~1~... DINTI' Mark Mihanovic Everybody knows the type. Moments after celebrating the successful completion of Johnny Junior's toilet training, they insert a tennis racquet in- to the tyke's hand and instruct him to consider it his arm's extension, to be detached only when both hands are necessary to hold any of the hundreds of trophies he's sure to win. These parents think nothing of spending thousands of dollars on proper coaching, proper equipment, and, naturally, membership in the proper club in order that little Susie may one day be tennis' darling. But for every Tracy Austin, millions of dollars are spent on disappointment. For every John McEnroe, there are thousands of teenagers spending the Friday and Satur- day nights of their youth smashing serves and overheads, hoping in vain that someday they'll be doing the same on television. And for every Andrea Jaeger, young girls across the United States are failures at the age of 17, afraid to face the parents who feel cheated because their child didn't have what it takes to be a winner. I've often wondered what distinguishes these "tennis parents" from the average ones. I think I received a partial indication in a column written by George Puscas in yesterday's Detroit Free Press. The subject of the column: Mrs. Gloria Connors, the mother of Jimmy and the epitome of the "tennis mother." Never mind that she had Jimmy playing tennis at the age of three. Never mind that she has spared no expense for her son's tennis develop- ment, bringing in such notable figures as Pancho Gonzalez and Pancho Segura to coach Jimbo. Never mind that she sacrificed her marrige so that she could travel with Jimmy and protect him from all that is evil. These could just be expressions of her love for her son, and she does love him. What bothers me about Gloria Connors is this: "He is an extension of me .:. Don't underestimate me. I am his mother, his coach, his manager, agent, chief bottlewasher and baby sitter." Jimmy Connors is 26 years old, married, and has one child. And Gloria Connors is his "baby sitter."Oh. Obviously, not all "tennis parents" carry their overbearance to this ex- treme. But the majority do see their sons and daughters as extensions of themselves. When Johnny Junior loses, he isn't nearly as unhappy as Big John. Until, of course, Big John's healthy competitive desire rubs off on his son, and Junior spits on the guy across the net when the opportunity presents itself. After all, what is Big John going to say when the boys at the club ask him how his kid fared? There are exceptions to these examples. There are parents who spend time and money on the tennis careers of their offspring simply to give them a chance to develop their talents to the fullest so that, if the opportunity for a tennis career presents'itself, they are able to make the most of it. And they deserve congratulations, because they are a minority. As for Mrs. Connors, well, I think it's time for Jimmyto give her a good spanking and send her to her room for the rest of his tennis career. Middaugh and Schembechler Conversations with baseball coach Bud Middaugh and the gridiron mentor this past week revealed a sharp contrast in philosophy. Middaugh continuously hammered at the point that whatever he does as a coach, he does for the benefit of the student athlete. Bo Schembechler, on the other hand, sees the situation in major college athletics today rendering that concept nearly impossible. The prominent coach of one of the largest and most successful football programs in the nation complained about the "bigness" of college athletics. He maintained that as long as he's expected to develop a product worthy of 100,000 people, the benefit of the individual sometimes has to take a back seat. And it's doubtful that Schembechler will have a change of attitude in the future. That is, as long as Mr. Canham is upstairs counting out the 100,000. e Eli Zaret On the strength of his performance Friday morning, WRIF-FM disc jockey Eli Zaret should be unemployed disc jockey Eli Zaret. Zaret's malicious attack on the Michigan Daily, coming after he falsely attributed a rumor that Schembechler hadsuffered a heart attack to this newspaper, was the quintessence of irresponsibility and incompetence. On second thought, maybe Zaret shouldn't be fired, after all. Maybe he just needs stricter supervision. Like a baby-sitter. Looking for work, Gloria Connors? CLINTON TWIRLS 7-0 Blue batsmen b By JON WELLS Paced by the strong right arm of junior pitcher Mark Clinton and the power of' Jim Paciorek and Fred Er- dmann, the Michigan baseball team opened its 1980 Big Ten season yester- day with a 7-0 pasting of defending con- ference champion Michigan State. In front of a large, shivering crowd at Fisher Stadium, Clinton, a righthander from Grosse Pointe, chilled the Spartan hitters for nine innings, striking out eleven, and surrendering only six singles. The shutout was the third in a row for the Wolverine hurler, spanning 22 innings. THE WIN IS the first in the Big Ten for new Michigan mentor Budd Mid- daugh, who had a few good things to say about his winning pitcher. "I think the key to a good pitcher is how he handles the tough situations and Mark (Clinton) was making the good pitch in the key situations." See Page 8 for recap