Men's Tennis vs. Ohio State Today, 1p.m. Liberty Tennis and Fitness Club SPORTS Baseball Doubleheader vs. Siena Heights Wednesday, 1 p.m. Ray Fisher Stadium - -- - - ------------- - ---- - - -- - - The Michigan Daily Sunday, April 21, 1985 Page 8 ------------- MIDDA UGH WINS NUMBER 600 " Batsmen blast Ball State twice Special to the Daily MUNCIE, Indiana - Bud Middaugh joined an elite group of coaches yester- day when his team swept a doubleheader from Ball State by scores of 13-9 and 8-6. The Michigan head coach became the 15th active coach in Division I college baseball to top the 600 win plateau. The Wolverines took four games from Ball State over the weekend raising their record to 31-6. Ball State, mean- while dropped to 18-15. Middaugh has never won less than 30 games in a season in six years as the Wolverines field leader. SIX HOME runs paced Michigan's at- tack in the first game. First baseman Ken Hayward and second baseman C.S. Beshke both rapped two home runs while catcher Randy Wolfe and left fielder Mike Watters each hit solo shots. Beshke, a senior, has developed into a power hitter over the last 12 days. In a 13 game period, the Birmingham native has belted six round trippers. The only other home run Beshke has hit in a Michigan uniform was in his first at bat as a freshman. Freshman Jim Agemy went the distance scattering 12 hits to win his fif- th game of the year. The righthander has yet to lose as a Wolverine. OUTFIELDER Dan Disher and cat- cher Eric Sanders paced Michigan's 12- hit attack in game two. Disher had a double, two singles, one RBI, scored two runs, and stole a base. Sanders had a triple, two singles, a sacrifice, two .RBI's, and scored one run. Sophomore Dave Karasinkski picked up the win going 5% innings. The lef- thander struck out eight, walked two, and gave up five hits. Casey Close finished the game getting his first save of the season. The Wolverines will be in Cleveland Tuesday for a doubleheader against Cleveland State. It will be Michigan's eighth straight doubleheader on the road. The team will finally come home Wednesday to meet Sienna Heights. SHARTON, FILER VAULT WOLVERINES INTO FIRST: Netiers hammer Daly Photo by DAN HABIB Wolverine Chris Tuerk soars through the air during yesterday's Red Sim- mons Invitational track meet at Ferry Field. Tluerk won the triple jump with a 33'4%2" and finished fifth in the long jump with a 17'6". Schroeder shines 0 while pacing thincdads By ADAM OCHLIS The letter of the day is J, and the Michigan men's tennis team served up just what the doctor ordered by defeating Indiana, 6-3 at the Liberty Tennis and Fitness club, behind four players, all whose first name begin with the letter J. Yesterday's victory over the Hoosiers moved the Wolverines into first place in the conference stan- dings with a 6-2 mark and knocked Indiana into second. And although the Big Ten champion is not decided until the conference meet May 10-12, Wolverine coach Brian Eisner admits that this was an important win. "THE MATCH went as I expected, and we beat an excellent team," said Eisner. "I was very pleased with our performance. We were competitive in every match and we played solid." The three match margin of victory was a result of Michigan's sweep of the doubles matches, all in straight sets. At first doubles, junior captain Jim Sharton teamed with Ed Filer in defeating the Hoosiers' Joe Christoff and Brad Pontov, 6-2, 6-3. Filer, who did not look anything like the same guy who lost to Pontov in two sets only an hour earlier, played exceptionally well with Sharton who was simply awesome. EISNER SAID of Sharton, who at first singles breezed past Christoff, 6-2, 6-0, "He's Mr. Solid. Day in and day out he does the job. He's been our most con- sistant player at the most difficult position." Also playing well was fourth singles player John Royer. Royer toyed with opponent Jeff Cohen before finishing him off, 6-3, 7-6. The sophomore from Columbus, Ohio was just glad to notch another victory. "I served real well but had a hard time returning. I hit the shots I had to hit," he said. ROYER THEN teamed with Jon Morris in second doubles action. Morris, who like Filer lost his singles match, played well with Royer in disposing of In- diana's Kim Anderson and Sven Salumaa. It was a quick trip to the showers for the Hoosier duo, as the 6- 2, 6-2 score indicates. Eisner thinks Royer could be something special: "He's a dynamic player and he has an exquisite game. He is capable of doing a lot of things on the Hoosiers court, now all he has to do is go out and do them." THE ONLY matches of the afternoon that were stretched out to three sets occured at fifth and sixth singles. At the number five position, Wolverine John Solik defeated Kim Anderson, 6-3, 4-6, 6-0 in a match that was not as close as one might think. Solik, subbing for a struggling Brad Koontz seemed to let up a little in the second set but came back strong in the third. "Solik did a .great job," said Eisner. "Koontz has not been performing as well as we'd like him to, so we gave John a shot and he was super." The only low points as far as the Wolverines are concerned were the near collapse of sixth singles player Franz Geiger and an apparent injury to Filer. Geiger walked past Gregg Anderson, 