Cougs drop pair
By Rob Conner
Of The Print
Nancy Mikleton has her
work.cut out. With a relatively
young and inexperienced
women’s tennis team it might
be a- long season for the first-
year coach.
On .the recent Washington
road trip Mikleton’s crew went
0-for-2, taking on Bellevue and
Green River Community Col
leges. Match scores were 4-5
and 0-9.
Number
one . team
member Mary Imper lost in
straight sets 4-6 and 3-6 at
Bellevue. “Mary is just that
close to being there,” Mikleton
said.
Freshman Carla Ziegen-
bein collected a singles victory,
6-2, 0-6 and 7-5. Darla Reed
and Shelly Horne were each
credited with victories via
default.
Imper and Ziegenbein
posted an impressive doubles
win at Bellevue by a score of
6-0, 6-2.
Mikleton calls Sheryl
Dischner, “probably my most
consistent player right now.”
Although she dropped both
matches, she was “in both of
them,” Mikletoh said. Dischner
lpst heartbreakers, 4-6, 6-7,
and 6-3, 3-6 and 5-7.
Clackamas’ record drop
ped to 1-7. Their next match is
scheduled for today at 2:00
against Clark College.
Gogl leads Cougars
The Clackamas Com
munity College men’s Cross
Country team, which placed
second in the nation in 1982,
finished first in the classroom
and was awarded as the
nation’s top Junior College
cross country team academical
ly.
Freshman Brian Abshire,
who placed seventh in the na
tion in 1982, led the team in
GPA with a 3.85 average.
Tony Maicey, Steve Gogl and
Kevin MacDermott, who plac
ed sixth, eighth and 142nd
respectively, were awarded for
the second straight year.
Ken Valasquez (30th in
the national meet), John
Hansen (33rd), Jeff Franklin
(65th), were all honored for the
first time.
“Our goal for the year was
to win the national title,”
Coach Kelly Sullivan said. “We
were runner-up in the field, but
academically, we won it. This
proves to me that we’re not on
ly strong as an athletic group,
but we’re getting the kind of
student athletes the school
wants,” Sullivan said.
Photo by Rick Obritschkewitsch
Women score 18
Inland Empire hosts meet
By Rob Conner
Of The Print
There weren’t any world
records set.
Spokane Community Col
lege did their best to make
Bellevue and Clackamas feel
right at home. Friday night the
athletes were welcomed to
town with a lasagna dinner,
and'on the menu for Saturday
was rain!
The Clackamas women
spent a good part of the after
noon trying to stay afloat, while
Bellevue and Spokane splash
ed it out by themselves.
Bellevue ended the day on top
with 79 points, followed by
Spokane’s 59, and Clackamas’
18.
The meet, billed as the
“First Annual Tartan Cup,” a
meet which Spokane coaches
hope becomes “one of the best
in the nation,” didn’t see a
flood of outstanding perfor
mances from the lone Oregon
representative.
The one strength that the
Clackamas women do have, at
the moment, is their
supremacy in the javelin.
Throwing without school
record holder Sheri Hilton, the
Cougars placed second
through fifth. Sue Frank, Deb
bie Koffel, and Terri Kelly all
qualified for Nationals with
throws of 147, 142, and 134,
respectively. Karen Barr was
fifth with a respectable toss of
125 feet.
One athelete who has
been able to survive the Wynia
“Iron Women” training regi
ment is Suzi Thompson. The
Silverton grad took fourth in
the 800 meters with a time of
2:23.67. “She did exceptional
in the 800, running it for only
the second time in her life, and
considering she hasn’t really
trained for it,” Wynia com
mented.
The next meet for the
Cougar women is Saturday,
April 16 at the University of
Portland. Western Oregon,
Portland State, and Puget
Sound are also tentatively
scheduled to compete.
Linksters impress Coach
By Buck Jennings
Of The Print
With the 1983 golf season
in full swing, Coach Jim Hud
son looks to the Cougar
linksters for a very successful
season.
This year’s roster after in
itial qualifying rounds has Dave
Reichert and Todd Frederichs
in a close battle for first man,
followed by Dave Stephens,
Tom Thompson, Andy
Goodard, and Brad Gustafson.
Coach Hudson com
mented on the 1983 squad:
“The team looks really good
this year. The highest 72 hole
qualifying average was 75 and
everyone on the team turned in
excellent scores.”
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The first part of this season
has gone quite well for the
Cougars as they won two out
of their first three matches and
established themselves as the
team to beat. The golf team
won their first match at home,
beating Lower Columbia Col
lege with Dave Stephens earn
ing medalist honors.
In their second match the
Cougars beat Grays Harbor
and Lower Columbia College
at Longview with Brad Gustaf
son as the medalist.
It was in the Cougars’ third
and most recent match that
they were dealt their first loss.
In Tacoma, against Tacoma
Community College and Grays
Harbor, Hudson and company
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took an early lead in the first
round, only to be shocked and
consequently beaten by
Tacoma’s astounding second
round play.
The Cougars’ fourth
match was the Mt. Hood Com
munity College Invitational
scheduled for April 6.
However, they did not play
because the coaches from the
other.teams wouldn’t let them,
Hudson explained. “The other
community colleges competing
in the tournament wouldn’t let
us play because the College’s
teams are in the National
Junior College Athletics
Association and compete with
the big four-year schools,”
Hudson said.
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