Page 16-Friday, June 6, 1980--The Michigan Doily m mi m u h ..a .:r...r.r.. .. :,-x:}r ::i::::: .: >x }{2.:} y{::}::n?. a u u,:..wr..i::.;;;..;;?:..,.},.r ,.s."},.:;:r,3":, "?} :"{t {'.;".:31.} }."i: v. ~'v.' ,":.3,r:{}v : :...",i{ .v...4:,, ..:., :i::"-:" ft: v.rC. :' ..?....."."s ,v :. .: :xw t. . D E T . . :?}. .'r ?rFO I r..;ti... :r H I .:.........a{..3 :t":fn}vR E S {. ..:..:x..:.:::," ..l: ..:.:.. U: :.: ..$?..n5 T H C O A C H IN ls.::,v:.:. . vx. :w.. L A ST, 4:.:.: .:?",," 6..:. Y E A RS".. .::.3v"' I Robertson's job: PONTIAC (AP) - Scotty Robertson, "I LIKE this team," Robertson said former assistant coach at Houston, of the Pistons, who won only 16 games yesterday was named to coach the last season while losing 66. "I think it Detroit Pistons, who finished last can win - and I'm not talking down the season with the worst record in the road - I'm talking now. National Basketball Association. "I feel secure because I think this Robertson, who was introduced to club's going places. I saw more positive Detroit reporters at a news conference, signs, during my interviews, in this agreed to a multi-year contract. Terms club than I've seen elsewhere. I like the were not disclosed. talent and I like the commitment that Robertson's previous head coaching general manager Jack McCloskey has. experience was six years ago when he made for me for the future." became the first coach of the expansion McCloskey said the Pistons, who New Orleans Jazz, now the Utah Jazz. have been without permanent coach Robertson was fired by the Jazz in the since they fired Dick Vitale on Nov. 8, club's first year and he left the NBA. He said the search took seven months returned to the league in the 1977-78 because "I wanted to be absolutely sure season, when he was hired as an I had the right man." assistant to Cotton Fitzsimmons with THE PISTONS are changing coaches the Buffalo Braves. for the 16th time since the 1957-58 Rescue Pistons season, when the club entered the NBA. Robertson is the fifth Pistons' coach in six years. In looking for a successor to Vitale, McCloskey said he even interviewed by telephone Bob Cole, the Australian national basketball team coach. Mc- Closkey said Richie Adubato, the for- mer Piston assistant who served as in- terim coach after Vitale's firing, was considered for the job. "Scotty has more experience in the league," McCloskey said. "Richie was in a very difficult position. It was perhaps unfair for Richie. There was a lot of turmoil." McCloskey said he was helping Adubato search for an NBA job. "OF ALL of the openings in the NBA, this is the one I most wanted because of =o Major league players' contract wins owners' official CHICAGO (AP) - The major league been compensation for free agents. owners, as expected, turned back op-. That item was put off and a panel of position to the new baseball players players and owners will be appointed to basic agreement and ratified the con- discuss the issue and make recommen- tract by a 21-5 vote yesterday. "Some dations by Feb. 1, 1981. If approved by clubs had certain reservations over both sides, the recommendation would certain parts of it," said Lee MacPhail, become part of the contract. American League president. "But it Should a compromise not be reached didn't mean that as a whole they would by that date, the owners would be free be opposed to it." to implement their compensation St. Louis, Oakland, Minnesota, proposal and the players would be free Cleveland and San Diego all voted to strike. Against the pact. But a simple 14-12 On other matters, the new agreement majority with a minimum of five teams increased the minimum salary from from each league was required to ap- $21,000 to $30,000; granted an increased prove the four-year agreement. allowance for players' expenses; in- The Major League Players creased owners' annual contribution to Association still has to vote on players' pension fund from $8.3 million ratification. to $15.5 million, and reduced the num- The key issue in the bargaining prior her of years of league experience to the May 23 tentative agreement had required from three to two before a approval player can submit his contract to bin- ding arbitration. According to Ray Grebey, chief negotiator for the owners, St. Louis voiced the strongest opposition to the agreement. The Cardinals insisted that owners stick to their hard line, and ac- cept the inevitability of a strike. Minnesota owner Calvin Griffith was also unhappy with the free agent com- pensation resolution. "I've lost too darn many Minnesota Twins to free agen- cy ... I feel I should get something back," he said. Cleveland Indian President Gabe Paul expressed that club's objection to the benefits package included in the contract. "As a matter of principle we thought too much was given up in pension," said Scotty Robertson the organization," Robertson said. "The people are already here working to make the Pistons a winner. . . I didn't come here for anything else." Robertson, 50, also has served as an assistant at Chicago. He also spent 10 years coaching at his college alma mater, Louisiana Tech. Robertson accepted the vacant slot cognizant of the fact that he was not the Pistons' first choice for the job. A spokesman for the Philadelphia 76ers said yesterday that Sixers' assistant coach Chuck Daly rejected offers to be head coach of the Pistons and the San Antonio Spurs. McCloskey would not confirm the Philadelphia report. Nailed at home! ARIZONA CATCHER Don Hyman applies the tag to Hawaii's Thad Reece, left, during Wednesday night's third-round College World Series contest in Omaha, Neb. Arizona, ranked third during the season, stayed alive in the collegiate classic by handing Hawaii its first tournament loss, 6-4 in 11 innings. The win earned the Wild- cats a berth in last night's semi-final game against California; which ousted top- rated Miami, 4-3, Wednesday. Last night, California led Arizona, 10-8, in the bottom of the seventh inning. The winner of last night's af- fair faces Hawaii this evening for the championship. 4 4 4 I 4 AP Photo