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The Danville Register from Danville, Virginia • Page 12

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6-B The Register: Danville. Tuesday, March 11. 1975 Bob McCurdy Hopes His Scoring Will Be Ticket To Pro Ball RICHMOND, Va. (AP The basketball season is over for Bob McCurdy, but the shag- gy-haired southpaw shooter hopes his national major col- lege scoring lead will be a tick- et to the pros--if not with the American or National basket- ball association, then in Eu- rope. McCurdy, a 6-foot-7, 200- pound forward from the Uni- versity of Richmond, scored 857 points in 26 games for a 32.9 average this season, including a school record of 53 points against Appalachian State.

Only Notre Dame's Adrian Dantley, who is averaging 30.4 and is playing in the NCAA Midwest Regionals, has an out- side chance of catching him. Crosby, Hope Tournaments Set For 1976 WASHINGTON (AP) The pro golf tour will include the Bing Crosby National Pro-Ama- teur and the Bob Hope Desert Classic again next year, it was announced Monday. Officials of the two tourna- ratified their contracts with' the Professional Golfers Association Tournament Play- ers' Division Monday for 1976. Dates for next year's tourneys will be announced later. The contracts assure that charities will continue to bene- fit from the two tournaments.

The principal beneficiary for the Bob Hope Classic is the Eisenhower Medical Center in Palm Desert, which has received nearly 53 million from the tourney in recent years. The Bing Crosby tournament, whose proceeds go to various charities, is played on three courses on the Monterey Penin- sula--Pebble Beach, Cypress Point and Spyglass Hill. The Bob Hope Desert Classic is co-sponsored by five sites- Bermuda Dunes, Eldorado, In- dian Wells, La Quinta and Ta- marisk Country clubs. The new contracts ended Crosby's reported dis- satisfaction over the amount of money the TPD wanted to ex- tract from television revenues of the two tourneys. Despite McCurdy's scoring, the Southern Conference team wound up the season with a 10- 16 record.

McCurdy is a dead-eye jump shooter, hitting 54 per cent of his shots, most from the 15-20 foot range. "I don't remember the last time he missed," Virginia Com- monwealth Coach Chuck Noe said. As Richmond's primary of- fensive threat, McCurdy was not one to pass off once he got the ball. He was credited with only 11 assists for the season. He averaged 9.6 rebounds.

He averaged 22.8 shots a game and took 35 per cent of the team's shots for the season. He scored in the 40s five times and in the 30s 11 times. But there have been many hotshot college scorers who' faded into professional oblivion. "My deficiencies are bal- Ihandling and quickness," he says. "If I can't make it in pro ball here, I'll play a couple of years in Europe.

But I can see myself playing in the NBA or ABA. You gotta have con- fidence." Conteh Rated Favorite In Title Fight "LONDON (AP) Jbhn'Con- teh, Britain's most exciting fighter, was rated the favorite Monday to retain his World Boxing Council light heavy- weight title against American challenger Lonnie Bennett. British oddsmakers made Conteh a 2-1 choice for Tuesday night's scheduled 15-round bout at Wembley Pool. But George Francis, Conteh's manager, was cautiously opti- mistic and said Bennett was just about the last opponent he would have chosen for Conteh. "Bennett is big, strong and the top challenger around," Francis said.

"We could have done without him. We'd have been much happier with a couple of easy fights, but the WBC insisted when John won the vacant title he would have to defend against the No. 1 challenger first time ouL" VNC Climbs To 7th After Tourney Win By The Associated Press playoff title game, rocketed to Pan American is 20th. UCLA jumped into second seventh from 12th. The Tar Cincinnati and -Centenary place in The Associated Press Heels, 21-7, received 282 points, were new this week, college basketball poll Monday, Arizona State, 23-3 and West-, replacing Arizona, 19th a week trading fourth place with Mary- rn Athletic Conference champ ago, and Creighton, which tum- TWO FOR McCUKDY-- Bob McCurdy, of the University of Richmond, fires in two of the 857 points this season that ranked him as the nation's top major college basket- ball scorer with an average of 32.9 points a game.

