THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven EGAN STARS: E!E . Chisox zap Brewers By The Associated Press MILWAUKEE - Reserve cat- cher Tom Egan, batting .175, singled in two runs and led the Chicago White Sox to a 5-2 vie- tory over the Milwaukee Brewers yesterday Egan, subbing for Ed Her- rmann who injured a hand Wed- nesday night, drove inaone run 4 ~in the second inning and ano ther in the three-run sixth as - t ;the White Sox beat the Brewers for the sixth time in seven American League meetings. Magic Number: 100 Best wishes Detroit! With the win against Oakland last night coupled with Baltimore's de- feat, the number on the big board now reads 100. You all remember the legend that states: a team that can reduce its magic . :"; ; t ':r il |.. number to 100 by June 23 is a sure bet to represent its league '' in the World Series. Skip Lockwood, 3-8, retired nine batte:rs in a row until Car- - slos May singled to start the .::.:: :.}}}::...three run rally that broke s 1-1 /{Bill Melton singled in the de- cisive run after a walk to Dick Allen, and Egan singled in Allen one out later to chase 29 Lockwood. A walk to Pat Kel- ly's single off relief pitcher Frank Linzy's glove sent in the L MELTON, the Chicago White Sox' third sacker, puts the inning's final run. of death upon Milwaukee's Ron Theobald during yesterday's Lockwood escaped the f i r st. inning without a run despite two on. The play was assisted by reserve catcher Tom Egan, walks and two errors, but was also chipped in with some clutch hitting as the White nicked for one in the second won 5-2 to move within 311 games of first place. when Rick Reichardt singled, STERN OPEN GOLF: Jamieson, Sikes lead stole second and scored on Egan's first hit. The Brewers tied it in the third when Lockwood reached first on a fielder's choice, took second on a walk and came home on a double by George Scott. Astros crunch CINCINNATI - Cesar Cede- no cracked four straight hits in- cluding a homer and Doug Ra- der keyed a six-run Houston ex- plosion in the third inning with a three-run homer as the Astros whipped Cincinnati 9-5 last night and regained first place in' baseball's National League West Division. Houston jumped to a quick 2- 0 lead off Wayne Simpson, 4-2, in the first inning when Rodger Metzger and Cedeno opened the game with singles and scored on Jim Wynn's infield out and Bob Watson's double. Cincinnati came back with a run in their half of the inning. And took the lead in the second by scoring a pair of runs. Pete Rose drove home George Fos- ter and Joe Morgan followed with a double to score Dave Concepcion. George Culver, 2-0, the sec- ond of four Astro pitchers picked up the victory. Jim Ray, Houston's r e 1 i e f special- ist, picked up the save, his sixth of the season. BIL kiss actit who Sox WE NORTHBROOK, Ill. W) - Jim Jamieson and veteran R. H. Sik- es each battled biting cold with a five-hole hot streak yesterday and shared the firstround lead in the $150,000 Western Open Golf Tournament at 68. The, slim, Indian-dark Sikes, slump-ridden all season, birdied five holes in a row over the wind- swept 6,716-yard par 71 Sunset Ridge Country Club course. Jamieson, a nonwinner w h o repeatedly has placed high on the tour this season, also was five-under-par on one five-hole stretch and included an eagle three in his drive. They shared a one-stroke lead over Tom Weiskopf, Hale Ir- win and Steve Oppermann tied at 69. Jim Wiechers, Australian Da- vid Graham, Bob Barbarossa were at 70 and were the only other players in the 147-man field able to break par in the cold and windy weather. The blustery winds, which had gusts up to about 35 miles an hour and increased the dis- comfort of the temperatures in the mid-50s, helped contribute to some extremely high scores. Bruce Crampton of Australia, the defending champion and run- ner-up to Jack Nicklaus in last week's U.S. Open Championship, was two over par at 73. Billy Casper, a two-time cham- pion in this old tournament, took a 75 and England's Tony Jacklin shivered home with the same, four-over-par total. George Archer, winner of two titles and more than $100,000 this season, took a 76. Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Arnold Palmer and South African Gary Player are not competing in this chase for a $30,000 first prize. The 31-year-old Sikes, who said he has won "only a little over a couple of thousand dollars" this year, attributed his sudden- ly improved scoring to the gift of a driver, a putter and a mys- terious lesson from old pro Dutch Harrison. "I've had a lot of trouble driv- ing for two years," he said. "A lot of fellows on the tour have tried to help me. Maybe 15 of them. Some of them almost help- ed me off the tour. "Last week I went to St. Louis to see Dutch. He knows me and my swing. He showed me some- thing about my swing that I'm working on. I don't have it yet, but I may have it by the end of the week." "No," he said, in reply to a question, "I don't