The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 6, 1979-Page 11 Tiges wnnig rcip.. . THE SPORTING VIEWS Tgerswinningrecipe...g. _______________________blend pitching, power By TOM STEPHENS The Tiger Stadium bleachers are shut down for season-long renovations, and the Bengals are in Seattle still a fifth-place club trying to turn them- selves into contenders. Steve Kemp and Company served notice last week they should be taken seriously as pennant chasers, taking four of six against New York and Baltimore. They continued their winning ways on the road, sweeping four from Toronto and two of three against Oakland. It's apparent that this year's Tiger team is the best since the glory days of 1968. They boast of substantial left-handed hitting power in a lefty's ball park, a corps of young players who are steadily improving, and some old veterans who continue performing beyond their career expec- tancies. Rusty Staub's bat remains poison to op- posing hitters. The arms race But there remain a few nagging problems the Tigers must solve if they want to establish them- selves as contenders by the all-star break. That kind of position - in the midst of a tight race with Baltimore, New York, Boston, and Milwaukee - is just the right tonic to give the young Tigers the confidence they need to keep them improving this year. The mound men present the foremost problem. Winning pitching duels in Oakland can completely erase the memory of those lost home run derbies in New York. There is no Denny McClain on the scene, either. The Tigers need to put together a rotation of five consistent game winners and a consistent John Hiller if they want to hang in with the likes of Boston and the Yankees. Alan Trammell is another key to the Tigers' future. He must continue his progression into a bona fide shortstop, both in the field and at the plate. And the potential hitting power must be developed. Thompson, Staub, Kemp, and Parrish are going to have to get downright monotonous in their assaults on the outfield's blue seats. By rights, those things should happen. The real question is pitching. As every armchair GM in Michigan knows, the answer to that question is simple: trade. Milt May is gone but Phil Mankowski, Jerry Morales, Tim Corcoran (remember him?) Lynn Jones are all possibilities. Dipping into the barrel for a quality hurler would be the Bengals' best bet if they want to contend in the next month and a half. Diamond shuffle Manager Les Moss would be wise to oc- casionally spell off Trammell and Lou Whitaker by inserting Mark Wagner into the lineup. Wagner deserves more playing time and both of the keystone cubs have been bitten by battle weariness. Now the Tigers have made their own move: drafting Rick Leach in the first round. Why not a pitcher? Maybe the club is looking ahead to the day a few years ahead when they can field an all- American college outfield of Kemp in left and Leach and Kirk Gibson in center and right. Ron LeFlore could certainly be persuaded to fill Staub's shoes as DH - for the undeniable good of the team - if all three of them continue to show the-promise of great things to come. The coming of Leach and Gibson into their own will have to wait three or four years. Right now Detroit fans will have to content themselves with the current aggregation of exciting hitters. Those hitters are all facing the fact right now that if they are not batting at, or close to .300, then their star- ting positions may be in jeopardy. Wagner, John Wockenfuss, Jones, and Champ Summers are all waiting, with fairly hot bats. Old yellers In their first home contest of the year with the world champion New York Yankees, the Tigers faced Ron Guidry on May 21 and got a complete game from Jack Billingham to beat the Yankees, 3-1. That game set them off on a streak that stands at 10 for 15 with ten more games upcoming against relatively weak opponents. One of the high points of that game came when Staub doubled, rumbled efficiently to third on Thompson's ground ball, and scored on a Guidry wild pitch. That started the bleacher bums yelling so loud that it apparently rattled the Cy Young winner into giving the Tigers their first run of the evening. The bleacher crowd has now been forced to join Mark Fidrych on the. list of "things the Tigers can't count on to help them out this year." Here's hoping they get some more pitchers to fill the gaps. MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP Ai tw th ov ho an .3 th ru al ba th ru re ts ni re 13 si St fo si ru Sr Ka Mir pia CIS Twins slow Oriole pennant train By The Associated-Press Royals 3, Yanks 1 Gura, 3-3, struck out three batters, scored on Thurman Munson's single to BALTIMORE - Roy Smalley, the NEW YORK - Larry Gura scattered walked two and was touched for an right. merican League's leading hitter, had three hits while the Kansas City Royals unearned run in the third inning. Bucky The Royals got to Tiant, 1-2, for a run o hits and drove in two runs to lead r dDent was safe when shortstop Freddie in the first inning when Amos Otis e hisa drowins to rs -itod roughed up Luis Tiant early and beat Patek failed to field his grounder. Dent walked, stole second and came home on e Minnesota Twins to a 3-1 victory the New York Yankees 3-1 last night. then took second on a wild pitch and Darrell Porter's single to left. ver the Baltimore Orioles last night. Smalley and Butch Wynegar singled me Minnesota runs in the third inning * 3d Smalley, who upped his average to *X- 89, added a sacrifice fly in the eighth. PAUL HARTZELL, 3-3, who entered * -X* e game with a lifetime 1.38 earned in average against Baltimore, didn't * * low an Oriole runner beyond first -X- ise until Pat Kelly doubled in the nin- * ' . Mike Marshall came in with two" nners on to get the last two outs andA cord his 12th save of the season.SP U The first two hits off Hartzell were * WOOD'S POL A RGUA RD ALL LEVI'S * No-out singles in the first and third in- * SLEEPING BAG-2 lbs. l0oz. ings by Eddie Murray and Al Bumbry, .%z. espectively. The right-hander retired $3 9b in a row following Lee May's leadoff reg. $42.98 NOW * boot, bell, straight, duroplus ngle in the fifth. * RAFT2-N The Twins rapped six hits off Steve * 2-MAN withAN NYLON * tone, 3-3, before chasing him in the INFLATABLE FLOOR BACKPACKER'S TENT ' urth. A walk to John Castino and a * - , ngle by Hosken Howell preceded the *I $t r $3298 * an-scoring singles by Wynegar and *SPE CIAL w fly reg $42.98 SALE * malley in the third. SALE ENDS SAT., JUNE SCOR ES *Complete Outfitters for Backpacking and Camping AmericanLeague *01E . Washington Ave. at 4th* iasaCiy 3, New York 1 anesota 3, Baltimore 19943572 * NationalLeague VISA * tsbargh 3, Los Angele i W lelaati6, New York * mon-sa 9am-6pm, -_}-aas " SA-aa--- I.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - SanaDiego , Chicago 3