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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 30

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Monday, September 10, 1984Part III 7 PRO FOOTBALL Winslow to Return to Chargers, Hopes to Settle Dispute o6 Angeles Smee By CHRIS COBBS, Times Staff Writer head, even though that would appear to be a certainty. "If he comes back, that would mean he's dissatisfied with the Houston offer, right?" Sanders said. "I hadn't really thought about it, but I wouldn't look for them to do that (use the Houston offer as leverage). I think Kellen will come back and honor his contract with us." The Chargers are more than ready to have him return. Sanders said over the weekend he would have no problems with a lame-duck Winslow, if it should come to that He cited the example of Cincinnati's Cris Collinsworth, who has remained an excellent receiver since signing a future USFL contract But just how much the Chargers are willing to come up from their offer to Winslow is unknown.

The Chargers are thought to have put forth a deal that would pay Winslow $480,000 for 1984 and increase by $50,000 annually for the next four seasons. Winslow is making $210,000 in base pay for 1984 and 1985 under the terms of his existing contract. Sanders said he doesn't look for Steiner to try to hold a gun to his "We would like to give the Chargers a chance to reply," Steiner said. "They have said publicly they would reopen negotiations if Kellen returned the team, as he is doing today. If they don't negotiate, they would be in a precarious spot as far as losing Kellen in 1986." Steiner said Winslow is tired of all the contractual wrangling and is interested in going back to work.

Steiner said he will talk with Chargers General Manager Johnny Sanders this week. "It's time for us to make a move and get this taken care of," Steiner said. "It's been disruptive for everybody." Steiner said Houston has given Winslow a short deadline in which to accept or reject its offer. He refused to say precisely how long the Gamblers have given him. SEATTLE-Tight end Kellen Winslow is expected to rejoin the Chargers today as his bid to win a new contract enters its second phase.

Winslow has received a five-year offer worth $3 million from the Houston Gamblers of the United States Football League. The contract would go into effect for the 1986 season, after his pact with the Chargers lapses. The Houston offer would be acceptable, Jim Steiner, Winslow's agent, said Sunday. He declined to say if a similar offer from San Diego would result in Winslow remaining with the Chargers. rin-M i ii i i ia i i $1500.00 INSTANT CREDIT AVAILABLE (ON APPROVED CBEPIT) IN DASH STERtOU amFM STEREO CASSETTE WITH.

SOUND fcoNCORD hplsi6 OBLAUPUNKT ASPEN UflSSfcTTE PLATtKI DOLBY. SEPARATE BASS TREBLE M'liT. ill SPEAKERS LOUDNESS rnwTnim mnma 1 lOI WATTS PER I I JSE 9353 CHANNEL. AMPl lift Ann (470 1 TAPE ft, AMFM STEREO CASSETTE WITH AUTOMATIC DIGITAL 128 AMFM STEREO CASSETTE WITH AUTO REVERSE i ijl IN DASH AMFM STEREO SWHJ TUNING, FREQ. CLOCK DISPLAY CASSETTE TAPE PLAYER nw stew m-m 1 km ej XR-UB" AUTOSOUND WITH A PAIR UC JSC USB RECEIVER, PAnacnnicpB dolby SONY "SPEAKERS HIGH Vs 1 I I I IV I NR, METAL POWER 1 xi JSE94C1 AUTO JET SOUND AMPLIFIER AMFM STEREO CASSETTE WITH X-TAL LOCK PL, rTTiM AUTO REVERSE QUARTZ AUTO PROGRAM FREQUENCY REVERSE AMFM STEREO CASSETTE WITH DOLBY, METAL, AUTO REVERSE, REPEATRACK, FM OPTIMIZER.

4 WAY BALANCE SEARCH MORE SYNTHESIS TUNING, AUTO LED DIGITAL, FRONT T98No278 100 SCAN, PRESET TUNING AUTO REVERSE. BUILT IN BACK FADER, LOCK. F.F.REW., IC CONTROLLED QUARTZ CLOCK I OS6 CAR SPEAKERS QY 4 ffcJ DXLO SWITCH SOUND graphic Clarion 5 iQfc "i EQUALIZER AMPLIFIER Dallas Not a Giant Killer After Loss From Times Wire Services EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. Were these the real New York Giants who rolled over the Dallas Cowboys, 28-7, Sunday? And were these the real Cowboys who turned the ball over four times and allowed Phil Simms to throw three touchdown passes? "We just didn't look good all week," Cowboy Coach Tom Landry said. "We were flat in practice and we played flat." The Giants' (2-0) win was etched by its defense.

