The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 8, 1979-Page 15 Netters keei By MARK BOROWSKI The results for the Michigan tennis team were as bright as yesterday's shining sun as the Wolverines darkened Indiana's skies, defeating them 7-2. The victory marked the end of the Wolverines dual meet season and they finished with a 9-0 conference record and a 19-2 overall record. "I was very pleased with our performance today (Monday). It is always far de ap the up fou fir WI fou the too sta ral led th re' Wa tfi( a; sec psi nig to thi of tin Th MICHIGAN'S JEFF ETTERBEEK, shown finishing through on a hard forehand, capped off four successful years of tennis at the Wolverines' varsity courts by whipping Indiana's Randy Druz, 6-3, 6-1, yesterday. Mich- igan won the match, 7-2. Tiger rally beats White Sox, 5-4 By BILLY SAHN Bengals needed to send the sparse Special tohe Daily crowd home happy. DETRIT -It as agam forthe In the fourth inning, down 4-0, the DE t n ight was the De rit Tge Tigers rallied to come within onerunof feated the Chicago White Sox, 5-4, on the White Sox. Staub led off the rally by erfect evening for baseball. knocking a single to center. Kemp then Down 4-0 after a White Sox rally in took Trout's first pitch and sent it into e top of the third, the Tigers opened the right field upper deck for his third with three runs in the bottom of the home run of the season. urth, and two in the eighth to take the With nobody out, Thompson lined a st of a three-game series from the Trout pitch .to center for a single. iite Sox. Parrish then slapped the ball to right [N A GAME where the Tigers used field, but Claudell Washington sr pitchers, reliever Bruce Taylor got misjudged the ball, letting it roll by him e win (1-1) , and starter Steve Trout to move the lead runner to second. k the loss for Chicago in his first JERRY MORALES proceeded to art of the season (0-1). move the runners further by grounding The Tigers' second run-producing out. After Aurelio Rodriguez popped up Ily of the night came as Rusty Staub his first pitch to the catcher Marvis 1off the scoring (as he did in the four- Foley, the Tiger shortstop Alan Tram- inning). Staub walked, only to be mell singled to right, .scoring Thom- placed with pinch runner Mark pson agner by Bengal manager Les Moss. Chicago broke the ice in the top of the With Steve Kemp up, the Tiger lef- third as Foley lined a base hit to center elder bounced one past third base for with Ralph Garr on deck. Garr fouled single, moving Wagner along to off starter Dave Rozema's first pitch cond. First baseman Jason Thom- deep down the right field line, but on the on followed with his third hit of the next pitch, kissed it goodbye as he Iht, a single to right. Wagner scored smashed the ball into the upper deck in tie the game at 4-4. Kemp moved to rsght field for a two-run homer. rd on the base hit. WITH WASHINGTON on first, third ONCE AGAIN Moss substituted one baseman Eric Soderholm creamed a his starters with a pinch runner. This Rozema pitch into the left field upper e, Tim Corcoran came in to run for deck for two RBI's. The White Sox went omsnAt the same time Sn -kin- ahead, 4-0. p the heat on hard coming back from a big match (a 7-2 win over OSU on Sunday) and play as well as we did," said coach Brian Eisner. The match featured the final match appearance of senior captain Jeff Etterbeek. At the number one singles spot Etterbeek easily defeated In- diana's Randy Druz, 6-3,. 6-1. Michigan's captain jumped to an early 4-0 lead in the first set, but Druz fought back to pull the match to within one game, 4- 3. At that point in the match Etterbeek momentarily sat down to pull his game together and he certainly did, as he won the next eight out of nine games and the match. "I'm a little disappointed with my performance for the most part of this year. I'm playing much better this weekend and I feel I've peaked at a good time with the Big Ten Tournament next weekend," said Etterbeek. "We did very well at the first three singles positions," said coach Eisner. Matt Hortwitch and Michael Leach followed Etterbeek's example and each posted easy victories at the number two and three singles positions respec- tively. Hortwitch defeated Jeff True 6-2, 6-3 and Leach upended Mike Dickinson 6-0, 6-3. The remainder of the singles matches were a different story. Fourth singles player Jud Shaufler was the only netter able to turn his match around and salvage a 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 victory. Shaufler's opponent, Tom Rogers, won the first set and was leading the second set 3-2 before Shaufler buckled down and won the next four games. Jack Neinken, playing fifth singles for Peter Osler who was sidelined with tonsilitis, was unable to net a victory for coach Eisner. After losing the first set, 6-4, to Tom Lockhart he surged back to win the second set 6-4. In the deciding set it looked as if Neinken was going to fall prey to Lockhart. He was down 5-3, but consistant play and perserverance brought Neinken into a 5-5 tie with Lockhart. Neinken then broke service to take a 6-5 lead. He was serving for the match with the score tied at 3-3, but Lockhart broke his ser- vice and the match went into a nine point tie-breaker. With Neinken leading 4-2 he had three serves to win the match, but Lockhart was just too calm under pressure and he won the last three points and the match, 7-6. The sixth singles player, Ihor Debryn, split sets 6-1, 6-3 before losing the final set 6.4 to Mark Behr. Michigan led the match 4-2 going into the doubles competition. About this time the wind picked up and made play quite difficult, but the team of Etterbeek and Hortwitch were able to snag a 5-7, 6-3, 6-3 win over Indiana's Druz and Dickinson. The second doubles team of Leach and Shaufler defeated True and Rogers 7-6, 6-4. Neinken and Debryn ended the match with a hard fought7-6, 6-7, 6-2 victory over Lockhart and Ron Remak. 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