Wednesday, October 6, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Nednesday, October 6, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Baltimore clinches third straight pennant World Series shows best at their worst HOW WOULD you like to manage the following mythical team in the World Series? Behind the plate you get Mickey Cochrane. In the infield you have Stan Musial, Rogers Hornsby, Honus Wagner and Eddie Mathews. As if that weren't enough, in the outfield you can have Ty Cobb, Ted Williams and Willie Mays. Who do you get to pitch? Who cares? Actually, you'd better care because with that team of World Series flops you're going to need a good pitcher to have a chance.. Believe it or not, those players, including seven Hall of Famers and two future Hall of Famers, were nothing but banjo hitters in post-season competition. The composite World Series batting average of those eight stars was a mighty .244. Cobb, Hornsby and Williams each hit over 100 points below their lifetime batting averages. In three Series, Mathews, who had 512 homers in his career, hit one, nd in the same number Mays hit none. Not that all of baseball's great stars folded in October, but through the years, fans have been disappointed to see the World Series bring out the worst in some of the best. But such -disappointments have been more than over- come by the surprising feats of the lesser known teammates of the great stars. Like, for example, Bob Robertson clouting four home runs in the National League playoffs this year while home run champion Willie Stargell couldn't even manage a bloop single. In 1931, a scruffy Cardinal rookie named Pepper Martin ran rings around the powerful Philadelphia Athletics and be- came a national hero. Martin batted .500 and stole five bases as he thrilled Depression fans who knew what it was like to be an underdog. Not many had heard of Martin before that October, but he may have had the best World Series in history. That is, if you ignore Dusty Rhodes. Rhodes didn't do too much before or since, but the World Series he had in 1954 for the Giants against the tremendous Ipleveland pitching staff is classic. Rhodes only came to the plate six times, but he got four hits including two homers. He drove in the winning run in two games and the tying run in a third. At the same time, teammate Mays only got four hits, and American League batting champion Bobby Avila batted .133 for the Indians. In other World Series, the best performances have been y players like Bobby Richardson, Bill Mazeroski, Julian Javier and Ron Fairly - good players, but not superstars. The point is that, assuming the Pirates make it to the World Series next week, don't; be surprised if Roberto Clemente and Stargell don't contribute very much. Remember that if Bal- timore's Frank Robinson and Boog Powell play worse than expected they won't be In bad company. Judging by past performances, the heroics are likely to come from players like Dave Johnson, Don Buford, Richie Heb- ner - or Robertson. Actually, when it comes to pitching, the story is dif- ferent. Generally, the great hurlers have had great World SerIes. The greatest pitching ever seen in a World Series was by Christy Mathewson, one of the two or three best pitchers ever, who shut out the mighty Philadelphia Athletics three times in 1905. Even Walter Johnson, who didn't get into a World Series until he was 36, pitched ferociously. In more modern times, fans have witnessed fantastic per- formances in the World Series by Sandy Koufax and Bob Gib- son, probably the two best pitchers of the past decade. Koufax hurled two shutouts and compiled an earned run average of 0.95 in eight games over four Series. In nine games over three years, Gibson won seven with two shutouts and 92 strikeouts. He also broke Koufax's single game strikeout record with 17 against the Tigers in 1968. The exceptions have been Bob Feller, the great Cleve- land fireballer, who pitched poorly in two games against the Boston Braves in 1948, and Denny McLain. Nobody will forget how McLain came into the 1968 Series with 31 vic- tories behind him and then was overshadowed by Mickey Lolich, who won three games while McLain' struggled.' McLain's poor performances then drew as much attention as those of the other great stars who somehow couldn't per- form as well under the spotlight of a World Series. However, as y