Banner Graphic, Volume 13, Number 104, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 January 1983 — Page 5
Sports scoreboard
Indiana High School Basketball B> The Associated Press h riday's Games Anderson 87. FW Wayne 57 Anderson Highland 63. Delta 61 Anderson Madison Hts 75. Elwood 48 Argos 74. LaOrosse 59 Attica 85, S. Newton 72 Batesville 102. S Riplev 49 Benton Central 67. Twin Lakes 47 Bethany Christian 73. Ft.Wavne i hristian46 Bloomfield 71, Sullivan 59 Blue River 74. Eastern Hancock 58 Boone Grove 62. Hanover Central 50 Brazil 79. Owen Valiev 53 Bremen 56. Goshen 46 Brookville 51. Union Co 43 Brown Co. 71. Indian Creek 59 Brownstown6l. Crothersville 40 Calumet 48. Lowell 47 Carmel 53, Huntington North 48 Carroll tCarroll i 82. N White 63 Cascade 63. Eminence 58 Chesterton 34. Valparaiso 33 Clinton Prairie 69 Hamilton Hts 51 Columbia City 72. Garrett 39 C olumbus East 72. Bloomington North 71 Crown Point 65. Lake Central 60 Culver Military 65. New Prairie 59 Daleville 67. Cowan 55 Danville 49, Avon 44 DeKalb64. Carroll i Allen 155 Delphi 79, Northwestern 64 E Centra 171. Jae-Cen-Del 63 E. Noble 75. Bellmont69 Eastbrook 52, Madison-Grant 50 Eastside64. W'oodlan62 Edgewood 67. N.Putnam 62 Elkhart Central 57. Penn 54. OT Elkhart Memorial 83, S.Bend Clay 57 Evansville Memorial 59. Evansville Mater Dei 49 Evansville North 70. Terre Haute North 61 Fairfield 68. Concord 44 Floyd Central 64. Louisville St. Xavier 55 Franklin Central 54. Decatur Central 47 Ft W ayne North 49. New Haven 48 Ft W ayne Northrop 73, FW’Dwenger 54 Ft .Wayne Snider 80. FW Luers44 Glenn 59. Triton 52 Graceland Christian 62. Evansville Dav 36 Greencastle 58. W'.Vigo 50 Greenwood 73. Center Grove 52 Ha milton Southeastern 39. Sheridan 35 Hammond7l. Hammond N'oll 62 Hammond Clark 80. Hammond Gavit 50 Henderson Co.. Kv 75. Evansville Reitz 48 Heritage Hills 61. Dubois 55 Highland 65. Munster 56 Homestead 65. Angola 57 Indiana Deaf 53. Morton Memorial 47 Inbpls Attueks 63. FW Elmhurst 50 Indpls Brebeuf 104. Indpls Tech 92 Indpls Manual 68, Indpls Broad Ripple 65 Indpls Marshall 82. Indpls Chatard 74 Indpls Northwest 71. Evansville Harrison 70. OT Indpls Perry Meridian 63, Beech Grove 56 Indpls Ritter 79. Monrovia 73 Jasper6o. Evansville Central 53 Jennings Co 86. Bedford-.N Lawrence 80 Kankakee Valley 79, N Newton 43 Kokomo 51. Logansport 49 LaVilles2, Knox 46 Lafayette Harrison 63. Crawfordsville 57 LakeStationßl. Culver4s Lanesville 24. Pekin Eastern 18 Lawrence Centra! 63, Indpls Roncalli 60 Lawrence North 68, Shelbyville 47 Lebanon 74. Frankfort 62 Madison 56, Scottsburg 41 Manchester7l. Whitko62 Marion 79. Richmond 69 Martinsville 54. Bloomington South 52. OT Merrillville 70. Hobart 40 Mich. City Marquette 61. S.Central34 Milan6o. X Decaturs9 Mishawaka 63. S.Bend Adams6l Mooresville 55. Brownsburg 50 Muncie Bums 50. Frank ton 33 Muncie Central 62. Lafayette Jeff 61 Muncie North 54. Kokomo Haworth 43 N.Daviess 23. Loogootee22. OT N Judson 36. Kouts39 N Knox 59, Washington Catholic 57 New Albany 57. Jeffersonville 55 New Castle 70. Jay Co. 53 New Palestine7o. Kmghtstown6B. OT North Wood 79. Rochester 63 Northridge6s. Jimtowns3 Norwell 67. S. Adams 58 Oregon-Davis 67. Washington Twp 53 Orleans 38. Borden 37 Paoli 79. Clarksville 51 Pendleton Hts 48. Lapel 47 Perry Central 55, S.Spencer 42 Peru 91. N.Mia mi 65 Pike Central 51. Gibson Southern 49. 2 OTs Princeton 76. Boonville 71 Rosedale 65. Montezuma 56 Rossville 64. Tri-County 45 S Bend Baptist 65. Calumet Baptist 63 S.Bend LaSalle 57. S Bend Riley 56 S Bend Washington 82. Mich City Elston 80 S Central 38. Henryville 37 S Knox 49. Vincennes Rivet 48 S Putnam 44. Rockville 42 Salem 51. Crawford Co. 48 Seeger63. Fountain Central 56 Seymour 44. Rushville43 Shoals 48. Springs Valley 47 Silver Creek 74. Corydon 58 Southmont 71, S.Vermillion 45 Southridge 87. T ecumseh 63 Speedway 58. Zionsville 52 Taylor 78. Westfield 52 Tell City 41. Mt. Vernon (Posey) 36 Terre Haute South 79. Indpls Washington 67 Tipton 56. Eastern (Howard 148 Tri High 53. Hauser 51 Tri-Centra 179, Cass 52 Tri West 75. Turkey Run 57 Warren Central 61. Indpls N Central 56 Wawasee 64. Plymouth 54 Wheeler 65, West ville 53 Whiting 65. Hammond Morton 62 Winampc 68, Rensselaer 52 Yorktown 48, Wapahani 40
