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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 16
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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 16

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Albany, Oregon
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16
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5 16 ALBANY DEMOCRAT HERALD. MONDAY. FEB. 4. 1980 Huskies' shocker in Pullman makes Pac-10 a 2-team race Four from mid-valley named Shrine football ali-star games Lebanon linebacker, Lebanon defensive back Kent Toomb, West Albany running back Randy Nyquist, West tight end Perry Packard and South Albany guard Brian Kirschner.

Defending state Class AAA champion Corvallis placed three players on the South: running backs Jaimy Patton and Bob Johnson, cornerback Terry Walker led Washington with 14 points, while Romar and Woods had 10 apiece. Don Collins paced WSU with 24 points, while John Preston scored 12 and Stuart House added 11. The Huskies evened their Pac-10 record at 5 5 and upped their season mark to 14-5 with the victory, while the Cougars moved to 7-3 and 15-4. The victory was Washington's second one point game over WSU at Pullman In two years. The Huskies downed WSU 57-56 last season.

In other conference games, Arizona State had some problems with Stanford but won 93 80 as Kurt Nimphlus scored 18 points. And Arizona mowed down Cal, 65 2 In Tucscon as Joe Nehls scored 21-points in the second half. Guard! Kevin Cull in. Ashland. Kobert Ar-buckie.

North Brad Centers Troy Anders. Crook County; Dale Weldeman. South Salem DEFENSE Ends Paul Hauiten, Sheldon; Todd Nell. Tackles dene Wet. MarahfleM; JIM CUNNINGHAM, WEST ALBANY; Si Unelry.

South Eugene Nose Guards Doug Davis. Baker; Leroy Brlte. Crater Linebackers Bill Hood. Grants Pais: Bob Johnson. Corvallis.

Greg Laltin. Crescent Valley Comerbacss Kyle MiKiimey. La Grande, terry Mitchell. Corvallis Free Safety Mark Conrsd, Cottage Grove. Strong Safety rk Mullaney.

Medford. CLASS AA. A. WKSTl Ends Mike Mondale. Phoenis.

Mike Miles. Phoenis; Kevin McClellan. Sluslaw; Jim Reeder. St Marvs: John Lira Chemawa. BusSpralt.

Paisley Tackles Dick Smith. St Helens; Dean Chnstensea. Regis; Steve McElorv. Waldport Guards Randy McDonald. Gold Beach, Darrel Ringer.

Sherwood; Devm Wallle, St Marys. Tore Asmaker. Col ton Center Bob Kornman, Elmlra: Bill Hunt. Reedsport Quarterbacks Paul Peerboom. Rainier; Steve Bouck.

Lutheran. Halfbacks Grej Mulkry. Coqullle; Ken Short Junction City; Tom McLeod. VernonU; Bruce Miller. Knappa; Charlie Smith.

Corbell, Fullbacks Mike Laverly. Newport: David Green. McKrntle. RICK O'SHEA. HARRISBURG; Ken Sickles.

Falls City. another 11 -point lead at 53-42 with 11 minutes remaining in the game. "1 wouldn't have bet a nickel on It. at halftlme or even with 10 minutes to go," said Washington Coach Marv Har-shman said. "We are still fighting for survival.

I don't think we are as good a team as Washington State, Oregon State or Arizona State." Washington outscored the Cougars 13 2 and tied the game at 55 55 with seven minutes left. The Huskies' Don Vaughn stole the ball and scored on a layup with 90 seconds left to put Washington up by one. Steve Matzen scored the Huskies' last two points on a layup with 37 seconds remaining. Four mid-valley football players Lebanon's Bill Steele, West Albany's Jim Cunningham, South's Albany's Tony Burris and Harrisburg's Rick O'Shea have been selected to play in Oregon's Shrine Alltar football games In August. Steele, a tight end, Cunningham, a tackle, and quarterback Burris were named Sunday to the 33rd annual Class AAA Shrine game to be played Aug.

