'Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 24, 1974 Bengals blasted by Brewers By The Associated P1r0 After a sacrifice, John Briggs MILWAUKEE-George Scott's walked with two out and stole bloop triple capped a two-run second. Rookie Bob Hansen fol- seventh inning rally, lifting the lowed with a two-run single. Milwaukee Brewers to a 7-3 The Tigers tied it in the sec- victory over the Detroit Tigers and after a single by Willie yesterday. Horton and a walk to Northrup. Rookie Robin Yount reached Rodriguez and Ed Brinkman de- first on an error by third base- livered two-out singles. man Aurelio Rodriguez with one out in the seventh and stole second for the Brewers' fourth Gayiord greases stolen base of the game. Dave BALTIMORE-Gaylord Perry May singled home Yount with p it c h e d a three-hitter and two out and scored the decisive George Hendrick singled home run when Scott's pop fly fell the only run he needed last -between three Tigers near the night, leading the Cleveland In- right field line. dians to a 2-0 victory over the The Brewers added three in- Baltimore Orioles. surance runs in the eighth on a Both Cleveland runs off Jim walk, Darrell Porter's RBI sin- Palmer, 2-5, were unearned with gle, Bob Coluccio's double and Hendrick's sixth-inning single a bases-loaded walk to Scott. snapping a 21-inning scoreless The Tigers had taken a 3-2 string for the Indians. lead in the top of the seventh Perry, winning his seventh when Jim Northrup singled, ad- straight game since losing the vanced to second on a passed baseball season opener, checked ball and scored on a two-out Baltimore on singles by Mike double by Rodriguez. Reinbach in the third inning and Don Money doubled to trigger Bobby Grich in the fourth and a two-run Brewer first inning Brooks Robinson's double in the against loser Joe Coleman, 6-3. fifth. Major League Standinqs AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East W . Pct. G w . Pet. GB 'Milwaukee 20 17 .540 - Philadelphia 23 17 .575 - Boston 21 19 .525 s Montreal 18 15 .540 1t Cleveland 20 20 .500 1' St. Louis 20 19 .513 2 Baltimore 19 19 .500 1 New York 18 23 .438 5 Detroit 19 20 .487 2 Chicago ' 15 21 .417 6 New York 20 23 .465 3 Pittsburgh 13 24 .349 81, West West Oakland 23 18 .561 - Chicago 20 17 .529 i les Angeles 31 11 .738 - Texas 20 21 .487 3 Cincinnati 20 18 .526 9 Kansas City 19 21 .473 :t'. San Francisco 23 21 .523 9 California 20 22 .472 3'. Atlanta 22 21 .512 9'. Minnesota 17 20 .453 4 Houston 22 23 .489 101 Today's Pitchers San Diego 17 29 .370 16 Milwaukee (Champion 2-0 or Today's Pitchers Sprague 2-0) at Boston St. Louis (Siebert 3-3) at (Wise 2-2). Chicago (Reushel 3-2). Cleveland (Peterson 2-2) at Houston (Roberts 5-5) at Atlanta Detroit (Slayback 1-2). (Capra 2-2). Baltimore (McNally 3-3) at Montreal (Renko 3-4) at New York (stottlemyre 5-5). Philadelphia (Lonborg 4-3). Chicago (Bahnsen 5-3) at Kansas New York (Matlack 5-1) at City (Splittorff 4-4). Pittsburgh (Reuss 2-3). Texas (Ciyde 3-0) at Minnesota Cincinnati (Gullett 4-3) at tBlyleven 3-6), San Dirgo (reit 2-7). Oakland( tunter 7-3) at Lea Angeles O(tton6 -3) at Calitornia (Langee0-e). San Francisco (Bradiey 4-4). s V 3 C i h s h e 3 e d e : : IN A SCENE remarkably characteristic of the recent Tiger-Brewer series, Tiger catcher Bill Freehan is flipped at the plate by Brewer DH Bobby Mitchell, The Tigers lost yesterday's bat- tle, 7-3. Coaches crush cagers By JOHN KAHLER It was a bright breezy day in Ann Arbor town with not a cloud " in the sky. Just the sort of day that weather-oppressed students use for trips to the Arb, soaking in the sunshine, and engaging in sexist activities. But few of these innocent peo- ple were aware that at High Noon yesterday, at Court No. 9 of the IM tennis courts, a cos- mic event was taking place. The For a look at what Rod Ca- rew is doing in the real world, one need only flip to page 11. Also on that page is more on the fate of James "Fly" Wil- liams. long-awaited showdown was fin- ally coming off. Campy Russell and Joe Johnson were squaring off against coaches Jim Dutcher and Bill Frieder. B E F O R E the match, both sides were free with their com- ments and predictions. Said coach Dutcher of his opponents, "I've never seen them play, but they can't be very good. After all, who ever heard of a good black tennis player? Except for Arthur Ashe, of course." To which Joe Johnson re- torted, "If Frieder is Dutcher's partner, we're certain to win." At precisely noon, Campy took the court, and proceeded to get in some warmup shos, one of which narrowly missed a car on Hoover Street. Little Joe was a little late, explaining, "I had a class." UNFORTUNATELY for Camp and Little Joe, this was to be the last time they led in the match. The two coaches domi- nated from the onset, as they won the first two sets by identi- cal 6-2 scores. Midway through the third set, Campy took leave of the game, explaining that he had to meet a friend from out of town. Lloyd Schinnerer took his place, but the coaches showed no mercy on the lkid from the Thumb, as the third set was lost, 6-3 and a fourth set, 6-2. A F T E R the match, it was learned that Campy had not agreed to a set of conditions proposed beforehand, to whit; that if Campy lost, he would withdraw his name from the hardship list and play another year for the Maize and Blue. Had Campy been f ool i s h enough to agree to this, the match would have cost him 300,- 000 dollars, if current rumors are to be believed. So as it stands now, Russell is set to be drafted by some NBA team next Tuesday, but the possibility still exists that he could change his mind. Next week, Dutcher and Fried- er plan to continue their hot streak by challengingBill Ayler and Wayman Britt to a four man hockey game. The Daily will be there. AP Photo CAMPY RUSSELL attempts to play the net in tennis action from yesterday's showdown at the IM courts. The normally 6-7 Russell was closer to 6-2 after coaches Dutcher and Frieder finish- ed off him and partner Joe Johnson. But fortunately for Camp, he is nt on the hardship list of World Team Tennis, and the future looks bright for the Pontiac, Mich. native.