Thursday, September 28, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,Page Seven Thrdyetme_8 92TH IHGNDIYPg ee Miracl By The Associated Press DETROIT - Duke Sims lined a tie-breaking single to left-center field with one out1 in the bottom of the ninth in- ning last night, capping a two run rally that powered the Detroit Tigers to a 6-5 victory over the New York Yankees. The triumph by the Tigers, who1 overcame a 5-0 lead built by New York in the first three innings, kept them one-half game back of first-place Boston in the Ameri- can League East. rally wins for Tigers dail Y I sports NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK BLOOM I three of Baltimore's seven hits in Baltimore left runners on first American League West. the opening inning but pitched out and third base in the opening in- Mayberry, who also cracked a of trouble when Johnny Oates lined ning, wasted a two-out triple by pair of singles in a four-for-four into a double play following Don Paul Blair in the fourth, and batting day was the biggest ne- Buford's lead-off single. stranded two more runners in the mesis to Wilbur Wood, 24-16. The ift -'paceIndins,9-7fifth. The fifth - place Indians, 9-7 Roger Nelson, 10-6, held the Sox against the Orioles for the season, scoreless until the ninth after Dick scored all their runs in the first Allen doubled across Jim Lyttle in and chased Dave McNally, 13-17, W e Sox Sfl the first inning. Lyttle doubled in before he retired a batter. CHICAGO - J o h n Mayberry the ninth and scored on Carlos Chris Chambliss rapped a two- slammed a two-run homer in the May's triple. run triple, following a single by first and scored after his third-; Mayberry's 24th homer followed Buddy Bell and a throwing error inning triple to launch the Kansa| a walk to Paul Schaal in the first. by first baseman Boog Powell, and City Royals to a 4-2 victoryyester- With two out in the third, Mayberry then, tallied on a single by Ray day, virtually dousing the Chicago;tripled and scored on Lou Piniella's Fosse which finished McNally. ( White Sox' pennant hopes in the single. TT A 1 T -r- 4 fice fly before Sims collected his game-winning hit. Run - scoring singles by Kaline and pinch-hitter Frank Howard and Mickey Stan- ley's sacrifice fly had brought the Tigers back within a run at 5-4 in the eighth. Magic Number: 8 The Miracle Tigers did it again last night-beating Mr. Invincible himself. Terror is spreading throughout the league now as Martin's Marauders seem to have a clear road home. Sparky Lyle, 8-5, who had come on in relief of Steve Kline to quell a three-run Detroit rally in the; eighth inning, loaded the bases with none out in the ninth on sing- les by Ed Brinkman, Willie Horton and pinch hitter Tony Taylor. Al Kaline tied it with a sacri- AP Photo OAKLAND CATCHER Gene Tenace clearly puts the the tag on Minnesota's Steve Byre trying to score on a squeeze play in last night's 1-0 Athletic victory. The win moves Oakland another step closer to the pennant in the American League's Western Division. Sal Bando knocked in Matty Alou for the game's only run. STRONG TEAMWORK Green Wave envisions third upset By CHUCK DRUKIS% Two weeks ago the nere men- tion of the Tulane-Michigan foot- ball game evoked a mirage of, another Virginia-Michigan farce, a 56-0 cakewalk last year. But the hallucinations are over. After capsizing its first two op- ponents, both of whom were at least one touchdown favorites, the Green Wave has roared from obscurity to national prominence, beinig rated eighteenth in this week's poll. Tulane is off to its best start since 1966,and a victory over the Wolverines w o u ld mark the Wave's best beginning in 23 years. - The Tulane crew wrecked Bos- ton College 10-0 in its opener and marooned the nationally ranked Georgia Bulldogs 24-13 last week. "That was a big one for us" said Coach Bennie Ellender after the Georgia win. "We beat a good football team. We still have some shortcoming, but we're im- stacked with Randy Lee and Mike Traux at the ends with tackles Charles Hall and Joel