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Personal posters by Kodak make ideal gifts for friends and relatives. Offer good November 4-20, 1985. See us today for details. Reg‘17 95 Special $ 1 4 95 Northgate 846-5418 CAMPUS PHOTO CENTER Page 14/The Battalion/Thursday, November 14,1985 Baseball’s Bay future uncertain Giants may move to Denver temporarily Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — The San Francisco Giants will discuss their desire to leave Candlestick Park, perhaps temporarily for Denver, with a committee of National League executives on Thursday. League Presi dent Chub Fee ney said Wednes day he will join Peter O’Malley of the Los Angeles Dodgers, Ballard Smith of the San Diego Padres and Bill Giles of the Philadelphia Phillies in a meeting Thursday with Giants’ owner Bob Lurie. “We’re going to talk about die Gi ants’ problems with the stadium,” Feeney said. “We want to get an idea of where they are, what they’re thinking about, and what they want to do.” All the National League clubs re ceived a letter from the San Fran cisco city attorney in September threatening them with lawsuits if they approved a move by the Giants that breached the team’s lease at Candlestick. Feeney labeled as “speculation” a report that a decision on the future of the Giants could result from the meeting. Asked if it were reasonable speculation, he said, “I don’t think so.” Lurie has said several times that under his ownership the Giants will not play again at cold and windy Candlestick Park, where they have a lease through 1994. Lurie also said he has no plans to sell the club, which has lost money in all but two of the 10 seasons he has owned it. “My commitment to finding a so lution to our current problems which will keep the Giants in San Francisco remains unshakeable,’’ Lurie said in a statement Wednes day. The Giants recently made a bid to share the nearby Oakland Coliseum with the American League’s Oak land A’s until a downtown stadium is built in San Francisco. But the Gants ■were rebuffed by the A’s, the Col iseum board and Oakland city offi cials. San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein hacked the plan to move temporarily to Oakland, but gave a cool response to an alternative plan by the Giants to move to Denver un til a downtown San Francisco sta dium is built. Two new coaches entei SWC basketball chase Associated Press DALLAS — Arkansas’ Nolan Richardson and Baylor’s Gene Iba join the Southwest Confer ence basketball coaches’ frater nity this year and Richardson has been put on the hot spot as the fa vorite. Richardson replaced Eddie Sutton who went to Kentucky and Iba comes into a troubled Baylor program which was hit by a scan dal last season, costing Jim Haller his job. “I think Arkansas should be the favorite because the Razor- backs return 13 lettermen,” Houston Coach Guy Lewis said. Richardson, who built the Uni versity of Tulsa into a basketball power, doesn’t mind the hot seat. “We have the talent to have a good basketball team,” Richard son said. “We’re not going to play basketball, we’re going to play Hawgball.’ We want to oe greedy with the basketball. “When we don’t have the ball, we want to do what it takes to get the ball. We will have a chance to score off our defense. We will press and play a lot of different defenses.” The SWC is expected to be more balanced this year because dominating centers nave gone to the pros. Seven-foot Jon Koncak of Southern Methodist and 6-11 Joe Kleine of Arkansas are in the NBA, along with Akeem “The Dream” Olajuwon of Houston, who left the league two years ago. “I think it wnl be really a wide open race,” said Texas Christian Coach Jim Killingsworth. “It looks like Texas A&M returns the most starting talent, but you just can’t count out teams like Hous ton and Arkansas. Everyone has a chance to figure in this thing be fore it’s over.” Texas Tech is the defending SWC Champion, but the Red Raiders of Coach Gerald Myers lost all five starters. “Replacing the five senior starters off last year’s team will be a challenge for us as a team,” My ers said. “Our team should have good confidence going into the season based on the way last year went for us. A lot of the players on last year’s team learned about |j what it takes to win and that should help us a lot." Myers said the SWC race could I be a “crazy one. There really isn't f any one team that should just !p dominate the whole conference.!; Arkansas, A&M and SMU willall be strong again and Houston will i lx? tough as always. “The rest of us have a chance § to develop into good teams as the jf year goes on so it should make for j|; an interesting race.” Iba said, “It’s very difficult for p me to tell how we will do during i the upcoming season. Our play ers have to adjust to a new system ! and sometimes this is difficult." [ Richardson said he expects the Razorbacks to be under the gun from the very start. “I inherited a good job but'an I extremely tough schedule,” he said. “The Southwest Conference! is a strong conference and I’m glad to be a part of it. Houston al- j ways has good teams and I under- i; stand A&M has almost everyone | back from a very good team." T he top returning players in- elude Winston Crite of A&M, . Carven Holcombe of TCU, Car los Briggs of