Tuesday, September 15, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I ...> rri faaa .'y . . ..V.4"Vfl vr . 'f ' + v r..V.~ FROM THE DRIVER's SEAT 'By Phil Hertz ose ones... Mets win, tied for t By The Associated Press MONTREAL - The New York; Mets, capitalizing on errors by Ron Fairly and John Bateman, I first Gridde Pickings dailly Those cl 4... really hurt THE REGULAR baseball season is about to come to its con- clusion after nearly six long months of competition, and unless you happen to be a Pirate, Cub 'or Met fan or- a believer in miracles there is little left to do but begin to follow your favorite football team, or the way things go nowadays your favorite hockey or basketball team, or if you are a follower of the Orioles, Twins, or the Big Red Machine, wait for the com- mencement of the play-offs and the World Series. Fortunately for baseball fans like me, the race in the National League East promises to be the best in baseball since four teams battled for the American League pennant in 1967. Barring an unforeseeable hot streak, the three ball clubs should spend the remainder of the campaign fighting tooth and nail for the unenviable right to .meet the Cincinnati Reds. Inevitably two of the 'teams will spend the, off-season second-guessing themselves and thinking about the won games which landed in the loss column, especially the ones late in the season. If the Pittsburgh Pirates fail to capture the .East Division title, they will be spending an inordinate amount of their free time this winter, thinking about Sunday's loss to the Chicago, Cubs at beautiful Wrigley ERield. WHEN DISASTER STRUCK the Bucs, they were on the verge of their second straight triumph over the Cubs, a win which would have dropped the /Cubs three games off the pace and dropped the Mets, who were in the process of dropping an extra-inning decision to the St. Louis Cardinals,' a game and a W half behind. The loss would not have been overly disheartening if it had not occurred the way it did. Steve Blass, the Pirate starting pitcher, had not allowed a hit to.the Cubs since the third inning and was one out away from his tenth victory when he induced Cub pinch-hitter Won- derful Willie Smith to loft a fly ball to centerfield. Blass im- mediately leaped/ into the air and began waving his hands in jubilation. He later commented, "I Always get excited about win- ning, but this had a little something extra about it." Pirate manager Danny Murtaugh was "on the way to the mound to shake hands With Steve. All the celebration, however, was a trifle premature because Matty Alou, the Pirate centerfielder and usually one of the surer gloves in the National League, was having difficulty with the wind and failed to catch Smith's fly ball. He later said, "I have no excuse; I should have caught it. But the wind was blowing the ball in and I kept coming and coming and coming. It looked like it was hit from center field to home plate. I just missed it." 'I erupted fr four unearned runs in the 10th inning last night end S defeated Montreal 9-5 to gain a virtual first-place tie with idle Pittsburgh in the N a t i o n a 1 NIGHT EDITOR: League's torrid East Division race. JERRY CLARKEA The victory, eighth for the Mets in their last 11 starts, gave them a 78-69 won-lost record for a ,5306 Bucs g t Mudcat percentage. The Pirates are 77-68 for a .5310 mark. The third-place PITTSBURGH - The Pitts- Chicago Cubs, also idle yesterday, burgh Pirates did not play yester- trai th leaersby oe gme. day, but they wert not idle. In a trail the leaders by one game. mvb indt hr ptea Afte Jery rot ;pnedthemove designed to shore up their After Jerry Grote o ened the bullpen for the National League 10th with a single off Mike Mar- East pennant drive, they acquired shall, pinch-runner Rod Gaspar ace reliever Jim "Mudcat" Grant' stole second and took third when from' the Oakland Athletics, first baseman Fairly cobbled Bud Harrelson's sacrifice bunt.V Pittsburgh General Manager The world must be full of losers since 674 of them couldn't find anything remotely useful to be unsuccessful at this week and for lack of anything worse entered the Daily's gridde pickings contest. Since the