Page 12-Thursday, July 26, 1979-The Michigan Daily MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: IDodgers cruise past Phillies, 16-8 By The Anocated Presn homer, a three-run shot, in the first in- runs. per, (7-5), in the fourth. The final Met LOS ANGELES - Joe Ferguson ning when Philadelphia jumped out to a Baker and Steve Yeager each drove run came in the fifth when Doug Flynn drove in five runs with a home run and 4-0 lead. But Sutcliffe allowed the in two runs in the Dodgers' six-run singled, went to second on a groundout a single, and Dusty Baker drove in four Phillies only three more hits before third. Baker doubled home Cey in the and scored on Elliot Maddox' single. runs with two doubles and two singles running into control problems in the fourth and the Dodgers added four It was the Giants' fourth loss ina row. as Los Angeles trounced Philadelphia ninth. Dave Patterson finished up for more runs in the sixth inning on run- B 1 A 4 16-8 yesterday. It was the Dodgers' the Dodgers. scoring doubles by Bill Russell and fourth straight victory. , Ron Cey slugged a two-run homer in Baker and a two-run single by BOSTON - Jim Rice drove in five The Dodgers pounded out 15 hits off the bottom of the first, his 19th, and the Ferguson. runs with his 23rd and 24th homers and five Philadelphia pitehers to back Rick Dodgers then scored six runs in the Mets 3 Giants 0 Carlton Fisk added a three-ron shot last Sutcliffe, 9-8, who scattered eight hits in third, chasing starter Dick Ruthven, (7- ' nght, powering the Boston Red Sox to a 8% innings.5.) SAN FRANCISCO - New York's 16-4 victory over the Oakland A's. Mike Schmidt, the major league's Ferguson hit his 13th homer with two Craig Swan pitched a six-hitter and The Red Sox jumped on starter Brian home run leader, slugged his 35th on in the eighth for the final Dodger faced just 31 batters - four over the Kingman, (1-3), and two relievers for 19 t t t Tiger homers cool hot Brew crew, 11-2 By LIZ MAC Special toThe Daily DETROIT - It was a batting coach's dream. The Tiger bats were smoking last night as they pounded the Milwaukee Brewers, 11-2. Jack Morris (9-5) stifled the visitors by yielding only five hits, with relief help in the ninth from John Hiller. On the losing end was former Tiger Jim Slaton (10-5), who seems to be jinxed at Tiger Stadium - he hasn't won here since April, 1976. THERE WAS not much that three Brewer pitchers could do against six- teen hits, including four homeruns. No one in the Bengal lineup was left out of the hit-producing barrage. The Tigers opened the scoring in the third inning. Second baseman Loy Whitaker looped a single to left, and Jason Thompson sent him to third with a single. Champ Summers then served up his first of two doubles to score Sweet Lou. In the fourth, the Tigers' designated hitter and newest addition, Altar Greene, smacked the first hit of his major league career. And quite a hit it was - a homerun to the lower deck in. right field. The Brewers tied it up in the sixth, Morris' only shaky inning, when Cecil SCORES American League Detroit 11, Miwaukee 2 Boston 16, Oakland 4 cleveland2. Minnesotan0 Tnodnto8, Texas 3 National League New York 3, San Francisco 0 LosAngelesn16, Philadelphia8 Cooper lofted a two-run homer to the upper deck in right. But that was all the runs Milwaukee could manage. MORRIS GOT a little breathing room in the Tiger half of the seventh, which saw Slaton depart. A walk to Alan Trammell on four pitches, a single by Ron LeFlore, and a perfect bunt off the bat of Whitaker put men on second and third. Steve Kemp then tallied two RBI by dribbling an infield single off the glove of second baseman Jim Gantner. That was far from the end of the Tiger scoring, however, as the hot bats produced a landslide of runs in the eighth. Lance Parrish and John Wockenfuss, pinch hitting for Greene, led off with back-to-back homeruns. Le Flore slashed an RBI double to the corner in right and came home on Whitaker's triple. THE TIGERS' big guns for the evening then stepped in. Kemp drove in his third RBI of the contest with a sacrifice fly and Summers drove in two runs with his tenth homerun of the year. The Tigers added a dash of ex- citement in the second frame. With two down, third baseman Tom Brookens singled to center, and advanced to third on Trammell's bloop single. They then attempted to squeeze outadouble steal, and although the Bengal shortstop was safe at second base, Brookens couldn't slide past Brewer catcher Charlie Moore. The loss was only the second in the last thirteen games for the Brewers. Tonight's contest between the two clubs will pit Tiger rookie Dan Petry (2- 1) against Moose Haas (7-6). minimum - as the Mets beat the San Francisco Giants 3-0 yesterday. It was the second time this season Swan, (9-9), has blanked the Giants and his third shutout of the season overall. He was never in trouble, allowing only two batters to get past first base - Darrell Evans, who doubled in the, seventh inning, and Dennis Littlejohn, who doubled in the eighth. Swan, who struck out seven and walked none, beat the Giants 2-0 on a two-hitter in April. The righthander got all the support he needed in the second inning when Joel Youngblood reached first on a fielder's choice, stole second, went to third on a throwing error by catcher Littlejohn and came home on a passed ball. Youngblood clubbed his 13th homer of the year off Giants starter Bob-Knep- hits in their biggest output this season, enabling Mike Torrez to breeze to his 10th victory in 16 decisions. With a 16-4 lead, Torrez was inserted into the batting order as Boston sub- stituted- freely and deleted the designated hitter. He gave way to pin- ch-batter Joel Finch, another pitcher, who lined out to right. Finch remained in the game as a reliever. Kingman retired the first two Boston batters easily, but then surrendered a walk and Rice's home run into the cen- terfield bleachers. Carl Yastrzemski and Bob Watson then singled and Fisk unloaded a three- run homer high into the left-field screen. The Red Sox nailed down the victory with a six-run sixth inning and a ded two runs in the seventh. U-M Stylists AT THE Union Open Mon-Sot 8:30am-5: l5pm at the UNION A blast from the best LPGA golfing sensation Nancy Lopez blasts out of a bunker during a pro- am event preceding a tournament at the Vallee du Richilieu Golf Club near Montreal. Lopez has drawn recent criticism from her fellow pros for taking tog much of the spotlight during heriief rise to the top of the women's golf world..