News Scrapbook 1984

THE TRIBUNE MAR 2 8 1984

USIU's g obal hue brings a victory cue

MAR 2 9 198-f

Morning Press 11

Lemon Grove (CA.) REVIEW Aztecs, Toreros Win Hall of C hamp's Awards 3 area amat uur athletes .and a profrssio11al golf Pr h;i'\ fl. · er•n s1•lel'tt•d 11s ~tar. of the '.\lonth to, Fehruar} br the 1eilha1d Awnicls com ilt<'<' ol the s,n J1iego IlalJ of l hwnpions. a _game and close to 8 re- bounds per contest. His steady o'. e1 all play was one of the prim reasons for the succe. • iltl scw•on fur U. of S.D

Brovelli didn't even think this cou d happen

JU 'IOR DEVELOPMENT PRO· GRAM - Beginning April 2, the Junior Development Program, sponsored by the San Diego TeMis Patrons, will pres- ent a new and challenging format. Most of the ranking juniors will attend this clinic to assist other juniors in develop- ing their game. BegiMers will receive basic troke instruction with emphasis on conditioning The sessions are as follows: be- ginners-mtermed1ates on Mondays from 3 30 to 5 p.m. and advanced tournament level players on Fridays from 3:30 to 5 pm. Program director is Katby Wil• Jette. The on-site professional is Ken Temple. Players may receive their membership cards at their first ses- ons MING TOURNAMENTS - The nnual Easter Vacation Tourna- (in memory of Maureen Connolly) heduled April 16-20 at Morley Field. Chairman of this event, sponsored by Peninsula Bank of San Diego, is Kathy Willette. The tournament director is Je Kremm. Categories include boys and girls from 10 to 18 years of age.... Deadline is April 14 for the 35th aMual San Diego Junior Metropolitan Tourna- ment to be played at Morley Field May 5-6 and May 12-13. The tournament is conducted by the San Diego Tennis Pa- trons Association m cooperation with the Balboa Tennis Club Entries should be sent to Jean Kremm, 1670 Los Altos Road, n Diego, Ca., 92109. USO TENNIS CLINIC - An opportu- nity f r Juniors and adults from be- gmne to th more advanced, to learn from succ fu 0.c hes can be had by takmg part in ll; ' USO Tennis Clinic April 7-8 at t: D' west tennis courts. The fee of $70 includes lunch both days. All proceeds go to benefit USD's men's and women' tenms teams. Emphasis during the two-day clinic is placed on fundamentals, strategy and competition For further information, call Collins at 291-6480, ext. 4272. ACE CANCER BENEFIT - The Al- ford D. Musgrave Fifth Annual Benefit Tournament for adults and juniors will be held at Tennis Escondido April 27-29, with Jean Cheney serving as tourna- ment chairman. Guest players will in- clude Rolf Benirschke of the Chargers, professionals Terry Holladay and Kathy O'Brien and members of the San Diego Friars. For entry and draw information, the number to call is 743-3601. Deadline for entries is April 20 at 5 p.m. The draw will be posted by 5 p.m. on April 23. (Elson Irwin's Tennis Notepad ap- pears every other Wednesday in the Tri• bune.) L~

Coach Dave Trebisky's recruiting ef- forts around the world apparently have paid off for the U.S International Uni• versity women's tennis team. After a 9- 10 dual match ason m 1983, Trebisky moved from a istant to head coach, up- graded the Gull schedule and went about recruiting his 1984 team from all corners of the glo As a result, USIU is 22-4 this spring and. uddenly the "inter- national" in th university's name has add d m nm After dropp ng a 6-3 dee 10n m the ason open r to def nding national champion USC, th Gui defeated UC- nta Barbara, 1 t to P p rdin , en Elson Irwin

Cage finished his collegiate 1.askethall career with virtual- ly Pv<'ry S.l).S.U. Aztec record including scoring, 1 ebound~ ,,r·rl lrl'l' throws made. A mi,mber of the all West- , rn \V A.C. team, Cag was also named to the C.P.I. All \\'est Coast Team. WH' 11mg star Ri<'k Lam• bet t of San Marcos !Iigh School won the slate cham plon~hip of his weight division hy pinning his opponent in lc:sult• ed in prize money of $90.000.

