Saturday, September 7, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAISY Page Seven Satrda,.Spebr7 98TEMIHGNDIYPg ee I .Horton sparks Bengals as McLain captures 28th Twins defeated in 8-3 rout; vWillie's 5 rbi's pace victory T 4 Graebner, Ashe head strong U.S. bid as amateur upsets spark tennis play By JEFF LISS Special to. The Daily DETROIT-The Tigers cut their magic number to 13, and Denny McLain sliced his magic number *to 2 as the Bengals wiped the Minnesota Twins 8-3 last night at Tiger Stadium. McLain allowed 8 hits and struck out 12 batters to become the first American League pitch- er to win 28'games since Detroit's Hal Newhouser won 29 in 1944. He needs only two more wins to become the first major leaguer to win 30 games in one season in' over 30 years. Southpaw Jim Kent * dail sports NIGHT EDITOR: ANDY BARBAS cessive singles and Al Kaline drove McAuliffe home and Stanley to third with a double to left. Willie Horton followed Kaline by blast- ing his 32nd homerun of the sea- son far into the night and the Tigers led 4-0. Twin shortstop Greg Nettles spoiled McLain's shutout bid early by 'parking a second inning Mc- Lain offering in a right field seat. Right fielder Jim Northrup made a valiant but vain leap for the ball. , Tiger \ Manager Mayo Smith added his own type of fireworks in the top of the third when he questioned a safe call on a Tiger pickoff attempt at second base. He argued long enough to earn an ovation fro'm the crowd of 42,269, but not long enough to be thumbed from the premises. Detroit added two runs and changed Kaat, in the fourth. Bill Freehan opened with a single and moved to second on Northrup's safety to right. Both advanced a base on Twin backstop John Rose- borro's passed ball, and Freehan trotted home with Northrup going to third on Don Wert's single. Minnesota Manager Cal Ermer had seen enough of Kaat, so he called for Dave Boswell as a fan in the right field grandstand yell- ed "that's it, Ermer. Bring in some fresh meat." D i c k Tracewski brought in the sixth Tiger run, charged to Kaat, when he forced. Wert at second, allowing Tracew- ski to score. The Twins registered twice in- the fifth. Frank Quillici led off with a triple and scored on Cesar Tovar's third single of the night. Tover went to second on Rich Reese's single and scampered to third as Horton misplayed. He then scored on Rich Rollins' double. Horton drove in his fourth and fifth runs of the night in the home half of the seventh when he doubled in Stanley and Kaline. From that point, with a five run cushion, McLain coasted the rest of the way. -Associated Press CONGRATULATIONS ARE IN ORDER as Willie Horton got the Tigers off to a fast start with a first inning homer. Horton slammed his thirty-second homerun of the season off Minnesota's Jim Katt with Mickey Stanley and Al Kaline on board. The Tigers went on to win 8-3, and extended their league lead to nine as Baltimore lost.$ FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (P) - A chilling, all-day rain postponed the ninth day's program yester- day with Clark Graebner of New York on the verge of completing a surprising virtual amateur take- over of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships. Two amateurs-America's Davis Cup ace, Arthur Ashe, and Hol- land's spectacular Tom Okker, al- ready are out =to the men's semi- finals and Graebner is only four games away. On the sidelines - beaten in a wave of upsets-are such pro stars as Rod Laver, Tony Roche, Roy Emerson, Pancho Gonzales and, Andres Gimeno. The amateurs have grabbed the scalps of nine men pros and three women pros in the past week. "The kids have come along fast- er than anybody anticipated," said Jack Kramer, the onetime king of the courts. Arthur Ashe is the