Page 16-Friday, August 8, 1980-The Michigan Daily Stadler heads P 'Walrus'shoots 67 in rain-soaked round ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - Craig Stadler, the chunky guy called "The Walrus" by his fellow touring golfers, shot a solid, 3-under-par 67 and took the lead eysterday in the storm-delayed first round of the 62nd PGA national championship. Stadler, who carries 220 pounds on a 5-foot-10 frame, had to wait for 36 minutes during a late-afternoon thun- derstorm delay before finishing par-par on the two toughest holes on the course for sole control of the lead. His late heroics lifted him ahead of a group of five tied at 68. They included veteran Bob Murphy, Dr. Gil Morgan, Curtis Strange, Howard Twitty and Bobby Walzel.I Defending champion David Graham of Australia and the man he beat in a playoff for the 1979 title, Ben Crenshaw, were at 69, one-under par on the 6,964- yard Oak Hill Country Club course that, most leading players -agreed, played about as easily as it ever will. Hale Irwin, a two-time U.S. Open, titleholder, also was a 69 and the only other man able to break par. "If you're ever gonna shoot a decent score here, this is the day to do it," said Twitty, the recent winner of the Har- tford Open. But the'pre-tournament favorites, Tom Watson, Lee Trevino and Jack Nicklaus, weren't able to take advan- tage of the relatively easy scoring con- ditions: soft greens which held the ap- proach shots, soft fairways that kept the ball from running into the deep, treacherous rough, and the absence of wind. Nicklaus, who broke his long slump with a dramatic victory in the U.S. Open a couple of months ago, managed a round of par 70. It could have been much better. "I played fairly well, but I missed an awful lot of putts,"-said Nicklaus, seeking to add a record-matching fifth Professional Golfers Association title to his record collection of 16 major- tournament victories. "I could have had a very low score. I putted the hall fairly well, but they just didn't go in," he said. Watson, a five-time winner on the U.S. tour this season and making his first start since winning the British Open two weeks ago, didn't make a bir- die in his effort that left him eight shots off the pace. "I can't remember the last time I was shut out of birdies in a round," Watson said. "But that doesn't take me out of it. I still think the winning score is going to be around 280(par). But it means that this has to be my bad round. I can't af- ford another one. It means I have to play three good rounds." Trevino, a two-time winner this year who scored the first victory of his career in the U.S. Open on this course in 1968, generally agreed. "It might even go over par," he said. "I just didn't play very well," Trevino said. "I mis-clubbed several tines and got it over the green and when you do that, you're just gonna make bogey. It's that simple." "On the fifth, I got it just off the fair- way, a foot and a foot. That's a foot into the rough and foot deep," he said. Strange agreed. "There's no making par out of that deep stuff," he said. But Stadler found a way. "I wasn't driving the ball as well as I'd like to, but I got a lot of good lies. Most of the time I was just in the edge of the rough. I was always where I could advance the ball. The course was set up easy for me. It suited my game." But his putting didn't hurt anything, either. He scored from 20 feet for a birdie on the second hole, then one-putted six of the next eight holes to save par. He got to two-under with a 15-foot putt on the 10th, then got his next two birdies after driving into the rough. He wedged to 10 feet and made the putt on the 12th and used a wedge again from the rough on the 14th. It set up a four-foot putt which he ran in to go four-under par for the day and two ahead of the field. But he hooked it off the tee on the 16th, couldn't extricate himself from the deep stuff this time and made his lone bogey of the day. After the rain delay, he finished par-par for the lead. Stadler, who won the Bob Hope Classic and Greensboro Opens earlier this year, was the only one of the leaders to play in the afternoon half of the field when the heat, which reached into the mid-90s, and the heavy humidity, were at their worst. "It was just a fun day," he said, but, characteristically, wasn't taking his leading position too seriously. "Oh, no," he said. "There's still much too much golf to be played to be thinking about winning. I'm just thinking about playing as well as I can." FIRST ROUND LEADER Craig Stadler flips his.putter into the air after missing a par putt on the 16th hole during the 1980 PGA Championship at Rochester, N.Y. It was one of the few mistakes that Stadler made while shooting a round of 67 to take the early lead. Isaac chosen Stu Isaac, head swimming coach for the University of Michigan women's team, has been named as one of six coaches to work with the United States National Team in the International Swim Meet for Boycotting nations at the University of Hawaii. The meet will be held August 14 through 17. The U.S. team will train for two weeks on the Pacific Islands before meeting most boycotting nations, including Japan, West Germany and Canada. 0 BUCS WIN, EXPOS FALL: NL East race tightens 0 CHICAGO (AP) - Bill Madlock hit a two-run homer, pit- cher Eddie Solomon cracked a pair of doubles and Tim Foji drove in three runs with a double and two singles, highlighting a 16-hit attack that carried the Pittsburgh Pirates to an 11-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs yesterday. It was the third straight triumph for the Pirates, who moved within 1 games of first-place Montreal in the National League East. The Expos were beaten by the New York Mets 7-1. The Cubs got solo home runs from Mike Tyson in the first inning and Jesus Figueroa in the second, his first in the major leagues. The Pirates tied the score with two runs in the bottom of the second on a wild pitch and Phil Garner's triple, then went ahead 3-2 in the third on Dave Parker's double and Willie Stargell's single. New York 7, Montreal 1 MONTREAL (AP) - Ray Burris pitched a six-hitter in his first start since returning from the 21-day disabled list and Joel Youngblood and Jerry Morales hit home runs as the New York Mets defeated the Montreal Expos 7-1 yesterday. Burris, who had been out with a broken thumb since July 3, lost his shutout bid when Rowland Office slammed his four- th homer of the year leading off the seventh inning. Burris struck out two and walked none in raising his record to 5-6. THE METS took a 1-0 lead against starter Fred Norman, ?-2, in the second inning when Morales hit his third home run of the season - all against Montreal. New York added three runs in the fifth. Frank Taveras started the inning with a single and raced to third on Elliott Maddox's single. Lee Mazzilli drove in Taveras with a sacrifice fly and after Steve Henderson struck out, Youngblood capped the inning by slamming Norman's 3-2 pitch over the left field fence. It was the sixth homer of the season and first since July 4 for Youngblood, who had stretched his hitting streak to 14 games with a single in the fourth. The Mets padded their lead with three runs off reliever Dale Murray in the seventh. Maddox singled for his third hit, Henderson walked and Youngblood singled to load the bases. Morales then stroked a two-run single and Alex Trevino lof- ted a sacrifice fly. I I