Saturday, April 10, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Satuday Apil 1, 171 HE MCHIAN AIL McLAIN WINS Orioles drop Tigers, 6-5 Bucks, Knicks win; lead in NBA playoffs By The Associated Press BALTIMORE - Dave Johnson, who earlier cracked a game-ty- ing, three-run home run, knock- ed in the winning run in the eighth inning with a bases-loaded ground out to give Baltimore a! 6-5 victory over Detroit last night. Johnson's check-swing ground- er to shortstop Dick McAuliffe drove home Boog Powell, who had doubled against the right field wall and moved to third behind two walks. Johnson's sixth-inning homer,, his first of the year, came after singles by Frank Robinson and Brooks Robinson and tied t h e game at 5-5. Jim Northrup singled home a run in each of the first two in- nings for Detroit as the Tigers collected five hits off Baltimore starter Mike Cuellar, a 24-game winner last season. Aurelio Rodriguez, whose sixth inning homer gave Detroit a 5-2 lead, also drove in a first inning run with an infield out and Joe Niekro singled home one in the second. Yankees of fed WASHINGTON - Tom M c- Craw, pinch hitting for e n ny McLain, slammed a leadoff home run in the 10th inning last night to give the Washington Senators a 5-4 victory over the New York Yankees. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL ALTERMAN McCraw, acquired by the Sena- tors from the Chicago White Sax a week ago, drilled a Lindy Mc- Daniel pitch off the right field scoreboard to give McLain the victory in his Washington debut. It was McCraw's initial plate ap- pearance this season. McLain, the controversial right- hander, obtained from Detroit in another of the Senators' off-sea- son trades, gave up 11 hits and struck out five in his 10 innings of work.I Gene Michael and Horace Clarke tagged McLain for run- scoring singles in the top of the ninth, giving the Yankees a 4-3 lead, but the Senators tied it in the bottom half on Joe Foy's se- cond double and a single by El- liott Maddox. inThe Senators took a 3-2 lead the sixth on a sacrifice fly by Foy. Twins tripped CHICAGO - Pinch-hitter Rich McKinney singled home R i c h Morales in the ninth inning yes- terday giving the Chicago White Sox a 3-2 victory over the Minne- sota Twins. Morales had opened the ninth~ with a, single, advanced to spec- ond on Vicente Romo's sacrifice and moved to third on a wild pitch. After Lee Richard struck out, McKinney singled.z and moved they A crowd of 43,253, largest for an opening day in White Sox history, saw the Sox take a 1-0 lead in the second. Carlos May opened the inning with a single, stole second and scored on Walt Wil- liams' ground rule double.:.,. Chicago made it 2-0 in the sixth .>.. when Mike Andrews walked with one outo stole second and scored .:'':>. on a single by May. ; .: . * * * . Cubs cream ' "" -Associated Press HOUSTON - Veteran M 11 t DENNY McLAIN throws one of his first pitches in a Senator uniform to New York's Jim Lyttle. Pappas fired a three-hitter a n d - ---- - __ the Chicago Cubs ripped T om Griffin for six runs in the se- MEET E IU cond inning that held up for a 6-0 victory over the Houston Astros last night. Only once did Pappas, 1-0, allow T iclads open outdoor quest two runners on base in the same, inning. The hits off him were sin By DALE ARBOUR fayette for another dual meet with which should end up keeping them Pas dta relatively weak Purdue team. out of the running for first place. Pappas didn't walk a batter and Today, the Michigan t rackThe weekend before the B i g For Michigan, the outlook for struck out seven. squad begins its outdoor season in Ten Meet, the Chicago T r a c k the outdoor season will hopefully Michigan. But this will only be a Club will bring their impressive be brighter than their eighth place warmup for the meets coming up squad to Ann Arbor for another finish in the indoor Big Ten Meet. wa mu f r he m et c mi g p dual meet. In last year's outdoor meet, the -/'' / T )-IF 0 n th nex twnmnhc Y r 9 r By The Associated Press MILWAUKEE - Jon McGlock- lin and Lew Alcindor sparked a third period spurt that pushed the Milwaukee Bucks to a 106-85 vic- tory, over the Los Angeles