The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 26, 1987, Image 11

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    Monday, January 26, 1987/The Battalion/Page 11
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Jan. 27, 28; Feb. 4, 5; Feb. 10,11
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I'm a 36 year old man. I earned $18,000 last month working less than 30 hours. The rest of the time 1 basked
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Mets 7 Darling, Teufel
to have day in court
HOUSTON (AP) — New York
Mets pitcher Ron Darling and sec
ond baseman Tim Teufel will have
their day in court today to face
charges that they assaulted two
Houston police officers.
The charges against Darling, 26,
and Teufel, 28, stem from a July 19
incident at Cooler’s nightclub in
southwest Houston in which the two
are accused of fighting with police.
The players and their attorney,
Dick DeGuerin of Houston, are
scheduled to appear in State District
Judge Joe Kegans’ court this morn
ing.
Attorneys and prosecutors are
prohibited from talking about the
upcoming trial because of a gag or
der issued by the judge last fall. The
players have kept mum since their
arrests.
Police claim Teufel left the night
club’s premises with an alcoholic
drink, a violation of state law.
Officer D.L. Bristley, working off-
duty as a security guard, said Teufel
was told he was breaking the law but
kept going and put up a fight when
Bristley tried to stop him.
Teufel is accused of hitting Brist
ley with his elbow and kicking him in
the groin. Prosecutors say Darling
grabbed another policeman, R.G.
Gresham, by the throat.
Mets pitchers Bob Ojeda, 29, and
Rick Aguilera, 25, are accused of
hindering police apprehension by
trying to help Darling and Teufel
avoid arrest.
DeGuerin has complained that
police overreacted during the July
arrests, using excessive force that in
cluded striking one of the players
with a flashlight.
If convicted. Darling and Teufel
face maximum penalties of 10 years
in prison and $5,000 in fines.
A hearing for Ojeda and Aguilera
is pending. They could receive up to
a year in jail and $2,000 in fines, if
convicted.
Edberg outlasts Cash,
takes Australian Open
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) —
Stefan Edberg of Sweden held off a
gritty comeback by Australian Pat
Cash on Sunday to win his second
straight men’s singles title in the
$1.65 million Australian Open Ten
nis Championships and avenge one
of his most painful defeats.
Edberg, 21, earned the second
Grand Slam title of his career with a
6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 5-7, 6-3 victory.
On Saturday, Hana Mandlikova
of Czechoslovakia won her second
Australian Open women’s singles ti
tle and earned the fourth Grand
Slam crown of her career, upsetting
Martina Navratilova, the world’s
top-ranked player, 7-5, 7-6 (7-1).
In Sunday’s final, Edberg won the
first two sets with flawless serving,
but then allowed Cash, playing in his
first Grand Slam final, to fight his
way back into the match.
Edberg, the No. 4 seed, regained
his composure in the final set, broke
for a 4-2 lead, then won the match
despite Cash staving off three match
points in the next-to-last game.
The match lasted three hours, 40
minutes, and the victory was sweet
revenge for a straight-set loss Ed
berg had suffered to Cash last
month in the opening match of the
Davis Cup final, which Australia
went on to win 3-2.
“That was the best revenge,” Ed
berg said. “That was the win I
wanted.”
Cash, 21, was bidding to become
the first Australian man to win a
Grand Slam event since Mark Ed
mondson captured the Australian
Open in 1976.
Edberg collected $103,875 Sun
day, while Cash got $51,938.
The sellout crowd of 11,000 was
firmly behind Cash, hoping an Aus
tralian would win the final Australia
Open to be played on Kooyong’s
grass courts. The tournament will
move to Melbourne’s new National
Tennis Center next year.
Edberg, however, finished the
stronger, helping to dispel his repu
tation as a player who folds under
pressure.
“I gutted it out,” he said. “I
worked hard on every single point.”
Both players agreed the turning
point of the match came when Cash
led 5-1 in the fourth set, but allowed
Edberg back to 5-5.
Although Cash eventually won
the set, Edberg’s comeback renewed
his confidence.
