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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 14

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I. B4 THE SUN, Monday, August 8, 1983 a Brunner leads Giants' rally past Jets in exhibition, 23-16 Hk' I I .1 el rj East Rutherford N.J. (AP) -Scott Brunner broke a third-quarter tie with a perfectly executed 10-yard bootleg run, then passed 27 yards to Danny Pittman for a fourth-quarter touchdown last night as the New York Giants defeated the New York Jets, 23-16, in a National Football League exhibition game. Brunner, who completed nine of 16 passes for 124 yards, re-established himself as a serious challenger for Two plays after a pass by Pat Ryan was intercepted by Giants cor-nerback Brian Carpenter and returned 4 yards to the Jets 16, Brunner took the snap and faked a handoff to running back Joe Morris. With the Giants' line moving to the right and the Jets' defense taking the fake, Brunner hid the ball on his left hip and swept untouched and almost unnoticed into the left corner of the end zone, breaking a 9-9 tie with 1 minute 4 seconds remaining in the third period.

Cowboy rookie brings excitement By The Associated Press It is only exhibition season in the National Football League, and just the first full week of action at that, yet rookie halfback Chuck McSwain and the Dallas Cowboys are already treating their fans to regular-season-style excitement. McSwain, a fifth-round draft pick considered a longshot to make the talent-laden Cowboys, scored two touchdowns in the final 97 seconds to lead the Cowboys over the Miami Dol- phins, 20-17, Saturday night. A crowd of 46,000 sat through 97-degree heat in Texas Stadium while watching Dallas fall behind, 17-6. But with less than two minutes remaining, McSwain took a screen pass from reserve quarterback Gary Hogeboom and broke three tackles on the way to a 67-yard touchdown run. Then, Ron Fellows recovered an onsides kick kick at the 50 and the Cowboys drove to the Miami 1 with 6 seconds left.

Dallas took its last timeout and Coach Tom Landry called a play for McSwain, who crashed into the end zone for the winning touchdown. In Saturday preseason games, Chicago beat Buffalo, 27-17; Cleveland nipped Green Bay, 21-20; Kansas City downed Cincinnati, 24-7; the Los Angeles Rams defeated San Diego 34-20; Pittsburgh topped New England 27-16; Tampa Bay rallied past New Orleans, 20-17; Atlanta edged Washington, 13-10, in overtime; the Los Angeles Raiders slipped by San Francisco, 26-23, in overtime, and Minnesota beat St. Louis, 28-10. Walter Abercrombie ran for two touchdowns in Pittsburgh's victory over New England, which got a pair of TD runs by Mosi Tatupu. A v- -vMi 1,1,1 rfa3y' United Press International Alberto Juantorena, of Cuba, screams in agony as he is track as he finished second in the fifth heat of the men's carried off the field on a stretcher after falling to the 800-meter event at the World Championships in Helsinki.

Waitz wins marathon; Juantorena hurt the Giants' starting quarterback job. He has failed to wrest it from Phil Simms each of the past three preseasons, but has wound up with it anyway by virtue of Simms's injuries. Colts urge Rush to have pity COLTS, from Bl and cajoled Kush into it. "I was kidding him," said assistant Hal Hunter. 'You get older and you get "I'd have bet anything we'd have been back for dinner Sunday at 6," said Mann.

"But I think those players kept after him. I believe they talked him into it." It is more likely, however, that Kush realized just how tired his team was. They did not arrive back in Baltimore from Houston until 3:30 a.m. Friday, and they had practice that afternoon and again twice on Saturday. "We looked pretty tired in practice Saturday," said defensive line coach Gunther Cunningham.