Match to pit Borg, Tanner CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. <AP) Sweden’s Bjorn Borg and Roscoe Tanner, a hometown favorite, will play each other in a Feb. 3 professional tennis exhibition in Chattanooga, a promoter announced Friday. California promoter Bill Stamps said the match will be staged at the University of Ten-nessee-Chattanooga's new $15.5 million sports arena. Tanner and Borg dueled each other in the 1979 finals of the Wimbledon tennnis tournament, with Borg winning. They met again later that year in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open, a match which Tanner won. Tanner hails from Lookout Mountain, a Chattanooga suburb. Ed Walsh of the Chicago White Sox won 40 games in 1908 and pitched 4 2 complete games.
TOURNAMENTS Clay City First Round Van Buren 57, Staunton 50 N Central (Sullivan) 82. Clay City 64 Grant County First Round Eastbrook 52. Madison-Grant 50 Oak Hill 94. Mississinewa6o Greene County Semifinals Worthington 62. Dugger 58 Linton 81. Switz City 53 Jefferson County Semifinals S Decaturs4, MadisonShawe43 New Washington 44. Southwestern 42 Shelby County First Round Triton Central 73, Morristown 52 Waldron 79, Southwestern 62 Wayne County First Round Northeastern 82, Centerville 47 Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Friday's Games Central lowa 63, Purdue-Calumet 58 Grace 89. Eastern Nazarene 79 Villanova 61. Notre Dame 55 NFL Playoff Schedule (Seedings in Parentheses) The top eight teams in each conference are seeded 1 to 8 for the duration of the playoffs by won-lost percentages and tiebreakers: First Round AFC Saturday's Games Cleveland (8> at Los Angeles Raiders 111 New England 17) at Miami (2) Sunday 's Games New York Jets (6) at Cincinnati (3) San Diego (5) at Pittsburgh i 4) NFC Saturday 's Games Detroit (8) at Washington (1) St Louis (6) at Green Bay (3) Sunday's Games Tampa Bay (7) at Dallas 121 Atlanta is> at Minnesota i 4) Sat.. Jan. Is&Sun.. Jan. IK AFC and NFC (Second Round) Lowest remaining seeds at highest remaining seeds; second lowest seeds at second-highest seeds CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES! W inners of Jan. 15-1 K games at home of highest remaining seeds) NFC Championship Saturday. Jan. 22 AFC Championship Sunday. Jan. 23 SUPER BOWL XVII Sun . Jan. 30. Pasadena Rose Bow I AFC vs NFC champions, for Vince Lombardi Trophv PRO BOWL’ Sun . Feb. 6. Honolulu Friday's Sports Transactions Bv The Associated Press BASKETBALL National Basketball Association PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS- Signed Donßuse, guard FOOTBALL l niled States Football League DENVER GOLD—Named Charlev Armey defensive line coach: Ellis Rainsberger offensive backfieid coach. Greg RoberLson trainer; and Carter Tate equipment manager LOS ANGELES EXPRESS Named Er nest "Pokey" Allen and Al Roberts assistant coaches National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pet GB Philadelphia 26 5 839 Boston 25 8 758 2 New Jersey 21 13 618 64 Washington 17 15 531 94 New York 12 21 364 15 Central Division Milwaukee 23 12 657 Detroit 18 19 486 6 Atlanta 16 17 485 6 Indiana 12 21 364 10 Chicago 11 21 .344 104 Cleveland 4 28 .125 174 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Kansas City 20 11 .645 San Antonio 22 14 611 4 Denver 16 19 457 6 Dallas 13 19 406 7 4 Utah 13 23 . 