Sunday, April 11, 1971 ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY ' Helt, Burton shutout EMU, 1-0, 2-0 By BOB ANDREWS The Wolverine diamondmen, led once again by their superlatives pitching, sailed to their third and fourth straight home victories as they swept Eastern Michigan in a twinbill by the scores of 1-0 in eight inningsand 2-0. The two wins gave Michigan a 10-4 over- all record for the season. In the opener, it was the fine pitching of Pete Helt that gave the Wolverines the impetus for the victory. Helt allowed only one hit, a lead off single to center by Eastern's second baseman, Al Mc- Laughlin. In the nightcap, Jim Burton was at his usual best as he blanked the Hurons on only five hits. Both starters went the distance and this gives the Wolverines a string of 14 straight games in which the starting pitcher went all the way. Helt found himself in hot water throughout most of the first game only because of poor fielding sup- port. In all, the Wolverines com- mitted six errors, three of them by the shortstop, Mike Rafferty. These defensive miscues, which constantly forced Helt to pitch with men in scoring position, led to serious situations in the first and seventh innings. In the first, McLaughlin lead off with a single and moved to second on a sacrifice attempt by Terry Collins. However, Wolver- ine first baseman, Pat Sullivan, fumbled the ball allowing Collins to reach safely. Mike Ferguson then grounded into a double play daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOT LEGOW and on the play McLaughlin moved to third. However, the Wolverines weren't out of the inning as Helt walked} Dave Yeager to put men at the corners. Yeager and McLaughlin tried to pull off a double steal, but Helt fired tle ball to catcher John Lonchar who made the tag on McLaughlin. Things didn't become real sticky for Helt again until the seventh. With the contest still a scoreless deadlock, Helt opened the inning by walking Lee Bjerki. Larry Bolt then attempted to sacrifice and reached safely as Helt threw wildly to first.' Then with Dave Smigielski at the plate, Lonchar tried to pick off BJerki but his throw went into center field allowing Bierki to go to third. Helt fanned Bob Smoots, the Huron hurler, for the first out and got two quick strikes on Mc- Laughlin. McLaughlin then tried a suicide squeeze but missed to strike out leaving Bjerki a dead duck as he tried to score. Michigan, which didn't get its first hit until the seventh when Pat Sullivan singled, finally broke through for the winning run in the eighth inning. With one out, Helt reached first on an error by McLaughlin. Car- row sacrificed Helt to second and Two big zeroes the first and only score of the game came home as Mike Bowen slashed a single just beyond the second baseman's reach to bring in Helt. In the nightcap, it was the blaz- ing pitching by Burton that led the way for the sweep. There was a bit more hitting in the second game as Eastern collected five hits and the Wolverines tallied six, all of them singles. The Wolverines scored their runs in the third and fourth frames off starter and loser Jay Kuhnie. Ini the third, Kocoloski and Burton went down on strikes, but then the team broke loose for three singles interspersed around an error to score a run. Carrow lined a single to left and on a hit and run play, Bowen singled shaprly to center sending Carrow all the way to third. Then Kettinger hit a vicious grounder to third baseman, Fer- guson, who booted it for an error to score Carrow. With men on first and second, Sullivan singled to left, with Bowen stopping at third. However, Kettinger round- ed second a bit too far and ended up caught in a rundown. Bowen then broke for the plate but the second baseman threw to the catcher who easily put the tag on Bowen. -Daily-Terry McCarthy MICHIGAN PITCHER Pete Helt kicks up a cloud of dust as he slides in with Michigan's only run in the first game of yesterday's doubleheader against Eastern Michigan. Helt hurled a one-hit shut- out in the opener for a 1-0 win and Jim Burton won the second 2-0. YANKS, TRIBE WIN: Orioles