News Scrapbook 1986

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840)

'

NOV 9 1086

.Jl./1,m 's P. c B 1xx11 1Jsn loses Occidentally, 41-7 1"

By Hank Wesch StarfWri~~

Occidental punted once, with 4:10 remaining. "It was just one of those days," USD coach Brian Fogarty said. "They played an outstanding game; their lines did a much better job than we expected "Up until today, I had been pleased with our progress. But when things went bad today, we didn't fight back as strongly as I would have hoped we would." USO forced a turnover on Occiden- tal's first possession, but the Tigers scored on each of their next five to take a 27-7 halftime lead. Defensive back Ben Stoebner's hit on Occidental receiver Jon Billings- ley forced the fumble, recovered by Leroy Hughes at the USD 25. That was the Toreros' high point. Occidental got the ball back at the USO 19 three plays later, when Dixon was sacked by Scott Anderle and a resulting fumble was recovered by Brad Arnold. Five plays later Tim Kennedy ran over from the 2, and the rout was begun.

Occidental built a 27-0 lead with Tim Dewberry field goals of 27 and 37 yards, followed by touchdowns on drives of 11 and 56 yards. Occidental's second touchdown, on a quarterback sneak by Mark Krajnik, was set up when Mike Sand Jin blocked a punt. The tlurd Oxy touchdown, on a 5-yard pass from Krajnik to Kevin Vega., cam,.. after the Tigers stopped the Toreros on downs. It took a heaping helping of penal- ties against Occidental and a diving catch by Scott Reilly to produce USD's only score of the game. On an incomplete pa s from their own 49, the Torcros got a yardage bonanza. Occidenta! was assessed an offsides penalty, a dead-ball personal foul on the incompletion and an un- sportsmanlike conduct penalty. The 35 yards assessed moved the ball to the Oxy 16. With 15 seconds to go before half- time, Dixon threw a pass into the middle of the end zone that Reilly caught at full stretch.

This much'1°an be said for the Uni- versity of San Diego's homecoming game at Torero Stadium yesterday. The weather was pleasant, the esti- mated crowd of was 4,000 jovial and the floats showed ingenuity. Too bad they bad to spoil it with a football game. On the field. the Toreros were sim- ply overpowered, absorbing a 41-7 pounding from Occidental that was USD's fifth straight defeat. Dominating the line of scrimmage, Occidental netted 392 yards - 290 of that on the ground - to 196 yards for USD. The Tigers (5-2-1) stopped them- selves - they incurred 17 penalties for 147 yards - about as often as did USD's defense. Offensively, the Toreros (3-6) generated nothing on the ground, were forced to throw after falling behind, 20-0, in the first 22 minutes and did so with little suc- cess. Quarterback Pat Dixon com- pleted eight of 34 for 111 yards with one interception.

Hank Egan Hes a teacher on the court

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) {Cir. S. 341 ,840)

86

NOV9

1 USF for soccer title

JI/~. ·. · ' • ,.. • • Toreros to p ay .JISQ's man ~~earn ad- vanced to the fmal~cff=the West Coast ------ ,.,.,.c

in an exhibition in Vancouver. Jim Hau and Brad Fenton scored for the ulls and Gary Shepherd had 28 ve;. Hau's goal gave U~I~ a 1-0 lead before British Columbia s_Ke1t~ Abbott scored twice. The w!nner. scored two empty-net goals m the final minute after USIU pulled Shep- herd for a sixth skater.

-------..--:-:--::--- Loeal --' '-----

Athletic Conference Tournament ·th a 3-1 victory over Sar.ta Clara ;~sterday at the University of San Gene Rothswohl, Jeff Silver and E . h Deutsch scored for the Toreros (1~~~1), who will meet USF today for Francisco.

-u!l_ in

th~ _Japan

first round of

Tokyo. The Soviet Umon ~at Canada 3-0 Sweden defeatetl China 3-1 ~nd Japan downed Brazil 3-2. The Umted States plays Brazil today ... The sec- ond-ranked UCSD Triton·s (38-6) upset top-ranked Menlo College (35· 13 1 t 8) 18-16, 6-15, 7-15, 15-2, 15- , as 1 of the Seagrams- . Coors Classic at UCSD. Mom_ca Brad- ' h f. night in t e ma . ley led the Tntons with 17 kills. HOCKEY _ The Umvers1 y British Columbia defeated USIU, 5-2, . •t

UCSD's

CROSS COUNTRY -

men's and women's teams swept host

h .

t S Cal Sta e an

Bernard·1no in a dual

. .

the champions 1p.

t Winner Kevin Carter f1mshed the five-mile course in 29 mmu es: seconds, to help the Triton men wm, 15-45. Gisele English_ won the three- of mile women's race m 19:50 to pace mee · · t g

. USF ( 16-2-4) defeated the Umvers~- .

ther semi

. th

ty of Portland, 1-0, m e o

final.

VOLLEYBALL _ The U.S. men's national team defeated So~th l_(orea 10-12, 12-2, 12-1, 12-4 last mght m the

UCSD's 20-38 victory.

Gu1side chance? Manor may be the guy for USD

Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Blade Tribune (Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. s. 30,498)

Mark Manor 6-5 freshman swing- man Craig Cottrell and 6-6 junior wmgman Marty Munn at the posi- tion last mght For all mtcnts and purposes, the aud1t1on could have ended nght where 1t began - with Manor Manor· first two outside jumpers found nothing but net, providing the Torero with an early 10-1 advan- tage. He added another jumper five minute· later before Egan substitut- ed for his starters. The second lineup, which included Cottrell and Munn, m1 ed each of its seven outside shots before Egan hastily put the starters back m with five minutes to play in the first halt and the score tied 21-21. f'ollowmg asket by Leonard, ·t ht three-point shots to provide USD with a 29-25 lead. The Toreros led 39-34 at the half with Manor contributing 12 first- half points. It was kmd of intimidating com- ing out agamst those pro players, but I felt good, Manor said. "It wasn't on my mmd that I've got to take over for Pete, I ju t came out and had the open shots. They were just open, I hot and they went. "Our trong point is inside, but if Please ,·ee TOREROS, B-6

NOV 11 1~86 .J/.{l~,i 's p c. B /<1

1888

U$D sponsors forum In ed to be the capital equipment, according to first-ever forum of its kind, 20 of Burt, a published author in the the nation's leading procure- field of procurement. ment officers will report their His book, "Proactive Pro- latest technique~ , '1 Thursday, curement: The Key to Increased Nov. 13 and ·Friday, Nov. 14, at Profits, Productivity and Quali- the University of San DiP.go. ty" (Prentice-Hall, 1984), is Purchasmg officers from utilized by a number of those at- General Motors, Northrop, tending the forum. Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Many of the aspects of his Motorola and Hughes Aircraft book will be discussed at the are among those scheduled to conference. Other subjects take part in the two-day con- scheduled for discussion in- ference, which is being hosted elude: by USD's School of Business at • Chief executive officers' the Manchester Conference Center. (The meeting is not open misperceptions of the p1ocure- to the general public, but the ments process. media is invited.) • The changing function of "Collectively, they (procure- procurement. rnent officers) spend trillions of Warren Norquist, director of dollars a year," said David Worldwide Purchasing, Polar- Burt, the USO business pro- oid Corporation, will discuss Cessor who organized the forum. how procurement officers can They work for companies that achieve key status. Norquist is spend 30 to 70 percent of their expected to be available for in- revenue on purchases of mate- terviews on Nov. 12, Wednesday rials, supplies, services and afternoon.

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