Saturday, April 17, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY II Page Eleven . Batsmen split with hawkeyes By ELLIOT LEGOW Relying on their typically excep- tional pitching and typically inept hitting, the Michigan diamondmen managed a split of a double-header with Iowa yesterday, taking the second game 2-1 after dropping the opener, 1-0. Mickey Elwood and Pete Het put on two more exceptional pitch- ing performances for the Wolver- ines, who extended their string of complete games to 16. But only Elwood was given enough support to come off with a victory. In fact the Wolverines had only one hit in their second game vic- torybut some sloppy Iowa fielding -~presented Michigan with two gift runs and the victory. In the opener the Wolverine batsmen connected for all of two hits, and totaled only three measly singles for the day. Elwood brought in the winning run himself in the bottom half of1 the seventh just when Michigan fans were beginning to think they would have to spend a few more. hours in Ray Fisher Stadium. The stage was set for Elwood's' game-winning infield bouncer by a walk to Leon Roberts, the one' Michigan hit of the game by John' Lonchar. and another walk to Jim Kocoloski. Lonchar's single was a hard bouncer which rolled off the glove daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: SANDI GENIS of the Hawkeye third baseman and into short left field. It could have been called either a hit or an er- ror, but the call was for a hit. Elwood's hit was nothing more than a slow bouncer to the second baseman who went for the out at first instead of trying for a double- play or throwing to the plate. Ev- eryone was safe and Roberts crossed the plate with the winning run. The initial Michigan run, in the first inning, was even more tainted. Mark Carrow was safe on third baseman Larry Schutzius' error, went to second on a walk, took third on a wild pickoff throw to second, and then came in to score when the centerfielder fumbled the pitcher's wild pickoff toss. Iowa touched Elwood for five singles and managed to put two of them together in the sixth to knot the score. Elwood's only streak of wildness hurt him in the sixth. Jeff Elgin singled and took second on a wild pitch. A two out walk, the only one Elwood issued in the game, kept things going for the Hawk- eyes and Fred Mims' shot up the middle tied the score. i Elwood fanned twelve as he re- corded his third victory of the year. In the first game Helt also yielded five hits and struck eight out while walking two. However, one of the hits was a: homerun off the bat of Hawkeye! second baseman Jim Cox. Cox, who had doubled in the first drove one over the left field fence leading off the sixth to give Iowa the only run in the opener. Michigan had two semi-rallies in, the first game, but never gat a run- ner as far as third base. Mike Bo- wen and Tom Kettinger walked with one away in the first but Pat Sullivan ended the uprising by bouncing into a double play. In the sixth a single by Mark Carrow and another walk to Bo- wen again presented Michigan with a chance, but this time Kettinger fanned and Sullivan again ended the inning with a double play. The split in Michigan's first two Big Ten games isn't quite what the Wolverines were hoping for but they get another chance for a Big Ten sweep when they host defend- ing champion Minnesota today for another pair, starting at 1:00 p.m. Hitless Wonders FIRST GAME IOWA Smith ss Sundberg c Cox 2b Blazin rf Mims cf Hurn lb Koeppel If Schutrius 3b Tschopp p Totals ab 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 26 r 4 1 0 a 0 n e h 9 0 2 0 2 0 1 a 0 5 bi 9 0 1 0 0 0 9 0 0 1 I I IF MICHIGAN 3 9'0 0 Carrow 3b Bawer rf 1 0 0 0 Kettinger If 2 0 9 9 Sullivan lb 3 0 9 0 Rafferty ss 3 0 9 0 Roberts cf3 0 0 0 9 Lonchar c 3 9 0 9 Kocoloski 2b 2 0 9 0 Helt p 2 9 1 0 Totals 22 0 2 0 r h e Iowa 000 001 0-1 5 3 Michigan 000 000 0-0 2 1 E - Schuzius, Cox, Sullivan, Hurn, DP - Iowa 3, Michigan 1. P0 - A, Iowa 21-7, Michigan 21-12. LOB - Iowa 7, Michigan 4. 2B - Cox. HR - Cox. METS NIP BUCS: Smith, Red Sox sink Tigers, 5-3 Tschopp (WV) Heit (L, 3-2) ip hi r erw 7 20094 7 5 11 SECOND GAME IOWA By The Associated Press DETROIT - Reggie Smith drove in two runs with a homer and sac- rifice fly as the Boston Red Sox defeated the Detroit Tigers 5-3 yes- terday. Smith's homer, his first, came off starter and loser Joe Niekro, 0-3, leading off the fifth inning. The drive nearly cleared the roof in'right field. His sacrifice fly came with the bases loaded in the eighth off re-; liever Bill Zepp, who just joined the Tiger line-up. It followed a bases-loaded squeeze bunt by Luis Aparicio which scored another run. Duane Josephson walked, stole second and scored the second on! Billy Conigliaro's single for the first Boston run. 4 He scored again in the fourth when he singled, reached