Men's tennis vs. Northwestern Tomorrow, 2:30 p.m. Track and Tennis Building SPORTS Women's tennis vs. Miami of Ohio Tomorrow, 6 p.m. Huron Valley Tennis Center The Michigan Daily Thursday, April 3, 1986 Page 7 Abbott, Michigan gallop past Broncos By ADAM OCHLIS With every pitch and every out and every inning, the legend of Jim Abbott grows and grows and grows. The eshman pitcher hurled a three-hit hutout yesterday in leading the Wolverines to a 1-0 victory over Western Michigan at Ray Fisher Stadium. Michigan won the first game of the doubleheader, 6-2, to begin the after- noon sweep. WITH THE biggest crowd of the year on hand which included Channel 2 in Detroit, NBC, and Bo Schem- bechler among others, Abbott, born Pv ithout a right hand, performed as well as any pitcher could hope for. In his finest outing in a Michigan uniform, the Flint native walked just one, and that was intentional. 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Abbott (3-0), was quick to credit his fielders, who constantly covered the gaps, and got good jumps off the bat- ted ball. "THEY MADE so many nice plays out there," he said. "It's certainly not too hard to pitch with that kind of help." The lone Michigan run came in the second inning when centerfielder Dan Disher tripled and third baseman Jeff Kiel grounded out, scording Disher. A 6-2 senior, Disher came into yester- day's action hitting just .074, and his three-bagger was almost caught by a diving Dave Krombeen in deep cen- terfield. "That was a catchable ball and we need to catch that ball," said Western coach Fred Decker. "And if we do catch it, we still could be out there right now." BRONCO pitcher Bob Bevis mat- ched Abbott the rest of the way, allowing only four hits. Bringing an earned run average of over four into the game, Bevis pitched well, yet Michigan coach Bud Middaugh thought the Wolverines should have scored more than once against him. "We looked sluggish at the plate," he said. "We took an awful lot of pitches where we are usually a little more aggressive." The first game offered more offense as both teams banged out seven hits. It was scoreless going into the third inning, when the Broncos rallied against Michigan starter Dave Karasinski, who was making his first start of the season. WITH NO outs, Western loaded the 3bases with two singles and a walk. Middaugh wasted no time in going to the hook, as he summoned freshman Chris Lutz from the bullpen. The Fair- field, Ohio native let up a run scoring single to Rich Maloney, but then retired the next thee in order. Lutz got leading Bronco hitter John Vander- Wal to ground out, struck out John Hemingway, and forced Bob Reimink to fly to right. That was the turning point in the game as Michigan (17-3) came right back with three runs of their own in the bottom of the inning. Right fielder Casey Close's three-run home run was the telling blow, as Michigan's num- ber-three hitter continued his Super- man-like performance at the plate. The 6-0, 200-pounder is hitting .492 through the first nineteen games. The homer was his ninth of the season, his second in as many days and his 36th of his career, a Michigan record. It was also the first at Fisher Stadium this season. "HE'S SWUNG the bat very well in key situations all year," said Mid- daugh. Lutz picked up his first win as a Wolverine as he pitched two solid in- nings before giving way to Paul Wen- son. Wenson threw three innings of one- hit, three-strikeout relief to record his second save. BUT THE afternoon belonged to Abbott, who seemed to get stronger as the game progressed. In control of all three of his pitches, Abbott had the Bronco hitters flailing away all after- noon. "He was getting his off-speed pitch over and he was also getting his curve ball over at times," said Middaugh. "They just couldn't sit on one pitch... and that makes his fastball that much quicker. "It also helps to have a crowd like we had here where everyone was behind him and pulling for him." Decker, who also recruited Abbott out of high school, was just as im- pressed. "I thought he threw super. His location was good and he was getting ahead of all the hitters," he said. "He just piched a good ball game. "We have guys who can swing the bat and he just overpowered a lot of our guys." Abbottsolutely great R H E Western Mich.... 001 100 0 2 7 0 MICHIGAN..003 030 X 6 7 1 Western Michigan: Alexander, Anderson (5) and Bohn M: Karasinski, Lutz (3), Wenson (5) and Campbell WP-Lutz (1-0), LP-Alexander (1-2), Save-Wenson (2) Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER Michigan senior Dan Disher is interviewed by Channel 2 in Detroit between games. of yesterday's doubleheader sweep of Western Michigan. Media personnel swarmed Ray Fisher Stadium yesterday as stan- dout Jim Abbott took to the mound for the Wolverines. R H Western Mich.... 000 000 0 0 3 MICHIGAN ..... 