Thursday, July 12, 1984A"he Battalion/Page 9 r ey e| al min' Sports ted gitlf. isted. gives tin enigmatic as he did :a ps from to a pro- a vicioia an eye takes the also man. complej complu lie seem ie street! Surprise clubs lead the way in AL, NL races United Press International Dwight Gooden of the Mets relped blow away the American eague in Tuesday night's All-Star ame, and now he’s hoping to do the lame with New York’s opposition in he National League East. Gooden, the major’s strikeout ileader, gave the AL a glimpse — and only a glimpse — of the fastball and urve that has made him one base- all’s hottest gate attractions. He ombined with Fernando Valen- ;uela of the Dodgers to fan a record six straight in the NL’s 3-1 triumph. Gooden and the rest of the Mets iow embark on their goal of captur ing their first NL East title since |1973. New York, with the fourth- st record in baseball at 47-34, has n * ne °f ' ls l« ,sl 1 d games and the Vfets begin the second half of the good a!- ieaso11 with a four-game series in At- is noti! anta ’ ofTofh Other NI. games Thursday will “Star'IKr ient * ^ os A n g e l es at Chicago, Cin- nn™i dnnati at Montreal, San Francisco at ;en noE' that ontl P' tts burgh, San Diego at St. Louis characts int * Philadelphia at Houston. Withb Gooden leatls a young staff that ully Oik includes 10-game winner Ron Dar- . Pauliet 'li n g> Walt Terrell and newcomer Bruce Berenyi and top-flight reliev- :rs Jesse Orosco and Doug Sisk. But ./layers and fans alike are most ini ls the mimer ms comt s when Ik horse la- man whe tfore. Hi| oyable. pressed with Gooden, the 19-year- old who last year at this time was pitching in a Double-A All-Star game in Chattanooga, Tenn. “He is an impressive young pitcher,” said Baltimore manager Joe Altobelli, who guided the AL stars Tuesday night. “He has a live fastball and is not afraid to throw the curve. If nothing happens to his arm, he’s going to be a great asset to his game.” Philadelphia manager Paul Owens had the luxury of managing Gooden in the All-Star game but won't be as fortunate the second half of the season. "I’ve never seen a young fellow with the type of poise he has,” Owens said. “That’s the way he’s been pitching all along. That’s why I had no fear of selecting him.” The Cubs are having a great sea son themselves, trailing the Mets by just one-half game. They appear to be going for broke this year and the trades for veteran right-handers Rick Sutcliffe and Dennis Eckersley, plus the return of injured Scott Sanderson, have strengthed their suspect starting rotation. The Phillies, led by exciting rookie second baseman Juan Sam uel, trail New York by just 3 ‘/a and the Cardinals and Expos are just 7 V2 “We won’t win if we keep playing the way we have in re cent weeks,” acknowledges Manager Sparky Anderson of the Tigeis. “The Blue Jays have come along fast and the Orioles can be relied on to play better in the second half of the season than in the first.” games off the pace and cannot be counted out. In the Western Division, the Padres, led by All-Star outFielder Tony Gwynn, the league’s leading hitter at .355, have a five-game spread over Atlanta and a 6 '/a-game bulge over Los Angeles. San Diego is one of only three ma jor-league franchises never to have made the playoffs and should get a strong challenge from the Dodgers, whose injured roster could heal in time for a strong pennant run. The morning after another rugged night with National League white lightning, American Leaguers resume their division races with two key questions. Are the Detroit Tigers running out of gas and are the Chicago White Sox just getting up a head of steam? nance, il 1 by Get- Add the* itchy dii sew Yorl enjoyaHi r- ;al gripe ■en near! s just tot 'Pope a id, stronj Stars, Wranglers ready for USFL championship The Tigers and White Sox go into the second half of the season with seven and one-game leads, respec tively, in the Eastern and Western Division, but going in opposite direc tions in recent weeks. The Tigers, once 35-5, have trav eled at a 22-22 pace which has en abled the Toronto Blue Jays to move to within seven games of first place and the Baltimore Orioles, the de fending world champions, to stand 1 1 V2 off the pace. Neither gap is too big to be overcome should the Ti gers continue to play at a .500 clip. The White Sox lead both the Min nesota Twins and California Angels by one game and the last-place Texas Rangers by 7 ’/a for that mat ter. But they won nine of their 10 games prior to the All-Star Game and could be generating a momen- TANK MCNAMARA® turn similar to the second-half drive in 1983 that enabled them to finish first by 20 games. “We won’t win if we keep playing the way we have in recent weeks,” ac knowledges Manager Sparky Ander son of the Tigers. “The Blue Jays have come along fast and the Orioles can be relied on to play better in the second half of the season than in the first.” “We’re in first place after a slow start,” says General Manager Roland Hemond, whose White Sox adopted the slogan, ‘let’s do it again this year.’ “We didn’t mean it quite that liter ally, however.” The league returns to action Thursday with Boston at Seattle, To ronto at Oakland, Milwaukee at Cali fornia, Cleveland at Texas, Detroit at Minnesota, Chicago at Baltimore and Kansas City at New York. In New York, there is the specta cle of George Steinbrenner’s New York Yankee millionaires flounder ing 20 games behind the Tigers in the East. Dave Winfield is leading the league with a .370 mark and Don Mattingly ranks fourth, but Yankee starting pitchers have been hit so hard so often that the New York brain trust (a euphemism for Stein- brenner) is considering abandoning the great experiment of the spring. That, of course, was switching Dave Righetti, a fine young starting pitcher, to the bullpen. The tactic was based upon the assumption that the Yankees would be a contender and, therefore, require the services of a late-inning “game-saver.” Righetti was a conspicuous absen tee from the American League All- Star squad in San Francisco Tuesday night primarily because he hasn’t re ceived enough opportunities to show whether or not he is a star reliever. Steinbrenner’s disappointment has been heightened, of course, by the unexpected rise of the cross town rival New York ,Mets to con tenders’ status in the National League. Wholesale changes are certain at season’s end unless the Yankees make a strong run during the sec ond half of the campaign —- and they have shown no signs of doing so halfway through the year. by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds "1 ial lyric, “Let’s C< r, eh?)> *Vil/i Tk jistrun# arly daP as the N> strath lour’s ; song United Press International TAMPA, Fla. — George Allen and Jim Mora are taking a similar ; approach to Sunday’s second annual [United States Football League ' championship game. Allen, head coach of the Arizona Wranglers, and Mora, coach of the i favored Philadelphia Stars, both said Wednesday they are approaching Sunday’s USFL finale like it was just another game. j “I’m trying to stay on the same I schedule we had in Arizona,” Allen- said. “We’re going to practice under the lights. That’s what we had to do at Arizona for the last two months because of the heat.” “I suppose it would have been nice to have had an extra week to prepare (like the NFL teams have for their Super Bowl), but I don’t know that it really matters,” Mora- said. “The way it has turned out, our (practice) schedule is the same as it was for all our Sunday games.” The Stars, who advanced to the championship with playoff victories over New Jersey and Birmingham after a 16-2 regular season, and the Wranglers, winners over Houston and Los Angeles after going 10-8, both arrived in Tampa Tuesday eve ning and got in their first workouts here Wednesday. “I think it was a plus to have all that heat because the last half of the season we’ve been very strong,” Al- lensaid. “With an older club, we out- conditioned some of the younger clubs. We won a couple of games in the fourth quarter because of our conditioning. “I’m still doing things the way I did years ago. It may be a little old fashioned, but this team has worked very hard and long and they’ve had a good attitude.” Philadelphia has beaten the Wranglers all three times they have met during the two years of the USFL. Last year, when the Wranglers were the Chicago Blitz, the Stars came from a 24-7 deficit with 21 points in the fourth quarter to win 31-24 in regular season play and scored 24 fourth-quarter points in a playoff game enroute to a 44-38 overtime victory. This year, the Stars, down 21-6 at the half, rallied to beat the Wran glers, 22-21, without the services of Philadelphia running ace Kelvin Bryant who missed that game be cause of an injury. “The Wranglers (on a six-game