The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 10,1989 - Page 8 'M' Lacrosse club outshoots Oberlin by Sarah Osburn Daily Sports Contributor The Michigan lacrosse club, under coach Bob DiGiovanni, began its fall schedule of exhibition games with an easy victory over Oberlin College on Friday night at Tartan Turf. The team, which returns 17 seniors this year, handed Oberlin a deceptively close 13-11 defeat. Junior Marc Silbergeld had a standout game for the Wolverines with two goals and an assist, and tri- captains Michael Kennedy, John Paul, and Tim Reilly combined for five goals. Key defensive play came from sophomores Kenny Nick and Alex Puciariello. Sophomore goalie Pete McPartlin, who started because goal- ie Rob DiGiovanni was absent, also played well defensively. After jumping out to an early lead, the Wolverines managed to work in all players on the 55 mem- ber team- including several first- year players. Dave Morath and Ed Honos scored goals for the Wolver- ines while B.J Bardy turned in impressive goaltending. Bill Kola- kowski and Tony Martinez proved to be strong forces on the defensive effort. Captain Michael Kennedy said incorporating the first-year players into the game is one of the main objectives for the five fall exhibition games the lacrosse team plays. The regular lacrosse season begins in the spring. The team travels to Bowling Green this Sunday for a tournament where they will face varsity teams from Wooster and St. Bonaventure. The next home game will be Octo- ber 20 against Toledo at Tartan Turf. 0 GRBAC. Continued from page 1 half, where he went seven of 13, while underthrowing several receiv- ers and tossing one interception. That would be forgotten, if Schembechler didn't have the option of using senior Micheal Taylor. After being injured in the Notre Dame game, Taylor has not been fit to play. He did dress for the Wiscon- sin game, but Taylor needs some tuning-up before returning to the lineup. "You can't play football without practice, particularly at the skill po- sition of quarterback," Schembchler said. "This is an important week of practice for him and then we'll evalute it." Both players will practice with the first team this week. "We run two teams, two plays a minute and Grbac will run one team, Taylor the other," Schembechler said. "Taylor will be at full-strength for this game." While Taylor works out, Grbac will play. Schembechler expects to see more of the Grbac that engin- eered the comeback win over UCLA, as opposed to the Grbac that strug- gled with Wisconsin. "It wasn't entirely the players fault. I think we coaches did a poor job in preparing them for the Wisconsin game," Schembechler said when trying to explain the poor offensive showing. "Had Wisconsin had a better offensive day, we'd have been in trouble." Schembechler did ease off on his critism of the defense, which had seemingly performed well in the win over the Badgers. "It would be hard to find fault with a defense that gives up seven first downs and 90 or so yards," -0. Schembechler said. "If we hadn't turned the ball over, they probably wouldn't have crossed our 50. So you've got to say they played pretty decently." Greg McMurtry took the offensive champion honors for a second straight week, while red-shirt frosh Chris Hutchinson, Mark Mess- ner's replacement at defensive tackle, was named defensive champion. Linebacker Erick Anderson was named defensive hustler, but the coaches did not name an offensive hustler. Chicago Cubs' Ryne Sandberg is tagged out by the San Francisco Giants' Matt Williams while trying to stretch a defeated the Cubs, 3-2, to win the National League pennant. They will face the Oakland A's in the World Series. Associated double into a triple. The Giants Clark clubs Cubs; Giants in Series SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The San Francisco Giants got the ultim- ate Thrill from Will and the Bay Area got its ultimate World Series. Will Clark's bases-loaded single with two outs in the eighth inning gave the Giants a 3-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs and the National League pennant Monday and set up a Bay Bridge Series starting Saturday night at the Oakland Athletics. Clark, in one of the greatest postseason performances ever, set