100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 11, 1980 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1980-09-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


SPORTS

Page 10

Thursday, September 11, 1980

The Michigan Daily

DETROIT DROPS FOURTH IN A ROW
Tigers lose to Orioles, 8-4

By JON MORELAND
Special to the Daily
DETROIT-Despite the loss of their
manager Earl Weaver, the Baltimore
Orioles managed to defeat the Detroit
Tigers, 8-4, last night. The win com-
pleted a four-game sweep in the series
for Baltimore.'
The victory by the Orioles kept them
in second lace, three games behind the
New York Yankees, who defeated
Toronto, 7-6.
Fine technical pens The Orioles got some outstanding
from relief pitching from Tippy Martinez and
Mars-Staedtler Tim Stoddard. Jim Palmer started the
game for the Orioles, but he only last
4y/3 innings.
4,Palmer got into trouble three times in
the first four innings, but didn't allow a
" single Tiger run. It was in the fifth in-
ning, though, that Baltimore went with
Martinez.
Martinez and Stoddard combined to
MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE allow the Tigers no runs in the last four
549 E. University innings.
MATOMISATOMISATOMISATOMISATOMISATOMATOMISATOMISATOMISATOMISATOMISATOMSATOMi
or the Fines i
Japanese Food;. at an
i Affordable Price, try Misato
iYou Won't Have to Beg in
the Streets to Eat with Us!
0
MiSato .. ,
0 Japanese Restaurant
1321 S. University4
Downstairs at the Village Bell
f Tel: 665-6918H
WOIIWOIYSWOIYSWOYSIWOVSIWOVSWOivSIWOiVSIWOvSIWOYSIWOYVSIWOVSIWO

Martinez picked up the win for the
Orioles, and Stoddard was given the
save.
Weaver was tossed out of the Oriole
dugout in the bottom of the second in-
ning after he and Palmer protested
several called balls by the home plate
umpire.
The Orioles got on the scoreboard
with four runs off of Morris in the top of
the fourth inning. With one out, back to
back singles by Eddie Murray and John
Lowenstein put two runners aboard.
Oriole designated hitter Terry
Crowley followed with his ninth home
run of the year that put Baltimore in
front with a 3-0 lead.
The Tigers came up with a rally of
their own in the bottom of the fifth,
however. With one out, Rick Peters
walked and Alan Trammell singled put-
ting runners on first and third. Tiger
first baseman Tim Corcoran then
proceeded to tie the game with a three
run homer off the facing of the upper
deck in right field.
The Tigers were not through in that
inning, however. After Palmer threw
one ball to Champ Summers, the
Orioles changed pitchers bringing in
lefthandler Tippy Martinez.
Martinez completed the walk to
Summers and struck out Parrish before
issuing an RBI double to John Wocken-
fuss. That splicing line drive in the right
field corner gave the Tigers a short-
lived 4-3 advantage.
The Orioles didn't waste much time
in regaining the lead. After back to
back singles by Ken Singleton and
Murray, Tiger manager Sparkey An-
derson brought in Tom Underwood to
face Lowenstein.
After Underwood walked Lowenstein,
Anderson summoned Dave Rozema to
pitch to Crowley. The Orioles countered
by sending up Pat Kelly to face Rozema
in the bases loaded, no-out situation.
Kelly responded with his third home
run of the year-a grand slam that put
the Orioles in front 7-4.
The Tigers threatened several times
in the last four innings against the
Baltimore relievers. The most serious
threat came in the eighth against Stod-
SCORES
American League
Oakland 3, Texas 1
Chicago 4, Seattle 3
Cleveland 7, Boston 4
New York 7, Toronto 6
National League
Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 0
Montreal 4, Chicago 2
Philadelphia 5, New York 0
PITCHER
NIGHT
at
ti(;ouq
1140 South University
668-8411

dard when Lou Whitaker and Peters led
off with back to back singles. Alan
Trammell then bounced into a double
play, but walks to Corcoran and Sum-
mers loaded the bases.
With the tying run at the plate and the
crowd of 14,133 expecting some rare
late inning heroics, Parrish stepped tp
the plate.
Parrish disappointed the crowd by
striking out, his fourth fan of the
evening.
Stoddard followed by retiring the
Tigers in order in the bottom of the nin-
th to keep the Orioles within striking
distance of the Yankees.
Indians 7, Red Sox 4
CLEVELAND (AP)-Rick Waits
scattered nine hits and Bo Diaz and
Dave Rosello each drove in two runs as
the Cleveland Indians rode a five-run
sixth inning to a 7-4 victory over the
Boston Red Sox last night.
Waits, 11-13, struck out eight and
walked five as he hurled his seventh
compete game.
Phillies 5, Mets 0 t
NEW YORK (AP)-Rookie Marty
Bystrom pitched a five-hit shutout in
his first major league start and Garry
Maddox drove in two runs to help the
Philadelphia Phillies to a 5-0 victory
over the New York Mets last night.
The Phillies seventh victory in 10
games enabled them to stay within one-
half game of the first place Montreal
Expos in the National League East.