entioned, not all stars have been World Series goats. Some, ke Lou Gehrig, Hank Aaron, Jimmie Foxx and Al Simmons,. played as well in October as during the rest of the year. And then there's Babe Ruth. In 10 World Series, the Babe put on some Ruthian performances, batting .326 with 15 homers and an incredible slugging percentage of .744. But then everybody knows the Babe was in a class by himself. ; AP POLL REVEALS: OAKLAND (P)-Lanky Jim Pal- mer pitched the Baltimore Orioles into the World Series for the third consecutive season yesterday, beat- ing Oakland 5-3 on a seven-hitter with the Robinson boys, Brooks and Frank, supplying the offensive punch. Palmer, 10 days short of his 26th birthday, completed the Oribles' American League cham- pionship playoff sweep for the third straight season. He also hurled the clinchers in playoff sweeps against Minnesota in 1969 and 1970. The Orioles, who have never lost a playoff game, took command <:;,< F when the Robinsons started con- necting against Diego Segui and four Oakland relievers. Baltimore had nicked Segui for a run in the first but it was a { cheap price for the A's to pay after the veteran right-hander loaded the bases with none out on walks to Don Buford and Boog Powell sandwiched around a hit by Paul Blair. Frank Robinson struck out on three pitches but Ellie Hen- dricks' long fly ball got the run home. Reggie Jackson tied the score for the A's with a long home run in the third that set off a booming Press display of owner Charles O. Fin- d the ley's fireworks behind the center pagne field fence. d El- It was still 1-1 in the fifth when Buford opened with his second __ single. Blair bounced into a force out but Powell walked. The run- ners advanced on Frank Robin- son's infield out, giving the Orioles men on second and third with two out. Here Manager Dick Williams de- cided to play the percentages and ordered Segui, a right-hander, to g for a walk. the lefty-swinging Hendricks and pitch to Brooks Robinson, who n in the swings from the right side. down in The ploy didn't work. Robinson es only ripped Segui's first pitch for a ng their single to center, scoring two runs pennant and putting the Orioles in front to stay. to come Sal Bando, captain of the A's ,ce, 16- narrowed the gap to one run with erry, in a sixth inning homer that set off the Pi- the Finley fireworks again. with 15- That was too close for the Birds and they padded their lead with he open- two more runs in the seventh, y. thanks to a double and some ag- -Associated P JUBILOUS CELEBRATION REIGNS in the Baltomore Oriole locker room after the Birds downe Oakland Athletics, 5-3, to capture the American League Championship. Participating in the champ festivities are from left to right: Paul Blair, Don Buford, skipper Earl Weaver, Chico Salmon an rod Hendricks. ROBERTSON, HEBNER HOMER: daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN PAPANEK gressive base running by Frank Robinson. Powell opened the inning with a walk against reliever Rollie Fin- gers and then Robinson, hitless in the series so far and burdened by a 3-for-19 slump going into the game, smacked a line drive to left. The ball landed perhaps two feet fair and banged up against the wall. As the 240-pound Powell chugged around third base, head- ing for home, Robinson rounded second. Powell slid home safely and Robinson pulled up at third on the play at the plate. Suns sweep Cells sail By The Associated Press DE KALB, Ill. - The Chicago Bulls dropped their fourth exhi- bition game of the 1971 season last night as they fell to the ,Phoenix Suns, 105-99, at De Kalb High School. The Bulls jumped to a 31-22 first quarter lead, but the Suns rallied to take a halftime lead of 55-50. Rookie guard Dennis Dayton scored 13 of his 22-point total in the second quarter. The Bulls closed to within five points in the fourth quarter after trailing by as much as 13 points in the second half,, but numerous fouls coupled with excellent free- throw percentages by the Suns stopped the Bulls from closing the gap. Cougars creamed CHARLOTTE-The Boston Cel- tics of the National Basketball Association rallied to beat the Carolina Cougars of the American Basketball Association, 107-100, in an exhibition game last night. Boston's Dave Cowens was high scorer with27vpoints, while fellow Celtic Jo Jo White scored 20. * * * Nets rip COLUMBIA, S.C. - The New York Nets survived