Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 7, 1974 Hayes suffers heart attack From Wire Service Reports COLUMBUS-Ohio State Uni- versity football Coach Woody Hayes was in stable condition in University Hospital yester- day after complaining of chest pains. Neither hospital spokesmen nor Hayes' personal physician would specaulate whether the 61-year-old Hayes, who ranks second among active college coaches in the number of vic- tories, had suffered a heart at- tack. "It will be three days before any definite diagnosis can be made," Dr. Robert J. Murphy said yesterday morning. Mur- phy doubles as the Ohio State football team doctor and Hayes' personal physician. IT DID NOT take quite that long to make the diagnosis. Late yesterday afternoon a hos- pital spokesman was quoted as saying that Hayes had, indeed, suffered a heart attack. "His situation is stable," the hospital source said. "He should be able to resume coaching af- ter he leaves the hospital." "I saw him (Hayes) as late as last week," Murphy said. "In general, he's in robust health." HAYES, IN the midst of pre- paring for his 24th season at Ohio State, was bothered by chest pains early Thursday. Murphy said he was summon- ed to Hayes' home and 'de- cided to atmit him." Hayes vas admitted to University flos- pital's Coronary Care Unit at 8 a.m. EDT. A well informed source states that Hayes balked at entrang file San /uJ/ _7Ja.44 Major league baseball . . .. .gone from Detroit John Kohler IT IS ALWAYS sad to watch the decay of a once competent base- ball team. The sixty thousand very odd people who paid their way into Tiger Stadium earlier this week witnessed one of the biggest bummers in Motor City history. The Tigers are dead. The Detroit Tigers have been written off many times before, only to confound the world by getting hot and surging back into contention. But this time the long delayed Bengal collapse is finally upon us, and not even George Kell can hide the sad fact. In their recently completed series with the Oakland Ath- letics, the Tigers proved that there are four things of a key nature that they cannot do very well - hit, pitch, field and run. The A's found they didn't have to work hard to take two of three. Bengal batters could only manage 11 safeties in three games against assorted A's pitchers. This state becomes even more de- pressive when it is considered that three batters - Al Kaline, Wil- lie Horton and Mickey Stanley - were responsible for seven of these hits. The rest of Detroit's hitless wonders wasted their time wearing a deadline in the grass between home plate and the Tiger dugout. Oakland's batters were not exactly lacing the ball, either. But then they didn't have to, since the Tiger pitchers were providing them with free trips to first base. Mickey Lolich and Joe Coleman, deuces who pose as aces on this staff, continually got themselves in trouble by putting people on via bases on ball, and then surrendering a key hit to drive these runners home. Lolich wasted a fine twelve strikeout effort by his inability to stop giving up free passes. All in all, the A's did not face major league opposition during their stay in Detroit. But Ralph Hook is not concerned. After Coleman made a quick exit Wednesday night, the major was heard to say, "Coleman had good stiff. When you have good stuff, you're going to give up a lot of walks." With the stuff Coleman was throwing that night, it was for- tunate that Coleman was walk- ing a lot of batters, since the free passes limited them to one base at a time. Bt that didn't matter to the "Miracle Major." Ever since failure ran him . out of New York, Houk has been exuding confidence and opti- "ira *,' Ajr" mism to all who would listen, " especially those with reorter's notebooks in their hands. To him, it really didn't matter that M a~r ..eagi the Tigers have not brought in L any new blood since the Denny American League McLain trade. "We have the material here to be a winner." East The players love to hear this, w L Pet. G since it builds up their egos. Boston 29 23 .58 - Sportswriters love to hear it, Milwaukee 26 23 .531 1% since they love people who Bt * 25126.94% treat them like imnortant peo- Detroit 24 2 .475 4% ple ,as Houk does. And the New York 25 29 .43 5 public gets conned, West Any team whose stopper is Oakland 31 22 .25 - Woodie Fryman obviously has Cicao 24 23 511 4 aesas 2262t.50s 4 the material for a cellar finish. Kansas city 26 26 .s0 4% There are good people there: Calitornia 25 29 .443 s5 John Hiller, Willie Horton, and Minnesota ' 21 27 .438 7% Al Kaline are having decent Results aeasons, bit they tend to get lost in the sub-mediocrity. A Milauke 9, Calitoni 7 bullpen ace is useless when New York at Chleago, delayed rain his team'trails 9-1. So expect to hear such names Today's Games as Danny Meyer, Bob Adams., Texas at Baitimore, night Marv Lane, Tom Vervzer and California at Detrot, p.m. Vern Ruhle mentioned in the Minnesota at New York, night near future. They have a future Oaklandat Milwaukee, night naTir setad .Bostond at Chicagonas, night at Tiger stadium,nena hcgngt into the ambulance that pulled up to his home to take him to the hospital. "No way are you going to get me in that damned thing," Hayes shosted at doc- tors who were trying