Monday, September 21,1987/The Battalion/Page 9 kies ftack Astros defeat Padres, end losing skid | HOUSTON (AP) — Houston $fana^er Hal Lanier was in a more conciliatory mood Sunday after the Astros 3-2 win over the San Diego Padres than he was after being cnt- Ja/ed by General Manager Dick K^««^^f^p.;.|yagner after a loss on Saturday I Lanier had complained about the * : mstros failure to make trades that i^eould have strengthened the team during the pennant race. I “I said we needed more pitching, Hut I was not singling out Wagner,” anier said. “I think Dick Wagner d I can settle our problems. This olrganization has to get along to be successful. ■ “You can’t point the finger at him (Wagner). He can’t swing a bat for our hitters and that’s been our prob lem." I Pinch-hitter Jim Pankovits’ bases- loaded single in the ninth inning provided the Astros with their win ning margin and snapped an eight- the Astros. The Astros had lost five straight and the Padres had won four straight overall. “We still have something to play for. There’s still money to be made,” Pankovits said. “People pay money to come see us play and it’s not that hard to give 100 percent,” said Pan kovits. Mike Scott, 16-12, was the winner, pitching his eighth complete game of the season and giving up two runs on four hits while striking out seven and walking three. “Obviously we’d like to be playing for more than second, but we get paid to play 162 games and we’ve got to do the best we can,” Scott said. “I got ahead of the batters better today than I have recently and I threw more strikes than I have been throw ing.” Kevin Bass led off the ninth with a double. An intentional walk to Glenn Davis and an intentional walk to pinch-hitter Davey Lopes, after Chuck Jackson’s sacrifice bunt, loaded the bases before Pankovits delivered the game-winning hit. Mark Davis, 8-8, was the loser in relief of starter Eric Nolle, giving up two hits and a run. Houston scored its first two runs with the help of infield throwing er rors. The Astros grabbed a 1-0 lead in the second after Davis reached first on a throwing error by third base- man Tim Flannery. Davis moved to second on Ken Caminiti’s sacrifice bunt before Ronn Reynolds doubled. They made it 2-0 in the fifth when Reynolds reached first on a throw ing error by shortstop Luis Salazar and went to second on Scott’s sacri fice. Reynolds advanced to third on Gerald Young’s single and scored when Bill Hatcher’s grounder forced Young. The Padres tied the score 2-2 in the seventh on a single by Carmelo Martinez, a double by Marvell Wynne, an RBI grounder by Flann ery and a sacrifice fly by Salazar. Benito Santiago, whose 23 game- hitting streak is the longest in the National League this year and ties the longest hitting streak by a rookie in modern major-league history, did not play. orter’s lOth-inning walk keys Ranger victory ough reaches record for balks, hit batsmen Photo by Jim bur Husky hints A&M’s 29-12^ with five catdd ill, the offenstij ning around, 3 controvertT d ever after thtd rill denied it. | ; (the press) doci up on who ski that bigofadn. >wed he could S defense credit, tij s great field poo d well,” BrooM the game ball, ense I’ve plait i the 1985 defeaj tl faster." ed why he b: (i ooks replied: tie defense.. ature arries as TCU f .the second to lie school’s histor defense held ushing. had a defens ■ I’ve beenhett in Wacker.'ItK, is I’ve ever had i La Veil Edward 1 i TCU. what we feared : 1 used speed M lays,” EdwardsJ ■d very well ience. They ame.” id his Frogs a weeks off to ft wo weeks are fun than the la We have some .rkansas. Thet'd ams in the natitt we can playwii sr teams in the proved thattoi ses is s-Hydroo T LENSES FT LENSES NSES DWEAR ARLINGTON (AP) — Because has a long memory, Texas Rang- s designated hitter Darrell Porter as able to drive in the winning run ithout taking the bat off his shoul- r. With the bases loaded and one out the 10th inning, Porter drew a %ilk off California reliever De- Wayne Buice to give the Rangers a 2-1 victory Sunday and a sweep of their three-game series with the An- F 15 - ■ “I’d faced him earlier in the sea son, and he made me bite on some load changeups,” said Porter. “I de cided not to swing until he threw a Strike, and he didn’t.” I The four-pitch walk was the third of the inning for Buice, who came on after loser Greg Minton, 4-4, gave up a leadoff single to Scott Fletcher. Reliever Steve Howe, 3-3, earned the victory with two perfect innings after replacing starter Charlie Hough to open the ninth. “Walking isn’t new to me,” said Porter, who won the opener of the six-game homestand by walking with the bases loaded to beat the Oakland Athletics. “I’ve always had a good eye. I think that was the 900th walk of my career.” After Fletcher stole second, Buice walked Pete O’Brien intentionally, then walked Tom O’Malley to load the bases for Porter. “We had our mind made up,” said California Manager Gene Mauch. “Minton would get Fletcher and Buice would finish up. It didn’t hap pen today, and it hasn’t happened a lot lately.” Hough commited two balks for an American League one-season record and hit three batters for a franchise record. In the first, with Devon White on first, Hough commited his eighth balk of the season, tying the Ameri can League record set by Frank Tan- ana in 1978. Two batters later, he hit Wally Joyner with a pitch for his 13th hit batsman of the season, tying a Rang ers record set in 1972 by Pete Bro- berg. Hough, a knuckleballer, then broke the record when he hit Brian Downing in the fifth and hit Joyner again in the seventh. His balk following Downing’s one- out single in the seventh set a league record and set up California’s tying run when Downing scored on Johnny Ray’s two-out single. With the victory, the Rangers im prove their season record to 73-76 and increased their lead over Cali fornia to 4 , /2 games. Both teams however, trail first-place Minnesota, which has a 79-70 record. In all the information being circulated about clinic-based health plans, a few facts may have escaped your attention. For instance, HMO advertising seldom mentions the limitations imposed on your ability to see any physician you choose. Or that these HMO plans offer no dental coverage whatsoever. Little emphasis is given to the sparse provisions such plans make for psychiatric services, or the strict limits imposed on elective surgery. Texas A&M employees are rarely told they will be required to surrender their PCS Card if they drop their present insurance to join a health plan. Nothing is said about the limitations on hospitals such plans cover. Or about what these plans won 7 cover: thj you may need to obtain q ,ike Physicals insurance policy, psycholocy b ° r a 'if© child may need for school ICal testin 9 your you may require during surq^ Ven the b| ood prominent health plan exciuJ^’ ln fact ' one areas of health care from jt s 08 18 s P e cific So if the promise of a sin 9te < ^® r ^ e - premium that covers all your family's health care costs sounds too good to be true...perhaps it is. Just be sure you know all the facts before you trade your proven medical insurance for the latest trend in health care delivery. 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