4 Sports Page 16 Tuesday, May 12, 1981 The Michigan Daily Two.in a row Split with MSU gives 'M' nine title 4 By MARTHA CRALL Michigan only needed one win to clin- ch the Big Ten East Division baseball title this weekend against Michigan State, and that's all it got. In Saturday's doubleheader at East Lansing, the Wolverines split with the Spartans, winning the opener, 7-2, while dropping the nightcap, 8-6. Sunday's doubleheader in Ann Arbor was rained out. MICHIGAN GOT off to a 4-0 lead in Saturday's opener with a four-run third inning. Second baseman Jeff Jacobson started things off with a single, Greg Schulte doubled him to third, and both scored when Bruno Petrella threw away Tony Evans' ground ball. Jim Paciorek then tripled in Evans, and with two out, Tim Miller singled to score Paciorek. Paciorek's triple was his seventh of the season, tying a Michigan record. In the bottom of the third, Petrella ruined Wolverine starter Scot Elam's no-hit bid with a home run over the left field wall. The Wolverines came back with two more runs in the fourth, however, when John Young, Schulte, and Evans all singled to load the bases, and Paciorek did the same to drive in two more runs and make the score 6-1. MICHIGAN STATE'S second hit of the game was as long as the first, a towering home run by Terry Johnson. Michigan rounded out its scoring in the fifth inning when Miller singled and went to third on rightfielder Mark Russ' two-base error. Young then singled Miller in. Elam hurled a complete game gem to get the win and raise his season mark to 9-1. The sophomore right-hander gave up only two hits, the two round-trippers, while walking one and striking out five Spartans. THE LOSER was Mark Pomorski (5- 1) who pitched three and one-third in- nings and allowed six runs, three of them earned. The nightcap was a wild scoring af- fair with Michigan State ending up on top. Freshman third baseman Chris Sabo and Paciorek starred for the Wolverines, each collecting two hits and two RBI. Sabo uncorked his 10th homer of the campaign (to tie a Michigan record) and also smashed a double. Chris Dorr got two doubles off of Michigan pitchers, going two-for-four and driving in five runs. Phil Magsig was the winning pitcher, going three and two-thirds innings in relief of star- ter Tim Birtsas. Gary Wayne (6-2) took the loss for the Wolverines, lasting only one-third of an inning in which he yielded four runs, all earned, on two hits and two walks. A parade of relievers followed him, in- cluding Bill Shuta, Jim Bartlett and Rich Stoll. Michigan's next action will be at 1 p.m. today at Fisher Stadium, when Wayne State invades Fisher Stadium for a doubleheader. 4 I Elam ... wings two-hitter 4 HUMENIK WINS IN SUDDEN DEATH: Blue linksters second in Badger By JAMES THOMPSON sudden-death hole, between Michigan's will take a full teameffort to do well in The Michigan golf team placed Ed Humenik, and Purdue's Jay Smith, conference play. second yesterday in the Badger In- both of whom shot 71 in regulation play Other top Wolverine finishers were vitational in Madison. The tournament on the par-72 course. Humenik won the Steve Maddalena and Tom Pursel. had been scheduled as a two-day, 36- sudden death with a birdie on the par- Maddalena had a 73 to tie for third with hole event, but high winds and low tem- four hole: Afterwards, he felt that he Wisconsin's Rob Peters, and Pursel peratures Sunday forced cancellation had his game all together, as he swung finished with a 77. John Morse, the of the first round of play, making well all of last week. Wolverines' top golfer thus far this yesterday's round the sole determinant "I WAS HAPPY about it, but I don't season, ended up with a 78. James Yaf- of the results, think I'll realize what I did until I tee off fe and James Becker, with 79 and 81, The tournament was highlighted by a at the Big Ten's," said Humenik. respectively, lifted the team to a score Humenik's victory was his first in in- of 378, right behind the first-place Pur- S RT T,~I dividual competition for the due's 373. 11111 Wolverines, and he still realizes that it The host team, Wisconsin, finished BASEBALL third, while the other Big Ten team playing in the tourney, Minnesota, en- May 12-7 WAYN STE (DH),EN 1ded up in sixth. May 15-17 BIG TEN TOURNAMENT -,IN ACTION Friday and Saturday at MEN'S GOLFEast Lansing in the Spartan In- vitational, the Michigan linksters did May 15-17, Big Ten Tourn., Minneapolis not fare as well, though. Even with the swing of senior John Morse, who tied MEN'S TRACK with MSU's Steve Lubber for first place May 15-16 Big Ten Championships, at 144, the Wolverines could only at East Lansing manage a sixth-place finish in a field of 15 teams. MEN'S TENNIS The top team finisher was Ohio State, May 15-22 NCAA Tournament, At the defending Big Ten champs, closely Athens, Georgia followed by Indiana, Michigan State WOMEN'S TENNIS (Green), Miami of Ohio, and Eastern May 15-17 MAIAW, at Madison Michigan. This time Humenik finished with a ECORC S 144, Pursel had a 153, Yaffe shot 161, and Dave Fardig had a 164. Wolverine coach Tom Simon cites this inability for American League his squad to get it together at the same Bostonz7,Toronto 6 time as the team's major problem. Texas9 . Kansas City I THERE WAS a three-way tie for ational League second in the tournament between Gary Houston 5, Cincinnatii0iorse Stickel of Indiana and Ohio State's Mike Atlanta 3. Pittsburgh 2 . .. takes Spartan Invitational McGee and Rocky Miller. tourney I I I Humenik .. sudden death winner The season comes to an end this week at the Big Ten's to be held in Min- neapolis, Mn. The people that Michigan will be counting on for peak performan- ces are Morse, Maddalena, and Humenik. Morse, who leads the team this season with an average round score of 75, also finished last season as the conference champ. Humenik is another player to be watched, as he has vastly improved and moved among the top- ranked golfers in the state. Morse, who feels strongly about the 'team-play' attitude, said "we need to win as a team because we are a team." 0