Page 28-Wednesday, May 6, 1981-The Michigan Daily 12TH-INNING HOMER BEATS BLUE Toledo edges 'M', 3-2 a By JOHN KERR For the Michigan baseball team the song "The Sounds of Silence" has taken on a whole new meaning; it describes the offensive portion of the Wolverines' latest efforts on the diamond. Yesterday the Michigan bats made nary a sound as the Toledo Rockets handed the Wolverines a 3-2 loss in 12 innings at Fisher Stadium. The Wolverines now stand at 31-14 on the season. MICHIGAN COULD muster only six hits in the contest, and Wolverine coach Bud Middaugh was so concerned about the Michigan offense that he had his team take batting practice following yesterday's loss. "We haven't been hitting the ball solidly lately," said Middaugh. "We're not taking good cuts at the plate, and for us to beat good clubs we're going to have to take better cuts." The Wolverines stayed close throughout the game, though, as Toledo was also having its hitting woes. The Rockets garnered two unearned runs off of Michigan starter Dave Kopf in the third inning and only managed five hits for the whole game. The fifth hit,. however, was a towering solo homer in the top of the 12th by Toledo shortstop Tim Kubacki off of Michigan's Jim Bartlett, which proved to be the dif- ference as Michigan was unable to score in its half of the inning. Bartlett, despite allowing only two hits in 61/ in- nings, was saddled with the loss and is 1-1 on the year. IT TOOK A fine effort for the Wolverines to send the game into extra innings, as the Michigan offense finally came to life in the bottom of the ninth. Shortstop Tony Evans led off with a triple up the alley in left-center and scored when Jim Paciorek smashed the next pitch off the wall in center for a double. With one out, freshman Chris Sabo singled home Paciorek, and the! game was tied at 2-2. Sabo was stran- ded at second, however, when Tim Miller and Vic Ray both grounded out. Neither team picked up a hit in the extra innings until Kubacki's homer clinched the game for the Rockets. The Wolverines currently occupy first place in the Big Ten's Eastern, Division with a 9-3 record. Michigan took three of four from Purdue last weekend to solidify that position. The loss to the Boilermakers, which came in the third game of the series, snapped a ten-game Wolverine winning streak. Michigan's victims during the streak included Indiana, Cleveland State, Detroit, Ferris State and Purdue. GERRY HOOL, Paciorek, Sabo, Greg Schulte and Miller continue to vie for the Michigan batting crown. Following yesterday's action, Sabo leads the Wolverines with a .354 average. Hool is next at .350 and Paciorek is hitting .348. Schulte now stands at .346 and Miller is swinging at a .339 pace. Pitchers Gary Wayne and Scott Elam still dominate the pitching statistics. Elam is 8-1 with a 1.68 earned run average while Wayne stands at 6-1 with a 1.20 ERA. Michigan takes on Eastern Michigan today at 1:00 p.m. ina doubleheader at Fisher Stadium. Rocket Blast 123 456 789 101112R H E TOLEDO.. ............. 002 000 000 0 0 4 3 5 0 MICHIGAN ............... 000000002 0 0 0 2 6 3 Clarke, Elston (4), Foster (9), and Gault, Garollo (8); Kopf, Bartlett (6) and Bair, Young (10) WP- Foster, LP- Bartlett HR-nKubacki 73-71; irsts I E I 0 Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM MICHIGAN SHORTSTOP Tony Evans crosses the plate in the ninth inning yesterday for the Wolverines' first run in its game against Toledo. Evans hita triple and scored on Jim Paciorek's double. Michigan, which trailed 2-0 going into the ninth, tied the game only to lose it in the twelfth inning, 3-2. Indiana squeaks by Blue, Wool folk shines with two By JOE CHAPELLE Indiana squeaked by the Michigan men's track team, 73-71, in a dual meet held in Ann Arbor last Saturday. Despite the team's loss, several Wolverines turned in solid performances. Michigan sprinter Butch Woolfolk finished first in both the 100- and 200-meter dashes with times of 10.79 and 21.34 seconds, respectively. In the 110-meter high hurdles, Shelby Johnson took another first place for the Wolverines with a time of 14.27. Another Michigan sprinter, Andrew Bruce, breezed to a first-place finish in the 400-meter dash in 46.92 seconds. Wolverine Mike Shea easily captured first place in the 800-meter run with his time of 1:50.11, with In- diana's Doug Morris finishing second in 1:51.81. The Hoosiers' Jim Spivey out-paced everybody to win the 5000-meter run in 13:54.23. Michigan's Gerard Donakowski came in second with a time of 14:13.92. Wolverine Brian Diemer placed first in the steeplechase in 8:58.01, followed by Indiana's Kevin Higdon, who had a time of 9:02.29. THE HOOSIERS' Mike Wellman and Bruce Gilbert finished 1-2 in the 1500-meter run with times of 3:45.14 and 3:50.69. Michigan's Bill O'Reilly notched a third with a time of 3:50.98. In the shot put, Wolverine John Nielson easily cap- tured first with his toss of 58'71/4". Indiana's Clarence Boone placed second with his throw of 52'8% ". Michigan's Dave Lugin and Indiana's Ron Jones both had leaps of 7'%" in the high jump. However, Jones received the five points for a first place finish. Wolverine long jumper James Ross finished first in that event with a leap of 24'61/". In the 40-meter relay, the Wolverines garnered another first with a time of 41.14. However, the Hoosiers came back to take first in the 160-meter relay ina time of 3:11.52. The Wolverines host the Chicago Track Club in their next competition this Saturday. Improved' women finish 4th "Improvement"-that is the one word which best describes the nature of the past spring for the women's track team, as the thinclads substantially improved on their seventh-place finish at the Big Ten Championships in 1980 with a solid fourth-place per- formance at East Lansing last weekend. Wisconsin easily won the meet with 182 points, far ahead of second-place MSU's 121 and Michigan's 60. Michigan had several point-scorers, including two Big Ten champions and record setters, Penny Neer (discus) and Debbie Williams (javelin). Neer, who had thrown a superlative 172'43/4" at a dual meet with Central Michigan the previous weekend, was the class of the field as she threw 167'4" to capture the event and establish a new record. WILLIAMS, THE dominant javelin thrower in the conference throughout her collegiate career, won the competition with a toss of 159'6", a Big Ten record. Other Wolverines also gave notable efforts. Melanie Weaver, in what Michigan coach Red Sim- mons described as an "outstanding performance," charged to a third place in the 10,000 meters, recor- ding an excellent 34:38 in only the second 10,000 of her career. Weaver's time was but two seconds slower than that of the winner. Sue Frederick helped the squad score points in three events, capturing fifth in the 800 (2:11) and fourth in the 1,500 (4:28), and running anchor on the 4 x 880 yard relay, as the Michigan foursome of her, Martha Gray, Lisa Larsen, and Carol Lam, recorded a 9:05. Michigan's 4 x 110 relay team of Cathy Sharpe, Renee Turner, Lori Thornton, and Brenda Kazinec also scored, finishing third in 46.93. Joanna Bullard, usually a high jump specialist, ran to a surprising third place in the 100-meter hurdles with a time of 14.79. Additional scorers for the squad included Sharpe, sixth in the 100-meter (12.61), Thornton, third in the long jump, and Kazinec, sixth in the 200-meter (25.0). Simmons seemed pleased with the results of the meet, though "in a few places we failed to come up," which, he felt, cost Michigan a possible third place. But if the tracksters continue to improve as much as they have, next year they might do better than that. -JOHN FITZPATRICK S 6