News Scrapbook 1989
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F.tr 1888 Ega~) relaxed approach pays off as USD withstands Western Kentucky By Kirk Kenney first 10 games. The Toreros played (l-7) went on a 15-1 run over the next "We're trying to release this pres- "I thought that was a great hustle big," said Egan. "We have some TrlbuneSportswriter good overall defense (which help two minutes that erased the deicit sure that has been put on us and play when John Jerome ran down quickness and some size, but we'll USD coach Hank Egan gave the them to a 36-19 rebounding advan- and produced a 52-51 Hilltoppers we're starting to do that. Coach is that ball," said Egan. He also was always borrow from one to pay the Toreros a present at the team's prac- tage), concentrated well (making 27- lead. trying to let up a little bit from every impressed by Woods' performance other." tlce Chr1Stma night. of-34 free throws) and played consist- Egan remained quiet and the little thing. It's just because he cares, on the boards and Dottin's perform- The Hilltoppers had the good for- "! decided to have the coach quit ent on offense (making 11-of-20 shots Toreros remained calm, cool and col- but some guys haven't responded to ance on both ends of the floor. Woods tune of making ll-of-19 three- a plying much pressure on these from the floor in each half). Jected themselves. USD guard Gylan that and they've gotten a little tight. fimshed with 14 points and eight re- pointers, which accounted for half of be has been," said Egan. "This is a team that's in a struggle Dottin, forward Kelvin Woods and They're afraid to make mistakes, and bounds and Dottin had 12 points and their 66 points. Junior guard Anthony "There' a lot of possibilities and one and has a confidence cnsis going on center John Jerome helped the you can't be afraid to get after it." six rebounds. Palm came into the game having of them was that I was forcing the - or had one,'' said Egan, whose Toreros answer Western Kentucky's Egan may have created some of If their was any drawback to made 5-of-15 three-point attempts Issue a little bit. I decided to back off team had lost two straight games challenge with a 15-5 run that pro- that pressure with his courtside be- USD's performance it was the this season. He made 5-of-6 last night a little bit and just co ch basketball and six of seven games coming into duced a 66-57 lead with three min- havior. Certainly, he created some Toreros' inability to stop Western on the way to a team-high 17 points. and let th kid develop into a last night's contest. "Hopefully, it's utes to play. distractions by shouting at officials. Kentucky from hitting three- "It was better tonight," concluded t am at a pac they're comfortable over. If you could write the scenario "Tonight, we didn't let anything Egan received technical fouls in two pomters. That was more of a trade Egan. "We got down and rallied back Ith." this was the best of all possible come down on us and start drag- games this season, once for throwmg off than anything else. The Toreros and I thought that was a key thing La t night, the Torcros presented scenarios. We withstood it (a late ging," said Jerome, who had .a game- his jacket on the court. controlled the inside and gave up the for us. I told them I had to learn to Egan with a 72-66 win over Western Western Kentucky rally) and came high 20 points and eight rebounds. "In Egan jumped up and down but outside shot. have faith in them and they had to Kentucky at the USD Sports Center. right back at them." the last few minutes when they once last night - he couldn't conta n ''Ev~body gives up something learn to fight their own battles. aybe Egan has something here. USD (4-7) led 26-19 at halftime and caught up, we didn't let that get to himself when Jerome made a partic- u you're super quick or super thought it worked both ways." D played with poise and purpose bad a 50-37 advantage with nine min- us. We said, 'Oh, we're down by one, ularly good play going after a loose.,, that wasn't evident in the season's utes to play. But Western Kentucky we've just got to come back.' ball late in the game. / 1
Los Angeles CA (Los Angeles Co..) Los Angeles Times (Ofange County Ed.) (C!r. D. 181,789) (Cir. S. 219,295) 30 I
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LOS ANGELf.5 TIMF.S
g the 1990s With a Pote f al for Gr at Things;
SAN DIEGO-Most architects seem to agree that the last decade was more of a painful adolescence lhan a graceful maturing. But many lessons learned dunng the past 10 years have advanced San Diego's architectural scene to the point where the city appears p01sed for great things m the '90s. Most observers are hard-pressed to name any landmark buildings put up m the pas t 10 years, and only one may stand the test of time: the new San Diego Conven- tion Center, arch1lect Arthur Er- ickson's masterpiece of concrete geometnes. But 1f there weren't many out- standing bwldings for a city that recently became lhe nation's sixth largesl. there were other mlle- stones. As the decade began, former Mayor Pele Wilson led the way toward developing a new down- town core. Its transformation from a place with little ret.a.Jl activity ind virtually no res1denual base to an urban center that incorporates both, as well as the awesome pace of development elsewhere in the city, often proceeded too qwckly for the good of architecture. Horton Plaza evolved from a mall with many street-level open- ings to a closed-m design. This has proven successful commercially but Jess viable as a tool aimed at rev1tal1zing nearby streets. And architect Jon Jerde's Disneyland- 1sh takeoff on postmodem1sm is bound to look dated in a few years: Downtown, the Centre · y De• velopment Corp. struggled to cre- ate a mechanism by which signifi- cant new projects could evolve · with input not only from their architects and developers, but also from city planners, community groups, economic consultants and politicians.
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Los Angeles Times e an ,ego Convention Center, designed by architect Arthur Erickson. The impressive center opened in late November.
