The Michigan Daily-Friday, Aprill, 1980-Page 11 EXPOS, CARDS POSE THREA T: Bucs BY MIKE WERNER A Daily Sports Analysis Opst year, the players of five National League East teams spent the month of October with their families watching the Pittsburgh Pirate "Family" on television during the league playoffs. History will repeat itself this fall unless the shoulders of pitchers Rick Rhoden and Don Robinson remain sore and keep them on the bench. The two young righthanders must successfully bver from last year's ailments and arm surgery if the Bucs are to fill the vacancy in the pitching staff caused by the departure of Bruce Kison (13-7, 3.19) to free-agency and the California Angels. , IN ALL other areas, the Pirates are solid and deep. There are few better in- fields in baseball than the Bucs' Willie Stargell, Phil Garner, Tim Foli and Bill Madlock. If anyone falters, the Pirates are loaded with quality substitutes in- ling Dale Berra, who batted .324 in I"iple-A ball last year, John Milner (.276, 16 HR, 60 RBI) and Lee Lacy (.247, 5 HR, 15 RBI). The outfield of Bill Robinson, Omar Moreno and the incomparable Dave Parker covers a lot of Three River Stadium territory and is devastating at the plate. The quantity of talent on the Pirates is exemplified by the pitching staff. The lpen, anchored by rubber-armed 'nt Tekulve (10-8, 2.75 ERA, 31 saves, 94 appearances) and featuring Enrique Romo (10-5, 3.00 ERA, 5 saves) is ex- tremely dependable. WHEN EVERYONE is healthy, the Pirates' starting rotation consists of Robinson, Rhoden, Bert Blyleven (12-5, 3.61 ERA), Jim Bibby (12-4, 2.80 ERA) and John Candelaria (14-9, 3.22 ERA). Until last year, the Montreal Expos ha' never won more than 82 games in season. Last year they won 95, and to repeat they could equal that output again, The infieldc provided they replace four key players, second basem Dan Schatzeder, Rudy May, Tony one HR, 35 RBI Perez and Dave Cash. sive whiz Ken] Pitchers Schatzeder and May could airtight. be the toughest to replace, as they com- THE REDB] bined for a 20-8 record last campaign. the lack of ac MAY (10-3, 2.30 ERA) joined the New cher .to comp] York Yankees through the free agent market. The 25-year-old Schatzeder (10-5, 2.83 ERA) was traded to the Detroit Tigers for Ron LeFlore, who had a tremendous year last season in centerfield for the Bengals, (.300, 9 HR, 57 RBI, 78 stolen bases) but will move to left with Montreal. This forces Warren Cromartie (.275, 8 HR, 46 RBI) to move to first base. The rest of the outfield is secure with Andre Dawson (.275, 25 HR, 1. Pittsl 92 RBI) in centerfield and Ellis Valen- tine (.276, 21 HR, 82 RBI) in right. 2. Monti Last year's surprise starter at second 3. St. L base, Rodney Scott, must improve on his .238 batting average .if Montreal 4. Phila fans are to forget Cash, who hit .321 in 5 Chico 92 games. Dawson, Valentine, and cat- cher Gary Carter (.283, 22 HR, 75 RBI) 6. NewI must pick up the RBI slack caused by the defection of Perez, EVEN WITHOUT Schatzeder and May, the Expos have a creditable pit- ching staff led by Bill Lee (16-10, 3.04 Littel (9-4, 2.19 ERA), Steve Rogers (13-12, 3.00 ERA) Knowles (2-5,% and Elias Sosa (8-7, 1.95 ERA, 18 Buddy Schul saves). Although the St. Louis Cardinals' lost saves)are the folk-hero Lou Brock, they more than T e starting compensated by acquiring Bobby Bon- Fulgam (10-6, ds, the only player ever to hit more than The Philadel 300 home runs and steal 400 bases during a career. serious injurie Bonds will join an awesome hitting dmsalp attack that includes veteran George WHEN HEAL Hendrick (.300, 26 HR, 75 RBI) speed- one of the mo ster Gary Templeton (.314, 9 HR, 62 baseball. RBI), NL batting champion Keith Her- The infield nandez (.344, 11 HR, 105 RBI), and the team. Pete Ros steady Ted Simmons (.283, 26 HR, 87 stolen bases)i RBI).s as East chi of Hernandez at first, an Ken Oberkfell (.301, I), Templeton and defen- Reitz at the hot corner is IRDS' main problem is capable left-handed pit- lement fireballer Mark ernsers Vage rs burgh real ouIs delphia ago York first base bag. Manny Trillo (.260, 6 HR, 42 RBI) made only ten errors at second last season. Larry Bowa (.214, 0 HR, 31 RBI, 20 stolen bases) matte even fewer errors at