MICHIGAN1 NOTES uevera to coach 11-Star team Michigan women's basketball head coach Sue Guevara was selected to coach the Big Ten All-Star Tour Team this August. The Big Ten All-Stars will travel to Austria, Slovakia antd Iungarv for a five-game schedule from August 10-17. "his is a great opportunity to coach I udent-athletes from other schools," Guevara said in a press release. "We have a nice squad with size and quick- ness, and there is a good blend of play- ers. This is a great opportunity for the kids to see another part of the world and play basketball" Guevara was voted the Big Ten Coach of the Year by the Media this past season. -f/im sotffIreports5 SPORTS BRIEFS Armstrong repeats at Tour de France PARIS (AP) - Lance Armstrong raised a glass of champagne even before he crossed the finish line- celebrating a Tour de France win that was even sweeter this time around. ,Armstrong has a habit of making the impossible look easy, whether conquer- ing cancer or winning one of the world's most grueling spoiling events for the second straight year. Lance Armstrong rides past the Arc de Triomphe during the 21st and final stage. Because of his insurmountable lead in Sunday's final stage of the Tour de France, riders joked and clw ned wxith the 28-vear-old Texan as thev coasted st the famous sites of Paris and Songs of spectators. MLB Standings R ,.i, i ay lome m 1 i 15AS ALCENTRAL W L PCT GB HOME AWAY ST Chio 6'.50 ,. - 2-17 3219 Lst' Cleoeia'dt 4.511 1.5 2524 2423 Lost 4 Kansas Cry 4551468 15.5 2523 2028 Lost 1 netroit 44 51.463 16 2323 2128 Won Minnesota 446.440 18.5 2329 2127 Won 3 AL-EAST W L PCT GB HOME AWAY STK *ankees 5142548 - 26-2' 2521 Won 1 'o ston 5144.530 1 2721 2423 Won 1 Toronto 5247.525 15 26-24 2&23 Lost 2 Baltimore 4354443 9 26-18 17-36 Lost 1 Tampa Bay 3858395 13.5 2128 1730 Lost 1 ALWEST W L PCT GB HOME AWAY ST Seatte 5739.193 - 3213 25 26 Won 2 Oakland 5244.542 5 25 23 2721 Won 1 Anaheim 5345.540 5 3122 2223 Lost 1 Texas - n45n50.4741.5 221 29 Lost 3 ENTRMAI W L PCT G HOME AWAY ST S ALous 554256 - 2919 2623 Lo1 Cinannati 49 48.505 6 2-23 2425 Won 1 chicago 4254.437 125 2525 1729 Won 2 Pittaburgh 42 54438 12.5 2523 17311 Won 3 -'inaukee 4058.408 155 22-27 18 31 Lost 3 Houston 34 63.350 21 17-30 1-33 Won 1 NL-AST W L PCT GB HOME AWAY ST Atlanta 5939.602 - 2916 3023 Lost 1 NY Mets 53 43,552 5 29-17 2426 WonO1 oanda 4849494 10.5 2824 2025 Lost 2 Montreali 4648.489 11 2822 18026 Won 3 Philadelphia 4353.447 15 2124 2229 Lost 2 N-WEST W L PCT 48 HOME AWAY STK Anzona 5642.571 - 3519 2123 LostS1 SanFraacIso5342.558 1.5 3317 2025 Wo 1 Angeles 5046521 5 2 2 2 20 LI 1 -lorado 4847.505 6.5 3114 1733 Wont San Diego 4354443 12.5 2423 193 Lnt 1O Amewacantegue ,- S A ..,1 r 5-..e 1 .n s o .20 l~ls3 s1 The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 24, 2000 - 1 Anderson reuited with Reds in Cooperstown AP PHOTO Tiger Woods continued his rewriting of the golf history books yesterday, as he cap- tured the British Open title, completing the career Grand Slam. Woods c Slam in recrdfashion COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Longevity landed Carlton Fisk and Tony Perez in the Baseball Hall of Fame, but one game defined their careers. Twenty-five years after the Reds and Red Sox played in the 1975 World Series, baseball planned to celebrate one of its greatest moments with the induction of two of the series' heroes at Cooperstown. "To have it come back full circle to here, I think it's more than a coinci- dence," Fisk said Saturday on the eve of the induction. "To be sitting here with him here, there must have been some- thing in the stars. And I'm just glad the stars were shining on us" Former Cincinnati manager Sparky Anderson, who was elected by the Veterans Committee, and longtime Reds announcer Marty Brennaman, who will receive the Ford C. Frick award, will also be there. Also