third when the ball -skipped past center fielder Mickey Stanley and came home on pitcher Gary Peters' ground out. The error was Stanley's first in the last 165 games in the out- field. Peters, 1-1, had a two-hitter un- til Stanley led off the sixth with a single. Ike Brown' followed with a pinch-hit homer. * * * Super Seaver 4' NEW YORK - Tom Seaver fired his rediscovered fast ball past Pittsburgh for a three-hit shutout and 14 strikeouts yesterday while the New York Mets rode Donn Clendenon's home run to a 1-0 vic- tory over the Pirates. Seaver allowed an infield hit to W Al Oliver in the second, a ground single by Dave Cash in the third and then retired 12 in a row before Oliver lined a single in the seventh. He didn't walk anyone. The Pirates failed to get a run- ner past first base. Dock Ellis, 1-2, allowed six hits and struck out six before he left for a pinch hitter in the eighth. He had retired 10 Mets in order before Clendenon, hitless in 10 .at- bats, unloaded his towering homer into the left field bullpen with one out in the fourth inning. * * * Twins topped ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - The California Angels, held hitless for 6 1-3 innings, roared back in the eighth inning on Sandy Alo- mar's two-run triple in a 4-1 vic- tory over the Minnesota Twins that stretched their winning streak to five. Alex-Johnson broke up Jim Per- ry's no-hitter in the seventh with a soft single to right, but the An- gels stung Perry for five more hits in the three-run eighth, sending the Twins to their fourth straight loss. Catcher Gerry Moses and pinch hitter Tony Gonzalez lined singles to start the rally. Alomar blasted his two-out triple to right over outfielder Tony Oli- va's glove and scored on Jim Fre- gosi's single. When Johnson smashed a single to center, Perry was taken out of the game. The Angels added an- other run in the ninth. Rudy May, lifted so Gonzalez could bat in the eighth, struck out nine Twins in posting his first vic- tory. Braves blast start the second, then walked Hal PHILADELPHIA (/P) - The At- King. Felix Millan, Earl Williams, lanta Braves scored seven runs in Marty Perez and pitcher Jim Nash the second inning on eight singles, singled in succession for three two walks and a sacrifice fly and runs. Sonny Jackson drove in an- held on for an 8-7 decision over the other with a sacrifice fly. Ralph Philadelphia Phillies last night. Garr and Hank Aaron both singled, Philadelphia starter Jim Bun- accounting for a sixth run which' ning retired Orlando Cepeda to chased Bunning. LEAD SERIES Knicks outlast Bullets NEW YORK (P) - The N e w ers Gus Johnson and Eddie Miles York Knicks broke away midway out with injuries and a third re-. through the second half and then gular, Kevin Loughery, also ail- held on desperately for a 89-84 ing, pulled within 44-40 at t h e victory over the Baltimore Bullets half. in the pivotal fifth game of their It wasn't until conservative bas- National Basketball Association kets by Mike Riordan, Frazier, playoff series last night, who finished with 28 points, and After New York built an 84-72 Dave DeBusschere ending the lead, Jack Marin sparked a 12-2 third quarter that the Knicks Baltimore run that pulled t he again had breathing room with Bullets within two points with 50 a 70-62 lead entering the f i n a 1 seconds to go. But Walt Frazier's period. basket with 28 seconds remaining DeBusschere and Frazier open- wrapped it up for the Knicks and ed the final quarter with two more gave them a 3-2 lead in the East- baskets and the Bullets appeared ern Conference final. finished. But Marin, who totaled The teams now return to Bal- 25 points, hit 10 points in a 12-2 timore for the, sixth game of the spurt before Frazier's decisive bas- best-of-7 series on Sunday after- ket. noon. After Loughery missed from the With Baltimore hitting only field with 19 seconds to go, Wil- five baskets in 22 tries in the first lis Reed, bothered by an aching quarter, New York shot into a right shoulder and scoring on1y 24-12 lead and the Bullets n e v er six points, pulled in the clutch caught up. rebound and DeBusschere added a However, the Bullets, with start- final free throw. ab Smith ss 3 Elgin cf 3 Cox 2b 3 Blazin rf 2 Mims If 3 Hurn lb 3 Wessels c 3 Schutzius 3b 3 Heckroth p '3 Totals 26 MICHIGAN r 0 1 0 a 0 0 4 9 h 1 1 0 9 1 1 a 1 9 s bi 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 Carrow 3b Bowen Cf Rafferty ss Sullivan lb Roberts If Hornyak rf Lonchar c Kocoloski 2b Kettinger ph Elwood p 3 1 0 0 otals 3 0 09 2 0 9 , 3 0 0 1 1 9 3 9 9 + 2 9 1 , 2 0 0 + 3 900 22 2 1 rh, 000 001 0--1 5 100 000 1-2 1 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 e 3 1 Iowa Michigan E - Roberts, Schutzius, Heckroth, Elgin. PO-A: Iowa 19-7, Michigan 21-4. LOB - Lowa 5, Michigan 6. 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