Sports Page 12 Tuesday, July 14, 1981 The Michigan Daily Palmer charges to Senior win BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP) - Ar- nold Palmer, the man who put the word "charge" into the vocabulary of golf. stormed back from an early 6-stroke deficit to win the U.S. Senior Open championship in a three-way playoff yesterday. Palmer, 51, started with bogeys on three of the first six holes but finished with an even-par 70 over the difficult 6,798-yard South Course at Oakland Hills to beat Bob Stone and Billy Casper. STONE, A club pro from Indepen- dence, Mo., had a birdie on the 511- yard, par-5 No.2 and holed a 170-yard 7- iron for an eagle 2 at the fifth hole, and looked like he might run away with it. But once Palmer began his charge, Stone snapped like a twig and finished with a four-over 74. Casper, who failed to make a birdie all day, was still in the hunt at two-over through the 14th hole. But the 50-year- old Casper, the youngest player in the tournament for golfers 50 and older, bogeyed No. 15 before the roof fell in. ON THE famous 16th hole, which has decided several major championships over the years, Casper knocked two balls in the pond guarding the green and finished the par four with an eight. Casper finished the round with a 77, as he and Stone each earned $9,586. Palmer, who pocketed $26,000, said the comeback victory was one of the most gratifying of his legendary career. "Early in the round my play was really pretty shakey and I was kind of concerned," Palmer explained. "When Bob jumped to three-under with his eagle, my main thought was to not get so far behind that I couldn't catch up. "I KNEW this golf course doesn't let you get much under par, so I figured I still had a chance to catch him if I could get something going." Stone, 51, made him a gift with bogeys on the seventh and ninth holes, while Palmer began making his move with birdies on Nos. 8 and 9. Palmer called his tee shot at the 210-yard, par- three ninth hole the key to the tour- nament. "I hit a 1-iron, and it probably was my best shot of the tournament," Palmer said of the shot which stopped 18 feet from the pin. "At that point, if I had a game plan, it was taking place. I was getting it going while the golf cour- se was starting to get to Bob." STONE, WHO bogeyed five of the last nine holes, said he tried not to let down after his quick lead, but admitted that "Arnie's Army" might have been a fac- tor. "In your heart, you know the fans want Palmer to win," said Stone, who appeared to miss his par putt on No. 7 when many of the 2,800 fans began moving to the next tee after watching Palmer hole out. 4 ROBERT STONE watches his chip AP Photo shot roll onto the ninth green during yesterday's playoff at the USGA THE LEGENDARY Arnold Palmer Senior Open, where he watched his strikes a pose that became very early 6-stroke lead over Arnold familiar to golf fans a decade-and-a- Palmer evaporate into a 4-stroke half ago: that of victorious defeat. exultation. Jet president testifies against Raider move LOS ANGELES (AP)-The president of the New York Jets, James Kensil, testified yesterday that the Raiders should not be allowed to move out of Oakland even though the Los Angeles area can support two National Football League teams. As the 10th week of the Raiders-NFL antitrust trial opened yesterday, Kensil, a former executive director of the NFL, told the U.S. District Court jury that "the fans of Oakland should in no way be left in the lurch." KENSIL WAS ASKED by NFL attorney Patrick Lynch to explain his opposition to the Raiders' planned move to the Los Angeles Coliseum in 1980, when the Rams had left the Coliseum to play 35 miles away at Anaheim Stadium. "There is no question there at all," Kensil said. "The Los Angeles arrangement was more lucrative. But that wasn't the question. The question was whether they should leave Oakland." Kensil acknowledged that two NFL teams could co-exist in the Los Angeles and Orange County areas, and noted that the New York Giants and New York Jets have "no significant effect on each other." Under cross examination by Los Angeles Coliseum attorney Maxwell Blecher, Kensil insisted that competition is not a significant factor and that "our fortunes would rise and fall on our performance on the field." 4 11