Thursday, October 5, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY POge Seven Thursday, October 5, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pc~ge Seven' Middies bat By MARC FELDMAN With just one winning season in the past eight years, the Midship- men of Navy have been waiting for their ship to come in for a long time. After the Middies posted a 5-4-1 record in 1967, the Navy football program went into a mete- oric plunge to the depth of grid- iron obscurity as just eight games have been registered in the Middie win column over the last four autumns. This year, Navy has emerged from the abyss of 56-3 trouncings to regain respectability in East- ern football and is a force to be reckoned with this Saturday as the Middies visit Ann Arbor to battlerthe nationally ranked Wolverines. A year ago, Navy gave the Wol- verines a bit of a tussle in the first half before succumbing by a 46-0 count. The beleagered Navy defense held Michigan to 15 points in the opening thirty minutes but the Blue Wave rallied for four touchdowns and a field goal in the second half to turn the game into a rout. the S. By CHUCK BLOOM THE Detroit Tigers are not the best team in baseball; let's make that clear. They are far from it. No regular has more than 65 rbi's or 22 home runs. Their best player is 37 years-old and their best pitcher is 20 pounds overweight. So why are they winners? The New York Yankees and Balti- mosre Orioles have better pitching thlan the Tigers and the Red Sox have far better hitting. The Tigers won on basically one thing: pride. With all the retreaded rejects and veterans play- ing on their last legs, the Tigers have pride. They want to prove that they can still play ball and be winners. Examine for a moment the moves the Tigers made to gain a division title. With only two bonafide starting pitchers the Bengals bought a sore-armed Kentucky tobacco farmer from the Philadelphia Phillies named Woody Fryman for $20,000. His re- cord was 4-10 with the last place Phillies and he was counted on only for spot work. Imstead Fryman pitched beyond even his personal ability winning ten very big games which kept the Tigers in the race duiring , t.second half of the' season.Tt Then the Martin Marauders purchased for pittance a .192 rejected catcher from the Dodgers named Duke Sims planning to use him for pinch hitting duty and an occasional start against right-handed pitching. Sims responded with a .328 average plus five homers and 18 rbi's. Sims hit everything and anything and whaepstaterhillehnaminjurdhisyhandorSims00stepp e-nt the srtgrole with authority. Hi ePhrienceiwas akey to te onigery drvepotdu rin kh. ls wo w es Not satidfied with this, GM Jim Campbell got aging warhorse Frank Howard on waivers. Howard's bat was the key since he could not participate i any playoff series. But like a real trooper, Howard came through for his new team winning a big game for the Tigers against the big, bad Orioles. He wasn't ex- actly setting the league on fire with his hitting but Hondo must have received some personal satisfaction knowing that he helped to win the title. But if one player is to be singled out as the key to it all; it must be Al Kaline. The man is phenomenal. At 37,years of age, Kaline is definitely nearing the end of the line. He has suffered through injuries and platooning all year long. But when the chips were on the table and the pressure was on, manager Billy Martin turned to the pro on the team to lead them. As in the 1968 World Series, Kaline came through. He went on a hitting tear as if he were a rookie fighting for a job. He socked three round-trippers In three straight games and in the crucial game Tuesday night, Kaline drove in the winning run and had a game saying catch in the first inning. When the dust cleared, Kaline's average was well above .300 and he sported ahseven; hitting streak. It was as if he was leaving In a The rest of the Tiger team seems to be just as old and just as bad. Norm Cash should be in Texas raising cattle instead of playing first base. Dick McAuliffe and Tony Taylor separately