Lakers last night in the opening game of the National Basketball As- sociation's Western Conference playoff finals. McGlocklin pumped in 12 points and Alcindor 10 as the Bucks ex- ploded from a 44-43 halftime de- ficit to a 72-66 going into the final quarter. Oscar Robertson, who suffered Ruggers in Big 1 -matehups By CHUCK DRUKIS The Big Ten rugby tournament starts this morning in Columbus, Ohio, and Seven Big Ten schools, all except Minnesota, Northwest- ern, and Iowa, will participate. In the first round, Michigan will square off against Michigan State. Ohio State, originally scheduled to play Iowa, will play the Mich- igan "B" squad. Iowa informed the tournament on Thursday that they couldn't make it. In effect, OSU is drawing a bye, even if the "B" team wins, they are ineligible for further tournament play. OSU drew a similar bye in 1969 when their first opponent couldn't come. Several sources have claimed that OSU allegedly knew that Iowa wasn't coming during the selections for the first round, purposely getting a bye. In other first round games In-' diana, tackles Purdue, and 1 a s t year's rugby champs Wisconsin Illinois. In the Windsor tournament last fall, Michigan beat Purdue, Illin- ois, and MSU, but lost to Wiscon- sin. Although Michigan never seems to be able to win the big one in tournament play, this is the year they seem ready. Coming off a successful season with a 3-0-1 mark, the ruggers are prepared. The ruggers were fortunate be- cause they suffered few injuries. Tom Kuzma will be the only play- er unable to play. Kuzma suffer- ed a broken hand in last Tues- day's practice. Rugger Cleland Child expressed the teams' feeling when he said, "We're not looking towards a n y particular game. The team to beat is the team we play." one of his worst shooting nights as a pro, found the range in the final 12 minutes as the B u c k s made a runaway in the first of the best-of-7 series. The 7-foot-2 Alcindor finished with 32 points to lead all scorers while Robertson tallied 19 and McGlocklin 18. High for Los An- geles was Wilt Chamberlain w i t h 22. Happy Hairston added 20. The inability of the Lakers to sink their free throws enabled Milwaukee to build an early lead. Then Chamberlain, the 7-1 veter- an, sparked Los Angeles at both ends of the court to give the Lak- ers their lead at intermission. The Bucks tied it at 51-51 and neither team was able to pull away until Milwaukee- ran off a 7-2 spurt at the end of the third period. Running for the first time in the game, the Bucks stampeded to 13 straight points and a 101-81 romp with one minute left. Bullets bounced NEW YORK - The New York Knicks took advantage of cold shooting and outmanned Balti- more in the third quarter and spurted to a 107-88 victory over the. Bullets yesterday afternoon for a 2-0 lead in their National Basketball Association playoff series. The best-of-seven Eastern Con- ference final now moves to Balti- more for the third and f o u r t h contests Sunday afternoon a n d Wednesday night. New York fell behind by as much as 33-23 beforedpulling even 48-all at the half and then broke the game open in thethird quar- ter. A 16-3 barrage did the damage, turning a 56-55 deficit into a 71- 59 lead. Walt Frazier had six of his 23 points in the binge. Baltimore; playing without in- jured Gus Johnson and with cen- ter Wes Unseld troubled with fouls in the third quarter, managed only six field goals in 19 tries and lost the ball 10 times in the period. With Earl Monroe missing t h e final quarter with an injured leg, the Bullets managed only 40 points for the final half. Baltimore was still withlIn 81- 75 but then the Knicks r o I le d away on a 16-2 spree that wrapped it up. SALE ON KLH PRODUCTS AT HI F1 STUDIO 121 W. WASHINGTON Downtown across from Old German Rest. NO 8-7942. Jiome Rick Cornfeld Martin: 'I'm not c-ocky- just brilliant' IN CASE ANYBODY is still so foolish enough to think that Billy Martin is a brasp, cocky man, the new manager of the Tigers is more than willing to make a correction. "When people introduce me," Martin said at a Tiger Press Day the other morning, "they call me the brash and cocky Billy Martin. When