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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • Page 53

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LOS ANGELES TIMES THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1999 D3 Galaxy Rises, Thanks to Myers Soccer: He scores twice as L.A. moves into first-place tie in conference with 3-1 win over Clash. Goran Ivanisevic served 27 aces and 15 double faults in his victory Ivanisevic Does His Best to Entertain U.S. Open: Croatian wins and comes up with multiple ways of adding levity to a tournament missing bright lights. Ville LN.Ov overVi JLj Liukko.

Asnwiated Press Wade Barrett had fouled Clint Mathis. Mathis returned after being sidelined a month following knee surgery. Surprisingly, the early goal did not lead to others. At least not in the first half. Instead, it was the goalkeepers who stepped up their game.

The Galaxy's Kevin Hartman, seeking his ninth shutout, and the Clash's Joe Cannon, both made several key saves. Cannon, who has lost twice to the Galaxy already this season, was especially sharp. In the 15th minute, he did well to snag a close-range header from Simon Elliott off a cross by Jones. And in the 28th, he did even better, getting down low quickly to smother a point-blank shot by Hermosillo off another Jones cross. Hartman was only slightly less busy.

He made saves off a header by John Doyle and shots by Barrett and Sequeira to remain unbeaten after 45 minutes. The second half saw both keepers lose their shutout bid. Featured Matches Today's featured matches at the U.S. Open at New York: MEN Axel Pretzsch, Germany, vs. Andre Agassi (2) George Bast).

Switzerland, vs. Marcelo Rios (10), Chile Lorenzo Manta, Switzerland, vs. Richard Krajicek (12), Netherlands Carlos Moya (8), Spain, vs. Nicolas Escude, France WOMEN Ruxandra Dragomir, Romania, vs. Lindsay Davenport (2) Silvia Farina, Italy, vs.

Monica Seles (4) Mary Pierce (5), France vs. Gala Leon Garcia, Spain Serena Williams (7) vs. Jelena Kostanic, Croatia loss on Saturday. His two goals were well deserved." Myers, who might have been languishing in last place in the Eastern Conference with the New York New Jersey MetroStars had the Galaxy not acquired him on June 1, agreed that his performance against the Burn had lacked something. "I didn't play well, but he Schmid told me he had a lot confidence in me and I tried to prove that I could do better.

"I feel great," he said. "I had a good game. We're in first place now, tied with Colorado, and that's what we want." Myers' first goal came in the second minute. A corner kick by Vanney was punched away by Clash goalkeeper Joe Cannon. The ball fell to Cobi Jones, who passed to Danny Pena.

Pena played the ball back to Myers and his shot bounced in off the right post. "A coach I once worked with said the worst lead in soccer is an early goal," Schmid said, "but I always think early goals are good. I'd rather be up, 1-0, than down, 1-0." The Galaxy was up, 2-0, after an exchanges of passes between Carlos Hermosillo and Myers led to Myers' second goal in the 58th minute. The Clash cut the lead to 2-1 when Alejandro Sequeira scored a minute later on a goal that looked suspiciously offside, but Vanney made sure of the victory in the 71st minute, scoring the first penalty kick goal of his MLS career after By GRAHAMEL. JONES TIMES STAFF WRITER When Sigi Schmid initiated the trade that brought Roy Myers to the Galaxy three months ago, his intent was to provide some backup for Mauricio Cienfuegos.

"We felt we needed one more midfielder in case there was an injury to Mauricio," Schmid said, "and we also felt we needed somebody who could be a playmaker when teams shut him Cienfuegos down. "Roy has certainly given us that." And more. On Wednesday night, in front of a Rose Bowl crowd of 8,662, the 30-year-old Costa Rican scored his third and fourth goals of the season as the Galaxy defeated the San Jose Clash, 3-1. The two goals, plus another by Greg Vanney, propelled the Galaxy into a tie for first place in Major League Soccer's Western Conference and all but secured it a berth in the playoffs. One more Galaxy victory in the final seven games of the regular season will clinch a playoff berth.

"I thought Roy Myers came back tonight and played a very good game," Schmid said. "He had really had an off game in Dallas in a 1-0 The Colorado Rapids of MLS and the Rochester Raging Rhinos of the A-League advanced to the final of the U.S. Open Cup Wednesday with victories in the semifinals. The Rapids shut out the A-League's Charlston Battery, 3-0, and the Rhinos upset the Columbus Crew of MLS, 3-2. Both games were played in Virginia Beach, Va.

The final will be played Sept. 14 in Columbus, Ohio. By LISA DILLMAN TIMES STAFF WRITER NEW YORK He looked like a Croatian version of Gilligan wearing a goofy smile, an even goofier floppy fisherman's hat and a bright red shirt in the interview room. Here was three-time Wimbledon finalist Goran Ivanisevic, the perfect antidote to a tennis hangover. Something was needed to offset the general malaise hitting the U.S.