want to say what it is," Sikes had a fantastically er- ratic start and didn't make par on the first 11 holes, He was three over par on the first six holes, with most of his trouble coming on the 447-yard, par four fifth where he made double bogey. He had a poor drive, was short in two, chipped to 15 feet and three-putted. But he started a five-hole birdie string on the seventh, scoring on putts of 15, 20, 20 and 15 feet before lacing a seven iron to within a foot of the cup on the 11th. He also holed a 40-foot birdie putt for a share of the lead on the 13th. Jamieson, who came to n a - tional prominence. with a sur- prise challenge in the Masters, played the back nine first and made his big move with a streak that started on the first hole, He made a 30-foot putt there, hit a six iron to five feet on the third, cut a four wood second shot into the wind and dropped it feather-soft 18 inches from the cup for eagle three on the fourth and holed from 18 feet on the next hole. -AssociatedPress No news is wet news Thursday, June 23, 1972 was a day when most of what little sports action was to have taken place, did not because of that revolting white blob at the upper right of the picture. Rain, rain go away! Major League Leaders BASEBALL'S TOP TEN Borne Buns Based on 125 at Bats Bench, Cincinnati, 18; Kingman, AMERICAN LEAGUE San Francisco, 16; Stargell, Pittsburgh, Player Club G AB R H Pet, 14; B. williams, Chicago, 13; Colbert, RSdi Oak 53 219 38 73 .333 a , 1R Pinielha KC 55 719 34 71 . B2neh RCnsnnat51 tae gil I in s D. Allen Chi 7 3 t305 Bench, Cin nna t5 argell,Pitts- Braun Min 41 135 12 41 .304 burgh, 47; A. Oliver, Pittsburgh, 43; C. May Chi 55 201 37 60 .299 Kingman, San Francisco, 43; watson, P. Kelly Chi 45 161 28 48 .298 Houston, 42. Harper Bsn 53 200 44 t2-298 Pitching (6, Decisions) Alm ar Cal 50 141 B271.295 ilass, Pittsburgh, 8-1, .888; J. Ray, R. Oliver Cal 58 241 27 67 .293 Houston, 7-1, .875; Nolan, Cincinnati, Pinson Cal J1 184 26 53 .288 9-2, .818; Sutton, Los Angeles, 8-2, .800; Home Runs Seaver, New York, 9-3, .750; Hands, Cash, Detroit, 14; R. Jackson, Oak- Chicago, 6-2, .750; Jarvis, Atlanta, 5-2, land, 13; Epstein, Oakland, 12; D. Al- .714; Brewer, Los Angeles, 5-2, .714. .. ien, Chicago, 11; Harper, Boston, 10 Duncan, Oakland, 10. Runs Batted In 231 S. State St. BkAllen, Chicago, 43;Ca. Jackson DIAL 662-6264 Oakland, 38; B. Oliver, California, 3t; pE 4 C. May, Chicago, 35; Epstein, Oak. OPEN 1 SHOWS land, 33. AT Pitching (6 Decisions) 2 P M Fingers, Oakiand, 5-1, .833 Kaat, STATPE 5 P.M Minesota, 8-2, .8000; Palmer, Baltiiuore, 9-3, .750; Lolich, Detroit, 11-4, ..733; 8PM. Bradlley, Chicago, 8-3, .727; Lee, Bos- ton, 5-2, .714; Kline, New York, 5-2, .714; 3 Tied with .700. BASEBALL'S TOP TEN ACADEMY Basedon12atBaAWARD Player Club G AB R I Pet. sanguilen Pgh 54 213 23 71 .333 M. Alou St L 52 195 25 65 .333 CAMPAS Best Art Direction Carty Atl 49 159 26 52 .327 Best Costume Design Cedeno Htn 54 210 35 68 .324 Santo Chi 38 135 26 43 .319 A. Oliver Pgh 56 236 35 75 .318 Garr Atl 57 236 38 75 .318 Clemente Pgh 50 203 36 64 .315 Brock StL 58 252 30 79 .313 r , Buckner LA 40 142 16 44 .310 { Professional League Standings ., American League W L Pct. GB Detroit 32 24 .571 - Baltimore 31 25 .554 1 New York 25 29 .463 6 Boston 24 29 .453 61/ Clevelaud 34 30 .444 7 Milwaukee 1* 36 .333 13 West - Oakland 38 18 .679 - Chicago 35 22 .614 3% Minnesota 30 24 .556 7 California 27 32 .458 12%/ Kansas City 25 30 .455 121z Texas 24 34 .414 15 Yesterday's Results Chicago 5, Milwaukee 2 New York at Cleveland, postponed Other clubs not scheduled Today's Game Minnesota (Perry, 6-5) at Kansas City (Splittorff, 5-4), night Detroit (Lolich, 11-4).at Baltimore (Cuellar, 4-6), night Boston (Curtis, 3-2) at Milwaukee (Brett, 2-8), night Chicago (Wood, 11-5) at Texas (Bosman, 4-6), night California (Ryan, 6-5) at Oakland (Hamlton, 4-0), night New York (Kline, 5-2) at Cleveland (Kilkenny, 0-0-), night National League W L Put. Gli Pittsburgh 36 21 .632 - New York 37 22 .627 - Chicago 34 23 .596 2 St. Louis 26 32 .448 10% Montreal 25 33 .431 1115 Philadelphia 21 36 .368 15 West Cincinnati 36 23 .610 -- Houston 36 24 .600 (5 Los Angeles 33 26 .559 3 Atlanta 27 30 .474 8 San Diego 20 39 .339 16 San Francisco 22 44 '.333 17 Yesterday's Results St. Louis at New York, postponed Houston at Cincinnati, inc. Other clubs not scheduled Today's Games Pittsburgh (Blass, 8-1) at Chicago (Jenkins, 8-5) Philadelphia (Nash, 1-1) at Montreal (McAnaily, 1-8), night St. Louis (Cleveland, 6-4) at New York (Seaver, 9-3), night iHouston (Reuss, 5-5) at Cincinnati (Grimsley, 3-2) night Atlanta (Niekro, 7-5) at Los Angeles (Downing, 3-3), night San Francisco (McDowell, 7-4) at San Diego (Arlin, 6-6), night We have the BEST REPAIRS and SERVICE around-TRY US SPORTS CAR SERVICE OF ANN ARBOR, Inc. 4705 Washtenaw (next to Ypsi-Ann drive in 434-01 n T-W-F-8-6; Man Th 8-9 FRANKLINJ SCtAFtNERPG Niciolas and Alexandra COMING- "CLOCKWORK ORANGE"