The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 25, 1986, Image 8

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Page 87The Battalion/Tuesday, November 25, 1986
High school prospects leery of SWC
DALLAS (AP) — Several top high
school football prospects say prob
lems with the NCAA will keep them
away from Southern Methodist,
while another says he’s not inter
ested in any Southwest Conference
school.
Dallas Carter’s Darren Lewis, con
sidered one of the nation’s top high
school running backs, said he won’t
play in the SWC because too many of
the league’s schools have been hit
with allegations of recruiting viola
tions.
“I don’t want my football career to
end because some other guy takes
money,” Lewis said. “With all their
schools getting in trouble, I think I’ll
have to stay away from the South
west Conference.”
Lewis told the Dallas Times
Herald that the latest round of alle
gations against SMU didn’t affect his
decision, but Duncanville running
back Barry Foster said the latest
problems could cause him to cross
SMU off his list.
“If the football program ends,
what’s the use of going there?” said
Foster, who is considering UCLA,
Ohio State, Southern California and
Arkansas. “It’s a good school and
I’m sure I’d like it, but I want to play
football, too.”
SMU’s football program, which
the NCAA placed ( on three years’
probation in August 1985, could be
suspended for up to two years if the
Baseball writers
vote Todd Worrell
NL rookie of year
NEW YORK (AP) — It didn’t take
St. Louis Cardinals’ reliever Todd
Worrell long to react Monday to the
good news that he was the National
League’s Rookie of the Year —- with
a piece of bad news for the league’s
hitters.
Worrell, who fell one vote short of
being a unanimous selection in bal
loting by the Baseball Writers Asso
ciation of America, announced that
his blazing fastball and hard slider
would be augmented next season . . .
hopefully by a baffling changeup.
“When I get to spring training, I
can concentrate on a changeup,”
Worrell said by conference call from
Temple City, Calif. “I’m going to be
talking to (pitching coach) Mike
Roarke about throwing a changeup
to left-handed hitters.”
That can’t be good news for the
hitters, considering that Worrell led
the league in saves with 36, while
fashioning a tidy 2.08 earned run av
erage.
“A good hitter will hit it (an
offspeed pitch),” Worrell conceded.
“But, if I did have any problems (last
season), they were against left-
handed hitters.”
Thompson got 46 points on a 5-3-
1 basis, while utility man Kevin
Mitchell of the New York Mets was
third with 22, including the other
first-place vote.
Worrell said that winning the
award was due in part to having “the
right people in my life at the right
time.”
He credited Chicago White Sox
Manager Jim Fregosi for easing him
through the transition from starter
to reliever when Fregosi piloted the
Cardinals’ American Association
team at Louisville in 1985.
“I think that’s when things all
came together,” Worrell said. “I
think I would have gotten to the ma
jor leagues as a starter, but I don’t
think I would have been at my best
in that role.”
Worrell, who appeared only three
times in relief in three seasons prior
to the transition in July 1985, made
an instant impression on the Cardi
nals. He posted a 3-0 record and a
2.91 ERA in 17 games.
Worrell, a 27-year-old right
hander, got 23 of 24 First-place votes
in easily outdistancing San Francisco
Giants second baseman Rob Thomp
son. Worrell, 9-10, collected 118
points in balloting by two writers
from each of the league’s 12 cities.
In October, he was the winning
pitcher when Jack Clark homered
off Tom Niedenfuer of the Los An
geles Dodgers, giving St. Louis the
NL pennant. And he was the losing
pitcher when umpire Don Denking-
er’s disputed call at first base helped
the Kansas City Royals win Game 6
of the World Series. The Royals then
won the Series the following night.
TUDENT
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Requirements:
1. Attend all Senate meetings.
Fall Schedule: Dec 3, 7:30 p.m. 204 Harrington
Spring Schedule to be announced.
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fairs, Internal Affairs, Finance, Rules and Regulations, Student Services)
3. Report to a student organization that is representative of your constituency.
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office.
