Friday, November 5, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Friday, November 5, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SPORTS OF THE DAILY I i Baseball re-entry draft nabs $tar _ GRIDIE IICKS I rs. s r e Orr leans towards Staton as starter By KATHY HENNEGHAN Michigan basketball fans will notice a few changes this winter - those of you who were around for last season, anyway. Coach Johnny Orr yesterday promised to press more, substitute more, and gave a pretty good clue as to who the fifth starter will be. The occasion for Orr's remarks was Michigan Bas- ketball Press Day. Orr summed up the upcoming sea- son at a luncheon at Weber's Inn yesterday. "IF I HAD TO DECIDE TODAY," said Orr, "Tom- my Staton would be our starter." Staton would step in at the forward spot vacated by Wayman Britt. Statof may seem small for the job at 6-3, but then Britt was just 6-2. With the depth at guard this year, Orr feels Staton is doing too well to hold him back. "Staton is" our quickest player outside of Rickey Green," said Orr. "He plays a lot like Wayman did, and, he may b'e a little stronger. He's going to have a great year. There's no way he can't." Barring any unforeseen developments, the rest of the lineup remains unchanged. "There's no question in my mind about Rickey and (Phil) Hubbard," said Orr. "No one can beat them out at their positions. "Ahd I lthink when the bell rings, Grote's going to be there. The same thing holds true for Johnny Robin- son." ORR IS TRYING TO EXPERIMENT a little more this year. Staton will see time at guard, and Orr is considering giving Hubbard some time at forward, with Joel Thompson in the middle. "Offensively, Hub can play forward tremendously well," said Orr; "Defensively, he has problems at for- ward. Most of the time Hub will play defensive 'pivot no matter who's in the game." Orr plans to usehis bench more extensively than he has in the past. "I have to change the way I've been coaching," he said. "I've never substituted a great deal. I've said I world, but I haven't. "If you don't play them, they're going to leave." Two walk-ons will stay with the varsity this sea- son. They are Dave Stavale, a 6-1 sophomore, guard from Harper Woods, and Bill Lelich, a 6-6 junior for- ward and former prep star at Birmingham Brother Rice. By The Associated Press happen to baseball. NEW YORK - Outfielder Joe "It reminded me of a den off Rudi proved the most popular thieves-everybody out to cut first - round choice yesterday each other's.throats. when he was selected six times "We spend millions developing as major league baseball con- these players. We give them a ducted its historic first-ever re- bonus. We nurse them through entry draft of free agent play- the minors. We develop them at ers. a great expense over a period of The re-entry draft was the maybe 10 to 12 years. compromise of the owners and Then, bang! Just like that, the Major League Players As- yy sociation. Arbitrator Peter Sei they are taken away,"Finley said. made the historic decision in The Detroit Tigersi selected December, 1975, that, in effect, Bobby Grich, Dave Cash, Wayne destroyed the age-old reserve Garland, Bill Campbell, Rollie clause and held that a player Fingers, Doyle Alexander, Sal cannot be bound to a club after Bando, Tito Fuentes and Steve his contract has expired. It was Stone a ruling upheld in the courts. -The draft concluled after. 19 The Montreal Expos opened rounds. with most teams passing the re-entry draft by selecting throughout the final few rounds. slugger Reggie Jackson as the * * No. 1 choice among the 24 .w players available. Spzkers sweep Like the others, Jackson Special To The Daily achieved free agent status by The Women's volleyball team plaving the 1976 season xithout posted two more wins last night sie-ing a contract. as they swept a tri-meet from Five of Oakland's available Delta College and Lake Super- eight players made the shopping for State College. lists of the maximum 12 teams. Bit the important-thing is which The spikers exhibited incon- of the interested clubs will bly. sistent play that has plagued The first player to be chosen them for the entire season. the maximum 12 times was Onk- In the first game, Michigan land catcher Gene Tenace. His sonrted to a 13-0 lead over name was scratched from the Delta College, in which Ro- list of availables in the third berta Salay served 11 straight round. Rudi was withdrawn af- points. ter his 12th selection in the' Then, for some , unknown rea- fourth round. son, things fell apart and sud- As they had promised, the A -- world chamnion Cincinnati .0 denly the score stood, tied at 15 and it took an overtime ef- fort to win, 17-15. The Wolverines regrouped and made an easy time of the sec- ond game, 15-9. The Blue captured the second half of the endurance meet with Lake Superior by scores of 15-6 and 15-5. The spikers played the entire evening with only seven players.