McCurdy is a 6-foot-7 senior forward from Deer Park, N.Y. (AP Wirephoto) land, while Indiana finished a perfect regular season and maintained its hold on the top spot. The Hoosiers, headed for the National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation playoffs with a 29-0 season record after their 94-79 Big Ten Conference victory Sat- urday over Michigan State, re- ceived all 37 first-place votes for 740 points from the nation- wide panel of sports writers and sports broadcasters. UCLA's Bruins, winners of the Pacific-8 Conference with their 72-68 victory over South- ern California, head into the NCAA playoffs with a 23-3 record. They will be shooting for their 10th national cham- pionship in 12 years, including a string of seven in a row that was ended by North Carolina Stale last year.

The Bruins jumped from fourth to second with 603 points while Louisville, 24-2, main- tained third with 575 and Mary- land, an. 87-85 loser to N.C. State in the Atlantic Coast Con- ference playoffs, fell to fourth with 474. The next two teams held their positions, No. 5 Mar- quette, 22-3 with 437 points, and No.

6 Kentucky with a 22-4 record and 424 points. North Carolina, which beat N.C. State 70-66 in the ACC following a 107-92 romp-over Arizona, received 280 points and moved up one notch to eighth, trading places with N.C. State, 22-6, which received 250 points. The Wolfpack, after fail- ing to gain a berth in the NCAA playoffs which they won last year, voted to turn down an in- vitations to any other tourna- ment.

Ninth is Alabama, which slipped from seventh, receiving 229 points after suffering a 76- 70 upset loss to Auburn. Topping the Second Ten is Pennsylvania, down one place. Notre Dame didn't play but still jumped to 12th from 16th, followed by Southern Cal, down one from a week ago, Clemson, Oregon State and Rutgers. Texas El-Paso, Cincinnati and Centenary are tied for 17th, and bled all the way from 13th. College Basketball Poll By The Associated Press The Top Twenty, with first-place votes in parenlhcses.

season records and total points. Points tabulated on basis of 20-18- JB-H-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1. Indiana 37 29-0 749 2 UCI.A 2.1-3 603 3. Louisville 24-2 575 4. Maryland 22-4 474 5 Marquetle 22-3 437 6.

Kentucky 22-4 424 7. N. Carolina 21-7 282. 3. Arizona St.

23-3 280 9. X. C. St. 250 10.

Alabama 22-4 229 11. Penn 23-4 173 12. Notre Dame 18 8 77 13. S. California 18-7 72 14.

Clemson 17-10 15. Oregon St. 17-10 39 IB. Rulgcrs 22-6 33 17. Texas 20-5 31 (tie) Cincinnati 21-5 31 (tie) Centenary 25-4 31 20.

Pan American 22-2 25 Others receiving votes, listed alphabeti- cally: Arizona. Auburn. Boston College. Cenlral Michigan. Crcighton.

Drake. Fur- man. Kansas. UiSallc. Memphis Michigan.

Middle Tennessee Nevada- Las Vegas. New Mexico Oregon, Southern Illinois. Stetson. Syracuse, Ten- nesscc, Texas AM. Utah St.

Newcombe Doesn't Agree With Some U. S. Players Especially Jimmy Connors Glory Gone For N. C. State Team "RALEIGH, N.C.

(AP)--The glory is gone for North Caro- lina State's basketball team. Now it's time for hard recruit- ing and tough training. Last year's No.l team fell by the wayside Saturday night when North Carolina dumped the defending champs 70-6U in the finals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. "We're out. We're not even defending champions because we were eliminated," Coach Norm Sloan said Monday.

As far as he's concerned, college basketball won't have'a cham- pion until the top'spot is won later this month. Sloan said he's 'not' bitter about the loss, though he bristles when questioned about why. He said such questions put him in the position of "making excuses or being dis- honest." "Everything looks different when you win. When you lose you look at it from a negative point of view: What's wrong with the team that lost? When you win you get a positive eval- ution; when you lose you get a negative evaluation," Sloan said. A big factor in the loss had to be All America David Thomp- son's leg crari.ps.

He -was side- lined for the last 10 minutes of Friday's win over Maryland with the cramps. "When your legs cramp se- verely, you in essence strain muscles," Sloan said, adding that Thompson was seriously handicapped by sore legs Satur- day and "is still limping to- day." Thompson's season aver- age was about 30 points a game; he put only 16 points on the board against North Caro- lina. N.C. State's 39 per cent shoot- ing average was another impor- tant factor. The season average was 51 per cent.

