The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 09, 1986, Image 7

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    sports
Red Sox even AL playoffs
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
BOSTON In the battle of bad bounces, blunders and
bizarre plays, the Boston Red Sox won their most impor
tant game of the season yesterday.
With almost every ball an adventure in Fenway Park's
late afternoon sun and swirling wind, the Red Sox beat the
California Angels 9-2 and evened the best-of-seven Ameri
can League playoffs at one victory apiece.
No team has ever won a playoff series after losing the
first two games at home,
.and some luck and strange
occurences enabled Boston to avoid that precarious
position.
"It's a game of human beings. Errors are going to be
made," Boston Manager John McNamara said. "That's
the nature of the game."
The Red Sox broke a 2-2 tie in the fifth when Dwight
Evans' pop fly was lost in the sun and swirling wind and
fell for a tie-breaking double. Boston broke it open with
three runs in the seventh, helped by three Angels errors,
and three more in the eighth, two on Jim Rice's homer.
"It was a. tough field today. It was a tough sky, a high
sky," Evans, Boston's veteran right fielder, said.
"I would say there haven't been too many like it. They
usually happen in a fall classic, and we haven't been in too
many of them."
Only five errors were charged, three to California, but a
half-dozen other balls caused trouble because of either the
conditions or poor judgment.
"No use in me discussing what, happened because I
don't understand them," California Manager Gene
Mauch said.
For awhile, it seemed like the last team to touch the ball
would lose. Even the game's final out was in doubt when a
grounder skipped off third baseman Wade Boggs' chest
until he recovered to get a force at second.
It was as if a joke Mauch made prior to the game had
come back to haunt him.
Mildred Cronin, widow of Boston's Hall of Fame short
stop and long-time Manager Joe Cronin, made a pre
game award prespntation, proinpting Mauch to remark,
"When I saw her, I said I hope she didn't bring any of
those Cronin gremlins with her "
Now, the scene shifts to Anaheim Stadium, site of the
next thiee meetings. Game 3 is scheduled for tomorrow
night.
The Red Sox bunched seven hits in the first two innings,
including a leadoff triple by Boggs and a following double
by Marty Barrett, who had three hits, but managed only a.
2-0 lead. Then, as the shadows crept across the infield, the
Angels began creeping back into the game and they
eventually tied it in the fifth on Wally Joyner's home run,
the first ever by a rookie in a playoff game.
But in the bottom of the fifth, with two outs and Bill
Buckner on first base, Don Baylor, who had two hits and
walked three times, drew a walk on a 3-2 pitch from
starter and loser Kirk McCaskill that barely missed
outside.
Evans, hitless in the series, followed with a high pop fly
behind second base. Shortstop Dick Schofield and second
baseman Bobby Grich converged on it, both taking turns
looking at the ball and each other. At the last moment,
Grich lunged backwards for the ball, but it dropped for a
two-base hit that allowed Buckner to score.
The luck that enabled Boston to take the lead stayed
with it in the top of the sixth. With one out, Grich singled
Stickwomen regain winning form
By ROBERT WILLIAMS
Collegian Sports Writer
Field Hockey Coach Gillian Rat
tray need not worry about where the
goals will come from in future sea
sons.
Sophomore forwards Lisa Bervin
chak (two goals on the day) and
Tracey,Neave (one goal, one assist)
made that clear yesterday afternoon
as the fourth-ranked Lady Lions
downed Temple 3-0 at Lady Lion
Field.
. The win not only upped Penn
State's record to 10-2-1, but the strong
Lady Lion showing also helped take
some of the sting out of a tough 1-0
loss to No. 3 Connecticut Sunday.
"We were disappointed because we
knew that we could have beaten (Con
necticut)," Rattray said. "This was a
good comeback."
"It was really important to win this
game, and win it big," junior forward
Diane Schleicher added. "We didn't
score the last game."
And after Penn State was stymied
on several early breakaways and
prime scoring opportunities, it ap
peared as though fate might have it
that way again.
But at the 18:17 mark of the first
half, Bervinchak erased Penn State's
goose egg from the scoreboard, as
she tallied what turned out to be the
game-winning goal.
With Penn State pressuring, Neave
took a shot which went through a
maze of players and wound up in the
crease on the stick of Bervinchak.
The Lancaster native then proceeded
to muscle the ball past the falling
Lady Owl netminder, Kim Lambdin.
Bervinchak, who was red-shirted
last year, now has six goals, and she
leads the team in game-winning goals
with three.
"She's been such an asset to us,"
senior goaltender Michele Monahan
said of Bervinchak. "She's real
strong and very consistent, which
really helps us out a lot."
Neave upped the Lady Lion lead to
2-0 at the 25:10 mark of the half when
she took a rebound off Lambdin's leg
pads and directed the ball just inside
the left post at what looked like an
impossible angle.
Neave's tally moved her into an
eighth-place tie with Alix Hughes
(1982-85) on the school's all-time list
Angels shortstop Dick Schofield tags out Boston's Marty
Barrett ending a rundown in the first Inning of yesterday's
game in Fenway Park. The Red Sox evened the American
League championship series with a 9.2 win.
and took second on Schofield's single off starter and
winner Bruce Hurst.
Bob Boone, the Angels' best career hitter against Hurst,
lined a single to left and Rice came up throwing. Grich
rounded third in full stride, but suddenly stopped as third
baseman Boggs cut off the throw. Boggs then threw to
shortstop Spike Owen, nailing Grich as he scrambled
back the base. .
Grich sprung to his feet, screaming at third base coach
Moose Stubing. Grich threw his hands up in the air before
slamming his helmet to the ground.
That strange play punctuated a game full of weird
twists and turns. The afternoon was typified by the Boston
seventh, when three Angel errors led to three more runs
that made it 6-2. The errors in the inning tied a major
league record for a playoff game.
Hurst managed to overcome the elements for a gutty,
11-hit complete game. He helped himself by not walking a
batter.
The Red Sox, who did not score an earned run against
McCaskill in 16 innings during the regular, season, ended
that spell with their first two batters.
Boggs opened with a drive high off the center-field wall,
and when Gary Pettis let the carom bounce over his head,
Boggs cruised into third with a triple. Barrett drove him
in with an opposite-field double to right. McCaskill escap
ed further trouble when Barrett was trapped off base on
Rice's one-out grounder to short.
,• • ,
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Temple's Crystal Gibbs looks to pass the ball downfield as Miriam Geller (left) and Mary McCarthy of Penn State give
chase. The Lady Lions broke a three•game losing streak with their 3.0 win yesterday at Lady Lion Field.
of goal scorers. She now has 11 goals
this season and 25 in her Penn State
tenure.
Rattray was pleased with the way
her team put everything together in
the first half.
"I thought we played well as a team
today, particularly in the first half,"
she said.
Penn State's advantage was upped
to 3-0 in the second half when the duo
of Neave and Bervinchak clicked
once again at the 54:21 mark.
While the Lady Lions still managed
to outscore the Lady Owls 1-0 in the
second stanza, Rattray felt that it
was more closely contested than the
first half.
"In the second half Temple came
out more strongly and it wasn't as
easy a half," Rattray said. "But I
think it was good that we still kept
that zero on their end and still man
aged to score another goal."
The Lady Lions not only dominated
on the scoreboard, but on the stat
sheet as well. Penn State cranked up
30 shots, while the Lady Owls could
only generate 10. And of Penn State's
30 shots, many were of the high-per
centage variety. Monahan said that
Penn State's strong transition game
gave the Lady Lions their many fast
breaks.
"I think it was the transition from
the defense," Monahan said. "They
really found the seams and got the
ball up the field really quick for
Tracey (Neave) and Diane (Schleich
er). Hopefully we'll be able to convert
Scott lifts Astros over Mets
By JOHN NELSON
AP Baseball Writer
HOUSTON Mike Scott was grate
ful that the much-heralded Shootout
at the K Corral with Dwight Gooden
lived up to its billing.
