The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 4, 1979-Page 21 BASEBALL ROUNDUP Cards bombed by Astros bats, 4-1 ByThe AssociatedPress ST. LOUIS - Enos Cabell pounded his second homer of the year and Alan Ashby drove in two runs, leading a 14- hit attack that carried Joe Niekro and the Houston Astros to a 4-1 triumph yesterday over the St. Louis Cardinals. The victory raised Houston's record to 16-8 and stretched the Astros' lead over the Cincinnati Reds to 312 games in the National League West. Niekro shut the Cards out until the eighth inning, when St. Louis got its only run. The Astros' 14-hitassault off four St. Louis pitchers also included three singles by Terry Puhl, a triple and a single by Jose Cruz and a single by Cabell to go with his homer. Vuckovich hurled the Cards' first eight innings. After he departed, Mark Littell faced only Landestoy and Howe. Darrold Knowles yielded Ashby's second hit and the third of Puhl's three hits, before Tom Bruno finished up. Giants 7, M ts 5 SAN FRANCISCO - The San Fran- cisco Giants smashed three home runs in the fourth inning, and beat the New York Mets 7-5, yesterday. The Mets took a 4-2 lead with three runs in the top of the fourth, but three of the first five batters to face Pete Falcone (0-2), in the bottom of the in- ning homered, knocking out the New York starter. Darrell Evans' hit his third homer of the season, Marc Hill singled to left field and LeMaster made the score 5-4 with his first homer of the year, clearing the left-field fence. Winning pitcher Ed Halicki, (2-2), popped out but Bill North hit his first homer of the season for the Giants' six- thrun. The Giants totaled five runs in the fourth, adding an unearned run off reliever Mike Scott. Gary Lavelle relieved Halicki after six innings and allowed only one hit in earning his third save of the season. New York's Ed Kranepool started for the first time this season, playing right field, and drove in three runs with a double, a single and a sacrifice fly. In the Mets' fourth, Willie Montanez led off with a single and went to third when John Stearns blooped a double to right field. Kranepool, who had doubled home a run in the second, hita sacrifice fly to center, scoring Montanez. Steve Henderson doubled to left, get- ting the hit because left fielder Terry Whitfield misjudged the ball, scoring Stearns. Henderson moved to third on a ground out and scored on an infield hit by Falcone. The Mets got their final run in the fif- th on a bunt single by Lee Mazzilli, a walk to Montanez and Kranepool's RBI single to right. WAITERS WOLVERINES' LAST HOPE Cage recruiting slows By GEOFF LARCOM With the signing of three letters of intent on the very first possible day- back in mid-April, Michigan's open season on basketball recruits started off with a decisive bang. Since that time, however, nary a sound has been heard from the basket- ball end of the athletic office. No ad- ditional recruits have been signed, and according to assistant coach Bill Frieder, it's quite possible that Ike Per- son, Joe James and Leo Brown will comprise the freshman cage class of 1979-80. "WE FEEL THAT we got off to a good start in signing three kids on April 11th," Frieda said yesterday in his of- fice. "After that we had at the most two scholarships left to give out for this year, and we wanted size. Since then we've had a chance to sign others, but none that we would want for our programat this time." Thus Johnny Orr and Frieder have eschewed opportunities to sign guards and forwards in hope of landing that elusive big man-a basketball catch that has eluded the Wolverines for quite some time. The two candidates pursued over the winter to fill that role were a pair of 6-11 centers-Joe Bresnahan from Oak Park, Illinois and Granville Waiters from Columbus, Ohio's East High School. HERE MICHIGAN'S options quickly shrank though, as Bresnahan opted to sign with Creighton. He had been con- sidering several schools with Michigan, Creighton, Stanford and Illinois among them. Medical School facilities played a strong part in his decision of which school to attend. So at this point Michigan's recruiting goals for this year boil down to the signing of Waiters, and that, says Frieder, won't be an easy task. The Columbus all-stater, who has used up all of his permitted visits to prospective schools, has narrowed his choice down to Michigan, Nevada-Las Vegas, and you guessed it-Ohio State. Jerry Tarkanian and his charges have waged an all-out campaign for the past three years to get Waiters, while Eldon Miller is making a big pitch to keep Waiters playing in his hometown. "THE KID'S GETTING a lot of pressure to attend Ohio State; you can image what it's like with it being in his own hometown," said Frieder. "He was at the governor's house Tuesday and they were naturally trying to get him to go instate." The situation has to appear somewhat ominous to Orr and Frieder, for it was much the same set of circum- stances that led to the Wolverines' failure to fulfill goal number one for this recruiting season-the signing of Ohio Player of the Year Clark Kellogg. After considerable deliberation, Kellogg narrowed his choices down to OSU and Michigan, finaly d ciding to play his college basketball forMiller in Columbus. "Ohio State is the only Big Ten school in Ohio, and that's a great built-in ad- vantage, given the talent that comes out of there," said Frieder, who describes himself as "hopeful, but pessimistic" on the chances of signing Waiters. "The players in Ohio are of much higher caliber than those from Michigan this year." LENDING CREDENCE to Frieder's pessimism is Eldon Miller's impressive recruiting record since coming to Ohio State. Miller has rejuvenated the recruiting program that had begun to sag during the latter days of Fred Taylor's coaching career in Columbus. It was Taylor; you remember, under whose nose Michigan snuck a player from Canton by the name of Phil Hub- bard, out of Ohio four years ago. Neither Frieder nor Orr are giving up hope however, not when Waiters is still maintaining he might go any of the three routes still available. Frieder says that Waiters' taking his time in deciding might just be a good sign, given the factors operating in favor of both UNLV and Ohio State. Should Waiters sign with the Wolverines, Orr and Frieder would be left with three scholarships to offer next year. Including James, Brown and Per- son, 13 are presently on scholarship for next season, with only Hubbard and Mark Lozier slated for graduation, leaving 11 for the following year. The maximum number of scholarships allowed is 15, so depending on Waiters' decision, the Wolverines will sign either three or four prospects come next spring. THUS, ALL snsrsr, is left to do fu r .-. this year is to wait for Waiters In the recruiting decision, right? Frieder you win sor "Hardly," says Frieder. "We've of Clark Kellogg, already made a trip to Indiana to look some. But always, at kids in their junior years for next goes on and on. war for Orr and me, and in the case you definitely lose the recruiting beat ENERGY. We can't afford to waste it. SPRING 25 days from now, the entire rear wall of the Peak will be reroved. Ounewadditi' 1n arc plt"i on.W m u stselnover $250,000 EVERY ITEM 10-50% OFF! SUMMER HOURS: Mon. - Fri 10 - 8 Sat. 10 - 6 Sun, 12 -5 Running Sale REG. 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