The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 15, 1986, Image 6

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Page 6/The Battalion/Tuesday, July 15, 1986
Sports
A&M’s Kerr grabs
200 in dual meet
BUCHAREST, Romania —
Texas A&M freshman Stanley
Kerr won the 200-meter dash in
20.90 seconds Sunday on the fi
nal day of a dual meet between
junior (19 years and under) teams
from the United States and Ro
mania.
A&M signee Derrick Florence
won the 100 Saturday with a time
of 10.34 to beat teammate Mi
chael Marsh of Inglewood, Ca.,
who ran a 10.58.
Kerr and Florence ran legs on
the U.S. 400 relay team, which
posted a 39.65 en route to its
first-place finish Saturday.
Kerr did not run the 100, nor
Florence the 200, as the U.S.
team rotates its sprint corps at
each competition.
On the first stop of the team’s
three-location tour, Kerr won the
100, and teamed with Florence to
aid the 400 relay squad to victory,
at Winter Park, Fla., in the Pan
American Junior Track and Field
Championships J uly 5.
The U.S. team will compete at
the inaugural World Junior
Championships in Athens,
Greece, Wednesday through
Sunday.
Ag golfer places 2nd
LUFKIN (AP) — Texas A&M
junior Neil Hickerson staged a
comeback, but fell short as Okla
homa State’s Brian Watts cap
tured the 1986 Trans-Mississippi
golf championship 5-up Sunday.
Watts, the current Big Eight
Conference champion, fired
eight pars and a bogey on the first
nine for a 2-up advantage, then
widened the gap to five after 18
holes'of play.
Hickerson, a native of Belton,
made a gallant comeback by win
ning the 23rd, 24th, and 26th
holes to cut his deficit to 2. But
Watts stormed back with three
birdies and two pars to win four
of the next five holes and the title.
Watts, selected as a First team
collegiate All-America this
spring, was even par for the day.
For the week. Watts had only
nine bogeys, didn’t have one in
his quarterfinal or semifinal
match and was four-under with a
140 in qualifying, one stroke be
hind tournament medalist Grant
Waite, an Oklahoma University
A&M takes in paycheck
from Cotton proceeds
DALLAS (AP) — Texas A&M
earned $733,559 as its part of the
proceeds from the 1986 Cotton
Bowl Classic, officials announced
Saturday.
The other eight Southwest
Conference schools each were
paid $240,000, Cotton Bowl Ath
letic Association president Dan S.
Petty said.
A&M, the 1985 SWC cham
pion, and Auburn each received a
record $2.08 million from the
Jan. 1 game’s gross receipts, but
ill
both schools will share the income
with their respective conferences,
Petty said.
A&M defeated Auburn 36-f6
in the New Year’s Day contest.
The record payoffs brought
the total CBAA contributions to
intercollegiate athletics since
1937 to over $55 million. SWC
schools have gotten over $3 1 mil
lion.
Clemens, Gooden to start Game
prc
r
HOUSTON (AP) — The two
managers made it official: Roger
Clemens vs. Dwight Gooden in base
ball’s 57th All-Star Game Tuesday
night at the Astrodome.
That left American League Man
ager Dick Howser with just one
pitching question left to answer.
Where was Dennis “Oil Can’’ Boyd?
“That’s a tough one to field right
off the bat,” Howser said at a Mon
day morning news conference at
which he and his National League
counterpart, Whitey Herzog, an
nounced their starting lineups.
“We only selected eight pitchers. I
want to be very careful about this.
There is a guy in Boston who got left
out. He’s an outstanding pitcher.
But we couldn’t take everybody,”
Howser said.
The volatile Boyd returned to the
Boston Red Sox’s clubhouse Sunday
to apologize for leaving the team last
Thursday in a huff over not being
selected for the team. At 11-6, Boyd
was second only to teammate Clem
ens, 15-2, in victories for the Red
Sox.
“My teammates have accepted me
back, and I’ll be back out there pitch
ing my heart out for them again,”
said Boyd, who was suspended for
More All-Star Game preview sto
ries can be found on page 7.
three days and missed a pitching
turn Sunday because of his walkout.
Howser, ever the diplomat, said
he was sorry “to see how dismayed
he was, and I think that’s enough
said. I feel sorry about Oil Can. We
picked some extra people because
we thought we needed the bats . . .
but 1 do feel sorry for Boyd. I don’t
envy his situation at all.”
Howser said he would start Clem
ens despite the fact that Clemens
pitched nine innings on Saturday,
snapping a two-game losing streak.
Gooden, 10-4, has won two of his last
three and has not pitched since last
Wednesday.
“I saw Dwight throw against us in
spring. He’s in a class of his own out
there,” said Clemens, who will be ap
pearing in his First All-Star Game in
a town near where he grew up. “I
think I have the advantage being at
home.”
Howser said he would use Fed
Higuera of Milwaukee and Charlie
Hough of Texas after Clemens. “It
might just be those three,” Howser
said. Hough will he appearing in his
first All-Star Game at age 38.
