Thursday, March 24, 1988/The Battalion/Page 13 J raditional big guns face Upstarts in East Regional Rices*! nditfMAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) Rice, H)uke is the odd team out in the Villian jpAA East Regional, at least when 1 do»[Bmes to recognizable conference k sin;,ffiliations. he Blue Devils, the Atlantic tnjojt st Conference tournament pions, might be the one team in egional whose conference is fa- rto basketball fans. |ut for the Atlantic 10, home of [ranked Temple and Rhode Is- ,and the Colonial Athletic Asso- on, in which Richmond plays, ignition has been a perennial >le2‘t)roblem. k sin# “The size of the school, the size of Os,B;hewhat conference you play vAetibif those things are irrelevant at this t,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski at one of four news conferences nesday. hat has no bearing on the e. We just want to concentrate bur players and have them play red j heir game.” Fifth-ranked Duke, 26-6, will t Rhode Island, 28-6, Thursday n r ,Hit in the opening game of the loUbieheader at the Brendan Byrne P na ’ while No. 1 ranked Temple, will face Richmond, 26-6, in i ihf jtepecond game. AlNiX The East Region championship game will be played Saturday af ternoon, with the winner heading for the Final Four in Kansas City. For the Blue Devils to play their game, they must come up with a way to cope with Rhode Island’s out standing senior guard duo of Tom Garrick and Carlton Owens, who both average more than 20 points per game, and blossoming sopho more forward Kenny Green. The Rams come into the game on an emotional high after victories over Missouri and Syracuse, which was seeded third in the East. Duke is the second seed behind Temple. Rhode Island is the No. 11 seed, while Richmond is No. 13. “The pressure is on Duke,” Rhode Island coach Tom Penders said. “If they lose to us, it’s tough. I’m sure (Syracuse Coach) Jim Boeheim has to wear a mask up in Syracuse be cause he certainly wasn’t supposed to lose to Rhode Island of the Atlan tic 10. “We’re loose. We feel we have ev erything to gain and nothing to lose.” One of the keys for Duke will be the play of 6-foot-6 forward Billy King, who will be assigned to try to stop either Garrick or Owens. “He’s a great defensive player,” said Owens, who runs the Rams’ run-and-gun offense. “It doesn’t concern me who he plays. We’re still going to play our game.” Krzyzewski is hoping Duke does the same thing against Rhode Is land, meaning the Blue Devils play good defense and play as a unit. “We can’t let Owens or Garrick have career games, or let Green take off,” he said. “We have to try not to do anything different. We have to play out style.” Temple coach John Chaney said Richmond can cause some problems for his Owls because the two teams are similiar in that they both play good defense and concentrate on a half-court game. “This is the exciting portion of the year,” Chaney said. “I think people who characterize teams in the final 64 as underdogs are people who have closed their heads and eyes on what has taken place. Anything can happen.” Richmond is a perfect example of that. The Spiders knocked off In diana and Georgia Tech last week to make it to the round of 16. Gan re tin n las re tit Pat Bradley to defend • tourney title gontWIOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — Pat ru Bindley returns to defend her ti- i the tie in the $350,000 LPGA Turqu oise Classic that begins Thursday Cl on the Moon Valley layout where AL she set a course record last year, to ■That was the first time this Jtinj-Brnameit was played on this ;rs ip,404-yard, par-73 course, and prrepraclley fired the record-setting ote Hrd-round 67 en route to a two- Kroke victory over Chris John- 2) ; son. teamBBut this year’s crowd favorite is hing JP^ly to be Mary Bea Porter of an, [nearby Scottsdale, nd tBhe was given an unprece dented exemption into the field e ( )n recognition of having saved the 1 ho:® of a drowning youngster last i Do;Wednesday while trying vet nsfully to qualify for thi unsuc- is tour- ext-tw sfully tent. radley has not been playing this season. She is not among top 50 in earnings, for in- nce, and she didn’t do well in esday’s sudden-death shootout t pared the field with each lie. [Bradley missed the green on second hole, the par-3 11th, wind up with a bogey and a it si quick trip back to the clubhouse, dtflPatty Sheehan, who says she jen eiljoys the shoutouts because they neeikive spectators a chance to see the players relax and joke, went on to Bn