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Bulldog Sports California State University, Fresno Thursday, March 1, 1990 'Dogs pin 36-3 loss on Mustangs By Dan Waterhouse Sports Writer The Bulldogs devastated the Cal Poly. San Luis Obispo wrestlers 36-3 Wednesday night In the last dual and home match ofthe season. FSU scored the largest victory In 30 meetings with Cal Poly. They beat us last year by one point," Bulldog head coach Dennis DeLiddo said. "So, we wanted to beat them bad." The Mustangs scored their only team points oT the night when freshman Terry Watt (16-13) decisloned senior Phil McLean (16-17) in their 150- pound matchup. McLean led 1-0 until 1:31 in the third round. Watts tied it up with an escape. With only eight seconds left in the match, Watts scored a takedown to win. Bulldog sophomore" Anthony Tamez's (118 pound) match against Gary DAgnostlno set the tone for the evening. Tamez dominated the Mustang freshman 8-2. Tamez was working towards a-pin as Ume ran out in the third period. He was awarded a three-point near-fall to assure the win. Sophomore John Sordi pinned senior David Park with 1:11 left in the first round of their match at 142 pounds. Sordi had scored a two-pint takedown 12secondsintothematch. FSU heavyweight Zack Rix capped his freshman season with a first round pin of freshman Seth Woodlll. Rix scored trie .pin with a reversaral 1:44 in the period. Rlxhad opened the scoring with a penalty point ' 52 seconds into the match Woodill was penalized for using a illegal hold. Woodill was leading 2-1 when he was pin ned. Junior Jon Pierro (30-10) came back to win his 134-pound match versus No. 10-ranked Robert Tabarrez (25-6-3). Tabarrez was leading 3-2 when Pierro scored a takedown just before the buzzer in the last period to win, 4- 3. With this win, Pierro moved into sole possession of ninth place on the alltimewins,listwith71 victories. - Senior Larry Sidlropoulos (20-12-1) won another close match, against freshman Charles Liddell. Sidlropoulos took the lead for good sbc seconds into the second round when he scored an escape. Score 4-3 Sidirppoulos. Liddell tied the match 13 seconds into the last round. Sidlropoulos scored a two-point takedown with 17secondsleft. Final score was 6-5. Sidlropoulos. Seniors Frank Trujillo 1126 pounds) and Wade Zimmerman (158 pounds) dominated their Mustang opponents. Trujillo outpointed freshman Joey Dansby 11 -2. Trujillo scored two See WRESTLING, page 7 J __ _ , David lettezJDaily Cotleqian Fresno States Scott Boness (top) defeated Cal Poly San Luis Obispo's Eric Schwartz 10-2 In the 167-pound match. The Bulldogs defeated the Mustangs3o-3 Wednesday. * It's not a lock out, it's a strike out Morey Holzman Harry Caray, the erstwhile broadcaster of the Chicago Cubs, will stare out at an empty Wrigley Field next month when the seventh Inning should be and start crooning (offkey. of course): Take me out to the ball game It costs jive dollars topark Buy me some peanutsandCracker Jacks Give him a 20get 50 cents back For its root, root, rootjor. the home team If ihey don't win, sell the club It costs one, two, three mil to sign A free agent today Baseball, like American business. Is in sad shape today. Do you want to know why Toyota sells more cars in this state than Ford? Look at the pracUces ofthe baseball owners today and you'll soon see parallels. ExampleOne. New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner ripped one of his former employees, the San Francisco Giants'Al Rosen, over Rosen's signing of slugger Will Clark to a contract over $3 million per year. Steinbrenner"s beef was not the fact Clark signed for that amount, but because he was offered that much money one year before he could force the Giants to pay him what he's worth. Good oldAmerican business. Screwyour loyal, faithful employees who can not go anywhere. Prevent it from entering their pockets, and keep it in yours. "Capitalism," Steinbrenner would claim. Wrong. Greed is the proper terminology. ExampleTwo. Oneoftheobncessionsthe players forced upon the owners tn the last strike was raising the rninlmum salary in the major leagues to $64,000. The lowest salary in the NaUonal Hockey League is $100,000. In an effort to cooperate with the NHL Player's AssociaUon. each team released its salary structure last month. Now, how can a sport without baseball's