The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 31, 1979-Page 11 GAME IN GOOD SHAPE: Littler: Putting key to taming Oakland Hills BIRMINGHAM (AP) - Gene Littler, again on the grounds that served as the site of his greatest triumph, was stroking drivers with effortless ease on the practice range at the historic Oakland Hills Country Club course. "Sometimes I think I'm playing pret- ty good. Then sometimes I don't think I can play a lick," the vastly respected, soft-spoken veteran said yesterday. "Um huh," said Miller Barber, stan- ding next to him, watching Littler's shots arching with rifle accuracy down the range. "Wouldn't you just love to have his problems? Wouldn't you just love to have the 'can't plays' like that?" AT 49, after more than a quarter-cen- tury on the pro golf tour, Littler's graceful, picture-perfect swing still is a marvel, a thing of envy, to his fellow pros. And, coming into the 61st PGA National Championship, the rest of his game - that deft, delicate, so- important touch around the greens - is starting to jell, too. The tournament starts Thursday. "I've been putting just awful the last couple of years," gentleman Gene said in a drawl that would be more ap- propriate to West Texas than his native Southern California. "Blut it's starting to come around. "And you have to be able to putt to do anything out here. If you can't putt, you're dead. You have no chance. No chance at all." It was on this famed course, a 7,014- yard, par 70 layout that Ben Hogan dubbed "the Monster" that Littler scored the highlight of his career, a vic- tory in the 1961 U.S. Open. "THAT WAS the biggest thing I've done," he said. "I know it in retrospect and I knew it at the time. "All I really remember is the first two holes and the last three. I missed birdie putts like this" - he spread his hands about two feet apart - "on the first two holes and I thought, 'Oh, this is gonna be a fun week,' and on the last three holes - I was playing with Gar- dner Dickinson - Joe Dey came out and told me, not Gardner, that we'd have to play faster." Littler went on to score the only major triumph of his career. He's lost two others, the 1970 Masters and 1977 PGA, in playoffs. "THAT'S THE best I've ever done," he said, but quickly added, "and the next-best was winning at St. Louis." That was one of the most dramatic victories the game has known. Littler had been stricken with cancer. He un- derwent surgery and suffered extensive muscle damage. He had to use his right hand to lift his left. There seemed little chance he'd ever play again. But he came back to play, to play well enough to rejoin the tour. And in 1973 he played well enough to win the St. Louis Open. "For a guy that didn't think he'd ever play again, that was really something," Littler said. "I got pretty lucky." Major League Standings Yesterday's games not included AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct. Baltimore .... 69 34 .670 Boston ....... 62 37 .626 Milwaukee ... 63 41 .606 New York .... 55 48 .534 Detroit ....... 52 49 .515 Cleveland .... 50 52 .490 Toronto ...... 32 72 .308 West California .... 60 45 .571 'Minnesota .... 54 47 .535 Texas ........ 54 48 .529 Kansas City .. 50 32 .490 Chicago ...... 46 57 .447 Seattle ....... 44 62 .415 Oakland ...... 29 76 .276 GB 5 6 / 14 16 18% 37%2 4 41/2 8%/ 13 1612 31 NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct. Montreal ..... 55 42 .567 Pittsburgh ... 56 44 .560 Chicago ...... 54 44 .551 St. Louis ..... 50 47 .515 Philadelphia . 52 49 .515 New York .... 42 55 .433 GB 1 5 5 13 3 8% 12 15 16 Houston ...... Cincinnati .... San Francisco San Diego ... Los Angeles .. Atlanta ....... West 60 46 57 50 51 54 48 59 44 60 43 62 .566 .533 .486 .449 .423 .410 New Laker coach counting on 'Magic' INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) - Jack McKinney formally was introduced as the new head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers yesterday, and immediately talked about National Basketball AP Photo Association titles. Record breaking Bulldog "Eventually, we intend to win an . . 2" NBA championship," said the 44-year- " The University of Georgia's Mel Lattany zips through the tape yesterday old McKinney, who will succeed Jerry as the South's men's 400-meter relay team finishes with a winning time of West at the helm of the Lakers. "I hope 1 38.30-best in the world this year-during competition at the National Sports it's this year, but if not, then 1981." i Festival in Colorado Springs. MCKINNEY made it clear that he is SPOR Y OF THE DAILY. Yanks deal agile Rivers By The Associated Presslokrrodut1miuebfreaetm.' NEW YORK - Mickey Rivers, the moody, often brilliant locker room just 10 minutes before game time. catalyst on the New York Yankees' world championship 'Horseman' dead- teams the past two years, yesterday was traded by the CLEVELAND - Don Miller, 77, one of the legendary Yankees to the Texas Rangers. In return for the 30-year cen- "Four Horsemen" of Notre Dame, died Saturday at Lakeside ter fielder, the Yankees will receive three minor league Hospital, two weeks after being admitted for a heart attack. players and a player to be named later. Miller played in the Notre Dame cbackfield from 1922- Rivers, the speedster acquired by the Yanks in a deal 1924, and carried 283 times for 1,393 yards for a rushing with California before the 1976 season, hs been considered by average of 6.83 yards a carry, a school record that still stan- many the most important offensive force on the club. In his ds. three full seasons in New York, the Yankees won three Writer Grantland Rice labeled halfbacks Miller and Jim American League pennants and the last two World Series. Crowley, quarterback Harry Stuhldreher and fullback Elmer This season, Rivers has been slowed down by nagging leg Layden, who played under Coach Knute Rockne, the "Four injuries. He has appeared in 73 of the Yanks' 103 games, bat- Horsemen." ting .289 with three homers and 25 runs batted in. "Outlined against a blue-gray October sky, the Four Rivers has had a continuing series of disciplinary Horsemen rode again. In dramatic lore they are known as problems with the Yankees. His, most recent run-in was Famine, Pestilence, Destruction and Death," Rice wrote af- before Sunday's.game in M1lWaukee, whenhe reported to the ter eNotre Dane victory over Army in 1924, counting heavily on rookie Earvin "Magic" Johnson to help the Lakers to a title. "The Lakers have a new owner (Jerry Buss), a new coach and a new magic show," said McKinney shortly after being introduced. Later, when discussing championship hopes, he said, "I don't want to put any extra pressure on a 19-year-old ball-handling guard." The pressure on Johrnson, the first player taken in last month's NBA draft, clearly will be there. But McKinney, for one, emphasized his belief that the Michigan State All-American is prepared for it. McKinney served as an assistant coach for the Portland Trail Blazers the past three seasons and with the Milwaukee Bucks the two previous years. BLIARDS at the UNION Open 11:30am M-F 1 pm Sat & Sun