The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, April 13, 1981, Image 5

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Tom Watson, Augusta's master
Penn State's Heidi Anderson won the floor exercise title and the women's
gymnastics team placed fourth overall at the AIAW championships in Salt Lake
City, Utah, this weekend.
Former boxing champ Louis dies
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) Former heavyweight boxing
champion Joe Louis, who held the title for 12 years and ranked
as one of history's greatest fighters, died yesterday after being
admitted to Desert Springs Hospital here, the hospital confirm
ed. He was 66.
"He was in a cardiac arrest state when he arrived," said
nursing supervisor Shirley Brown. "They did everything they
could to revive him."
Brown said Louis died at 10:05 a.m. PST.
"He had been ill for quite some time," Brown said. "He had
had a stroke and different things."
She said Louis' wife, Martha, and some immediate family
members were with him when he died.
Louis, confined to a wheelchair since he underwent heart
surgery in 1977, attended the Larry Holmes-Trevor Berbick
heavyweight title fight Saturday night at Caesars Palace. On
April 6 he had been feted by some 1,500 people at a salute in his
honor.
Called the Brown Bomber for his punch and string of
knockout victories, Louis was just 23 when he won the heavy
weight title by knocking out 31-year-old James J. Braddock in
the eighth round at Chicago in 1937.
In 17 years as a boxer of which almost four years were
spent in the Army during World War II he earned nearly $5
million. Louis had little to show for it when he was through and
was in constant income tax difficulty with the government.
When Louis retired for the first time, on March 1, 1949, he
told reporters: "I'm glad to retire. It takes a load off my mind.
the
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Watson holds on to Wili,..MBSteto t
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) Tom Watson turned
back any would-be challengers with a front-run
ning 71, and scored his second Masters victory
yesterday in the 45th .renewal of golf's annual
spring rite.
Watson, who established himself as golf's
current king with his 1977 triumph on the rolling
hills of the Augusta National Golf Club course,
won by two strokes with a 280 total, eight shots
under par.
While he never trailed over the last 18 holes of
the first of the year's four major tests of golfing
greatness, the green jacket was a hard-won piece
of cloth.
It was not exactly a walk in the park. There
were challenges aplenty.
First and last there was the indomitable
figure of Jack Nicklaus, now 41 and secure in his
position as the finest player the ancient game has
produced. At other times, there were Johnny
Miller, gritty little John Mahaffey and Greg
Norman, the white-haired Australian sharp
shooter.
All got close at one time or another on the
warm spring afternoon, but none of them could
ever take that last step to pull even with Watson
on the trek through the azaleas and dogwoods.
The key to Watson's victory came on the two
back-nine par-ss, the 13th and 15th holes.
Miller, playing 54 minutes in front, birdied the
17th from about 14 feet to go six under par and pull
within one stroke of Watson, who was seven under
for the tournament when he played the 13th. On
that hole, Watson put his second drive in Rae's
Creek, the little stream that trickles through a
ravine in front of the green. But he saved par
and his lead. He pitched to 4 to 5 feet from the hole
and made the putt.
On the 15th, Watson two-putted for the birdie
that gave him a two-shot margin and nailed down
the win.
Nicklaus and Miller tied for second, a position
unhappily familiar to each, with 282 totals. Miller,
now a three-time runnerup, had a closing 68.
Nicklaus, who was seeking a sixth Masters title,
settled instead for a share of a record he'd rather
not have. He tied Tom Weiskopf for the most
second place finishes four. After a slow start,
Nicklaus managed to match par, 72.
Norman was next, alone at 283 after an erratic
I could see that I couldn't fight any more, and rather than lose
the title in the ring, I decided to quit." But 27 months later he
came out of retirement because of a pressing need for money,
an urge to fight again and with confidence he could beat
reigning heavyweight champion Ezzard Charles.
He met Charles on Sept. 27, 1950, and was soundly beaten in
a 15-round bout.
"I'll never fight again," Louis said through swollen lips
But just two months later he was back h, action with a string
of victories. His career in the ring finally came to an end when
he met Rocky Marciano on Oct. 26, 1951, at the age of 37.
