The Michigan Daily-friday, June 4, 1982-Page 15 NAVRATILOVA ROLLS OVER MANDLIKOVA aeger upsets Evert- loyd PARIS (AP)- Andrea Jaeger, on the slapped down another double. She lost and the semifinals are scheduled for won the title in 1974. Wilander, who eve of her 17th birthday, overwhelmed eight straight points before going to 30- today, with the final Sunday. eliminated Ivan Lendl and V fvoite hri Evhrtd yd rh e ~ all in the final game. Mats Wilander, a 17-year-old Swede, Gerulaitis this week, plays Jose- yesterday and is bidding to become the Navratilova finished off the match also is aiming to become the youngest Clerc of Argentina in the semifinals youngest winner of the French Open with a spectacular backhand return winner on record. The youngest men's Argentina's other star, Guille down the line. champion was Wilander's compatriot Vilas, meets Jose Hilgueras of Sp tennis championship. woJm In tomorrow's final she will face Mar- It was a rest day in the men's singles Bjorn Borg, who was just 18 when he who upset top-seeded Jimmy Conno tins Navratilova, who rolled past deedn hminHn adioa 6-0, 6-2 in another semifinal matchz yesterday. "THIS IS the best tennis I have ever played," Jaeger said following her one- k sided victory over the four-time cham- pion. f Lloyd, once rated unbeatable on the ° slow clay courts at Roland Garros w Stadium, was out-classed and lost seven games in a row as Jaeger went from 4-3 in the first set to 5-0 in the second. Jaeger, in the singles final of a Grand Slam event for the first time, played an almost perfect game, racing to retrieve balls on her baseline and driving to the back corners of her opponent's court. Lloyd wilted under the pressure and r made a stream of errors. NAVRATILOVA'S victory over Man- dlikova was even more one-sided. The % first set lasted only 16 minutes-an unusually quick time on these courts, where rallies are drawn out. It was Mandlikova's second tour- . nament this year, following back trouble. She showed only rare flashes of the form that took her to the title last year, when she upeet Lloyd in the final._ Mandlikova went to 2-2 in the second set, but then slumped again and picked up only five points in the last four , games. ;b ... SHE FINISHED the sixth game withAPh two double faults. She queried the first APPh of these, but after an argument she ANDREA JAEGER returns a shot in her French Open semifinal match with Chris Evert-Lloyd. Jaeger upset Evert- laughed, went back to her baseline and Lloyd 6-3, 6-1 and will face Martina Navratilova in the finals tomorrow. McEnroe back in top vocal form has itas Luis rmo ain, rs. MANCHESTER, England (AP)- John McEnroe's game still has room for improvement, but the Wimbledon champion took the opportunity yester- day to show he was approaching his best vocal form as he reached the semifinals of the $18,000 Greater Man- chester Grass Court Tennis Champion- ships. McEnroe, who had his Wednesday program washed out by rain, had to play two singles yesterday to catch up. HIS FIRST was peaceful enough-a 6-2, 6-0 third-round victory over British junior Nick Fulwood. But then the opposition became a lit- tle more fierce in the quarterfinals and McEnroe needed 97 minutes of hard work to beat fellow American Jay Lapidus 6-3, 6-4 in a match in which winning never looked that easy. The 23-year-old Lapidus, an aggressive left-hander ranked No. 102 in the world, gave McEnroe a tough battle. IT WAS only the Wimbledon cham- pion's third match after a long layoff .with torn ankle ligaments, and whether he wanted such a rugged workout at this stage of his comeback is questionable. After six games, contested at a fast pace on a scorching hot day; some of the line decisions began to bother McEnroe. In the seventh game, when he was a break point down, he struck a ball fiercely to the back of the court. It ricocheted into the crowd and hit a spectator. At the end of the game, won by McEnroe for a 5-2 lead, a line judge walked across to the umpire and spoke to him about the incident. MCENROE ASKED what all the fuss was about and the linesman said after- ward, "He said things to me I couldn't possibly repeat. I don't use language like that." Toward the end of the second set, with McEnroe looking as weary as the packed crowd, the Wimbledon cham- pion appealed for extra linesmen. There only were four to assist the umpire and McEnroe shouted across to the referee's headquarters, "This poor guy is being forced to call six lines him- self. Even I would make mistakes in his position. There are at least 20 linesmen sitting in the stands watching, can't we have some down here working." HIS REQUEST went unheeded and afterward McEnroe said, "I know this isn't a Grand Prix tournament, but if they want to stay big they should play as near to Grand Prix conditions as possible." McEnroe served nine double faults during the match but said, "That has nothing to do with my injury, it is just a lazy serve after my layoff." McEnroe plays John Alexander of Australia in the semifinals today. LW I On June 7, 1982 Playgirl Magazine will be in town to interview models for an upcoming. nude feature on "MEN OF THE B/G 10 SCHOOLS" If you are interested in modeling, please contact L Horwitz at (313) 769-2200. Interviews June 7 1 Oam to 7pm.