Page 16-Wednesday, June 28, 1978-The Michigan Daily SIX-RUN FIRST KO'S INDI CL were toda: Th tivat on th was Dieg the N FR chan futil histo batte time. 6-1 vi Da Tiger St foL (two the p hits put t eveni Tht April succu kept Fri bad p who f to wa win i pitch every first . RO to cei and coaxe hurle Fri pitch Alexa near Rozema fumigates By PAUL CAMPBELL around third and scored while Alexan- Staub, "and r SpecialtoThe Daly der was still searching for the ball. an excellent EVELAND - If Willie Horton Friesleben finally got the ball over made some b a vindictive man, he'd be smiling the plate, and Rusty Staub thanked him him pretty go yby putting it over the fence in rightfield TIM CO e Cleveland Indians recently deac- for a two-run homer that upped his 'RBI Mankowski ki ed the aging slugger to make room total to 51, second in the circuit, two runs with e roster for Dave Friesleben, who That's when Friesleben's infield took Paul Reusch picked up on waivers from San over. First baseman Andre Thornton dians earlieri o after three years of struggling in stopped a bouncer off Jason Thom- the Chicago C lational League, pson's bat, but couldn't control it to UESLEBEN responded to the throw to first. Second baseman Duane ge of scenery with one of the most Kuiper followed by booting Steve e debuts in American League Kemp's sure double play grounder. ry, failing to retire any of the six WHEN MILT May singled sharply to rs he faced as Detroit scored six right to score' Thompson, Friesleben s in the first inning and coasted to a was finished. His American League ca n ctory. ERA is impossible to calculate - it's an ve Rozema went all the way for the infinite number. By DA rs to record his third victory again- "He - (Friesleben) threw the ball And then the ur losses. He wasn't overpowering where our bats were," is how Ralph Three incon strikeouts) but got the ball over Houk described the Tigers' success be added to1 late (no walks) and scattered nine against Friesleben. roster, after t well enough, that Cleveland only Indians manager Jeff Torberg tried nounced Mon wo men on base once during the to explain Friesleben's problems away. Olden had lo ng. "He wasn't balanced and he didn't have deficient grad e victory was Rozema's first since time to adjust," said Torborg. "His Olden, a 6-6 29, when he shut out Seattle before mechanics were just mixed up." Park, failed ambing to shoulder problems that "I faced him in the NL," said Rusty high school a' him off the mound for three weeks. must forfeit esleben's performance was like RaRosey return signed on Apr iractical joke for the Indian fans, DETROIT NCAA regulati inally turned out in some numbers a r N bi ted to enroll a itch their team go for their sixth LeFlore oi........ . 5 1 2 0 College to resu n the last seven games. The new Whitaker 2...... . 3 1 1 0 On the sur er and his new team did almost Stanbdh............ .. 5 1 2 would eem rthing wrong while allowing the J. ThompsonIb ............5 1 0 chances next half-dozen Tigers to score. Mp.ay c ... 4 1 2 1 represents o N LEFLORE led off with a single corcoran rf............... 4 0 2 0 recruiting effo nterfield, then stole second easily Mankowski 3b ........3 0 1 2 Johnny Orr w waited there as Lou Whitaker A. Rodriguez3b............o 0 Hubbard plus ed out a walk from the Indian Wagner-'ubbard.plus rTota ''''.-...36 0 Ii 5 r. CLEVELAND esleben then uncorked a very wild ab r h bi that bounced off catcher Gary Dade rf... . .......4 s i Inder's chest and bounded around Manning of....-.-.. 4 0 2 0 the Tiger dugout. LeFlore raced hrnIb.. . .4 10 Carbo dh .................. 4 0 2 t G. Alexander c ............ .4 0 1 0 Con3b.. .........'. 3 0 0 0 J. Norris ph ............... 1 0 0 0 Kuiper2b.......... 3 0 2 0 veryzer ss ......... 3 0 0 5 Total................ . 34 1 9 1 Detroit.. .. 600 0 0 0 0 0 0-6 Cleveland.............. 0 0 0 1 00 0 0 0-1 E-Kuiper. DP-Detroit 1, Cleveland 1. LOB- Detroit 7, Cleveland 6. HR-Staub (10). sB-Le- Fiore, Corcoran. S-Wagner. DETROIT RoemaW,34..... 