"I think coach Kush could see it had all caught up with them." However, there is no rest for the wicked and very little for assistants. Rush's coaches were) excused from Goucher until breakfast today, too, but each found an excuse to return to work even defensive back coach Bob Valesente, who left a hospital bed to pick up some game films. "He walked right into camp with Sutton captures PGA as Nicklaus rally fails wisely let Ruimiko Kaneko, of Japan, and Carey May, of Ireland, lead the first 5 kilometers Jacqueline Gareau, of Canada, then opened 30 yards on the pack at about 9 miles, and Regina Joyce, of Ireland, took over, building a 35-second lead near the halfway mark. Following his wife on the course with a bicycle, Jack Waitz remained unconcerned about the large pack of about a dozen runners who trailed Joyce. "I asked Crete how she was feeling at 25 kilometers," Jack said.

"She shook her head, but that's TRACK, from Bl once in a 10.20 quarterfinal heat. "I wanted to control this race throughout, and that's exactly what I did," said the Willingboro (N.J.) sprinter, who will not begin long jumping until tomorrow. "My first race was just OK. This race was perfect" Waitz has run faster marathons, one in New York that broke the 2:30 barrier in 1979 and another at 2:25:41 the following year. But this was her first women-only race, with a world title at stake.

Instead of pushing the pace, Waitz World Track and Field results Grete Waitz replenished her fluid intake with a Norwegian electrolyte drink similar to Gatorade. Training in the heat at home in Oslo this summer with Rob de Castella, the Australian great, and Ovlyn Dahl, a world-class Norwegian marathoner, conditioned her for the warm, cloudless weather yesterday, on a hilly, windy course. Watiz, benefiting from a relatively slow pace, took the lead at the 2-hour mark and quickly broke away from Smekhnova. "She was very bright, that Grete," said Gareau, who finished fifth. "She really did something to win the race." Camacho stops Limon in fifth San Juan, Puerto Rico (AP) Undefeated Hector (Macho) Camacho, of New York, stopped Rafael (Bazooka) Limon, of Mexico, in the fifth round yesterday and won the vacant but disputed World Boxing Council super featherweight title.

Using lightning speed, the 21-year-old Camacho knocked down Limon, 28, three times, once in the third round as the bell sounded and twice more in the fifth in the scheduled 12-round fight. Referee Richard Steele, of Las Vegas, stopped the fight with 2 minutes 52 seconds gone in the fifth round. Limon admitted afterward he was Greg Norman, 1,875 72-72-70-75-289 Lou Graham. 1,875 73-74-70-72-289 Gary Player, 1,875 74-68-73-74289 Larry Mize, 1,730 70-70-75-75-290 Peter Oosterhuis, 1,730 75-71-71-73-290 Morris Hatalsky, 1.730 69-75-73-73290 Gibby Gilbert. 1,730 7046-80-74290 Mike Nicolette.

1,730 72-71-73-74-290 Lon Hinkle. 1,730 70-75-74-71290 Vance Heatner, 1.730 73-74-72-71-290 Tom Watson. 1.730 74-67-78-70-290 Gil Morgan, 1.610 72-73-74-72291 George Burns. 1.610 78-68-72-73291 Charles Coody, 1,610 73-72-70-76-291 Jack Renner, 1,610 74-71-73-73291 Ed Fiori, 1.610 75-69-73-74291 John Adams, 1.610 75-71-72-73-291 Jim Nelford, 1,565 72-72-76-72-292 Scott Hoch. 1,565 73-72-74-73-292 Bruce Fleisher, 1.535 74-73-74-72-293 Bob Gilder, 1.535 71-69-76-77293 Craig Stadler.

