Wednesday, June 4, 1986AThe Battalion/Page 7 SO torn Sports i job isoffi ers whom; nd worked ii now are indie said • undersia rffectsafat. lard to mi. if vou can ven’t had a; or seven we rkers, he s ing Odesi: onstructio: il fields,lie. seeing a ' Will the las lease turn ded, toldL rat time an Ags hope to shine as NCAAs begin today dro >hn McAht ei ally get aggravate! mi econon id, as "ten ,■ througl ordeddOt of morel < robberies m S5Ufor ■ases have assaults, n; aggtae a red witli I 156 compate ind autotlif ,des heldsta nty Sherill icrease inrt ) to 61M i to the same i problems ibute it toan , “Peopled 1 . The eco: e going. It’sj me time.' on, spoke® e Departme ving calls tl tiring abo: ide rate. >f suicides mtly, and' nedia must effects of« of 1929 s i ■t. gure thattltl ipie in .'It em selves," k[ a Hers, “Win: in Midlani i . rve. These; H ed away." By Ken Sury Sports Editor fehe Southwest Conference is ex- ected to shine at the 65th Annual JCAA Outdoor Track and Field lhatnpionshijjs which begin today 11ndianapolis, and Texas A&M will clanking for its own place in the un. . Truck and Field News picked . cj u t h e r n dlethodist to TTOCK dn the meet and Field dth as many as mm—mm—mm— our other SWC schools finishing in he top 10, but the Aggies will have ta do it without freshman Randy lames putting the shot. Barnes, who has the world’s best aut at 71 feet, 9'/j inches this year, Irfjipped from the shot put competi- ion Monday night. Barnes injured iis knuckle on his throwing hand at he Mt. San Antonio Relays in Cali- drnia in late April and aggravated it n the SWC Outdoor Champion- hips in mid-May. Barnes underwent laser treat- nents two weeks ago, but couldn’t hrow Monday, so A&M assistant oach Ted Nelson said they decided o pull (aut cal today’s qualifying. With Barnes, the odds-on favor- te, absent from the shot-put compe- Barnes drops from shot put RandyBarnes tition, SMU’s Lars Nilsen (67-9'/.2) has a chance at the NCAA crown. But he is recovering from a cut on his right thumb and wdll face strong competition from Minnesota’s Ron Backes, the NCAA indoor champion at 68-1 l'/i, Brigham Young’s Soren Tallehm (64-7 : '/») and Louisiana Tech’s Steve Cate (65-8'A). While Barnes’ injury doesn’t af fect his discus throwing, his personal best of 200-9, is short of the top throws by contenders Vesteinn Hafskenisson of Alabama (209-11), Ed Wade of Oklahoma (205-7) and Bernard Kneissler (202-11) for the discus championship. The Aggies have two athletes in the long jump competition. Junior transfer Ian James set a school and Canadian national record as he leaped 26-8 : '/i at the Texas A&M Re lays in April. Sophomore Chris Walker's best this year is a 26-l : '/t which he set at the College Station Relays. The top jump this year is Arkan sas senior Mike Davis’ wind-aided 27-3'/i, but has been inconsistent in big meets. Others with a good shot at winning the event are Texas South ern’s Paul Emordi and UCLA’s Mike Powell (26-11%) and NCAA indoor winner Kennv Harrison of Kansas State (26-9%).' A&M’s entry in the triple jump is senior Francisco Olivares, who jumped to a school and Mexican re- corcl 54-0‘/i at the Texas A&M Re lays. But his jump is well short of this year’s best marks with Emordi’s wind-aided 56-9'/a, and Houston’s Frank Rutherford went 54-9 to win the indoor title. In the 400-meter intermediate hurdles, Craig Calk will represent A&M with a toj) time of 50.40 sec onds. But Iowa State junior Danny Harris is expected to win his third consecutive NCAA title. He is cur rently the world’s No. 2-ranked 400 intermediate hurdler with a top time of 47.63. The Aggies' strength this year has been in its freshman class, wnich has proved profitable in the sprints and relays. Floyd Heard and Stanley Kerr earned NCAA berths in both the 100-and 200-meter dashes. Heard’s best is 10.12 in the 100 and 20.10 in the 200, while Kerr’s tops are a 10.14 and 20.25. But SMU also has a fleet-footed freshman in Roy “Robot” Martin. Martin owns a 9.97 and 19.86 in the windy SWC Championships. Other strong contenders incluae Missis sippi State’s Lorenzo Daniel, Olym pic silver medalist Sam Graddy of Tennessee and Chidi Imoh of Mis souri. Texas Christian also has a con tender is Roscoe Tatum, who ran a 10.08 and 20.60 at the SWC Cham pionships. Francisco Olivares Heard’s, Kerr’s, Martin’s and Ta tum’s bests were all set at the SWC Championships. In the 400-meter dash, Arkansas is hoping for a first-place finish by Roddie “Comet” Haley, who has twice won the event at the SWC Championships. But Washington State senior Gabriel Tiacoh’s 44.32 is tops in the world this year, while Ha ley’s time is third. A&M is caught in the middle of an SWC-laden field in