I Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, April 8, 1984 I Tigers Morris no-hits White Sox, 4-0 CHICAGO (AP) - Detroit's Jack Morris overcame a spell of wildness in the fourth inning when he walked the bases loaded with nobody out and went on to pitch a no-hitter yesterday as the Tigers defeated the Chicago White Sox 4-0. Morris walked six batters and struck out eight en route to the first no-hitter of the 1984 season and the first for a Detroit pitcher since Jim Bunning did it in 1958. It was also the first no-hitter in Comiskey Park since Chicago's Joe Horlen no-hit Detroit on Sept. 10, 1967. Except for some fine plays by right fielder Kirk Gibson and first baseman Dave Bergman, a late defensive replacement, all the other defensive plays by Morris' Tiger teammates were routine.. Gibson raced back to make a fine catch of a long drive by Rudy Law in* the first inning that sent him to the right field wall. 1st Detroit pitcher to get a gem since '58 In the seventh, Morris issued his fifth walk of the game, to Greg Luzinski, whom he also walked with two outs in the ninth. After Ron Kittle flied out in the seventh, pinch-hitter Tom Paciorek hit a hard shot headed toward right field that Bergman picked off with a one-handed stab. Bergman also stole another potential hit off pinch-hitter Jerry Hairston when he grabbed his hot shot behind first base and threw to Morris covering first. MORRIS, 2-0, a 20-game winner for the Tigers last year, retired the first nine batters on this crisp, sunny day, then suddenly couldn't find the plate. He went to a 2-0 count on Law, then was charged with a third ball for going to his mouth while on the mound. After going to 3-2, Morris walked Law, then, ap- parently upset, walked Carlton Fisk and Harold Baines to load the bases.- But he got Luzinski on a comebacker,, threw home to force Law, and catcher Lance Parrish completed the double play to first. Morris struck out Ron Kit- tle to end the inning. In the ninth inning, Morris locked up the no-hitter in fairly easy fashion, as the White Sox crowd of 24,616 starting standing and cheering for him at the on the first pitch. Then Morris knocked down a smash to the mound by Baine and threw him out for the second out. Morris then went to a 3-2 count on Luzinski before walking the burly designated hitter. HE FINISHED by striking out Kittle with a breaking pitch, for his eighth strikeout of the game. After the final pitch, Morris' catcher, Parrish, charged to the mound to hug the right- hander. Morris was then engulfed by his back-slapping teammates. The Tigers made the most of their four hits off Floyd Bannister, 0-1. Che Lemon slugged a two-run homer in the second inning on a 3-2 pitch. Parrish had walked with nobody out and was on base when Lemon slugged his homer in- to the lower left field seats. In the fifth, Lemon led off with a doubled and scored on a double by Gib- son. Gibson then was sacrificed to third and scored on a fielder's choice groun- der by Lou Whitaker. start of the inning. Morris got Fisk on a tapper to first Softballers, Hoosiers go halvers By ERICK GARFIELD It was a matter of execution in Michigan's first Big Ten action of 1984. In game one, the Wolverine sof- tballers had it, and won, 4-1. In the second game, however, they didn't, and Indiana's Hoosiers swung the ax for a 6- n 0 win. ''THE FIRST GAME was really nice," said Michigan coach Bob DeCarolis. His pitching was a success, for one thing, but that wasn't all. "We needed to move the ball on the ground AP Photo and execute, and that's what we did. Defensively we made the plays. The Tiger pitcher Jack Morris celebrates after striking out Chicago's Ron Kittle difference in the second game was we to finish off a no hitter yesterday. didn't get good pitching, we didn't get good defense, and when we did get run- t -r The University of Michigan Law School Application for W Admission A Publ ication ofhe Mi i ga Dal ridaur," *rcY *31 23 o EsMen's Tennis *NETTER RELIN UISIIE pn oh' (Itthts~esQ t " he lif Trckan TTnos uidig Laser~ AS1J1J.