The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 13, 1986 -Page 11 Bosox edge ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Dave Henderson, whose two-run homer capped a four-run rally in the ninth inning that kept Boston alive, hit a sacrifice fly in the 11th inning yesterday that gave the Red Sox a 7-6 victory over the California Angels in Game 5 of the American League playoffs. The Red Sox, who several times were perilously close to elimination, instead narrowed California's lead to 3-2 in the best- of-seven series. Game 6 is scheduled Tuesday night in Boston. H E N D E R S O N' S heroics, which came after his defensive miscue on Bobby Grich's freak home run had put California ahead in the sixth, enabled Boston to avoid being swept in three games at Anaheim Stadium after splitting the first two games at Fenway Park. Don Baylor and Henderson hit two-run as the Red Sox overcame a 5-2 deficit in the ninth, and the same two players triggered the Red Sox victory in the 11th. Baylor, leading off the 11th, was hit by a pitch from Donnie Moore. It was the 36th time Baylor was hit this year and the 228th time for the AL leader in that department. DWIGHT EVANS singled Baylor to second and Rich Gedman's fourth hit of the game, a bunt single, loaded the bases. Henderson followed with his sacrifice fly to medium-deep center. The victory went to Steve Crawford, who pitched out of a bases-loaded jam with one out in the ninth and also worked the 10th. Calvin Schiraldi, tagged with Boston's heart-breaking loss in Game 4, worked a perfect 11th for the save. THE ANGELS battled back against three Boston relievers to tie it 6-6 in the bottom of the ninth. Trailing 6-5, Bob Boone led off with a single against Bob Stanley. Boone, 3-for-3 Sunday and 9-for-17 in the series, was replaced by pinch- runner Ruppert Jones, who took second on a sacrifice fly by Gary Pettis. Joe Sambito relieved Stanley, and Wilfong grounded his first pitch just beyond the reach of second baseman Marty Barrett. Jones was running all the way and slid home safely, just ahead of right fielder Evans' strong throw to Gedman. DICK SCHOFIELD then greeted Crawford with a single that Angel sent Wilfong to third, and Brian Downing was intentionally walked to load the bases. But with the winning run 90 feet from home plate and the outfield drawn in, Crawford managed to get out of it by retiring Doug DeCinces on a shallow fly to right and after going 2-0 on Grich, got him on a soft liner back to the mound. Earlier, it appeared Henderson, normally a late-inning defensive replacement who had entered the game in the fifth inning to replace the injured Tony Armas in center field, was the goat. THE RED SOX, who had blown a three-run lead in the ninth inning Saturday night in a stunning game won by Grich's RBI single in the 11th, took a 2-1 lead into the sixth behind Bruce Hurst. With two outs, DeCinces doubled before Hurst worked a 1-2 count on Grich, who had struck out in his previous two at-bats. This time, Grich hit a long drive that Henderson seemed to have within range. Henderson leaped just short of the fence and got his glove on the ball, but his momentum carried his glove above the wall and the impact knocked the ball loose and over the fence for a two-run homer. Mike Witt, who won game 1, had cruised into the ninth inning with a 5-2 lead. But with the crowd of 64,223 screaming for the Angels to wrap up their first AL pennant, Bill Buckner opened the inning with a single. One out later, Baylor homered over the left field fence and cut the deficit to 5-4. Witt retired Dwight Evans on a popup, and then was relieved by left-hander Gary Lucas. But Lucas hit Gedman with a pitch, and relief ace Donnie Moore was summoned. Henderson fouled off a 2-2 pitch before launching a drive over the left-field fence. Henderson danced down the first-base line and his teammates streamed onto the field to greet him while the crowd sat in shocked silence. 