Wednesday, October 4, 1972 FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine THE BEST OF THE WORST Tigers cop East with .55 percentage (Continued from page 1) ever, Yastrzemski lost the handle double play ball to shortstop Eddie 'aily of the ball, allowing Kaline to Brinkman. cross the plate with the third and Brinkman flipped over to sec- final run. ond sacker Dick McAuliffe who so rsThe Beanmen threatened in the dropped the ball allowing Yastr- eighth with Yastrzemski advancing zemski to slide safely into second. to second on a single and a wild Harper scampered all the way NIGHT EDITOR: pitch. Chuck Seelbach came in as' home in the midst of the confu- ROGER ROSSITER Fryman left to a standing ovation. sion. Carlton Fisk screamed a Seel- After Rico Petrocelli was. caught bach fastball down toward third looking at a third strike, Carlton been an easy double had he not and eventually left field. But Au- Fisk sent a line drive to right slipped rounding first. relio Rodriguez made a diving field on which Kaline made a great But ing st. r ao saveighe Tige a ny shoestring catch to save the Ben- But in the seventh, the Tigers stab to save the Tigers from any gals from further damage. finally knocked out the Boston junk more trouble for the rest of the Boston starter Luis Tiant, (15-6), baller. With one out, McAuliffe evening. kept the Tigers off the scoreboard atoned for his error with a long Seelbach fanned Evans and pinch for five innings with ,some fine double to deep right-center. Ka- hitter Cecil Cooper before the 11:11 pitching and lucky fielding behind line, 'the hottest hitter in the Ameri- flyball. ,him. can League during the past two In the champagne-laden Tiger With two on and two out in the weeks, lashed a 1-2 pitch to left lockerroom after the win, Kaline Detroit fifth, Dwight Evans, after scoring McAuliffe with the go- commented on his Tiger team. slipping and % overrunning Duke ahead run. Kaline went to second "We're not the best ballclub in the Sims' fly ball, made the grab on the throw' to the plate. Next, world, but we put it together in while flat on his back. Sims' beat out a grounder for an the last two weeks to win it." Detroit tied the score in the sixth infield hit. Meanwhile on the field, deliriousi %q a walk to Norm Cash, a sacri- Cash followed with a roller to fans were whooping it up while fice by Willie Horton, and a single firstbaseman Yastrzemski w h o tearing up turf and making a gen- by Jim Northrup that would have tried to nab Kaline at home. How- eral nuisance of themselves all in MINOR SPORTS REDUCED Scholarship cutback foreseen the spirit of victory. Detroit now earns the right to face the Oakland A's in Oakland for the American League cham- pionship commencing Saturday af- ternoon. Crlton wins 27th CHICAGO OP)-Steve Carlton won his 27th game and Don Money and Greg Luzinski hit back-to-back home runs in both the third and fifth innings as the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Chicago Cubs 11-1 in a National League game yester- day. Bill Robinson started the Phillies to their first six-homer game of Ppen 'LlScrowned BOSTON Harper cf Aparicio ss Yastrzemski 1 b R Smith rf Petrocelli 3b Fisk c D Evans If Griffin 2b Cooper, ph Tiant p Lee p Oglivie ph Total DETROIT aS 4 4 3 3 3 4 3 1 0 32 h 1 1 1 0 ti 0 0 0 1 4 4 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 the season by hitting his eighth after Luzinski's single in the sec- ond. Left-hander Dan McGinn, making only his second 1972 start, was the victim of the Phillies' rapid start. Brewers boom NEW YORK UP-Johnny Briggs and Joe Lahoud boomed home runs last night, -helping the Milwaukee Brewers to a 3-2 American League baseball victory over the New York Yankees. The Brewers nicked Mel Stottle- myre for a run in the first inning when Ron Theodald opened with a walk, raced to third on Ellie Rodriguez' single and scored on a sacrifice fly to Dave May. Skip Lockwood protected that edge ntil the fifth when Murcer led off with his 33rd homer of the season into the upper deck in right field. Tribe splits CLEVELAND (')-Pitcher Roric Harrison slammed his first major league home run and the Baltimore Orioles defeated Cleveland 4-3 last night for a split of their season- ending twi-night doubleheader. Cleveland won the first game, 6-5, in 10 innings behind Tom Mc- Craw, who drove in four runs and set up the other two. Hrrison, 3-4, retired the first 13 men he faced and held Cleveland to just two hits in the first six innings before weakening and be- ing replaced by reliever Grant Jackson. res blast PITTSBURGH d)-Al Oliver and Richie Hebner drove in two runs each as the Pittsburgh Pirates downed the St. Louis Cardinals 6-2 last night in a tuneup for the Na- tional League playoffs. AP Photo By JIM ECKER A resolution which