Advertisement

Head Injury Sidelines Indy Driver Scott Sharp

From Staff and Wire Reports

Scott Sharp will miss the Indianapolis 500 May 25 because of a head injury he suffered in a crash during practice last Friday.

The 29-year-old racer from Danville, Calif., was knocked unconscious when his car slammed into the wall. He regained consciousness but was hospitalized overnight.

Sharp was back at the track Saturday, hoping to be cleared to drive by early this week, but a subsequent CT scan revealed a brain bruise.

Advertisement

“We’re just hoping that Scotty will be back for [an Indy Racing League race at Fort Worth, Texas, June 7],” car owner A.J. Foyt said. “For his health and everybody concerned . . . we elected to stick with the doctors because they know best.”

Sharp’s fast lap of 217.402 mph, run two days before his crash Friday, was the third-fastest since practice began May 6. Only pole-winner Arie Luyendyk and Tony Stewart, who took the middle of the front row, have been faster.

Sharp, who also bruised his right knee in a crash earlier in the week, had started three consecutive Indy 500s. His best finish was 10th last May.

Advertisement

Davey Hamilton qualified over the weekend in one of Foyt’s G Force-Aurora cars in the middle of the third row for the 33-car field, at 214.484.

Tennis

Her knee sound and her spirits upbeat, Steffi Graf returned to competitive tennis after a 100-day layoff in which she was dethroned by Martina Hingis as the game’s No. 1 player.

She and doubles partner Ines Gorrochategui lost on opening day of the German Open at Berlin to Rika Hiraki and Florencia Labat, 4-6, 6-3, 3-6.

Advertisement

The seven-time Wimbledon winner will play Chanda Rubin today in her first singles match.

*

Thomas Muster began his quest for a record third consecutive Italian Open title with a straight-sets victory at Rome. Muster, seeded third, defeated Italian wild-card entry Marzio Martelli, 6-3, 6-2.

The victory gave Muster a 4-4 record on clay this year; he was 111-5 during 1995-96.

The first seeded player to lose was No. 16 Mark Philippoussis of Australia, who was beaten by Morocco’s Karim Alami, 6-2, 6-0.

Yachting

Veteran yachtsman Syd Fischer and the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia announced in Sydney the formation of an America’s Cup syndicate to challenge the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron in 2000.

It will be Fischer’s fifth bid to win the Cup, equaling the record of British yachtsman Sir Thomas Lipton in the 1920s and 1930s.

Final bids close Wednesday. Eleven syndicates have paid a deposit and been officially verified. The winner of the challenger eliminations will meet Team New Zealand off Auckland in a nine-race America’s Cup series starting Feb. 28, 2000.

Miscellany

Texas Tech, awaiting possible punishment for exceeding financial limits on scholarships, was one of eight schools picked to play host to regional competition in the NCAA Division I baseball tournament beginning May 22.

Advertisement

Texas Tech, the top team in the Big 12 Conference, will be the host for the Central Regional. Ron Maestri, chairman of the Division I baseball committee, said the panel saw no reason to exclude Texas Tech since the case is still under consideration.

Former boxing champion Nigel Benn testified at London that he was not the man who smashed an ashtray into a former business partner’s face in a nightclub. The 33-year-old retired fighter is accused of shattering the nose of ticket agency owner Ray Sullivan at a London nightclub last September.

International Sports & Event Marketing, which runs the Toshiba Senior Classic golf tournament, will look for a new home for the event after negotiations Newport Beach Country Club ended. Bob Neely, the president of ISM, said possible new sites for the Senior PGA Tour tournament include Tustin Ranch, Coto de Caza, Dove Canyon and Oak Creek.

Advertisement