Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 10, 1971 Tigers tame Brewers; Phillies By The Associated Press DETROIT-Norm Cash blast- ed a three-run home run in the first inning and Les Cain scat- tered four hits as the Detroit Tigers handed the Milwaukee Brewershtheir sixth consecutive ls,3-0, last night. Cash's homer was his 12th of the year, t y i n g him for the American League lead. It came J off Lew Krausse, 2-8, after Al Kaline singled and Willie Hor- - ton was hit by a pitch. All four Brewer hits were sin- .. s gles, with two coming in the fifth, as southpaw Cain hurled f f his first complete game in five starts, upping his record to 4-1. ,.4 It was his first nine-inning .$ shutout in the majors. Although the Tigers collected F -: f 13 hits, Krausse and Ken San- f f .<* ders blanked them after Cash's homer. Detroit stranded 12 run- r{ ners after the first inning. Associated Press Dodgers drowned MINNESOTA TWINS' Cesar Tovar (12) is tagged out at second PHILADELPHIA - Ken Rey- base by Baltimore shortstop Mark Belanger in the third inning of lea gainedtory with the helpmajor last night's clash between the Twins and redhot Orioles. Tovar, clutch relief pitching by Woodie who had walked earlier, was retired on, a throw by catcher Andy Fryman and an early three Etchebarren. The Birds took their seventh straight, 2-1. 'home run attack as the Phila- TIGERS TAKE FIFE Boston selects Burton in raft dump Dodgers delphia Phillies defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers, 9-4, last night. Fryman came on in the eighth after Jim Lefebvre opened with a single and Steve Garvey walk- ed. Be 'retired Duke Sims on a fly ball and got pinch hitter Bill Sudakis to hit into a double play. D e r o n Johnson's three-run homer featured a four-run first inning attack off loser Claude Osteen, 6-4. Singles by Larry Bow and Terry Harmon and a throwing error by Osteen on Willie Montanez' grounder ac- counted for the first run. Expos dump Giants MONTREAL - Steve Renko hurled a one-hitter-Dick Dietz' second-inning single-and dou- bled home the first run of the game as the Montreal Expos whipped the faltering San Fran- cisco Giants 4-0 last night. Renko, 7-4, and Perry, 6-4, were locked in scoreless battle when Montreal struck for single runs in the fifth and sixth in- nings. Bob Bailey led off the fifth with a bunt single, the first hit off Perry, and was sacrified to second by Boots Day, Renko scored Bailey with a two-out double down the left-field line. Ronunt led off the sixth with a double, to third on Rusty Staub's single and scored on a force play. Braves bomb Cards ATLANTA - Zoilo Versalles' two-run single highlighted a six run outburst in the fifth inning at the Atlanta Braves downed the St. Louis Cardinals 8-3 last night. The Braves paraded 10 batters to the plate to erase a 3-2 St. Louis lead by collecting five hits, a walk and a hit batter and adding one run on Joe Torre's throwing error. Hank Aaron tied the game with a run-scoring double to left center and Cardinal reliever Moe Drabowsky broke the tie when, with the bases loaded, he hit Earl Williams with a pitch. Two Cardinal players, pitcher Frank Linzy and first baseman Bob Burda, were injured when they collided at full speed in the sixth chasing a foul bouncer tc- ward Ralph Garr. Birds topple Twins BALTIMORE - Frank Robin- son doubled home Don Buford from first base with two out in the 10th inning last night, giving the red-hot Baltimore Orioles a 2-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins, their seventh consecutive triumph. Buford opened the inning with a single off loser Jim Kaat, 4-5, and, after Pau Blab and Brooks Robinson flied out, Frank Rob- inson hit a deep drive to right field and Tony Aliva missed a leaping try at the wall. . Mike Cuellar limited the Twins to four hits for his ninth win in 10 decisions. Cubs clip iBucs CHICAGO - Brock Davis drove across two runs with a triple and single and Ferguson Jenkins recorded his tenth vic- tory as the Chicago Cubs beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-1. Jenkins completed his 12th complete game giving up seven hits, including Willie Stargell's solo homer in the fourth. Short owes baek rent for stadiuxm WASHINGTON (A) - The own- ers of Robert F. Kennedy Sta- dium where the Washington Senators play baseball may be- gin attaching gate receipts if club owner Robert Short doesn't pay $135,000 he owes in back rent, the Washington Star reported yesterday. The paper quoted officials of the Armory Board of the Dis- trict of Columbia as saying a decision on whether to obtain a court order impounding receipts within the next 30 days. The board -operates the federally- owned stadium. Another possibility, the Star said, is outright eviction. Short, in the two years he's owned the Senators, has been plagued by poor attendance and says he operates at a deficit. He wants the Interior Department to take over the stadium and has threat- ened to build. a new one perhaps in suburban Virginia unless the government provides some fi- nancial help. The Star said the Armory board has gone to Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and American League President Joe Cronin in unsuccessful attempts to collect the rent. 4 By The Associated Press Two former Wolverine pitching stars, Jim Burton and Dan Fife. were selected yesterday in the secondary phase of professional baseball's player draft. Burton, the fireballing south- paw who was generally acknowl- edged as one of the nation's finest collegiate hurlers, was drafted by the Boston Red Sox in the first round. Fife, who captained the Wol- verine basketball team this past winter, and also played the out- field in addition to managing his Canonero II in jured again NEW YORK (A) -- Canonero II. the Venezuelan owned colt who failed to win racing's Triple Crown, has developed a new in- fection in his right hind leg, it was disclosed yesterday. "The colt has a new prob- lem," said Dr. Michael Gerard, a veterinarian who oxamined the 3-year-old at the request of Buddy Hirsch, trainer or King Ranch. "His blood count is up and he definitely has an infection in the hock," Dr. Gerard said, adding "X-rays reveal nothing wrong with his bone structure." The winner of the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness, but fourth to Pass Catcher in last Saturday's Belmont takes, pre- viously had a skin rash and an infection in his right hind hoof. mound duties, was drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the second round. Fife was drafted in the NBA draft by the Milwaukee Bucks earlier in the year. Meanwhile, the Washington Senators and Chicago White Sox both surprised at the baseball draft by selecting athletes best known for the way they throw the ball-Dartmouth pit-Ther Pete Broberg and Mississippi quar- terback Archie Manning. The Senators, expected to seek hitting help, went instead for pitching by selecting Broberg as the No. 1 draft choice in one category of the secondary phase and quickly equating his paten- tial with Hall of Famer Walter Johnson. The White Sox opened the other category in the secondary phase by making Harvard catcher Pete Varney the No. 1 selection and then sent for Manning, a standout pro football prospept currently bogged down in contract negotia- tions with the New Orleans Saints. Two other athletes who also made big names for themselves as quarterbacks - Joe hTeis- mann of Notre Dame, selected by Minnesota, and Charlie Dud- ish of Georgia Tech, picked by San Diego - were also selected. Both Thiesmann and D disn are shortstops. But Broberg and Manning commanded the most attention, since the financial blandish- ments involved in their 'dgnings likely would exceed all the rest. Broberg, a fireballing right hander who allowed only 82 hits and struck out 212 in 151 1-3 innings for Dartmouth, previous- ly had been drafted by Oakl),nd and turned down a repurted $150,000 offer to continue his edu- cation. Broberg still has one yeas of college remaining. Theismann was picked as the regular phase of the draft--the selection of players never e- fore drafted - came to an en , with 801 athletes taken. Thesa- For a daring expose on the sports staff and the always excit- ing news on NHL goings-on, see page eleven. mann, however, already las signed a pro football cntreeSt with Toronto of the Canadin n Football League. Dudish, who quit Geor-ia Tech after his sophomore year, was the 12th pick in the secondary phase, delayed category-players previously drafted who were not eligible to be redrafted it Jane- ary but became eligible again. Major League Standings y AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East ;'..,.,e...,. . . W L Pet. GB W L Pet. GB i 's-- Baltimore 33 19 .635 - New York 32 20 .615 - Boston 32 22 .593 2 St. Louis 35 23 .603 - Detroit 30 25 .545 4% Pittsburgh 34 23 .596e Cleveland 25 28 .472 82 Chicago 28 29 .491 6% : y New York 24 30 .444 10 Montreal 23 27 .460 $ - Washington 19 35 .352 15 Philadelphia 21 28 .389 12 West West . Oakland 37 19 .661 - San Francisco 38 21 .644 - , Kansas City 28 23 .549 6 Los Angeles 30 27 .526 7 Minnesota 27 29 .482 10 Houston 28 29 .491 9 California 26 30 .464 11 Atlanta 27 32 .458 41 Chicago 20 30 .400 14 Cincinnati 23 34 .404 14 - . ,$' Milwaukee 20 31 .392 141, San Diego 18 39 .316 19 Yesterday's Results Yesterday's Results Detroit 3, Milwaukee 0 Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 1 Kansas City 5, Washington 4 Atlanta 8, St. Louis 3 /e Cleveland 3, Chicago 1 Cincinnati 2, Houston 1 Baltimore 2, Minnesota 1, 10 inn. Philadelphia 9, Los Angeles 4r Boston at Oakland, inc. New York 4, San Diego 2 New York at California, inc. Montreal 4, San Francisco 0 Today's Games Today's Games -Associated Press Chicago at Cleveland San Diego at New York Minnesota at Baltimore Los Angeles at Philadelphia CHICAGO CUBS Ron Santo raises a cloud of dust as he slides into home plate yesterday afternoon to Washington at Kansas City San Francisco at Montreal score on a double by Brock Davis. Bues' catcher Milton May attempts to field the throw from center Milwaukee at Detroit Atlanta at Houston ew York at California Pittsburgh at St. aLouis fielder Al Oliver, while the Cubs' Danny Breedon (19) looks on.