Scott, the National League leader
with 306 strikeouts, tied a playoff
mark with 14 strikeouts, and allowed
just five hits as the Houston Astros
defeated the New York Mets 1-0 in the
opening game of the 1986 National
League playoffs.
"It's a little more satisfying to win
1-0 than 10-9," Scott said. "There was
a lot of buildup for this game, and you
never know what's going to happen."
Scott got all the offense he needed
from Glenn Davis, who homered in
the second inning then made a game
saving play in the field in the ninth
inning to turn back the Mets a final
time. •
"We made a couple of great plays,"
Scott said. "In a one-run game like
this, it can make a big difference. We
have a good defensive ballclub."
Gooden, the major-league strikeout
leader the past two seasons, gave up
seven hits in seven innings while
working in and out of trouble as the
Astros• wasted numerous scoring
chances. He struck out five before he
was relieved by Jesse Orosco.
"Scott pitched a good game, a great
game," Gooden said. "And the
scoreboard showed that. I struggled a
little bit early. I was getting every
thing up. But as I went on, I got my
control and my curveball started
working. I got my rhythm a little
bit." •
Game 2 of the best-of-seven series
tonight will match Houston right
hander Nolan Ryan, 12-8, baseball's
all-time strikeout leader, against left
hander Bob Ojeda, 18-5.
"I don't think I've ever seen that
type of pitching in such a big game,
not in the playoffs," Astros Manager
Hal Lanier said.
The shutout was the first in the NL
playoffs since Rick Sutcliffe and War
ren Brusstar of Chicago combined to
beat San Diego 13-0 in Game 1 of the
1984 series. The last individual shut
out by an NL pitcher was Bob Forsch
for St. Louis, 7-0 in Game 1 of the 1982
playoffs against Atlanta.
Danny Jackson of Kansas City
pitched a 2-0 shutout in Game 5 of last
year's American League playoffs
against Toronto.
Scott became only the third NL
pitcher to strike out 10 or more in a
playoff game, the most recent being
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more of those breakaways into
goals."
"It's a more patient offense than
we've been having," Rattray added.
"Before it was very much left to what
was happening and now we've got
definite people to look for."
On the defensive end of the field,
Penn State was equally impressive.
Monahan recorded four saves en
route to her fifth shutout of the sea
son, and the 24th of her career (six of
which were shared).
The win broke the Lady Lions'
three-game winless streak against
Temple. Penn State tied its Philadel
phia-based rival last year and suf
fered losses in 1983 and 1984. The
Lady Lions now lead the all-time
series 6-4-1.
CZMI
John Candelaria, who also struck out
14 against Cincinnati on Oct. 7, 1975
while with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Detroit's Joe Coleman in 1972 and
Baltimore's Mike Boddicker in 1983
also struck out 14.
Davis, who became only the second covering for the out. Ray Knight
Astro to hit 30 or more homers in a struck out for the last out, giving
season with 31 this year, hit a 1-0 pitch Scott at least one strikeout in each
from Gooden to straightaway center inning.
field to lead off the second. Center , The Astros loaded the bases with
fielder Lenny Dykstra was at the wall one out after Davis' homer, but Good
waiting, but there was no chance. It en wriggled out of further trouble
was over the fence with plenty to despite being wild high with the fast
spare, and the Astros had the first ball.
league championship playoff homer
of their history.
Darryl Strawberry was the only
Flyers: potential
is not enough
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
• PHILADELPHIA The Phila
delphia Flyers open their 1986-87
NHL season tonight against the
Edmonton Oilers with the prover
bial monkey on their backs.
General Manager Bob Clarke
says he's tired of reading and
hearing about the potential of the
young Flyers.
"They may be young in age but
they're veterans on the ice and I
won't be satisfied with second
place," Clarke said recently.
Clarke leaves no doubt that he
expects this team, which averages
22.5 years, to win the Stanley Cup.
The Flyers in the last two sea
sons won their division title with 53
victories and more than 100 points
each time, only to be eliminated in
the Cup playoffs. Last season they
were ousted in a best-of-five first
round series by the New York
Rangers, fourth to the Flyers in
regular season play.
