Tigers' have be' Friday, September 15, 1989- The Michigan Daily - Page 13 late-season successpcouldNInrsngnviewsy' late-season successn viewld t 'c\ portin'"viws e * ''fans need to keep witching effect in future Ingview priorities straight 1sor iavesthe Spoting viws by Bill Girardot Daily Contributer Can winning ever become a curse? In the case of the Detroit Tigers, Winning in the final weeks of the season may actually prove more damaging than if they had continued their losing ways. Having won 9 of their past 12 games reinforces the Tiger management's view that this season's poor showing was entirely due to injuries. Now that the team is healthy, the front office views the recent wins as a sign of how the season could have gone and how next season will go. < ,-Ort nn zikvstheosporting views , lmo vv~ ~st~rriniview it VOWS l h? SCr'd of the A.L. East in 1990. Nothing could be further from the truth. While it is true injuries hurt the team this season, they also helped to point out some glaring weaknesses in the ballclub. Having lost such sluggers as Kirk Gibson, Lance Parrish, and Darrell Evans, the Tigers have gone from the top to the bottom of the league in runs production. In 1988, Alan Trammell had a career year in homers and RBIs to combine with Darrell Evans' solid production. Now minus Evans and an injured Trammell, the Tigers are forced to rely on the bat of Lou Whitaker. Kevin Mitchell and Fred McGriff together will probably end up hitting more homers than the punchless Tigers. The lack of power has nothing to do with injuries. The Tigers have allowed their power hitters to slip by and have replaced them with players such as Fred Lynn and Gary Ward who have already seen their best years come and go while playing for other teams. The worst part of the whole deal is that General Manager Bill Lajoie thinks everything is running smoothly. Already he has said the Tigers have no interest in the upcoming free agents. Apparently Lajoie is trying to model his team after the Lions. The Tigers have a great chance of correcting their only fatal weakness if they lay out some cash and sign a player such as Robin Yount who is up for free agency this year. If they can add some offensive punch to their lineup the Tigers could become the next Baltimore Orioles. Like the Orioles of a year ago, the Tigers out of desperation have found some tough young pitchers. Pitchers such as Kevin Ritz and Brian DuBois are loaded with potential for greatness and have already proven themselves this year in a trial by fire. The solid core that made the Tigers one of the dominant teams of the 1980's is still present, but to become competitive the Tigers still need the vital ingredient of power. Trammell and Whitaker can whack the ball but they are not cleanup hitters. If Whitaker and Trammell are back in the three and four spots on opening day next year, Tiger fans will cursed from the very first day. Tiger fans need more than the semi-excitement created during last week's seven game winning streak. The thrills were not due to an exciting race - but rather because TV anchorman Mort Crim promised to shave his head with eight consecutive wins. That not pennant excitement. That's a curse. by Steven Cohen Daily Sports Writer Priority is always a question in sports as well as in life. In the past few months it seems this concern has intensified in sports and old notions have been challenged, disturbed, or questioned. The Pete Rose Affair, the steroid issue in the NFL, the tremendously high salaries paid to pro athletes, and the suspicion that many universities place too much emphasis on sports rather than academics, have all caused headlines. The situation at the University of Kentucky is a typical example of how the demand for a winning team can cause a college administration to let its integrity slip. It provides a lesson in priorities that other univer- sities like Michigan would be wise to heed. Kentucky found itself in a bind after an assistant coach mailed $1,000 to the father of basketball player Chris Mills. This infraction, coupled with other violations, led to the NCAA placing the Kentucky basketball program on probation. Thus, Kentucky was forced to take a second look at its priorities. So how did they go about it? They went out and hired the biggest name they could find, former New York Knick coach Rick Pitino, and paid him a salary approximately 20 times that of a UK professor. The amount of money they paid the mercurial Pitino is suggestive of their continuous desire to have a high-profile, winning program. If1 Kentucky really wanted to place fair play and academics first then they would have hired a less prominent coach with a deep-rooted interest in the university. It took a Lexington, Ky. paper to reveal Pitino's involvement in eight NCAA violations while an assistant at Hawaii in the 70's. Kentucky ap- parently didn't look further than Pitino's won-lost record. The officials in Lexington should not take all the blame, though. After all, the hoop-crazy citizens of Kentucky refused to believe that some improprieties might have been' conducted by their beloved Wildcats. In fact, Kentuckyans were incensed and threatened boycotts of thet Lexington Herald Leader when it ex- posed Kentucky's violations. The feeling that corruption is so widespread has caused some athletic programs to seem insincere in their efforts to reorganize. Some programs may feel that their only misdoing was getting caught. This attitude needs to be changed. Either the laws which govern col- lege athletics should be revised be- cause they are unreasonable, or tighter scrutiny should be applied. Universities who run clean programs should not feel that they are at a competitive disadvantage. The concern of priorities has also touched Michigan when the Big Ten began an ongoing investigation into a reported 26 transgressions by the Wolverine baseball program. Michigan does not need to bend the rules to win. As one Big Ten coach remarked, "I know one thing, Bo Schembechler is a man of integrity. And he won't stand for any nonsense." On July 15, Michigan baseball coach Bud Middaugh resigned under pressure. It's comforting that the athletic di- rector at Michigan is Schembechler, a man who throughout his twenty years here, has set the highest stan- dards of ethics and fair play. It is wrong to place a premium on winning as often the distance be- tween a win and a loss is provided by fate. As a foul shot can clang off the backboard and a last-second field goal can be shanked, it is better to place a premium on the integrity of a pro- gram. That is what will endure de- spite the fickle finger of fate. The large majority of fans who follow Michigan sports have good intentions, but just as the difference between victory and defeat can #be precariously small, so too can the margin between healthy support and rampant win-at-all-costs-boosteris; . One need only remember that the fans of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Kentucky, and SMU love their teams every bit as much as Michigan fons do. Whitaker ...Tiger's top excitement Management believes that - just as in 1987 - a healthy group of players will lead the team to the top Read Jim Poniewozik Every Sigma Nu Fraternity We'd like to invite all interested men to rush. Sun. 17th thru Thurs. 21st. 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