10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 20, 1994 304 S. STATE STREET * 4 doors South of Liberty.- 998-3480 ON L UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN lEAIVYWEIGHT COITON T*SHIRTS, SWEATSHIRTS, AND HATS. COME SEE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN T-SHIRTS AND SWEATSHIRTS IN THE WORLD (OVER 100 DIFFERENT DESIGNS TO CHOOSE FROM) ALL AT THE ABSOLUTE LOWEST PRICES! VS - - Open Monday through Friday 9 AM-? PM, Sat 10-7, So 1046 Kansas City's Bob Hamelin named AL Rookie of the Year NEW YORK (AP) - Bob Hamelin, who inherited the Kansas City Royals' designated hitting job from George Brett and became one of the league's best sluggers, was an easy winner Wednesday as AL Rookie of the Year. Hamelin was the first DH to win the rookie award, and the first Royals player to earn it since Lou Piniella in 1969. The honor, now named the Jackie Robinson Rookie Award, was first presented in 1947. Hamelin hit 24 home runs, drove in 65 runs and batted.282. He led AL rookies in homers, RBIs, runs (64), hits (88), doubles (25), walks (56) and games (101) when the players' strike started Aug. 12. Hamelin, who also played 24 games at first base, received 25 of 28 first-place votes in balloting by the Baseball Writers Association of America. He also got three second- place votes and finished with 134 points. Cleveland Indians outfielder Manny Ramirez, who hit .269 with 17 home runs and 60 RBIs, was runner- up with 44 points. Texas Rangers outfielder Rusty Greer, who hit .314 with 46 RBIs and also made a diving catch that finished off Kenny Rogers' perfect game, got the other three first- place votes and was third with 42 points. The NL rookie award will be an- nounced Thursday. Hamelin, 26, broke Bo Jackson's rookie Royals record of 22 home runs set in 1987. Hamelin's biggest homer was a two-out, three-run shot in the bottom of the 12th inning off Chicago reliever Roberto Hernandez on July 25 for a 6-4 victory that kept alive Kansas City's eventual 14-game win- ning streak. Helped by the string, the Royals closed within four games of the AL Central-leading White Sox when the strike started. Hamelin also became a fan favor- ite.at Kauffman Stadium, earning the nickname "The Hammer." After the All-Star break, many fans showed up at the park waving toy hammers when he came to the plate. Hamelin ranked ninth in the AL in home runs, fifth in slugging (.599) and fourth in home-run ratio, con- necting once every 13 at-bats. Hamelin showed power from his first year in pro ball, leading the North- west League with 17 home runs for Euguene after being picked by the Royals in the second round of the June draft. Hamelin sustained several back injuries in his next few seasons before going through an injury-free 1993, when he hit 29 home runs for Triple-A Omaha. Hamelin made his major league debut in 1993, hitting two home runs in 49 at-bats. At the time, the Royals al- ready were counting on him to takeover the DH spot left by Brett's retirement. Negotiations continue; no progress WASHINGTON (AP) - A 40- day break, a lost World Series and a new mediator changed nothing in the Major League Baseball talks. "There was no substance discussed today at all," union head Donald Fehr said after the sides met for 90 minutes Wednesday. Mediator W.J. Usery, hired Fri- day by the Clinton Administration, said the next session will be in 5to 10 days but he will speak with each side separately before then. Wednesday's meeting, attended by six players and 11 team representatives, was devoted to ground rules. "He needs to get up to speed," Kansas City Royals pitcher David Cone said. "He seems to think smaller and more concise groups are going to be better." Usery, 70, is regarded as the top mediator in the country and has more authority than his predecessors be- cause of his presidential backing. He mediated the National Football League's 44-day preseason strike in 1974. "When you believe you have po- sitions that are very strong and people believe in the position, it's difficult," he said. Both sides said they hold Usery in high regard. Fehr said the union rec- ognized Usery is brought in only for the most difficult disputes. "My optimism is based on com- mon sense," management's chief ne- gotiator Richard Ravitch said. "I don't know any other way we can bring an end to the dispute and reestablish pub- lic confidence in baseball." Ravitch did not back off management's threat to either unilat- erally put a freeze on player signings or impose a salary cap. Fehr said either action could make talks even more difficult than they already are. "I believe very strongly in collec- tive bargaining," said Usery, a labor secretary under President Ford. "People exchanging ideas, thoughts and proposals." Wednesday's meeting was only the fourth between players and own- ers since the strike began Aug. 12. The walkout, baseball's eighth work stoppage since 1972, wiped out the final 52 days and 669 games of the season and led to the first cancellation of the World Series since 1904. Usery sat with management rep- resentatives to his left and players to his right. In all, 31 people sat around the table. "I look for owners to be very in- volved," Colorado Rockies chairman Jerry McMorris said. Acting commissioner Bud Selig, who attended the previous session on Sept. 9, stayed in Milwaukee. Management's delegation included his daughter Wendy Selig-Prieb, the Brewers' general counsel. "It's obviously very tough," Usery said. "If it wasn't, the parties already* would have resolved it." Clubs had until midnight to de- cide whether to offer salary arbitra- tion to 42 players covered by the restriction on repeat free agency within a five-year span. The California Angels offered arbi- tration to Chili Davis, who had a $2.4 million salary in 1994 and is attempting to negotiate a three-year deal worth about $11.25 million. The San Fran- cisco Giants were considering offering arbitration to Darryl Strawberry but hadn't decided by early evening. 4 1 -~ I :1 II I I I - m - m - m - ------------------------------------- ~ al 4 t f p-f 4- I I I any. I Go to a FREE screening of a the T.V. show that cuts cheesy r z ~ brand-spanking new episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, movies to pieces. Stranded in space, a guy and two 3'robots sit through really bad movies and make wisecracks. See it now before it spoils. a 11 oo MONOU I