Wednesday, July 7, 1976 JONES HEADS NL STAFF: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Fifteen Fidrych named to Al-Stars By The Associated Press Detroit's rookie sensation Mark "The Bird" Fidrych and five-time 20-game- winner Cat- fish Hunter head the American League's nine-man All-Star pitching staff, announced yes- terday by Boston Red Sox Man- ager Darrell Johnson. National League manager Sparky Anderson also announc- ed his staff yesterday, which includes Randy Jones, the win- ningest pitcher in the major leagues. Johnson, manager of the American Leaguers for the 47th All-Star game July 13 at Philadelphia, hopes his staff of five starters and four relievers can reverse the trend that has carried the National Leaguers to victory in 12 of the last 13 mid-sea- son games, including last year's 6-3 triumph. Besides Fidrych and Hunter, Johnson named starters Frank Tanana (California), Luis Tiant (Boston), Bill Travers (Milwau- kee). Relievers Rollie Fingers (Oak- land), Sparky Lyle (New York), Dave LaRoche (Cleveland) and Rich Gossage (Chicago) round out the staff. Fidrych, Tanana, Travers and LaRoche are new- comers to the classic. Fidrych, the exciting, non-con- formist righthander leads the regular AL pitchers with a 1.85 ERA and a 9-1 record. He has caught the imagination of thou- sands of Tiger fans who pack the stadium each time he pitch- es, and impressed almost every- one he faces. Hunter has been named to eight All-Star squads, pitched in five of the games, and lost' twice. He is 10-7 so far this year. Other starters' records: Tiant, 10-5; Tanana, 10-5; and Trav- ers, 9-6. Lyle tops the relievers with 16 saves, while Fingers has 11 and LaRoche has 10. Tanana, Travers, Lyle and LaRoche are the squad's lefties. The left - handed National Leaguer Jones is 15-3 with a 2.51 ERA this season. Join- ing him on the NL team are New York Mets Jon Matlack and Tom Seaver, Rick Rhoden (Los Angeles) Andy Messer- smith (Atlanta), John Monte- fuso (San Francisco), Woody Fryman (Montreal), and Ken Forsch (Houston). Forsch, with a 1-2record and 1.93 ERA, is the only reliever on the eight-man squad. The other records: Rhoden, 8-0, 2.76; Messersmith, 8-6, 2.37; Montefusco, 7-8, 3.31; Fryman, 8-6, 3.60; Seaver, 8-5, 2.92; Mat- lack, 10-2, 2.62. Fryman, Matlack and Jones are the lefties on the staff. -) M 'Fast, true' course awaits stellar British Open field By The Associated Press SOUTHPORT, England - The Royal Birkdale links here today looks like every's golfers dream of what a course should be on the opening day, of the 94th British Open. The 7,001 yard, par-72 course, burnished by weeks of hot sun and fanned by the lightest of breezes floating in from the sea, was playing fast and true and according to Gary Player, winner of the 1974 Open, "I am absolutely positive the tourna- ment record is going to be bro- ken." That record stands at 276,, set first by Arnold Palmer in BILLBOARD The entry deadline for summer half-term softball has been extended to 4 p.m. Thursday, July 8. Turn in en- tries at the Coliseum, Fifth and Hill Streets. For more in- formation, call 763-5195. Pictures for IM User's Pass- es will be taken Saturday, July 10 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Central Campus Rec. Bldg. This is in addition to regular business hours. Staff, faculty, alums, their spouses and non - university people "lust get a User's Pass. Call 764-8247 for the fee schedule. 1962 and equalled 11 years later by Tom Wesikopf. Both were recorded at Troon. Neither Weiskopf nor Palmer has so far ventured any pre- dictions thout what will happen to their record, although Jack Nicklaus - still the bookies' fa- vorite at 4-1 despite an unevent- ful year thus far - suggested things might not be all that easy. After a weekend practice round he said the course is playing so hard that low scores may not be the rule, especially for the long hitters who might be in danger of over-hitting the greens. Nicklaus heads a 27-man U. S. contingent that includes Tom Watson, last year's Open winner at Carnoustie; Mas- ters winner Ray Floyd; Hale Irwin, last year's Piccadilly World Match Play champion; Johnny Miller; Weiskopf, the 1973 British Open titlist, and present U.S. Open champ Jer- ry Pate. Pate is the man the gallery will be mainly interested in when the tournament begins. He left Britain last year with the record of losing all four of his Walker Cup matches, then going out in the first round of the British Amateur and failing to qualify for the British Open. Butt, after turning professional he did a complete about-face and won the U. S. Open last month. Missing this year will be Lee Trevino, who is suffering from a strained back muscle. But three former winners will be turning out once again - Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead, and South African Bobby Locke. Sarazen won the Open at Sandwich in 1932, while Snead won the first post-war Open at St. Andrews in 1946. Altogether, 155 golfers will tee off in pursuit of the $13,500 winner's check. M- / 00, - PLU S - El ST UDENT NHl( 50c Admission With Stude COMING JULY 14 a DR. BOP and TTHE HEADLINE HOURS: Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m. WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m. 516 E. 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