Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 13, 1975 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 13, 1975 FIND A BASE in any ball park and that's where you'll find the action. Cleats, dust, leather and horsehide all met in this play last night as the New York Mets' Dave King- man is tagged out at third by San Francisco's Bruce Miller. The Mets won 3-2. Roberts booms for Bengals By CLARKE COGSDLL HORTON slammed the mis- nred in the wind for a double), ': Sieciii Ta The Dotty take hetween thildhasem,,, an w-ted an, O-2 ~ul DETROIT - It was Family Night last night at Tiger Sta- dium, and the Kansas City Roy- als responded with an X-rated attack, stranding 15 baserunners on the way to a 5-0 whitewash at the hands of the Bengals. Only 7,022 souls braved tem- peratures in the upper forties, a strong wind pounding in from left field, and a three-game De- troit losing streak, to watch win- ning pitcher Vern Ruble and John Hiller struggle to a nine- hitter. If it weren't for one bad pitch, and some dubious man- againg by KC mentor Jack Mc- Keon, they might still be there. The bad pitch came in the second inning, with the count at 2-2 on Willie Horton, Tom Very- zer and Ron LeFlore on the basepaths, and two outs. Royal starter Dennis Leonard then tried to drill strike three through the letters. George Brett and the bag, into the left field corner. Both run- ners scored easily while Hor- ton, the slowest Tiger since Rocky Colavito, wisely held at first. The dubious managing came in the sixth, when ex-Wolverine Leon Roberts drilled a liner into Section 4 in the upper deck, with Nate Colbert and Bill Freehan perched on the sacks. The shot boosted Roberts' hit- tting streak to 14 games - he has yet to be collared this sea- son - but it might have been avoided. Through the first five innings, Leonard had fanned a sextet of Bengals, running into trouble only in the second. But he took nearly 90 pitches to do it, and that many pitches in that few innings usually spells fatigue. COLBERT, who had popped up twice (once of which got car- w- rzuan -/-cont intoa walk, and Bill Freehan follow- ed with a shot between short and third. But by the time the KC bullpen had someone ready, Roberts had homered, and Mickey Stanley had follow- ed with another wicked shot for a single. Ralph Houk, by contrast, yanked Ruhle without hesita- tion in the eighth, when the tir- ing hurler gave up a single to Vada Pinson and walked Cookie Rojas. Then again, Kansas City doesn't have a Hiller in its bull- pen. Hiller did face a sticky wicket in the ninth, when secondbase- man Gary Sutherland flubbed leadoff man Jim Wohlford's bouncer, and George Brett blooped a doubledown the left- field line. But the Tiger lefty whiffed the dangerous Hal Mc- Rae, got John Mayberry to tap to the mound, pitched around Harmon Killebrew, and fanned pinch hitter Amos Otis to send the folks home happy. Majfor League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East W L Pet. GB EW L Pet. G Milwaukee 16 10 .615 -. Chicago 10 9 .667 - Boston 14 10 .583 1 Pittsburgh 13 12 .520 4 DETROIT 13 12 .520 22 Philadelphia 13 14 .481 5 Baltimore 12 15 444 4/,z New York 12 14 462 5, Cleveland 11 i5 .423 5s St. Louis 12 55 .444 6 New York 11 17 .393 6 Montreal 11 14 .440 6 Weit West Oakland 17 12 .586 -- Los Angeles 22 11i.667 - Texas 17 12 086 - Cincinnati i1814.563 31, California 15 16 .484 3 Atlanta 17 17 .500 5 Kansas City 15 16.484 3 San Diego 15 16 .484 6 Minnesota 12 13 .480 3 san Francisco 14 17 .452 7 Chicago 12 17 .414 5 Houston i123 .324 11. Yesterday's Games Yesterday's Games Cincinnati at Philadelphia, ppd., Detroit 5, Kansas City 0 rain Boston at Oakland, inc. Montreal 11, Atlanta 1 New York 3, San Francisco 2 Today's Games Lu, Angeles 6, S1. Louis 4, 150isn. Kansas City (Fitzinorris 3-3) at Today's Game . Detroit (LaGrow 3-2), 8 p.m. Houston (Konieczy 1-4) at Chl- Chicago (Kaat 5-0) at Baltimore cago (stone 4-0) (Grimsley 0-4), night. Cincinnati (Nolan 1-2) at Phila- Milwaukee (Slaton.3-4) at Texas delphia (Underwood 3-3), night (Bibby 1-3), night San