FerryField track
closes door to public,
By DAN NEWMAN
The athletic department has closed the newly-resurfaces Ferry Field
varsity track to the public, restricting its use to members of Michigan's
men's and women's track teams.
"The joggers have ruined the track," said a spokesman for the athletic
department. "If we reopened it to the public, it would cost $60,000 every two
years just to keep it up."
The track was resurfaced over the summer at a cost of $50,000 to the
department, according to associate athletic director Don Lund.
A source inside the department said the track was closed to the public in
response to two home track meets which were cancelled last spring due to
poor track conditions.
Several non-varsity runners expressed bitterness over the department's
decision to deny them use of the track. One graduate student, who asked not
to be identified, said he was told by department plant supervisor Bob Flora
that the track would be reopened to the public June 17, the date by which
resurfacing was to have been completed.
The student went on to explain that Flora told him shortly after resur-
facing had been completed that the track would be available only to team
members "because of the costs of keeping it up."
Many runners, the student said, are now running at the University's
other outdoor track, which is located on Palner Field. He added that the
Palmer track "is not nearly as good" in quality as the Ferry track.
"It's not an exact 440 (yards) and there are only three lanes," he said.
"Ferry Field was a track for runners, and I especially liked it because there
was a nice mix of people. There were the athletes, but there were also the
slightly over-weight men as well as the elderly ladies."
"With today's running craze, people feel it's their recreation track to
use," said Lund. "Every person thinks it's their track. It's not that the
athletic department is trying to be hard-nosed or anything. It's just always
supposed to have been used for intercollegiate meets."
The department may place turnstiles at the entrance to the track and
charge users a small admission fee, the department spokesman added.

e:
;.i. il

Don't hit me!
Harold Baines of the Chicago White Sox cowers away from the aggressive tag of Seattle Mariners' Dave Edler as he slides
into third with a triple in yesterday's game in Chicago. Baines' triple drove in two runs as the White Sox went on to defeat
the Mariners, 4-3.

GRIDDE PICKS

If one of the Presidential debate
topics were the Griddes and the prize
was one free one-item-pizza from Pizza
Bob's, you can bet Jimmy Carter would
be debating in no time!
You can win a pizza, too, by picking
winners from the games listed below
and turning them in to the Daily Office
420 Maynard before midnight Friday.
1. Northwestern at MICHIGAN (Pick
score)

2. Syracuse at Ohio State
3. Purdue at Wisconsin
4. Michigan State at Illinois
5. Iowa at Indiana
6. Ohio U. at Minnesota
7. California at Florida
8. Kentucky at Oklahoma
9. USC at Tennessee
10. Tulane at Stanford
11. Texas A&M at Georgia

12. Brigham Young at San Diego State
13. Eastern Michigan at Bowling Green"
14. Central Michigan at Miami (0.)
15. Rice at Clemson
16. Louisville at Florida State
17. Houston at Arizona State
18. Simon Fraser at Montana
19. Towson St. at Slippery Rock
20. DAILY LIBELS at the Mean
Machine

..i. O.i
4
/ , :'
.Ni +
,'. ;,
t
l '
p;
iSS:. .
5!'i
}' '.
T; Z ,,
y{.f.
VS
.1
.;.tY ;r' : .
< ~'. '.
. .
-::Y . ,:...: .
l::, , :.: S>
v ,?,
,' y;"?:
:" . .z
,, $33
'1
,. }
3if
a
1 . 'f'
s ,a::
,:f; i
f '4 :
f
<i
t x:
a

Le

250 OFF
STUDENT DISCOUNT
THE COMPREHENSIVE DRUG INFORMATION BOOK
FACTS AND COMPARISONS

Contains the drug information you
over 10,000 products listed...
a handy complete reference...

need to know...

Pharmacy, medical, nursing students...you need
FACTS, the most current, complete, objective
reference for prescription and OTC drugs
available. Contains comprehensive information,
comparisons on over 10,000 drugs, each grouped
according to its therapeutic category. Used by
healthcare professionals everywhere. SAVE 25%
for your very own FACTS now... in Bound or
Monthly Updated Loose-leaf.
Use this coupon to order your Facts and Comparisons
NEW 25% STUDENT DISCOUNT (Not a subscription renewal notice)

<.

YES! Please send me:

Signature

L The Loose-leaf Edition sName
(includes 11 monthly updates)
$72.00 Reg., STUDENT DISCOUNT @ $51.75 9 school

Major

I EE DInED

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan