Friday, July 28, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Tigers take two from Brewers y - - - - - By The Associated Press MILWAUKEE - Norm Cash blasted his 19th home run of the baseball season with two runners aboard and two out in theninth inning after an error kept Detroit alive and the Ti- gers, held to one one until the ninth, beat Milwaukee 3-2 in the opener of a twi-night dou- ble-header Thursday. Bill Parsons, 8-8 was breezing along on a 1-0 lead and a one- hitter-a fourth-inning triple by Aurelio Rodriguez-until third baseman Mike Ferraro booted Rodriguez' slow hopper with one out in the ninth. After Jim Northrup struck out, Willie Horton singled and Cash hom- ered into the right field bleach- ers for three unearned runs. The Brewers took a 1-0 lead against 17-game winner Mickey Lolich in the first on a single by Dave May and a triple by Tommie Reynolds. L o 1 i c h allowed five hits before leaving in the eighth for a pinch hitter. In the second game Eddie Brinkman's two-run, tie-break- ing single in the eighth inning highlighted a four-run uprising that hoisted the Detroit Tigers o an 8-5 victory over the Mil- waukee Brewers. McCraw melts 'em BALTIMORE-Tom McCraw belted a two-run pinch-homer in the ninth inning last night to boost the Cleveland Indians to a 4-3 victory over the Balti- more Orioles. Pat Dobson, 12-9, gave up a one-out single to Frank Duffy, then McCraw, batting for win- ning reliever Phil Hennigan, 1- 1, unloaded his third homer of the season over the right field fence. The Orioles had pullesd ahead 3-2 in the seventh inning on B o o g Powell's bases-loaded single off Henningan. Cleveland jumped on Dobson in the first_ inning, singles by Del Unser and Jack Brohamer and a walk loading the bases in the first inning. John Lowen- stein delivered two runs with a two-out single. While Dobson was wriggling out of jams in the middle in- nings, the Orioles were tying it with single runs in the third and sixth innings. Don Buford tripled in the third and scored on Grich's sacrifice fly. Don Baylor was hit by a pitch in the sixth, stole second and scored on Brooks Robinson's single. Murcer moders 'em NEW YORK--Johnny Calli- son and Bobby Murcer smacked home runs and winning pitcher Fritz Peterson started a two- run rally with a fifth-inning single as the New York Yankees defeated the Boston Red Sox 6-2 in an American League baseball game last night. With the Red Sox ahead 2-1 on a fourth-inning tie-breaking homer by ex-Yankee Danny Ca- ter, Peterson opened the fifth with a single and Horace Clarke singled off the glove of shortstop Juan Beniquez. The runners advanced when losing pitcher Marty Pattin, 8-9, tried to pick Peterson off sec- ond and his throw hit Peterson on the leg and rolled away. The tying run scored on Thurman Munson's bloop single and Mur- cer's sacrifice fly put New York in front 3-2. Callison, who drove in the Yankees' first run with a sec- ond-inning single, homered in the sixth and Murcer hit his 15th home run of the season in the seventh off Bill Lee follow- ing a double by Munson. Magic Number Box Surprise, sporting enthusiasts. Today it's your turn. You can help the Tigers and win valu- able prizes, like a lock of Don Wert's hair. All you have to do is to write on a piece of legal size paper, the Tigers' magic number and send it to The Daily before Guy Fawkes Day. Hurry, time is running out. Hint: it's bigger than a breadbox and smaller than the Grand Canyon. Allen axes 'em CHICAGO--Dick Allen smash- ed two home runs and Ed Herrmann drove in two runs with a single to lead the Chi- cago White Sox and Wilbur Wood to a 7-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals Thursday in the first game of an Ameri- can League twi-night double- header. Wood, 16-10, fell behind 2-0 before retiring a man as Fred Batek opened the game with a single and scored on Steve Hov- ley's second homer of the sea- son. The Sox ited it in the bottom of the second on a single by Carlos May, a double by Ed Espiezio and Herrmann's single. Allen smashed a two-run homer in the third off Paul Splittorff, 9-6, to break the tie, then added No. 24 in the sev- enth inning. It was the third time Allen has hit two homers in one game this baseball season and gave him one more than the 23 