page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 18, 1976 PaeTeleTEMIHGNDAL.rdaJn.1,17 ABA merges with NBA By wThe Asocaed Pres' HYANNIS, Mass. - After nine years of bidding wars, legal squabbles, and general rivalry, the National Basketball Association and the American Basket- ball Association achieved peace yester- day in the assimilation of four ABA clubs and a pol of players into the NBA. Joining the 30-year-old NBA will be the Denver Nuggets, Indiana Pacers, New York Nets and San Antonio Spurs. That will increase the NBA's member- ship from 18 to 22 teams, with each of the league's four divisions acquiring one new club. NOT INCLUDED in the expansion agreement were the Kentucky Colonels and the Utah Rockies, the ABA's other two franchises. Both, however, will be compensated by the four departing ABA clubs for being shunted aside. The Colonels recently agreed to accept $3 million while the financial determin- ation for the Rockies, who played in St. Louis last season, has not yet been de- cided. THE MONUMENTAL decision was thrashed out in all-night discussions among the top representatives of both leagues, who met both jointly and sepa- rstelv. And when it finally came time for the NBA's Board of Governors to make its choice, the vote on the first ballot was 17-1, with only Seattle dis- senting. Afterward, both commissioners - tar- rv O'Brien of the NBA and Dave De- Busschere of the ABA - were elated that the wearying talks were successful and that an amicable accord had been reached. EACH OF the four former ABA teams will pay the NBA $3.2 million, a de- crease of $1.3 million from the original asking price. IN ADDITION to the financial pay- ments, the major points of the agree- ment included: -The players from the Kentucky and Utah teams will be placed in a pool, from which a dispersal draft will be con- docted among all 22 teams, with teams drofting in inverse order to their re- cords for the 1975-76 season. -Players remaining from the Virginia franchise, which folded after last sea- son, also will be included in the pool. Five players from the Virginia team al- ready have signed with NBA clubs. -ALL CONTRACTS of ABA players who are picked ir the dispersal draft will be honored by NBA clubs. Players not chosen become free agents, and, if they are not signed, they will be paid from a pool of money supplied by ABA owners. . -The four ABA teams joining the NBA will not share in television reve- nues for four years. -The Nets will have to pay a terri- torial indemnity to the New York Knicks for infringing on their area. The pay- ment is expected to be $4 million spread over 20 years. meaning that, with in- terest, the fee will amount to about $6 million. -All ABA rosters are to be frozen as of May 1, 1976. Twins and rain stop Tigers NCAA to seed teams in basketballtore tok urney Iy The Associated Press ITASCA, Ill. - The NCAA Division I basketball committee voted yesterday to retain its 32-team championship bracket, but took steps to insure two top teams don't meet head-on in the first round. There had been some discussion the NCAA would revise its current playoff procedures when last year it appeared No. 5 ranked Indiana and No. 2 ranked Mar- quette could have met each other in first round sectional play. But the committee voted instead to give itself authority to seed teams "in the best interests of the tournament, an NCAA spokesman said. This would make certain, he said, that top teams do not face each other in the first round. In addition the committee determined that a conference champion must win at least 60 per cent of its games to receive automatic qualification to the NCAA tourney. It granted automatic qualification to the winner of the newly formed Eastern Independent Collegiate Basketball League and reduced the number of automatic berths in the Eastern College Athletic Conference from four to three. The committee also authorized a study to look into the possibility of redrawing regional boundaries. BLOOMINGTON-The Minne- sota Twins were credited with a rain-shortened five inning vic- tory here last night by the score of 4-0. Minnesota scored two runs off loser Verne Ruhle, 5-3, in the bottom of the third inning, and chased the Tiger starter in the fifth when they loaded the bases with no-one out, After the delay, the teams re- sumed action only long enough for the Tigers to end their threat, but the Twins put two men on base in the bottom of the sixth when inclement weath- er stopped the game again. The umpires finally called the game when the rain failed to lighten. The second delay was one hour long. The four runs the Tigers ran across the plate earlier in the inning were wiped out and en- abled the Twins to claim the victory. Kuhn to give ruling The College World Series fifth-round g a m e between ( flO )I('I Arizona and Arizona State was postponed because of i rain last night. The game has been rescheduled for tonight and the winner