Hale and middle guard Roland Szuninski plugging up the middle. Truax's first cousinhplays tight end for the world champion Dallas Cow- boys. Lee, coming of a stellar performance against the Bull- dogs, was named the Southeast lineman ofrthe week by the As- sociated Press. Senior linebackers Glenn Hard- er and Mike Mullen with monster back David Griener, a hefty and agile three-some, have provided abrupt stops to opponent running plays besides outstanding cover- age on passing plays in the Green Wave's two victories. The defensive secondary, sha- dowing their assignments with apelike agility, have frustrated any passing attack very effective- ly.. Lettermen George Ewing who intrecepted a clutch pass against Boston College besides returning a 57 yard punt for a TD against 46 yards against Georgia in the second half to pin them deep in their own territory. Overall Lee has maintained a 43.2 punting average. Quarterback Mike Walker has combined his two year varsity experience with sophomore Steve Foley to adequately guide the of- fense. Foley tossed a 16-yard scoring pass in his college debut at B.C. while Walker passed for a score and pranced for another against the Bulldogs. The Wave's receivers have been sure-handed but lack in breakaway potential. Mike Foley, Tulane's steadiest wide receiver B les B 0 j- g- and brother of quarterback Steve, has been the Wave's steadiest end. Ends Frank Anderson and' Basil Godwinrhave however been steadily improving according to Ellender. The crux of the running attack has been carried by Doug By- num, Eddie Price, and Virgil Vaughn. "Our big problem," said El- lender, "has been to open a hole for these boys. All they need is a little daylight.'' The offensive front line is the strongest the Wave has amassed in several seasons. Senior Jeff Hollingsworth, a candidate for all-American honors, leads a line that includes Ed Mikkelsen, Mike Owens, and Mike Koesling. Steve Wade centers the snap. I I 1......................... e s : Red Sox rise OpeA iui pe ut n iug a n w a er p t BOSTON - Reggie Smith doub- led home two runs, Luis Aparicio tripled in a pair and Bill Leesturn-ed l iashentetor t is C season Boston Red Sox beat Milwaukee 7-5 yesterday in an important Ameri- can League East baseball game. By CHUCK BLOOM' I ly improved his offense and Larry fending champions from Indiana. The victory kept the first-place The history - making Michigan Day rounds out the senior contin- Last season, Michigan placed a Red Sox a half-game ahead of De- water polo team will meet its gent. fine second in the conference. troit. first opponent of the season, the Junior Paul Fairman returns as Pheney, who also coaches at Smith doubled in the final two Kentucky Wildcats, tomorrow night the Wolverines' second leading Ann Arbor Huron High, is very runs of a three-run fifth inning at Matt Mann Pool starting at 7:30 scorer as does sophomore Pat impressed with this year's Michi- that put Boston ahead 5-4 and Apa- p.m. saBauer, coming off of a fine season gan squad. "They are better now ricio clinched it with his triple in, The historical fact of this year'sj last year. than they were at the end of the, the sixth. water pool team is that for the; season last year. We have so much Lee took over for Lynn Mc- first time in its short four-year Michigan's first opponent Ken- depth that there is no set starting Glothen in th ethird, after Johnny history there are recruits on the tucky, is an active recruiter in lineup. Everyone an the team is Briggs' three-run homer gave the team. Goalie Jim Firestone and water polo and has better finan- good, there is no one who is bad. Brewers a 4-2 lead. He held Mil- forward Rick Yawitz, both from cial backing than does Michigan. waukee at bay until the ninth when Clayton, Mo., are attending Mich- The Wildcats were members of the he needed help from Bob Bolin as igan for the sole purpose of play- Midwest Water Polo Conference but 1972 Schedule the Brewers scored a run on a ing polo even though they are not decided this year to drop out, hop- 1972 