to con- vince him that the trip was for his own good. HAYES' ILLNESS took his coaching staff by surprise. "I telephoned him at home around eight last night," re- called tackle coach Ralph Stab. "He was in good spirits." George Hill, Hayes' No. 1 assistant, said he also talked to Hayes Wednesday night. "He was talking about what we were going to do Friday. As far as I know, he's never missed a day of work." Hayes and his staff were winding up their spring football reports this week before going on vacation. WIDELY despised in Ann Ar- bor, the colorful Buckeye men- tor has a good claim to being the top coach in the land. His famous "three yards and a cloud of dust" philosophy may not make for the most enter- taining game to watch, but it has generated its imitators throughout the Big Ten, most notably Bo Schembechler. tHyes also possesses one of the more distinctive thought patterns in the nation, believ- ing himself at times to be Gen- eral Patton. He also has a repu- tation of being a tyrant with his olayers and with reporters, but his most recent trip to the Rose Bowl seemed to indicate that he might be mellowing. A tireless worker and met cu- lous planner, Hayes has 192 ca- reer college victories, ;ecoid only to Alabama's Paul "Bear" Bryant. IN 31 SEASONS of high schiol and college coaching, he has 211 triumphs, 70 defeats and nine ties. Hayes has coached longer than any of his predecessors at Ohio State, infamous as an in- tellectual graveyard. His OSU record is 159-49-8, including three national championships. WOODY HAYES collects his thoughts before the Michigan-Ohio State game played last November. The Olentangy Maestro was stricken with a heart attack yesterday morning. Texas Rangersrip Cleveland; Brewers humiliate California CLEVELAND (A) - Alex Johnson knocked in four runs, two of them in a three - run Texas seventh, and the Rang- ers, behind Jackie Brown's sev- en-hitter, beat the Cleveland Indians 6-2 yesterday night. The Rangers got to Cleveland starter Jim Perry early when Cesar Tovar lead off the game with a single to left, moved up a base on Lenny Randle's bunt and scored on Johnson's single to center. Texas chased Perry, 4 - 5, from the mound in the seventh ue Standings National League East W L Pet. Ga Philadelphia 29 24.547 - St. Louis 17 24 .529 1 Montreal 23 22 .511 2 New York 22 30 .423 645 Chicago 19 28 .404 7 Pittsburgh 15 30 .375 8t5 West Los Anteles 39 15 .722 -- Cincinnati 30 1 .585 7%t Atlanta 28 25 .2 1o Houston 25 27 .500 11 San Francisco 29 28 .509 11% San Diego 20 28 .345 21 Results New York 4, Cincinnati 3 San Francisco 9, St. Louis 5 Houston 4, Montreal 0 Chicago at San Diego, inc. Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, inc. Today's Games New York at Houston, night Cincinnati at Philadelphia, night St. Louis at San Diego, night Moatreai at Atlanta, night Chicago at Los Angeles, night Pittsburghi at San Franciuco, night as Toby Harrah led off with a single and advanced to third on an error. Jim Fregosi's RBI single made it 2-0. Tovar was then hit by a pitch, but was forced at second on Randle's fielder's choice grounder, Fre- gosi taking third. After Randle stole second, Johnson knocked in the second and third runs of the inning with a double to right center field. Angels aced MILWAUKEE - Mike He- gan's two - run pinch single capped a three-run seventh in- ning rally and helped the Mil- waukee Brewers to a 9-7 victo- ry over the California Angels. George Scott, who had dou- bled home three runs in the first inning, began the uprising in the seventh with another double. After a walk, Charlie Moore doubled home Scott for a 7-7 tie. An intentional walk filled the bases, setting up the single by Hegan, Cards blown SAN FRANCISCO - Pinch- batter Chris Arnold's two-run triple and Gary Matthews' wind - blown, three - run double sparked a seven-run, fourth- inning rally that lifted the San Francisco Giants to a 9-5 vic- tory over the St. Louis Cardi- nats. One - out singles by Gary Thomasson and Bruce Miller triggered the seven-run fourth off Lynn McGlothen, 7-3. Arnold belted his triple with two out and Bobby Bonds' run-scoring single made it 3-3. Bonds stole second, took third on a wild pitch and scored the go-ahead run on Mike Phillips' single. Steve Ontiveros belted a ground-rule double on a ball misjudged by left fielder Brock, chasing McGlothen. Reliever Rich Folkers walked Ed Goodson, loading the bases, and Matthews hit a fly to short center. The wind kept blowing the ball toward the infield and it dropped for a bases-clearing double. Reds ripped NEW YORK - John Milner crashed a lead-off homer against reliever Pedro Borbon in the eighth inning lifting the New York Mets to a 4-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. Milner's shot, his ninth of the season, cracked a 3-3 tie after the Mets had come from behind with two runs in the seventh on Cleon Jones' single to tie the game. With two out in the seventh, Ed Kranepool batted for Met starter Tom Seaver and singled to left. Bud Harrelson also singled, then New York loaded the bases when Felix Millan beat out a hit behind second base. Jones followed with his line single to center that chased Cin- cinnati starter Roger Nelson. Borbon came on and got Rusty Staub to bounce to first