Page Eight, 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY _Friday, March 27) 1970 Page Eight, 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 27~ 1970 Aaron, Mays to Join immortal club By RICKEY CORNFELD Babe Ruth, Rogers Hornsby and. Joe Di Maggio failed to qualify for mem- bership in baseball's most exclusive club. Lou Gehrig, Frankie Frisch and Ted Williams never made the grade. All the more reason, then, for Hank Aaron and Willie Mays to celebrate when this year, they become the 3000- hit club's first new members since Stan Musial qualified in 1958 by cracking a double off Moe DraboVsky in Wrigley Field. Aaron and Mays will become only the ninth and tenth players since profes- sional baseball began a century ago to pass the 3000 career hit level. The others are Ty Cobb, 4192 hits; Musial, 3630; Tris Speaker, 3514; Cap Anson, 3425; Honus Wagner, 3415; Ed- die Collins, 3310; Napolean Lajoie, 3242; and -Paul Waner, 3152. To accomplish those totals takes more than great hitting ability. It takes per- severance and durability. It means es- caping unnecessary injuries and bounc- ing back from the unavoidable ones. And, of course, it takes luck.; It t a k e s 20 seasons averaging 150 safties to amass 3000 hits. The eight players who have done it all played well. into their forties. Ignoring Cap Anson, who played in the days of short seasons, the players averaged 168 hits a year. The average career was 21 full seasons. Totalling 3000 hits in these days of needs 74 and should get them by about August. That two players will join the club in the same season is not strange. In fact, one of the oddities of baseball is that this will be the third time that this has happened. Wagner and Lajoie both made it in 1914, Lajoie with his last hit of the season. Speaker and Collins got their 3000th hits in 1925. The difficulty in reaching 3000 hits is emphasized by_.the number of hitters who came just short of the mark. Be- sides Aaron and Mays, 13 players to- taled between 2800 and 3000 hits. The record for futility is Sam Rice, who came 13 short. A year in the mili- tary service during World War I was the difference. Ted Williams was another wartime casualty. Although he missed most of five seasons in the service, he was still only 346 short Yet it was war, oddly enough, that enabled Paul Waner to make his 3000th hit. Through the 1841 season, Big Poi- son had made 2956 hits, and his career seemed about over. Then because of wartime shortages of players, he was able to become a reg- ular again.- While playing w i t h the Dodgers, Braves and Yankees during the war, Waner passed the 3000 mark easily. Injuries stopped a number of players short. Wee Willie Keeler, who first said, "Hit 'em where they ain't", did so 68 times too few. two minor injuries during his career kept him out of the club. Hornsby, considered the greatest right-handed hitter ever, lacked 70 hits., A 1930 foot injury was the cause. George Sisler was in the middle of his career, with a lifetime average of .367, when an eye injury caused him to miss the entire 1923 campaign. The in- jury permanently affected his hitting, and his lifetime average ended up an anemic .340. He finished his career 189 hits short of 3000, a mark he surely would have passed but for the injury. A player who was literally stopped short of the mark because of illness was Gehrig. The same rare disease that, -at the age of 36, ended his consecutive t game streak and, as it turned out, his life as well, stopped his number of hits at 2721. A case equally tragic is that of Ed De- lahanty: You don't remember Big Ed? . He was a slugging, outfielder around the turn of the century whom some experts considered the greatest hitter ever - not excluding Ruth. During the dead-ball era Big Ed once hit four .home runs in a nine-inning game. His lifetime average is .346, the fourth, best ever. (It is third if you are one of those who refuses to recognize the banished Joe Jackson.) By July 16, 1903, during Delahanty's 6th m a j o r league season, he had, amassed 2597 career base hits. That day, Big Ed fell off a train - some people think he jumped - into Niagra Falls. Had he lived he would have surely reached 3000 hits. Then there is the Babe. The man who was voted last summer as the greatest of them all never reached t h e 3000 mark. Ruth was only 127 hits away when he retired. Had he not spent the first three-and- a-half years of his career as a pitcher, he would have made them with several hundred to spare. All this is not to say that the play- ers who made it were not struck by mis- fortunes. Musial missed a year in the service. Even Cobb was out parts of two seasons while hurt or ill. In fact, only Speaker and Wanes',, never missed much playing time. A 'few other current players seem'to have a chance, though slim, of making the club. Roberto Clemente, 35, has 2559 hits. Al Kaline, also 35, has 2446. Frank Robinson, 34, could m a k e it if he stretches his career out. He now has 2283 hits. But is likely that none of them will make it. The game of baseball and the process of aging have ways of frus- trating even the greatest players. U >hotos from "The Glory of Their Times" TY COBB slides into third. The great Tiger star compifed a ma- jor. league record of 4192 hits, 562 more than his closest rival, Stan Musial. TYPING PRINTING Avoid the Hassle Check our Rates and Professional Service CAMPUS MULTISERVICE 214 Nickels Arcade 662-4222 GRASS 49 (,j HANDBOOK +9 THE MARIJUANA MANUAL" Send $1.00 to Dart Enterprises,' P.O. Box 40, Village Station, New York, N.Y. 10014 J Ed Delahanty lower batting averages is especially dif- ficult. A lifetime average of .320 seems too much to ask of the players we see on the field today. Yet even averaging .320, a hitter needs 9375 at bats to make 3000 hits. Only 13 players in the history of baseball have had that many at bats. Because of the rarity of the act, it is a special treat this year to witness two players passing the magic 3000 mark. Aaron, 36, should get his 3000th hit early in the season. He is only 44 away. Mays, 38, will take a little longer. He the mini ad 1965 SUPER HAWK. $300, well taken care of