Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 111, No. 325, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 23, 2015 Page: 7 of 18
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INSIDE SPORTS
Denton Record-Chronicle
SECTION B
Bigs could steal the
show at the NBA Draft
Page 4B
Sports
WHO TO CALL
940-566-6913
Larry McBride
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
DentonRC.com
Morgan breaks ice, U.S. shuts out Colombia
Morgan and Wambach started up
top for the United States, which used
the same starting lineup as it did in the
group-stage finale against Nigeria — a
first since Jill Ellis became coach.
It was Morgan’s second straight start
after workingher way back from abone
bruise in her left knee. Morgan came in
as a sub in the first two matches of the
tournament.
Perez, a 20-year-old junior at Mi-
ami, started because regular goalkeeper
Sandra Sepulveda was serving a sus-
pension for yellow-card accumulation.
Sepulveda had six saves in Colombia’s
win over France. Castano had started in
Colombia’s World Cup opener, a 1-1
draw with Mexico.
Holiday and Rapinoe
suspended for Friday’s
match against China
Soccer
Women’s World Cup
United States 2, Colombia 0
l c
gan’s shot five minutes later, but
couldn’t stop the goal to put the United
States up 1-0.
Carli Lloyd also scored for the sec-
ond-ranked Americans, who will face
No. 16 China on Friday in Ottawa. The
United States is seeking its third World
Cup title, but first since 1999.
The Americans have not allowed a
goal in 333 minutes.
Colombia has never won soccer’s
premier tournament, but the No. 28
Las Cafeteras pulled off one of the big-
gest upsets in any World Cup in the
group stage when they defeated third-
ranked France 2-0.
L '\
By Anne M. Peterson
Associated Press
EDMONTON, Alberta
Morgan scored her first goal of the
Women’s World Cup and the United
States advanced to the quarterfinals
with a 2-0 victory over Colombia on
Monday night.
Abby Wambach’s penalty kick early
in the second half went wide after Co-
lombia goalkeeper Catalina Perez — a
backup herself — was ejected for a foul
on Morgan. Stefany Castano, who re-
placed Perez in goal, got a hand on Mor-
t
Alex
\
C>
Todd Korol/Getty Images
Alex Morgan, right, scores on Colombian goalkeeper Stefany Castano in
the Women’s World Cup on Monday in Edmonton, Alberta.
See WORLD CUP on 3B
Notebook
shows
Rose bet
as a player
MAKING HISTORY
*
f
/
♦
1*
, I
I ‘
BRISTOL, Conn. (AP) - ESPN
says it obtained a notebook that shows
Pete Rose bet on Cincinnati Reds
games during his last season as an ac-
tive player in 1986.
Ikl.v
%
Pro baseball
Major leagues
The career hits leader agreed to a
lifetime ban from baseball in 1989 after
an investigation by John Dowd, a law-
yer retained by Major League Baseball,
concluded he bet on the Reds to win
from 1985-87while he was a player and
manager.
Rose repeatedly
denied the allegations
before admitting in a
2004 autobiography
he bet on Cincinnati
to win while he man-
aged the team.
Rose became play-
er-manager in 1984
and managed the team until the sus-
pension in August 1989.
ESPN’s “Outside the lines” said it
obtained a notebook seized by U.S.
Postal Inspection Service in October
1989 from Rose associate Michael Ber-
tolini, which reflect betting records
from March to July 1986, nearly two
months after Rose was declared perma-
nently ineligible by Major League Base-
ball.
*
-w
i *
s
Rose
>
F *%■
Andrew Redington/Getty Images
Jordan Spieth watches his tee shot Sunday on the ninth hole during U.S. Open Championship at Chambers Bay in University Place, Wash.
Only 21, Jordan Spieth shares company with game’s biggest names
By Doug Ferguson
AP Golf Writer
UNIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. -
Jordan Spieth loves golf history, which
is appropriate for someone quickly be-
coming part of it.
Spieth was a freshman at Texas
when he first went to St. Andrews with
the rest of the Walker Cup team. They
played the Old Course, soaked up the
vibe at the home of golf and headed
north for matches at Royal Aberdeen.
