Page Eleven Friday, September 22, 1972 PIRATES CLINCH FIRST: THE MICHIGAN DAILY If THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven c ,;: _ Bengal By The Associated Press BOSTON - The Detroit Tigers rallied for four runs in both the first and third innings and beat the Boston Red Sox 10-3 last night to reduce the Red Sox' lead over the Tigers in the American League East pennant race to less than one percentage point. Boston,. with a record of 78-65, has a .5454 percentage while De- troit, with 79-66, is at .5448, six-10- a thousandths of a point behind. The Tigers jumped on Red Sox o rookie starter Mike Garman, 0-1, in the first, scoring on a walk, ad single by Bill Freehan, an infielda forceout, Willie Horton's RBI-sin- g gle and Norm Cash's RBI-double. John Curtis relieved for BostonC and gave up two more runs, one ont Aurelio Rodriguez' single and the other on catcher CarltonaFisk'ss throwing error to second after af man was tagged out at home. Q blast Bosox Wolverines battle MSU n IV football oener daily sports, NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK BLOOM against the eventual West cham- pion in the National League play- offs, which start Oct. 7. Eyeing a champagne celebration denied them Wednesday night by a N\ew York victory, the Pirates quickly went to work in the first inning off Met right-hander Gary Gentry, 7-10, scoring a run without the aid of a hit. I Gentry was driven to an early shower in the midst of Pittsburgh's five-run flurry in the third. Sin- gles by Vic Davalillo, Rennie Sten- nett and Roberto Clemente pro- duced the first run of the inning, knocking out the Met pitcher. Reliever Ray Sadecki loaded the bases with a walk to Al Oliver and gave up a two-run single to Richie Hebner and run-scoring base hits to Milt May and Bob Robertson. y *sk Yanks skid , earned run in the seventh. Bell was chased in the eighth when the Yanks scored two rains with two out. An infield single by pinch hitter Felipe Alou and sin- gles by Horace Clarke and White produced one run, and another scored on Bobby Murcer's single off reliever Ken Sanders. Bernie Allen hit a one-out homer in the ninth for New York's final- run. * * . * Phils fly * * * ST. LOUIS-First baseman Ted Simmons committed a three-base error in the eighth inning enabling the Philadelphia Phillies to score two runs and beat the St. Louis Cardinals 3-1 last night in National League action. Phils' Larry Bowa and Tommy Hutton had reached base on a single and a walk with one out in the inning when former Cardinal Willie Montanez hit a hard ground ball at Simmons that bounced off his leg and skipped toward the bullpen. Right-hander Jim Bibby, 1-1, who yielded a two-out homerun to Phils' rookie Bob Boone in the seventh, took the loss. I By FRANK LONGO ,amount of game competition the offensive-wise, Brown does foresed as been said before, but the freshmen are exposed to these a solid Blue defense. it thing going for the new days. Michigan State's Eddie Ruthers gan varsity-reserve football "When I was a freshman," he ford brings only 17 tendered fresh- is enthusiasm; recalls, "we didn't have any games men in his 48-man group, so the "junior varsity squad" plays at all. Now these freshmen have mini-Spartans probably have cont st of six games today against six games to look forward to." siderably more upperclassmen with gan State in the Stadium at That gives them the chance to be- probably more experience than th( ., and everyone from coach come the winningest freshman- Wolverines. s Brownhto the last freshman varsity reserve-junior varsity team Michigan will"definitely start its n who hopes to play before j in Michigan history. best 22 men, Brown has decided eople sme ay, is Brown is ably assisted in the but he very much wants to giv teusiasm.new at Michigancoaching department by three of as many players as possible a teamut istnewatwMicganhis former teammates at Michigan. chance to get into the game. Also; rt osfr themnewtNCA Mike Hankwitz, Garvie Craw and he'd like to operate part of the :at allows freshmen to com- Werner Hall each also played un- game with an entirely freshma in varsity sors e up of both tendered and der Schembechler, so they are not group. ed pofbthtedthedasdtywithout knowledge of his "system." The rest of the schedule includes es were not able to releas Tke two other members o the another game with State, two with rplete roster of the squad staff are Bill Whitler, who played Notre Dame, and one each with latet yesterday, too late for at football at Miami of Ohio, (one PurdueandToledo. ation. Lineups will be avail- of the prerequisites, it seems for And. while it is hard to single t the gametos wevr, becoming a successful football out individuals to keep your eye wt the game today, however. coach), and Bob Sutton, who at- on with little, previouscompetition, awn, who was Bump Elliott'stedEU .vtends EMU. one name to remember might be .