IHL M~HI(,AN L)AILY Page Seven Saturday, September 9, 1972 1HE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven .. Tragedy hits oly as Boston, 11- 1f ti it j riant off Be nga ls Yanks; down o'5 By The Associated Press Munich-Jim Ryun fell, little Rick DeMont finally lost his medal d aily and banishment came for two 400- meter track medalists charged with "disgusting" behavior in a succession of tragedies for the - Americans yesterday the Olym-NIGHT EDITOR: pic Games (more on Ryun below).BNBHMcIOR It was the United States' day of BOB McGINN infamy, a "Black Friday," prob- ably to be remembered for many burned up, it would go home in a years., minute," said George Frenn, the:l 245-pound hammer thrower from THE AMERICANS' Hollywood, Calif. Frenn is white. ing day of this terror-marred, dis- RICK DeMONT HAD a lost look sension-riddled sports' spectacle, in his young eyes yesterday as he began with the International Olym- said, "I feel I got burned." pic Committee announcement But the 16-year-old swimmer about DeMont, a 16-year-old school- from nearby San Rafael managed boy from San Rafael, Calif., a few smiles during a news con- troubled with asthma, who had a ference where he discussed the forbidden drug in his system when Olympic gold medal he won and he swam to victory in the 400- apparently will have to give back. meter freestyle. "I've still got it with me-not After a review of the case, the here, but at home," he said and IOC executive Board decided that added, "I'll give it back if the the gold medal should go to Brad International Olympic Committee Cooper of Australia, who finished' or my coach (U.S. team coach second and the silver should go to Peter Deland) tell me to." Steve Genter of Lakewood, Calif., A refusal, he said, "would prob- who was third. Rick and his medal ably mean I'd get kicked out of already had flown home. I tha AAU (Amateur Athletic Union) Then, moments late, the Execu- and couldn't compete anymore." tive Board rocked the Olympics DeMont won the.400-meter free- with the announcement that Vince style at the M~unich Olympic Matthews of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Games. But the IOC has stripped Wayne Collett of Santa Monica, him of the title because traces of Calif., were barred from any future a forbidden drug were detected in Olympic competition because of his system after the race. their disrespectful attitude on the victory stand Thursday after they THE DRUG, ephedrine, was in had finished 1-2 in the 400-meter medicine DeMont had been taking race. about a year for asthma. Ephe- man into the Olympic boxing finals. RAY SEALES of Tacoma, Wash., a light welterweight, defeated Zvonimir Vujin of Yugoslavia on a unanimous decision, but Valdez( a 25-year-old Air Force sergeant from Houston, lost to Emilio Cor- rea of Cuba 3-2. In other semifinals, bantam- weight Ricardo Carreras of New York City, was eliminated by Al- fonso Zamora of Mexico on a 4-1 decision and Marvin Johnson, a middleweight from Indianapolis, was stopped in the second by Viat- chesiav Lemechev of Russia. All the American losers will get bronze medals. The U.S. perform- ft1t(t, / i, ance compared with the two gold' medals and one silver medal win- ner in Mexico City in 1968 when By The Associated Pressj seven Americans reached the BOSTON - C a r 1 Yastrzemskis semifinals. drove in three runs with a single A bright note came when Harry and a two-run homer and Luis "Buddy" Melges, a 42-year-old Tiant hurled a four-hitter, lead-f sailm aker from Szenda, Wisc., won ing the first-place Boston Red Soxl the gold medal of the new soling to a 4-2 victory over the New YorkI Olympic yachting class yesterday. Yankees last night.j Melges won the final race sail- It was the fourth consecutive ing with crew members Bill Bent- triumph and 12th in 14 games forj sen of Lake Geneva, Wisc., and the Red Sox, who started play one- Bill Allen of Excelsior, Minn. He half game ahead of Detroit in the had been certain of the medal al- American League East. The fourth- ready when it was known that the place Yankees have dropped three two big classes could sail six races in a row and five of seven and are only instead of seven. three games back.s Yastrzemski gave Boston a 1-0 lead off Fritz Peterson with a first-inning single following Luis Aparicio's double off loser Peter- son. He made it 3-0 in the third1 .;with his sixth home run of the baseball season with Tommy Har- per aboard via a walk. Tiant, 11-4, went into the gameI with four straight shutouts butI had hisnscoreless stringsnapped at 40 innings in the fifth when Felipe Alou doubled and scored on a single by Celerino Sanchez. The Red Sox bounced right