Page 12-Thursday, June 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily LEFLORE HELPS OUT WITH BAT Wilcox keeps Mariners dry, 7-3 'IX By MARK BOROWSKI SpeeitoThe Daily DETROIT - Tiger pitcher Milt Wilcox snapped a personal two-game losing streak and Ron LeFlore provided the key offensive spark, as the Tigers manhandledhthe Seattle Mariners 7-3 last night at Tiger Stadium. The streaking Tigers set the stage for tonight's debut of their new manager, Sparky Anderson, by winning their fourth consecutive game. WILCOX WAS at his best at his specialty, pitching himself out of jams in the third, fourth, and sixth innings, while scattering seven hits in seven in- nings of work. John Hiller then saved Wilcox's fifth victory of the young season with a dominating performance in relief. The Tigers played the role of the op- portunist to the hilt in the fourth inning. Mariner pitcher Mike Parrot gave two complimentary passes, putting Jason Thompson and Champ Summers on base. Third baseman Phil Mankowski followed with a single to score Thom- pson from second. PARROT THEN loaded up the bases by walking Mark Wagner, playing for the injured Lou Whitaker, who was placed on the 15-day disabled list yesterday after injuring his ring finger in Tuesday night's game with the Oakland A's. Ron LeFlore then cleared the bases with a slicing triple to right centerfield to put his team up 5-2. Alan Trammell, batting in Whitaker's push-along slot, lofted a long sacrifice fly to center to bring the fleet-footed LeFlore home with the sixth Tiger run. The Tigers opened the scoring in the second, when Thompson ripped a line- drive double to deep left-centerfield. Champ Summers followed with a sharp single to left, scoring Thompson from second. SEATTLE CAME back with one run in their half of the third when Mario Mendoza singled and Larry Milbourne followed him with an RBI double to tie the score. The Mariners took the, lead- for the first and only time in the fourth, when former Tiger outfielder Dan Meyer- hoisted a Wilcox curveball, floating it into the seats in short rightfield. The Tigers will close their short two- game series with the Mariners tonight. Veteran ace Jack Billingham (6-3) is scheduled to face the Mariners' Rick Honeycutt (3-5), as the Bengals look to make Anderson's American League opener a successful one. Hurry up, Trevor! Express lose again PONTIAC (UPI)-Tommy O'Hara, Bob Iarusci and Sakib Viteskic scored shoot-out goals last night to give the Washington Diplomats a 2-1 victory over the Detroit Express in North American Soccer League action. O'Hara and Iarusci gave Washington a 2-0 lead in the shoot-out round before Paul Hunter got Detroit's lone goal of the extra session. Viteskic, the fifth man to shoot for the Diplomats, clinched the victory when he went around Detroit goalie Jim Brown and kicked the ball into the open net. A shoot-out round occurs if a game ends in a ti after regulation time and a 15-minute sudden-death overtime. The team finishing with the advantage after alternating shots by five players receives one point and the win. Keith Furphy ended a scoreless string of 246 minutes, 32 seconds for the Express when he scored at 36:56. Washington's Ken Mokgojoa tied it at 1- ( with 13:03 left in regulation time. The game was forced into overtime but neither side scored, requiring the shoot-out. Washington boosted its record to 10-5 while Detroit, with its fifth straight loss, fell to 6-9. SCORES BASEBALL American League Toronto 9, California 8 Cleveland 6, Oakland 4 Detroit 7, Seattle 3 National League Montreal 4, Atlanta 1 Houston 4, Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 4, New York 1 North American Soccer League Washington 2, Detroit 1 TONIGHT AT 1ECON14D 1u EMPLOYEE PRICE NGH 504 off mixed drinks 254 off mugs, popcorn, pop $1.00 off pitchers Sun. is Hospitality Night ALL employees of A2 Bars & Restaurants admitted FREE with proof. STUDENTS 504withI.D. Thr.-Sun-4th CHAPTER Mon.-DICK SIEEL and the MINISTERS OF MELODY for more info call 994-5350 Anderson out to prove success not a luke By The Associated Press THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. - Sparky Anderson, the newly appointed manager of the American League Detroit Tigers, says, "I noticed that baseball didn't stop without me, but I learned how much I need it." Anderson's observation came in an interview with Steve Springer, spor- ts editor of the Thousand Oaks, Calif. News-Chronicle. The former manager of two World Series championship teams with Cin- cinnati of the National League, said, "I enjoy going to a young club. Maybe now I can prove to people that I can manage. "I want to prove to people that the success I've had was not just a fluke caused by the fact that I had the stars. "I feel again like I was in 1970 when he started at Cincinnati. I was en- thusiastic, naive, just a wide-eyed kid of 33. "Well, I have that same feeling now: "We are going to have fun. We are going to enjoy playing. We pre in tough, but we have great power, great speed and a good, young, balanced club. "Nobody is expecting lightning in the bottle right away. Right now, I'm going to observe." He said he would keep the coaching staff that worked under deposed manager Les Moss. In addition, he is hiring his friend Billy Consolo, a for- mer major leaguer. The latter's exact duties were not outlined. Detroit was in fifth place in the American League East with a 27-26 record when Moss was unexpectedly fired. "It was strange," Anderson said. "I had seen the Tigers on Friday night. I went out to Anaheim with Consolo to see them against the Angels. I even talked with Moss around the batting cage. When Billy and I were coming home, I told him that I thought Detroit had a great young ball club." Sparky has some American League friends he hopes will give him some help as he changes leagues. And remember when he was so critical of the AL designated hitter rule? "The DH is the greatest thing in the world," he said with a grin. Then he added: "Somewhere along the line, it has to either be in both leagues or not at all." CONTACT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. includes a second pair of hard lenses Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Stree 769-1222 by appointment