Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 21, 197 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 21, 1 97~ Tough BLOOMINGTON, (UPI) -- A two - run triple by Dan Meyer and a two - run double by Bill Freehan keyed a five-run sixth inning last night and gave the Detroit Tigers a 5-3 win over the Minnesota Twins. Southpaw Mickey Lolich (4-3) went the distance for Detroit, gaining his first victory in his last four decisions. Dave Coltz, (2-4) took the loss. M I N N E S 0 T A scored its first runin the fifth inning on a single by Dan Ford, a sac- first rifice by Glenn Borgmann and Twins a single by Rod Carew. son b But Detroit scored five times ers f in the sixth after two were out. from Aurelio Rodriguez started it Frei with a walk, but was forced at two ri second by Gene Michael's left fi grounder. .Hortor Michael reached second when Rober Ron LeFlore grounded out, and The went to third on an infield sin- sond r gle by Gary Sutherland. doubli MEYER THEN tripled in the Steve third, lich. Ashe blasts Car ninth Da i. uhis se Davis C up; the Tv rejects role Blu BOS NEW YORK ()--Arthur Ashe nitche says he will not compete in Rice, Davis Cup play unless the for- Benim mat of the international tennis the B event is changed. Vid'1 "I'm as patriotic as the next 7-0 la fellow," Ashe said yesterday, BLI "but I will not give up 12 weeks victor of my working year, and that's loss,< what you need to co-relete six foret rounds in the Davis Cup. out in "The Davis Cup is no longer a premier event. The competi- tion is too long. You can't eN- Rar pect leading pros to give up 12 M I weeks of their year to play Ger Davis Cup." Georg twing IN RECENT years, many top 10th it Americans have not partici- Hegan pated on the U.S. Davis Cup wauk squad, because of scheduling feattt conflicts or personality clashes. night. Two yearn ago, an American Earl squad which was minus many 4-1 le top players lost to Colombia in score a preliminary round., single The Association of Tennis chell Professionals, of which Ashe is president, would like the Davis o Cup format reoruanized along the lines of soccer's World Cup, NEB where nations compete within son ci geographical groups, with the single winners advancing to the finals, triple, T grs topple Twis The Michigan Daily t:T two Tiger runs before shortstop Danny Thomp- ooted the next two ground- or errors. Meyer scored first on the first miscue. ehan sent home the next uns with a double into the eld corner, scoring Willie n from second and Leon ts from first. Twins scored their sec- un in the seventh on a e by Ford, a pop single by Brye, sending Ford to and a wild pitch by Lo- ew's infield single in the drove in Thompson for cond RBI of the game and wins' final run e bombed TON (3) - Bill Lee d a two-hitter and Jim Tony Conigliaro and Juan mez belted home runs as Boston Red Sox whipped Blue and the Oakland A's st night. UE, BIDDING for his ninth y, suffered his second and allowed six runs be- being replaced with two nthe fifth. ngers brewed LWAUKEE(A} :e Scott tripled home the run in the bottom of the nning, and scored on Mike n's grounder, as the Mil- ee Brewers rallied to de- he Texas Rangers7-6 last lier, the Brewers blew a ad, then rallied to tie the at S-S in the seventh on s by Don Money and Mit- and Scott's sacrifice fly. bson devours ;W YORK (') - Pat Dob- hecked Kansas City on six s. Roy White collected a double and two singles, and Graig Nettles homered and tripled as the New York Yan- kees blanked the Royals 6-0 last night. Dobson (3-5) walked two and struck out two in gaining his first triumph since April 26. Torre towers CINCINNATI (AP) -J o e Torre's two-run homer, his first in a New York uniform, capped a four-run fifth inning and Jer- ry Koosman combined with Bob Apodaca on a six hitter, pro- pelling the Mets to a 6-2 vic- tory over the Cincinnati Reds last night. Hail Cesar HOUSTON (P) - Cesar Ce- deno walked leading off the eighth inning and came all the way home with the tie-breaking run on Bob Watson's single, as the Houston Astros beat the Philadelphia Phillies 4-2 last night. The Phillies had tied the score at 2-2 in the top of the inning on Dave Cash's infield single with the bases loaded. Elvin Hayes rules the boards Warriors do it again! Sabres quarter Flyers - -'.. . . . -" } e.:" : -?"r i: r " Maior League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB Milwaukee 20 13 .606 Boston 17 15 .531 21 Detroit 16 16 .500 31J Baltimore 15 19 .441 514 New York 15 20 .429 6 Cleveland 13 20 .394 7 West Oakland 21 15 .583 - Texas 20 16 .556 1 California 20 18 .523 2 Kansas City 20 19 .513 21/ Minnesota 16 17 .406 3s/ Chicago 15 20 .429 51 Yesterday's Results Boston 7. Oakland 0 New Yorki6, Kanas City 0 Milwaukee 7. Texas 6, 10 innings Detroit 5, Minnesota 3 Baltimore at Chicago, ppd., rain Only games scheduled Today's Games Oakland (Holtzman 3-4) at Bos- ton (Cleveland 2-2), n. California (Tanana 2-1) at Cleve- land (Kern 0-0), n. Kansas