4 Softball vs. Western Michigan Tuesday, 1 p.m. Varsity Softball Diamond SPORTS Baseball vs. Western Michigan Wednesday, 1 p.m. Ray Fisher Stadium The Michigan Daily Monday, March 31, 1986 Page 10 I 'M' batsmen sweep outclassed Adrian By SCOTT G. MILLER April Fools' Day came early for Michigan yesterday as the Wolverines annihilated Adrian College 8-2 and 11- 0 at Ray Fisher Stadium. The doubleheader sweep completed a busy weekend for coach Bud Mid- daugh's squad. On Friday, the Wolverines split a twinbill at Miami of Ohio, losing the first game, 4-3, and winning the second, 7-5. Michigan beat the Redskins twice Saturday, 10- l and 6-5. "I AM a little disappointed," said Middaugh of the weekend. "I was hopeful that we could take them all." Adrian couldn't hope to take anything. The Bulldogs resembled a softball team out for a Sunday after- noon of sun and fun. The party began when Michigan starter Kevin Gilles was chased from the mound. Gilles surrendered three hits and two runs while not retiring a batter. The bad joke seemed to be on the Wolverines. "(THEIR lead) may have startled us," said Middaugh, "but we would have been ready to play regardless." That readiness was displayed in the form of three runs in the bottom half of the first. Eight Michigan hitters came to the plate in the stanza, and the Wolverines never looked back. The first and second hitters in the lineup, center fielder Eddie Woolwine and designated hitter Kourtney Thompson, batted once in each of the first four innings. First baseman Hal Morris led the offense with two hits and two RBIs. RUSS REIN, backup quarterback on the football team, pitched three- and-one-third innings in relief for his first collegiate victory. Paul Wenson notched his first save of the season, striking out seven, including five bat- ters in a row. The second game was a laugher from start to finish. The Wolverines scored two in the first and two in the second off Bulldog starter Mike Skuratovich. Batting practice began in the third inning. Adrian relief pit- cher Steve Thallman faced ten batters and surrendered four hits and five runs. The telling blow was a Morris triple that knocked in two. While the Bulldog pitchers struggled, Michigan starter John Grettenberger breezed for five in- nings,giving up four hits and striking out six. THE WOLVERINES' total com- mand made the contest appear to be a scrimmage. "I think any time you play it is totally different than a scrimmage," said Middaugh. "Scrimmages only have certain value you can see. There is no uneasiness, and people know each other. Even if you bring in umpires it is not the same." Don't tell the Michigan players that. Though they failed to capitalize on numerous scoring opportunities, the Wolverines were as relaxed as if it were an intra-squad game. The entire team rose to cheer on the batters in the fifth and sixth innings when six straight pitchers came to the plate. Grettenberger and Greg Everson walked. Wenson flied out to center while Jim Abbott and Scott Kamieniecki grounded out. Dave Karasinski was the only one to strike out. "You can get into switches where you lose the DH," said Middaugh, "Pitchers love to hit, and they will have to be ready for the conference games." FOR THOSE conference games the team's offense must improve. Despite the 19 runs scored against Adrian, Middaugh wasn't overjoyed. "We're not hitting as aggressively as we did down South," commented the Wolverine, head man. "We're not driving the ball." Michigan hopes the aggressiveness will return as the team travels South to Bowling Green for a double header on the real April Fools' Day. Dogged R H E Adrian .................2000000 2 7 2 MICHIGAN..............320 300 X 8 10 2 Adrian: Donat,Straub (2), Burgess (4) and Rainey M: Gilles, Rein (1), Wenson (4) and Gillette WP-Rein (1-0), LP-Donat (1-2), Save-Wenson (1) R H E Adrian ................. 000 000 0 0 4 4 MICHIGAN..............225 200 X 11 10 1 Adrian: Skuratovich, Thallman (3), Pscodna (4), Hester (4) and Brownell M: Grettenberger, Wolf (6) and Campbell WP-Grettenberger (1-1), LP-Skuratovich (0-2) Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Michigan third baseman Jeff Kiel (3) chases down an Adrian baserunner between home and third during the first game of yesterday's doubleheader sweep of the Bulldogs. BATTLE OF BACKCOURTS: Cards set to Duke i*t out DALLAS (AP) - In college basketball's year of the guard, the national championship will be settled in a bat- tle of talented backcourts. Duke's All-American Johnny Dawkins and Tommy Amaker go head-to-head with Louisville's Milt Wagner and Jeff Hall tonight in the championship game of the NCAA Tournament. TOP-RANKED Duke, with an NCAA-record 37 victories in 39 games, has won 21 in a row, but a lack of height along the front line keeps some from calling it an outstanding team. Louisville Coach Denny Crum scoffs at that notion. "I hear people say that Duke is not that strong of a team," said Crum, whose team has won 16 in a row. "I think you are as good as you play, and they play very well. They just continue to win games. They have won 21 in a row, are ranked number one, and they do everything you want a basketball team to do." Dawkins, a 6-2 senior, and Amaker, a 6-0 junior, make up what might be the best backcourt in the nation. "I'M THE quarterback," Amaker said. "Johnny is the type of player who roams around the court. I'm there to let him be free." They will be facing the full-court pressure defense which led Louisville past the strongest non-conference schedule in the nation and to the Metro Confererence regular-season and tournament titles. Duke's defense, which has forced 19 turnovers a game, is keyed by its ball-hawking guards. "MILT IS a great