The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 6, 1978-Page 11 Last of the Ninth By RICK MADDOCK John hurls 4-hitter at PhiL YanAks and Royats . . *0 .Night and Day A T LEAST BOTH Kansas City and New York have songs named after them, because that's about the only similarity the two cities, and more importantly, the two baseball teams have. The slow easy going Midwest versus the fast paced grind of the Big Ap- ple. Reggie Jackson, the biggest egotist in the world, versus Freddie Patek, the smallest man in baseball. The powerful Yankees versus the versatile Royals. For the third year in a row, the two teams are at each other for the right to represent the American League in the World Series. Take awaythe ninth in- ning of the fifth game of both playoffs, and the Royals would have a 2-0 edge. But such is not the case. Those rich, dirty rich Yankees have jolted the Royals two years running. Both times the Royals' dreams of being in the Series was shattered. The bitterness remains, but along with it is a questioning of their own abilities. The Royals looked pathetic in the first game of this year's playoffs, and then they turned right around and bombed the Bronx Bombers. NY fans hostile Now, the Midwestern boys have to knock the hay off of their spikes and fly East to the zoo in the Bronx, better known as Yankee Stadium. There is no way in hell that the Yankee fans are going to wave handkerchiefs at the Royals-smoke bombs maybe, not handkerchiefs. The point is that the Royals may have a tough time in New York, not because of the Yankees, but because of the Yankees' fans. The Royals' fans were very civil in the first two games of the playoffs. As a matter of fact, they were too civil. There should be no reason for Steve Braun to sit in the dugout waving a towel to charge up the fans, and this brings us right back to the beginning-the Apple versus the Midwest-it's shown in the fans and in the teams. There is no way that the Lettermen would be invited to sing the National Anthem in Yankee Stadium, like they were in Royals Stadium. In the same breath, no way would Whitey Herzog still be with the Yankees if he had lost two playoff games in the ninth inning of the last game. Folks in the Midwest are tolerant, not so in the East, especially in New York. Billy Martin is gone. He defeated Herzog twice; Whitey is still managing, Billy's not. Martin was able to deliver a winner, which is the top priority issue, yet he was fired for not being able to handle the business aspects of the job. Those aspects emphasize getting along with the boss. All of this brings us to another point. In K.C., baseball is baseball. In N.Y., baseball is business, and now that The City-once the business capital of the world-is having financial problems, the Yankees are the major escape from reality that many of the business people have. Yet, their minds are still oriented, wanting their team to run like an efficient organization. George Steinbrenner is the well publicized owner of the Yankees, and he's all business. If his Yankees are not performing efficiently in his eyes, then he wants a change-immediately. He's demanding, almos arbig arn egotist as Jackson, and cannot accept-defeat. Although he resides in Cleveland, he typifies the mold of every New York businessman. Pressure on Royals What all of this brings us to is Game Three of the playoffs today. The Royals have played in Yankee Stadium before, under the same pressure conditions, but do they have as strong a team as last year? It appears that they don't, especially in the long ball department. Their game depends'on good solid fundamental baseball, more than ever. If the Royals can prove that they can hold their composure in front of 53,000 plus crazed fans, then they will have a shot of knocking off those nasty Yankees. The key game is today's game. The Royals must prove to them- selves, the Yankees, and the fans in Yankee Stadium that they cannot be rat- tied. 4=0 win gives LA advan tage PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Captain Davey Lopes, who said his job is to motivate, led by