Howser also announced a batting
order of center fielder Kirby Puck
ett, Minnesota; left fielder Rickey
Henderson, New York; third base-
man Wade Boggs, Boston; catcher
Lance Parrish, Detroit; first base-
man Wally Joyner, California; short
stop Cal Ripken, Baltimore; right
fielder Dave Winfield, New York;
second baseman Lou Whitaker, De
troit, and Clemens. Boggs is replac
ing Kansas City’s George Brett, who
was elected to start but has a sore
arm.
Herzog’s batting order was left
fielder Tony Gwynn, San Diego ®
ond baseman Rvne
cago; first baseman Keith HemBj vers j
dez. New York; catcher Gary CanH
New York; right fielder Dnn un
Strawberry, New York; third k®T l(: | 1 ^
man Mike Schmidt, Philadelp!^t ec i
c entei fielder Dale Murphy,AtlaiB o0 i ()
shortstop Ozzie Smith, St. Louis,iH| asl
Gooden.
1 lerzog said he might foiBfhe I
Gooden with either Fernando trim co
lenzuela of Los Angeles or M®1 off
Scott of Houston, but he hadnoijBson <
t ided for sure yet. He also thanifti,illy 1
the National League for alkjtvvr yer
him to take 10 pitchers. Hie im
'It wasn’t because I’d use lOptH-p^g
ers, ” Herzog said. “But thereariBu v
many who deserved to go. I rsH rrer
f eel bad for guys like Bob OjtH^ 0 i.
Jesse Orosco and Roger McDoM; •
(all from the Mets), and myownmH .' >
I odd Worrell. In the near futurtH’
would like to see the roster
panded to 30 (f rom 28) and malfH ns Si
mandatory to take 12 pitchers. v |iv e d
Although Gooden has beenitH, nls
mild slump, splitting his lastfouri
iJ r Li i u >W 1S r'
visions, Herzog said he chosei* terta
1985 C\ Young winner as the\H luc j e
starter because “he is the bestpiid®
in baseball. H It a
guided
eight y<
in acco
Goodwill Games
U.S. wrestlers win 3 individual golds, Soviets win all-around
ojiii/ec
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leg! ate
MOSCOW (AP) — American
wrestlers captured three gold med
als at the Goodwill Games Monday,
while Soviet gymnasts swept the
medals in all-around competition,
again shutting out a disappointing
American team.
John Smith, Dave Schultz and
Bruce Baumgartner each defeated a
Soviet opponent in their gold-medal
matches, boosting the American
medal count to 99, 34 gold.
But the Soviets took seven wres
tling golds Monday, widening their
lead in the medals race with a total of
145, 59 gold.
Smith defeated Khazen Isaev 6-3
in the 136-pound class, despite com
plaining of a bad call in the second
period when he scrambled out of
bounds.
“They have the home-court ad
vantage,” Smith said of the Soviets,
who are hosting the inaugural Good
will Games. “I accepted it and tried
not to let it get me down.”
Schultz and Baumgartner were
both gold medalists in the 1984
Olympics.
Schultz rallied from a 2-0 deficit
to down Adlan Varaev 4-2 in the
163-pound class. Baumgartner
scored the final point with just 22
seconds remaining, edging out Da
vid Gobedzhishvili in the 286-pound
match. The score ended in 4-4 and
Baumgartner won on criteria.
Americans Kevin Darkus, at
pounds, Andre Metzger at
pounds, and James Scherr at
pounds, all took silver medals.
In gymnastics, held before just
3,000 people in the cavernous Olym
pic Stadium Hall the Soviets swept
the medals as Yuri Korolev won the
gold, Valentin Mogilny the silver
and Vladimir Artemov the bronze.
The top American Finisher, Charles
Lake, was seventh.
“We were all a bit disappointed,”
said Bart Conner, a member of the
gold-medal American team at the
Los Angeles Olympics and a com
mentator here for Turner Broad
casting System. “Unfortunately we
got of f to a terrible start yesterday.”
But other gymnasts have to
plained about equipment here,p
ticularly the mats.
“A lot of the athlethes havefo:
thev (the mats) are slipping
them,” Conner said.
126
150
198
At the end of the First day of gym
nastics competition Monday, the
United States was fifth in the six-na
tion event.
“We have a lot of work ahead of
us,” Lake, of Newhall, Calif., said.
Lake praised the meet and said it
would help American gymnasts pre
pare for the 1988 Olympics.
“You always have to look at the
Russians because they always set the
standard,” he said.
Korolev registered scores ofSi
on the rings, high bar, side h :■
and floor exercise, and 9.75 on bed
the parallel bars and die vaultHs
two-day total was 1 17.15 points.
The United States opened;:
men’s volleyball tournament wiki]
15-8, 15-9, 15-10 victory over B
garia. The Soviet Union defeal
Brazil 15-9, 15-6, 15-3, and Czed
Slovakia rallied to beat Japan 10-
8-15, 15-1 1, 15-11, 16-14.
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sea
fieh
Am
seas
phr
In team handball, the Unit#
States’ men’s team defeated 1
22-19, but the U.S. women’s tec
lost to Denmark 23-22.
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