ednesdoy March 31, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven TOPS NEWCOMBE AT CRISLER Laver wins Civitan Classic By ERNIE DUNBAR and BOB MILLER; Rod Laver surged back in the third set to win the Civitan' Tennis Classic over John New- combe 7-6, 2-6, 6-4. Three separate events were, included in last night's pro- gram, with the proceeds going to charity. In the evening's first match, t U-M tennis team members Bud- I dy Gallagher and Eric Friedler i survived a strong comebackt from teammates Brad Holland, and Jim Holman to win the ex- hibition doubles match on at tiebreaker, 6-5. Friedler opened the set, breez- ing to a 40-love victory. Thej senior captain from Evanston, Ill., had problems placing his first serve, but combined with Gallagher for well placed vol- leys and baseline shots. Laver and former Detroit Ti-' ger catcher and current TV 2 sportscaster Jim Price teamed to face Newcombe and former Lion great Ron Kramer. Kra- mer kept the crowd laughing with his court antics, but wentE down to defeat. Laver and a rather rotund, WJR sportscaster Bob Reynolds ran circles around each otherj in their match with Newcombe. and former Detroit Love, Trish Faulkner. Reynolds had diffi- culty with several easy shots, and it was obvious he had spent more time behind a microphone, than he had on a tennis court.; THE THIRD celebrity match had Laver and WXYZ's Peter Heller challenging NewcombeI and Faulkner. Heller managed' a few respectable shots, but was outclassed by his opponents. The feature attraction pitted two-time Grand Slam winner, Because the match was played. for charity, the U.S. Special' Olympics being the recipient, neither Laver or NewcombeI was totally serious throughout|1 the event. Frequently the two! competitors teased each other with dink shots at the net, and other untraditional shots for l tournament play. The first set was a tennis fan's dream. Laver broke New- combe's serve and then won his own to jump quickly out in front 2-0. But Newcombe blazed1 three straight serves at Laver including a game winning ace, 1 then returned Laver's hot shots1 in game four to tie the set up; 2-2. ' In the next game Newcombe utilized his famous backhand to negate L a v e r' s cross court spins, holding serve for a 3-2 lead. Both players won their next service, and Laver tied the , ca t4 4~ Ait nh lan~i~r reached the shot and powered at forehand down the line. New-'4 combe retrieved it, and lofted a I lob over Laver's head. Most peo-;I ple thought it would be out of Laver's reach, but the deter- mined lefty leaped and poundedI a backhand down the line, safe-1 c ly away from Newcombe. The two Australians pluggedi away at each other until Laver rocketed a serve that New- combe could only put his racket ' on, and the match was tied this ' time at six games apiece. The 13 point tiebreaker provedj to be as exciting as the set was.c Each player won his servicet until Laver was up 4-3. ThenI Newcombe doubled faulted. La- t ver protected his two point lead1 winning the tiebreaker 7-5 to take the first set 7-6. What the first set was, the second wasn't. Newcombe drop- ped Laver's serve, then regain- ed his composure to reel off six t wins in the next seven games.I The match was deadlocked atc one set a player. ' THE THIRD set picked upr where the first one left off. Neither player was conceding even the least point. As a mat- ter of fact, both Newcombe and Laver started to catch their second wind, and time and again drew appreciative ap- plause from the crowd for their quality play. For the first nine games serv- ice was held, giving Laver the edge 5-4. But, it had to be game seven that gave an indication to who would win the $7,000 first prize money. In a real marathon, with La- ver serving, Newcombe hit two cross court shots. Then Laver took command taking a 40-30 lead. A double fault then set up the longest game in the match. Each player won half of the next 12 points. Laver finally won the game when Newcombe faltered and was unable to return either of the next two serves. Laver copped first place by breaking Newcombe's s e r v e. Tied at 30-30, Newcombe blew a dink shot, and then proceeded to hit a return shot into the net to give Laver all the points he needed for a 6-4 win. Blue SERVING IN the second set, Rod Laver against John New- s w aig WUacpet ca. Holman was the victim of blaz- combe, one of the top five play- ing backhands by Friedler and ers in the world. LAVER