12A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 20, 2001 Ryder Cup switches to even-numbered years Ex-Tiger farmhand victim of WTC attack LIGONIER, Pa. (AP) - The Ryder Cup will be played the last weekend in September next year in England, then switch permanently to even-numbered years. To accommodate the change, the PGA Tour agreed to postpone by one year the Presidents Cup - previously scheduled for November 2002 in South Africa - then play those matches in odd-numbered years. The Ryder Cup, which had been scheduled for next week, was postponed in the wake of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. Jim Awtrey, chief executive officer of the PGA of America, said the switch in cup schedules "appears to be the most logical solution given the situation we are dealing with." The Ryder Cup originally was to be played Sept. 28-30 at The Belfry in England. The matches were postponed Sunday because the attacks made some players wary of travel and uneasy about playing golf. It will return to The Belfry on Sept. 27-29, 2002, with the same captains and 12-man teams. U.S. captain Curtis Strange said his players would wear clothing with 2001 logos so "we don't forget why we're playing a year later." The niatches between the United States and Europe willbe played one week after the American Express Championship is played at Mount Juliet in Ireland. "I don't know of any other time that there has been this much cooperation in doing the right thing, " Awtrey had said earlier this week. "Everybody wants to make this work." He praised golf clubs already picked as the sites of the tournaments for sup- porting the changes, among them Oak- land Hills Country Club outside Detroit, which now will get the Ryder Cup one year later in 2004. The PGA Tour did not set a specific date for the President's Cup matches, which began in 1994 between the Unit- ed States and players from everywhere in the world except Europe. It was to have been played Nov. 7-10, 2002, in South Africa. "This new schedule provides the most effective response to the need to adjust our schedules in light of the recent tragedies," PGA Tour commis- sioner Tim Finchem said. NEW YORK (AP) - Michael Wein- berg was fearless on the baseball field, tracking down fly balls and coming up with big hits with quiet confidence. To those who knew him, it seemed only natural that Weinberg would some- day become one of New York's Bravest. And almost fitting that he died a hero. The 34-year-old firefighter, former St. John's outfielder and player in the Detroit Tigers' farm system was killed in the aftermath of terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center. "When I first heard about what was going on, one of the first things I said to my wife was, 'I hope Mike wasn't there,"' said Joe Russo, Weinberg's coach at St. John's from 1986-89. Weinberg, from Maspeth, N.Y., was a member of the New York Fire Depart- ment, stationed at Engine 1, Ladder 24 in lower Manhattan. He was on vacation and getting ready to tee off at Forest Park Golf Course in Queens when he heard that the first plane crashed into one of the twin towers. His sister, Patricia Gambino, was working on the 72nd floor of. Two World Trade Center, but escaped. Weinberg's firefighter instincts kicked AP PHOTO Tiger Woods won't have the chance to celebrate another Predident's Cup until next year, when it will be held in South Africa. ____________________________________ -4. in, and he dropped everything so he could get into Manhattan and help out. Russo said Weinberg drove to his sta- tion house before heading to the World Trade Center with the Rev. Mychal Judge, the fire chaplain, and Capt. Daniel Brethel. All three men died after they sought cover as the towers collapsed, and Russo said Weinberg's family believed Judge was administering last rites to Weinberg when they were killed. George Goldbach, a Brooklyn native who spent 20 years in the New York Fire Department before becoming chief of the West Metro Fire Protection Dis- trict in Colorado, knew Weinberg. "He got killed in the street," Gold- bach said. "They found him under a truck that had debris fall on it." Weinberg, who was buried Monday, always seemed to have a flair for hero- ics. He was the Big East Tournament's Most Outstanding Player in 1988, when he hit two home runs, including a three- run game-winner against Villanova in the semifinal game. "He never really reached his potential in baseball because he was injured - he broke his right collarbone - and it affected his throwing and swing a little," Russo said. "He was originally a catcher for us, but after he got injured, we moved him to the outfield and he did a nice job for us. And then, he just went berserk in the Big East tournament that year." Weinberg was a career .256 hitter, with six homers and 59 RBIs in four sea- sons at St. John's, and played two undis- tinguished minor league seasons in the Tigers organization. His teammates included future major leaguers Jose Lima, Danny Bautista and Felipe Lira. He hit .238 with 16 RBIs in 1990 with Niagara Falls of the New York-Penn League and just .217 with two homers and 11 RBIs for Fayetteville of the South Atlantic League the following season. After being released midway through the 1991 season and realizing his dream of getting to the majors was improbable, Weinberg opted to join the fire depart- ment. But he never lost his competitive edge. "I was told that he was always at the fire house swinging the bat or the golf club, and he really became a heck of a golfer," said Russo, who first heard of Weinberg's death from former St. John's athletic director John Kaiser and former player Frank Caccavale. "Mike was a good athlete in pretty much every- thing he did." Mike Carey, St. John's assistant direc- tor of media relations, said Weinberg was described by those who knew him as "a good guy and extremely well liked." "Mike was a great kid," said Russo, who coached at St. John's from 1974- 95. "He was one of those guys who was always smiling. You couldn't get mad at him." Weinberg was striking in person a handsome and muscular man who was a featured model in the fire department's calendar. But his smile is what Russo said everyone will remember most. I 0 d I m I