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10 * The Red ar>d Black « Thursday, July 20, 1989
SPORTS
Future stars to shine in GACA games
Georgia fans will get an early
preview of some potential future
Bulldog stars next week as ath
letes from three high school sports
descend on Athens for the annual
Georgia Athletic Coaches Associa
tion (GACA) All-Star games
Pitcher Stan Payne of the north
squad and football signee Jason
Hamil of the south will represent
Georgia in a July 26 baseball dou
bleheader The games will begin at
5:30 and be held at Bowden Park
because of construction work cur
rently under way on the new sta
dium at Foley Field.
Payne, a (lame thrower from
local Clarke Central High School,
was drafted in the second round of
the recent mqjor league draft by
the Los Angeles Dodgers He opted
to attend Georgia to further de
velop his pitching skills, while also
getting a good education to boot.
He is one of three pitchers and
six outstanding prospects that
Georgia head coach Steve Webber
has signed since the end of the
season.
Hamil was an outstanding
pitcher for Berrien County High
School, compiling a 13-1 record this
past spring. He is taking a route
similar to former two-sport Bulldog
E sat Chris Carpenter, who played
th football and baseball Hamil
will probably play wide receiver on
the football team.
The Georgia men’s basketball
team will not be represented in
next Thursday night’s competition
at the Coliseum, but Lady Dogs’
fans will get a chance to see
Georgia signee Victoria Jones strut
her stuff for the South. Jones is a
talented 6 footer who reportedly
can play three or four different po
sitions.
Both Georgia head coach Hugh
Durham and Bulldog fans alike
will only be able to wonder what
Chris
Chilton
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could have been as they watch »uch
mqjor college aignees as Clemeon’a
Wayne Buckingham, Georgia
Tech’s Ivano Newbill and DePaul’s
Terry Davis perform. They join the
likes of former in-state greats
Pervis Ellison, Dale Ellis and
Kenny Walker, to mention just a
few, who opted to go elsewhere on
national signing day.
The All-Star week will conclude
with next Friday’s football battle at
8:00 p.m. at Sanford Stadium.
Georgia will have eight signees on
display, including aix on the North
squad and two on ths South.
Stephens County offensive
guard Clay Ware, Brookstone run-
ning back Mack Strong, Greene-
Taliaferro linebacker Greg
Jackson, Lovett linebacker Torrey
Evans, and offensive tackle Mike
Fellows and defensive back Earl
Fouch of Hart County will help
lead the North, while LaCrange
defensive tackle George Brewer
and Vidalia quarterback Jason
Palmer are Georgia’s Bignees on
the South.
Look for Jackson and Strong to
make the biggest contributions for
the North, while the South’s
Brewer will dominate the line of
scrimmage, and hopefully Palmer
will make his Sanford Stadium
debut a sign of good times to come.
So if you have nothing to do next
week and you are wondering what
Georgia’s athletic program will
look like in three or four years, you
can get at least a partial indication
by coming out and watching these
events.
Chris Chilton It a sports writer for
the Red and Black
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□ Rusty &
FANFARE
The Georgia Diamond Dogs picked up a new recruit this week
with the signing of Tommy Owen. Owen, a transfer catcher from
George C. Wallace Community College In Dothan, Ala., lead his
team to the Alabama Junior College Championship.
TALK
Fleming leads new team
Georgia Diamond Dog Dave
Fleming, member of the U.S.
National Baseball team, is tied
for wins on the stiff with a 3-1
record, posting a 5 04 ERA
Fleming, an upcoming junior
on the Bulldog stafT, led the
Dogs in wins, ERA and innings
pitched in 1989. He «•*!] help
bolster a young staff for the
1990 season
The U.S. National team will
play Cuba later in the summer
and finish their competition
against an international field in
Puerto Rico.
- Jeff Hart
Georgia: talent supplier
The University of Georgia base
ball program has been one of the
mqjor leagues biggest suppliers
of talent over the last several
years as six former Bulldogs
have seen action this summer.
All six are members of Na
tional League clubs and four of
the six own starting positions.
The Atlanta Braves currently
have Derek Lilliquist and Jeff
Treadway on their roster while
Marty Brown, Cincinnati Reds;
Cris Carpenter, St. Louis Cardi
nals; Steve Carter, Pittsburgh
Pirates; and Glenn Davis,
Houston Astros round out the
list.
Carpenter, Carter and Lilli
quist each played on the Dogs’
1987 College World Series team
and Davis, last week, was
named the National League
Player of the Week batting .500
witli 5 RBI and three runs
scored.
- Jeff Hart
UGA sports strong overall
The Georgia men’s athletic pro
gram placed 21st while the
women’s teams finished ninth -
despite the exclusion of gymnas
tics as a criterion • in annual na
tional all-sports standings
compiled by the USA Today.
Ex-Brave shoots self, wife
The Associated Press
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Former At
lanta Braves pitcher Donnie Moore
was found shot to death Tuesday
afternoon at a home in Anaheim,
and his wife suffered multiple gun
shot wounds in an apparent suicide
and murder attempt, police told
the Anaheim Bulletin
Moore was also a former Cali
fornia Angels pitcher.
Anaheim Police Sgt. David Sev-
tne
erson identified the body as
Moore’s after police were called to
investigate an apparent domestic
dispute.
Moore, 35, pitched for Atlanta
from 1982 through 1984, including
the 1982 National League playoffs
for the Braves.
Moore was released from the An
gels in 1988 two years after he car
ried California to within one strike
of the 1986 World Series.
But he gave up a two-run home
run to Boston’s Dave Henderson in
the top of the ninth inning of Game
5 of the American League
Championship Series that gave the
Red Sox a 6-5 lead. Boston went on
to win the game 7-6 and won the
next two games in Boston to move
into the World Series. The Red Sox
lost the championshi in 1986 to the
New York Mete.
Moore set team records in 1985
by recording 31 saves and finishing
57 games.
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