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ROUNDUP : South Falls to West in Field Hockey

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The South is the youngest field hockey team in the U.S. Olympic Festival tournament, and its members might also be the quickest learners based on their performance against the No. 1-seeded West team in a semifinal Tuesday at Loyola Marymount.

Three days after being overwhelmed by the West in the Festival’s opening match, the South squad--which includes the U.S. Junior (21 and under) team--gave a much better account of themselves in a 3-2 loss at Sullivan Field.

The West (4-0 in tournament play) will play the East (2-1-1) in the gold-medal game at 4 p.m. today.

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The South (0-3-1) will play the North (1-3) in the bronze-medal game at 2 p.m.

The West defeated the East, 3-2, in pool play Monday.

The South--having been shut out by the West, 3-0, in the teams’ first confrontation--took a 1-0 lead in the rematch when Bing Hoang, a 17-year old forward-midfielder from Westlake Village, scored nine minutes into the match.

Hoang’s brother Tommy, 24, quickly retaliated for the West by scoring his second goal of the tournament less than a minute later to tie the score, 1-1.

Tommy Hoang scored again with six minutes left in the half to give the West a lead it would never relinquish.

David Wisner of Westlake Village scored his second goal of the tournament early in the second half to extend the West’s lead to 3-1 before Scott Williams of Thousand Oaks narrowed the South’s deficit to 3-2 with less than 14 minutes remaining.

The West had eight shots on goal. The South had five.

Tuesday’s match ended Brian Spencer’s scoring streak at three games as the 29-year-old forward from Chatsworth was held without a goal for the first time in the Festival. Spencer, a member of the 1984 Olympic team, had scored five goals in the West’s first three matches.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Sara Wilson, a former standout at Hart High, had five points and five rebounds in the West’s 69-60 victory over the East in the bronze-medal game at Pauley Pavilion. Wilson made two of three shots from the field, one of two free throws, and had three offensive rebounds.

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The West, which had lost to the East, 70-54, in pool play Saturday, was led by Frozena Jerro, who had 11 points.

SOFTBALL

Lisa Erickson of La Crescenta drove in a run to help give the South a 3-1 victory over the North at Hjelte Park in Encino.

Erickson, a former Cal State Northridge All-American, drove in Sharon Sodano with a line-drive single to left field in the fifth inning to give South a 3-1 lead.

The two-run margin could prove crucial because total runs scored serves as the first tiebreaker in determining the second team in tonight’s 8 p.m. gold-medal game.

The East has already secured a berth in the final. “It was a fat, fat pitch,” Erickson said. “It was exactly what I was looking for. (Coach) Niles (Sherman) told me not to take anything high because they were assuming that I would bunt.”

The other key hit was a two-run single by pinch-hitter Charlotte Wiley in the fourth inning which gave South a 2-1 lead. Christine Oliver of Simi Valley pitched the first five innings for the South and allowed one run on four hits. Kim Maher of Ventura had a bunt single in the fourth and Priscilla Rouse of Canoga Park had two singles.

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