of the Detroit Tigers' 8-6 loss to the Kansas City Royals. Clinton was justifiably pleased with his performance but admitted that he tired in the late innings. "I had good velocity on my fastball in the begin- ning, but relied mostly on my curve in the middle innings. In the late innings I didn't have anything." Paciorek, batting in the designated hitter slot due to a sprained right shoulder, provided the Wolverines with all the runs they would need when he launched a high drive over the left field wall for a 2-0 first inning lead. The round-tripper was Paciorek's third of the young season and boosts him into the team RBI lead with 18. FRESHMAN leftfielder Fred Er- dmann, moved over to right to replace the "ailing" Paciorek, banged out a single, double and triple, scored a run and knocked in two. In the second inning, Erdmann led off witha ground double over the first base bag, and went to third when Garry Gawrych grounded out to second. Tim Miller got the first of his two RBI's by laying down a successful safety- squeeze bunt, bringing home Erdmann with the third Michigan run. Middaugh flashed the suicide sign again in the fifth. Jeff Jacobson led off the inning with a bloop single to left- center, stole second, and scampered around to third when the Spartans' starting and losing pitcher, Jay Strother, side-armed a wild pitch. Tom Fredal, batting for Chuck Wagner, couldn't get his bat on the ball with Jacobson bearing in on him from third base, but the State catcher, Jerry Pollard, fumbled the ball for an error and the run scored. ERDMANN WAS the instigator again in the sixth when he led off with a bad hop single past first base, went to second on a sacrifice, and scored on Miller's single up the middle. The Wolverines tallied their final two runs in the seventh when Erdmann swept home Paciorek and Gerry Hool with a sinking line drive triple to center field that scooted past the diving Spar- tan centerfielder Tim Kearly. Yesterday's victory boosts Michigan's overall record to 12-9; 6-2 up The Michigan Daily-Sunday, April 13, 1980-Page'7 GEM elI State The Michigan batsmen will have a: brief respite on Tuesday when they host' Central Michigan in a doubleheader;at . Fisher Stadium, but then the team . travels west for two conference doubleheaders next weekend against Minnesota and Wisconsin. Spartan Soup - T MICHIGAN STATE- ab r It rbi. Dankovich ss ............ 4 0 1 0# Dorrb.................. 4 0 0 Robinsonlif ................4 0 1 0 Russrf.................... 4 0 0 0 x ~~Dietes2 Haines 2b .... ........4 0 0 a Mehail dh......... Kearlyci .................. 4 0 2 0 Pollard e.................. 2 0 1 0 Totals ..................... 31 0 6 0 MICHIGAN ab Erdman ... single, double, triple north and 1-0 in the conference. -Michigan State now carries a sur- prisingly poor 5-16 slate, showing little indication yet that it will successfully defend its Big Ten title. THE TWO teams will move to East Lansing tomorrow to conclude their weekend home and home series. Freshman righthander Steve Ontiveros (2-4, 2.81) will start for the Wolverines while State will throw righthander Brian Wolcott (1-2, 5.90). Although he is off to a slow start, Wolcott is a proven pitcher and should provide a tough test for the Michigan hitters in the unfrien- dly confines of Kobs Field. Schulte cf ................. wagner if ................. Foussaines ss........... Paciorek dh............. Hool c ................. Erdman rf.........:....... Gawrych 3b............: Miller 1lb................ Jacobson 2b............. Fredal If.............. Wroten pr............. Totals ................ 5 1 4 3 4 4 2 3 4 1 0 31 r 2 0 0 2 i 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 h 1 0 1 1 1 3 0 l 1 0 0 9 rhi- a 0 0 2 0 2. 0, 0 0 0 s E-Strother. LOB-Michigan State 10, Michigan 6. 2B-Erdman. 3B-Erdman. HR-Paciorek (3). SB-Jacobson 2. SH-Gawrych,Wagner, Dankovich, Miller, Pollard. IP H R ER BB SO Michigan State StrotherL (14)..........5 5 5 2 3 Butzirus............... 2% 2 2 2 1 2 Michigan Clinton W (3-2)..........9 6 0 0 3 11 WP-Clinton, Strother. BK-Clinton, HBP-(by Clinton) Pollard. T-2:11 U FIORE 2ND A T 210 Ballesteros leai AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Severiano Ballesteros continued his conquest of the 44th Masters yesterday, slashing to a third-round 68 that gave him a seven- stroke command of golf's annual spring rite. The 23-year-old Spaniard, already the British Open champion and looking for new worlds to conquer, has a 54-hole total of 203, a whopping 13 strokes under par on the famed Augusta National Golf Club course. A STRING of three consecutive bir- dies on the back nine helped put the young man in a position where the tour- nament - one of the world's most revered tests of golfing greatness - is his alone. He can win it. Or he can lose it. It is that simple. And he has an outside chance at set- ting a scoring record: The 72-hole record is 271, 17 under, set by Jack Nicklaus in 1965 and tied by Ray Floyd in 1976. Ballesteros needs a 68 in today's scheduled final round to tie it, 67 to beat it. HIS CLOSEST pursuers noted, in timidly optimistic tones, that he hasn't won it yet. "Funny things happen in golf," ob- served defending champion Fuzzy Zoeller, nine strokes behind. Ballesteros .shotat record "Seve is