Marciano, 28, knocked Louis out in the eighth round.
In 71 fights as a professional after he graduated from the
Golden Gloves in Detroit, the Brown Bomber scored 54 knock
outs in posting a 68-3 record. Louis fought a record 26
championship bouts, 25 of them defenses, without a loss, and
many of those fights especially his rematch with Max
Schmeling will be discussed as long as people talk about
boxing.
Louis was born Joseph Louis Barrow on May 13, 1914, in
Lafayette, Ala. He was raised in a Detroit ghetto and became a
professional fighter in 1934. •
He won his first 28 fights before being knocked out by
Schmeling, a former world heavyweight champion from Ger
many, in the 12th round June 19, 1936, in New York. Louis shook
off the stunning upset and went on to win the title, but he didn't
forget the loss to Schmeling. And on June 22, 1938, in Yankee
Stadium, Louis avenged the defeat.
its
Nicklaus, Miller tie for 2nd .
He started the day with a one-shot lead over
Nicklaus, the holder of 17 major professional
titles. The eagerly anticipated duel between the
two giants of the game really didn't materialize.
The closest they came was on the final few holes
when Nicklaus finally got untracked.
He birdied the 15th, two-putting, and holed a
long one, perhaps 35-40 feet, on the 16th.
Still, he trailed.
He received warm, loud ovations from the
huge crowds surrounding the greens on the 17th
and 18th, but he wore a rueful smile as he
acknowledged the applause. It was an acknowl
edgement of his past triumphs, his overwhelming
record not the cheers given to a current winner.,
Watson birdied the par-5 second hole, had a
two-shot margin and took it from there. He had
only a couple of lapses a bogey on the ninth,
where his putt rolled down the steeply sloping
'green onto the front fringe and he had to chip back
and one-putt for bogey.
He dodged a bullet on the 13th, where his great
save of par saved his lead and possibly the
tournament. The little second putt for birdie on
the 15th, no more than ,two feet in length, confirm
ed Watson's character.
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By SHARON FINK
Daily Collegian Sports Writer ovation that night. She salvaged some
After the team finals of the AIAW pride for us."
national gymnastics championships Fri- The place the Lady Lions finished was
day night, it looked like it would be a something more or less expected by the
weekend without any redeeming value Aveners. They've been saying since the
for the Lady Lions. preseason the team would have to fight
The first words Marshall Avener, the for its life to finish in the top six.
assistant coach of the women's gymnas- But ending up fourth hurt. It left the
tics team, said after the finals were, "We Aveners and the Lady Lions disap
blew it." Penn State, which went through pointed, not so much by the fact they
the regular season undefeated and won were fourth, but that Penn State per
the Eastern championship on guts, fight formed badly and could very easily have
and luck, couldn't overcome powerful been third.
Utah or peaking UCLA or four of six The last time the team scored 141 was
Lady Lions falling Off beam as it ended in its second meet of the year. The Lady
up fourth, scoring 141.80 3.85 points Lions started off well Friday on floor and
less than Utah. vault, scoring their third-highest of the
The Utes, in front of a home crowd of
8,000 at the Special Events Center in Salt
Lake City, won their first national
championship as expected with 145.65.
Third-seeded UCLA gave Utah a good
fight before ending up second (144.10),
and Cal-State Fullerton, the fourth-seed
ed team that competed in the next-to-last
rotation, scored well enough (141.95) to
edge out Penn State for third by .15.
Redemption came Saturday night,
however, in the finals of floor exercise,
courtesy of freshman Heidi. Anderson.
Anderson, the only Lady Lion who made
any event final, was the leader going into
the final with a 9.45 from Friday, and she
won the national floor exercise title Sat
urday by scoring a 9.6 the highest
score given out in any event final.
"Heidi was great," Penn State head
coach Judi Avener said. "She was really,
really great. What a trooper. We were all
cheering for her, rooting her on. She was
72 that included a double bogey on the long 10th
that destroyed any upset hopes he may have held.
