Monday, March 24, 1986/The Battalion/Pag" S III Sports idling le thee irted w 3ut ate :s and In Top 2 teams in Final Four field Duke, Kansas battle in semis to meet Louisville-LSU winner Associated Press Top-ranked Duke routed Navy 71-50 and second-ranked Kansas iought off North Carolina State 75- 67 Sunday to earn Final Four berths pigainst each other next Saturday in the NCAA basketball champion ships. hadn’t played a Duke, which Banked team or 1 Drding I yed at a | tieard t or den Basketball ■one with a nominating big ■nan in three previous tournament fcames, had no trouble with 6-foot- pl David Robinson and the rest of ■he Midshipmen in the East Re- ■gional championship at East Ruther- Bord, N.J. B Robinson scored 23 points and Ifttad 10 rebounds for the 17th- H'anked Middies — hut Johnny Daw- Buns had 28 points and seven te- L 1 Bxrunds and Mark Alarie added 18 K"/ Bajoints for the Blue Devils. Duke aised its record to 36-2, stretched its inning streak to 20 games and left avy’s final record at 30-5. Then the Jayhawks, 35-3, playing In their own back yard, rode Danny planning’s 22 points and Greg Dreil- Ing’s 19 past unranked North Caro lina State.in the Midwest Regional fi- al. Charles Shackleford and Chris Washburn had 20 apiece for Slate, hich wound up 21-13. sail n The Duke-Kansas semifinal will Be a rematch of the final in the Big nan Ami ^PP* e Ni l , a preseason tournament keofEa !* n which the Blue Devils beat the in critfi J^hawks 92-86. the intoB l h e other NCAA semifinal mat- jbytdjjBhup at Dallas' Reunion Arena, de- T:ided by games on Saturday, sev enth-ranked West champion 1986 National Collegiate Division I Men’s BASKETBALL CHAMPIOHSHIP West Regional Championship Saturday, March 22 at Houston Louisville 84, Auburn 76 Southeast Regional Championship Saturday, March 22 at Atlanta Louisiana State 59, Kentucky 57 East Regional Championship Sunday, March 23 at East Rutherford, N.J. Duke 7 1, Navy 50 Midwest Regional Championship Sunday, March 23 at Kansas City, Mo. Kansas 75, North Carolina St. 67 The Final Four At Reunion Arena, Dallas Semifinals Saturday, March 29 Duke, 36-2, vs. Kansas, 35-3, 3:30 or 6 p.m. Louisiana St., 26-11, vs. Louisville, 30-7, 3:30 or 6 p.m. Championship Monday, March 31 Semifinal winners usual co:- lent of £ Chakuri mmintni' the at :-hourr.' ist beta ■r media d Sundt' >f the [i' ents are: Louisville, an 84-76 winner over un- j^anked Auburn, will face unranked Louisiana State, which upset third- ranked Kentucky 59-57 for the Southeast title. The national championship will be decided Monday night, March 31. Kansas outscored the Wolfpack 25-10 down the stretch in the Kemper Arena at Kansas City, Mo. Manning personally outscored State 8-1 in a run during which Kansas went from 57-52 down to 62-58 up. Then Dreiling put in a follow shot that gave the Jayhawks a 64-58 edge w ith 4:40 remaining. “I’m so happy for Greg, that we needed him in such a big game and he played great,” Kansas Coach Larry Brown said. Dawkins hit only four of 15 shots in the first half, then canned his first seven in the second half as Duke kept Navy from getting closer than 10 points. Louisville Coach Denny Crum, celebrating the 30-7 Cardinals’ trip — his sixth —to the Final Four, said, “We’ve had to work very hard to get to this point. We played a tough schedule but now it’s paid off for us. Our kids know not to get too excited yet. They know they’ve got two more games to win.” Freshman center Pervis Ellison got them within two wins of a na tional championship by doing the job on both ends of the court in the closing minutes against Auburn. His two blocks of Chuck Person shots, a three-point play and a pair of free throws enabled Louisville to hold off the Tigers. Herbert Crook scored 20 points for the Cardinals. Person had a game-high 23 and was named the West Regional’s Most Valuable Player. Coach Dale Brown felt profound satisfaction at LSU’s upset of Ken tucky, which beat the Tigers three times in three earlier meetings this season. “I thought I did my best job of coaching and they gave their best on the floor,” Brown said. LSU held the Wildcats to two field goals in the last 5:50 —one an un contested layup with six seconds left. With Kentucky leading 51-47, Ricky Blanton made two consecutive layups to tie it with 4:34 to play. Don