miles. Wil sell to highest offer by Nov. 1. Andy-761-5930. Z2 with maxi power! ichael!.! (is here) 2 Homecomings are always better than one! I love you! lap FF Read and Use DAILY Classifieds 11. Maravich signs pact with Atlanta Hawks PREPARE FOR AUTUMN Baby Blue grow up By The Associated Press Pistol Pete Maravich, college basketball's. player of the year, will play professional ball with the Atlanta Hawks of the National. Basketball Association, his at- torney announced last night. The announcement was made at a news conference by Lester Lit- train, one of two attorneys who handled the negotiations . for Maravich, a three-time All-Amer- ican at Louisiana State University. Terms of the contract were not disclosed, but sources say Mara- vich signed for about $1.9 million, which would be the greatest amount ever paid a college athlete turning professional. Maravich, had been drafted No. 1 by the Carolina Cougars of the rival American Basketball Asso- ciation acd in recent weeks all speculation 'centered on Maravich signing with the ABA team. However, in a surprise move, FREE U FESTIVAL with the "Leaves of Grass" and "Cat's Cradle" Union Ballroom March 28-8-1 Tables to buyor sell crafts, Brinq your toys, your friends, or anything you want! FREE!! the Hawks made the No. 3 choice last Monday in the NBA draft and selected Maravich, who aver- aged .44.1 points per game throughout his three-year career at LSU. The NBA signed two more first round choices yesterday. The Phil- adelphia 76ers announced the signing of Al Henry of Wisconsin to a multi-year National Basket- ball Association contract. Terms of the contract for the 21-year-old, 6-foot-9 Henry were not disclosed, but the amount was said to be in six figures and was termed very satisfactory. Henry, a Memphis, Tenn., na- tive, played center at Wisconsin, averaged 17 points per game, and was second in Big Ten rebounding with an average of 12-a game. The Boston Celtics also an- nounced that they have signed Dave Cowens, their 6-foot-9 top draft choice from Florida State, to a three-year contract. Cowens, who had committed himself to the National Basketball Association before the draft, sign- ed for a reported $270,000. He also was the No. 1 pick of Los Angeles of the Americap Basketball As- sociation. The ABA did not get completely shut out in the day's episode of the pro basketball bidding war. Bobby Croft of Tennessee, first round choice of the ABA's Dallas Chap- parals says he will play for the Chaps, but it will cost the Texans more money. The 6-foot-10 Croft, a native of Hamilton, Ont., who captained the University of Tennessee's basket- ball squad last season, was drafted by the Chapparals in the ABA's first round of selections. However, Croft says he wants to play for the Kentucky Colonels in Louis- ville, Ky. By TERRI FOUCHEY Last spring very few people on campus outside of the football coaches were familiar with the names Taylor (both Bill and Mike), Doughty, Keller, Gram- bau, Darden, and Murdock. Even fewer knew what to expect from them concerning football playing ability. Well, by mid-November their names and football talent had become evident to a lot of people outside of their coaches and teammates. Now that the above-mentioned young men have earned their let- ters and are juniors the question: which of this year's crop . of "rookies" will burst on the scene in a blaze of glory and m a k e names for themselves?, is on the coaches' minds. CONCERNING the sophomores, coach Jim Young has this to say, "It's too early to say who'll be first team since we've only had seven practices. At the moment none of the sophomores are play- ing first team but any of them could break in." Sandusky, O h i o seems to be making a habit of ,producing Michigan defensive lacks and "Bo" Rather is their third con- tribution to the position. Young commented on his play this spring, "Rather has shown excel- lent ability to play pass defense. He's also done some really fine tackling." Rather may be taking the place of graduated fellow townsman Brian Healy and could be -joining another fellow San- duskyite Tom Darden in the back- field. ANOTHER PROSPECT stolen out of Ohio f r o m right under Woody's nose who has a chance of "breaking in" is Clint Spear- man. At present Spearman is the second team defensive end and 'p -Daily--Sara Krulwich Gridiron rites of spring Young feels he has excellent po- tential for the position. Al "Cowboy" Walker is getting his chance at running back. In practices so far Young rates Walker's performance as demon- strating fine running ability and, "more important, he has f in e blocking talent." THE PLACES WHERE Young expects the sophomores to be of greatest help are in the defensive secondary and on the-second team offensive line. -"Right now several sophomores are backing up the defensive secondary and I think several will end up there." hI L Cronin offers to rehire umps; SSouth, Africa to host Ashe? .By The Associated Press " BOSTON - Joe Cronin, president of the American League said yesterday that an offer of reconciliation had been made to two um- pires fired in 1968. But Cronin said one of the umpires, Al Salerno, Oid not accept what Cronin called the "generous offer" that was made to both him and Bill Valentine. Jack Sheehan, public relations director for the American League, said "both had to accept together-just let it go at that." The offer, Cronin said, included a trial period of work in the minor leagues which "it was hoped would result in their return to the American League." 0 JOHANNESBURG - Arthur Ashe, center of a controversy which ended in South African's ouster from the 1970 Davis Cup com- petition, may play in this country after all, the Afrikaans-language daily Die Vaderland reported yesterday. 0 GREENVILLE, SC. - Joe Williams seems on the verge of accepting the Furman University head basketball coaching job but said he would not make a decision for a couple of days. ovE rv vt5: is iMiit :it . 3r Going. to Europe?, Need a car but don't think you can afford it? Try our unbelievably LOW PRICE BUY or LEASE European Motor Service 331 S. 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