“He had control of the match to
tally,” Edberg said. “He let me off
the hook.”
Cash concurred.
“If I’d won the fourth set 6-1, I
would have won the match,” he said.
“I was on a roll and should have fin
ished him off before he got his mo
mentum back.”
Despite staving off three match
points two games later, Cash was un
able to stop the resurgent Edberg
from holding serve for the match -
and the title.
Azinger wins Phoenix Open
after shooting 4-under 67
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) —Paul
Azinger took advantage of a mass
collapse by other contenders and
nursed home a 4-under-par 67 that
provided him with his first profes
sional triumph Sunday in the Phoe
nix Open golf tournament.
Azinger, playing steadily and con
fidently in the bright, warm sun
shine, took the lead when defending
champion Hal Sutton, playing well
in front of him, missed a five-foot
putt and bogeyed the 18th hole.
“I was putting through my
shadow and I just didn’t get the putt
lined up,” Sutton said.
It was just the opening Azinger
needed. He brought home the vic
tory with a couple of decisive pars
and won with a 268 total, 16 strokes
under par on the new TPC course at
Scottsdale.
The lanky, 27-year-old Azinger,
called “Zinger” by his fellow players,
was making his first start of the sea
son. He collected $108,000 from the
total purse of $600,000 for his solid
performance.
Sutton, Corey Pavin and Doug
Tewell all led or shared the lead at
one point or another, with a half-
dozen others — including PGA
champion Bob Tway and Fuzzy
Zoeller — within striking distance.
One by one, they all dropped
away.
With a share of the lead, Tewell
bogeyed three consecutive holes
starting on the sixth.
Pavin, a winner last week in the
Bob Hope Classic, remained in con
tention until he bogeyed the 16th,
then got one in the water on the
17th.
Zoeller and Tway simply couldn’t
make up the ground necessary.
They needed a mistake by Azinger
to have a chance.
And he didn’t make any.
Spurs’ acquisition of Berry
proving worthwhile recently
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) —
Walter Berry joined the San Antonio
Spurs out of shape and with a lot to
learn.
But Berry has been getting lots of
playing time recently and Coach
Bobby Weiss is happy with the re
sults.
“Unless I’m crazy, I’d have to be
pleased with Berry,” Weiss said Sat
urday night after the Spurs rallied to
beat the New York Knicks 108-101.
“He’s ahead of where I expected
him to be,” Weiss said.
Berry, a 6-foot-8 forward who has
been averaging 19 points per game
in his last eight games, was Port
land’s first-round draft pick last
June, the 14th player chosen overall
in the NBA draft. He was acquired
Dec. 18 in a trade for 7-foot rookie
Kevin Duckworth.
Saturday night, Berry, last sea
son’s College Player of the Year at
St. John’s, scored 19 points and
grabbed 10 rebounds, helping the
struggling Spurs improve their re
cord to 12-29.
“I think I’m coming along real
well,” said Berry, who has started the
last four of the 15 games he has
played with San Antonio.
Last season, Berry set the St.
John’s single-season scoring record
with 828 points, won the John
Wooden Award and the Adolph
Rupp Trophy, and was named an
All-America.
Berry’s addition to the Spurs has
given the team a lift, Weiss said.
“When Walter got here, I told him
there was no pressure on him. I
didn’t expect any real production
from him until the last quarter of the
season,” Weiss said.
“I felt he was way behind. He was
out of shape, didn’t know the of
fense. It was a big adjustment,”
Weiss said. “About 10 to 12 days af
ter we got him, he started being pro
ductive.”
Berry also has pleased Spurs man
agement.
“He has contributed a lot more
than people expected him to con
tribute,” dub president Angelo
Drossos said Sunday. “We knew he
had the talent. But there were some
questions in some people’s minds,
not our minds, as to his attitude and
intensity. So far, he has shown he is
the type of player you need to build
a franchise.”
Berry joined two other first-
round draft picks on the Spurs,
guards Johnny Dawkins of Duke
and Anthony Jones from Nevada-
Las Vegas.
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