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Muster’s Feats on Clay End at 38 in a Row

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From Staff and Wire Reports

Thomas Muster finally showed he can lose on clay and Boris Becker showed he still can’t win on it Saturday in the BMW Open at Munich, Germany.

Muster’s clay-court winning streak was ended at 38 matches by Carlos Moya, a 19-year-old tennis player who is ranked 40th in the world and who needed only 69 minutes win, 6-3, 6-3, in the semifinals.

The streak dated to early August and included seven tournament titles for Muster, ranked second. In each of the last three of those tournaments, Moya had been one of his victims.

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Becker’s streak is even longer. He has never won a clay-court tournament, and has been particularly frustrated at Munich, where the courts are 10 minutes from his house.

The most recent frustration was administered Saturday by Slava Dosedel, an unseeded player who beat Becker, 7-6 (7-2), 2-6, 7-6 (8-6), in a three-hour match.

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Two-time defending champion and top-seeded Michael Chang fell victim to flashy, hard-serving Karim Alami, 6-4, 6-4, in the semifinals of the AT&T; Challenge on clay in Atlanta. Alami’s finals opponent will be the winner of the match between second-seeded Richey Reneberg and Nicklas Kulti.

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Defending champion Bohdan Ulihrach defeated Emilio Sanchez, 6-3, 6-1, and second-seeded Yevgeny Kafelnikov beat Christian Ruud, 7-5, 5-7, 6-3, in semifinal-round matches in the Skoda Czech Open and will play each other today in Prague for the title. . . . Conchita Martinez routed a flu-weakened Mary Pierce, 6-1, 6-1, and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario beat Julie Halard-Decugis, 6-2, 6-0, to reach the finals of the Rexona Cup at Hamburg, Germany.

Golf

Jeff Maggert, playing on his home turf at the Tournament Players Course at The Woodlands, shot a six-under-par 66 to claim a one-shot lead over David Duval after three rounds of the Houston Open.

Maggert, who had seven birdies, has a 14-under 202 after three rounds. Duval, returning to competition for the first time in three weeks after a tick bite put him in the hospital for three days, had a 67.

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Larry Gilbert and Graham Marsh shared the lead in the PaineWebber Invitational in Charlotte, N.C., with Gilbert shooting a two-under-par 70 and Marsh a 71, both totaling 137 after two routes.

Among the 15 players within four shots of the co-leaders was Arnold Palmer, 66, who shot his second consecutive 70.

One shot off the lead were Dick Hendrickson, who shot a 67, and Jack Kiefer, who carded a 68 on a day when gusty winds helped make scoring difficult.

Catrin Nilsmark holed out a 60-yard sand wedge for eagle on the par-five ninth hole and birdied the other par-fives en route to a four-under-par 68 that gave her a 13-under 203 for 54 holes and a one-shot lead over Val Skinner in the Sprint Titleholders Championship on the LPGA Tour at Daytona Beach, Fla.

Laura Davies shot a 67 and was within three strokes at 206, tied with Australian rookie Karrie Webb and Dawn Coe-Jones.

Auto Racing

Reigning Formula One champion Michael Schumacher set a qualifying record in his Ferrari, turning a 1-minute 26.890-second lap and averaging 126.952 mph at Imola, Italy, in earning the pole for today’s San Marino Grand Prix.

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Ron Hornaday Jr. outraced hometown favorite Mike Bliss after a late caution period to win the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Craftsman 200 at Portland (Ore.) Speedway, averaging a track-record 64.217 mph for the 100 miles and earning $36,375.

Blaine Johnson, John Force and Warren Johnson were the top qualifiers in top fuel, funny car and pro stock in the National Hot Rod Assn. Pennzoil Nationals in Dinwiddie, Va., where final eliminations are scheduled today.

Blaine Johnson turned a 4.721-second 295.27-mph pass in top fuel.

Force was No. 1 in funny car in 5.025 seconds and 294.11 mph.

Warren Johnson topped pro stock at 7.007 seconds, 196.16 mph, in a Pontiac Firebird.

Olympics

Gavin Maxwell of Canada, who missed the 1992 Olympics by one spot, qualified for this year’s Games by winning the men’s canoe 1,000 meters in Atlanta, beating American Jim Terrell by about a canoe-length at the last Olympic hemispheric qualifier for eight countries.

Alexandra Harbold of Rockaway Beach, N.Y., joined her husband, Michael Harbold, on the U.S. Olympic team. He had previously qualified in the 1,000-meter men’s single kayak. She was on the winning team Saturday in the women’s kayak four.

Laser sailor Andy Lovell held off Nick Adamson to win the first race of the U.S. Olympic Yachting Trials in Savannah, Ga., then edged Adamson for runner-up in the second race and took the overall lead.

Among the other class leaders were: Robbie Daniel and Enrique Rodriguez, Tornado class; Jayne Fenner-Benedict and Lanee Butler, women’s Mistral windsurfer; Mike Gebhardt, men’s Mistral; Courtenay Becker-Dey, Europe class; Tyler Moore and Ryan Cox, men’s 470 class; and Kris Stookey and Louise Van Voorhis, women’s 470.

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Miscellany

Dutchman Leon van Bon cycled to a stage victory in a 110.5-mile Raleigh-to-Greensboro, N.C., run and Lance Armstrong retained his race lead in the Tour DuPont.

Van Bon was 40 yards in front of Radisa Cubric of Yugoslavia at the finish, timing 4 hours 37 minutes 34 seconds.

Ernie Schlegel rolled strikes on his final six balls to beat defending champion Mike Aulby, 236-200, in the title match of the American Bowling Congress Bud Light Masters at Salt Lake City.

Names in the News

Kentucky basketball Coach Rick Pitino said sophomore forward Antoine Walker intends to make himself available for the NBA draft, though Pitino said the decision is not final. . . . The Chicago Bears have reportedly exercised their option to extend the contract of Coach Dave Wannstedt through the 1997 season. . . . Buffalo Bills long snapper Adam Lingner has decided to retire after 13 years in the NFL.

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