sports Stickwomen upset undefeated UCONN, 3-2 By TODD SHERMAN Collegian Sports Writer Early last week Head Coach Gil lian Rattray said that the University of Connecticut's powerhouse field hockey team could be beaten. And when junior forward Stacia Palahnuk scored her second goal halfway through the second period Saturday at Lady Lion Fielsl to give Penn State a 3-2 lead and the even tual margin of the upset victory, she proved her coach right. Connecticut was 9-0 before the loss, and although the Huskies were not in the latest National Collegiate Athletic Association poll because of a paperwork snafu, Rattray said UCONN would have been ranked in the top three. She added' that her team was confident going into the game. "They were ready for Connecti cut," Rattray said. "The game against Maryland really helped (a 3- 0 win last Tuesday). They really have been working hard in practice and they felt good going into this game." Palahnuk agreed. "We were pretty confident," Pal ahnuk said. "But we knew we had to work hard for it." The win was Rattray's 150th ca reer win. In 11 1 / 2 seasons as the Lady Lion coach, Rattray's teams have compiled a 150-42-18 record. No. 11 Penn State upped its record to 8-2 and its sixth straight win (the Lady Lions are 7-0 at home) by taking it to the Huskies from the opening drop. Constant pressure by Rattray's team allowed it to roll up a 23-11 shot on goal advantage in the first half and it was 10 minutes into the game before Connecticut could move the ball onto the Penn State side of the field. The Lady Lion's Booters drop 3-2 decision to LIU By CAROL D. RATH Collegian Sports Writer Despite a Dave Dabora goal and a Thomas Greve penalty kick in the second half, the soccer team had its hopes of posting a tie against Long Island dashed after a controversial call with less than four minutes re maining in the game. The non-offsides call resulted in the Blackbird's final goal of the game and gave the No. 12 visitors a 3-2 victory at Jeffrey Field Friday night. The game was hampered by 60 fouls, six caution-yellow cards, a yel low card for the entire Long Island team, and - five ejection-red cards, which made continuous play difficult for either team. "From the first minute, the whistle was blowing constantly," Lion Head Coach Walter Bahr said. "It's a dis ruptive factor. Not that it favors one team or the other team but the whis tle is a disruptive factor. They could not play and we could not play. The whistle blew all the time and it was inconsistent. It wasn't a dirty game. There was no rhthym, no flow to the game." The 'disruptions became prevalent in the last minutes of the game which ended in the controversial goal. "I was upset at the end. We tied it up 2-2 and we have the game pretty much going our way at that time there was a foul committed here," Bahr said. "The referee was very technical the entire game and the ball was placed five to eight yards away from where the foul was called. The linesman saw it and did not call the play back and that led to the third goal. We were not even set for it." The Blackbirds dominated the field offensively during the first half, with Penn State having a number of oppor tunities they could not manage to capitalize on. Nelson Pena assisted by Jorge Acosta opened up the scor ing at the 4:13 mark. Three minutes later, Blackbird for ward Roger Chavez recieved the first of many yellow cards to be issued in the game. Chavez assisted Roberto Cristobal in putting one past Lion goalie Bert Ecklemeyer at 26:28. Before the break at the half, Lion Jay Ruby received a yellow card for encroachment. Penn State opened up the second half with a yellow card being given to Troy Snyder. LIU forward Maicol Antelo received the next yellow card prior to the one assigned to the entire Long Island team for delay of game. LIU players Vinitus Charlie and Javier Marquez nabbed yellow cards number six and seven as play became more physical on the field, with play ers from each team exchanging words. _ The first red card of the game was issued to Lion defender Paul Moylan at the 61:48 mark for pushing the opposition in front of their bench. With less than 15 minutes remain ing in the game, midfielder Dabora Penn State's Lisa Schroeder, left, runs into University. of Connecticut goalie halfway through the second half gave the field hockey team a 3.2 upset win Sue Lundy in Saturday's game at Lady Lion Field. Stacia Paiahnuk's goal over the previously undefeated Kyskies. persistence paid off at the 22:12 One minute later the Lady Lions get upset when Kathy got injured," midfield, drove down the right side mark when freshman Tami Worley suffered a potential setback when a Rattray said. "They didn't, they of the field and fired across into the flicked a penalty shot into the upper Connecticut player drilled the ball stayed together and kept playing." left side of the Penn State goal. left side of the goal for a 1-0 