] n addi lion, three area bas- lall tea m : have be1>n e r t :( i c a t e s of At·hie, cment f{)I th<'ir {),·erall succe~sful play dunng the cut 1 cnt s<•a::,on. Thi' Stars of the Month ar t:. of SD. baskethall 1>lay<'r Mike Whitemarsh; S.D.S.U. bask tt.all p 1 ayer Mich a e I Cage; !"nn l\f arc o s High School wrestler Ril:k Lambert and golf r JJac-k Renner. Certificates of Achie~ement were awarded to the l:. of S.D.. lens Ba.·ketball tPam for their season that saw them "m the championship of the W.C.A.C. and a be1-th in the :KCAA playoffs; the Pt. Loma High ~choo! Gitls Basketball team for fini~hing their sea- son undefcat<'d and winning th,, S.D. Section CIF 2A Bas• k et ha 11 Championship. The Oc-eanside High Pirates wt>rc the Boys 2A CH' Basketball champs. l'SD Tm·cro tParn leader and for the sea/Son a,·C'l'aged over 1 points Whitmarsh was the

TENNIS

the t~m

beat UC Irvine befor

a 17•1 trcak. The only loss was to national runner- up Trimly lD th t span. An 11-match winning strea was stopped by Oklahoma on March 15 but w1 over Illino1S, Pacific, Santa ylara San Jose State, Hawaii and Santa Cruz have started the Gulls on another lreak USIU ha used a firm lineup nee opemng day with ylvie Tetreault in the No. l slot. A freshman from St. Jean, Quebec, Tetreault was finalist in Girls' 18 of the Eastern Canada Champion- ships several years ago. In the No. 2 spot, Clare Thompson from Sydney, Australia, also a fresh- man, has a strong forehand and an ag- gressive game. She has a ·urned the captain' role despite being a first-year student. Another freshman, Suet Kock, the No. 3 player, is from South Africa. She has a consistent serve and able backhand. Another Canadian, Julia La- bonte, holds down o. 4 She is con id- ered one of Canada's top three junior players. No. 5 is Elizma ortje, also a South African, who possesses a solid ground game. The only returnee from last season IS Allison Allen, a sophomore out of Palm Springs, who played No. 1 as a freshman for the Gulls. Others on the team are Connie Trebi• ky (Dave's wife), who played No. 5 last season; Gul Guzelbey of Istanbul, Tur- key, and Yoshie Miyamoto of Japan.

• 'March 29, 1984

Page 4

(CA.) REVIEW

lemon Crove

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Ip;"·~ In 1hi1rl 1J',1r;, to, < ,.r,<'1· points per g:un" and Vi, 111.:~ ppg average this sea. s ·n places hii 1 in third place ir: thP top 10 single sPason I oints a gnmc listing. .Junio1· forward Ant), on y }~C'"S~ Pndcd up thP WCAC li<'lcl goal percC'n1,lg(' )Pad,•r r ,ki n!! 1"7 of 206 shots Uilli', '· He also ht•r·ornPs l SD's new IPader, hNllin•• out I: o IJ Ba rtholomcw•~ .377' 1r1Jm 11 1 1' I D77-7 season. IIP w.,s al 0 0 namC'd AII-\VCAC First Team after av<'raging 11.9 ppg :md 6.5 rpg. Freshman c e n l e r Scott Thompson was named \VCAC Freshman of tile Year. Scott a, eragcd 7.1 ppg, 4 .8 rpg, 1.33 !,Jocks pg while shooting .50'> from tllC' field. ThC' TorPros wNe n.fi with Scott as the starting center. Scott also made thp All-Tournament tt"am at the 8th Annual Wolf Pack Classic in whi<"h lhe To- 1 eros placed second. Fol' th<' fourth vear in-a-row tlw Toreros plac~d the most memhe1·s on the WCAC All Academic team. This year's student athletes making the 1.1 member souDd were: John Prunty !3 time winner1, An- thony Reuss (3 time winner), Mario Coronado 12 time win• ner 1, Mike Whitmarsh, Joe Fish, Nils Madden, Steve Ki•aJ!man and Eric i\lussel- man. hit 1