SMASHED a serve a Gallagher and lost serve to give Although the scene was fa- Newcombe, who returnedi his opponents a 2-0 lead. miliar, the stage was different. short towards the net. Lave Holland, a sophomore from_ ----- -_- -_-- --- - ---- --- - - _ Chicago, started the comeback! in the fourth game. Down love- DEFENDING BIG TEN CHAMPS: 30, Holland unleashed a service ace. From this point on, Holland settled his game, which had been shakey, at the beginning of the match.wbg Holland Nand Holman began to br kinc G llchrc h ~ TPn ark |I at it er 1 1 Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN ROD LAVER returns a shot in his match with oJhn Newcombe at Crisler Arena last night. A crowd of 4,500 was on hand to see the 38-yea r-old Laver defeat fellow Australian Newcombe 7-6, 2-6, and 6-4. Golfers swngig sweet me for r g ng ua agner s serve o two driving forehands by Hof- By MB DILLON should give the team strength up round out the pitching staff and sole possession of centerfield.' man. d Although it's a little early in the middle. Backing him up will provide needed depth. "He really played well down' the season, it appears that the be junior John Jagels. Ross said he was a little dis- there," said Ross. "He was hot HOLLAND SCORED his sec- Michigan baseball team is cap- Starters at first and third base appointed in the pitching per- at the end of last year and and ace of the night in the able of playing the caliber of are still a question mark. The formance in Florida. "It wasn't should continue to hit this year." eighth game and held serve to ball that won them the Big Ten top contenders for the first place as good as I expected it would The outfield is rounded out by bring his team to 4-4. . crown last year, their first since slot are Dave Chapman, a sopho- be," said Ross. "We had a lot Chris Martucci, Steve Seyferth Friedler and Holman again 1961. more who batted .290 in Florida, of walks compiled by the whole and designated hitter Bill Hasel- held serve in their respective During a successful 11-day and Ed Clegg, a junior from staff, and I'm hoping we can get rig, who finished last year at games, taking the match to a spring trip to Lakeland, the Adrian, Michigan. rid of them. If we can't, we're .294 and hit consistently in the, nine point tiebreaker. . Wolverines racked up a 6-5 rec- Third base is a toss up be- going to do nothing but walk preseason. Holman built a 3-1 lead in the ord and a team batting average tween junior Greg Lane and people around the bases." Lead-off man Mark Grenko- tiebreaker, but Friedler chipped of .324. This was boosted by sophomore Bob Wasilewski, the On the positive side, Ross add- ski, voted Most-Improved away at the advantage and tied Dick Walterhouse's .525 average, f team's preseason leader with 7 ed, "The defense is real good.'sP, ed7,st-Impred Holan split the next swc and pitcher Lary Sorenson's 3-0 RBI's and a .346 batting aver- Jim Berra (starting his second Player of 1975, is the tap re- Hpli denxtERA age. year at shortstop) was excellent g hitter at .340 and led serves, extending the match to record and 3.18 ER. the team in stolen bases last isrfial eintthtr Walterhouse was 'ust un- j The loss of pitchers Chuck on defense, and so was Walter- sean se l t t 4-4, Holman volleyed the believable," said Assistant Rogers and Craig Forhan, who house. I fully expect us to come sbaodn aitfl .9e ne f er ball into the net, giving Fried. Coach Pete Ross. "I expected both recorded ERA's under around." Ida and knocked In six runs. ler and Gallagher the, tiebreaker him to hit the ball, but I 1 1.60 last year, places big ex- Sophomore Mike Parker, at 5-4,:and the set, 6-.r didn'tknow he was going to pectations upon the shoulders who hit .300 in Lakeland, and Behind the plate, is Teddy In the evening's second set of kill it. He was excellent on of a pair of sophomores, Craig .273 last season, and fresh- Mahan, backed up by Jim Capo- matches, celebrities from the defense, too." McGinnis and Bill Stennett. man Rick Leach, are starting fer. Mahan, batted .333 in spring Detroit area teamed with New- Walterhouse, a senior and this "If McGinnis and Stennet do prospects for right field. ball, and will start his thirdl combe and Laver for exhibition year's team captain, begins his well, then we should do well,"1 "Both of them hit pretty well season as top backstop for the doubles matches. third season at second base and said Ross. "We're really