Page 14-Friday, August 7, 1981-The Michigan Daily SPOR TS OF THE DAIL Y Murphy takes P lead 4 DULUTH, Ga. (AP) - A violent vanced to Friday's semifinals against thunderstorm forced a suspension of the winner of another quarterfinal mat- play shortly after Lee Trevino was ch between top-seeded Andrea Jaeger disqualified yesterday in the first round and No. 6 Sue Barker. of the 63rd PGA national championship. The men's top seed, Ivan Lendl of Play was held up at 3:50 p.m. EDT, Czechoslovakia, advanced to the quar- with Bob Murphy in the clubhouse with terfinals with an easy 6-2, 6-1 third- a leading four-under-par 66 and about round victory over Shlomo Glickstein of half the field of148 still out on the long, Israel. Lendl's opponent Friday will be difficult Atlanta Athletic Club course. Jose-Luis Damiani, the No. 10 seed THE SIRENS sounded, signalling the from Uruguay who upset No. 6 Jose players to seek shelter from the rain Higueras 6-0, 6-4 in another third-round and lightning, while Rules Committee match. Chairman Bill Clarke was explaining In a pair of men's second-round mat- that Trevino had been disqualified for ches postponed from Wednesday asrain- failing to sign his scorecard after interrupted session, France's Gilles shooting a four-over-par 74. Moretton upset No. 7 Tomas Smid 6-2, 6- "It was an innocentrerror," Clarke 4, and Australia's John Alexander said. "He said it was the first time this dropped Romania's Ilie Nastase 6-3, 6- had happened in his career. But, under 2. the rules of golf, we had no option hut to Laperierre joins Canadiens disqualifyhim." MONTREAL (AP) - Jacques Trevino, a former PGA champion Laperriere has been named a full-time and twice the winner of both the British assistant coach with the Montreal and U.S. Opens, played in the same Canadiens, the National Hockey group with Tom Weiskopf. They inad- League club announced yesterday. vertently signed each other's cards in Laperriere, a veteran star on the ice the space provided for the player him- for Montreal, had been expected to win self to sign. the job backing up first-year Coach Bob TREVINO LEFT the scorer's tent Berry after having served in a part- before the error was discovered. time capacity under Claude Puel last Weiskopf, who remained in the tent af- season. ter Trevino had left, was advised of the Puel resigned after the Canadiens error, and signed correctly. were eliminated in a three-game Virtual unknown Mark Lye, who has preliminary-round playoff sweep by struggled to qualify each week for most Edmonton Oilers. of his five-year pro golfing career, sur- The club also announced the signing prised even himself by ending up of 18-year-old defenseman Gilbert among the first-round leaders in the Delorme, its second choice in the NHL tournament. draft in June. He played with Lye, a 28-year-old from Napa, Calif., Chicoutimi of the Quebec Major Junior fired a three-under-par 67 over the Hockey League last season. 7,070-yard course, one stroke behind Terms were not disclosed, but the leader Murphy and tied with Bob East- contract was believed to be for one wood for second place. year. Lye attributed his success to the Otis finally reports rediscovery of his swing during a prac- tice round Wednesday after saying he KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Out- was "disgusted" with his game. fielder Amos Otis made his delayed "I haven't been playing well and this return to the Kansas City Royals round gives me a boost," said Lye, a yesterday after a two-day drive from a non-winner who made the top 60 money vacation spot on what he called "a list in 1980 for the first time and has deserted island" of the North Carolina earned nearly $47,000 this year with a coast. fifth-place finish in Phoenix earlier this Otis was the last of the Royals to year, his best effort. report for training at Royals Stadium Jausovec advances since the 50-day-long players strike en- ded last Friday. INDIANAPOLIS(AP)- Third-seeded OTIS SAID he first learned of the set- Mima Jausovec held off an ailing Anne tlement two days late because there are Smith on match point six times yester- no telephones on the island. After day and rallied to a 4-6, 6-1, 7-5 victory driving his in-laws back to their home in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Clay in Virginia, Otis said he was delayed by Court tennis tournament. the air traffic controllers strike and had Smith, seeded eighth, took leads of 4-1 to drive the 1,300 miles back to Kansas and 5-2 in the third set before a painful City with his wife and children. leg cramp hobbled her. Jausovec was "I had been calling every two or three able to play a cautious game after that, days to see what was going on," Otis keeping the ball in play while Smith said. "On the 25th of July, I had missed shot after shot. decided, 'This is it. Baseball's over' So JAUSOVEC, 25, of Yugoslavia, ad- we got ourselves together to havea nice the suds factory winter and rest of the summer enjoying ourselves." Otis said he played catch with his sons during the strike but had not swung a bat. He checked in Thursday at a weight of 179 - one pound less than his weight when the strike started June 12. LPGA leaders absent WHEELING, W. Va. (AP) - Pat Bradley and JoAnne Carner lead a field that is conspicuous by the absence of seven of the top 10 money winners into today's start of the $125,000 West Virginia LPGA Classic at the Speidel golf course. Only about half of the top 40 money winners - 21 golfers in all - will be competing at the mountainous course, which is considered one of the most physically demanding on the LPGA tour. "SOME OF the girls are tired right now and they want to take a break," said Carner, the fourth-leading money winner. She noted that the golfers have played several 72-hole tournaments recently. "Physically, I don't think the women can play as many 72-hole tournaments as the men," she said. "There are a lot more four-day tournaments now and it does take its toll ... that's probably why only three of the top 10 money win- ners are here." Despite the absence of leading money winner Donna Caponi, Nancy Lopez- Melton, Beth Daniel, Sally Little and Kathy Whitworth, tournament director Phil Day called the field "super." "I'D BE LYING if I said I didn't wish we had more golfers," Day said. "But I still think we'll have a very competitive tournament. Jan Stephenson, the ninth-leading money winner with earnings of $91,188, withdrew from the 54-hole tournament Thursday. The only top 10 golfers com- peting are Bradley, Carner and Jane Blalock, the 10th-leading money winner and a two-time champion in Wheeling. She won both the 1976 and 1978 tour- naments and set the scoring record in the eight-year-old tournament in 1978 with a nine-under-par 207. Golfers among the second 10 in money earnings who are playing this week are Hollis Stacy, defending champion Sandra Post, 1977 winner Debbie Austin, Patty Hayes, Dot Ger- main and Carolyn Hill. M a i I a Doily Photo by KIM HILL Are you waching, Bill Frieder? Two of Ann Arbor's weekend athletes participate in a friendly game of one- on-one at Summit Park. a