-f Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 21, 1975 Tigers hold on to win, 10-9 By CLARKE COGSDILL Special To The Daily DETROIT - This one was supposed to be a laugher. When the Tigers scored seven runs in the first inning off Rudy May and reliever Dave Pagan, the 23,347 fans at Tiger Sta- dium relaxed last night. And why not? After all, Vern Ruhle, one of their club's more reliable starters, had to be a good bet to make the lead stand up. And if worst came to worst, there was a well-rested John Hiller lurking in the bullpen to make victory certain. Three hours later, they knew better, Ruble, shaky through- out, had to be lifted in the top of the ninth after he'd clearly lost his stuff. Then, the roof very nearly fell in, as Hiller suffered a rare, terrible outing, and the Tigers were relieved to break their four-game losing streak with a 10-9 escape. MICKEY Stanley's three-run homer, which had seemed the height of frivolity when he tag- ged it in the seventh, turned out to be the deciding blow. The Tiger veteran, who's better than adequate with the glove at his new first-base slot, is doing everything the Bengals had or- iginally expected of Nate Col- bert, whom he replaced. Facing a 10-3 Tiger lead in the top of the ninth, Yankee manager Bill Virdon called on Bobby Bonds, recuperating from an injury, to bat for short- stop Jim Mason. Ruhle's sec- ond pitch to him landed in the right field upper deck. One out later, Walt Williams drove a hard single, his third of the night, to right field. Hil- ler had been warming up since the sixth, and needed the work, so Ralph Houk decided to get s Stanley booms the game over with quick and made the switch. It was the right move, but it nearly gave the wrong result. Roy White lashed a two-strike hanging curve to left, and a nassed ball moved the runners to second and third. Ron Blom- berg walked, and Thurman Munson drove in Williams with a knock to center. CHRIS Chambliss flied deep to Dan Meyer in left, scoring White, but putting the second out on the scoreboard. Then Graig Nettles, who had 4 RBIs for the night, stroked a double down the left-field line, clear- ing the bases. Rob Reynolds quickly began throwing hard in the Tiger bullpen. A wild pitch moved White to third, and pinch-batter Alex Johnson beat out a hard smash Aurelio Rodriguez had trouble handling. But just when disaster seem- ed inevitable, Tom Veryzer made a fine stop on Bonds' smash, and made the force play with Gary Sutherland to bail the Bengals out. THE TIGERS' seven run out- burst, which eventually tagged May with his first loss after five straight wins, saw Ron LeFlore walk, take third on Sutherland's single, and score on Danny Meyer's grounder to short. Singles by Willie Horton, Stan- ley, Rodriquez, Veryzer, and LeFlore, and a double by John Wockenfuss, accounted for the rest of the runs. Wockenfuss collected two hits on the evening, and seemingly has Wally Pipped Bill Freehan to the bullpen. The Michigan Daily Major League Standings - AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East W L Pet. GB W L Pet. GB Boston 36 24 .600- - Pittsburgh 37 24 .607 - .ew York 35 29 .547 3 Philadelphia 35 29 .547 33/2 Milwaukee 32 31 .508 51/. New York 32 28 .533 4%j Baltimore 20 33 .441 8 chicago 32 32 .500 6 Detroit 26 34 .433 10 St. Louis 29 32 .475 8 Cleveland 24 38 .387 13 Montreal 26 32 .448 4x. west West Oakland 39 25 .609 - Cincinnati. 41 36 .612 - Kansas City 37 28, .569 2y Los Angeles 39 29 .574 2 Texas 32 31 .508 6y., San Francisco 31 34 .417 9 Minnesota 30 31 .492 7% San Diego 30 35 .462 91> California 31, 35 .470 9 Atlanta 20 37 .431 12 Chicato 26 37 .413 12i/, Houston 24 46 .343 IS'3 Detroit 10, New York S Atlanta 4, San Francisco 2 Boston 4, Baltimore 3 Pittsburgh 5, New York 1 Milwaukee 6, Cleveland 0 Philadelphia 7, Montreal 4 Minnesota 5, Chicago 3 Ss. Louis 5, Chicago 4 Today's Games Cincinnati 7, Houston 3 Minnesota (Campbell 0-3) at Chi- Today's Games rago (Kast 10-3) Pittskuegh (Kison 7-2) at New New York (Dobson 7-5) at De- York (Matlack 8-5) troit (Lolich 7-4) Montreal (Blair 3-8) at Philadel- Boston (Pole 1-2) at Baltimore phia (Carlton 6-5) (Palmer 11-3) San Francisco (Caldwell 3-6) at Kansas City (Busby 9-5) at Oak- Atlanta (Morton 7-6), twinight land (Holtzman 6-6) Chicago, (Reuschel 