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Paawt-ehelsaily M,1 Mary VolgUbeigei (21) of CSUF tangle* with Mary HMe (15) and Gloria Smith (21) of San Francisco. Photo by John Biek Bulldogs still'perfect,' losseslrun record to 0-8 by Kerry Watkins . Hustle and aggressive play kept the Bulldog women's basketball team not only in the game but brought them close to upsetting conference leader, Univer¬ sity of San Francisco and second place UC Berkeley last weekend. Despite the hustle, the Bulldogs suffered their 7th and 8th defeats by a margin of 49-38 to USF and 56-51 to Cal. Their current 0-8 conference standing doesn't quite tell the story when the Bulldogs twice came within one point of tying the game against USF and stayed within two points of leading in the Ber¬ keley game. 'When you play with good intensity, as we did this weekend, the best of teams don't look as good,' said Fresno coach Diane Mi'utinovich. 'We fought oack, kept up with them, . just played a good tough game.* said Milutinovich. 'We played a good de¬ fense in both games.* "USF was tough to score against, We had way too many turnovers.* Bulldog Nody Crannis led the defense giving' an outstanding performance in both games. 'Crannis had good move-, ment. She hustled and was on top of the ball throughout both games,' said Milu¬ tinovich. 33 charity shots at the freethrow line made the difference for Berkeley, said Milutinovich. 'For the first time this season I felt the officiating made a dif¬ ference. They went.to the line 21 more times than us.' CSUF's Louise Tonascia had a good day against Berkeley pulling down 15 rebounds. 'She was with the ball the whole game, till she fouled out.' said Milutinovich. The women cagers will be back in action in the women's gym hosting UOP, Friday at 7 pm. Wrestlers lose to Chico Wrestling coach Dick Francis had predicted a very close meet when his team traveled to Chico last weekend. But the Wildcats gave the Bulldogs any¬ thing but that, beating CSUF 29-14. The team faces Utah State tomorrow in the men's gym starting at 7:30 p.m. Sac State edges gymnasts Despite individual leading perfor¬ ates by Diane Ashlock and Terri Engstrom, the Bulldog gymnastics squad was narrowly edged for first in a three-school meet last Friday in Sacra¬ mento. Host California State University, Sacramento tallied a team score of 125.5 to the Bulldog's 124.8 to -capture the non-conference meet. The Bulldogs host Cal Pomona in another non-conference meet Friday at 1 p.m. in the men's gym. Correction *-> * • . . Sherman Sowny, CSUF human sex¬ uality instructor, was incorrectly iden¬ tified as John Sowby in a story on sex in the SO's which ran Monday. We regret the error. __. NIT bid is still possible, win offsets last-second loss by Tony Stevens After a last second loss to LongBeach, and after a frustrating start against UC Santa Barbara, CSUF's NIT chancesl seemed as far away as New York, where the tournament is held. But the Bulldogs regrouped and turned back the Gauchos to keep those slim chances for a trip back East alive.. The UC Santa Barbara "game-was' seemingly anti-climatic compared to the • earlier loss against the Long Beach State 49ers. Since the ruiing. last week that knocked CSUF out of the conference race and left only probable alternative to CSUF the NIT, many felt a win against the 49ers would do wonders to their New York chances and a loss, well...just the opposite. But because the loss came only at the last moment of the game, and on a lucky one at that, Crant felt it wasn't all that detrimental. With over five minutes to go in the game and tied at 65 apiece, Crant de¬ cided to run the clock down to the last second for a possible game-winning shot and at worst, a chance at over-time. But a poor pass with 20 seconds to go gave the ball over to the 49ers and a 28-foot prayer by Long Beach's Michael Wiley was'.tipped in by teammate' Craig Dykema. just before the buzzer banding the Bulldogs their only loss in Seljand this year and first in 17 games. The 71-64 victory Saturday night had ■ the makings of a rout early in the game the visiting Cauchos jumped off to a quick 12-2 lead. The near capacity crowd may have gotten the. idea that, the Bull¬ dogs were on the verge of running away and hiding because of their tumultous season, But Boyd Grant resorted to'the tool which has characterized the Bulldogs since his arrival to-the-campus"— tenay- cious defense. After the spread had built to 12 points, the highest defici£the Bulldogs have seen in Seiland thisyear, the 'Dogs came steadily back tr/trail by only one at haltoime.^)Then in. the second half, the Cauchos. continued to wilt and soon found themselves on the short end of a nipe point bulge. The Bulldogs overall record is now 15-7 with two more games remaining on the road in Irvine and Fullerton Thursday and Saturday. If the Bulldogs can win both of those games and finish the season with 17 victories, the invita¬ tion from New York might still come. Ha MartuieM ef CSUF'sxsta ana Iraaa si. _.!■_■ . a with C.I State, Hayward ^7*^*21??°** fc* Francisco took .eosnd with tap^T^^ ••—•»*•••**•$«• *»rf.3-2tai«s*^,*l£^3r" "»l**»«-«a.. TlwCSUFtawsa. beat Hay- ■ - — >vj5;.. I*ssiaa!a»'!
