The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 01, 1994, Image 4

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    Wednes<
Astros break tie in the
eighth to beat Marlins
HOUSTON (AP) — Andujar
Cedeno hit a two-run single to
break an eighth-inning tie Tues
day night, sending Houston to a
5-3 win over Florida.
In the eighth, Luis Gonzalez
and Chris Donnels hit two-out
singles, and pinch-hitter Kevin
Bass walked to load the bases.
Cedeno followed with a single
off Richie Lewis (1-3).
David Veres (2-2) pitched a
perfect eighth for the win, and
John Hudek worked the ninth
for his sixth save.
Houston starter Greg
Swindell scattered nine hits
over seven innings.
Jeff Bagwell’s 12th homer, a
two-run shot in the first, gave
the Astros a 2-0 lead.
The Astros added an un
earned run in the fourth.
The Marlins cut it to 3-1 in
the fifth on Russ Merman’s
homer, his first.
Florida tied it 3-3 in the sixth
inning on RBI singles by Benito
Santiago and Morman.
Florida 3,
Houston 5
Florida
ab
r
h
bi
Milwkee
ab
r
h
bi
Carr cf
4
0
0
0
Felder rf
4
0
0
0
Browne 3b
4
1
3
0
Finley cf
4
0
0
0
Brberie 2b
4
1
1
0
Biggio 2b
3
1
1
0
Conine If
4
0
0
1
Bgwell 1 b
4
2
1
2
Sntiago c
4
0
1
2
Gnzalez If
4
1
2
0
Mrman 1b
4
1
2
0
Dnnels 3b
4
1
1
0
KAbbtt ss
4
0
1
0
Servais c
0
0
0
0
Tvrz rf
4
0
0
0
Esebio c
3
0
0
1
Grdner p
2
0
0
0
Bass ph
0
0
0
0
Clbrnn ph
1
0
1
0
Hudek p
0
0
0
0
Whters pr
0
0
0
0
Cedeno ss
2
0
1
2
RLewis p
0
0
0
0
Swndell p
2
0
1
0
YPerez p
0
0
0
0
Stnkwc ph
0
0
0
0
Veres p
0
0
0
0
Cminiti 3b
1
0
0
0
Totals
35
3
9
3
Totals
31
5
7
5
Florida....
000 01 2 000 -
-3
Houston..
200 100 02x -
5
E. P Browne 5.
LOB-
Florida 5, Houston 7. HR-
Morman 1, Bagwell 12.
SB - Biggio 14.
IP h
r
er
bb
SO
Florida
Gardner
6 4
3
2
2
2
RLewis, L 1
-3
1.2 3
2
2
2
1
YPerez
.1 0
0
0
0
1
Houston
Swindell
7 9
3
3
0
4
Veres, W 2-2
1 0
0
0
0
0
Hudek, S 6
1 0
0
0
0
1
I
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Rangers come out strong
and overcome Brewers
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Odd-
ibe McDowell drove in three
runs and Roger Pavlik earned
his first victory as the Texas
Rangers beat the Milwaukee
Brewers 7-4 Tuesday night.
McDowell and Rusty Greer
each had two-run singles off
Jaime Navarro (2-5) in the first
inning for the Rangers.
McDowell added a sacrifice
fly in the third, scoring Jose
Canseco, who had doubled lead
ing off the inning. Manny Lee
followed with an RBI single, dri
ving in Dean Palmer, who had
singled and taken second on a
passed ball, for a 6-2 lead.
Palmer went 3-for-4 and scored
twice
David Hulse made it 7-2
when he led off the fourth with a
triple and scored on Will Clark’s
single.
That chased Navarro, who
faced just 21 batters and gave
up seven runs, six of them
earned, on 10 hits in 3 1-3 in
nings.