would dras- tically cut back the numb'er of. athletic scholarships available in the. Big Ten for the "minor sports" is on the verge of rati- fication. The projected move slashes the number of grants awarded from 34 per 'year to less than half that figure. Associate Athletic Director Don Lund defined the "minor sports" as "everything but football and basketball, our revenue makers." B a s ejb a 11, gymnastics, track, swimming, tennis, wrestling, and golf thus become the non-revenue makers, by definition. Lemon axed K A N S AS CITY (P) - The Kansas City. Royals dismissed Bob Lemon as manager yester- day and replaced him with Jack McKeon, manager' of the Amer- can L e a g u e baseball club's Omaha farm team. Lemon will finish the season with the Royals tonight against Texas.' LUND EXPLAINED that the exact number of scholarships that would remain has not been finalized. He hinted that "around 1S is a good guess." It is not clear when the new rules would become operative. The Michigan hockey team is in a unique position on the Ann Arbor sports scene. Al Renfrew's crew is a member of-the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, an organization more lenient with its purse strings than the Big Ten. Lund pointed out that the level of competition. within the con- ference would not be affected. Cutbacks would be across the board for all ten schools. * He ,admitted that the Big Ten would suffer nationally for a year or two, especially in the vital recruiting field. However, Lind believes that other con- ferences, such as the Southwest, Pacific Eight, and Big Eight, would soon "follow the leader."- Partial scholarships will grow in importance as the totals doled out decrease. Full rides in the minor sports will become rare, with the typical stipend covering one-third of a student's expenses. (In the form of room, board or tuition.) Money saved from the eco- nomic maneuverings would be rechannelled within the Athletic Administration. Funds for the dollar-starved intramural pro- gram is a possibility. Track coach Dixon Farmer sympathizes with Athletic Direc- tor Don Canham. "Canham is using foresight in projecting what our financial situation will be like five years from now," statedI the former Occidental mentor. I Farmer foresees the Occidental track program at the club level within five years.. "Some schools will keep going to the hilt (finan- cially) until It becomes necessary for drastic moves," predicted Farmer. Neither Farmer nor gymnas- tics coach Newt Loken predicts a mass exodus of quality coaches from the Big Ten when the scholarships are reduced. "Hell, it's taken me 28 years to learn the streets of this town," lamented Loken. "I'm not leav- ing now." The reduction in scholarships might bring back the two or three sport performer. For in- stance, two players with equal abilities in basketball and base- ball could both be landed, one on a basketball grant, the other on baseball. The result is a pair of satis- fied coaches and some over- burdened student-athletes. Also on the planning board is a longer-range proposal to reduce the number of basketball scholar- ships. As it now stands, six are awarded per year, or 24 over a four year period. A 'reduction to 18 for the four years is being seriously considered. The football team retains its 30 per year (or 120 for the four years) allocation. Even this total is 10-15 below the other major conferences. ab r hi McAuliffe 2b 3 1 1 0 Kaline rf 4 1 2 1' Sims c 3 0 1 0 Cash lb 3 1 0 '0 W Horton if 3 0 1 0 M Stanley of 0 0 0 10 Northrup 'f 4 0 2 1 A Rodriguez 3b 4 0 9 0 E Brinkman ss 4 0 1 0 Fryman p 3 0 1 0 Seelbach p I 0 0 0 Tota ~ 32 3 9 2 Boston 1 fl 0 0 0 0 0 0 0-1 Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 1 $ 0 x-3 E-McAuliffe, Yastrzemski. LOB-Bos- ton 8, Detroit 9. 2B-Aparicio, McAuliffe. SB-Harper, R. Smith. S-W. Horton. ip h r er bb so Tiant L,15-6 6% 7 3 2 3 4 Lee 1!"f 2 9 0 0 2 Fryman W,10-3 7 -, 4 1 0 4 5 Seelbach 1 0 0 0 0 2 Save-Seelbach 14. WP-Fryman. T-3:12. A-50,653. Sims cut down at home KALINE IGNITES Old Tigers produce DETROIT UP) - "The older you get, the harder it is to get up for every game," said a mobbed Al Kaline. "But for the big ones like this, it's no problem at all." Kaline was the hero last night, knocking in the winning run with a single in the seventh inning as the Detroit Tigers captured base- ball's American League E a s t championship with a 3-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox. Tiger Stadium was a scene of bedlam immediately after the game with swarms of fans from; the crowd of 50,000 tearing up bases and mobbing players who battled their way back to the dug- out and into the champagne- doused Tiger clubhouse. The clubhouse was a hectic scene with virtually every player' plus executives being drenched