361 94 Houston 5 28 .152 16 Pacific Division Los Angeles 26 7 .788 Seattle 23 10 .697 3 Phoenix 22 14 .611 54' Portland 21 15 583 64Golden State 14 20 412 124San Diego 7 27 . 206 194 Friday's Games Phoenix 108. Indiana 101 Atlanta 110, Dallas 102 Philadelphia 106, Washington 89 Boston 116, San Antonio 113 New Jersey 111, Chicago 98 Kansas City 139. Utah 117 Milwaukee 109, Detroit 92 Denver 125. Houston 97 Saturday's Games Los Angeles at New York Kansas City at Philadelphia Chicago at Atlanta Washington at Cleveland Boston at Dallas Uth at Houston Denver at San Diego Seattle at Golden State Sunday 's Games Detroit at New Jersey Phoenix at Milwaukee Seattle at Portland
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Cub wrestlers defeat Cascade
CLAYTON-Winning seven of the 13 matches, Greencastle won its third dual high school wrestling meet of the season Thursday night, defeating Cascade 39-27. Greencastle travels to Plainfield Jan. 11 and will host Brazil Jan. 13 at McAnally Center. CHRIS SANFORD, John Skinner, Mike Allen, Phil Asbell, Brad Calbert and Matt Sage all posted victories for Greencastle on the mat. Brian Singer received a forfeit at 112 pounds. Sage's heavyweight victory assured the Cubs a team win. Greencastle trailed 24-16, but got a superior decision from Allen at 155 pounds and pins from Asbell. Calbert and Sage
Cavaliers waive Magley
RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - The Cleveland Cavaliers have waived second-round draft pick David Magley. Magley, University of Kansas forward, appeared in 14 games
Wyche calls early IU grid meeting
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) Sam Wyche, already at a disadvantage in recruiting, wasted no further time as the new Indiana University football coach and called a team meeting today for all of his players. “I want to get to know as many people as I can. I want this to be a family. I’d like it to be, when a player says, ‘Coach.’ it's almost like he’s saying, ‘Sam,’ says the 38-year-old Wyche, who succeeds the fired Lee Corsoat Indiana Wyche, quarterback coach for the NFL Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers,
$400,000 purse set for LPGA RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (AP) The Nabisco-Dinah Shore Invitational, richest tournament in women's golf, will become even richer this year. General tournament cochairmen Robert M. Schaeberle and F. Ross Johnson jointly announced Friday that the purse of this year's event wili be $400,000 and the winner will earn $55,000. The purse last year was $310,000 and winner Sally Little collected $45,000. The 72-hole tournament will be played March 31-April 3 at the Mission Hills Country Club, which is located near Palm Springs. Little won last year’s event by firing an 8-under-par 64 on the final round, giving her a 72-hole score of 278. She won by three shots over Sandra Haynie. who had a 65 in the final round, and Hollis Stacy , who finished with an even-par 72.
for the win. Greencastle led 33-27 when Sage and Cascade's Mike Barber took the mat. A Cub loss in the final match would have tied the score. Greencaslle 39, Cascade 27 98—Chris Sanford, G. I Hi decision, Kelly Angrich. C. 105-Paul Lee. C, by forfeit. 112—Brian Singer. G. by forfeit. 119-Jon Skinner, G, third period pin, Kevin Johnson. C. 126-Jeff Davis, C, 3-11 decision, Monty Beaman. G. 132-David Chambers, C. 3-0 decision. Pete Meyer. G. 138~Scott Armour. C. second period pin, Pat Meyer, G. 145—David Romer, C, third period pin, Randy Vicars, G. 155-Mike Allen, G, 17-5 superior decision, Bob Knuckles. C. 167—Phil Asbell, G, first period pin. Jerry Brown. C. 177-Brad Calbert. G. third period pin. John Snider. C. 185-Phil Hesler, C, 6-3 decision. Charlie Gilmer, G. Hwt.-Matt Sage, G, second period pin. Mike Barber. C.
