Thursday; September 16, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY -Page Nine TIrdy epebr1, 96TEMIHGNDIL aeNn TIGERS DRENCHED Bucs close on Phils By The Associated Press 7 The Pirates wrapped up their P H I L A D E L P H I A - fourth straight victory over theI Bill Robinson slammed a two- Phillies in the eighth off reliev-r run homer, a single and drove er Tug McGraw, the fourth of in three runs as the Pittsburg five Philadelphia pitchers. Pirates beat Philadelphia 7-2 Parker doubled and scored on' last night and moved to within Robinson's single.I five games of the front-running * * * Phillies in the National League Bird bat/ East. Left - hander John Candel- BALTIMORE - R o o k i e aria earned his 15th victory Andres Mora slugged a home in 21 decisions, limiting the run and Wayne Garland picked Phillies to three hits, strik- up his 18th victory last night ing out four and walking three in the Baltimore Orioles' 1-0 in seven innings. decision over the Detroit Ti- The Pirates jumped on Phila- after six innings. delphia starter Jim Kaat, 11-13, for a 2-0 lead in the second in- The game was started and ning, when Dave Parker hit a played in a steady downpour, one-out single, and Robinson with the pitcher's mound and followed with his 20th homer. home plate area doctored They made it 4-0 in the third, several times. After Balti- routing Kaat. Richie Zisk bang- more was retired in the sixth, ed his 20th homer, Willie Star- the umpires called an abrupt gell doubled and Parker ripped end to the contest and De- a run-scoringtsingle, the second troit Manager Ralph Houk of his four hits. protested vigorously. Candelaria walked Mike One of the two hits off Gar- Schmidt with one out in the land, who has lost six times, fourth, and after Greg Luzinski was Rusty Staub's 2000th major flied out, Dick Allen hit a tow- league hit. with two out on a single by Thurman Munson and Lou Pi- niella's run - scoring double. The American League East leaders added a run in the eighth on a leadoff walk to Fred Stanley, a single by Mickey Rivers, a fielder's choice grounder by Roy White and Munson's ground- out. MICHIGAN UNION Billiards, Pinball, Bowling 22 tobles, 20 machines, 7 lanes OPEN: 1 1 a.m. Mon.-Sat. 1 p.m. Sundays "WE HAVE THE PLACE AND THE GAMES" -t Pytvtsi- --n-heDal t Pays to Avertise in The Daily Announcing Marty's LEATHER LAYAWAY SALE 11 Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY In training? PRESIDENT GERALD FORD returned to dine at the Michigan football training table after a forty-two year absence yesterday during his visit in Ann Arbor to kick off his presidential campaign. Ford was a regular for dinner in 1934 -as captain and most valu- able player of '34 Wolverines. Sitting next to the President is Coach Bo Schembechler, who entertained Mr. Ford earlier as he paid a short visit to practice yesterday after- noon. BOGGS NOT BOTHERED: ering drive over the centerfield fence to cut the lead to 4-2. I M i I f { 1 i I f { 1 f Olympian dives in, obscurity Tribe tamed CLEVELAND-Doyle Alexander gave up four hits and posted his third shutout of the season as the New York Yankees beat the Cleveland In- dians 2-0 last night. Alexander, 12-9, got the only run he needed in the first in- ning when New York scored I By PAUL CAMPBELL With memories of the Sum- mer Olympics only two months old, we who consider ourselves sports fans would feel safe in saying that we could recognize and place most of the names of the athletes who made their marks in Montreal. ALL OF US could expound at length on the divine gyrations of Nadia Comaneci or the in- stant excitement created by Sugar Ray Leonard. Most of us could recognize the prodigous stomach of Vasily Alexeyev, Dwight Stones' Mickey Mouse' T-shirt, or the jubilant face of victorious decathlete, Bruce Jen- ner. Certainly we all remember that if you bought a whopper, you got a Nieman, or that Mc- Donald's s a l u t e s America's youth. And our collective chest would swell with pride as we confidently spoke of the feats of Lasse Viren, Alberto Juanto- rena, John Naber and a host of others. But how many of us remem- ber Phil Boggs? AS WE SIT there stroking our, beards and scratching our heads, a good number of us admit that, no, the name doesn't q iite conjuire up an image. But maybe it should. After all, Boggs reached the pinnacle of his sport this summer when he won a gold medal in three meter snrinaboard diving ("Oh, that Phil Bogus!") On ton of that, Phil lives in Ann Arbor ("You're kidding") and attends the Uni- versity of Michigan Law School ("No way!"). "I don't really mind the la-k of recognition," laughed