they introduce Bobby Richardson," he said, refer- ring to his soft-spoken successor at second base with the Yankees, "they talk about his World Series exploits. Well, I've got more than he does." Brash? Cocky? Maybe just honest. "I'm aggressive," Martin admitted. "As a player I led by my actions on the field. It takes hard work to be aggressive, but you gotta be honest with yourself about your strong and weak points. Everybody has weak points. Only' one man didn't, and they crucified him. His name was Jesus Christ." Martin, who has been manager now for barely half a year, has transformed the Tigers into a team that is barely recogniz- able. Al Kaline said it is the most aggressive, hardest-working team he has ever played on, and other observers close to the club agree. This is Martin's second time in a Tiger uniform. As a self- proclaimed non-brash, non-cocky, ex-World Series hero, Martin covered shortstop with more-or-less success in 1958. Then as now he was supposed to come in and fire up a lethargic Bengal nine. "When I came here the first time," Martin said, "I was billed as a holler guy, a spark plg. You can only do so much sparking, you gotta have a motor to work with. We didn't have that kind of ball club." Many people thought the Tigers still don't, but Martin, with the aid of such speed demons as Kaline and Willie Horton, have set about proving them wrong. In last Tuesday's season opener, both Horton and Kaline were sent on hit-and-run plays and both were thrown out stealing. Does Martin think that sending Kaline and Horton running was a smart move? "I thought it was brilliant," he equivocated. "This was a hit and run. You gotta know the situation and who's pitching and what kind of pitches he's throwing. We're gonna get caught on hit-and-runs. We're gonna get caught on steals. But this game is one of percentages. "You gotta force the opposition into making mistakes, and they're doing that. For once, they're making fools of the opposition. And that's when baseball is fun. "Look," he added, "when Northrup was on third base and he was dancing up and down, what happened? He forced the pitcher into making a balk. And he had balked once before, too, when the umpire didn't catch it. You gotta take those chances. You gotta bunt and hit and run. You gotta take the concentration away from the pitcher." Martin has been talking like that for a long time, all his baseball life. But so far, he has been able to live up to his own advance billing. An effective minor league manager at Denver, he moved up to the parent Minnesota club in 1969 and led the' Twins to a divisional title before being fired because of front office resentment. This is his second chance, and he has been planning his overhaul of the Tigers' style of play all year. "In the winter," he said, "you just talk about how you're gonna do things, but in the spring you gotta execute. They made mistakes, the young kids especially. But they started to get things down. I'm very much happy with the way they were doing things. The important thing is they want to do it right." A fiery guy, Martin is famous for carrying on feuds with other baseball figures. One is reportedly with Oriole manager Earl Weaver, but Martin denied it. He's a good man and a great manager," Martin said. "He just does things out there that I don't like. I'll tell that to his face. What's the difference? I do things that he doesn't like." Martin paused, then added, "I don't like that he's got all those good players." Another famous feud is with pitcher Dave Boswell, for- merly a 20-game winner under Martin with the Twins and now back with him on the Tigers. For perhaps the 1000th time, Martin explained what happened that August night two years ago outside the Lindell AC bar in Detroit. "He didn't run his laps in practice one day. I was told about it by the pitching coach. I saw him in the bar and told him I wanted to see him about it the next day. He got mad at the pitch- ing coach, but I told him that was the coach's job and if he hadn't told me, he'd be fired. Bob Allison tried to talk to him about it v IJI2t I falter in tourney Special to the Daily COLUMBUS - Michigan's