prize fund has never managed to grow past first place there have to be 673 losers with 674 entries, so the odds of losing are pretty good and the risk of suffering the ignominity of winning is slight. Even with the odds, tnere was, however, one loser unlucky enough to win. He is Robert Hodes, of 908 Sybil No. 2. Even more unlucky, though, are Bob's roommates, who wil have to eat his prize the next time it's his turn to cook dinner. It must be said in his favor that Bob didn't apply his full efforts to being unsuccessful. He decided to make his gridde picks the same way that Dickie Nixon, who once tried to become an FBI man but didn't make the grade just as he has.failed at all his endeavors, de- cides on his foreign policy: This method entails flipping a three faced coin. If it lands on its edge you make the right decision. As everyone knows, Dickie's coin has once beerf used by a hotshot coin flipper from Reno who had it specially balanced to improve the odds. Unlike Bo, this ace player of the odds believed in winning. As, all soap opera watchers can tell you, there is sorrow in the midst of happiness. Bob's true sorrow is that his prize for winning Gridde Pickings is a genuine Cottage Inn pizza. This really makes him a loser, so he 'can rest in peace after he eats it. If he can prove that his hospitalization insurance is paid up he can pick it up any time he feels like taking his life in his hands. In case anyone wants to lose next week, here are the games. -Associated Press Going out for a peace DALLAS COWBOY ace Lance Rentzel, famed for his ability to catch passes, appears yesterday' with his wife, dancer Joey Heatherton, equally famous for throwing them, to announce the formation of Student Alternatives to Violence. The group is dedicated to establishing peace among various factions on Amer- ican campuses. }. :}..... : "{}: :.'r v}:n:::.":{.i:; {} : r."'" {:;ti}::L'r'."i i ssr'r>::::}i'}: }:}}?:;::{{:?:em Tommie Agee bounced to third baseman Bailey, who threw to the plate to trap Gaspar in a rundown, but Gaspar scored the tie-breaking run when Bailey let the return throw from catcher Join Bateman get past him. Wayne Garrett's run-scoring double, a walk, a sacrifice fly by Ron Swoboda and an RBI singleI by Donn Clendenon completed the rally. Met reliever Danny Frisella, who retired the last 15 batters he faced before leaving for a pinch-hitter in the 10th, earned his seventh victory against three setbacks. The Mets struck for five runs in the fifth, erasing a 4-0 Mon- treal lead, but the Expos tied it in the bottom half against Fri- sella on a walk, a bloop double by pinch hitter Mack Jones and Bobby Wine's sacrifice fly. Billboard The intramural department has announced new pool hours for the fall semester. Faculty and administrative only may use the varsity pool from 11 a.m..to 1 p.m. and the IM pool from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday. Coeducational hours in the IM pool will be 3:30 to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. and 7 to 10 p.m. on Friday. The IM pool will also be open Saturday from 10:30 to 12:30 p.m. and from 3:30 to 5:30. Joe L. Brown refused to disclose what the A's received in exchange for the righthanded veteran, who has compiled a 6-2 record with 24, saves and a 1.71 earned run aver- age among the best in the Amer- ican League. The player or players will be named at the end of the season. Grant will join the Bucs tonight in Philadelphia, where Luke Walk- er, who pitched a two-hitter last week against the St. Louis Car dinals, will oppose the Phils' Bar- ry Lersch. 