Wednesday, June 16, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Eleven Wednesday, June 16, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Touching all NBA considers four ABA the bases teams for possible merger _ _ _imtlSeg1 It's not the same *... ... at Tiger Stadium WENT TIME-TRIPPING Monday night. It happened at Tiger Stadium and it made the whole evening worthwhile. I went back eight years, a time when they still played baseball at Michigan and Trumbull. There was something missing when we arrived at the stadium. The seats were fine, the weather hot and humid- just right for baseball. But it just wasn't the same. I sensed discontent throughout the stands. Who were these guys in the Tigers' uniforms? The double-play combination was Scrivener to Garcia to Thompson. Frank MacCormack was pitching to John Wockenfuss. The outfielders were Dan Meyer, Ron LeFlore and Rusty Staub. Something wasn't right. I first became unstuck in time for a brief, delicious moment, just before game time, when it was announced that Norm Cash was in the ballpark, broadcasting for ABC. The crowd grabbed at this nostalgic straw and gave Cash a long, friendly ovation. Everyone was smiling, and they cheered as Cash threw out the first ball. He was a link with better times, and a welcome distraction from the strangers on the field. It was like the happy, relaxed feeling you get when you see a good friend in a room full of strangers. My mood perked up. "I love Norm Cash," I said. My friends nodded their agreement as we clapped. I wanted him to go down on the field, chomping on his bubble gum, squinting at the pitcher like he used to, and then send a couple of pitches into the upper deck. I settled for a quick daydream, and then sat back to watch the game. I tried to enjoy it, but couldn't. It was a lousy game. My disenchantment reached its peak in the fourth inning when these Tigers appeared to lose control of their motor responses. The brain signals seemed to take a rest stop on the way to the muscles. First Meyer lunges at a line drive and it skids under his glove, letting the hitter take second. Kansas City's John Mayberry hounces a single to right, Staub tries to catch it with his shin and the run scores. After a force out, Hal McRae takes off for second and Wocken- fss tries to cut him down by throwing the ball to the centerfielder. It doesn't work. The next hitter walks, putting runners at first and third. The Royals, taking great delight in the Tigers' antics, force one more mistake with a double steal. Wockenfuss throws to Scrivener, whose hurried, high throw lets the runner slide home. This was cruel and unusual punishment for a Tiger fan. Cruel, wiyway-not really unusual. I lost interest in the game. I began leafing through my program, not wanting to watch what was happening on the field too closely. But in the seventh, the crowd started yelling. I looked up to see a familiar face and number. Mickey Stanley is in the on-deck circle, getting ready to pinch hit. Now I don't especially like Mickey Stanley as a ballplayer, but he is a real Tiger, a survivor of '68-that alone is something to cheer about. Me grounds out. By the ninth, Detroit is down, 5-2. Many fans have already ducked out. Staub bounces out, not running hard until he sees the first baseman bobble the ball. But then it is too late. Stanley gets another cheer as he comes up, and he promptly slams one into the corner for a double. Kansas City changes pitchers. While Alex Johnson is drawing a walk a fight breaks out inthe bleachers. Someone, apparently a cop, slugs somebody and iseems like half the bleacherites run to get in on the action. Now I'm getting interested. Rodriguez lines a single to right to load the bases and the crowd is really excited. K.C. brings in another pitcher.- Some drunk, college-age guy is on the field, waving a Tiger Pennant, e is chased off the field, but the cops lose him in the rwd. The drunk's friend bl ksthe cops' way and there ispushing, shoving and a lot of confusion, just like old times. The bleacher fight has moved under the stands. Back on the field, Ben Ogivie is taking bad swings at bad pitches and striking out. But the bases are still loaded and Ralph Houk reaches into the past for another pinch hitter, Bill Freehan. The stage is set. Everything is just right. There's Mickey Stanley edging off third and Bill Freehan settling in the batter's box. The dank has about ten cops after him, and the fans are rying to watch everything at one. I look up in the broadcast booth. Norm Cash is up out of his chair, nervously bobbing up and down on the balls of his feet and staring at the field. That's his team down there. (He needs some gum to chew, I say to myself.) Freehan makes everyone stand up with a long foul to left. Be pumps another to the same spot. People are oohing and aahing and then holding their breath as the next pitch, a curve ball, snaps sharply over the outside corner for a called third strike. And suddenly, unmercifully, it's 1976 again, and time to drive home. By The Associated Press H Y A N N I S, Mass. - National Basketball Association Commissioner Larry O'Brien said yesterday that a four-team plan