will meet Eastern Michigan for the series title Saturday night. Jim Crawford took over in relief and surrendered two sacrifice flies upping the Min- nesota lead to 4-0. The Tigers tied it in their half of the sixth on five hits, and had Tomr Veryzer on third when rain halted the g a me for 27 By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn said yes- terday he has the right to disapprove the sales that sent three Oakland stars to teams in the American League for $3.5 million. After a 90-minute hearing, which Kuhn had called be- cause he had questions about the blockbuster sales that sent ace left-hander Vida Blue to the New York Yankees for 1.5 million and stars Rollie Fingers and Joe Rudi to Boston for $1 million apiece, the commissioner said he would decide on the matter this morning. "I have to consider these transactions in the best interest of baseball," Kuhn said, referring to his special "integrity-of-the- game" power. "I have the inherent power to do what I feel is in the best interests of baseball. Kuhn would not reveal whether he was inclined to intervene in that manner, declining to talk on the substance of the issues he was facing. "The issue is whether the assignment of the three contracts is appropriate or not under the circumstances, that's the issue I have to wrestle with," Kuhn said. Major League Standings minutes. Players blast Open course; amateur leads first round By The Associated Press DULUTH, Ga.-Mike Reid, an obscure, upstart amateur in a glamorous field of the world's finest professionals, deftly constructed a leading, three- under-par 67 yesterday while such stars as Jack Nicklaus, Hale Irwin and Arnold Palmer flailed in varying degrees of frustration during the first round of the United States Open Golf Champion- ship. Three strokes in back of him at 70 was Masters champion Ray Floyd. FURTHER BACK at 72 was leading money- winner Hubert Green, Gary Player and Ben Crenshaw. Tom Weiskopf finished double bogey-bogey for a 73. Johnny Miller completed his 18 bogey-par-dou- ble bogey and shot 74. He was joined at that figure by British Open champion Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus. REID'S SURPRISING lead, however, was not the biggest story of the day at the Atlanta Ath- letic Club course. Complaints about the condi- tion of the course-the first ever in the South to host this championship-were coming from every direction. "The worst preparation I've ever seen for an Open course," snorted Hale Irwin. "The fairways weren't cut," complained Arn- old Palmer. "There was casual water on them and it sure as hell didn't rain." Gary Player claimed, "The fairways were too long to execute the shot you were required to make." NICKLAUS - holder of 14 major profesisonal titles-echoed Palmer's statement about the fair- ways. Sandy Tatum, chairman of the United States Golf Association's tournament committee, ex- plained the three-quarter inch fairways were longer than desired due to some confusion over the size of the wheels on the gang mowers used on the fairways. The casual water resulted, he said, from some sprinklers that stuck. The controversy over the course condition oc- cupied much attention, but Nicklaus observed that "everybody has to play the same course- it's no big deal." - ---- ...-- AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB New York 34 22 .607 - Cleveland 28 t500 6 Boaston 26 29 .473 1/71 Baltimore 27 32 .457 '8 Detroit 25 31 .446 9% Milwaukee 23 30 .434 9'? West Kansas City 38 20 .655 - Texas 33 23 .59 4 Oakland 21 31 .483 10 Chicago 27 21 .412 10 Minnesota 21 30 .414 10 Calitarnia 25 3t .397 15'. Yesterdays Results New Yoek 5, Chteago 4 Minnesota 4, Detroit 0 Baltimore 4, Texas 1 Mlwaukee at Calfornia, n Boston at Oakland, a only games scheduled Today's Games Kansas city (Leonard 6-2) at Cleveland (waits 1-1), n. New York (Blue 6-6) at Chicago (Johnson 3-7), a Detroit (Roberts 5-5) at Minne- sota (Hughes 2-7), n Baltimore (May 4-3) at Texas (Umbarger 7-4), n Boston (Wise 5-3) at California (Kirkwood 1-6). a Milwaukee (Augustine 2-2) at Oakland (Torrer 6-7), n NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pet. G1 Philadelphia 41 17 .707 - Pittsburgh 34 25 .576 7' New York 32 33 .492 12' Chicago 27 33 .450 15 St. Louis 26 35 .426 16' Montreal 20 34 .370 19 West Cincinnati 39 23 .629 - Los Angeles 36 27 .571 3', San Diego 33 27 .550 5 Houston 29 34 .460 10' Atlanta 24 35 .407 13'. San Francisco 23 41 .359 17 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 3, San Francisco 2 New York 1, Los Angeles 0, 14 innings Only games scheduled Today's Games Chicago R. (Reuschel 6-4) at At- lanta (Morton 0-5), n Los Angeles (Rhoden 5-0) at Mon- treal (Fryman 7-4), n San Francisco (Dressler 1-4) at New York (Seaver 6-5), n Cincinnati (Dillingham 5-4) at Philadelphia (Lonborg 9-3), n Houston (Richard 7-6) at Pitts- burgh (Candelaria 5-4), n San Diego (Jones 12-2) at St. Louis (Falcone 4-5), n