Pedro wavers in 1st outing (AP) In his first outing of the spring, Pedro Martinez looked noth ing like the unhittable pitcher of last September and October. Then again, it was spring training. “Everything went fine. Those are not the results I would like,” he said Monday after allowing three runs and three hits in two innings as the Boston Red Sox lost to the Texas Rangers 13 6 on Monday. Using mostly fastballs, Martinez gave up a double, triple and homer while throwing 32 pitches. In the first inning, Martinez faced Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez with one out and a runner on third. The Rangers catcher edged Martinez for the American League Most Valuable Player last season when two writers left Martinez off their ballots because they didn’t think pitchers should get the award. Martinez won this much less important matchup, getting Rodriguez on a called strike on the outside comer. “I like challenges,” Martinez said. “Pudge is one of the players I like to face, and he’s going to be one of the players I want to face most of the time in spring training so I know how to get him out.” The other matchup should have been more one-sided - the AL Cy Young Award winner who was 23-4 with a major league-best 2.07 ERA and AL-high 313 strikeouts vs. Luis Alicea, who has 36 homers in 10 sea sons. •• Even though it s spring training, you like facing good teams...” Jaret Wright pitcher, Cleveland Indians In other Florida games: Expos ll,Mets6 At Jupiter, Fla.- Hideki Irabu pitched three innings in his first start of the spring and had an RBI single in a seven-run first. New York starter Bobby J. Jones failed to retire a batter, allowing seven runs, six hits and three walks. Rondell White had a two-run double and Chris Widger a two-run single before Irabu’s hit. Braves 12, Blue Jays 2 At Dunedin, Fla. - Tom Glavine pitched two hitless innings in his first outing of the spring, and Brian Jordan homered off Gary Glover. Toronto reliever John Bale was ragged for five runs, including a three-run homer by Marcus Giles. Jeff Horn hit a two-run homer for Atlanta in a three-run ninth off Lance Painter. Astros 8, Cardinals 7 At Kissimmee, Fla. - Daryle Ward, who has bounced between the major leagues and the minors, hit his second homerun in two days. Ward, the son of former big-leaguer Gary Ward, hit a solo homerun off reliever Mike Matthews in the seventh to put the Astros ahead 7-6. He homered Sunday off five-time Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens. The fifth pitch was a fastball that didn’t go as far inside as Martinez would have liked. Alicea sent it over the 20-foot wall in right field fdr a second-inning homerun. “I could have gotten Alicea out, maybe, with some other pitches, but that’s not exactly what I want,” Martinez said. “I don’t want to get hurt trying to get Alicea out in spring training.” At Winter Haven, Fla., Richie Sexson drove in four runs with a homerun and a double as Cleveland routed the Yankees 15-1, dropping New York to 0-5 this spring. The World Series champions have been outscored 49-16 and have not held a lead in any game this year. Sexson’s second spring-training homer came in the fourth inning off reliever Mike Buddie. He added a two-run double during an eight-run fifth. * Pirates 11, Reds 4 At Bradenton, Fla. - Aramis Ramirez, trying to win Pittsburgh’s job at third base, went three for four with a grand slam off Dennys Reyes that capped a six-run seventh. Ramirez is six for 10 (.600) with seven RBI in his first three games this spring. Phillies 5, Tigers 4 At Clearwater, Fla. - shortstop Kevin Polcovich botched a potential game-ending double play for Detroit’s sixth error, allowing two runs to score. Detroit made three errors in the ninth inning. Jaret Wright pitched two hitless innings in his spring debut. Wright, trying to hang on to the fifth spot in the Indians’ starting rotation, needed just 18 pitches to retire his six batters. “Even though it’s spring training, you like facing good teams, and it’s still the Yankees,” Wright said. “It’s always good to skate by that first one and get it out of the way.” Carlos Perez, who struggled last year, was pounded for six runs and five hits in two innings as the Los Angeles Dodgers were routed by the Baltimore Orioles 17-3 in Vero Beach, Fla. After signing a $15.6 million, three-year contract, Perez went 2-10 with a 7.43 ERA last season. “This is the first game,” Perez said. “I’m still working. It’s no big deal.” All five games in Arizona were wiped out by rain. Marlins 6, Royals 4 At Haines City, Fla. - Josh Beckett, Florida’s top draft pick last year, pitched two hitless innings and Mendy Lopez hit a three-run homer. Carlos Beltran singled twice and drove in two runs for the Royals. Beltran has five RBI in Kansas City’s four games, all losses. Twins 4, Devil Rays 1 At Fort Myers, Fla. - Brad Radke, the subject of trade rumors all spring, allowed one run and three hits in three innings. Radke, unable to get a multi year contract by his Feb. 20 deadline, was making his second outing of the spring. Tampa Bay’s lineup was miss ing Jose Canseco, Vinny Castilla and Greg Vaughn, who did not make the trip from St. Petersburg, Fla. p.m. JVebraska Union sponsored by RHA and the Daily Nebraskan ISU’s Fizer, Longhorns’ Mihm heads list of All-Big 12 stars ■ Iowa State guard Jamaal Tinsley provides surprise in selections. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Marcus Fizer, whose forceful pres ence led Iowa State to its first confer ence championship in 55 years, heads a parade of unanimous selections for The Associated Press All-Big 12 bas ketball team. In an unprecedented show of una nimity, a panel of sportswriters and sportscasters who cover the Big 12 on a regular basis also named Oklahoma State’s Desmond Mason, Oklahoma’s Eduardo Najera and Texas 7-footer Chris Mihm to every first-team ballot. For the fifth first-team spot, Iowa State point guard Jamaal Tinsley, who ranked in the top three in the Big 12 in both steals and assists, outpolled Colorado guard Jaquay Walls. Mason, 6 feet, 6 inches, and Najera, 6 feet, 8 inches, are the only seniors on the first team. Fizer, 6 feet, 8 inches, Mihm and Tinsley, a 6-foot 3-inch junior college transfer, are juniors. Fizer - leaner, quicker and smarter than he was as a pudgy sophomore who averaged 18 points - topped the Big 12 with a 22.8-point scoring aver age. “He is a man among boys,” said Colorado Coach Ricardo Patton. Fizer is barreling into the postsea son as one of the hottest players in the nation, averaging 32.6 points during the last five games by shooting 61 of 106 (.575) from the field. He has gone higher than 30 points in four of his last five games. “He’s a different guy. He’s more mature,” said Iowa State Coach Larry Eustachy. “He lets the game come to him. He dictates the game. The game dictated him last year.” Fizer and Tinsley were the key players in one of the biggest stories in basketball this season. With Tinsley providing what Oklahoma Coach Kelvin Sampson termed the finest point-guard play in the conference, the Cyclones went from 15-15 a year ago to a school record of 26-4. In pre season polls, they were not picked higher than sixth. In league games, the Cyclones went 14-2 in capturing their first con ference title since winning the Big Six in 1945. The top vote-getters on the second team were Texas forward Gabe Muoneke and Walls, whose 42 points in an overtime victory against Iowa State set a Big 12 record. They are joined by Missouri point guard Keyon Dooling, Nebraska cen ter Kimani Ffriend and Texas Tech guard Rayford Young. Tinsley, who didn’t play high school basketball, had 199 assists and made 75 steals. “Tinsley’s the best with the ball in his hands maybe in our league,” said Oklahoma Coach Kelvin Sampson. “In terms of creating, Tinsley might be the best.” Kansas Coach Roy Williams said, “He’s the best newcomer in the league for sure and has done more things at point guard than anybody else I can think of.” Najera, who came to Oklahoma four years ago from his native Mexico hardly able to speak English, will leave as one of the most popular Sooners ever. He was second to Fizer with an 18.5 scoring average and sec ond to Mihm with 9.5 rebounds a game. He probably leads the conference in bumps and bruises and headlong dives to the floor in pursuit of loose balls. “There’s a significant difference between being a star and being a team mate,” said Sampson. “Eduardo is a humble kid, a mild, humble, modest soul. I’m a better person for having had the opportunity to coach him.” For his career, Najera ranks 1 Oth in school history in scoring, sixth in rebounding, seventh in steals and sixth in blocked shots Mihm led the Big 12 with 19 dou ble-doubles last season and is again at the top with 17 this season. His 10.4 rebound average is the best in the league and his 17.8 points are sixth. “He’s just a monster,” said Larry Eustachy. “He scores so easy. He’s just so big and has such a nice touch around the basket.” Mason was third in the conterence with 18.1 points per game and the most important contributor to Oklahoma State’s 23-5 record. For Baylor Coach Dave Bliss, there is little difference in the quality of Najera, Mason and Mihm. “A coin flip,” he said. “Each of the three does so much for the team they’re playing on. They bring differ ent things. Najera, very few big men are as good a leader as he is for his team. Desmond Mason plays well at both ends of the floor and has really stepped up his offense. Chris Mihm is just overwhelming in the post.” Vikings look to sign Marino, but Dolphins say they’ll take quarterback back again MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - At least one team in the NFL doesn’t think Dan Marino is washed up. Dennis Green is trying to lure the league’s career-passing leader to Minnesota, where he would become the Vikings’ eighth starter in eight seasons. Marino turns 39 this year and has spent his entire 17-year career in Miami. He is considering an offer from the Vikings, but he’s also considering retirement. Marino was offered Minnesota’s starting quarterback job last week in talks with Green, two sources close to Marino and speaking on condition of anonymity confirmed Monday. Marino, who has never won a cham pionship, most likely will decide by the end of the week, one of the sources said. The offer was first reported Sunday night by ESPN and Fox Sports Net, cit ing unidentified sources. “I’m just flabbergasted,” Dolphins President Eddie Jones said. “I have no idea about Dan Marino and any report about him going anyplace. I know noth ing about where Dan’s head is at or what he plans to do.” But Jones said for the first time Monday that if Marino plays next sea son, the Dolphins want him. “Danny has been told he can come back,” Jones said. Green didn’t return phone calls from The Associated Press on Monday. Last week, he told his staff not to dis cuss the team’s quarterback situation in light of heavy criticism of his declara tion that Daunte Culpepper, his top draft pick last year, would enter camp as the projected starter. But Green told WAFN Radio in Miami he’d love it if Marino and the Vikings pursued their elusive champi onship rings together. “We think this is a perfect merger of a guy who wants one more year to get it done the right way and a team that’s looking for that one guy who wants one more year to get it right,” Green said. Floods. Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Rescues at sea. International peacekeeping missions. Whenever there’s a need, the National Guard and Reserve responds. But only with the unselfish support of thousands of employers like you. THANKS FOR MAKING US YOUR BUSINESS. student travel. itshere. Apetpatooza FEATURING: Blacklight Sunshine, lower case i, Blue Panic, M80, Guru WHEN: March 9th, 2000 7pm - Midnight tickets bn sale March WHERE: Centennial Ballroom, City Union 7-8, 10am - 2pm in COST: $4 in advance, $5 at the door the Union food court Proceeds to benefit Matthew Nolde SPONSORED BY: Abel Residence Association and PHRappa Alpha