Tom Kite, who has a history of high finishes in this
event, and Jerry Pate were next at 284. Kite
closed up with a 68, matching Miller's effort for
the best round of the day, and Pate shot 70. David
Graham, an Australian and a former winner of
the PGA, was next at 71-285.
Ben Crenshaw, Mahaffey and Ray Floyd fol
lowed at 286. Mahaffey, only one stroke back with
nine holes to go, slipped to a 74 with 40 on the back
nine. Floyd, a former winner here and holder of
two 1981 titles, shot 71. Crenshaw, still lacking the
one major title he needs to confirm his position in
the game, had 73.
The victory was worth $60,000 to Watson, who
has set money-winning records in each of the past
three seasons and won Player of the Year honors
in the past four. It also extended his habit of
scoring multiple triumphs in certain key events.
Of his 26 career victories, including three British
Opens, he has acquired 19 of them in only eight
tournaments.
the only person who got a standing
year, 36.10, on vault (because Penn State
was seeded fourth, it competed on floor
first, then vault, bars and beam).
On bars, the event that gave them
trouble at regionals, the Lady Lions
didn't do badly but had their problems.
They scored their third-lowest of the year
—35.4
But the difference between fourth and
third, the cause of all the hurt and disap
pointment, was beam. Four of six Lady
Lions fell off, and they wound up scoring
their second-lowest of the year, 34.95.
Marshall summed things up rather
subduedly with, "Beam really did it.
Four out of six. That's the story."
He went on to try to explain the hurt.
"It's one thing not to place high,"
Marshall said. "Then to feel you did not
perform well. . .It's a hurt one must
experience to appreciate. We feel so
badly. We muddled through. We feel we
let ourselves down, we let Penn State
Former heavyweight boxing cham
pion Joe Louis died yesterday in Las
Vegas, Nev. He was 66. Louis, nick
named the Brown Bomber, had been
in ill health for some time .
While he was waiting for Norman, his partner,
to putt out, Watson heard the footsteps of the
Golden Bear. They came in a resounding roar
when Nicklaus holed that beautiful putt on the
16th.
Watson, knowing Nicklaus was on the move,
never faltered. He grimaced when the sound
came' ringing through the trees, scowling, show
ing an expression of pain. When it was his turn to
putt, he stepped quickly to the ball and rammed it
home.
Potential danger was on the 17th. Although he
led by two, he ducked his head in dismay when his
approach shot found a bunker. Watson blasted out
to about 3 to 4 feet and made that par-saving putt.
The 18th went by routinely.
Mahaffey played the front side in 34 and was
within one at that time. The hard-luck guy, whose
career has been dogged by a series of injuries,
couldn't handle the vast length of the 10th and 11th
par-4 holes measuring 485 and 455 yards, respec
tively. He bogeyed them both.
Norman, playing in his first Masters, also was
a threat after the first nine and also dropped back
on the 10th, where he drove into the woods, played
out, threw his second through the green and took
three from there a double bogey.
That left only Miller, playing well in front, and
Nicklaus. Miller simply ran out of holes. He got
his score to six under par and went to the white,
colonial clubhouse hoping for a repeat of the 1973
U.S. Open. In that tournament, he came from
deep in the pack with an early 63 and then sat
around for a couple of hours before the rest of the
field finished and he won the American national
championship.
"I'm happy to at least let Watson know I was
around;" Miller said.
"I didn't think much about winning when I
started out, but after birdies on the first two holes,
Oakmont came into my mind."
Nicklaus was two over par for the front side
and couldn't really get anything generated until
he two-putted from a vast distance for the birdie
on 15. The long birdie putt on 16 lifted him into a
Jack waited for him at the 18th green and was
among the first to shake Watson's hand when the
last little par putt dropped in the hole.
mistakes.
AlAWillobr-- gild
e 4
down. . .It's not so much we wanted to
place higher, we did not perform well."
Judi said all in all, the team did not
perform badly. Before the final rotation
started, she said, the Lady Lions felt
psyched, confident and good about them
selves. And for the most part, they put on
their usual gutsy performance, led by
Marcy Levine. Levine performed all
around with a cracked rib and, besides
breaking on bars, did well, Marshall
said.
