4 Michigan Hall of Fame Dinner Friday, October 2, 7 p.m. Crisler Arena $30 per person The Michigan Daily Gibson's bat keeps Tigers in the hunt TORONTO (AP) - K i r k Walewander went to second on Lou Gibson's 13th-inning single drove in Whitaker's sacrifice and scored when the go-ahead run and the Detroit Gibson's soft fly ball bounced off Tigers stayed close in the American the artificial turf and over center League East race by beating the fielder Lloyd Moseby's head. Toronto Blue Jays, 3-2, Sunday, Walewander, the fastest runner on averting a sweep in their four-game the Detroit team, beat a good throw series.teDtottaba odtrw The Blue Jays' magic number by Nelson Liriano. Walewander slid remained at five and their lead over belly first around catcher Ernie the Tigers dropped to two and one- half games. The two teams finish Mike Henneman, 10-3, who hada the season with three games at worked two and one-third innings Detroit next weekend. Saturday, pitched one and two-third Jim Walewander started the 13th innings for the victory and Dickie with a walk off Jose Nunez, 5-2, the Noles got the last out for his second fifth of six Toronto pitchers. save. SPORTS Basketball tickets On sale now Athletic Ticket Office Monday, September 28, 1987 Page 8 Back attack: 4 M' runs for 1 1 f r 1 436 yards p- What's Happening : . Recreational Sports " INTRAMURAL TOUCH FOOTBALL SIGN-UPS MON., OCTOBER 5 through WED., OCTOBER 7 11 am - 4:30 pm Intramural Sports Building Play begins: Wed., October 14 " INTRAMURAL SOCCER SIGN-UPS FRI., OCTOBER 2 and MON., OCTOBER 5 11 am - 4:30 pm Intramural Sports Building Play begins: Wed., October14 " DAY HIKE ALONG THE POTOWATOMI TRAIL TRIP DATE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1987 PRE-TRIP MEETING: Thurs., October 1, 1987 7pm NCRB Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON Senior linebacker Andree McIntyre agonizes over a torn Achilles' tendon suffered in Saturday's 49-0 victory over Long Beach State. The injury en- ded McIntyre's season and college career. (Continued from Page 1) Michigan head coach B o Schembechler. "He means a lot to the team, and I hate to lose him. "He's the key to our defense. Taking McIntyre and Thibert out of there takes out the two best linebackers we have." McIntyre, the defensive signal caller, tore his Achilles' tendon in the third quarter against the 49ers. The fifth-year senior will miss the remainder of this season. He was enjoying his finest year as a Wolverine. Cooper, who this weekend started his first game, suffered a knee injury on the opening kickoff. He is side- lined for an indefinite period. "We've never had this many in- juries defensively, but there's no sense dwelling on it," said Schem- bechler. "Historically, when some- one goes down, someone comes in and plays hard." SCHEMBECHLER expects senior John Willingham, junior Bobby Abrams, and first-year player Cornelius Simpson to provide that hard play at linebacker. The 19th- year head coach also expects his offense to increase its load. Quarterback Demetrius Brown continues to gain confidence. The redshirt junior completed six of 13 passes for 125 yards and played steadily. Whether Brown is ready to face Big Ten competition remains to be seen. "It doesn't matter if Brown is ready for the Big Ten," said Schem- bechler. "He's going to play." The offense.continued to show it could run on any team. Strong line play allowed Wolverine running backs to gain 436 yards. Senior tail- back Jamie Morris rushed for 171 of those yards on 20 carries while Allen Jefferson, in only his third game, accumulated 89 yards on just 10 car- ries. M O R R I S and Jefferson combined to march Michigan 79 yards in three plays to start the' second half. Morris had a 57-yard run, and Jefferson scampered 20 yards for a touchdown. In the first half Saturday, the' Wolverines looked nothing like Big Ten Champion. Long Beach State (2-2) stopped Michigan on its first possession on fourth and goal from the one-yard line. The 49er de- fense remained stingy, but their of- fense failed to move the ball. Michigan led 21-0 at half. "I felt we could come back," said 1? w U Ann Arbor Court Club Long Beach State head coach Larry Reisbig. "But they came right out, and away that went." LONG BEACH STATE came right out on its first play from scrimmage. Tailback Michael Roberts raised some eyebrows in the crowd of 101, 714 when he turned the corner for 13 yards. But quarterback Jeff Graham threw an interception on the next play. That pattern would be repeated all afternoon. Every big play the 49ers made was soon followed by a mistake. 