• Mie Battalion S PORTS Page 3 • Wednesday, July 14, 1999 ra|A. duel for the ages? mTiger Woods, David Duval try to become Wmhe next big rivalry in the world of sports ise vntp, ; E O ' J x ise voted that has a symbotf L Doug SHILLING adies and gentleman. On this tee, from Jack- sonville Beach, Fla., spends standing 6 feet tall and weigh- oter coig in at 180 pounds, the lead- UnderttsBg money winner on the PGA I grants:Tij)ur this season, the man with tile shades, David Duval. And a $14.1 It oil this tee, from Orlando, Fla., Imentatistjanding 6 feet 2 inches tall and cal year, weighing in at 160 pounds, the :ted 15?--Bcond leading money winner on the PGA Tour, the Republic:jian with the magic sand wedge, Tiger Woods.” —If Michael Buffer could get anywhere near the ■•st tee at the Carnoustie Golf Club in Carnoustie, a plansr Sitotland for the 1999 British Open, that is how he 1 Bould probably introduce the two best golfers in : pay fo-Be world as they prepare to square off. one of™ For Woods, who has only won one major, and HMOs-Buval, who has not yet captured a major, the British Open provides them a wonderful shot at nade hei shagging one. dentwiB Since 1995, Americans have had a stranglehold tractice on probably the most prestigious tournament in timesiltBe world. Theyre;! Ever since John Daly beat Constantino Rocca in arovisio: a playoff in 1995, Tom Lehman, Justin Leonard and a appeal Bark O’Meara have all brought the Claret Jug back to the United States. I But beyond a win, this year’s British Open pro- I Bides Woods and Duval a perfect setting for their / I lllfrdding rivalry that everyone wants to see take off. [AJ|f People are so eager to see it happen that they ——-pre starting it off under false pretenses. The folks at ■ lBbC Sports have scheduled a “Lord of the Links,” made-for-prime time match between Woods and Duval in which the winner will take home $1.1 million and a big ego boost — but that’s about it. Rivalries aren’t made in a made-for-TV setting, they are made on the field of play. Competition might be the most important part of sports, but rivalries are what add the spice to them. Over the years, there have been some very heated rivalries. In baseball, there was Mickey Mantle vs. Willie Mays; in basketball, it was Larry Bird vs. Magic Johnson; and before Woods and Duval it was Jack Nicklaus vs. Arnold Palmer in golf. The only difference between Woods and Duval and the other rivalries is that the other men settled their rivalries on their playing field. Mantle and Mays never held a home-run derby to determine their rivalry, they settled it in the World Series. Bird and Magic never had a three- point contest to see who was the better man, they duked it out in the NBA Finals. Palmer and Nick laus dueled mano-a-mano on the final day of major tournaments, not in some made for TV event. There is no doubt that Woods and Duval are the future of golf. Both have won multiple tourna ments this year and in most major statistical cate gories they rank No. 1 and No. 2. Duval has the most birdies on the PGA Tour while Woods is second, and Duval also leads Woods on the money list with over $3 million earned this year, a tour record. Woods leads Duval in scoring average, top-10 finishes and just over took the top ranking in the world from Duval. However, in the recent major tournaments they have played in. Woods and Duval have done well TERRY ROBERSON/The Battalion Newly hired women’s swimming coach Steve Bultman comes to College Station from the University of Georgia here he helped lead the Lady Bulldogs to the 1999 NCAA Women’s Swimming and Diving Championship. ultman brings experience to A&M BY JOHN GIBSON The Battalion Steve Bultman was named the ffiew women’s swimming coach for h e 1999-2000 season. Bultman, a K w i mmin 8 coach with 20 years of :>rocluC®xperience, comes to Texas A&M V Edito ! i rom Ih 6 University of Georgia, y Fr1it(lM iere h e has been an assistant JS ^ Roach for the last four years, lion Ecp While he was at Georgia, he Editof Helped establish the swimming Brogram that eventually led the JasW Bulldogs to the 1999 NCAA Mvomen’s Swimming and Diving -“•‘^Ehampionship. ithonyI® “i was happy at Georgia, but I was in assistant and the opportunity to :ome here and be the head coach vas to good to pass up,” he said. ‘A&M is a great school with tremen- ious facilities, and it is in the south, •vhich was a big deciding factor. ” Before coaching at the collegiate level, Bultman was primarily roaching for club teams. [ He was a head coach for the Lin tiranha Swim Club in New Or leans, La., the Dynamo Swim Club in Atlanta, Ga. and also in Pen- fsacola, Fla. During his time at the Dynamo Swim Club, he had several swim- win Olympic Festival gold medals and many set new junior w^Btational records. In 1988, while he was coaching in Pensicola, he had three swim- ; 0 arium r & Aaf»" atioaSi > ! 