lead. into freshman Kathy Klein's knee, The Huskies tied the score eight Rattray said that part of her game The goal was Worley's team-leading knocking her out of the game. minutes later when Connecticut se- strategy was to control Ryan. . seventh of the year. "I was hoping the team wouldn't nior Janet Ryan took a pass at "We were trying to shut her down Penn State's Thomas Greve, right, tries to dribble past a Long Island University defender in Friday night's game at Jeffrey Field. The soccer team dropped a 3.2 decision to LIU in a game marred by penalties and controversy. on an assist from Greve, put the Lions on the scoreboard. With 5:37 remaining in the game, defender Bob Christina's shot at the Long Island cage was batted away by a Long Island player while it was still in the penalty zone. With the support of 2,800 hushed and standing fans, Greve took the free penalty shot and put it past Blackbird goalie Ricardo Aguilera to tie the game, 2-2. Aguile ra has only allowed three goals in seven games, prior to Friday. Less than two minutes later, an anticipated call changed the end re sult. As Blackbird Roger Chavez dribbled the ball down the field, the Lions clearly expected, but did not receive, an offsides call. "I think it (the referees) ruined the whole game," Greve said. "Especial ly when you work for 45 minutes to come back in the game and you score two goals and the next play the guy is a mile offsides. scores a goal. It killed us, completely." Although it appeared to be the end of the scoring in the game, it certain ly was not the end for red cards. With a little over two minutes remaining in the game, Cristobal was red-card ejected. Lion defender Larry Miller and Chavez were each issued the last cards of the game, red cards for violent conduct, with seven seconds remaining on the clock. Not only did the crucial loss drop the No. 19 Lions' record to 7-4, which will most likely drop them out of the Top 20 and will severly affect them come national play-off bid time. But Bahr is in a bind since red card recipients Moylan and Miller will be sidelined for tomorrow's game against Lafayette. "A red card is an extreme penalty and usually they're given out when a referee has really lost control of the game and that game did not have control over it from the start," Bahr said. "I've never seen a game with as many yellow cards or red cards in my life." Pitching seen as playoff key By BEN WALKER AP Sports Writer The Kansas City Royals, the last team to break the American League West jinx, will try to do it again while the Los Angeles Dodg ers, the last team to stop John Tudor, face the same task when baseball's playoffs begin with a new best-of-seven format. Tomorrow night, the AL playoffs begin in Toronto, where the Blue Jays will try to bring the first World Series to Canada. The Na tional League playoffs begin Wednesday night in Los Angeles when the Dodgers play host to the St. Louis Cardinals. Pitching often dominates the postseason, and all four teams are well-equipped. The Dodgers lead the majors in team earned run average and St. Louis ranks second in the NL. To ronto's staff ranks No. 1 in the AL, followed by Kansas City. "Both teams are built around their pitching," says left-hander Jimmy Key of Toronto, who will pitch Game 2 on Wednesday. "The best pitching depth should make a big difference." Dave Stieb, 14-13, will start for Toronto in Game 1 against Kansas City's Charlie Leibrandt, 17-9. Bud Black, 10-15, will go against Key, 14-6, in the second gam; and Bret Saberhagen, 20-6, will face Toronto's Doyle Alexander, 17-10, in Kansas City in Game 3. Royals' Manager Dick Howser has already said Danny Jackson, 14-12, will start Game 4. Toronto Manager Bobby Cox is still unde cided about his starter for the game, and will go with either Stieb or Jim Clancy, 9-6. The NL series also features some pretty hot pitchers. And no one in baseball is as hot as Tudor, who has won 20 of his last 21 decisions for the Cardinals. Tudor, 21-8 and leading the ma- Cowboys sneak past Giants, 30-29 EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) Gene Lockhart recovered a Phil Danny White shredded the New Simms fumble at the New York 19. York Giant defense for three touch- Dallas gained five yards in three down passes and Rafael Septien plays and then called on Septien, who booted a game-winning 31-yard field had missed four field goals in five goal with 2:19 to play as the Dallas attempts last week. Cowboys edged the Giants 30-29 in an • NFL game last night. The Giants, now 3-2, had rallied White connected with Mike Renfro from a 14-6 halftime deficit to grab a on touchdown passes of eight and 24 26-14 lead as Simms connected on yards and hit Tony Hill on an 18-yard three third-quarter touchdown strike as Dallas raised its record to 4- passes. He hit Lionel Manuel on scor 1. The triumph also avenged a pair of ing strikes of 51 and 23 yards and then losses to