Tuesday, June 10, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9 Arizona rips slorida State or CWS title TANK M C NAMARA® by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds GlPT FOR A Z£RiOU£> 5PDRTS fAM. A tv. Me cam watcia tv im TM& &Po\ueR. Me.'^ GOTTMO. oMe- ie> PC?R WAA6K) OPF MiG SACK. POEG ME |4AV£ OtOe ME CAM ATTACH TD TME LAWM MO^VER ^ ■AHA, Neb. (AP) — Mike Sen- arid Gar Millay hit two-run hom- ; in the sixth inning and Gary Alex- der pitched a seven-hitter as Arizo- def eated Florida State 10-2 f or the JAA College World Series title tnday night. It was the third national title for : filth-ranked Wildcats, 49-19 on : year. It was the second trip to the als for the top-ranked Seminoles, 0 ended 61-13. Florida State lost [ to Southern Cal in a 15-inning impionship game in 1970. Alexander, 8-2, lost his shutout l in the ninth when Luis Alicea led with a triple and Bien Figueroa gled him home. Ed Fulton singled {iieroa with the second run before jxander f inished off his third com- te game of the year. Kerr Th< re has not been a complete me shutout in the CWS title game ce Jim Withers of Southern Cal inked Oklahoma State 1 -0 in 1961. Arizona started its title march by iring unearned runs in the fourth filth for a 2-0 lead heading into 1? big sixth inning. ■Flotida State starter Mike Loynd, gave up a leadoff double to iip Hale in the sixth and left the me for Richie Lewis, who had won a and saved two for the Seminoles the tournament. Lewis gave up the first two-run met to Senne, his 1 1th of the year jjj sei mid of the CWS. Todd Traf- i walked and one out later Millay his ninth homer of the year for a ■ Felton ) lead. , The Wildcats added three more in : seventh on five hits, including _ a il singles by Trafton and Millay |i| Ad Tommy Hinzo’s steal of home. It IQk Millay's third hit of the game. pal, iaje're talkinjg Aeo/r A NAAN) WlHO ; 3 &6EU MOWlMG? 0OTM OUR MElGHgOFcG' VARPS TMEfeE AMP MAGMT kEA France, Soviet Union move to 2nd round of World Cup MEXICO CITY (AP) — European powers France and the Soviet Union pitched shutouts Monday to secure places in the second round of the World Cup soccer championship. The Soviets clinched first place in Croup C w ith a 2-0 victory over Cana da in Irapuato. France, the European champion, beat Hungary 3-0 at Leon. Previously, Brazil and Denmark had made the second portion of the 24-team tournament. While the Soviets awmit a third- place team from either Croup A, B or F for a game Sunday in Leon, the French will have a one-week respite before facing the runner-up in Croup A in Mexico City on June 17. That could be either Italy or Argenti na, the winners of the last two Cups. Hungary’s only chance to move on would be as a third-place team — four of them advance — but its -7 goal differential just about precludes that. The Soviets f ielded a team of nine second-stringers against Canada, f eeling it already was assured of mov ing on. The move nearly backfired as the plucky Canadians kept things scoreless for 57 minutes. Tony Waiters, coach of Team Canada, picked the Soviets to make the semifinals, at least. “They have to be taken very se riously and I think they’ll reach the last four,” Waiters predicted. France went up 1-0 w ; hen Yannick Stopyra headed in a long centering pass by William Ayache. The Hunga rians tried to open it up in the second half, but that is France’s game. The French scored when Jean Tigana converted a superb give-and-go with Dominique Rocheteau, and again when Rocheteau converted Michel Platini’s pass. Tournament organizers said attendance at World Cup matches was running about 57 percent of sta dium capacity, with the Latin Amer ican and Spanish teams the biggest draws. FIFA suspended five players Monday resulting from poor conduct during first round competition. The British captain was banned for two games after throwing a ball at the referee in Saturday’s scoreless tie against Morocco. Uraguay’s Bossio w'as suspended from his team’s next match against Scotland after being ejected for a foul in Sunday’s 6-1 loss to Denmark. Iraqi midfielders Basil Corgis and Haris Mohammed were suspended for two matches for “insulting the re feree” during and after a rough game against Belgium on Sunday. Hit the hardest w'as Samir Shaker, an Iraqi defender, who was “sus pended from all FIFA activities until further notice” because he “spat at the referee” following the Iraq- Belgium match. IQiqtqtqiMtqiqtqiqiqlaiqtqiqiqiqiqi FOH PLANT SALE SATURDAY. JUNE 14. 