Royals, Phils open tonight By LARRY FREED Over the past few seasons both the * Kansas City Royals and the Philadelphia Phillies have earned the reputation as chokers in post-season competition. But this year, both teams have hurdled the first obstacle, the divisional playoffs, and tonight are ready to vie for the World Champion- ship, the prize that has thus far eluded both teams. The Kansas City Royals got to the 77th annual World Series by knocking off; the favored New York Yankees in three straight games. It will be the first trip for the Royals to the fall classic af- ter three unsuccessful bids against the Yanks. In the National League, the Phillies didn't have as easy of a time with the Houston Astros. It took them the full five games to dispose of the cin- derella team in a series that set back fundamental baseball 20 years. The Series matches two teams that are loaded with hitting talent, but a lit- tie shallow in the pitching corps. The Royals are led by George Brett, who seems to have a lock on the MVP award after hitting .390 and driving in 118 runs. In addition to Brett, the Royals at- tack includes Willie Wilson (.326, 230 hits, 79 SB) their fleet-footed left- fielder, Willie Mays Aikens (20 HR, 98 RBI) at first base and DH Hal McRae (.297, 83 RBI). The Phillies will counter the Royals arsenal with a probably rotation of Bob Walk, Cy Young can- didate Steve Carlton, Dick Ruthven, and rookie Marty Bystrom. The designated hitter rule is once again activated for this World Series, and that should greatly improve the Phillies' attack. This will allow Manager Dallas Green to move Greg Luzinski, who is not known for his agility in left field, to the DH role while either Lonnie Smith or Greg Gross will assume Luzinski's outfield position. Other Philadelphia starters include third baseman Mike Schmidt, who was held in check by the Astro pitchers during the previous series, - first baseman Pete Rose, one of the few Philly players with World Series ex- perience, and the hitting stars of the NL playoffs, centerfielder Gary Maddox and second baseman Manny Trillo. They will be facing the well-rested pit- ching staff of the Royals that includes starters Larry Gura, Dennis Leonard, Rich Gale, and Paul Splittorff, along with relief ace Dan Quisenberry. The Series, which opens tonight at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia, will showcase two rookie managers with different coaching philosophies. Kan- sas City's Jim Frey likes to utilize his players' speed on the base paths by stealing, sacrificing, or executing the hit and run. This will put the pressure on Philadelphia's catcher Bob Boone, who stopped the Astros' runners during the NL series. If-Boone is successful in shutting down the Royals running game, it will force Frey to change his style of play and give the Phillies the edge. Dallas Green, the hard-nosed manager of the Phils, has not made many friends during his brief tenure, but he has done something former Philly skipper Danny Ozark could not do-get the team to the' World Series. Green has accomplished this task by relying on the big inning. Very few of his Phillies have the words bunt or sacrifice fly in their vocabulary. During the season when they trailed in- the late innings they depended on the longball from Schmidt (48 HR, 121 RBI) or Luzinski (19 HR). Instead of moving a runner over, Green would gamble that one of his clutch hitters, such as Bake McBride (.309), Smith (.339) or Rose (.282) would deliver. Thus far Green's tactics have worked, but during the series with the Astros, the Phillies lacked the fundamental skills began to show and if they reoccur against the Royals they probably will not be as fortunate. In a short series such as this, the out- come usually is dependent on which team has the stronger bench and pit- ching staff. Both the Royals and the Phillies have adequate depth. Kansas City will have Clint Hurdle, Pete LaCock, Dave Chalk, and Jamie Quirk do most of the pinch-hitting chores as well as the back-up work. While the Phillies will have Greg Gross, Del Un- ser, Keith Moreland and John Vuckovich coming off the bench. Both teams pitching staffs are solid but they could be vulnerable if they are forced to go to the bullpen too often. Tug McGraw, who pitched in all five playoff games, is the ace of the Phils staff and is usually called on in the late innings. If Green is forced to go to a long reliever, he will probably send for either Larry Christenson or Kevin Saucier. Ron Reed and Warren Brusstar also are available for short relief. Outside of Quisenberry, the Royals relief staff is shallow. Ken Brett, George's brother, and Marty Pattin will normally be used in long relief, while Renie' Martin, who