most 'improved player I've seen in 'a long time.'He is young and strong. So is Okker. Either is cap- able of winning the title here. I like Ashe." Because of the rain, the sched- ule which normally would have been played yesterday moves to' today, putting off the women's singles final to tomorrow and the men's final to Monday. Today's program now begins with the women's semifinal match between top-seeded Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., and Maria Bueno of Brazil. The winner must meet Virginia Wade, the pretty British amateur who knocked off second-seeded pro Ann, Haydon Jones in the semifinals. In the second match, Grabner and John Newcombe of Australia will complete their quarter-final duel, which was halted by dark- ness Thursday with Graebner, Ashe's Davis Cup teammate, lead- ing the fourth-seeded Aussie two sets to one, 5-7, 11-9, 6-1, and the score tied at 2-2 with no service break in tho fourth. Also on the card is the remain- ing quarter-final duel between third-seeded Ken Rosewall of Australia, the tournament favor- ite, and Dennis Ralston of Bakers- field, Calif. The semifinal pairing today sends Ashe against the Graebner- Newcombe winner, giving the United States a better than 50-50 chance of having a man in the finals. Should Graebner and Ralston come through, joining Ashe, it would make the first time in 17 years .America has placed three men in the semifinals. Rosewall is the lone survivor of the MacCall troupe which includes such standouts as Gonzales, Laver, Emerson and Gimeno. Newcombe is the only man still alive from Hunts so-called "H a n d s o m e Eight," and he's on slippery ground. Okker, as a registered player, has chosen to play for the $16,000 first prize, which he can take under the relaxed international rules. The matches will be televised by CBS 4-6 p.m. EDT today and 3-5 p.m. EDT tomorrow. absorbed his eleventh loss 12 wins. againstI CARDS DROP TWO: Baltimore falls, drops 9 back FOOD THINGS Come In Small Packages The win upped Detroit's log to 90-52, 9 games ahead of second place Baltimore who lost to Chi- cago 3-2. The Tigers set off the fireworks early, as, they tallied four times in the first frame. Dick McAuliffe and Mickey Stanley stroked suc- Two go! DETROIT: McAuliffe 2b Stanley cf KaUne lb Cash lb W. Horton If Freehan c Northrup rf Wert 3b j Trcewski ss McLain p Total ab 4 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 3 33 r h bi 1 1 0 2 2 0 100 x 2 5 1 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 8 11 7 BALTIMORE (P)-Buddy Brad- ford led off the 11th inning with his fifth 'home run of the season, Chicago's third solo shot of the game, and the White Sox dealt Baltimore's slim pennant hopes another blow, edging the Orioles 3-2 last night. The setback, Baltimore's sev- enth in the last 10 games, dropped the Orioles nine games behind American League-leading Detroit, which beat Minnesota. Bradford connected with an op- posite-field shot over the right field fence against Pete Richert, third Baltimore pitcher. Gerry McNertney and Pete Ward hit the other Chicago ho- mers in the fifth and sixth in- nings, against starter Jim Hardin. * * * ST. LOUIS (I)-Reliever Frank Linzy extinguished St. Louis ral- lies in both games last night and San Francisco swept a twi-night doubleheader from the Cardinals, defeating Bob Gibhon 3-2 in the opener and winning the nightcap 8-7 for Juan Marichal's 25th vic- tory of the season. Linzy rescued Bob Bolin in the first game as the Giants tagged Gibson with his second loss in his last 20 starts. The Giants had piled up a big lead in the second game on a two-. run double by Jim Hart in the seventh inning and Willie Mays' 18th homer in the eighth. The double loss kept St. Louis' magic number for clinching the National League pennant at nine. Any combination of nine Cardinal victories or San Francisco defeats will wrap it up. MINNESOTA ab r h bi Tovar cf 4 1 3 1 Reese lb 4 0 2 0 Rollins 3b 4 0 1 1 Allison, If 4 0 0 0 Nettles rf 4 1 1 1 R ~oseboroc 3 0 0 0 Renick .sit 3 0 0 0 Kilie brew ph". 