McEn roe, Connors win, Mayer upset LONDON (AP)- John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors, the top two seeds, were easy straight-set winners in the second round of the $172,000 Stella Ar- tois tennis tournament at the Queen's Club yesterday, but fellow American, Sandy Mayer, the No. 3 seed, was upset. While McEnroe ousted Australia's Charlie Fancutt 6-3, 6-2 and Connors disposed of John Fitzgerald, another Aussie, 6-0, 6-1, Mayer, ranked eighth in the world, was beaten by obscure Eddie Edwards of South Africa. EDWARDS, WHO is not rated high enough to qualify automatically for this month's Wimbledon championships, surprised Mayer 6-4, 3-6, 10-8. Edwards is No. 141 on the world com- puter rankings. He said he would not make the cutoff for Wimbledon, which starts June 21, and would have to play the qualifying tournament. Edwards' victory moved him into the third round of the tuneup tournament for Wimbledon. DESPITE THE loss, Mayer is expec- ted to be high on the list when the Wim- bledon seedings are announced next Monday. The American had a match point at 5- 3 in the second set and did not appear in danger of losing. At 40-30 he returned Edwards' service short and moved in at the net, but the South African passed him with a cross-court backhand. "I think he slipped a bit as he turned to chase my shot," Edwards said. MCENROE BEAT Fancutt after winning a vital point on a controversial line call. After gaining an early service break and then losing his lead, McEnroe broke through again at 5-3. He got the winning point in that game when Fan- cutt hit a smooth backhand smash and the umpire overruled a linesman and called the ball out. The angry Australian disputed the decision for two minutes before going on with the next game. McEnroe, who has been in trouble with umpires at this tournament for the past two years, stood quietly on his baseline this time and did not say a word. CONNORS WAS the most impressive player of the day. Against Fitzgerald, he dropped only eight points in six ser- vice games. Lloyd, who won the mixed doubles in the French Open with Wendy Turnbull of Australia last weekend, won a seesaw match against Australia's Peter Johnston 7-6, 2-6, 6-4. Tim Wilkison, who injured an ankle in a fall in his first round match Tuesday, prepared to fly home to the United States. A tournament. spokesman said Wilkison had damaged ligaments and would not be unable to play at Wim- bledon. AP Phoi John McEnroe returns a shot in a match earlier in the year. McEnroe defeated Charlie Fancutt, 6-3, 6-2, yesterday to advance to the third round of the Artois tennis tournament in London. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Austin withdraws from tournament BIRMINGHAM, England (AP)- Tracy Austin, the U.S. Open champion, withdrew from the Edgbaston Cup women's tennis tournament with stomach trouble yesterday. She had Ito retire after one set and almost two games of her third-round match against Betty Stove of The Netherlands. BOTH STOVE and the crowd were surprised to see the 19-year-old Austin hurry from the court at the end of the first set in which she led 4-1 before losing five games in a row. "This," said her coach Marty Reissen, "was by arrangement made with officials before the match started. They knew what the trouble was and had a washroom nearby if Tracy needed it." Austin did need it for more than five minutes and she came back to the court looking pale and too ill to continue the match. AFTER LOSING the first game of the second set and trailing 40-30 in the next game, she asked the umpire's per- mission to leave permanently, and walked off. Austin, who also was ailing, along with several other players, at the Fren- ch championships, arrived in England from Paris a week ago. But she was stricken with stomach trouble over the weekend and hasn't been well since. After yesterday's withdrawal, she said: "I saw a doctor before the match and I thought I could play my way through. With hindsight, it was the wrong decision. I led 4-1 at the start and played quite well, but then suddenly I couldn't move. I felt terrible." NOW, AUSTIN faces the problem of getting in practice for the June 21 Wim- bledon tournament, since she is not en- tered for next week's grass court tour-, nament at Eastbourne. Meanwhile, Pam Teeguarden, the earlier conqueror of Evonne Goolagong Cawley, reached the third round, beating South Africa's Sue Rollinson 4- 6, 6-0, 6-4. Betsy Nagelsen beat American countrywoman Alycia Moulton 6-3, 3-6, 7-6. In other all-American matches., Nan- cy Yeargin defeated Barbara Hallquist 6-2, 7-5, veteran Billie Jean King over- came Lele Forood 5-7, 6-3, 6-1, and Kathy Jordan beat Rosie Casals 6-2, 4-6, 7-6. 