84^ : surnind Tiers 77843-1 i: mers qualify for the U.S. Champi onship and make it onto the Olympic swimming team. He was also selected as an as sistant coach to accompany the team on the trip to Seoul, South Ko rea. That year the U.S. Swimming Team finished with the silver medal for overall team competition. "We are looking to contend for the [Big 12] Championship as well as be within the top 10 on the national level” — Steve Bultman Women’s Swimming Coach “It was a great experience to be able to go over there and to repre sent our country in that manner,” Bultman said. During his stint as a head coach on the club level, Bultman coached three members of the 1991 World Championship Team and swim mers who participated in the 1985 Pan-Pacific games and the 1990 League of European Nations Cup. Bultman had at least one na tional champion every year from 1985 to 1990. Bultman began his swimming career at Jesuit High School in New Orleans, La., where he won the Louisiana State Championship in the 50-meter freestyle event. He attended Louisiana State University, where he was a mem ber of the swimming team, and he eventually became an assistant coach by his senior year. After he graduated from LSU with a degree in psychology, he lat er went on to receive his teaching certificate in physical education from Tulane University. While in Pensacola, he re ceived his master’s degree in physical education from the Uni versity of West Florida. Last year A&M’s women’s swimming team finished 31st na tionally and 4th place in the Big 12 conference, behind Nebraska, Texas, and Kansas. Bultman remains very opti mistic about this year’s squad be cause of last year’s outstanding performance of team captains Monica Williams and Tracy Evans and Big 12 Newcomer of the Year, freshman Clara Ho. “We are looking to contend for the [Big 12] championship, as well as be within the top 10 on the na tional level,” Bultman said. “As each girl individually gets better, the team as a whole will get better. but never challenged each other. In last year’s British Open, Woods finished third and Duval ended up tied for 11th. In this year’s U.S. Open, Woods again finished third while Duval ended up in a tie for seventh. Not exactly battles for the ages. The best thing that could happen for Woods, Duval and the sport of golf is to have the two of MARK MCPHERSON/The Battalion them stroll up the 18th fairway on Sunday in Scot land tied for the lead in the British Open. That way we could see who is the real “Lord of the Links ”. Doug Shilling is a junior agriculture journalism major Martinez, AL shine in All-Star game BOSTON (AP) — On a night when history filled every crooked comer of Fenway Park, Pedro Martinez left his own mark on the mound. Moments after Ted Williams threw out the first ball, Martinez pitched himself into the All-Star game record book Tuesday night by striking out the first three hitters. Mixing a blazing fastball, dart ing curve and tantalizing change- up, Martinez struck out five in two innings, leading the American League over the Nationals 4-1 for its third straight win. With Hall of Fame pitchers Bob Feller, Warren Spahn and Bob Gib son looking on, Martinez did some thing that no one — not even the great Carl Hubbell — had ever done. Martinez fanned Barry Larkin, Larry Walker and Sammy Sosa to start the game. The Boston ace, al ready halfway to the magic 30-win mark at the break, kept up the streak by striking out Mark McG wire to begin the second inning. After Matt Williams reached on an error by second baseman Rober to Alomar, Martinez got Jeff Bag- well on a 3-2 curve. And when Williams was caught stealing on the play, Martinez walked off to a standing ovation, his night finished after 28 memorable pitches. Martinez said he wasn’t really trying for the strikeouts. “After seeing the guys in BP and in the home-run contest, I knew I had to get my pitches where I want ed or else I was going to get hurt,” he said as he received the MVP award. Martinez tied an AL record with his five strikeouts and became the first AL starter to win an All-Star game in his own park. And he did it on a night when the greatest liv ing players in baseball had come together for the final All-Star game of the 1900s. Stan Musial, Willie Mays and Hank Aaron were among the many honored as part of an all-century team in a moving pregame tribute. As the sport’s past met its present and future, the biggest ovation was left for Boston’s own Splendid Splinter, with Ken Griffey Jr., Tony Gwynn and every other player in uniform forming a circle around Williams. “Just to see so many glories of baseball all together at one time,” Martinez