Sports Page 12 Tuesday, June 15, 1982 The Michigan Daily Tigers drop first, 5-0 Cubs beat Phillies to end 13-game skid 4 CLEVELAND (AP)- Len Barker pitched a four-hitter and struck out 11 batters, and Rick Manning homered and doubled as the Cleveland Indians blanked the Detroit Tigers, 5-0, in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader last night. Barker, 8-3, lowered his earned run average to 2.49 in hurling his first shutout and fifth complete game of the season. He walked two and recorded at least one strikeout in each inning in helping the Indians snap a five-game losing streak, the team's longest this year. THE INDIANS took a 2-0 lead in the second against Jack Morris, 8-6. Andre Thornton walked, took third on Man- ning's double and scored on Alan Ban- nister's infield single. One out later, Mike Fischlin singled Manning home. Manning's homer in the third, his fourth of the season, scored Ron Hassey, who had singled. The Indians chased Morris in the fourth when Miguel Dilone walked and moved to third on Fischlin's double. After reliever Kevin Saucier walked Toby Harrah intentionally, Von Hayes was hit by a pitch to score Dilone. In the second game, the Tigers and Indians were deadlocked at one in the seventh inning. Larry Herndon hit his 12th home run of the year in the fourth inning. Cubs 12, Phillies 1 1 CHICAGO (AP) - Bump Wills collected four hits, including a three- run homer, to highlighta 19-hit Chicago assault against five Philadelphia pitch- ers yesterday afternoon as the Cubs snapped their 13-game losing streak with a wild 12-11 victory over the Phillies. The losing streak tied the Cubs' all- time record for futility set in 1944. The last Chicago victory this season was a 3- 2 triumph over the Los Angeles Dodges n May 29. THE CUBS made this one look easy, and hard, as they ruffed up Philadelphia starter Steve Carlton for six runs in just over three innings of work and also committed six errors to help the Phillies get back into the game. Carlton, who last Wednesday defeated Chicago with a 16-strikeout performance, was touched for five runs in the second inning. Chicago starter Ferguson Jenkins, 4- 8, had a no-hitter working in the fifth when Mike Schmidt and Bo Diaz reached on errors by Bowa and San- dberg, two of six committed by Chicago. Garry Maddox followed with a double to spoil the no-hitter and shutout, and two more runs scored on sacrifice flies by Ivan DeJesus and George Vukovich. Orioles 9, Brewers 4 BALTIMORE (AP) - Dan Ford cap- ped a five-run seventh-inning outburst with a pinch-hit, gramd-slam homer last night, propelling the streaking altimore Orioles past the Milwaukee Brewers, 9-4. The Orioles have now won eight of their last nine games, clouting 18 homers during that stretch, including Joe Nolan's solo homer in the third against the Brewers. WITH THE score tied, 4-4, Lenn Sakata reached first on third baseman Paul Molitor's error to open the seventh. Al Bumbry then beat out a bunt, and both runners advanced on Rich Dauer's hit- and-run groundout. Ken Singleton was walked intentionally to load the bases, but Milwaukee starter Moose Haas, 3-4, then walked Eddie Murray on five pit- ches to put Baltimore ahead 5-4. Ford, who had not played since pulling a hamstring muscle last Thursdaybatted for John Lowenstein and homered on a 1- 2 pitch from reliever Jamie Easterly. Run-scoring singles by Charlie Moore and Jim Gantner with two outs in the seventh pulled the Brewers into a 4-4 tie. Gantner also had a two-run single in the second. 4 4 AP Photo BUMP WILLS OF the Chicago Cubs is out at second in the fourth inning yesterday as Philadelphia pitcher Steve Carlton's pickoff throw to Pete Rose at first was relayed to Ivan DeJesus for the tag. The Cubs went on to win. 12- 11. snapping a 13-game losing streak. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Ford testified against 4 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- A special judge heard 20 minutes of arguments yesterday in a $12 million lawsuit against Clemson football coach Danny Ford that defense lawyers want dismissed. James Cofer and Terry Minor, two former Knoxville high school athletes, filed the lawsuit last fall, alleging recruiting violations. CHANCELLOR William Inman postponed a decisioni on the request for dismissal until later this week. The lawsuit is against Ford; Billy Ware, the school's for- mer recruiting specialist; Knoxville businessman Tom Breazeale; the Atlantic Coast Conference and its com- missioner, Bob James. Cofer and Minor signed with Clemson in 1981. CHANGING their minds that spring, they were released from ACC grants. But officials of the Southeastern Conferen- ce, of which Tennessee is a member, said neither would be eligible to sign with Tennessee or any other SEC school. Cofer and Minor had said they were paid up to $1,000 by Breazeale, a Clemson alumnus, and allege in their lawsuit that they were promised other things, including television sets, refrigerators and entertainment "such as that provided by Clemson University recruiting hostesses known as Bengal Babes." Simmons narned USFI boss NEW YORK (AP)- Chet Simmons, current president of ESPN-the all-sports cable television network-was named commissioner of the fledgling United States Football League yesterday. Simmons, 53, served as president of NBC Sports from 1977 to 1979. Previously he worked for ABC-TV. JUDGE PETER B. Spivak, the USFL's acting chairman, said in a statement, "After a lengthy and extensive search, we believe that Chet Simmons has the perfect credentials to serve as commissioner of the USFL as it matures into a professional sports franchise as 'The Other Season.'" Jon "S O lS leriid 4ll-I?~ I fi nsisi f ears NEW YORK (AP)- Forward Bobby Jones and center Caldwell Jones, who helped the Philadelphia 76ers get to the final round of the National Basketball Association playoffs, were among those selected by the league's 23 coaches for the NBA's All-Defensive team, it was announced yesterday. Also chosen were forward Dan Roundfield of the Atlanta Hawks and guards Michael Cooper of the world champion Los Angeles Lakers and Dennis Johnson of the Phoenix Suns. Pira tes snap Solotosn f(r .llorrison PITTSBURGH (AP)- The Pittsburgh Pirates said yester- day they had traded right-handed pitcher Eddie Solomon to the Chicago White Sox for infielder Jim Morrison. Pittsburgh drafted Morrison in 1972, but he stayed in school and later signed with Philadelphia. Morrison, 29, has a career batting average of .256 with 49 homers and 156 runs batted in. This season, he's batting .223 with seven home runs and 19 RBI., Solomon, 31, has a 2-6 won-lost record with a 6.75 ERA in 11 games this season. Over his 61/-year major league career, Solomon has a 35-42 record and a 4.00 ERA. 4 4