"Most of the time when your shooting per- centage is that low, you're go- ing to lose," Sloan said. Before State played its first game last fall, Sloan predicted the team would have problems operating with three forwards. NEW YORK (AP) Austral- ian John Newcombe, who has a home in this country, still doesn't understand the Americans act--least of all Jimmy Connors. "The American players are very clanish," Newcombe said Monday. "Every year the Americans and Australians go to Hartford to play in the World Cup.

We have a dinner together with the sponsors, and after it's over we hang around and down a few beers'. "But by then the American team's gone." When the Americans and Australians do go out drinking together, Newcombe says the Americans scramble to pick up the bill, prompting U.S. star NIT Retaliates In Kind Stevens Survives Fiery Crash To Win 250-Lap Modified Race "BUGS 1 STEVENS Exhibition Baseball Monday's Kxhihiliiin l.ini'sciires Hv Tilt- As-iiK-ialrn 1 Press Fort l.iiiidonliitr. Kla. Atlanta 0(iO (Kn ni2 -n I New- York i A I in lip INK in 2 RtH'd.

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HnitMrin nnnSHflll-- 7 13 1 Tim-tnn nnn ono -t 2 Kirhard. SieVirrl He Ins Santos 7 and May: Rarr. Rnmhnrk WriEht and a I. -Rarr. A I I a "Bugs" Stevens said fate was responsible for his victory Sunday in the modified portion of the Dogwood 500 Classic at Martinsville Speedway.

Stevens barely managed to avoid a spectacular fiery crash which hailed the race for more than 51 minutes after 90 laps had been completed. Ed Barton of East Hampton, Conn, who started in 30th position lost control of his 73 Vega coming out of the fourth turn on a restart after a caution flag. Barton hit Geoff Bodine as he crossed the track forcing Bodine into the grandstand wall near the start-finish line. Brian Ross slammed into Bodine and almost immediately was hit from behind by Melvin Chilton. Ross and Chilton's cars ap- peared to explode after the collision sending flames higher than the roof of the grandstand.

Outside pole position Donald "Satch" Worley of Rocky Mount also was a victim of the crash. None of the drivers involved was injured. Bodine and Chilton hit me, I guess. "When I hit Bodine, my back end went up in the air and Chilton musl've driven under me and punctured the fuel cell," Ross explained. "I was aware that the car was on fire before everyone stopped hitting me.

Al first, there were so many cars hitting me I didn't dare get out of the car," he continued. Worley said he saw everything happen in front of him but cars were everywhere and there was nowhere to go. just ran right into the fire." The 500-lap program was marred by 25 caution flags for a total of 176 laps. In the Late Model Sportsman opener, the field did not reach the start line before the first of 15 yellow flags was out. Sonny Hutchins lost control of his car coming out of the fourth turn going toward the green nag.

Four cars were eliminated in the mishap. They were Hut- chins, Jack Ingram, Reds Kagle and Roy Lee Hendrick. Hendrick, son of eventual soon. "Harry was on it before we even left the turn. "I didn't expect that.

I thought we were supposed to get to the line. When I got on it, the car just turned around like I had broken an axle or something," Hutchins said. Ingram said Hutchins wrecked everyone. "He i was bouncing around all over out there and he kept standing on it and doing idiot-type stuff like that," the disappointed Ingram fumed. Winner Hendrick received a blow on the right door panel from Hutchins in the action but laughed about it after the race.

"I thought I was going to have to go through the pit wall to get away from him." Hendrick blamed the 40- degree temperatures for the sliding start. The tires just wouldn't hold enough to take off like they did, he explained. NEW YORK (AP) It was the National Invitation Tourna- ment's turn to fire in college basketball's war of words Mon- day, and members of the 16- team Madison Square Garden classic unloaded some of its heaviest guns. For starters, there was Coach Lou Carnesecca of St. John's University.

Carnesecca still was steaming over remarks from John McFadden, Rutgers' assistant coach. McFadden called the NIT "minor league" on Saturday when the Scarlet Knights beat St. John's 79-77 to earn an NCAA tournament berth and leave the Redmen in the NIT. McFadden said the con- troversial quote came from Tom Young, Rutgers' head coach, and that it was only a device to get his team up for the game against St. John's.

