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June 17, 1980 - Image 15

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Michigan Daily, 1980-06-17

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The Michigan Doily-Tuesday, June 17, 1980-'Page 15
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. T rs to, , -Brewers'
ige. 1 .

From behind win, 6-5
Down 5-0 in nightcap

BY MARK MIHANOVIC
Specialtothe Daiiy
DETROIT - The Milwaukee
Brewers led Detroit, 5-0, through seven
innings of the nightcap of last night's ,
twinbill, after the Tigers took the first
game in classic come-from-behind
fashion by the score of 6-5. ' -
Milwaukee reliever Bill Castro stood
one strike away from registering a save
in the opener, but Champ Summers
ripped his two-out, 1-2 pitch to left-
center for a double which scored Kirk
Gibson from second to tie the score at
five. Then Al Cowens, newly acquired
from California three weeks ago, won
acceptance from a screaming .Tiger
Stadium crowd of 37,040 by singling to
left to send pinch-runner Rick Peters
scampering home with the game-
winning run.
Brewers' starter Reggie Cleveland
pitched masterfully through the first
seven frames of the second contest.

Detroit's only hit came on a two-out
Stan Papi line-drive single to left field
in the bottom of the third. Cleveland
quickly retired Steve Kemp on a boun-
cer to the second baseman.
Cleveland looked to be having trouble
in the Tiger sixth as he walked Peters,
Kemp, and Richie Hebner, but a Papi
double play grounder and Summers'
ground out to first baseman Cecil
Cooper doused that threat.
Milwaukee got Detroit hurler Dave
Rozema for single runs in the second,
third and sixth innings and two tallies in
the seventh. Gorman Thomas' poked an
upper deck solo blast to left field for his
12th homer of the year and gave
Milwaukee a 3-0 lead at the end of the
sixth.
After Dbn Money singled to center off
Rozema, Cooper cracked a four-bagger
. into the left field seats to send the tem-
peramental hurler to the dugout for
reliever Roger Weaver.

Milwaukee's Robin Yount opened the
first game with a fly ball to center
which Gibson got _ a glove on but
dropped, giving the Brewers a double.
Money then powered a homer to deep
left field making it 2-0 before starter
and winner Milt Wilcox had gotten an
out. Wilcox then settled down and
retired three batters.
The Tigers struck back almost as
quickly. Kemp rapped'i clutch two-out
single and Summers started his big day
with a double to the right-center field
canvas, bringing Kemp around for a 2-1
ball game.
BOTH CLUBS' bats remained quiet
until Milwaukee's }half of the fourth.
Brewer clean-up hitter Thomas found
the right field line with a bloop two-
bagger, and Wilcox' wild pitch sent the
Brewer to third. After Ben Oglivie
walked on four pitches, Sixto Lezcano
grounded to Papi and Thomas cleanly
broke for the plate. Realizing that he
was a dead duck, Thomas forced a run-
down which allowed Lezcano and
Oglivie to move up to second and third,
,respectively. Then Mark Brouhard's
grounder up the middle which went just
out of reach of second baseman Lou
Whitaker's reach scored both Brewers
and made it 4-1.

SPORTS OF THE DAILY:
New Mexieo Scandal

ROSWELL, N.M. (AP)-U.S. District academic transcripts for Lobo athletes.
Judge Juan Burciaga began If convicted of the charges, Ellen-
questioning prospective jurors today as berger could receive up to 35 years in
(the trial of former University of New prison and $31,000 in fines.
Mexico basketball Coach Norm Ellen- Ellenberger told reporters before the
berger opened. trial began he expects to be acquitted.
The former Lobo head basketball "I'm not a crook. I'm not a criminal,"
coach is charged with five counts of he said. "I've got nothing to hide."
mail fraud, one count of wire fraud and The former coach also said he had
one count of interstate travel in aid of looked forward to the trial because "I
racketeering. The indictment, retur- just want to get this over with and get
ned by a federal grand jury Feb. 14, are back to a normal existence."
related to a scandal involving phony Burciaga shifted the trial from
Colorado athletic
director disciplined
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - University of Colorado President Arnold Weber
Monday disciplined three members of the school's athletic department, including
Athletic Director Eddie Crowder, for their roles in violations of NCAA rules.
Weber warned each of those reprimanded or mentioned as being in violation of
the rules that they would be fired if similar incidents happened again.
THE COLORADO Board of Regents last week confirmed that 50 of the 83
violations alleged by the athletic governing association appeared to have merit.
The violations, dating back to 1970, involved recruiting, financial aid, alumni
involvement, transportation matters, athletic workouts and academic matters.
Twenty-four CU employees were named in the allegations, but 19 have
resigned since some of the violations occurred, Weber said.
THE KANSAS CITY-BASED National Collegiate Athletic Association has not
announced what punitive action, if any, it will take against Colorado for the
violations.
The board determined that Crowder was involved in instances of loaning an
automobile and providing a meal to a student athlete more than seven years ago,
Weber noted. In addition, Crowder did not report his knowledge of - and moves to
correct - other NCAA violations to the CU administration, Big Eight conference
officials or the NCAA, Weber said.
IN DOCKING Crowder a year's vacation (one month) and laying out ground
rules for Crowder's continued employment, Weber noted that "the overall respon-
sibility for monitoring and assuring compliance with NCAA and Big Eight Con-
ference rules rests with the athletic director."
Weber said Crowder in the future would be held "personally accountable for
any direct violations.