winning streak) have played very well of late and we can’t afford to let them get an early lead on us again,” Mora said. “We were lucky to win that first game (this past season) and I hope we don’t get behind again be cause I don’t know if we could come back again.” “We match up well against Phila delphia,” Allen said. Sunday’s contest will feature the passing of Philadelphia”s Chuck Fu- sina against Arizona’s Greg Landry and the running of Bryant against Kevin Long and Tim Spencer of Arizona. Fusina was the USFL’s top-rated quarterback while throwing for 3,827 yards and 31 touchdowns dur ing the 18-game regular season. Landry, a 16-year pro veteran, threw for 3,534 yards and 26 touch downs. Bryant, the Most Valuable Player in the USFL in 1983, rushed for 1,406 yards during the regular sea son and 269 in two playoff games, including 154 last week against Bir mingham. Spencer and Long were the 1-2 runners in the Western Con ference with 1,212 and 1,010 yards respectively. Denver Gold owner accused of ‘tampering’ with Houston’s Davis United Press International DENVER — Denver Gold owner Doug Spedding may name a new head coach over the next few days, but he also can expect something else — a USFL tampering charge for his attempts to lure an assistant coach away from the Houston Gam blers. Officials expect Spedding to an nounce by the end of this week the hiring of Darrell “Mouse” Davis, Houston’s offensive coordinator, as the Gold’s new head coach. But Jay Roulier, a part owner of the Gamblers, doesn’t like the way Spedding has gone about trying to sign a new coach and plans to take action. Whether or not Davis is signed, Roulier said he will press tampering charges against his fellow USFL team owner for the way he ap proached Davis about the job. “We’re going to make an issue of this, not to prevent Mouse from going to Denver, but to let Spedding know that he can’t flout league rules and get away with it,” Roulier said. “All we wanted was for Doug to ask our permission to talk to Davis as league rules provide. He flat didn’t do that, and we have a well-docu mented case of tampering to present to the league.” According to Roulier, Houston co-owner Jerry Argovitz asked Sped ding several times in recent weeks whether he wanted to talk to Davis about the Denver job, formerly held by Craig Morton. Each time, Sped ding would say no and then contact Davis anyway. ionic Of subtly includini )ut oftN e of Jntil /nthesi^' 00 mud like Pi" 1 f Musi‘ 105 Holleman Drive Telephone 093-5737 POOH ’ S PA R K YOUR FAMILY FUN PARK Across Texas Avenue from the College Station water tower. EVERY THURSDAY NITE CHRISTIAN SKATE -« -s Yi NITE WU Only CHRISTIAN music will be played and suggestions of groups and/or artists will be accepted. 7:00 PM. to 10:00 PM. $3.00 V Pirzaworks J Thirsty? It’s Thirstday! FREE PITCHER With Large Pizza Purchase Save $3.00 696-DAVE 326 Jersey St. (Next to Rother’s Bookstore) OPEN 11 a.m. — .MgntiaYrSalyrtilY . he cro l lispurf of a' sical 1 Lo vt not ffi* 1 bcnf TONIGHT ONLY Joe Smith An Ordinary Man. With An Extraordinary Message. “Where Is The Power of Christianity Today?” • Former chemist and production supervisor, GAF Corporation. • Author and Lecturer, Joe has toured Israel, Wales, England, Ireland, Argentina, and throughout the United States. • Austin Peay University Graduate with Masters work at the University of Kentucky. A special invitation to international students from every nation! Come and Hear Joe in Rudder Tower, Room 302 7:30 pm Sponsored by: Marantha Christian Fellowship J* mmmm 'COUPON* INTERNATIONAL HOUSE *'»**us RESTAURANT ALL YOU CAN EAT Buttermilk Pancakes 79 Offer expires August 15, 1984 $ 4 p.m.-6 a.m. 1 7 days a week ■ j r • 103 N, College Skaggs Center M GATES OPEN AT 8:00 ALL MOVIES BEGIN AT 8:45 “ * BOLL RARDAREIIA’ " DO HER THING I * Thursday, July 1 2 Warren Beatty Diane Keaton in Monday, July 1 6 DOC nxtc DOC DOC DOC DOC DtIC DtK= DOC DOC Q't&ue' TAMU STUDENT :75 NON-STUDENT 1.50 1.00 * * ¥ CHILDREN 6-12 CHILDREN UNDER 6 - FREE Now, there’s a new name for terror. Friday/Ssturday, July 1 3/14 THATS ENTERTAINMENT MG M’s salute to the golden years of musicals Tuesday, July 1 7 on the Two races compete^ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ FANTASTIC PLANET* ¥ Sunday, July 1 5 $ Marilyn Monroe, , Lauren Bacall and TV Betty Grable g o husband hunting in * Mow to Marry ^ a Millionaire ^ Wednesday, July 1 8