16 at Civic Stadium in Portland. O'Shea, a running back, was named to the Class AA, A and game to be played Aug. 23 at Baker High School. Five mid-valley players were named alternates for the game. They are: The Associate Frees The Pac-10 Conference basketball race took a dose of the unexpected Saturday night when Washington shocked Washington State 64-63 In Pullman.

The 7-3 Cougars, thus, dropped two games In the loss column behind co-leaders (10-1 Oregon State and Arizona State, threatening to make the title run a two-team affair. Washington's Stan Walker. Lorenzo iRomar and James Woods were in harmony for 34 points Saturday lift the Huskies to their upset. WSU had a 37-26 lead at halftlme. The Huskies closed to within five early In the second half, but the Cougars built OmtNSK: Split End Ron Owing Klamath.

Tight Ends Todd Schimmeia. Ontario; BOX STEELS, LEBANON. Quarterbacks KellY Rtcnarrdnn. Hidden Valley: TONY BURRIS. SOUTH ALBANY.

Fullback ike Sodaro. Churchill RuMitn Backs Jaime Patios, Corvallis. Kcvla Leonard. Ctna-cft til Tackles Doa Caseoier. Medford.

Ed Schtaser. North Eugene, John Vorvtck. Pendletoa. St. John's disappoints its big red fans ciboijt sports College basketball Julie Washington had 16 for the Ducks, who led 52-24 at half.

Ex-Beaver assistant coach Zoumboukos joins UO staff The University of Oregon's football coaching staff has been completed with the hiring of assistant Neal Zoumboukos. Zoumboukos, 33, comes from Oregon State, where he coached the offensive line in the disastrous 1-10 Beaver season of 1979. He has had 12 years experience, including two separate stints at his alma mater, UC Davis, with an. intermediate assistantship at the University of San Francisco. Zoumboukos had rejected an offer to become an assistant at Illinois earlier this year.

Oregon Coach Rich Brooks has not decided what Zoumboukos will coach at UO. Brooks is expected to reevaluate his staff before determining specific staff assignments this week. Zoumboukos Is a native of San Francisco. Mark Aguirre's 29 points, eight assists and five blocked shots paced 19-0 DePaul over North Texas State. Ray Blume's 18 points led Oregon State past Southern California In a tense Paclflc-10 contest.

Kyle Macy scored 22 points as Kentucky beat Tennessee, sending the spinning Volunteers down to their fifth straight Southeastern Conference defeat. "Defensively. It was our best effort since December." said Kentucky Coach Joe Hall, who hasn't been pleased about too much lately. "That's as hard as we've played." Louis Orr and Roosevelt Boule combined for 42 points to help Syracuse beat Providence; Orlando Woolrldge's 20 )ints led Notre Dame over Davidson; oward Carter's 22 points paced LSU past Mississippi State and AJ Wood had 20 as North Carolina defeated Furman. Also, Steve Stlpanovich's 17 points led Missouri over Nebraska; Weber State beat Boise State behind David Johnson's 25; Bobby Conrad's two free throws with eight seconds remaining led Clemson over South Carolina and Purdue beat Indiana as Arnette Hallman scored 16 points.

second-ranked Oregon State edged Southern Cal 73-72; No. 3 Kentucky turned back Tennessee 83-75; No. 4 Syracuse routed Providence 89-69; No. 8 Notre Dame crushed Davidson 105-71 and No. 10 Louisiana State took a 75 63 decision over Mississippi State.

Also. No. 11 North Carolina beat Fur-man 75-63; No. 14 Missouri downed Nebraska 7340; No. 15 Weber State trimmed Boise State 79-73 In overtime; No.

16 Clemson nipped South Carolina 61-60 and 17th-ranked Purdue turned back ISth-ranked Indiana 56-51. Greg Manning scored a career-high 26 points to lead Maryland's victory over Duke, one that Terrapin Coach Lefty Driesell called "one of the best games a team of mine has ever played." Claude Gregory's 23 points helped Wisconsin beat Ohio State. The defeat was the second to Wisconsin and the third In eight days for the buckling Buckeyes. Alvis Rogers' jumper with one second left led Wake Forest over Virginia, spelling the Cavaliers' fourth ACC loss. Aaron Curry's field goal with three seconds remaining lifted Oklahoma over Kansas State.