offensive player and Louisville has two very capable guards," Dawkins said. "It's going to come down to who wants it the most. There is no easy way out." "They're both big and tall, so they definitely have the height advantage, but we've played against big backcour-i ts before," said Amaker, who leads the Atlantic Coast Con(erence champions in steals and assists. "They like to post up, too," Amaker said. "We've got to try to force them as far out on the perimeter as possible." DAWKINS, the leading scorer in Duke history and owner of a 20-point average this season, has had a hot hand in the tournament, averaging 25.8 points while hit- ting 62 percent from the field. Wagner, 6-5, a fifth-year senior, is one of five Cardinals averaging double figures with a 14.9 average. Hall, a 6-4 senior, averages 10.4 points. On the front line, Duke has 6-8 senior Mark Alarie, 17.1;4 6-5 senior David Henderson, 14.2; and 6-8 senior Jay Bilas, 6.9. The backup is Danny Ferry, a 6-10 freshman whose clutch performance helped Duke down number-two Kan- sas 71-67 in Saturday's semifinal game. "DUKE IS stronger inside, but we do have a slight height advantage with (6-9 freshman Pervis) Ellison, although not in experience," Crum said. "As a duo, their guards are quicker, but we have a height advantage. We have ways of taking advantage of the size of our guards." Billy Thompson, a 6-7 senior forward, averages 15 poin- ts and 7.9 rebounds for Louisville, Ellison 12.8 and 8.1, and 6-7 sophomore forward Herbert Crook 11.9 and 6.3. "They're a balanced team and you can't just concen- trate on one player," Krzyzewski said, "and their bench is a little deeper than ours." Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Michigan pitcher Russ Rein hurls a pitch toward home plate in yester- day's first game. Rein notched his first career victory in an 8-2 win. THE SPORTING VIEWS a' Dodgers on top... ...Reds By LIAM FLAHERTY You hear it every year. Spor- tswriters and fans gushing over the beauty of the crack of the bat, the color of the grass, the smell of the leather. Whatever the reason (maybe it's- the effects of a winter of Red Wings' hockey) everyone is talking baseball. The National League West should be one of baseball's most interesting divisions. The Reds, second place fin- ishers last year, have made some major off-season moves. Four of the six teams have new managers (although Roger Craig joined the Giants late last year). Yet, despite all this change, the call here is that the Dodgers will repeat and the Reds will be bridesmaids once again. DODGERS: This could very well be the best team in baseball. Only the Mets and Royals rival them for star- ting pitching. Fernando Valenzuela and Orel Hershiser are the best lefty- righty combination in the majors, and Jerry Reuss and Bob Welch both won 14 games last year. The offense will be improved with a full year of Pedro Guerrero in the out- field and a fit, enthusiastic Bill Madlock at third. Mike Marshall and Mike Scioscia are coming off big years, and Mariano Duncan solidifies a sometimes shaky defense. L.A.'s only potential area of weakness is the bullpen, where Tom Niedenfuer may still be recovering from last year's playoff disaster and Ken Howell is coming off a bad second half. But they have added Ed Vande Berg, a pitcher everyone wanted this winter. Yet the Mariners, for reasons known only to them, gave up the lefty for ancient backstop Steve Yeager. NL~W, est L.A. has depth as well; only a great run by the Reds will deny them. REDS: Pete Rose, who after chasing Ty Cobb should know something about patience, has his Reds going for it all this year. Over the winter, Cincinnati acquired John Denny and Bill Gullickson after ad- ding Buddy Bell and Bo Diaz last summer. All the names are recognizable and the tendency is to think this infusion will put the Reds over the top. But Denny has been unimpressive since his 1983 Cy Young season, and Gullickson always seems to have the word "potential" attached to him. Former ace Mario Soto prefers to pit- ch in a five man rotation, while Rose has already said he's going with four. Rookie surprise Tom Browning seems primed for a sophomore jinx. Despite winning 20 games last year his ERA was 3.55. But there's a lot of may challenge and 15-game winner Bob Knepper head a rotation that will be even stronger if Nolan Ryan can come back from an off year. GIANTS: For a team that lost 100 games for the first time in their recent history, this may be a lofty prediction. But the Giants were led by inept Jim Davenport and it may be surprising. that they lost only 100 games in the cavernous hell of Candlestick Park. Things can only go up. Roger Craig should be able to do something with troubled young talent like Chris Brown, Dan Gladden, and Jose Uribe. He can only improve a pitching staff led by Mike Krukow and newcomer Roger Mason. An in- teresting story should be college sen- sation Will Clark, who has already been named as opening day first baseman. PADRES: In the Padres' minds they've already won their biggest vic- tory of the year - getting rid of the tyrannical Dick Williams. It will be a much looser club with Steve Boros at the helm but it will make little dif- ference in wins and losses. Steve Gar- vey and Graig Nettles would be great at the corners if it was 1978, but in 1986 they are nearing the fossil stage of their existence. The pitching staff is entirely mediocre, and last year's best, Lamarr Hoyt, was recently in a rehab center. But the Padre's biggest problem is an almost total lack of speed. With its pocket of John Birch Society members, the Padres may be the only club in baseball with more Barry Goldwater supporters than threats to steal. I I" I 0 . .- -, , Ift i I,. - , 0 w