1,535 72-73-76-72-293 Mark Lye, 1.535 75-67-75-76-293 Mike Donald, 1.506 71-71-76-76- 294 Tom Kite. 1.506 72-75-73-74-294 Arnold Palmer, 1.506 74-73-74-73-294 Nick Price, 1,506 72-74-74-74-294 George Archer, 1,506 70-77-74-73294 T.C Chen. 1,500 72-75-79-69-295 Larry Gilbert, 1.500 71-74-76-75-296 Pat Lindsey, 1,500 74-72-80-71-297 Rex Caldwell, 1,500 74-73-75-75297 RonStreck, 1,500 72-73-77-76-298 Jim Logue, 1,500 73-74-77-76-300 Bill Britton, 1,500 74-73-77-76300 Bobby Heins, 1,500 73-74-75-78-300 Lee Elder, 1,500 76-71-77-77-301 EdSneed, 1,500 74-73-75-79-301 Allen Miller, 1,500 69-78-77-78302 Bob Eastwood, 1,500 76-70-77-79-302 Robert Hoyt, 1.500 71-72-80-80-303 Leonard Thompsn, 1,500 73-74-75-81-303 Curtis Strange. 1,500 71-74-85-74-304 Jim King 1,500 73-73-78-84-308 tonova, Soviet Union. 11.32.

Heat 21, Marita Koch. East Germany, 11.25.2, Merlene Ottey, Jamaica. 11.34.3, Helina Marja-maa, Finland. 11.34.4, Nadeja Gueorguieva, Bulgarai. 11.43.

Heat 3 1, Diane Williams, U.S., 1 1 .25.2. Silke Gladish, East Germany, 11.36.3, Rose Aimee Bacoul. France. 11.42.4, Shirley Thomas, Britain, 11.48. Heat 4 1, Evelyn Ashford, U.S., 11.11.2, Marliesd Goehr, East Germany, 11.16.3, Angela Bailey, Canada, 11.36.4, Heather Oakes, Britain, 11.57.

Women's marathon 1, Grete Waitz, Norway, 2:28:09.2, Marianne Dickerson, U.S., 2:31:09.3, Raisa Smekhnova, Soviet Union, 2:31:13.4, Rosa Mota, Portugal. 2:31:50.5, Jacqueline Gareau, Canada, 2:32:35. 6, Laura Fogli, Italy, 2:33:31.7, Regina Joyce, Ireland, 2:33:52.8, Tuija Toivonen, Finland 2:34:14.9, Joyce Smith, Britain, 2:34:27.10, Lutsia Beliae-va, Soviet Union, 2:34:44. Pezzatini, Italy. 1:27:15.25.

Phillip Vesty, Britain, 1:27:20.26, Martiel Fesselter, France, 1:27:39.27. Roman Mrazek. Czechoslovakia, 1:27:46.28. Jorge Llopart, Spain, 1:27:49.29, Simon Baker, Australia. 1:28:09.30, Willi Sawail, Australia, 1:28:16.

Other U.S. finishers 36. Tim Lewis, U.S., 1:30:10. Men's shot put 1, Edward Sarul, Poland, Ulf Timmermann, East Germany, Remigius Machura, Czechoslovakia, Dave Laut, U.S., lanis Bojars, Soviet Union, Udo Beyer, East Germany, Alessandro Andrei, Italy, 65-10V 8, Aulis Akonniemi, Finland, Vladimir Milic, Yugoslavia, Mike Lehmann, U.S.. 64-7V4.

11, Josef Kubes, Czechoslovakia, 64-6. 12. Ivan Ivancic, Yugoslavia, Women's 100 Semifinal qualifiers Heat 1 1, Anelia Nouneva, Bulgaria, 11.20.2, Angella Taylor, Canada. 11.24.3, Alice Brown, U.S., 11.30.4. Olga Nasonova-An- Mm't 20,000 walk 1, Ernesto Canto, Mexico.

1:20:49.2. Jozef Pribilinec, Czechoslovakia. 1:20:59. 3, Evgeny Evsiukov, Soviet Union, 1:21:08.4. Jose Marin, Spain, 1:21:21.5, Gerard Lelievre.

France, 1:21:37.6, Pavol Blazek, Czechoslovakia, 1:21:57.7, Mauri-zio da Milano. Italy. 1:21:57. 8. Guillaume Leblanc, Canada, 1:22:04.9, Raul Gonzalez, Mexico, 1:22:06.10, Roland Weiser, East Germany, 1:22:14.

