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■, Monday, May 3,1993 ■■ ' " -"■ .;;...'- The Daily Collegian ■ . Sports -^-7 push. I think we'll bemuch more prepared (in Austin) and we'll have to work hard." Roque and Castro, two of the top-10 career money earners, reached the final as the only un¬ beaten team remaining in the double-elimination format tourna¬ ment. "Those guys came a long way back and had a great tournament. It's frustrating, but we had a great weekend," Roque said. In the first game, Masakayan and Kirby jumped out to a com¬ manding 14-2 lead and cruised to a 15-6 victory to send it to a deciding game two. Game two was a gut-wrencher. Masakayan and Kirby jumped out v Chmstme BaKtWTic Daa_v CoufOUN Gail Castro digs a kill attempt in the finals of the Fresno Open yesterday at Lost Lake Park. to a 5-1 lead but found themselves facing game-point at 6-5. "' 1 was thinking it's now or never. That is not the time you want to be tentative." Masakayan said. They weren't, as they came back to tie the game 6-6 and eventually win the game. Masakayan and Kirby defeated Marie Andersson/Shannon Millen 15-1, Janice Harrer/Deb Richardson 15-lOtbreachlhecon- tender bracket final against fourth- seeded Barbara Fontana and Lori Kotas, who they faced in the finals of the San Diego Open April 25. Masakayan/Kirby already faced the pair earlier Sunday morning and lost their first game of the season, 15-10, to fall into the con¬ tenders bracket^; Kotas and !?bnt:ina dropped into fMConrenders bracket after losing to Roque and Castro in the winners bracket final, 15-8. The game was tight from the very beginning with both teams holding slim leads. Kotas' and . Castro scored the final four points of the game after Masakayan and Kirby came back to make it 11-10. The season's top two .money winners, Masakayan and Kirby started out the day 3-0 after dispos¬ ing of their first four opponents by a combined score of 45-6. "In the last few weeks we've kind of co m e out slow in the morn¬ ings," Kirby said. Baseball From page 6 record to 5-4. Cruise had pitched, three straigh t complete games prior to yesterday, but was pulled in the sixth after giving up seven runs on nine hits.' On Friday, Mike Salazar won his 11th straight decision despite giving .up 12 hits and six earned runs. Salazar- benefitted from a Bulldog offense that pounded out 17 hit§. and 12 runs. In Salazar's two previous starts he had given up a combined five unearned runs. The senior left¬ hander used 144 pitches to pick up his eighth complete game in his last nine starts. Gary McNamara and Brad Dandridge led the Bulldog's of¬ fensive attack by combining to collect eight hits and eight RBIs. McNamara was 5-for-5 with four RBIs and.two doubles, while Dandridge was 3-for-6 with four RBIs and three runs scored. Fresh¬ man shortstop Ben Reynoso also Softball From page 6 , Green was a little less impres¬ sive in Salt Lake City, although one of the Utes' two, sixth-inning runs was unearned. Bulldogs third baseman Melissa Thatcher's throwing error allowed Shae Pierce to score Utah's second run of the inning. ' Green rebounded in the second game when she relieved .sopho¬ more starter Maureen Brady. She replaced Brady with one out in the nth with the game tied at two. FSU scored the game-winning run in the top of the seventh. Jenni¬ fer McNatt opened the inning with a single. Pinch-runner Jennifer Don n er scored two outs later when catcher Christa Yorke doubled to right field. Fresno State exploded in game tM% against Southern Utah, scor¬ ing six runs in the second and five in the sixth, when the game was called due to the 10-run rule. Michelle Bolt and Jenifer Henry each had two hits and two RBIs, and Brady tossed a three-hit shut¬ out. had three hits for the Bulldogs. On Saturday, junior Steve Soderstrom (6-5) pitched three- plus innings because of a sore right elbow that bothered him earlier in the year. Sacramento State scored three runs on three hits off Soderstrom. . , Junior Fared Fernandez came in relief for Soderstrom, limiting the Hornets to two runs in six innings of work. Fernandez had four strikeouts en route to his fifth win of the season. Todd Johnson, McNamara and. Dandridge each had home runs for the Bulldogs. Johnson's and McNamara's