Page 10, The Herald, Thursday, July 3, 1980" Copperside Store PROPANE. GROCERIES: LAUNDROMAT - Catering tt camp and Institution orders OPEN 10-10 7 days a wook - Phone 635-4050 Compare our prices te your favourite store! he mda " dally hecold “ . - | LONDON (AP) — Jimmy Connors came from behind. twice to defeat fellow American Roscoe Tanner 1- ' 6, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 loday and earn a semifinal berth in the “Wimbledon tennis cham- _Pionships. LONDON (AP) — Bjorn Borg let his iceman mask drop for just an instant.’ “The pressure?" he asked. “Sure I'm under pressure. “It is always the other guys who have nothing to lose. It worries me sometimes. Maybe the other guy doesn’t care and plays out of his mind, If I have a bad day that is it.” The Swede, usually emotioniess in public, gave a . rare insight’ into his hopes and, fears after defeating sixth-seeded American Gene Mayer 7-5, 6-3, 7-5 Wed- nesday. to move inta the Wimbledon ‘semifinals, \ Borg has everythi Borg will meet unseeded American Brian Gottfried in . the semifinals today. Gott- ‘fried, who has yet to drop a’ set in the championship, beat 13th seed Wojtek Fibak of Poland 6:4, 7-6, 6-2. Borg, who is bidding for his fifth successive Wim-. bledon tile, said he was delighted-with his form but ” feels the - weight of ‘con- tinually performing up to fan expectations, “Tam serving | well: ‘and re- “into the defeating big-serving Hank - turning much better than I ~-was,"" he said. “I'm very consistent every year — in fact ‘that is. probably. .the strongest part of my game. “] always feel confident, and most of the time FE play well, but [know [ must keep’ being ” ‘consistent: I. can't afford a off day.” Third seed Connors moved last eight. by Pfister 6-4, 6-7,°6-1, 7-6 ina match that was halted Expos go two ahead By The Associated Press Houston Astros left the redhot weather in Texas, only to run into a red-hot baseball team in Atlanta. As if playing ‘can you top this” with themselves, the Braves followed their 134 triumph Tuesday night with a 14-0 rout Wednesday... In winning the first three games of the four-game series that concludes tonight, the Braves have amassed 45 hits and 32 runs against the National League West Division leaders.. ‘. In the other NL games Wednesday, Montreal Expos downed Philadelphia Phillies 61, Los Angeles Dodgers defeated San Diego Padres 10-7, Cincinnati Reds beat San Francisco Giants 6- 2, St. Louis Cardinals trimmed Pittsburgh Pirates 7-5 in 11 innings and New York Mets topped Chicago Cubs 3-1. THE RACES NATIONAL LEAGUE. re East Ww. i Pet. OBL Montreal E5640 0) ead Philadelpnia 3833 .$35 2 Pittsburgh P35 52?) 2A New ‘York 35 a7t 6 chicaga 2 7 St. Louls 32 43 «427 40 Houston | 43°30 589 — Los Angeles 4333 546 (1v Cincinnati 38 38 514 5% Atlanta a4 466% San Francisco ED) “a rs Va San Dlago 34 43 44211 ‘ AMERICAN LEAGUE . a _ ant . ‘L Pet. GEL New ‘York 49 25 1662 — Milwaukee 423) 575) 6M Baltimore 41 33 .554 B Detroit 39 32 «54? 8% Boston 38 95 .$21 10% Cleveland: 35 1 486 19 Toronto 32°40 .a4é 36 ‘ West... Kansas = City 45°31 .592 — thicago 36 38 .486 8 Texas 36 39 1480 8% Oakland 33 43 «134 12 Seattle 33 43.434 12 Minnesota 32 43 «40? 