television revenue offer a lcwer minimum wage? A curious sidenote is the NHLPA's contract with the NHL has no provision for a salary minimum. _- Hockey owners voluntarily take care of their players. That's one reason the last hockey strike was in 1925. In 1925, the first-place Hamilton Tigers wanted $200 per man for playing six more games than the previous season. The owner refused, and the players went on strike during the playoffs. The Tigers, who finished last in every season they played prior to 1925, had to forfeit their playoff round when the owner refused to give in to the players' demands. The NHL offered a perfect compromise: The players were banned for life (later commuted because of legal ramiflcaUons) and the franchise was shifted to New York as the New York Americans. TheAmericans died a peaceful death in 1942. The baseball players are wrong, also. If someone threw $3 million my way to cover baseball for seven months. I don't think It would be too cUfflcult to live up to my contract. If the player's are that fed up. play for two seasons, invest the money, and then retire. Steinbrenner, he who bitcheth at Clark's contract, signed Pascual Perezto a $1.7 million per annum contract during the off season. ■ Steinbrenner made his fortune by starting a- shippingbusinessinCleveland. Thatsounds like a contradiction in terms — owning ships on a lake that once caught on fire. Anybody who's been to Cleveland recently understands that it deserves its reputation- ariothe Indians. Unions came into existence in America for one reason: CorporaUon screwed labor. Once labor gained power, it was never going to give it up. The Japanese realized this trend, and Indoctrinated practices to protect and actually show some concern for their employees. American businesses have seen Japan take marketshare. ThemoreastuteAmerican businesses have realized the trend and have copied some of the Japanese employee relations. Now if baseball would only follow suit, we could all go to the old. ball game.
Object Description
Title | 1990_03 The Daily Collegian March 1990 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1990 |
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 | Collection Permissions |
Description
Title | March 1, 1990, Page 6 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1990 |
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 | Collection Permissions |
Full-Text-Search | Bulldog Sports California State University, Fresno Thursday, March 1, 1990 'Dogs pin 36-3 loss on Mustangs By Dan Waterhouse Sports Writer The Bulldogs devastated the Cal Poly. San Luis Obispo wrestlers 36-3 Wednesday night In the last dual and home match ofthe season. FSU scored the largest victory In 30 meetings with Cal Poly. They beat us last year by one point," Bulldog head coach Dennis DeLiddo said. "So, we wanted to beat them bad." The Mustangs scored their only team points oT the night when freshman Terry Watt (16-13) decisloned senior Phil McLean (16-17) in their 150- pound matchup. McLean led 1-0 until 1:31 in the third round. Watts tied it up with an escape. With only eight seconds left in the match, Watts scored a takedown to win. Bulldog sophomore" Anthony Tamez's (118 pound) match against Gary DAgnostlno set the tone for the evening. Tamez dominated the Mustang freshman 8-2. Tamez was working towards a-pin as Ume ran out in the third period. He was awarded a three-point near-fall to assure the win. Sophomore John Sordi pinned senior David Park with 1:11 left in the first round of their match at 142 pounds. Sordi had scored a two-pint takedown 12secondsintothematch. FSU heavyweight Zack Rix capped his freshman season with a first round pin of freshman Seth Woodlll. Rix scored trie .pin with a reversaral 1:44 in the period. Rlxhad opened the scoring with a penalty point ' 52 seconds into the match Woodill was penalized for using a illegal hold. Woodill was leading 2-1 when he was pin ned. Junior Jon Pierro (30-10) came back to win his 134-pound match versus No. 10-ranked Robert Tabarrez (25-6-3). Tabarrez was leading 3-2 when Pierro scored a takedown just before the buzzer in the last period to win, 4- 3. With this win, Pierro moved into sole possession of ninth place on the alltimewins,listwith71 victories. - Senior Larry Sidlropoulos (20-12-1) won another close match, against freshman Charles Liddell. Sidlropoulos