split wide to lrelet Campbell going fishing ... ... with little bait O WEEKS AGO, the Detroit Tigers started paying the price for several years of front-office bungling. As early as 1971, it was clear to unbiased observers that the team was in for serious long-term trouble if it didn't take steps to get good young talent into the system immediately. Based on the club's track record, it was equally clear that this talent wasn't about to come from the farm system. This was so for two reasons: 1) Very few players emerged from the system as bona-fide major leaguers, and 2) Those who did, emerged on other clubs. Elliott Maddox went to Texas in the Denny McLain deal, and is currently a .300-hitting outfielder for the Yankees. It's becoming more obvious every day the Tigers would have been better keeping Maddox around, while letting Texas hold on to Aurelio Rodriguez. Pitchers Mike Marshall, Dick Drago and Jim Rooker all slipped away in the expansion draft, so the Tigers could protect outstand- ing prospects like, like, like . . . well, you get the point. All three of them would be seeing heavy action now if the Bengals had found a way to keep them on the roster. Pitching woes And pitching is almost certain to be a problem for Detroit in the coming years. Of the team's veterans, only Mickey Lolich, Joe Coleman and John Hiller figure to be any good from now on out, and as for the youngsters . . . well, they ought to hand out free suits of armor in the bleachers every time Fred Holdsworth, Dave Lemanczyk or Bill Slayback touches the ball. The minor league situation is almost as depressing. Evans- ville, with all those American Association All-Stars on the field, was a losing team-precisely because its pitching staff got bombed with numbing regularity. Holdsworth, for all he needs to learn, was still the only member of that staff who was able to maintain decent personal stats over a large number of innings. The picture is quite a bit better at Montgomery, but as Ler- rin Lagrow so painfully proved, there's a long distance between burning up the Southern League, and achieving respectability in the big leagues. If the Bengals can't do better than this, and quickly, the future for Detroit looks bleak indeed. Even if Ron LeFlore be- comes the Lou Brock of the late-70s, even if Tom Veryzer starts drawing favorable comparison with Marty Marion and Arky Vaughan, and even if Mary Lane, Ben Oglivie, Dick Sharon and Jim Nettles learn to hit major-league pitching consistently, the Tigers will go nowhere until they find the young guys who can hold the opposition down with regularity. Should trade vets The only way the Tigers are going to get that kind of talent is by investing their remaining stock of valuable veterans in trades for precisely this sort of talent. And this doesn't just mean peddling Eddie Brinkman to the highest bidder. Brinkman, after all, is a 32-year old, not particularly fast shartstop with a questionable stick and an increasingly uncer- tain future. His chief value would be to a club locked in a tight pennant race which needs a genuinely good fielder at short to have a solid chance of winning. Since few clubs get into contention anyhow without a decent shortstop, that market is pretty limited - right now, the only club fitting the descrip- tion well is Saint Louis, and with some stretching maybe you could add Pittsburgh. For most of the other big league clubs, Brinkman simply does not have the sort of skills which would really help them. True, he's an excellent player, and deserves all the nice things Detroit fans have said about him, but his value on the trading bloc, viewed objectively, is not nearly as high as many people think. Who wants them? Then, if he wants a few laughs over the off-season, Jim Camp- bell can try to convince someone to take any (or all) of Bill Free- han, Gates Brown, and Mickey Stanley off his hands at anything better than fire-sale rates. So when you come right down to it, the only players left for whom Campbell can expect to receive anything good in return are Gary Sutherland and Aurelio Rodriguez. Both are backed up by relatively promising players - Sutherland by John Knox, and Rodriguez by Danny Meyer in Evansville- and both have enough talent and major league life expectancy to interest quite a few other clubs. Rodriguez is worth the most in trade, since he does have an outstanding glove, and at age 26 he's young enough so that whoever owns him can wait for him to develop as a hitter. Naturally, the Tigers have screamed vociferously whenever trading him is sug- gested. But he's just about the only Tiger you can say would be worth more elsewhere than he's worth in Detroit, and that makes him precisely the player the Tigers should be most interested in peddling. Nixon and Agnew, remember, always said they'd never re- sign, until they finally did it. You can expect the Bengals to say they can't afford to part with Rodriguez. But, given their des- perate need for good young pitching talent, maybe they realize that they can afford even less to keep him in Detroit. The long arm of the law FORMER MICHIGAN stand- out _ defensive tackle Tom - Beckman (99) swats his big right paw in front of passes for the Memphis Southmen these days. Beckman missed Detroit Wheels' quarterbackF r Bubba Wyche's pass, but the O Southmen went on to annihi- late the Wheels 37-7 Wednes- day night. 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