Boes after his daily workout at Matt Mann Pool. "I realized all along that diving wasn't a major snort and that even if I won, Phil Boggs would not be a household, Phil first met Michigan diving "I don't feel that I've had to word." coach Dick Kimball. give up that much in relation toj BOGGS HARBORS no resent- "I had some definite mechani-' what I've gained," he said, dis- ment for the other Olympic win- cal problems with my diving and pelling the image of the young ners who are moving on to mil- he (Kimball) had a reputation athlete who is forced to give up lion dollar endorsement and ad- as the best mechanics coach all else for the sake of sport. vertising contracts. around." Boggs summed up his feelings "I have no reason to be U n d e r Kimball's tutelage, by saying simply, "I love to angry," noted the twenty-six- Boggs entered his first inter- compete. Some guys get ner- year-old champion. "I've had national meet, the USA Inter- vous when there's lots of people my share of recognition. I've national. Although he didn't win watching them, but it helps me. been honored wherever I've there, his international record' Pm happy with what I've done gone and had a couple of pa- since then has been amazing. and what I'm doing." rades and a lot of little cere- He has won World Champion- Boggs continues to dive be- monies on my behalf." ships in 1973 and 1975 (the only cous cotis to dive One such honor was accorded two times that the meet has' cause he has agreed to square Phil when his hometown of Ak- been held) and has added titles' off against Jennifer Chandler, ron,, Ohio designated August 11 in a dozen different lands. East who won the gold medal in as "Phil Boggs Day." Germany is the only country ! women's springboard, in one of It was in Akron 15 years ago he has competed in where he the "Battle of the Sexes" being that Phil got his first taste of has not won. filmed by CBS. the -r- at which he excels. "SPORTS HAVE given me so BOGGS PLANS to donate his "''>' a YMCA recreation much-a chance to travel, to nr and tried just about see different people, to repre- fee for the event to charity, t r >j s , _ I SCORES American League Baltimore 1, Detroit 0 New York 2, Cleveland 0 Boston 2, Milwaukee 1 Texas 4, Chicago 3 National League St. Louis 7-4, New York 0-1 Pittsburgs 7, Philadelphia 2 Chicago 2, Montreal 0 Cincinnati 4, Los Angeles 3 Houston 4, Atlanta 3 Speckat next week Bowling 50/game 11 A.M.-5 P.M. Monday-Saturday Michigan Union I - I ever rrt," recalled Phil. "But I always was best at swimming and diving. I had two brothers who swam, and besides, I was always small (today he stands 5-5 and tins the scales at 131 noinds) so it became clear to me that I couldn't so too tar in sports like baseball or football.". BOGGS DROPPED swimming; after ijnior high to concentrate on diving. He graduated from Akron Firestone High in 1967 !nri beaded for Florida State TTnaersitv to begin his college ,-r. After foilr vears of hard e.rk and "nrbahly half a mil- Hn'i di-es." he won the \TAA th"o meter crown in 1971. Boges' next ston was the Air r'nr-e ("'NI lotterv n'mnber was 14. so T enlisted.") He served "n t +e fac"lty at the Colorado S-rinor Raadomv and boned un nn diving d'iring the summer IT WAS DURING one of those s'1mmers. 19'2, to be exact, that sent my country - things," said Boggs. all these' The Top 20 NEW YORK (UPI) -- The 1976 United Press InternationalhBoard of Coaches top 20 college football teams with first place votes in parentheses. Team Points 1. Ohio State (16) 1-0-0 349 2. MICHIGAN (17) 1-0-0' 343 3. UCLA (1) 1-0 254 4. Pittsburgh (4) 1-0-0 246 5. Oklahoma. (1) 1-0 244 6. Missouri 1-0 156 7. Penn St. 1-0 150 8. Nebraska 0-0-1 80 9. Georgia I-0-0 67 10. Texas A&M 1-0-0 55 11. Maryland 1-0-0 48 12. Arkansas 39 13. Alabama 15 14. LSU 0-0-1 13 15. Boston College 1-0-0 12 16. (tie) Texas Tech 1-0-0 9 thereby retaining his amateur status. I FREE FOOSBALL at the C rosseyed Moose EVERY MONDAY 3-4 p.m. ooo 7 !1 i. -______________ _ - - - ---.r__________ !, .. . _.p . .__--- . 11 - I GRIDDE PICKS Till Is i' i (tie) N. Carolina 2-0-0 9 613 -Liberty (tie) Kansas 2-0-0 9 I J . 19. Southern California 0-1-0 6 20. Oklahoma St. 5 -_-_- A program for 5-1 1 yr, olds CLONLARA bus picks your child up at local public schools daily. He/she enjoys Robby & Hamburghs very special after school program until you arrive anywhere between 3:15 and 5:30 p.m. daily. VERY REASONABLE RATES Clonloro Child Care 769-4511 1. Stanford at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Ohio State at Penn State 3. 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