came back-to-back in the third to give the 'Dogs a 5- 1 lead. Dandridge, who leads the team with 12 home runs, hit a shot that went over the left field fence hit¬ ting a concrete wall of the parking garage in the fourth. The home run was estimated to travel 500 feet if it did not hit the wall. Sportswriters needed Threer^dnosltions are sitrll open lwlheFall '93 semester at The Daily Colfegian. Applicants should have sports journalism experi- etjcejjutlfcyou feel you can write, submit an application. Applications should be submitted to Tbe Daily CoDegian in the Keats Building,mailstop42. For ttotr«»mfc«iiktion, contact Michael Hughes or Dave DonneUySat 278-5733. MINI STORAGE SPAC1 \\ Ml A P. I E| SPECIAL STUDEN I RAI bS! FOR THE SUMMER LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE ALLUVIAL MINI STORAGE 370 W. ALLUVIAL 3 BLOCKS WEST OF BLACKSTONE 431-4840 FREE LOCKS WITH THIS COUPON EXP 5/31/93 : Bulldogs will play three road lubleheaders in as many games this weekend: WAC opponents San Diego State and Cal State- Northridge on Friday and Satur¬ day, and a non-conference battle at Cal Poly Pomona on Sunday. Kennel Bookstore Sale Books!! w* MARK TWAIN foreword by Anne Ficklei Terrific collection of the best of Twain includes his masterpieces The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn. The Prince and the Pauper, and A-Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court with his burlesque Autobiography and selections from Sketches. Illustrated in B&W. 704 pages. 6x9. 517-09289-1 can.si7.98 Only $12.99 THOSE UTTLE RASCALS: A Pictorial History Of Our Gang by Rebecca Gulick. They're still Our Gang! A wonderful, nos¬ talgic look at the f0> year history of .the series that gave us The Little Rascals: Spanky and Alfalfa. Buckwheat. Darla. | Farina and Petey. they're all here in a fe photo-packed trip down memory lane. 5 (And today's kids who WBtch them on • Cable TV will love it tool 150 B&W photos. 80pages.9x12. li££ EES5 Mf** 1. <***» JP—r*** fresM 278-4286 ^ P n
Object Description
Title | 1993_05 The Daily Collegian May 1993 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1993 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | May 3, 1993, Page 7 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1993 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | ■, Monday, May 3,1993 ■■ ' " -"■ .;;...'- The Daily Collegian ■ . Sports -^-7 push. I think we'll bemuch more prepared (in Austin) and we'll have to work hard." Roque and Castro, two of the top-10 career money earners, reached the final as the only un¬ beaten team remaining in the double-elimination format tourna¬ ment. "Those guys came a long way back and had a great tournament. It's frustrating, but we had a great weekend," Roque said. In the first game, Masakayan and Kirby jumped out to a com¬ manding 14-2 lead and cruised to a 15-6 victory to send it to a deciding game two. Game two was a gut-wrencher. Masakayan and Kirby jumped out v Chmstme BaKtWTic Daa_v CoufOUN Gail Castro digs a kill attempt in the finals of the Fresno Open yesterday at Lost Lake Park. to a 5-1 lead but found themselves facing game-point at 6-5. "' 1 was thinking it's now or never. That is not the time you want to be tentative." Masakayan said. They weren't, as they came back to tie the game 6-6 and eventually win the game. Masakayan and Kirby defeated Marie Andersson/Shannon Millen 15-1, Janice Harrer/Deb Richardson 15-lOtbreachlhecon- tender bracket final against fourth- seeded Barbara Fontana and Lori Kotas, who they faced in the finals of the San Diego Open April 25. Masakayan/Kirby already faced the pair earlier Sunday morning and lost their first game of the season, 15-10, to fall into the con¬ tenders bracket^; Kotas and !?bnt:ina dropped into fMConrenders bracket after losing to Roque and Castro in the winners bracket final, 15-8. The game was tight from the very beginning with both teams holding slim leads. Kotas' and . Castro scored the final four points of the game after Masakayan and Kirby came back to make it 11-10. The season's top two .money winners, Masakayan and Kirby started out the day 3-0 after dispos¬ ing of their first four opponents by a combined score of 45-6. "In the last few weeks we've kind of co m e out