The Michigan Daily'-Wednesday, October 19,1977-Pae 9 Bronx Bombers capture Series W YORK (AP) -- Reggie -T7 1_ Y r i 4 a,- 4 NE sackson smashed three home runs, tying a World Series record set by Babe Ruth 51 years ago, and powered the New York Yankees to baseball's World Championship last night with an 8-4 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Jackson, who played a major role in the season-long soap opera of the Yankees, brought the story to a fairy. tale conclusion with a two-run homer in the fourth, a two-run homer in the fifth and a solo shot into the center field bleachers in the eighth. Each homer came on the first pitch. It was the first time in World Series history anyone had hit three consecu- MVP Jackson ties Ruth record with 3 HR's tive home runs. Chris Chambliss also ripped a two-run, homer and Mike Torrez rode the long-ball attack to an easy, nine-hit victory as the Yankees nailed down their 21st world title and their first in 15 years. The homers were the third, fourth and fifth of the World Series for Jackson - the Yankees' leading hitter with a .450 average - as the Yankees won the Series four games to two. Jackson's five home runs. were the most ever by one plaver inma World Series. The first homer erased a 3-2 Dodgers lead and the second put the Yanks on top 7-3. The first two were virtually identical, low line drives into the lower right field stands, but the third was a towering drive that bounced into an unoccupied area of the bleachers and had the capacity crowd of 56,407 roaring its approval. Jackson came out of the dugout and doffed his cap to set off yet another round of cheering by the nearly-hysterical crowd. They were the kind of sudden, dramatic blows Yankees owner George Steinbrenner had in mind last November when he signed Jackson for $2.9 million, making him the most expensive commodity in baseball's first free agent auction. After the Dodgers had scored two Reggie show LOS ANGELES abr hbi Lopes 2b Russell ss Smith rf Cey 3b Garvey lb Baker if Monday cf Yeager c, Davilla ph Hooton p Sosa p Rau p Goodson ph Hough p Lacy ph 01 00 21 i1 12 0 1 0 1 01I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o0 NEW YORK Rivers cf Randolph 2b Munson c Jackson rf Chambliss lb Nettles 3b Piniella if Dent ss Torrez p abr hbi 4020 4 1 0 0 4 1 10 0 3435 4 2 2 2 4 0 0 0 3001 200'6 3000 unearned runs in the first inning, Jackson opened the Yankees second by walking on four pitches. Cham- bliss followed with his home run into the right field bleachers, tying the score. But Reggie Smith restored the Los Angeles lead with a third-inning homer. It was his third of the Series and the ninth for the Dodgers, tying the National League record set by the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1955 and tied by Milwaukee in 1957. That made it 3-2 Dodgers, but Jackson took over at that point, with an awesome power show that re- wrote the World Series record books, His first homer followed a leadoff single by Munson in the fourth inning. The hit extended Munson's World Series hitting streak to 10 straight games - all four last year against Cincinnati and six this Octo- ber. In the fifth, Jackson connected again, tagging the first pitch with two out after Mickey Rivers had opened with a single and was forced on an attempted sacrifice. Still, Jackson wasn't through. In the eighth, leading off, he hit a towering blast well back into .the center field bleachers, far beyond :the 417-foot sign, an area of the stadium rarely reached. Stirred by Jackson's heroics end by the Yankee victory, fans poured onto the field asp Torrez got pinch hitter Lee Lacy on a pop to the mound for the final out. Jackson barreled through the crowd, knocking over several fans en route to the dugout. Fans grabbed Willie Randolph's hat and bumlped other Yankees players as police. moved in to try and keep order. When it was over, the fans claimired the field like a sea of bodies sweeping, over the stadium that was modern- ized at a cost of $100 million just two years ago. It was the first World Champion- ship in the new stadium and Jack- son's power display made it one of the most memorable in the storied history of the Yankees. ** * * * * * * * ,..I- .M#._4 Total 34 4 9 4 Total 31 8 8 8 LOS ANGELES................... 