with champagne. Even Woody Frymtan, the non- drinking pitcher who throttled the Sox on four hits for 723 innings, drank champagne. "None of my family smokes, chews or drinks," said Fryman. "I took a sip today and I'll prob- ably take another. Mother prob- ably won't appreciate that." Tiger Manager Billy Martin was ecstatic describing his feelings simply as: "Happy! Happy! Hap. py!" as he bounced from one broadcast microphone toanother. Martin pointed to Kaline as the man who led the drive to the flag.' "There's not a word I can say. All the superlatives . . . I would use them all. There aren't words to describe how he played." . The 37-year-old Kaline raised his hands in jubilation moments be- fore catching the final out in right field when he grabbed it he set off the pandemonium. , "We have no apologies. We battled them, and nobody ex- pected us to get as far as we did." That was Boston Manager Eddie Kasko's initial comment in the gloomy Red. Sox clubhouse. "Everybody put out 1,000 per cent and you can't ask for more,,, Kasko said quietly as the Detroit fans whopped it up and made a shambles of the playing field. "We stopped hitting and scoring just about the time they (Tigers) started." Veteran right-hander Luis Tiant, the loser in what he considered "the biggest game of my life," wiped away tears and repeatedl "too late now, too late now." The loss was only the second in 13 starts for Tiant since he was promoted to the regular rotation Aug. 1. Two of the three runs charged to him were unearned, that enabled him to edge Cleve- land's Gaylord Perry for the earned run average title, 1.9106 to 1.9107. "What the hell," Tiant said when told he was the first Bos- ton pitcher to win the ERA title since Mel Parnell in 1949. "The only thing is to win. I would like the championship instead of ERA." "We just didn't hit, and if you don't hit, you don't score," Tommy Harper said. "If you don't score any runs, you can't win." ODELTA RESTAURANT PIZZARIA State and Packard SH eGREEK MENU-MON.-WED. SBaclava SYogurt SUNDAY SPECIAL FOR $2525. ROAST TURKEY SPAGHETTI WITH For take-Out BAKED HAM MEAT BALLS call ROAST CHICKEN 7-1 1 ALL ABOVE INCLUDE: Soup or juice, Salad, S662-781 Bread, Soft Drink, Desert., EVERY THURSDAY-PIZZA 50c OFF k & Open 7:00 A.M.-I :00 A.M. Friday, Saturday 3.00 AM. . °r"}: :":" r'.:{ : .'}^}'.'l."...;.,,..,7;,.,7.."};{{ :; {,:r:{"}: i':or'}:}Y..,.. ..?%"""'.;{{{{:ry-;,:'r:"i:":fi ^Y ~. '^:"=:i7}}e};:{"}}:vv.4 . }5Yv -.v,.; "." ,. " " >.,.ti v:::'+7 e J.v {.": .wf "'' r. i}: '".4.+:,r...: S1."r %%f:, "?:y: ". }::::":.":. .5;:ti4C: :;},; }r;Y ;.. {.rm:. :.: :.v.: g§,n...f.".. .,:}k"..,.......? ...:...a.....: ir....«:......r:....,..}r :''::+r:::v:::.:..... ....:............ r... r..:..,:.7r: R. :77: ::...,............ n... ..,.; Major League Standings American League East National League East AP Photo DICK McAULIFFE (center) dropped a flip from shortstop Eddie Brinkman (left) in this first inning double play attempt. Tommy Harper scored from second base on the play for the BoSox' only run. r Detroit Boston Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee w 86 84 80 79 72 64 L 69 70 74 75 84 91 Pct. .555 .545 .519 .513 .462 .413 GB 1212 5% I 6112 14% 22 Pittsburgh Chicago New York St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia W 96 85 82 74 70 58 West L 58 69 73 81 85 97 Pet. GB .623 - .552 11 .529 14/ .477 221/% .452 2614 .374 38%2 West Oakland 92 61 .601 - Chicago 87 66 .569 5 Minnesota 76 77 .497 16 Kansas City 75 78 .490 17 California 74 7t .484 18 Texas 54 99 .353 38 Yesterday's Results Chicago 5, Minnesota 4 Cleveland 6, Baltimore 5, 1st, 10 innings Baltimore 4, Cleveland 3, 2nd Milwaukee 3, New York 2 Texas 3, Kansas City 0 Detroit 3, Boston 1 Oakland at California, inc. Cincinnati 94 59 .614 - Houston 84' 68 .553 9!, Los Angeles 84 70 .545 10%4 Atlanta 70 83 .458 24 San Francisco 67 , 86 .438 27 San Diego 58 93 .384 35 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 11, Chicago 1 ' New York 5, Montreal 1, 1st New York 4, Montreal 3, 2nd, 12 innings | Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 2 f Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 5 'Cincinnati 6, Houston 1 San Diego at San Francisco, inc. I1 Mll-al BUYS 618 S.MAI1N 4 Nobody makes malt liquor like Schlitz. Free cartridge clinic It's to your advantage to keep record wear to a minimum. but of course, you want to get the best sound possible. Bring in your cartridge mounted on its turntable and Shure factory trained technicians will help you strike a happy medium between the two. First, your stylus will be carefully inspected for wear under our special Bausch- Lomb stylus microscope. we will also make sure the cart- ridge is properly mounted in the tone arm shell. 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