The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 12, 1984, Image 8

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Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, September 12, 1984
TANK M c NAMAltA® by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
U.S. hockey team advances
to Canada Cup semifinals
Iowa State
needs brains
Criner says
United Press International
AMES, Iowa — Iowa State Coach
Jim Criner said Tuesday the Cy
clones will have to become a much
smarter football team this week if
they want to bounce back from a dis
appointing opener and beat the
Drake Bulldogs.
The second-year ISU coach said
his team was in good physical shape
Saturday but made critical mental
mistakes that led to eight turnovers
in a 59-21 loss to No. 5 Iowa.
“Physically, we did not get pushed
around on the field,” Criner said.
“We tagged a lot of guys out
there. And on the quarterback sacks
(of Iowa’s Chuck Long), it wasn’t one
guy getting to him it was lots,” he
said. “On a lot of the sacks it was be
cause he couldn’t find someone to
throw to. The receivers were cov
ered.”
Because of the youth of his team,
Criner said he expected some men
tal breakdowns last week, such as pe
nalities and missed assignments.
He said he emphasized the impor
tance of physical conditioning dur
ing the summer so the squad could
spend the fall training camp concen
trating on technique and execution.
“We put the emphasis in the right
place. That’s why I’m so disap
pointed,” Criner said. “Every mis
take we made our football team has
rehearsed 100 times. There’s no ex
cuse, except that we lost discipline in
a big game.”
Iowa State plays its first home
game Saturday against intrastate foe
Drake. Criner thinks the Bulldogs,
0-2, are capable of upsetting the Cy
clones, but he admits he’d rather
have opened with them last week in
stead of Iowa.
“Anytime you’re a young football
team, you’d like to play someone not
the caliber of Iowa in the first
game,” he said. “You like to find out
what your weaknesses are, but not so
abruptly.”
Criner said his decision to start
sophomore Alex Espinoza at quar
terback against Drake does not mean
junior Alan Hood has been pushed
to second team for good.
He said one reason he selected
Hood to open against the Hawkeyes
was Iowa State team members voted
him as co-captain.
“It shows the players respect him
as a leader,” said Criner, who indi
cated he might wait another two or
three games before settling on a per
manent signal-caller.
“The key will be that by the time
we get to league play, we’ll know we
have the right guy,” he said.
Criner was asked toward the end
Tuesday’s news conference if he has
considered a wishbone attack on of
fense.
United Press International
EDMONTON, Alberta — The
United States is not planning a sec
ond hockey miracle at the Canada
Cup hockey tournament. The club
does not require magic anymore.
The U.S. finished the round-ro
bin in second place with a 3-1-1 re
cord, earning a semifinal berth at
Edmonton’s Northlands Coliseum
Wednesday night against the third-
place Sweaes, who finished at 3-2.
Team Canada, which lost to the
undefeated world champion Soviets
6-3 in their final round-robin in Ed
monton Monday, is consigned to
fourth place and a semifinal rematch
with the USSR in Calgary Thursday.
The U.S. has been the cannon
fodder in international tournaments
for several years. Even the victory
over the USSR at the Lake Placid
Olympics was widely regarded as a
“Miracle on Ice.”
But miracles rarely strike twice.
Head coach Bob Johnson would
rather credit the team’s perfor
mance to hard work, and desire.
“We are ready for the semifinal,”
Johnson said. “We don’t have a lot of
50-goal scorers so we have to work
just a little harder. All along we
wanted to get into the playoffs, now
we just take it one game at a time.”
Mark Johnson and Neal Broten,
members of the 1980 Olympic
champions, each contributed two
United Press International
DALLAS — The business man
ager for PGA champion Lee Tre
vino said Tuesday that Trevino and
more than 200 other people are in
volved in a single litigation with the
Internal Revenue Service over an
IRS claim for back taxes.
Trevino associate Joe Salinas, re
sponding to a report published in an
Austin newspaper, said he felt it was
unfair to single out Trevino as being
the subject of an IRS complaint.
The Austin American-Statesman
reported the IRS claimed Trevino
owed the government $82,211 in
goals to power Team U.S.A. over
West Germany in Monday’s final
round robin. Coach Johnson said
such efforts typify the team.
“We have a lot of guys that are not
superstars in the NHL,” he said,
“but they keep working and I’m
proud of everyone’s effort.”
By wdy of example, Johnson
points to defenseman Gordie Rob
erts, who “has played well for us —
and he was cut from previous Can
ada Cup teams — but has shown he
can play at this level for us.”
Johnson’s son Mark shares the
outlook of his father: “I’m very
proud of 7 points,” he said. “Our
only loss was a 2-1 game to the Soviet
Union and our goal at the start was
to get into the playoffs.”
A confident Swedish team, play
ing a strong physical brand of
hockey with two back-to-back wins,
would like to avenge a 7-1 loss to the
U.S. in the tournament opener.
“When you get to the semifinals in
an international tournament like
this, all the teams are good. So we’ll
have our work in front of us,” said
Lief Boork, coach of the Swedish
team.
“But we are ashamed of losing 7-1
to the Americans (Sept. 1) and we
want to beat them. We’ve got noth
ing against them, but it would do our
pride good to beat them.”
taxes and penalties stemming from
“tax avoidance shams.”
“Lee and his wife purchased a lim
ited partnership in 1980,” said Sali
nas. “This is something that is nor
mally done. The IRS happened to
pick on this one and challenged the
deductions in it. There were 260
other people in this one limited part
nership.
Trevino’s attorney, Jack Hawkins,
said the suit on behalf of the part
nership was filed during the sum
mer.
“Our petition was filed on or
about July 11,” said Hawkins. “It was
Boork said no matter which team
the Swedes play, they will stick witk
the uncharacteristic aggression
which has stood out as the most dis
tinctive feature of their play in the
preliminary series.
“We’re not the shy Swedes from
game one,” he said. “It’s (playingag-
gressively) a very important thing
when you play the NHL teams on
their own grounds.
“The 7-1 loss against the Ameri
cans was a shock to our team. !i
made us toughen up. Typically, Swe
den would back down and lose.
“But we realized we have to
change our shy, don’t care Swedish
attitude. You always have to plas
hard to win and we have not always
played that way in the past,” Boork
said.
The Swedish coach shid the ]]
NHL players on his roster playeda
key role in defining the more ag
gressive style of play after the 7-1
loss to Team U.S. A.
Thomas Gradin, the smooth-skat
ing Vancouver Canucks center who
has seen duty on the wing during
Canada Cup play, said Team Swe
den is playing a new brand of hockey
that combines the best elements of
NHL and European play.
lawsuit
filed in a Washington tax court.”
The IRS refused to recognize a
number of Trevino business trans
actions as legitimate deductions
“since such alleged transactions are
shams entered into for tax avoidance
purposes,” the agency said.
IRS officials said Trevino and his
former wife earned $1.1 million in
1980, owe $52,662 in back taxes and
another $29,549 in penalties and in
terest.
Hawkins confirmed the Trevinos
contracted in 1980 with brokerage
firm Gregory Government Securi
ties Inc. of Dallas to buy and sell va
rious government securities.
Trevino involved in
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