Francona Signs Two-Year Deal to Be Manager in Philadelphia
Terry Francona, named manager of the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday, said he wants his team to overachieve next season, which is probably the only way it will be any better than the last three seasons.
The Phillies have gone 190-231 since winning an unexpected NL pennant in 1993.
Francona, who has a two-year deal that will pay him $600,000, is used to rough spots. He was third-base coach last season for the Detroit Tigers, who were 53-109.
Francona, 37, brings a lifetime of baseball knowledge but no major league managerial experience to the job.
The son of former major leaguer Tito Francona, he was the first overall pick in the 1980 draft by the Montreal Expos.
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Acting Commissioner Bud Selig is expected to announce today that he has called a meeting of major league owners for next Wednesday in Chicago to vote on the proposed labor agreement. Twenty one of the 28 clubs are needed to ratify the agreement, which would end a three-year dispute. Will they emerge with an agreement? “Some how, some way, I think we will,” he said.
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Reliever Mike Timlin agreed to a two-year contract with the Toronto Blue Jays worth $4,325,000. . . . The Baltimore Orioles plan to move shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. to third base next season, according to the team’s current third baseman, Todd Zeile. . . . Tony La Russa, who brought his intense style to a new league and led the St. Louis Cardinals to the NL Central championship, won the Associated Press manager-of-the-year award for the third time. . . . The Angels announced they will not raise ticket prices for next season.
Tennis
Pete Sampras and Boris Becker lost their opening matches at the Paris Open, with Becker denouncing the arena as a “zoo” and “madhouse.”
Marc Rosset reeled off 20 aces to beat Sampras, top-seeded and the defending champion, 6-4, 6-4.
Becker lost to Carlos Moya of Spain, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4, then complained bitterly about the behavior of the spectators. Seeded players continued to fall, with nine of the 16 already out of the tournament before the end of the second round.
No. 5 Goran Ivanisevic, the 1993 winner, lost, 6-3, 6-2, to Paul Haarhuis of the Netherlands. No. 10 Marcelo Rios lost to Czech qualifier Petr Korda, 6-3, 6-4. No. 14 Alberto Costa of Spain was beaten, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4, by Dutch qualifier Fernon Wibier, the lowest-ranked player in the field at 211th.
Second-seeded Austrian Barbara Paulus defeated Russian teenager Anna Kurnikova, 6-4, 6-3, in the Kremlin Cup tournament at Moscow. Fourth-seeded Sabine Appelmans of Belgium defeated Sarah Pitkovsky of France, 6-4, 7-6 (6-1), and fifth-seeded Ruksandra Dragomir of Romania eliminated Poland’s Magdalena Grzybowska, 6-2, 7-6 (6-2).
Meredith McGrath breezed to a 6-3, 6-2 upset of fourth-seeded Iva Majoli in the second round at the Ameritech Cup at Chicago.
Second-seeded Jana Novotna overpowered Amy Frazier, 6-2, 6-1, and No. 5 Martina Hingis defeated Stephanie DeVille, 6-1, 6-2.
Court proceedings began in Hamburg, Germany, in a civil lawsuit filed by Monica Seles against the German Tennis Federation over her 1993 stabbing. Seles is seeking $16.3 million in damages for lost income after the attack, and is blaming the federation for lack of security.
Names in the News
Jose “Pepe” Fernandez, 38, a scuba diver from Cuba, died while diving late Tuesday after an accident off Cabo San Lucas. Fernandez was the lead support diver for Francisco “Pipin” Ferreras, a Florida resident who is in Mexico training for his attempt next month to set a world free-diving record with a plunge of 450 feet on a single breath.
Charles Reed, a former Pacific 10 football and basketball official who also officiated NBA games in the mid-1970s, died Sunday in Los Angeles. Reed, a former president of the Southern California Basketball Officials Assn., had suffered a stroke in 1979. He was 68.
Ralph Vince, a member of the Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame who played professional football and became a coach, athletic director and lawyer, has died at 96.
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