1982Af&-Amerimcn golfteam NEW YORK (AP) - Player of the Year Corey Pavin of UCLA, NCAA champion Billy Ray Brown of the University of Houston, and the sons of two former major league baseball players - Chris Perry of Ohio State and Jay Delsing of UCLA - head the 1982 All- American golf team annonced yester- day. Joining them on the squad were Brad Faxon of Furman, Rick Fehr of Brigham Young, Jeff Hart of Southern California, John Slaughter of NCAA- champion Houston and Willie Wood of Oklahoma State. The nine-man team, announced by Stan Wood, chairman of the Coaches Selection Committee, will be honored June 22 by the All-American Collegiate Foundation ata dinner in New York. Perry's father, Jim, won the Cy Young Award as the best pitcher in the American League with the Minnesota Twins in 1970. Delsing's father, Jim, was an American League outfielder. Charboneau demoted CLEVELAND 'AP) - Outfielder Joe Charb-neau, the i980 American League Rookie of the Year, was demoted yesterday to the Cleveland Indians' Class AAA affiliate, the Charleston Charlies. Charboneau, who also spent part of the 1981 season at Charleston,was sent down to make room for right-handed pitcher Bud Anderson on the Indians' roster. Anderson, 1-5 with a 3.68 earned run average in 11 starts for the Charlies this year, joined Indians for a double- header last night in Detroit. Charboneau hit .214 with two home runs and nine runs batted in during 22 games with Cleveland this season. He was to join Charleston today. Sims signs FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)- The New England Patriots have signed defensive lineman Kenneth Sims, the top choice in the National Football League draft and the cornerstone of their rebuilding project, to a four-year contract. The club announced the signing yesterday. Neither the Patriots nor Witt Stewart, Sims' agent, revealed the details of the deal. THE CONTRACT would not make Sims, a 6-foot-5, 279-pounder from the University of Texas, the highest paid Patriots' player "at the present time," said New England General Manager Bucko Kilroy. Neither he nor Stewart would say whether any other top choice in a draft has received a better con- tract. "It opens the door for me to go in and play football, knowing I'm getting what I'm worth," Sims said on a telephone hookup from Texas. "I don't have to worry about it for another four years." New England had a 2-14 record last season and had the poorest rushing defense in the NFL. Paige'sfuneral on Saturday KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Funeral services wil beheld Saturday for Leroy "Satchel" Paige, one of the first blacks enshrined in the Baseball Hallof Fame. The service for Paige, who died following a heart attack at his Kansas City home Tuesday, will be held at 3 p.m. EDT Saturday at the Watkins Brush Creek Chapel. He will be buried in Forest Hill Cemetery. The legendary pitcher's family asked no flowers be sent to the funeral and suggested contributions to the restoration fund of Satchel Paige Stadium, a youth baseball stadium dedicated to Paige just three days beforehis death. Soviets drafted MONTREAL (AP) - Three hockey players from the Soviet Union were selected in the National Hockey League entry draft yesterday. In the seventh round, the Los Angeles Kings picked Viktor Nechaev, the New York Rangers took Sergei Kapustinand the Minnesota North Stars selected Viktor Zhluktov. NECHAEV, 27, lives in Los Angeles. He is maried to an American and was allowed to come to the United States earlier this year. He played center for the 1975 world champion Soviet National junior team and has played for several club teams in the Soviet Union. Both Kapustin and Zhluktov were members of the Soviet National team which won the world championship last April. Kapustin, a 29-year-old left wing is "a real class player," said Rangers General Manager, Craig atrick.