example yesterday with three hits - including a home run and a triple - and three runs batted in, as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Philadelphia Phillies 4-0 and took a 2-0 lead in the best-of-five National League Championship series. While Lopes keyed the offense, Dodgers left-hander Tommy John limited the Phillies to four hits, while striking out four and walking only two. Only four balls were hit out of the in- field as John's sinkerball kept the Phillies hammering into the ground. The series moves to Los Angeles for as many as needed of three scheduled weekend games. In the first two games, Lopes - the 32-year-old second baseman - has six hits in nine at-bats, five RBI, two homers, a double and triple. THE PHILLIES headed for the West Coast needing a three-game sweep to become the first team in the 10-year history of the playoffs to come back from an 0-2 deficit. In the last three years, the Phillies have been involved Philly phlops in six playoff games at home and have yet to give the sellout crowd a victory. Right-hander Dick Ruthven, who won 13 games and lost six after coming to Philadelphia from Atlanta last June 15, started for Manager Danny Ozark's Phillies and pitched three hitless, scoreless innings before the Dodgers caught up with him. Lopes started the defending National League champions to their second straight victory in thetseries with the Dodgers' first hit of the game - a three-ball, two-strike home run that landed in the left-field bullpen to give the Dodgers a 1-0 lead. LOS ANGELES boosted its lead to 3-0 in the fifth, knocking out Ruthven, whose lifetime record against the Dlodgers soared to 1-11. Dusty Baker opened the fifth with a double into the left-field corner, and after Rick Mon- day bounced out, Steve Yeager groun- ded a single through the shortstop hole to score Baker and make it 2-0.' Yeager, starting only his eighth game since July 1 - he was disabled with an injured shoulder - stole second on the first pitch to John. John then grounded out, but Lopes singled to center, scoring Yeager and boosting the Dodgers' lead to 3-0. BILL RUSSELL followed with a single, which brought Ozark from the dugout to lift Ruthven in favor of Warren Brusstar. Reggie Smith flied deep to right-center, ending the inning. In the seventh, Monday opened with a single to right, and after Yeager fouled out, John dropped a sacrifice bunt to advance the runner. Lopes then rifled a triple into the right-field corner and it was 4-0. THE PHILLIES, meanwhile, had a first-inning leadoff single by Mike Schmidt, who reached third on a pair of infield outs, but was left when first baseman Garvey made a fine scoop of a wide throw by third baseman Ron Cey after he fielded a hard grounder off the bat of Greg Luzinski, saving a run. Jose Cardenal drew the first of John's two walks as the lead-off batter in the second, but after Bob Boone lifted one ISCORES Major League Baseball Playoffs National League Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 0 IM "B" Softball Playoffs DAILY LIBELS 8, Midshipmen 3 Palestine Human Rights Committee Organization Meeting October 6, 1978-7 PM Mich. Union, Conference Room 6 of the three balls that'went out of the in- field, Jerry Martin grounded into a double play. Martin played right.field in place of Bake McBride, who suffered injured ribs in a collision at first base in Wednesday night's game. The Phillies didn't get another baserunner until the fifth, when with one. out, Boone grounded a single throughtthe middle.But John got Mar- tin, to hit into a force play and retired Ted Sizemore on a tap in front of the plate. THE PHILLIES' biggest threat of the game came in the seventh, when Garry Maddox beat out an infield single and Luzinski followed with a line hit to cen- ter, Maddox racing to third. But John again got that tantalizing sinker to work in his favor as he induced Car- denal to hit into a force play and got Boone to ground into a double play. In the eighth, Martin opened with a walk. But he, too, was eliminated as Sizemore grounded into the third Dodgers' double play of the game. When the teams play Friday in Dodger Stadium, left-hander Steve Carlton - who has been given extra ,rest because of an inflamed bursar sac in his pitching shoulder - will try -to keep the Phillies alive. The Dodgers will pitch right-hander Don Sutton, who has a perfect 6-0 record in post-season competition including playoffs and World Series games. IMPORTANT U-M Ski ,Club First Meeting Wed. Oct. 11-7:30 Mich. Union Kuenzel Room Everybody Welcome! Many trips available! -THINK SNOW- LOS ANGELES ab Lopes 2b................... 4 Russell ss............... 4 Smith rf........ .......... 4 North cf.................0 GarveyIb................4 Cey 3b................... 4 Baker if ................... 4 Monday rf ................. 4 Yeager c ................... 3 Johnp .................... 3 TOTAL.................34 PHILADELPHIA ab h 3 1 1 0 0 0 I 1 0 8 bi 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 DIAG RALLY COME MEET DEMOCRAT FOR U.S. SENATE GUEST SPEAKERCHIP CARTER ALSO SPEAKING ED PIERCE, for State Senate EARL GREENE, for U.S. Rep. PERRY BULLARD, State Rep. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6-1:00 P.M. Are you registered to vote November 7? WANT AN ENG INEER ING. CAREER THAT'S DIFFERENT? More than fifty recent U.S. engineer grads are in the oil fields of the Middle East, West Africa, Far East, and Europe as Schiumb ergeengi neers Interested? Schiumberger Overseas INTERVIEWING EE, ME, Physics BS and MS October 13, 1978 r Schmidt 3b ................ 4 Bowa ss.................4 Maddox cf ................ 4 Luzinski If...............3 Cardenib................2 Boone c. ............. Martin rf . ........,........ 2 Sizemore 2b............... 3 Ruthven p .............. I Brusstarp ................ 0 Morrsn ph .............. I Reedp ................... 0 Foote ph ................ 1 McGraw p................. 0 TOTAL.................. 28 Los Angeles ........... 0 0 0 Philadelphia.........0 0 0 DP-Los Angeles 3. LOB-Los delphia 3. 2B-Smith, Baker. Lopes (2). SB-Yeager. S-John. IP1 Los Angeles John W, 10.............. Philadelphia Ruthven L, 0-1............4% Brusstar............... 1% Reed....................2 McGraw .................. 1 1 T-2:06. A-60,643. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 h bi 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 00-4 0 00-0 Angeles 5, Phila- 3B-Lopes. HR- H R ER BB So 4 0 62 6 0 2 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 t 4 3 0 1 0 I Schedule AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game NewYork.................011 020 030-7 16 0 KansasCity...............000 001 000-1 2 2 Beattie, Clay 6 and Munson; Leonard, Mingori 5, Hrabosky 8, Bird 9 and Porter. W-Beattie, 1-0. L-Leonard, 0.1. HR-New York, Jackson 1. Second Game NewYork..............000000 220-4 12 1 Kansas City.............140 000 32x -10 16 1 Figueroa, Tidrow 2, Lyle 7 and Munson; Gura, Pattln 7, Hrabosky 8 and Porter. W-Gura, 1-0. L-Figueroa, 0-1. HR-Kansas City, Patek 1. Thursday's Game No game scheduled Friday's Game Kansas City Splittorff 19-13 at New York Hunter 12-6, 3:30 p.m. Saturday's Game Kansas City (Leonard 21-17) at New York (Guidry 23-3). 8:30 p.m. Sunday's Game Kansas City at New York, 8:30 p.m., if necessary. NATIONAL LEAGUE First Ga me Los Angeles ................ 004 211 001 - 9 131 Philadelphia ................ 010 030 001--5 121 Hooton, Welch 5 and Yeager; Christenson, Brus- star 5, Eastwick 6, McGraw 7 and Boone. W- Welch, 1-0. L--Christenson, 0-1. HRs-Los Angeles, Gravey 2 (2), Lopes I, Yeager 1. Philadelphia, Martin 1. Thursday's Game Second Game Los Angeles..............000 120 100-4 8 0 Philadelphia............. 000 000 000 - 0 4 0 John and Yeager; Ruthven, Brusstar 5, Reed 7, McGraw 9 and Boone. W-John, 1-0. L-Ruthven, 0-1. HR-Los Angles, Lopes (2). Friday's Game Philadelphia (Carlton 16-13) at Los Angeles (Sutton 15-11), 8:30 p.m. Saturday's Game Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 4:30 p.m.. if neces- sary. Sunday's Game Philadelphia at Los Angeles, 3:55 p.m., if necessary. 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