has been inconsistent for the Royals, is the other short reliever. If the Royals could get seven or more good innings from their starters each game and the rest of the 1980 World Series goes true to form, look for the champagne to be flowing in the Royals' dressing room after game six. CLUB SPORTS ROUNDUP: Kickers jolt Way ne, 3- 1 The Michigan Soccer Club defeated Wayne State, 3-1 last Wednesday night, raising its record to 2-3. The Blue booters opened the scoring in the twentieth minute, when fullback Frank Marcis took an overlap pass from right winger Dwayne Johnson and chipped what looked to be a misguided crossing pass into the far corner of the net. FIFTEEN MINUTES later, Johnson himself tallied, converting Tim Mc- Vay's long chip. The Wolverines missed on several scoring opportunities and failed to score for the rest of theafirst half and the start of the second. Finally, 20 minutes into the second half, Stefan Mitkov, normally a fullback, slammed home Tong Park's perfect pass from 12 yards out, right in front of the net. Wayne State scored near the end of the game, beating goalie Dave Morgan (George Youanides played the first half), but it was too little, too late. Grad kickers win Veteran right winger Matt Lynes' two goals sparked the Michigan Graduate Soccer Club past the Titans from the University of Detroit, 4-2, in last Satur- day's competition in the Motor City. The grads overcame a 2-1 deficit in a sluggish first half by tallying three unanswered goals in the last stanza to preserve the first win of the season for the club. In the first half, the grads struck early when Lynes knocked in the first goal of the game off a perfect assist from captain Uwe Pleban. The Titans responded by scoring two quick goals, one on a corner kick and one on a penalty kick to seize the lead, 2-1. Fresh from some tongue lashing in a halftime bull session, the grads netted three goals in the second half. Lynes banged in a header, Pleban scored on a long assist from goalie Jay Weiss, and Mohamed Boussoufi found the corner of the net after a pass from Pleban. The grads will battle the Titans again this Saturday at home on Fuller Field at 11 a.m. Rowing club places second The Michigan rowing club returned from London, Ontario on October fifth with a surge of confidence. Both the men's and women's boats finished in second place in their meets. A real test for the crew will be this weekend when the club travels to Boston to race in the Head of the Charles. Ruggers trounce MSU The Michigan Rugby Football Club (A-squad) defeated MSU last Saturday by a score of 15-7. Leading scorer for the Wolverines was club president Dan Schimpke with 11 points. David Weber scored the remaining four. Club Sports Roundup was re- ported by Sam Sherber, Bruce Neary, Greg DeGulis, and Karen Kann. AP Photo A JUBILANT GARRY MADDOX, of the Philadelphia Phillies, is carried off the field following the Phillies 8-7 win in ten innings Sunday night in Houston. Maddox got the game winning hit to propel the Phillies into the World Series tonight against Kansas City. World Series Tonight's Game Game One Kansas City at Philadelphia, 8:30 p.m. Tomorrow's Game Game Two Kansas City at Philadelphia, 8:20 p.m. Friday's Game Game Three Philadelphia at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m. Saturday's Game Game Four Philadelphia at Kansas City, 1:45 p.m. Sunday's Game Game Five . Philadelphia at Kansas City, 3:30 p.m. (if necessary) Tuesday, Oct. 21 Game Six Kansas City at Philadelphia, 8:20 p.m. (if necessary) Wednesday, Oct. 22 Game Seven Kansas City at Philadelphia, 8:20 p.m. (if necessary) SPORTS OF THE DAILY: 0 Women linksters close on upbeat By LARRY MISHKIN Paced by the strong shooting of Elaine Satyshur and Alison Smith, the women's golf team concluded its 1980 fall season by placing third, out of 20 teams, in the Midwest Regionals held at the University of Illinois in Champaign this past weekend. Playing in what Coach Tom Simon described as "horrendous weather," the women turned in a two-day team total of 695 that was good enough for a third place finish behind the winning Ohio State teams' 670 and Marshall Univer- sity's 677. Satyshur and Smith were the low scorers for Michigan turning in 86, 85 and 87, 84 respectively. The other Michigan scores were Linda Drillock 87, 88; Karyn Colbert 91, 88; and Elaine Crosby 90,92. "I was pleased with the win," said Simon. "It showed our continuing im- provement for the last four weeks where we have finished first, sixth, fir- st, and now third." The other finishes that Simon referred to were a first place finish in the A.I.A.W. tournament at Michigan State, a sixth place finish out of 18 teams at the Spartan Invitational, and