Banner Graphic, Volume 21, Number 139, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 February 1991 — Page 8
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THE BANNERGRAPHIC F«txwy 15,1991
College Thursday’* College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press EAST Coast Guard 105, Nichols 57 Frostburg St 95, Mary Washington 89 Hunter 105, Manhattanville 81 lona 76, Manhattan 69 Marist 98, Mount St Mary's, Md. 82 Mass.-Boston 79, SE Massachusetts 60 Monmouth, N.J. 83, Long Island U. 60 N. Adams St 77, Fitchburg St 68 N.J. Tech 119, N.Y. Poly 70 Niagara 98, Loyola, Md. 96,40 T Rhode Island Coll. 72, E. Connecticut 61 Rider 70, Cent Connecticut St 61 Roberts Wesleyan 82, E. Nazarene 61 Siena 88, LeMoyne 75 St Francis, NY 95. Wagner 90 St Peter’s 58, La Salle 57 Utica Tech 105, Oswego St 85 West Virginia 94, Rhode Island 61 Westfield St 62, Framingham St 60 SOUTH Belmont 88, Cumberland, Tenn. 64 Birmingham-Southern 88, Talladega 77 Centenary 84, Samford 75 Coastal Carolina 91, N.C.-Asheville 67 Coker 59. Cent Wesleyan 45 Coppin St 85, S. Carolina St 70 Creighton 75, Texas-El Paso 62 Dillard 81, William Carey 79 E. Tennessee St 90, Liberty 49 East Carolina 55, Campbell 52 George Mason 77, Old Dominion 75 Georgia St 90, Georgia Southern 81, OT limestone 79, Francis Marion 70 Lincoln Memorial 85, N.C. Central 76 McNeeae St 72, SW Texas St. 63 Memphis St 70, Cincinnati 63 Miles 77, Savannah St 73 Milligan 71, Tusculum 66 Montevallo 78, Athens St 67 Morehouse 127, Fort Valley St. 87 N.C. Charlotte 91, W. Kentucky 77 NE Louisiana 84, North Texas 63 Pembroke St 94, Queens, N.C. 58 Radford 82, Charleston Southern 69 Randolph-Macon 77, Va. Wesleyan 61 S. Indiana 107, N. Kentucky 98, 2OT S.C.-Spartanburg 83, Lander 54 South Alabama 92, Southern Miss. 85 South Florida 64, Ala.-Birmingham 61 Southern U. 125, SE Louisiana 101 Southern, NO 84, Xavier, NO 74 Stetson 68, Mercer 55 Tenn. Temple 97, Bryan 70 Texas-Arlington 98, NW Louisiana T 1 Transylvania 93, Alice Lloyd 74 Trevecca Nazarene 94, Lambuth Coll. 81 Troy St 162, Columbus 130 Tulane 88, South Carolina 63 Union, Tenn. 100, Freed-Hardeman 73 Virginia St 85, Bowie St 70 Washington & Lee 83, Guilford 80, OT MIDWEST Aquinas 87, Spring Arbor 70 Ashland 70, Bellarmine 64 Columbia, Mo. 74, Missouri Baptist 63 Detroit 79, Valparaiso 68 Doane 93, Kearney St 91 Eureka 71, Blackhum 66 Grace 107, Indiana Tech 86 Grand Valley St. 89, Hillsdale 86, OT Greenville 85, Harris-Stowe 80 Hamline 69, St. John's, Minn. 65 Huron 94, Dakota St. 69 Ind.-Pur.-Ft. Wayne 96, Kentucky St. 81 Indiana Wesleyan 112, Ind.-Kokomo 81 lowa 82, Minnesota 69 Ky. Wesleyan 92, Indianapolis 83 Mary 91, Valley City St. 72 Michigan St. 55, Northwestern 53 Mid-Am Nazarene 109, Baker 91 Minot St. 69, Jamestown 67 Missouri Mil. 81, Evangel 67 N. Michigan 70, Lake Superior St 69 Northwd, Mich. 99, Grand Rapids Baptist 92, or Ohio St. 73, Wisconsin 71 Park 85, Maryville, Mo. 61 Principia 79, Mac Murray 77 SW Missouri St. 104, Drake 81 Saginaw Vai. St. 76, Michigan Tech 66 St Ambrose 112, Aurora 99 St Joseph’s, Ind. 71, Olivet Nazarene 67 St. Louts 88, Dayton 80, OT Tiffin 84, Shawnee St. 62 U. of the Ozarks 84, Westminster, Mo. 76 Wayne, Mich. 79, Oakland, Mich. 73 Webster 104, Fontbonne 91 Wheaton 76, Rockford 71 Wis.