Page 16-Thursday, July 27, 1978-The Michigan Daily TALE OF TWO STREAKS Rose reaches 39, Clark stopped Pete aims for Cobb; faces Carlton Friday NEW YORK (AP) - Pete Rose extended his modern National League record consecutive game hitting streak to 39 games with a fifth inning double, but the New York Mets overwhelmbed Cincinnati 12-3 on former Red Joel Youngblood's bases-loaded triple and two-run homer. Rose doubled uo the alley in right- center field on a 2-2 pitch from Mets starter Nino Espinosa, 9p8. ROSE GROUNDED out and walked on four pitches in the third before leading a fifth with his double. BULLETIN C.J. Kupec, the 6 foot 8 three year veteran from the Univer- sity of Michigan, has been traded by the Houston Rockets to the Milwaukee Bucks for the Bucks fourth round draft choice in the 1979 draft. Kupec, who averaged four points and 1.9 rebounds per game for the Rockets last year, is joining his third team. He was originally drafted and signed by the Los Angeles Lakers. Rose's streak has centered the atten- tion of all baseball fans on him, and has brought the trivia nuts out of the wood- work. One has brought up a copule of scoring situations which could confuse the average fan. How would you score them? 1. LET'S SAY Rose comes to the plate five times in a game. He draws two walks, gets hit by a pitch once,; reaches base once on catcher's inter- ference and delivers one sacrifice bunt. Is his consecutive game hitting streak still alive or it is over? 2. Change the sacrifice bunt to a sacrifice fly-what does that do to Rose's streak? According to the baseball rule book, in the first instance rose's streak would still be alive but in the second it would be over. The situation is covered by the Baseball Rules, 1978 edition, headlined Guidelines for Cumulative Performan- ce Records. THE RULE STATES : "A consecutive-game hitting streak shall not be terminated if all the players appearances result in a base on balls, hit batsman, defensive interference or a sacrifice bunt. The streak shall ter- minate if the player gets no sacrifice except for a fly. The difference between the two forms of sacrifice is because in many cases a sacrifice fly comes about by accident. The player may be swinging away for a base hit, but if he flies out and a runner scores, he is credited with a sacrifice and not charged with a time at bat. In the case of a bunt it is clearly the player's intention to sacrifice, unless he is bunting for a base hit. In that case the official scorer is supposed to charge him for a time at bat even if the play results in the advancement of a baserunner. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--"I'd rather see it end in a winning game for us, but we didn't give up any ground. That's good," a philosophical Jack Clark said yesterday after his 26-game hitting streak came to an end in Silvio Mar- tinez' two-hitter that carried St. Louis past San Francisco 2-1. Despite the loss, the Giants remained two games ahead of Cincinnati in the National League West. The Reds, with Pete Rose extending his streak to 39 games, were routed 12-3 in New York. "I would have liked to make it longer, but I got the club record." His 25th game broke the Giants' mark shared by fred Lindsmith, Don Moeller and Willie McCovey. "I'll have other batting streaks. Maybe later this year or some other season I can do better." Said Martinez: "My strategy against Clark was to throw on the outside cor- ner all day. Other than that, I didn't pit- ch him any differently than anybody else." Clark's streak ended before a crowd of 18,769, which pushed San Francisco's .home attendance over the one million mark for the first time since 1971. Clark was 0-4 although he hit the ball well in two at bats. Lous Brock singled in a run in the eighth to break a 1-1 tie, makinga loser of Ed Halici, 5-4, who allowed only 14 hits. Oberkfell reached base on an error Jack Clark by second baseman Bill Madlock and was sacrificed to second by Martinez before Brock singled sharply to left. THOMPSON HITS 21st Bengals slip pcist0's Editor's note: Due to a rain-delay, the Tigers game started late. What follows is Daily reporter's Al Fanger's account of the first eight innings, after which the Tigers were leading 9-6. The headline indicates the winner of the game. Thanks. I fct~ ea~gue Sladixg6 AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST W L Pct. GB Boston............63 34 .644 -. Milwaukee............57 39 .594 5% Baltimore .......... . 55 43 .561 8% New York.........5343 .552 9% Detroit ................ 51 47 .520 12% Cleveland ............. 46 50 .479 16%/ Toronto ............... 35 64 .354 29 WEST Kansas City . ......... 54 42 .563 - California............53 47 .530 3 Oakland ............... 50 50 .500 6 Texas ................. 46 51 .474 8% Minnesota ............. 42 53 .442 11% Chicago ............... 41 55 .427 13 Seattle ............... 36 64 .360 20- late games not included NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST W L Pet. GB Philadelphia .......... 53 41 .564 - Chicago ............... 49 47 .510 5 Pittsburgh ............ 47 47 .500 6 Montreal .............. 47 54 .465 9% New York.........45 58 .437 12 St. Louis ..........4061 .396 16 WEST San Francisco ..... 60 40 .600 - Cincinnati ............. 58 42 .580 2 Los Angeles ...........58 42 .580 2 San Diego ............. 48 52 .480 12 Atlanta ................ 45 53 .459 14 Houston ............... 43 56 .434 16% Yesterday's Results. New York 12, Cincinnati 3 St. Louis 2, San Francisco 1 Atlanta at Philadelphia, n Montreal at Houston, n Pittsburgh at San Diego, n Chicago at Los Angeles, n By AL FANGER Special to The Daily DETROIT - The Birds stop here. The Baltimore Orioles, winners of ten of their last thirteen outings, roared in- to Tiger Stadium with southpaw sen- satin Mike Flanagan on the hill and were promptly roared right back out by a well-oiled Tiger machine last night. Perhaps it was the deluge which delayed the game at its start for one hour, or the sizzling Tiger timber, or the clutch pitching of Detroit starter Jack Billingham. Regardless of cause, the effect was gripping. The Bengals, chewed, clawed, and bit the O's to score three runs in the fir- st and five more in the third. By that time Earl Weaver and company were wishing the rain had lasted a while longer. The Bengals wasted no time getting their act together, as Ron LeFlore led off with a single, was bunted to second by Lou Whitaker, and scored on major league RBI leader Rusty Stabu's vic- tory. Enter Jason Thompson, who sliced a Flanagan curve into the left field seats for his 21st round tripper of 1978, and before you could blink it was 3-0. The Birds sponsored their own home run derby in the second, as Lee May and Dough DeCinces poked back-to- back shots into the upper deck, but that's the closest the Birds ever came. If the Tiger first saw burning bats, then the third was pure flame throwing. Flanagan yielded two singles and two walks before he was yanked in favor of righty Teddy Martinez, who was given similar treatment. Manager Ralph Houk counted by pin- ch hitting red-hot Ted Corcoran, who singled home another run. Add a sacrifice fly by Alan trammel and the Bengals had what appeared to be an in- surmountable 8-3 advantage. The Birds would not play dead, however, as they tallied a run in the six- th and two in the seventh to move with a pair at 8-6. It was again DeCinces who proved the Bengal nemesis, as he socked his second homer of the game. The Tigers, who have now won six of eight contest during their current stay at Michigan and Trumbull, face Baltimore again tonight before enter- taining Seattle for three games over the weekend. SCORES AMERICAN LEAGUE New Yoerk 3,Cleveland i Texas2, Boston0 NATIONAL LEAGUE Atlanta 4, Philadelphia 2 Houston 5,.Montreal 0