Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 1 2, 1971 ontreal blasts Chicago, 5-2 MONTREAL ()-Fleet Yvan Cournoyer and Montreal's Ma- hovlich brothers, Pete and Frank, led the Canadiens to a 5-2 romp over Chicago in last night's fourth game of the Stan- ley Cup playoff. The victory squared the best- of-seven National Hockey Lea- gue championship series at two games each with game five set and game six back in for Chicago Thursday night and game six in Montreal on Monzon set for Griffith ROME (R) - World middle- weight boxing champion Carlos Monzon of Argentina said last night he expected to fight Ameri- ca's Emile Griffith within 45 days. He added he had no doubts he would beat him. "I am the champion of the world," Monzon said just before taking off for home from the Rome airport, "and I will re- main so for a long time." Monzon triumphed over ex- champion Nino Benvenuti of Italy when Benvenuti's manager three in the towel in round three at Monte Carlo Saturday night. The Argentine boxer called Griffith "a fearsome opponent, as was Benvenuti. I do not, how- ever, have any doubts about the outcome of the contest. I am champion of the world and I will remain so for a long time." national television Sunday af- ternoon. A seventh, if neces- sary, would be played in Chi- cago next Tuesday night. Cournoyer scored a pair of second period goals after the Mahovlich brothers had help- ed Montreal grab a 3-1 lead in the opening 20 minutes. Pete Mahovlich got the Can- adiens started at the one min- ute mark of the first period, deflecting Terry Harper's shot past Hawk goalie Tony Esposito. It was the first shot of the game for either team. Stan Mikita tied it for the Hawks on a power play goal at 3:09 but less than four 'minutes later, the Canadiens were in front again with Pete's older brother, Frank, setting up Jean Beliveau in front. Chicago's Cliff Koroll was in' the penalty box only 12 seconds when the Canadiens burst into the Hawks' goal. Cournoyer and Frank Mahovlich zipped passes back and forth before Frank caught Beliveau lurking at the corner of the net and hit him for the go-ahead goal, Chicago tried to come back with Jacques Laperriere in the penalty box but Pete Mahovlich intercepted the puck and forced rookie Rick Foley into a holding penalty that erased the Hawks' manpower advantage. A few mo- ments later, the Canadiens had their third goal of the period on Guy Lapointe's slap shot. For tips on the recent exploits of the Wolverine batsmen and the NBA-ABA player rebellion, see page eleven. The quick right winger vas just coming out of the penalty box when the puck came to Foley in midice. Cournoyer, behind the rookie, flicked the disc away from him and sailed in alone on Esposito for his eighth goal of the playoff. After Dennis Hull's slap shot caught the far corner of the Ca- nadiens' net, beating goslie 1Ke Dryden on his glove side, Cour- noyer and the Mahovlich brothers struck again on a power play. CHICHAGO BLACK HAWK Stan Mikita (21) scores Chicago's first goal against Montreal goalie Ken Dryden in last night's Stanley Cup finals action. Mikita's goal evened the score at 1-1 in the first period, but the Canadiens pulled away to win, 5-2 and even the series at 2-2. BIRDS BREAK STREAK Wright, Angels whack Ben gals By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ and CARLA RAPPOPORT Special to The Daily DETROIT - Homeplate re- mained untouched by Bengal cleats last night, as the Califor- nia Angels sailed over the Tigers, 5-0. Bidding to top a .500 win-loss record, three Detroiters got to third base. But none scored, as Angel Clyde Wright pitched him- self out of jams in the first, third, eighth, and ninth innings. With the Baltimore Orioles' victory last night, the Tigers went back to three games out of first in the American League Eastern division. Starting pitcher Mickey Lolich took the loss, his third against five victories. Wright's win last night gave him a 3-3 record. The Angels got their first run in the third on a homer by centerfielder Ken Barry, his se- cond of the season. NBA's Braves won't pay dues BUFFALO, N.Y. () - The Buffalo Braves have refused to pay expansion dues to the Na- tional Basketball Association Seattle SuperSonics because of the Spencer Haywood affair, Braves' owner Paul Snyder said yesterday. A report from Seattle said the Cleveland Cavaliers also balked at paying the Sonics. Snyder said Buffalo, Cleveland and the Portland Trail Blazers felt that Seattle violated NBA rules by signing Haywood be- fore he became eligible. Snyder said Buffalo paid $3.7 million for its franchise, with $1.5 million as a down payment, The balance of $2.2 million is to be paid over a four-year period in installments of $550,000 an- nually. "We sent 13 teams their check before the May 1 deadline, but held back on Seattle's," he said. On the West Coast, Seattle owner Sam Schulman told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer that Buffalo and Cleveland had not paid nim. Their final run also came on a homer, this one by third base- men Ken McMullen in the eighth inning. It wac McMul- len's fifth round-tripper of the season. In the fourth inning, fi rst baseman Billy Cowen led o f f with a single to deep center. With Roger Repoz batting, Cow- en stole second and went to third when short stop Ed Brink- man fumbled Bill Freehan's throw from the plate. He scor- ed on a sacrifice fly by Repoz. The Angels added a run in the seventh, as Berry doubled to left and then scored on a single by Sandy Alomar. Birds squeak by BALTIMORE - Merv Ret- tenmund's single off the glove of Kansas City shortstop Freddie Patek scored Brooks Robinson from second base in the 10th inning last night and snapped Baltimore's three-game losing streak with a 5-4 victory over the Royals. Robinson drew a leadoff walk from Ted Abernathy and, after Boog Powell flied out, D ave Johnson also