SPORTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, September 25, 1980 Page 11 WILD EXTRA INNING AFFAIR Tigers, Jays deadlocked at 8 By MARTHA CRALL and JON MORELAND Special to the Daily DETROIT- The Detroit Tigers and the Toronto Blue Jays were tied 8-8, af- ter nine innings last night at Tiger Stadium. The Blue Jays were unable to muster a single hit off Tiger starter Mark Fidrych. However, he walked five of the seven Jays he faced. The big blows off of Fidrych were two bases loaded, two-out walks to Al Woods and Barry Bonnell. After those two bases-on-balls, Tiger manager Sparky Anderson decided to bring in a hurler who could throw strikes. Anderson summoned reliever Jerry Ujdur, who succeeded by throwing his first pitch down the middle of the plate. The Jays' centerfielder, number eight hitter, Paul Hodgson crossed the Tigers up by recording Toronto's first base hit. The blow was a triple up the left- center field alley that knocked in the Jays' third, fourth and fifth runs. Cat- cher Ernie Whitt followed with a double to right center giving Toronto a six run lead before the Tigers' first turn at bat. The Tigers battled back to tie it up with five runs in the bottom half of the sixth inning. Steve Kemp got things started with a towering fly ball that landed in the up- per deck bleachers in right field. The clout was Kemp's 21st homer of the year and accounted for his 97th RBI of the campaign. Designated hitter Champ Summers followed with a walk and Tim Corcoran singled before Blue Jay manager Bob- by Mattick replaced starter Mike Todd with reliever Mike Barlow. John Wockenfuss followed with an in- field single, and Al Cowens came through with a base hit scoring Sum- mers and Corcoran. With Stan Papi at the plate,! Barlow uncorked a wild pitch scoring Wocken- fuss and moving Cowens to second. With still no one out, Papi laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt; moving Cowens to third. Mattick then brought on lefthander Paul Mirabella to pitch to Tiger lefty Lou Whitaker. Whitaker came through with a sacrifice to deep left field scoring Cowens and evening the score at 7-7. Both teams came with single runs in the eighth inning. The Blue Jays got theirs on a pair of singles and a ground out. The Tigers came back to tie the score when Wockenfuss launched a Mirabella fastball 15 rows deep into the left field lower deck. After Dan Petry. retired the Blue Jays one-two-three in the top of the nin- th, the Tigers mounted a threat in the bottom half of the inning. AP Photo FREE AGENT Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson, right, chatting with Houston Oilers' running back Earl Campbell yesterday at Houston during a workout session. Henderson was signed by Houston toy a contract with undisclosed terms. L i SPORTS OF THE DAILY: 'M'edges Western n field hockey debut KALAMAZOO-The Wolverine field hockey squad, in their season opener, upended Western Michigan 3-2 last night. Michigan's Marty Maugh opened the scoring for the Wolverines eight minutes into the first half. Shortly thereafter, Michigan took a 2-0 lead on Julie Forrestel's tally. However, with only two minutes remaining in the first half, Western's Margaret Hindle scored, and Michigan's lead was cut to 2-:1 at the intermission. WESTERN STARTED where they had left off, as Hindle added another goal in e first two minutes of the final half to tie the score at 2-3: The winning goal was scored by Michigan's Maugh, midway through the last half. The victory was sweet revenge for Michigan, as last year Western defeated the Wolverines in the state championship tournament. The Zinwell Award, given to the outstanding offensive and defensive players of the game, went to Maugh on offense, and Forrestel on defene. Michigan's goaltenders,1aureen Vachon and Heather Cairns,recorded seven saves, while the offense totaled 11 shots at Western's goal, 'Hollywood'signs with Oilers HOUSTON (AP)- Thomas "Hollywood" Henderson signed a contract yester- Jay with the HoustotOilers, but club officials were uncertain the National Foot- all League veteran would see action in Sunday's game against Cincinnati. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed by the Oilers, but Henderson repor- tedly took a salary cut from the $125,000 plus incentives he earned annually with the San Francisco 49ers. HENDERSON WAS SIGNED after veteran offensive guard Conway Hayman was placed on injured reserve. Hayman, a three-year starter for the Oilers, suf- fered a ruptured disc in his back and would be sidelined at least four weeks, the spokesman said. Henderson, 27, was waived by the 49ers last week. After he became a free agent Monday, he said he wanted to pay for the Oilers and offered to play free the irst two weeks. " The veteran linebacker was waived by Dallas Cowboys Coach Tom Landry last November after a series of incidents when Henderson missed practices or was late for meetings. The 49ers later signed Henderson but team officials said he missed 25 practice sessions and was waived by Coach Bill Walsh. When you need big favors you ask good friends. ~ - Awl SEPTEMBER 28 STUDENT Memberships at Ann Arbor Court Clu for a special low offer of ONLY $20.00 Our Facilities include: . Student court cost only $5.00 /hr. 12 Racquetball. Paddleball Courts Sauna & Whirlpool Marcy Exercise Equipment (Use included in membership fee.) Nautilus Fitness Center (Additional fee) No prime time on Fri., Sat., & Sun. Aerobic Dance Classes --------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - Knut III V\.W