• active hurl r, with the A's, holdin& a place near the of the career Ii lS in relief wins and aves ... Goo had his bre through eason in 1975, leadin the A.L. in save for the White ox ... Hi lory years were 197 I, when hi dependable perform led to many Y wee vlCtori ... 'The hard­ 'thro ing righthander led th A.L. in aves in '78 and 'SO ... Thecardi from the 19 3 Fleer ilion, 3 I, his lut , orth 20 cents ... J hn Peter vH .' n W G ER was on of the fir t Hall of Famers. and during his areer w called th best player ever by m ny '" In the 1909 World erie hi Pirate bear Iy Cobb's Tiger . in a legendary matchup •. ith "Hon .. hitting to Cobb' .231 ... "The Flyrn Dutchman" won eight balling champion hip ... The card is from the 1915 Sporting ews sct.;' 1 &4, orth 600 today in top condition ... Sports Quiz by Larry Duncan SUPER BOWLS 0 BORES? 1. What players perticipated in the first« ver Super Bowl touchdown in Super Bowl 11 2. arne the first kicker to connect on four field g Is in a Super Bowl. 3. Name th first-ever team not to score a touchdown in Super Bowl play. 4. arne the only New York Jet to ever score a touchdown in Super Bowl play. S. arne the fir t-ever te m to : scar. fety in Super Bowl pl y. 6. me the first-ever team to score over 40. points in Super Bowl gan1e. . 7. Name th only Super Bowl team to score five touchdowns in one quarter. 8. arne the low scoring Super Bowl game to date. Sports Quiz Answers 1. Bart Starr threw Willie McGee a 37 y rd TO; 2. Don Chandler of Gr en B y in Super Bowl II; 3. i mi Dolphins in Super Bowl V; . tt Snell i Super Bowl m. S. Pit­ rgh Steelers in Super Bowl IX vs. Minnesota; 6. Chicago Bears t the ew England P triots in Super­ Bowl XX 46-10; 7. shington R ins in Super Bo I xxn, 8. iami be t Washington 14-7 in Super Bowl VII By HARRY . ANDERSO • JR. SpflCl., to th. Michigan Cltlz n D orr-Located aero rom Detr it City Airport, there' a chool know to few, but unknown to m ny. � I C I tion once known for th famo DeLaSalle collegia now 10- cat d in Warren. lthou h it h a high rollment of 75- tudents, it h on of the be t CIa D ba kerb II programs in the t�te. The n�me of the. chool is th Evangelical Chri tian Academy, a mall private chool on Detroit's orth t Side. Although over- hadowed by the like of e t sid basketball powers Per hing, orthern, E t Catholic, Cas Tech and Denby, third year he d c ach Ron Womack is very confident of hi quad which is compri ed tl y of Clas A caliber ball "0 E THI G W ort of peered was the quality of players we have on our team," Womack aid. "We play in a area of the city which i ri .h in ba kctball talent. , Al though a greater number of talent attend East Catholic, Northern, Cas' Tech, Pershing and Denby we get a good crop here. """ "It' difficult to play in the shadow of the other east side chools because of our ize and schedule, we're not fortunate to schedule teams like Ket­ tering, Denby, Southwestern or Per- hing." Womack, who's also the chool's athletic director, tries to put hi best foot forward to schedule schools in classes A and B but runs into problems at times. "Sometimes when I attempt to make a schedule I call orne of the clas A and B schools in the city and the suburb ," Womack explained .• 11 don't know if it intimidation factor HARRY DEASON. Jr.Mktllgan Evangelical Academy players chat with assistant coach during a break at practice. • or what but a lot of cl A, B and C htt want to play us .... · NICKNAMED THE JETS, be­ cause of their location near Detroit City Airport, Evangelical Christian is a member of t Greater Metro Inde­ pendent Conference which com­ prises Evangelical Christian. Trinity Christian, Taylor Bapti t Park, Franklin Rose, and Taylor Light of Ufe. The Jets have dominated the con­ ference the past few years under Womack. The east side school has complied records of 15-5 in 1991 and 19-2 this past season. . So far this on the quad has been unbeaten and they've done It with a mall number of pi ye . "We only have 10 players on our varsi ty team and onl y 10 on the junior varsi ," Womack said. "We're trying to build our program through our (unior high program which has more players than our varsity and junior varsity." "We don't even have tryouts. Tho e who come out for the team are automatically on the team, but we have a winning program: Unlike the other private schools in the. area we don't even recruit here to attract players to our program." H�,!�yE_ . �!;�P MICS, not at tettes. Is the mo t important issue et Evangelical Christian. The standard of academic excel­ lence is strictly enforced by Womack and the school instructors.