Baylor, Butch Moore of SMU, Alvin Franklin of Houston, and William Mils and Andrew Lang of Arkansas. Gooden wins NL Cy Young Associated Press NEW YORK — Soft-spoken but hard-throwing Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets became the youngest player ever to win the Cy Young award, receiving unanimous acclaim Wednesday as the best pitcher in the National League last season. Gooden, who turns 21 on Satur day, also became the first pitcher to win Rookie of the Year and Cy Young awards in successive seasons. The right-hander had a record of 24-4 and led the National League in ■ earned run average, strikeouts, com plete games and innings pitched. Gooden received 120 points, in cluding all 24 of the first-place votes cast by the Baseball Writers’ Associa tion of America, becoming the sev enth pitcher to receive the award unanimously. John Tudor of St. Louis, 21-8 during the season, was second with 65 points, followed by Orel Hersniser of Los Angeles with 17, Joaquin Andujar of St. Louis with 6, Fernando Valenzuela of Los An geles with 4, Tom Browning of Cin cinnati with 3 and Jeff Reardon of Montreal with 1. The other unanimous winners were Sandy Koufax in 1963, ’65 and ’66; Denny McLain in 1968; Bob Gibson in 1968; Steve Carlton in 1972 and ’77; Ron Guidry in 1978, and Rick Sutcliffe in 1984. Votes are cast by two members of the BBWAA from each National Dwight Gooden League city with a first-place vote counting five points, three for sec ond and one for third. “I’m honored to have my name listed with the other Cy Young win ners,” Gooden said. “So much has happened to me in such a short pe riod of time — Rookie of the Year last year and now this. Still, I would gladly trade both of these awards for one World Series ring. That’s what I will be shooting for next year.” The award came to Gooden three days before his 21st birthday, mak ing him 13 days younger than Va lenzuela when the Dodgers’ south paw won his Cy Young Award in 1981. Valenzuela was 10 days past his 21st birthday when he won the award on Nov. 11 of that year. While consistently downplaying his own accomplishments in relation to those of the team as a whole, Gooden had the kind of season that made him stand out from the rest. His ERA of 1.53 was a team re cord, and he led the league with 276 2-3 innings pitched, 268 strikeouts and 16 complete games. He also had eight shutouts, second in the NL to Tudor’s 10. Gooden was the first pitcher since Sandy Koufax in 1966 to lead the league in the pitching triple crown categories of victories, ERA and strikeouts. Six pitchers besides Gooden — Koufax, Walter Johnson, Grover Cleveland Alexander, Dazzy Vance, Lefty Grove and Hal New- houser — have led the majors in those categories, and all but New- houser are in the Hall of Fame. With a 17-9 record in his rookie season of 1984, Gooden has a career record of 41-13. Gooden had the season’s longest winning streak, 14 straight victories from May 30-Aug. 25, breaking the club mark of 10 by Seaver in 1969. He went 31 consecutive innings without allowing a run and put to gether a string of 49 consecutive in nings from Aug. 31-Oct. 2 without allowing an earned run. On Aug. 25, at the age of 20 years 9 months 9 days, he became the youngest pitcher in modern baseball history to win 20 games. Bowl game match-ups tc be selected By HERSCHEL NISSENSON AP Football Writer The official bowl invitation datf j; still is one Saturday off. Comingup i| however, is the unofficial selection! date, which usually turns out to be more official than the official one. | “Most of the deals will be made i this weekend,” says one high-placed li bowl representative. If you don’t think that deals are made in advance, you have only to] remember back to last year when the j Cotton Bowl and Doug Flutie be came a twosome. The Cotton Bowls; head honcho is Jim “Hoss” Brock ] chairman of all the bowl committees j and the fellow who got the “official" I selection date pushed back a week | this year to the fourth Saturday in November; the Boston College ath letic director is Bill Flynn, a former president of the NCAA. Here are several rumors: • Penn State to the Orange Bowl. • The Big Ten co-champion or runner-up to the Cotton Bowl. • And is NBC-TV thinking about sweetening the Fiesta Bowl pot and pairing 9-0 Penn State and 10-0 Air Force, assuming both keep winning? 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I W' Perish the “You’re n about the ra to be outdot fans and all to get caugh “The nice that it’s all d NCAA lot and then tin 1.” The \\ oh pious and 5 end, winnei four losses ; ties be foi e tual NCAA the tourney ers. There’s n in a lineup niot Roy I Most Valual flanked by Grant and A the envy oft Except p< Fighting llhi They reu 26-9 team, duo of Douj Douglas the the Best tar and maybe i But the F nity is being year about tions. Last seasc preseason p the con let ei six teams in the Illini.tr tance down the NCAA before ge Georgia Tec If either ter in the It Indiana to si The Haw replace dep Stokes and redshirt Bt Coach Geor solve the f season slide; diana will n< from junior DALLAJ University, efit rules v the baskett before the fractions la Morning 1 day. “The N< Kansas (lit; I expect to very shortl Dr. Herber The six- infractions tions and ; tional Colie cases, was s