Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, August 7, 1973 -Sed & seem, Help from above: Teddy Sizemore ... . .Movin' 'em around 0 * Dan Borus I CHICAGO-THE FIRST PLACE St. Louis Cardinals sprinted onto a cloud-covered Wrigley Field to take their pre-game practice swings. On the hill for the warm-up was Redbird pitching coach Barney Schultz, whose knuckleball helped the 1964 Redbirds to a stunning come-from-behind victory in the topsy- turvy National League Pennant race. The first guy in the cage was number 41, a second baseman by trade, and he was performing the most delicate of batting feats, the line drive single to the opposite field, with a droning consistency. Every outside offering landed in right field. Later the fun loving Redbirds held a mock home-run hitting contest (after all, how real can a home-run hitting contest be if your team is dead last in the majors in round trippers and Henry Aaron and Darrell Evans have more homers than your entire ball club). Everybody in the starting lineup plays, espe- cially with the inviting ivy covered walls of Wrigley. Everybody, that is, but number 41, red Sizemore. Sizemore continues with that little line drive to right. "Keep your head down, wait on the pitch, keep your bat down, Go. Every time in right field." "They don't pay me to hit them," he tells a reporter, "they pay me to move Brock around." It is a long way from Fisher Field to moving Brock around but Teddy Sizemore, the man traded even up for Richie-Dick Allen, has made the journey. None the worse for wear, Ted Sizemore looks just like he did when he was the premier back- stop for the 1964-66 Wolverines. At 5-9, 170, Sizemore looks more like a Serbo-Croatian studies major than a college backstop. But Sizemore caught and did much more. "He did everything we asked of him," recalls assistant basketball coach Dick Honig, who was assistant to Moby Benedict during the Sizemore years. "The only problem Teddy had then was that he wanted to be a home run hitter. You know, he'd hit one out of the park, and he'd think he could do it whenever he pleased. It took us some time to correct that." "It's overworked," an effusive Honig continues, "but Size- more is an example of a guy who made it because he worked at it. On his team, there were guys with much more ability, but none worked harder than Teddy." Teddy started working the moment he suited up in a Maize and Blue uniform. Brought from Detroit's Pershing High School to play short, Sizemore donned the catcher's equipment when number one man Pete Adams was injured prior to the team's departure to the baseball pastures of Arizona for spring training. A miniture Lou Gehrig-Wally Pipp epic unfolded as Sizemore took the job away and never lost it. In fact, the following spring Adams declined to try out. Actually Sizemore wasn't altogether enthralled to be going behind the mask again. "But I wanted to play ball. We needed a catcher and I could do it (it was his high school and sandlot position). It's as simple as that," Sizemore said. The Arizona trip confirmed what almost everyone had taken for granted: That Theodore Sizemore could play with the best behind the plate and he wasn't going to take abuse from anyone. Sizemore's .342 was the second best average on the squad. The Big Ten race began in earnest and the sophomore from Detroit stood in. But he did so with a handicap-a painful knee injury that prevented him from playing late in the season. Dave Campbell, a teammate of Sizemore on the Cardinals and on the 1964 Michigan team, speculates that if Sizemore was completely healthy he would have lead the team to the Big Ten championship. Sizemore ended his rookie (sophomore) year hitting at a .281 clip with no home runs and 14 runs batted in. His next year the junior jinx hit Teddy and he could only manage .248 ("I tried for too many homers that year." He hit two). It was his senior year that Sizemore came of age and the scouts came with money in hand. He led the club to yet another second place finish, batted .315 with 22 runs batted in, was selected as the All Big Ten catcher, and drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers who saw in him the perfect Dodger-little power, good speed and hustle, and field ability. Yet Sizemore was not exactly pleased with his season. "I missed playing in the NCAA's, we never won a title in my years at Ann Arbor. All three seconds and by one game, too," said Sizemore. "I blew it against Purdue my senior year when I tossed a ball away. The Dodgers went to work on Sizemore and made him into an infielder-what Moby Benedict was going to do until Adams got hurt. "The toughest thing," Sizemore revealed, "was learning to . throw and run all over again. At second you never throw over- handed but that's all you do as a catcher. The Dodgers never had any doubts either and they brought the Michigan native up in 1969. Sizemore more than lived up to Walter Alston's expectations when he swatted .21 and earned Rookie of the Year honors. The next year he batted .306 and looked to be the new Jackie Robinson. But the Dodgers unloaded him even up for a slugger, some- thing they had never had but always wanted. Sizemore became a Cardinnal where he has been the second baseman ever since. Batting practice is over and the field is cleared. The Cubs take the field and Ferguson Jenkins begins the game by throwing two quick strikes to Lou Brock. The third pitch is high and away. The fourth pitch is on the