slow in the morn¬ ings," Kirby said. Baseball From page 6 record to 5-4. Cruise had pitched, three straigh t complete games prior to yesterday, but was pulled in the sixth after giving up seven runs on nine hits.' On Friday, Mike Salazar won his 11th straight decision despite giving .up 12 hits and six earned runs. Salazar- benefitted from a Bulldog offense that pounded out 17 hit§. and 12 runs. In Salazar's two previous starts he had given up a combined five unearned runs. The senior left¬ hander used 144 pitches to pick up his eighth complete game in his last nine starts. Gary McNamara and Brad Dandridge led the Bulldog's of¬ fensive attack by combining to collect eight hits and eight RBIs. McNamara was 5-for-5 with four RBIs and.two doubles, while Dandridge was 3-for-6 with four RBIs and three runs scored. Fresh¬ man shortstop Ben Reynoso also Softball From page 6 , Green was a little less impres¬ sive in Salt Lake City, although one of the Utes' two, sixth-inning runs was unearned. Bulldogs third baseman Melissa Thatcher's throwing error allowed Shae Pierce to score Utah's second run of the inning. ' Green rebounded in the second game when she relieved .sopho¬ more starter Maureen Brady. She replaced Brady with one out in the nth with the game tied at two. FSU scored the game-winning run in the top of the seventh. Jenni¬ fer McNatt opened the inning with a single. Pinch-runner Jennifer Don n er scored two outs later when catcher Christa Yorke doubled to right field. Fresno State exploded in game tM% against Southern Utah, scor¬ ing six runs in the second and five in the sixth, when the game was called due to the 10-run rule. Michelle Bolt and Jenifer Henry each had two hits and two RBIs, and Brady tossed a three-hit shut¬ out. had three hits for the Bulldogs. On Saturday, junior Steve Soderstrom (6-5) pitched three- plus innings because of a sore right elbow that bothered him earlier in the year. Sacramento State scored three runs on three hits off Soderstrom. . , Junior Fared Fernandez came in relief for Soderstrom, limiting the Hornets to two runs in six innings of work. Fernandez had four strikeouts en route to his fifth win of the season. Todd Johnson, McNamara and. Dandridge each had home runs for the Bulldogs. Johnson's and McNamara's came back-to-back in the third to give the 'Dogs a 5- 1 lead. Dandridge, who leads the team with 12 home runs, hit a shot that went over the left field fence hit¬ ting a concrete wall of the parking garage in the fourth. The home run was estimated to travel 500 feet if it did not hit the wall. Sportswriters needed Threer^dnosltions are sitrll open lwlheFall '93 semester at The Daily Colfegian. Applicants should have sports journalism experi- etjcejjutlfcyou feel you can write, submit an application. Applications should be submitted to Tbe Daily CoDegian in the Keats Building,mailstop42. For ttotr«»mfc«iiktion, contact Michael Hughes or Dave DonneUySat 278-5733. MINI STORAGE SPAC1 \\ Ml A P. I E| SPECIAL STUDEN I RAI bS! FOR THE SUMMER LIMITED SPACE AVAILABLE ALLUVIAL MINI STORAGE 370 W. ALLUVIAL 3 BLOCKS WEST OF BLACKSTONE 431-4840 FREE LOCKS WITH THIS COUPON EXP 5/31/93 : Bulldogs will play three road lubleheaders in as many games this weekend: WAC opponents San Diego State and Cal State- Northridge on Friday and Satur¬ day, and a non-conference battle at Cal Poly Pomona on Sunday. Kennel Bookstore Sale Books!! w* MARK TWAIN foreword by Anne Ficklei Terrific collection of the best of Twain includes his masterpieces The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn. The Prince and the Pauper, and A-Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court with his burlesque Autobiography and selections from Sketches. Illustrated in B&W. 704 pages. 6x9. 517-09289-1 can.si7.98 Only $12.99 THOSE UTTLE RASCALS: A Pictorial History Of Our Gang by Rebecca Gulick. They're still Our Gang! A wonderful, nos¬ talgic look at the f0> year history of .the series that gave us The Little Rascals: Spanky and Alfalfa. Buckwheat. Darla. | Farina and Petey. they're all here in a fe photo-packed trip down memory lane. 5 (And today's kids who WBtch them on • Cable TV will love it tool 150 B&W photos. 80pages.9x12. li££ EES5 Mf** 1. <***» JP—r*** fresM 278-4286 ^ P n |