News Scrapbook 1986-1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S . 341 ,840)
9'31
Jlllu1'•
2
s beat Brovell .,
P c e
I
IHXB
I
freshman I didn't pl.a-/ wanted to show him hat I can do," said Madden, who has scored a total of 50 points in three meetings - all victories - against B-ovelli's teams, while averaging 7.2 points a game in his four-year career. "I respect him a lot, but I don't ever want to lose to much; I
2,500-plus. "We recruited Nils because we knew he had that potential," Brovelli said. "We were right." USO, 12-t overall and 3-1 in the West Coast Athletic Conference, re- mained tied for first place with Gon- :r.aga. USF fell to 12-5 and 2-2. "I really wanted to beat him (Bro- velli) badly because when I was a
r adden four years ago and convinced him to attend ~er nSanta Clara or the Unnersity o. I 'ahfornia. Brovelli believed l'1e 6- loot·8 forward "had the potential" to develop into a solid pla r, but a year after enlisting Madden, he also became bulli h on the future of the University of San Francisco, aid so he h aded north. ruitea
Last night Brovelli came back to U Oas USF's coach and as the guest o honor at Nils Madden's coming- out party. Madden, forced to stand tall because of the foul problems of 7-foot USO center Scott Thompson, scored a season-high 23 pomts and had 12 rebounds in leading the Toreros to a 68-56 victory over the Dons before a capacity crowd of
.
,.
Sunday, January 18, 1987
~.
"'
See USD on P e H-6
San Diego, Calif. (San Diego Co) Mira Mesa Jour'1al
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)
AN 2 21987
,Alim'•
, , 16
P C B
USJJ!s Madden planningi suitable encore for Dons By Kirk Kenn y ;}Yi.'J~ Tribun fl<)rUwr1t1•r If thi w r love tory it would be about Ingrid and Lee Madden, w o re fll'st acquamt d a pen p I mor than 30 years ago lngrtd' lette bor a G rmany postmark; Lee San Francisco can- cel Th y corr ponded for ome thr months before Lee traveled to Germany to m t Ingrid m person. Th y wer married 11 day lat r. But th1 isn't a love story, it' a b k tball tory And n 1tber ngnd nor Lee plays hoop That oul hav been th nd of this story b d the coup! not return to t y re tor six rhlldren. The t of In rid nd Lee s kids IS I fadd r>, ho happens to attend USO - and is a foot-8 semor fo rd on th Toreros basketball team Madden gr •w up in Sebastopol, which I somewhere between Santa Clara and San Francisco, the two cit- j the Torer vi it this weekend as th :, con inue play in the We t Coa t A hletlc Conference. Toreros (3-1, 12-4) m th is telling em the me thing you're t Hing them and vcrythlng is fine. Sometimes the coach inside their head tells them something different. I thmk Nd ' coach ma e It hard on him because he's really tough on him He' n er satisfied with what he's doing. H~ puts a lot of pressure on him "I think he's a little mo e aware of 1t now I k p tellmg ls he should b d manding of hlmse , but realize that some nights he's going to be uper and some rughts he's not gomg to be too good He doesn't have to ac pt that, but he shouldn't worry so much about 1t whe e a a bad g r e. It appears Madden has a handle on hi coach this ason He is USD's second-leading scorer behind center Scott Thompson with 11.3 points a game, and he lea
...Allen'•
r.,. 1888
P. c. e
~olleff's "Romeo and Jul/et Suite" will be among the selections performed by young musi- cians at Civic Youth Orchestra's 31st Annual Win· ter Concert on February 8 at 4 p.m. This year the concert will be held at Camino Hall on the campus of University of Sao Diego. As for the past 31 years, cl~tc Youth Orchestra continues to provide exellence in orchestral training to San Diego's gifted young musicians. The Civic YoutfrOrches- tra provides young people with the opportunity to study and perform the world's great orchestral works under the guidance of fine teachers. For concert ticket information, or for informat1on regarding participation in any of the orchestras,./ call Jane Reeder at 234-7227. ?-"'I 5 '5
,,.
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. 0. 7,415)
JAN 2 3 1987
...A.l/r11 •• P C B
/40 1egan, S .
., •
1 ,
w •pr:f:sso_r' ~rn~d who re~f>is m lme . for a federal jud eshlp, w,ll present a special achievement award to th~ San Diego Commission on ~he ~1· centennial of the U.S. Constitut~on Tuesday afternoon at the Scottish Rite Center in Mission. Valley. Local commission Chair Joan Bowes will receive the award. / * • • / --
Dons (2 2, 12 5) tonight at USF Me- morial Gymna 1um. Ingrid and Lee will be in the stands. They also will be watching their son tomorrow night agai t Santa Cl ra tis is anxio for a rfo, ....nee 1m1lar to the ne he gave la t Satur- day wh n th Toreros defeated the 68-56 at the USO Sports Center. fadd n ored team-high 23 points with a te m-high 12 rebounds to move USD into a first-place he with Santa Cla a mthe WCAC "Statistically, that was his best performance," said USO coach Hank Egan, "but I'm not too sure that was his best performance of the season. We gave him a job to do against Santa Clara (two nights before the USF game) covermg Jens Gordon, who wa one of their leading scorers. I told Nils, 'l need you to accept this challenge and get after this guy.' You know how any points Gordon got? Zero. "Nils plays pretty sohd defense, so we usually give him the toughest de- fensive assignment. He's pretty big, he'· got quicknCSli to him and he's willing to take the challenge." No one has ever questioned Mad- den's desire. He's always eager for a challenge, be it from one of his three brothers playmg one-on-one in the driveway, or guarding a team's top scorer in a g me The knock on Nils, who has had hili share of struggles in the past, 1s he 1s too hard on himself. Said Egan "I think all players have a coach inside their head Lots of times the coach ms1de their head
season agairu;t Athletes In Action and coach kind of got all over me. I've lowly been building up my con- lid nee. .oach Egan always tells me I'm n hardest critic. I know that I get down on myself, but I think t helps. I know when I make my mistakes and I want everything to j;O nghl. I used to dwell on it more, but I think I'm getting better at putting it out of my bead I'm learning to just make the best of it li I just go out to play my hardest, I ow everythmg will take care of itself.'' Altho gh the Toreros struggled on th road during their first conference trip this season, Madden believes USO will take care of the Dons for the fourth straight time. ''l think it's gomg to be a lot harder up there because they're playing at home and I think they're going to have (jumor forward) Patrick Clardy back," he said "He was injured wh n we played them the first time. But I think we'll come out harder " Ingrid and Lee Madden will be rooting for their -son and his team tomght, as will Julie Matteoni, Nils' girlfriend. Nils and Julie met follow- ing the last game of his sophomore season when she was a cheerleader at USO. In fact, they also were pen pals hen Matteoni went to school in Italy a year ago. But that's another love story.
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)
JAN 24 1987
Jllleri 's P. c. B
/ ,, 18,X
/
- The Rev. Jack E. Lind . fessor in the r~li . meot at the Un· has been named n Diego an Church of f:!tor of the ~uthe/ Poway. Lind u. . Incarnation in of All Saints t~i IS a former pastor theran churches edran and First Lu- t . dir an a former Ive ector of the Sa . execu- :~:~~}rftnfekrenc~~k:g:u~:'Z -· us , who has re · . q1USt, a pro- depart-
_ The San Diego Union/Peter Koeleman The Toreros' Nils Madden (40) goes over the rim an~ the Dons' Pat Giusti for two points. USD: Madden sparks Toreros hi " m. Continued from H-1
sive rebounds - he would only !Core 12 points for the evening and beGlme a supporting actor in Madden's show- stopping performance. "To be successful we've get to move the ball and make good deci- sions and somewhere on the route of the ball people have to be willing take the risk to put it up," said Egan. "We can't always be trying to get the ball to Scott." So be it: With Thompson in the game, the Toreros were up 27-23; when he left, they went up 35-27 at ~he half. And when it got close again m the second half at 54-51 in favor of USO. the ball went not to Thompson, but to Mark Manor, and, yes, Mad- den. Manor, a hyperach •e but confi- dent senior forward, had come into the game hitting only 6 of 23 shots from three-point range. But when the Dons cut into a 15-point lead and made it a three-point game with five minutes to go, he let loose with a bomb and made it a si pomt lead for USD.
"The three-point shot is not really that far; it's like a mystic thing," said Manor, who also hit a three-pointer earlier in the game. "It's like it's in the back of your mind that it's a glory shot." Manor's two "glory" shots and a layup by Madden would be the Toreros' only baskets in the final 12:21 of the game, but a free throw binge netted USO a dozen points and secured the victory. "My job is to play defense and re- bound," said Madden. "Scoring is just a bonus." And another nasty reminder for Brovelli as to what he left behind.
Maybe not, but when this game began it appeared as if the Dons were more fired-up about winning than the Toreros. USF, smothered, 72-39, by USO a year ago here, opened the g1me with a vengeance and took 5-0 lead. And they went up 14-8 with 13:52 remaining in the first half and Thompson sitting on the bench. "We just didn't get off the mark" said USO head coach Hank Ega~, who is 46-24 since replacing Brovelli including a 31-5 mark in the Spo~ Center. "We couldn't get in rhythm, and some of that has to do with the job they were doing on us." Thompson, the all-everything lead- er for USO with 16.7 points and 6.5 rebounds a game, picked up three fouls in nine minutes of the first half. And though he would come back in the second half to police the defen- sive boards - hauling in nine defen-
<>u.i.U.....£..--.J
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)
JAN 2 3 i987
.Jll/r11 '• P. c. B
,-., 1888
Made with FlippingBook Annual report