links- men are a disappointing eighth at the halfway point of the Kepler Invitational golf tourney in Co- lumbus, Ohio. Playing 27 holes yesterday, the best Michigan could muster was a 609 total which left them 29 strokes behind first place Michigan State. Michigan's low scorers were Neal Spitalny a n d Gary Bailliat who both checked in with 11 over par 119's. Rocky Poz- za was only a stroke behind at 120 but the remaining Wolverines finished further back with Dan Hunter at 125, John Roska at 126 and Chuck Murnham at 128. Coach Bill Newcomb blamed the generally high scores on the high winds and rough greens and felt "anything better than 120 w a s good golf." He added he was dis- appointed with the bottom three Wolverines. 19 teams are entered in t h e tourney with Dan Denger of Pur- due the individual leader at 109. nil e 1U * t U o YV Us. After a rather unsuccessful cam- paign on the indoor circuit, the Michigan squad will be seeking to redeem themselves- next weekend at Knoxville, Tennessee. The Dog- wood Relays is sponsored by the University of Tennessee and will provide mostly relay competi- tion. The following weekend, the team will travel east to compete in the prestigious Pennsylvania Relays in Philadelphia. From1 there, the squad w i ll be again heading south, this time to Quan- tico, Virginia for the Quantico Re- lays. Both of these meets are again primarily relay meets, where the depth of a team in many events is often more important than the presence of one or two star performers. Michigan has an abundance of depth in both the 880-yard and mile runs, which will greatly help their two-mile and four-mile re- lays. Their 440-yard and mile re- lay units are also better than average and could place in most of the meets this spring. After all of these relays, the Michigan team returns to dual meet action which will eventually lead up to the Big Ten Meet the last weekend of May. On May 8, the squad will head to Cham- paign to face a tough Illinois team. The following weekend the Michigan team heads to West La- The Big Ten Meet will be held in Iowa City and should prove to be a tough battle for the champ- ionship. Indiana is the defending champion, but they will have a very tough time holding onto that title with Indoor champion Wis- consin chasing after them. Illinois and Michigan State are both, strong too, but they each l a c k talent in some of the events, Michigan squad ended up fifth in a very tight race for the third spot. Michigan has a lot of young talent this season, and if they capitalize on it, they should be stronger outdoors than they were indoors. Otherwise, they will face second division status in the Big Ten meet for one more sea- son. Casey looks sharp in football practice Courtmen stunned by Illinois, defeated 6-3 By BILL ALTERMAN I Michigan's first football game is still five months and two days away, but the high-powered Wol- verines were in midseason form yesterday as the first stringers trounced the second team 35-0 in a full scale scrimmage in t h e stadium. Freshman quarterback Kevin Casey appears the man to beat for the slot vacated by Don Moor- head as he led Michigan's starting offense to paydirt five of six times. On the first strings' opening drive, Casoy twice picked up sizable yardage on what appeared to be a busted play. After scrambling 20 yards down to the 23, Casey hit fullback Fritz Seyferth with an 18 yard pass. Then, after an eight yard scoring toss to Seyferth was nullified by a holding penalty, Casey again prevented disaster by running out of trouble and pick- ing up eight yards to the seven. From there Alan "Cowboy" Walker took it in on a sweep. Dana Coin kicked this, as well as the second extra point. The second touchdown was set up by wingback Glenn Doughty who has shown flashes of hip sophomore brilliance all spring long. Following a ten yard jaunt by Walker, Doughty, who has added some ten pounds to his frame this year, took off from his own 41 on a run up, the middle, and breaking tackles all over the field, went 51 yards to the seven. Sey- ferth plunged in for the touch- down. Then after the first string de- fense throttled the second string offense for