The Flyers will be guided by
Mike Keenan in his third season as
head coach. He directed the team
to the second-best record in the
league last season 53-23-4 (110
points).•
The nucleus of the Flyers consis
ts of goalie Bob Froese, who led
the NHL in 1985-86 with a fewest
goals-allowed average of 2.55, a
.909 save percentage and five shut
outs; right wing Tim Kerr, a 58-
goal contributor last year; winger
Brian Propp, the team's scoring
leader with 97 points, and Mark
Howe, an 82-goal scorer as one of
the league's top defensemen.
The only major change by the
defending Patrick Division cham
pions is the acquisition of de
fenseman Jean-Jacques
Daigneault from Vancouver for
Rich Sutter, Dave Richter and a
draft pick. The Flyers also re
ceived two draft choices. Daig
neault was a first-round
Vancouver selection in the 1984
NHL entry draft. He scored five
goals and 23 assists in 64 games
last season for Vancouver.
The Daily Collegian
Thursday, Oct. 9, 1986
Mike Scott
Met to reach third. He singled with
one out in the ninth for New York's
final hit. He stole second and moved
to third when Mookie' Wilson hit a
hard groundball that Davis made a
diving stop on and threw to Scott
Kevin Bass doubled into the right
field corner, and Jose Cruz flied out to
shallow center field. ' •
The team announced last night
that it signed defenseman Kerry
Huffman, its first-round draft
pick, to a multi-year contract.
Clarke said Huffman might be in
the lineup tonight against the Oil
ers.
Huffman scored three goals and
added 24 assists for the Memorial
Cup champion Guelph Platers last
season. He was scholastic player
of the year for Peterborough, On
tario, a Junior B team, in 1984-85.
Huffman, 18, was the 20th player
picked overall in the draft. The 6-2,
180-pounder is a native of Peterbo
rough.
Otherwise, the Flyers are a vet
eran cast with such key players as
wingers Ilkka Sinisalo, Murray
Craven, Rick Tocchet, Lindsay
Carson and Dave Brown; centers
Dave Poulin, Pelle Ecklund, Ron
Sutter and Peter Zezel, and de
fensemen Doug Crossman, Brad
Marsh, Ed Hospodar, and Thomas
Ericksson.
Unless he signs before tonight's
face-off, the Flyers will be without
their second-best defenseman,
Brad McCrimmon, who is locked
in a salary dispute with Clarke.
Froese is backed up in goal by
veteran Glenn Resch, acquired
last March from the Jersey Dev
ils, and rookie Ron Hextall, who
played with the Hershey Bears of
the American Hockey League last
season.
The Flyers' main challenger in
the 82-game regular season is ex
pected to be the Washington Capi
tals, who finished second in the
division last year when they lost to
the Flyers on the final day of the
season. The Caps were a second
round playoff victim of the Rang—
ers.
In the other NHL openers, Mon
treal is at Toronto, Calgary is at
Boston, Buffalo at Winnipeg, De
troit at Quebec, the New York
Islanders at Chicago, New Jersey
at the New York Rangers, Wash
ington at Pittsburgh and St. Louis
at Los Angeles.
Netmen tune up for spring
By JOSEPH HAAS
Collegian Sports Writer
Sometimes in team sports the
difference between a winner and a
loser is the mysterious intangible
known as chemistry. It may mean
having the right mix of personali
ties and temperament on a base
ball team or calling the right plays
and making timely substitutions in
football or basketball.
The men's tennis team has spent
this fall trying to find chemistry:
the right singles lineup and the best
doubles combinations to attack its
tough spring schedule.
Although the team has had an up
and down fall competitively, the
players and their coach, Holmes
Cathrall, are optimistic that the
right combinations and a lot of
determination and hard work will
lead.to another successful spring.
"Last year was our first 20-win
season ever and we hope to at least
duplicate that," said Lee Sponau
gle, the team's No. 1 singles and
doubles player. "Our ultimate goal
would be to make the NCAA's in
May. It depends on how hard we're
going to work.".
