Wednesday, March 30, 1 OSSAThe Battalion/Page 11 $$ 0 legit 40-year-olds still succeed on mound From the Associated Press ■okies when it breaks the 95-mile- peihour barrier, and Charlie Hpugh’s knuckleball still makes pose tantalizing dips and turns. shiti&HWhile most of their 40-year-old theit Hntemporaries have retired, Hous- kidedjton’s Ryan and Texas’ Hough are ■11 pitching af ter all these years. ■ Each pitcher reached the 40-year- 'id lit. old plateau with drastically different >v onlijmethods. Morv, HRyan does the job with fast ball spleasiilheat, Hough with knuckleball fluff. WleovtHRyan, 41, works out continuously ipiiig in the off season and attributes his ale tkjHreful health program with extend- 0-poir ling his career. vietnjBHe is a non-smoker who does a full-days’ work during the off season led bilononeof his three ranches, also ■Hough, who turned 40 on Jan. 5, ■ IViBdiews the exhaustive weight train- coaling program established by pitching m, aacBach Tom House in favor of his vDukJown methods. londB House decided not to mess with success, no matter how unorthodox it appeared. Hough works hard at his own pro gram in spring training, his sessions on the stationary bike interspersed by cigarette breaks. “I never thought I’d be pitching in the major leagues at this age because most fastball pitchers don’t last this long,” said Ryan, the major league’s all-time strikeout leader. Ryan had one of the most mem orable and forgetable seasons of his career, all rolled into 1987. Ryan led the major leagues with 270 strikeouts and tied for the major league lead with a 2.76 earned run average. Yet he became the first player in history not to win the Cy Young award after leading the league in both categories. Ryan finished fifth in the Cy Young voting because of a 8-16 re cord, attributed to a season-long lack of run support. “I’ve seen pitchers throw well and go through a month of not getting the support,” Ryan said. “But it lasted all season with me.” Hough led the Rangers’ otherwise youthful staff in victories for the sixth straight year. He led the major leagues with 40 starts and 2851/3 in nings pitched. At 39 years, nine months, he be came the oldest pitcher to lead the American League in both categories. “I’ve incorporated some of what Tom does into my routine,” Hough said. “But the main filing for me is to get enough innings to pitch. A knuckleball pitcher has to throw it a lot to get ready.” While Ryan is part of a veteran pitching staff with the Astros, Hough is the elder moundsman of the Rangers. His 18-13 record last season and his 223 strikeouts, fourth best total in the league, gives more weight to his opinions and he tries to lend a voice of experience to the younger staff. “I try to be kind of a second to what management says,” Hough said. “Sometimes you’ll have a man ager tell you something that doesn’t sound just right. “It helps to have a veteran say, ‘Yeah, I’ve seen that work before, you should apply that.’ ” Although knuckleball pitchers have more longevity than fast ball pitchers, Hough realizes he’s pitch ing on borrowed time. “Yeah, you wonder when it’s going to end,” Hough said. “You get all kinds of aches and pains in spring training. “One day your legs hurt, another day it’s your shoulder. You never know which one will get you.” For all his experience, Hough ran afoul with the new balk rule early in spring training, commmiting nine balks in four innings. “It’s not going to bother me as long as it’s enforced equally,” Hough said. “You could find guys getting balks called with one (umpiring) crew and not with another. I don’t want to get caught in that kind of disadvantage.” !e, its nthc d slioi weni i ad. pulled to kin i the I ixamp»: , we'll h i it,’ na er. d ead ;rs. Oil averaj \rizon five Si ligure' tollins rejoins Reds after lucky accident PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) — A didu jcket to a Cincinnati Reds’ game nstopij ias turned into a ticket back into he big leagues for outfielder )ave Collins. He was out of baseball early ast summer when he decided to ustms nake the one-hour drive from his mingli Springboro, Ohio, home to watch Reds’ game at Riverfront Sta- lium. He saw equipment manager Bernie Stowe, spent some time eminiscing, then went down to he Reds’ clubhouse to visit. I think that was the start of it til,” he said. ' When Reds officials learned hat Collins was out of baseball, hey started negotiations toward ringing him back to Cincinnati, where he played from 1978-81. “One thing led to another,” he aid. The result is a reunion that has leased both parties. Collins, 