tember 8. 1983 - Paae 7-D Michigan Baseball Statistics Hitting Name, Pos. G AB R H 2B-3B-HR SB BB RBI AVG. Rich Bair, C ............ 57 163 30 64 10-64 2 9 37 .393 Chris Sabo, 3B.......... 59 209 58 77 174-16 19 26 56 .368 Jeff Jacobson,2B....... 59 197 40 71 12-0-10 7 23 63 .360 Barry Larkin, SS....... 57 193 53 68 7-3-5 13 24 37 .352 Dan Disher, OF-P...... 39 60 14 21 3-1-1 8 3 4 .350 Ken Hayward, iB-P. 59 185 40' 62 11-1-5 7 33 50 .335 Fred Erdmann, LF ..... 49 126 23 42 8-0-4 5 26 29 .333 Mike Watters, RF...... 55 137 36 43 10-4-0 12 35 28 .314 Chuck Froning, DH..... 50 104 17 30 1-0-0 2 15 16 .288 Casey Close, OF-P...... 46 82 11 23 4-2-2 7 3 18 .280 Dale Sklar, CF..........52 122 31 34 7-2-3 5 10 15 .279 C. J. Beshke, 2B .........33 49 11 13 54-0 0 8 9 .265 Jeff Minick, OF.......... 19 19 1 8 0-0-0 0 1 4 .421 Kurt Zimmerman, 3B 18 10 6 4 1-0 3 5 2 .400 Dave Kopf, P-DH........24 21 2 8 1-1-1 0 3 3 .381 Eric Sanders, C.........18 24 4 7 1.0-0 1 3 2 .292 Dan Sygar, OF........ 48 19 23 5 2-0-0 9 6 3 .263 Chris Gust, OF.........41 21 19 2 0-0-0 5 5 1 .095 Chr Seychel,DH.......3 4 0 0 0-0-0 0 0 0 .000 Tim Karazim, P......... 21 3 0 0 0-0-0 0 0 0 .000 Scott Kamieniecki, P 15 2 0 0 0-0-0 0 0 0 .000 MarkDadabbo,C....... 8 1 2 0 0-0 0 0 0 .000 Derek Kerr, C.......... 2 1 0 0 0-0- 0 0 0 .000 MICHIGAN ............. 59 1751 424 582 100-24-51 101 243 376 .332 Opponents............. 59 1617 194 352 50-11-24 64 258 176 .218 Pitching Name G SAV W-L IP H R/E BB SO ERA John Codere.......... 2 0 040 1.3 1 0/0 0 0 0.00 Jamie Piper..........9 1 3-0 17.3 7 3/3 15 8 1.56 Gary Wayne...........15 1 7-2 69.7 54 25/14 29 51 1.81 Ken Hayward.......... 5 0 2-0 8.7 5 2/2 3 4 2.07 Scott Kamieniecki.... 14 0 5-1 57.0 39 23/18 39 46 2.84 Tim Karazim .......... 21 7 4-1 47.3 40 23/16 21 31 3.04 Dave Kopf............15 2 9-1 73.3 66 37/27 40 41 3.32 Rich Stoll............. 16 1 12-2 87.3 84 39/33 28 47 3.40 Casey Close..........14 0 5-1 51.3 36 23/20 48 32 3.51 Bill Shuta............. 10 0 3-0 21.0 12 13/12 23 16 5.14 Dan Disher............5 0 0-1 6.7 8 5/5 9 6 6.72 Dan Sygar............ 1 0 0-0 0.0 0 1/1 3 0 ee MICHIGAN........... 59 11 50-9 441.0 352 194/151 258 282 3.08 Opponents............ 59 4 9-50 421.3 582 424/345 243 181 7.37 Middaugh making By PAUL HELGREN He has only been here four years but baseball coach Bud Middaugh can already stake his claim as one of. Michigan's most successful coaches. Middaugh guided last year's team to a tie for third place in the College World Series in Omaha, the third time a Wolverine team has gone to the tour- nament under his tutelage. Michigan was also Big Ten and Mideast Regional champions, and won a record 50 games, shattering the old mark of 44 set in 1982. The 1983 season ran Middaugh's career record at Michigan to 171-57, an average of almost 43 wins per season. Yet somehow the Michigan mentor. manages to stay humble about his achievements. "OUR SUCCESS is an example of the success of this university," Middaugh said when asked if three World Series trips were a prime indicator of his suc- cess. "It's really a tribute to the univer- sity and the athletic administration. Don Canham and the whole program have really helped us." Middaugh guided his Wolverines- to the College World Series where they won two games and lost two. They defeated Maine in the opening round, 6- 5, before losing a heartbreaker, 6-5, to Alabama. They came back to crush Stanford 11-4 with a seven-run rally in the ninth inning but were them eliminated by eventual national cham- pion Texas, 4-2, two nights later. "I'm very proud of this club," Mid- daugh said after the Texas loss. "We didn't win (the Series), we thought we 'M' niane takes third at '83 World Series had a good chance to win, but I thought we had a heck of a year." Although great recruiting, sound coaching and outstanding athletes have been a Michigan baseball tradition, Middaugh has a different explanation for its frequent appearances at college baseball's most exclusive gathering. In typical Middaugh modesty coach Bud credits the fans. "The community supports us with great crowds," said the former Miami of Ohio chief. "You know, all three years we've made it to Omaha