Page Twelve FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, August 13, 19 DOWN 12-3, BENGALS ROAR BACK Twins By KATHY HENNEGHAN special To The Daily DETROIT -- It was a long. night for pitchers and a thrilling one for fans as the Minnesota Twins downed the Tigers 12-11 before a crowd of 20,554. The Twins posted a seven-run second inning and a five run third to get off to a seemingly insurmountable 12-3 lead, but the Tigers kept coming back. MINNESOTA LED 12-9 going into the. ninth. With one out, Rusty Staub and Kemp blasted back-to-back solo home runs to bring "etroit back to life. How- ever, Twins relief ace Tom Johnson re- tired Jason Thompson on a groundout to second and fanned Ben Oglivie to end the game. The main gate attraction was Minne- sota's Rod Carew, who was hitting .384 going into last nigh's action. Carew re- ceived a rousing ovation when he belted a grand-slam home run into the right- field upper deck in the third inning. But it was the rest of the Twins lineup that edge set the pace in the early going. Tiger starter Fernando Arroyo retired the side in order in the first inning. Arroyo had a 3-0 lead to work with, thanks to Thompson's opposite-field home run in the first, but ran amuck in the second. THE RIGHT-HANDER walked Lyman Bostock and Glenn Adams on eight straight p it c h e s. Butch Wynegar's groundout to first advanced the runners, then a single to right by Rich Chiles scored two runs. Minnesota third baseman Mike Cub- bage homered to right just over Oglivie's outstretched glove to put the Twins ahead 4-3. On the very next pitch, Bob Randall laced a pitch to right, and that was all for Arroyo. Manager Ralph Houk yanked him after only 1113 innings of work in favor of southpaw Jim Crawford. Crawford, however, fared no better as Larry Hisle greeted him with 4 long single to left. Roy Smalley followed with Tigers, a hit-and-run double, bringing in two more runs to make it 6-3. Smalley crossed the plate when Tiger second baseman Tito Fuentes bobbled a routine grounder for his 22nd error of the year. IN ALL, it MEN came to the plate in the nightmarish inning, as the Twins posted a 7-3 lead. The Tigers fought back hard, but never quite caught up. The Twins continued to pound in runs .in the third. Cubbage singled home his third run of the game on a blooper to left. Next, Randall and Smalley both sin- gled, setting the stage for Carew's grand slam. The Tigers chipped away at the lead wi h three two-run innings. In the third, Staub, Kemp and Thomp- son all singled to load the bases. Staub scored the Tigers fourth run on Oglivie's double-play grounder. Catcher Milt May bounced a single to right to score Thomp- 12-11 son. DETROIT ADDED a pair of runs the fourth when Ron LeFlore singled left and trotted home as Fuentes belt his fifth homer of the year. In the Tiger sixth, shortstop Tom Vo yzer singled, and LeFlore doubled to p men on second and third. Both scored groundouts by Fuentes and Staub. While the Tigers offense mounted comeback, they got some unexpected r lief in the persons of Steve Grilli ai Bruce Taylor. The pair combined G six shutout innings on one hit. Minnesota's Tom Burgmeir, who can in in third inning for starter Pete RE fern, picked up his sixth win in nil decisions. The lefthander yielded f runs in fivr innings, before giving w to Johnson in the eighth. With the win last night, Minnes moved into first place in the Weste Division by a half-game over Chica The White Sox lost to Texas 10-7. 5 pre o'te brilLittler increases PGA By The Assocated Press NCAA alters tourney format GREENSBORO - Weak collete basketball conferences that automatically send a team to the NCAA national tournament each year will lose that privilege rfter one n ore season. The NCAA executive comiittee agreed yesterday to a plan limiting automatic tournament berths to champions of the 16 conferences holding the best won-lost records in the previous five years of Division I tournament play. The 10-man commitee like-I the recommendation of Its basketball study committee so much that it voted to begin the plan with the 1979 tournament a year earlier than called for in the original proposal. The change will reduce the number of automatic bids from 21 to 16, leaving half the berths in the 32-team tournament on an at large basis. A selection committee will fill those spots from inde- pendents and other conference-aligned schools. Yankees shuffle personnel NEW YORK - The New York Yankees recalled third base- man Mickey Klutts from Syracuse of the International League yesterday and added Art Fowler as the pitching coach'. Klutts, who was batting .281 at Syracuse with 14 homers and 65 runs batted in for 8S games, was brought up to take the place of Graig Nettles, who sprained a knee Thursday night and will be out for about a week. To make room for Klutts, the Yankees optioned outfielder Dell Alston to Syracuse. Fowler, was a coach under Yankee Manager Billy Martin with the Minnesota Twins, Detroit Tigers and Texas Rangers, has been wit of baseball since the Ra-igers fired Martin and several members of his staff during the 1975 season. 