The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 04, 1986, Image 8

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Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, June 4, 1986
Answers unclear in Ags’ struggle
By Ken Sury
Sports Editor
Texas A&M Men’s Golf Coach
Bob Ellis said it’s hard for him to
pinpoint the reason the Aggies
failed make the top 20 cut last week
end at the NCAA championship, but
the results are "■™——
the same. Men’s Golf
“T he last two
years (at NCAAs) we came up dry,”
Ellis said. “And that’s not what we’re
after. We didn’t play well as a team.”
A&M finished tied for 23rd with
Missouri in the team standings with
a 901. Only Jorge Coghlan of the
Aggies survived the 221 cut in the
third round with a 220.
Maggert makes U.S. Open
Texas A&M senior Jeff Mag
gert qualified for the U.S. Open
Monday as he fired a 138 in a
two-day sectional tournament at
the Houston Country Club.
Maggert shot a 70 in the first
round and a 68 Monday to lead a
field of five sectional qualifiers
for the U.S. Open.
Maggert was a third-team All-
America this year and was invited
to the NCAA Championships on
an individual basis.
f ive individuals qualify for the
Open in each of 10 sectional tour
naments held throughout the na
tion, Texas A&M Men’s Coif
Coach Bob Ellis said. Approxi
mately 5,500 golfers vie for a U.S.
Open berth each year.
fluenced the performance
team," Ellis saicl. I
hi
"But it also could be thati:|
too much pressure on thetf
These guys worked treme. ,
hard for the tournament ’3EIRUT,
workouts throughout deat lS | eill niilit
and finals week and played'. in i t i and c
of stroke play in a pre-toumaj fac tion
hour hattl
1 hey just wanted itsobacl [
there’s enough pressure on ^ re p,
ready/’ ■ anc l
A&M’s Neil Hickerson (223), Jeff
Maggert (224), Roy Mackenzie (233)
and Flint Nelson (241) were elimi
nated from the competition.
tied for 67th place at 298 with six
other individuals.
Coghlan shot a 78 in the final
round and finished the tournament
“We played well individually at
times,” Ellis said. “But we couldn’t
get four players to play well at the
same time.”
Ellis said he feels his team is men
tally tough enough to compete at the
NCAA level, but thinks two factors
in particular led to their struggle at
NCAAs.
“I think there was an undercur
rent created by a player (All Ameri
can Paul Mayo) who was removed
from the team which could have in-
■
ureters SIIU .^
instead id dwelling on thepiMp 111
although A&M will lose four jhdng a*
including Maggert and Co; nps
lis has a positive attitude ab.U was ^ ^
year. (rut m wee
lank cann
“We’ve got a good nud.ljdwgs abl;
Neil, Rov and Flint, andbik huddled
talent coming in,” Ellis saic n leaked sti
sometimes with young tears^atic weapt
siasin and desire tan do Polite said
with tire lack of experience jj 119 won
Mexicans exult over team’s 2-1 winom
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican soccer fans
flocked to Aztec Stadium to support their na
tional team’s World Cup debut Tuesday, then
celebrated the 2-1 victory over Belgium by danc
ing, singing and partying in the streets.
Before a crowd of 110,000, which rocked the
massive stadium every time the Mexicans did
something positive, Fernando Quirante and na
tional soccer hero Hugo Sanchez scored goals.
Mexico then held off the Belgians, who got a
goal by Erwin Vandenbergh late in the First half
but could not produce anything more.
When the game ended, the street parties be
gan. Within minutes of the conclusion, about 400
people had flocked to the Angel of Indepen
dence landmark to shout “Mex-i-co, Mex-i-co,”
and “Canamos (We won!).” Others who were
headed to the monument’s steps to cheer, sound
trumpets, wave flags and generally express their
joy at the victory called on those passing by to
join in the celebration.
Cars beeped their horns to the same rhythm as
the cheers. By nightfall, thousands more were
expected to jam the streets, blocking traffic with
their reveling.
Even in prisons here, inmates have been pro
vided with color televisions to watch the games,
the government said Tuesday.
At the game itself, tens of thousands of Mexi
cans dressed in green, red and white — some
with their faces painted in the Mexican national
colors — created a constant din. The fans waved
flags, chanted, and one banner high in the inex
pensive seats proclaimed “Ayer Rationes Hoy
Campeones” — “Yesterday Little Mice, Today
Champions.” A Mexican sports writer once re
ferred to the Mexican soccer team as “little
A lone Belgian flag was draped over the rail
ing of the third tier of the stadium and, on the
opposite side of the field, a small group of Bel
gians displayed a Flemish flag—a black lion on a
yellow field.
The fans whistled and yelled derisively when
Belgian players appeared on the field, which was
wet from a morning rain that stopped an hour
before kickoff.
When the host team took the field, it was met
with a thunderous ovation. That roar grew even
louder when Quirante, a defender who moved
up to attack, headed home a free kick by captain
Tomas Boy at 23 minutes.
VIOSCOW
Then Sanchez, the star striker, putinalsad l ues
after Bov's cornet kick was headed tohi her husba
ier Aguirre. ing she w
Sanchez, who pla\' l<u sp.imdi p, ,-;ht:train to
Real Madrid, then turned a cartwheel it to throi
bration. etleratth
The Belgians came back on Vandc She said si
goal late in the First hall but never cameifflBw in a f
tying the score. ich she anc
At Guadalajara, Northern Ireland e confined i
Algeria 1-1, while Portugal defeated [ baggage !