Diego (spillner 2-3) at Pitts- Cleveland (Peterson 2-3) at Min- burgh (Reuss 2-2), night nesota (Hughes 2-1 or Albury 2-1), Atlanta (Harrison 2-1) at Mon- night. treal (Fryman 3-0), night New York (Medich 3-4) at Califor- san Francisco (Caldwell 0-4) at nia (Ryan 6-1), night. New York Koosman 2-1), night. Boston (Wise 3-2) at Oakland Los Angeles (Hooton 0-3) at St. (Abbott 2-1), night. Louis (McGlothen 3-2), night Netters finish dual meet campaign; ag MSTJ 9-0 EAST LANSING-The Wolverine tennis team finished its dual meet season on a strong note by shellacking Michigan State 9-0 here yesterday. This left the Maize and Blue with a 16-1 dual meet record- their finest since 1957 when they won their lone NCAA crown. The Wolverines handled the Spartans easily, as all six singles matches were decided in two sets. Only the doubles match be- tween Michigan's Brad Holland and Jim Holman and the Spar- tans' Dick Callow and Kevin McNulty went three sets. "We played indoors on a surface similar to ours and felt right at home," coach Brian Eisner said. Victor Amaya and Fred DeJesus continued their winning ways by defeating Larry Stark and Tom Gudelsky 6-3 and 6-1 to push their doubles streak to 11 straight. This streak includes an im- pressive win over Stanford's John Whitlinger and John Delaney earlier this year-last year's NCAA doubles champions. The Wolverines' scheduled match with Minnesota this Satur- day was cancelled as the Big Ten tournament is now slated for that date. Michigan has dominated the Big Ten tournament the last seven years and is favored to win it again. Look Out Big Tens! SINGLES Victor Amaya d. Larry Stark, 6-0, 6-3 Fred DeJesus d..Rick Zabor, 6-0, 6-1 Eric Friedler d. Tom Gudelsky, 6-1, 6-0 Terry Karzan d. Lee Woyahn, 6-3, 6-2 Buddy Galagher d. Dick Callow, 6-3, 6-1 Jim Holman d. Kevin McNulty, 6-0, 6-2 DOUBLE Amaya & DeJesus d. Stark & Gudelsky, 6-3, 6-1 Friedler & Karean d. Zabor & Woyahn, 6-0, 6-0 Holman & Holland d. Callow & McNulty, 7-5, 2-6, 6-0 SPORTS OF THE DAILY Day of reckoning for Islanders UNIONDALE, N. Y. (P) - When the New York Islanders lost the first three games of their Na- tional Hockey League semifinal series against Philadelphia, General Manager Bill Torrey stuck his tongue firmly in his cheek and offered some hope for his team. "Now," said the bow-tied boss of the Cin- derella team, "we've got them where we want them." Down 3-0 to the Stanley Cup champion Flyers, the Islanders have bounced off the deck with three straight victories to send the series into a decisive seventh game Tuesday in Philadelphia. "We don't play hockey," said goalie Glenn Resch, who spearheaded both the comebacks. "We play miracles. I can't explain what's hap- pening. I'n just riding along with it." IV. MSU woes-football EAST LANSING (1) - Michigan State Uni- versity may need more time to complete its probe of recruting practices, the president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association said yesterday. Dr. John Fuzak, who is MSU's faculty repre- sentative to the NCAA, said the school might need an extension past the June 2 deadline. MSU President Clifton Wharton announced last month that the school was under NCAA investigation. He refused to disclose the charges against MSU, but subsequent reports indicate they involve football recruiting vio- lations. Srring football awards from Michigan Sports Information Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler has announced the winners of the Wolverines' three spring practice awards for 1975. All-Big Ten end Dan Jilek of Sterling Heights, Illinois, recpived the Meyer Morton award for the greatest development and promise. Wingback Jim Smith, from Blue Island, Illi- nois, was awarded the Frederick Matthael Award for the junior-to-be, who shows the most leadership and achievement both on the field and in the classroom. The John Maulbetsch Award, given to the best freshman who shows the most promise went to defensive back Dwight Hicks of Pennsauken, New Jersey. WHA Championship-Houston, 7, Quebec 2. Houston wins second straightf WHA title