Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 19, 1977 PARKER PACES WOLVERINE ATTACK Hurons, Blue split twin bill By PAUL CAMPBELL Mike Parker, enjoying his finest day of the Michigan baseball season, crashed a two-out solo homerun in the eighth inning yesterday to give the Wolverines a 4-3 victory in the nightcap and a split of their doubleheader with Eastern Michigan. The first game was all Eas'ern, as the Hurons mas- tered Michigan, 5-1. with an 11-hit attack and some fine pitching by junior John Martin. PARKER'S BLAST consumated a Michigan comehack which was aided by two EMU errors. One of the Huron miscues came on an unusnal play in the bottom of the fifth inning. With Michigan trailing 3-1, second baseman Scott Anderson led off the inning with a sharp double into the left field corner. But Eastern first baseman Bob Vizthum was of the opinion that Anderson neglected to touch first, and he called to pitcher Bill Martin '(no relation to John) to try an appeal to the umpires. But Martin's throw skipped in the dirt and evaded Vizthum, while the alert Anderson scampered to third. The umpire was unsympathetic to Vizthum's view of the play, and on the next pitch Rick Leach drove Ander- son home to make the score 3-2. THE HURONS continued to display their human qualities in the bottom of the sixth. Michigan shortstop Jim Berra opened with a sharp grounder to third. Third baseman'Brian Petroff, who had handled three tough chances flawlessly in the first game, grabbed the ball cleanly but threw way over Vizthum's head to send Berra to second. Then, after Parker moved the runner to third on a sacrifice, catcher Jim Capoferi singled through the drawn in infield to knot the game at three. Tom Owens, who pitched all eight innings for the Wol- verines, scattered nine hits and was tough when he needed it in the late innings. He allowed the potential winning run to reach base in both the seventh and eighth, but both times pitched out of the jam to even his record at 2-2. "I planned to let Tom pitch as long as he could go, but I was surprised and pleased that he went all the way," said Michigan coach Moby Benedict after the game. OWENS WAS the victim of a couple bad hops in the fifth inning when Eastern broke a 1-1 tie with two runs. After two were out, Brian Stemberger and Vizthum reached base on consecutiev ground singles that bounced wildly at the cut of the infield. Huron centerfielder Ted Dasen cleared the bases with a 375 foot double. Dasen also keyed the Eastern attack in the first game with three hits. He leads EMU with an average over .390. But Dasen's feats with the bat were bettered by Parker. The junior from Toledo, who started the day 'batting .237, 'collected four hits in four official trips to the plate. Besides his winning round tripper, he swatted two doubles to the outfield fence. For the day, he drove in two runs and scored two. HE ALSO threw in a walk and a sacrifice for good measure. Parker's play was all the Michigan fans had to cheer about in the first game. The Wolverines 10-game win- ning. skein was snapped by Martin, who only allowed just three hits and raised his record to 6-7 on the year. Martin would probably like to make a career out of pitching against Michigan. He shut the Blue bats out on two hits earlier in the season in a 1-0 win. Vizthum drove in Dasen with the first run of the game in the second inning. Then it was Dasen driving in Stemberger and Pat Sheridan in the third. BENEDICT BROUGHT in Kevin Clinton in the fourth to replace starter and loser Bill Stennett (5-4). But Petroff greeted the senior reliever with a blast to left which flew over the fence just inside the foul pole, Michigan's only run came in the third. After Berra walked and took second on a wild pitch, Parker un- corked one of his doubles to deep center. Eastern added another run in the fifth to seal the decision. FACE SIXERS FOR TITLE: Ipr e if the l e4, ___________Blazers plan strategy By The Associated Press Tigers promote Corcoran DETROIT-The Detroit Tigers called up rookie outfielder-first baseman Tim Corcoran from their Evansville, Ind., farm club yes- terday to bring their American League roster to the 25-man limit. The 24-year-old Corcoran hit .378 in 31 games with the American Association club, the same batting average he had in spring training with the Tigers. At Evansville, he had a 16-game hitting streak going when he got the word to report to the Tigers at Dallas. Corcoran was signed as a free agent by the Tigers while he was in college in California in 1974. Aurelio switching to short? ARLINGTON, Tex. - Aurelio Rodriguez, slick-fielding third baseman for the Detroit Tigers, is expected to rejoin the team this weekend in Chicago. Rodriguez, who has been sidelined for three weeks with an injured ankle may find himself at shortstop. "I'm not saying we're going to do it," Houk said Tues- day. "But it's something that's under consideration." The move would solve two problems for the struggling Tigers. It would enable them to keep hot-hitting rookie Phil Mankowski at third and would probably shore up the fielding at shortstop. Hoik