he hit all last year with the Los Angeles Dodgers. The White Sox added two runs in the eighth inning on bases-loaded grounders by Jay Johnstone and May. STORMIN' NORMAN, who made a great stop of a screaming foul in the All Star game, is looping home after a long home run which won the game. Norm doesn't know the MAGIC NUMBER, can you help him. Exciting contest rules in the box to the right. CARDS CONQUER: Reds By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - Johnny Bench and Tony Perez cracked succes- sive two-run docbles in the first inning as Cincinnati's streaking Reds coasted to an 8-2 victory over the San Diego Padres last night. The Reds, leaders in base- ball's National League West, jumped on Steve Arlin, 8-12, for all their first-inning runs before a man was out. Ben bares no bodkin w From Wire Service Reports Ben Davidson, the massive mustachioed defensive end of the Oakland Raiders, has de- cided to bare some of that famous brawn. Choosing a San Francisco skin flick entitled, "The Green Door," Davidson has become a start, a veritable cine- aste. However, in the skin flick tradition, Davidson's part is a come-on, a teaser for the audi- ence. Rather than removing any of his outer garments, Davidson will appear fully clothed. Made by San _ Francisco's Mitchell Brothers, pornogra- phers supreme, "The Green Door" centers around, what one brother terms, "an old erotic tale in which a pretty woman s kidnapped and taken to a specal nightclub where rich guests pay to witness sexual action. In the end, the audience, collective Ids showing, becomes part of the group grope and takes part in an orgy that one reviewer says,' "would make a fourth-down goaline pile-up look tame." Davidson who is married and has three female progeny got $500 to play the part of the club's bouncer. He wears a tuxedo throughout. Davidson, w h o s e 1 o n g drooping mustache gives him an air of an English lord or a vampire, claimed he did it as a lark, "When they called me, I thought it might be interest- ing, so I thought it over and talked it over with my wife. His wife, termed an open women, had no objection and the portly, muscular man be- came a sex star. Next week Davidson opens camp with the Raiders and at the Bejou Theatre. rack Padres Pete Rose's single, walks to Joe Morgan. and Bobby Tolan and Bench's and Perez's double started the Reds on the way to their fourth victory in the last five games and 11th in the last 13. Bench, the major league lead- er in runs batted in, raised his total to 75 with an eighth-in- ning grounder. That scored Rose, who had walked and taken third on Morgan's single. Jack Billingham, 7-9, allowed the Padres an unearned run in the third when Pat Coirales reached second on a two-bane error by Billingham, moved to third on an infield out, and came home on a: Dave Roberte' uncer back to the mound when Billingham couldn't make up his mind where to throw the ball. The Reds added a run ,in the fifth when they bunched three straight singles off Arlin after two were down. San Diego got the run back in the sixth on Nate Colbert's 23rd homer of the season and ninth this month. Cards cruise MONTREAL - The St. Louis Cardinals exploded for five runs on seven hits and two Montreal errors in the third inning and Reggie Cleveland scattered eight hits en route to an 8-2 National League victory over the Expos last night. Matlack mushes PITTSBURGH - Jon Matlack fired a four-hitter and Wayne Garrett drove in the only run he netded with a 10th-inning sacrifice fly, carrying the New York Mets to a 1-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates yester- day in the first game of a twi- night doubleheader. Cleon Jones started the Mets' winning rally against Pittsburgh starter Nelson Briles, 9-4, with a double to left. He took third on Ed Kranepool's bunt single, then came home on Garrett's fly to center. Matlack, 10-5. and Briles duel- ed to a scoreless tie through nine innings, each working out of a bases-loaded jam. The left-handed Matlack, who allowed only three hits through eight, faced his biggest test in the Pirate seventh, Al Oliver opened with a pop fly to center that Met second baseman Garrett let drop for a two-base error. An intentional walk to Manny Sanguillen followed by an unin- tentional