Fans knew the answer to '28 Tigers woes (Editor's Note: The follow- ing story is a reprint cour- tesy of the Detroit News. It was published May 30, 1928. The Daily Sports Staff thinks you will enjoy it, particularly in light of the Tigers' misfor- tunes this summer.) What is the matter with the Tigers? Detroit's base ball club, her- aided this spring with brave fanfares of praise, began losing from the very start and now is floundering about the lower reaches of the second division. The fans of Detroit are ask- ing questions. What's the trou- ble? Is it the manager? The hitting? The fielding? The pitching? I there dissension in the ranks? Is the management doing all it can to build up the team? Yesterday, reporters from The Detroit News as they went about their daily tasks, took up the question and asked it of those with whom they came in contact during the day: "WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH THE TIGERS?" Here are some of the ans- wers: THOMAS LOGAN, Book-Cad- illac Hotel - The trouble with the Tigers is they are tripping on their tail. The spirit of co- operation seems to be lacking and no team can win that hasn't the spirit. JOSEPH H. CREEDON, sec- retary, Detroit Lodge of Elks- The Tigers are warm weather players. I believe hot weather would make them a winning team. The organization, from Moriarty down, is good enough to win any ball game, but the Tigers never have been known to win in cool weather. RAY C. BANE, oil station op- erator, 13541 Third avenue - It must be caused by prohibition. We blame everything else that goes topsy-turvy on the Eigh- teenth Amendment, so why not this? DR. FRANK B. BRODER- ICK - If I were to tell what I thought was the matter with the Tigers, my dog would bite me. DETECTIVE LIEUT. GEORGE LUDWIG - M o r e people are patronizing the City recreation parks every year to watch amateur ball games be- cause they can see more real ball playing there than at Navin Field. RAY DOHERTY - probation officer - I think George Mor- iarty is the best manager De- troit has had or ever will have. The present losing streak is due principally to the long list of injuries which the team has, sustained. MAYOR JOHN C. LODGE - Compare the team with Hughey Jennings' pennant- winning ag- gregation of 1907. George Mor- iarty is much like Jennings in his knowledge of base ball, en- thusiasm and disappointment at reverses. Jennings had probab- ly the worst pennant-winning team on peper in the history of baseball, with the exception of the 1914 Boston Braves. He had a perfectly awful infield, a bet- ter than ordinary outfield, fair catchers but an extraordinary battery. It was a team of great spirit. Take Charley Schmidt, the great catcher. With a brok- en finger, he ran to Doc Keane and said: "Here, Doc, put a few splints on this," and he roared loudly when he was tak- en out of the game. That was the spirit that actuated every man. The Tigers of 1928 have had the jinx on their trail since the season opened and in addi- tion it is a team built around the batting ability of one man, Harry Heilmann. The attitude seems to be: "He's not hitting, so what's the use?" I know of no hpyodermic injection which will infuse a base ball team overnight with the ability, the spirit and the will to win. JOSEPH O. CASTELLUCCI, assistant prosecuting attorney- That the Detroit Tigers are not a winning ball club is due al- most entirely to the close rein Navin keeps on the purse strings. JOSEPH GUYETTE, Federal Court baliff, a base ball fan for 50 years - The Tigers are all right. They need to be pepped up by their rooters, that's all. I remember, years ago, when the Boston team went bad on tour and lost 20 straight games. The Boston rooters got together, organized a rooters' club and gave the team a rousing wel- come when it got back to the home grounds. The faith of the rooters brought the team to- gether and it won games with ease after that. JUDGE GUY A. MILLER, of the Circuit Court - There is so much wrong with the Tigers that I don't know where to be- gin. Heilmann and Fothergill are the two slowest outfielders in either league. As fielders, they are through. They are good hitters but do not come within 30 per cent of covering the ground they should. The man- agement must get down to bed rock and build the team from the ground up. J. HENRY PICKLER, Hotel Statler - Pitchers are the heart of a base ball team, and the heart of the Tigers seems to be suffering from valvular dis- ease. MATTHEW M. GOEBEL, grand knight, Gabriel Richard Council, Knights of