The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 18, 1982-Page 9 Batsmen end skid Special to the Daily The Wolverine baseball team snap- d a three-game losing streak last fight by routing Kansas, 14-5. Greg Schulte had a double and three singles and Jim Paciorek set a career homerun Paciorek sets mark record to support the eight-hit pitching of Rich Stoll. Michigan, now 4-3. for the young season and 1-2 in the Citrus Tour- nament, got all the runs they needed in a 'seven-run second inning explosion. After the Wolverines loaded the bases on a single by Rich Bair, a walk to Tony Evans and a successful bunt by John Young, Jeff Jacobsen drove in the first run with a sacrifice fly. John Clem and Schulte then hit back - to-back singles to knock in two more runs and a perfect suicide squeeze by Chuck Froning brought in Clem and Schulte. After Chris Sabo singled to center, Jim Paciorek capped the inning with a two-run homer, his fifth in six days and 20th of his four-year career. Paciorek's round-tripper broke the record set by former Wolverine shor- tstop George Foussianes. The Michigan batsmen added four more runsin the fourth, highlighted by Evans'three-run homer,one run in the fifth and two in the sixth to put away the Jayhawks. The beneficiary of the Wolverines' 14- hit attack was Stoll, who after a shaky third inning scattered four hits and pit- ched shutout ball. Stoll, now 2-0, struck out six and walked three for the game and was helped by two double plays behind him, Michigan's first twin- killings of the season. The Wolverines will take the field against Central Michigan in Texas today at 2 p.m. Detroit time. Oh Henry! Kansas ...................104 000 0 - 5 8 3 Michigan .................070 412 x - 14 14 2 Coplen, Kroeker (2), Ackley (4), Lohr (6) and Shelley, Hoskison (6); Stoll and Bair. WP-Stoll (2-0) LP- Coplen (0-2) HR-Paciorek (5), Evans (3) GEORGETOWN CENTER Patrick Ewing will attempt to lead his Hoya teammates out of the West, Regional and in to the 'Final Four in the NCAA Tournament. For complete pairings of this weekends action, see graph at right. Paciorek ... new HR king Straight from the source's mouth 1 By RON POLLACK Reason for panic .. . e... Canham keeps his cool HE SITUATION IS repeated year after year, all across the nation. A college team is having a disappointing season and everyone is up in arms about it. The fans shout, "fire the coach." Newspapers write, "fire the coach." And finally the panicky athletic director says, "coach, you're fired." But there are exceptions to this rule, and one can be found here in Ann Ar- bor. During a losing season, Michigan Athletic Director Don Canham does not panic and he does not fire his coaches when defeats pile up. It's not as though Canham hasn't found himself in a position to do so. In the early 70's, men's basketball coach Johnny Orr was severely criticized by fans when one of his teams did not meet pre-season expectations. A "dump Orr" campaign cropped up, but Canham stuck with his coach. Last year, quite a few women's basketball players let it be known that they were unhappy with Gloria Soluk as their coach. This season, men's basket- ball mentor Bill Frieder saw his squad compile a miserable 7-20 record. In both cases, Canham never even considered making a coaching change. "I've never let anyone go for winning or losing," says Canham. "There have been other reasons though, but never for losing. With Frieder there was never a doubt that we'd keep him. And the same with Johnny Orr. "Gloria's an outstanding coach. The last person who knows what a coach is going through are the players. Nationwide, those who do complain are those who aren't getting playing time and are frustrated about that. That was the case with Gloria last year." Patience pays off At one point this season, Frieder's team owned a 1-13 record. Some coaches might have received a pink slip from a worried athletic director. Frieder received a pep talk. "After our early losses, Don would manage to find his way to my office and say to hang in there because things would get brighter and we'd upset someone," says Frieder: "He even said that it would help us in recruiting and put us in good shape for the future. As it turned out, he was right." Frieder's recruiting efforts this year are not the only example of Canham's patience paying off. The "dump Orr" campaign was only a memory when Orr's squads became one of the nation's elite in the mid 70's, including a trip to the NCAA finals in 1976..Soluk also came through for Canham, as her squad posted a 17-9 mark this season-the best record in the program's nine-year history. Another plus that goes along with a policy of not firing a coach because of a bad season or two is stability. If an athletic director has a reputation for firing coaches, a recruit may have second thoughts about signing a letter-of- intent for that school. After all, the person who is recruiting him today may be replaced with an unfamiliar face and coaching style tomorrow. "Any time you have a question mark with whether you'll return, you may have a problem with recruiting," says Frieder. Security breeds confidence But Frieder never had this problem, because Canham told him during the season that he was in no danger of being fired. With no pressure coming from the athletic director's office, Frieder was able to do his job with confidence. "When you're secure, you can handle things the right way rather than when you're in a panic situation," says Frieder. "With many programs you have instability from the athletic director on down. But here, that's ab- solutely no problem. I don't think that there are too many athletic directors who would have handled the situation as well. I don't think there's any question that he's the best athletic director in the country. Anyone will tell you that" AP Photo N ohole is an island The par 3 17th hole at the Tournament Players Club in Ponte Vedra, Fla. of- fers quite a challenge for the touring professionals. The water-engulfed green will be one of many bizarre encounters for the pros as they try to master the course for the first time ever during this weekend's Tournament Players Championship. SCORES NHL N.Y. Rangers 5, Philadelphia,2 Washington 6, Vancouver 6 Exhibition Baseball Detroit 5, Philadelphia 0 San Francisco 8. Milwaukee 5 Seatle 4, San Diego 2 Toronto 3, St. Louis 1 Texas 12, Minnesota 4 Atlanta 6.Los Angeles 2 Chicago (AL) 9, Pittsburgh 5 N.Y. Mets 5, Cincinnati 1 Baltimore 14, Kansas City 3 Technical HOUSING DIVISION MARKLEY HALL RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATIONS FOR SPRING/SUMMER 1982 Available Starting March 10, 1982 In 1500 S. A.B. 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