11, Anatoly Gorshkov, Soviet Union, 1:22:34.12, Reima Salonen, Finland, 1:22:51.13, Petr Po-chenckuk, Soviet Union, 1:24:55.14, Ralf Kowalsky, East Germany, 1:25:13.15. Smith, Australia, 1:25:23. 16. Enrique Vera, Mexico, 1:25.27.17, Alik Basirev. Bulgaria, 1:25.49.

18. Carlo Mattioli. Italy, 1:25:53.19, Jim Heiring. U.S., 1:25:55.20, Marcel Jobin, Canada, 1:26:13. 21, Erling Andersen, Norway, 1:26:39.22.

Michael Boenke, East Germany, 1:26:57 23, Jose Pinto, Portugal, 1:27:10.24, Alessandro PGA, from Bl brought him to 9 under after the 12th hole. At this juncture, he had closed the gap to 4 strokes. Jaccbsen, however, dropped a stroke with a bogey at the 13th, which he followed with pars. The other threat came from Nicklaus, two groups ahead of Sutton's threesome. Nicklaus was steady, having had no bogeys.

A couple of putts had failed to drop, but still he was playing well. Nicklaus had started the round at 4 under par and made the turn at 6 under after making birdies at the difficult second hole and the fifth. He reached minus-6 with a birdie at the 10th, and when he birdied the 14th, Nicklaus caught Jacobsen at minus-8. Jacobsen at this point was on the 17th hole. McGowan, in the second-to-last threesome, meanwhile was making a modest run at the leader.

He had started at 5 under, gained a stroke on the front nine and advanced to 7 under par with a birdie at the 11th hole. For most of the afternoon, after Crenshaw faltered, no one was closer to Sutton than Jacobsen with a 4-stroke gap. Hal Sutton, $100,000 65-66-72-71-274 Jack Nicklaus, 60,000.... 73-65-71-66275 Peter Jacobsen, 40,000 73-70-68-65-276 Pat McGowan, 30,000 68-67-73-69277 John Fought, 25,000 67-69-71-71-278 FunyZoeller. 19.000 72-71-67-69-279 Bruce Lietzke.

19.000 67-71-70-71279 Dan Pohl, 16.000 72-70-69-69-280 Mike Reid. 10,880 69-71-72-70-282 DougTewell. 10,880 74-72-69-67282 Jay Haas, 10.880 68-72-69-73282 Scott Simpson. 10.880 66-73-70-73-282 Ben Crenshaw. 10,880 68-66-71-77-282 Keith Fergus, 6,750 68-70-72-73-283 Hale Irwin.

6,750 72-70-73-68-283 Jim Thorpe. 6.750 68-72-74-69-283 Roger Maltbie, 6,750 71-71-71-70-283 David Graham. 6.750 70-69-74-70-283 leeTrevino. 6,750 70-68-74-7 1-283 John Cook, 4,750 74-71-68-71-284 Raymond Floyd. 4,750 69-75-71-69-284 Danny Edwards, 4,750 67-76-71-70-284 Fred Couples, 3.912 71-70-73-71-285 Don Pooley, 3.912 72-68-74-71285 Chip Beck, 3,912 72-71-70-72-285 Jerry Pate, 3,912 69-72-70-74-285 Bobby Wadkins, 3,200 73-72-74-67-286 Buddy Whitten.

3,200 66-70-73-77-286 SeveBallesteros, 3,200 71-76-72-67-286 Andy Bean, 2.650 71-73-71-72-287 Mark Pfeil, 2,650 73-7 1-70-73-287 TomWeiskopf, 2.650 76-70-69-72-287 the hospital ID tag still on his wrist," said Hunter, eye-witness. Valesente is in St. Joseph's Hospital, where doctors are trying to decide whether to operate for a kidney stone. While they deliberate, Valesente will be watching films of the Houston game he missed. Though none rose from a sick bed, Rush's other assistants could not put football to rest yesterday.

