Tuesday, June 20, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven PECULIAR INSTITUTION LIVES Court upholds reserve clause By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court yesterday ex- tended baseball's unique exemption from antitrust laws in a 5-3 ruling against onetime St. Louis Cardinal outfielder Curt Flood. Rolling off the names of 87 old-time players and with lyrical references to "Casey at the Bat," Justice Harry A. Blackmun said he recognizes the immunity is an aberra- tion. But he said any change in the 50-year old tradition, established by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, would have to come from Congress and not the courts. Red Sox rip Texas By The Associated Press The California A n g e I s nipped Baltimore 4-3 last night and Detroit trailed Oakland, 5-3, in the eighth. BOSTON - Reggie Smith whacked a pair of home runs and drove in five runs, pacing a four-homer attack that pow- ered the Boston Red Sox to a 12-0 American League baseball victory over the Texas Rangers last night 'behind Sonny Sie- bert's three-hit pitching in the American League's only East Coast night action. The one- afternoon game, Cleveland at Minnesota, was rained out and Detroit was at Oakland and Baltimore at Cali- fornia in late games. Siebert, 7-3, kept the Rangers hitless until Ted Kubiak, a pinch hitter, lashed a double down the right field line leading off the sixth inning. Magic Number: 103 Before the late results last night Detroit held first place and had the number down to 103. But now its the Oakland A's confronting our boys. Good luck, Tigers! Smith started the onslaught with a two-out, two-run homer in the first inning off loser Pete Broberg, 5-5, after short- stop Luis Aparicio had singled with one away. Smith connect- ed again with two runners aboard as Casey Cox was rapped for four runs in the seventh. The Red Sox struck again with two out in the second. Carlton Fisk singled, Siebert was hit by a pitch and Tommy Har- per doubled off the left field wall, scoring both runners. Boston left three runners stranded in the third, then chased Broberg in a four-run fifth. Smith started it with a single and Rico Petrocelli drove his fifth home run of the sea- son into the light towers atop the wall in left. Danny Cater greeted reliever Jim Shellenback with his third homer and the Red Sox made it 6-0 on a double by Fisk and Harper's single. Professional Le As a result, baseball will be able to retain its special "re- serve clause," which binds a ballplayer to the team that owns his contract. Other sports, partly impelled by judicial decisions, have loosened these bonds and given players some limited free- dom to choose the team for which they will play. Blackmun said Congress ap- parently has no quarrel with baseball's special status since it has adopted none of the more than two dozen bills introduced in the last two decades to change the system. Flood brought a $3.1-million damage suit against the reserve system after the St. Louis Car- dinals traded him in 1969 to the Philadelphia Phillies. He was backed by the players' union, and former Justice Ar- thur J. Goldberg argued his appeal in the high court. Essentially, the suit main- tained there was no logical reason to treat baseball differ- ently from other professional sports, particularly since even amateur players no longer have broad freedom to select their pro teams, and frenchises have been moved from city to city.' Flood sat out the 1971 sea- son. He played briefly for the Washington Senators, in 1971 after officials agreed this would have no bearing on the suit. Voting with Blackmun t maintain baseball's legal status were Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart, Byron H. White and William H. Rehnquist. Dissent- ing were Justices William O. Douglas, William J. Brennan Jr., and Thurgood Marshall. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. did not par- ticipate. Burger cast his vote with "grave reservations." But he said, "Courts are not the forum in which this tangled web .ought to be unsnarled." Douglas, in his dissent, said the 1922 Holmes decision "is a derelict in the stream of the law that we, its creator, should remove." He added: "Only a romantic view of a rather dis- mal business account over the last 50 years would keep that derelict in midstream. The justice went on to say that the beneficiaries of the exemption are not the Babe Ruths, Ty Cobbs and Lou Gehrigs but "the owners, whose records many say reveal a pro- clivity for predatory practices." Justice ;Marshall, meanwhile, said, "baseball players should not be denied the benefts of competition. :ague Standings CARLTON FISK of the Boston Red Sox slides safely into second base yesterday eluding the tag of Texas' Toby Harrah. The Red Sox won that game, and the major league owners won a major battle when the reserve clause was upheld yesterday by the Supreme Court. Prates break slump, dump Dodgers, 13-=3 Reactions to decision vary By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Su- preme Court decision on base- ball's reserve clause yesterday was greeted by different reac- tions from the different involved parties. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn hailed the finding as con- structive, Players' Association director Marvin Miller called for Congressional action to change the legal treatment of baseball, and most player representatives talked of collective bargaining rather than litigation as a means to change the reserve clause. Kuhn also called "for renewed collective bargaining on the re- serve system after the 1972 sea- son." "I think the decision is con- structive in its recognition that baseball has developed its present structure in reliance on past court decisions," said Kuhn. "The decision opens the way for renewed collective bargain- ing on the reserve system after the 1972 season," he added. am confident that the players and the clubs are in the best position to determine for them- selves what the form of the re- serve system should be and that they will both take a most re- sponsible view of their respec- tive obligations to the public and to the game." "We will continue in our ef- forts to remedy the inequities in baseball's present reserve sys- tm through collective bargain- ing," said Marvin Miller, execu- tive director of the Major League Players Association. "In addition, we feel con- fident that the Congress will accept the court's clear invita- tion to act in this matter and we will be cooperating fully with the Congress to achieve that re- sult." While Ted Simmons, St. Louis catcher who is playing without a contract, said he would prob- ably seek court action against the renewal clause if he has not signed by the end of the season, other players were thinking along the lines of collective bargaining rather than court action. "I'm sure there will be some sort of new effort made," said catcher Bob Barton, who' was the San Diego player represen- tative before being traded last week. "All we want is for base- ball players who are unhappy with their team to be able to go to another." "The ruling doesn't make a lot of difference and the play- ers were not looking to make utter chaos which complete eli- mination of the reserve clause would do" said pitcher Milt Pappas, the player representa- tive of the Chicago Cubs. By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH - Al Oliver and Roberto Clemente drove in three runs apiece as the Pitts- burgh Pirates ended a 23-inning, scoring drought by blasting the Los Angeles Dodgers 13-3 in a nationally - televised baseball game last night. The victory moved the Pi- rates back into first place in the National League East by one-half game over the New York Mets, who were beaten by Houston 3-0. Pittsburgh, shut out twice over the week end by San Diego, jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first inning off loser Don Sutton, 8-2, on run-scoring sin- gles by Oliver and Manny San- guillen. The Dodgers narrowed the margin in the third with a run off winner Doc Ellis, 6-3. Bill Russell singled to left, took sec- ond on a - sacrifice and scored on Bill Buckner's single. Mets one-hit HOUSTON - The Houston Astros tied a major league re- cord with their second consecu- tive one-hit pitching perform- ance when Larry Dierker lim- ited New Tork to Duffy Dyer's third-inning sintle and retired 17 straight batters in a 3-0 vic- tory over the Mets last night. Jerry Reuss fired a one-hitter against Philadelphia on Sun- day-a leadoff double by Larry Howa in the ninth inning-and Dierker completed the record- tying performance, the eighth TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FRFE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 time it has been done. Six of the back-to-back one-hitters have been in the National League, the last by the Mets against Chicago and Philadel- phia in 1970. Houston threatened to break the base ball game open several times against New York starter Jon Matlack, 7-3, but he pitched out of trouble in the third, fourth, fifth and sixth. innings before the Astros broke through with two runs in the seventh en route to their fifth straight win. Reds shutout CINCINNATI - Tim Foli broke up a scoreless deadlock with a sacrifice fly in the sev- enth inning and Bill Stoneman blanked the hard-hitting Cin- cinnati Reds on four hits as the Montreal Expos downed the Reds 2-0 last night. Stoneman limited the Reds, 1 e a d e r s in the National League's West Division, to sin- gles by Joe Hague and Denis Menke in the second inning, a bunt single by Tolan in the fourth, and a leadoff single by Pete Rose in the ninth. The vic- ory was Stoneman's sixth against tory was Stoneman's s i x t h against five losses. American League National League East East W L Pet. GB W L Pet. GB Detroit 31 22 .555 _ Pittsburgh 36 20 .643 - Baltimore 30 23 .566 1 New York 36 21 .532 1 New York 24 29 453 Chicago 33 22 .600 2'.M Bostons 23 20 .451 7 Montrealt 24 31 .429 12 Cleveland 23 28 .451 7 St. Louis 24 32 .429 12 Milwaukee 17 34 .333 13 Philadelphia 20 30 .357 16 W'st West Oakland 36 17 .679 incinnati 35 22 .614 - Chicago 33 21 .611 3', Houston 35 23 .603 Minnesota 2 23 .54971 Angeles 32 26 .552 3M Kansas City '25 19 .403 I1I Atlanta 27 21 .402 7 y California 25 31 .446 12 San Diego 20 37 .351 15 Texas 23 33 .411 14 San Francisco2 1 43 .328 17? Yesterday's Results Toterday's Results Chicago 7,San Fra cisco 6, 11 innings Boston 12 Tesas 0 P'ittsburght 13, Los Angeets 3 Detroit at Oakland, inc. Philadelphia at Atlanta, postponed Baltimore'at California, ine. Montreal 2, Cincinnati0 Cleveland at Minnesota, postponed Houston 3, New York 0 Other clabs not scheduled San Diego at St. Louis, postponed Tonight's Games Today's Games Detroit at Oakland Los Angeles at Pittsburgh Baltimore at California San Diego at St. Louis, night Cleveland at Minnesota San Francisco at Chicago Kansas City at New York Philadelphia at Atlanta, night Chicago at Milwaukee Montreal at Cincinnati, night Texas at Boston New York at Houston, night Best Art Direction - Best Costume Design OPEN :45 2nd Hit Week!'..8..M SNICHOLAS & ALEXAN DRA