~~D 164-O551 then ( tuab tt dO thaI' ol htttt~ 1tW0th tta tvs.Pur d nue198 u mmer - oal1 a~iga in tO hHE fies ' PI w, tt-0' I'(Ia(rzit IFod y Moch2 198 rle a sai ambles with loc h a t am I re alty s..ISe 7 usmmer Bit Annie Bo".nd usbl e t ----I- ht- saga C~re. hanw coou.t bfiR egi,.dns ' f: yagain nth R" toh~ ners on base, we didn't execute. Again- st a team like Indiana, you can't afford to do that." Michigan took the first game behind the five-hit combined pitching of Julie Clark and Linda Allen. Allen also starred at the plate in her first action against her old teammates since tran- sferring to Michigan last season, poun- ding out two doubles in the first game and two singles in the second contest. The Wolverines got on the board in the first inning when first baseman Mena Reyman tripled and then rode home on Carol Patrick's bunt single. IN THE SECOND, Allen doubled and Lisa Panetta was hit by a pitch to start it off. Missy Thomas' successful bunt loaded the bases, but Allen was then cut down at the plate attempting to score on a passed ball. Panetta scored when Mary Bitkowski reached on a fielder's choice and Thomas tallied when Alicia Seegert was safe on an error following another bunt. Reyman sacrificed Bitkowski. across the plate to end the scoring for the Wolverines-for the day, as it tur- ned out. Reyman was injured on the play when she was knocked off-balance by the Indiana first baseman while crossing the bag at first. The junior fell on her shoulder, separating it and causing DeCarolis to realign his defen- se in the second game, when back-up first baseman Vicki Morrow pitched. Reyman will be sidelined two or three weeks. Indiana's only run in the game came off Clark in the third when Mary Haslinger tripled and Linda Thaler followed with a double. Allen came on in the fourth to preserve the lead and improve her record to 5-4. THINGS WENT differently for the Wolverines in game two. Pitcher Any Unterbrink, who hurled both games, got stronger as the day went on, allowing only the four runs in the first Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Freshman Vicki Morrow displays her intensity as she comes around on a swing in yesterday's home opener against Indiana. two innings of the 14 she pitched. In the nightcap, the sophomore stymied Michigan on six hits and raised her record to 13-4 with the shutout victory. The Hoosiers gave her plenty of sup- port at the plate, the second time around, scoring two runs in each of the first, second, and fourth innings off the Wolverines' Morrow. Brenda Thaler's two-run single in the first was more Ludwig 's !_" " '6 Special to the Daily WEST LAFAYETTE - Freshman Steve Ludwig's two under par 69 led the Michigan men's golf team to a fourth place tie after the first round of the Purdue Invitational yesterday. 69i paces 7L The best round of Ludwig's college career put him into a two-way tie for third, just two strokes behind the first- round leader, Purdue's Brian Glasco. MICHIGAN SOPHOMORE Pete SaVarino contributed an opening round vi I M JOSTEN' S GOLD RING SALE than enough for Unterbrink. a DeCarolis was pleased to gain the split with the Hoosiers, defending Big Ten champion Hoosiers, against whom the Wolverines dropped three of four contests last season. "After a split with them," he said, "I don't feel too bad." The teams meet again today at 1:00 p.m. at the Varsity Softball Diamond. f'golfers o of 70, which tied him for fifth, while Wolverines Dan roberts, Ken Clarke Terry Povin and Chris Westfall shot 74, 76, 77 and 78 respectively. Michigan coach Jim Carras said yesterday's performance may be a strong indication of, the Wolverines' future. "I'm especially pleased with the play we've gotten from Ludwig and Savarino. Together with Dan Roberts we've got the makings of a top conten- der." The Wolverines are already a con- tender at Purdue. Their first-round total of 366 ties them with Indiana for fourth place in the 12-team meet. Michigan trails leader Purdue (354), Illinois (361), and Wisconsin (362) going into today's final round. "I'm elated with the rounds we put together today," Carras said yester day. "We've had limited play outdoor this season, yet we're only 12 strokes out of first place and five out of second. "I think we have a chance to make a move and surprise some teams tomorrow." SCORES - 6 ~1iw ttlbgtan 1taiI DELIVERS Stop by Ulrich's and see a Josten's representative on Monday, April 9 through Friday, April 13, 11:00 a.m. -,4:00 p.m. He will be glad to show you the entire line of rings from Josten's. During this week you can get $15 off 10K gold rings and $25 off all 14K gold rings. The White Lustrium ring is only $79.95 on these dates. USFL Oklahoma 20, Michigan 17 Chicago 16, San Antonio 10 (OT) Baseball National League Montreal 7, Atlanta 2 Philadelphia 9, cincinnati 1 Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles0 San Francisco 11, St. Louiseg American League Detroit 4, Chicago 0 Minnesot a13, Baltimore 4 Texas A;New York 5 (rain-5 innings)