The source didn't particulary concern Carnesecca. It was the quote itself that bothered him. "I think you should always think about what you say when you open your mouth. As a coach and a teacher, you should always have compassion for the other fellow." And what about North Caro- lina State Ail-American David Thompson, who called the NIT "a loser's tournament" after the Wolfpack rejected a bid? "Is Frank McGuire a loser?" snapped Carnesecca, nodding at the South Carolina coach. "Were Joe Lapchick or Clair Bee losers? Or Lenny Wilkins or Walt Frazier? They all coached or played in the "I can understand a player saying things like that in the despair of defeat, but I can't understand coaches.

The real losers are those people who fail to understand what it is to com- pete at this level." Princeton Coach Pete Carill was in no mood to discuss Thompson's "loser" charge. "We spend too much time worrying about North Carolina State," he said. "They're not playing anywhere." As for other complaints about the NIT's quality, Carill sneered. "We're happy to be in it," he said. "There has been enough substance to this tour- nament to disregard those com- ments.

"We have freedom of speech in this country, and that means you're even allowed to make a jackass of yourself." Next up was McGuire of South Carolina. "Anybody who runs this tour- nament down," he said, "doesn't know what he's talk- ing about." Then he offered a word of advice for other NIT coaches who might be consid- ering a popoff. "Don't knock the NCAA tour- nament," McGuire said, "or somebody might be knocking at your door, asking for your cre- dentials, and you might be out of business." The 38th annual NIT's busi- ness begins Saturday and Sun- day with afternoon and evening doubleheaders. Manhattan meets Massachu- setts and Providence plays Clemson in Saturday's first twinbill. At night, it will be Southern Illinois against Pitts- burgh and St.

John's vs. Lafa- yette. On Sunday, South Caro- lina faces Connecticut and Princeton goes against Holy Cross in the afternoon, with Memphis State meeting Oral Roberts and St. Peter's taking on Oregon at night. Quarter-finals are scheduled for next Tuesday and Thurs- day, with the semifinals Satur- day, March 22, and the finals Sunday, March 23.

Arthur Ashe to call the Aussies, who prefer to split the check, tightwads. "I don't think that's accu- rate," Newcombe said. "When Americans go out, no one really wants to pick up the check, but someone does it anyway. In Australia, no one does that be- cause we think it's a form of showing off. It's like saying that I have more money than the other guy." Since they don't socialize, Connors has never beaten New- combe to a check.

But it will be another thing when the two square off in Las Vegas for their heavyweight tennis bout. The pie is expected to be million when Connors and New- combe play one-on-one at Cae- sar's Palace, but they have not yet agreed on a format for slic- ing it up. Newcombe, who has beaten Connors in three previous meet- ings, is expected to be the crowd favorite in that April 26 match, just as Rod Laver had the fans' support when he lost to Connors in a head-to-head match earlier this year. "I'm surprised by the vi- ciousness of people against Jimmy," Newcomebe said. "I just don't understand it.

People don't want me to beat him, they want me to kill him. I feel sorry for him because people feel so violently against him." But Newcombe's compassion for Connors is strictly off-court. "Right now I am the best player in the world," the 30- year-old Aussie said. "Beating Jimmy would be something special to me. INSULATE Your Now SAVE FUEL into ettki welk Call 793-4281 ELLIS STEWART IKC.

After the race, Stevens said winner Ray Hendrick, stopped he was running behind the cars on the track to avoid the spin- ning cars but was hit Norfolk State Wins 1st Round NAIA Game At Siirilsnla. Kla. St.lsniis nfli ino 100-3 fi 3 i a a A om mn rvK-R 13 1 Denny. Sadoeki '4'. Snsa 7 I and Rnrlnlph: 3 i OTtcn i5).

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Bass involved in the crash. "I had to almost stop and when went by there were flames on both sides of the car." Ross, of Bailston Spa, N.Y., said he was looking for a place lo go when Bodine hil the wall. "Someone else was beside me so I had nowhere lo go. I hil from cars behind. "I saw Sonny going all over and I slopped.

