Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 427, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 December 1985 — Page 9
Sports scoreboard
Indian* High School Basketball n By The Associated Press Wednesday's Games EC Roosevelt 75, Hammond Clark 37 EC Washington 56, Whiting 42 Indpls Chatard 56, Lawrence Cent 49 Indpls Ritter 59, Indpls Attucks 54 Indpls Washington 47, Indpls Brebeuf 40 Noblesville 82, Carmel 59 Warren Central 77, Indpls Marshal 52 Wes-Del76, Hagerstown 52 Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Wednesday's Games Ball State 57, Indiana State 56 Dayton 69, Butler 55 DePauw 60, Illinois Wesleyan 58 Transylvania 71, Franklin 64 Wednesday’s College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press EAST American U 67, George Washington 66 BuckneU 73, St. Francis, N.Y., 68 Georgetown 76, New Mexico 51 Lehigh 93, Dickinson 68 Maryland 42, West Virginia 41 Ohio U. 70, Wagner 57 Penn St. 76, Indiana, Pa. 58 Providence 94, Maine 62 Rutgers 72, Columbia 60 Seton Hall 73, Fordham 66 Siena 61, Niagara 55 St. Bona venture 78, Massachusetts 77 St. John’s 62, Marist 48-SOUTH Georgia St. 79, Augusta 76 S. Mississippi 86, Arkansas St. 82. VMI76, Lynchburg 72 MIDWEST Ball St. 57, Indiana St. 56 Dayton 69, Butler 55 Miami, Ohio 80, Denison 55 Missouri 81, Middle Tenn. 77 Morehead St. 77, Ohio Wesleyan 71 SOUTHWEST Texas 82, Oral Roberts 66 Texas AAM 88, Prairie View 60 FAR WEST Colorado 78, Colorado St. 65 Fullerton St. 117,U.5. International Portland 54, Idaho 53 San Jose St 68, San Francisco 61 national Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W. L Pet. GB Boston 19 3 .864 Philadelphia 12 10 .545 7 New Jersey 1211 .522 7Vi Washington 11 11 .500 8 New York 6 16 .273 13 Central Division Milwaukee 17 8 .680 Detroit 14 10 .583 2Vi Atlanta 11 12 .478 5 Cleveland 9 13 409 6Vi Chicago 8 17 .320 9 Indiana 6 16 .273 9‘* WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Houston 16 7 .696 Denver 15 8 .652 1 Utah 14 11 .560 3 San Antonio 13 11 .542 3>k Dallas 11 10 .524 4 Sacramento 7 16 .304 9 Pacific Division L.A. Lakers 18 2 .900 Portland 14 12 .538 7 Seattle 10 14 .417 10 L.A. Clippers 8 15 348 11 W Golden State 9 17 .346 12 Phoenix 6 16 .273 13 Wednesday's Games Boston 118, Sacramento 101 Philadelphia 125, Cleveland 110 Atlanta 105, Seattle 97 Washington 108, Detroit 100 Indiana 114, San Antonio 101 Denver 134, LA. Clippers 95 Utah 119, Portland 111 Phoenix 123, Golden State 113 Thursday's Games New Jersey at New York Milwaukee at Washington Philadelphia at Chicago Dallas at Houston Phoenix at L.A Lakers Friday’s Games San Antonio at Detroit Atlanta at Indiana Cleveland at Milwaukee L.A. Lakers at Denver Portland at Golden State L.A. Clippers at Seattle Wednesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL—Approved the sale of the Pittsburgh Pirates to a group of local businesses. American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Traded Gary Roenicke, outfielder, to the New York Yankees for Rich Bordi, pitcher, and Rex Hudler, infielder.