-Milwaukee 91, NE Illinois 66 Xavier, Ohio 69, Evansville 56 SOUTHWEST Ark.-Monticello 94, Harding 76 Arkansas St. 73, Cent. Florida 48 Arkansas Tech 85, Ouachita 82, OT Henderson St 82, S. Arkansas 69 New Orleans 85, Ijimar 75 Oklahoma City 132, Oklahoma Baptist 80 Sam Houston St. 68, Stephen F.Austin 61 Texas-San Antonio 83, Ant-Little Rock 74 Tulsa 68, Bradley 59 FAR WEST Alaska-Anchorage 75, Grand Canyon 56 Boise St. 75. Idaho St. 65 Brigham Young 83, New Mexico 76 Caufomia 82, UCLA 79 Colorado Mines 79, Western St. Colo. 75 Colorado St. 67, San Diego St. 50 E. New Mexico 97, N.Mex.Highlands 64 Fresno St 107, Utah St 86 Idaho 82, N. Arizona 67 Metro St. 94, Colorado Christian 77 Montana 79, Weber St. 67 Nevada 76, E. Washington 73 New Mexico St 80, Fullerton St. 74 Oregon 75, Washington St 69
Ex-Bear drafted No. 1
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Offensive lineman Caesar Rentie, a former seventh-round draft pick of the Chicago Bears, became the firstever draft pick in the World League of American Football. “They told us that we are pioneers for the World League, so you can just call me ‘Lewis & Clark,’” said Rentie, a 290-pound guard selected by the New YorkNew Jersey Knights Thursday. HIS SELECTION WON’T mean instant wealth because players in the WLAF will only receive a base salary of $20,000 for a 10-week season. Thursday’s selections were the first of a six-stage, position-by-
All The Good Sports Are On Putnam County’s Radio Station •Tonight at 7:45, the Shakamak Lakers play the Clovers at Cloverdale on WJNZ! •Tomorrow morning at 9:30, catch the Putnam County “Coaches’ Corner” followed by the DePauw Tigers Sports Huddle! •Tomorrow night at 7:45, the Rockville Rox play the Clovers at Cloverdale on WJNZ! •Sunday at noon, Steve Paquin and the Boys High School Sectional Basketball Tourney Draw on WJNZ! 94.3 FM Stereo WJNZ
Sports scoreboard
Oregon St 80, Washington 63 Pacific U. 82, San Jose Sl 74 Seattle Pacific 84, Seattle 71 St Martin’s 67, W. Oregon 54 Stanford 92, Southern Cal 76 U.S. International 98, Northridge St 96 UNLV 98, UC Santa Barbara 71 Utah 77, Wyoming 72 Big Ten Big Ten At a Glance By The Associated Press Conference Overall W L Pct W L Pci. Ohio State 11 1 .917 21 1 .955 Indiana 10 1 .909 22 2 .917 Illinois 8 3 .727 18 6 .750 Michigan St 7 5 .583 14 8 .636 lowa 6 6 .500 17 7 .708 Wisconsin 5 6 .455 11 10 .524 Michigan 4 7 .364 11 10 .524 Purdue 3 8 .273 11 10 .524 Minnesota 3 8 .273 10 11 .476 N'western 0 12 .000 5 17 .227 Monday’s Result Ohio State 81, Michigan 65 Thursday’s Games lowa 82, Minnesota 69 Michigan State 55, Northwestern 53 Ohio State 73, Wisconsin 71 Saturday’s Games Illinois at Michigan State Wisconsin at lowa Michigan at