Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 435, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 December 1985 — Page 7
Along with a team champion, 13 individual champions were decided for each weight class during Thursday night's Putnam County Wrestling Tournament. Champions are (front row, from left): Brad Garner, Greencastle; Troy Peters, Greencastle; Pat Thibodeau, South Putnam; Jerry Fox, South Putnam; Brian Ress, Clover-
Sports scoreboard
National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W. L. T Pet. PF PA J** ami 1 1 4 0 .733 400 320 N Y Jets 10 5 0 .667 356 254 New England 10 5 0 .667 328 267 Indianapolis 4 11 0 .267 286 370 Buffal ° 2 13 0 .133 200 353 Central Cleveland 8 7 0 .533 277 257 Cincinnati 7 8 0 467 418 403 Pittsburgh 7 8 0 467 369 327 Houston 5 10 0 .333 268 378 West x-L A Raiders 11 4 0 733 338 302 Denv er 10 5 0 667 353 305 Seattle 8 7 0 .533 325 276 San Diego 8 7 0 .533 433 397 Kansas City 5 10 0 .333 279 326 NATIONAL CONFERENCE N East X-Dallas 10 5 0 667 341 302 NY. Giants 9 6 0 600 371 273 Washington 9 6 0 .600 270 296 Philadelphia 6 9 0 400 249 275 St. Louis 5 10 0 .333 262 387 Central x-Chicago 14 1 0 933 419 181 Green Bay 7 8 0 .467 317 338 Minnesota 7 8 0 .467 31 1 322 Detroit 7 8 0 .467 290 329 Tampa Bay 2 13 0 133 277 428 West x-L.A. Rams 1 1 4 0 .733 334 261 San Francisco 9 6 0 .600 380 247 New Orleans 5 10 0 .333 284 385 Atlanta 3 12 0 200 266 442 x-clinched division title y-clinched wild-card playoff berth Friday's Game Denver at Seattle Saturday's Games Pittsburgh at New York Giants Washington at St Louis Sunday's Games Atlanta at New Orleans Buffalo at Miami Chicago at Detroit Cincinnati at New England Cleveland at New York Jets Green Bay at Tampa Bay Philadelphia at Minnesota San Diego at Kansas City Houston at Indianapolis Dallas at San Francisco Monday's Game Los Angeles Raiders at Los Angeles Rams END REGULAR SEASON Thursday's College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press EAST St. Francis, Pa. 105, Mercy hurst 81 St. Michaels 70, Harvard 64 Seton Hall 81, Dowling 45 SOUTH McNeese St. 64, NW Louisiana 61 N. Carolina St 77, Wake Forest 64 South Alabama 64, Cent. Florida 56 Stetson 79, Dartmouth 53 MIDWEST DePaul 70, Northwestern 67 Detroit 68, N. Michigan 48 Huron 78, Northern St. 75 Ohio St. 80, Dayton 73 S. Indiana 101, St. Louis 73 Wichita St. 85, New Orleans 69 SOUTHWEST Rice 90, Mary Hardin-Baylor 50 Tulsa 63, Oral Roberts 47 FAR WEST Montana 84, NW Nazarene 79,20 T San Jose St. 58, Santa Clara 55 U.S Inti. 82, Morgan St. 78 Utah 107, Seattle 72 Washington 74, Brigham Young 68 TOURNAMENTS Cardinal Varsity Club Classic Championship Ball St. 73. Miss. Valley St. 63 Third Place Delaware St. 58, Brooklyn Coll 57 TTiursdav’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League CALIFORNIA ANGELS—Announced that Geoff Zahn
|L» % IN OBSERVANCE OF THE JtfCHRISTMAS HOLIDAY ill WE WILL CLOSE Tuesday December 24 at 12:00 noon cind RE-OPEN Thursday-Regular Hours —— \FmM' CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK jM 1 FIRST CITIZEN S BANK & TRUST CO. GREENCASTLE FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK
dale; Tom Catanese, Greencastle and (second row, form left) Jesse Hensley, North Putnam; Kerry Bullerdick, Greencastle; Brian Hayden, South Putnam; Richard Fox, South Putnam; Travis Mundy, Greencastle; Gary Heard, Cloverdale and Tony Cash, South Putnam. (Ban-ner-Graphic photo by Steve Fields).