going in spring ball," said Ross. "Par- Wolverines. to miss Forh'an and Rogers. ker pitched too, and did okay. Michigan opens the season at' They were both great players." Leach we won't see until after home with a doubleheader Tom Owens, Steve Perry, spring foo'-1111" against Toledo April 6 at 2 p.m. I rk' n N L I Ll h 't l __ 4-f ~ IIDave Chapel and Mark Grinell Six-footer Dan Damiani owns at Fisher Stadium. By JIM POWERS For most people Florida is a place of fun, sun, and oranges.1 But the University of MichiganI golf team will only find hot: golfers and intense competition when they begin playing in Coral Gables. Today through Saturday, Mich- igan will be competing in an invitational sponsored by the Gulf America Corporation. All teams entering will field six players for 72 holes, with the top five scorers' rounds' counting towards the overall school standings. Though the Wolverines will likely be the best northern team, they will be at a natural disadvantage against southern! linksters who have been play- ing all winter. Golfing citadels such as East- ern Tennessee, Duke and the University of Southern Florida are some of the top competi- tion the Wolverines will be up against. "It will also be tough for us playing on foreign grass," stat- ed Tim Van Tongeren. Southern' courses are laid with Bermuda turf which won't grow up here. This affects the lay of the ball~ in the fairway, as welltas the grain of the green. Bearing the banner for Mich- igan will be Doug Davis, Ken Walchuck, Tim Van Tongeren, Frank Sims, Rod Pafford and Randy McClelland. These were the six best qualifiers in an in- trasquad tournament over spring break. Sims and Pafford are full of freshman excitement about the coming season. "We show- ed we had a lot of talent in the fall," said Pafford. "We have a real chance to win the Big Ten and get an NCAA Championship bid." Coach Bill pleased with1 felt basically playing well. N e w c o m b was the qualifying and that the team was Football rival Ohio State will be the team that Michigan will be gunning for this season. The Wolverines are anxious for their first showdown April 16, since the Buckeyes clipped the Blue in the Wolverine Invitational last fall. The University Course, which is open to students, is now open for play. The players say the course is in good shape for this time of year. .3 or is 0 t itl By The Associated Press King cans pros Tennessee's Bernard King has told officials he will forego a request for hardship status in the professional draft in order to try for a berth on the U.S. Olympic team. King, the top scorer and rebounder in the Southeastern Conference last season as a sophomore, also enrolled for spring quarter classes at Tennessee on Monday. King was notified by Bill Wall, who is on the International Basketball Committee, that he should send Dean Smith a telegram telling him he would forefit his rights to the pro draft if selected for the Olympic trials. Smith, the basketball coach at North Carolina, is the head coach of the U.S. Olympic squad. Tennessee coach Ray Mears was pleased with King's decision labeling it, "good news for Tennessee basketball." The Vol's coach warned however, that King would have to make good grades this spring quarter and attend summer school to retain his eligibility. -- Cotton pickin' Cotton Fitzsimmons was fired last night as coach of the Atlanta Hawks, mired in last place in the National Basketball Association's Central Division. Gene Tormohlen, Fitzsimmons' assistant, was named in- terim coach and was to direct the Hawks in last night's game against the Milwaukee Bucks. Atlanta carried a 10-game losing streak and a 28-46 season record into the game. Fitzsimmons was named coach in 1972 after having been coach of the Phoenix Suns for two seasons. His over-all record with the Hawks was 112-134, and his six-year NBA record stands at 237-247. Atlanta's best NBA finish under Fitzsimmons was second in 1972-73. The team had two of the first three selections in last year's NBA college draft. But the two players picked, David Thompson and Marvin Webster, signed with the American Basketball Association. Lide heads West Kent State Athletic Director Milo "Mike" Lude is following in the footsteps of his former football coach, Don James. Lude, 53, a native of Kalamazoo, Mich., yesterday accepted the job of Athletic Director at the University of Washington. Lude arrived in Seattle yesterday, but it was not known when he would assume the directorship. ._...