12% California 26 a? 358 17 CASTLEGAR, -B.C. (CP) — High schoel principal Gary Puder of Vancouver fired a six-under-par 66 Wednesday to tie the course record and take the first- round lead in the B.C, amateur golf championship. Sandy Harper, of Nanaimo, B.C., eldest of four Harper brothers entered in the field of 159, was in second place with a 67 on the par-72, 6,500-yard course. Puder knocked four strokes off par on the back nine in warm, sunny weather. Tied for third with 68 were Jim Smith of Pitt Meadows, B.C., and Jeff Fought of Portland, Ore. Four players shot two- underpar 70s. Expos 6 Phillies 1 Montreal's Steve Rogers helped himself with an RBI _ Single in the second inning . and the. Expos got some unexpected help from the major leagues’ winningest pitcher in beating - the Phillies. Oo Steve Cariton, 13-4, con- tributed to his own undoing by throwing a@ pair of run- scoring ‘wild pitches. The first came in the third in- ning, allowing Andre Dawson‘ to score the go- ahead run, and the other helped make it'3-1 in the fifth. Carlton did, however, strike out five to raise his career tata] to 2,329 and take over eighth place on the all- time list, He moved ahead of Ferguson Jenkins. Dedgers 10 Padres 7 Bill Russeli keyed a four- run ‘fifth inning with a two- run single, carrying Los \ It? S no rose Angeles to its~ comeback victory and helping the | Dodgers survive a fivefor- five: performance by San Diego's Dave-Winfield. Winfield’s performance in- cluded a three-run homer in .the first and four singles. Reds 6 Giants 2.‘ - -Cincinnati right-hander Frank. Pastore smothered San Francisco on .six ‘hits, dropped his earned un average’ to 3.04 ‘and named himself. a natural placement for the Giants' Vida Bite on: the all-star team.- Blue was named to the team but was placed on the disabled list Wednesday because of a -herniated cervical disc’ in his leit shoulder, Ken Griffey and Dan Driessen backed Pastore with three hits apiece and Driessen reached base five consecutive times. . tee, Te. garden lated oh ahd Cardinals 1 Pirates 5 St. Louis shortstop Garry Templeton preserved a 5-5 tie with a circus catch in the ninth inning and team-mate. Ken Oberkfell snapped it in the ilth as. the Cardinals trimmed Pittsburgh. ' With one out and Pirates runners at first and second, Templeton , ran down an apparent game-winning bloop hit by Omar Moreno. He made a- lunging, waist- high catch and turned it into a double-play. Mets 3 Cubs 1 | John Pacella and Neil Allen combined on a two- hitter and Lee Mazzilli hit a. . first-inning homer to carry the Mets to victory. Pacella pitched 71-3 innings but gave way to Allen after an 18-. minute rain delay. Allen recorded his 14th save of the season, second - only to Chicago's Bruce Sutter in the NL. - ently ae te for Ross Baumgarten By The Associated Press Ross Baumgarten does not have to pitch a no-hitter to win a ballgame, just a one- hitter. And that's what Chicago’s hard-luck left-hander did Wednesday night, limiting California,-to Rod Carew's leadoff single in the seventh inning plus one walk as the White Sox nipped the Angels 1-0, = The White Sox squeezed ‘out an unearned run off Frank Tanana in the seventh inning. Only once since Baumgarten's only previous victory on April 13 have they scored more than one run in - his behalf. “TI figured we'd score sometime, somehow," said Baumgarten, who has been supported with just nine runs in his last 762-3 innings, The White Sox remained eight games behind first- place Kansas Cily in the American. League West. when the Royals edged Minnesota Twins 4-3 in 10° innings. In the AL East, New York Yankees increased ‘their Jead over runner-up Milwaukee to 64 games by blanking Boston Red Sox 60 while the Brewers bowed to Oakland A's 5-3 in 10 innings. Elsewhere, Baltimore Orioles trimmed Toronto Blue Jays 6-2, Detroit Tigers edged Cleveland Indians 7-6 and Texas Rangers downed Seattle Mariners 6-3, Orioles 6 Blue Jays 2° Lee May drove in four runs ‘ and Mike Flanagan scat- tered eight hits as Baltimare downed Toronto for its 22nd triumph in’ the last 24 ‘meetings with the Blue Jays. May