and Ken Forsch, pitchers, will not be offered new contracts. Reached a three-year agreement with the Palm Springs Angels. National League CINCINNATI REDS-Traded Jay Tibbs, Andy McGaf figan, and John Stuper, pitchers, and Dann Bilardello, catcher, to the Montreal Expos for Bill Gullickson, pitcher, andnSal Butera, catcher. PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Named Dennis Rogers manager and Don Williams pitching coach of Nashua of the Eastern League Announced that Tommy Sandt will return as manager of Hawaii of the Pacific Coast League BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA—Fined Darryl Dawkins of the New Jersey Nets $2,000 and Steve Stipanovich of the Indiana Pacers $750 for fighting during a game Saturday night Fined Micheal Ray Richardson of New Jersey SSOO and Roy Hinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers $250 for other incidents. FOOTBALL National Football League MINNESOTA VlKlNGS—Announced the retirement of Jan Stenerud, place-kicker, effective at the end of the 1985 season. HOCKEY National Hockev League NEW YORK RANGERS-Traded Mike Rogers, center, to the Edmonton Oilers for Larry Melnyk, defenseman, and Todd Strueby, left wing. SKIING INTERNATIONAL SKI FEDERATION—RuIed that Dorota and Malgorzata Tlalka of Poland can compete for France as soon as they become French citizens. National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pet.. GB Boston 21 5 808 New Jersey 15 12 556 6 W Philadelphia 14 12 .538 7 Washington 13 12 .520 7>6 New York 7 19 269 14 Central Division Milwaukee 18 11 621 Detroit 15 13 .536 2>/4 Atlanta 13 14 481 4 Cleveland 12 14 462 4><i Chicago 10 20 .333 B‘/i Indiana 7 18 .280 9 WESTERN CONFERENCE N Midwest Division Houston 18 9 667 Denver 18 9 667 Utah 16 12 .571 2 >At San Antonio 15 12 .556 3 Dallas 13 12 520 4 Sacramento 9 18 .333 9 Pacific Division LA. Lakers 22 3 880 Portland 15 14 .517 9 Seattle 1 1 17 393 12'/i LA. Clippers 9 17 .346 13'/i Phoenix 9 17 346 13'/4 Golden State 10 20 .333 14'^ Thursday's Games Cleveland 109, New York 105 Dallas 120, Atlanta 108 Washington 98, Chicago 92 Denver 123, Portland 118 Phoenix 107, Sacramento 106 Detroit 99, Seattle 97 Friday’s Games Houston at New Jersey Utah at Philadelphia Milwaukee at Indiana L A. Lakers at Cleveland San Antonio at LA. Clippers Saturday's Games New Jersey at Indiana Detroit at New York L A. Lakers at Washington Houston at Atlanta Boston at Philadelphia Utah at Chicago Dallas at Milwaukee San Antonio at Denver Golden State at Phoenix LA. Clippers at Sacramento Portland at Seattle National Hockey League At A Glance Thursday's Games Quebec 5, Montreal 4, OT Boston 2, Hartford 1 Philadelphia 6, New Jersey 3 Pittsburgh 4, Minnesota 3, OT
Schembechler blasts Akron coaching move ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) University of Akron President William Muse erred in replacing head football coach Jim Dennison with Gerry Faust, Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler says. “Believe me, this guy (Dennison) is a widely respected coacn.,” Schembechler said Thursday. “You know, it’s the type of situation where they should be fighting to hold onto him, that he doesn’t get a better job.’’ Akron President William Muse announced Wednesday that the Ohio school named Faust to replace Dennison, who was named assistant athletic director. Faust resigned as coach at Notre Dame Nov. 26. Dennison, 47, led the Zips to an 8-3 record last season and a berth in the NCAA Division I-AA playoffs. He was Akron’s winningest coach, sporting an 80-62-2 record in 13 seasons at the Ohio Valley Conference school. Schembechler, speaking to reporters in advance of the Wolverines’ meeting New Year’s Day with Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl, said Muse represented what was wrong with college sports. “If anybody should be fired it’s that guy,” Schembechler said. “You know what? He will be there two or three years and leave the place in a shambles and go somewhere else. “But what’s the guy (Muse) say? ‘We want instant respectability.’ I’ve got to laugh at that. That guy shouldn’t be president of a junior college.” Muse declined comment on Schembechler’s remarks, saying he had not heard them in detail. “There are different opinions about the decision,” the president said Thursday. “We felt it was in the best interest of the university and the football program. It’s an opportunity for the university and for Dennison to move into athletic administration.” Other Akron officials have defended Faust’s hiring. “Someone like Faust can put us on the map,” John Steinhauer, chairman of the Akron board of trustees, told The (Akron) Beacon Journal after Faust’s appointment was announced. “We’re going to get national publicity.” Faust, 50, was 30-26-1 at Notre Dame. The Irish were bombed 58-7 by Miami in his final game.