76 Associated Press Roger Clemens congratulates a jubiliant Calvin Schiraldi after the Red Sox' reliever pitched a perfect 11th inning to preserve Boston's 7-6 come- from-behind victory. WE E r To AIBERT G YINC SPORTS OF THE DAIL Y: Lions run over Packers, 21-14 PRESENr" TOILET MYN' QJY9L.Fl(ATON5 ON PA~PER - INCRsON , NoL X5 ,--- GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - Rookie Garry James rushed for 140 yards and scored his first NFL touchdown on a 41-yard run yesterday as the Detroit Lions defeated the Green Bay Packers 21- 14. It was Green Bay's sixth straight loss. Fullback James Jones, Detroit's leading rusher this season, gained 99 yards on 29 carries. Scott Williams scored on a one- yard dive in thesecond quarter as he and James teamed for a 14-point surge. Detroit evened its record at 3-3. Falcons 26, Rams 14 ATLANTA (AP) -Gerald Riggs ran for 141 yards and one touchdown and Buddy Curry and Bret Clark set up field goals with 34-yard returns as Atlanta downed the Los Angeles Rams 26-14 in an NFC West first-place showdown yesterday. Riggs put the Falcons ahead to stay at 10-7 on a four-yard run with 2:16 left in the first half, capping a 47-yard drive that started after Clark blocked a Dale Hatcher punt that went only 14 yards. Curry returned a blocked field goal attempt 34 yards to the Rams' 46 to set up a 32-yard field goal by Nick Luckhurst in the third quarter and Clark's 34-yard interception return to the Los Angeles 34 set up Luckhurst's 49-yard field goal early in the fourth quarter, which put the game on ice, 23-7. Cowboys 30, Redsins f IRVING, Texas (AP) - The Dallas Cowboys, backed by Herschel Walker's two touchdown runs and 155 yards receiving, knocked the Washington Redskins out of the NFL unbeaten ranks with a 30-6 victory Sunday in a key NFC Eastern Division showdown. Washington dropped to 5-1, while the Cowboys got back into the division race with a 4-2 mark. Walker scored on two one-yard runs, but killed the Redskins with his six pass receptions. Washington was also flagged for interference on Walker to position the Cowboys for a field goal. The Redskins, burdened by three missed field goals, a lost fumble and an interception, couldn't get their offense untracked. r xY P TIC I 1.. o f v3b', Albert's Resume Riter TM will not only type your resume [like other printers], we'll help you compose your resume to fit your career goals. We also have the largest selection of resume paper and. envelopes in town. Open 7 Days a Week Albert's Copying 535 E. LIBERTY 995-0444 Tiger great Cash drowns CHARLEVOIX (AP) - Norm Cash, a first baseman for the Detroit Tigers for 15 years and the American League batting champion in 1961, apparently drowned yesterday while boating in northern Lake Michigan, authorities said. The body- of Cash, 51, of Bloomfield Hills, was positively identified by his wife, Dorothy, shortly after 4 p.m. Sunday, according to Patrick Avery, a corrections officer for the Charlevoix County Sheriff's Department. THE BODY was discovered about 11 a.m. in about 15 feet of water just offshore of Beaver Island, located 32 miles northwest of Charlevoix in Lake Michigan, Avery said. Divers pulled the body from the water, and it was flown to Charlevoix for positive identification by the sheriff's department, Sgt. Gary Gokey of the state police post at Petoskey said. GRIDDE PICKS Taco Bob's is dead and gone, but Pizza Bob's lives on. Several readers were frightened earlier when it was reported by the Daily that Taco Bob's was closi g up shop. The readers called the Daily, wondering if the closing would have an effect on Pizza Bob's, and thus, they feared, an effect on Griddes. Not to worry, however. Turn in your picks by midnightaFriday and win a free pizza (not a taco or a burrito) from Pizza Bob's. 1. Iowa at MICHIGAN (pick total points) 2. Michigan State at Illinois 3. Indiana at Minnesota 4.Wisconsin at Northwestern 5. Ohio State at Purdue 6. Alabama at Tennessee 7. Syracuse at Penn State 8. Oklahoma State at Oklahoma 9. Georgia Tech at Auburn 10. Arkansas at Texas 11. USC at Arizona State 12. North Carolina State at North Carolina 13. Air Force at Notre Dame 14. Penn at Navy 15. Holy Cross at Army 16. Oregon State at Arizona 17. Stanford at Oregon 18. Kansas at Kansas State 19. Grambling State at Mississippi Valley State 20. Hated Fry at DAILY LIBELS I THE 2ND RECRUIT EMPLOYMENT SEMINAR ® tE ~b 3 1UZh'0 7j*8 A6t L, IUtz 101 o) t v gt S'I'R c b -z 1, tz z / b% /0 .Z, t Z1U tz tz Z.)' 4 = " -F AEG (T) Z' (-T L f. L i to ) 2f 2 9 J r-4T ~-T i THIS SEMINAR WILL BE HELD IN JAPANESE October 13, 1986 Cash ... former Tiger drowns 3:00 5:00 p.m. pf.( What's Happening Recreational Sports .PLACEInternational Center 4 ra RECRUIT U.S.A., INC. 700 S. Flower St., Suite 3210 Los Angeles, CA 90017 T1-800-325-9759 T1-800-423-3387 (In California) INTRAMURAL TOUCH FOOTBALL OFFICIALS NEEDED 4 i