teage wewe ,Jui1 F 1 rru At sm yi . 14 11976 Page Twelve t Ht M1t:.Hlt3^N L ^ILT 3C1TUrGayr ^UgUST 1'tf 1710 Detroit trims Royals, 3-2 From Wire service Reports KANSAS CITY - Consecu- tive doubles by Tom Veryzer and John Dockenfess with two out in the seventh inning pro- pelled the Detroit Tigers to a 3-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals last night. Kansas City starter Al Fitz- morris, 14-8, and Detroit's Vera Ruble, 7-9, both pitched score- less baseball through the first five innings. Chuck Scrive-er led off the Tiger sixth with a walk, and sped to third on Ron LeFlore's single, the first Detroit hit. Ben Oglivie's sacrifice fly scored Scrivener to give the Tigers a 1-0 lead. The Royals tagged Ruhle for three hits and stole three bases in the sixth, but man- aged just one run, with Fred Patek scoring on a ground ball by Al Cowens. After Wockenfiss' donble broke the 1-1 tie, the Tigers added a rnn in the secenth ooi Rusts St'ob's RI3 sin le It proved to he the wining ron when the povats cored in the bottom of the ninth on a do hie by (eor, , reP t and a simle by John 'sta-herrv off reliever John Hiller. The Royals threatened in the eighth, placing two men on base with two out, but left field- er Oglivie's diving catch of an Amos Otis line drove cooled the rally. Fitzmorris, a sinker - ball veteran sporting a 2.80 earn- ed run average prior to the game, tops among Royal start- ers, did not allow a hit and struck out four through the first five innings. Before Ron LeFlore chopped a single under the glove of shortstop Fred Patek in the sixth, Fitvmorris had permitted onl three baserunners. Willie Horton reached base leading off the second on Pa- tek's throwing error, Jason Thompson walked in the fifth and Scrivener walked leading off the sixth. Thompson, the muscular rookie first baseman whose 17 home rns rank fifth in the American League, then stole second base, his first steal of the season. Frster frolics 'W ytOK -George Foster drove in four runs and Dave Concepcion knocked in three more with two homers to lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 7-3 vic- tory last night over the New York Mets. Foster, who boosted his m a j o r league - leading RBI count to 106, and Concepcion each belted two-run homers in the sixth inning against Mickey Lolich, 7-11, to give Cincin- nati a 5-2 lead. It was Fos- ter's 27th homer of the year. Concepcion hit his first homer of the night in third to open the scoring, but the Mets pushed across two runs in the fifth to take the lead on a run-scoring error by Concepcion and a sac- rifice fly by Mike Vail. Foster drove in two more runs in the seventh with a bases loaded single after Joe Morgan was given an intentional pass Lolich. Jack Billinghamn picked up his 10th win against eight losses with relief help from Will McEnaney and Rawly Eastwick. Count cruises PHILADELPHIA-John Mon- tefusco fired a six-hitter and Darrell Evans hit his ninth home run to direct the San Francisco Giants to a 3-0 vic- tory last night over the Phila- delphia Phillies. After allowing a double to Dae Cash and a bunt single to Larry Bowa to open the game, Montefusco struck out the side and went on to record his fourth straight s h ut o u t and fourth straight victory in upping his record to 13-9. He struck out nine and walked only one. Bombers boom BLOOMINGTON, M i n n. - Graig Nettles drove in fivet runs with his 16th and 17th home runs of the season and Ed Fi- gueroa won his sixth straight game and 15th of the year as the New York Yankees beat the Minnesota Twins 9-3 last night. Nettles, a product of the Min- nesota farm system, capped a five-run first inning with a three-run homer and then slam- med a two-run shot in the eighth off reliever Bill Campbell. The 31-year-old Yankee third base- man narrowly missed a third home run in the sixth inning when a long blast went foul at the last moment. Figueroa, 15-6, won his first game in two weeks with late relief help from Sparky Lyle and tied Baltimore's Jim Pal- mer for the most victories in the American League. 