expected for the impromptu reunion are previous inductees Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench and Carl Yastrzemski - all of whom played in the '75 Series and its unforgettable Game 6, which Fisk won with his body- bending, game-ending homer in the 12th inning. "I remember when he hit that homer, I was pulling foul and he was pulliil fair," Perez said at the inductees neoo conference. "I also remember that sw had another game the next day. But tha home run ended the best game we evc played in the World Series." Also being honored in Sunday's cere mony are Negro League star Norr "Turkey" Stearnes and Veteran Committee selection Bid McPhee, 19th Century defensive specialist fo Cincinnati who was the last second base man in baseball to play without a glove Although best known for his Game t homer, Fisk earned his Hall credential game by game, catching 2,226 of then - more than any catcher in history. I1 also hit a major league record 351 of hi: 376 homers as a catcher. "I think people will connect me vitl that home run in the 1975 Series," ht said. "But after that '75 Series I playe( 20 years after that." Fisk was elected with 79.56 percen of the votes after a career in which- h had 2,356 hits and 1,330 RBIs and wsa selected to the All-Star team I I times Although he spent I1 years with thk Red Sox and 13 with the White Sox, tht native New Englander will be enshritnec wearing a Boston cap. ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) - Tiger Woods strolled over tile Swilken Bridge and into history yesterday vith a performance never before seen on a course swhere golf has been played for more than 500 years. It was a fitti xav for Woods to win the British Open at the home of golf, making him the youngest placer ever to complete the career Grand Slam. The game has never seen anything like this. Delirious fans tried to leap over the Siilken Burn to watch Woods finish off' another masterpiece. Ie didn't disap- point them, making a par on the 18th hole for a 69 that set another benchmark for sears to coie. He finished at 19-under 269, the low- est score in relation to par ever at a major championship. Woods beat back a brief scare from David Duval to become only the fiflth player to win all four majors, the first since Jack Nicklaus won the 1966 British Open at 26. hie 24-year-old Woods seems to be racing toward the record that matters the most - the 18 majors Nicklaus won in a career that remains the standard. For now. "Hc is the chosen one. He's the best player who has played the game rightt now," said Mark Calcavecchia, who stuck around St. Andrews to watch histo- ry in the making. "If Jack was in his prime today, I don't think he could keep upl With Tiger" Comparing eras is never easy, but Woods' performance in the majors stands alone. One month after he demolished the field in the U.S. Open to win by a record 15 strokes, he won the silver claret jug by eioht strokes over Ernie Els and Thomas Bjorn. It was the largest margin of victory in the British Open since 1913, when J.H. aylor won by eight strokes oserTed Ray. Woods became only the second British Open champion to win \\ith four rounds in the (Ils, and he beat by one stroke the record Nick Faldo set at St. Andrews in 1990. See you in Cooperstown This year's Hall of Fame class includes: Inductee Sparky Anderson Tony Pere: Bid McPhee Marty Breoaman Carlton Fisk Team Cincinnat Reds Cincinati Reds Cincinnati Reds Cincinnati Reds Bostm Red Sox Norm "Turkey" Stearnes Negro League * Broadcaster ON APRIL 26TH, 2000, BETA THETA PI FRATERNITY HAD frtsi wtaHISTORICAL FRATERNITY ARTIFACTS STOLEN. $1,1000 REWARD FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO THE RECOVERY OF THE ARTIFACTS. REWARD FOR INFORMATION LEADING'TO THE ARREST AND CONVICTION OF THE PERPETRATORS. 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