an NL playoff record with 13 hits and 24 total bases. His single to center off Cubs ace reliever Mitch Wil- liams gave the Giants their first pen- nant since 1962, four games to one. The Cubs, though, fought until the end. With two out in the ninth inning, Giants reliever Steve Bed- rosian gave up three straight singles and a run before retiring Ryne Sand- berg on a grounder to second. Starter Mike Bielecki, who allowed only three hits in seven 2/3 innings, walked pinch-hitter Candy Maldonaldo, Brett Butler and Robby Thompson, with two outs in the eighth to load the bases. Clark had eight RBIs in the series. It was yet another disappointing loss for the Cubs, who have not won a World Series since beating Detroit in 1908 and have not been to one since 1945. It was the 16th NL pennant for the Giants since the World Series started in 1903, with 14 coming when the team played in New York. The Giants last won a World Series in 1954 when they swept Cleveland. It was the first time the Giants have clinched a title of any kind at Candlestick Park. The Giants and Athletics have met each other three times in the World Series, with the last coming in 1913 when the A's played in Philadelphia. Rick Reuschel pitched eight innings, allowing an unearned run and seven hits. Unlike the first four games, the starting pitchers were in command. Reuschel, bombed in Game Two at Chicago, allowed just the tainted run in the third inning and Bielecki pitched six scoreless innings before the Giants tied it.r Almost predictably, Clark played the part of hero again for the Giants and led off the seventh with a triple into the rightfield corner. Kevin Mitchell followed with a sacrifice fly to deep center field, tying the score. The Cubs had runners at first and third in the eighth with two outs, but Reuschel got Andre Dawson to hit a grounder back to the mound, increasing to 14 the number of run- ners he left on base in the series. With one out in the third, Mitch- ell lost Walton's high fly to left in the sun for a two-base error. Mitchell had his sunglasses on but did not flip them down. The ball glanced off his glove and bounced a few feet away. Sandberg followed with an opposite-field RBI double, but was thrown out trying to stretch the hit into a triple. For the third straight day, the conditions were ideal at Candlestick Park. The game started at 12:07 p.m. in 78-degree temperatures under a brilliant sun. The battle for the record book between Clark and Mark Grace made for a nice sideshow. In the sixth inning, Grace singled for his second hit of the game and 11th of the series. Walton led off the game Monday with a single, and Grace singled him to third with two outs. But Reuschel struck out Dawson to end the inning. Bielecki retired 11 straight bat- ters until Clark lined a single to center. Bielecki started Game Two at Wrigley Field, but left after four 2/3 innings having allowed four hits and two runs. The Giants threatened in the fifth when Matt Williams got to third with one out. Williams led off the inning with an infield single and moved to sec- ond when shortstop Shawon Dun- ston's throw got away from Grace at first. One out later, Williams moved to third on a passed ball. But Bielecki struck out Pat Sheridan and got Jose Uribe on a shallow fly to left. AP Top 20 1. Notre Dame 2. Miami, Fla. 3. Colorado 4. Nebraska 5. MICHIGAN 6. Tennessee 7. Arkansas 8. Houston 9. Pittsburgh 10. USC 11. Alabama 12. Auburn 13. N.C. State 14. Clemson 15. Oklahoma 16. Illinois 17. Air Force (tie) Wash. St. 19. Florida St. 20. W. Virginia MEET THE RED HOT m CHILI PEPPERS! This Friday, October 13 at 3:30 p.m. -11, -Sr4 with your Host TOM FRANCK and student commedians Jeff Goad and Lawrence Rosenberg ti: w*vrsi *"Iesovty UM News in The Daily 764-0552 Michigen Daily ARTS 76,-037. TheUniversity club isa private club- for students, faculty, staff, alumni, and theiraccompanied guests. Only members may purchase alcohol a at . . . INFO*FEST '89 MICHIGAN lop Areu p p WHERE YOU CAN EAT, DRINK, BE MERRY, AND LEARN SOMETHING AT THE SAME TIME. Need to TODAY! satisfy a sweet tooth? October 10 Like to win Skills booth, and get some helpful hints on how to manage your time. Or take a look at our CD-ROM display, and get a chance to plav with a computer. 4 I I