Applications are in 221 Pavilion and are due by Tuesday, Dec. 2 at 5 pm. If there
are questions or more information needed, please call:
Miles Bradshaw, Speaker of the Senate 696-4387
Mason Hogan, Speaker Pro Tempore 260-3367
recent allegations are verified by the
NCAA.
Former linebacker David Stanley
told the NCAA that he received
$25,000 to sign with SMU and that
he and his mother received $750 a
month while he was playing for the
Mustangs. Stanley contended the
payments continued after the SMU
went on its most recent probation.
Tight end Albert Reese was sus
pended for SMU’s final two games
in the wake of reports that he re
ceived a rent-free apartment.
SMU Coach Bobby Collins said ki
is concerned that slow actionbyikl
NCAA will hurt his recruiting ell
forts.
“I’d love to see it cleared upnesl
week, but I know it won’t happeri;
he said. "We’ve got to demandactio;l
will he taken. We’ve been crucifelj
already. Somewhere in the woriil
there has to he fairness.”
Texas Christian also is on proba
tion, while other NCAA rules viola
tions have been alleged at Houston,
Texas Tech, Texas and Texas A&M.
Carter linebacker Jerome PipkirJ
said that unless the SMU caseistt
solved soon, “I won’t go there,i|
sentiment shared by Carter lineman
Dwayne Phorne, considered to l
top prospect in North Texas.
“If it’s still up in the air, I’d be no
vous about going there,” Phora
said.
Bowls should be filled
after weekend action
(AP) — The late scramble this
weekend for berths in the Cotton,
Sugar, Orange and Sun bowls will
create some strange bedfellows.
Imagine an Arkansas Razor-
back rooting for a Texas Long
horn? That hasn’t happened for a
while.
“I’m going to be there hooking
those Horns all week,” said Ar
kansas nose tackle Tony Cherico,
who dates Texas Coach Fred Ak
ers’ daughter. “I’m a bij£ Long
horn fan now. I’ll even suit up for
them.”
A Cotton Bowl opponent for
seventh-ranked Ohio State will be
decided Thursday night when
Texas plays A&M. A victory by
the Aggies, ranked 13th in The
Associated Press poll, would give
A&M the Southwest Conference
title and the host berth in the Cot
ton Bowl, sending No. 1 1 Arkan
sas to the Orange Bowl . . .
maybe.
Should the Hurricanes lose to
2-8 Fast Carolina on Thursday
night, Penn State would face Big
Eight champion Oklahoma in the
Orange Bowl. That would leave
Miami awaiting an opponent at
Tempe.
Enter Arkansas or A&M. The
SWC runner-up will need a place
to play should be it replaced in
the Orange Bowl by Penn State.
With that problem solved, the
next question is the identity of the
Sugar Bowl host against Ne
braska.
A victory by Texas would give
the Razorbacks their First trip to
the Cotton Bowl since 1976. As a
loser, A&M would go to the
Orange Bowl to oppose third-
ranked Oklahoma . . . maybe.
The Southeastern Conference
champion is the host team in the
Sugar Bowl. Alabama can tie
Louisiana State for the title by de
feating Auburn on Saturday.
“We will not make a decision
relative to a tie — if one should
occur — until the season’s over,’
said Mickey Holmes, the Sugar
Bowl’s executive director.
tn
VI
ll
Those maybes would be defi-
nites if second-ranked Penn State
didn’t have an escape clause in its
Fiesta Bowl contract. The Nittany
Lions will play at Tempe, Ariz.,
against top-ranked Miami on Jan.
2 ... probably.
Holmes said the selection com
mittee would meet Sunday, after
Alabama plays Auburn and LSI
closes its season against Tulane
on Saturday night, to choose the
SEC representative.
With that piece of the puzzle in
place, the final bowl matchup
would be set. Either LSU or Ala
bama would be El Paso-bound for
a Christmas Day showdown in the
Sun Bowl against Washington.
Unless . ..
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