Object Description
Title | 1980_02 The Daily Collegian February 1980 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1980 |
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 | February 12, 1980, Page 6 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1980 |
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 | Paawt-ehelsaily M,1 Mary VolgUbeigei (21) of CSUF tangle* with Mary HMe (15) and Gloria Smith (21) of San Francisco. Photo by John Biek Bulldogs still'perfect,' losseslrun record to 0-8 by Kerry Watkins . Hustle and aggressive play kept the Bulldog women's basketball team not only in the game but brought them close to upsetting conference leader, Univer¬ sity of San Francisco and second place UC Berkeley last weekend. Despite the hustle, the Bulldogs suffered their 7th and 8th defeats by a margin of 49-38 to USF and 56-51 to Cal. Their current 0-8 conference standing doesn't quite tell the story when the Bulldogs twice came within one point of tying the game against USF and stayed within two points of leading in the Ber¬ keley game. 'When you play with good intensity, as we did this weekend, the best of teams don't look as good,' said Fresno coach Diane Mi'utinovich. 'We fought oack, kept up with them, . just played a good tough game.* said Milutinovich. 'We played a good de¬ fense in both games.* "USF was tough to score against, We had way too many turnovers.* Bulldog Nody Crannis led the defense giving' an outstanding performance in both games. 'Crannis had good move-, ment. She hustled and was on top of the ball throughout both games,' said Milu¬ tinovich. 33 charity shots at the freethrow line made the difference for Berkeley, said Milutinovich. 'For the first time this season I felt the officiating made a dif¬ ference. They went.to the line 21 more times than us.' CSUF's Louise Tonascia had a good day against Berkeley pulling down 15 rebounds. 'She was with the ball the whole game, till she fouled out.' said Milutinovich. The women cagers will be back in action in the women's gym hosting UOP, Friday at 7 pm. Wrestlers lose to Chico Wrestling coach Dick Francis had predicted a very close meet when his team traveled to Chico last weekend. But the Wildcats gave the Bulldogs any¬ thing but that, beating CSUF 29-14. The team faces Utah State tomorrow in the men's gym starting at 7:30 p.m. Sac State edges gymnasts Despite individual leading perfor¬ ates by Diane Ashlock and Terri Engstrom, the Bulldog gymnastics squad was narrowly edged for first in a three-school meet last Friday in Sacra¬ mento. Host California State University, Sacramento tallied a team score of 125.5 to the Bulldog's 124.8 to -capture the non-conference meet. The Bulldogs host Cal Pomona in another non-conference meet Friday at 1 p.m. in the men's gym. Correction *-> * • . . Sherman Sowny, CSUF human sex¬ uality instructor, was incorrectly iden¬ tified as John Sowby in a story on sex in the SO's which ran Monday. We regret the error. __. NIT bid is still possible, win offsets last-second loss by Tony Stevens After a last second loss to LongBeach, and after a frustrating start against UC Santa Barbara, CSUF's NIT chancesl seemed as far away as New York, where the tournament is held. But the Bulldogs regrouped and turned back the Gauchos to keep those slim chances for a trip back East alive.. The UC Santa Barbara "game-was' seemingly anti-climatic compared to the • earlier loss against the Long Beach State 49ers. Since the ruiing. last week that knocked CSUF out of the conference race and left only probable alternative to CSUF the NIT, many felt a win against the 49ers would do wonders to their New York chances and a loss, well...just the opposite. But because the loss came only at the last moment of the game, and on a lucky one at that, Crant felt it wasn't all that detrimental. With over five minutes to go in the game and tied at 65 apiece, Crant de¬ cided to run the clock down to the last second for a possible game-winning shot and at worst, a chance at over-time. But a poor pass with 20 seconds to go gave the ball over to the 49ers and a 28-foot prayer by Long Beach's Michael Wiley was'.tipped in by teammate' Craig Dykema. just before the buzzer banding the Bulldogs their only loss in Seljand this year and first in 17 games. The 71-64 victory Saturday night had ■ the makings of a rout early in the game the visiting Cauchos jumped off to a quick 12-2 lead. The near capacity crowd may have gotten the. idea that, the Bull¬ dogs were on the verge of running away and hiding because of their tumultous season, But Boyd Grant resorted to'the tool which has characterized the Bulldogs since his arrival to-the-campus"— tenay- cious defense. After the spread had built to 12 points, the highest defici£the Bulldogs have seen in Seiland thisyear, the 'Dogs came steadily back tr/trail by only one at haltoime.^)Then in. the second half, the Cauchos. continued to wilt and soon found themselves on the short end of a nipe point bulge. The Bulldogs overall record is now 15-7 with two more games remaining on the road in Irvine and Fullerton Thursday and Saturday. If the Bulldogs can win both of those games and finish the season with 17 victories, the invita¬ tion from New York might still come. Ha MartuieM ef CSUF'sxsta ana Iraaa si. _.!■_■ . a with C.I State, Hayward ^7*^*21??°** fc* Francisco took .eosnd with tap^T^^ ••—•»*•••**•$«• *»rf.3-2tai«s*^,*l£^3r" "»l**»«-«a.. TlwCSUFtawsa. beat Hay- ■ - — >vj5;.. I*ssiaa!a»'! |