010 000 X 1 4 Western Michigan: Bevis and Honquisto M: Abbott and Gillette WP- Abbott (3-0), LP-Bevis (2-2) E 1 2 Three-pointers, replays may enter college hoops Louisville E DALLAS (AP) - Basketball fans found nothing funny about a disc jockey's April Fool jest that the NCAA tournament results were in doubt because the Louisville Cardinals failed post-game drug tests. KMGC disc jockey Mike Preston made the report Tuesday 10 minutes after he reminded listeners that it was April Fool's Day, said station general manager Ross Reagan. "HE WARNED listeners that they should be real careful today because they're going to hear some wild stories,"'Reagan said yesterday.He said the station then ran a newscast carrying the legitimate version of Louisville's 72-69 Monday night vic- tory over Duke. "He came back on the air at about 6:40 a.m. and indicated that the Final Four victory was in question and stay tuned for more details and came back and developed this silly story about Louisville," Reagan said. Preston quoted "sources" saying there had been drug tests after the championship game, that some Car- dinal players had tested positive and that the championship results were on hold. REAGAN SAID Preston admitted the report was an April Fool's hoax minutes later at 6:53 a.m. "That's when we started getting the calls," Reagan said, referring to ingered by listeners who telephoned the station Tuesday about the false broadcast. University of Louisville and NCAA officials were not amused. "I JUST can't see how anybody would joke about that," said Kenny Klein, director of sports information for Louisville. He said he spoke with Preston and was told a disclaimer was run. "What about the people who tuned in and didn't hear the disclaimer?" drug hoax Klein said. "I think there's no place to offer that." Klein said he wasn't sure if team members had heard about the report, but that he had told university athletic department officials about it. He said he expected them to inform the school's legal counsel, but didn't know if any action would be taken. Reagan defended Preston's remarks as just good fun and said the jockey would not be fired. WORD PROCESSING Everything in memory, low prices, free proofing, rush service. PRONTO PRINTING 761-TYPE Michigan Union 769-COPI cJt ly tc ACCUTYPE WORD PROCESSING LASER-JET PRINTER Resumes, Papers, Cover Letters, Etc. Complete Secretarial Service Available Same Day Service 761-5050 CIBACHROME COLOR STATS " Color Transparancies " Pearl or Glossy Paper . No Negatives Required . Flat Art or from Slides ~NDLy GREAT CopY~ 110 E. Washington Ann Arbor, MI 48104 [313] 994-0222 (AP) - Coaches and assistants ap- peared surprised and even disappoin- ted that the NCAA decided to recom- mend a three-pointgoal in college basketball, but they appeared generally in favor of using TV replays to assist in certain circumstances. Yesterday, the NCAA rules com- mittee recommended that the full NCAA membership ratify changes in- stituting a 19-9 three-point goal and use instant replays to assist in scoring and timekeeping calls. Videotaped replayed would not be used to settle arguments over judgment calls such as fouls. "I'M VERY surprised to see it (three-point goal) pass," Notre Dame Coach Digger Phelps said. "I didn't realize it was under serious con- sideration, based on the experimen- tation by major conferences a few years back, which generally seemed to be negative." Louisville assistant coach Jerry Jones, who said he was speaking for Coach Denny Crum, said his first reaction to the three-point goal was "that shot can cause as much harm as benefit because it's not a high percen- tage shot." "I think it's a way of legislating against zone defenses without really saying so," Jones said. "WE PUT the (shot) clock in and if that didn't keep you out of the zone, we'll put the three-point play in to make you play man-to-man," Jones said the NCAA was seeming to say. On the TV replay, Jones noted: "If they cannot correct an error by normal channels - that is by statistics or play-by-play - there's nothing wrong with using a replay to correct something like a clock error. Anytime you can eliminate an error that is something positive." Jacksonville Coach Bob Wenzel said he was totally against the three-point goal- "from any distance. We've ex- perimented with it in the Sun Belt Conference a few years back, and we didn't like it. I don't think many coac- hes do. "I think perhaps we're fooling around with the rules too much," Wenzel said. THURSDAY Long Island Ice Tea Night Long Island Ice Teas only $2.50 FREE PIZZA 10:00 p.m. - Close 338 S. STATE 996-9191 L. SUMMER CAMP POSITIONS STILL AVAILABLE AT TAMARACK CAMPS Cabin Counselors * Specialists in Waterfrong and Small Crafts, Arts & Crafts, Nature & Outdoor Projects, Photography, Video, Computers, Horseback Riding, Amateur Radio " R.O.P.E.S. " Trip Leaders " Unit & Specialty Supervisors * Secretary * Food Service & Maintenance Staff " Nurse & Clinic Assistant " Physicians (1 week) " Social Worker " Bus Drivers. Also forester/construction positions at Camp Maas FINAL U-M INTERVIEW DATES Apl 8 & 17 SIGN UP AT CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT Tamarack is the Jewish residents camp agency sponsored by The Fresh Air Society of Metro Detroit since 1903. 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