Wednesday, July 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven MORGAN SINGLES IN WINNER NL rallies to win in tenth, 4-3 ATLANTA (/PI - Cincinnati's Joe Morgan delivered a 10th inning single, scoring Nate Col- bert with the winning, run, as the National League rallied for a 4-3 victory over the Americans in baseball's 43rd All-Star game last night. The Nationals rallied to tie the game in the ninth inning at 3-3 and then Colbert opened the 10th with a walk, moved up on a sacrifice by San Francisco's Chris Speier and scored on Morgan's line drive single to right. Morgan was mobbed at first base by the NL players and San Diego's Colbert crossed the plate easily. It marked the seventh extra-, inning game-in All-Star history, all of them won by the National League. The NL now holds a 24-18-1 edge in the mid-summer series which began in 1933. Tug McGraw of the New Tork Mets, who struck out four, American League batters in two innings he worked, was the winning pitcher and Baltimore's Dave McNally, who came on at the start of the 10th, took the loss. The Americans carried a 3-2 lead into the ninth on the strength of a two-run pinch homer by Kansas City's Cookie Rojas an inning earlier. But the Nationals bounced back to tie the game against knuckleballer Wilbur Wood of the Chicago White Sox. Billy Williams of the Chicago Cubs opened thee National ninth with a single that bounced off the pitcher's mound and up the middle. PITTSBURGH catcher Manny Sanguillen was the next batter and instead of trying to ad- vance the runner with a sacri- fice, he swung away. That strategy worked as he dropped a soft liner to center just be- yond the grasp of shortstop Bobby Grich. Williams raced to third on the play. Houston's Lee May got the rin home with a shot to short- stop which Grich turned into a force-out at second base. When Ron Santo slammed into a double play, it sent the game into extra innings. Rojas, who has hit only 39 home runs in 10 major league seasons, stole the dramatie thunder from Atlanta's Hank Aaron with his eighth inning homer. That shut, just over the left field fence beyond Williams' grasp, gave the Americans the lead, wiping out a 2-1 edge pro- vided by a sixth inning homer by Aaron. The Americans had picked up a 'run in the third inning when Bill Freehan of Detroit walked on four straight pitches, moved up on Jim Palmer's sacrifice and scored on single by Rod Carew. The score was still 1-0 with two out in the sixth when Hous- ton's Cesar Cedeno singled to center against Cleveland pitch- er Gaylord Perry. That brought up Aaron before his hometown fans and, with the record crowd of 53,107 lean- ing forward in anticipation, the Atlanta slugger unloaded on Perry's first pitch. The ball zoomed towards the left field fence, about 40 feet to the right of the marker which commemorates Aaron's 600th career homer hit off Perry here last year. As the shot cleared the wall, the fans gave Aaron a thunderous standing ovation. "This has to be the most dra- matic homer I ever hit," said Aaron. "I haven't done well in All-Sta: games and the one I hit last year wasn't as dramatic because we lost. "I felt comfortable hitting against Perry. The pitch I hit off of him was a spitter. It wasnt one of his best spitters, but it was a spitter." The 2-1 edge stood up until the eighth when Rojas, a right- handed pinch hitter swinging for left-handed Carew against right-hander Bill Stoneman, hit his homer. But the Nationais weren't through yet and bounced back for their victory. - Morgan was voted the game's Most Valuable Player. "I was fortunate to receive this award with so many fine players on the field. It could have gone to about 25 other guys, the Cincinnati second baseman said. CINCINNATI'S JOE MORGAN (8) receives congratulations on his game winning hit in yesterday's All-Star game from his National League teammates. Nate Colbert (17) of San Diego scored the winner in the tenth off Dave McNally. Dem Ole Extra-inning Blues AMERICAN Carew 2h Bojos lb Macere cf Schnblum rf R Jackson rf D Allen lb Cash lb Ystrmski If Rudi 1f Grich so B. Robinson 3b Bando 3b Freehan c Fisk c Palmer p Lolich p G. Perry p R. Smith ph Wood p Piniella ph McNally p Total NATIONAL ab r h bi Morgan 2h 2 o 1 1 Mays el 1 1 1 2 Crdens cf 311 00 i. Aaron rf 1 0 0 0 A. Oliver rf 4 0 2 1 Stargelt ,if 300 0 B.nWliamslif 1 0 0 0 Bench e 3 0 0 0 Sanguillne 1 0 1 0 L. May lb -4 0 0 0 Torre 3b 2 00 0 Santo 3b 2 0 0 0 Kessinger ss 1 1 0 0 Carlton p 2 1 1 0 Stoneman p O 0 0 0 McGraw p 1 0 0 0 Colbert ph 0 0 0 0 