Jose Mercedes got Canseco to
Texas 7, Milwaukee 4
Texas
ab
r
h
bi
Milwkee
ab
r
h
bi
Hulse cf
5
1
1
0
Hamilton cf
5
0
0
0
Frye 2b
3
1
1
0
TWard rf
4
1
1
0
WCIark 1b
4
1
1
1
GVghn If
5
2
3
1
Canseco dh
4
1
1
0
Harper dh
4
0
2
0
Greer If
4
1
2
2
Nilsson c
2
0
1
1
Palmer 3b
4
2
3
0
Spiers 3b
2
0
0
0
BRipkin 3b
0
0
0
0
Jaha 1 b
4
0
0
0
OMcDI rf
3
0
2
3
Surhoff 3b
3
1
1
0
MLee ss
4
0
1
1
JoReed 2b
3
0
1
0
JOrtiz c
4
0
1
0
JsVIntn ss
2
0
0
0
Totals
35
7
13
7
Totals
34
4
9
2
Texas 402 100 000 - 7
Milwaukee 200 000 011 -4
E. Palmer 7. LOB - Texas 5, Milwaukee 8.
2B - Frye 6, Canseco 10, Greer 5, Palmer 7,
GVaughn 7, Harper 10. 3B - Hulse 4, Surhoff 2.
HR - Rodriguez, Carroll. SB - Frye 4.
Texas
IP
h
r
er
bb
so
Pavlik, W 1-2
7
9
3
3
1
5
Oliver
1
0
1
1
2
1
Whiteside
.2
0
0
0
2
0
Howell, S 2
Milwaukee
.1
0
0
0
0
1
Navarro, L 2-5
3.1
10
7
6
1
1
JMercedes
5.1
3
0
0
2
2
Scanlan
.1
0
0
0
0
0
hit into a double play to end the
rally. Mercedes gave up three
hits with two walks and two
strikeouts in 5 innings.
Rodriguez
Continued from page 3
NCAA Championship. The Ag
gies missed qualifying as a
team by only four strokes.
As Ro
driguez wait
ed, two play
ers from
Kansas tied
his score, re
sulting in the
need for the
tie breaker.
Matt Gogel,
John Hess
and Rodriguez Rodriguez
took their
places at the 418-yard, par four
fourth hole with Rodriguez tee
ing off first.
After a perfect tee shot, Ro
driguez brought his 181-yard
drive to within 20 feet of the
hole. He pulled his putt a foot
and a half left of the hole, and
tapped in his final putt for par,
placing the pressure on Gogel
and Hess. Both players bogied,
giving Rodriguez the NCAA
berth he was striving for.
The last time A&M qualified
for the NCAA tournament was
in 1987. Ellis has taken his
team to the championships 12
times in his 20 seasons with
A&M, but Rodriguez is the first
Aggie to ever qualify for an in
dividual bid.
“I’m really excited about the
opportunity to play in this
year’s tournament,” Rodriguez
said Monday. “I played nine
holes today, and I’m feeling re
ally confident.”
Rodriguez has yet to win a
college tournament, but Ellis
said he is a very consistent
golfer and is playing better than
ever. He does not expect Ro
driguez’s lack of tournament
wins to affect his performance
in the championship.
“There’s no question of An
thony’s potential to be the
champion,” Ellis said Monday.
“If you don’t learn something
every day, you’re going back
wards, and Anthony is always
trying to learn and improve.”
ESPN will televise the sec
ond round of the NCAA Cham
pionship Thursday at 2 p.m.
and the final round live Satur
day at 3:30 p.m.
Rockets
Continued from Page 3
championships. But with the
stars of those teams — Magic
Johnson, Isiah Thomas and
Michael Jordan — all retired,
and this is a year in which
someone else has a chance to
take over the league.
Houston started the game
with a barrage of 3-pointers.
Maxwell had four in the 8 1/2
minutes and Horry made two.
Horry also had a pair of dunks
and three free throws for 13
points, and the Rockets shot 67
percent for the quarter. Only
two or three shots were contest
ed by Utah, and Houston had 11
assists in the quarter for a 33-20
lead.
In the second quarter, Hous
ton started with a 12-4 run in
which no shot was longer than
15 feet. The Rockets held Utah
to 15 points in the period for a
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) — A1
Arbour, who coached the New
York Islanders to four Stanley
Cups in 19 seasons, is expected to
retire Wednesday and be replaced
by assistant Lorne Henning.
The Islanders, swept by the
New York Rangers in the first
round of the playoffs, scheduled
a news conference for Wednes
day and said Arbour, general
manager Don Maloney and sev
eral former Islanders stars
would attend.
The team did not mention
Henning when it called the news
53-35 halftime lead.
Utah got within 56-42 early
in the third as they started the
quarter with a 7-3 run, but
Houston came right back with a
10-4 run capped by Maxwell’s
fifth 3-pointer to increase the
lead to 22 again, 71-49. It got to
26 with 36 seconds left on Olaju-
won’s falling turnaround from
the corner, and when the score-
board read 79-55 after three
quarters.
