Tuesday, September 18,'1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage seven Tuesday, September 18, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage seven Hammerin' Hank hits another; Expos and Pirates post wins By The Associated Press Padres to 10 hits, to the complete ATLANTA (W) - Hank Aaron game victory. blasted his 711th career homer, Perez' solo blast broke up a moving him three short of Babe scoreless pitching duel between Ruth's career mark. Dave John- Morton, 13-10, and Randy Jones, son smashed his 42nd homer of the 5-5 and triggered the Braves to a year two batters later to tie Rog- four-run inning. ers Hornsby's record for homers: Baker had a run-scoring single by a second baseman in a season and Mike Lum a two-run double and the Atlanta Braves smothered in the rally. the San Diego Padres 7-0 Monday The game drew only 1,362 fans, night. a record low for Atlanta, breaking Aaron led off the eighth by strok- the tl 3mark ofi2,007 se here on ing Gary Ross's 0-1 pitch just in- Se 23,a19s n a e side the left-field foul pole for his the Braves and Padres. 38th homer of the 1973 baseball sea- Son. Cards clubbed dail sports NIGHT EDITOR: BRIAN DEMING Pinch hitter Matty Alou, Fe- lipe's brother, had drilled a two- out single in the eighth inning snapping a tie and lifting St. Louis to a 4-3 lead. AP Photo NEW YORK JETS' Rich Sowells hits Green Bay Packer Jon Staggers just as a pass from Packer quarterback Scott Hunter arrives. Staggers hiti he turf hard on his back, but managed to hang on to the ball. The play was good for 24 yards, and helped the Pack to a 23-7 victory. Despite rain, cold and the lifting of the local television blackout, only 759 persons with tickets failed to show up for the game played in Milwaukee's County Stadium. Dusty Baker then followed with But Jimmy Lyttle opened the a triple before Johnson unloaded MONTREAL - Felipe Alou's Expos' ninth with a single and his 42nd homer, the major league two-otpinc single tied tesco pinch runner Tony Scott took sec- high, over the left field fence. and then Alou scored Montreal's ond on a wild pitch. The next two Jonsn' bas tedth imo-winner on a weird pinch single by bteswr retired but Felipe 3Johnson's blast tied the immor- RnWos fbgte xo o atters weresi dh e IRon Woods, lifting the Expos to a tal Hornsby who set his mark in 5-4 victory over St. Lous In the Alous pinch single tied the score. the, 192 season while playing for first game of a twi-night double- Then Woods popped up near the St. Louis Cardinals, header yesterday. the mound and it dropped between Those blasts, plus Marty Perez' eighth homer in the sixth, helped Carl Morton, 13-10, who held the L n ,. _ T all the Cardinal fielders for a sin- two doubles to extend his RBI total gle as Alou scored the deciding to 112, tops in the National League. run. Seaver, 17-10, had allowed just Home runs by Ron Fairly and five runs in four previous triumphs Bob Stinson had helped the Expos this season- over Pittsburgh, but come from behind twice earlier in the Pirates tagged him for five the game. It was Montreal's sixth runs in the three innings he lasted straight victory. last night. * Stargell tripled home a run in the first to give Pittsburgh a 1-0 Mets mauled 'lead, and consecutive doubles by PITTSBURGH (RP) - Willie Star Richie Zisk and Milt May extended gell drove in four runs with four the lead to 2-0 in the second. extra-base hits, including his 40th After Al Oliver walked with one- homer of the season, to lead the out in the third, before Stargell Pittsburgh Pirates to a 10-3 vic- and Richie Hebner tagged Seaver tory over the New York Mets last for night in a game that was inter- successive homers to score rupted by rain. three more runs. The victory kept Pittsburgh atop The Mets cut the lead to 5-3in the National League East. the fifth with three runs off Pirate In addition to his two-run homer starter Bruce Kison before rain in the second inning off Tom Sea- interrupted the game for more ver, Stargell rapped a triple and than an hour. University of Michigan Tae Kxwon Do Club DEMONSTRATION ih Tuesday, Sept. 18th 7:00 P.M. Women's Athletic Bldg. Classes starting Sept. 19 Info: Len at 763-6040 Coaches By BILL STIEG fourth d The opening of the Big Ten each time football season last Saturday occurred saw the debuts of four new head State's L coaches, two of them veterans of Wildcats league action who had switched tie the g schools, and two others making goal. It their premier appearances in the plan, as conference. quarterb True to form, the vetetan Big nected w Ten coaches, John Pont of North- for the g western and Alex Agase of Pur- It was due reigned victorious in their for Stolz openers, while newcomers Denny set up b Stolz of Michigan State and Lee with turn Corso of Indiana received the intercept rudest of welcomes. ble - on In Evanston, Illinois, Indiana But St transplant Pont and his North- pleasant western Wildcats surprised the performl MSU Spartans and their new coach L mentor, Stolz, with a 14-10 upset. in Bloom nois c o PONT KEPT A sparse crowd watched of 27,305 excited as he ordered made a b his team to gamble for the ne- en -by II cessary yardage three times in and three debut in Bi [own situations and won e. One of these big plays in the fourth quarter at 13 yard line, when the declined a chance to ame at 10-0 with a field proved to be the best a couple of plays later ack Mitch Anderson con- ith tight end Steve Craig ame winning touchdown. a frustrating afternoon who saw his Spartans oth Northwestern scores novers; one of them an ion and the other a fum- ne of six by State.' tolz's nightmare was a dream compared to the ance freshman Indiana ee Corso had to observe mington. Corso and Illi- a c h Bob Blackman in horror as their teams total of 12 fumbles (sev- linois, five by Indiana) w five interceptions (one by Illinois, four by Indiana). But the Illini, led by Quarterback J e f f Hollenbach and fullback Steve Greene, made better use of their breaks and emerged the winners, 28-14. Greene scored twice and Hollenbach had a 12- for-19 pass completion tally. ALEX AGASE, former North- western coach, has moved to Purdue and though he beat Wis- consin 14-13, he can't be too hap- py over the performance of his new club. The Boilermakers won only with a big helping hand from the Badgers. In this case the helping hand was all thumbs. The snap on a game tying extra-point kick attempt was fumbled and the kick was blocked. This hap- pened in the fourth quarter, aft- er Wisconsin had marched 80 yards in 14 plays to score and g Ten pull within one point, 14-13. After the missed PAT the hapless Bad- gers never had another scoring chance. Meanwhile, down in Columbus, Woody Hayes turned loose his herd of Ohio State football play- ers in the direction of Minne- sota's goal line and they stunned the Gophers with a 56-7 stam- pede. Archie Griffin, improving all the time and still only a soph- omore, was the leader of the on- slaught with 249 total yards. Har- old Henson, last year's Big Ten storing leader, started off this year where he left off last season and scored three touchdowns on short plunges. The victory was Hayes' 150th in 23 years as Buckeye mentor. Next week OSU has an open date and then Woody goes for his 50th defeat. i4 i i I } i 3i I i I pors91 0ine iaiy -- .eea semij That's our Bo.. . ... alwvays hungry Dan Borus BO SCHEMBECHLER wouldn't be Bo Schembechler if he took Michigan's 31-7 pasting of Iowa as a definitive test of how well his 1973 squad can play. There he was dining at the Mon- day press luncheon sounding like a man who didn't know where his next victory was coming from. Oh, it wasn't really that bad. In the course of his talk with reporters, Schembechler singled out the.offensive line, linebacker Carl Russ, the entire backfield, and place kicker Mike Lantry for praise. And there was no doubt that Bo liked a lot of things he saw on the drizzle-soaked Astro Turf in Iowa City. And this time Bo didn't have an unimpressive opener to talk about. Asked by one scribe if he expected to score as many as 31 points, Bo smiled, and calmly replied, "Yeah, I expected to score that many."- But the enthusiasm was somewhat short-lived. "We've yet to get the test," .Schembechler said. "We worked with the option play well. Franklin runs that play with such finesse. He handles himself well and they (the Hawkeyes) were so obsessed with stopping Franklin that they gave our tailback plenty of yardage. Many times we caught them with no inside pursuit. We'll take it that way." Schembechler professed concern still about the offensive line. "We handled Iowa well because they are an angling team. I know we can handle anglers. In fact most teams won't play us with an angling offense because we handle angling so well." Bo's point and it is one to be taken to heart, is that Iowa did much to hand the Wolverines their first one in the victory column this year. Michigan's ground game looked sharp in the second half, but was not so impressive in the first. The Wolverines managed seventy yards on penalties and two in- terceptions, as many as Franklin threw all last year, plus a couple of fumbles. That is not Bo Schembechler football. "Take away Douthitt (Earl, the jack rabbit defensive half- back) and their middle guard and Iowa didn't stand much of a chance," said the Michigan coach in a revealing mood, "Why, that Douthitt made five or six tackles which saved touchdowns." Then the canny Schembechler proceeded to give plenty of good horror stories about Stanford's pro style defense, about some linebacker who can run the hundred in 9.8, about the multi- sets that the.Cardinal defense will show, and about how big they are up front. Schembechler was being polite. Stanford's good, no doubt. Probably very good. But you've got to believe that all those sen- iors on the Wolverines are ready for this one. What was interesting about the Iowa game was the things the Wolverines did not show. Clint Haslerig and Paul Seal, to name two. Although Haslerig was the intended target of a couple of Franklin tosses, it was curious to note that his number did not come up at all when Schembechler decided that land locked offense was the name of the day. Haslerig scampered for 168 yards last year and is wingback on this year's power sweep, a play to reckon with as any Michigan Stater who saw last year's scamper by Gil Chapman will tell you. Seal, rightly considered an All-American candidate, did not even get a pass in his direction, unless you count the time Frank- lin was downed trying to pass. Most of the time, Seal was an ineligible receiver toiling in Schembechler's unbalanced line. It's a good bet that those two will be wreaking havoc on 23-7 Green Bayrouts jets MILWAUKEE (A ) - Lightly re- 75 games since Oct. 16, 1966 when garded Scott Hunter, outshining reserve quarterback Al Woodall New York's fabled Joe Namath in completed a 17 yard pass to DavidE the clutch, passed for one touch- Knight in the last minute of play. down and set up two field goals to The iJets lost two fumbles, both ofI lead the Green Bay Packers to a which led to Packer scores follow- 23-7 victory over the Jets in a ing recoveries by Jim Hill. National Football League opener I .. last night.r A national television audience The To 20 watched Hunter, a third-year pro# who followed Namath at the Uni- W-L-T s Ptsr versity of Alabama by six years, 1. So. California 38 1-0-0 1,106 complete six of 13 passes for 107 3. Ohio state 1-0-0 944 yards, including a 19-yard scoring 4. Alabama 2 1-0-8 809 strike to Rich McGeorge as Green 5. MICHIGAN 1-00 615 Bay mounted a 10-0 lead late in 6. Tcxas a0-0-0 65 7. Penn State 1 1-0-0 588 the first half. 8. Notre Dame 0-0-0 389 Namathhwho led the NFL in 9. Oklahoma 1-0-0 384' touchdown passes and passing 10. Tennessee 1-0-0 319 yardage last year, connected on 112: AMzburn 1-0-0 247 16 of 32 for 203 yards. He was 13. Arizona state 1-0-0 152 dumped for losses three times, and 14. North Carolina St. 2-0-0 129 failed to lead the Jets into Packer 1 n1-0-0 8 16, Houston1-0 86 territory after their first series un- 17. Oklahoma State 1-0-0 35 til 7:41 remained to play. 18. UCLA 0-1-0 27i The Jets averted what would 19. Colorado 0-1-0 22 have been the first shut out with 20. tie Bowling Green 1-0-0 19 tie Missouri 1-0-0 19 Namath playing quarterback in tie Daily Libels 1-0-0 19, Gridde Pickings "Life is short, Our minds are small;, So we unite with Uvnamaya, Mother of us all."j BUSINESS WAS SLOW in the Eastern Religions hymnal racket. Bil- bo Talmadge, battle-scarred veteran of hundreds of Baptist camp 1 meetings, racked his brains for a sure-fire gimmick he c o u 1d pawn off on the Free-Will Buddhist Convention to be held in Saltk Lake City the following week. The man who haddiscovered 666 English rymes for "Holy Jesus" was in a bind. Why hadn't he learned enough to get out while the getting was good? Why couldn't he latch on to something slightly more honest, like STP? IF ONLY he had filled out his Gridde Pickings and turned themj in to the Michigan Daily midnight, Friday. The free Mr. Pizza pizza awarded to the winner was the closest thing to Nirvana anyone could possibly experience. Bereft of all hope for salvation, he sighed and 'turned again to Hymn 274, "From Rawalpindi's Icy Mountains." He knew he'd find the answer somewhere, sometime. Dean Smith of 4790 Washtenaw and John Behm of 912 S. Forest found the answers last week, and their joint entry copped the free pizza. True enlightenment may be yours this week. Bring your entries to the Daily, 420 Maynard, or have them mailed and postmark- ed no later than midnight, Friday, September 21. Be sure to include your name and phone number! Brady superlative Ken Brady, former !University of Michigan basketball center, was impressive in the Detroit Pistons' intra-squad game yester- day scoring 18 points in the Pistons' final workout before open- ing the exhibition season. "Brady really looked good tonight but that's what we ex- pected from him," commented Piston mentor Ray Scott about Detroit's fourth round draft pick. "But he's going to be a much better player than he is now," Scott added after Brady awed EMU's Bowen Field House crowd with his aggressive defense. Brady is presently one of three rookies on the Pistons' roster of 15, which includes 12 veterans. Former Michigan star and fifth round choice Henry Wilmore never appeared in the Pistons' rookie camp in mid-August. Lakers trade LOS ANGELES-The Los Angeles Lakers, building for the future when Wilt Chamberlain retires, traded starting forward Jim McMillan to the Buffalo Braves yesterday for 7-foot center Elmore Smith. The 7-foot-1 Chamberlain, 37, has threatened retirement and is holding out for a new contract. Pete Newell, general manager of the National Basketball Association Lakers, denied that the acquisition of Smith is a management lever in negotiations or an indication that Wilt is quitting. "The purpose of the trade is simply to acquire a young center with outstanding potential. When we draft, there's not much chance to draft an outstanding center . . . this opportunity came up. It may not come up next year or the year after," said Newell. ** * Bench benched CINCINNATI-The Cincinnati Reds announced yesterday, prior to the game with the Houston Astros, that Johnny Bench has been fined $210 and handed a two-day suspension by Na- tional League President Charles Feeney. Bench was ejected from the game Saturday night by home plate umpire Andy Olsen. Olsen charged Bench bumped him and used abusive language. The Reds' All-Star catcher immediately appealed the ruling and a hearing was scheduled by Feeney Sept. 20 when the Reds are in San Francisco. The fine and suspension were set aside pending the hearing, and Bench was in the Reds' lineup last night against the Astros. Cincinnati Manager Sparky Anderson, who also was ejected from the game, was fined $300 for what Olsen reported as "abusive language and actions," the Reds said. IF IT'S A REALLY GOOD T HIS MUST II v v i :: 4'"i "':{!::"i'rt{'::.;::.:.;"ii} :5::..:{":":i iv:::":"}:":t is{":: is":::::{{:.}}:"i:{"""::1:'.:Y:4: ''"::fi:-' "'.V"AI:Y: :":"::'' titi": t!!. ?4'!t."!Y!4'!.Y!"!:!Y!."."!!!!!!!!!!!!I!: !!"" t.Yl.:l.Yl: }:::. .ti ....!'V..l.".'t:': l.Yl..... 1... ! . ..4..1.....4...4 .............. ...!l X.Y.44i1. 4Y!}!!!A{f !!.\ A!!M!!!ll :... ..... r.lrfl.:4l:.!!'.... 1. J. ..... " " .." Major AMERICAN LEAGt East Baltimore Boston Detroit New York Milwaukee Cleveland 87 81 79 75 71 66 West 6 6! 7 7 7! 8 League Standings UE NATIONAL LEAGUE East L Pet.GB W L3 1 .588 - Pittsburgh 74 72, 9 .540 7y Montreal 75 73 r0 .530 9 St. Louis 73 76 5 .500 14 New York 73 76 9 .473 17TlbChicago . 70 78 5 .437 23 Philadelphia est 65 84 C1 .588 - incinnati 92 57 19 .588 - Los Angeles 86 64 9 .44 San Francisco 83 65 7 .490 14 Houston 76 75 5A .490 tlanta 73 79 17 .473 17 San Diego 54 95 6 .347 35 Yesterday's Games es Montreal 5, St. Louis 4 Atlanta 7, San Diego 0 Houston 5, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 10, New York 3 Pct. .507 .503 .493 .490 .473 .436 .617 .573 .561 .503 .477 .365 GB 3 32 5 10/ 62 8%/ 17 20 38 i ... 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee/Oldsmobile Oakland 87 6 Kansas City 81 6 Chicago 73 7 Minnesota 73 75 California 69 7 Texas 52 9 Yesterday's Game Baltimore 5, New York 4 Minnesota 8, Kansas City 3 Texas 10, White Sox 3 i SKIP DINNER and PLAY POOL FREE at THE MICHIGAN UNION TODAY and THURSDAY-5:00-7:00 P.M. 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