Cunningham and Rick Venturi spent the day with their families but, like the matched set of bookends that they are, came together for pizza and game films last night. "I washed both cars, and now I'm babysitting," said Cunningham. He held a phone on one shoulder and his 29-pound son, Adam, on the other. Hunter's wife is in Japan, where bis son-in-law coaches armed services football and his daughter is a sportswriter, so he came by Goucher for meals and films. PAINT NOW 1 DAY SERVICE CALL FOR APPOINTMENT PAINT NEW 1 thoroughly defeated.

"He Camacho is really good," he said. "You have to recognize it." An excited promoter, Don King, said, "This is the first time Limon has been knocked out." While Limon may never have been beaten so quickly, he was knocked out in the 15th round by Bobby Chacon, of Oroville, Dec. 3 in Sacramento, Calif. Chacon took the title from Limon at that time. Camacho, with reporters crowded around him, said "It was my speed.

That was the difference." "I came out fighting, and that's what I did," said Camacho, who leaped at Limon at the starting bell and moved him into the ropes with hard lefts. mammi WJMSSL ANY CAR VWfTT? NO UPS ANY COLORyQ jNOEXTRAS Boston Five: Patti Rizzo, the 1982 LPGA Rookie of the Year, went on an early birdie spree, disregarded a heavy downpour and charged from behind for her first victory on the women's pro golf tour yesterday in the $175,000 Boston Five Classic at Danvers, Mass. Rizzo, starting the last round 3 strokes behind Australian Jane Lock, fired a 4-under-par 68 for a 72-hole total of 277, 11 under regulation at Radisson Fremcroft Country Club. That gave the 32-year-old former University of Miami (Fla.) All-America a 2-stroke victory over Lock, a 28-year-old former Australian amateur champion just starting her second year on the U.S. tour.

Patti Rizzo, $26,250 66-7073-68277 Jane Lock, $17.150 71-67-68-73279 Vicki Tabor, $10.500 70-69-70-73282 Pam Gietzen, $6,563 69-7072-72283 Sue Ertl, $6,563 71-6673-73283 Donna Caponi, $5,133 71-70-71-74286 Stephanie Farwig, $5,133 72-73-70-71286 Sandra Palmer, $5,133 74-7 1-69-72 286 Becky Pearson, $4,025 74-6673-74287 Patty Sheehan, $4,025 72-71-73-71287 Jan Stephenson, $4.025 75-68-70-74287 Carol Charbonnir, $3,325 72-76-69-71288 Alice Miller, $2,888 74-73-70-72289 Montgomery. $2.888 69-73-76-71289 Mindy Moore, $2,888 73-73-71-72289 Colt camp Today 9:15 a.m. Morning drills. 3:15 p.m. Afternoon drills.

Both sessions open to the public. Tomorrow 9:15 a.m. Morning drills. 3:15 p.m. Afternoon drills.

Both sessions open to the public. THERE IS NO FINER PAINT MADE WE USE DuPONT PIGMENTS GE SILICONES Bob Boyd, 2.650 70-77-72-68287 Johnny Miller, 2,650 72-75-73-67-287 Jim Simons, 2,650 69-75-72-71-287 Bob Shearer, 2,087 73-67-76-72-288 Larry Nelson, 2,087 i 72-68-68-80-288 Calvin Peete, 2,087 69-71-76-72-288 Jim Colbert, 2,087 r. 73-66-76-73-288 Tim Simpson, 2,087 76-70-70-72-288 Bobby Nichols, 2,087 75-69-74-70288 Gary Hallberg. 1,875 71-75-71-72-289 Barry Jaeckel. 1,875 73-7447-75-289 2777777? 421 1 REISTERSTOWN ROAD 367-8585 5911 EASTERN AVENUE 633-3400 51 1 W.

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