Lawrence Taylor had three sacks, two of which forced fumbles, and Terry Kinard had an interception that set up one of the touchdowns and also had a recovered fumble, on a Taylor sack, that stopped a Dallas (1-1) drive. And, whenever the Giants got the ball, Simms came through, twice throwing scoring passes on the first play after a turnover. Simms, who threw for 409 yards and four touchdowns against Philadelphia last Sunday, hit Byron Williams on a 62-yard scoring play late in the first period to give the Giants a 7-0 lead. Only 65 seconds seconds later, he hit rookie Lionel Manuel with a 16-yard scoring strike. It came on the first play after Kinard intercepted a Gary Hogeboom pass and returned it 39 yards.

Then Taylor, who later would leave the game briefly with a shoulder bruise, put on his show for the Giants Stadium crowd of 75,931. With Dallas in a third -and -three situation at the Giants six, the All -Pro linebacker blitzed up the middle and crashed into Hogeboom. The ball bounced right into the hands of Andy Headen, the Giants' other outside linebacker, who raced 81 yards untouched into the end zone to make it 21-0. The win was the third for the Giants in their last four meetings with the Cowboys in Giants Stadium, and the margin of victory was the greatest for New York over Dallas since a 41-10 decision in 1962. KJiLmjiggDODQLBY NR, onnp 00 JtrM Un in mi fcPf TNfci WAY SPEAKER2k1 VEHICLE ALARM LmWnMrfJ ANTENNA hf WITH00JJTy J2020 SYSTEM WITH W5I SILENT ALRM POCKET ofteB.

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I IFiIeL CASSETTE L- lIZ; JH selection 10 LJ3Mril 8888881 stands IfeJ ISSAjHgOO IT IB Ann 3 segment graphic equalizer WW rLvSJ IS "3SfcH 1Iol 288 Tallest PanASOfliC amfm stereo UZ. fci SMAK WTHFM, check LEO'S PRICE. rtnJSUmC LpAniO rAMFTTE lM FOLDING HEADPHONES, dfil BECORDEfW ft if AMFM, IrHECS SSSS 9 pIL WITH j(5BAND GRAPHIC EQUALIZER OlJJN X. 1 I STEREO CASSETTE, AUTO EulCf 4 SbdVbatbIDETACHABLE SPEAKER A WAIAEtEO CASSETTE fyEVERSE 4 DOLBY fS SPEAKER I LOGIC CONTROL 'st-EDPEAk 1 QQ0(D ITKm QR00 nDEHUFJv UNIT ALSO AVAILABLE OHAKK rTTJTTTW rH-3 fl ffl SYSTEM jWlTHFM'CHECKLE0'SPRlCE'' l' 1 uSSltm ))NLV jL lllP fl MOLBY NF liFD-30A 1C700 AMFM 2 BANDDETACHABLE A A QQ COMPO 'JlSgnttl S-- JtUT0 REVERSE 1 OllMUU STEREO CASSETTE TAPeZ1WU 2 4 WAY DETACHABLE MaUUU(J CHECK LEO'S REFLEX Jil mi LIMITED PLAYER MINI HEADPHONES ft WITH SPEAKERS Z33 LOW PRICEI SPEAKERS 2 PER i 1SANYO HITACHI II Ml II I II I USTOMEB SI MM a MK 'Fr rT5ri CORDLESS TELEPHONE Fttf WITH UP II AUTOMATIC mil lun TcicounuF wtuu 11- TELEPHONE Si TO YOUB TO 700 I Tllr II I NUMBER CAPACITY HAND FREE DIALING. II 1 1 FCC APPROVED.

