y' tie d1 idity-atu dp ld 2'-1da i f5 MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP Angels down By JIM DWORMAN Specialto the Daily DETROIT - The Captain forgot his hook. Tiger manager Sparky Anderson, known as "Captain Hook" for his quick removal of pitchers, left his first two on the mound a bit too long as the Califor- nia Angels ended Detroit's eight game win streak by pounding out a 9-7 win over the Tigers. PAT UNDERWOOD, a Detroit star- ter, was shelled for two runs in each of the first, third, and fourth innings. The southpaw gave up home runs to Bobby Grich and Bob Boone before Anderson removed him at the start of the fifth in- ning. Underwood's successor Aurelio Lopez, faired no better. Anderson pulled Senor Smoke after only six bat- ters, but not before Tim Foli and Fred Lynn delivered RBI singles for the Angels. Larry Pashnik-came on to pitch three and a third scoreless innings hbefore yielding to Elias Sosa who shut down the Angels in the ninth. THE ANGELS raced to a quick 2-0 lead in the opening inning on singles by Brian Downing and Rod Carew, a wild pitch by Underwood, and a double to left center off the bat of Don Baylor. Detroit left fielder Larry Herndon raced back towards center on Baylor's double, dove for the ball, and got his glove on it, but could not hold on to what would have been the inning's final out. The Tigers came back with one run in the second on Herndon's single, a walk to John Wockenfuss, and an RBI single by Lou Whitaker. California increased its lead to 4-1 in the thrid when Grich blasted the ball in- to the right field stands with Rod Carew on base. DETROIT GOT one back in the bot- tom of the inning when Enos Cabell singled home Alan Trammell, but in the top of the fourth Boone's homer, with Foli on Base, gave the Angels a 6-2 lead. The Tigers, once again, bounced back on singles hy Richie Hebner and Her- ndon, and a two-run double by Wocken- fuss to make the score 6-4. California scored its final three runs off Lopez in the fifth, but the Tigers were not done. They got one run in each of the final three innings to bring the final score to 9-7. Detroit's final run came with two outs in the ninth when Mike Ivie knocked a solo homer into the lower deck in left field. Orioles 3, Blue Jays 0 TORONTO (AP)- Mike Flanagan combined with two relievers on a seven- hit shutout, and John Lowenstein homered to pace the Baltimore Orioles to a 3-0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays last night. Flanagan, 2-4, spaced five hits over seven innings and lifted his lifetime mark against the Blue Jays to 13-4 as Baltimore put together its first three- game winning streak of the season. FLANAGAN GAVE up just one extra- base hit, a double by Garth Iorg in the sixth, and did not walk a batter before he was relieved by Tim S toddard. Stoddard gave up a pair of hits before yielding to Tippy Martinez with one out in the ninth, and Martinez earned his third save. Lowenstein drove in two of the Orioles' runs. In the third inning, he gave Baltimore a 2-0 lead with a solo home run off Jim Gott, 0-1. He tagged a 3-2 Gott fastball for his eighth homer of the season. In the fifth inning, Lowenstein drove home Dan Ford with a single. Ford walked to open the inning and advanced to third when shortstop Alfredo Griffin threw wildly to second for an error on Ken Singleton's infield hit. The Orioles loaded the bases without scoring in the first inning, then took a 1- 0 lead with two out in the second. Lenn Tigers Sakata walked, moved to third on a single by Al Bumbry and scored when Rich Dauer singled. Red Sox 8,A's 7 BOSTON (AP)- Home runs by Jim, Rice, Dwight Evans, and Carl Yastr- zemski highlighted a 18-hit attack that boosted the Boston Red Sox to an 8-7 victory last night over the Oakland A's, who lost their fourth straight. Boston,.which has won three in a row, rallied from a 4-1 deficit and took the lead for good on Jerry Remy's single in the fourth inning. REMY'S HIT drove in Glenn Hof- fman and made the score 6-5. Hoffman had tripled in the tying run. Tom Burgmeier, 2-0, picked up the win by pitching 3 1-3 innings in relief of starter Mike Torrez, and Mark Clear got his eighth save. Rick Langford, 3-6, gave up 14 hits and seven runs in 5 1-3 innings for the loss. The A's went ahead in the first inning on Cliff Johnson's solo homer, his four- th, but Rice smacked his seventh homer 9- to tie the score in the bottom of the in- ning. Braves 7, Phillies 6 ATLANTA (AP)- Chris Chambliss drove in the tying run then scored the game-winner on third baseman Mike Schmidt's error in the seventh inning to lead the Atlanta Braves past the Philadelphia Phillies 7-6 last night. After trailing early by five runs, the Braves rallied for four runs in the fifth inning and another in the sixth before Claudell Washington led off the seventh with a single. He was sacrificed to second and scored on Chambliss' single to tie the game6-6. Chambliss moved to second on Dale Murphy's single and reached third when Bob Horner flied to center. He came home when Schmidt bobbled Bruce Benedict's grounder. Steve Bedrosian, 3-0, the fourth Atlanta pitcher, picked up the victory, holding the Phillies scoreless over the final three innings. Sparky Lyle, 1-1, took the loss. Bobby Unser to skip this year's Indly 500 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Defending champion Bobby Unser said yesterday he will skip this year's Indianapolis 500 to fulfill an obligation he now wishes he hadn't made to be team manager for driver Josele Garza. "It's the toughest thing I've done in 33 years of racing," said Unser, the first Indy winner in 24 years to miss the next year's race. UNSER, WHOSE 19 Indy starts are second only to 25-year-veteran A. J. Foyt, said he had joined the Garza team in disillusionment over the furor following his third Indy victory a year ago. The 48-year-old Unser appeared to choke back his emotions several times during a hastily assembled news conference at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway the day before the final weekend of qualifications for the May 30 race. "There is a lot of sadness in Bobby Unser. I've waited too long," he said. "It's not fair to a car owner at this point to wait any longer for my decision. I'm just not going to run here this year." SPECULATION HAD run high all month the Unser would jump into one of several backup cars available to him to make a qualifying attempt after the 23- year-old Garza was safely in the race. But Garza, last year's top Indy rookie, crashed during a practice session prior to last weekend's time trials and Unser spent most of the week testing the car. "That put us a long way behind," Unser said. "Maybe that messed up any idea I had of driving right there. But I wasn't sure of it at the time. "This does not mean I'm retired," he added. "It's just that I feel an obligation to the Garza team. I don't feel now that I'm ready to stop driving, but I have a com- mitment to Josele. I really have an open deal with them. I can do anything I want to, but I feel I havean obligation to run the team." Unser indicated he will drive in other championship car races this season after the Garza team is running smoothly. "There's not any doubt about that," he said. CHICAGO CUBS pitcher Ferguson Jenkins struck out eight batters in Thurs- day's game against the Dodgers to come one game short of a lifetime total of 3,000 AT THE BOARD SHOP you can experience freedom of choice in sailboard design and technology for fun on the Huron River and nearby lakes. We stock sailboards, board sailing suits, harnesses, and accessories for al lyour wind surfing needs. 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