201 000 001-4 NEW YORK........ ...........020 320 Oix-8 E-Dent. DP-New York (2). LOB-Los Angeles 5, New York 2. 2B-Chambliss. 3B-Garvey. HR- Chambliss (i), Smith (1), Jackson (3). SF-Piniella. IP H R ERBB SO Hooton(L,1-1)......3 3 4 4 1 1 Sosa .............. in 3 3 3 1 0 Rau ..............1%/ 0 0 0 0 1 Hough,............ 2 2 1 1 0 2 Torrez (W,2-0)... 9 9 4 2 2 6i PB-Munson. T-2:19. A-56,407. ,.--.-..- - -- 1 OPEN HOUse 1 Saturday & Sunday 1 October 22&2 Z 1 ICAPNER D 1 1 31503 CARPENTER ROAD 1 1 971-9510 1 NBA New York 120, Kansas City 113 Detroit 110, New Jersey 93 Baseball New York 8, Los Angeles 4 (New York wins series, 4 games to ) t. I ZELDA'S GA * PRES WI' !e t WI featu WII Playing Tues. b-9FP Come to Zelda' enjoy cockta 3250 Was ~L~h mALALA AL __ ENTS uring , .AN" ,Wed.. Thurs. PM. '4,' °, : y . -AP Photo YANKEE CHRIS CHAMBLISS puts everything he has into a Burt Hooton flutterball and parks it in the rightfield stands, tying the game at 2-2: Reggie Jackson later drilled three of his own homers in carrying the Yanks to an 8-4 victory over the Dodgers, clinching the World Series for the Yanks for the first time since 1963. SIMPSON, LANIER LEAD ROUT Pistons By ERNIE DONDAR and DAVE RENBARGER 'Special to The Daily DETROIT-With the friendly New Jersey Nets providing the opposition, and a friendly Cobo Arena crowd on hand for the occasion, the Detroit Pistons opened their 1977-78 NBA season with an easy 110-93 victory over the former New Yorkers. Even the Pistons themselves acted like friends, suggesting that they have forgotten last year's season of bickering and second-guessing coach Herb Brown. BROWN ELECTED to starit the new season with a lineup featuring the tall backcourt tandem .of Chris Ford and Ralph Simpson. From the opening tipoff, Simpson's play made Brown look like a genius. t'neztormer All-American from Michigan State, scored 7 of Detroit's first 13 points and went on to grab scoring honors with 23. "Whether I started or not, I had to come in to play," said Simpson. "Herb's been on us with me all along." "I decided to start Ralph because he has to get comfortable with this ballclub," explained Brown. The Pistons opened up a quick 27-14 advantage after the first stanza to put the game on ice early. The Nets con- tributed by shooting an ice-cold 37 per cent in the first half and were faced with a 57-36 halftime deficit. BUT THE BIGGEST happening in the first half came along late in the first quarter when Brown released popular forward Marvin Barnes from the con- fines of thie bench. To the absolute delight of the 4,778 fans, some of whom had decorated the arena with banners FREE SKIING! " 3 free lessons on our1 Cal971 -4310 Peak indoor Ski Deck. Plus/ a free lift ticket at Mt. or stop byThe Peak Brighton and Sugarloaf. There's no obligation.35 The free skiing Carpenter is yours... on us. Ann Arbor pulveriz welcoming back their her1 Barnes responded with 11 points in 18 minutes of action. "It's been a real rat race," said Bar- nes. "I've been locked up tight as a drum for five months. I wasn't nervous coming back though, because I'm a professional." With rookie forward Ben Poquette out with the flue, and veteran Al Eberhard nursing an injured ankle, Brown found himself short of front court men. Willie Norwood was pressed into service, scoring eight points in 24 minutes. IN THE SECOND HALF, the Nets never did mount much of a comeback, closing to within 13 points early in the final quarter. Lightning quick guard Bird Averitt paced the Nets offensively with 23 points. Piston leader Bob Lanier had little trouble handling Net centers George Johnsdn and Darnell Hillman. Lanier racked up 22 points, grabbed 8 reboun- ds, and dominated play while on the e Nets court. Former Wolverine Wayman Britt radle his NBA-debut, entering with 1:48 remaining in the game, and the Pistons on top 100-82. For his efforts, the college forward-turned pro guard scored one basket, recorded one steal, and com- mitted one foul. 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