-caller for the Blue varsity The 1972 team is made up of 30 Phil "Pepper Powers, a highly- 7-68, is in his first year at tendered freshmen, plus 12 "walk- recruited quarterback prospect d served as a graduate as- ons," but it also includes sopho- from Marcellus, Michigan, who is it under present headucoach m ores and upperclassmennot mak- expected to start. nhembechler and last year ing the varsity, and this week is His back-up will be Mike Holmes, ed the Dartmouth freshmen. rounded out by anyone not on the of Akron, Ohio, and also seeing mn is looking forward to his 48-man traveling squad to UCtA. I some action calling the plays will s opener very much, being Although Brown professes to be sophomore Jeff Spahn, who ularly pleased with the have some fine individual perfor- backed-up Dennis Franklin for last d t mers, the lack of time that his year's frosh team. team gets to practice alone could Another name to remember work against it. would have been running back Most. of the week the varsity- Gordon Bell, a 5-9%, 180-pound reserves spend imitating Michigan speedster from Troy, Ohio, but he opponents to help the varsity squad has been chosen to travel with better prepare for its games. But the varsity to'the West Coast. ic they will have had only two 45- Season ticket holders who bring minute sessions this week to prac- their ticket booklets will be ad- tice their own Michigan plays. Al- mitted free while all others will be in and became the game's though unsure of what to expect charged one dollar. ng ball carrier. gaining 75 Magic Number: 12 Detroit came back for four more in the third on a run-scoring dou- ble by Cash and a three-run single by starting pitcher Joe Coleman, 17-13, who entered the game bat- ting .096 with two RBI. Cash hit his third double with two out in the seventh, then scored 'r it I 3 t i ry AP Photo DETROIT'S NORM CASH is out by a mile at the plate but coach° despite this the Tigers whipped the Boston Red Sox 10-3 last night Broe to move into a virtual tie for the American League East Division' team's lead. Boston's Carlton Fisk applies the tag. partici on a double by Mickey Stanley.! The final Tiger run scored in the MILWAUKEEr-ns oih n srgg ninth when Al Kaline doubled and drove in three runs with a single Jim Northrup drove him in with a and his 18th home run, leading the single. The double was Kaline's Milwaukee Brewers to a 6-4 Ameri 900th career extra base hit. can League victory over the sxid- ding New York Yankees last ight. Briggs' third inning home run, B c's reign following Ellie Rodriguez' walk, drove in the decisive runs as tie NEW YORK-Steve Blass, back- Yanks dropped their fifth game inj ed by a five-run third inning, their last six starts. Mike Kekich, pitched the Pittsburgh Pirates to 10-13, gave up all four runs in, their third straight National League dropping his fourth straight deci- East title last night with a seven- sion since his last victory July 29. hit, 6-2 victory over the New York Brewer starter Jerry Bell, 4-1, Mets. held New York hitless after Roy The Pirates, sitting in first place White's first-inning single until' since June.19, thus earned a berth Johnny Callison singled for an un- SH UT TLESWORTH, THORNBLADH EXCEL Bo has nice problem at fu By GEORGE HASTINGS When the preseason predictors went about sizing up the Mich- igan offensive backfield for this season, there seemed to be surety at only one position. While a quarterback, a tailback, and a wingback all were yet to be picked, at fullback Ed Shuttles- worth was always listed as a sure starter and an All-American candidate. But now, going into the Wol- verines' second game of the sea- son Saturday night at UCLA, the situation is reversed. Dennis Franklin, Harry Banks, and Clint Haslerig began the Northwestern game at the other three back positions and will apparently start there again this week. However, Michigan coach Bo Schembechler is still unsure as to who will start at fullback this week, and it is evident that play- ing time at the position this year is going to be Shuttlesworth and Bob Thornbladh. split between a fellow junior, Schembechler feels that both players will start some games and that both will "play a great deal" this season. "They're very, very even at this point," he says, adding that the more impressive of the two in