Page 16-Friday, May 26, 1978-The Michigan Daily Canadiens reign again!! Habs paste Bruins, 41 for clincher BOSTON (AP) - Unsung Mario Tremblay, noted more for his muscle than his finesse, scored two goals.and the Mon- treal Canadiens skated to their third consecutive Stanley Cup championship last night with a 4-1 victory over the Boston :~Bruins. r .. ,Steve Shutt and Rejean Houle also scored for Montreal while the Canadiens used a close-checking defen- se to thwart Boston's offense and take the best-of-seven series 4-2 for their 20th Stanley Cup title since the NHL was founded in 1$23. The Bruins, who had won seven con- secutive games at home during the playoffs, took a 1-0 lead on a power-play goal by defenseman Brad Park at 4:05 of the first period, just 22 seconds after Montreal's Bill Nyron was penalized for holding. AP Photo However, the speedy Canadiens took IN A BRIGHT MOMENT of an otherwise disappointing game for the Boston Bruins, Brad Park scores in the first period command and out-skated the Bruins the during the NHL Stanley Cup playoff game last night. Canadien goalie Ken Dryden watches the puck roll into the net as rest of the way. Bruins' Don Marcotte signals a score with Wayne Cashman (12) and Canadien Serge Savard (18) watching. BATSMEN ELECTRIFIED Wolverines host NCAA By GEOFF LARCOM Fisher Stadium, where the Michigan Wolverines play their home baseball games, has no lighting system for night games. But you can bet there will be plenty of electricity in the air there today, as the NCAA Mideast Regional Baseball Tournament begins, pitting the Eastern Michigan Hurons against the Missouri Tigers in the opener at 1 p.m., and the Wolverines against Texas A&M at 4 p.m. "If you can't get excited over the baseball coming up in the next two days, well, you just can't get excited at all," said an electrified Wolverine coach Moby Benedict. "I believe we're in for a great weekend of baseball." Excited or not, the Wolverines will have their hands full this afternoon when they take the field against the fourth-ranked Southwestern Conferen- ce champion Aggies, who sport a 37-14 season record coming into tournament play. The Aggies also won their second straight league title in posting a 19-5 conference mark. It was the most league wins ever recorded by an A&M team . Aggie coach Tom Chandler remem- beis last year only too well, when his team was sent packing by the Wolverines 13-4, in the Midwest Regional in Norman, Oklahoma. "Rick Leach did it to us in football during the f.ll, too. Hopefully, it won't happen again this weekend," Chandler laughed. Aggie gunners aiming to turn Chan- dler's cautious optimism into a cham- pionship speech include All-America candidates Kyle Hawthorne and Robert Bonner. Shortstop Bonner is the Aggies' leading hitter at .347, while Hawthorne at first base paced Texas A&M in homers (14) and RBI's (51). With a team season batting average of .284 (compared with the Wolverines' Bengal bats sileneed by Birds again, 2-1 BALTIMORE (UPI) - Les May lined third straight complete game last night a game-winning home run in the eighth ina 2-1 victory by the Baltimore Orioles inning and Scott McGregor pitched over the Detroit Tigers. e McGregor, 4-3, was treated to a 1-0 lead when center fielder Larry Harlow * * couted his third home run in the third + inning off rookie starter Steve Baker, ************************ who was making his major league LANDOVER, Md. (AP)-Bob Dand- debut. May's homer came off reliever ridge and Elvin Hayes, goats in Washington's opening game loss, com- John Biller with two out in the eighth. blued for 59 points and led the Bullets to a 106-98 victory over the Seattle Super- TIGER CATCHER Lance Parrish Sonics last night, tying the NBA cham- tied the score 1-1 with his fifth homer in pionship series, 1-1. the seventh inning. McGregor had It was the first victory for the Bullets spaced four singles until Parrish's in 10 championship games. The Bullets blow. had been swept by Milwaukee in 1971 and Golden State in 1975. ,Hiller, 4-2, entered the game in the The third'game of the best-of-seven seventh and had struck out three of four series will be played Sunday at the batters before May belted his ninth Capital Centre, where the Bullets have homer over the left field fence. May won 10 in a row, including eight in the leads the Orioles in homers and has - playoffs. . driven ina team-leading 31 RIs. -egional .266), it appears the Aggie strongsuit is hitting. Six of the nine starters average over .265. The Wolverines, however, hold the statistical edge in speed and pitching. "You'd think those Texas boys could run, but the truth is, they can't," said Chandler. "We're a slow ballclub (nine stolen bases this year) with sound of- fense and defense." Tomorrow, depending upon today's results, the Wolverines will square off against either EMU or Missouri. In regular season action, the Blue nine fared well against the two squads, going 3-1 against the Hurons and 2-1 in Florida facing the Tigers. Coach Ron Oestrike's EMU squad is champion of the Mid-American Con- ference while Missouri received an at- large bid as a 35-16 division champ of the Big Eight. The Collegiate Baseball News currently ranks the Hurons 22nd in the nation, the Tigers 31st and the host Wolverines eighth. SCORES AMERICAN LEAGUE Texas7, Minnesota I Kansas City 9, Seattle4 Boston 9. Toronto 5 New York 9.Cleveland 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE San Francisco 9, Houston I Chicago 5, Phiiadeiphia I Montarealis.5t.Loums2 NHL . Montreali4, Bstons Montrea'wins series, 4 gamesto 2