walk to Bob Robertson loaded the bases with one out. However, Bill Mazeroski lined out to center and Gene Alley flied to right to end the inning. Houston hacked HOUSTON-Bill Buckner drill- ed a tie-breaking single in the seventh inning to trigger a three- run Los Angeles rally that car- ried the Dodgers to a 6-3 victory over the Houston Astros last night. Devaney leads school-boys into battle against omnipotent Dallas CHICAGO (P) - The cham- quarterbacks to challenge the pion Dallas Cowboys of the Na- mighty cowboys in the nation- tional Football League rate al- ally - televised Chicago Tribune most a three-touchdown favor- Charities classic ABC-TV-9 p. ite, but history hints a possible m., ENT. upset for the collegians in the This recalls that a coach- 39th All-Star football gabe Fri- quarterback combination from day night. the same college has paid off All-Star Coach Bob Devaney, twice in the illustrious, if some- who directed the Nebraska what one-sided, All-Star ser- Cornhuskers to national college ies, in which the Cowboys seek titles the past two seasons, has to give the pros a ninth suc- not only one, but two of his own cessive victory and boost their Professional League Standings Y American League National League East East W L Pet. GnBsW L Pet. GB netroit 53 37 589 - Pittsburgh 56 34 .622 - Baltimore 10 39 .562 21/2 New York 50 39 .562 54 Boston 45 42 .517 6 2St. Louis 46 43 .517 954 New Yok 43 43 .500 8 Chicago 41 45 .5110 Cleeland 3151 .4015 Montreal 4048 .4515 Milwaukee 35 54 .393 175 Philadelphia 32 58 .356 24 West West Oakland 56 35 .615 - Cincinnati 56 33 .629 - Chicago .. 5942.530 61Ilouston 51421.54817 Minnesota. 45 41 .517 9 Los Angeles 48 42 .533 8'2 Kansas City 45 46 .495 11 Atlanta 42 49 .462 15 California 40 52 .435 164 0San Francisco 41 52 .441 17 Texas 37 53 .411 1812San Diego 33 57 .367 23!1 Kesolts Results Detroit 3, Mi'waukee 2, 1st Chicago 4, Philadelphia 0, 1st Detroit 8, Milwaukee 5, 2nd Philadelphia 3, Chicago 2, 2nd Chicago 7, Kansas City 3, 1st New York 1, Pittsburgh 0; 1st, 10 Kansas City 3, Chicago 0, 2nd innings Nes Yory6,aBoston , Pittsburgh 7, New York 5, 2nd Cleveland 4, Baltimore 3 St. Louis 8, Montreal 2 n Texas at California SanFrancisco at Atlanta, postponed Minnesota at Oakland Cincinnati 8, San Diego 2 Today's Games Los Angeles 6, Houston 3 Detroit (Slayback, 4-3) at Milwaukee Today's Games (Longborg, 1-4) Chicago (Pappas 6-6) at Philadelphia Kansas City (Drago, 7-11) at Chicago (Carlton 14-6) Bahnsen, 12-10) New York (Seaver 12-7) at Pittsburgh Boston (Peters 1-2 and Siebert 9-5) at (Ellis 8-4) New York (Klne 9-4 and Stottle- St. Louis (Wise 10-10) at Montreal myre 10-11), 2 (Stoneman 8-7) Cleveland (Wilcox 6-11) at Baltimore San Francisco (Barr 3-3) at Atlanta (McNally 10-7) (Niekro 9-8) Texas (Broberg 5-8) at California San Diego (Kirby 6-11) at Cincinnati (Wright 11-5) (Simpson 6-3) Minnesota (Woodson 6-9) at Oakland Los Angeles (Downing 5-6) at Houston (Hunter 12-4) (Wilson 6-7) edge to 28-9-2. Devaney, who will start skilled Jerry Tagge at quarter- back, has another Cornhusker, Van Brownson, as a backup. Devaney is the firsthcollege head coach to pilot the All- Stars since Maryland's Jim Ta- tum took a 31-0 thumping from the Detroit Lions in 1954. Notre Dame's Frank Leahy led the collegians to a 16=0 blanking of the Chicago Bears in the 1947 All-Star game in which Irish quarterback George Ratterman's deadly passing to swift Buddy Young of Illinois devastated the Bears. In the 1936 All-Star game, Minnesota's legendary Bernie Bierman recorded a 7-7 tie with the Detroit Lions when Gopher quarterback Babe Levoir ran 17 yards for the collegiate touch- down. Even Cowboy Coach Tom Landry, who sent his bristling Dallas squad through a noctur- nal dress rehearsal at Soldier Field Thursday night, concedes the Cornhusker "family" as- pect of the All-Stars is not to be taken lightly. Devaney has brought in his entire Cornhusker staff of as- sistants, plus a half-dozen 1971 Nebraska stars headed by quarterbacks Tagge and Brown- son, running back Jeff Kinney and defensive lineman Larry Jacobson. "That's going to make the All-Stars tough to beat," said Landry, whose Cowboys will field virtually the same pow- erhouse which whipped the Miami Dolphins 24-3 in the Super Bowl.