San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) D 30 1989
DEC 2 9 1989
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E f II. 1688 U_SQfaces Columbia . fin::1 l prep for wee ·'J-cr_lj"'~ Victories agai?st Western Kentuc- Center. Egan's coat toss agamst ky and Colun:ib1a do not a season Eastern Washington, which resulted make what with Loyola M~rymount in a technical foul, failed to provide and Pepperdme lymg mwait m 1990. levity. Still. wit~ its win over. Western "We really did get down," Woods Kentucky _Tnursday, and _with ~no_th- said. "We started blaming other er one tomght at 7:30 ag~mst v1S1tmg (teammates) for stuff that happened. Columbia, the US~s basketball I think everything is straightened team will be ctoser to leaving what out; at least I hope so." has been a long and dark _tunnel. Woods, who will start tonight, And none too soon, either. West lined USD up nicely in the second C_oast Conference play for USD be- half of Thursday's game, when he gms on Jan. 6, _when th~ Toreros face scored all of bis 14 points. Enthusi- San~a Clara m the first . of three asm and team play got him in the straight home games against WCC comfort zone he explained opponents. ~-- ' · "It would give us some confidence He had company. u:-D. hut its best going into league if we played to- percentage of the ~eason against gether as a team again." forward Western Kentucky - 55 (22 of 40). Kelvin Woods said of tonight's game. The Tore~os also made 79 percent At this stage, that USO (4-7) would from the line. consider mere team play and a victo- So now, on the penultimate eve of ry over Columbia a confidence-boost- a decade, the Toreros are looking er tells how the Toreros have strug- ahead, with smiles. Well, without gled. frowns. Despite returning eight lettermen . "We know what we have to do; it's - three starters - and welcoming Just been said," Woods said. "It really versatile newcomer John Jerome, hasn't been put into effect yet." USD had lost six of its last seven H~ knows words can come easily, before beating Western Kentucky. as.~JS proved: Along the way, Coach Hank Egan . All we have to do is play real well described the Toreros' play as sel- m league and when the (WCC) tour- fish, and twice, after his tantrums nament comes around, win that." wit~ referees, described his own be- USD bas never played Columbia hav10r as out of control. (2-6). The Lions, 27-point losers to The gloom wors~ned last week, California on Wednesday, have three when Eastern Washmgton and Neva- scorers in double figures, Jed by da-Reno ~at the Toreros by 15 and sophomore center Dane Holmes (13.3 19, respectively, at the USD Sports points, 6.3 rebounds). Egan frets as team tops W. Kentucky Hank Egan sat and squirmed, squinned and sat, and watched with occasionally clenched fists as his USD basketball team gave back a 13-po!nt"lead agains[ Western Kentucky last night. But from Egan's mouth came only the good. Well, mostly the good. The words of encouragement may have come In staccato bursts, but they did come. . It is part of Egan's pre-New Year's resolu• lion, and already 1t has paid a dividend. With their coach pulh. .. ck on his own reins, the Toreros found the way themselves and took a 72-66 victory at the USD Sports Center. "ThJS Is a team that's in a struggle, and that has bad a confidence crisis coming on, ' said Egan, whose team improved to 4-7. "Hopefully, that's past " In order to speed the process, Egan said, the To~eros, who had lost two straight, pent some time over the holidays considering o best to attack their problems. "What we decided to do," Egan said, "was to have the coach quit putting pressure on these kids to develop so fast ... Maybe I was forcing the issue a little bit." ~d so last night there was Egan, fighting the impulse to holler - at the officials, at his players. He watched a 50-37 lead shrink to 51- 50 with 7:35.left to play. He blamed himself for failing to call a t meout during Western Kentucky's run which included three three-point shots. And then he watched as the Hilltoppers' Rodney Ross tapped in a rebound shot, giving hill team its first lead since an 11-10 advantage early in the first half. But Egan held on, and so, finally, did the Toreros. With hustlmg play down the stretch from sophomore guard Gylan Dottin and front-line players John Jerome and Kelvin Woods, USD maintained its composure, J ~egained the lead and never gave it Torero win, 72-66 A l >,[G (AP) - and pulled down eight rebounds to lead the Um~ · o to a 72-66 victory 1 hun;d y nigh a amst W tern Kentucky Kelvin Woods added 14 pomt nd eight rebounds for San Diego, ~nthony Palm cored 17 poin~s tmd h d five ists. while Scott Bol y add d 11 points and three i t f r We tern Kentucky, 3-7. John Jer- om cored 20 point San Diego, Calif, (San Diego Co) SAU DIEGO TRIBUNE DEC 30 1989 .Jllla. '• P. c. e Err. 1888 Toreros hail Columbia US~n~~ance to work out the kinks be~it's time to bring on Loyola Marymount, Pep- perdine, Santa Clara and the rest of the West Coast Conference. The Toreros (4-7) conclude non-eonference play to- night at 7:30 against Columbia University at the USD Sports Center. The game wHI be preceded by the USO women's basketball team's game at 5 against Arizona State. "There's a lot of things we need to work on both offensively and defensively," said USD coach Hank Egan. "Our execution. That's what we need to be doing. We're not going to be making very many changes. You make some changes going in but I think we have the package we need. We just ~eed to do it better," Egan has used seven different starting lineups in the season's first 11 games. 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