35, played for the ieds’ Nashville farm club from une 19 to July 3, regaining his tiling stroke. He became the leds’ busiest pinch hitter the last all of the season, and hit .294 overall in 57 games. Collins got a reprieve from the arly retirement he feared was at and when Montreal cut him just cored lis seas a 25' due i( before the start of the regular season. “I didn’t think I’d get on with another ballclub,” he said. “I fig ured that would probably be it.” Had he not gone to the Reds’ game last summer, he’d probably be concentrating solely on coach ing Springboro High School’s basketball team. The Reds aren’t about to let him concentrate year-round on high school coaching yet. They like Collins’ varied assets: he has experience and speed, he can switch-hit and pinch-hit, and he can play first base or any outfield position. Collins isn’t shy about trying to help younger players by giving advice. “Any time you’re on a team of younger players and you’ve got experience, you can help the younger players in relating to them the experience you’ve had,” he said. “If something should be said, you should say it.” Collins is one of six outfielders remaining on the Reds’ roster, virtually assuring him of a spot on the team. He and Eddie Milner will back up regular left fielder Kal Daniels, center fielder Eric Davis, and platoon right fielders Paul O’Neill and Tracy Jones. Old-Timer Yount still crazy about baseball CHANDLER, Ariz. (AP) — Tea mmates still call Robin Yount “The Kid” and at age 32 with his 15th ma jor league season several days away he still approaches the game with a boyish enthusiasm. “It’s as fun as the team is success ful for me nowadays,” says the Mil waukee Brewers’ center fielder, who became a major league shorstop at age 18 in 1974. “I’m in it basically for the competi tion. It’s really the only reason I do play, for the competition.” Yount, who is in the second year of a three-year contract that pays him more than $1 million a season, has played more major league sea sons than any other Brewer. Shoulder surgery in 1984 and 1985 forced him to move from the infield to the outfield because he could no longer make the long throw from the hole. But in 1987 Yount hit .312 with 21 homers, 103 runs batted in and 198 hits in his best season since he won the American League MVP award in 1982. “I still feel like I swing the bat as well. Actually a lot of times, 3^ is your prime,” Yount said. “Sometimes you don’t don’t feel as young. Your body doesn’t always work as well as you’d like it do but most the times it feels pretty good,” Yount said. The outfield presented a new baseball challenge for Yount, and it’s one he’s conquered after years as one of the game’s top-fielding short stops. “I played the infield for 20 years, and I’ve only been out there for three years,” said Yount, who made only six errors in center the last two seasons. “The more you play the more comfortable you get. I feel comfort able out there, but it doesn’t mean you don’t still have things to learn. Hopefully the more I play the better I get.” Yount’s most memorable catch in 1987 came last April when on the dead run he made a fully extended, diving grab of a line drive for the fi nal out of Juan Nieves’ no-hitter against the Baltimore Orioles. Yount already has 2,217 major league hits, but he says statistics have never been as important to him as playing on a daily basis. “I’ve been fortunate. I’ve had in juries but not the type that have kept me out of the lineup. I’ve been for tunate lostay healthy,” he said. “If 1 lead, it’s by example. I don’t' go around telling guys what they should do or what they shouldn’t do. I just try to play as often as I can and as hard as I can.” New faces dot Oklahoma spring workouts said» vingWNORMAN, Okla. (AP) — For the ith io first time in a long while, Keith Jack- misse sou’s name is missing from the Okla- roken feuna football depth chart. So is Dar- our. ■ Reed’s, Mark Hutson’s, Dante econd-Mues’and Lydell Carr’s, ye AlsH 1 hose players helped put to- ceniei ge'lier one of the most successful 1 rdiiif® e tches in Oklahoma history. The Kn®Hp CI Rides Available for Students on Sat., April 2, 2:00 p.m. MAUNDY THURSDAY-7:30 p.m. “Jesus Prepares People For Communion" (John 13: 1-17) GOOD FRIDAY -7:30 p.m. ‘Jesus Died” (John 10:30) CAQTPQ Outdoor Service 7:30 1 E- 1 * ocn VIV-rCO Festival Service9:30 “HE IS RISEN INDEED” * iJVF'S ■■I ▼ Ml \ 9 *s\ JOE £ LI-baud Musician of the Tear Producer of the Year Male Vocalist of the Year Best Rock Band Best Texas LP Fiscal fitness. 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