singled his first three times at bat, twice with the bases loaded. : Royals 4 Twins 3 John Wathan’s one-out Single. in the 10th inning scored pinchrunner Rusty Torres from third base. Kansas City opened the 10th with singles by Dave Chalk and Willie Wilson. Torres ran for Chalk and U.L. Washington sacrificed before reliever Mike Bacsik took over for starter Jerry Koosman. Wathan, who drove in two earlier runs with a triple, then delivered a line single up the middle for his fourth hit. Yankees 6 Red Sox 0 Veteran left-hander Rudy May pitched five hitless. - innings before settling for a six-hitter as the Yankees completed a sweep of a three-game series. The Yankees jumped on Steve Renko for a run in the first inning on doubles by Willie Randolph and Reggie Jackson. Graig Nettles homered in the fourth and New York added three runs _in the seventh as a result of errors by third baseman Butch. Hobson. and catcher Gary Allenson on the same play. A's 5 Brewers 3. Pinch-hitter Jeff Newman and Wayne Gross rapped ‘ run-scoring singles in the 10th inning as Oakland ended a four-game skid as well as the Brewers’ four-game winning streak, Dwayne Murphy and Mike Davis yeached. on bunt singles with one oiit in the 10th before Newman and Gross singled, giving. Mike Norris 10th victory: ; Tigers 7 Indians 6 Alan Trammell amd Lance Parrish homered, Tom Brookens drove in three runs and John Morris posted his fifth consecutive triumph with relief help from Dan Schatzeder. Cleveland went ahead 3-2 in the filth on singles by Jorge Orta, Mike Hargrove and Joe ‘Char- boneau. It was the 16th vietory i in 20 games for the Tigers, Rangers 6 Mariners 3 Gaylord Perry scattered season-high 10 batters. Texas scored three runs in the third, two of them on Richie Zisk’s single after Seattle right fielder Joe Simpson dropped a two-out fly ball. The Rangers had scored earlier in the inning on Al Oliver's run-batted-in single. Mickey Rivers opened the game for Texas with a-triple and scored on Buddy Bell's single. Rivers later drove in two runs witha grounder and a single, Als and Esks again? By Ian MacLalae The Canadian Press The windup of the Canadian Football League's exhibition season Wed- nesday went as expected. The Grey Cup champion Edmonton’ Eskimos smothered Toranto Argonauts 35-15 after leading 35-1 going into the final . quarter of a game played in Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium. And its 1979 Grey Cup?! opponents, Montreal Alouettes, still) look the dominant club in the astern‘ Conterence, but they needed a three-tauchdewn — per- lormance fram newedmer Alvin White to subdue Hamilton Tiger-Cats 21-17. The results left Edmonton and Calgary Stampeders on top of the Western Con- ference in pre-season play with 3-1 records ahead of Winnipeg Blue Borabers, 2-2; British Columbia Lions, 1-2- 1; and = Saskatchewan Roughriders, 0-4. The Als were the only CFL team tofinish exhibition play with an unblemished record, 4-0. Ticats were 3-1, Ottawa Hough Riders finished 1-2-1, and the Argos 4-4, The regular season gets under way next ‘Tuesday with Calgary at Ottawa and Saskatchewan Visiting BC, The Ottawa game will te shown nationally on the CBC television network starting “at 8 p.m, EDT. Edmonton head coach Hugh Campbell didn't make the same mistake Wed- nesday as he did on the weekend when he sat several of his starters for a game with the Stampeders and got burned, 28-16. While the Eskimos took some time to get their of- fence to jell, the defensive play that characterized Edmonton's Grey Cup ehampionshipteams the last two years forced five Toronto tumnovers, which in iurn kept their offence busy. Three of the Toronto