But she was Penn State's second-high
est all-around finisher at 19th. Anderson
was the highest, tying for. eighth, while
Karen Polak was 23rd and Lisa Ingebret
sen 26th. For the first time in several
years, not one Lady Lion finished in any
of the top six All-America spots in all
around.
It is ironic the Lady Lions had their
biggest problems on beam. Beam is their
best event. During the season they aver
aged three points higher than their oppo
nents on that event. In their last five
regular season meets, they scored over
37.
Penn State's beam performance at
regionals saved a decent score and its
fourth seed at nationals, and it won all six
individual places. And on a Penn State
Sports Information handout the team
took along for the press in Utah, there's a
little paragraph about, "Team Strength
on Balance Beam."
But Utah rightfully deserved to win,
Marshall said. The Utes had some breaks
but looked much like the Utah that was in
Rec Hall in early March, he said. And
UCLA, the fifth-place team last year,
was helped by two all-arounders who
By The Associated Press
Bob Lanier scored 11 of his 23
points and Marques Johnson 10 of his
35 in the fourth quarter, blunting a
Philadelphia 76er rally and sweep
ing Milwaukee to a 109-98 victory
yesterday as the Bucks tied the two
teams' National Basketball Associa
tion Eastern Conference playoff se
ries at 2-2..
The Bucks led by 18 points early in
the second quarter. The 76ers,
sparked by 22 points by Julius Erv
ing, three times cut their deficit to
one point in the final period before
Lanier and Johnson pulled the Bucks
through.
Spurs 114, Rockets 112
San Antonio's George Gervin
scored 33 points, many of them on
hard earned drives, and helped the
Spurs stave off a fourth-quarter
Houston rally yesterday for a 114-112
victory in a NBA Western Division
semifinal playoff game.
The Spurs, who led by 13 points
with seven minutes to play, had to
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Bucks down Philadelphia,
Boston advances in NBA
Monday, April 13 a
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and Jack Nicklaus,. denied 6th title
placed in the top six Sharon Shapiro,
winning her second consecutive national
title (37.2) and freshman Diane Dovas,
placing third (36.55).
That still didn't take away from the
disappointment.
"It just hurts to believe we let down,"
Judi said. "At the end of beam, the girls
went off the floor into a little room and
cried. But they. held their heads high.
They were proud in defeat, shaking
hands with all the other teams. They lost,
like the champions they are.
"I don't know. It's just we so easily:
could have been third. Beam. . .And it's
so typical Fullerton beat us for it by .15."
That's another irony. Fullerton has tttl .
been a thorn in Penn State's national
aspirations since the Lady Lions won
their first national title in 1978 by .15 over
Fullerton. In 1979, the Titans won the
title at Rec Hall by .10 over Penn
State.
This year Fullerton was the only other ; tv
team to beat Utah during the regular;
season and was seeded fourth,• only .04
behind the Lady Lions.
In the end, Marshall grudgingly ac-
cepted the Lady Lions' finish.
"It's' just one of those years," he said.
"We said in the beginning this was a
rebuilding year. The fact that we did as
well as we did is a credit to this team.
We're only disappointed on hOw we did it.
"In a sense we outdid, ourselves.
Fourth is about right for this team. We
said all year we just wanted to finish in:
the top six. But we very easily could have
been third." st,
fight off a determined Rockets rally
to even the series at two games
each.
Kings 102, Suns 95
Ernie Grunfeld poured in a 4ame
high 27 points, and Scott Wedman
and Reggie King rattled in 21 apiece
to lead the Kansas City Kings to a
102-95 victory over the Phoenix Suns
yesterday in Kansas City to take a 3-
1 lead in their NBA playoff series.
The Kings, normally a poor shoot
ing free throw team, locked up the
game at the line when center Sam
Lacey hit a pair of free throws to
make it 100-95 with 36 seconds left
and Wedman added two more with
18 seconds left for the final margin.
Celtics 109, Bulls 103
Larry Bird scored a game-high 35
points, including four free throws in
the last 13 seconds, to give the Bos
ton Celtics a 109-103 victory yester
day over the Chicago Bulls. The win
gave the Celtics a four-game sweep
of their NBA playoff series.