Water Polo Schedule single, walk and single. on scholarship. ing to enhance their chances of Boston opened the scoring in the ' "They wrote to us-asking to going to the NCAAchampionships Sept. 30- KENTUCKY second on Dwight Evans' single come to Michigan," said coach in California. Oct. 6-MICHIGAN STATE and a groundout. The Red Sox' John Pheney. "They were very im- With the excitement and interest INDIANA first run in the fifth was produced pressed with our program. I'm given water polo in recent Olym- 7-INDIANA by a walk and singles Aparicio very happy to have them here, see- ' pic coverage, more universities 20-at Loyola and Carl Yastrzemski. ing that they were both high school are fielding polo teams. Presently at Loyola-vs Wisconsin *All-Americans."the Midwest conference has Michi- 21-at Illinois Circle Birds bow Firestone adds strength in goal gan State, Purdue, fresh with a Nov. 3-LOYOLA BALTIMORE - Gaylord Perry to an already strong position for coach from MSU, Loyola Univer- PURDUE of Cleveland notched his 23rd vic- the Wolverines. First-string goalie sity of Chicago, Wisconsin, George 4-ILLINOIS CIRCLE tory, a 3-0 decision over Baltimore junior Stu Isaac is one of the top Williams College, Western Illinois, GEORGE WILLIAMS in a rain-delayed game last night nPeotl nferithe Midwest Water Illinois (Chicago Circle), and de-? 5-WESTERN ILLINOIS as the Orioles moved closer toward poloConference.___ elimatioin e eric L "Seeing as that the goalie is the ...: :::..: . .. backbone of our team, we 11 have East race. n rbe ntenx oryas o ehn o The Orioles, division champs for no problem in the next four years, the past three seasons trail first- Along with new recruits, Michi place Boston by 32 games and gan has depth due to the many is m n can be eliminated by any com- reunig h sdenior unor t a mn bination of Boston victories and returning senior, juniors a nd Baltimore losses totaling three. years atack w esenior ca- nbyd yourse The Red Sox open a three-game tain, Steve McCarthy; the team's series in Baltimore Friday. leading goal scorer. Rick Dorney, Perry, who has lost 16, allowed also a senor the team'soSERVICE AP .also paenir ste tm osth .{rr s:>w improved plyeraccordingtoPe h neyrand assistant coach Tony Va- Sun., 7 p.m., 1 544 SAB 761-7913 e Standings Ray McCullough perhaps the : . __''',.^____}_____________'-______ Detroit (Lolich 21-13) -_____________ ______________- ____________________ D Minnesota (Woodson 14-14) at Oakland (Odom 14-6) i ( A UAC-Daystor Concert National League East Pittsburgh 94 55 .631 H Chicagor 83 66 .557 11 and New York 77 71 .520 16z St. Louis 72 79 .477 23 Nloiitreal 67 81i81.453 261 Philadelphia 55 94 .369 39 Cincinnati 91 58 .611 - SATURDAY, OCT. 7 $2 - $3 - $3.50.- $4.00 HILL AUD.-8 p.m. Houston 82 66 .554 82 Los Angeles 82 68 .547 9 /% "THE PERSUASIONS are that one special group that comes in every so Atlanta 70 79 .470 21- San Francisco 6486.427 271/2 often that can really be a great lift out of the everyday doldrums and, since San Diego 57 91 .385 332 they aren't yet a "name" group, wouldn't it be a shame if all that fine Yesterday's Results singin' and struttin' and synCOpatin' that theSe guys d0 slipped by un- Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 1 FUN Chicago 8, Montreal 0 noticed? .-FUSION Atlnta8,Cincinnati 5S Houston 3, san Francisco 0 . . . richness and majesty with every performance . . . keeping alive a Lo s , n Yoek 0 tradition (acapelia street corner singing) that somehow refuses to roll over _ne , Dgand die, no matter how many advances in musical electronics are made. -CREEM vent Direct Cinema TICKETS JUST WENT ON SALE AT THE MICHIGAN UNION AND SALVATION RECORDS. NFRONT REALITY ALSO BY MAIL TO UAC, MICHIGAN UNION (no personal checks) P.M. ALSO on sale now at the Michigan Union ONLY: II WED., OCT. 4 Commander Cody, AsleepAt The Wheel coming Oct. 27-$2-$3-$3.50 in person Stevie Wonder, coming Saturday, Oct. 28-$2.50-$4-$450-$5.00 D. A. PENNEBAKER or by mail order to UAC, Michigan Union (sorry, no personal checks) introducing