shortstop. Mike Schmidt (.253, 45 HR, 114 RBI) is back for another big year at third. The outfield of Greg Luzinski (.252, 18 HR, 81 RBI), Gary Maddox (.281, 13 HR, 61 RBI) and Bake McBride (.280, 12 HR, 60 RBI) should improve on last year's totals. PITCHING WILL once again be the Phil's biggest concern. Dick Ruthven, Larry Christenson, and Warren Brusstar were all plagued by injuries last season. They must recover if the Phillies are to overtake the Pirates. The Chicago Cubs have not won a pennant since 1945, but they would have collected several if the last two months of the season had been rained out. Last September the Cubs only won nine games. The main wrench in the Cub machine is the lack of starting pitchers. THE BIG GUN of the much-maligned staff is Cy Young Award winner Bruce Sutter. (6-6, 2.23 ERA, 37 saves). However, after Sutter, only Dick Tidrow (11-5, 2.71 ERA, four saves) and Rick Reuschel (18-12, 3.62 ERA) can be coun- ted on for consistency. At the plate, the Cubs' situation im- proves. Dave Kingman hit 48 home runs last year, and there's no reason why he can't do even better this season. Other standouts are: outfielder Jerry Martin (.272, 19 HR, 73 RBI) and after riding the Phillies bench for years, and first baseman Bill Buckner, who, after bat- ting only .284 last year, is looking to rebound and hit .300 for the fifth time in his career. The New York Mets are coming off their worst season since 1968. To start the new decade, the Mets changed ownership but kept their fine young manager, Joe Torre. imps TORRE'S MAIN task will be to find a capable relief pitcher to replace Skip Lockwood (2-5, 1.50 ERA), who became a free agent. Torre hopes that 24-year- old righthander Jeff Reardon (1.2, 1.71 ERA, two saves) will be the man. The Mets also need a good season from pitcher Pat Zachry, who had won 34 games the previous three years but underwent arm surgery last campaign. If Zachry recovers, some pressure will be removed from newly-signed ace Craig Swan (14-13, 3.00 ERA(. Offensively, the -Mets have many capable players, including outfielder- first baseman Lee Mazzilli. The Brooklyn-born Mazzilli hit .303 last year. Left fielder Steve Henderson (.306, 5 HR, 39 RBI, 13 stolen bases) and rightfielder Joel Youngblood (.275, 16 HR, 60 RBI) are also dangerous at the plate. Paid Political Advertisement VOTE TONI BURTON Councilwoman 2nd Ward Monday, April 7 "It's Time for a Change" Paid for by The Committee to Elect Toni Burton m 9ERA, 13 saves). Darold 4.04 ERA, 13Esaves) and :(4-3, 4.46 ERA, three two prime candidates. rotation is led by Bob , 3.83 ERA) and John 2.53 ERA). phia Phillies suffered 22 s last season, resulting in performance and the anager Danny Ozark. LTHY, the Phillies boast st impressive lineups in is the backbone of thb e (.331, 4 HR, 59 RBI, 20 returns to hold down the , ; S6 EIBERT A N rJ The Good, the Grad and the Ugli should take A STUDY BREAK WITH CINEMA thru SUNDAY . -. CLINTON, ONTIVEROS ON THE MOUND Blue has guns ready or Rockets BY MARK MIHANOVIC Fresh off a double slaughter of jwling Green Wednesday night, the 'chigan Wolverines face another twin tussle today at Fisher Stadium, this time versus Toledo (1 p.m. starting time). After splitting two with Grand Valley lastSaturdayMichigan came back on Wednesday apd drilled the Falcons to the tune of 5-0 and 11-0 behind the pit- ching of Scott Dawson and Scot Elam to bring its overall record to 9-8. The two shutouts gave the Wolverine staff three in the four games since the squad has returned from its annual Florida swing. Junior southpaw Mark Clinton. (1-2) shot the first blank at Michigan post- *< Rose replante at U. of So. Florida WEST LAFAYETTE (AP) - Purdue basketball Coach Lee Rose has:x resigned to accept the post as coach at the University of South Florida and the resignation has been accepted, Boilermaker officials said yesterday. Rose reportedly has been offered an $86,000-a-year package to make ther coaching switch, but he said Florida's warmer climate and relatives of his wife who live near Tampa were major reasons for his decision.