Reds finally have Gullickson
CINCINNATI (AP) - The trade that brought Montreal Expos pitcher Bill Gullickson to the Cincinnati Reds is likely to be the club’s last deal until spring training, General Manager Bill Bergesch says. To obtain Gullickson, the Reds had to give up another right-handed starter, Jay Tibbs, in the six-player trade, which was announced Thursday. “To get quality, you’ve got to give up quality,” Reds player-manager Pete Rose told reporters. “You never say you’re not going to make another deal because you never know what will happen tomorrow,” Bergesch said. “But Pete and I think this will conclude our trades until spring training.” The Reds obtained Gullickson and reserve catcher Sal Butera from Montreal in exchange for right-handed pitchers Tibbs, Andy McGaffigan and John Stuper and
||PB|| Wfewuj Ctawuw Jpif will close TuescJ ay, December 24th at 12:00 Noon and be closed Wednesday, Dec. 25 Christmas Day. We will re-open THursday December 26 for regular business hours. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of CLOVERDALE Cloverdale Member FDIC 795-4221
i jA Sw-*' *• ms.. JJBsir 'TR rJr j>R9H9F ;• W «$ MBF uim Br|sS3r 8 v. HUmPi Sllllllg^jHk jjdL* faL-Wi 1 *—1 Mmm Ms gjgpnjr j A Jr ' U¥ I 1 RH J i I m Wflj HfßLr IMBMiMIIiB wp- it » 1 Sms W&m pJHKiIF qg||jjSP
Compare and see the difference. ® BOO Residential Space Heating Annual Cost Comparison Heat Pump High Tech Equipment Ts73B 00 Propane $587 00 I Oil Natural SSOB 00 Gas S4OO | $439 00 | Fuel costs are based on the use of high-efficiency heating equipment in a structure with a yearly heat loss of 57 98 million Btu and on average energy rates in effect in our service area October 1, 1985 Average seasonal equipment efficiencies applied Natural gas $6 29 per Mcf oil $1 01 per gallon propane 77<t per gallon electricity 6 3<t per Kwh
backup catcher Dann Bilardello. The deal created two more openings on Cincinnati’s 40-man winter roster, which now has three open spots. Bergesch said one of those positions will be filled when the Reds re-sign veteran free-agent first baseman Tony Perez, and the other two slots will be kept to protect young prospects. Montreal General Manager Murray Cook said, “We feel we’ve acquired three quality pitchers, along with a catcher who will give us good offense and defense.” Gullickson, a six-year veteran with Montreal, joins the Cincinnati starting staff of right-handers Mario Soto and John Denny and left-hander Tom Browning, who finished with a 20-9 record in 1985. The Reds obtained Denny from the Philadelphia Phillies in a trade last week. The Reds finished second to the pitchingrich Los Angeles Dodgers in 1985 and are
Gas Advantage #2:
December 20,1985, The Putnam County Banner Graphic
trying to strengthen their starting staff to challenge the Dodgers in 1986. Rose said he has not decided whether to go with a four-mar. or a five-man starting staff, which could include right-hander Ron Robinson, next season. He said the front four pitchers will complement the Reds’ bullpen duo of right-hander Ted Power and left-hander John Franco. Rose, who played with Denny and Gullickson after leaving the Reds following the 1978 season, rated them both as hard workers. “I know Bill’s been trying to get out of there for a couple of years because he knows they're not going anywhere,” Rose said of the Expos. “Whether we win it or not, you can see we’re on the way up, and those guys like to come to a club like that.”
More people come home to the comfort of gas heat.
It’s true. Gas gives you more warm for your money. And gas costs less than oil or electricity. Dependable gas furnaces stand the test of winter ..year after year! It’s the only heating system you need. No wonder more people come home to the comfort of natural gas than to any other fuel. Get the Gas Advantage and « ■ m warm up to gas heat. Ask your heating dealer jfvjkbv about the new dependable, | high-efficiency gas furnaces. And use energy wisely. ™ = Gas gives you more for your money.
lifilADDi tJCwTVw fttt i n dm mi
NEW YEAR’S EVE \ DANCE 4 iYFWST POST 1550| ’ Featuring: f "SIDE STREETS" } Country and Rock i M Cover Charge [ NO Package Deal J jj NO Frills or Specials | e Plan Now | { Fun For All | "Everyone Welcome" | 819 S. JACKSON _ §
A7