24 HOUR FITNESS (AVOID THE CROWDS OF CCRB) * AEROBICS WHIRLPOOL " RACQUETBALL " LOCKER ROOMS - NAUTILUS STANNING First-year player Simpson to move into Big Ten's big time OLYMPIC FREE WEIGHTS VOLLEY BALL " FITSTOP - CARDIOVASCULAR CENTER Open 24 hours from Mon. 6 am to Fri. 10 pm Saturday 7 am - 7 pm Sunday 9 am - 5 pm STUDENT PROGRAMS AVAILABLE 2875 BOARDWALK (Near Briarwood) 662-0243 Harris ... calls on Simpson By ADAM OCHLIS With two more linebackers lost to injury, the job of shoring up the Michigan defense may lie in the hands of Cornelius Simpson, who in his first year at Michigan wasn't expected to play at all Andree McIntyre (torn Achilles' heel) and Keith Cooper (knee) both suffered serious injuries in Michigan's 49-0 rout over Long Beach State Saturday. McIntyre, a fifth-year senior and possible all-Big Ten selection, is through with college football. Cooper, a junior who started his first game against the 49ers, may also be out for the season. And while defensive coordinator Lloyd Carr said that John Willingham and BobbyAbrams would replace the injured in the starting lineup, it was Simpson who stepped in when McIntyre went down. "I felt a little nervous going in there for the first time - thinking I would have to play," said Simpson, who himself is recovering from a twisted knee suffered in the first week of practice. "Everybody was just saying 'Get ready, get ready, you're going in there.'" There is no time for the all-state selection from Highland Park' to be nervous, however. Simpson will be counted on heavily whether at starter or backup - something that does not thrill coach Bo Schembechler. SIMPSON, who recorded two tackles in his quarter-and-a-half, was expected to take the route most Michigan newcomers take and be redshirted. That is no longer the case. "It wasn't our intention to play him this year," said Schembechler. "But we were out of business there. Now we have to get him some experience. We'll put him right on the special teams. "Simpson will play the rest of the year." And with those words "Neil," as he likes to be called, has become an integral member of the linebacker unit decimated by injuries. In all, five linebackers who were expected to see much playing time are out indefinitely. Because of the prior injuries to Curtis Feaster, Mark Spencer and Steve Thibert, Simpson had been practicing with the second unit the past few weeks. To be put in a position like he is in now, however, is something nobody could have expected. "I had an idea that I may play a little this year, but I didn't think it would be this early," Simpson said. "L just have to go out there and do my job to the best of my ability." Simpson posted 16 sacks during his senior year at Highland Park Community High. He runs the 40-yard dash in 4.4 seconds and he bench presses 390 pounds. Now, however, he has to adjust to a much higher: level of competition. And while Simpson thinks he, will be able to contribute, one teammate says that' nothing but excellence will be expected from the 6-3, 215-pounder. "I think he can do a'good job," said senior nose, tackle Billy Harris. "But it's not a matter of can he. He has to. That's how it works at Michigan. Whether you're a freshman, sophomore, senior, or fifth-year senior, when your number is called, you have to go out and not only play, but do the job and do it well." ~ Sportster modem.It brIgs your school's mifame cmputerinto your room. Get CompuServes IntroPak1-a 140 value-Free! A Sportster 1200 bps modem connects your Apple, IBM-compatible or almost any computer to the world. So instead of going to the university computer center during regular hours, you can access the mainframe computer anytime. Right from your room. You can write or revise your term papers. Communicate with bulletin board services. Access libraries. 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