Baseball Doubleheaders vs. Purdue Saturday and Sunday, 1 p.m. Ray Fisher Stadium SPORTS Softball Doubleheader vs. Toledo Today, 3 p.m. Varsity Softball Diamond The Michigan Daily Wednesday, April 8, 1987 Page 9 M' unimpressive in sweep By GREG MOLZON Coming off three losses in four games, one might think that a doubleheader sweep would be all that was needed to cure the ills and get the Michigan baseball team back on the right track. Guess again. The Wolverines defeated Wayne State, 9-2 and 2-0, yesterday at Ray Fisher Stadium, but looked so lackluster and unimpressive in doing so that head coach Bud Middaugh had the squad back on the field practicing an hour after the game ended. After a 45-minute long team meeting, the players hit off batting tees trying to correct their hitting problems and get their confidence back. "I pretty much left it up to them. I'm not making them come back out (to practice). I just told them what I thought they should do," said a somber Middaugh. THE TEAM will have to improve on its batting for the Big Ten season, which starts this weekend. "To be a better ballclub you have to improve on the areas that you feel the need to improve in," said Middaugh. "Right now, (hitting) is one of the areas that I'd like to center in on." Michigan managed just three hits off Wayne State pitchers Steve DuCharme and Ken West in the second game of the doubleheader. However, the Wolverines didn't turn any of those hits into runs, and had to rely on Tartar mistakes to score. Michigan's baserunners terrorized Wayne State all day, as the Wolverines had 14 steals (11 in the first game) and caused six Tartar errors (five in the opener). In the third inning of the nightcap, Mike Gillette got on base after an error. He stole second, was balked to third, and scored on an errant pick-off attempt by catcher Alexis Fernandez. The final run of the game came in the sixth inning, when freshman Greg McMurtry walked and stole second. He advanced to third on a fly ball by Bill St. Peter, and scored on a sacrifice fly by Tom Brock. DAVE PERALTA pitched five solid innings, giving up just one hit and no runs. "I thought Peralta pitched very well," Middaugh said. "You could see how they banged Iggy (Mike Ignasiak) around a little bit, that gives you an idea how effective (Peralta) was." Ignasiak relieved Peralta in the sixth and had five strikeouts in two innings of work, but did face some trouble before recording his second save. In the opener, Wayne State, 13-6, jumped to a 2-0 lead in the first inning off starter John Grettenberger. Brad Silverstein led off the game with an infield single and then scored on a Matt Romine triple. Pete Marra singled in Romine for what would end up being the Tartars' last run, as Grettenberger, Chris Starr, and Rick Leonard shut them out the rest of the way. The Wolverines, 17-5, tied the game with two runs in the second inning and broke it open with seven more in the fourth. Terry Stone relieved starter Rich Wood at the beginning of the inning and left four runs and one out later. A McMurtry walk, and singles by Darrin Campbell and Jim Durham loaded up the bases, and after Rich Samplinski flied to center, St. Peter promptly put the ball deep over the left field wall for a grand slam. Chris Kalafut came in for Stone, and the Wolverines scored three more runs with the help of two errors, a walk, a misplayed fly ball, and a wild pitch. The Wolverines won't be able to count on such charity when they open the Big Ten season against Purdue this weekend, so Middaugh hopes some extra practice will turn the team around. Middaugh will get a quick chance today to see how the extra work helped when Michigan hosts the University of Detroit. The doubleheader was originally scheduled for Detroit, but has been reset for 2 p.m. at Ray Fisher Stadium. Doily Photo by SCOTT IUTUCHY Mike Gillette scores during the third inning of Michigan's 2-0 victory over Wayne State in the second game of yesterday's double header. Michigan also won the first game, 9-2. Ir THE SPORTING VIEWS" Sugar Ray marvelous in ending boxing myths Michigan Daily SPORTS 763-0376 By LIAM FLAHERTY The smart money was wrong in a big way. Sugar Ray Leonard's victory over Marvin Hagler Monday night was no mere upset. It was a violation of a sacred code, a spit in the face of past boxing gods. The hallowed commandments of the sport - "a good big man always beats a good little man" and "to rest is to rust" - were rudely slapped, taunted, and turned around by Leonard in the same way he slapped, taunted, and turned around Hagler. THE FEAT was remarkable. Leonard had more speed, strength, and stamina than anyone imagined. Leaving his natural weight of 147 pounds and coming off essentially a five-year layoff, most fight fans expected a slower, more stationary Sugar Ray. Not so, especially in comparison to the comatose movements of Hagler. Leonard maintained good motion throughout the fight and had sufficient hand speed to throw numerous combinations, especially coming out of clinches. It was an incredible comeback - "the greatest sports comeback of all time" - according to commentator Tim Ryan. Ryan seemed ready to place the Resurrection a distant second to Leonard's return. But as stunning- as Leonard's effort was, Hagler's descent was equally shocking. The Marvelous One's purported age of 32 has always been suspect, and on Monday he looked on the down side of 40. HAGLER'S hand speed was nonexistent, and through the entire -night he didn't throw two good- punches consecutively. There were moments when he had Leonard on USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDSI U of M Sailing Team X I. MASS MEETING . April 9th 6:30 pm - 311 W. Engineering The Men of ATO would like to thank The Women of AGD p for the .