the third time, Casey and Doughty collaborated on a pass over the middle which t h e wingback went 44 yards with be- fore being halted at the two. Big Ed Shuttlesworth, a 241 pound fullback, took it in from there. Tom Slade came in to take over the first string quarterbacking Special To The Daily CHAMPAIGN - Michigan's courtmen suffered a shocking 6-3 loss yesterday to surprising Illinois in the opening match of their Big Ten season. The Wolverines had trouble with the erratic wind currents and were unable to play up to their usual standards as they lost five of six singles matches. Coach Brian Eisner said the wind was the critical factor, "it was a question of which team would adjust best. We didn't." He added that "Illinois was used to playing on their courts and we weren't." This was also Michigan's first outdoor match of the year. "We beat them two weeks ago" (in the Irish Invitational), Eisner said, "and we knew this would be a difficult match." Only in the doubles were the Wolverines able to do well as they won two of the three matchups. Of the six singles, however, only Ramon Almonte was able to emerge victorious for Michigan, Almontevdefeated Kevin Morrey 7-5, 6-4. The rest of the singles belonged to Illinois. Number one Michigan seed Joel Ross went down to Rick Wack 6-4, 6-3. Rod Schroeder smothered Tim Ott 6-0, 6-4, and Chip Clements made short work of Dick Raverby 6-2, 6-3. Kevin Senich lost to Berry Maxwell 6-1, 6-4 and to complete the rout, Miles Harris knocked off Mike Ware 7-5, 6-0. In doubles competition Ott and Ware defeated Morrey and Cle- ments 6-4, 4-6, 6-1, while Almonte and Senich upended Harris and Maxwell 6-3, 3-6, 6-4. The final match saw Raverby and Ross de- feated by Schroeder and Wack 5-7, 6-3, 6-4. The Wolverines face Purdue to- day at 1 p.m. Scores PRO BASEBALL Baltimore 6, Detroit 5 Washington 5, New York 4, 10 inn. Kansas City at Oakland, inc. Chicago 3, Minnesota 2 Chicago 6, Houston 01 Pittsburgh 8, Atlanta 2 San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. slot but injured his leg almost immediately. Doughty meanwhile continued his one man vendetta against the defense as he picked up 21 yards straight up the mid- dle. For once, however, the first string could not take it in. It took only a few plays for the first string to get the ball back and this time they garnered the score the hard way, picking up 3- 4-5 yards a carry with Shuttles- worth, Doughty and Walker each lugging the football. The second string now, with freshman halfback Don Cole- man doing much of the carrying, penetrated into opposition terri- tory but were stopped on downs at the 41. From there the first string took over and worked it down to the four before C a s e y was thrown for a 16 yard loss ending the threat. Shortly thereafter, Walker thril- led those in attendance with a spinning, weaving run in which he broke four tackles and went twenty yards to the five. Doughty then plunged over from the one. Greg Koss took over the se- cond string offense at this point and started picking apart the de- fense with pinpoint passing. He did not have the time that Casey was getting, however, and was un- able to sustain a drive. The gridders will break for East- er and will finish their spring practicing with an open scrim- mage a week from today in the stadium. M-PIN BOWLING 1 P.M.-Mid. SUNDAY UNION NEED HELP? Upstate Abortion Referral Service Our service can provide a safe, legal alternative to your problem with mini- mal cost and delay. 518-785-8189 $195 $195 Open 7 days a week III I I why cart all those clothes home ? 4 Call Greene's Cleaners today! We'll deliver a storage box- Fill it with your winter garments- We'll pick it up-clean your garments- Store them in our air conditioned vault. Next fall-give us a call. We'll deliver- fresh and clean-beautifully pressed. * It's so convenient-and cheaper than shipping. Still only $4.95 plus regular cleaning charges. Call and reserve your box today. Greene's Cleaners NO 2-3231 For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits ......$6.98 (All Colors) Bells .........$8.50 DENIM " Of Graduiating 9999999-1%, VI Bush Jeans Rat . $10.00 R n I i