Tuesday, June 28, 1988/The Battalion/Page 5 Sports ,ead o%, • Porirtou Tuesday] nation cat or rooreinij. Aggie captures double crowns in A&M Open sd McDonj; ® Miypuk ■ What's Uf ssionsare, Mil run. h By Hal L. Hammons Assistant Sports Editor Texas A&M tennis player Shaun O’Donovan proved last weekend that it doesn’t necessarily take prac tice to be perfect. O’Donovan and his partner, for mer Texas Christian player Neil Smith, wrapped up the men’s dou ble’s championship Sunday at the Texas A&M Open with a 7-5, 6-4 win over Austin’s William and Rich ard Dopson at the Omar Smith Ten nis Center. O’Donovan and Smith, both na tives of South Africa, were playing in their first tournament as a team. | O’Donovan said, “Normally it’s ™ V hard for two players who have never played with each other before. We just sefemed to hit it off well.” ^ . Smith’s victory over the Dopsons [ I f was especially sweet. Smith and his ^•vj partner in last year’s Open lost in a grueling semifinals match that tour nament director and A&M women’s tennis coach Bobby Kleineke coined “World War III.” O’Donovan also teamed up with fellow Aggie Cindy Churchwell for the mixed doubles championship, the bin; Churchwell, a sophomore, was elimi nated in the semifinal round of both ingles and women’s doubles. San Antonio’s Glenn Barton, a former Southwest Texas State stand out, ruined former A&M player Dean Goldfine’s return to College station by eliminating him 6-3, 7-6 n the quarterfinals on the way to the men’s championship. Barton beat Ravi Kumar of Dallas 6-2, 6-3 for the title. Austin’s Diana Dopson beat Deb bie Wren of Dallas, who had knocked out Churchwell. 6-4, 6-2 iven nas ottley was stud nb nearli :1 her liant s the man dndow « ''Brien lin i and hei inth ago. iwn the dm trieve bet i Mottle' VBrienatt tossed Tyson KO’s Spinks in first, captures undisputed title ATLANTIC CITY (AP) — Mike Tyson knocked Mi chael Spinks out in the first round with a crashing left- right to the head and retained the undisputed heavy weight championship Monday night at the Convention Center. It was no contest. It was one of the shortest heavyweight championship fights in history. Only three title bouts have ended quicker. The time was 1:31. Shortly past the minute mark, Tyson put Spinks down to the knee with a right to the body. Spinks got him at the count of two and Tyson was on him like a jungle cat. Then the left and right connected with Spinks’jaw and he went down on his back. Referee Frank Capuccino began to count and it was obvious the stricken Spinks wouldn’t beat it. “Whatever he does, I’m going to win,” Tyson had said before the scheduled 12-round bout. Spinks never got a chance to do anything. “No one on the planet can come near me,” Tyson had boasted. Tyson, who will be 22 on Thursday, was a 4-1 favor ite. It turned out the odds were way out of line. Tyson swarmed over Spinks at the opening bell and never gave the previously unbeaten challenger a chance. Spinks landed only a left and right during the short fight. It was over before a sellout crowd of 21,785 really had a chance to settle in. There was speculation of squabbling in Tyson’s camp and reports that marital problems might trouble him. He answered that question swiftly and ruthlessly. Spinks had said before the fight, “I don”t know what kind of problems Mike Tyson will present. ... As soon as the fight ends. I’ll be able to tell you.” The 31-year-old Spinks was in no condition to tell anyone anything at the end of this fight. When Spinks did qome around, he said, “I finally found someone who can beat me.” It was the first defeat against 31 victories for Spinks, the former undisputed light heavyweight champion and former International Boxing Federation heavy weight champ. Tyson, who weighed 218 1 /4, six pounds more than Spinks, now has a 35-0 record with 31 knockouts. For his pain, Spinks got a guarantee of $ 13.5 million. Tyson’s cut from the fight, which was televised on closed-circuit and pay-per-view television, would be in the neighborhood of $20 million. Zina slams No. 5 seed Photo by Jay Janner A&M’s Shaun O’Donovan returns a shot Friday in the A&M Open. for the women’s singles title. O’Donovan thought that the sum mer layoff hurt the Aggies’ showing. “After playing the whole season, you think, ‘The season is over,’ ” O’Donovan said. “You take a little break. “I think we could have done a lot better. I didn’t think we were into the tournament. We were not psy ched up enough. “We didn’t see that manv big names (on the schedule). Not many of us worked out that hard, because we were not expecting that many good matches.” The tournament was played in August last year, but was moved to June this year because of players’ problems coping with the heat. A&M English professor Larry Reynolds beat Skip Goody of Bryan 6-2, 6-3 for the men’s 45 single’s crown. WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Ask Zina Garrison how she can sud denly go from a player who loses big matches to one who wins even bigger ones and she’ll give a simple answer — motherly advice. “I never got down on myself. That’s important,” the 12th seed from Houston said after beating fifth-seeded Gabriela Sabatini 6-1,3- 6, 6-2 Monday and reaching the quarterfinals at Wimbledon. “That’s my best win in a long time,” said Garrison, who has a his tory of losing matches when they be gin to count the most. She reached the semifinals at Wimbledon in 1985 and the Austra lian Open quarterfinals last year. But she suffered big defeats in her three most recent Grand Slam appearances — in the fourth round to Lori McNeil at the U.S. Open last year, in the second round to an un known at this year’s Australian Open, and in the fourth round to Helena Sukova of Czechoslovakia at the French Open this month. Garrison’s last singles title came in February 1987, and from a personal high of fifth in the worldwide rank ings, she has slipped to 13th. Garrison heard the whispers. “But it’s not important what other people think,” she said. “My mother has always told me, ‘It’s what you think that matters.’ ” Garrison’s game was developed on American hardcourts and is best suited to fast surfaces, such as the grass at Wimbledon. “I don’t think she was comfortable with the court,” Garrison said. “The difference in her confidence level from clay to grass was unbelievable.” iid the wo® filled "lit ;ly over i aiousy. th him fori will goitf )f illegal dn Griffin’s S worth irked theifj 1 to a si being re! and f ,,, v ol'sniaifl ! n dealing! id Ernes!® long doit® the iteiiM you can’lij: for l he am*, ]Y? You’re in Atlanta. It’s three o’clock in the morning. You’re having chest pains. Will the hospital accept your HMO coverage! ; iV-' Vi 1 ' wmrn /'I/ Jjl- : 1 vfc.nr •• Op.CTJ WJ j % W hen you need medical care while traveling, you don’t need added worry over the ^ M acceptability of your health plan outside its service area. 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