a first-place finish out of nine teams at the Central Invitational. Commenting on the season as a whole, Simon said, "We had a decent year. It was not really better than I thought it would be, but this was due mainly to our slow start. However, with our improvement during the second half of the season, we finished higher than I thought we would at mid-season. I was basically pleased with the girl's performance on the year." Simon shied away from selecting any one. of the golfers as his outstanding performer of the year explaining that it would be a close choice between three or four girls. "One would play well one week, and the next week another one would play well. This went on for the entire season. They were all very close in ability and it would be very hard to say one was bet- ter than the other," Simon said. Looking ahead to next spring, Simon said, "The girls will definitely be prepared for their spring season. They will be involved in a program all winter designed to improve their strokes, This should help bring their scores down." With the fall season ending this past weekend, Simon has already begun recruiting golfers for next year's team. "I have my sights on a couple of girls who could really help this team a lot. We'll just have to wait and see if we can get them," he said., This spring, Simon will only lose two team members, Crosby and Smith, to graduation so he will have Drillock, Satyshar, and Colbert all returning with a year of experience. Because of this and his optimistic outlook on recruiting, Simon anticipates a suc- cessful fall season next year for his team. "If we get these recruits and if the girls work hard this winter and spring, we should have a very good fall season next year," he said. Women harriers place first The University of Michigan Women's cross country team took first place in the Western Michigan Invitational on a cold rainy day in Kalamazoo last Saturday. A total of seven teams competed in the event. Second in the field, behind Michigan, was Bowling Green led by the excellent performance of Betsy Ryan who finished first. Behind Ryan, Michigan runners Melanie Weaver and Suzanne Fredericks tied for second, with Lisa Larsen in fourth. Most of the other Wolverines were bunched in between 10th and 18th place. Keeping together seemed to be the Wolverine's game plan. Coach Ken Simmons said, "Our girls did really what we tried to do, stay together. This (the win) gives us a good record so far. It's not bad for the second year as a team." Last week, Michigan took second at the Michigan State Invitational. The other Michigan runners that placed in the top twenty at Kalamazoo on Saturday included Lynn Fudala (10th), Josie Von Voighlander (13th), Carol Lam (16th), Annette Penilo (17th), and Ingred Rader (18th). Central Michigan placed third behind Michigan and Bowling Green. The other teams that competed in order of finish were Western Michigan, Ferris State, Calvin College and Spring Arbor. The Wolverines travel to Columbus Saturday to compete in the Big Ten Championships. TUESDAY SPECIAL ALL PAINTER PANTS 25 % off :BIUOUR( nickels arcade A r- Rent a Car from Econo-Car Econo-Car 438 W. Huron 761-8845 ECCOfO-CAR A GFLCO COMPANY U of M students 19 years old and older Rent a Ford or another fine car Beginning October 13, 1980 The LSA Internship Program Will Be Accepting Applications for Summer and Fall Internships, 1981 October 13-Applications available in 460 Lorch Hall November 3-Final deadline for applying APPLICATIONS and INFORMATION available in 460 LORCH HALL THE BEST HAIRCUT OF YOUR LIFE ...or your money back! We honor GRIDDE PICKS "Aw, c'mon! I did the best I've ever done this week and you're gonna sit there and tell me that I didn't win?!" "Sorry, but this week's winner was Steve Hirtle of 580 Union Drive. He picked the winners of 17 games last week." 0 "Well I picked 17 winners, too! How come I'm not the winner?" "I told you, in case of a tie, the per- son with the closest prediction on the score of Michigan's game is the winner. You said that Michigan would win, 73-0. Sony, Bo, but Steve was just a bit closer! "Well, I'm gonna win this week, I'll tell you that right now." If you would like to beat Bo and win this week's free pizza from Pizza Bob's, 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. N(. Carolina St. at N. Carolina Florida at Mississippi Wake Forest at Maryland Baylor at Texas A&M Washington at Stanford Columbia at Yale Long Beach St. at San Jose St. Kentucky at LSU Syracuse at Penn St. Edinboro St. at Slippery Rock DAILY LIBELS at Little Brown Jugs . %r / -7-, I-:.-,. . a' The M AIZE iscoming .. . Fridnv fl.* 1 7 f//t T. I i 'egnn -+ -,. It, +;__ nh-m-r - -1. - n- A;ti^r -r art rh r , t I