- ROSE GUIDED the Boilermakers to a 50-18 record in his two seasons at: Purdue. That-success brought Purdue a Big Ten co-championship, a runner- up finish in the National Invitational Tour- nament and a trip to the NCAA Final Four and third place finish last month.' "It is with reluctance that I have ac- cepted Lee Rose's resignation," said Pur- due athletic director George King. "He has y given us two great seasons of basketball and I maintain that Lee Rose is one of the r finest coaches in the college game today." Rose hid two more years on the con- tract he accepted when he took the Purdue y job. 9 jb"OF COURSE, in no way would we stand in the way of Lee's wishes and am- bitions," King said. "We can only wish him the best as he pursues new career oppor- tunities." Rosea "I wouldn't trade my Purdue ex-4 ... leaves Purdue perience for anything," said Rose. "There are several reasons why I have decided to accept the head coaching position at South Florida. The three most impor- tant of which are, climate, the new Sun Belt Conference and relatives living }> x in the Tampa area." The rich four-year offer includes $28,000 in actual salary, a $10,000 ledge from New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, a house for WRose worth about $10,000, a summer camp for youngsters that generates about $10,000 and a radio-television package worth about $10,000, the St. Petersburg Times reported yesterday. Rose earns $41,000 in salary at Purdue and outside income brings him to a total estimated between $50,000 and $60,000, the newspaper reported. Rose has a 282-93 record in 13 seasons of coaching. I . Every Night II Gtering Paeof the W eek Sbi0 t3rbQA Uil beGO iub! ail +tt"1h n"A" iw w Til!W UW A-17" IMU Florida opposition with a 3-0, three-, hitter over Grand Valley. He is scheduled to pitch in the first game today, with freshman Steve Ontiveros coming on in the nightcap. Toledo mat- ches up with two lefties, sophomore Stan Clarke (0-2) and senior. Mark Blumenschein (1-1). One of the more formidable challenges the Rocket hurlers face today is that of keeping Michigan's George Foussaines off base. Thesenior shortstop went two-for-three in Wed- nesday's second game, keeping his bat- ting average well above the .400 level. "George is just an outstanding player," proclaimed Michigan coach Bud Middaugh. "He's also improved himself defensively. He's improved his lateral movement and his quickness." Middaugh is also encouraged by the bat of sophomore rightfielder Jim Paciorek, who smashed two round- trippers and totalled seven RBI's two days ago. "He has the potential to hit the long ball;" the first-year Wolverine mentor understated. "You go through streaks when you're swinging well, and he's swinging well right now. But he has im- proved as a hitter, day in and day out. As the season goes on, though, we need to have people in front of him and behind him who will produce, also." Toledo returned from their southern jaunt at 4-7. Third baseman Cliff Willis leads the regulars in hitting with a .409 average; freshman DH and leftfielder Paul Peer is swinging at a .345 clip; centerfielder Maurice Hall is at .333; and 6-3, 205- pound first baseman Don Whiting displays a .310 mark. But Rocket coach Stan Sanders believes that his team's strength this year will stand on the mound. "They (Clarke and Blumenschein) pitched fairly down south. Overall, our pitching is going to keep us in games. "I know Bud," Sanders continued, "and he always had good. teams at Miami (of Ohio). "I'm sure they (Michigan) will be a good baseball team." Middaugh is particularly pleased that his pitching staff, depleted by the losses of Steve Howe and Steve Perry, has performed so well. "The games are just well pitched. Location was good, and we didn't kick the ball around. We were also able to score runs early, and that took some pressure off of our pitchers. I was disappointed Saturday, splitting with Grand Valley, but I was pleased yesterday (Wednesday). After today's games, the Wolverine nine plays yet another twinbill Satur- day at Bowling Green, where the Falcons will surely be eager for revenge. Youplaythe leading role in our fightagainst support birth defects MARCH OF DIMEP "I Jazz Y. 'l I\1-1-1 % Qrnk a1NSS Johnny Grilfi With I yin Ronnie Mathews Ray Drummond and Special Guest Idris Muhammed Richie Cole Keeper of the Flame" Saturday ADril 12th ,8m