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U.S. Soccer Players Backed by Women’s Foundation

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From Staff and Wire Reports

The Women’s Sports Foundation backed the U.S. women’s soccer players Tuesday in their dispute with the federation over wages.

The 20 women who won the World Cup last summer are boycotting next month’s Australia Cup because they do not have new contracts with the U.S. Soccer Federation.

“These young women have brought honor to their sport and have given their absolute best to U.S. Soccer and the American public,” foundation President Nancy Lieberman-Cline said. “They deserve better treatment.”

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The women sought a new contract proposal as early as September, but the federation preferred to begin negotiations on Dec. 1.

The players asked for $18,000 apiece to compete in four games, three in Australia and one against Norway in February. Under the old contract, which the federation wanted to continue, the players would have made $6,300 each. The federation picked 18 replacement players last week to compete in Australia.

Jurisprudence

An unidentified woman is alleging that former welterweight champion Oscar De La Hoya sexually assaulted her, a charge De La Hoya has denied through his attorney.

De La Hoya has not been arrested or questioned by police, who are investigating the allegation, which was made at about 3:30 a.m. Monday after the woman and two other females were asked to leave a party at De La Hoya’s West L.A. home.

LAPD officers answered a call from one of the three ejected party-goers at about 2:30.

The sexual assault charge was not made by the woman until she showed up at the Hollenbeck Division about an hour later.

“The victim alleged that she was the victim of a sexual assault and that Oscar De La Hoya was the perpetrator,” said Cmdr. Dave Kalish of the Los Angeles Police Department.

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“The true facts,” according to a statement released by Bob Chapman, De La Hoya’s attorney, “are that three individuals created a disturbance at Mr. De La Hoya’s house. . . . Apparently one of those individuals thereafter made a false report in order to embarrass Mr. De La Hoya.”

Golf

Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia head a field of 12 in this week’s $3.5-million Williams World Challenge at Grayhawk in Scottsdale, Ariz. The event, a fund raiser for the Tiger Woods Foundation, is sanctioned by the PGA Tour but is not an official tour event.

Meanwhile, Woods said he hasn’t decided whether he will play in next month’s Phoenix Open, the tournament where he was harassed by an armed and apparently intoxicated man last January.

A fan carrying a concealed weapon was wrestled to the ground and arrested during the final round. The incident occurred just after Woods had teed off on the sixth hole.

Miscellany

Investigators say there was nothing out of the ordinary that might have caused the crash of a plane that was going to pick up South Carolina football Coach Lou Holtz. The National Transportation Safety Board’s preliminary report said all flight operations were normal when the Beech King Air turboprop was making its approach to Lady’s Island, S.C., on Dec. 19.

Pilot Dewey “Sonny” Foster, 65, of Columbia, S.C., was killed in the crash.

Former Carolina Panther receiver Rae Carruth underwent DNA tests to determine whether he fathered the baby whose mother he is accused of killing. Carruth and authorities have said he is the father of 6-week-old Chancellor Lee Adams, but confirmation was needed for a custody hearing.

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Roger Staubach, Red Grange, Herschel Walker and O.J. Simpson were named starters on the Walter Camp Foundation’s All-Century college football team. Others included Ron Yary and Ronnie Lott of USC and Ken Easley of UCLA. Reserves included Brad Budde and Tim McDonald of USC and Jerry Robinson and John Lee of UCLA.

Officials dismissed two protests against Danish-Australian yacht Nokia, and its record time of 1 day 19 hours 48 minutes 2 seconds for the 630-nautical-mile race from Sydney to Hobart, Australia, will stand.

Germany’s Dieter Baumann, the gold medalist in the 5,000 meters at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, faces a two-year ban from the German athletics federation after a second urine sample showed traces of the banned steroid nandrolone.

Winter Sports

The United States, featuring a team of 10 NHL draftees, beat Slovakia, 1-0, for its first victory in the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Sweden. Adam Hall of Michigan State scored in 14th minute.

The victory at Skelleftea kept the Americans unbeaten in Pool A. They tied the Czech Republic, 2-2, in their opening game.

Skier Anita Wachter of Austria won for the first time this season on the World Cup circuit, taking a women’s giant slalom race at Leinz, Austria. . . . Peter Schlickenrieder of Germany edged Havard Solbakken of Norway in a photo finish to win a men’s cross-country freestyle World Cup sprint event at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.

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