The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 07, 1985, Image 6

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    sports
Ex-PSU diamond star's
dream becomes reality
By TIM EYSTER
Collegian Sports Writer
For the vast majority of people
playing baseball at the high school
and college levels, playing in the
World Series is something they
dream about but never experi
ence. That dream came true, how
ever, for former Behrend College
baseball player Tom Lawless this
past season.
Lawless, who played shortstop
for the commonwealth campus
from 1975 to 1978, is a utility in
fielder for the National League
champion St. Louis Cardinals,
which recently lost the Fall Clas
sic in seven games to the Kansas
City Royals.
He made only one appearance in
the World Series, pinch-running
for Brian Harper in Game Six but
he did not score. The 28-year-old
Allison Park resident said, howev
er, that just being a member of a
team that made it to the World
Series is something he can always
cherish.
"You always dream of that, but
you never expect it to happen,"
Lawless said on making it to the
World Series. "It was a good feel
ing. Regardless of your winning or
losing, the memories that you car
ry, they'll last with you forever."
Indeed, when Lawless played
baseball at Strong Vincent High
School in Erie, the World Series
may have seemed like a longshot
to-an outside observer. Penn State
Head Baseball Coach Shorty
Stoner, who was coaching at Be
hrend then, originally tried to re
emit Tom's older brother Pat, but
noticed the playing ability of Tom
in the process and tried to recruit
him.
,Lawless decided to enroll at
Behrend because he liked Stoner
as a coach and he hadn't been
offered any baseball scholarships.
When Lawless first arrived at
Behrend, Stoner noticed he had
the potential and the basic tools
for playing well. Stoner said the
only talent Lawless had at the
time that really stood out was his
speed, exemplified by his 6.6-6.7
times in the 60-yard dash.
• As Lawless' years at Behrend
passed, however, he became a
consistent hitter who also had a
good arm and could play any posi
tion, Stoner said.
Lawless' name can be found all
over the Behrend College record
book. He ranks second all-time for
career marks in batting average
(.378), runs scored (87), walks (55)
and stolen bases (40). He also
Jennings makes an impact with booters
By CAROL D. RATH •
Collegian Sports Writer
Before he left his hometown of Mbabane, Swazi
land, in December 1981 to visit his father who was
lecturing within the College of Education at Penn
State, Kevin Jennings was uninformed as to colle
giate life in the United States, much less, colle
giate soccer in America.
Yet that visit to Happy Valley would make such
an impact that it would change his life for the next
four years.
During that introduction to the campus, he was
also introduced to the sport that Jeffrey Field fans
adore most Penn State soccer. It goes without
saying that when one gets a formal introduction to
Penn State soccer it's simultaneous to an introduc
tion to Head Coach Walter Bahr.
"I was very impressed with the program here.
People (at home) really don't realize wohat stan
dard soccer is over here. I was really surprised at
how good they were," Jennings said. "It's a
different kind of style between home and here.
Soccer back home is more so individual skill than
here, where it's a lot of hard work and team work
and that:s the way I like to. play."
For six months, Jennings tried out for various
English soccer teams with no luck and after his
visit here, decided that this was the ideal place to
not only play soccer but to finish his education.
Bahr was eager to sign the skillful but somewhat
shy South African who would undoubtedly develop
into one of the Lions' most valuable assets.
"Kevin's a very skillful player who seems to get
better each year. There's really no one strong
point of Kevin's play," Bahr said. "He has above
average speed, above average ball control and an
above average sense of field vision. Kevin is the
type of player that would be an asset to any team.
I'd like to have a Kevin Jennings as a team player
every year. His attitude and his talent are excep
tional."
One particular unique skill Jennings possesses is
his ability to make things on the field look easy.
"Kevin just shows such smoothness on the
field," senior defender Larry Miller said. "He
makes difficult moves look really simple."
Bahr said that Jennings is the type of player
whose subtleness with the ball is outstanding. He
added that the senior midfielder can also work
extremely well under pressure.