going to be awfully hard to catch. If a man plays that well, he deserves it,"said Ed in second alone at 210 after a 69 that included an eagle. He is playing in his first Masters. BALLESTEROS, despite his age the leading player in Europe for the past four years, built his third-round score around an overwhelming domination of the par-5 holes. He played them 5-under-par. They surrendered to his strength, finesse - and luck - birdie, eagle, birdie, birdie. As Fiori said: "I didn't expect to be in second. I'll just go out tomorrow, play my best and try to learn something." He was the only man within sight of quick-striding Ballesteros, one of the most exciting young players the game has produced in years. Eight shots back with 18 holes to play were Andy North, J. C. Snead and a pair of Australians, PGA titleholder David Graham and Jack Newton. They were tied for third at 211. North, Newton and Snead all had 69s under the gray skies that leaked a chilly drizzle most of the day. Graham had to recover from a string of three bogeys in four holes to match par-72. TIED AT 213 was a starry trio of Gary Player, a three-time winner here, Tom Watson and Hubert Green. All shot 71s. Watson, the game's best player over the last three years but now challenged for world supremacy by Ballesteros, had to recover from a triple bogey-6 on the water-guarded 12th hole to make it respectable. Five-time Masters winner Jack Nicklaus, who had worked so hard to cap his comeback in this tournament, continued to find nothing but frustration. The Golden Bear, now 40, took a 73 and was out of it at 218. One by one they disappeared and Seve kept it going. The great three-iron shot that set up the eagle on No. 8 put him out of reach. From that point on, it was no longer a question of "who" but by "how much?" Iri~sh, spank' s pikers BY KENT WALLEY The Michigan men's volleyball team failed to reach the finals of the Midwest' Intercollegiate Volleyball Association championships yesterday, bowing to Notre Dame, 16-14 and 15-11, at the Cen- tral Campus Recreation Building. Trailing 14-6 in the second game, the Wolverine spikers battled back to within three, 14-11, before succumbing to the Fighting Irish. Despite:the defeat, two Michigan players were named to the MIVA All- Star team. Scott White gained first team honors and Eric Bircstannard made the second team. While the Wolverines were being ousted, Miami was downing Northern Illinois, 15-5 and 15-10, to gain the finals. In the finals Miami easily captured the first game by a 15-6 score, but the Irish rebounded by an identical margin. The decisive game saw Notre Dame on the verge of victory at 13-10, before the Redskins, in a dramatic comeback, scored the last five points to snare the regional crown. Freshman shines in Michigan net victory Sunday Morning Funnies COMEDY & MIME TROUPE FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 8:00 PM MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM Mark Mees capped a superlative week-long number one singles effort yesterday, beating highly-regarded Ted Kauffmann of Minnesota in straight sets as the Michigan netters buried the Gophers, 7-2, at the Liberty Racquet Club. Coach Brian Eisner called Mees' second day at number one singles an "outstanding performance." Later in the afternoon, the Zanesville, Ohio freshman teamed with fellow Buckeye Dan McLaughlin to beat Greg Wickland and Brian Biermat in third doubles, 7-5, 7-5. THE WOLVERINES, ranked ninth nationally, were near top form, winning the first five singles and two of three doubles matches. At second singles, junior Matt Horwitch squeaked by Kent Helgeson, 6-4, 6-4, then paired with Michael Leach to take the number one doubles match from Kauffmann and Dave Morin 6-2, 7-6. Morin posted the only Gopher singles win, outlasting Minnesota native Louis McKee at sixth singles 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. MICHIGAN'S OTHER loss occurred at second doubles, where Tom Haney and co-captain Jack Neinken fell to Helgeson and Hokan Almstrom, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. Leach defeated Greg Wicklund at third singles, 6-2, 7-5, while Neinken and Haney recorded wins at numbers four and five, respectively. The win leaves the Blue netters with an overall record of 11-1 and an un- blemished Big Ten mark of 4-0. The team's next match is here Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. against defending MAC champion Miami of Ohio. A&M Recording Artists; FROM ENGLAND SQUvEEZE SCORES Baseball American League Kansas City 8, Detroit 6 Chicago 8, Baltimore 2 New York at Texas, ppd. rain Milwaukee 18, Boston 1 Minnesota 6, Oakland 0 National League Chicago 6, New York 3 Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 2 Philadelphia 6, Montreal 2 Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 4 " i v, 9-,O74 -v ' to AP Photo A GLUM JACK NICKLAUS watches his putt go awry yesterday at the PGA Masters championship in Augusta, Ga. The 40-year-old Golden Bear shot a third-round 73 for a total of 218, a whopping 15 strokes behind the pace- setter, 23-year-old Severiano Ballesteros of Spain. ANN ARBO POW WOW Featuring: Traditional Native American dances, danc contest ts.booths for ,rts 2nd rafts &foo 6 ) A 1~ SUN. APRIL 13 r EVERY SUNDAY we offer a , - J