slip by Tigers in ninth TAKE SERIES LEAD: Cgnadiens shock Brains By The Associated Press MONTREAL -- A pair of goals by big Frank Mahovlich and one by defenseman Jacques Laperriere- last night helped the Montreal Ca- nadiens a 3-1 playoff victory over the Boston Bruins and 2-1 edge in their best-of-7 Stanley Cup series. The fourth game of the series will be played here tonight. Phil Esposito, Boston's high-scor- Prdute Special to the Daily WEST LAFAYETTE Michi- gan's courtmen rebounded from a stunning defeat at Illinois Friday to trounce Purdue 9-0 in Big Ten action yesterday. In squaring their conference re- cord at 1-1, the Wolverines soundly swept the top and bottom seed- ed matches and slipped by the Boilermakers in the middle match- es to score their first shutout of the new season. Number one Michigan s e e d Joel Ross led the way by sound- ly thrashing Purdue's Nick Gior- adano 6-0, 6-4, and combining with Dick Raverby to defeat Gior- adano and Jim Mansfield in first doubles 6-3, 6-3. In sixth singles Mike Ware smashed Ron Kniznick 6-2, 6-1, while in third doubles J Ramon Almonte and Kevin Sen- ing center who set a National Hoc- key League record for points dur- ing the regular season with 152 on 76 goals and 76 assists, was the Bruins lone goal scorer at the 29- second mark of the opening period. For Maho lich, they were his second and third goals of the ser- ies. It was the first for both La- perriere and Esposito. Laperriere did not score a goal in 49 regular-season games with the Canadiens. A record crowd of 18,904 was on hand to see rookies netminder Ken Dryden score his second succes- sive victory against the high- powered Bruins. The previous high for an NHL contest here was 18,784. Dryden stopped 37 of 38 shots the Bruins piled at him, while Gerry Cheevers made 28 stops on 31 shots taken by the Montreal club. The Bruins led 1-0 after one per- iod, but Montreal had taken a 2-1 advantage by the 40-minute mark. Mahovlich counted the only goal of the third period. Rangers routed TORONTO - Paul Henderson's second period goal sparked the Toronto Maple Leafs to a 3-1 vic- tory over the New York Rangers last night and a 2-1 lead in their best-of-7 National Hockey League East Division semifinal playoffs. Goals by Ron Ellis in the first period and Henderson in the sec- ond, with the Rangers playing a man short, gave Toronto a 2-0 lead after two periods before a sellout crowd of 16,485. After the Rangers had made it Henderson slapped the puck past Villemure at the 4:19 mark. * * * Black Hawks blast PHILADELPHIA - Bobby Hull scored a pair of third period power play goals last night, giv- ing the Chicago Black Hawks a 3-2 victory over the Philadelphia Flyers in a National Hockey League playoff game. Hull's two blasts, his fifth and sixth of the series, gave the Black Hawks a 3-0 edge in games in the best-of-7 series. The teams re- sume play here this afternoon in a nationally televised matchup. The Flyers took an early lead on a goal by rookie Rick MacLeish midway through the opening per- iod but Chicago's Pat Stapleton matched that by beating goalie Doug Favell with a power-play shot just over three minutes later. Simon Nolet retrieved the lead for Philadelphia 6:42 into the second period, beating goalie Tony Esposito on a power play. l ,But Hull's twin scores in the I third period sent the Flyers to the brink of extinction and touch- ed off a near riot at game's end. * * * Blues blank Stars ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - Ernie Wakely was superb in the nets and the St. Louis Blues got key power play goals from Frank St. Marseille and Noel Picard to topple the Minnesota North Stars 3-0 last night and take a 2-1 edge in their National Hockey League Stanley Cup playoff series. Wakely stopped 29 Minnesota shots in the first shutout of the Stanley Cup West semifinal as the Blues went ahead in the best- of-7 series going into tonight's game in Minnesota. St. Marseille broke up a score- less duel between Wakely and Cesare Maniago at 8:04 of ;he second period with two Minnesota players in the penalty box. Picard gave the Blues their sec- ond goal at 19:17 of the middle period with a blistering screen shot and the Blues added an insurance goal from Terry Crisp at 8:39 of the third period. EASTERN MICHIGAN ab r McLaughlin 2b 4 0 Collins ss 3 0 Ferguson 3b 4 0 Yeager rf 2 0 Roe 1b 2 0 B jerke if 1 0 Bolt of 1 0 Smigielski C 3 0 Smoots p 2 0 Totals 22 0 MICHIGAN h 1 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 1 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Carrow3b 3 0 0 0, Bowen rf 4 0 1 1 Kettinger if 2 0 0 0 Sullivanib 2 0 1 0 Rafferty ss 3 0 0 0 Roberts cf 3 0 0 0 Lonchar c 2 0 0 0 Kocoloski 2b 3 0 0 0 Helt p 3 1 0 0 Totals 25 1 2 1 rhe Eastern Michigan 000 000 00-0 1 1 Michigan 000 000 01-1 2 6 E: Rafferty 3, Sullivan, Kettinger, Belt, McLaughlin; DP: Michigan 3; LOB: Michigan 5, EMU 7; SAC: Michigan 1, EMU 5. By The Ass6ciated Press BALTIMORE - Dave Johnson singled home Frank Robinson with the winning run in the last of the ninth inning, lifting Baltimore past Detroit 2-1 yesterday. Johnson's two-out single to right off Mickey Lolich followed hits by Frank Robinson and Brooks Robin- son, giving the victory to right- hander Jim Palmer.' It was the second straight game that Johnson drove in the winning run. Ed Brinkman opened the Detroit third with a walk off Jim Palmer and moved to third when Dick Mc- Auliffe singled and right fielder Frank Robinson bobbled the ball for an error. Willie Horton then rapped a sharp grounder into the hole which shortstop Mark Belanger fielded and got McAuliffe at third, with Brinkman scoring. * * Senators blanked WASHINGTON - Mel Stottle- myre pitched a three-hitter and the New York Yankees backed him up with 11 singles before Bobby Mur- cer's run-scoring double in the #eighth inning as they defeated Washington 6-0 yesterday for their first victory of the season.. They pecked away at Jim Shel- lenback for four hits and two runs in the fourth with Danny Cater, John Ellis, Gene Michael and Stot- tlemyre contributing the hits and Michael and the pitcher the RBIs. * * * Red Sox outslugged CLEVELAND - Larry Brown broke a 5-5 tie with a two-run double in the fourth, then knocked home two more with a single in a fifth-inning rally as Cleveland out- slugged Boston 11-10 yesterday. Brown's hits sparked three-run uprisings in each inning as the In- dians overcame a one-man show by Boston's Luis Aparicio, w h o knocked in six runs with a grand slam home run and two-run dou- ble. Catcher Ray Fosse gave the In- dians a 2-0 lead in the first inning with a two-out homer after Vada Pinson singled. Phillies explode PHILADELPHIA-Don Money's first hit of the season, a home run. keyed a three-run sixth in- ning rally that carried the Phila- delphia Phillies to 4-1 victory over the Montreal Expos yesterday in the first game ever played at the new $45 million Veterans Stadium. The Phillies trailed 1-0 when Money opened the sixth with a shot just inside the leftfield foul pole that tied the game, and set off a display on! the half-million dollar electronic scoreboard which included an exploding cannon, smok , gushing water from a color fountain and the playing of Stars and Stripes Forever. Mays cracks another ST. LOUIS - Thirty-nine-year- old Willie Mays hammered his fourth home run in as many games, gunning the San Fran- cisco Giants to a 6-4 triumph yes- terday and spoiling the St. Louis Cardinals' National League home opener. * *~ * Reds ruffled NEW YORK-Donn Clendenon raced home from third base on Wayne Granger's wild pitch with the bases loaded and two out in the 11th inning yesterday, giving the New York Mets a 3-2 victory over the winless Cincinnati Reds. Helt (W, 2-1) Smoots (L) Time: 2:09. ip 8 8 h 1 2 r er w so 0 0 34 1 03 5 Second Game EASTERN MICHIGAN . Professional.L.eague.i........ngs. ... ... ... SProfessional League Standings ' Bolt Cf Collins ss McLaughlin2 Yeager rf Ferguson 3b Roe lb Bjerkl if Smigilski c Kuhnie p Oims P Kramer ph Mills p Holmes ph Reichel ph Bara cf To ab 2 2 lb 3 3 3 3 3 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 )tals 24 MICHIGAN h 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Baltimore