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April 14, 1988 - Image 9

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1988-04-14

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Men's Golf
Kepler Intercollegiate
Friday
Columbus, Ohio

SPORTS

Women's Lacrosse
vs. Detroit Country Day
Tonight, 7:00 p.m.
Tartan Turf

The Michigan Daily

Thursday, April 14, 1988

Page 9

-' puts hurt on Hurons
Tanderys, Finken star in Michigan sweep

By MICHAEL SALINSKY
Steve Finken hit a home run in the bottom of the
last inning of yesterday's second game to give Michi-
gan a 3-2 victory, and Jeff Tanderys came four outs
from pitching a no-hitter in the first game to lead
Michigan to a doubleheader sweep over Washtenaw
County rival Eastern Michigan.
Finken's home run, his fifth of the year, came off
Huron reliever Bill Bates, capping off a Michigan
comeback.
"I was looking for the fastball," said Michigan's se-
nior third baseman. "It was three and one, so I had a
pitch to play around with. He (Bates) had thrown a
forkball on the last pitch for a ball."
FINKEN reached base six of his nine times at the
plate for the day and all three outs were on solid fly
balls. "I felt pretty comfortable all day," he said.
Michigan cruised past the Hurons in the first game,
8-1. The game was a wild affair - 15 walks, two hit
batters, and, for good measure, a couple of wild
pitches. The Wolverines were beneficiaries of 11 free
passes by four Eastern Michigan pitchers.
Donn Wolfe was the starter and loser for the
Hurons, lasting only one and two-thirds innings. Wolfe
gave up three runs on four hits and four walks.
After the first three Michigan batters reached base,
Greg Haeger hit a sacrifice fly and Bill St. Peter singled
to give the Wolverines an early 2-0 advantage.
THE HURONS got out of the inning when Dar-
rin Campbell hit into a double play, but Michigan got
single runs in the second, fourth and fifth off Wolfe and
relievers Todd Starkey and Steve Irwin, opening up a 5-
0 lead.
Meanwhile, Tanderys was cruising along with a no-
hitter going into the sixth inning.
Tanderys, a first-year player out of Novi, had control
problems early on, walking four in his first three in-
nings of work. The 6-foot-3 righty settled into a
groove after walking center fielder Brian Neil in the
third. He retired nine batters in a row, including the
first two he faced in the sixth.
But the last batter in that streak - Neil again - hit
two balls hard, one just foul down the first base line
and one right at second baseman Matt Morse.
WHEN TANDERYS hit Brent Roach with a
pitch, it was clear that he was tiring. "I pitched Sunday
and I threw quite a bit then," said Tanderys, "I was only
supposed to go four innings."
The next batter, designated hitter Mickey Delas,
lashed a shot off the glove of Finken at third base for
the Hurons' first hit. There was no question on the of-
ficial -scoring. The hit was a rope that Finken was
lucky to even get his glove on.
After Tanderys threw a couple of pitches in the dirt,
he was replaced in favor of Dave Peralta. Keith Riling
got the second and last hit for Eastern Michigan, scor-
ing the Hurons' only run.
THE WOLVERINES have been strapped for
pitching lately, so Michigan head coach Bud Middaugh

had to be happy with Tanderys' performance. According
to Tanderys, Middaugh played a role in that perfor-
mance, specifically helping him get over his early
wildness.
"After the second inning, coach took me out to the
bullpen and worked with me," said Tanderys. "He
showed me what I was doing wrong. I was pulling my
left shoulder across to much (on the delivery)."
Tanderys, who came into the game with a 3-1 record
but a high 6.49 ERA, hopes his performance is a sign
of things to come. "I felt mechanically I was a little
sounder today," he said. "(For the future) I'm opti-
mistic.
Tanderys said he knew he had a no-hitter - "I saw
it on the scoreboard" - but tried not to think about it.
Tanderys had one no-hitter in high school, but lost the
game, 1-0, on an error.
PHIL PRICE walloped a two-run homer in the
bottom of the sixth. It was the fourth consecutive dou-
bleheader in which Price has hit one home run. The
sophomore left fielder walked his first three times up,
twice intentionally, before hitting his eighth
roundtripper of the year, knocking in his 37th and 38th
runs.
But it was Finken who was the hitting star of the
day. The senior out of Fort Wayne, Ind., had two hits
in the opener and two more stolen bases to add to his
Michigan record. He scored Michigan's first run after
walking to open the game and stealing second. In the
nightcap, Finken walked twice in addition to his game-
winning shot, and scored two of Michigan's three runs.
The Wolverines managed only three hits off two
Huron pitchers but again chalked up the bases on balls,
walking eight times. With Eastern Michigan up, 2-0,
two of those walks, by Huron starter Todd Hendricks,
resulted in Michigan runs.
GREG MCMURTRY, who walked five times
on the day, scored on Haeger's second sacrifice fly of
the day. Finken was brought across on St. Peter's dou-
ble over the third baseman's head to tie the game at
two.
The score remained that way until the seventh due to
strong relief performances by both sides. Michigan's
Ross Powell and Chris Lutz were masterful, giving up
only one hit in five and two-thirds innings in relief of
starter Jim Abbott. Lutz retired all nine men he faced
and earned the win.
Abbott just didn't have his good stuff. After getting
the first out, he yielded singles to Mike Hammontree
and Roach. One run came across on a double steal -
the second on a ground out by Delas. When two of the
first three Hurons reached base in the second, Middaugh
gave Abbott the hook.
The Hurons' Todd Hendricks was impressive in re-
lief for Eastern Michigan, giving up only one hit in
four innings of work before Finken came to the plate
and sent the Ray Fisher stadium crowd home happy.

Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER
First baseman Greg Haeger slides into second base in Michigan's 8-1 win over Eastern Michigan in the first
game of yesterday's doubleheader.
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