the relays. In the 400 relay, TCU is expected to be the team to beat as the foursome of Ta tum, Andrew Smith, Leroy Reid and Greg Scholars have the country’s top time of 38.97. Several squads could act as spoil ers in the event, including the A&M squad of Lawrence Felton, Heard, Archie Roberts and Kerr which owns a 39.28 tittle along with SMU. Baylor set a meet record of 3:00.84 last year in the 1,600 relay with senior Willie Caldwell as anchor. This year Raymond Pierre replaced Caldwell and led the team to a 3:01.45 to lead the nation. SMU ran a 3:01.07 with Martin as anchor, but was disqualified for a lane violation. TCU has the second- best time in the country with a 3:02.74. The Aggies, with the squad of Kendric Wesley, Gary Pervis, Matt Washington and Maurice Holt, have a school-best time of 3:04.51. A&M didn’t qualify anyone in the distance events, but came close as freshman Matt Dunn missed the 800-meter run by less than one sec- ohd, and while Calvin Gaziano set a school mark with a time of 3 min utes, 44.29 seconds, it was shy of the 3:42.54 needed to qualify. Bird’s 3-point shot gives Boston 3-1 advantage HOUSTON (AP) — Larry Bird jot the go-ahead basket with a three- Doint bomb, then the Boston de- ense took over Tuesday night, puli ng the Celtics within one victory of heir I6th NBA title. The Celtics took a 3-1 lead in the )est-of-seven NBA championship ieries with a “ 106-103 victory NBA Finals Tuesday night ^^—mmmmm^m—m iespite scoring only two points after lird’s three-pointer gave them a 04-101 lead with 2:26 left. Bill Walton scored the final two joints of the game with 1:39 left af- er an offensive rebound. Walton had replaced a worn-out lobert Parish at center down the stretch. Parish had come back from an eight-point, 3-for-I5 shooting performance in Boston’s Game 3 de feat to score 22 points on 10-for-15 shooting Tuesday night. “Robert played a great game all the way through but he got real tired at the end,” Walton said. “I was very surprised to get the call, but I was re ads' and it sure feels great. It’s a tre mendous feeling.” Houston’s only points in the final four minutes came on a rebound basket by Rodney McCray. It made the score 104-103 after Bird’s bomb gave Boston the lead for good. “Defense did the job,” Boston Coach K.C. Jones said. “They’ve got the two franchises (Akeem Olajuwon and Ralph Sampson) and we denied them a couple of shots and got some blocks. Their inside game was so tough we had to take them out of it.” Bird scored only seven of his 21 points after halftime, but none were bigger than his three-pointer, which provided the 19th and final lead change of a game that was close throughout. “It wasn’t a designed play,” Bird said. “It was just what happened out there. We moved the ball around and it swung around to me. The shot dock was running down and I had to shoot it.” Steals by Danny Ainge and Kevin McHale in the final minute pre served the slim Boston margin. “Bird hit a big three-pointer at the end to give us the cushion we needed and our defense at the end of the game got us the steals,” Wal ton said. Houston, facing a 3-1 deficit that no team has ever overcome in the fi nals, still has not given up hope. One game will be played in Houston Thursday night, with the last two scheduled for Boston Garden where the Celtics have won 40 consecutive games. “In 1981, I had to hear the other team cheer through the wall, ‘We’re No. 1,’ ” said Robert Reid, referring to the Rockets’ 4-2 defeat to the Cel tics in their only previous meeting in the finals five years ago, when the last game was played in Houston. “That’s not going to happen Thurs day night. Nobody has given up any thing yet. If there’s a miracle of a chance, if we have a life vest, we’re still afloat.” Boston’s Dennis Johnson also fin ished with 22 points while McHale had 19. Sampson had 25 points, Ola juwon 20 points and 14 rebounds and Reid 19 points for Houston. The fourth quarter was incredibly close, even closer than the game as a whole, which had 19 lead changes and 13 ties. The final period started with the Celtics holding a one-point lead and it wasn’t until Bird’s three- pointer that either team led by more than two points. There were six lead changes in the first three minutes of the final quarter alone. While Houston was taking advan tage of Boston turnovers in the first half, the Celtics stayed close by hit ting 13 of 16 second-period shots. At the same time, the Rockets got 31 field-goal attempts but made only 14. Houston received 21 points in the first half from Ralph Sampson but led by only one point at halftime as the Celtics hit 63.4 percent of their shots. 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