6-0, in the fir- st set but fell apart and dropped the next two, 4-6, 2-6. Filer, meanwhile hurt his elbow right before the end of his doubles match. The sophomore transfer from South Carolina is questionable for today's mat- ch against Ohio State, however the injury did not ap- pear serious. By JIM GINDIN Sue Schroeder broke a four-year- old record in the 5000-meter run yesterday, highlighting the women's track team's performance in the Red Simmons Invitational at Ferry Field. Schroeder's time of 16:29.33 won the race by 71 seconds, and shat- tered the school mark set by Boston Marathon champion Lisa Larson in 1981. It also qualified her for the NCAA national meet. "IT WAS A total surprise to us," said coach James Henry. "It was hot, humid and windy. Susie's a very small kid. We thought the wind would blow her all over the place, but it still didn't hold her back." Junior Angie Hafner also qualified for nationals, winning the high jump with a season-best leap of 5' 111". Dawn McGinnis was second with 5'10". "Normally, she's (Hafner) per- forming under a lot of pressure," said Henry. "There wasn't a large field of competitors and she knew she could win the meet with a 5'7", or lose to a teammate if anyone. Before she knew it, she was jumping at a qualifying standard." Michigan's other winners were in the mile relay (Cathy Schmidt, Dedra Bradley, Laurette Mallard, Joyce Wilson), the triple jump (Chris Tuerk - 33' 41/") and the 400 meters (Bradley -58.15 seconds). "It was a nice, low-key meet for us. It gave the girls a chance to per- form under no pressure. History has shown that they run best when the pressure isn't on, so we want to keep them as relaxed as possible," said Henry. Steverson qualifies for NCAAs Special to the Daily LAWRENCE, Kan. and EAST LANSING - The men's track team split its squad yesterday between the Kansas Relays in Lawrence, Kansas and the Michigan State In- vitational in East Lansing and got some good results in the process. Todd Steverson qualified for nationals in winning the 400-meter dash in 46.03 seconds. He was closely followed by freshman teammate Omar Davidson in 46.48 for second place at the Kansas Relays. In Lansing, Dave Hall paced the team with a first-place toss of 161 feet in the discus event. Scott Crawford won the long jump in 23' 1" and Chris Fitzpatrick finished third in the 400 meter hurdles with a season-low time of 53.5 seconds. Ha a special gift for upcommg graduates * Tigers roar back, 0 dump Roy By JIM LANTOS Special to the Daily DETROIT - It was Tiger day yesterday and the beloved World Champions proved once again the old adage, "It ain't over till it's over," still holds true. Detroit played come from behind ball throughout the entire game giving Tiger fans nothing to really cheer about through the first eight innings except for the pre-game barbershop rendition of the national anthem performed by none other than the Osmond brothers. KANSAS CITY sluggers banged away without mercy at Detroit starter Walt Terrell. First baseman Steve Balboni led the Royal attack with three hits while Jim Sundberg, Darryl Motley and Willie Wilson contributed with two hits a piece. For a while it appeared as if Kansas City had the game in the bag. By the seventh inning Royals starter Mark Gubicza had retired 21 batters, giving up only four hits in the process. The Kansas City pitcher had retired 13 in a row in fact before Darrell Evans began ds in ninth the Tiger comeback by tagging him for a solo home run into the upper deck in right in the bottom of the seventh. Leading 3-1, in the eighth, Royals manager Dick Howser sent in reliever Dan Quisenberry who led the American League last year with 44 saves. The submarine throwing righthander faltered though as Detroit pounded him hard in the last two innings. In the bottom of the eighth, third baseman Chris Pittaro began a rally by cracking an infield single. Then with two outs, shortstop Alan Trammell sent Pittaro to third with another single to center, and rightfielder Kirk Gibson sent him home with an RBI single to right. It was in the ninth, though, that the Tigers made Saturday's price of ad- mission worth every penny. Utilizing consistent hitting, Detroit hitters John- ny Grubb and Evans, each banged out singles. Chet Lemon then singled in Grubb and Pittaro drew a walk to load the bases, setting the stage for the game-winning hit which came from the bat of Lou Whitaker. Plus $400 purchase alwance** from Ford Motor Com1--pany. Blue edges White, 27-20 Vehicles Included in the Plan. You may choose am new 1985 Marquis, Cougar Topaz or Lynx. *Pre-Approved Credit. Just meet three simple conditions: " You must have verifiable employ- ment that begins within 120 days of your Your credit record, if you have one, must indi- cate payment made as agreed. **$400 Purchase Allowance. Make your best deal...use the $400 as a down payment or receive a $400 check directly from Ford after the sale. (Continued from Page 1) yarder to give him nine points total. The soccer-style kicker only played five games in high school and is presently a non-roster player. "He's done a real grain run by Jamie Morris, who finished with 53 yards on 15 carries. Blue quarterback Bob Cernak made things even scarier for his team when MFI R(:IIRYI I - I G-.0OI