Redden’s jumper put the Tigers ahead again, the Wildcats tied it again on James Blackmon’s basket, then LSU took the lead for good with 2:31 to go on Blanton’s two free throws. Layups by Redden and Blanton around a pair of free throws by All- American Kenny Walker clinched the victory. Ags take final game from Coogs, 9-1 d and w or to Ml geom df s “uncoB- By TOM TAGL1ABUE Sports Writer Texas A&M whipped the 24th- I ranked Houston Cougars 9-1 Sun- Hday at Olsen Field behind the pitch- irked ling of Gary Geiger and the hitting of m-Uniw ! jeffSchow. lejartrf t Geiger scattered seven hits and ilahun® | struck out five batters, and Schow Chakurdi jwent 3-for-5, —— be pW j with a home Baseball forahu Jrun and two >vers sS (singles, scored two runs and drove in fronu^ trt musck was tram' [arch 1 insplant three runs. Sunday’s game gave the Aggies (19-14, 2-1) two-of-three wins against the Cougars: A&M was drubbed in the opening game Satur day 15-1, but bounced back behind the pitching of Dale Barry, who led the Ags to a 10-1 win in game two. A&M Head Coach Mark Johnson was pleased with the Ags’ wins. “We beat an outstanding Houston team and they’re a well-coached, I good-hitting ballclub,” Johnson said of the 24-9 Cougars. “They’re not an ; easy ballclub (to beat). It was a great win for us. I didn’t think we could hold them that well, hut I was sure tickled to death that we could.” Geiger (3-3) and Barry (4-0) both allowed only one run on seven hits Jeff Schow and both picked up their third com plete game of the year. A&M’s offense, which was so ane mic in game one, exploded for 29 runs and 23 hits in the final two games. UH, which came into the se ries with a team batting average of .333, collected only two runs on 14 hits. The Cougars scored in the top of the first inning when Geiger balked in the only UH run. The Aggies tied the ball game in the bottom of the first when Scott Livingstone belted a one-out double Gary Geiger off the left field fence to score Schow, who led off the inning with a single. Larry Coker, who dropped his re cord to 5-3, came in for starter Paul Kuzniar and retired the next two batters to end the Aggie rally. Both teams went scoreless until the sixth inning when senior first baseman Fred Gegen smacked his second homer of the season to put the Aggies ahead 2-1. Geiger kept the Coogs off the board with the help of his defense, including two double plays and two diving catches by Schow in left field. “I worked real hard concentrating on each pitch and being ready — thinking the ball’s going to be hit to me every pitch — and it gave me the extra step I needed to make those good plays,” Schow said. A&M exploded for four runs in the seventh on two-run homers by Schow and Mike Scanlin. Schow’s homer was his sixth of the season and came with Don Wren on board. Scanlin’s belt was his 12th of the year — a single-season high for the senior centerfielder. A&M added insurance runs in the eighth as Maury Martin and Schow collected RBI singles to finish the scoring barrage at 9-1. Houston Head Coach Roland Walton said his team went stale when the Aggies came to life. “We just all of the sudden went stale,” Walton said. “It wasn’t a must win, but a very important win, but our team has to face those kinds of situations early. They have to go out there knowing it’s tough — we need it bad.” A&M will play Bethel College of Minnesota in a single game today at 3 p.m. V Plitt ■ THEATRE GUIDE .. : Infqrmatiorr . ' ,:> 7' ' .. •?; 846-6714 / iCe# GONE HQ THU COMEDY WITHOUT BRAKES. PG-nl'gg) j KSS SPIDED OP THE WOMAN UUB Daily 7:30 9:45 HANNAH AND HER SISTERS 1^31 Daily 7:40 9:50 Daily 7:00 9:45 it mm A UNIVERSAL RELEASE Daily 9:30 0? y&> Daily 7:00 9:30 CONTACT LENSES $79°° $99°° $99°° pr.* - daily wear soft lenses pr.* - extended wear soft lenses pr.