Gibson p 1 0 0 0 niass p o o o 0 neckert ph 1 0 0 0 Sutton p 0 0 0 0 Speier ss 33 3 6 3 Total ab r b hbi 4 0 1 2 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 43 1 1 2 000 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 01 0 0 2 01 0 30 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 01 0 0 22 0 020 0 0 0 40 3112 100 02 100 10 202010 0 0104 DRAW SEEN LIKELY Chess battle adjourned REYKJAVIK, Iceland (MP) - Bobby Fischer and Soviet title- holder Boris Spassky adjourned the seventh game of their world championship chess match last n i g h t after 40 hard - fought moves. Play resumes today. World chess champion Boris Spassky, fighting to make up a one-point deficit in his seventh game with Bobby Fischer, start- ed play last night with a king's pawn opening. It was an unus- ual move for the Soviet title- holder and indicated he was out for blood. Fischer, leading 3%-21/2, re- plied with ^an equally aggressive move, pawn to queen's bishop 4, moving into a Sicilian defense. The American challenger ia one of the world's most experi- enced players in this defense, One out when winning run scored. G. Perry 2 3 American 001 000 020 0--3 Wood 2 2 National 000 002 001 1--4 McNally L, 0-1 ' 1 DP-American 2, National 2. LOB- Gibson 2 1 American 3, National 5. 2B-R. Jack- Blass 1 1 son, Rudi. HR-H. Aaron 1, Rojas , Sutton 2 SB- J. Morgan, S-Palmer, Speier. Carlton 1 0 iphrerbbs Stoneman 2 2 Palmer3 5 0 0 012 McGraw, W, 1-0 2 1 Lolichr2 1V 0 0 1 T-2:26. A-53,107 which seldom results in a draw. Spassky arrived on time. As soon as referee Lothar Schmid started the time clock, he made his first move using the white pieces which allowed him to open the game and gave him a slight edge. Fischer, arriving four minutes late, sat for a few minutes con- sidering Spassky's opening-a favorite of the lanky American. By the seventh move, the game developed into the Najdorf vari- ation, one extremely familiar to Fischer. Spassky again showed his mettle by inviting a pawn sacrifice, hoping to gain and open attack file. At the eighth move, Fischer took the pawn. This cost him at least three moves, as white soon developed four powerful pieces-his two knights and two bishops. At this point Nikolai Krogius, Spassky's second, was all smiles. "It's good for Spassky," he grinned. "He's come out kick- ing." However, the American camp noted Fischer was one pawn up and had yet to de- velop his pieces. They said he had played the Najdorf varia- tion repeatedly as a teen-age prodigy, usually winning. "But he wasn't playing Spassky in th o se days," a Chicago buff added. There were no cameras in the huge auditorium. Lawyer Paul Marshall, who flew in from New York at Fischer's request, said the American was not yet satis- fied with the setup. Experts were divided over whether Fischer's pawn grab at the eighth move was a wise de- cision. "All my life I have had a feel- ing it should not be played," said Danish master Jens Evevoldsen. "Fischer so far has pulled it off, but maybe the Russians have made something in prepar- ation." Fischer pulled another bomb- shell out of the bag at the 12th nmove, with pawn to king's rook three. Argentine Grandmaster Mi- guel Najdorf said this was a "beautiful" move. Spassky though for 36 min- utes. His second, Efim Geller, said he must be taken aback. The champion had to choose between taking Fischer's knight with his bishop and weakening his own kingside attack or with- drawing his bishop, offering a second pawn sacrifice to justify this sacrifice. "Spassky's pawns are now ka- put," said an American chess official. But in one sense he has more room to develop." Un- daunted, at the 14th move, Spas- sky offered a pawn sacrifice. Fischer jumped at it. . The champion had opened up the entire board, going for a direct attack on black's king, with hope of winning his queen. At the 15th move, Spassky took a black bishop, evening the score on that count. Destinaticon: Draw? (me Seven: Spassky white, Fisch- 1. P-i4 P-Qu4 2. N-Ki3 P-Q3 3. P-Q4 PxP 4. NxP N-RiB N QB3P-qR3 6. B-KN5 P-K3 7. P-104 Q-N3 8. Q-Q2 QxP 1 O-0P-R3 1'. B-R4 NxP 13. NxN Bx13 14. P-135 Px1' 16. Nxs'r K-B 7. N>il N-B3 18 N( ;R-Q Elapsed time: Spassky, 99 miinuates; ischer, 0 m1utes. '0. Q- 11 -1;0 NI I '. 1'-Ni i'-NI 22. Q-().-4 1 -iceh 23. K-Ri i 1 26. ((s NxQi 27. R-K2 K-N? "0 N-I'' "9. N-44N.-014 30 N -4!its 1-1 31. N-No om(1100 V.. P-111N-K 34. Px-003N 35) R-Q3 P-k;4 36. P-113 N_0 a 37. N N7-Q6xN 40. N-K8ch K-N3 Elapsed time: Spassky, 148 minutes; Fischer, 122 minutes. Willie takes it sitting down