could not start for most teams yet together they compliment each other perfectly, giving the Tigers some sort of solidity at sec- ond. Willie Horton can play for any other team than Detroit but he plads on 'scratching out hits but no homers. Mickey Stanley's arm is gone and so is Jim Northrup's bat, yet they preserve. Thie bullpen is shaky and the bench is ancient. So why all the ex- citement? Simple, the fact that they won when they should not have is excitement enough. The team's fading ability combined with an enormous pride and desire to win wrested away a long-sought after division title from the Orioles. So now they ener the American Leagte Championship series as decided underdogs to the stronger Oakland A's. How- ever, this is based on paper ability not taking into considera- atiany factors like who has been winning and who has been Logically, the Tigers should lose badly to the younger Ath- letics. But logic has never entered into a championship series of this kind. It has always been the team that is the hottest, not necessarily the best, which wins at all. It happened in 1969 with thenewroriMetsand deirtonretdcanahappenngagain. So nowntouetthe Tigers out, yet. ee is this thing calle lick and it comes from pride, which the Detroiters have in abundance. .v, ti sbsdo ae blt o aigit osdr- tle to. Last year, Michigan was favored by many "linemakers" by sixty orj seventy points as in previous games with Penn State and Boston Col- lege, the Middies were beaten back by respective 56-3 and 49-6 counts. Against these same two oppon- ents this autumn, the Middies' have shown a remarkable turn- about of form as the powerful Nittany Lions needed a fourth quarter rally to subdue the Mid- dies 21-10 and BC was downed, 27-20. In the Penn State game, Navy held the ball 65% of the time in the first half and led at that juncture, 3-0. Penn State was un- able to move until the third quar- ter when quarterback John Huf- nagel hit seven of nine passes to lead Lion drives of 89 and 60 yards. Penn State mentor Joe Paterno was in a complimentary mood that afternoon as he said that "This is the best Navy team since the Roger Staubach days." After this fine showing against Penn State, Navy moved up to a third ranking in the East in Sports Illustrated and its ranking was enhanced as the Middies played, one of their best games in years as the Eagles were grounded 27-20. Boston College was a leadingl Darn Sox' ti T; 0c escape daily ,sports NIGHT EDITOR: MARC FELDMAN- . contender for the Lambert Trophy, emblematic of superiority in East- ern football, as they compiled a fine 9-2 long in 1971. Navy dom- inated the Eagles last Saturday as Dan Howard ran for 239 yards, for two touchdowns, and a fine vic- tory. Howard's performance was{ somewhat overshadowed by Ohio State freshman Archie Griffin's 239 yard game against North Carolina, but the Associated Press did not overlook Howard's efforts as they named him to share Back of the Week honors with the new Buckeye hero. Although Howard was Navy's leading rusher last year as al sophomore with 411 yards, a ser- ious knee injury before the Army game made his status questionable for the coming season. The 5-10, 170 pound junior yas unable to participate in spring. drills and his effectiveness seemed to still be in doubt in the Middies' opening pair of games as he car- ried 16 times for a meager 38 yards. Most of the. damage was done on a "sprint draw" which was an effective play all day against Bos- ton College. This play is success- ful only if a team possesses strong blocking in the offensive fine. Aside from center, the Middies have experienced men on the line ranging in weight from 237 to 252 pounds. The center is George Markulis, who was outstanding on the plebes a year ago as a line- backer. Forzano has termed this set of blockers as the best at the Acad- emy in over a decade. Fred Stuvek and Al Gienny are both experienc- ed quarterbacks and have shared that spot this year. Stuvek has passed for nearly 100 yards per game but he has been plagued by interceptions and the loss of his best receiver, Larry Van Loan.. Van Loan had been touted as an All-American candidate as wide receiver but he broke his collarbone for the second time against Boston College and will be out of action for at least six weeks. Stuvek's prime receiver will probably be tight end Steve Ogden who has caught 10 passes. Navy's defense has shown im- provement behind the fine play of tackle Glen Nardi and linebacker I mediocrity " "1.