~1-dreekl Week eve~r _ the ropes, causing fan's minds to leap ahead to the furious blizzard of punches that was surely to come. Perhaps there have been too many, both given and received, in Hagler's long career. At any rate, the explosions were eerily absent, as Leonard would put together a quick flurry and dance away. Skills flee quickly in boxing, often without witnesses. Hagler may have lost the majority of his goods in his brutal victory over Thomas Hearns. Or his trainers, the Petronelli brothers, may have overtaxed him, leaving his stuff in the roads and sparring wars that make up Hagler's Spartan training regime. It would not be the only error they made in this bout. Their strategy of saving Hagler's more effective southpaw stance until the third round cost them two rounds they could have used dearly. More importantly, in the late rounds they conveyed no sense of urgency to their fighter. After the eighth round, when Leonard didn't have enough to hurt him anyway, Hagler should have been wading in and going for the knockout. Yet he seemed strangely complacent, allowing Leonard to run and escape him. Perhaps this was a final bit of star-crossed hubris - Hagler mistakenly thinking his status as champion would carry more weight with the judges than would Leonard's style. It obviously didn't. Leonard had every angleworking for him, from the controversial 12-round limit to the schoolyard antics that he knew would rattle Hagler. The final coup came at the announcement of Leonard's victory. Hagler stood stunned. A rematch would show nothing but a more advanced exhibition of the effects of age. Ray Arcel, the most respected trainer in the game, in explaining before the match why Leonard didn't have a shot, repeatedly said, "You can't beat Father Time." As Hagler found out Monday, it's a rule that works both ways. Associated Press Despite a five-year layoff, Sugar Ray Leonard had Marvin Hagler ducking punches while winning the middleweight championship in a split decision. Fitness If Your Hair Isn't Becoming to You - You Should Be Coming to Us. DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State ....... 668-9329 Mapl Village .........761-2733 TIRED OF THE WAIT? * Racquetball Courts - Pools " Dance Studios " Gym " Tanning Booth " Sauna * Nautilus Club PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE 3 blocks fromcentral campus ANN ARBOR "Y" 350 S. FIFTH AVE " 663-0536 1 GUS' P 310 MAYNARD - 665-! . Gi ;~ -~Qw I ZZ (INSID 5800 ERIA E DOOLEY'S) X-LARGE 16" PIZZA with 3 items AND 2 QUARTS OF POP $6.99 plus tax AND SATURDAYS exp .6/1 87 Tanrning 1220 S. UNIVERSITY Corner of S University & S. Forest Upstairs from McDonalds FIRST VISIT / PRICE MAN&M-'sWITH THIS COUPON I I 995-1220 I 8 Tanning Beds Available - No Waiting! * 4 UVA Tanning Beds - Low UVB, No Burning * 2 UVA Tanning Beds - With Face Tanner * 2 Super Tanning 38 Lamp R-UVA Beds OPEN UNTIL 3 A.M. ON FRIDAYSI i I YOUR PHILOSOPHY PROFESSOR WILL BE FURIOUS IF YOU READ THIS BOOK! The book is Rudolf Steiner's Philosophy of Spiritual Activity. And we can't say we'll blame your professor, either, because the book challenges some of our most cherish- ed presuppositions. For instance: that the brain thinks. Not at all, says Steiner. The brain doesn't think any more than a radio plays a Beethoven symphony. The orchestra plays the sym- phony. The radio makes it possible for us to listen to it at home. (But try telling that to a three year old who has never seen an orchestra.) ' Steiner also challenges the notion that there are "limits to knowledge," which we have accepted as part of the human condition since Kant (d. 1804). In fact, The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity is written in such a sequence of thoughts "that, if you read it with enough energy, you come to grasp the nature of thinking as a sense-free experience. And the nature of the one who thinks as a being of soul and spirit embedded in a meaningful world. Which should make your professor very angry. How can anyone speak of soul and spirit today? What can that possibly mean in a world which accepts the world-as- perceived as the only reality? Well . . . we must agree with him. It means nothing if you don't experience it. And you won't experience it if you don't try. And if you've read this far you'll realize now you're free to make that choice. A. What's Happening Recreational Sports NOMINATIONS DUE Wed., April 15, 1987 for IM AWARDS Intramural Bldg - 763-3562