I think Sam Ard hit me in the rear and that did it," the younger Hendrick ex- plained. Hulchins blamed pole-siller Harry Gant for starting too OD, Akron, Assumption Head Division II Field At Brarfrnlon. Fla. Pctroil Pitt-shureh Walker Humphrey, l-amonl Moose(6K Ray 210 000 031--7 12 It 03(lonooni--4 10 Ignasiak '7' and 7 Kison. BreU(3.

and Macha. ifi. W-- Isnasiak HRs-I)e- troir. Sutherland: Pittsburgh. Macha.

Al Fnrl Mvrrs.Fla. Cincinnati non 000 020--2 6 Kansas City oooonoooi-i i T. Carroll. Henderson 4 Hrdlund McEnancy (81 and Del Riisfo. Fried 8 Biisby.

Dal Canton (41. McDaniel 7) ar.d Martinez. Papke 7K McDaniel. At 1-akrland. Fla.

Chunichi OM 141 3(12-14 13 0 Detroit 201 000 301-- 7 11 4 Mlsawa. Hoshino (B) and Shintaku: Ifiller, Christenson HI. Moore (7) and Wockcnfuss, Slisawa. Christenson. irRS-- Chunichi.

Miyoshj. Oshima; Dc- tfoil, Wockcnfuss. EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) Favorites Akron, Old Dominion and Assumption head an eight- team field for Wednesday's quarter-finals of Ihe National Collegiate Athletic Association's College Division II basketball tournament. Old Dominion, ranked No.

6 among Ihe nation's small colleges, will be making ils fi- nal appearance in the Division II tournament, moving up to the major college division next year. Sophomore Wilson Washing- ton, a 6-foot-9 center who Irans- fered from Maryland, leads the Old Dominion squad that has averaged 87.5 points a game Eastern Illinois. Assumption, 20-7, playing in the final round for the fifth straight year, is led by 6-7 center John Grocho- walski. a College Division All- American last year who aver- aged 23.7 points and 14.2 rebounds this season. Ninlh-ranked University of New Orleans, 21-6, is one of two other returning schools from last year's finals.

New Orleans, which will face Riverside in the second game Wednesday, is led by S-2 guard Wilbur Holland who averages 25 points. The opening game, 12:35 p.m., CDT, pits Assumption against eighth-ranked Gannon, with five players in double fig- 25-3. After the New Orleans- ur es- Riverside game, Old Dominion In its march to the finals, Old tangles with llth-rated North Dakota, 22-6, and Tennessee State, 18-7, takes on Akron. The semifinals will be played Thursday, beginning at 7:05 Akron, 20-8, beat two ranked p.m., with Friday's consolation teams in regional tournament game at 7:05 p.m. and the play, St.

Joseph's, and championship match at 9:05. Dominion beat Randolph-Ma- Con, which earlier beat defend- ing Division II champion Mor- gan State. KANSAS CITY A Norfolk State defeated William Jewell 83-64 last night in the first round of the National Association of Intercollegiale Athletics basketball tour- nament. Montevello met 12th seeded Illinois Wesleyan later Monday to close out eight first-round games. Eight more are scheduled today.

Second-seeded Fairmont Stale was rallied by Kearney Slate before regaining its composure and gaining a 94-86 victory. Earlier Monday, fourth-seed- ed Marymount, ripped Monmoulh, N.J., College 86-72. Three other seeded teams--Al- corn State, Edinboro State and Midwestern of Texas--ad- vanced in the tournamenl while Millersville of Pennsylvania, which was not seeded, sur- prised Ferris Slale. Fairmonl State was leading 50-46 at intermission but was dazzled by a Kearney State scoring surge afler Ihe break in which Ihe Anlelopes outscored Ihe Falcons 16-4. The second-half heroics by the Nebraskans were led by 6- foot-3 guard Tom Kropp, who paced his team's scoring with 26 poinls, rebounding wilh 18, assists with six and steals with four.

Fairmont State finally set- tled down and broke into an eight-point lead with Slfe min- utes remaining. Alcorn State, No. 8 seed and ninnerup in last year's NAIA tournament, rallied behind the 25-point scoring of John McGill to lake an 88-77 decision over Central Arkansas earlier in Ihe day. The Mississippi school Irailed by Iwo points at half- time. Botvling Results Excursion Plan saves you money, buys you time.

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About The Danville Register Archive

Pages Available:
125,630
Years Available:
1961-1977