Page 16-Thursday, July 31, 1980-The Michigan Daily Sports _______ .,. Tiger rally falls short; Astro Richard lose 4th straight, Clear, who picked up the win. By BUDDY MOOREHOUSE After retiring the first five Angels in a SpecialtoThenaily row, Schatzeder walked Bobby Grich, DETROIT - The frustration con- bringing up Bob Clark and his .186 bat- tinued for the Detroit Tigers last night ting average. But Clark defied the as they dropped their fourth game in a numbers and blasted his second rouid- row to the California Angels, 6-5, last tripper of the year into the left field night at Tiger Stadium. A gutsy per- seats to give California a 2-0 lead. formance by Bengal starter Dan Schat- THE TIGERS got a run back in the zeder was not enough, as he absorbed fourth as 41 Cowens walked, John the loss and dropped to 6-7 for the Wockenfuss singled, and Jim Lentine season. Angel starter Frank Tanana scored Cowens with a single to left. pitched impressively through six in- They tallied two more in the sixth, nings before he was replaced by Mark when Wockenfuss walked and Lance OAKLAND ROUTS TORONTO: Indians extend streak 6-5 Parrish followed with a single. Lentine then belted a triple to center, scoring the tworunners and putting the Bengals in front, 3-2. That lead held up until the eighth in- ning, when the Angel bats erupted for four runs. Little Fred Patek led off with a triple, and then Rod Carew (who had pinch-hit for California catcher Don Whitmer) singled. Angel manager Jim Fregosi then inserted Bert Campaneris to run for Carew, and he scampered around to score on a double by Larry Harlow.. THAT SPELLED the end for Schat- zeder, who was replaced by Aurelio Lopez. After he struck out the first Angel to face him, Don Baylor cracked a two- run homer, boosting the Angel lead to 6- 3. Detroit rallied for two runs in their half of the eighth, however, as Wocken- fuss tripled and came home on a single by Parrish. After Andy Hassler replaced Clear, pinch hitter Richie Hebner singled moving Parrish to third. Lentine then bounced into a double play, but the grounder was enough to score Parrish. BUT THAT WAS all the Tigers could muster, as they slipped further down the line in the American League East. The night was particularly frustrating for Tiger third-baseman Tom Brookens who fanned three times, in addition to some questionable play in the field. The-Tigers have seen their attendan- ce figures drop steadily on their current homestand, where they are now 2-5. collapsesI PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The Houston Astros million dollar pitcher, J. R. Richard, collapsed during a workout in Houston early yesterday and was to undergo emergency surgery for removal of a blood clot in a neck ar- tery, the club announced Wednesday night. Ed Wade, an Astros spokesman, disclosed the planned operation while the Western Division-leading Astros were playing the Phillies in Philadelphia. The operation was to be performed at Houston Methodist Hospital by a team of vascular surgeons. Richard has been on the 21-day disabled list since July 16 with what had been, diagnosed as a blockage of an artery in his right shoulder. He was working out in the Astrodome Wednesday morning when he collapsed and was taken by ambulance to Methodist Hospital. . Wade said Richard was admitted to the intensive care unit of the hospital, where the clot was discovered. Wade said in a brief statement han- ded out at the ballgame that surgery was expected to be performed im- mediately. SCORES' American League California 6,DetroitS5 Oakland 11, Toronto 1 Cleveland s, Seattle 2 Chicagon, Milwaukee s National League Philadelphia6, Houston 4 Montreal 2,Cincinnati I CLEVELAND (AP) - Ross Grim- sley scattered five hits in his first American League complete game in almost three years, and Rick Manning doubled home the tie-breaking run in the seventh inning to lead the Cleveland Indians to their eighth consecutive vic- tory, a 5-2 triumph over the Seattley Mariners last night. Grimsley, 2-0 since he was purchased from the Montreal Expos on July 11, retired the final 15 Seattle batters after yielding a fifth-inning leadoff single to Larry Cox. The veteran left-hander struck out one and walked one in going the route for the first time in the AL since firinga 4-0 shutout for the Baltimore Orioles on Sept. 21, 1977 against Toronto. Grimsley spent all of 1978 and 1979 in the National League. Manning delivered a one-out double, his third hit of the game, off Glenn Ab- bott, 8-7, after Gary Alexander opened the seventh with a walk and was sacrificed to second by Jerry Dybzin- ski. Cleveland took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Miguel Dilone singled, stole second, advanced to third on Jorge Orta's grounder and scored on Mike Hargrove's single. Seattle went ahead 2-1 in the third on a single by Mario Mendoza, a walk and RBI singles by Bill Stein and Bruce Bochte. Alexander's fourth home run of the season knotted the score 2-2 in the fourth. Toby Harrah doubled home a run in the eighth andscored on a single by Ron Hassey as the Mariners suffered their fifth defeat in a row and their 16th in 20 games. A's 11, Blue Jays 1 TORONTO (AP) - Oakland's Rick Langford fired a two-hitter after pit- ching six perfect innings, while Wayne Gross hit a pair of two-run homers and Dave Revering and Jeff Newman also homered as the A's bombed the Toronto Blue Jays 11-1 last night. Langford, 10-9, retired the first 18 Toronto batters and was within nine outs of a perfect game when light- hitting Alfredo Griffin led off the Blue Jays' seventh by driving Langford's first pitch over the right field fence for his second home run of the year. Doug Ault got the other hit bff Langford, an infield single in the eighth, as the 18-year-old right-hander pitched his 14th consecutive complete' game and ran his personal winning streak to six in a row. Langford struck out four and walked none. Revering, who doubled home a run in the first inning, led off the fourth with his 10th homer of the year for a 4-0 lead as the A's scored once in each of the fir- st four innings against loser Dave Stieb, 10-8. They added three runs against Jack Kucek in the fifth, two on Gross' first home run of the game and eighth of the season, and Newman belted a two-run homer in the sixth, his 10th. Gross hit another two-run homer in the ninth off Tom Buskey. In the second inning, Tony Armas scored on a double play grounder, and the A's scored in the third when Dwayne Murphy squeezed home Jeff Put, in his place Vladimer Kiselyov of the Soviet Unionsets an Olympic record in the shot put with this toss. The put soared a total of 21.45 meters, or 70 feet 1% inch, yesterday in Moscow. See page 15 for more coverage of the 1980 Summer Olympics.