Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 9, 1975 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 9, 1 97~ Blue netters keep winning ways By JON CHAVEZ up to the other members of the team Jesus doubles tandem which he decided When last seen the Michigan Tennis THE WOLVERINES were a bit leery to give solid performances and they not to play rather than split up. team had a 7-1 record and was in the of Notre Dame's 13-2 slate, but it was came through lifting the Wolverines to process of demolishing Wisconsin 9-0 at the Irish who were out of luck as the a 6-3 victory. TODAY the Wolverines host 1974 Big the Multi-sports building. Wolverines found their record deceptive, Ten runnerup Indiana which has a very A break in semesters has since oc- crushing them 9-0. "TENNESSEE has an excellent chance tough No. 1 singles player in Doug Sul. curred but the team hasn't been idle. In It was two weeks ago at Southern Illi- to win the Southeast Conference this livan. fact they've been quite busy as their nois that Michigan faced its first real year," asserted Eisner who is now con- Sullivan, described by Eisner as current 13-1 record should indicate. challenge in the form of Tennessee. vinced of their potential. "small, quick, and crafty" has given Since that April Saturday when they On Friday Eisner's crew took on Kan- Saturday evening Michigan met the Victor Amaya loads of trouble in their feasted on the Badgers the Wolverines sas beating them 9-0 indoors. Michigan host Salukis, a squad Eisner felt at the previous matches, but "Victor fortunate. have defeated Kalamazoo College, Notre then faced the Volunteers on a some- time was probably "the second best in ly has been able to beat him in the Dame, and a neat round-robin of oppo- what chilly Saturday morning, the midwest." past." nents coach Brian Eisner has referred to Tennessee has very good personnel He had to be pleased with the results, The Hoosiers will have good solid pea. as "the Southern Illinois Invitational." that can play great tennis on any given a 9-0 whitewashing in favor of the Maize ple down the line and will bring a little After Michigan had sent Kalamazoo day and according to Eisner, "that's and Blue. hometown flair in with them at No. S home packing with an 8-1 thrashing, the exactly what they did." "In that particular match I thought we singles in the form of Pete Casler, a Maize and Blue netters headed for South With two of Michigan's big guns, Vic- played particularly well," stated Eisner graduate of Huron High School. Bend to keep an April 29th match with tor Amaya and Eric Friedler losing at who was forced to go without Fred De- The match begins at 2:30 on the Notre Dame. No. 1 and 2 singles respectively, it was Jesus due to injury and the Amaya-De- Varsity Courts. Islanders at it again Buffa ..o ei nts onitre MONTREAL - Craig Ramsay touched off a three-goal out- burst in the first period that powered Buffalo past the Mon- treal Canadiens 4-3 and sent the Sabres into the National Hockey League Stanley Cup finals. The Sabres, who won their best-of-seven semifinal series four games to two, will face the winner of the Philadelphia-New York series. The Sabres jumpedIto a 3-1 lead in ehe first period and scored again in the second frame before withstanding a two-goal rally by the Cana- diens in the last period. Ramsay's unassisted goal, his fifth of the playoffs, came with just 2:05 elapsed and was fol- lowed by Rick Martin's fifth playoff goal at 8:51. Peter Mahovlich pulled Mon- treal to within one goal at 9:48, but Peter McNab scored for the Sabres at 17:53 to send the Sa- bres into the second period with a two-goal bulge. Center Jim Lorentz gave Buf- falo a 4-1 margin midway through the second period. Guy Lafleur started Mon- treal's third-period rally at 8:05 when he scored his 12th goal of the playoffs, but the Canadiens could not score again until just 1:015 was left when Mahovlich put in his second goal of the contest, his sixth of the playoffs. It will be the first time the Sabres have made the Stanley Cup final since joining the league in the 1970-71 season. Montreal outshot Buffalo 32- 27, but the Canadiens were un- able to solve goaltender Gerry Desjardins until the final period. There were only eight minutes of penalties called in the game, six of them against Buffalo. Can i happen? PHILADELPHIA - J. P. Pa- rise and Jude Drouin each scored a goal and an assist while goalie Glenn Resch stop- ped 28 shots as the irrepres- sible New York Islanders beat the Philadelphia Flyers 5-1 last night to hang on in the Stanley Cup semifinal playoffs. The Islanders, bent on re- peating their quarter-final round comeback from a 3-0 deficit, slashed the Flyers' advantage in this best-of-seven-game series to 3-2. The series now returns to the Islanders' Nassau Coli- seum for game six on Sun- day. A seventh game, if nec- essary, would be in Philadel- phia on Tuesday. The Flyers didn't get a shot on goal until 9:27 of the first period and that was doubtful as Resch