The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 12, 1987, Image 7

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    Friday, June 12, 1987/The Battalion/Page 7
Sports
s
c
\&M golfers
>lip to 20th
NCAAs
ation Sea* Loyd Brumfield
I the depar ffl Assistant Sports Editor
a varietv The Texas A&M golf team ran
lysandsut nto more trouble Thursday,
it restriciinl ro l J P* ,1 8 hrom a 12th place tie to
p ace v Nth place af ter two rounds of the
iJCAA Men’s Golf Championship
ay the at Ohio State University in
in ’as mar M mbu s. Ohio,
ecessan A&M posted a second-round
eveis ' D C orc °f ^08 to finish at 610 going
n| the third round. Oklahoma
teen undtiH 5 ant * Forest were tied
T r . n .„ jorlfirst with an overall score of
1 a P 187
Members oil 0
g enough
s do not h
e busy sii
Arkansas was the top South-
rsl Conference school after the
cond round, posting a 594 for
foul'th place. Houston was in sev-
■ with a 598, and Texas was
l^th with a 601 score.
in|H an( ly Wylie led the Aggies
I W a score °1 151, and Neil
Hterson followed with a 152.
m a ajary Gilchrist and Roy McKenzie
fPfvere two strokes back at 154,
■ VV||e Randy Lee rounded out the
finishers with a score of
160.
mans atw #:;•
dinedtop:| Wake Forest’s Len Mattiace
llld Glen Day led all golfers with
on injuri overall scores of 143.
badly hm
r gascanian
inside Seal
lashing r:
•t of Pusar r
enter,
eporl
[The players fought hard but
up empty-handed,” A&M
ch Bob Ellis said. Roy made
(triple bogeys), but birdied
last hole. That’s typical of
t went on.
|We just aren’t getting results,
tral ritvo It’s not from a lack of effort, but I
ightwitht don’t know what it is. Missing the
Bis not on their minds.”
sternly dfli®'h e final cut for the tourna-
Etu will occur today after the
will slip (hjni round, and the tournament
nan Bui will conclude Saturday,
ept Chun “We’ll have to play great Friday
to make it, but that’s not what we
tis April camt here to do,” Ellis said. “Yes-
m until jii terday we were tight, but today
we just didn’t concentrate for 18
■in to agn holes.
ectedattk "Everybody hit the ball well,
'andontht hut it was jus
p< isition dj
was just one of those days.
Celtics stay alive with 123-108 victory
BOSTON (AP) — Danny Ainge
made Five 3-point shots, one at the
halftime buzzer, and four more in
the third period, as the Boston Cel
tics stayed alive in the NBA
championship series with a 123-108
victory over the Los Angeles Lakers
Thursday night.
Ainge Finished with 21 points as
all Five Boston starters scored at least
that many points. Dennis Johnson
led the way with 25 points as the Cel
tics won for the second time in Five
games.
Despite the loss, the Lakers now
have two chances at home in the Fo
rum in Inglewood, Calif., to win
their fourth NBA title since 1980.
Game 6 will be Sunday and a seventh
game would be played Tuesday
night.
The Celtics, who also have three
titles in this decade, are trying to be
come the first team to repeat as
champions since they did it in 1969.
The Celtics also are the 19th team to
trail 3-1 in the NBA Finals, and none
of the previous 18 has overcome that
deficit.
To do it this season, Boston would
have to reverse its recent fortunes in
road games. The Celtics have lost six
consecutive games away from Bos
ton Garden, with all but one of those
losses by more than 10 points.
Larry Bird had 23 points, Kevin
McHale 22 and Robert Parish 21 for
the Celtics. Magic Johnson led Los
Angeles with 29 points, while Ka-
reem Abdul-Jabbar and Mychal
Thompson had 18 apiece.
James Worthy, after a l-for-9 first
half performance from the Field,
made his First five shots in the third
period, helping Los Angeles get
within eight points on three occa
sions after trailing by 15 at halftime.
But Boston answered every chal
lenge as Ainge hit four 3-pointers in
Five attempts in the quarter. The
Celtics scored 12 of the last 14 points
of the period for a 96-77 bulge.
Los Angeles fought back again as
reserve center-forward Thompson
scored nine points in the first 4:43 of
the fourth quarter, leading a 16-6
spurt that made ii 101-93 with 6:57
left. But the Celtics, who blew a 15-
point lead in Game 4, pulled away
from there as Dennis Johnson
scored nine points.
The Celtics, who haven’t lost two
straight games here since the Lakers
did it in the 1985 playoffs, forced
the series back to California by du
plicating a feat the Lakers managed
in Game 2.
Michael C o o p e r h a d a
championship series record six 3-
pointers and, like Ainge, scored 21
points as the Lakers also had Five
scorers with 21 points or more, led
by Byron Scott with 24.
Bird scored 18 points and Ainge
hit a 40-footer at the buzzer as the
Celtics outscored the Lakers 33-17 in
the final 10:02 for a 63-48 halftime
lead.
The Lakers led 31-30 with 10:17
to go in the second quarter, but the
Celtics then took charge. Boston
started with an 1 1-2 spurt, with Bird
hitting a 3-pointer for a 41-33 ad
vantage with 7:54 to go.
