Page 14-Thursday, May 21, 1981-The Michigan Daily SPORTS OF THE DAILY NBA All-Defensive squad chosen 1 NEW YORK (AP)Forward Bobby Jones of the Philadelphia 7ers has been named to the National Basketball Association's All-Defensive team for the fifth straight season, the NBA an- nounced yesterday. Jones received 35 points from the NBA's 23 head coaches who voted at the end of the regular season. A first-place vote was worth two points, and a second-place vote one. Coaches were not allowed to vote for their own players. HIS TEAMMATE Caldwell Jones earned the other forward spot with 24 points. Guard Dennis Johnson of Phoenix topped all vote-getters for the third straight season, and was the only player named on every ballot. He received 20 first-place votes and two for second. Joining him in the backcourt was New York's Michael Ray Richardson while center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar of Los Angeles (31 points) was named for the third straight season. THE SECOND team included for- wards Dan Roundfleld (10 points) of Atlanta and Portland's Kermit Washington (15. points) with San An- tonio's George Johnson (8 points) at center. Milwaukee's Quinn Buckner (20 poin- ts) gained one guard spot. There was a tie for the other back- court position between Dudley Bradley of Indiana and Michael Cooper of Los Angeles, with nine votes each. Knicks, Cavs trade NEW YORK (AP)-The New York Knicks have traded their first-round 1981 draft choice-the 17th overall pick in the draft-to the Cleveland Cavaliers for veteran guard Randy Smith, the National Basketball Association club announced yesterday. Smith, 32, has appeared in 758 con- secutive NBA games, including all 82 Cleveland contests last season. He last missed an NBA game on Feb. 15, 1972, when he played for the Buffalo Braves. LAST SEASON, Smith averaged 14.6 points, 4.4 assists and 113 steals. In his 10-year career, Smith has 14,778 poin- ts-an average of 18.2 per game-and 1,256 steals. Smith, 6-foot-3, played college ball at Buffalo State and joined the Braves in 1971-72. He was with the club when it moved to San Diego for the 1978-79 season, and was traded to Cleveland on Set. 21, 1979. Smith has appeared in two NBA All- Star games, and was named the Most Valuable player of the 1978 game in Atlanta, when he scored 27 points and collected six assists. Yankees, A's trade NEW YORK (AP)-The New York Yankees traded veteran first baseman Jim Spencer and left-handed pitcher DISTINCTIVE HAIRSTYLING FOR Tom Underwood to the ,Oakland A's yesterday for first baseman Dave Revering, rookie outfielder Mike Pat- terson and a minor league pitcher. The Yankees had tried to trade the 33- year-old Spencer and two minor leaguers to Pittsburgh during spring training for first baseman Jason Thompson, but Commissioner Bowie Kuhn overruled the deal because New York also agreed to give the Pirates $850,000 of which $450000 would have gone to pay Spencer's salary. THE COMMISSIONER had put a limit of $400,000 several years ago on deals involving cash. Spencer, who came to New York from the Chicago White Sox on Dec. 12, 1977, had been mired in a slump this season until Tuesday night, when he collected a single and a game-winning, two-run homer aganst Kansas City. He was batting .143 with two homers and four RBI's. Underwood, 27, was acquired from Toronto on Nov. 1, 1979. He compiled a 13-9 record with a 3.66 earned run average last year and was 1-4, 4.41 this season in six starts and three relief ap- pearances. THE 28-YEAR-OLD Revering, a three-year major league veteran, bat- ted .290 last year with 15 homers and 62 RBIs. He is hitting .230 this season with two homers and 10 RBI. Patterson, 23, hit .348 in 23 at-bats for the A's and will be assigned to the Yankees' Class AAA Columbus farm team in the Inter- national League. The Yankees' other acquisition, left- hander Chuck Dougherty, 21, was 3-3 with a 3.80 ERA for Oakland's San Jose farm club in the Class A California League. He will be sent to Fort Lauder- dale in the Class A Florida State League. Spencer and Underwood left