Assistant Coach Marco Bulatovic, who was a
three-year teammate of Jennings, said that "Silk"
acquired his nickname during his sophomore year.
"People have been know to stare at Kevin for his
smoothness on the field. We used to say that he
was as 'smooth as silk' on the field," Bulatovic
ranks third all-time at Behrend in
career hits (106) and career dou
bles (13).
In 1976, Lawless led Behrend
with a .448 batting average and
received the Rawlings Adirondack
Big Stick Award for the highest
batting average in Area Eight of
the National Association of Inter
collegiate Athletics. He also made
the NAIA District 18 All-Star team
in 1976, 1977 and 1978.
Stoner said Lawless was the
kind of offensive player who
"caused the opposition a lot of
grief." He said Lawless could turn
a single, walk or one-base error
into a triple by stealing second and
continuing to third, on an errant
throw into center field.
"He was a core of my program
those four years, and without him,
there would have been a tremen
dous void there," Stoner said.
"He's probably the most outstand
ing player to come out of that
program."
Lawless' shot at the major
leagues came when he was drafted
by the Cincinnati Reds in the June
1978 draft and assigned to their
Pioneer Rookie League team in
Billings, Mont., where he played
one season. In 1979, he played on
the Reds' Class A Florida State
League team in Tampa and was
its Most Valuable Player.
He went to University Park for
one term in February 1980 to earn
his bachelor's degree in political
science. He then spent his next two
seasons with the Reds' Class AA
Eastern League team in Water
bury, Conn., garnering MVP hon
ors in 1981.
Lawless moved up to the Reds'
Class AAA team in Indianapolis,
Ind., in 1982 and became an all
star second baseman in the Ameri
can Association. On July 15, he
stepped into the major leagues
with Cincinnati, where he re
mained the rest of the season. He
was back in Indianapolis for all of
the 1983 season.
He started the 1984 season in
Cincinnati, -was sent down to the
Reds' new AAA team in Wichita,
Kan., after the All-Star break for
three weeks, and then was traded
to Montreal as the player-to-be
named-later in the Pete Rose deal.
The Expos assigned him to their
new AAA team in Indianapolis,
but Lawless was with the parent
club in September.
Lawless began spring training
1985 with Montreal, but was traded
to the Cardinals Mar. 20 and as
signed to their AAA team in Louis
ville.
Penn State midfielder Kevin Jennings moves the ball downfield In the Lions' upset victory over Connecticut
said. "I haven't seen anyone with his skill level time individual record list with 25 career goals and
and his soccer background in a while." 11 assists. Jennings was the Lions' lead scorer last
Yet, Jennings isn't the type of athlete who enjoys year with 14 goals and three assists. This season he
talking about himself, despite his abilities and is third in terms of individual scoring with six
accomplishments. goals and two assists and follows forwards Thom-
Currently, Jennings is 14th on Penn State's all- as Greve and Niall Harrison.
Stickwomen wary of Lady Rams
By GLENN SCHUTZ
Collegian Sports Writer
The record doesn't show it and this
week's poll position doesn't show it,
but the field hockey team's contest
against the Lady Golden Rams of
West Chester will be a formidable
one.
The sixth-ranked Lady Lions (14-3-
1) will clash with No. 17 West Chester
(10-6-1) in a 2:30 p.m. game at Lady
Lion Field in a key National Colle
giate Athletic Association Mideast
Division game.
Despite the Lady Rams' lackluster
record, the team has defeated some
perennial powers, and the losses have
been close games.
"The games that they have lost
could have gone either way," said
Head Coach Gillian Rattray. "They
also tied and defeated Rutgers and
Temple, teams that we lost to and
tied respectively.",
Rattray attributed West Chester's
ranking as compared to an average
record to the fact that the Lady Rams
defeated Temple.
"They had a big win over Temple,
and that really pushed them up in the
polls," Rattray said.
The Lady Lions are aware of the
power the West Chester team pos
sesses, but they are ready to take on
the challenge.
"It's going to be a really tough
game," said Team Captain Lorraine
Razzi. "There is no doubt that they
are a tough team."