North western Minnesota at Purdue Sunday’s Game Indiana at Ohio State Semistate Ind HS Girls Semistates INDIANAPOLIS (AP) First-round semistate pairings Saturday, Feb. 16, in the 16th Indiana High School Athletic Association girls’ basketball tournament (Games 11 a.m. and 1230 p.m., local, with winners playing 8:15 p.m. for semistate championships): Fort Wayne Kokomo (21-1) vs Fort Wayne Northrop (20-2) Penn (21-2) vs Warsaw (19-3) Lafayette Anderson (18-4) vs Valparaiso (22-1) Gary West (22-0) vs McCutcheon (19-3) Seymour Charleston (19-4) vs Seymour (20-3) Pike Central (22-1) vs Bedford-N.Lawrence (250) Southport Brownsburg (23-0) vs Warren Central (15-9) Mt Vernon (Hancock) (20-2) vs Terre Haute South (17-5) NBA National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L PcL GB Boston 37 12 .755 Philadelphia 25 23 .521 11 Vi New York 21 28 .429 16 Washington 21 29 .420 1634 New Jersey 15 34 ,306 22 Miami 14 35 .286 23 Central Division Chicago 34 14 .708 Detroit 35 16 .686 44 Milwaukee 30 20 600 5 Atlanta 26 23 .531 834 Indiana 20 28 .417 14 Cleveland 17 32 .347 17 34 Charlotte 15 33 .313 19 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division W L PcL GB San Antonio 33 14 .702 Utah 32 16 .667 IV> Houston 28 22 .560 634 DaUas 17 29 .370 1534 Minnesota 16 31 .340 17 Orlando 15 34 . 306 19 Denver 14 33 .298 19 Pacific Division Portland 40 9 .816 LA lakers 36 12 750 334 Phoenix 32 16 .667 7Vi Golden Slate 27 21 .563 1 234 Seattle 23 24 .489 16 Sacramento 15 32 .319 24 LA Clippers 15 33 .313 2434 Thursday’s Games Miami 141, Denver 112 Chicago 102, New York 92 Seattle 102, Orlando 90 Houston 129, Washington 117 Detroit 102, Milwaukee 94 Phoenix 106, San Antonio 97 Boston 128, Golden State 112 Sacramento 98, Philadelphia 81 Friday’s Games Milwaukee at Charlotte, 7:30 p.m. Denver at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m. New York at Cleveland, 8 p.m. Washington at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Minnesota at LA Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Boston at LA Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Utah at Portland, 10:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Charlotte at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Seattle at Atlanta, 8 p.m. New Jersey at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. San Antonio at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Phoenix at Houston, 8:30 p.m. Minnesota at Utah, 9:30 p.m.
position draft that will be conducted over a 10-day period. Running backs, punters and kickers will be drafted on Saturday, followed by quarterbacks, wide receivers and tight ends on Feb. 18; defensive linemen on Feb. 20; linebackers on Feb. 22, and defensive backs on Feb. 24. The WLAF begins play March 23 with franchises in Orlando; Birmingham, Ala.; Sacramento, Calif.; San Antonio; New York; Raleigh-Durham, N.C.; London; Montreal; Barcelona, Spain; and Frankfurt, Germany. THE KNIGHTS WILL be Rentic’s fourth professional team in four seasons.