“It’s one of my favorite places in the
world,” Spieth said Sunday evening. “I
remember walking around the R&A
clubhouse and seeing paintings of roy-
alty playing golf, and it was dated 14-
whatever. I’m thinking, our country
was discovered in 1492 and they were
playing golf here before anyone even
knew the Americas existed.”
Pro golf
PGA Tour
Caddie from Washington helps Spieth/4B
The documents are under seal and
stored in the National Archives’ New
York office, where officials have de-
clined requests to release it publicly,
ESPN said.
According to the ESPN report, the
authenticity of the documents has been
verified by two people who helped take
part in the raid, which was part of a mail
fraud investigation and was unrelated
to gambling.
Rose applied for reinstatement to
baseball in September 1997 and met in
November 2002 with Commissioner
Bud Selig, who never ruled on the appli-
cation.
Rose applied again after Selig was
succeeded by Rob Manfred in Janu-
1
That was only four years ago, when
not many outside golf circles knew
Spieth. He’ll get more attention next
time he arrives at St. Andrews.
The 21-year-old Texan, who
slipped into a green jacket in April,
hoisted the silver U.S. Open trophy
Sunday at Chambers Bay.
Not since Tiger Woods in 2002 has
anyone won the Masters and U.S.
Open in the same year, and it gets even
more impressive to hear the short list
of players who have: Jack Nicklaus.
Arnold Palmer. Ben Hogan twice.
Craig Wood.
$
*
_
Charlie Riedel/AP
Jordan Spieth poses with the trophy Sunday after winning the U.S. Open
at Chambers Bay in University Place, Wash.
ary.
Rose is ineligible for the Hall of
Fame as long as he is on the permanent-
ly suspended fist.
See SPIETH on 3B
Vanderbilt claims Game 1 of CWS finals
Jones held Vanderbilt in check until
Zander Wiel singled with two outs in
the sixth and Bryan Reynolds walked.
Both scored when Toffey, who was 1 for
11 in the CWS, sliced a ball down the
left-field line for a double.
Vandy added three more runs in the
seventh. Ro Coleman hit an RBI single
and, after Kevin Doherty relieved
Jones, came home when Dansby Swan-
son bounced a ball off the wall in the
right-field comer for a double. Rey-
nolds’ RBI single made it 5-0.
Ben Bowden came on for Fulmer
with two outs and two runners on in the
eighth and got Matt Thaiss to fly out.
This is the first finals rematch since
Oregon State and North Carolina met
in 2006-07.
By Eric Olsen
Associated Press
OMAHA, Neb. — Carson Fulmer
combined with two relievers on a four-
hitter, Will Toffey’s two-run double
broke a scoreless tie in the sixth and de-
fending national champion Vanderbilt
opened the College World Series finals
with a 5-1 victory against Virginia on
Monday night.
The Commodores (51-19) need to
win today or Wednesday to become the
seventh team to win back-to-back na-
tional titles, and the third to do it in the
past 10 years.
Fulmer (14-2) stmck out eight,
walked two and hit two batters in his
20th consecutive start of at least five in-
nings. He outdueled Virginia starter
College baseball
CWS: Vanderbilt 5, Virginia 1
1
Connor Jones (7-3), who allowed three
hits over five shutout innings before the
Commodores got to him for two runs in
the sixth.
Virginia (42-24), the Commodores’
finals opponent for the second straight
year, scored in the ninth to end the Van-
dy bullpen’s streak of 22 shutout in-
i"-
rungs.
Fulmer, the No. 8 overall draft pick
by the Chicago White Sox, retired nine
in a row from the fifth to eighth inning
before Adam Haseley bounced a ball
over the left-center fence for a ground-
rule double. Four of his eight strikeouts
ended innings.
Ted Kirk/AP
Vanderbilt’s Bryan Reynolds scores on a two-run double Monday by Will
Toffey as Virginia catcher Matt Thaiss looks on during Game 1 of the Col-
lege World Series finals at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Neb.
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Parks, Scott K. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 111, No. 325, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 23, 2015, newspaper, June 23, 2015; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1124473/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .