g, . i 'f*?.i s~s ^ :r.,, .«. * e . ^ . :. ",,". ::_ i '} :;vt }:; ;+ .r: :tis; Night Editor: DAN BORUS SPo Frid ay jw olverine gridd ers practice Sept. 1,1913 sweat out '+"v °}{ .., .:...,.. r...N '1.. R: :". . . .}:?t{"5:,5'. . . . . . . Cha-mbliss ' bombards Motown From Wire Service Reports CLEVELAND - Cleveland first baseman Chris Chambliss clouted two homers, one of them a grand slam, to propel the Indians to a 10-4 victory over the sagging De- troit Tigers last night. D e t r o i t began promisingly enough, breaking away to a quick 2-0 lead off winning pitcher Dick Tidrow. Dick McAuliffe led off with a double, and singles by Ron Cash and Jim Northrup, along with a wild pitch, accounted for the tallies. FOLLOWING CHAMBLISS' first homer, a solo shot off losing pitch- er Woody Fryman in the bottom of the first, the Tigers increased their margin to 3-1 in the fourth on consecutive doubles by Willie Horton and Gates Brown. Then, the roof caved in on the surprised Bengals. A Cleveland rally in the bottom of the fourth sent 11 men to the plate. The In- dian efforts were good for seven runs, efficiently garnered with six hits. AFTER FRYMAN let five of the first six Cleveland batters reach base, giving up run-producing hits to Frank Duffy and Tom Ragland, he was relieved by Mike Strahler. Strahler promptly allowed a wild pitch, a walk to Buddy Bell, a bunt single by Walt Williams which scored the Tribe's third run of the inning, and Chambliss' grand slam blast. Major League Standings By JOHN. KAHLER where, according to the Univer-j CLOAKED in a secrecy secure sity's Sports Information service,, beyond the wildest dreams of G. the Maize and Blue gridders con- Gordon Liddy, Bo Schembechler's' sume some 40 gallons of "Wol-' Wolverines completed their last verine-ade" each day.E session of two-a-day practices yes- Only players, coaches, and train- terday. The taciturn Schembechler, ers have been allowed inside the: obviously seeking to give an im- practices. A similar rule will be in pression of a man with several effect this Saturday, when the team' surprises up his sleeves, declined will have a full-scale scrimmage' to comment substantatively on the in the Stadium in preparation for team's progress after the practice the season opener against Iowa. was finished. Schembechler takes the Iowa: The one safe conclusion which game quite seriously: previous: can be reached is that the team Michigan openers have tended to should be in shape when the sea- be less-than-impressive, and Iowaf son opens. The temperature on Coach F. X. Lauterbur has put the Tartan Turf has occasionally together an interesting collection; climbed to 115 degrees, touching of sophomores and freshmen which; off the squad's thirst to the point has considerable promise, to say; Pirates axe Virdon; Murtaugh netw boss the least. ler may be forced to make some SOME IOWA partisans are open- last-minute changes in his offensive ly talking about a situation rem- strategy. A runner such as Chuck iniscent of 1967, when the un- Heater, who doesn't have over- heralded Indiana "Whiz Kids" whelming speed but compensates came out of journalistic oblivion to with outstanding balance and tena- tie for the Big Ten title and win city, is a "natural" for a ball- the trip to Pasadena. An opening- control offense but will have day victory over Michigan would trouble fending off the speedy Gil Chapmans, Gordon Bells, Harry NL a Bankses, and Rob Lyttles if a game-breaker plan is decided upon. Senior priority football tickets Similarly, a wide-open offense go on sale today at 8:30 a.m. in ! would militate against the single- Yost Fieldhouse. Those purchas- skill quarterbacks such, as Tom ing tickets must have an I.D. Slade, and would give Kevin Casey card showing either imprints or Larry Cipa the inside track in Q43UZBD, number 0 to the right the race f r an understudy job of the name, or a transcript behind Dennis Franklin. copy showing that the student DEFENSIVELY, the major con- is entitled to a senior-priority cr ilpoal ocnrt ("Group Four") seat. cern will probably concentrate faround the middle guard and line- go a long way toward bringing this barer are smal, quick Henry Hl Hawkeye vision from hallucination types, but there's some doubt they to reality, will be able to handle the job as As for what Wolverine practices well as "The Great Pumpkin" did. have included, only speculation is Furthermore, none of the avail- the rule. In light of what happened able linebackers has the outstand- in Columbus last year, it would be ing speed which helped make Mike surprising if 'the team has not Taylor and Tom Kee such out- spent some time working on the standing performers in the past. PITTSBURGH (AT-September, a bad month for managers, has claimed another victim. Bill Vir- don got axed yesterday by the Pittsburgh Pirates and Danny Murtaugh was named his succes- sor. he learned of the change. Others appeared unconcerned, while some seemed shaken, bystanders said. The team knew something wrong, sources added, when don's gear was removed at last minute from a truck that was Vir- the was goal-line offense, an area which received much attention during spring drills several months ago. During the scrimmages reporters have been allowed to witness. the The front four and defensive sec- ondary are probably pretty solid, but a failure at the linebacking positions could result in Michigan giving up more points than Wolver- The announcement was made in to carry club equipment to the Michigan team has demonstrated ine fans are accustomed to watch- a hastily called news conference airport, some talent at producing spectacu- ing at Three Rivers Stadium by Joe 1 oetln tpouigsetc-ig Lt BrwnRgeers aage of the Virdon, who had been Murtaugh's lar "big plays," but has had Practices are, of course, a poor L. Brown, general anaclu, whh hright-hand man during the 1970-71 trouble generating the sort of ball- measure by which to gauge the Nationagueague lady and mis- seasons, often served in place of control Shuttlesworth-up-the-middle performance of a team for It is e vr sey star rght-fielder Murtaugh when the latter was side- offense which is the cornerstone of hard to predict how strong or weak Robrto eente was killed in an lined with illness. He was the Schembechler's offensive theofies. any particular position will be when rt lanecrash off Puerto Rico rteam's batting and outfield coach If this pattern continues for the it goes up against 'unfamiliar per- ai 31,1972. from 1968-71. final week of practice, Schembech- sonnel. . Dec. 3, 17. i Brown said Murtaugh, 56, an -. -- - - affable, cigar-chewing Irishman, would remain as manager at least through 1974. Brown refused to discuss his rea- sons for the shuffle, but said the announcement was his "most dif- ficult . . . in my 35 years of base- ball." The announcement was prompt- ed by the recent failure of the Pirates to gain on the first place St. Louis Cardinals in the NationalN_ League East. The Pirates lost three straight to the Redbirds in their just-completed series. .Virdon had been embroiled in disagreements and feuds with key Bucco players, particularly third- baseman Rich Hebner and pitcher Dock Ellis. We Shutter to Th k You Miht Miss ItL sources close to the club said. One bystander said catcher Manny San- r e ,!®®.® A O .i ®il giOl Ol+ 4pi Olig eg guillen had tears in his eyes when V--. -- _ _ _W T' VAV /''7 w - __ ^ w w - - - -- - nr w rr AMERICAN LEAGUE East Baltimore Boston Detroit New York Milwaukee Cleveland W 79 77 74 71 67 61 L 57 63 67 68 72 81 Pct. GB .581 -j .550 4 ! .525 73 .507 10 .482 13% .430 21 West Oakland 81 51 .587 -"4 Kansas City 76 62 .551 'S Chicago 69 70 .496 12% Mnnesota 67 70 .4891l3% California 62 72 .463 17 Texas 47 91 .341 34. Yesterday's Results Cleveland 10, Detroit 4 New York 8, Milwaukee 6 Chicago 5, Minnesota 0 (7 innings) Oakland at California night Other clubs not scheduled Today's Probable Pitchers Oakland (Odom 4-9 or Holtzman 20-11) at Texas (Hudson 4-3) California (Ryan 16-15) at Kansas City (Busby 14-12) Chicago (Wood 22-18) at Minnesota (Decker 9-6) Baltimore (McNally 14-14) at Cleve- land (G. Perry 15-18) Milwaukee (Slaton 11-13) at New York (McDowell 5-3) Detroit (Perry 13-13) at Boston (Pattin 12-13) NATIONAL LEAGUE East AP Photo Bob Didier recently of the Toledo Mud Hens is looking for another base to throw to after tagging out Charlie Spikes of Cleveland to complete a wierd double play. The bogalousa Bomber had attempted to score on Dave Duncan's forceout in the fourth inning. Seven Inclins were luckier than he, however, as the Tribe broke the game open in that inning and went on to win, 4 over the Detroit Tigers. Use Daily Classifieds +- St. Louis Montreal Pittsburgh New York Chicago Philadelphia w 72 68 67 66 65 63 L 68 70 69 73 73 77 Pct. .514 .493 .493 .475 .471 .454 GB 3 3 6; 9 West Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Houston Atlanta San Diego Yesterday's1 Montreal 5, Chicago 3 85 55 83 57 79 59 71 71 67 74 49 89 Results .607 - .593 2 .572 5 .500 15 .475 18%/ .355 35 San Diego at Los Angeles (night) St. Louis (Wise 13-10) at Chicago (Hooton 11-13) New York (Matlack 11-15) and Kobsman (10-12) at Montreal (Tor- rez' 9-1) and Renke (12-13) Pittsburgh (Kison 0-0) at Philadel- phia (Brett 12-5) Cincinnati (Grimsley 13-13) at At- lanta (Schueler 7-7) San Diego (Arlin 9-13) at Los An- geles (Osteen 16-13) Houston (Roberts 13-9) San Fran- cisco (Marichal 1011) UA rv in-o V faculty om yBnk has ae free Ch~igOnt for you. Ca l434-27 - Idrive in) for Go ahead. 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