~ U/N' I' ' t kJIC BIII By The Associated Press "You got it Chrissie Baby," Johnny Reuters said. The Boston Red Sox finished one-,, half game behind East Division Now Marvel was not an autocrat, not a dictator. Like any good champion Detroit in the finale coach, she put the moves to a vote of the team. American League standings yester-; The team approved it overwhelmingly and started in chanting, day with a 4-1 victory over the "Two-four-six-eight: organize to rehabilitate." Tigers. The team took the field, filled with the thrill of victory instead of The game was meaningless since the agony of defeat the Tigers, by beating Boston 3-1 Tuesday night, had clinched the The outlook was grim for The Daily 50 that day. divisional title. They will meet the Their "stars" were faking injuries, attendance was dropping, and Oakland A's in the AL playoff, be- the old "rah-rah-hit-'em-in-the-ass" spirit just wasn't there. ginning Saturday at Oakland. So coach Marvel Misfit was faced with one alternative - get thie finished with 70 defeats, but be- team together for one of those ol' "Knute Rockne-Sock-it-to-'em-in-the- cause of the unprecedented play- guts" locker room speeches." ers' strike at the start of the sea-; Men, make sure you get those Gridde Pickings into 420 Maynard son which scrambled the schedule, by midnight Friday for a freetMr. Pizza pizza. Detroit played one more game than the Red Sox-and won it. 1. Navy at MICHIGAN (pick 11. Rhode Island at Maine In yesterday's other afternoon score) 12. Kent St. at West Michigan games on the final day of regular- 2. Indiana at Syracuse 13. Missouri at Oklahoma St. season play, Minnesota clinched 3. Penn St at Illinois 14. Alabama at Georgia third place in the American League 4. Notre Dame at Michigan State 15. Auburn at Mississippi West with .a 14-2 shellacking of the S. Kansas at Minnesota 16. Duke at North Carolina St. runner-up Chicago White Sox, San 6. Northwestern at Wisconsin 17. Florida at Florida St. Francisco finished its poorest sea- 7. Ohio State at California 18. USC at Stanford son since moving West in 1958 by 8. Purdue at Iowa 19. New Mexico St. at SMU beating San Diego 6-4 and Phila- 9. Lehigh at Army 20. Northern Arizona at Montana delphia edged the Chicago Cubs 10. Colgate at Yale St. The Red Sox deprived Detroit's Joe Coleman of his second straight 20-victory season. Coleman absorb- ed his 14th loss as Marty Pattin, 17-13, out-dueled him with a four- hitter. NOTICE OF Each team scored a first-inning run, then the Red Sox pushed j Michigan across two in the second on Rick Ui n Ee to Miller's doubleand singles by Vic CorlJuan Beniquez and Cecil Cooper. Ben Oglivie's single and, Miller's triple scored Boston's final Notice is hereby given that a student run in the third. N The Twins, with their biggest offensive show of the season, election wi ll be conducted concerning pounded the White Sox for 19 hits, including Eric Soderholm's pinch- amendments to the Michigan Union hit, nside-the-park homer. Constitution, on October 31, 1972 Chuck Voith. Nardi, a solid 6-5, 225 pounder is according to Coach Rick Forzano, "the most under- rated football player on the East Coast, maybe in the country." Voith was named lineman of the N. week last year by the Associated Press for his incredible perform-a ance against Duke. Voith was in- volved in no less than 24 tacklesI x and recovered three Blue Devil fumbles. The Middie defense goes down t hill from there as experience anda:a}. ability are lacking in the secon- dary and at the defensive ends.a Against Michigan a year ago, the Navy defense did a creditable job for a half but the offense could manage just three first downs