But Utah had 16-0 run mid
way through the fourth quarter
to cut the deficit to 83-75. Hous
ton went 5:21 without a point
before Olajuwon scored on a
jumper. Horry made a toma
hawk dunk with 1:32 left and
Kenny Smith made four foul
shots in the next 30 seconds to
get the lead back to 11 with a
minute left.
Houston now has a week off
while the Knicks and Pacers
batter each other out East.
The Rockets got here by beat
ing two of the teams that tried
unsuccessfully to bring the West
its first title since the 1987-88
rrrrM’t-.’p whfr*:$ryi . U
conference, although a source fa
miliar with the situation said
Henning would be getting the
coaching job.
Arbour, 61, leaves the Is
landers as the NHL’s second
winningest coach with 781 victo
ries in 22 seasons. He ranks only
behind Detroit Red Wings’ Scot
ty Bowman (880). He coached
the Islanders to the Stanley Cup
in 1979-80, 1980-81, 1981-82
and 1982-83.
In past weeks, rumors have
circulated that Arbour would be
stepping down following a sub
season. The Portland Trail Blaz
ers, losers to Detroit in 1990 and
Chicago in 1992, dropped a best-
of-5 series 3-1. The Phoenix
Suns, runners-up to Michael
Jordan and the Bulls last sea
son, were outlasted 4-3 in a
great semifinal series.
The Rockets have a history of
success in Game 5 of the West
ern Conference final. In 1986,
they beat the Lakers in five
games on Ralph Sampson’s
buzzer-beating shot at the Fo
rum. And in 1981, Houston beat
the Kansas City Kings 4-1, win
ning the last game at Kansas
City.
Among Houston’s possible fi
nal-round opponents, the Knicks
are a team that has been with
out a championship since 1973.
The Pacers, before this year,
hadn’t even won a single playoff
series since joining the league in
the 1976 ABA-NBA merger.
One of them will have to face
a team that looked almost invin
cible, at least for most of one
night.
par season, finishing 36-36 with
12 ties for 84 points and fourth
in the Atlantic Division. Ar
bour’s current coaching stint
started with the 1988-89 season.
He was a former player and
then coach with the St. Louis
Blues. Arbour’s teams won 123
playoff games, also second all-
time to Bowman.
A 12-year NHL veteran as a
player, Arbour was a defense-
man on three other Stanley Cup
winners, Detroit in 1954, Chica
go Blackhawks in 1961 and
Toronto Maple Leafs in 1964.
Sanders
Continued from page 3
stop him, you can only hope
to contain him. He’s “Prime
Time,” baby.
But despite their loss,
the Braves did gain a two-
time All-Star in Roberto
Kelly. The right-handed
outfielder will give the
Braves solid leadoff speed
and power. But is he the
same explosive leadoff
threat as Sanders? Braves
general manager John
Schuerholz thinks so.
“We wanted to balance
our line-up with another
right-handed hitter,”
Schuerholz said.
So basically, John, you’re
giving up “lightning speed”
because he’s left-handed.
Okay, you’re the boss.
Don’t worry about all of
those mean ole’ right-hand
ed pitchers who eat right-
handed hitters for lunch.
And forget about Deion’s
flare’ for tying up those
.-same pitchers. > '- - 1
Well, chalk one up for
baseball drama. We’ll see
these two clubs battle it out
down the stretch, with their
new dolls vying for playoff
glory.
Roberto Kelly is an es
tablished player with good
numbers, and he will pro
duce for Atlanta. But I
think Cincinnati pulled a
fast one on the Braves.
They got the man...Neon
Deion. But what do I know?
After all, I’m just a simple
baseball fan, so trades
frighten and confuse me.
Rangers blow lead
in race for Stanley,
fall to Vancouver
NEW YORK (AP)-The
Rangers are seeking their first
title since 1940 but keep mak
ing things hard on themselves.
For the second straight
game and the third time in
eight games, they blew a one-
goal lead in the final minute of
regulation. This time, Martin
Gelinas scored for Vancouver
with exactly a minute to go,
hacking in a rebound that
Richter appeared to have in his
pads.
Bure extended his playoff
point-scoring streak to 16
games despite being bottled up
almost all game by the
Rangers.
Alexei Kovalev twice faked
out Vancouver defenseman
Dave Babych to set up Steve
Larmer’s goal 3:32 into the
game.