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CLEVELAND INDIANS—Traded Mike Fischlin, infielder, to the New York Yankees for a player to be named later. TEXAS RANGERS—Named Mike Bucci manager of Salem of Northwest League and Chino Cadahia manager of Daytona Beach of the Florida State League. National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Traded Steve Yeager, catcher, to the Seattle Mariners for Ed Vande Berg, pitcher. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Traded John Denny and and Jeff Gray, pitchers, to the Cincinnati Reds for Gary Redus, outfielder, and Tom Hume, pitcher. PITTSBURGH PlßATES—Purchased contracts of Matias Carrillo, outfielder, from the Mexico City Tigers and Martin Hernandez, pitcher, from the Mexico City Reds of the Mexican League. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Traded Manny Trillo, second baseman, to the Chicago Cub 6 for Dave Owen, infielder Acquired Scott Medvin, pitcher, from the Detroit Tigers and Hector Quinones, shortstop, from the Milwaukee Brewers to complete earlier deals. Traded Alex Trevino, catcher, to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Candy Maldonado, outfielder. Appalachian League BURLINGTON, N.C.—Announced it will field a team in the league in 1986 and will be an affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. FOOTBALL National Football League GREEN BAY PACKERS—Signed Vince Ferragamo, quarterback, to a one-year contract. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Placed Scott Pelluer, linebacker, on injured reserve HOCKEY National Hockey League MONTREAL CANADIENS—RecaIIed Serge Boisvert, right-winger, from Sherbrooke of the American Hockey League.COLLEGE FORDHAM—Announced the resignation of O’Neal Tutein, head football coach. GEORGlA—Announced that Eric Burdette, basketball forward, has quit the team NCAA—Announced that it will not penalize the University of Central Florida for basketball violations last season. NORTH CAROLlNA—Announced that Kevin Anthony, quarterback, will give up his final year of eligibility. SAN DIEGO STATE—Named Denny Stolz head football coach. SOUTH CAROLINA ST —Asked for the resignation of Bill Davis, head football coach. U.S. OLYMPIC FESTIVAL—Named Ed Jacoby, track and field coach of the West team. National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W L. T Pts. GF.GA Philadelphia 21 8 0 42 131 86 Washington 17 7 3 37 103 80 NY Rangers 14 14 1 29 105 95 NY Islanders 11 10 7 29 107 110 Pittsburgh 11 14 4 26 110 106 New Jersey 12 14 1 25 101 108 Adams Division Quebec 16 10 1 33 108 86 Montreal 14 10 3 31 121 100 Boston 13 10 5 31 110 102 Buffalo 13 13 2 28 100 92 Hartford 12 13 0 24 100 102 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division St. Louis 12 12 3 27 99 106 Chicago 9 14 4 22 111 129 Minnesota 8 14 6 22 112 112 Toronto 8 17 3 19 106 126 Detroit 7 16 4 18 87 138 Smythe Division Edmonton 21 5 4 46 162 119 Calgary 16 8 3 35 122 96 Winnipeg 10 17 3 23 103 138 Vancouver 9 18 3 21 110 131 Los Angeles 7 17 4 18 97 142 Wednesday’s Games Montreal 3, Hartford 1 N.Y. Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 4, tie N.Y. Rangers 4, New Jersey 2 Toronto 6, St. Louis 4 Minnesota 10, Detroit 2 Edmonton 12. Chicago 9 Winnipeg" 6, Vancouver 3 Thursday's Games Quebec at Boston Montreal at Philadelphia Los Angeles at Calgary Friday's Games Hartford at Buffalo Edmonton at Winnipeg International Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press East Division W L. T . Pts. GF GA Muskegon 18 9 0 36 117 85 Saginaw 14 9 0 30 81 75 Kalamazoo 11 14 0 23 101 108 Toledo 6 21 0 17 88 137 Flint 6 20 0 15 86 128 West Division Fort Wayne 15 9 0 33 97 77 Milwaukee 16 7 0 32 105 70 Indianapolis 13 11 0 27 78 79 Peoria 12 12 0 27 83 84 Salt Lake 13 12 0 26 97 90
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Denny and Trillo part of trade day
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Baseball’s 1985 winter meetings, predicted to be a slow time for trading, keep speeding up. Just ask John Denny, Manny Trillo or Gary Roenicke. Those players highlighted six more deals made Wednesday that boosted the trade total to 10, matching the number of swaps made during the entire 1984 annual meetings. “I’m delighted to be with the Reds,” Denny, a former Cy Young Award winner, said after Philadelphia sent him and a minor leaguer to the Reds for speedy outfielder Gary Redus and relief pitcher Tom Hume in the biggest deal of the day. The brisk trading far overshadowed the planned business, Commissioner Peter Ueberroth’s meeting with team owners. No new developments regarding expansion and relocation, the drug situation or the use of the designated hitter in the World Series emerged after the six-hour session. The owners did unanimously approve the sale of the Pittsburgh Pirates to a group of local businesses. While the owners were talking trades, several general managers were trading players. The New York Yankees, the most active team at last year’s meetings, made two deals acquiring Roenicke and a player to be named later from Baltimore for pitcher Rich Bordi and second baseman Rex Hudler, and getting utility infielder Mike Fischlin from Cleveland for another player to be named later. The Los Angeles Dodgers, who missed a chance to get Rickey Henderson last year and wound up not making any deals during those meetings, made two trades Wednesday.