1986 10 AM - 2 PM FLORICULTURE GREENHOUSE Great prices. GREAT plants! 71 i l I* BiqiqtqttiPtQmiqlqiqiqiqtqiQiqiqtgi •ert Reid: BA final) ain use)| lion ford eliminate! ■ by the l id 5 Ags sign with baseball clubs By Tom Tagliabue Sports Writer Texas A&M left-handed pitcher M - s jss Kwan and All-Southwest Gon- ,,, rente performers Dale Barry and . ikeBcanlin, who were drafted one |U t | ie iek ago in the collegiate baseball )|n aft, have signed contracts with ma- the nett that, too. r league clubs. Swan, who appeared in only 10 imes this season and did not make e A&M traveling squad, was the st Aggie picked in this year’s draft, van, w'ho was 1-3 with a 5.14 ERA, ts selected in the 10th round by the n Francisco Giants. Barry, who was named to the All- turnament team at the NCAA uth II Regional in Tallahassee, r, was the ace of the Aggies’ pitch- 5stiff this year with an 11-1 record d a 2.03 ERA. Barry was drafted by the Balti- ore Orioles in the 1 1th round. Bar- signed late last week with the ioles and reported to Florida for e week of training before being ligncd to the Orioles’ farm system. B^rry, who was voted the C.E. it” Olsen Outstanding Pitcher by i teammates, started 13 games, npleted nine and earned two shut- ts. He struck out 87 batters in 1 15 lings of work. Centerfielder Scanlin, who almost wrote the entire A&M record book, is draf ted in the 15th round by the :xas Rangers and signed late last :ek. Scanlin was drafted in the 26th and in 1985 by the Seattle Marin- >, but opted to stay at A&M for other year. During his senior campaign, Scan- broke 13 school records including ist games (207), runs (170), runs tted in (170), home runs (43), total ses|425) and stolen bases (41) in a He hit .327 this season with 20 homers, 65 RBI and 20 stolen bases. It was the first time in A&M history anyone has had 20 home runs and stolen bases in a season. Scanlin was also voted co-winner of the Marion Pugh Most Valuable Player Award along with shortstop Ever Magallanes by his teammates. Scanlin reported to Daytona Beach, Fla., Monday for rookie camp, but will return to A&M in the fall to continue working on his phy sical education degree. Three other current Aggies were drafted in the late rounds of the draft, but are expected to return to defend the SWC title they won in 1986. Sophomore third baseman Scott Livingstone was drafted by the New York Yankees, while juniors Darryl Fry and Magallanes were drafted by the New York Mets. Four Aggie recruits have yet to decide whether to go pro or accept the scholarship offered them. A&M’s top recruit, outfielder Carl Sullivan of Brenham, was a second- round draft pick by the Chicago White Sox. Shortstop Chuck Knoblauch of Houston Bellaire, pitcher Randy Pryor of Pearland and catcher Steve Piskor of Plano also were drafted out of high school. Baseball Notes — The Bryan/Col lege Station Cardinals, an amateur baseball team, are back for another season and will bring an 0-2 record into Wednesday’s home opener against the New Ulm Firemen at 8 p.m. at Travis Park in Bryan. The Cardinals feature A&M pitchers David Jones and Todd Over- bergen as well as former Aggie stars, Fred Gegen and Kelly Keahey. Ticket prices are $2 for adults and $1 for students. Double Tree leaves you room to grow” 1901 W. Huieemm - OH, 2818 Photo by Tom Ownbey A&M pitcher Russ Swan, above, pitcher Dale Barry and centerfielder Mike Scanlin recently signed baseball contracts. ceep jo'sas vife, Send lotos The haircut you want is the haircut you get. At Supercuts, wdve been trained to cut hair perfectly So no matter how you like your hair cut, you're going to get the cut you like. Every time. We guarantee it, or your has helped make us America's most popular haircutters. 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