SPORTS OF THE DAILY Pecci 'KOs' Connors rday, June 9, 1979-Page 11 By the Associated Press PARIS - Victor Pecci, the lanky Paraguayan tennis star, upset Jimmy Conners 7-5, 6-4, 5-7, 6-3 in the semifinals of the French Open Cham- pionships amid feverish excitement before a crowd of 17,000 at the Roland Garros Stadium yesterday. It was Pecci's second big victory in three days. He ousted Guillermo Vilas of Argentine in straight sets in the quar- terfinal round Wednesday. In tomorrow's final, the Paraguayan giant will play Bjorn Borg of Sweden, who eliminated Vitas Gerulaitis 6-2, 6-1, 6-0 in 1 hour, 20 minutes, in the other semifinal. It was the 11th meeting bet- ween the two, and Borg has won every time. Inman leads in Atlanta ATLANTA - Joe Inman came from eight shots off the pace with a 64 and assumed the early second-round lead yesterday in the $300,000 Atlanta Golf Classic. "If you could grade 'em, grade 64s, well, that'd be the ugliest 64 you ever saw in your life," Inman said after posting his 135 total, nine shots under par on the hilly, 7,019-yard Atlanta Country Club course. "Things like this just don't happen. I didn't hit the ball that good. But I had a phenomenal putting round," Inman said. "I've got to start hitting the ball better. This will not happen again." With about half the field of 150 still out in hot, humid weather, Inman held a 1- stroke lead over Grier Jones, who com- posed another 68 for a 136 total. Larry Nelson was next with a 70-137 and would have had a share of the lead but for a couple of three-putt greens on his back nine. Mark Lye, who set the first round pace with a 63, blew 12 strokes higher to a 75 and was at 138. He was followed by Masters champ Fuzzy Zoeller at 71-139. Among the late starters were Barry Jaeckel and Ed Fiori, each of whom had a first round 67, and Gary Player, whpvi d iti , diumAr improve if he is to make the cut for the final two rounds. McAdoo to be a Net? EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. - Boston's signing of Larry Bird yester- day came as good news to the New Jer- sey Nets, who now hope to pry forward Bob McAdoo loose from the Celtics. "Boston now has a coach and signed their No. 1 player," Nets General Manager Charlie Theokas said. "Now they can more aggressively and ac- tively make decisions relative to Bob McAdoo." Boston management has indicated it would be looking to move McAdoo once they signed the Indiana State star, who put his name to a five-year $3.25 million contract Friday. Theokas said he plans to meet with Boston General Manager Red Auer- bach at the league meetings next week in Washington to discuss the 6-foot-9 McAdoo. The Celtics acquired McAdoo from the New York Knicks in March for three first-round draft picks. Bid for the 'Crown' NEW YORK - Trainer Bud Delp fir- st started dreaming of winning the Triple Crown with Spectacular Bid last fall. Today, Bid is an odds-on favorite to turn the dream into reality and become thoroughbred racing's third con- secutive Triple Crown winner. Entered to stop him are nine three- year-olds including three colts who chased Bid in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and an intriguing outsider - Coastal, who is unbeaten in three starts this year and who was extremely im- pressive in winning the Peter Pan Stakes at Belmont Park May 27. If all 10 start, each under 126 pounds - there could be two or three scratches - the Belmont will be worth $273,000, with $163,800 to the winner. Post time is 5:38 p.m. EDT. Television coverage by CBS will run from 5 nm. to 6nm Bird in the hand BOSTON (AP) - Larry Bird got lost jogging yesterday morning but found his way to a ballyhooed Boston Celtics ceremony where he became the richest rookie in sports history at $3.25 million for five National Basketball Association seasons. Hailed as one of the great collegians of all time, the blond 6-foot-9 In- diana State star, and self-professed "hick from French Lick," was anointed the prospective savior of the once-powerful NBA team. "I'm ready to play right now," said Bird at a mobbed Boston Garden news conference where he was given uniform No. 33 by Celtics President Red Auerbach. "I should have told Mr. Auerbach I would have played for nothing," joked Bird, who emerged from his French Lick, Ind., home to make official what Auerbach, Celtics owner Harry Mangurian and Byrd's lawyer Bob Woolf had spent two months hashing out. No terms of the pact were announced, but sources said it has annual worth of $650,000 in salary and fringes. w ro openea with a 75 and must improve . . . New bill would end HE BAKER'S WIFE ba b llse a m on l e(Marcel Pognol. 1938) baseball monopolies ----'.3> WASHINTON (AP) - More support Specifically, the bill states that one as picked up yesterday for a team cannot ban another in the same - ongressional bill to strip baseball of sport from locating within a 75-mile Raimu, the village baker, can't work because he mourns his wife's departure with a shepherd. The villagers, who want their bread, assemble to bring her s immunity from antitrust laws and to radius - unless that geographical area back. Orson Welles stated that this comedy was proof that "a story and an estrict use of territorial rights in all has a population under 2 million. actor, both superb," can result in a "perfect movie." Raimu's baker is the true rofessional sports. Most of the talk at the Capitol news tragicomic hero in this classic tale of cuckoldry. French, with subtitles. (127 min.) Three players' unions joined the conference, called by Dixon, refelcted 7:30 & 9:30 AUD. A ANGELL HALL $1.50 ponsors of the House measure while the disenchantment with the territorial w C it rE p s Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., in- troduced a similar bill in the Senate to enable Los Angeles to get another pro football team when the Rams move to Anaheim after next season. Supporting the legislation were the Major League Players Association, the National Football League Players Association and the North American Soccer League Players Association. REP. JOHN F. Seiberling, D-Ohio, and Julian C. Dixon, D-Calif., in- troduced the legislation which would, in addition to ending baseball's exemption from antitrust laws, make it illegal for a professional team in a large metropolitan area to unilaterally bar, other teams in that sport fr9m entering, its area. rules that have helped leave Washington without a baseball fran- chise since 1971 and may leave Los Angeles without an NFL team. The game that doesn't need any help The BILLIARDS at the UNION Reduced rates 'til 6 PM CINEMA- II 001 Presents TURNING POINT (Herbert Ross, 1977) A film about the choices two women made in their twenties: SHIRLEY MAC- LAINE foregoing a promising career in ballet to raise a family; ANNE BAN- CROFT, her best friend, choosing the challenges of an intense balletic career. As middle age approaches, MacLaine envies Bancroft's success and longs for recognition of her own talent, and Bancroft faces loneliness and isolation. Toaether, they reexamine their lives and reach new levels of under- standing. Mikhail Baryshnikov. the world's premiere male ballet dancer, dominates the screen with a magnetic sensuality and an electrifying stage presence. 7:30 & 9:30 ANGELL HALL AUD. A $1.50 i ."RIM