`The games that they
have lost could have
gone either
way... They also tied
and defeated Rutgers
and Temple, teams
that we lost to and
tied respectively.'
-Head Coach Gillian
Rattray
With the recent No. 6 ranking, Penn
State has gained a great deal of
confidence and the Lady Lions know
they are tough.
"We are very happy about the
ranking," Rattray said, "and I think
that the girls have even more confi
dence now."
- - - -
Razzi agrees with Rattray that the east Division receives an automatic
team now has confidence but she is berth.
also aware that West Chester will be
shooting for them. will be more intense than the Penn
"They are going to want to knock us game since they (West Chester) are
out of that spot," she explained, "and in our division," Razzi said.
we are going to want to stay there." One of the factors that makes the
Since the playoff berth will be de- Lady Rams such a tough opponent is
cided on Sunday, the Lady Lions see the overall play of the team.
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Pann Rtdfe r s Shoji Fibula . (33) trkid - tO"Mickhandld past a Penn defender during a game earlier this season at Lady Lid,n
Field. Pribula and her teammates will be trying to slip past West Chester when the Lady Lions and the Lady Rams go head
to head at 2:30 p.m. today on Lady Lion Field.
this game as a very intense and vital
one because the winner of the Mid-
"There is no doubt that this game
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"They have some really good girls, "They are also very fast and use good
and I remember them as being ag- stick work."
gressive from our last game," Razzi With the playoffs just around the
said. "Everyone was pushing and corner, Rattray and the team refuse
shoving." to look beyond this game.
Rattray pointed out some additio- "We can't second guess and think
nal factors which make the Lady about the playoffs," Rattray said.
Rams impressive. Razzi agreed.
"They have several good players "We have the attitude that we takp
back from last season, so we can't things one game at a time," she said.
key on just one player," she said. "Hopefully this will be a big win .":
Kentucky booster cited
in recruiting scandal
NEW YORK (AP) Dave Bat
ton, a former Notre Dame basket
ball player, said he was offered
$20,000 by Seth Hancock, owner of
the Claiborne Farm, to attend the
University of Kentucky, according
to the latest Sports Illustrated
released yesterday.
Batton told the magazine he was
offered the money in October 1973
in return for four summers' work
on the horse farm outside Lexing
ton.
"Kentucky was illegal from Day
One," Batton told Sports Illus
trated.
Hancock has denied Batton's
allegations. '
Hancock was one of 12 universi
ty boosters disassociated from the
school's athletic program in 1976
Mullin signs NBA pact
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Chris
Mullin signed a four-year contract
with the Golden State Warriors
yesterday, ending his holdout six
games into the season, and said he
was eager to begin his NBA ca
reer.
"I'm in great shape. It's going to
take me a little time to get into the
team system, but I'm anxious to
start," the All-American guard
from St. John's said after signing
with the team at a news confer
ence.
Mullin, the seventh player cho
sen in this year's NBA draft, was
the last of the first-round selec
tions to agree to terms. No money
details were announced, but the
settlement is believed to be in the
$500,000-a -year range.
The Warriors took a 1-5 record
into last night's home game
against the Seattle Super Sonics,
, "'-
The Daily Collegian
Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985
."-• •
" t,, 7
•
* ;
• ' ;;••,,,5;
•
when the Wildcat football and bas
ketball
teams were put on proba
tion for recruiting violations.
Sports Illustrated also said that
two law-enforcement sources told
the magazine that the IRS is
"monitoring" the situation con
cerning the allotment of tickets.
Joe B. Hall, who resigned as
Kentucky basketball coach last
March after 13 seasons, received a
personal allotment of 323 tickets,
which had a face value of $24,000.
Eddie Sutton, who replaced
Hall, was cut to 64 tickets, Ken
tucky President Otis Singletary
and Athletic Director Cliff Hagan
announced in June, acknowledg
ing that public "questioning" of
Hall's tickets were a factor in their
decision.
and Coach John Bach said he
planned to give Mullin an immedi
ate, though brief taste of NBA
action.