Yukica sues Dartmouth
HANOVER, N.H. (AP) - Athletes, teams, schools agents anyone with a sports contract is likely to have an eye on a court case in northern New Hampshire where a judge has been asked to decide if Dartmouth College can fire its football coach. In 33 years of coaching, Joe Yukica doesn’t recall any football coach who has responded to his firing by suing to keep his job, but he doesn’t see it as a landmark case. He just wants to coach the final year of his contract. However, others think the outcome could affect more than Yukica and Dartmouth. “I think the whole athletic world will be watching,” said Athletic Director Gene Corrigan of Notre Dame, which recently replaced football coach Gerry Faust but only after he had completed his five-year contract. “These things are always done for money, not for work.” Sports lawyer and agent Bob Wolff of Boston said the public is confused because contracts in sports don’t seem to be honored.
“Everybody else knows that if you sign a
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GARYREDUS Traded to Phillies
Los Angeles filled a big void by getting left-handed reliever Ed Vande Berg from Seattle for veteran catcher Steve Yeager, and filled Yeager’s spot as a backup by obtaining Alex Trevino from San Francisco for outfielder Candy Maldonado. San Francisco made the other deal of the day, sending four-time All-Star second baseman Manny Trillo to the Chicago Cubs for utility infielder Dave Owen. The Giants also spent part of the day working on a major trade that would have sent outfielder Chili Davis to the World Series champion Kansas City Royals for pitcher Mark Gubicza, outfielder Pat Sheridan and a highly touted pitching prospect. In all, 22 players have been traded so far duringnthe meetings, compared to 25 last year.
contract, you’re expected to live up to its obligations, even if it’s distasteful,” Wolff said. “Why nobody up to this point has brought this forwardntin sports), I don’t know. But I believe in the sanctity of a contract, so good luck, Joe Yukica.” Boston College Coach Jack Bicknell, who will testify on Yukica’s behalf, said, “I know coaches who have been fired, and others who have walked out on contracts; it’s not a good thing. Maybe I’m old fashioned, but it used to be a contract was a contract. Nowadays it’s a contract until something else comes up, or you change your mind. “Yukica is not the kind of guy who’s flitting around. He obviously feels strongly that he’s fulfilled his end, and expects them to fulfill theirs.” Yukica was fired Nov. 29 after eight seasons at Dartmouth.
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December 12.1985, The Putnam County Banner Graphic
Stolz decides to stay out west and coach
SAN DIEGO (AP) - BowlingnGreen’s coach Denny Stolz, in Fresno preparing for the California Bowl, has decided to stay on the coast as the new football coach of San Diego State University. “I think we can make this program competitive, not only in the (Western Athletic Conference), but one of the elite in the country, and that’s exactly what my aim will be,” Stolz said Wednesday at a news conference announcing his appointment. Stolz replaces Doug Scovil, who was dismissed after the Aztecs finished the current season 5-6-1. Scovil was largely responsible for converting San Diego State’s football program from one built around junior college tran-
Gators see opportunity
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Florida Coach Galen Hall, whose six-th-ranked Gators were on probation and couldn’t appear on television this year, said coaching five of his players in the 48th annual Blue-Gray All-Star Classic is vindication for him. “This is our chance to let people in this country hear about us,” Hall told The Advertiser, a Montgomery newpaper. Hall was named defensive coach for the Gray, while Grambling’s Eddie Robinson, the winningest coach in football history with 329 victories, will coach the southern offensive team, Blue-Gray officials announced Wednesday.
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sfers to one based on freshmen recruiting. Stolz’ current team is in Fresno, Calif., preparing for Saturday’s California Bowl game agaiast Fresno State. Bowling Green won the MidAmerican Conference and Fresno State won the Pacific Coast Athletic Association this year. Bowling Green, 11-0, could be the nation’s only unbeaten Division I-A team this year if Oklahoma beats undefeated Penn State in the Orange Bown on Jan. 1. “All in all, he was the right man at the right time for our program, and we’re thrilled we were able to get him,” San Diego State Athletic Director Fred Miller said of the 51-year-old Stolz.
The Blue will be coached offensively by Purdue Coach Leon Burtnett, the Big Ten Coach of the Year, while the defense will be guided by Temple’s Bruce Aria fine football team, but we haven’t had any television exposure,” Hall said. “We want to get our name in front of the nation.” Representing the Gators in the Blue-Gray game will be tailback Neal Anderson, fullback John L. Williams, wide receiver Ray McDonald, punter Ray Criswell and linebacker Alonzo Johnson. Full team rosters won’t be announced until Friday.
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