4-6) at St. Milwaukee (Broberg 6-7) at Cleve- Louis (Gibson 1-5), night land (Eckersley 4-0), nitht Cincinsnati (C. Carroll 5-4) at Taos (Umbarger 2-2 and wright Houston (Richard 4.3), night 0-3) at California (Tanana 4-4 and Los Angeles (Messersmith 10-3) at Hassler 3-7), 2, twinight San Diego (Folkers 2-3), night DeJESUS MATCH THRILLS Blue netters fall Special To The Daily MICHIGAN'S remaining players in the 91st NCAA tennis championship at Corpus Christi, Texas, Fred DeJesus in singles and doubles entrants Eric Fried- ler and Jerry Karzen were eliminated yesterday in semi-final action. DeJesus, the tournament's twelfth seed hadn't lost a set in the competition until he met Southern Methodist's three-time all-American George Hardie who elimi- nated the Michigan ace 6-2, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6. Friedler and Karzen seeded seventh, were ousted by the third seeded doubles team of Billy Martin and Brian Teacher from UCLA, 7-5, 7-5, 6-3. Michigan, coached by Brian Eis- ner, is out of competitors and fin- ishes with 17 points. The Wolverines are in a fourth place tie with Stan- ford and SMU, with the competition ending today. UCLA ran away with the team title early. The Bruins have 26 points al- ready. Behind them, with second and third place locked up, are Miami of Florida with 20 and Trinity with 19 re- spectively. Neither of those schools has any players left in competition. Hardie, who gained four-time All- American status by yesterday's victory, could give SMU sole position of fourth, dropping the Wolverines to fifth if he can beat top-seeded Billy Martin of UCLA who gained today's finals by crushing Joao Soares of Pepperdine 6-0, 6-4, 6-4. The Bruins are hoping that Mar- tin, a freshman, can duplicate Jimmy Connors' 1971 feat of taking the singles crown in his first year. The match is scheduled for 1 p.m. CDT. Martin also has a chance to become the first freshman to win both the sin- gles and doubles title as he and Teacher will face cross town rivals Butch Walts and Bruce Manson of USC who yester- day knocked off Alvaro Fillol and John Eagleton from Miami of Ohio 6-3, 6-1, 6-4. Against Hardie, a left-hander, De- Jesus was trying to come back from a 2-1 deficit in the best of five sets. The fourth set was tied 6-6, so the two played a tie-breaker. Hardie went up 4-1 (the first player to five points wins), but DeJesus hit a low shot that just cleared the net to stay alive. The Michigan junior from Puerto Rico then scored the next point to make it 4-3, but later hit a return long to lose 5-3 and the set 7-6. Hardie, who could win his first cham- pionship by beating Martin today said the turning point in the match was when he broke DeJesus' serve to go up 2-0 in the third set. After the match, which many people felt was the best of the tournament (to- day's contests not withstanding) the crowd gave the two a standing ovation. Friedler and Karzen threw a scare into the UCLAns but Martin, somewhat tired from his earlier match, rallied him- self to send the Wolverines packing. It marked the first time that any of Eisner's squads or any Maize and Blue entrant had reached the semi- finals since the Wolverines' 1957 championship team. Although the Wolverines- finished with 17 points and will wind up in either fourth or fifth place, (compared to last year's total of 19 and third place), in many respects this year's performance was better. Michigan's Victor Amaya and Jerry Karzen didn't score a point in singles competition, while the first-seeded dou- bles team of Amaya and DeJesus fell untimely in the quarter-finals to a Texas squad they had beaten earlier this year. The Wolverines can take pride in their NCAA performance in which they were the only cold climate school to finish in the top ewelve. They actually did better than Stan- ford, last year's champs, although the Cardinals returned all their big guns. ELECTRICAL METER READER Gary Miller, from Atlanta, strokes an ace on this year's championship putt-putt course at Columbus, Ohio. Miller won the Professional Putters Association finals with a 3-2 victory over Dan Anders, a sophomore at St. Petersburg, Fla. College. Miller copped (count it) $50,000 while Anders won $15,000. Not bad, eh? Don't miss the nation- als-they'll be played this weekend,