over Beth Daniel three holes R Jater. Jed ffiSheehan had finished second in the Tucson Open shootout a _ aitBek earlier, and previous shoot- ; ni OUts wins at Denver and Cincin- ygi pati. mP®“But I didn’t win any of those tournaments,” she said. ■She already has taken one first, Bo third-places, including the thotiMMcson Open, and a seventh lair place finish to head the earnings ag, list with $69,933. iat ®“This is one of my better tht Starts,” said Sheehan, a two-time gierall LPGA champion in her e i (l ninth season. y|‘ Sheehan and Daniel, third in •18)®rnings, are joined by such other yl money leaders as No. 2. Ayako Okamoto, JoAnne Garner, Betsy 0 King, British rookie Laura Davies in( ) and Jan Stephenson. The field I will be cut to low 70 scorers after holes. Organizers take steps to improve tennis finals DALLAS (AP) — Organizers are making some big changes in the $680,000 World Championship Tennis Finals in a bid to bolster the tournament’s attendance and pres tige. Not that the Dallas tournament is suffering — it could gross $3 million this year. It’s just that officials thought changes were needed to en sure the event’s success because of a slumping Dallas economy and com petition from other spectator sports. Among the changes for this year’s tournament, which runs Tuesday through April 2 at Reunion Arena, are live network television coverage for Saturday’s final, the addition of Nabisco Grand Prix bonus points and increased marketing and adver tising to attract fans. Perhaps the most significant change will be new dates for next year’s event — Feb. 28-March 4 — that will make it the season’s final in door tournament. The new dates won’t conflict with the Virginia Slims of Dallas, tentatively scheduled for November. Owen Williams, WCT Finals chief executive officer, fought to change the dates because they were not pop ular with players who had already begun playing outdoor tourna ments. Many who qualified for Dallas have been competing in outdoor tournaments since Feb. 29. The two- week Lipton International Players Championship in Key Biscayne, Fla. — an outdoor tournament — ends two days before Dallas begins. “1 had to bang heads from Tim buktu to Tokyo to get it through,” Williams said. “I felt the tournament needed it because you want the play ers to come happy. They said it’s crazy playing a two-week outdoor tournament then coming into Dallas. The 1989 date will kill that conflict.” What worried Williams more was the potential for injuries to players competing in the LIPC. Top-ranked Ivan Lendl had already withdrawn from the WCT Finals because of a stress fracture, and the loss of other players could have hurt attendance. But Pat Cash (sore heel), Stefan Edberg (bronchitis) and Boris Becker skipped Lipton, ensuring that the WCT will have seven Top 10 players and four of the top five. As extra incentive, the WCT’s $200,000 first prize will be supple mented by 700 bonus points, which are part of a yearlong competition that awards the bonus pool winner $800,000. The change from a Sunday to Sat urday final this year will give the WCT Finals live coverage on CBS, which should boost its ratings. Al though the WCT sacrificed a Sun day TV appearance and extra reve nue, Williams said the noon Saturday final will be more popular with players and fans. The WCT has a vested interest in its fans. About 50 percent of its income is generated from ticket sales and about 40 percent from sponsors. It is the “fifth or sixth largest grossing tournament in the world,” Williams said. Attendance has been consistently good, although last year’s five-ses sion tournament attracted 62,434, its lowest turnout since 1983 when it drew 64,690 for eight sessions. Astros edge Dodgers 4-3 VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Bob Knepper blanked Los Angeles for six innings and Reid Nichols and Jim Pankovits homered Wednesday as the Houston Astros topped the Dodgers 4-3 in an exhibition base ball game. Knepper scattered five hits, walked one and struck out four as he evened his spring record at 1-1. Nichols and Pankovits blasted two-run home runs off Don Sutton to give the Astros all the runs they needed. The Dodgers scored three runs off reliever Joe Sambito in the sev enth inning, but left-hander Juan Agosto pitched out of trouble, and Rocky Childress hurled a scoreless ninth to pick up his first save of the spring. Second baseman Steve Sax col lected three hits and scored a run to lead the Dodger attack. 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