Philadelphia at Golden State, 10:30 pun. Sunday’s Games Cleveland vs. Washington at Baltimore, 1 pun. Detroit at New York, 1:30 p.m. Sacramento at Indiana, 2:30 p.m. Boston at Denver, 4 pro. Milwaukee at Orlando, 4 pro. Philadelphia at LA Clippers, 9 p.m. Portland at LA Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Hockey National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EST WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W L T Pts GF GA NY Rangers 30 20 9 69 220 183 Pittsburgh 30 25 3 63 247 218 Philadelphia 28 26 6 62 197 187 New Jersey 24 24 11 59 209 196 Washington 27 28 3 57 189 193 NY Islanders 19 32 8 46 170 215 Adams Division Boston 35 18 8 78 230 198 Montreal 32 22 6 70 209 188 Hartford 26 26 6 58 170 189 Buffalo 22 23 13 57 205 200 Quebec 12 37 10 34 168 259 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division W L T Pts GF GA St. Louis 35 16 7 77 228 182 Chicago 36 19 4 76 195 153 Detroit 26 29 5 57 210 223 Minnesota 19 32 10 47 192 215 Toronto 15 37 6 36 169 243 Smythe Division Los Angeles 32 19 7 71 240 187 Calgary 30 21 6 66 230 180 Edmonton 28 27 3 59 201 196 Winnipeg 21 31 10 52 202 218 Vancouver 20 35 5 45 177 235 Thursday’s Games Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 2 Winnipeg 3, New Jersey 3, tie Chicago 2, Quebec 1, OT Los Angeles 4, Edmonton 2 St Louis 3, Vancouver 2 Friday’s Games Montreal at Buffalo, 7:35 pro. Hartford at N.Y. Rangers, 7:35 p.m. Washington at Calgary, 9:35 p.m. Saturday’s Games Minnesota at Detroit, 1:05 pro. Philadelphia at New Jersey, 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 7:35 p.m. Hartford at Montreal, 8:05 p.m. Edmonton at Toronto, 8:05 p.m. Washington at Vancouver, 8:05 p.m. Boston at Los Angeles, 10:35 p.m. Sunday’s Games Detroit at Chicago, 2:35 p.m. Quebec at Winnipeg, 3:35 pro. Toronto at Buffalo, 7:05p.m. St Louis at Calgary, 8:05 pro. IHL International Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press East Division W LOTL Pts GF GA Kalamazoo 36 19 0 72 227 185 Indianapolis 34 18 3 71 223 158 Fort Wayne 31 23 4 66 258 225 Muskegon 25 27 3 53 199 232 x-Albany 22 30 3 47 191 232 West Division Peoria 40 11 3 83 275 161 Salt Lake Cty 32 22 4 68 232 212 Phoenix 27 25 5 59 227 232 San Diego 24 30 5 53 195 246 Milwaukee 23 29 3 49 193 235 Kansas City 15 39 3 33 173 271 x-Folded Feb. 14. NOTE: Two points are awarded for a victory and one for an overtime or shootout loss. Thursday’s Game Salt Lake City 4, Kansas City 2 Friday’s Games Muskegon at Kalamazoo Indianapolis at Fort Wayne San Diego at Phoenix Peoria at Kansas City Salt Lake City vs. Milwaukee at Green Bay, Wis Saturday’s Games Indianapolis at Muskegon Fort Wayne at Kalamazoo San Diego at Phoenix Sunday’s Games Indianapolis at Milwaukee Peoria at Kansas City Kalamazoo at Muskegon Salt Lake City at Fort Wayne Transactions Thursday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Agreed to terms with Jeff Robinson, pitcher, on a one-year contract. BOSTON RED SOX—Agreed to terms with Kevin Romine, outfielder, on a one-year contract. CALIFORNIA ANGELS- Agreed to terms with Chuck Finley, pitcher, on a one-year contract. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Agreed to terms with Brandy Vann, Randy Veres and Chris Johnson, pitchers, on one-year contracts. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Named Reggie Jackson part-time coach.