walked before Ret- tenmund came through. The Royals tied the g a m e with two out in the ninth on Joe Keough's double and a triple by Amos Otis " after Baltimore had taken a 4-3 lead in the eighth on Johnson's double, Rettenmund's infield out and pinch hitter Andy Etchebarren's sacrifice fly. Twins topped ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - Duane Josephson and Carl Yas- trzemski smacked two-run home runs for the Boston Red Sox but it took an unearned run to give Gary Peters one of his rare victories against the Minnesota Twins 5-4 last night. After Yastrzemski's f i f t h homer, a 403-foot shot into the right field bleachers, sent the Red Sox into a 4-2 lead in the sixth, Rico Petrocelli singled and moved to third on two ground outs. Rick Renick boot- ed Josephson's grounder to al- low the deciding run to score. Astros axed NEW YORK - Erratic Nolan Ryan survived seven walks, a hit batsman and a wild pitch to toss a three-hitter and Dave Marshall ripped a grand slam homer, leading the red-hot New York Mets to an 8-1 victory over the Houston Astros l a s t night. New York got to Houston ace Larry Dierker, 5-1, for t h r e e runs in the second and chased him in the midst of a five-run flurry in the sixth capped by Marshall's grand slam. Rick Cornle d Jun outon ..*. in the All-Star game? JIM BOUTON for the All-Star team! That's the weord from the University of Buffalo's Spectrum, whose sports columnist, Richard Feuer, is leading a campaign to write in the author of Ball Four on the All-Star ballot to il- lustrate fan discontent with the management of baseball. To publicize his campaign, Feuer has sent copies of a col- umn blasting baseball - not the sport but the men who run it - and an accompanying press release to hundreds of news- papers and radio stations across the country. He criticizes baseball for nine points, ranging from the obvious charge of racism to a complaint about Commissioner Bowie Kuhn's close association with President Richard Nix- on, "one of the great mass murderers of our time." Poor Richard Feuer. He really blew it with that last one. If he is serious about his campaign to reform baseball, it will be hard enough. The natural reaction to receiving a copy of somebody else's column in the mail is that the person must be stricken by a special case of egotism. When he combines that with a plan to set up a national organization - in this case to be called "Fans Lobby for the Liberation of Sports" - people will figure he is a crackpot to boot. It is too bad because Feuer has some legitimate gripes, ones that anyone with any sense has long since seen. There is enough to be complained about without decrying Kuhn's friendship with the President. What Feuer probably doesn't realize is that nobody cares if Bowie wants to be close to the power and glory, but that not even baseball fans are liberated enough to support calling Nixon a mass murderer. Baseball fans are also too complacent to do anything like writing in Jim Bouton in enough numbers to make any impres- sion. For one thing, Feuer's method calls for voting for real players at each of the eight positions and then writing in Bou- ton at the bottom, a method that won't even register on the computers. For another, most papers will throw Feuer's article in the trash and people won't even find out about the golden opportunity they have to strike a blow for justice and against mass murder. What Feuer also may not realize in his attempt to topple baseball's structure is that the things he complains about have always been a part of baseball. As far back as the 1800s base- ball was run with business interests as much as pennant races in mind, Blacks were barred beginning in the 1880s, and players have been fighting the reserve clause since then, too. The horrible treatment of players Feuer writes about makes their treatment in years past look like life in the Bastille. All this is mentioned not to say that baseball is all right because it's better than it used to be, but that it is almost use- less to try to do anything about the injustices, Not only does he have the baseball organization against him, but also many of the leading sportswriters, whom he acknowl- edges as declining to report the reality of major league life. A fan movement to liberate sports would be nice, for there are many aspects that need liberation. But the idea that the fans will rise up and force baseball owners to hire black managers, end the reserve clause, obey the waiver rules or eliminate bed checks (why bed checks is unreason- able in an athletic endeavor, Feuer does not say) is ridicu- lous. So is the idea of the owners listening, even if fans did rise up. So go ahead and vote for Bouton if you happen to remem- ber, but it ain't going to do much good. AK Major League Standings ' AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct. GB Boston 19 9 .679 - Baltimore 17 12 .5 Detroit 1at155.403 St New York 13 14 .481 5t Washington 13 56 .440 6j/ Cleveland 10 19 .345 St west Oakiland y 1112 .636 - Kansas Cite it 155.16t4 California 17 16 .515 4 Minnesota 15 16 .484 5 Milwaukee 12 15 .444 6 Chicago 10 18 .357 81 Tuesday's Results Boston 5, Minnesota 4 New York at Milwaukee, inc. washington at Chicago, ppd., rain Californis 5, Detroit 0 Baltimore 5, Kansas City 4, 10 inn. Cleveland 7, Oakland 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Es L Pet. GB New York 19 9 .679 - Pittsburgh 18 55t.621 1Y2 z St. Louis 18 14 .563 3 j Montreal 12 11 .522 4y2 1z Chicago 14 17 .452 05'2 Philadelphia 9 19 .331 10 west San Francisco 13 5 .719 - Atlanta 15 15 .500 7 Los Angeles 15 17 .469 8 Houston 14 17 .452 8y4 Cincinnati 11 18 .379 10% 4 San Diego 9 20 .310 12% " Tuesday's Results Chicago 6, Philadelphia 2 Pittsburgh at San Diego, inc. St. Louis 10, Montreal 4 Atlanta at Los Angeles,inc. Cincinnati at San Francisco, tue. New York 8, Houston 1 IL