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UPI wirephot9.
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6 , 41
•Parker leads Bucs by
By The Associated Press
; Manager Chuck Tanner pointed to the box score, not
the scale, after full-bodied Dave Parker led the Pitts
burgh Pirates to a 3-2 victory over the Montreal Expos
yesterday in Pittsburgh.
"Dave Parker is swinging the bat and running like
the Dave Parker in the MVP year he had," Tanner said
after Parker rapped three hits, including a home run
that preceded a consecutive homer by Pirate newcomer
Jason Thompson off losing pitcher Ray. Burris.
"I've never thought a thing about his weight," added
Tanner. "All I want him to do is be healthy. People
make big issues out of things, but Dave is a big man,
he's 6 feet 5, and Dave plays hard and he plays every
day.,,
Parker's weight has been a point of controversy
wince the start of spring training. The 29-year-old right
fielder weighed about 225-230 pounds when he won the
National League MVP award in 1978. But after knee
surgery during the past offseason, he reported this
spring at an acknowledged weight of 255 pounds.
Parker was silent yesterday, declining to talk to
reporters. "No more, no more," said Parker, who had
!leen gruinbling about media attention on his waistline.
"Dave, when he plays, is capable of losing three to
five pounds on a day like this," said Tanner.
Parker smacked Burris' first pitch. of the fourth
liming over the right field fence for his first homer of the
season and Thompson followed with his first homer as a
Pirate, driving a 3-1 pitch over the right field wall.
Braves 3, Reds 2
Dale Murphy drilled an RBI single in the eighth
inning to cap a two-run rally and give the Atlanta
Braves a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds yesterday
in Atlanta.
Murphy's game-winning hit came after consecutive
doubles by Claudell Washington and Glenn Hubbard had
tied the game 2-2 against losing reliever Tom Hume.
Atlanta starter John ' Montefusco, making his debut
for the Braves, had allowed only one hit, a leadoff single
to Dave Collins in the first, before leaving in the
seventh. The. Reds' Frank Pastore, who left for a pinch
hitter in the eighth, had a perfect game through four
innings and allowed only four hits in seven innings.
Gary Templeton tripled home one run during a three
run rally in the fifth inning and scored the winning run
on first baseman Pete Rose's error, keying a 7-3 St.
Louis Cardinal triumph over the Philadelphia Phi!lies
yesterday' in St. Louis.
Winner Lary Sorensen, acquired by St. Louis in a
winter trade from the Milwaukee Brewers, restricted
Philadelphia to five hits before giving way to Bruce
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State College, Pa.
(We will deliver)
Cardinals 7, Phillies 3
BREWERy
Sutter in fife final three innings. Philadelphia right
hander Larry Chrkstenson was the chief victim of a 13-
hit Cardinal attack, which included' two Templeton
triples. Held hitless until the fourth, the Phillies erupted
to score all their runs in the inning.
Manny Trillo doubled and scored on Bake Mcßride's
single to erase a 1-0 St. Louis advantage. The Phillies
scored two more runs on Mike Schmidt's RBI single and
Garry Maddox' fielder's-choice grounder.
Sutter, making his first appearance in a Cardinals'
uniform, came on after Gary Matthews' leadoff single
in the seventh. He retired nine of the 10 batters he faced,
striking out four and walking one, for the save.
In Chicago, rookie Hubie Brooks opened the ninth
with a triple and scored on Mike Cubbage's pinch
sacrifice fly to lift the New York Mets to a 2-1 victory
over the Chicago Cubs yesterday.
Brooks' triple.was his third hit of the game and came
off reliever and loser Rawley Eastwick. Reliever Neil
Allen, the fourth Mets' pitcher, gained the victory.
Tim Leary, the prized Met rookie right-hander,
made his major league debut and pitched two hitless
innings. Leary had three strikeouts and walked one
before departing when his elbow stiffened in the chilly,
foggy weather.
Larry Herndon got a two-out double on a San Diego
fielding disaster in the 14th inning and scored on Mike
Ivie's single as the San Francisco Giants outlasted the
Padres 7-6 yesterday in San Francisco.