1 0 0 0 Quilici 2b 4 1 1/ 0 Kaat p 1 00 Boswell pi 0 0 0 0 Holtrph 1 00 B. Miller' p 0 0 0 0 Look ph 1 0 1 0 Perrnoski p 0 0 0 0 Xostro ph 1 00 0 AW Total 35 3 9 3 Minnesota 010 020 000-3 Detroit 400 200 20x-8 E--W. Horton, Renick. DP--Detroit 1. LOB-Mlnnesota 6, Detroit 5. 2B- ol- lins, Northrup, W. Horton. 3B--Quilici. HR-W. Horton 32, Nettles 1. SB- Tovar, Roseboro. S-McLain, Tracewski. ip I r erbb so Kaat L, 12-11 3V 7 6 6 0 1 Boswell . 0 0 0 1 0 B. Miller 2 1 0 0' 0 2 Perranoski 2 3 2 2 1 2 MeLain W, 28-5 9 9 3 3 1 12 WP--Koot. PB-Freehan. T-2:22. A- 42,269. U.S. drivers Unser, Andretti banned, by Grand Prix ruling Great Stuff for the Apartment' Free Delivery in Ann Arbor THE OLD BRICK ANTIQUES 512 So. Main 761-0696 STORE HOURS- 9 A.M. td7 P.M-... Closed Sundays and Holidays ItI I CHARGE IT! * CH Prescriptions t heCosmetics t Men's Toiletries A~o~ ecu 10~ 1 112 South University na Phone 663-5533 Highest Quality Always MONZA, Italy (R) - Two Unit- ed States drivers were banned Friday from Sunday's Grand Prix of Italy Formula-One auto race because they insisted on partici- pting in the Hoosier hundred in Indianapolis on Saturday.' Organizers of the Grand Prix said the ban on Mario Andretti and Bob Unser was based on the rule forbidding drivers to partici- pate in any other race started less than 24 hours before the Monza start. Andretti and Unser left by plane for Indianapolis after Fri- day's official trials with plans to participate in Saturday's Hoosier Hundred. In the trials Andretti drove a Lotus-Ford and Unser a BRM. Each qualified easily. Their plans were to fly back to Monza Saturday night and ar- rive Sunday in time to participate in the Grand Prix. John Surtees of England, driv- ing a Honda, turned in the day's fastest time, spinning over the 3:5-mile flat course at an average speed of 149.06 miles an hour. His time was 1 minute, 26 seconds. Graham Hill of Britain, was second with 1:26.57 in his Lotus Ford with Denis Hulme of New I Come down TONIGHT 'til 6 P.M. HENDERSON FORD '68 CLEARANCE SALE i Major League Standings GOHI GOUT of I AMERICAN LEAGUE - W L Pct. Detroit 90 52 .634 Baltimore 81 61 .570 xBoston 76 65 .539 xCleveland 76 68 .528 New York 70 70 .500 lOakland 71 71 .500 Minnesota 67 76 .472 xCalifornia 61 81 .430 ~p Chicago 61 82 .427 Washington 56 84 .400 x--Late games not included. NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 9 13 15 19 19 23 29 29 33 'St. Louis San Francisco Cincinnati Chicago #Atlanta Pittsburgh Philadelphia Housto New York Los Angeles W 89 77 72 74 72 69 66 64 64 63 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit $, Minnesota 3, night Chicago 3, Baltimore 2, 11 inn. night Cleveland at Oakland, night Boston at California, night TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Oakland Boston at California minnesota at Detroit Chicago at Baltimore Washington at New York YESTERDAY'S Philadelphia 5, Chicago 2 Los Angeles 6, 8, Cincinnati San Francisco 3, 8, St. Louis Atlanta 7, Houston 1 Pittsburgh 2, New York 1 TOD2AY'S GAMES Houston at Atlanta San Francisco at St. Louis Los Angeles at Cincinnati Philadelphia at Chicago New York at Pittsburgh Pct. GB Zealand third in his McLaren .622 -- Ford in 1:26.61. .542 11% 518 15 ,514 15% .507 16% .489 22 468 22 CAMPUS MOTORS 451 24 2Sales and Service .44 25%2 436 25 z RESULTS SEIL LOSE UT 4,6 '68 Americans $1858 2, 7 '68 Javelins $2595 - Inc. Auto. 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