back with a run in their half of the fifth on Harper's double and a single by Aparicio. Bobby Murcer's career high 27th j home run in the sixth accounted for the only other New York run off Tiant, who has pitched seven consecutive complete game vic- tories. Fryman sizzles BALTIMORE - Detroit's Woodie Fryman held Baltimore hitless for 5/3 innings and finished with a two-hit 2-1 victory over the Orioles last night that kept the Tigers on the heels of the Boston Red Sox in baseball's American League E ast. The Tigers remained one-half . game behind Boston while the third-place Oriolestdropped 2/ games off the pace. Gates Brown gave Fryman, 5-2, the lead with his 10th home run in the opening inning off loser Pat Dobson, 15-15, and Ed Brinkman's run-scoring double made it 2-0 in the seventh. The Orioles threatened in the first and fourth, but didn't get a hit until Brooks Robinson doubled with one out in the sixth. A pinch homer by Don Buford, :. who was 0-for-14 as a pinch hitter, AP Photo including 10 strikeouts, ended Fry- man's shutout bid in the seventh. consoles a distraught Jim Ryun Fryman, making his first start rd:;y. against Baltimore since coming to r Detroit from the National League, struck out eight. A hit batsman and a walk pro- duced a Baltimore threat in the: first and the Orioles loaded the bases on two walks and another hit batsman in the fourth before Mark Belanger flied out. A walk and a single by Aurelio Rodriguez preceded Brinkman's de- cisive hit in the seventh. * * * Viva Jenkins PHIfLADELPHIA - Ferguson. Jenkins became a 20-game winner for the sixth consecutive National League baseball season last night as the Chicago Cubs beat the Phil- adelphia Phillies 4-3 on back-to- back doubles by Don Kessinger and Jose Cardenal in the eighth inning. Willie Montanez' 13th home run of the season helped the Phillies to a 3-1 lead after four innings but the Cubs caught up in the sixth when Kessinger singled and Billy Williams tagged Dave Downs for his 29th homer. They were the 100th and 101st runs batted in for Williams. Jenkins, 20-10, has a 22-6 record against the Phillies, who dealt him to the Cubs in 1966. The 6-foot-5 right-hander allowed eight hits and struck out seven. Chicago got its first run in the third on Carmen Fanzone's single, a stolen base, fly ball and a wild pitch. The Phillies broke a 1-1 tie with two runs in the fourth on singles by Larry Bowa, Tommy Hutton and Montanez and Joe Lis' groundout. * * * Pale Hose split CHICAGO-Pitcher Clyde Wright HOCKEY Russia 5, Team Canada 3 % NFL Buffalo 34, Philadelphia 17 smacked a three-run homer and pitched the California Angels to a 9-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night for a double-header split. Dick Allen drove in four runs with a bases-loaded triple and a double to pace the White Sox to a 5-1 victory in the opener. The split, coupled with Oakland's 6-3 victory over Texas, dropped the Sox 31/ games behind the leaders in the American League West. Wright, 15-9, capped a four-run second inning with his second homer of the year which followed singles by Doug Howard, Lee Stanton and Jack Hiatt and chased loser Dave Lemonds. The Angels pecked away for four more runs and had an 8-0 lead when Wright finally weakened in the eighth. The Sox loaded the bases on a single, a walk and an error. Allen singled home two runs and Rick Reichardt tripled home two more. The University of Michigan i GILBERT and SULLIVAN SOCIETY Medal Russia United States East Germany Japan West Germany Australia Italy Great Britain,- { drine is in some hay fever pills that can be bought without a doc- tor's prescription. Totals "I had it on my record, but Gold Sil. Br. Tot. somewhere along the line someone 34 22 18 74 didn't read it," the teenager said. 27 27 24 78 But he added, "I'm in no position 19 17 20 56 to blame anyone." 12 7 8 27 In boxing, welterweight Jesse 8 9 11 28 Valdez, the United States' boxing 8 7 2 17 team's flashiest fighter, lost a dis- 5 3 6 14 puted split decision last night as 4 4 4 12 the Americans moved only one announces its FALL MASS MEETING Sweden 4 4 4 12; Poland 4 3 4 11 Hungary 3 8 12 23 Bulgaria 3 7 2 12 France 2 4- 5 11 THE U.S. OLYMPIC Committee,: stunned and embarrassed by the' IOC action, immediately sent off a letter of protest and requested a, review of the matter. But the damage already had. been done and the American sec4 tor of the Village hummed with1 charges of "racism" and threats of an athletic boycott, mainly black, that seemed unlikely to take place on any large scale. But American morale, already shattered by internal bickering, ,buck-passing and administrative foul-ups, dipped to a low as the Soviet Union continued to surge ahead in the gold medal race. "The whole U.S. team is so Billboard The intramural sports man- agers' will have several meet- ings next week. It is important to attend them. Residence Hall meeting will be Tuesday, Sept. 12 at 7:30. p.m. in the Sports Service Building; Graduate meet- ing Sept. 12 at 9 p.m. in the Sports Service Building. Women's division meeting will be on Sept. 