ACCESS TO MCI II i 1 III li 1 'LJT SPRINT 1J5 II Ml I lz- aMOj4M ErrKte'Vl BaDAWEn ucn WARRANTY. huu rrr-iEBj'SGTySiWii rjsmi ffaars hh!" iklse system. -may -not be; "IW.S'y II ffSe IIoompatibletoyouhsys AMPLIFIER ZI II Vf ijBHJteVf un iSS' II Lr-U LONG RANGE CORDLESS WITH UP TO 1000 FOOT POTENTIAL RANGE AUTO STANDBY Miami Defeats New England, 28-7 From Times Wire Services MIAMI Mark Clayton of the Miami Dolphins, fighting dizziness and nausea, left the New England Patriots with their heads spinning Sunday. Reaching the bench late after halftime, Clayton was told that the Dolphins were short a receiver, and he raced onto the field. On the next play he caught a 38-yard pass from Dan Marino for the go-ahead touchdown as Miami defeated the Patriots, 28-7.

But Clayton wasn't through. Less than two minutes later he caught a 15-yarder from Marino for another touchdown that all but locked up the victory for Miami (2-0). "I've been feeling sick since Thursday and I haven't really eaten anything since yesterday," Clayton said. "I was very nauseous. My legs felt heavy.

In the pre-game I was sluggish." Marino completed 16 of 26 passes for 234 yards. His New England counterpart, Steve Grogan, struggled on 20 of 42 for 217 yards and four interceptions. Glenn Blackwood intercepted two Grogan passes and Mike Ko-zlowski picked off a third, returning it 26 yards before he lateraled to William Judson, who went 60 yards to complete an 86-yard scoring return with 2:53 left. Versatile Jim Jensen, the Dolphins' No. 3 quarterback who caught two scoring passes against Washington last week as a wide receiver, took a lateral from Marino late in the second quarter and hurled his first NFL touchdown pass, a 35-yarder to Mark Duper.

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1 1 Bmi So ol imperial) HUNTINGTON BEACH (714) 848-3070 7672 Edinger Blvd SAN DIEGO (619) 582-4824 5011 El Caion Blvd SAN DIEGO (619 296-5061 381 1 Carrano Del Rio I On Block ol ftOMCien I Sporti Arena CHUU VISTA (619) 426-8260 255 Broadway San Diego 92101 VENTURA (805) 654-8400 3955 E. Main St. WEST TORRANCE 373-9901 3826 Sepulveda WESTW00D 479-8036 10915 Santa Monica Bl. WHITTIER 947-5611 16041 Whittier Blvd. SAN BERNARDINO (714) 884-1205 133 So.

Streel THOUSAND OAKS (805) 496-0349 757 Thousand Oaks Blvd. TORRANCE 371-5588 21154 Hawthorne Bl ICoiiw of Torianoa Bl I VAN NUYS (818) 894-8381 15601 Roscoe Blvd. COSTA MESA (714) 642-1020 1844 Newport Blvd I Cor ol Newport dwy I C0VINA (818) 967-4242 4666 Grand Ave I Blm 8 ot Af.ow Hwy I CULVER CITYFOX HILLS 390-7424 5701 Sepulveda Blvd DOWNEY (213) 803-3431 9474 firestone Blvd EL T0R0 (714) 770-7575 El Toro Boad ANAHEIM 1303 EUCLID (714) 520-3100 ANAHEIM (714) 635-5180 540 Slate College Bl ,7 BIDS SO Lincoln, BAKERSFIEID (805) 833-1025 4127 Ming Ave CAN0GA PARK (818) 999-2570 S559 Topanqa Canyon Bl MONTEREY PARK 261-2116 2345 Atlantic Blvd. ORANGE (714) 771-2770 1710 Chapman PASADENA 181 Rosemead (818) 577-7774 RIVERSIDE (714) 359-4904 3838 Tyler Ave SOME MERCHANDISE OF LIMITED SUPPLY SOME MERCHANDISE NOT AVAILABLE AT ALL STORES ir ASK US ABOUT OUR EXTENDED WARRANTY STEREO KEARNY MESA (619) 569-0777 4220 Convoy St LAKEW000 630-5935 5249 Lakewood CASH ONLY SERVICEI.

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