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Drabek receives record award from arbitrator
PITTSBURGH (AP) Doug Drabek was 22-6 last season for the Pittsburgh Pirates, but he’s already 1-0 in 1991 and spring training doesn’t start for another 10 days. The National League’s biggest winner in 1990, Drabek became the biggest winner in salary arbitration history with Thursday’s $3.35 million award by arbitrator Raymond Goetz. The Pirates offered $2.4 million. ONLY LAST SATURDAY, California Angels first baseman Wally Joyner became the first player to top $2 million in arbitration. “Salaries are going up, and we just went to where the market is,” Drabek said. Drabek, who increased his salary tenfold in two years, will get a $2.25 million raise and that got a raise out of the man who pays the bills, Pirates president Carl Barger. BARGER, WHO HAS championed the cause of fiscal restraint in an era of skyrocketing salaries, never knew the price of winning the National League East championship would be this high. “Doug is deserving of a generous salary ... but this is another example of the unchecked escalation of salaries that’s currently plaguing our industry,” Barger said. “We thought we made a generous offer.” Two other Pirates, Bobby Bonilla and Barry Bonds, also are seeking $3 million-plus salaries in arbitration, and second baseman Jose Lind wants $950,000. The Pirates will pay sll million in raises or about their entire 1989 payroll if they lose all four arbitration cases.
It’s Earnhardt, Allison duel
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) Neither Dale Earnhardt nor Davey Allison believes the other will spring any surprises during their anticipated shootout Sunday in the Daytona 500. That certainly figures if both drive according to the form they showed Thursday while wiring their respective fields in qualifying races for Sunday’s $2 million event. “I DON’T THINK Davey was holding anything back, and I wasn’t either,” Earnhardt said after his victory in the second 125-mile qualifier. “When I saw Dale swerving in and out on the racetrack, blocking Ernie (Irvan), I figured there’s nothing wrong with him.” So the hand seems to have been dealt for a battle of the two most dominant cars to wage a highstakes battle at the Daytona International Speedway. But there may a few jokers in the deck. Irvan finished a strong second to Earnhardt in a battle of Chevrolet Luminas, with Kyle Petty’s Pontiac also a factor, finishing third in the first race.
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DOUG DRABEK Receives $3.35 million
BONILLA’S CASE WAS argued Thursday, shortly after he turned down the Pirates’ last-ditch offer of about $4 million annually over four years. Bonds’ hearing is scheduled today. Drabek’s agent, Randy Hendricks, said the Pirates arc professional, cordial and hardnosed in negotiations, but aren’t prepared to pay full market value. “We’re delighted, but we thought / we clearly won,” Hendricks said. “The Pirates ... came in with a low-ball figure. This represents the flow of the market.” DRABEK, 28, BECOMES the fourth highest-paid pitcher in baseball behind Roger Clemens, Dave Stewart and Bob Welch. He is the first Pirate and the 38th player to make $3 million.
BOTH EARNHARDT AND Allison say they will change engines for Sunday. “We’ve got to change our engine,” Earnhardt said. “It’s the same one we used all week and it’s worn down.” Earnhardt used it to win the Busch Clash, a sprint race last Sunday for 1990 pole winners. ALLISON WILL SIT on the pole Sunday, having qualified his Ford Thunderbird at 195.955 mph. Irvan, second fastest in qualifying, will have the outside pole.
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Drabek will get about SBO,OOO a start, but won’t apologize for making so much money during a recession that has cost thousands of workers their jobs. “Salaries are going up a lot, but people don’t complain about movie stars or rock stars making money. They still go to the movies or buy their tapes,” Drabek said. “We’re in the entertainment business, just like movie stars and rock stars. You have to go where the market is and adjust yourself to the changes.” DRABEK TRIPLED HIS salary for the second straight year. He made $325,000 in 1989, then won sl.l million in arbitration last year, when he was 22-6 with a 2.78 ERA. He was 1-1 in two NL playoff games against Cincinnati and was a near-unanimous choice for the Cy Young Award, receiving 23 of a possible 24 first-place votes. Drabek said the only thing that will change is the number of zeroes on his paycheck. “I got a big raise last year and I didn’t change anything,” Drabek said. “I didn’t change anything this winter and I won’t change anything in spring training. I’ll keep the same work habits and attitude I had in (Class) A ball.” THE HENDRICKS BROTHERS Randy and Alan also negotiated Roger Clemens’ record $21.5 million contract with the Boston Red Sox last week, but said they didn’t use that deal to argue Drabek’s case. The Pirates offer “was just too low, considering the evolving changes in this business,” Randy Hendricks said.
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