The Michigan Daily-Saturday, June 6, 1981-Page 15 SPORTS OF THE DAILY Lewis takes double at BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Amazing teenager Carl Lewis of Houston became the first athlete in 45 years to win both a field event and a track event at the NCAA outdoor championships, capturing the long jump and the 100-meter dash last night. The magnificent Lewis, 19, from Willingboro, N.J., equalling a feat last accomplished by the legendary Jesse Owens of Ohio State in 1936, took the long jump at 27 feet, % inches, and the 100 meters in a wind-aided 9.99 seconds. AFTER THE sprint win, the second of his two events, Lewis raised both hands in victory, then circled the track to a standing ovation from the crowd of approximately 4,600 at Louisiana State University's Bernie Moore Stadium. In the 100, Mel Lattany, a Southeastern Conference champion from Georgia, was first out of the blocks and led for about half the race. But the bigger and stronger Lewis and Jeff Phillips of Tennessee came charging past diminutive Lattany. PHILLIPS FINISHED second in 10.10, and Lattany was third in 10.16. The wind was 2.54 meters per second, .54 over the allowable for any record recognition. Had the time been accep- ted, it would have been the third-fastest 100-meter race in history, behind the 9.95 time of Jimmy Hines in 1978 and the 9.98 of Silvio Leonard of Cuba in 1977. In other action, Southern Methodist's Mike Carter won the shot put with a mighty heave of 68'10", joining teammate Richard Olsen as a winner at the meet. Olsen had won the hammer throw the previous day. Heavy rains drenched the area, and the cold and wet was severe enough to force the long jump competition in- doors, and Carter to don a sweat top while competing. Indy vote revealed INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-Chief steward Tom Binford said yesterday that he voted with the 3-2 majority that turned down Bobby Unser's protest alleging Mario Andretti committed a no-passing violation during the May 24 Indianapolis 500. Binford's disclosure was the first time the vote during a hearing by stewards following the race was made public. THAT VOTE, plus a unanimous 5-0 vote denying Unser's protest of a one- lap penalty he received, was explained by Binford during the second day of testimony at a special U.S. Auto Club hearing. On Thursday, Binford had testified that scoring records showed Unser violated the "yellow-flag rule" by passing a line of cars as he exited the pits at the end of the 149th lap. Binford said a one-lap penalty in such cases is mandatory. Binford said yesterday that he voted not to penalize Andretti because the stewards' deliberation was "based on the fact that we had a presumption of innocence and must have records of any infraction. We didn't see any records of a violation by Andretti." Owens to Indiana PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-The Por- tland Trail Blazers yesterday traded center Tom Owens to the Indiana Pacers for a future National Basketball Association draft pick. The club said Indiana gave up its fir- st-round pick in the 1984 draft for the 31- year-old Owens. THE 6-FOOT-10, 220-pound Owens played sparingly for the Trail Blazers this past season as the club went to Mychal Thompson at the pivot position. Owens graduated from the Univer- sity of South Carolina and was drafted into the now-defunct American Basket- ball Association in 1971. He played five seasons in the ABA and then went to Houston for a season before he was traded to Portland before the 1977-78 season. WVU investigation MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)-West Virginia University officials are in- vestigating alleged academic infrac- tions involving some WVU athletes, a university vice president confirmed TCAA's yesterday. WVU's vice president for academic affairs, Bill Nugent, said a report will be turned over soon to the state Board of Regents, and that the NCAA also might be notified. "ALL I WOULD say at this point is that we are reviewing these questions and will not have anything to say on it until we finish," Nugent said. Nugent said the university was "reviewing the academic records of athletes" and would report in the next few days to the regents. Should any violations of National Collegiate Athletic Association regulations be found , "we will report those violations to the NCAA," he ad- ded. Nugent was quoted yesterday as saying that two courses that have since been discontinued were found last year to have been taken by a high number of athletes, many of whom made 'A's. Branch treated for drugs SAN FRANCISCO.(AP) - Cliff Branch, star wide receiver for the Super Bowl champion Oakland Raiders, has been released after 26 days of group therapy at a Scottsdale, Ariz., drug treatment facility, it was reported yesterday. BRANCH, WHO caught two touch- down passes in Oakland's Super Bowl victory over the Philadelphia Eagles, was released Tuesday from the Camelback Mental Health Center, the same facility that recently treated for- mer Dallas Cowboy and San Francisco 49er Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson, the San Francisco Chronicle said. Branch apparently tried to keep his hospital stay quiet, registering under the name Irvin Houston. But his iden- tity was revealed when another patient showed an autographed. picture of Branch to friends, the newspaper said. Borg, Lendl in finals of French Open PARIS (AP)-Sweden's Bjorn Borg, aiming to win the title for a record sixth time, and Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia yesterday reached the finals of the French Open tennis tournament. Borg edged Victor Pecci of Paraguay, 6-4, 6-4, 7-5, in three closely-contested sets on the eve of Borg's 25th birthday. LENDL, 21, CAME from behind and wore down Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina, 3- 6, 6-4, 4-6, 7-6, 6-2, ina marathon match lasting four hours, 23 minutes. The Borg-Pecci match, which lasted two hours, 22 minutes, was a classic. Pecci, 25, defied the traditional method of playing from the baseline on clay, and repeatedly went to the net to cut off Borg's top-spin ground strokes. His volleying thrilled the 16,000 fans, but in the end Borg won the points that counted. BORG SAID AFTERWARD that it was a tougher match than the final of 1979 when he beat Pecci in four sets. The tall Paraguayan from Asuncion used his long reach to play many spec- tacular stop volleys, and at times Borg appeared completely unable to deal with him. "He is very fast coming to the net," Borg said. "It was very difficult to make passing shots." THE LENDL-CLERC match initially had little of the flair of the first semifinal as the men slugged it out from their baselines. For three hours, Clerc appeared the likely winner. He won the first set. In the second, he had three break points in the third game and two more in the seventh, but he failed to profit on them, and Lendl eventually broke service in the 10th game to level it at one set all. Clerc won the third set. The fourth went with service to 6-6 and a tiebreaker, during which Clerc came back from 1-4 and had a match point at 6-5. Lendl saved it by slamming downa service winner, and he went on to win the tiebreaker, 9-7. By this time the match had become a thriller, and in the final set, with Clerc looking tired, Lendl powered to service breaks at 3-2 and 5-2. "After I lost the match point in the tiebreaker, I lost a little concentration. He had more confidence in the final set," Clerc said. Not this time AP Golfer Ray Floyd wiggles his putter in frustration as he misses a birdie putt on the sixth hole at the Atlanta Golf Classic yesterday. There were not too many more frustrations for Floyd, though, as he bagged a 66 for a two-round tCotaof S Qn the 6,45yarsdAtanta Country Club course.