Columbus- It seems to me there is plenty of good material but absolutely no co - operation between the managers and the players. Moriarty never should have been chosen manager. LIEUT. CLARENCE WHITE, Highland Park police - The Tigers need pitchers. They don't have good relief pitchers. We need one like old "Hook" Dauss, who could be depended on always to pull a game out of the fire. PATROLMAN A R T H U R HEIDT - What Detroit needs is a National League team, which would cause the owners of the Tigers to spend money for good players so they could compete for patronage. JOSEPH DOBROWOLNY, letter carrier - Detroit once was noted for its heavy hitting, but not now. Easterling made four hits one day and was taken out the next day. I don't think he has been in the game since. Let's have some new blood and let the old players worry about their jobs for a while. DR. AUSTIN HOWARD, Re- ceiving Hospital - Navin will not spend the money for talent. Pitchers are needed. As for the rest of the team, they released two of their best players in Ma- nush and Blue. GENEVIEVE KENNEDY- The Tigers need the moral sup- port of the women fans of De- troit. I'll wager that a crowd of young women rooters at the ball park would make the Tig- ers play real ball. R. C. SHEPHERD, recruiting officer, United States Coast Guard - The Tigers are one of the finest teams in the league. No team can work well with a lot of its members on the sick list and old Lady Luck giving it the absent treatment. l'ish gridders suspended for violating school rules SOUTH BEND, Ind. (A) -- he said. Six Notre Dame football play- The dismissed students were ers including the heart of the identified by an Irish teammate Irish defense, have been sus- as Luther Bradley, Muncie, pended from school for at least Ind.; Russ Browner, Warren, a year for violating school Ohio; Al Hunter, Greenville, rules, The Associated Press N. C.; Willie Fry, Memphis, learned yesterday. Tenn.; Roy Henry, New Or- The South Bend Tribune said leans, and Dan Knott, Crow- in its Thursday editions that chilla, Calif. At least two news- the case involved a complaint papers carried the same identi- filed by an 18-year-old woman, fications. who alleged she had been The university, in a short raped. A prosecutor said six statement, said the "serious Notre Dame football players violation of university rules" were under investigation in a which prompted the dismissals rape allegation. No charges was not a criminal matter. have been filed. But Ken Fedder, chief deputy Notre Dame acknowledged prosecutor for St. Joseph Coun- that a "small number of stu- ty, which includes South Bend, dents" had been dismissed, but confirmed that a criminal in- it would not say how many vestigation was being con- there were and would not iden- ducted by his office against six tify them as football players. football players, but he de- However, A r a Parseghian, lined to say who they were. coach of the national champion "I can't say if criminal Irish, conceded in a telephone charges will be filed or not," he interview that all were mem- said. "There's no reason to be- bers of his team. lieve that charges won't be "It's a great disappointment, filed, but it may depend on the one of those things that happen, university's handling of the and we'll just have to set it be- matter," hind us,' Parseghian told the Bradley, a defensive half- AP. Parseghian said he would back, led last year's squad in not become involved in the mat- interceptions. Browner, an end, ter. topped the front four in tackles. "As far as I'm concerned it Both were starters last season was a university irregularity, and were members of the Irish and a university suspension," track team. THE a new improvised musical revue. - - - conceived & directed by ALLAN ALBERT managing director DREW'SPARKS starring the cast of BOSTON'S longest running5show- THE PROPOSITION June 6 - august 10 THE RUI3AIyAT 102 S. first st.,ann arbor wednesdays & thursdays -9:30 fridays.t9:3o saturdays. o:oo with dinner wed., Thurs., and Fri.--i 04; st.--$1.5 General Admission wed. and Thurs.-$1.0; Frl. and sat.--St. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE is accepting resumes for set, cos- tume, and lighting designers for the 1974-75 season. Please submit in writing by August 6 to Alida Silverman, 2683 Esch, AA; or call 971-3513. if i LAHELU diSOU1 THESOUTH 1235 UNIVERSITY 300 S. STATE 313-668-9866 313-665-3679 MON-FRI: 9:30-9 SATt 9:30-6 SUN: 12-+6 the music people TONIGHT! 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