Abdul-Jabbar hit two hook shots
and Cooper added a 3-pointer, help
ing the Lakers get as close as 51-46
with 3:41 remaining. But a 12-2
spurt to end the half, gave Boston
its big halftime bulge.
Seaver has rocky return in AAA ball
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) — Tom
Seaver, pitching for the first time
since rejoining New York, was hit
hard Thursday night during an ex
hibition game against the Mets’ Class
AAA Tidewater team, setting back
his scheduled return to the major
leagues.
Seaver was shelled for seven runs,
six of them earned, on nine hits in
2'/s innings. After the game, Seaver
and Mets Manager Davey Johnson
agreed the three-time Cy Young
winner’s planned start, against Phila
delphia on June 20, would be
pushed back about a week.
Mets right Fielder Darryl Straw
berry, who was benched for the past
two games and Fined $250 by John
son for showing up late Tuesday,
started for New York and played the
enlire seven-inning game. Straw
berry, who had threatened to boy
cott the game, went 0-for-3.
Seaver, 42, took the loss in the 7-1
defeat.
“The outcome wasn’t very desira
ble, but I wasn’t looking at that. I was
looking at how he threw the ball,”
Johnson said.
“His arm strength and his control
is better at this point than I thought
it would be,” he said.
Seaver threw 58 pitches, 37 of
them strikes. He struck out two and
walked one.
“Am I happy? Certainly not. But
am I totally disappointed? No,”
Seaver said.
“I threw some good pitches and
some bad,” Seaver said. “I was also
happy that I was able to throw
strikes.”
Seaver returned last week to the
Mets for the third time. He agreed
to terms on a free-agent contract
that will pay him about $600,000 the
remainder of this season.
Seaver had not pitched since last
August, when a knee injury finished
his year with the Boston Red Sox.
“Physically, everything felt fine,”
Seaver said. “That’s another positive
sign.”
Mets General Manager Frank
Cashen called Seaver after injuries
decimated the pitching staff.
Ex-SWC official added to list for SMU job
DALLAS (AP) — Former South
west Conference Associate Commis
sioner Dutch Baughman is on a list
of candidates for Southern Method
ist University athletic director, offi
cials said.
“I haven’t talked to anybody there
to know where they are right now,
but I am interested,” said Baugh
man, who resigned last week as Vir
ginia Tech athletic director.
“I don’t know the new (SMU)
president, but I’ve been very im
pressed with what I’ve heard about
liim.”
Duke University law professor
and former Chancellor A. Kenneth
Pye, who will arrive at SMU on Aug.
17 as its new president, has said his
first priority will be to hire an ath
letic director.
Baughman is on SMU’s list, said
SMU faculty athletic representative
Lonnie Kliever. But a source close to
the athletic department told the Dal
las Times Herald that Baughman is
not high on the university’s list.
SMU officials in January adver
tised the position to replace Bob
Hitch, who resigned in December
during an investigation into the
school’s pay-for-play scandal.
But SMU officials put the hiring
on hold in March while looking for a
replacement for former President L.
Donald Shields, who resigned in No
vember.
Bosworth main prize
in supplemental draft
NEW YORK (AP) — Brian
Bosworth, the outspoken, one-of-
a-kind linebacker who insists he
will play for just five of the NFL’s
28 teams, will be the principal
prize today when the NFL holds
its lottery-style supplemental
draft.
Bosworth, who probably would
have been one of the top three
picks in the regular draft, by
passed it because he did not want
to be chosen by the Indianapolis
Colts or Buffalo Bills, who were
ready to take him.
He had that option because he
still has a year of football eligibil
ity remaining, even though he
• has graduated from the Univer
sity of Oklahoma and signed with
an agent, making him ineligible
to play.
He enters today’s draft having
written letters to all 28 teams de
claring that he will play only for
five — the New York Jets or Gi
ants, the Los Angeles Rams or
Raiders and the Philadelphia Ea
gles. His field is based on Bos-
worth’s desire to play for a good
team in a major market or — in
, Philadelphia’s case — his feeling
he would star immediately as the
middle linebacker in Coach
Buddy Ryan’s “46” defense.
Those Five hold 43 of the 406
slips that will be drawn from a
drum to decide who gets the First
pick in the draft, meaning Bos
worth has one chance in 9.44 to
be assured of being chosen by a
team he wants.
“Everybody’s a longshot,” con
cedes his agent, Gary Wichard.
“This is Russian roulette. This is
the lottery system.”
But there are indications that
nothing is written in stone. For
example, Bosworth told the Or
lando Sentinel Thursday he
would be willing to play for
Tampa Bay, which has 28 slips in
the lottery.
“People have speculated for
months that all Brian Bosworth
wants to do is go play for a win
ning team or one that is already
established,” Bosworth told the
Sentinel. “That’s not true. I want
to play for a team that, to me,
possesses a challenge. I’ve sat
down and looked at it. Tampa
poses that challenge.”
Bosworth’s father told News-
day that he might not be too en
thusiastic about the Giants be
cause they might suffer a letdown
after their Super Bowl victory.
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