and averaged about a point a game, the NBA Cavaliers said Friday. The 6-foot-8 Magley was Indiana’s Mr. Basketball in 1978 at South Bend LaSalle.
comes to Indiana with hopes of turning around a losing program that has seen only five winning seasons since 1947. Corso had two of those winning seasons but was fired last month after compiling a 41-68-2 record in 10 years with the Hoosiers. “I'd rather not put a timetable on it,” says Wyche, whose appointment was announced at a news conference Friday. “But we re going to try to be successful immediately ... It’ll happen Success will come.” Wyche, who played nine years in the NFL and then ser-
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Tracy Caulkins, 19, finished second in the 200-meter individual medley at Indianapolis Friday, but said she was satisfied with her opening-round effort in the U. S. International Swimming Meet. She holds 42 national swimming titles. (AP Laserphoto)
ved as an assistant at San Francisco for four years, said the first season he was with the 49ers. the team went 2-14. "Three years after that, we were 16-3 and world champions. You gain a lot of experience in turning around a program like that in three years. "I made a lot of phone calls before I came here." Wyche said “No one told me, ‘You’re going to go out there and win.' Most of them told me, Sam. you can't win there. It's a basketball school.' “My question back to them was, is there something there that says I can t win 1 ’ Is there
some barrier to winning 9 There isn't a barrier I think I can win here and I think I can win here in the not too distant future.” Wyche planned to meet with Corsos assistants, possibly keeping some on his staff, then meet with his players before heading for the NCAA convention at San Diego with Indiana athletic director Ralph Floyd on Sunday. Once he gets back, recruiting takes top priority. "We re behind, but the staff here has been working on it." said Wyche. “There is a big turnover of players, and recruiting is crucial."
January 8,1983, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic
Swim marks fall at Indianapolis
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Tracy Caulkins, the winner of more national swimming titles than any other American with 42, is looking for a comeback this year. “I had a disappointing summer,” said the 19-year-old Caulkins, who won three gold medals in the 1978 world championships but finished a disappointing third in both individual medley races at last year's world championships. “I learned a lot last summer,” she said. “I know I do need to work harder. This year is probably the most important in getting ready for the Olympics...! learned I have to be a lot tougher mentally.” The University of Florida sophomore failed to win a gold medal in Friday’s 200-meter individual medley but left the Indiana University Natatorium saying she was satisfied with the opening session of the U.S. International Swimming meet. “I really wasn’t concerned with time. I gave 100 percent. Everything felt really strong. I was really pleased,” said Caulkins, who finished second to East Germany's Kristin Otto in the race. Although Caukins took second, she and her teammates on the United States expressed satisfaction with their performance against an East German team they figure will be their toughest competition in the 1984 Olympics. “I don't think any time is too early to gain confidence by beating them,” said Tiffany Cohen, who led a sweep by American swimmers in the 800 freestyle. “I really wanted to get the meet off to a good start for the USA,” said the 16-year-old from Mission Viejo, Calif, who won
four national titles in 1982. “We got beat really bad by them,” (East Germany) in the world championships. “We don’t want that to happen again.” Preliminary and final competition in the three-day meet continue today with the final session scheduled for Sunday. Two world bests were set Friday. Jeff Kostoff, a 17-year-old high school senior from Upland, Calif, recorded a world’s best time of seven minutes, 44.53 seconds in winning the men’s 800 freestyle race. Kostoff’s time was more than three seconds faster than the previous best recorded by Vladimir Salnikov of the Soviet Union last month. However, Kostoff's time will not be recognized as an official world mark since it was recorded in a short course 25-meter pool. World marks can only be set in a 50-meter pool. Darjan Petrie of Yugoslavia, a bronze medalist in the 1,500 freestyle at last year's world championships, finished second to Kostoff. Petrie’s time was only a half second off the time of 7:48.24 recorded by Salnikov on Dec. 19. “I was just going out to swim my race and I figured that Petrie would be out ahead,” said Kostoff. "He got out a little further and I was beginning to worry. But, he just started to die (tire).” Kostoff, the current U.S. champion in the 1,500 freestyle, will be recognized as the American short course record holder. His time shattered the standard of 7:56 set by Bobby Hackett in April. 1978. Birgit Meineke of East Germany lowered her world s best in the women's 200 freestyle in 1:56.35.
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