Friday, September 20, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Friday, September 20, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PaQe Nine T 7U Lytl By JEFF SCHILLER Bo Schembechler's teams pride themselves on execution. There is no room for mistakes and steady performance is pre- ferable to inconsistent brilli- ance. It's hard for an under- classman to establish himself in an atmosphere like that, and it's especially difficult when he is a tailback on a squad which boasted three of the league's top four tailbacks last season and enjoys the return of all ofI them. But then, Rob Lytle is no ordinary underclassman. Lytle made himself known to Michigan fans last Saturday against Iowa by gaining 86 yards while playing only half the game. But football insiders have known about the 6'1", 190 lb. sophomore since his high school days when he was one of the most sought-after recruits e pa sses first knit bunch of guys. too. There's no hard feelings And the Wolverines are al- between us because Gordie and ready reaping the rewards. The I have a great relationship. We possessor of 9.6 speed in the 100 both just go out and do the yard dash as well as the mus- best job we can." Daily Sports NIGHT EDITOR: LEBA HERTZ t, in the country.; AFTER BEING PURSUED by everyone in the Big 10, the Big 8, the Pac 8, and many oth- ers, Lytle narrowed the field to Michigan, Ohio State, and Pur- due, ultimately choosing Ann Arbor. "It was a combination of things. I liked the school and Coach Schembechler of course,: but what really impressed me ; was the closeness of the team. They really seemed like a tight-, cle to run inside, Lytle is cut from the classic tailback mold. At most schools with lesser tal- ent, the big publicity "All- America hoopla" would be in high gear, - but here at Michi- gan, Rob is forced to share not only the press releases with the likes of Franklin, Heater, Chap- man, Brown, etc. but also his tailback position with last year's sophomore sensation Gordon Bell. His attitude seems realis- tic. "Sure, I'd like to be play- ing all the time", Lytle com- mented "but Gordie Bell is a good football player who does a great job for us, and I know1 he'd like to play all the time, Franklin starts Good news emitted from Michigan's practice ses- sion yesterday. Dennis Franklin will be ready for the Wolverines b a t t I e against Colorado Saturday. Franklin worked ex- tensively with the first unit yesterday, and ap- peared to be back in the form that gained him the nickname "Dennis the Menace." I-- test "You know", he added, "that two of our substitutes last year, Larry Cipa and Bob Thorn- bladh made their pro rosters and Don Coleman (semi-regu- lar defensive end) beat out Rick Middleton of Ohio State who was an All-America last year for the starting linebacker spot on the Saints. "I DON'T KNOW how many guys are affected by the crowd", he commented, "and I suppose I won't know for sure until I go down there, but in general, the opposition's booing gets me up. For them to boo you, you know you have to have done something well whereas the home crowd will cheer for almost anything." The coaches are very high on Rob's future and certainly Maize and Blue fans came away from the Iowa game with a favorable first impression. It remains only for Lytle to prove his consistency, but even that is not in much doubt. After all, he cracked Bo's lineup, didn't he? LYTLE ALSO offered an in- sight into the attitude of this year's team, "I think we have something to prove after the Athletic Directors' vote last .__. i I I BUCS CLOSE IN: Yanlks ; t Doily Photo by KEN FINK Lytle tortures t,,klP C4 UqA..r. split wide to the left a 3 - - - ~~Clarke cogsdill .....5 I'm a sportswt ... .. . not a salesman IS SPORTSWRITING journalism? That's not exactly the burning question of our times. The media-whatever the hell we are-catch most of our criticism for the way we handle the really important stories: Watergate, in- flation, amnesty, The Pardon, the latest AP cheesecake shot of a semi-nude teenaged Australian female on a deserted beach just north of Sydney, those clowns in the state legislature, those! clowns on the City Council, those Wall Street geniuses who blame e' rything on "continual high interest rates and a general lack of confidence" when they (of all people) should know' better, and so on. All of this distracts peoples' attention from how we, the sports media, happen to be treating our favorite subject. That's a serious oversight. Sports, as a set of cultural phenomena which manage to rivet the attention of tens of millions of people for extended periods of time, is clearly important to The way in which this country lives. And since most people rely on the media to provide their day-to-day contact with the sports world, the job the media does is important, too. Minds in Columbus which have never heard of Eric Severeid are warped daily by the poorly-concealed snake-oil peddling of Paul Horning onrthe sports page. This is an extreme example, but it is not as rare as it should be. In executive suits throughout the country, the overfed barons of sport know darn well that the friendly neighbor- hood sportswriter-no one seems to remember his name but everyone agrees he's, a great guy-will throw in a nice bit3 of publicity, disguised as a feature story, or even (if he's audacious) as friendly analysis, to hype the gate. Economics, worse yet, favors the situation. Like all other journalists, the sportswriter earns his living because people are interested in the subject he covers. Therefore, anything that increases fan interest in a sport, increases the job security of the sports-scribe. If you don't believe this, just read *he latestj prose from the pens of people - - _-__------ - '. , By The Associated Press NEW YORK -The defending Baltimore Orioles completed aJ " three-game sweep ofNew York M a Q rLe u andmoved into first place in the American League's East Standinas Division last night, blanking the, AMERICAN LEAGUE Yankees 7-0 behind Dave Mc- East Nally's three-hit pitching. Baltimore I 7L .53 GB McNally, 16-10, stifled the New York 80 70 .533 A Yankees on three singles in Boston 77 72 .517 3 winning his fourth consecu- Cleveland 73 75 .493 614 tive game and eighth in 101 Milwaukee 72 78 .480 814iczJl 1.I a Detroit 69 81 .460 i decisions since July 31. It Was west the second shutout for the- Oakland 85 66 .563 -- Orioles in the three-game Texas 80 70 .533 41/ sep Minnesota 77 74 .510 8 Yesterday's Results Don Baylor opened the scor- Detroit 3, Boston 1 1 ing, smashing the first pitch of Baltimore 7, New York 0 the fifth inning from Rudy May, Kansas City 4, Oakland 3, 10 in. Today's Games 6-4, far over the fence in left- Cleveland (G. Perry 20-10) and center near the 371-foot sign (F. Peterson 9-12) at New York for his ninth home run of the (Tidrow 12-12) and (Gura 4-0), 2. season. Baltimore (Grimsley 17-13) at Boston (Drago 6-9), (n). Stargell socs Detroit (olicha 16 18) at Mi- PITTSBURGH - Willie Star- California Ryan (20-15) at Minne- gell hit a two-run double and sota (Decker 15-12), (n). Richie Hebner added a three- Kansas City (Fitin orris 11-6) at run homer, keying a seventh- Texas (J. Brown 12-12), (n)., Oakland (Abbott 5-5) or (Hamil- inning rally that lifted the ton 6-4) at Chicago (B. Johnson Pittsburgh Pirates to an 8-6 8-4), (n). victory over the St. Louis Car- NATIONAL LEAGUE dinals last night. W L Pet. GB relief ace Al Hrabosky, who had St. Louis 80 70 .533 --allowed only one earned run in ttsbg 7970870 / his previous 26 appearances. Montreal 71 78 .477 8/ .The victory moved the Pirates New York 67 82 .450 12!4 within a half-came of the first- Chicago 63 86 .423 164_ place Cardials in the National Los Angeles Wet9 56 .624 - League East. lose he homers by Stargell and ner in the five-run Pirate ising both came off Cardinal (ers Ruhie OSTON-Right-hander Vern- Ruhle pitched two-hit ball for en innings in his first major ;ue start and veteran Al ine closed in on 3,000 life- s hits with a run-scoring sin- lifting the Detroit Tigers 1 3-1 victory over the Boston 1 Sox last night. lead Ruhle, a 23-year-old gradu- ate of Olivet College in Mich- igan, beat Boston veteran Luis Tiant, 20-13, who failed for the sixth straight time to gain his 21st victory. Kaline, hoping to become only the 12th player in baseball his- tory to collect 3,000 hits, col- lected his 2,997th when he sin- gled home a run in the first inning after Ron LeFlore sin- gled and stole second. season. To characterize it as re- venge makes it too emotional, but we do want to show every- one just how good we are." ALL-CAMPUS PARTY te::Sat.,Sept. 21 featuring l4 ime: 8:00 p.m. CO Ok: y$Place: AJT.O. Fraternity.LOD 1415 Cambridge 1 Admission S . .a .cY- TONIGHT is PARTY NIGHT 'TEEIEE 11 k 341 S. Main 1 III SGT. PEPPER 1028 E. UNIVERSITY 662-0202 BEER and WINE Dance, Rock, and Roll SPECIAL ITEMS: THURSDAY, SEPT. 19-MONDAY, SEPT. 23 1I Cincinnati 91 59 .607 2% Atlanta 83 68 .550 11 Houston 76 74 .507 17% San Francisco 68 83 .450 26 San Diego 55 96 .364 39 Yesterday'saResults Chicago 7, Philadelphia 4 Pittsburgh 8, St. Louis 6 San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. Cincinnati at San Francisco, inc. Today's Games New York (Sadecki 8-8) at Pitts- burgh (Brett 13-8), (n). Chicago (Bonham 11-19) at St. Louis (Forsch 5-4), (n). Atlanta (P. Niekro 17-12) at Houston (Richard 2-1), (n). Philadelphiak(Carlton 14-12) at Montreal (Repko 11-14), (n). San Diego (McIntosh 0-3) at Los Angeles (Messersmith 18-6), (n). Cincinnati (Kirby 10-8) at San Francisco (D'Acquisto 12-12), (n). Home of Authentic Persian Rugs OVER 100 OBJECTS OF ART AND APPAREL FROM PERSIA (IRAN) We Buy, Sell & Appraise New & Used Oriental Ruqs 20% OFF SHEEPSKIN COATS for men, women & children MK9 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 320 E. LIBERTY Ann Arbor 769-8555 COUZENS FILM CO-OP presents "TELL THIEM WII "EBOY IS HERE with ROBERT REDFORD and ROBERT Couzens Cafeter Fri. & Sat. at 8 & I D necessary Admission $1 r BLAKE ia 10 1/2 gal. WILSON LOW FAT MILK .......59c / gal. SKIM MILK ...................59c 1/2 gal. WILSON CHERRY HILL ICE CREAM .. .................79c DANNON YOGURT.........3 cups for 98c HEAD LETTUCE .................... 29c TOMATOES ..................29c/lb. GREEN PEPPERS................10c each CUCUMBERS1......................10c COLBY CHEESE .................1.19 lb. GROUND ROUND BEEF ........ 1.09 lb. BEEF STEW.. 1.49 lb. STORE HOURS: Open 7 Days from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. whose employment depends on' the survival of the Detroit Wheels. Frankly, I don't see what pur- pose there is (for example) in predicting championships for the local teams when there's no way they can achieve them by any combination of talent and/ or luck. This only leads to dis- illusioned fans, and undercuts the business completely. These aren't exactly new points. Similar criticism of journalism is almost as old as the profession itself. And that's the hell of it. Noth- ing has been done. Even though sportswriters know that wtli- mately their lives depend upon their being free agents, uncom- mitted to the teams and indi- viduals they write about, they have failed to unite to do any- thing substantive to improve their situation. Genuine s p o r t s journalism would be a good thing for the sportswriters, for their readers, and ultimately even for the ath- letes. Too bad there's so little of it! I HOW IS YOUR DELIVERY? Discover ichigan! -at& I Is delivery of THE DAILY acceptable? We hope so! If not, please call us at 764-0558, MON- FRI., 10-3 and tell us what's wrong. It's the only way we can try to correct the errors. * * AND IF you want to order THE DAILY for home delivery use the same number: 764- 0558.1 DAILY CIRCULATION STAFF Ps SUBSCRIBE * .to *I * a \p5580458 i MEDICAL SCHOOL APPLICANTS American Medical Col- school applications. Your schools you select. lege Admissions Profile, MCAT scores, grade point Contact your pre- I E ,i I