turn- ovérs were in the first half an indirectly resulted in 13 Edmonton points. _ The Eskimos led 4-1 after the first quarter, But behind quarterback Warren Moon, newlysigned to a long-term contract, they added 17 polnts before the hall, Moon hit on one touchown pass, 38 yards to Waddell ‘Smith. Jim Germany ran five yards for another TD. Veteran Tom Wilkinson called the plays in the sei id half when Angelo Santucci ran three yards for another score and Wilkinson passed 35 yards to Brian Kelly for TH). to lose Tuesday ‘night when darkness fell. Connors is less than happy that his matches are.behind _ schedule because of poor Weather. “1 now have to play Thursday (today) — and Friday if I’m to get to the final,” said Connors,- ‘I'll either be in great ‘shape: or ‘dead.” McEnroe, who has become the new ‘idol of the Wim- ‘bledon crowds, scored a 6-3, 62, 62 victory over his ‘RAY WANKING... oo cous sscer cba Te Set Wwofor him wUzz, PAl ‘ and one tor him - Al picks 14 extra _ players NEW YORK (AP) — Ben Oglivie of the Milwaukee Brewers heads. a list. of 414 American League players chosen lo participate in'‘their - first all-star baseball game next Tuesday in Los Angeles, League president Lee MacPhail said today Oglivie, the fourth-leading ‘vote- getter among ‘outfielders, probably will start for the American League since Jim Rice of Boston. Red Sox is disabled with a broken wrist, the league said, Oglivie took a bump on the knee from a batted ball himself Wed- nesday night; but. x-Tays were negative. — Oglivie, hitting .232 with 21 homers and 56 runs batted in, joined, Al Bumbry of ‘ Baltimore” Orioles, Rickey Henderson of Oakland A's, Ken Landreaux of Minnesota Twins, Al Oliver of Texas Rangers and Jorge Orta of Cleveland Indians on the AL's list of outfielders chosen to support those elected by the fans. . Reggie Jackson of New York Yankees, Fred Lynn of the Red Sox and Rice were the elected outflelders. Rice, _ however, is one of three leading vote-getters who will miss the game because of injury. Also Injured are second ‘baseman Paul Molitor of the Brewers (rib cage) and third baseman George Breti of Kansas City Royals (ankle), ‘They were expected to at fend the game along with itiev, but (hey will not play. ‘champions. - friend ‘anil: doubles partner Peter Fleming - td earn his ‘Semifinal spot. ‘ Ini wornen ‘saction, Evonne Goolagong, . 29, of Australia had the Centre Court crowd ‘ omits feel when she defeated No, 2 seed Tracy Austin 6-3, 0-6, 6-4 “10 advance to the: women’ 8 singles final. The fourth- ‘seeded ‘Australian, was cheered through every. point against ‘year-old Austin, who had ‘Hankin “By ‘Grant. Kerr. VANCOUVER (CP): —. Strikers ‘Trevor Whymark ° and-Ray Hankin assumed the. responsibilities of two | departed. ‘stars by scoring” | two Boals each as Vancouver Whitecaps ‘slapped ‘the punchless Atlanta Chiefs 5-0 Wednesday night in a North American Soccer: "League- game. < Whymark and Hankin de- lighted the crowd of 22,155 with their offensive thrust just two days after Alan Ball and Willie Johnston -were sent back to England in a major ‘shakeup of the defending Soccer. Bow] Whitecaps got solid work from. their makeshift’ mid- field and steady goalkeeping from Bruce Grobbelaar, who recorded his sixth shutout in 13 starts. | Buzz Parsons ‘scored the other -poal as Vancouver evened ils record at 10-10 and pulled tg Within nine pol of. secoridplned’ "Lids! "Angeles -Aztecs in the. " Western Division of. the, ‘National - Conference.. + *~ ‘Atlanta, 5-13, now has lost all eight:road games this season and is a distant last in the Central Division of the same conference, ' one Coach Tony Waiters, with