reached over the bar to glove a shot by Reggie Leach. The Islanders took a 1-0 lead at 14:19 on a power play goal by Parise, his eighth of the playoffs. In the second period, the tem- po changed completely as the Flyers outshot the Islanders 17 6. But Resch and the defenders in front of him frustrated the defending champions. After Philadelphia exhaust- ed itself shooting at Resch, the Islanders scored on only their second shot of the per- iod, at 14:23. The Flyers finally scored a 15:10 when Bladon shot fros the right point and the puck de flected off Bob Kelly's skate into the net. Sp orts of the, Dail1yl By The Associated Press Avery Brundage dies GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany - Avery Brun- dage, the crusty American millionaire who for 20 years was the controversial president of the International Olympic Committee, died last night in this Bavarian ski resort. He was 87. Friends in Santa Barbara, Calif., where Brundage lived part time for 31 years, said he suffered a heart attack. Of- ficials at the district hospital where Brundage died did not give the cause of death. Brundage stepped down as head of the IOC in 1972 after the Summer Olympic Games at Munich, Germany. But he re- mained as honorary president of the self-perpetuating com- mittee which sets the rules and regulations for the quadrennial athletic competition among nations. When he retired, Brundage called for abolition of the Winter Olymnic Games after 1976 because of rampant com- mercialism. n-rticalarly in Alpine skiing. "There are only two kinds of competitors," Brundage said in his final speech to the IOC in August 1972. "Those free and independent individuals who are interested in sports for sports' sake, and those in sports for financial reasons. Olympic glory is for amateurs." 0 Tiant to see parents HAVANA - Sen. George McGovern said yesterday Ameri- can baseball and basketball teams may be flying to Havana soon because Fidel Castro is receptive to using sports dipolmacy for warming up relations between Cuba and the United States, and additionally, the long wait may soon be over for Luis Tiant, the ace of the Boston Red Sox' pitching staff. Reports from Havana indicated he soon will be reunited with both parents for the first time since 1960. McGovern, winding up his visit to Cuba, said Castro had agreed to grant visas to the Tiants so they can watch their son pitch. The Michigan Daily Sports Meyer bombs By The Associated Press the runs with a double,1 DETROIT - Rookie Dan Veryzer had an RBI single Meyer hit the first pitch of the Ron LeFlore delivered the f Detroit sixth inning for a home run with a 415 - foot triple run to snap a 4-4 deadlock and Tiger relief pitcher JohnI the Tigers went on to beat the y. ... .,,,:::.- Milwaukee Brewers 6-4 last night. Major Le The triumph pulled Detroit into a tie with Boston for sec- AMERICAN LEAGUE and place in the American League East race, one game behind Milwaukee. MiP 1 t. DETROITr 12z 5 .711 M E Y E R' S homer, his noston 12 9 .571 second of the season, came off Baltimore 10 13 .435 'Cleveland 10 13 .4354 reliever Jim Colburn, now 0-1. New York 10 15 .4005 The Tigers added another run in the inning when Leon Roberts Oakan est walked, stole second, took third Texas 14 51 .530 on catcher Darrell Porter's ov- Kansas City 14 13 .5191 erthrow of second base and California 13 14 .481 Minnesota 10 11 .76 scored on an infield out. Chicago 10 16 .3055 Milwaukee scored its runs on Yesterday's games a pair of two-run homers off Ti- Detroit 0, Milwaukee 4 ger starter Vern Ruhle, by Texas 5, Kansas City 3 George Scott in the fourth in- California at oakland, inc. ning and Don Money in the fifth. Today's games Texas at Detreoit, night B R E W E R starter Jim Minnesota at naltimore, twini: Chicago at Cleveland, night Slaton was lifted in the fourth Milwaukee at Kansas City, nig inning after Detroit scored four B Yoston at Califoenia, aiht New Yark at Oakland, nitht runs, getting five consecutive hits after two were out. Aure- Chicago 89 lio Rodriguez drove in two of Brewers Tom er pitched the last three innings and and struck out seven men in- final cluding six in a row, one short of the major league record for Hill- a relief pitcher. ague Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East G aW L Pet. ( - Chicago 50 0 .667 - 1 Pittsburgh 13 10 .545 1 Philadelphia 13 11 .542 3 4 New York 10 13.455 4 S1. Loeuis 9 14 .391 01' 5 Montreal 8 13 .381 6' west Los Angeles 19 10 .655 - -- Cincinnati 16 13 .55233 1 San Francisco 14 13 .519 4 San Diego 14 14 .500 4' 3 Atlanta 14 16 .007 5' 3 Houston 10 21 .323 10'. Yesterday's games Philaedlphia 6, St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 4, New York 2 Atlanta 3, San Francico2 San Diego 3, Cinrinnati 0 Only games scheduled Today's games San Diego at Chicago iht Philadelphia at Atlanta, night Cincinnati a New York, night ht Houston at Montreal, night Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, nigh ,an Franiwso at S1. Louis,ight ~Golden St. 79