New York last season that combined with rookie George Adams kept the Cowboys out of the playoffs on a 70-yard scoring pass play. for the first time in over a decade. However, White rallied the Cow- The game-winning field goal was boys, driving them 65 yards in five set up late in the fourth quarter when plays to cut the gap to 26-21. The Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Doyle Alexander is hoisted up by cheering fans after he stopped the New York Yankees 5.1 to clinch the American League East title for Toronto Saturday. Alexander will lead the Blue Jays against the Kansas City Royals for the American League pennant starting tomorrow night In Toronto. jors with 10 shutouts, will pitch Game 1 against Fernando Valen zuela, 17-10. The game mill start at twilight, which should give the two left-handers even more of an ad vantage. Valenzuela and the Dodgers are the only team to have beaten Tudor The Daily Collegian Monday, Oct. 7, 1985 because she was setting up all their passes," Rattray said. "We did that in the second half." With six minutes left in the first period Palahnuk scored her first goal when she took a pass from sophomore Miriam Geller and fired it into the net to make it 2-1. "Mary (McCarthy) and I were on the goalie's pads, but Mary was behind her and I got the chance at the ball," Palahnuk said. "I con trolled it with my stick, got my balance and hit it in. That was my first strong hit in. I put it right in the corner." A more aggressive Connecticut team took the field in the second period but the Lady Lions rose to the task and played stellar defense but Connecticut senior Marjory Abbott scored on a corner penalty shot 10 minutes into the half to knot the contest at 2-2. "I felt that the game should have been ours the way we played in that first half," Rattray said. "But I saw them creeping back in the second half and when they got their second goal I thought 'Oh great.' " _ But Penn State returned to its first-half form and Palahnuk scored her second goal of the game and fourth of the season to put the Lady Lions in the lead. The goal was Palahnuk's second game-winner in a row. , Team Captain Lorraine Razzi said the team worked together well. "It was the most incredible game," Razzi said. "Everything came together. This game will be good for us." "I thought we played very good team defense and offense," Rattray added. "I think that is what counted in the end, that it was a total team effort." since May 29. Valenzuela shut out St. Louis 3-0 on three hits on July 20. "The way he has pitched, they're capable of beating anybody," said Los Angeles Manager Tommy La sorda, whose team won seven of 12 against St. Louis this season. touchdown came on the 24-yard throw to Renfro. Dallas then got field goals of 22 and 29 yards from Septien on its next two possessions to grab a 27-26 lead. But the Giants came back one more time, driving from their nine-yard line to the Dallas 30, with Simms hitting passes of 23 yards' to Rob Carpenter and 29 yards to Phil Mc- Conkey. The drive stalled at the Dal las 30 and rookie Jess Atkinson, who earlier had missed an • extra point, booted a 47-yard field goal with 4:57 to play. The Giants then held Dallas, only to have Simms fumble as New York tried to run out the clock. AP Laserphoto Lady spikers turn back Pitt, GWU By TIM EYSTER Collegian Sports Writer Before the women's volleyball team went into its matches with At lantic 10 foe George Washington and cross-state rival Pittsburgh this weekend at Rec Hall, Head Coach Russ Rose said it had to control its own game and not worry about the other team's. For the most part, the Lady Lions fulfilled his wishes, crushing the Lady Colonels 15-4, 15-3 and 15-1 Fri day and coming back to defeat the Lady Panthers 15-4, 15-6 and 15-12 Saturday to up its season record to 13- 2. As it did in earlier losses to Rhode Island and Illinois State, Penn State consistently jumped to early leads against George Washington and Pitt. Unlike the former two matches, how ever, the Lady Lions showed an abili ty to hold those leads this weekend. The only game Rose thought the Lady Lions weren't totally in control of this weekend was the third one against Pitt. After falling behind 5-1, the Lady Panthers came back to tie that con test 5-5, lose the next six points, and later pull to within one at 13-12. Penn State then reeled off the next two points to improve its home record to 8-0 this season. The Lady Lions have won 24 games during the streak and lost only one. "I think we came out and played a real strong solid match (Saturday) night against George Washington, and except for the third game against Pittsburgh, I thought we were in total control of that match also," Rose said. "We had a few letdowns, but I thought on the whole we came back and played extremely well." Rose added that his team served well enough to limit the spots where the opposition could return the ball, knowing