Cathrall said he is using the fall
tournaments and upcoming winter
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Two important steps to getting a job.
practice to set his lineup and estab
lish better work habits.
"(The fall season) could have
been better," he said. "We didn't
win as much as I'd have liked to
. . . we haven't put it together yet.
Right now we're pretty unsettled
except for maybe my one and two
(singles) people.
"When we begin winter practice
I'll be a lot more familiar with
what I can expect from the kids,
what they can expect from me."
Cathrall said the team needed to
work on individual weaknesses dis-
covered through its fall matches.
"After we've got them pretty
well straightened out, we'll start
playing for positions for the spring
trip and the spring season," he
said.
The team began its fall season
with weekend tournaments that
were broken up into individual sin
gles and doubles flights rather than
team play. Sponaugle won the "A"
singles at Old Dominion University
and the rest of the team had varied
success in the three tournaments
which included competition at
Bloomsburg University and the
Naval Academy at Annapolis, in
addition to Old Dominion.
Last weekend the team played
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THE • PENNSYLVANIA • STATE • UNIVERSITY
BY•AUTHORITY•OF•THE•BOARD•OF•TRUSTEES•AND - UPON
THE• RECOMMENDATION•OF•THE• FACULTY •AND• OF•THE.SENATE
HEREBY • CONFERS• UPON
RESSIE MAY
THE•DEGREE•OF
BACHELOR OF ART
IN • RECOGNITION •OF •THE•COMPLETION •OF • THE • MAJOR • IN
GRAPHIC DESIGN
IN•TESTIMONY•WHEREOF•THE•UNDERSIGNED•HAVE•SUBSCRIBED
THEIR•NAMES•AND•AFFIXED•THE•SEAL•OF•THE•UNIVERSITY•THIS
MONTH •OF • AUGUST • A • D• WEIS
-14;Z'=.:. , -
••••=l. dr .11 , ••••• So ••••••
three team matches in the James
Madison Quad at Harrisonburg,
Va. It opened with an 8-1 victory
over East Tennessee State. Spo
naugle won the No. 1 singles match
6-3, 4-6, 6-3 and Oliver Sebastian
won the second slot 6-4, 6-4. Glenn
Leach won at No. 3, 5-7, 6-3, 7-5, Bill
Dollard won at No. 4, 6-0, 6-3 . and
David Welch took the sixth singles,
7-6, 7-5. Adam Steinberg lost in the
fifth singles 4-6, 6-3, 6-3. The team
also swept the three doubles
matches, all in straight sets.
Next came a tough 6-3 win over
the host team, James Madison.
Penn State took the top two singles
and doubles matches in addition to
two other singles to clinch a win
ning margin. The team closed out
the weekend with a 5-2 loss to
Atlantic 10 rival West Virginia. The
first and third doubles weren't fin
ished after WVU posted its decisive
fifth win.
Cathrall said he wasn't surprised
by the weekend results and that he
expected to lose to West Virginia
because of the Mountaineers' depth
and experience.
"They're going to have to work a
little harder, play with more inten
sity and work on the specifics of the
game," he said.
w~.o~_~.Q:L.L
=WM
126 Carnegie Building
University Park, PA
863-3215
collegian production 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday
'Other' football team wins too
By JIM DEEGAN
Collegian Sports Writer
Contrary to popular belief, Joe Paterno's Nittany Lions
aren't the only undefeated football team at University
Park this season.
While the nationally ranked football team was dispos
ing of Rutgers at Beaver Stadium before a throng of 84,000
last Saturday, the Penn State Rugby Club was tangling
with a team from California (Pa.) University on a remote
field north of East Halls.
The locations and attendances may have been greatly
different, however the results were strikingly similar.
The club improved its record to 6-0-1 by handing the Cal
State team a 27-0 defeat. As the record indicates, winning
is nothing new for Penn State's 'other' football team.
After seven games this season, the rugby club has
outscored its opponents 133-16 while posting three shut
outs with an average margin of victory of 17 points per
game. Its only tie came against a team from Lancaster in
a tournament played earlier this season which it even
tually won. In . its last three games it has demolished
rivals by a combined score of 81-3. The club has allowed
only one try all season.