Open one day after the No. 1 player, Pete Sampras, and the two-time defending champion, Patrick Rafter, exited because of injuries. Ivanisevic is a reliable source. Last year, he enlivened an otherwise ordinary day here when he revealed that someone sent him an early birthday present, handcuffs and chocolate body paint. This time, it was tamer stuff after he defeated qualifier Ville Liukko of Finland, 7-5, 7-6 (7-5), 4-6, 6-2, in the first round Wednesday.

Ivanisevic had 27 aces and double-faulted 15 times. These days, Ivanisevic is simply trying to handcuff his psyche. His often-fragile confidence took a hard hit after Wimbledon, as he won only two matches in five tournaments before the Open. "I am struggling," he said. "But if I can put my game together, now I have to win six more matches.

It's a long way, you know. It's like Mt. Everest. You never know with me. It just clicks and the game is there." He was just getting warmed up.

Ivanisevic started talking about his alternate personalities. The good Goran, the bad Goran and the in-between Goran. Sometimes, all three surface in the same match. "Actually, in the match I find out," Ivanisevic said. "There's a couple of guys there.

I have a little chat, 'Which one is going to go Sometimes we fight: 'You "Today in the end was a good one, you know." Suddenly, the line of questioning veered toward Sybil territory. Do you give these voices, these guys, different names? "No, it's just me. It's just me, me and me," he said. "Today was only two. One guy stepped in in the middle of the second set, started to hit," he said.

"OK, I won that set. Then in the third set, I just was pulling him out, 'Sit down, relax, He didn't listen. "Then fourth set, you know, I just came in. I said, 'OK, now let me finish this." If he wins, everybody wins. "Oh, we all get the trophy," he said.

"I get the trophy and I buy another two trophies for whoever is there." Ivanisevic was simply having fun. He said he enjoyed making the room of journalists laugh. "I'm not a case to go to the psychologist or any kind of thing," he said. "I am the best psychologist for myself." Although Ivanisevic is unseeded, he is in the vastly weakened upper half of the draw, now minus Sampras and Rafter. The other remaining seeded players in his half are No.

5 Gustavo Kuerten of Brazil, No. 7 Todd Martin, No. 9 Greg Rusedski of Britain, No. 14 Tommy Haas of Germany and No. 16 Nicolas Lapentti of Ecuador.

Haas defeated Australian Open finalist Thomas Enqvist of Sweden, 6-2, 6-4, 7-6 (8-6). He survived despite suffering a pulled hip muscle in the third set "I didn't think about it at the time," Haas said. "It's bothering me now a little bit. I think it's just normal." Only one seeded player on the men's side was dismissed. Magnus Norman of Sweden defeated No.

17 Felix Mantilla of Spain, 1-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-4. The men's draw, which appeared to be in such disarray after the departures of Sampras and Rafter, regained some form when third-seeded Yevgeny Kafelnikov beat Max Mirnyi of Belarus, 7-5, 6-1, 6-7 (7-5), 6-3. That meant a final between Kafelnikov and second-seeded Andre Agassi, which would be a rematch of Kafelnikov's recent 6-1, 6-4 rout of Agassi in the Montreal final, remained a strong possibility. Both players appear to be at the top of their games. In women's second-round matches, No.

3 Venus Williams defeated Anne-Gaelle Sidot of France, 6-4, 6-3. There was one mild surprise. Tara Snyder defeated Wimbledon semifinalist Mirjana Lucie of Croatia, 7-5, 6-3, in the second round. Top-seeded Martina Hingis of Switzerland looked much sharper than she did in the first round Monday. Wednesday, Hingis defeated Sarah Pitkowski of France, 6-1, 6-1, in 46 minutes.

Tennis Notes Patrick Rafter, who retired in the fifth set of his first-round match against Cedric Ploline on Tuesday night, has a small tear in the rotator cuff of his right shoulder. Rafter had an MRI exam on Wednesday at a New York hospital. Every-day Discounted Prices On Every Kind Of Tire. EUMOYALM MICHELItf BUNLOP KUffB GOOD'yEAR BFGoodrlch- LABOR DAY SALE GOING ON NOW! It's One Wild Selection Process mmmii viinswn MICHEUN EUMROYAin hour so ma a mm mm nnv Smooth Quiet Ride HIGH PERFORMANCE "HR" RADIAL High Performance "HR" Speed Rated At An Affordable Price 40,000 Mile Treadwear Sorting SIGNATURE METRIC Winston BEST Metric Radial 70,000 Mile Treadwear CLASSIC Premium quality steel radial State-of-the-art long lasting tread design 80,000 Mile Michdln Tried. And True.

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This year's wild-card selection was something of an eyebrow raiser. Chosen on the men's side were Bob Bryan of Camarillo, ranked No. 199; Kevin Kim of Fullerton, 240; Taylor Dent of Newport Beach, 283; Mashiska Washington of Delray Beach, 312; James Blake of Fairfield, 333; Phillip King of Long Beach, 690, and Jeff Morrison of Huntington, W.Va., and MaliVai Washington of Ponte Vedra Beach, both unranked. Before the tournament began, MaliVai Washington, a Wimbledon finalist in '96 and a player ranked as high as No. 11 before suffering an injury that has kept him out most of this year, pulled out because of a new injury.