9 9 1 1 0 2 CLEVELAND FreislebenoL, 0-1 ... 0 4 6 5 1 0 P. Reuschel....... 6 7 0 5 1 0 Kern .............. 2 0 0 0 0 2 Monge ............ 1 0 0 0 1 0 Dave Roz ema WP-Freisleben. T-2:21. A-12.214 AN STAR TER Idians, 6-1 he has a good fastball and to be a much more valuable acquisition hook. But he must have than Friesleben, settling down to pitch ad pitches because we hit six innings of shutout ball. od." The Indians' lone run came on a hit- ERCORAN and Phil and-run play in the fourth inning. Thor- nocked in the Bengals last nton took off from first on a one-two pitch h singles against reliever to Bernie Carbo, who bounced the ball el, who had joined the In- off second base into short center. Thor- in the day on waivers from nton scored easily, but Carbo was ubs. But Reuschel proved caught in a rundown. rge recruit Olden 't maethe grade VE RENBARGER ere were three. :ing freshmen, that is, to the Michigan basketball the official word was an- day that recruit Cedric st his eligibility due to es. forward from Highland to raise his cumulative verage to a 2.0, and now the Michigan tender he ril 12 in compliance with ions. Olden is now expec- at Daytona Beach Junior irrect his GPA. face, the loss of Olden to hurt the Wolverines' winter, given that he e-fourth of the coach's rts this spring. However, will have a healthy Phil both starting iorwards back next year, along with a pair of heavyweight freshmen frontcourtmen on the way. In reacting to the announcement, Orr called Olden "a good kid who we ob- viously could have used," but it was ob- vious that his heart was not broken. "We had a hunch that it was coming for the last month," said Orr, indicating that he was aware of the potential grade difficulty during the recruiting procedures. "We decided at that time to sign him and see what happens. "His commitment to us is over," Orr continued. "We'll follow his career and if he does well next year, we may sign him again. We're gonna wait and see." Big Ten champion Michigan State was hit with a similar problem but of greater magnitude when it was an- nounced that the Spartan's top recruit, Walker D. Russell also lost his eligibility due to grades. aI a L.Jeagute s awdiag8 AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST W L Pet. Boston ................ 51 21 .708 NowYork ............. 41 35 .577 Milwaukee ...........40 31 .563 Baltimore .........,... 40 32 .555 Detroit ................35 35 .500 Cleveland ............. 32 38 .444 Toronto...............24 47 .327 WEST Texas .................38 32 .543 Kanas City ........... 38 32 .543 California ............. 36 36 .500 Oakland ............... 35 37 .486 Chicago.-............ 32 39 .451 Minnesota-............-30 40 .429 Seattle3......0........ 26 48 .3a L~antnight's renults Detroit6. Cleveland1 ' Toronto .Balimore 2 GB to% 10 11 15 is 26% 3 4 6% 8 14 NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST W L. Pt. Philadelphia ......... 37 30 .552 Chicago ........ 36 33 .522 Montreal .............. 37 36 .507 Pittsburgh ............ 34 35 .493 New York ............32 43 .427 St.Louis............... 27 47 .365 WEST San Francisco ......... 45 26 .634 Cincinnati... . 44 29 .603 Los Angeles ........,.. 40 32 .556 San Diego ............35 37 .486 Houston ...............31 38 .449 Atlanta ................ 29 41 .414 Yesterday's games New York 7, Chicago 2 St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh0, 1stgame Philadelpia1,Montreal0 LosAngeles 3,CAtlata4- Htouston 7, Cincinati4 GB 2 3 4 9 131/ 2 18N% 13 15% Slip-slidting away AP Photo Reggie Jackson of the New York Yankees slides across home plate in the second inning of last night's Yankee-Boston game, which was tied 4-4 inthe 11th inning. All that's left of catcher Carlton Fisk is his mask, as Fisk had to move up the line to field an errant throw. Yankee ace Ron Guidry (12-0) had started for the Yanks.