City (Leonard 1-1) at New York (Medich 3-6), U. Texas (Hargan 3-2 or Wright 0-2) at Milwaukee (Champion 3-2), n. Detroit (Ruhle 3-1) at Minnesota (Albury 2-2), n. Baltimore (Cuellar 2-3) at Chi- cago (Kast 6-1), I. NATIONAL LEAGUE East W 1. Pet. GB Chicago 21 16 .613 - Philadelphia 20 16 .556 2 Pittsburgh 17 14 .548 214 New York 16 15 .516 3Y2 St. Louis 14 19 .424 64 Montreal 13 18 .419 61 West Los Angeles 25 14 .641 - Cincinnati 20 20 .500 51 San Diego 18 19 .48 6 Atlanta 19 21 .475 61 San Francisco 17 19 .472 6a/h Houston 15 27 .357 1114 Late games not included Yesterday's Results Atlanta 9, Montreal 4 New York 6, Cincinnati 2 Houston 4, Philadelphia ; St. Louis at San Diego, inc. Chicago at Los Angeles, inc. Pittsburgh at San Francisco, Inc. Today's Games Pittsburgh (Kison 3-1) at San Francisco (Montefusco 2-2). Montreal (Renko 0-1) at Atlan- ta (Niekro 2-4), n. New York (Seaver 5-3) at Cincin- nati (Billingham 3-3), n. Philadelphia (Twitchell 3-4) at Houston (Dierker 4-4), n. St. Louis (Gibson 1-3) at San Diego (McIntosh 4-2), n. Chicago (Stone 5-0) at Los Ange- les (Messersmith 6-0), a. SAN FRANCISCO (1) - High- powered Rick Barry pumped in 36 points, including two free throws with 26 seconds left, and the remarkable Golden State Warriors rallied for a 92-91 vic- tory over the Washington Bul- lets last night. The aroused Warriors, who had stunned the favored Bul- lets by coming from 16 points back to win Sunday's opening game, did it again, this time fighting from a 13-point sec- ond quarter deficit. Barry poured in 23 points in the first half but the Warriors trailed 52-46 after being behind 46-33 at one time. They didn't begin their come- back until early in the third quarter, when they trailed 63- 52. Then they outscored the be- fuddled Bullets 17-S and finally went ahead for the first time in the game 69-68 with 1:47 to go in the third quarter. Golden State built its ad- vantage to 88-80 late in the fourth period, but the Bullets battled back and finally took the lead 91-90 on a three point play by Mike Riordan with 1:01 to go. After both teams missed field goal attempts, Barry took a long pass from George Johnson and was ahead of the field when he was pushed hard from behind by Riordan. He then hit the two winning free throws. Washington then worked the ball around, but three shots in the final seconds all failed. Phil Chenier paced the Bullets with 30 points, Riordan finish- ed with 21 and Elvin Hayes scored 15. Sa bres saw B U F F A L 0 () - Rene Robert scored at 18:29 of the overtime, giving the Buffalo Sabres a 5-4 triumph over the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 3 of the National Hockey League's championship series The victory cut the Flyers' lead to 2-1 in the best-of-seven series for the Stanley Cup with Game 4 to be played here Thursday night. The Sabres, who had come back from deficits of 2-0, 3-2 and 4-3 finally tied the score on the first career playoff goal by rookie defenseman Bill Bajt. Hajt lifted in the second re- bound of a shot by Rick Mar- tin over Philadelphia goalie 92-91; in OT Bernie Parent at 9:56 of the third period. That's the way it stayed with periodical intermissions while the players tried to dissipate fog which settled repeatedly over the Memorial Auditorium ice. High temperatures and hu- midity caused condensation that hindered vision and re- feree Lloyd Gilmour often had to stop play while the players skated around to light- en the haze. Then came Robert's which ended two Buffalo futility streaks against the defending Stanley Cup champions. The Sabres hadn't beaten Parent previously in their five-year his- tory and hadn't beaten the Flyers in 15 games. Final 'M' baseball statistics BATTING G AB R H RBI AVG 2B 3BHR SO BB SB-Att E Grenkoski, of 34 130 19 46 18 .354 6 2 2 14 15 12-16 1 Hackney lb 33 99 14 33 23 .333 7 0 8 23 18 0-0 4 Chapman, if 12 31 5 10 4 .323 0 1 0 2 5 0-1 Haslerig, of-dh 23 47 15 14 5 .298 0 0 1 4 14 4-5 0 Ross, of 34 114 21 34 17 .298 3 3 2 16 15 4-5 3 Parker, dh-of 21 43 13 12 5 .279 2 1 0- 1 8 0-0 Damiani, of 32 85 11 23 4 .271 1 1 1 14 7 1-2 2 Mahan, c-dh 33 121 017 31 16 .256 2 2 2 11 9 0-0 1 James, 3b 31 99 16 25 16 .253 5 0 0 4 8 0-0 8 Lane, 3b-lb 8 21 3 5 5 .238 1 0 0 3 2 0-01i Wa'erh'se, 2b 35 118 17 28 16 .237 2 2 2 17 14 7-9 Berra, ss 31 80 13 17 8 .213 5 1 0 23 18 3-3 13 Wa'le'ki, c-dh 23 69 6013 14 .188 2 1 0 10 8 0-0 8 TOTALS 35 1057 171 291 151 .275 36 14 18 142 141 31-41 55 PITCHING g gs ge w-l so b1 pet. wplhb bkfp h r er era C. Forhan (r) 8 8 5 5-1 28 14 .833 1 2 0 52 54 17 1 1.38 M. Weber (r) 12 4 3 4-1 47321 .800 4 0 1 56% 33 14 91.43 Chuck Rogers (r) 10 8 7 7-2 50 14 .778 . 1 00 63 50 17 12 1.1 B. Stennett (r) 4 4 2 3-1 15 18 .750 1 2 0 25Y3 22 12 9 3.20 L. Sorensen (r) 8 5 2 3-3 27 19 .500 4 5 0 42% 44 24 20 4.5 C. McGinnis (1) 6 5 1 3-1 22 203.750 9 1 0 27 30 24 18 .f T. Joyce (1) 2 1 0 0-1 509,.000 2 4 9 5 % 7 6 9.53 TOTALS 35 31 20 25-10 194 115 .714 19 14 1 272 235 115 8 2.71