Richter made the lead stand
until Bret Hedican scored on a
rebound at 5:45 of the third pe
riod.
Kovalev put the Rangers up
2-1 at 8:29 of the third when he
took Leetch’s cross-ice pass and
wristed a shot from the left
faceoff circle over McLean’s
shoulder.
Gelinas fought off a check
from New York defenseman
Jeff Beukeboom to tip the puck
off Richter’s body to send the
game into overtime.
The Rangers outshot Van
couver 14-3 in the first half of
overtime but McLean made
outstanding saves against
Sergei Zubov, Larmer, Mark
Messier, Adam Graves and
Stephane Matteau.
Courier ends Sampras’ Open hopes
French Open quarterfinals dash thoughts of fourth Grand Slam
PARIS (AP) — Jim Courier ended Pete Sam
pras’ bid for a fourth straight Grand Slam title
with a 6-4, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 victory Tuesday in the
French Open quarterfinals.
The result killed Sampras’ hopes of becoming
the first man since his idol Rod Laver in 1969 to
hold all four Grand Slam titles.
“This definitely adds to the hurt,” Sampras, the
No. 1 seed and world’s top-ranked player, said.
“To win four in a row would have been something
written about for a lot of years.”
“The clay limited my serve and helped out his
forehand,” said Sampras, limited to four volley
winners. “I should have attacked and come in
more. I felt I had my chances. It just came down to
not playing the big points well enough.”
Asked the difference from their previous
matches, Courier said, “I put clay on the court to
day. I was in a lot more rallies and I was able to
be the dictator rather than the person being dic
tated to.”‘T’ve proven to myself that I can win on
clay,” Sampras said. “I think I can win here one
year. I really believe that. I’m getting better each
year.”
“It would be a great opportunity for Pete to win
four in a row,” Courier said. “But I think he knows
and we all know that it’s still not a real Grand
Slam. It would have been a little different if we
were at the finals of a U.S. Open with one match
to go.”
“It’s certainly a good one for my head,” he said.
“It’s been a long time since I’ve won a big match
like this. It’s been a long time since I beat the No.
1 in the world ... But I don’t want to get over-excit
ed because I still have to come back and get busy
again on Friday.”
The seventh-seeded Courier will clash in the
semifinals against No. 6 Sergi Bruguera. The
Spaniard, who hasn’t lost a set so far, beat No. 4
Andrei Medvedev 6-3, 6-2, 7-5.
The other men’s semifinalists will be deter
mined Wednesday when No. 5 Goran Ivanisevic
plays Alberto Berasategui and Magnus Larsson
faces Hendrik Dreekmann.
In women’s play, defending champion Steffi
Graf and No. 12 Mary Pierce powered into a semi
final matchup. Graf trounced Ines Gorrochategui
6-4, 6-1, while Pierce routed Petra Ritter 6-0, 6-2
to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal.
No. 2 Arantxa Sanchez Vicario held off Julie
Halard 6-1, 7-6 (8-6) to earn a semifinal berth
against fellow Spaniard and No. 3 Conchita Mar
tinez, a 2-6, 6-1, 6-2 winner over No. 16 Sabine
Hack.
“I had a pretty solid idea of what I wanted to do
out there, and through the ups and downs of the
match, I was able to stick with it,” Courier said.
The first set was decided on a double fault by
Sampras that gave Courier a break in the third
game. Courier saved one break point in the eighth
game before serving out the set with one of his
patented inside-out forehand blasts.
Sampras found his range and broke Courier
three times to win the second set. Now, Sampras’
coach, Tim Gullickson, was imploring, “Keep it go
ing, Pistol!”
Sampras stayed even with Courier until what
proved to be the turning point of the match: the
ninth game of the third set. Sampras was up 40-
15 on his serve, but he played passively and
Courier fought back to break for a 5-4 lead. Couri
er then served out the set, finishing with an ace.
The two were even on serve in the fourth set
until Courier, taking advantage of a double fault
on game point, broke Sampras for a 4-3 lead.
Three games later, Courier served out the match
at love, with Sampras hitting a backhand serve
return wide on the final point.
Bruguera used his relentless baseline game to
wear down Medvedev.
Bruguera averted three sets points in the 10th
game of the third set. He said he played “great”
tennis but still doesn’t feel as confident as he did
last year.
Sub-par season mars winning record
Islanders coach to retire after 781 wins
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