The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 7, 1981-Page 15 1968 Year of the Tiger It doesn't matter if you side with the players or the owners in the baseball strike, there is one thing everyone agrees on; it is an unfor- tunate situation. So in order to partially relieve the misery df any baseball junkies going through withdrawal, the Daily today begins a new feature. Throughout the duration of the strike, we will provide a look back to a more pleasant time - 1968. There was no free agent compensation, no NLRB, no court injunctions, and no strike. And for those of you who don't remember, in 1968 the Tigers were win- ners, World Series winners in fact. Each day the Daily will relate the results of the previous evening's Tiger game - minus thirteen years. July 6, 196$-- A's 4, Tigers 1 DETROIT (AP) - Oakland literally knocked Tiger pitcher Earl Wilson out of the box with two vicious line drives that bounced off him in the fifth inning yesterday, as the A's snapped a seven- game losing streak by beating Detroit 4-1. The loss also ended a five-game Tiger winning streak. Oakland scored two runs in the opening inning on John Donaldson's double and singles by Rick Monday and Jim Gosger. The A's added one in the third and one in the fifth. Detroit, which had hit 15 homers during its five-game streak, managed. to hit four doubles off Oakland starter Chuck Dobson, but could only muster one run. Although he allowed four two- baggers, Dobson held Detroit to six hits. Wilson, who suffered the loss and fell to 6-6, was lucky to survive the contest. In the fifth Monday hit a line shot off Wilson's right shoulder and the ball glanced off his cheek as he fell sideways to the ground. After recovering and retiring Oakland third baseman Sal Bando, Reggie Jackson hit a second sizzler back to the box that struck Wilson in the right hand. This time Wilson was taken out of the game and sent to Henry Ford Hospital for hand x-rays. Monday and Jackson aside from both knocking Wilson around, each gathered two hits in the contest. Jackson also ad- ded two RBI's. Rightfielder Jim Northrup led the league-leading Tigers with two of De- troit's six hits. Oakland ab campaneris, ss ....... 5 Donaldson, 2b ......... 3 Maondaycf ........... 4 Sando3b ............. 4 Jackson f ..... 4 Gosger, if ........3 Webster, ....lb ........ 3 Duncan, c ............. 4 Dobson, p ............. 4 r 0 2 0 0 0 0 8 h 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 8 TOTALS ............ 34 4 rbi 0 2 0 4 rbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Presidential advice AP Photo Former President Gerald Ford chats with professional golfer David Graham and comedian Bob Hope prior to yesterday's play in the Jerry Ford Invitational Golf Tournament in Vail, Colo. Golfers have no. Pity for pro batsmen Detroit ab McAuliffe,2b......... 4 stanley, ef ............ 3 Nortrupr 4.. 4 Cahib......... 4 Horton,If.............. 4 Freehan, c ............ 3 Matchick, ss .... 4 Wert, 3b........... 4 Wiso, p....... Roonker. p........ 1 Brown,ph............. I wyattp............... 50 r 0 0 1 0 0 o 0 a 0 0 h 1 0 2 i 0 i i 0 0 4 0 0 6 TOTALS ............ 33 1 E-Wert. DP-Detroit 1. LOB-Oakland 8, Detroit 7. 2B-Northrup, Freehan, McAuliffe, Cash.3B-Donaldson. SB-Jackson. IP H R ER BB SO Dobson(W, -..... 9 1 1 2 Wilson (L, 6-) .... 4% 7 4 3 3 2 Rooker ...... . 2% 0 0 001 2 wyatt ................. 2 1 0 0 1 2 T-2:41. A-26,008 -P OAK BROOK, Ill. (AP) Professional golfers are showing no sympathy for baseball's striking players. "I'll bet if you polled every golfer at the Western Open, you wouldn't find one who didn't side with the baseball owners,'' said Howard Twitty, a mem- ber of the PGA Tour's Tournament Players Policy Board. SUCH DISDAIN for the baseball strike is understandable. In golf, every man is for himself. In affect, he's an in- dependent businessman. He must pay his own expenses and must decide when and where he wants to perform next. "Baseball players ought to try playing golf for a living," said former PGA champion Al Geiberger, part of the PGA Tour since 1960. "No guarantees, all expenses paid - by yourself. I'd like to hear them com- plain then," said Geiberger, whose best year of $175,693 came five years ago. TWITTY, THE winner of an average of $170,000 in' his last two years, boils over the big contracts down-the-line baseball players command. "Look at what they make," he said. "They have one good year and they get a contract for $400,000 a year for the next six years. And they get it no mat- ter what they do, even if they never make another hit." Twitty doesn't mind seeing Dave Winfield drawing $1.3 million a year. Or Fred Lynn drawing $1.2 million, Dave Parker, Phil Niekro and Andre Dawson $1.1 million. "A STAR deserves it," said Twitty. "But the mediocre player making $400,000?" Former Masters winner Charlie Coody said, "I'd like to see how many baseball guys make more than $100,000. A lot more than golfers, I'll tell you. And these guys do it without any overhead. "For someone on the Tour to make $100,000, he's got to earn $150,000 total, considering that it costs about $50,000 just to get around from week to week. Now go ahead and look at the money list to see how many guys make $150,000." LED BY Tom Watson's $530,808, 21 golfers reached $150,000 a year ago. Forty-four earned $100,000 or more. "Now," Coody said, "if you could make a list of the baseball players - all 650 of them - when you got to the last guy making $50,000, you'd be close to No. 600. Out here, though, there wouldn't be 80." In fact, only 73 golfers cleared $50,000 in gross pay in 1980. One was Coody, with $73,918. 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