Page 16-Thursday, May 25, 1978-The Michigan Daily THE SPORTING VIEWS 'M' '78 baseball. . the comeback kids By JAMIE TURNER There are many sports stories that come out of Michigan every year. This is a successful University when it comes to athletics, and as such one can find heart-warming stories concerning the resurgence of a particular team from the depths of despair to the heights of victory. The Michigan baseball team is no exception to the rule. When the season began the Wolverines were considered odds-on favorites to win the Big Ten. The pitching was solid, and the hitting sufficient to provide scoring punch. The Wolverines 'came north after their annual trip to Florida with a respectful, it not awe-inspiring record. "Now," people thought, "the team will begin their rampage on the way to an NCAA tournament spot." But it didn't work that way. In popped Mother Nature to take away the Michigan nine's sharpness. For over a week the season opener was post- poned due to wet grounds, and with it went much of the offense that Moby Beedict counted on to blow out opposing teams. In the doldrums By the afternoon of April 12th, the worst had arrived. Despite outstand- ing pitching, Michigan went down to a double dip defeat at the hands of the University of Detroit 2-0, 3-0. The Big Ten season was nearly at hand, and practically every other team had been able to put in large amounts of prac- tice. Minnesota had played nearly twice as many non-conference games as had Michigan - and worse yet - the Gophers and Wisconsin were to be the first teams the Wolverines would face. Starting the conference season on the road is no easy task. As Benedict once put it, "One bad weekend and you're out of the race before you're in it." Perhaps it sounds a bit cliche, but it's true, Michigan had to start off well. So they went 11-1 in the first six weeks of Big Ten play, all but eliminating the rest of the teams with still two weekends left. The next question is HOW? How did this team turn itself around in time to run off 19 victories in its last 26 games and finish 13-3 in the Big Ten? Who were the players who turned the season around? Who's to blame? Again, to paraphrase Benedict, 'Baseball is a team game,' and nobody displayed that fact better than the Wolverines in the last part of the season. But the fact remains that there were certain people who were in- strumental in getting Michigan where it is now, preparing for the NCAA's this weekend. The first star has to be Rick Leach. No one in the last sixteen years ac- complished what the pitcher-turned quarterback-turned center fielder did this past season. Big Ten batting champion with a .457 average. 55 hits this season, breaking Bill Freehan's 1961 mark. Overall batting average of .430, again the highest since 1961. Second in team runs batted in. Team leader in runs scored. The list could go on and on. The final result was obvious. Second star: Steve Howe. Not many people know that the sophomore from Clarkston sat out much of last week with a bladder infection that was feared to be much worse. Nevertheless, Howe got out of bed Friday, and by Sunday was hurling a four hit shut-out - and putting Michigan into the NCAA's. Howe will soon be declared an All-American, if he isn't one already. His 9-2 record and 1.82 ERA speak for themselves. All in all, another indispen- sable reason why Michigan is where it is. Third Star: George Fousiannes. Fousiannes has been moved into the background the last few weeks with the heroics of his teammates, but without the big DH from Birmingham, Michigan would not have been in such good position heading into the stretch. The mentor himself For it was Fousiannes who almost singlehandedly accounted for Wolverine scoring early in the season, when the rest of the batters seemed to be confronting a pitched ball for the first time. By the middle of May he had six home runs and 25 rbi's, every one of them seemingly coming in the clut- ch. Fourth Star: Moby Benedict. It is easy not to take the veteran coach seriously. Benedict seems to be one long cliche at times, piling up enough "That's baseball" excuses to make Ralph Houk proud. But there can be no question that the Coach of the Wolverines did exactly that: COACH. He didn't give up the ship and panic when Michigan was struggling, and he didn't let his players get over confident when the,Cam- pionship was within reach. Tigers split with Birds in away twinbill BALTIMORE (AP)-Andres Mora's first home run since being recalled from the minor leagues May 15 gave Baltimore's Jim Palmer a 1-0 victory over Detroit for a split of last night's For more sports, see Page 15 twi-night doubleheader with the Tigers. The Tigers, who had lost 11 straight games in Baltimore since July 31, 1976, won the opener 3-2 on a ninth-inning single by Aurelio Rodriguez, a late- inning defensive replacement. Mora won the nightcap with his homer off Bob Sykes, who had won his first three starts for Detroit after being called up from the minors. PALMER, 5-4, allowed six hits-two apiece by Rusty Staub, Jason Thom- pson and Steve Kemp-while knotching his 199th career victory. The Tigers loaded the bases in the sixth on a double by Thompson and two walks, but Palmer retired Milt May on a fly ball. May's third hit of the opener laun- ched Detroit's winning rally off Dennis Martinez, 3-3. Steve Dillard ran for May and scored on the hit by Rodriguez after being sacrificed to second. Burn baby burn Dance instructor Mary "Sarge" Williams leads the players of the Knoxville Farragut High School football team through a ballet routine during spring conditioning drills.Step lightly boys. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: A-maya rolls in Italy ROME-Giant-killer Victor Amaya Bosox cruise won his second-round match in the $230,000 Italian Open Tennis Tour- TO8ONTO-Jack Brohamer and nament yesterday by ousting Colom- Carlton Fisk hit two-run homers and bian Ivan Molina 4-6, 6-1, 6-4. Mike Torrez tossed a seven-hitter for The unranked Amaya, a 23-year-old his sixth victory as the Boston Red Sox University of Michigan graduate, had downed the Toronto Blue Jays 8-2 last eliminated seventh-seeded Corrado night. Barazzutti of Italy in the first round Brohamer's first home run of the Tuesday. seasop, which gave the Red Sox a 2-0 Another American, third-ranked lead with two out in the second inning, Brian Gottfried, whipped Australian came against former Tiger Dave Colin Dibley 6-1, 6-3, and fourth-seeded Lemanczyk, 1-8, with Fred Lynn Eddie Dibbs of the United States aboard via a walk. Rick Burleson's disposed of Argentine Jose Clerc 6-1, 6-3 bloop double and Jerry Remy's single in second-round play yesterday. produced the third Boston run in the Tennis' latest giant-killer is a giant third. himself, taller and sturdier than some Boston got its sixth run in the seventh basketball centers. inning without a hit off Joe Coleman, Amaya, of Holland, Mich., 6-foot-7 another former Tiger, making his first and 220 pounds, stunned the tourney appearance in a Toronto uniform. Tuesday by ousting national hero Dwight Evans walked, took second on Barazzutti 6-3, 7-6, overcoming the an infield out, and went to third when seventh-seeded player as well as a Burleson struck out but reached first on screaming crowd of 7,000 at the Fora Cerone's passed ball and scored as Italico clay compound. Remy forced Burleson at second. -AP -AP Maor League Baseball American League Detroit 3-0. Baltimore2-t Boston 8,Toronto Cleveland at New York, pp SCORES NationalLeague Cincinnati S Atlanta4 -chicago 6., Phiiadelphia 4-2 St.Louis?2, Manireaio Pittsburgh6 New York5 y MSf4bal. dailylibes 19.HSRI4