corner, Brock sticks out his bat and the ball takes off to left for a double, Number 41 takes the first pitch and on the second moves Brock around with a sacrifice. Another day in the life. II uEiz III IhE31I By The Associated Press DETROIT - The old baseball chiche which proudly proclaims that the game isn't over until the final out has found a new cham- pion-the seemingly never aging Detroit Tigers. Last night, with a little help from Providence, the Tigers came through in the pinch. Throwing errors by Sparky Lyle and Felipe Alou allowed Au- relio Rodriguez to score all the way from first base with the win- ning run in the 10th inning, giv- ing the Detroit Tigers a 5-4 vic- tory over the New York Yankees. Rodriguez led off the 10th with a single to center off Lyle, 4-8. Ed Brinkman then dumped a sac- rifice bunt which Lyle fielded- but threw wildly past first base- man Matty Alan for an error. THE BALL BOUNDED down the right-field line, where it was retrieved by Felipe Alou. Rodri- guez, running all the way, scored with a head-first slide when Felpie Alou's throw to the play bounced past Yankee catcher Thurman Munson for the secod error of the play. Big Frank Howard had slam- med a two-run pinch-homer with two out in the bottom of the ninth inning, capping a three-run Tiger rally that sent the game into extra innings. The triumph, before a national television audience and a Tiger Stadium crowd of 51,001, lifted the Tigers past the Baltimore Orioles into first place in the tight American L e a g u e East. The Orioles, beaten by the Boston Red Sox 5-3, dropped into second place, one-half game behind De- troit. Boston and New York are both one game out of first. WITH THE YANKS ahead 4-1, Mickey Stanley led off the ninth with a double off starter Mel Stottlemyre. After Gates Brown lined out, Willie Horton singled and Lyle relieved Stottlemyre. Lyle got pinch-hitter Al Kaline to hit into a force-out, Stanley scoring on the play, but the 6- foot-7, 275-pound Howard, batting for Norm Cash, hit his eighth homer of the season into the lower leftfield stands. Gates Brown had put the Tigers ahead 1-0 with an opposite-field homer off Stottlemyre in the fourth. J THE YANKEES moved in front 2-1 in the sixth when Ron Blom- berg bounced a two-out double over Detroit right fielder Jim Northrup's head. New York add- ed two more runs in the seventh on run-scoring singles by Horace Clarke and Roy White. Until the ninth inning, the kay play in the game was Blomberg's two-run double in the sixth. With two out, Roy White sin- gled and Bobby Murcer drew a walk from Detroit starter Mike Strahler. Blomberg then hit a sinking liner which Northrup ran in on, apparently hoping for a shoestring catch. But the drive hit in front of him and bounced over his head to the wall, allow- ing both runners to score. STRAHLER walked Munson to open the Yankee seventh inning and then Fred Scherman came in to pitch. He retired the first two batters before Clarke sin- gled home Munson, who had reached second on Felipe Alou's ground out. 0's gored BALTIMORE - Carlton Fisk smacked a two-run single to high- light a four-run outburst in the first inning that started the Bos- ton Red Sox on their way to. a 5-3 victory over the Baltimore Oriles last night. The Red Sox collected five hits off Baltimore's starting pitcher, Doyle Alexander, who did not last out the first inning. With one out, Luis Aparcicio singled and Reggie Smith hit a long double to left-center for Boston's first run. After Carl Yastrzemski struck out, designated hitter Orlando Cepeda drove home Smith with a single, Rico Petrocelli doubled and Fisk hit his two-run single. Eddie Watt then relieved Alex- ander, 6-5, and gave up a bunt single to Rick Miller before get- ting out of the inning. Unbeaten Reggie Morst gave up a two-run homer to Merv Ret- tenmund, his sixth of the season in the fifth inning but posted his fifth victory of the year. He need- ed relief hetp from Bob Bolin in the ninth, when the Orioles scored their final run on a pinch single by Boog Powell. Tommy Harper hit a solo homer for Boston in the ninth, his 14th of the season. Major League Standings AMEAICAN AEAGUE East W A Pct. G1 Detroit 60 50 .545 - ltimore5 5 49 .542 Boston 59.51 .536 1 New Yoo 01 sl5 .5351 Milwankee 52 57 .477 7 Cleveland 43 70 .381 it' West tOakland t3 40 .568 - Kansas City 64 49 .566 - Minnesota 55 53 .509 6 Chicago 55 57 .491 8. California 51 57 .472 10. Texas 41 68 .376 21 Results Boston 5, Baltimore 3 Detrsit 5, Ne, York 4, 10 innings Cleveland 7, Chicago 3 Other clubs not scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE East a St. Louis Chicaen Pittsburgh Philad ephia New York w L Pt. GB 01 51 .545 - 56 56 .500 5 54 55 .495 51'' 54 56 .491 6 52 t0 .464 9 49 00 .450 10"1 feared singles hitter pose during his Michigan playing days. In 1964 through 1966 Sizemore was a catcher for the Maize and Blue, although he had been brought to Michigan to be an infielder. The Dodgers finally converted the All- Big Ten catcher to a second baseman. Today Sizemore plays his baseball for the St. Louis Cardinals for whom he plays second and bats in the .280s. f f LsAgles 60042 .02. - C icinnati 67 47 .588 31 f }san Francisco 61 49 .555 7". .r: :B,::. ouston 5857 5 .04 13 Atlanta 52 64 .448 10'. San Diego 37 73 .336 31?'. ftesults %17Montreal7, Chicago 3 Houston 5, Cincinnati 4 New York 10, St. Louis 3 Los Angeles at San Diego, night Other clubs not scheduled Summer Daily SporIts