The Michigan Daily-Saturday, July 19, 1980-Page 15 A..iairnu - -o' . Sportsm Dingman leader in Michigan Open Ted Kondratko (from Plymouth) The Wolverines' Big .Ten medalist, 'dand Bob Proben (Redford) both have John Morse, joins four others at 146, A m ater s ea sm a stroked rounds of 74 and 70 to remain still not out of the hunt. Defending five shots off the pace, while John champion Randy Erskine, with 74-73- Molenda (West Bloomfield), Gary 147 is eight behind the leader. over veteran le Norman (Battle Creek), and Rock- So the 1980 Michigan Open is still a ford's Thom Rosely (who yesterday wide open tournament, and probably no played the best 18 holes of the tour- one is more aware of that fact than a By MARK MIHANOVIC can't complain about my putting, but nament thus far, a 67), are another young man who could turn this event in- Marc Dingman, a 20-year-old junior that (slow greens) is not what I prefer." stroke behind at 145. to a Cinderella story, Marc Dingman. I at Eastern micnigan, putted his way to a round of 69 yesterday and took the lead after two rounds of the $20,000 Michigan Open at the par-71 Michigan Golf Course. Coupled with his Thursday score of 70, Dingman's 69 gives him a total of three-under-par 139 and a surprising one-stroke edge over Lynn Janson, 1979 Michigan PGA Player of the Year, who has chalked up two rounds of 70. First- round leader Steve Groves finished his second 18-holes in 72 strokes, dropping him into a tie for third with Bill Grooms. Dingman, entered as an amateur, bogeyed only the par-three fifth hole yesterday, citing his deftness on the greens as the major reason. "I didn't hit it (the ball) that good, but some of the shots I missed turned out all right," he laughed. "But I've never putted that well. I didn't think about the first round. I just kept playing." Janson, who finished seventh in the Open last year, echoed the sentiments of many of his peers when he expressed a preference for faster greens than the ones played on thus far in the tour- nament. "The greens were slow, but hard," the 32-year-old veteral said. "I Groves, from Orchard Lake, played the still rain-drenched greens well in Thursday's round of 69, avoiding any three-putts, but he did just that twice yesterday for bogeys, and it cost him the lead. "You're gonna three-putt out here," he said with no hint of discouragement. "I don't care who you are or wvhere you're at. You're gonna do it, so you just gotta accept it and go on. N "I actually probably played, from tee to green, better today than yesterday. I like my position. I don't like leading especially." Unlike some of the others, Groves was satisfied with the course's con- dition. "The fairways are real good," he said, "and the greens are still holding. They're not the swiftest greens in the world, but they're not the worst greens I've ever putted on, either." Detroiter Grooms returned to the clubhouse with one of the better rounds of the day, a two-under 69, to move up into a deadlock with Groves. Nobody completed the first two days of play at even-par 142, but Belmont's Buddy Whitten and Warren's Reynold Gutzi sit four strokes back of Dingman with 143. PHILY DOWNS BRAVES IN ATLANTA: Reds 'Cruz' by Mets CINCINNATI (AP) - Hector Cruz rapped his first home run of the season, a three-run shot in the sixth inning, and Mario Soto pitched four innings of one- run relief as the Cincinnati Reds beat the New York Mets 5-3 in the first game of Friday's twi-night doubleheader. Cruz hit the first pitch from Mets' starter Pete Falcone, 5-6, deep into the left field seats to erase a 3-2 New York lead. The homer followed two-out walks to Johnny Bench and Dan Driessen. Soto, 3-4, making his 35th appearance of the season, surrendered a solo homer to Claudell Washington leading off the top of the sixth to break a 2-2 tie. He then retired the last 12 New York bat- ters. FALCONE ALSO fell into a costly streak of wildness in the second inning when he walked Ray Knight and Bench with one out and gave up an RBI double to Driessen. Bench then scored from third on a two-out wild pitch. Phillies 7, Braves 2 ATLANTA - Bake McBride and Pete Rose drove in three runs each while Nino Espinosa and Dickie Noles com- bined on a three-hitter Friday night, lif- ting the Philadelphia Phillies to a 7-2 victory over the Atlanta Braves. Espinosa, 1-1, continued, his comeback from season-long shoulder woes by pitching the first seven innings and allowed only two hits - home runs by Bob Horner in the second and Chris Chambliss in the seventh. He left in the eighth after issuing his only walk, a leadoff pass to Jeff Burroughs. NOLES TOOK over from there and surrendered a pinch single by Biff Pocoroba in the eighth. Mike Schmidt belted his 23rd homer in the sixth, a solo shot off Phil Niekro, 7-12. It was Schmidt's seventh career home run off Niekro. The Phillies scored three runs in the third: Ramon Aviles singled but was forced out on Espinosa's bunt. Lonnie Smith walked and Rose singled to right, scoring Espinosa. McBride then hit a two-run double to center. McBride also drove in a run in seven- th with a bases-loaded infield grounder that scored Aviles. Rose added a two- run single in the ninth. Ali in rare form for Holmes fight promo NEW YORK (AP) - Thump! thump! thump! Muhamemad Ali pounded his fist on the table for emphasis and attention. He was talking, but in the milling crush of bodies that routinely reports for boxing press conferences these days, very few people were listening. Ali was selling tickets Thursday for his Oct. 2 date in Las Vegas against Larry Holmes, a $14 million closed cir- cuit extravaganza which has moved from Taiwan to Rio de Janeiro to Cairo before finding a home and settling in Caesars Palace. PROMOTER DON King put the package together with Ali getting a reported $8 million and Holmes getting $6 million. Clifford Perlman, chairman of the board of Caesars Palace, made a $1 million down payment for the fight on the spot in one of the few serious moments of the press conference which Ali dominated. "Two years away ... 38 years old ... I'll eat Holmes up ... I'm gon- na mess Holmes up ... I'm gonna take this sucker ... I'll wipe him up." Ali was talking in fragmented sen- tences, rattling his sabers at the World Boxing Council heavyweight champion. Holmes kept his cool through much of the barrage. "YOU ARE shaking hands with Father Time," Holmes said, taunting the former champion, much in the manner that Ali has goaded him. He even dipped into some Ali-style poetry. "They say you float like a butterfly, sting like a bee, but I'll tell you now; I'm gonna end it in three," said Holmes, chuckling over his doggerel. But if this was a needling contest, then Ali won ina walk. Egged on by his entourage which now wears warmup jackets proclaiming themselves "Ali's Wrecking Crew," the former champion opened with the popular "Ballad of Ali." The verse, in- cluding a section which goes: "Ali's got a left; Ali's got a right; He hits you and you're asleep for the night;" was longer and more original than Holmes' effort. "I KNOW I'm great, but I want to be immortal," Ali explained. "Four times world champion. Can you imagine that? I want a record that can't be broken." Now warmed up, Ali began speaking in machine gun bursts. "I'm making a prediction," he said, "not only will Holmes lose, but I will knock him out. I've got his num- ber . . . He loses his cool ... I'm gonna psyche him out."