1. Arizona at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Wisconsin at Oklahoma 3. Texas Christian at Purdue 4. Minnesota at Missouri 5: Colorado at Indiana 6. Oregon at Illinois 7. Notre Damegat Northwestern 8. Iowa at Oregon State 9. Michigan State at Washington if 10. Nebraska at Southern Cal 11. Ohio U at Kent State 12. California at Texas 13. Lafayette at Rutgers 14. Navy at Penn State 15. UCLA at Pittsburgh 16. Virginia Tech at Alabama, 17. Syracuse at Houston 18. North Carolina State at North Carolina 19. Maryland at Duke 20. Geneva at Slippery Rock I -'. I- Major League Standings THE CUBS, as often happens, took advantage of their reprieve and followed Alou's error with three singles, producing a 3-2 victory. When you lose a game 13-0 you laugh about it, and are unable to second guess the result, but losses like Sun- day's are the kind that iingrained indelibly in your mind (Thirty- minutes after the fiasco, the Pirates were still stunned by the turn of events and were unable to do much more than slowly undress), and often effect a'team's play in future contests. A win Sunday might have given the Bucs that extra mo-' mentum that might have meant the difference in their four game series at Shea Stadium in New York this weekend. It might have meant the beginning of the end for the Cubs, who must play their last 14 games away from home. It certainly would have made life considerably more miserable for the Mets, who were losing a tight game, but were able to take con- solation after hearing of the Pirates' troubles. But then baseball has always been a game of might have beens and never were., SOME RANDON THOUGHTS: Chuck Tanner, the new manager of the Chicago White Sox, may actually be going down in the world. He had been manager of the Hawaii team in the Pacific Coast League, and the Hawaiians drew over a half mil- lion fans to their home games, a figure that the White Sox will probably not surpass. . Speaking of the White Sox, they have now replaced the Cleveland Indians as the team most likely to be moved in baseball's game of musical chairs. Don't give up hope if you didn't win The Daily's Gridde Pickings contest this weekend. Displaying my! penchant for ipsets and underdogs, I went 8-12 last weekend, good enough for last place in the Sports Staff's pool.- AMERICAN LEAGUE East Baltimore New York betroit Boston Cleveland Washington Minnesota Oakland California Kansas City Milwaukee. Chicago' W L 95 51 81 65 75 71 75 71 71 76 68 77 West 87 58 80 67 77 68 58 88 55 90 53 93 Pct. .651 .555 .514 .514 .483 .469 .600 .544 .531 .397 .379 .363 Today's Games Oakland at Milwaukee Chicago at Kansas City California at Minnesota 'Detroit at Cleveland Baltimore at Washington Boston at New York, 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 14 20 20 241 26 10 291% 32 34!1', GB 1 12 13" . Los Angeles 78 67 .538 San Francisco 77 69 .527 Atlanta 72 76 .486 Houston 70 76 1479 San Diego 58 89 .395 Yesterday's Results New York 9, Montreal 5, 10 inn. Atlanta at San Francisco, inc. San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. Today's Gamnes New York at Montreal Pittsburgh at Philadelphia St. Louis at Chicago Cincinnati at'Houston San Diego at Los Angeles Atlanta at San Francisco L U 13 141> 201/1. 211, 34 East W L New York 78 69 Pittsburgh 77 68 Chicago 76 69 St. Louis 70 77 Philadelphia 66 81 Montreal s64 82 West Cincinnati 93 56 Pct. .531 .531 .524 .476 .449 .438 TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 .624 - r -- -- I RENT-A-CAR (CHEVROLET IMPALA) WE SPECIA LIZE IN PIZZA Litt le (aesars PI ZZA TREAT 17511 Plymouth NORTH CAMPUS Special Offer for Students, M-Th. 4-12 P.M. Fri:-Sat. 2 P.M.-2 A.M. Sun. 2-12 P.M. $8.00 a PLUS 8C Per C Mile Daily Offical Bulletlm The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before *p.m.,, *of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once :only. Student organiiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 Day Calendar Computer and Commu ication Sci- ences Lecture: David J. Farber, U. of COMING SUNDAY Calif, at Irvine, "Distribution Comput- .er System": 2009 LSA, 4 p.m. Statistical Research Lab. Lecture: Martin weinrich, "An Introduction to the Stat Lab & ,the New Constat : 421 w. Engineering, 7 p.m. Duo Concertante: Angel Reyes, violin and Joseph Banowetz, piano: Rackkam Lec. Hall, 8 p.m. General Notices Professional Theatre Prog. will hold usher sign-ups for Actors Company Fall Festival of Contemporary Theatre on Sept. 16 and 17, 3-5 p.m. and 7:30-9 (Continued on Page8) INCLUDES ALL GAS (STUDENTS MUST BE 21 OR OLDER) *SPECIAL WEEKEND RATE-Fri. till Mon. $15.00 and 8c PER MILE ALADDIN RENT-A-CAR (FORMERLY HERTZ AGENCY) 1900 W. STADIUM 663-8677 Across from Huron Valley Bank 1. 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