Page Twelve THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 26, 1973 Drought hits eight-Tigers drop 21 decision to Bosox Fisk blends Tiger ILIE NASTASE, the favorite to capture the Wimbeldon's Men's crown, loops the ball io yester- day's first round action. Women's play commences today with Margaret Court seeded first. WIMBELDON SANS PROS: Nastase, Borg tri u WIMBLEDON, England (P) - Ilie Nastase, one of the few pro-' fessionals not boycotting the com- petition, and Bjorn Borg, the teen-age sensation from Sweden, scored men's singles victories yesterday as the Wimbledon Ten- nis Tournament got underway. Nastase, of Romania, the No. 1 men's seed, whipped Hans Plotz of West Germany 6-3, 7-5, 6-2. The 17-year-old Borg, seeded sixth, eliminated veteran Pre- duction at Wimbledon last year. mjit Lall of India 6-3, 6-4, 9-8. Second-seeded Jan Kodes of The Borg-Lall match lasted one Czechoslovakia also advanced but hour and 40 minutes and conclud- not without difficulty. He beat ed with the young Swede win- Ken Hirai of Japan 4-6, 6-4, 6-1, ning a tie-breaker in the.final 6-3. set 20-18. The tie-break was the longest played since its intro- Alex Mayer of Fort Wayne, Moior League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East Easb w LPet. GB W L Pct. GM New York 40 31 .560 - Chicaga 42 30 .583 - Milwaukee 37 32 .538 2 Monreal 32 33 .492 6?}., Baltimore 33 30 .523 3' St. Louis 33 35 .485 7 Boston 34 33 .508 4 - Philadelphia 32 36 .471 8 Detroit 32 37 .462 7 Pittsburgh 31 36 .463 8Y Cleveland 26 44 .371 13 N Yk West 30 35 .462 8 Kansas City 40 33 .548 - os Angeles 4 26 (368 5 Chicago 36 30 .546 San Francisco 42 .32 .568 5 Oakland 38 34 .530 1, Cincinnati 37 34 .521 81 Minnesota 3s 32 .526 2 Atlanta 30 42 .417 16 California 36 32 .529 1' San Diego 23 49 .319 23 Texas 23 42 .340 131, Results Results Pittsburgh 8, Montreal 6, 1st a Cleveland 4, New York 2 Pittsburgh 3, Montreal 1, 2nd Boston 2, Detroit 1 Philadelphia 7, St. Louis 6 Texas 4, Oakland 3 Chicago 3, New York 2 Baltimore 4, Milwaukee 3 Houston 13, Cincinnati 2 Chicato 3, Minnesota 2 Los Angeles at San Diets Kansas City at California (night) Today's Pitchers Today's Pitchers Pitsburgh (Walker 3-5) at Montreal New York (Dobson 2-1) at Cleveland (Stoneman 1-4) (Strom 1-7) Chicago (Hooton 7-4) at New York Detroit (Seelbach 1-0) at Boston (Koosman 6-5) (Tiant 8-7). - St. Louis (Gibson 7-6 and Folkers 1-i) Oakland (Hamilton 3-1) at Texas at Philadelphia (Carlton 7-8 and Ruth- (Merritt 1-2) ven 1-5) Baltmore (Palmer 7-4) at Milwaukee Cincinnati (Grimsley 6-5) at Houston (Colborn 10-2) (Wilson 5-7) Minnesota (Decker 1-2) at Chicago Los Angeles (Sutton 8-4) at San (Wood 14-9) Diego (Jones 0-1) Kansna City traro 7-61 at California Atlanta (Niekro8 -4) at San Francisco r Daily N.J., breezed past Britain's Rich- ard Lewin 7-5, 6-4, 6-3; Zan Guer- ry of Lookout Mountain, Tenn., beat Jan Hordijk of The Nether- lands 9-7, 6-2, 6-2, and Ike Ma- chette of Belverdere, Calif., eli- minated Onny Parun of New Zealand 3-6, 6-4, 6-3, 7-5. Stan Smith of Pasadena, Calif., last year's Wimbledon champion, would have been seeded No. 1, but he joined the boycott of 72 members of the Association of Tennis Professionals in protest over the International Lawn Ten- nis Federation's suspension of Niki Pilic of Yugoslavia for his failure to play on his nation's Davis Cup team. The dispute will not affect the women's bracket, where such stars at Billie Jean King and Chis Evert of the United States and Evonne Goolagong and Mar- garet Court of Australia will vie for the title. The walkout by more than 70 members of the Association of Tennis Professionals cut the or- iginal list to ribbons but didn't pare the fans. Jimmy Connors, seeded fifth and the United States' brightest hope for the title, defeated Brit- ain's Mark Farrell 6-4, 6-3, 6-4. By boycotting Wimbledon, the ATP stars sacrificed a chance to share in the $130,000 purse. But they were regarded as villains of Fro n ire Servite Reports BOSTON - Even a six game whammy over the Boston Red Sox was not enough magic to keep the faltering Detroit Tigers from f a lII i n g deeper towards American League East oblivion last night as they fell before the Hose 2-1. Bill Lee's cocky left arm and Carlton Fisk's potent bat spelled the end for the hapless Tigers before a national television audi- ence. The loss was the eighth in succession for the hapless Tigers, who have now