took the lead for good sbc seconds into the second round when he scored an escape. Score 4-3 Sidirppoulos. Liddell tied the match 13 seconds into the last round. Sidlropoulos scored a two-point takedown with 17secondsleft. Final score was 6-5. Sidlropoulos. Seniors Frank Trujillo 1126 pounds) and Wade Zimmerman (158 pounds) dominated their Mustang opponents. Trujillo outpointed freshman Joey Dansby 11 -2. Trujillo scored two See WRESTLING, page 7 J __ _ , David lettezJDaily Cotleqian Fresno States Scott Boness (top) defeated Cal Poly San Luis Obispo's Eric Schwartz 10-2 In the 167-pound match. The Bulldogs defeated the Mustangs3o-3 Wednesday. * It's not a lock out, it's a strike out Morey Holzman Harry Caray, the erstwhile broadcaster of the Chicago Cubs, will stare out at an empty Wrigley Field next month when the seventh Inning should be and start crooning (offkey. of course): Take me out to the ball game It costs jive dollars topark Buy me some peanutsandCracker Jacks Give him a 20get 50 cents back For its root, root, rootjor. the home team If ihey don't win, sell the club It costs one, two, three mil to sign A free agent today Baseball, like American business. Is in sad shape today. Do you want to know why Toyota sells more cars in this state than Ford? Look at the pracUces ofthe baseball owners today and you'll soon see parallels. ExampleOne. New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner ripped one of his former employees, the San Francisco Giants'Al Rosen, over Rosen's signing of slugger Will Clark to a contract over $3 million per year. Steinbrenner"s beef was not the fact Clark signed for that amount, but because he was offered that much money one year before he could force the Giants to pay him what he's worth. Good oldAmerican business. Screwyour loyal, faithful employees who can not go anywhere. Prevent it from entering their pockets, and keep it in yours. "Capitalism," Steinbrenner would claim. Wrong. Greed is the proper terminology. ExampleTwo. Oneoftheobncessionsthe players forced upon the owners tn the last strike was raising the rninlmum salary in the major leagues to $64,000. The lowest salary in the NaUonal Hockey League is $100,000. In an effort to cooperate with the NHL Player's AssociaUon. each team released its salary structure last month. Now, how can a sport without baseball's television revenue offer a lcwer minimum wage? A curious sidenote is the NHLPA's contract with the NHL has no provision for a salary minimum. _- Hockey owners voluntarily take care of their players. That's one reason the last hockey strike was in 1925. In 1925, the first-place Hamilton Tigers wanted $200 per man for playing six more games than the previous season. The owner refused, and the players went on strike during the playoffs. The Tigers, who finished last in every season they played prior to 1925, had to forfeit their playoff round when the owner refused to give in to the players' demands. The NHL offered a perfect compromise: The players were banned for life (later commuted because of legal ramiflcaUons) and the franchise was shifted to New York as the New York Americans. TheAmericans died a peaceful death in 1942. The baseball players are wrong, also. If someone threw $3 million my way to cover baseball for seven months. I don't think It would be too cUfflcult to live up to my contract. If the player's are that fed up. play for two seasons, invest the money, and then retire. Steinbrenner, he who bitcheth at Clark's contract, signed Pascual Perezto a $1.7 million per annum contract during the off season. ■ Steinbrenner made his fortune by starting a- shippingbusinessinCleveland. Thatsounds like a contradiction in terms — owning ships on a lake that once caught on fire. Anybody who's been to Cleveland recently understands that it deserves its reputation- ariothe Indians. Unions came into existence in America for one reason: CorporaUon screwed labor. Once labor gained power, it was never going to give it up. The Japanese realized this trend, and Indoctrinated practices to protect and actually show some concern for their employees. American businesses have seen Japan take marketshare. ThemoreastuteAmerican businesses have realized the trend and have copied some of the Japanese employee relations. Now if baseball would only follow suit, we could all go to the old. ball game. |