winger Car] Valentine sitting ~ out a one-game suspension, - moved Steve. Kemiber-up to. . forward andthe Vancouver .. attacker: ;genonded wit three assists... wo 1 " maximum " of been tabbed as: the player most likely to slop Martina Navratilova from'taking her third, conseculive women's ~ title. - "Goolagong wili meet either Navratilova or Chris Evert Woy. Navratilova made it the: semifinals -by : narrowly beating 36-year-old Billy JeanKing 7-6, 1-6" 10-8. The: fifth-seeded King served for the match in the final set and then staved off - eight inatch points before finally going under, Navratilova, the 23-year: ‘@ld Czech-born left-hander said: *'I couldn't believe it, Every time I needed just one point she kept getting her first serve in. My serve was atrocious and .she served welland kept hitting Wi winners aff m ssing shots.” Licyd, Wimbledon champion in 1974 and 1976, had a rest day Wednesday. She has a 25-12, won-lost record against Navratilova. finds range as Whitecaps rolling Roger Kenyon - was _in- serted _ into midfield, allowing Rudi Kral- to roam from ‘his?.sweeper ‘position andthe Dutch. international - directed the atlack with his epinpoint' agses, - . The Whitecaps ‘dominated the opening half and: took a twogoal ‘lead, while - out- shooting the Chiefs 13-5, NASL “NATIONAL: * CONFERENCE. Eastarn Division. ao Wik ABP Pts New > Mork 14 ‘- 5 a7 41125 Toronto . & 9 79 3028 BO Wash . 810 39:38 32 ad Rochester: 6:8 22 26 17 65 Cenirai ODivisian. ... Tulsa, 10 8 28 2624 84 Dailas 8 9 27 3018 46 Mian 613.28 3424 60 Arants 13 U8 a4? at Western Dlvisian. Seattle 19-2. 40 \e yy451 tos) Ana ‘1 6 32 26 92 Vancouver 10.10 29 7 23 = 83- Porttand 6127019 29 18 54 AMERICAN CONFERENCE : Eastern pPivision. eae ABP Pts Fort Laud % x Ss 33:32 «98 Tamos': Bay-ll @ 33 32 90. $6 News Eng’ 1010 36 3690 90 Phila 7). - 1a 42 39 5S oe antral. Olvision. Chicago - 4 46° 25°38 128 Mompnis ‘ 940 27 32-24 78 Cetroit q ‘0 29 27 24 «72 Houston: . 3204129 71 Western division. bee? Calit Wit 4346 36 98 Edmonton” 10 32 32 79 San Diego 61024 3¥ 21 a? San Jose - 13029 «37:25 «61 NOTHix Sint points. are awarded ‘tora win, and one bonus point for every goal scored with a three per game. No bonus point is awarded for overtime or sheelout. goals. ° Wednascay, Rasulis. Edmonton innesota | 0 Vancouver 5 Atlania 9 New .York’ 3: Toronto” 1 ag hiiacelpnte a Fort dale . senivie 1 Tulsa 0- (s@) Portland . 2 Washington 1 ‘Dallas 2) San- _ Sen Diego. 3 * “gan 2°07) — Lauder: a aoe ia, a ue | Whymark scored his first goal in the ninth minute off a header and Parsons got his first of the season when a corner kick by Gerry Gray struck an Atlanta defender and was headed past goalkeeper Slobodan " Tlijevski by Parsons from six feet out. ‘Atlanta lost “forward Walker McCail after 20 minutes when he suffered a mild concussion after being hit in the back of the head in a collision with Vancouver fullback Paul Nelson. McCall Jay on the field for nearly 15 minutes before he was pul on a strecher and taken to hospital asa .precaution. Whymark got his seéond goal, and ninth of the season, hine minutes into the second haif after a hard shot by -Kember rebounded to. the . Vancouver striker near the side of the net for an easy ta apt ‘aver: two -minuled inte’ Hankin’ ‘scored his second goal with a booming 15-yard shot after Kember cleverly deflected a pass from Parsons to the big striker, Grobbelaar made his best save in the 65th minute when David Byrne, who replaced McCall, struck a 15-yarder right ‘into Grobbelaar’s hands. Hankin got his fourth goal of the season in the 75th minute when he alertly deflected in a short pass from Gray. ee a ea reo Laie