Page ^A'he Battalion/Wednesday, June 27, 1984 Men more exciting than TANK MCNAMARA women at Wimbledon K..S0J2&, TM£ OUAKTe^gACK S6T T/-16 *PRO FOOTBALL- I^CORC/' For tooaiPowjM passed r^- United Press International WIMBLEDON, England — The difference between men’s and wom en’s tennis was made quite obvious at Wimbledon Tuesday, and there’s no denying that the men put on a more popular show. While Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert Lloyd emphasized again how one-sided the women’s matches can be, the top men players toyed with disaster. Of the seven seeded men in ac tion, four were forced to five sets and two others went four sets. All, however, managed to survive. In sharp contrast, the top six women’s seeds breezed through their opening round matches, losing a total of 13 games between them. Only two players were forced to a deciding third set. No one injected any more drama into their first round match than 14th seed Bill Scanlon and Eric Ko- rita, who battled valiantly for four hours and nine minutes before Scan lon perservered, 7-6, 6-7, 6-2, 3-6, 13-11. In the 23rd game of the final set, Scanlon held at love and then made the decisive break with three back hand passes in a row and a forehand service return. Scanlon, the man who stunned John McEnroe in the fourth round of the U.S. Open last September, was just pleased to be moving on. “I’m happy to have survivied,” Scanlon said.“You just play the best you can play. You know it’s going to end pretty soon.” Also put to a severe test were No. 4 Mats Wilander of Sweden and No. 5 Jimmy Arias of the United States, making his Wimbledon debut. Wilander, so troubled by an in jured right wrist that he hesitated to hit the ball hard, needed two hours and 40 minutes to subdue American Sherwood Stewart, 6-4, 6-4, 6-7, 7-5. Arias, so nervous that he started to get leg cramps in the fourth set, overcame South African Bernie Mit- ton, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4. routed Elene Elisenko of the Soviet Union, 6-1,6-0. Continuing this one-sided domi nation, fourth seed Pam Shriver de feated Eva Pfaff of West Germany, 6-0, 6-4, fifth seed Zina Garrison was a 6-0, 6-0 winner over Rina Einy of Britain, and No. 6 Kathy Jordan breezed past Heather Ludloff, 6-1, 6-1. Also winning in straight sets were No. 8 Kathy Horvath, No. 9 Wendy Turnbull, No. 12 Claudia Kohde, No. 13 Barbara Potter, No. 14 He lena Sukova and No. 15 Andrea Te- mesvari. Angola ‘cops out’ of Summer Games Extended to five sets along with Scanlon were 12th seed Johan Kriek, No. 13 Tomas Smid and No. 15 Vi tas Gerulaitis. Kriek edged Briton Michael Westphal, 6-3, 6-0, 2-6, 6-7, 7-5; Smid beat Larry Stefanki of the United States, 6-4, 6-7, 0-6, 6-4, 6-2; and Gerulaitis subdued Tony Giam- malva, also of the United States, 3-6, 6-1, 6-4, 6-7, 7-5, in 3 hours and 13 minutes. Requiring three sets to win were 10th seed Jo Durie, who beat Kim Shaefer, 6-2, 6-7, 6-0, and No. 11 Lisa Bonder, a 2-6, 6-3, 6-3 winner over Jo Louis. United Press International Navratilova, in quest of her fifth Wimbledon crown, needed one set to regain her bearings and then swept through the second set in 14 minutes to beat Peanut Louie, 6-4, 6- 0; Evert Lloyd, a three-time Wimble don champion, crushed Sabina Goles of Yugoslavia, 6-1, 6-1, in 54 minutes; and third seed Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia Arias, a clay court specialist, said he worked hard for the last two weeks on his grass game, which he calls his least favorite surface, but still was hesitant to serve and volley in the early going. “I knew his shoulder was hurt ing,” the 19-year-old Arias said of Mitton. “I kept waiting for his big serve but he kept sending in bloop ers. I started going to the net after the first set. He was serving so slow I figured I should take advantage of LOS ANGELES — Angola, the last of 142 nations to accept an invi tation to participate in the Summer Games, Tuesday apparently re versed its decision and became the 15th country to join the Soviet-led boycott. Radio Moscow said the reason was that “the United States authorities are turning the Games into an arena of confrontation,” according to Olympic Organizing Committee of ficials monitoring the broadcast. A statement from the official An golan news agency gave no reason for the decision. A spokesman for Angola at the United Nations in said no senior official was immediately available for comment. Angola has long been aligned with the Soviet Union in world affairs and has thousands of Cuban troops stationed on its territory. Peter Ueberroth, president of the LAOOC, told the Los Angeles Times the Angolan withdrawl “ap pears to be isolated for the minute,” but, he added, "I really believe the Soviets are still trying every possible thing” to pressure more countries into boycotting. Since the 142 acceptances were announced June 4, one other coun try, Bolivia, said it will not attend the Games. Other nations in the boycott are Afghanistan, Bulgaria, Czechoslova kia, Cuba, East Germany, Ethiopia, Hungary, Laos, Mongolia, North Korea, Poland, South Yemen and Vietnam. WJ. CUV- V-V .VJ. iCACJ C s-r x , w A , M.M.M x. — ^ - — • - ^ £> x. ^ c\_, ■ J , IT A IS 1 1 ^ VJ11 d , wasjust pleased to be moving on. minutes; and third seed Hana figured I should take advantage of available for comment. Korea, Poland, South Yeme “I’m happy to have survivied,” Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia it.” Angola has long been aligned with Vietnam. Selling team brings tears to eyes of Twins owner " That was when Griffith and his sister I cried like a baby, Griffith says grabbed him and embraced him said and write on the invitation: W M SI t \A/ I I I f 1 VO I 1 ft O 11 VOl 1 VI III— c. 1 ft ■**/'**=» n t r-Orr t 111 n OT 1 TT — I i r 11 Vi #->1 » t n •- 1 (■' c s-'x 1 ■ o o- o o 1 • _ . . . What would you do if you sud denly came into $32 million? Would you dance, sing or cele brate or maybe take that around- the-world vacation you always wanted? Calvin Griffith cried. Not little tears, big ones. You have to remember he’s the last of base ball’s old dinosaurs. They don’t shed little tears. When they cry, they really cry. He couldn’t help himself. It wasn’t the money, it was the principals, and in this case, the principals were the ballplayers with his Minnesota Twins. That needs a little clarification. They were his Twins, his and sister’s, Thelma Haynes, until last Friday. That was when Griffith and his sister sold their 52 percent controlling in terest to Carl Pohlad, a Minneapolis businessman, technically, now they are Pohlad’s Twins, and that chang ing of hands terminates the Griffith family’s 65-year control of the ball club. If you want to be like the lawyers and get real technical about it, the Griffiths still own the Twins. No fi nal contract has been signed yet, nor has the American League approved the sale. Both are mere formalities, though. Griffith and Pohlad signed their names to a letter of intent in a ceremony at home plate at the Met- rodome in Minneapolis, the home of the Twins, Friday evening, and that was when the tears began to flow. “I cried like a baby,” Griffith says without a trace of self-consciousness. “My heart was very heavy when I was signing the paper, but the thing that really made me cry was when the ballplayers came up and said, ‘Thanks for the opportunity,’ ‘Thanks for the things you’ve done for me.’ I just broke up when they came up to me like that. You should’ve seen ‘em. (Tom) Bru- nansky, (Kent) Hrbek, (Gary) Gaetti, every single one of ‘em had some thing to say to me. The manager, Billy Gardner; all the coaches, every one.” Even some of Griffith’s old play ers like Bob Allison and Hall of Famer Harmon Killebrew were on hand for the occasion. The way they grabbed him and embraced him said everything. To some, that might’ve seemed a bit strange. Those would be the ones who usually have heard Griffith de scribed as “stingy” and “penny- pinching,” the tighest owner in the big leagues with a buck. They don’t know the real Calvin Griffith. They never saw him at work. They never saw the avalanche of solicitations that come in to him regularly, requests for contributions in every possible form, that some times ran as high as $10,000 or $15,000 a week. Many of the re quests are disguised as charity din ner invitations and they come from all sections of the country. More often than he likes, Calvin Griffith has to take his pen in hand and write on the invitation: “I’m sorry I don’t have enough money to buy a table.” And then he signs his initials. But he has never turned down an invitation from the state of Minne sota. “How could I?” he says. “Those people supported me.” Admittedly, it’s a little hard to get too worked up about team operators who own franchises, in baseball or out, because I’ve never heard of one who ever had to have a benefit run for him. But Griffith, it seems to me, has taken a lot of criticism he didn’t deserve. It’s true, he was economical. So what? He couldn’t have survived had he not been. Nobody paid his bills for him. Parrish wins home run hitting duel United Press Jnten»tion*l Vol 79 ARLINGTON — Texas Ran;, ers slugger Larry Parrish hit 1® balls out of Arlington Sladwi Tuesday night to eliminate fornia's Fred Lynn in a home hilling contest. Last month Parrish knodtf Chicago's Ron Kittle from Ik competition ith 16 homerunsi eluding six in the first imm Tuesday, the 30-year-old out fielder broke a scoreless tie in tk second inning with lour hotntt into the lefl-centerlieldbleachm Parrish, who recently sett Ranger record with at least out RBI in 11 straight games, lower! with three more how into the left-centerfield scats it the third inning to takeaV-Oltai and added one each to lefiliet and dead centerfield in the fount for a 9-1 lead. Lynn, who has Ireen inandou of the Angels’ lineup recmtlr with back spasms, had to hit intotl wind blowing from right to kt field, which favored the rigk handed swinging Parrish. The lefthanded hitting Lyttll only homer occurred in tk fourth inning when he ploppi one into the right field bleachmi Each baiter was credited wit; point for a home run, and an® for each swing resulting in a not homer, with a five-inning liB imposed. 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