where they were going to hit it. Penn State had seven service aces in each of its weekend matches. Assistant coach Lori Barberich also said the Lady Lions worked hard at jumping to the early leads, some thing they didn't do in some games during previous weekends. In winning its first conference match of the season in three games, Penn State jumped out to 6-0, 7-1 and 5-0 leads against George Washington. Penn State also took a 3-0 lead in its opening game against Pitt and held cushions of 6-2 and 10-3 in the second game. "They worked well this weekend," Barberich said. "They were•really, really concentrating on starting off really well, like jumping on the other team on the first serve and not wait ing for six or seven points to go by." Rose said his team's decisive victo ry over George Washington was not its best match of the year, but he added that he was pleased with its ball control. "I think except for two or three mistakes, we played a pretty flawless game," he said. "We were concerned with what we did on our side of the net and not what they were doing on their E MinkMart Always Open • Soda • Groceries • Cold Salads • Chips • Cold Cuts • New Hot Deli Regular Hoagie just 690 with this coupon Limit 2 per customer offer expires 10/11/85 Corner of College & Atherton ,VOWMURII Penn State's Marcia Leap (6) and Ellen Hensler (7) watch the volleyball go past them in a game against Pitt Saturday side. That's why the score was as it was." Rose also said he didn't think George Washington, which went into the weekend with a 9-5 record, was ready to play against the Lady Lions. "I have to wonder what was wrong PSU-Pitt rivalry special to stepsisters By STACEY JACOBSON Collegian Sports Writer At Penn State, Pitt is a bad word. The rivalry between these two tea ms is intense enough without adding sibbling rivalry also, but Judy Mc- Donough and her stepsister Kris Wex ell faced these exact rivalries Saturday night when the Penn State volleyball team triumphed over Pitt 3-0. Wexell from Pitt explains, "We were buddies before we were sis ters." The two girls met in North Hunting ton when they were in fifth grade. They introduced their parents to each other and their parents were married the summer before the girls went into seventh grade. They both attended Norwin Jr. and Sr. high schools and played volleyball together throughout thoses years. The problem began when McDon ough, a junior, was offered a volley ball scholarship from Penn State and Wexell, also a junior, received a scholarship from Pitt. "I knew (Wexell) was leaning to wards Pitt," said McDonough. ' One of Wexell's main reason for attending Pitt was their nursing pro- with George Washington," he said. "I don't think they were prepared to play, and I think what happened is we just jumped on them early and they never could regain their rhythm at all." Even though it was not a non-con- gram. Coincidentally, McDonough decided to attend Penn State because of her career plans also: studying food science. When opposing each other on the court, there is more a sense of compe tition than fierce rivalry. McDonough said that while she warms up she thinks about competing against her sister, but once she's on the court she only thinks about the game. "I want my team to win, but I hope Kris does well with her personal When you take courses through Penn State's Department of Independent Learning, you pick the place. Your classroom can be your dorm room, your apartment, or even by the campfire on the weekend. Over 175 credit courses, including many baccalaureate degree requirements, are available for registration at any time. So, if you want your classroom where you are, stop by the Independent Learning office at 128 Mitchell Building and pick up a free catalog with course descriptions and costs, or call ference match, Rose said Penn State's victory over Pitt was still very significant. The Lady Panthers went into Saturday night's match with a record of 16-4. "It's always a big win when you can beat Pittsburgh in anything," he said. performance," said McDonough. Wexell describes their games against each other as a friendly ri valry. She has an attitude similar to McDonough's when it concerns games. "When she (McDonough) gets put in the game I always wish her good luck with her performance," Wexell said. Pitt's current record is 16-5, while Penn State is 13-2. Penn State beat Pitt in three consecutive matches. YOU PICK THE PLACE 865-5403 University Park campus or toll free 1-800-252-3592 anywhere in Pennsylvania The Daily Collegian Monday, Oct. 7, 1985-9 ••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 'D • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• ONLY TAKES 5 MINUTES Seniors have picture taken by La Vie 'B6. Don left of your yearbook! 0 EADLINE to for all 4,. . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Colleges October 11 La Vie 'B6 -Focusing on you eiestieeemeotamoode your 't be out