Albuquerque to Roswell, although
Ellenberger had not requested a
change of venue. The judge cited exten-
sive pre-trial publicity.
"I wanted to be tried in Albuquerque
because that's my home," Ellenberger
said. "But I believe in the system, and
if you believe in the system, you should
get a fair trial anywhere."
Raiders can move
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The California Supreme Court ruled
Monday in favor of the Oakland
Raiders and against the city of Oakland
in the case involving the city's attempt
to take over the National Football
League team under powers of eminent
domain.
The city went to the State Supreme
Court after a lower court dismissed the
eminent domain suit.
In Monday's ruling, the Supreme
Court denied Oakland's petition for a
hearing and an application for a stay of
the lower court decision.
The Raiders' Oakland Coliseum lease
has expired and the team's
management wants to move to the Los
Angeles Coliseum, but more court vic-
tories will be necessary before the
move can be made.
Streak ended
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland
right fielder Jorge Orta grounded out in
the fifth inning of last night's game
against the Chicago White Sox, endinga
streak of nine consecutive hits over
three games.]
The major league record for con-
secutivehitais 12, set by Mike Higgins
of the Boston Red Sox in 1938 and tied
byDtrbit's'Walt Dro-on9.a e.

A solo round-tripper by Lezcano in
the sixth put Milwaukee farther ahead,
and the Brewers' Lary Sorenson, who
was baffling the Tigers with a good
breaking ball, appeared in command.
HOWEVER, Detroit got it going in
the sixth. With one out Lance Parrish
singled on a hard grounder which third
baseman Money couldn't handle. Af-
terwards, Milwaukee second baseman
Jim Gantner's poor relay throw on a
tailor-made double play ball put Tiger
Tim Corcoran at second. Papi followed
and singled to shallow center to make
the score 5-2.
The Tigers continued their hitting in
the bottom of the seventh frame.
Singles by Gibson and Alan Trammell
chased Sorenson in favor of lefty Bob
McClure. Kemp singled to make it 5-3
and Summers' long fly to deep right
brought the Tigers to within one.
Twins 4, Blue jays 0
TORONTO (AP) - Geoff Zahn scat-
tered nine hits in pitching Minnesota to
a 4-0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays
Monday night, that ended the Twins'
four-game losing streak.
Zahn, 5-9, notched his third shutout of
the season - the only shutouts the
Twins have recorded this year. He
struck out five and walked three in
registering his sixthcomplete game.
THE TWINS took a 1-0 lead off Toron-
to starter Jesse Jefferson, 2-4, in the
second inning. Rob Wilfong drew a one-
out walk and stole second. One out
later, Pete Mackanin singled him
home. Minnesota added another run in
the third when Butch Wynegar led off
with a double and scored on Glenn
Adams' double.
The Twins picked up their final two
runs in the seventh when John Castino
lined a two-out single, went to third on a
single by Wynegar and scored on the
front end of a double steal. Rick Sofield
then doubled, scoring Wynegar and
chasing Jefferson.
AL Standings
East
W L Pct. GB
New York .... 37 21 .638 -
Milwaukee ... 31 25 .554 5
Boston-....... 31 27 .534 6
Cleveland.... 29 27 .518 7
Toronto-...... 28 28 .500 8
Baltimore .... 29 30 .492 8%
Detroit ....... 26 28 .481 9
West
Kansas City .. 37 22 .627 -
Chicago-......29 28 .509 7
Oakland-...... 29 30 .492 8
Seattle-....... 28 32 .467 9
Texas-........ 26 33 .441 11
Minnesota .... 23 36 .390 14
California .... 21 36 .368 15
*Night games not included
SCORES
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Detroit 6, Milwaukee 5 (1st game)
Minnesota 4, Toronto 0
Cleveland 5, Chicago 3
Baltimore 5, California 2
New York 6, Seattle 3
Texas 6, Kansas City3

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