Cleveland Washington Detroit New York Boston Chicago Milwaukee Minnesota Oakland Kansas City California East W 3 2 2 I 1 I West 3 2 2 1 L Pct. 0 1.000 1 .667 2 .500 2 .333 2 .333 2 .333 1 .750 1 .667 2 .500 3 .40 3 .400 3 .250 GB 1 1i 2 Pittsburgh New York Chicago Philadelphia Montreal St. Louis San Francisco Atlanta Houston San Diego Los Angeles Cincinnati East W 3 2 2 1 1 1 West 3 3' 4 2 1 0 L 1 1 3 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 3 3 Pct. .750 .667 .400 .333 .333 .333 .750 .750 .667 .500 .250 .000 GB 1% 1% 1 2% 1'2 1 Y 12 ich were making short work of 2-1 with Dave Balon's score, the Phil Hammond and Dick Cochran Leafs finished it off on Gary 6-1, 6-1. Monahan's second goal of the In between, were some close series. Henderson, who has five ones, but Michigan managed to goals in the series, assisted on win them all. In second singles, Ellis' goal. Tim Ott lost the first set to Mans- The series resumes here today field 2-6, but slipped by in the with the fifth game in New York next two 7-6, 7-6, while in third Tuesday night. singles Raverby squeezed by Mike Just before Ellis' goal at 5:03 Smart 7-6, 7-6. of the opening period, and with In the other singles, Almonte Ranger defenseman Tim Horton defeated Hammond 6-2, 6-4, and serving a minor penalty, Ellis nul- Senich defeated Cochran 7-6, 6-2. lified a goal by Rick Ley when he "We played much better t h a n skated into the New York goal against Illinois," commented crease. Coach Brian Eisner. "The weather In the second period, with was very good," he added. "Every- Ranger defenseman Jim Neilson body could use all their shots. sitting out an interference call, Yesterday's Results Cleveland 11, Boston 10 Baltimore 2, Detroit 1 New York 6, Washington 0 Milwaukee 4, California 3 Oakland 5, Kansas City 4 Minnesota 5, Chicago 3 Today's Games N:w York (Kline 0-0 - Kekich 0-0) at Washington (Bosman 1-0 - Janeski 0-0 or Cox 0-1) 2 Boston (Peters 0-0) at Cleveland (Foster 0-0) California (Murphy 1-0) at Mil- waukee (Pattin 1-0) Detroit (Kilkenny 0-0 or Scherman 0-0 and Chance 0-0) at Balti- more (Dobson 0-0 and McNal- ly 1-0), 2 Minnesota (Kaat 0-0) at Chicago (John 1-0) Kansas City (Drago 1-0) at Oak- land (Hunter 0-1) Yesterday's Results Houston 2, Chicago 1 Philadelphia 4, Montreal 1 'Atlanta 5, Pittsburgh 4 New York 3, Cincinnati 2, 11 inn. San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. San Francisco 6, St. Louis 4 Today's Games Cincinnati (McGlothlin 0-1) at New York (Seaver 1-0) Montreal (Morton 0-1) at Phil- adelphia (Lersch 0-0) San Francisco (Robertson 0-0 and Marichal 1-0) at St. Louis (Gib- son 0-1 and Cleveland 0-0), 2 Pittsburgh (Ellis 1-0) at Atlanta (Stone 0-0) Chicago (Hands 0-1) at Houston (Wilson 0-1) San Diego (Phoebus 0-1) at L o s Angeles (Sutton 0-1) Carrow 3b 3 1 1 0 Bowen cf 3 0 1 0 Kettinger if 3 0 1 0 Sullivan 1b 3 0 1 0 Rafferty ss 1 1 0 0 Lonchar c 2 0 0 0 Hornyak 3 0 0 0 Kocoloski 2b 3 0 1 1 Burton p 3 0 1 0 Totals 24 2 6 1 rhe Eastern Michigan 000 000 0-0 5 2 Michigan 001 100 x-2 6 1 E: Carrow, Ferguson 2; DP: Mich- igan 1; LOB: Michigan 7; EMU 2; SAC: Michigan 1; SB: Collins. ip I h rer w so Burton (W, 4-1) 7 5 0 0 0 9 Kuhnie (L) 3% 5 2 1 1 3 Holmes 1 Y~ 1 0 0 0 1 Mills 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP: Rafferty (by Kuhnie); Time: 2:16 A-763. a COMING WEDNESDAY! JANE FONDA and GIG YOUNG in They Shoot Horses, DonA't They? Benefit for the Peace Treaty Movement $1.25 (Help bring the Peace Treaty to the people) Nat. Sci. Auditorium 1:30-9:30 Wed., April 14 L ____ ___ ____ ___ ____ ___ ____ ___ ____ ___ ____ ___ _-- 'jl ." ; ,. ' ,.,';. ......:. >.:: . ": ... . ..n . ......r i .' "£7,. S..t.....S.,.. . :. :...... ...$ , ..t.. 5 ______ r: _ __ -- The University of Michigan Department of Economics and Center for Russian and East European Studies invites you to a lecture by I Bikard Lang Professor of Economics, and Director, Economic Institute, Zagreb University WIN AN ALL-EXPENSES-PAID TRIP To EUR PE Ol "Workers' Self-Management in Yugoslavia" DATE: Monday, April 12, 1971 TIM:- 4-10 t m II _ . .._ _.- ....