a late rally by the Virginia Squires to take a 103-96 victory in an American Bas- ketball Association exhibition last night. That finished Fingers and Dar- old Knowles relieved for the A's. With pinch hitter Andy Etchebar- ren at bat, Knowles uncorked a wild pitch that bounced perhaps 25 feet away from catcher Gene Tenace. Robinson broke for the plate and slid home safely with Baltimore's fifth run. Jackson sent the fireworks man back to work again in the eighth with another booming home run and when Mike Epstein followed with a single, there was some hope for the A's. But Palmer got Bando to rap into a double play and then retired A n g e1' Mangual on a bouncer. In the ninth, Palmer finished with a flourish, striking out Te- nance, Epstein and pinch hitter Curt Blefary to end it in a hurry. The frustration of the A's might have been best shown by the so- what reaction to two young fans who raced on the field with one out left and tore right back off without stirring a guard. The victory was the 14th straight for Baltimore. The Orioles finish- ed the regular season with an 11- game string of triumphs. That streak parallels the one the Orioles took into the 1970 World Series when they beat Cincinnati in five games to take the world cham- pionship. For the student body: Genuine { Authentic Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to 50 Piraes PITTSBURGH VP)-Rich Hebner turned from goat to hero with an eighthinning homer in support of surprise starter Bob Johnson, giv- ing the Pittsburgh Pirates a 2-1 victory over San Francisco yester- day in the third game of the Na- tional League playoffs. The triumph, in which the Pi- rates beat Giants' ace Juan Mar- chal, gave Pittsburgh a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five series to deter- mine the National League pennant winner. Hebner lashed a 1-2 pitch from Marichal just over the outstretched glove of right fielder Bobby Bonds for the decisive blow in the tense, dramatic struggle with two out in the eighth inning as 28,322 fans rained a stream of paper from the stands. Hebner, a third baseman, com- mitted the error that led to the only San Francisco run in the sixth inning. Johnson gained the victory after Manager Danny Murtaugh had de- cided to pinch hit for his last- minute pitching choice at the start of the inning. Marichal, who won 18 games for edge Giants, 2j the Giants during the regular sea- son and pitched the pennant- clincher in NL west on the last day of the season, struck out Davalillo and got Dave Cash on a grounder to short but then Hebner broke it up. The home run decisively made up for Hebner's throwing error which let the Giants' run in the sixth inning. Ken Henderson open- ed the inning with a single for the fourth hit off Johnson and Tito Fuentes followed with a bunt down the third base line. Hebner came in quickly to field the sacrifice but then threw wildly to first and Henderson raced around to score. Thedrama built later in the in- ning when, after Willie Mays was thrown out attempting to bunt, Willie McCovey was walked in- tentionally. Johnson then struck out Bonds on a 3-2 pitch but walk- ed Dick Dietz on a 3-2 pitch, load- ing the bases. The count also went to 3-2 on Alan Gallagher but Johnson reach- ed back and got him on a grounder to short. Johnson got out of another jam in the eighth by getting Dietz to ground out, before leaving pinch batter. Dave Giusti then came of ninth and set the Giantst order, leaving the Pirat one victory shy of clinchir first National League; since 1960. The Giants are expected back with their other a game winner Gaylord Pe today's fourth game while rates go for the clincher game winner Steve Blass. Perry beat Blass 5-4 in tI er of the playoffs, Saturda I CHECKMATE Gridde Pickings, The silence caused a thunderous explosion within the mangled region of his brain. The bright lights were piercing his retinas as if a molten hot sabre slashed his visual confines.t Finally, the good guy could take no more, screaming, "I'll tell you. Get your gridde pickings to 420 Maynard by midnight Friday and try to win a Cottage Inn pizza." 