By The A societed Prose The St. John's basketball fans were waiting and ready for the Louisville Cardinals right down to the thousands of bright, red signs that said "We are. John's." The St. John's basketball team was waiting, too but obviously not ready. "Our quality of play was a nightmare," said St.

John's Coach Lou Carnesecca after watching his ninth-ranked team lose a 76-71 decision to the seventh-ranked Cardinals Sunday in a nationally televised game. "We did very little right. When we watch the films tomorrow, I know we'll be unhappy." Camesecca's players will no doubt kick themselves over the way they let Darrell Griffith and Wiley Brown slip through for a basketful! of inside field goals. As Griffith emphasized after scoring 23 points: "Our offense is designed to shoot layups. If we can't carry on this offense, we find ourselves sitting on the bench and holding Coach (Denny) Crum'shand." The Cardinals accomplished all they set out to do, continually flying inside with the skyrocketing Griffith and the bullish Brown.

That forceful pair helped Crum's team build a 17 point lead late in the game, then Louisville held off a St. John's comeback try. "It took a while for us to get loose," said Griffith. "St. John's is one of the toughest teams we've played this year.

I would rank them with Ohio State (a team the Cardinals beat by 10 points earlier this season)." The loss stopped a 17 game St. John's winning streak the second longest In the nation next to DePaul's 20 and the longest at the New York school In 50 years. The game was the only one involving ranked teams Sunday and followed a busy Saturday schedule during which four Top Twenty clubs were upset. Fifth-ranked Duke lost a 101-82 decision to Maryland, sixth-ranked Ohio State was beaten 70-67 by Wisconsin, nth-ranked Virginia dropped a 79-77 decision to Wake Forest and No. 20 Kansas State lost 56-55 to Oklahoma.

Elsewhere, top-ranked DePaul defeated North Texas State 102-71; Blazers' Lucas target, of Washington trade? The Washington Bullets are interested in obtaining both John Williamson of New Jersey and Maurice Lucas of Portland in what has been described as an upcoming major trade, according to a published report. The Washington Post, citing National Basketball Association sources, said today Bullets Larry Wright, Roger Phegley, and Mitch Kupchak have been mentioned in the possible trade. Bullets General Manager Bob Ferry said Sunday that if the deal takes place, it is likely to occur either today or Tuesday. No comment was available from Portland this morning. Oregon State clouts Montana, 6-1 in league Oregon State's women's basketball team stayed on the heels of unbeaten Northwest League-leading Oregon Saturday night, defeating Montana 82-62 at Gill Coliseum.

The Beavers, 6-1 in league and 13-6 overall, led 35-28 at half and received double figure scoring from Margy Becker (18), Carol Menken (18), Pam Mollet (18) and Jan Martin (14) to win going away. OSU hosts Alaska-Anchorage Thursday, 5:15 p.m. at Gill Coliseum. Ducks remain unbeaten, pound Montana State Unbeaten University of Oregon turned on its fastbreak and full-court press at the outset Saturday night and romped to a 97-62 victory over Montana State in a Northwest League women's basketball game. The 8-0 Ducks (14-4 overall) won their ninth straight game.

Bev Smith had 29 points and 14 rebounds, along with five assists, five steals and seven blocked shots to guide the Ducks. Beaver gymnasts establish school scoring record Oregon State took four of the top all-around spots and set a school record in the process of capturing a four-way women's gymnastics meet Saturday at Arizona. Ranked fourth in the nation, the Beavers scored a school-record 141.05. Sophomore Mary Ayotte led the way for OSU with a 35.60 all-around and a 9.05 floor exercise. OSU also got a first place on uneven bars from Connie Shuya's 9.3 routine.

OSU's record remains unblemished at 9-0. The Beavers meet 12-0 Oregon Saturday at 8 p.m. at Gill Coliseum. TEAM SCORES: Oreayja State HI i. Arizona 137 00: Saa Dteap State 134 IS.