Herndon hit a fly ball to deep left-center field and left
fielder Gene Richards appeared ready to make the
•catch. But. Richards pulled up at the last second,
apparently thinking center fielder Ruppert Jones would
make the catch, and the ball fell between them. After
reliever Gary Lucas intentionally walked Jack Clark,
Ivie got his fourth hit of the game, a single to left.
The winner .in the 4 1 / 2 -hour game was rookie Fred
Breining, who worked the final two innings for his first
major league victory.
In Los Angeles, Ken Landreaux slugged a two-run
homer and doubled to lead the Los Angeles Dodgers to a
3-2 victory over the Houston Astros yesterday and a
sweep of their three-game series.
Rick Sutcliffe,. with relief help from Steve Howe,
earned the victory. Vern Ruhle took the loss.
Rangers 6, Yankees 4
Al Oliver and Mickey Rivers drilled two-run singles
and the Texas Rangers rallied to defeat the New York
Yankees 6-4 yesterday in New York.
Ferguson Jenkins earned the 260th victory of his
PENN STATE
SUB SHOP #1
11:00 am.• 2:30
Sun. til Midnight
225 E. Beaver Ave..
above the Brewery
Don't Be Railroaded
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Mets 2, Cubs 1
Giants 7, Padres 6
Dodgers 3, Astros 2
Expos, 3-2
major league career as the Rangers won their first
game of the season after dropping two straight to New
York. •
Jerry Mumphrey and Bucky Dent touched Jenkins
for solo home runs and Nettles homered off reliever
John Henry Johnson, who took over in the seventh.
Ben Oglivie and Ted Simmons belted two-run homers
to support the seven-hit pitching of two Milwaukee
pitchers as the Brewers defeated the Cleveland Indians
6-1 yesterday in Cleveland.
Right-hander Jim Slaton, who sat out most of 1980
because of a rotator cuff injury to his right shoulder,
held the Indians scoreless on four hits in 52-3 innings to
get the victory. He walked two and struck out four.
In Boston, Jim Rice capped a five-run eighth inning
with a grand slam homer yesterday as the Boston Red
Sox, held hitless for six innings by Richard Dotson,
rallied for a 5-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox.
After Dotson lost his no-hit bid on an infield hit by
Dwight Evans in the seventh, the Red Sox broke loose
an inning later to earn a split of the two-game series and
give Ralph Houk his first triumph as Boston manager.
Reliever Mark Clear preserved the victory despite Jim
Morrison's leadoff homer in the ninth.
John Mayberry clouted a three-run homer and
Toronto's Luis Leal pitched no-hit ball for 5 2-3 innings
yesterday as the Blue Jays defeated the Detroit Tigers
6-2 in Detroit for their first victory of the season.
Lynn Jones hit a pinch home run in the Detroit eighth
with Lance Parrish aboard off Leal, who allowed five
hits before needing ninth-inning help from Mike Willis
and Roy Lee Jackson. •
Oakland's Steve McCatty hurled six hitless innings
and stopped Minnesota on three soft singles yesterday
as the A's blanked the Twins 1-0 in Bloomington, Minn.,
to complete a sweep of their four-game season-opening
series.
The complete game was the fourth straight for A's
pitchers and also the second consecutive shutout. Matt
Keouglfblanked Minnesota 3-0 on Saturday. The Twins
have not scored in 26 innings since a three-run first
inning on Friday.
Rod Carew, who earlier rapped out three hits and
drove in two runs, stole home for the 17th time in his
career with two out in the ninth inning yesterday, and
the California Angels rallied for four runs to defeat the
Seattle Mariners 8-6 in Seattle.
Brewers 6, Indians 1
Red Sox 5, White Sox 4
Blue Jays 6, Tigers 2
A's 1, Twins 0
Angels 8, Mariners 6
Pirate catcher Steve Nicosia takes it on the chin by the Expos' Larry Parrish in
the seventh inning of the Pirates' 3-2 victory over Montreal in Pittsburgh
yesterday.
The Daily Collegian Monday, April 13, 1981-9
UPI wirephoto