1. MICHIGAN at Michigan State 12. Colgate at Harvard (pick score) 13. Delaware at Lafayette 2. Illinois at Ohio State 14. Marshall at Northern Illinois 3. Indiana at Wisconsin 15. Citadel at VMI 4. Minnesota at Purdue 16. Ohio U. at Kentucky 5. Northwestern at Iowa 17. Wake Forest at North 6. Kansas State at Kansas Carol Stat 7. Oklahoma at Texas Crln tt 8. Georgia at Mississippi 18. Brigham Young at Utah State 9. Stanford at Washington 19. Idaho State at Idaho 10. Army at Penn State 20. DAILY LIBELS vs. 11. Toledo at Bowling Green Anonymous Eunuchs 11 State Street at Liberty ' Angels deal Johnson to Cleveland Indians The Place to Meet INTERESTING People Bach Club PRESENTS: A program of works by Bach, Hayden and Fran- ceschini, played by So- prano, Trumpet, P i a n o and Harpsichord. Refreshments of Chinese Chick- en-Fried Rice served ofter tho program THURSDAY AT 8 P.M. South Quad, West Lounge No Musical Knowledge Needed EVERYONE INVITED further info call- Sue 764-7894 John 482-5858 r ANAHEIM (YA) - The California Angels traded their problem player, Alex Johnson to the Cleveland In- dians yesterday, the Indians taking an attitude of letting bygones be bygones. "We're not looking back, we're looking to the future," said Cleve- land President Gabe Paul in acquiring the 1970 American League batting champion who was suspended by the Angels last June for failure to hustle. Johnson and catcher J e r r y Moses, who late in the season voiced discontent with the Angels, went to Cleveland in exchange for outfielders Vada Pinson, who bat- tled with the Indians' manage- second The Top Twenty teams, with first- place votes in parentheses, season re- cords and total points. Points tabu- lated on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8- 7-6-5-4-3-2-1: 1. Nebraska (43) 4-0 1058 2. MICHIGAN (5) 4-0 886 3. Texas (3) 3-0 818 4. Auburn (2) 3-0 654 5. Colorado (2) 4-0 616 6. Alabama 4-0 607 7. Notre Dame 3-0 606 8. Oklahoma 3-0 592 J. Penn State 3-0 289 10. Georgia 4-0 280 11. Washington 4-0 241 12. Arizona State 3-0 148 13. Tennessee 2-1 1401/2 14. Duke 4-0 139 15. Ohio State 2-1 125 16. Louisiana State 3-1 92 17. Arkansas 3-.1 53 18. NorthCarolina 4-0 33 19. Stanford 3-1 30 20. Toledo 4-0 25 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- ment; and Frank Baker, plus right-handed pitcher Alan Foster. Pinson, 33, a veteran of 13 major league seasons, had caused prob- lems at Cleveland, claiming the Indains failed to live up to salary promises for 1971. The Angels had to rid them- selves of Johnson. He was sus- pended without pay from his $55,000-a-year job last June 26, having been fined 29 times in the early season for not giving 100 per cent effort. 2 DA YS B.B. KING HOWLIN WOLF FRI.--HILL AUD.-9 P.M. $2.50-$3.50-$4.50 Tickets: Mich. Union Salvation Records, 330 Maynard AND NOW A WORD FROM OUR advertising contributed fo hYulgo d I UrO N for the P ~ CUblcgo NE 7 RUG Professional Hair Stylists and Barbers OUR REPUTATION IS ON THE LINE Michigan Union Barbers L f ',krttii :_ .,. + t i i r [} .f ' : _ r__ r 1 t U Ip Ir- .li .. l4 7t B?[. 4l 9 l I r. 1 . -T I' . WeRent to 21 Year-Olds and Up STARTING AT $5 PER DAY & 5c PER MILE remains By The Associated Press The Wolverines strengthened their hold on the number two spot in the weekly Associated Press college football poll this week, after defeating Navy Sat- urday 46-0. Iichigan received 886 points and five first place votes, three more than last week from the national panel of 55 writers and broadcasters. National champion Nebraska, after beating previously unbeat- e Utah State 42-6, remained amber one with 43 first place ballots. Texas, number three, is only 68 points behind the Wolverines Penn State, ninth, and Georgia, tenth. The only other Big 10 team in the top 20 is Ohio State, number 15. The Big Eight is represented by three teams, Ne- braska, Colorado and Oklahoma, in the top eight, and the South- eastern Conference has a troi- ka, Auburn, Alabama and Geor- gie, in the top ten, and two more, Tennessee, 13th, and LSU, 16th, in the top 20. Besides Texas, the Southwest- ern conference claims Arkansas, 17th in the top 20. The Paciffic 8 is represented by two second 10 teams, Washington, 11th, and Stanford, 19th. A third, South- ern California, was dropped from +ha r.anr, aftr r 'ah-3- 0nlo rTRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi C14e £ir4i-* :4 aiJ OFFICE HOURS C IRCU LATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10a.m.-Noon and 1-4 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS-764-0557 lOa.m.-1 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY- 12:30 p.m. DISPLAY ADS -764-0554 I I I fiilil I -in