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the Barbour Gym while the In- dependent division meeting will be on Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the Sports Service Building. The Fraternity division meet- ing will be on Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m. In the Sports Service Build- ing. The Women's Club Sports meeting will be on Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m. at Barbour Gym. for KENYA'S KIPCHOGE KETNO after their 1,500 meterhe t yestei LAST H URRAH Ryun falis* out n bid for gold 'i ,,I i I' I : THE GONDOLIERS Sunday, September 10 8:00 p.m:-Michigan Union University Club Lounge Singers, Actors, Technical, Costumes, etc. Professional League Standings East Boston Detroit Baltimore New York Cleveland Milwaukee 71 72 70 70 61 54 L 59 61 63 64 n 79 Pet. .546 .541 .526 .522 .406 GB 21 2 3 11 181/ National League East West Oakland 78 54 .591 - Chicago 75 58 .564 31A_ Minnesota 66 65 .504 I114 Kansas City 56 06 .496 12 Calif ornia 62 71 .466 16!/ Texas 50 83 .376 2812 Last Night's Results Boston 4, New York 2 Kansas City 5, Minnesota 0, 1st Kansas City 3, Minnesota 2, 2nd Chicago 5, California 1, 1st California 9, Chicago 4, 2nd Detroit 2, Baltimore 1 Milwaukee at Cleveland, postponed Oakland 6, Texas 3 Today's Games Boston (McGlothen 6-5) at Cleveland (Perry 19-15) Milwaukee (Lonborg 12-9 and Brett 5-10) at Baltimore (McNally 13- 14 and Alexander 5-8), 2 Minnesota (Goltz 3-1) at Kansas City' (Nelson 9-4) Oakland (Odom 13-4) at Texas (Stan- house 2-5) California (Foster 0-1) at Chicago (Fisher 4-6) New York (Gardner 6-2) at Detroit (Coleman 15-12) Pittsburgh Chicago New York St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco San Diego w 85 73 67 64 61 49 82 74 71 62 58 50 L 47 61 64 76 71 84 51 58 61 72 75 82 Pct. .638 .541 .512 .477 .469 .370 .617 .561 .538 .463 .436 .379 GB 121/4 16j 21 22 35 71? 101/ 201> 24 31 %z MUNICH u h.-,-Jim 1yn's third bid for a tolJd modal eid d with a fli , yesterday-,,hen the 1,500-meter world record h.oldcr from Kansas tripped andfelduring a qualifyig he at "I cap 't figre o ut what happened,' said the stt irie , uom-f'ed Ryuo. "1 th'>ught I was play- iPg it smart by laying back hike that." The collision, with Ghana's little-known Billy Fordjo 'r, left the 25-year-ol Ryun dazed. le finis'ed th heat but was next-to-last and is out of the Games. The veteran, in his third Olympics, was ex- pected to qualify for the semifinals of the 1,500 easily. lnstead, with one lap to go, his foot got entangled with Fordjour's and both went sprawl- ing. "I don't rem ember exactly what hoppened," Ry in said later "I remember being in a collision West a d someone's knee hitting my jaw as I fell. Wh n I got up, I realized I mustn't panic. "I tried to distribute my pace evenly but, with 20 meters to go, I knew I wouldn't qualify." R vun had run 3:52.8 for the mile this year, t i'd fastest time ever recorded, and was favored al '~g with Kenya's Kip Keino, to take the 1,500. Ryun wot the silver medal in the 1968 Olympics when Keino won and set an Olympic record of 3:34.9. The race was at high-altitude Mlexico City, however, and Keino lives at 7,000- foot Nairobi. Many felt their race here would gi -e Ryvun a chance for revenge. dvon finished in 3:51.2, his eyes filled with tars. He was spiked on both ankles. It was another hearbreak for the Kansan, who as a teenager at Tokyo in 1964 was striken with ft and failed to qualify, and who in 1968, as the favorite, ran second to Keino. wa , t..E. ' - -- _ - _ _ ; i l' IF I i Convenient Components I Last Night's Results Pittsburgh 7-4 at Montreal, 1-2 St. Louis 9-2 at New York, 4-8 Chicago 4, Philadelphia 3 Houston at San Francisco, night Atlanta at Los Angeles, night Today's Games St. Louis (Gibson 15-9) at New York (Gentry'6-8) Pittsburgh (Blass 16-6) at Montreal Stoneman (10-11) Houston (Reuss 9-11) at Los Angeles Osteen (5-10) Cincinnati (Gullett 8-7) at San Fran- cisco (Willoughby 4-2) Chicago (Hands 10-8) at Philadelphia (Twitchell 3-8) Only games scheduled I UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT FEATURING THIS WEEK:I FRI. & SAT., SEPT. 8 & 9 NEW HEAVENLY BLUE 9:30-1:30 WED.-SAT., SEPT. 13-16 DETROIT{ O4u4deh 208 W. 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