----- ._._.. a _ ........ ...,_ _ _ - __..... ..,...__... Tampa Bay, Seattle choose gridters in expansion draft i I , NEW YORK OP) - Wide re-. ceiver J. K. McKay wert homej to his father, John McKay coach of the Tampa Bay Buc- caneers, and linebackker Mike Curtis of the resurgent Balti- more Colts was picked by the Seattle Seahawks last night as the National Football League's two expansion teams filled theirI rosters with 39 veterans fromx each of the 26 other teams. t The Buccaneers selected, among othe'rs, Detroit lineback-1 er Larry Ball, running back1 Anthony Davis, Oakland runn- ing back Harold Hart, Miamil linebacker Doug Swift and Buf-' falo defensive end Pat Toomay in the lengthy draft. McKay, who played for hisj father at the University ofl Southern California, was thel property of the Clevelandt Browns. Davis, another Sou- thern Cal star, was officially the property of the New York Jets. Both, however, had played for the Southern Cal. ifornia Suns in the World Football League. end John McMakin and Balti- more running back Bill Olds. SCORES Brown, a former University of Michigan All-American, was the Steelers' No. 1 draft pick in 1975. He was used as a backup cornerback and safety and also as a kick re- turn specialist last season, appearing in 13 games for the Super Bowl champions. I I Davis defunct rushing through was leading that now- league with 1,200 yards when it folded midway the 1975 season. i Among the notable new Sea- hawks was Curtis, middle line- Evans was the last of thei backer for the Colts since 1969,( original 1966 Miami expansion a four-time selection to the Pro choices on the Dolphins. He had Bowl and Baltimore's Most Val- ; been a starter for them for 10 cable ndlayer min r974 st straight years at right tackle. uable Player in 1974. M-ai a elce hr The Seahawks, coached by McMakin was selected third Jack Patera, also chose Pitts- out of Clemson in the 1972 draft burgh defensive back Dave by Pittsburgh, and was a start- Brown, Miami tackle Norm er in all but one game during Evans, New England quarter- his first two pro seasons. But back Neil Graff, Detroit tight injuries hampered him in 1974 : EXHIBITION BASEBALL Pittsburgh 3, Detroit 1 Chicago white Sox 3, Kansas City Montreal 5, Minnesota 3 Boston 6, St. Louis 3 Cincinnati 7, Philadelphia 1 N.Y Yankees 6, N.Y. Mets 4 Los Angeles 13, Baltimore 8 Texas 4, Atlanta 1 California 4, San Diego 0 San Francisco 10, Oakland 9 Milwaukee 4, Cleveland 2 NBA Buffalo 93, Boston 83 Phoenix 113, New York 97 Cleveland 95, Houston 86 Golden State 94, Chicago 84 Milwaukee 130, Atlanta 126 NHL Buffalo 4, Boston 4 washington 5, Detroit 3 r2 it 4, ULRICH'S BOOKSTORE 5th Annual $3990s9000 Inventory Sale involving every article in our store except text- books, special orders and calculators. Sale starts Saturday, April 3rd thru Saturday, April 10th, 8:30 to 5:30 549 East University Ave. .STUDENTS: Take Part In Chances Are's STUDENT NIGHT All Students With I.D. Pay ONLY 50c Cover Charge Every Wednes- day. PLUS DANCING TO THE LIVE MUSIC OF CLOUDBOURST ONLY AT: oZi ues tame Tigers, 3-1 BRADENTON, Fla. UP) - er bobbled the throw to first Pittsburgh left - hander Jerry and scored on Al Oliver's single Reuss pitched six innings of to right. shutout baseball yesterday and Manny Sanguillen's single the Pirates scored twice in the scored what proved to be the first inning to beat the Detroit winning run. The Pirates added Tigers 3-1 in exhibition play. i another run in the fifth on Bob Reuss gave up three hits and , Robertson's single. "nn walk and sLL Uta 'JU tthr ,,~lr nI trrnut l 'n - -' --- - '- -- and last year he was dealt to Detroit, where, as a backup to Charlie Sanders, he caught only six passes for 77 yards. ELECTRIC I TYPEWRITER. RENTAL $20 $s/wk $20/ma deposit U.CELLAR 769-7940 Midwest's Lorqest Selection of European Charters Canadian and U S from $259 CALL 769-1776 -% Great Places ! TRAVEL CONSULTANTS 216 S. 4th Ave, Ann Arbor 516 E. LIBERTY' 994-5350 p. i before rookie Jimn Minshall took over in the seventh. The Tigers finally pushed across a run in the ninth off Kent Tekulve, on a pair of walks and Bill Freehan's single. Rookie Miguel Dilone led off the Pittsburgh first with a bunt single off loser Vern Ruhle. He went to second when Dan Mey- r V / / 40/ ._ . I i For Bargain Hunters THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS II ___ M_ I I U I I k \ I I _