Wednesday, October 2, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven- W e I s a , O t b r 2 9 8T E M C I A A L Paae Eleven Busch rumbles as 'Mound-Giants' ready. for clash Stanley at short? Mao0, Mayo, please! Mayo Smith has finally blown his cool. You know Mayo - he's the friendly, colorless fellow who runs a baseball club called the Detroit Tigers who spent most of the sum- mpr pounding the crap out of the rest of the league. He's tired, you say - it's easy to crack up after a pennant race. Right. But if his latest move goes the way it easily could, the World Series will make the season seem like a picnic and Mayo will get even more tired, from sleepless nights. On Sunday, our man Mayo announced that Mickey Stanley will open today's first game at shortstop. To ordinary folk, this is hardly stunning. To a Tiger fan, it surpasses such penny-ante decisions as The Bomb, the choice of Chicago as The Convention Site, and the Famous Bump Elliott Field Goal Attempt. Mayo has just stuck his 0neck out a mile. What has he done? First of all, he is saying that the way the Tigers won all year - and they won big - won't be good enough for the Cardinals. This.alone is hardly inspiring. But more important, he has taken the league's best centerfielder and stuck him at 'short. In doing so, he has weakened both positions. When Stanley boots a grounder in the ninth, or when a long fly grazes the top of Jim Northrup's glove in center' - a fly that Stanley would have had - all hell is going to descend on Mr. Smith's head. Oh, sure, it's a gutsy thing to do, as Joe Falls says. Stepping out of U Towers is gutsy, too. But you don't do it unless you're out of your mind, or the place is on fire. And Mr. Smith is not crazy, and the Ti- gers' chances have not gone up in smoke. Yet. It's fine to be gutsy, to gamble. But you can't use it to prove yourself, to respond to pressure. Maybe Mayo isn't doing this, but does he really think that Kaline's extra bat in the lineup will offset. the disaster pending at shortstop? I don't. What would you do? Well, first I'd move Stanley back to center- field, where:he feels right and belongs. Northrup would go back to right, where he's one of the best. Then I'd put Tracewski at short. Trixie is a, good fielder, an old hand and not an automatic out. That leaves Kaline and Cash to share first base, and that's where I'd put them. I'd use Kaline in St. Louis, where his consistent bat would benefit from spacious Busch Stadium, and Cash in Detroit, with those lovely, beckening rightfield seats. This wouldn't be easy. Kaline has endured too long not to play, and Cash is a real pro - a. player's player. And he's also been red- hot with the bat. But the Tigers have enough big bats as it is, and they shouldn't weaken their defense, in the World Series of all places, ' just to get another one. Maybe I'm all wet. I hope so, and good luck Mayo. You really socked it to 'em this time, old pal. And if the act bombs, there's al- ways tomorrow. Or next year. By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - Denny McLain, with 31 victories, is the American League's biggest winner in 37 years. Bob Gibson, with an earned run average of 1.12 is the National League's stingiest pitcher ever. They'll face each other today when Detroit takes on St. Louis in the first game of the World Series, but Mayo Smith isn't impressed. "You put two good pitchers against each other, and everybody builds them up as the biggest thing, since gangbusters," said Smith, who managed the Tigers to 103 victories this year. "Then the whole thing ends up disappointing. All pitching duels do. Often one of the pitchers gets bombed out." A victory over the Tigers this afternoon would vault Gibson in- to a tie for the most consecutive games won in a Series, a mark shared by Lefty Gomez and Red .?Sggvgg: g g :~ Opening (lay lineups DETROIT McAuliffe Stanley Kaline Cash Horton Northrup Freehan Wert McLain 2b ss rf lb if cf C 3b p ST. LOUIS Brock Flood Maris Cepeda McCarver Shannon Javier Maxvill Gibson If cf rf lb C 3b 2b ss p Ruffing, both of the New York Yankees. McLain, on the other hand, has no Series history. The last time the Tigers were in it in 1945, Den- ny was only one year old. He did slice off a piece of his- tory this season by winning 31 games-which made him the first pitcher to win that many since Lefty Grove in 1931. r averages : Final Tige Despite what his manager says, the match up is one of the most glamorous in Series play. For Gibson, the Tigers will have a slightly revised line-up. The re- vision revolves around the inser- tion of Mickey Stanley at short- stop. Smith wanted to get Al Ka- line into the line up, and the only way he could do it was by bringing Stanley in from center field. da ly sports NIGHT EDITOR: PAT ATKINS More Sports, Page 9 "We think Mickey can do the job," said Smith. "I played him there for about a week and made up my mind Sunday. If we get a lead, I'll put Ray Oyler at short- stop in the late innings, move Mickey to center and take out Willie Horton." Horton, bothered with a sinus condition, has been having some trouble but will open the Series in left. Jim Northrup takes over for Stanley in center and Kaline will be in right. Kaline, long the leading slugger of the Tigers, broke his right arm early in the season, and by the time he was ,ready to return, the Tigers were going so well Smith didn't want to disturb the com- bination. Now Smith wants the veteran's bat to help spice up the offense. "This is not a sentimental gest- ure to get Al Kaline in the line- up," Smith said. "We're out to win this thing and by putting an extra bat in we think we can do it." "The biggest edge will be in the first two or three innings," he said. "There is where they will have the edge on us. Our guys will go in there with stars in their eyes." At the same time, the Tigers will have money on their minds. Brown Christian Kaline Horton Northrup Freehan Cash Stanley Mcluliffe Matthews Matchick Wert Pirice' Tracewski Oyler Comner AB R 92 15 3 0 327 49 512 68 580 76 540 73 411 50 583 88 570 95 52 4 227 18 538 44 132 12 212 30 215 13 48 8 14 1' 14 10 14 1: 3: 21 BATTING H 2B3 3 34 7 2 1 1 0 95 13 1 46 20 2 53 '29 7 42 24 2 08 15 1 51 16 6 42 24 10 11 0 0 16 6 2 07 15 1 23 4 0 33 3 1 29 6 1 6 0 1 3B 2 2 7 6 0 2 x 0 HR 6 0 10 36 21 25 25 11 16 3 3 12 3 4 1 1 SB RBI, 0 15 o 0s 6 52 0 85 4 90 0 84 1 63 4 60 8 56 0 8 0. 14 0 37 0 13 3 15 o 12 d1 3 Avg. .370 .333 .291 .285 .264 .263 .263 .259 .249 .212 .203 .199 .174 .156 .135 .125 BB 12 0 55 49 50 65 39 42 82 5 10 37 13 24 20 0 sO 2 0 39 110 87 70 57 99 12 46 50 14 51 59 7 E 0 0 7 6 7 7 8 4 9 1 10 15 1 5 0 GOOSE-EGGS MAY DOMINATE the Busch Stadium scoreboard when Bob Gibsoh and Denny McLain, the fireballing hurlers of the 1968 campaign, clash in the curtain-raiser of the World Series today in St. Louis. 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