the Yankees yesterday. Underwood repor- tedly was headed to join the A's in Boston, while Spencer planned to return to his Maryland home, where one of his children was ill. Revering was expected to join the Yankees tomorrow night. There was no im- mediate word on who would fill the open spot on the Yankees' roster. Cage coach announced PHILADELPHIA (AP)-St. Joseph's University announced yesterday the appointment of Jim Boyle, assistant coach the past eight years, as head basketball coach. Boyle succeeds Jimmy Lynam, who resigned Monday to become an assistant coach with the Portland Trail Blazers of the National Basketball Association. Boyle, 40, reportedly will be given a three- or four-year contract. He said the length and terms of the con- tract still were to be decided. AT A NEWS conference yesterday, Boyle said he intends to continue the same type of program that enabled Lynam to lead St. Joseph's to the quar- terfinals of last season's NCAA tour- nament. SCORES Boyle is the sixth graduate of the university to coach the basketball team since John McMenamin. Since graduating from St. Joseph's in 1964, Boyle has been a teacher in the Philadelphia parochial school system, assistant coach at Widener University for two seasons and then an aide at St. Joseph's. Davis versus NFL LOS ANGELES (AP) - A National Football League attorney praised Al Davis as a "remarkable man" who in- spires great loyalty, but said yesterday the Oakland Raiders' managing par- tner has a flaw - he believes rules are made to be broken. Attorney Patrick Lynch, one of three lawyers who spoke in defense of the NFL and its joint defendants during the second and final day of opening arguments of the antitrust trial, in- sisted that the bitter court dispute bet- ween the NFL and the Raiders is not a matter of antitrust. It is, he said, a mat- ter of broken contracts and betrayal of Oakland football fans. "MR. DAVIS is a remarkable man," Lynch told the jury. "He has inspired loyalty in the people around him. But he has left injury in his way. Part of that is the belief that rules are to be broken - even the Golden Rule." Davis and NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle sat separated only by an aisle in a front row but did not look at each other. Lynch, using visual aids including cartoons projected on a movie screen, told the seven-woman, three-man jury that Davis agreed to abide by the NFL rules when he joined the league. Of Davis' claim that the NFL is restraining trade by barring him from moving the Raiders to Los Angeles, Lynch said: "Nobody held a gun to Mr. Davis' head and said, 'You must join this league.' Mr., Davis made the choice." Lynch said that the NFL, if it allowed the Raiders to leave Oakland,. would be joining in the betrayal of the fans. "You can disregard the fans, or disregard the public that supports you," he said. "You have to look at the fact that people don't forgive and do remember. It just isn't right for the Oakland Raiders to leave Oakland where they've been making plenty to just to line their pockets in Los Angeles." Attorney Joseph Cotchett, represen- ting the Los Angeles Rams, also praised Davis' abilities as a leader, but he said he believed Davis' only interest in moving was "power and money." 4 4 MEN AND WOMEN Try a 1980 NEW LONG or SHORT STYLE American League THE DA SCOLA sfeati~ctsexeand STYL STSBoston S, Oakland 3 I STY ISTSBaltimore 5, California 3 LIberty Off State.. b8-9329 National League East U. at So. U.... 6b2-0354 Cincinnatitl0,Chicago 7 Arborland-......971-9975 New York4,SanFrancisco3t0innings) Maple Vilage .... 7b1-2733 Pittsburgh s, Atlanta t FORWARD BOBBY JONES of the Philadelphia 7gers, shown here scoring two points, was named to the NBA All-Defensive team, voted on by the league's coaches,for the fifth consecutive season. Joining Jones on the squad were guards Dennis Johnson of Phoenix and Michael Ray Richardson of New York, center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar of Los Angeles and Jones' Philadelphia teammate CaIdwell Jones at the other forward position. I