The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 16, 1984, Image 7

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Willie Wilson gets
to play again
See page 8
Wednesday, May 16, 1984/The Battalion/Page 7
gs going to NCAAs
By DAVE SCOTT
Sports editor
Jounty — the®
it populous tiB
declared a siiB
fear their rtyree down, one to go.
funds wouldlB’hree Aggie teams, men and
defending iSmen’s golf and women’s
roads agawsi softball, have received invita-
dons in their respective sports
iralion seekinitoBVCAA tournaments. But the
;ned after a«|eball team is still waiting,
ter from tlieicopfidently, but w'aiting none-
down Paysostireless.
; evacuation ofB_ . . .. .
briefly threail 1 ^ be f‘ n g. ‘ he Rlce ° wl j
■ce and timshing in second
pice in the SWC tournament
Bt weekend in Austin, the
ieam has greatly improved its
Knees of being selected. Assis-
l flit coach Mark Johnson feels
k / T| At the Aggies deserve the one
y I Ul°* 'I' 6 11 at-large bids.
' |ri think our chances are very
■Hod,” Johnson said, “I will be
v all the mflrv disappointed if we don’t
and then won second place out
right in the tournament, there
should be no way the second
team in the strong SWC could
be overlooked.
However if the A&M is se
lected, that would give Rice an
outside shot at best. Rice Coach
David Hall said if A&M goes,
Rice should too.
“If they (NCAA) take A&M,
they ought to at least give us
consideration,” Hall said.
“There’s no reason to take them
(A&M) over us. We will have
more wins than they do and
fewer losses.”
The Aggies finished 40-17
and Rice finished 41-14.
Pitcher Tom Arrington was
named most valuable player of
the tournament and three other
A&M players were named to
the all-tournament team:
catcher Steve Johnigan, second
?d, thedeiria»:g el 1 bid. I guess I’m cautiously basemen Tim Cartwright and
mg emplomop'irmsuc
at) colleges fljohnson said that since the
ply," the #■» finished the regular sea-
n a report ot 8011 fi e d f° r second with Rice
outfielder Mike Scanlin.
The men’s golf team was one
of the 32 teams across the coun
try named to the NCAA tourna
ment to be held at the Bear
Creek Country Club in Hous
ton from May 17-23. Five teams
were selected from District 6,
along with Houston, Texas,
Houston Baptist and Arkansas.
One player from Lamar was
chosen.
Thirteen of the 14 other teams
who finished in last year’s Top
15 were among the teams se
lected for the championships.
Joining A&M from last year’s
championships are defending
champion Oklahoma State,
Texas, Houston, Ohio State,
Clemson, Georgia, UCLA,
North Carolina, Oklahoma,
Brigham Young, Fresno State,
Missouri and Wake Forest.
The women’s softball team,
who are defending national
champion but finished just
third in their region, received
an at-large bid to be one of the
16 teams named. The Aggies
(45-15) begin the championship
play Thursday in regional ac
tion against Cal State Fullerton
(52-10) Thursday in Houston.
iwale is early favorite
r all this Ieam
$30 to $401
ng to an <
: aig of the I
for Training
alleges arekfc United Press International
i move ouioIaLTIMORE — Wearing
> the 21stcerjjascball caps reading “Have a
-y M. Brickellflale Preakness,” the Claiborne
■arch for tkflrms contingent left no doubt
flnday who was the early fa-
ions have lolflrite in Saturday’s 109th run-
urvive," he jiing of the second jewel of rac-
vill survive wing's Triple Crown,
nvest in crtH wa l e > tfi e upset winner in
new inethodithe Kentucky Derby, and three
in engaging flier thoroughbreds settled
new expentflo their stalls at Pimlico Race
mean flexi®urse after a flight from Lex-
arning.” ftgton, Ky., and prepared to re-
Bne training for the run for
fl black-eyed susans.
fliwale easily stole the spot-
gght from Gate Dancer, Pine
I'cle and Taylor’s Special, at-
ting a clutter of television
Tim Cartwright chases a ball in the outfield dur
ing the fifth inning of the first game against
Photo by PETER ROCHA
Texas. UT scored seven runs on seven hits in that
inning and went on to beat the Ags 15-4.
as no refinerit
lets,
xu need plarii
Superior afttig
pany appro;
ible takeover!
If up for salt!
among me®
founding ‘
f oil mergenl
s, particulail|
t the takes
xnipetilion,
id increase!
m foreign fl
of die ventij
tain the dealt!
the Senate!
osed, 11-mot
oil takeover!:
d, to have til
ly the matter!
cameras and about a dozen re
porters as he checked into stall
40 of the Stakes barn — re
served each year for the Derby
winner.
There, under a bright yellow
plaque immortalizing his father
— triple Crown winner Seattle
Slew — and other great horses,
Swale chomped hay, slurped
water from a metal bucket and
generally ignored all the atten
tion.
“He never lets anything
bother him. Nothing stirs him
up,” said Mike Griffin, who
managers Swale for trainer
Woody Stephens. “That Derby
crowd didn’t even stir him.”
Griffin said Swale “ran a little
bit faster than we expected”
during a workout Sunday at
Claiborne Farms “but the track
was awful fast.”
Exercise rider Bill McKenzie
will take Swale, who now has
won $781,690 in 1984, through
an easy gallop Tuesday morn
ing at 6:30 a.m. EDT.
“He won’t do much work,”
Griffin said. “He’ll just jog
around. We might walk him
down the back stretch.”
Swale, by virtue of his three-
length Kentucky Derby victory
and five wins, three seconds
and a third in 10 outings this
year, is considered an early fa
vorite in the Preakness, which
will award about $330,000
prize money.
Celtics beat Bucks in first game
in
United Press International
BOSTON — Larry Bird scored
24 points and Robert Parish
added 17 while limiting Bob
Lanier to just 2 Tuesday night
as the Boston Celtics coasted to
119-96 victory over the cold
shooting Milwaukee Bucks in
the first game of the Eastern
Conference finals.
The second game of the best-
of-seven series will be played
Thursday night at Boston Gar- _
den.
Milwaukee shot just 35 per
cent in the first half, hitting
only 14-of-40 field-goal at
tempts to trail at the half 54-42.
The Bucks never got any closer,
trailing by 15 through most of
the second half before Boston’s
substitutes extended the lead to
23.
Boston’s defensive specialist,
Cedric Maxwell, added 17
points while sixth man Kevin
McHale came off the bench for
16. Milwaukee was led by Mar
ques Johnson with 18 and Paul
Pressey with 17.
In the 1983 playoffs, Milwau
kee swept Boston 4-0 in the con
ference semifinals.
Boston extended its lead to
the lead at 8:59 when Parish
stole the ball from Lanier at the
Bucks’ 3-point line and drove
for a layup that started a 17-5
run. Qtiinn Buckner finished
the spurt with an 18-foot
18 points midway through the jumper from behind McHale’s
third quarter, with Maxwell hit- screen.
ting a jump hook to complete a
6-0 run, making the score 75-
57.
In the first quarter, the teams
combined to hit just 14-of-42
field-goal attempts. Boston took
Milwaukee, which shot just
27 percent in the first quarter,'
trailed 35-23 midway through
the second quarter, then began
a 10-2 run, keyed by two jump-.
ers by Johnson.
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