for merger with the Amer- ican Basketball Association seemed to be most acceptable to both leagues. O'Brien, taking a break after a long meeting with the Board of Governors and before the start of a session with mem- bers of the ABA, including Commissioner Dave DeBuss- chere, held a news conference. He said that before any deci- sion could be made on accept- ing ABA teams into his league, a "myriad of questions have to be answered." PRIOR to the NBA's summer meetings at the Cape Cod re- sort, the NBA had been consid- ering three plans - acceptance of four, five or six ABA teams. O'Brien said that while the five and six team packages still were alive - "I wouldn't call anything dead" - he emphasiz- ed that both sides currety were focusing on the four-team concept. Under that proposed arrange- ment, the teams that would join Indiana, N.C. sign best frosh crop ROANOKE, Va. - Defending NCAA champion Indianaand At- lantic Coast Conference perren- nial contender North Carolina ted the way as college basket- ball'straditional powers grab- bed a good share of the top high school talent in this year's recruiting campaign. The annual survey by The Roanoke Times made for The Associated Press showed that Indiana and North Carolina each signed four of the top 40 high school players. The top 40 is a compilation of nine scholastic All-Ameri- ca teams, two recruiting ser- vices, and the opinions of some of the country's top college coaches. It was a bonanza year for Indiana, which graduated four starters from its undefeated team. The same was true for North Carolina, which lost only first-round draft pick Mitch Kupchak, a member of the United States Olympic team. The Hoosiers got Glen Grun- wald, a hot-shooting 6-foot-9 for- ward from Franklin Park, Ill. Ohio's Player of the Year, 6-5 Butch Carter from the tradition- al basketball hotbed of Middle- town; 6-10 Derek Holcomb, a raw-boned center from Peoria, Ill., and Mike Miday of Can- ton,'Ohio, whom one coach term- ed "a 6-7 Kent Benson." North Carolinas' quartet of prospective stars included its home state best, 6-4 John Vir- gil of Elm City; Indiana's Mr. Basketball, guard Dave Coles- cott; 6-10 Steve Krafcisin of Oak Park, Ill., and 6-6 Mike O'Koren of Jersey City, N.J. Many of the country's other powers also did well. North Carolina State got three premier play - guards Clyde The Glide Austin ofgRich- mond, Va., and Brian Walker of Lebanon, Ind., plus 6-5 Char- les Hawkeye Whitney of Hatts- vile, Md. Maryland, Louisville, UCLA and Kentucky, all familiar nam- es in college basketball, each signed two players off the list. the NBA for the 1976-77 season parently decided the would be the Denver Nuggets, plan was best. Indiana Pacers, San Antonio I N A D D I T Spurs and the New York Nets, DeBusschere, the AB this year's ABA champion. resented by assistar sioner Jim Keeler, I THAT WOULD leave out the a A four-team 10 N to A was rep- it commis- Roy Boe of Drr sms of ABA's other two franchises - Kentucky and Utah. The ABA Players Associa- tion, headed by its counsel. Prentiss Yancey, has been maintaining that if only four teams are taken into the NBA, the older league would leave it- self open to an immediate law- suit. O'Brien said that after re- viewing the merger proposals Monday night with his advisory board - William Wirtz of Chi- cago, Abe Pollin of Washington, Mike Burke of New York and William Alverson of Milwau- kee - he was awed by the number of problems facing such situations. THE COMMISSIONERS, ap- pearing tired following Monday night's long session with the ad- visory board and yesterday's lengthy session with the Board of Governors - who must ap- prove any such merger with t4 of tivotes - said the most optimistic development that could result here when the meetings end Thursday would be "an agreement to agree." "That would be the outer lim- it," he added. "I don't see how you could have a resolution within the next two days." O'Brien emphasizedthat the ABA had been encouraged to present "any and all proposals it wants" to the NBA, but ap- mew Xr . ngeW1USt- u San Antonio, Carl Scheer of Denver and Bill Eason of Indi- ana. The numerous problems still to be solved include financial matters, dispersal of players, territorial indemnification and schedule of payments.. Meanwhile, O'Brien an- nounced that the league had been enjoined from taking any action with respect to transfer- ring the Buffalo Braves fran- chise out of the upper New York State city. The action was filed in U.S. District Court in the western district of New York. Braves' owner Paul Snyder had annotunced Monday he had given Irving Cowan, owner of the Diplomat Hotel in Holly- wood, Fla., an option to buy 100 per cent of the team's stock and move the club to Holly- wood where it would play its home games in the new 15,000- seat Sportatorium. A KNOWLEDGEABLE COACH BLOOMINGTON, Ind. W - University of Indiana presi- dent John W. Ryan told football coach Lee Corso at a banquet that he would be Indiana's coach as long as he had any- thing to say about it. Corso responded by saying: "Dr. Ryan, I hope your con- tract is longer than mine." 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