He was replaced by veteran Richey Rene-berg of Atlanta, currently ranked No. 206. O'Brien's ranking as one of the Americans closest to the No. 104 cutoff and his Davis Cup service would have seemed to make him an easy choice for a wild-card spot. When no call was forthcoming from the USTA, O'Brien entered the qualifying tournament and lost in the first round to top-seeded Ivan Ljubicic of Croatia, despite holding a 4-2 lead in the third set.

"No excuses. My fault," O'Brien said. "I should have qualified." But a closer look at the wild-card choices of the USTA does give one pause, not only on behalf of O'Brien, but others such as No. 163 Geoff Grant. MaliVai Washington is an obvious choice, if healthy.

Blake, Bryan, Dent and King are explained away as part of the USTA's ongoing effort to get the most out of promising newcomers. Kim has been one of those newcomers since he won the national boys' 18 title in '96, and Morrison automatically gets a spot by virtue of his NCAA title for Florida this spring. Mashiska Washington, MaliVai's brother, who, at 25, does not seem to be a part of any youth movement, turned pro in 1995 and has a 1-5 record in main tour events since then. The choice of Mashiska took on additional controversial overtones when one of the women's wild cards went to Mashona Washington, 23, MaliVai and Mashiska's sister, who entered the U.S. Open ranked No.

159 among the women. Mashona has made it to the second round of two Women's Tennis Assn. events this year. Both Mashiska and Mashona lost in the first round here, Mashiska in four sets and Mashona in three. After his loss, Mashiska, when asked about the wild-card controversy, said, "I think all Americans should have an opportunity to play in America's tournament." All this was against the background of a letter sent out last season by William Washington, who is black and the father of the tennis-playing Washington family.

The letter went to many people in tennis, including members of the media, and it accused the USTA of discrimination in its player development and team selection. Last Friday, William Washington filed a complaint in U.S. District court here against the USTA, charging many of the same things he did in his letter. Jay Snyder, U.S. Open tournament director, denied, despite the fact that three of the 16 wild cards awarded went to the Washington family, that political correctness had anything to do with the choices.

Those choices were made in a meeting of USTA coaches, officials, player development personnel and Davis Cup captain Tom Gullikson. "After we got done with the selections," Snyder said, "I was the one who asked the group if it had occurred to anybody that three of our wild cards went to one family. And the truth was, it hadn't. We had done it piece by piece and each had earned the spot separately." Snyder said that the USTA stressed player development and not marquee names, and said that Reneberg was selected over O'Brien when MaliVai Washington pulled out because Reneberg had only received one wild card into the U.S. Open over the years and O'Brien had received four.

Had one more spot come open, O'Brien would have gotten it, followed by Grant, Snyder said. "Nobody in our group was striving for political correctness in this," Snyder said. For the moment, O'Brien is mostly striving for excellence in the doubles draw, where he and Lareau are seeded No. 11 and won in the first round Tuesday. "Doubles can be a good life, and a good living," O'Brien said.

"But I still think I can get back to No. 30 in singles. I also have a dream to play in the Olympics. I'm not sure exactly how that works, but to get one of the doubles spots would be an unbelievable experience." How it works is much like how the Davis Cup team and U.S. Open wild cards are chosen: A good ranking, some good luck and, just maybe, a dash of politics.

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All wheels jheciol order. See store for detail match in the U.S. Open. Second-round doubles, that is. The name should be familiar.

O'Brien is a 29-year-old Stanford graduate who has been around the men's tennis tour for seven years, has made a nice living at something he loves to do and has some nice peaks in a career that, at the moment, is in a bit of a valley. The peaks include winning the 1996 New Haven tournament, plus gaining three Grand Slam tournament finals in doubles the 1996 and '97 Australian with Canadian Sebastien Lareau and the 1995 U.S Open with Australian Sandon Stolle and three appearances for the United States in the. Davis Cup in Brazil, England and in a loss against Australia at Boston in July. At Boston, O'Brien teamed with Pete Sampras to get the only U.S. point, in a five-set victory over Mark Woodforde and Stolle, and, to date, that is O'Brien's lead item on his career highlight film.

"That has to be my most memorable moment in tennis," O'Brien said Wednesday. "It was a home tie, my first one. I'm representing my country and I'm playing with the greatest player ever to play the game. "There was one moment, one point in the fifth set, when the crowd was so loud and the feeling so incredible that it was like I was walking on air. I'm not a big guy on thinking about history, or where things fit in the game for me, but I remember thinking that this was amazing, that this is why I play the game." Suffice to say that O'Brien does not play the game to be on the sidelines when the singles draw is posted for the U.S.

Open, yet that is what happened. And while he is blaming nobody but himself he was sought for this story, he didn't do the seeking his plight is an interesting study in USTA decision-making. O'Brien, once as high as No. 30 in the world after his big 172-place gain in the rankings in 1996, is now No. 174.

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