and 71 yards in total of- fense, giving defenders , little chance to recover from each Michigan onslaught. For various reasons, the out- standing athletes have stayed away from the military academies in the past 8 to 10 years, but mainly through the efforts of Forzano and Dallas Cowboy quarterback, and Navy alumnus, Roger Staubach, this trend seems to be receding; A l t h o u g h the Middies havel brought some degree of respectabil- ity back to Annapolis, it is still quite far fetched to expect them to battle Michigan on even terms Daily Photo by DENNY GAINER this weekend. However, Penn Statef probably didn't expect the battle The spoils of victory it had from the (Middies either. ? 0,... F } J., VS : . . . . X SPLAYERS UNION-LEAGUE A New All-Campus Theatre DIRECTORS NEEDED FOR INFO CALL: Mark, 763-6641 or Anne769-386 ...a....,.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . K.. ar 3..'. x+.. r. . . ;.. } . . . M\ 8 Y + . ti. J q , far t x. .. > 6 3 x3 p....a. . a *..*.*.f*f-.a..3.. . . UAC-DAYSTAR 9.4~ 9. .9.'. 9 9.,*. . . ..~ .**.,~.9 ,,~ .T H IS SAT. NIGHT :; :rJ ayy~llHill Aud 8 p.m. T$200 "$3.00 THE PRSUASONS3.50. $4.00 and CHEECH & CHONG icket (reyast Reserved seats Michigan Union 11-6 p.m. and Salvation Records Maynard St. 11-9 p.m. ALSO, On Sale Now at Michigan Union ONLY: COMMANDER CODY, Asleep At The Wheel coming Oct. 27-$2-$3-$3.50. Stevie Wonder coming Oct. 28-$2,50-$4-$4.50-$5. ACCUTRON REPAIR SEIKO WATCHES Campus Jewelers 719 S. University-665-4355 in Ann Arbor Since 1952 and November 1 and 2, 1972. The text of these amendments is avail- able in the SGC Office, Room 3X, Mich- igan Union. p m }-I .. .-.-... .$ {' Major League Standings: T HE UNIVERSITY OF MICH IGAN i ANN ARBOR CHAPTER OF THE POLISH AMERICAN CONGRESS 0 H ILLEL FOUNDATION 0 DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY * CENTER FOR RUSSIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN STUDIES INVITES YOU TO A LECTURE by GEORGE LERSKI Professor of History, University of San Francisco ON UNDERGROUND MOVEMENT AND THE JEWISH QUESTION IN NAZI OCCUPIED POLAND THURSDAY, OCT. 5-4:10 P.M. 200 LANE HALL PHI DELTA THETA FRATERNITY Invites You to RUSH STUDENT GOVERNMENT Is Now Accepting Petitions of (andidacy for the FALL ELECTIONS OCTOBER 31st--NOVEMBER 2nd THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS ARE TO BE FILLED: * Six full term at-large, seats on Student Government Council y Eight at-large seats on LS&A Student Government " Eight seats on Rackham Student Government " Five seats on the Board of Directors of Pirgim " One Undergraduate Seat on the Board in Control of Student Publications. PERSONS INTERESTED IN PETITIONING FOR THESE SEATS SHOULD PICK UP PETITIONS AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICES: " For the Six Student Government Council Seats and for the Undergraduate Seat on the Board in Control of Student Publications, Go to the Student Government Council Office, Room 3X, Michigan Union " For the Eight LS&A Student Government Seats, Go to Room 3M, Mich- American League East National League East. Detroit Boston Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee Oakland Chicago Minnesota Kansas City California Texas 86 85 80 79 72 65 L 70 70 74 76 84 91 Pct. .551 .548 .519 .510 .462 .417 .597 .565 .500 .494 .487 .351 GB -- 5 61 ' 14 21 5 | 15 !1 16 17+ 38 West Pittsburgh Chicago New York St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco San Diego w 96 85 83 75 70 59 95 84 85 70 69 58 L 59 70 73 81 86 97 59 69 70 84 86 95 ePt. .619 .548 .532 .481 .449 .378 .617 .549 .548. .455 .445 .379 GB 11 1312 21 %2 261.2 37Y2 10% 10% 25 26% 36, i i W~est 92 62 87 67 77 77 76 78 75 79 54 100 Results Minnesota 14, Chicago 2 Boston 4, Detroit I Milwaukee 1, New York 0 Kansas City 4, Texas 0 Oaklan' at California, inc. Other clubs :not scheduled. Results Philadelphia 2, Chicago 1 San Francisco 6, San Diego 4 New York 3, Montreal 1 St. Louia 4, Pittsburgh 3 Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 1 Cincinnati 4, Houston 2 * COMPLETELY * LOCATED AT REMODELED HOUSE 1437 WASHTENAW .I I I