has rotated Tom Veryzer and Mark Wagner at shortstop this season. Neither is hitting .200 and Veryzer has committed three errors, while Wagner has been charged with six. Dantley top NBA rookie NEW YORK-Adrian Dantley, who averaged 20.3 points a game, a record for a Buffalo rookie, was named NBA Rookie of the Year yesterday in a runaway vote. The 6-foot-5 forward, the first rookie to surpass the 20- point average since Sidney Wicks did it for Portland in 1971- 72, received 44 of the 66 votes cast by sports writers and broadcasters in NBA franchise cities. John Lucas of Houston was a distant second with eight votes. Scott May of Chicago, Richard Washington of Kansas City, Mitch Kupchak of Washington and Ron Lee of Phoenix shared -the re- maining votes, Dantley, a native of the nation's capital, left Notre Dame after his junior year and signed with Buffalo as a hardship case. He wound up as Buffalo's top scorer in 23 games and had 10 or more rebounds in 24 games. By The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. - J a c k Ramsay, coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, says his team must stop three high-scoring players in order .to beat the Philadelphia 76ers and win the NBA title. The 76ers rely on three play- ers-Julius Erving, George Mc- Ginnis and Doug Collins - for most of their offense, Ramsay said. Hitler, Tic Reds topjc ARLINGTON, Tex. - Texas' Gaylord Perry became the third pitcher in major league history to win 100 games in both the American and National leagues as the Rangers defeated the De- troit Tigers 6-3 last night. The 38-year-old Perry, 3-4, was credited with the victory after a rocky start in which. he fell behind 3-0 in the first inning. As he has done many times in the past, Perry got better as the game progressed, retiring the final 18 Detroit batters. Texas tagged Tigers starter John Hiller, 1-4, with the loss thanks to five runs in the fourth inning. Reserve catcher John Ellis delivered the key hit, a two-run single, to spoil relief ace Hiller's third start in the last six years. Reds romp CINCINNATI - Bob Bailey, shrugging o f f Cincinnati's clean-up" jinx, drove in three runs with a single and a sac- rifice fly to lead the reds to SCOR ES Late Baseball Chicago (AL) 7, Kansas City 4 St. Louis 8, Houston 4 Atlanta 10. Montreal "McGinnis, Collins and Erv- ing are great individual play- ers," the Portland coach said yesterday. "You've g.t to stop those three guys, especially Erv- ing. He's made some fantastic individual plays." RAMSAY ATTENDED the fi- nal game of the Philadelphia- Houston semifinal series Tues- day night in Houston. The Blazers worked out on their home court yesterday. They will travel to Philadelphia today and practice Friday and Saturday for the championship series opener Sunday'afternoon. "They (the 76ers) are a one- on-one play team," R a m s a y said. "They don't have the team concept that we do, but they use their one-on-one abilities very well. The Blazers, who swept the Los Angeles Lakers in four games for the Western Confer- ence crown, will have been idle for eight days by gametinme )Ie Pirates Sunday. "I think it helps us," Ramsay an 8-3 .victory over the Pitts- said of the layoff. "It enables burgh Pirates yesterday, hand- tis to get Dave Twardzik back ing winless Jerry Reuss his in the game and I think it real- fifth loss, ly helped Bill Walton get over Bailey, the sixth member the physical Los Angeles ser- of the Reds tried in the No. 4 batting spot, triggered a TWARDZIK, A starting guard, four-run first inning with his missed the last six Blazer play- two-run single and hit his off contests because of a sacrifice fly in the fifth, when sprained ankle. He will be the Reds scored twice with- "about 100 per cent" for Sun- out a hit. day's game, Ramsey said. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUr East East W L Pet. (tB w L Pet, GB New York 19 14 .576- Pittsburgh 23 1 0 69 Baltimore 17 13 .567 Chicago 21 11 .656 i Boston 18 14 .563 t. Louis 20 13 .606 3 Milwaukee 1it18 .486 3 Phiadephia 17 14 .548 5 Toronto 15 20 .4219 5 Montreal 13 17 .433 0'. Detroit 14 19 .424 5 New York 12 20 .375 11 Cleveland 12 20 .375 6' West W~est Los Angees 2tt80.771 - Minnesota 24 11 .686 - Cineinnati t1509 .441 11' Chicago 20 12 .25 Houston 14 20 .412 t' Texas 17 14 .548 5 San Francisco 13 20 .394 13 Kansas City 17 16 .515 6 San Diego 14 24 .368 14' Oakland 17 18 .486 7 Atlanta 11 24 .314 16 California 16 20 .444 8t'. Yesterday's Results Seattle 13 27 .325131 % Cincinnati 8, Pittsburgh 3 Late games not included Today's Games Today's Games Toronto (singer, 2-5) at Mil- San Diego (Jones, 3-5) at Mon- waukee (Cort, 1-1) treal (Stanhouse, 3-5), n. Seattle (Pagan, 0-1) at Oakland Chicago (Reusehel, 6-1) at At- (Langford, 3-2) lanta (Mfekra, 1-7), a. Baltimore (Palmer, 5-3) at New Lm K Angeles (Rau, 5-0) at Pitts- York (Gullett, 3-2), a, burgh (Kison, 3-2, a. Kansas City (Colbun, 5-3) at San Francisco (Halicki, 2-3) at New Chicago (Stone, 3-3), n. York (Todd, 0-0), n. Minnesota (Goltz, 2-2) at Califor- Philadelphia (Kaat, 0-1) at 5os ila (Ryan, 5-4) n ton (Anftaima 245. a