Colorado 1 From staff Associated Proas reports Arizona football players alleged to have received illegal job payoffs The newspaper said the checks were Issued between September 1978 and August 1978. It said three players appeared to have been paid while under full scholarship at the university. Tompkins. Crosby and Robertson said they did no work for the city, and Robertson said neither did his wife, the Star reported. It said Heater couldn't be reached for comment.

Some of the checks In Heater's name apparently were sent to the home of assistant football Coach Karl Singer, who declined to comment, the Star said. TUCSON. Ariz. (AP) Checks totaling approximately $6,000 were issued by the city of Tucson in the names of three University of Arizona players and a player's wife who say they did no work for the city, the Arizona Star says. In a copyright story, the Star said Sunday the checks were Issued In the names of tailback Larry Heater, running back Robert "Boot" Robertson, tackle Cleveland Crosby, former offensive guard Willie Tompkins, and Robertson's wife Stephanie, who at the time the checks were written was his fiancee.

LBCC basketball teams split in Bend 1 1 I 1 I fclWMi-UMi ini i fcuwii iwniam mmmm I Linn-Benton's women's basketball team played just the opposite In a healthy-looking 66-40 win Saturday night over Central Oregon. The Roadrunners did it with several players sick and another with a bruised foot. Even Coach Dave Dangler wasn't feeling well. But it didn't slow down enough as it improved its OCAA record to 9-1, a game behind unbeaten Umpqua. "We were playing the last-place team and it wasn't an emotional game," Dangler said.

"After we went up we kind of relaxed. We're going to take a couple days off since we don't play until Friday (Clackamas)." will then return against Mt. Hood on Saturday. L-B pressed the first 12 minutes and went up 30-9. It then took the press off and coasted to the finish.

Jean Melson, despite a painful foot bruise, was 7 for 15 from the field and was high scorer with 19 points: she also had nine rebounds, as did Kelly Pierce. Linda Friesen also played well at guard, starting in place of Karey Poehlman who wasn't at full strength due to illness. LINN-BENTON (Hi Prmce II. Hatcher I. Pierce 4.

Friesen 4. Poehlman I. Mar vin7 RodgersS Meiion II Legrel. CENTRAL OREOGN 1401 Strome l. Huske 10.

Hagen 4. Hekker 1 Swegar 1. Dm I. Baer7. Pencil 0 Halftlme LBCC 35 COCCI 1 BEND Central Oregon Community College won its fifth game in 11 OCCAA decisions, surviving a sound Linn-Benton defensive effort to win 59-55 Saturday night.

The loss was LBCCs ninth in 11 league games, and another in a string of tough down-to-the-wire losses for the Roadrunners. "It was a good ball game, we stayed close and had some leads late in the game." LBCC Coach Butch Kimpton said. "We fell behind by six with three minutes to go. then came back and had a critical blocking call against us. allowing them to go ahead by four in the last minute.

We couldn't catch up after that." Central Oregon led at half 31-27 but couldn't shake the Roadrunners. who received a 19-point game from Lebanon's Bill Ray, and a 12-rebound performance by Jon "We've been playing well the last three games," Kimpton said, "it's just that we've been dwelling too much on the negatives things some officials' calls, some missed shots. Instead of getting some positive things from what we do well we're getting an opposite reaction. And it's not easy to overcome those tendencies." LBCC (H): Anderson J-S; Rkketts J-l J. Newell SMI: Rayl7-I0 GoyinsJO-0 Leonard IMI: Homouckle 1 4.

Maahsl42; Richardson 1 Ml; Totals USSM4 CENTRAL OREGON (Si Olson 11-4 4: Paxtoo44l Diersl-I4 Ridley i 13: Shirt 1 Ml Clare 1M, Bcadey 4 1-2 1. Bnunley 2 2 12. Holitetlarl 1 I 1. Totals 2S-SSS-1SS Hairtlme Central Oregon 31. LBCC 27 LBCC 66.