0's Palmer one-hits A's BALTIMORE-Jim Palmer htirled a two-hitter and rookie Kiko Garcia's two-run single capped Baltimore's four-run sixth inning rally as the Orioles defeated Oakland 6-1 last night and handed the A's their 14th consecutive loss. Palmer, 13-10, pitched his first complete game in seven starts and extended Baltimore's winning streak to five in a row-. Vida Blue, who lasted only one-third of an inning while losing in New York Wednesday night, had allowed only three hits, includ- ing Doug IDeCinces home run, before being shelled from the mound in the sixth. Itis record is now 10-15. Pirates nip Mets PITTSBURGH-Pitcher Jim Rooker drove in two rtius and scored another after a stolen base to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 3-2 victory over the New York Mets last night in the first game of a doubleheader. Rooker, who raised his record to 10-6 on a nine-hitter, had itree singles in three at-bats off loser Jerry Koosman, 8-13. Rooker's two-run, bases-loaded single in the second inning gave the Pirates a 2-2 tie after New York had scored twice in the first with the help of an error byPirates shortstop Mario. Mendoza. margin fy The Associated Press PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.-Gene Littler, reeling off pars with the machine-like monotony that has been his trademark, again sidestepped the subtle terrors of Pebble Beach with a three-un- der-par 69 and stretched his lead to two strokes yesterday in the second round of the PGA Na- tional Championship. The 47-year-old Littler, the only player in the field who has notmade a bogey, com- pleted 36 holes in 136, an im- pressive eight strokes below par for his two, conservative, slow-paced strolls over the 6,806-yard Pebble Beach Golf Links that winds through tow- ering eucalypus t r e e s and along the crags of Carmel Bay. Jack Nicklaus, seeking a rec- ord-typing fifth PGA champion- ship, was assessing his round of 71 and his 140 total while Littler played the 18th hole. "Actually I played fairly well -iJst nothing much happened," Nicklaus said. "With 36 holes to ga. I'm obviously in good posi- tion at only three strokes back." He paused while a volunteer worker changed Littler's sub- par total from a red seven to a red eight, signifying a birdie on his final hole. "All I was saying," Nicklaus said, "four strokes back isn't bead." That birdie, on a 15-foot putt, ended a string of 11 consecutive pars for Littler, who had been sidelined with an aching back for six weeks coining into this, the last of the year's Big Four events that also include the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open. Littler, however, said he was not surprised - "that's not a very good word"-to be leading SCORES Amoerican League .oo'iota 1, .Vetroit 51 Now York 10-4, Calitornia 1-3 Cleveland 2-3, Milwaukee 0-4 toeeccad game 10 Inn.) naltinzore 6, Oakland 5 Kasas City9, T onto $ tBoston 7, Seattle 2 Texas 10, Chicago 7 National League rittsbuigh 3, New York 2 St. Lois 2, montrteal to two strokes the tournament. "I've played fairly decently, not too bad, for three or four days now," he said in typically, low-key fashion. But, while pleased, he was vastly unimpressed at being in front. "It doesn't mean anything at this point," said the veteran who scored his 29th tour tri- umph earlier this season. "With 36 holes to go in the tournament, anything can hap- pen on a golf course like this." Jerry McGee, who came to Pebble Beach primarily for a second honeymoon and to cele- brate his recent victory in the Philadelphia Classic, was second at 138 after a second round 70. Nicklaus and Danny Walkins, who shot a 71, were another two shots back. Nest came a group at 1 headed by Tom Watson, game's outstanding player tl year who was forced to use b rowed clibs when two of his of sets of irons were declan illegal. Watson was tied with fe mer Masters champion Chas les Coody, Joe Inman and } Geiberger, author of a recon 59 earlier this year. Coody ha an erratic 71, Geiberger a . and Inman a 69 in the chilli f o g.g y, occasionally drizz weather. Johnny Miller and Lee Trevi were at par 144. Miller with second round 74. Trevino wit 73 that included a double bog seven on the last hole. JERRY McGEE, a former Ohio State golf star, blasts out of trap enroute to a bogey in yesterday's action in the PGA championship at the famous Pebble Beach layout in California'. Monterey Pennisula, McGee didn't make too many bogeys, his two-day total of 138 left him in second place, two stroke back of the pace set by Gene Littler.k