Monterrey 1-0. :rsi\mont
‘1 hope the
I he Irish look .111 r.11 I\ lead whei told rcpi
Whiteside’s free ki< k went oil .1 (Im irtEnent. “1
Algerian wall .md into the net. But iLtdand ton
dane tied it on a free kick in the SStbeiy the li
when he beat diving goalie Ihit Jemiinjim: let me
the left. drs. Bonne
“We had an early goal that gave use itment ancl
and we had two m<>1 e t leal < fiances,"B ited Stales
ham, Northern Ireland’s coach, said.“KttWest Eure
taken advantage of those chances, Algerit h
have been dead and buried.”
But the Irish appeared to tire lateintkH
t trolled
and Algeria controlled the final 25 minute:
bare
Curry offers tuneup fight to Leonard Mb
FORT WORTH (AP) —
Donald Curry says he definitely
wants Sugar Ray Leonard.
And Curry, the undisputed wel
terweight champion, is offering him
self as a “tuneup” opponent for
Leonard before his anticipated
comeback fight against Marvelous
Marvin Hagler.
“Hey, I would love if,” Fort
Worth’s
On May 1 Leonard announced he
was making himself available for a
one-shot comeback against Hagler,
the undisputed middleweight cham-
pion. Leonard is still awaiting Hagl-
er’s decision.
man of Fort Worth through Oct. 3 1.
“As far as managers, I’m still honor
ing my contract with Mr. Gorman
until the day it expires.”
of his comeback bid. Hisrt
33-1 with 24 KOs.
DOStC
Curry
said Monday. “I
think he should
come back and fight
Boxing
me anyway. I
got all the titles that he retired with,
and I won. The ones he had. Why
don’t he come back and get them?
“I feel like he should come back
and prove himself. I feel that if he
beats me, people will give him a lot
better chance with Marvin. If he can
beat me, then he’s back. That’s
looking at it on his part. I think I
would win.”
Leonard’s announcement
prompted Curry to end the brief
business relationship he had devel
oped with attorney Mike Trainer of
Bethesda, Md. Trainer has served as
Leonard’s business adviser since he
turned professional following his
gold-medal-winning performance at
the 1976 Montreal Olympics.
Leonard became undisputed wel
terweight champion on Sept. 16,
1981, when he scored a 14th-round
knockout against Thomas Hearns.
In April, Curry struck a verbal
agreement with Trainer to become
his business manager.
Leonard retired with his titles in
tact on Nov. 9, 1982, after having
undergone surgery to repair a de
tached retina in his left eye in May of
that year. But Leonard returned to
the ring on May 11, 1984, when he
scored a lackluster ninth-round vic
tory against journeyman Kevin
Howard.
“But with Mike, I thought it was a
conflict of interest if Ray was coming
back,” said Curry, who remains un
der contract to manager David Gor-
The ring rust showed and How
ard knocked Leonard down for the
first time in his career. That same
night, Leonard announced the end
WASHP
Now at age 30, Leonard overning
back into the picture. ervice ord
uesday t
“He said he had thetuneoP e nds mor
with Kevin Howard,” Cti!Tp™ er P os
“but Kevin didn’t give himt u ' . lo ern
centive to really go and worti 11 a( ldi(i
1 would give him that incentr'8 internal
got his titles. I’ll fight him Hr roa ' ( * uies
12 rounds, 15 rounds ant * '
matter to me.” p board 1
seted a 1
Curry became the first ^ , ' l< 11
puled 147-pound champio' ' a! j ei
t 111 / -ywastarni
Leonard when he scored a®
round knockout against Milt John R.
Crory last Dec. 6. That atoard’s cha
Wor ld Boxing Council belt 0 indicatio
World Boxing Associationiolved in a
ternational Boxing Federal#>Ver. We ■
Curry had already c’aptured ny corrupt
Peter E.
Celtics
(continued from page 7)
narrow lead because of a 12-7 ad
vantage in offensive rebounds and a
9-3 margin in turnovers that re
sulted in 13 additional shots and a
14-0 margin in scoring after turn
overs.
The Celtics made 58 percent of
their shots for the game, making 45
of 78, while Houston made 43 of 99
for 43 percent. Houston finished
with a 25-11 advantage in offensive
rebounding and a 16-9 edge in turn
overs.
The Celtics, who routed Houston
twice in Boston with third-quarter
blitzes and nearly did it again in
Came 3 with a 17-3 run at the start
of the second half, continued that
pattern Tuesday.
Boston outscored the Rockets 19-
10 in the first IV2 minutes of the
third quarter for an 82-74 lead, the
largest of the game for either team.
But Houston came back with
seven consecutive points and trailed
; p<
the
The Rockets’ 23 points was the first
time in the series that had scored
more than 20 in the third quarter.
rare outside basket by Me
jumpers bv Reid and Bird,
airman
aded gui
on will
50 millio
any whose
Itant was 1
After Houston led 10-5, McHale
scored 10 of his 13 first-quarter
points during a 21-11 streak that
gave Boston a 26-21 advantage with
3:25 left.
The Rockets then scored the next
seven points, regaining the lead
when Lewis Lloyd grabbed an offen
sive rebound and hit a five-footer. A
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NAGLE
402 Nagle behind Skaggs
eight points apiece in thepey;The rea
the score tied 30-30 at the enrobe was
quarter. )e iircums
Neither team led by nwilection,
three points in the second4me after
until Sampson got two cotfred the e
three-point plays for a 5(mat|recomr
ton lead with 5:10 to go,
went on to score 10 points^ cx ^
than two minutes but a jit , '.I
Parish with one second leftt, ,
margin to 64-63 at halftime
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