practice during the week will get the nod each Sat- urday. The recent history of Schem- bechler and his fullbacks has been a bit curious. Last year, it was senior Fritz Seyferth who started all but two or three of the contests, yet it was Shuttles- worth who saw by far the most playing time. Shuttlesworth, in 1971, carried the ball a total of 182 times, as opposed to 56 for Seyferth. And he made good use of his oppor- tunities, too, gaining 875 yards for a 4.8 average, and scoring six touchdowns. The accomplishments of the big 6-2, 227-pounder from Cin- cinnati were not overlooked, either, as he made second team All-Big Ten as well as several sophomore All-America squads. Meanwhile, Thornbladh spent most of last year on the side- lines, partly because of a knee injury that kept him out of sev- eral games. When he did appear he performed well enough to establish a 4.1 average and re- cord four touchdowns, but over the season he compiled only 125 yards. But Schembechler came into this season with an open mind at fullback, and in practice prior to the Northwestern game Thorn- bladh, who like Seyferth is a bet- ter blocker than Shuttlesworth, gained a slight edge, and re- ceived the starting berth for that contest. Thornbladh carried four times in the Wolverines' drive after the opening kickoff against the Wild- cats, and ran well, picking up 22 yards. But on the fourth carry he fumbled, and that was all the action he saw. Shuttlesworth iGC1Ull1j uC~ll vuaw av , } ^, yards in 17 tries. Shuttlesworth says that the fact that he has started so few times in his career here hasn't bother- ed him, as long as he has gotten his chance sometime during the contest. "Sure, I'd rather start," he says, "but Blade's playing- good football, and he's going to get his playing time, and I'll get mine." Meanwhile, Thornbladh was not discouraged, either, by the fact that he was yanked so quick- ly last Saturday. "It was the fumble - it's that simple," he says. "Ed's such a great player that I just can't afford to make a mistake." But Schembechler makes it clear that the fumble has not. put Thornbladh in the doghouse permanently, and that the 6-2, 224-pounder from Ply- mouth, Mich., will see a lot more action this year. Butthe man most happy about the fullback situation is Schem- bechler himself, who feels lucky to have two such fine runners as Shuttlesworth a n d Thornbladh. (THE OLD VILLAGE INN) OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY, including Sunday DANCE TO came leadin Major League Standings The Seven James Quintet North America's Hottest New Group! WEDNESDAY thru SUNDAY at 9:00 3411 WASHTENAW Near Arborland 973-2100 American League East National League East w 1. Boston Detroit Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee Oakland Chicago Minnesota Kansas City California Texas w 78 79 77 75 66 60 West 85 80 73 70 67 52 L Pet. 65 .5454 66 .5448 68 .531 69 .521 80 .452 86 .4i1 GB- 2 3 131/2 1914 5 1112 14 18 33 Pittsburgh Chicago Ngw York St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco San Diego 91 79 74 70 65 54 West 89 80 67 63 54 53 65 69 76 78 90 55 63 67 77 82 88 iJ Pet. .632 .549 .517 .479 .455 .375 .618 .559 .535 .465 .434 .380 12 167' 2? 2512 37 814 12 22 262 34 GB 58 63 69 71 76 91 .594 .559 .514 .496 .469 .364 AP Photo PITTSBURGH'S STEVE BLASS AND DOCK ELLIS partake in a bit of the bubbly after clinching their third straight division title last night with a 6-2 win over the Mets. Blass hurled a seven- hitter and Ellis enthusiastically watched. Phone 764-0558 to Subscribe to THE MICHIGAN DAILY Yesterday's Results Detroit. 10, Boston 3 Milwaukee 6, New York 4 Kansas City at California, inc. Other clubs not scheduled Today's Games Kansas City (Drago 11-15) at Oak- land (Blue 6-8) New York (Kline 16-7) at Cleveland (Perry 21-16) Texas (Stanhouse 2-6) at Chicago (Bahnsen 19-15) California (Messersmith 7-9) at Min- nesota (Blyleven 14-16) Detroit (Zachery 1-0) at Boston (MeGlothen 7-6) Only games scheduled. Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 6, New York 2 Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 1 Other clubs not scheduled Tonight's Games San Diego (Caldwell 7-8) at Atlanta (Niekro 14-11) Philadelphia (Reynolds 2-13) at New York (McAndrew 11-6) Montreal (Moore 8-8) at Pittsburgh (Kison 8-7) Cincinnati (Grimsley 13-7) at Hous- ton (Dierker 15-7) Chicago (Reuschel 8-8) at St. Louis (Cleveland 14-14) San Francisco (Willoughby 5-2) at Los Angeles (Sutton 16-9) original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs,- by leading 20th century artists: Pablo Picasso Johnny Friedlaender Marc Chagall