The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 15, 1980-Page 19 I Au I I MAJOR LE AGUE ROUNDUP Alan Fanger Sox power by Twins The audience seemed awe-struck as the short, stocky man with rather thick glasses took the podium and delivered what amounted to a quasi- evangelistic sermonette on a totally non-religious topic - the marketing and promotion of college athletics. - "Empty seats do nothing for you. I hate empty seats. If you have empty seats, you're also not going to sell as many hot dogs, and you're not going to sell as many souvenirs." said Russ Potts. "You have to create excitement," he continued, his words piercing the minds of the spectators. "You have to get people talking about it. We had a theme for every ballgame and a different corporate partner." Potts' accomplishment of doubling Southern Methodist University's football attendance from 26,000 to 52,000 in two years is considered only slightly less than miraculous. Just three years ago, sports fans in Dallas used Saturday afternoons in autumn to rest up for the events of the following day. That was when the Dallas Cowboys would be donning the pads to square off against the best of the National Football League. But Potts' crafty salesmanship has paid off to the point where he filled Texas Stadium to capacity for the SMU-Baylor game, the very same day Texas and Oklahoma were playing in the Cotton Bowl (and for more than just pride). Potts is not the first athletic director to receive such saintly accolades from his colleagues. Don Canham has been labeled one of "the greats" in college athletics for some time, and largely on his ability to jam 105,000 people into Michigan Stadium for every home football game. During the Friday session, Michigan's "super salesman" even divulged the secrets of his success - it involved direct mass mailing and extensive advertising in weekly publications. But wait a minute! We all know about Saturdays in autumn, the "great- ness" associated with Michigan football, the frenzied crowds, and the car- nival atmosphere. Let's shift our focus to Crisler Arena, the home of the Michigan basket- ball team. The Big Ten season is winding to its usual high-strung conclusion, as frontrunner Purdue invades Ann Arbor for yet another key contest. Michigan is definitely in contention for a post-season tournament bid, and optimism seems to have returned to the plush, theatre-like dome for the first time in three years. We would expect to see this reborn optimism translated into a large, vocal crowd, so let's look around the arena for some empty seats. Hmmmm. Not so difficult. A thousand at one end, a thousand at the other end, and a few hundred in between. Seems a bit surprising, doesn't it? Or is this not the team which boasts of electrifying players like Mike McGee, Johnny Johnson, and Thad Garner? Is it not the team which stunned Marquette in Milwaukee, then returned home and knocked Minnesota, Iowa, and Ohio State off their high horses? The answer to both questions is yes. But the Athletic Department has yet to answer the question which occupied the minds of media members and fans throughout the year: If you can cram 105,000 fans, into Michigan Stadium for a laugher of a football game (Michigan-Northwestern provides a good example), why can't you fill an arena one-eighth that size for a basketball game which promises to be worlds more competitive? At Missouri, Athletic Director Dave Hart executed a tremendous sell-job for a team which in the pre-season was labeled a Big Eight also-ran. Using the slogan, "Missouri Basketball is Big Stuff," he took his sales campaign to businesses as far away as Kansas City and St. Louis, and urged them to join in a co-operative venture. The results were immediately visible: increased attendance and a new wave of enthusiasm for a team which was dominated by several freshmen. Hart's successful marketing technique could be applied here, and with even greater success. Ann Arbor, with a population of more than 100,000, has nearly four million people living within 50 miles of it. Columbia, Missouri, on the other hand, hasa population of about 60,000, and is located 125 miles from both Kansas City and St. Louis. The Detroit area could respond to promotional efforts on behalf of Michigan basketball, if Canham were to take heed of Hart's strategy. With the arrival of Tim McCormick this fall, those empty seats we've become so accustomed to seeing over the past couple of years will probably become occupied - at least for the conference games. But past conditions are certain to return somewhere down the road. That's when Canham will want to take some pointers from Potts and Hart. Contact Lens Special Soft and hard* contact lenses $178.50 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. *includes a second pair of hard lenses Offer expires April 18 Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment Red Sox 7, Twins 6 BOSTON (AP)-Pinch-hitter Jim Dwyer drew a bases-loaded walk to force in the deciding run with one out in the ninth inning last night, lifting the Boston Red Sox to a 7-6 victory over the Minnesota Twins behind the relief pitching of rookie Keith MacWhorter and veteran Tom Burgmeier. Minnesota rooKie Doug Corbett, appearing for the 14th time this season, retired nine batters in a row until Butch Hobson lined a single to center in the ninth. Jerry Remy followed with an infield hit off first baseman Danny Goodwin's glove and Carl Yastrzemski walked, filling the bases. Dwyer then walked on five pitches, the fifth walk issued by Corbett, 3-1, this season. Jim Rice drove in four runs for the Red Sox with his fifth homer and a single. Angels 13, Indians 7 CLEVELAND (AP)-Dave Skaggs, making his first appearance in a California Angels uniform, drove in five runs with a home run and two singles to lead the Angels to a 13-7 thrashing of the Cleveland Indians last night. Skaggs, who was purchased from the Baltimore Orioles Tuesday, singled home a run in the Angels' four-run first inning and drove Cleveland starter Dan Spillner (2-2) from the mound with a two-run single in the third. The Angels scored seven times in the third to build an 11-4 lead after the Indians had tallied four runs in the bottom of the second to tie the score 4-4. Cleveland cut the lead to 11-7 on Toby Harrah's fourth-inning home run, his second of the season, and Tom Veryzer's first homer, a two-run blast in the sixth. Skaggs then hit his first home run of the season, a two-run shot in the seventh, to build the margin to 13-7. Chris Knapp (1-2) gained the victory in relief of starter Dave Frost, and reliever Jim Barr picked up his first save. Mariners 7, Blue Jays 0 TORONTO (AP)-Willie Horton and Bill Stein each hit two-run homers to back the five-hit pitching of Glenn Abbott as the Seattle Mariners defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 7-0 last night. Abbott (3-2) struck out five and walked two in pitching his third complete game. The only hits he allowed were three singles by Roy Howell and one each by Rick Bosetti and Damaso Garcia. Seattle jumped to a 3-0 lead in the first inning. Julio Cruz walked on Jim Anderson's single. Two outs later, Leon Roberts singled home one run and Horton followed with his first homer of the year, just inside the left field foul pole. BILLBOARD The Seventh Annual C.S. Mott Children's Hospital Golf Classic will be held Saturday, May 17 and Sunday, May 18. The first round will be played on the University of Michigan Golf Course, with the second round at Radrick Farms. The entry fee is $60. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Pediatric Cardiac Service at Mott Hospital. Contact Herb Black, 663- 9307, or Dean Ligard, 764-1260 for fur- ther information. SLOW DOWN, you move too fast. SAVE GAS!'