said. “So many names that I recognize by just names and numbers they have out there.” Though the Green Monster was never a factor — no one came close to hitting the famed left-field wall — the AL got enough offensive support from Cleveland’s quartet of starters in cutting its deficit to 40-29-1. Voting begins on baseball All-Century team BOSTON (AP) — With nearly two dozen Hall of Famers sitting beside him, Bud Selig said Tuesday that, as long he’s commissioner, Pete Rose can pret ty much forget about reinstatement to baseball. The occasion was the launch of voting for baseball’s All-Century team. While Rose is among the 100 play ers on the ballot, he wasn’t invited to the news con ference before Tuesday night’s All-Star game and won’t be asked to any ceremonies if he’s among the winners. “I don’t think there’s anything I would do to change what Bart Giamatti did,” Selig said, referring to the for mer commissioner who kicked Rose out of baseball. Because of the lifetime ban he signed with Giamatti in August 1989, Rose is ineligible for the Hall of Fame. Rose applied for reinstatement in September 1997, but Selig hasn’t announced a decision. From his state ments Tuesday, it’s clear the only two options Selig is considering are rejection or never acting on the petition. “Without question, Pete Rose in one of the top play ers in the century,” Hall of Famer third baseman Mike Schmidt said. “I truly believe the ball’s in Pete’s hands. Pete needs to take some serious steps in his life.” Of the 100 players on the ballot, 85 are in the Hall of Fame. The exceptions include eight active players: Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Ken Griffey Jr., Tony Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, Greg Maddux, Mark McGwire and Cal Ripken. Also not in the Hall are re cent retirees Dennis Eckersley, Paul Molitor, Eddie Murray and Ozzie Smith. The only other three are Carlton Fisk, who fell 43 votes short of the hall this year; Shoeless Joe Jack- son, who was bypassed by the baseball writers and the veterans committee before the prohibition against banned players took effect in 1991; and Rose. Jackson was among eight Chicago White Sox play ers banned for throwing the 1919 World Series, and there’s been a campaign to reinstate him, too. Selig said he expects to make a decision on Jackson’s case later this year. Twenty-nine of the 54 living players on the ballot attended the news conference, including 22 Hall of Famers, among them Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Stan Musial. Fans can vote for two players at each infield posi tion, two catchers, nine outfielders and six pitchers, and a committee can select up to five additional play ers to make up for any imbalance slighting the early part of the century, bringing the total to 30. Balloting runs through Sept. 10 and the team will be announced before Game 1 of the World Series. A panel selected by baseball will pick and All-Century starting lineup from the team. Ventura defends return to professional wrestling ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Gov. Jesse Ventura defended his return to professional wrestling yesterday, insisting he’s entitled to a life out side politics. Ventura bristled when asked whether his renewed ties to the World Wrestling Federation threat ened the dignity of the governor’s office. “If I were a nightclub singer in Caesars Palace, would you ask the same question?” he asked. That wasn’t the only time he compared himself to a Las Vegas lounge act. Within the hour, he was on Minnesota Public Radio, using an identical argument against his critics. The governor, who wrestled pro fessionally as Jesse “The Body” Ventura until retiring in 1986, scheduled a news conference today with the World Wrestling Federa tion. He plans to participate Aug. 22 in the WWF’s $29.95 pay-per-view “SummerSlam” event. Ventura’s role has been billed as a return to the ring. Whether he will wrestle or referee is a secret for now. The sold-out event is scheduled for the Target Center in Minneapolis. Ventura wouldn’t divulge his role in the event or answer ques tions about how much he would be paid or where the money will go, though he said Monday some will go to charity. He did respond to criticism. “There’s no rule that says a gov ernor can’t have fun,” Ventura said. “There’s no rule that says a gover nor on his own time can’t be a hu man.” His appearance on the WWF event is simply a return to his pro fession before he was governor, he said. “The perception is that people need to be professional politicians and that therefore being a politician is your entire life,” he said. “Well, it’s not Jesse Ventura’s entire life and I think I was elected upon the fact that I came from being a pri vate citizen.” 1' i