"I'm sure he'll get to make a
cameo appearance. I want to
make sure he understands it as
that, and that the fans do, too,"
Bach said. Giving the rookie too
much playing time too quickly, the
coach added, "would be throwing
him into a meat grinder.
Mullin said, "There are going to
be some hard times and good
times. That's what life is all about.
The Warriors have gone through
hard times recently, failing to
make the NBA playoffs the last
eight seasons. They now are with
out Purvis Short, the NBA's
fourth-leading scorer last season,
At St. John's, Mullin was a 55
percent shooter from the floor,
made 85 percent of his free throws.
PSU favored over Bearcats
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Football Writer
They're making a lot of noise this
week in Gainesville, Fla., where
the 7-0-1 Florida Gators are ranked
No. 1 for the first time in the 50-
year history of the Associated
Press college football poll.
"It will give our team the incen
tive to play 100 percent," crows
linebacker Patrick Miller.
There's noise in State College,
Pa., as well, where Penn State (8-
0) again finds itself in a brouhaha
over the rankings.
"I don't think weekly (i.e., regu
lar-season) polls are worth a nick
el, and I've said that consistently,"
says Coach Joe Paterno, who
usually conducts his own postsea
son Paterno Poll when he thinks his
Nittany Lions have been treated
unfairly.
But the most noise of all comes
from the Big Ten where lowa
Coach Hayden Fry said he almost
pulled his team off the field last
Saturday because of what he con
sidered excessive noise by the
crowd at Ohio State.
"We had a fourth-and-one and
our line is just sitting there and
didn't hear the snap call," Fry
said. "When it rains, it rains on
both sides of the field. Crowd noise
is one-sided.
"Chuck Long got to the top of the
list of quarterbacks in passing effi
ciency because of his ability to call
audibles. That was taken away
from him. He became mentally
disturbed for the first time since
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he's been a starter with us because
of his inability to communicate."
Says Ohio State's Earle Bruce:
"You are going to have noise when
you have enthusiasm. I think Fry is
overreacting because he lost (22-
13). I think the officials did a good
job. Crowd noise will be there. You
have to prepare for it. You have to
call a play in the huddle and go
with it."
This week, Illinois is having the
recorded sound of screaming fans
piped in to its practice sessions.
The Mini play, of all places, at
lowa.
Will Fry try to keep the decibel
count down?
"You try to talk to 90,000 people
over the P.A. system and say, 'You
better stop that or we're going to
suspend play for a while,' and
they're just laughing," he says. "It
has to be controlled some way and
the referee is the only one that can
have the leverage, and we just
don't have the rule, for it."
Rest assured it will be noisy in
Jacksonville's Gator Bowl where
No. 1 Florida is a 5 1 / 2 -point favorite
over No. 17 Georgia in their annual
interstate blood-letting. The Gators
are unbeaten in 18 games, the
Dawgs in seven.
The pick . . . Florida 21-14.
Last week's score was 41 right
the Upset Special of Illinois over
Michigan ended in a tie, but the
Illini covered the spread 10
wrong and one tie for a percentage
of .803; for the year, 328-121-11
.731. Against the point spread, the
count was 27-15-1—.643; for the
Nowadays and nowanights) the Big Man On Campus
is the one with the biggest collection of Trivial Pursuit®
card sets. So here are six editiOns to pursue.
® Baby Boomer® From Edition Eisenhower to
Flower Power.
® Silver Screen Edition—A ton of titillating
Tinseltown trivia.
a All -Star Sports Edition-11er e's your chance
to knock a 3ock_ right on his artificial turf.
* Genus tVTM Edition —Picks up where
the Genus Editiorim laughed off.
®
'OW' Edition—Music! Music! Music!
From 'Beethoven to Boy George.
® -Young Playergm Edition—From
the Brothers Grimm to the Brothers Gibb.
Get 'em all. Play 'ern all. Dave a ball!
g1i'14616464 uj,t®
is rican entitled to Life, Liberty 8c the Pursuit of Trivia.
Every Ame
' ' /4*
year, 168466-6—.503.