# Polo pizazzf The Michigan water polo team. takes on Ohio State and Michi- gan State this weekend at Matt Mann Pool to complete their regular season schedule. "This was supposed to be a Big Ten tournament with every- one in the Big Ten except In- diana participating," said Michi- gan coach Dave Peugh. "But' Minnesota and Purdue dropped out leaving just OSU and MSU." Since no league standings will be altered by the results of this weekend's play, Peugh looks at the tri-team match as a chance to tune up for the conference championships in two weeks at Chicago. "We've had the best week of, practice since the beginning of the season," said Peugh. Peugh sees Rick Pepper and Tom Reddick as individual standouts in the polomen's 7-5 season. "Rick has been carry- ing us all year," he said. WASHINGTON, D.C. - Speaking for her husband, bed-ridden Reddick, a freshman, has only with fatigue from a strenuous campaign schedule, Betty Ford recently broken into the start- announced soon-to-be-ex-President Gerald Ford's Gridde Picks ing lineup, but Peugh feels that at a press conference overflowing with emotion. The First Lady he is "really doing the job." attributed low voter turnout due to the American public Although the polomen must de- striving to get their picks to 420 Maynard by midnight Friday feat Loyola and Chicago Circle, (tonight) and Colorado-Missouri being "too close to call." the engineers of two previous loses for the Blue this season, 1. MICHIGAN at Purdue it. North Carolina State at Peugh seems optimistic. 2. Indiana at Michigan State Penn State "I think we should be able i12. Kent State at Hawaii to defend our title .and win the s13. Central Michigan at conference championship," he 4. Illinois at Ohio State Eastern Michigan said. S. Iowa at Wisconsin 14.North CarolinA at Clemson -RICK VALENTINEI 6. Colorado at Missouri 7. Oklahoma State at Nebraska 15. Georgia at Florida (Jacksonville) jr SCORESm NHL Boston 7, Chicago 5 Detroit 3, Philadelphia 2 NBA Cleveland 96, Milwaukee 88 Atlanta 97, Chicago 87 rn 8. Boston College at 16. VMI at Citadel Miami, Fla. 17. Harvard at Pennsylvania 9. LSU at Alabama 18. Western Michigan at (Birmingham) Miami, Ohio 10. Navy at Syracuse I 19. Vanderbilt at Kentucky NEED HELP IN KICKING THE SMOKING HABIT? Come to a Public Meeting ANN ARBOR SMOKING WITHDRAWAL CLINIC FRIDAY, NOV. 5-7:00 p.m. Room 5-U-M HEALTH SERVICE Sponsored by: Michigan Lung Assn. na ~U-M Health Service I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reds did not participate in the I : San Francisco mime roupe ; draft' but did appear to stake{'r their claim to Gullett, savin'g IIN they would bid for him aloe False Promises/Nos Enganaron with the 12 teams that drafted him. AT THE Charles 0. Finley, maverick Po er Center owner of the Oakland A's, has a word for the baseball re-entry Nov. 11, 1976- p.m. draft. "It's horse manure." he said. TICKETS $2.50 "It's the worst thing that has A railale at the Power Center and ever happened to baseball-it's UAC Ticket Office the worst thing, that could ever " : . : " m ..: :.u AN The Fall 1916 LS&A Student Government Elections For Eight (8) Full Year Member-at-Large Positions, and one (1) Half-Year seat on the EXECUTIVE COUNCIL of the Government will 6e held on Nov. 22 and Nov.,23, 1916 (Monday and Tuesday) CANDIDATES may file petitiorns for office at the LS&A Student Government Offices, 4001 Michigan Union (763-4799) NO LATER THAN: Friday, Nov. 5 at 5:00 p.m. STADIU Greek and American Foo A Specialty 338 RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA I' Ili r i-- _.._ . ._ _-"" ', 1 ill ,: ? . I{ * PIZZA " STEAKS . CHOPS " CHICKEN " SEA FOOD LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN i E i L', { ji I I I ' i 1 I I S. State 663-4636 s ' I ' I { , ' I I ! I j' ,j 1 ', -- ~" f_ ' '" / f. ,: .. l ; .. ; , .. , . ,. ,: ;,1. : , t ' l t .r'" x ' " J ' , ,." I[ ' t L'".; x ; y ::. "" . :..t. .. t r '.'!' -x: 4 ll ,. t Sd "I l 41 n AL4'~ I L v L t t ' , .Swer anninCo , r/apa Ca4/lornia 539 E. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR 995-1866 . i ,I, , 3 I I I i t I' I I U 0 I 2.1 kI IL __ __. ROCK A JAZZ Just I i ON RCA I r3 AND s U 4 ! a 0 I' j "f / 0 i i I I I CHARGE IT! .IGeor~esen~sn & Joe Farr~JI~ A~ . -. = I II m