3IisoE Ieavfl24e Sias vaioags% AMEICCAN iLAGUEF East W L pct. GH New York 68 44 .608 - Baltimore 56 54 .510 it Cleveland 55 57 .491 13 Detroit 55 58 .486 131 Boston 53 57 .482 14 Milwankee 47 61 .435 19 West Kansas City 68 45 .603 - Oakland 61 53 .535 7 i Minnesota 56 57 .496 12 Texas 55 58 .489 13 Chicago 49 63 .436 181 California 50 65 .435 19 Late games not included Yesterday's Gaines New York 9, Minnesota 3 Detroit 3, Kansas City 2 Texas 2, Clevelandi1 Chicago 5, Baltimore 2 Boston at Oakland, n Milwaukee at California, n Today's Gaies Texas (Briles 8-8) at Cleveland (Waits 5-5). New York (Holtzman 9-8) at Minnesota (Goltz 9-11) Boston (Jenkins 11-9) at Oak- land (Buie 10-10) Chicago (Barrios 3-5 and Brett 6-7) at Baltimore (Palmer 15-10 and (Fanatan 0-3, 2 t-n (etroit (Lemanzyck 4-4) at Kan- sas City (Leonard 14-4) n Milwaukee (Slaton 12-10) at California (Kirkwood 4-9), n BACKS WOODY: NATIONAL LEAGUEF" East W L Pc( . GRt Philadet'hia 74 39 .657 - Pittsbitrh 61 52 .540 13 New Ytrk 59 58 .505 17 chieIgo 53 65 .449 231. st. Itu 48 6 vs.431 25 Mlontreal 41 69 .371 313 West Cincinnati 76 40 .656 - ios Angeles 62 53 .539 13'.. ltontit 58 60 .492 19 San Diego 57 62 .480 201/, Atlanta 53 63 .457 23 Sat Francisco 50 69 .423 27 Yesterday's Games Pittitrgh 8. Houston 5 Cincinnati 7, New York 3 Montreal 6-3, San Diego 0-4 san Francisco 3, Philadelphia 0 Chicago 3-7, Los Angeles 2-8 St. Louis 8, Atlanta 0 Today's Games Cincinnati (Zachry 11-3) at New York (Espinosa 1-2), 2:15 p.m. Los Angeles (Rau 10-9) at Chi- cago (Burris 9-11), 2:15 p.m. .Pittsburgh (Medieh 5-11) at Houston (Andujar 6-8), 3:05 p.m. San Francisco (Barr 10-8) at Philadelphia (Carlton 13-4), 7:35 St. Louis (Rasmussen 3-9) at At- lanta (Messersmith 11-9), 7:35 p.m. San Diego (Jones 18-7) at Mon- treal (Stanhouse 8-5), 8:05 p.m. Chicago Cub's Bill Madlock, right, may soon find himself eradled in the arms of Los Angeles Dodger Bill Russell if he isn't careful. When it was all over, Madlock found himself out in a run- down between first and second. There was a bright side when Madlock tallied his 12th homer, as the Cubs split a doubleheader with the Dodg ers yesterday. Archie sides with his old coach WILMINGTON, Ohio (A) - Two-time Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin, siding with his former Coach Woody Hayes, said he knows sev- eral Ohio State players who received illegal re- cruiting gifts from Michigan State University. The Cincinnati Bengals' first round draft pick said yesterday "I know several players on our team (Ohio State) who got stuff or were of- fered stuff from Michigan State. They got things like clothing but they gave it back." Declining to name the players, he said he was never approached with any illegal enticements. "THE ONLY thing I was promised by other schools, is that I would be a starter." He said a niunber of coaches, "mostly from Mid-Ameri- can schools," discouraged him from attending Ohio State. "They said I was too small to play in the Big Ten." Hayes has become embroiled in a bitter con- troversy since admitting he turned Michigan State into the NCAA for recruiting violations that led to probation for the East Lansing school. The Michigan State News, a campus newspa- per, has charged that Hayes has practiced illegal recruiting, including offering a football prospect a $50 bill to "have a good time." GRIFFIN said that if Michigan State is suc- cessful in having a counter investigation launch- ed against Ohio State "They (the NCAA) won't find anything like what happened at Michigan State." "I don't know any players who got any money from Coach Hayes or anybody at Ohio State," said Griffin. Two other former Buckeyes joined Griffin in defe-ding Hayes. Ken Kuhn, a starting linebacker for the Buck- eyes in their last three Rose Bowl appearances, called Hayes "an honest man who I can re- spect: I'll say this, if anything was going on at Ohio State, Woody Hayes would not know about it. He would stop it if he found out ab'out it." Jim Hetikko, an offensive line standout for the Buckeyes in the 1950s, described Hayes as a "Simon Pure." He said Hayes is honest . - . and he keeps everyone else who may be con- nected with recruiting honest." Griffin Hayes