Page 16-Tuesday, July 22, 1980-The Michigan Daily Avet's da in the sun I d Jansonewins Open as contenders fade and I was choking, so I didn't want to have to two-putt from 30 or 40 feet," he said. The ball stopped rolling six feet away from the pin, and when he knocked the putt home for birdie, the Michigan Open and its $3,000 first-prize money were his. Wolverine linkster John Morse, who won the Big Ten individual champion- ship in May, remained in the picture with two rounds of 73, but his 77 on Saturday left him back in the pack. His fourth-round 74 gave him a 72-hole total of 297. Throughout the tournament, many of, the competitors complained about the condition of the course, especially the slow, rain-soaked greens and the dif- ficulty of pin placements. But as one might expect, the champ was satisfied. "Thesetgreens are as hard as any in the stste to putt, regardless of whether they're slow, as they were this year, or not," Janson said. "I like to play a golf course where par is an excellent score, so I'll have to congratulate the Tour- nament Committee on that." Just as the Tournament Committee congratulated Lynn Janson, Michigan's top golfer, at least temporarily. By MARK MIHANOVIC In the hot sun at the University Golf Course Sunday, Lynn Janson tightened his grip on the state's golfing leadership by shooting a 72 to hold off Steve Groves' challenge and win the $21,000 Michigan Open by two strokes. It was consistency that spelled vic- tory for the tall, smooth-swinging Com- stock Park resident, who is the head pro at Green Ridge Country Club in Grand Rapids and the 1979 Michigan PGA Player of the Year. Janson's rounds of 70-70-71-72gave him a tournament total of one-under-par 283: Groves (from Or- chard Lake), playing along with Janson and Bill Grooms, also notched a 72 over the last 18 holes for a four-round tally of 285. AFTER GOLFING his way out of contention on Saturday with a score- of 76, Belmont's Buddy'Whitten stormed back Sunday with a 67 (tying Rock- ford's Thom Rosely'for the best round of the tournament) and finished three strokes behind Janson at two-over-par 286. Grooms, from Detroit, began the final round only one stroke behind the leader,'Janson, but a bogey on No. 11 (normally the second hole), a double bogey at 12, and another bogey at 13 sent him on his way to a 77 and out of title contention. He finished in a tie for fourth at 289 with 20-year-old Marc Dingman, who won honors as the Open's top amateur. A junior-to-be at Eastern Michigan, Dingman used an almost-flawless put- ting game to take the lead after two rounds, but he played the final 36 holes to the tune of 76-74 and faded from the top. GROVES HAD a chance to win all the way through Sunday's last hole. On the par-three, 250-yard 12th, he landed his tee shot four feet from the cup. After he made the birdie putt and Janson scrambled for a par, Groves was just two strokes down. He then barely missed birdie putts on 13 and 14 of seven and 15 feet, respec- tively, which he described afterward as the key to the match. "I felt 12, 13, and 14 were the key points," Groves said. "I felt that when!I made the birdie at 12, I had a chance. But I didn't feel good over the putter at all today, and as a result, I had a lot of putt that were short. Lynn knew that allhe had to do was hit the middle of the green and make par. JANSON AND Groves matched pars on 15 and 16, and they hit their respec- tive second shots at 17 to within inches of each other about 30 feet from the hole. Groves hit his putt dead center but a little strong, and it bounced off the SCORES American League Minnesota 8, Baltimore7 Texas 5, oston3 Kansas City 2, Chicago i National League Montreal8 ,,tlanta i St. Louis 5, Los Angeles 2 back of the cup and out, forcing him to settle for par. He picked up a stroke anyway, though, as Janson missed a three-footer and bogeyed. But Janson came back and clinched the win with a brilliant second shot at the 445-yard, par-four 18th. "I had just three-putted 17 because I was nervous 4 1 40 DOWN TO THE WIRE goes Lynn Janson-but the veteran pro has the experience of many tournaments to carry him safely through the pressure cooker and into the winner's circle of the 1988 Michigan Open held at the University Golf Course. Janson, who is shown studying a long putt on the 17th hole of the final round, shot an even-par 72 and took advant- age of younger players' mistakes to win the title. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: Pactorek hitting patri otic HRs Michigan's Jim Paciorek blasted a two-run homer and Although Heritage was the first across the finish line, it went three-for-four this weekend to help the United States will not necessarily be the overall winner once final times are Collegiate All-Star team coast to a 10-2 victory over the determined under a complicated handicap formula. Korean national team and give the Americans a 3-2 advan- Heritage and Brassy were among only 21 of the 300 boats tage in the best-of-seven series being held in Seoul, South entered in the 259-mile race up Lake Huron to pass the mid- Korea. way point Sunday night at Cove Island. Paciorek has been hot with the bat the last two games of * * * * the series. He has had five hits in his last seven at-bats, and is Twins' Cub bage badly injured six-for-17 through the entire series for an .352 average. BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)-Minnesota Twins third In the fourth game, which the United States won 3-2, baseman Mike Cubbage suffered a broken nose and facial Paciorek scored the game-winning run in the first inning, lacerations last night when he was struck by a ground ball in Paciorek has started in rightfield every game. the first game of a doubleheader with the Baltimore Orioles. * * * * Cubbage was carried off the field on a stretcher after he Heritage wins Mackinac regatta was struck on the right side of his face by a ground ball off the MACKINAC ISLAND (UPI)-The scratch boat Heritage bat of Len Sakata. was the first to cross the finish line yesterday in the storm- Doctors at Fairview Southdale Hospital said Cuhage's tossed 56th annual Port Huron to Mackinac Island yacht eye was not damaged, hut he had cuts shove the right eye and race.on the right side of his nose. The 63-foot Morgan sloop, owned by D.L. Wildman of The injury occurred with one out in the third inning and Chicgo, crossed the finish line at 12:20.01 p.m. EDT. Bassry the Orioles leading 5-1. With the bases loaded, Sakata sent a apparently was a close second in the prestigious race, spon- one-hop smash to thiard. The ball struck Cubbage in the face sored by the Bayview Yacht Club of Detroit. and shattered his eyeglasses. 0 4 A