we've hosted the regional tournament, which definitely helps. The main reason we get selected by the NCAA (to host) is they know we'll get great crowds. They can't ignore that." NOR CAN ANYONE ignore the Wolverines this year. In fact, even though the season won't start until spring, Michigan is the clear favorite to repeat as Big Ten champion. They did lose, some fine players but a good recruiting year coupled with plenty of remaining talent should be enough to create another Middaugh-some team. Leading the returneees is sophomore sensation Barry Larkin. Larkin assumed the critical shortstop position as a freshman and immediately became a stalwart on defense and of- fense. The Moeller High (Cincinnati) graduate covered a lot of ground around second base and hovered around the .350 mark in batting all year. The 5-11, 175 pound Larkin was also named the Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten Tournament. Larkin solidified an infield that does have a few holes to fill. First baseman Ken Hayward, who had an up and down year at the plate but still hit well over .300, returns at first base. But co- captain second baseman Jeff Jacobson is gone and so is slugging third baseman Chris Sabo, who gave up his senior year to-sign a contract with the Cincinnati Reds. Utility infielder C. J. Beshke could fill in at second but whether he can hit well enough to stay in the lineup remains to be seen. Sophomore rightfielder Mike Watters or infielder Kurt Zimmerman could move into Sabo's position at third. LAST YEAR'S outfield was supposed to have been the weak link on the team following the graduation of Jim Paciorek and Greg Shulte. But with Fred Erdmann in left, World Series all- tournament team member Dale Sklar in, center, and Watters in right the oufield defense improved greatly. Big Ten batting champion Erdmann is gone but the other two are back and there are good players waiting in the wings. Sophomore Casey Close, who also pit- ches, looks like a solid candidate for lef- tfield. The Wolverines will also be shin- guard deep in quality catching this year. Senior Rich Bair surprised every one by leading the team in hitting last year. Bair, who was co-captain with Jacobson last year, is a good receiver who handles the pitchers well, though he has had trouble throwing runners out. Sophomore Eric Sanders was an adequate replacement for Bair last year but he may be pushed by a Mid- daugh recruit, Mike Betz. Betz, who was also an All-State quarterbak at Dearborn Edsel Ford, hit over .440 his senior year and has a rifle arm. "MIKE'S GOT the strongest arm of any of the kids," Middaugh said. "A catcher is what he's got to be." Look for Betz to be the starting catcher in1985. mark So the team in the field looks solid but as Middaugh has said at least a thousand times, "You win champion- ships with pitching and defense." If that's the case then rack up another championship for Michigan. Relief ace Tim Karazim is gone, Rich Stoll is now in the Montreal organization, and Dave Kopf went pro as well, but everyone else is back-with the addition of some new young arms. Gary Wayne, Scott Kamieniecki, and Casey Close form an outstanding rotation. Add to that the most sought af- ter high school prospect in the state of Michigan, Dave Karmasinski, and you have the makings of an excellent staff. SENIOR LEFTHANDER Wayne was the most consistent pitcher on the staff last year with a 7-2 record and a 1.84 ERA. Kamieniecki's only loss come against national champion Texas in the World Series as he posted a 5-1 record. Sophomore righthander Close was 5-1. Karasinski, a lefthander, was simply fearsome in high school. At one point in the season, the Utica High graduate struck out 138 batters in 61 innings and allowed only two runs. "He's got good poise and a major league curve ball," said Middaugh. "He could stand on the mound and tell you he was going to throw the curve ball and you wouldn't be able to hit it." All in all Middaugh's fifth Michigan team looks like it will be different from his first four-great. F$.8O a week student aid! The Detroit Free Press, Michigan's best morning newspaper, gives valuable assis- tance to students who are: Bored in Business Administration (get ex- cited with our Business Monday section and daily financial coverage!) Behind in Biology (get ahead with our highly respected Science Section!) Positively lost in Political Science (find your way to the head of the class with our national and international news cover- age, insightful editorials and well-bal- ance# team of political columnists!) Phrazzled in Phys. Ed. (let our college and pro sports coverage unphrazzle you!) Humbled in Humanities (our excellent movie, music and drama reviews will make you a critical success!) In fact, the morning Free Press will turn you into a true class act, no matter what class you're in. And you can have the Free Press delivered to your door for only $11.90 during fall semester - a savings of 80t a week! To order, call 668-6911 between 8a.m. and 4 p.m. Detrott' .free Prss Rich Stoll, the winningest pitcher in Michigan history, fires one toward home plate. U, Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK SEVEN REGULARS RETURN: Softball team ha By JIM DAVIS Depth will not be a problem for the 1983 softball squad. Coach Bob DeCarolis enters his four- th year at the helm of the Wolverines. The team posted a 32-27 record in 1983, following a 31-14 mark and a third-place finish in the AIAW national finals in 1982. SENIOR outfielders Missy Thomas, Jody Humphries, and Carol Pattrick lead the Wolverines, who return seven regulars. Thomas, a converted right-handed hitter, batted .273 from the left side of the plate and swiped 18 bases last season. The Southfield native also played catcher in addition to her out- field duties. Humphries, enters the season with 62 career RBI s, a Michigan record. The three-year starter batted a disappoin- ting .234 last season, but was second in RBI s with 17. PATRICK, after transferring from Oakland Community College, batted .277 with 22 runs scored and a team- leading 20 RBI s last season and set a Wolverines single-season record with 49 hits. Juniors Mena Reyman, Marcie Smith, and Lisa Panetta and sophomore Leslie Bean also return. Reyman, a two-year starter at first base, scored 24 runs last season and boasts a .260 career batting mark, with nine triples and four home runs. Smith -hit .247 while seeing more action as the season progressed. Panetta played shortstop and knocked in 17 runs, while Bean, playing catcher and third base, knocked in 13 runs despite being hampered by in- juries most of the season. FOUR PLAYERS graduated, including the top two pitchers. Jan Boyd rewrote the Michigan pitching record book and nnted a 1.12 ERA and 16-14 mark in Indiana. Then the attention shifted to recruiting. "We went after five people and we got them all, which is pretty unheard of when you consider the type of people that we got," DeCarolis said. Julie Clark of Howell and Vicki Morrow of Pontiac Catholic were recruited to team with Allen in shouldering the bulk of the pitching chores. -MARI FOSTER, a three-sport All-Stater, will "pitch and probably play somewhere in the infield." Martha Rogers and Alicia Seegert, both of Ann s depth Arbor Gabriel Richard, will get long looks at catcher as well as in the infield. "When we started recruiting, we were thinking that if we could get one or two of them, we would be really hap- py," said DeCarolis. But Michigan got them all, giving the Wolverines quite a lot of versatility for the new season. "The key to all these recruits and the people coming back is that we're going to be doing a lot of experimenting in the fall, move a lot of people around and see what is best," said.DeCarolis. "Depth is not gonna be a problem." THE FULL CAMPUS LIFE FOR Thomas and Humphries ... two of the top returnees you! University 'owers has newly remodeled apartments with natu- ral, earthtone carpet and luxurious oak furniture. We have the best location on campus near classes, shopping and recreational facilities including the U. of M. football stadium. Our rent is reasonable: APARTMENT 8 MO. LEASE 12 MO. LEASE 3 person/2 bedroom/mo. $485.00 $405.00 2 person/2 bedroom/mo. $490.00 $420.00 4 person/2 bedroom/mo. $515.00 $430.00 3 person/3 bedroom/mo. $555.00 $480.00 'FAikR jINtauGajtt FEA TURING: i i s