seen themselves Cubs edge Mets, P hits nip Cards The Chicago Cubs just keep roll- ing along in the National League East and the rest of the division just keeps scrambling a f t e r straws. Ron Santo's game tying double in the ninth, followed by Don Kessinger's game clinching single gave the visiting Cubs a 3-2 comeback victory over the New York Mets. In Philadelphia, rookie Mike Rogodzinski ripped a two-run pinch home run in the eighth inning last night, lifting the Philadelphia Phillies to a 7-6 victory over the St. Louis Car- dinals. Rogodzinski connected after Tommy Hutton singled with one out in the eighth. It was the rookie's seventh hit this season, all as a pinch hitter, and it wip- ed out a Cardinal lead built on Ted Simmons' third home run of the season in the top of the eighth. SIMMONS connected after the Phillies had rallied to tie the score with two runs in the bot- tom of the seventh on Cesar To- var's triple and a single by Denny Doyle. St. Louis picked up three runs in the third off Phillies' starter Wayne Twitchell. National League With one out, Lou Brock and Ted Sizemore walked. Tim Mc- Carver singled home Brock. JOE TORRE then singled to right scoring Sizemore, and when Tovar allowed the ball to get through for an error, McCarver also scored. The Phillies, trailing 5-0, erupted for three in the sixth and knocked out Cards' starter Alan Foster. KEN FORSCH fired a six-hitter to notch his eighth victory and the Houston Astros erupted for nine runs in one inning to swamp the Cincinnati Reds 13-2 in last night's game played in the Astro- dome. Cesar Cedeno's single and his 27th stolen base preceded a run- scoring single by Bob Watson in the first inning and Forsch pro- tected the 1-0 lead uuntil the sixth when Houston broke it open with the nine-run explosion, the As- tros' most productive inning of the season. CEDENO'S 13TH homer touched off the fireworks. Before the in- ning was over, Cedeno had claim- fall from first to fifth in the di- vision. The Tigers started off on the right track with an A Kaline blast over the fabled "Green Monster" in left field. It was the 380th homer of Ka- line's career which began ex- actly 20 years ago last night, in Fenway Park. K a 1 i n e has smacked four home runs this campaign, three in this ancient Boston stadium. Bit the Sox were not about to let Tiger hurler Jim Perry off so easily. Perry wore out his welcome in the fifth. Danny Cater, playing the first while Bosox star Carl Yaztremski pa- trolled the outfield, singled. Age- less Luis Aparicio singled him to second. Aparicio's base knock was the 2,600th of his career, and if the shortstop continues his time-defying act he will get the magic 3,000. Cater moved to third on a fly ball and galloped home on Rick Miller's single to center. The Tigers and the Red Sox then settled down to. a game of nerves; each side feinting a score but neither quite accomplishing a run. The Sox were getting the best of this war of nerves, put- ting men on base in every suc- ceeding inning. Then Fisk, Boston's simply su- perlative sophomore backstop, ended the nonsense with a solo shot in the eighth inning, his 16th round tripper of the year. And down went the suffering Tigers. Lee, a supposed source of dis- sension on the always dissention- ridden Sox, was brilliant, allow- ing the Tigers five base runners in nine innings. He didn't even hand out a free pass in going the distance. The Tigers now know that all good things must come to an end. But must all bad things? Yanks tumble CLEVELAND - John Ellis and Charlie Spikes singled home first- inning runs against their former team and Chris Chambliss drilled a decisive two-run single in the sixth, pacing the Cleveland In- dians to a 4-2 victory over New York last night that snapped the Yankees' eight-game w i n n i n g streak. Gaylord Perry, who has often been accused of throwing spit- balls and grease balls, survived claims by the Yankees in the eighth inning that he was putting a foreign substance on the base- ball, He allowed nine hits, boost- ing his record to 8-9. The Indians, who had lost three in a row, jumped on Mel Stottle- myre, 9-7, with first-inning sin- gles by B u d d y Bell, Oscar Gamble, Ellis and Spikes for a 2-0 lead. Perry surrendered a run in the fourth when Roy White singled, took second on an in- field out and scored on a single by Graig Nettles. Sports of The, Daily, See Page 11 a .,.,,« .,, . f --