The !'arlier til1s mon,h leaving in its wake a list ot suc-ce~srs the> school "ill point to v. ilh µride Th" tl'am finished its best n• 1sC'n P 1 :f'r v. l1h an overall ; " ·or d of 1S. JO and took the \\TC Conference rPc-orcl wilh a ().3 and the title in Ii st1Ltight ganie~. l'.l o,·elli was named District '~, heating out l 'NLV's Jerry T II kanian. Dt ovelli was also n,ltnl'd \VC AC Coach of the Ye;i1· by his colleagues. ln the r;CAA Tournament. Pi\ision 1, the Toreros drop- ped a (15-56 decision to Prince- ton, the nation's top defensive team but USD was in the tournament a first. Other notahle items for the tecord: ',enior fon,ard Mike \Vhit- rrarsh \,as named HonorahlP irention All American by the :AP. For the second year in-a- rnw. Whitrn:u sh received All- \VCAC F'irst TPam honors. ln the final WCAC statisti• cal .standings, he fini~hPd third in scoring {18.9 ppg1, third in rebounding C7.4 rpg J, second in assists f6.2 apg l. third m ~teals ! 1.8 spg 1, fourth in field goal PErrentage 1.538 ) and tenth in free throw percent- age <.7261. He was also honnred as WCAC Player of the Week on 3 different occasions this sea- son while also picking up the Most Valuable Player Award at the 8th Annual Wolf Pack Classic in Reno. In his 2-year career at 'SD, Whitmarsh p I a ·e d in 52 games, scored 893 1>ts fl 7.2 ppg), grabbed 3.10 rehounds {(;.4 rpgl. and dished out 226 a~sists ! 4.4 apg J while shoot- ini;: .513'1, from the field ( 325- X598J and .732': from the line < 213X:\32 1. His 893 points /-e~son l'n,kd

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USD Rally Falls Short as Toreros Lose SCBA Game to Long Beach, 6-5 SAN DIEGO-Despite rallying for two runs m the bottom of the eighth inning, the University of San Diego baseball team lost to Cal State Long Beach, 6-5, in a Southern California Baseball Assn. game Friday at Alcala Park. The game was tied. 3-3, entering the seventh inning when the 49ers' Dave Baggot hit a sacrifice fly, scoring teammate Rickie Hopkins from third base. Designated hitter Johnnie Gonsalves then singled to score left fielder Larry Smith. Long Beach (18-17-4, 1-1) added another run in the top of the eighth to make it 6-3. In the inning. Derek Stewart scored from second base on Hopkins' fourth hit of the day USO (13-16-1, 0-2) collected three singles to load the bases with no outs in the eighth against the 49ers· Bruce Young (3-2) . Second baseman Bill Ismay singled to score one run and another came home on first baseman TomSeyler's infield out. Russ Applegate (2-5) took the loss for the Toreros. Applegate allowed five runs on eight hits in 6½ innings. Designated hitter Andre Jacas led USO with a double, triple and two RBIs. Catcher Eric Bennett was 3 for 5.

TIMES-ADVOCATE

SAN DIEGO UNION .L .. MAR 2 8 1984

MAR " 4 1984

Cal State Long Beach beats USD SAN DIEGO - Ricky Hopkins had four hits Friday to lead Cal State Long Beach to a 6•5 victory_ over USO in a Southern California Baseball Association game at Alcala Park. Eric Bennett had three hits for the Toreros, who had a 3-2 lead after five innings but allowed four runs In the next three innings. USO which also got two hits and two RBI from Andre 0 Jacus, rallied in the eighth inning with t.vo runs, but fell one run short. Russ Applegate (2-5) took the loss. Bruce Young (3·2) earned the win. USD (0-2 1n the SCBA, 13-16·1 overall) will meet Long Beach (H, 18·17·4) again today in a noon dou• bleheader 1n Long Beach.

LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 4, USD 3 - ~yola had_ two of _its four hits off Russ pplegate m the sixth inning when th Lions (14-19) scored three tim~ to e come a 3-1 d f' . over• e 1c1t. Catcher Eric Bennett had two of the seven hits for USD (15-17-1) Both teams are 2-3 in SCBA play. .

THE TRIBUNE-

SAN DIEGO UNION MAR 2 3 1984

MAR 2 8 1984 In a pair of otlier local college games USIU ~toP_ped_ UC-Irvine 7-2 behind th~ thr ~•hit pitchmg of Ralph Rivero and the hitting of Marlon Figneroa and Gonzalo Guerra, both of whom collected two hits· and Loyola-Marymount stopped USD 4_3 a~ catcher Eric Bennett had two of the seven USO hits. USIU is 17-21-1 and USD is 15-17- 1.

Whitmarsh, Cage, Lambert capture Breitbard awards Area athletes Mike Whitmarsh and Mi- chael Cage (basketball) and Rick Lambert (wrestling) along with professional golfer Jack Renner were selected as stars of the month for February by the Breitbard Awards Committee of the San Diego Hall of Champions.

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