- "Education comes first," Womack said. "We have a lot of pride in our program and have one of the highest academic requirements in the state. You can't have any F's on report card (luring the semester. Even if you have a "B" averag�, if you have an "F" you cannot play the entire semester." Womack is not only the boys bas­ ketball coach, he's also the athletic director and girls basketball coach as . well. the chool' athletic director he' not only re ponsible for the eduling 0 gam , but make ure that the players not only 0 to , but do I in h001. THE JETS head coach explai that there were attemp to try other ports, butbeca of their very mall ize, it' been a task to maintain and create other va itv athleti . "Basketball is the only va ity port we have." Womack id. "We try to develop varsity ports for girls volleyball, girls softball, boy baseball and boys and girls track. . However, b cause of our ize of 7S to 80 tudents it' pretty hard to find enough- people interested. It doesn't take a lot of kids to run a basketball program." Because the Jets have a hard time cheduling games Womack hopes to put the Evangelical Chri tian Academy into. the Metro Conference which comprises teams from Hamtramck, Lutheran West (Detroit), Lutheran North (Mount Clemens), Lutheran East (Harper Woods), Lutheran Westland,. Lutheran Northwest (Rochester Hills). University-Ligget (Grosse POinte), Cranbrook (Bloomfield Hills), Clareneeville (Uvoni ), and Harper 00' �-. � "The Metro Conference is mostly Class C schools," Womack said. "Not only are the teams more com­ petitive, we won't have a hard time scheduling games to play." . "THIS YEAR WE are scheduled to play Ecorse and Covert, one of the top ranked teams in Class 0, twice. this year. We are still working out things with teams like Kettering-and Bishop Gallagher for games later on in the season." Womack concluded that the En­ vangelical Christian Academy has the potential to grow, not just as a basketball power, but as a institution of education a well. DHA working hard, to promote kid .By Harry M. Ander on. Jr. SpfIC. I to ttt. Michigan CItJz.n (Part four of a four -p�rt series) DETROIT _" Recognition. It's ornething that kids strive for and the Detroit Hockey Association is striv­ ing for it's pla�ers not just thernsel­ ves. Every year th assocaition learns something new to help their kids beyond the Jack Adams Arena and the Detroit Police Athletic League. (PAL). One of the opportunitie the DHA i trying to-obtain for the ki to play hockey are COllege scholarship. Tr vel coach George Adam ex­ plain d that recruiting kids to play college i n't like. recruiting kid to play COllege football, ba ketball, baseball or track' and field. "In h key it' not a. matter of ka ti ng r a particular team and all of a uddcn all the college recruuers would me down to the rink and offer them h ck y cholar hip ,". Adams a.ld."There' different paths kid hav t 0 through and certian thin r[anll tions have to do to get their kid xpo ed to college recruite ." "I've talked to former Red Wing and urrent University Of Michigan h key coach Red Berenson and he gave me me pointers on recruiters. We're till w rking on getting con­ nection or our kid to obtain chol hip for college." "One thing about college recruiters is that they don't go to high . school hockey games to recruit players. Most of the recruiting is through amatuer hockey group like' 0UI'S. We;re starting to find out as hockey associations get comfortable with us pointers to help get our kids get colle-ge scholarships, so we're trying to position our-kids to get ex­ posure to get college cholarships." One way the DHA is helping their Rockies travel quad get expo UTe is going to tournaments outside of Michigan. "We travel to tournaments in Chicago, Indiana Buffalo, Ohio and Pittsburgh, " Owens said. "Since then we've been getting support from the United States Amatuer Hockey �- ociation, the major anctioningbody of amatuer hockey in the U.S." Another way of getting the DHA. exposure is through inviting other 01- ganizations down to the rink. This way players get to meet other players and gain exposure outside the Jack Adams House League. "The Red Wing have offered their upport by offering clinics to our kids," aid Sylvia Puckett, president of the DRA. "The Junior Red Wings made them elves available by spon­ soring orne of our kids to come to their games thi year. This happens a lot, not just a few times." But exposure.like everything else, takes money. Getting equipment for maller playerS to play in the 'Jack Players in a recent game at Jack Adam Adams House League, but when it come to travel squad it' a different tory. "When it comes to equipment it' affordable at the house league lei," Adam explained."When it come to older kids and travel qua you need to buy new and expensive equipment to competitive, "As kid. get older and the game ets more COJl1P titive, the . cost of equipment kyrockets. One way to combat it is ponsors. The Detroi t Hockey League for now has no ponso from the corporate world, but PAL and the Detroit Recreation Department. have defrayed orne of the cost. All of the members agreed that media exposre from local papers have kept the OHA going and hopes that more people will come in and nract coil g couts and ponso .