No. 2 Penn State (favored by 13)
at Cincinnati: The Bearcats upset
the Lions two years ago and have a
chance to catch them looking
ahead to Notre Dame a fat
chance . . . Penn State 28-7.
lowa State at No. 3 Nebraska (by
40): Coach Tom Osborne says it's
too early to be talking Big Eight
and national championships for the
Huskers but it's too late for lowa
State . Nebraska 41-14.
No. 4 Ohio State (by 25) at North
western: The Buckeyes' defeat of
lowa left the Big Ten and national
championship races up for grabs
. . . Ohio State 35-7.
Army at No. 5 Air Force (by
12 1 / 2 ): Son of War of the Wishbones
. . . Air Force 24-14.
Illinois at No. 6 lowa (by 7):
They'll pipe down in lowa City
when Long asks for quiet . . . lowa
28-20.
No. 7 Oklahoma (by 25 1 / 2 ) at Mis
souri: Woody Widenhofer, who
built the Pittsburgh Steelers'
"Steel Curtain" defense, tries to
contain the Sooners' explosive
Wishbone . . . Oklahoma 28-14.
No. 8 Miami, Fla. (by 3) at
Maryland: Last year, the Hurri
canes blew a 31-0 lead and lost 42-40
to the greatest second-half
comeback in history. Revenge . . .
Miami 24-17.
Purdue at No, 9 Michigan (by.
14): The Boilers can be spoilers
and decide the Big Ten against
Michigan and lowa the next two
weeks. Upset Special of the Week
. . . Purdue 24-21.
Ex-Blue Jay skipper Bobby Cox
named AL Manager of the Year
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK Bobby Cox, who
managed the Toronto Blue Jays to
their first divisional title and then left
the club to become general manager
of the Atlanta Braves, was named
American League Manager of the
Year by the Baseball Writers Asso
ciation of America yesterday.
Cox received 16 first place ballots
and 104 points from a 28-voter panel
composed of two writers from each of
the league's 14 franchise cities.
Dick Howser of the Kansas City
Royals, who defeated Cox's Blue Jays
in the American League playoffs and
then won the World Series against St.
Louis, finished second with four firsts
and 63 points. Gene Mauch of Califor-
LATE NIGHT
FOR TWO
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nia was third with eight firsts and 57
points.
The Blue Jays won 99 games under
Cox and beat the New York Yankees
by two games to win the AL East title.
In the playoffs against Kansas City,
Toronto took a 3-1 lead only to have
the Royals recover by winning the
last three games to capture the title.
During the World Series, Atlanta
asked permission to talk with Cox,
whose contract with Toronto had ex
pired. He then signed a five-year
contract to join the Braves as GM,
returning to the team he had man
aged for four years from 1978-81.
Cox was attending the general
managers' meeting in Inverness,
Fla., when yesterday's announce
ment was made.
It was the second year in a row that
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TRIVIAL PURSUIT" i 5 the rethsiNed Trademark ol Ikon AN.,ot. Lid 'Canada) for Me game dsthbuted and sold n the US Levier exclushre
!cense to SELCHOW & RIGHTER CO. Bay Shore. NY BABY BOOMER .5 1110 reg.slcred tradenurk of Baby Boorners at Amerca. Int
Only '4.93
The Daily Collegian Thursday, Nov. 7, 1985-11
Howser has finished second in the
BBWAA balloting. He lost by one
pbint last year to Sparky Anderson of
Detroit.
Mauch, who returned to manage
the Angels last season after a two
year retirement, had his team in the
West Division championship race in
the season's final week and finished
one game behind Howser's Royals.
Billy Martin, fired for the fourth
time by the New York Yankees after
the season ended, finished fourth in
the balloting with 19 points followed
by Oakland's Jackie Moore, who had
four. Tony Larussa of Chicago and
John McNamara of Boston received
one point each.
Whitey Herzog of the St. Louis
Cardinals was named National
League Manager of the Year.
237-7314
Expires 11/9/85
14" Italian
Bags of Chips
Drinks
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