A try in rugby is worth four points and is similar to a
touchdown in American football. The object of the game
is to advance the ball into the opposing side's in-goal (end
zone). The ball may be kicked, carried, or passed (to the
sides or rear). Tackling is permitted, but blocking is
forbidden. A conversion is attempted after a try by
kicking the ball through goal posts and is worth two
points.
Chris Koch, a player and spokesman for the rugby club,
said that most of the schools the team plays during the
regular season are from Pennsylvania.
"In the past, our closest games have been against city
The Daily Collegian Thursday, Oct. 9. 1986-13
clubs where competition is better and players have more
experience," Koch said.
Koch said many of the Penn State members quite often
have little or no experience and learn the game gradually
through practice.
"Most of the freshmen and sophomores see playing
time in 'B' and 'C' games or in the spring, when we play
our second season," he said.
The competition and level of play will get tougher soon
though, beginning this weekend when the club competes
in the annual Allegheny Rugby Union Tournament in
Pittsburgh. Also competing in the ARU tourney will be
teams from West Virginia, the University of Pittsburgh
and Slippery Rock. The winner of the tournament ad
vances to the Midwest Collegiate Rugby Tournament,
played in April, to represent the Allegheny Rugby Union.
Last fall the Penn State club captured the ARU
championship and finished sixth in the Midwest Tourna
ment.
To pay for traveling expenses, Koch said that the club
receives some money from the University, but most of the
money is generated through club fundraisers.
Koch said the goals of the club this year are to win a
second ARU championship, to fill in the void left by last
spring's large graduating class, and to recapture the
Bartoletti Cup Championship an annual tournament
played in the spring which is hosted by the club.
Bruce Hale, the team's head coach, said this will be the
18th -year for the Bartoletti Cup Championship, which
Penn State has won four times in the past.
"Last year we finished tied for second place, but didn't
get to play in the finals due to a point differential," Hale
said.
Hale also expressed interest in staging an exhibition
match at Jeffrey Field before the Penn State-Pitt football
game on Nov. 22. Hale said he hopes the match would give
the club the exposure and recognition that it deserves.
RESSIE MAY
CAREER OBJECTIVE: Position in cartography. remote sensing or a related field which utilizes
mapping and/or geographic skills.
EDUCATION: B.A. in Geography, The Pennsylvania State University. Jan. 1984 (Penn State's
Geography department was ranked No. 2 M the nation in the 1982 lones.Lindsey Report);
was a B minus student.
COURSE APPLICATIONS: (Credits)
Production Cartography (3)
Designed, scribed, photographed, developed and compiled production cartographic
projects; received a B grade.
Manual Cartography (3)
Designed and executed manual Iblack•and•nhitel cartographic projects (graduated
symbol. isoline. choropleth maps): received a H grade.
Remote Sensing and Photogrammetry (6)
Constructed photo mosaics and stcreogram, took aerial photos. Learned applications of
aerial photography to map-making. Learned techniques of enhancing and classifying
satellite images for land-use/land cow mapping; receised a B grade for both courses..
ADDITIONAL COURSES: (Credits)
• quantitatise (statistical) techniques (3)
• geographic data systems (3)
• computer science (3)
• differential calculus (3)
WORK EXPERIENCE:
Stock Room Manager/Receis int Clerk Dollar Bargain Store
- WAS promoted from temporary skorker to full-time stock room manager
Supervised up to six people who priced and stocked merchandise
Benched merit raise after six months
Food Service Work, Pollock Dining Hall 6/81-12./83
Learned how to work with unionized and nonunionizod workers ago, 18 to 65, in order
to accomplish goals
Pettis ed two merit raises
ACTIVIDE-S AND HOBBIES: Jere Club. Underdogs (Geography Club). weightlifting
racquetball, reading
33 Princess Drive
MM. AZ 17865
15551 555-1414
• physical geography (6)
• human geography (9)
• linear (mania) algebra (3)
MIME=