Page 14-Friday, June 11, 1982-The Michigan Daily One ear later: After the strike, baseball recovers A NEW YORK (AP)- One ye Ray Grebey, director of ma baseball's Player Relations tee, is asked if he still is remin baseball strike. "YES," HE laughs, "as a fact, the other day a guy cam office asking for autographs, what a great job he thoug doing." Marvin Miller, executived the Players Association, is same question. "I will tell you that at no ti ever had a fan saying any ar later. 'Great job,' 'You're right,' 'Keep jor league going.' Commit- "BUT NOBODY really talks about it ided of the anymore." It was one year ago-June 11, 1981- matter of that the issue of free-agent compen- ae into my sation caused the first midseason telling me players strike in major league history. ht I was The strike would not be settled until the wee hours of July 31, after 712 games director of were lost. asked the The unthinkable-a summer without baseball-had happened. It was a me have I situation which caused concern, ything but dismay and frustration on the part of most baseball fans, including the one in the commissioner's office. "I WAS AS worried as anyone," said Bowie Kuhn. "It was as bad a time as the game ever had. But at this point, it looks like we've come through well." Statistics seem to bear the com- missioner out. As of June 6, total atten- dance for the two major leagues was 6 percent (783,511 fans) better than at the same point in 1980, baseball's last full season. Now that baseball is back on the diamond and away from the bargaining table, the fans have respon- ded in kind. "The average fans, as I've said from the beginning, perhaps have not forgot- ten the strike. But they have put it aside," said Grebey. "THE GAME itself has turned out to be bigger than the strike." But was two months without baseball necessary for the betterment of the game? The player representatives who cks up Blue in draft ruits were thought to havea chance of going in the National draft were goalie Jon Elliott and center hree were Paul Kobylarz. However, neither player was picked. Elliott and uits were Kobylarz will both be eligible to be , Pat Goff drafted next year. f Edina. As a freshman last season, Elliott had t 5-11, 180 a 3.50 goals against average and a 9-11-4 Minnesota record. Kobylarz, a sophomore last d. Goff, a season, played in 36 of the Wolverines' y the New 38 games during which time he scored round. 11 goals and added 8 assists. Kobylarz hoice was was tied with Brian Lundberg as the captain of team's sixth-leading point getter. on Edina Locally, Huron High graduate Tom Montreal Allen, now playing at Michigan Tech, was taken by the Philadelphia Flyers in who were the 10th round. took key roles in last year's negotiations seem to think so. "None of the players in here regret what they did," said California's Doug DeCinces, the American League player rep last season when he was with the Baltimore Orioles. "THE PLAYERS never really had a choice," said Angels catcher Bob Boone, who was ,National. League player rep while with the Philadelphia Phillies last year. "The owners tried to take something away. It would have really changed the players' ability to have any say about having free agen- cy." DeCinces and Boone, incidentally, are among several of last year's player reps who found themselves playing for new teams in 1982, either via trades or free agency. Others include Mark Belanger, DeCinces' teammate with the Orioles who now plays in Los Angeles, and Reggie Jackson, who went from the New York Yankees to the Angels as a free agent. The strike was settled with the establishment of a player pool to com- pensate those teams losing "ranking" free agents. "WHAT WE had on the table when we struck," said Montreal's Steve Rogers, "was having to give up a 16th-best man on a club when another club signed one of those free agents rated in the top third. It would have ruined free agency. That's what we really struck for." The players seem to have adopted the same "let's-start-over" attitude as the fans. "I don't think the game is any dif- ferent," said Pittsburgh player rep Kent Tekulve. "The game is bigger than all of this. Both sides, management and labor, wish it didn't happen. I'll tell you, we're all going to work harder to make sure it doesn't happen again." 4 4 Detinces ... 'no regrets' NHL pi recruits Three Michigan hockey recr selected in Wednesday's Hockey League Draft. All t defensemen from Minnesota. The trio of Wolverine recr Todd Carlile of North St. Paul of Roseville and Bill Brauer o1 CARLILE, WHO stands at pounds, was selected by the I North Stars in the sixth rount 6-1, 174-pounder was taken b3 York Islanders in the 11th Another 11th round draft ct Brauer, the 6-3, 202-poundc Minnesota's state champic High, who was chosen by the Canadiens. Two current Michigan icers noone ... no other choice' 4 Elliott and Kobvlarz . .. NHL passes on Wolverine icers AP Photo Jumpin'Jack Flash? No, it's jumpin' Robin Yount of the Milwaukee Brewers. The Brewer shor- tstop leaps over Baltimore's Cal Ripken, Jr. at second base during the front end of a double play in the fifth inning yesterday. Milwaukee went on to win the game, 9-7. (See story, Page 15). 4