Page 10-Wednesday, October 14, 1981-The Michigan Daily L.A. tops Expos, 5-1 Yanks beat A's, 3-1 THIS BUD'S FOR YOU By BUDDY MOOREHOUSE mm 4t. -7m LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ron Cey, who hadn't swung at bat in a game in more than a month, lined a run-scoring double, and Pedro Guerrero and Mike Scioscia hit consecutive eighth-inning home runs yesterday to back Burt Hooton and the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 5-1 victory over the Montreal Expos in the first game of their National League Championship series. Both Eighth inning homers came af- ter two were out. Cey started the uprising with a single to center and Guerrero followed with his homer to left off reliever Jeff Reardon who replaced started Bill Gullickson. Scioscia then belted his shot to right- center. The Expos were shut out until the nin- th inning when they scored their lone run on doubles by Gary Carter and Larry Parrish. That was only the four- th run off Dodgers pitching in the last 51 innings. Game Two of the best-of-five series is scheduled for tomorrow night at Dodger Stadium Yankees 3, A's 1 NEW YORK (AP) - Graig Nettles, a batting flop in the East Division playof- fs, hammered a three-run double with two out in the first inning and the New York Yankees went on to defeat the Oakland A's 3-1 last night in the opening game of the American League Championship Series. Veteran left-hander Tommy John, his sinker pitch working to perfection, scattered six hits in six innings and was nicked for a run in the fifth on Dwayne Murphy's RBI grounder. Ron Davis and Rich Gossage, New York's bullpen aces, held Oakland hitless over the final three innings. The second game of the best-of-five series is scheduled for Yankee Stadium Wednesday afternoon with Oakland right-hander Steve McCatty opposing another New York left-hander, Rudy May. The rest of the series will be played in Oakland beginning Thursday night. AP Photo. EXPO OUTFIELDER Jerry White can't climb high enough to reach Mike Scioscia's eighth inning home run which finished the scoring in yesterday's 5-1 Dodger playoff victory over Montreal. No more powerhouses... ... parity in college football ELIEVE IT OR NOT, there once was a time when the Michigan football team didn't make its fans wait until the fourth quarter to see who was going to win the game. No matter who the opponent was, the Wolverines usually powered to an early lead so that the crowd didn't need to sit on the edge of the benches with sweaty palms until the end of the game. Michigan fans will no doubt remember those Saturdays as being fun. You could sit in the stands, reach for a beer, and by the time your attention was fixed back on the game, the Wolverines had added three more touchdowns to their tally. It was also quite fun back them to laugh at Michigan coach Bo Schem- bechler. Every week, Bo would put on his sternest face and tell the world that Northwestern, Illinois, or whoever happened to be on the Wolverines' schedule that week, was sure to be a tough opponent for his boys. Then on Saturday, Michigan would win 65-0 and everyone would walk out of the stadium chuckling at Schembechler's pessimism. Well, 1981 has arrived and no one's laughing at Bo any more. When he stands up and says that Iowa is going to be a tough opponent, people believe him, because Iowa is a tough squad. So is Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, and several other teams in the league.Like it or not, it appears as though the day of the superpower has finally come to an end. The experts gave warning Actually, the experts have been warning us for quite some time now'that parity was reaching college football, but no one really believed it. It seemed that the top teams in the country were always Alabama, Nebraska, Oklahoma, USC, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Michigan, and a few others. The only thing that ever changed was the order of finish. But this year, the evenness among the nation's teams is finally starting to show. The aforementioned kingpins are starting to be supplanted by such upstarts as Iowa State, Florida State, North Carolina, and Mississippi State, not to mention the Big Ten's Wisconsin and Iowa. It's getting to the point where it's no longer an upset when a Michigan or a Nebraska is beaten. To see that this parity has indeed arrived, one needn't look any further than the Big Ten standings. The Wisconsin Badgers, a team that made it hard in the past for anyone to keep a straight face when talking about their football, are currently sitting pretty atop the pile, with victories over Michigan, Purdue, and Ohio State to their credit. Certainly, no one would have guessed that they would be in the driver's seat for the Rose Bowl at this stage of the season. The reason that coaches and others who are familiar with college football have been saying that parity was on its.way was because of a rule initiated in the early 1970's. This change limited the number of football scholarships a school can offer to 95, down from the previous 120. That made it much harder for a powerhouse school to stock up on the high school blue-chippers. The previously weak teams were given a chance to rebuild, and the results are starting to show. The junior colleges lend an arm Another trend that has helped the weaker teams become stronger is the recent influx of college transfers to the major universities. The schools out west have been raiding the juniors for years, but it has only been recently that the teams in the midwest have caught on to this source of immediate help. Illinois started the trend and gained national attention last season with its use and misuse of juco transfer quarterback Dave Wilson. But the Illini aren't the only Big Ten team to rely on help from the junior colleges. Michigan State, Indiana, and Minnesota also start'junior college transfers, and the other schools in the league are quickly catching on to this effective rebuilding tool. Recently, Michigan battled the explosive juco connection of Babe Laufenberg to Duane Gunn. So with the nation's colleges playing football on a more even keel now, it won't be long before all the major bowls start showing new faces. The Big Ten just decided to get a head start on the rest of the country this year. 0 S 0 I EARTHWATCH A weekly series of_ environmental , talks NOT IN MY BACKYARD! The siting of hazardous wastes WED. OCT. 14-7:30 p.m. Mason Hall Rm. 443 Sponsors: Environmental Low Soci- ety, PIRGIM, MSA, LSA-SG, And LSSS. IM SCORES Monday Soccer All-Campus Jimmy Dean Machine 3, Law Gold #2 1 Williams House 1, Navy II 0 Taylor House 1, Delta Tau Delta 0 Softball Independent Beaver Patrol 11, Free Basers 2 Screw Balls 20, Alumni of Apt. C 3 Super Upers 15, True Blue 8 Fraternity Phi Gamma delta 12, Sigma Nu 7 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 21, Triangle 0 Sigma Alpha Mu 4, Beta Theta Pi'2 Zeta Beta Tau 5, Acacia 1 Residence Halls Elliot 'A' 7, Allen Rumsey 4 Fisher'A' 8, Nads 7 Chicago Blue 7, Kelsey Rt. Blue 6 71- N / ^ 14 4 .r.N .. y d j t t ., Ktf $ 11 f I 'Chen fdude I Savings are from everyday low hang-tag prices. ' TM Dolby Laboratories Fretter Appliance Co. 1981 IC YuA4,ewt and tZM4 Jnvt a 4 a/enA AW I I I F~ I - - I I