4 Page 12 -- The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 10, 1987 AROUND THE HORN Detroit captures first win, 9-3 I Golden Words BY GREG MOLZON By ADAM SCHEFTER Special to the Daily DETROIT - With the Tiger bats exploding for six runs in the third inning yesterday, Detroit registered its first win of the 1987 campaign and avoided a sweep in its opening series. Walt Terrell pitched eight innings to earn the win, and Eric King came on in the ninth to preserve the 9-3 victory over the New York Yankees. The Yankees jumped on top in the first when Rickey Henderson toppled a grounder to the right of the pitching mound. Terrell fielded the ball and did his best Darnell Coles imitation, throwing it into right field which allowed Henderson to go to second. From there, the speedster moved to third on Willie Randolph's groundout and scored on Don Mattingly's sacrifice fly. T*THE YANKEES had barely begun to savor the lead when their starting pitcher, Bob Tewksbury, served up batting practice to the Tigers. Tewksbury lasted two innings and allowed four runs. His successor Bob Shirley fared no better in four innings of work. He let up six runs. The onslaught began in the first when Pat Sheridan lined a one-out single over shortstop Wayne Tolleson's head. The next batter, Matt Nokes, lined a double to the wall in right-center which scored Sheridan from first and tied the score at one. One inning later, Chet Lemon hit a solo blast in the upper deck to put Detroit in front to stay, 2-1. And in the third inning, the Tigers put the game out of reach. Lou Whitaker started the rally by singling to right. Sheridan followed with another single to left, and Yankee manager Lou Piniella then yanked Tewksbury and fed Shirley to the Tigers. Terry Harper walked to load the bases, and Alan Trammell drove a two-run single to center. After Larry Herndon walked, Darrell Evans drove a sacrifice fly to center to put Detroit ahead by four. A Coles' single, Lemon double, and a Joel Skinner throwing error rounded out the assault to make the margin 8-1 after three. The day, however, wasn't a complete laugher for Tiger fans. Willie Hernandez was placed on the 15 day disabled list, and pitcher Jeff Robinson was called up to take his place. Brewers 12, Red Sax 11 MILWAUKEE (AP) - Rookie catcher B.J. Surhoff led off the bottom of the eighth inning with his first major league home run to earn the Milwaukee Brewers a 12- 11 victory yesterday and a three- game sweep over the Boston Red Sox. The winning blow came off right-hander Steve Crawford (0-1) after Boston's Danny Sheaffer's first major league homer with two out in the seventh inning off Milwaukee reliever Chris Bosio tied Associated Press Detroit Tiger third baseman Darnell Coles gets tagged out at home plate in the third inning of yesterday's game against the New York Yankees at Tiger Stadium. The Tigers scored six runs in the third inning en route to their first win of the season, 9-3. the game at 11. Rob Deer hit a pair of three-run homers and drove in six runs to give the Brewers an 11-7 lead after five innings. Deer, who hit 33 homers last season, capped a five-run third inning with a three-run shot to left off reliever Rob Woodward. His second homer to left, also off Woodward, wrapped up a four- run fifth inning that also included a solo homer by Glenn Braggs. Bosio (1-0) gained the victory with Mark Clear, who pitched the ninth, gaining the save. Trailing 11-7, the Red Sox scored four times in the sixth, three on Bill Buckner's bases-loaded double. The Brewers rallied from early deficits of 4-0 and 6-2 as Deer hit two homers in one game for the Sugar Rayde fies odds... ...establishes greatness Billed as the Super Fight, it was staged to determine who would be crowned Superman. Forget about the WBC middleweight title, the 12-round battle between Sugar Ray Leonard and Marvelous Marvin Hagler determined who would go down in boxing history as the greatest fighter of this era. And the winner- Sugar Ray Leonard. Brain over brawn, finesse over strength, boxer over fighter, Leonard over Hagler. Overcoming all odds, Leonard turned back the clock to do the impossible - beat the menacing Hagler who hadn't lost in 11 years. ALL THE experts agreed that it couldn't be done. Leonard, 30, who had fought only 12 lackluster rounds in the last five years, was fighting at a heavier weight (158) than he had ever fought at before, and was doing it all without a warmup fight. Even in his prime, Leonard's chances would have been questionable, but now, they said he had no chance. However, that is exactly why Leonard had to have this fight. He certainly didn't need the money, the fame, or the risk of losing his eyesight. He had already beaten the best - Benitez, Duran, and Hearns, and had his place reserved with the greats of boxing history. Still, Leonard wanted more. He wanted to do what no one else could. The 1976 Olympic gold medalist had watched carefully as Hagler destroyed every opponent he faced and knew that he, and no one else, could beat the invincible Hagler. As much as Leonard wanted Hagler, Hagler wanted and needed Leonard just as badly. The middleweight champion had also beaten the best and was termed unbeatable, but the elusive Leonard was always looming in his mind. LEONARD WAS the media darling, the Olympic hero, the million-dollar man, and was adored by fans all over the country. As marvelous as Hagler had been in his remarkable career, he never received the adulation or credit that Leonard did. So when Leonard offered the challenge, Hagler accepted and the Super Fight was set with the champion favored by 3-to-1 odds. Leonard told anyone that cared to listen that he would win, but very few agreed with him. The notion that a boxer who had barely fought in five years would be getting into the ring with the most dangerous fighter of the decade enraged sensible minds. They said it was a horrible mismatch that would put Leonard's eyesight, and possibly his life, in danger. WHEN THE fight finally arrived on Monday night in a parking lot in Las Vegas, a funny thing happened. Leonard won a 12-round decision. No chance, impossible, against all odds. The pure fact that Leonard was able to survive 12 rounds was an amazing accomplishment in itself, but the most surprising detail was that he was able to return to his form of earlier days and win the split decision. Yes, Leonard proved everyone wrong. And while many may never accept that he did win, including Hagler, his amazing return will go down as one of the great stories in sports history. As always happens in boxing, there is now the temptation for Leonard to fight again. He could have a rematch with either Hagler or Hearns, or he could fight any number of other fighters for many millions more. However, there is no more for Leonard. He has beaten all the best fighters of his time and forever will be known as a great champion. There had always been doubts about Leonard's ability and desire before, but now there can be none. By beating Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard has proven, once and for all, that he is a very special boxer. 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