* - tinted soft lenses call 696-3754 FOR APPOINTMENT * EYE EXAM AND CARE KIT NOT INCLUDED OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D.,P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 SOUTH TEXAS AVE-SUITE 101D COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 77840 ■ffi 1 block South of Texas & University Dr. A NEW GENERATION. J» ’ »*> >**i. > Daily 6:00 7:45 tfiGHLAJy A basketful of cash is better than a garage full of 'stuff' Have a garage or yard sale this week - Call 845-2611 Texas begins own investigation into selling of tickets Associated Press DALLAS — The University of Texas has opened an in-house in vestigation and has notified the NCAA about allegations that football players sold complimen tary tickets to boosters at prices up to $600 per ticket, Athletic Di rector DeLoss Dodds said. In a copyright story, The Dal las Morning News reported Sun day that former players said head coach Fred Ak ers not only was aware of the widespread practice but also routinely cautioned play ers to be careful not to get the school in trou ble with the NCAA. “Several days ago we became aware that a Dallas Morning News reporter was interviewing some of our former athletes for the purpose of obtaining a story that might contain allegations of possible NCAA violations,” Dodds said in a prepared statement released Saturday. “We immediately began our own investigative process with outside counsel. We have notified representatives of the NCAA en forcement division of the allega tions of violations and have pledged them our full cooper ation,” Dodds said. The News, during a two- month investigation, interviewed 28 former Longhorn football players whose Texas careers spanned a period from 1978 to 1986. According to the report, 27 ex players said ticket-selling is a UT football tradition, one that con tinues despite the knowledge of those involved that it is a violation of NCAA rules. “I’m not aware of this,” Akers said Friday in his Austin office. “But you don’t have to make any mistake about it — I can tell you where it’s going to be going from here on. It will be turned in (to the NCAA). Yes, I’m surprised.’ Citing policy, David S. Bt i st, the director of enforcement for the NCAA, would neither con firm nor deny there is an inquiry. Of the 28 players interviewed by The News, 24 said they regu larly sold their complimentary game tickets in what many play ers said is the best way for a UT student-athlete on scholarship to get pocket money. Some players said they netted as much as $4,()()() a year selling their tickets. Others said they made that much just on tickets for the a n n ua 1 Texas-OU game played in Dallas. “We beat the NCAA." said Tony Degrate, a standout de fensive tackle from 1982 to 1 984 and the winner of the 1984 Vince Lombardi Award as the nation's outstanding college lineman. NCAA regulations allow each player to receive four compli mentary tickets per game, presu mably for relatives and friends Although student-athletes used to be able to sell their complimen tary tickets for face value, the NCAA ruled in 1980 that they may not sell them at any price. Fourteen of the players inter viewed recalled that Akers always warned the players to be careful when they sold their tickets — a statement Akers firmly denies. “Well, I don’t know who said that — and I don’t really care — that is not true,” said Akers. “They all heard the message, and that was, ‘You are not to sell your tickets.’ “And I cautioned them ahom being careful, who you talk to ‘Don’t be trypped by anybody into enticing you to sell tickets. And you don’t know who you’re talking to — a gambler or anyone else.’ But the message was: ‘You’re not to sell them (tickets). Nash voted SW 1 Coach of the Ye' Texas A&M Head Swimming Coach Mel Nash was voted South west Conference Coach of the Year for the second time in Five years by league coaches after leading the men swimmer’s to a ————— fourth-place Swimming finish in the SWC Championships a week ago. After completing his eligibility in 1977, Nash stayed on at Indiana University as an assistant coach. The next season he was in Texas directing Texas-Arlington. After two years there, Nash moved ; the head job at A&M. Nash is credited with turn around the flailing A&M progran In 1982, his third season with Aggies, Nash was named !- Coach of the Year. In addition, he recruited the gies’ first All-American, < O’Neil, since 1957, he led women to an llth-place finish tionally last season, and has had Aggie teams ranked in the Top the past three seasons. na- his it Siciliana Pizza it NapoSetana Pizza it Sandwiches it Stromboli (FREE DELIVERY 846-0379 Hours: Sun-Thurs I 1 a.m.-2 a.m. W Sat & Sun 1 I a.m.-3 a.m. 405 W. University at Northgate LARGE THIN CRUST PIZZA WITH ONE TOPPING only With this coupon. One coupon per person.