his PRIMARY, COMPANY ----------- ------- ---- is Major Leagu AmericansLeague East W L 1. {~ proving everyday." Georgia and Charles Moss an- .'815s i;7 . Ellender h as constructed a char the secondary from their Coach Bo Schembechler made Detroit 81 68 .544 solid defensive unit that has come halfback posts while sophomore some final personnel, decisions yes- Bime 8 5 3' up with the clutch defensive David Lee, Randy's brother, op- terday in preparation for Satur- New York 78 71 .54 14 up 'sbattl withtanyhgplykoutedCleveland 69 83 .4541 plays. He has now added an of- erates from safety. day's battle with the highly touted Milwaukee 62 88 .412 20 fense that is increasingly show- One of Tulane's most devastat- Green Wave. West ing more confidence and consis- ing defensive strengths has been Team doctors determined that Oakland 88 60 .595 - tency. . the punting of Randy Lee, who defensive back Tom Drake, who Minnesota 75 71 .514 12 The defensive front wall is boomed the pigskin 57, 54, and suffered a neck injury in the 26-9 Kansas city 74 74 .500 14 {_____victory over UCLA will definitely California 72 78 .480 17 miss Michigan's next two ball Yesterday's Results r games. Boston 7, Milwaukee 5 G r ad d e P ock 'ng1 Barry Dotzauer will again re- Cleveland 3, Baltimore 0 place Drake at the wideside half- California 3, Texasi 1 spot Detroit 6, New York 5 M Theory back spot, while Linwood Harden Kansas City 4, Chicago 2 arxian eory .will transfer reserve roles from Oakland 1, Minnesota 0, 1st, 11 innings Prof. Quincy Adams Wagstaff: "The trouble with this college isthe short side to the wide sie Minnesota at Oakland 2nd, inc. that we're neglecting football for education." John Pighee, who was the third Kansas City 'Drago 12-16 at Boston Two professors: "Exactly, the professor is right." team safety, has moved into the E (Curtis it-7) Wagstaff: "Oh, I'm right, am I? Well, I'm not right. I'm wrong. shortside back-up spot. New York (Stottlemyre 14-17) at Now I know what I'm dealing with. I'm dealing with a couple of snak- On offense, Larry Gustafson has.. ...... es. What I meant to say is that there's too much football and not recovered sufficiently from an el-i Unprecedented Two-Night enough education." 'bow dislocation to be available for nno u U i ;.{ r w 3 I a ,2 i a I n Two professors: "The professor is right, again." Wagstaff: "You're wrong again. If there was a snake here, I'd apologize. Where would this college be without football? Have we got a stadium? Have we got a college? Well, we can't support both. To- morrow we start tearing down the college." Two professors: 'But professor, where will the students sleep?" Wagstaff: "Where they always do, in the classroom." So bring your choices to 420 Maynard and win a Mr. Pizza pizza. And perhaps a bonus surprise. Bring your dog around and we'll give him a bonus, too. 1. Tulane at MICHIGAN 11. Boston College at Navy 2. North Carolina at-Ohio State 12. Tennessee at Auburn 3 Mich. State at Southern Cal. 13. Bowling Green at West. Mich. 4. Purdue at Notre Dame 14. Virginia at Duke 5. Wisconsin at LSU 1S. Toledo at Ohio U. 6. Minnesota at Nebraska 16. California at Missouri 7. Indiana at Kentucky 17. N. Illinois at Marshall 8. Illinois at Washington 18. Holy Cross at Temple 9. Iowa at Penn State 19. Fresno St. at San Jose St. 10. Northwestern at Pitt 20. DAILY LIBELS at East. Echos wingback duties. Schembechler also said that Curtis Tucker has been moved from offensive guard to tackle. Last year Tucker was named to the all-Big Ten second team at tackle, but was 'switched to guard when Paul Seymour moved to tackle from tight end. Tucker didn't become academic- ally eligible until just two days before the Northwestern game, forcing his work at guard to be minimal. NiLM MAKRM)Cb 8P 1 TUES., OCT. 3 in person WILLARD VAN DYKE with his own THE RIVER, THE CITY VALLEY TOWN JOPLIN-HENDRIX Auditorium, The Detroit Institute of Arts Tickets: $1.50 (students 60c for each evening Art Institute, Audson's, U. of D. 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