CENTRAL OREGON 40 (women) BEND For a team that wasn't supposed to be feeling well. WEDNESDAY IS CLASSIFIED BONUS DAY And you can run your MOTORCYCLE AD FREE! roiiifs DG IH at tsnx ftoinfii3B This week the Bonus Day Is for Motorcycles. different category will be selected and announced next All it takes is a phone call to our classified department before 4 p.m. Tuesday and we'll run your ad (up to 4 lines) for a motorcycle, absolutely free. only.

Wrestling: Beavers win two; Ducks, Linn-Benton defeated CORVALLIS Oregon State swept two weekend wrestling meets, pinning Southern Oregon 27-8 on Saturday and stopping Washington State 26-11 Sunday at Gill Coliseum. The victories expanded OSU's dual meet record to 16-9. OREGON STATE 27, OREGON I 111 Parson. Randy Ma)ors. OSU.

5-1. 126 Mark HiroU. OSU. Stewart. J-J -134 Mike Bauer.

OSU. Coke. S. ls-4. 142 Mike Hicks.

OSU. drew with Zemuido. S-S ISO Brad Swaru. OSU. Monroe.

SHIM- John Only. OSU. Combs s-2: 117 Fred Miles. OSU. Harmon S.

f-4: 177 Mark Elbert. OSU. Hotuo. 11 1. 190 Cralton S.

Chris Bielenoerg. OSU. Hwt Howard Hams. OSU. d.

HoUoman, 1, 1M OREGON STATE M. WASHINGTON ST II HI Inaba. Randy Majors. OSU. 7-S.

121 Dsn Ertckson OSU Pickering. 5-3 134 Mike Bauer. OSU. pinned Quaim. W.

5 30. 142 Mike Hicks OSU. Zuroski. 11 3: 15 Brad SwarU. OSU.

Johnson. W. 11 7: 15 Dnlevidl John Only OSU. 7-4. 17 Kary Madden.

OSU. Hanson. W. 114: 177 M.rt Elbert OSU drew with Bliss. Willi: ISO Morrow, W.

Chris Bieienbr(. OSU. 4-1. Hwt Ron Uhl. OSU.

Laraeil. ARIZONA ST. 26. OREGON 12 TEMPE Losing its second straight dual meet after having won 12 straight, the Oregon Ducks fell 26-12 Saturday night to Pac-10 favorite Arizona State. The 12-4 Ducks meet Oklahoma in Norman tonight.

111 Hoffman. A. pinned Alan Goldman. 0. 3 43: 121 Robertson A Russ Miller.

0 11-4 134 Romero. A. Bill Nugent O. -7: 142 Chops A. Nelson Imamura O.

4 41 ISO Scott Bliss. 0 Soiono. A. 1-2: 151 Baker O. Bodine.

A. 13-1: 117 -Jeff Steubing O. drew With Kovaiiek. A. 3-1; 177 Dave Severn A Mike Miller.

O. s-I. Dan Severn. A Ryan Kelly. O.

M. Hwt Dan Cook. O. Jenkins. A 11-4.

LANE 34. LBCC 14 EUGENE Linn-Benton's wrestling team had to forfeit two weight classes and lost by default in another giving up 18 totals points and lost a 34-14 match to Lane College Saturday night. Lone winners for the 64 (duals) Roadrunners were Ken Noble at 134, Tim Ysen at 150 and Dan Schaefer. by forfeit, at 158. The Roadrunners return to action Friday.

2:30 p.m. at home against Central Oregon. Ill Gunther L. won by forfeit, 121 Witham. Ld Bob Downs LB.

7. 134 Ken Noble, LB, Williams. L. I-5. 142 Peterson.

L. Dester Stothofl. LB 11-4. 130 Tim Vsea. LB.

Henneman. L. 1-7: 151 Dan Schaefer LB. won by forfeit: 17 DUley, pinned Rick Sanlord. LB 1 40.

177 Gates. L. pinned Roger Schenti LB. 1 51, 190 Central. L.

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