Sports Page 16 Friday, June 18, 1982 The Michigan Daily Milwaukee edges Detroit, 3-2 By JIM DWORMAN Specialtothe Daly DETROIT - Dave Tobik must be wondering "what did he do that I didn't do?" The Tiger reliever's eleventh inning performance was as good as Milwaukee's bullpen ace Rollie Finger's, but when the game ended Tobik walked off the mound with a loss while Fingers was credited with a save. THE BREWERS scored an unearned run off Tobik with two outs in the eleventh to take a 3-2 victory from the Tigers. Tobik, coming in for Tiger starter Dan Petry to begin the second extra in- ning, yielded only one hit, a two-out triole to Milwaukee catcher Ed Yost, but that hit was all the Brewers needed. After an intentional walk to Ben Oglivie, Milwaukee's Gorman Thomas bounced a one hopper off the chest of Tiger Shortstop Alan Tammell to score Yost and give his team its final margin of victory. Fingers, who also came in to start the eleventh, was blasted immediately. Un- fortunately for the Tigers, Jerry Tur- ner's shot travelled to straight away center field, 430-feet away from home plate, where it was caught by Thomas. Kirk Gibson hit a two-out single off Fingers, but the 1981 Fireman of the Year struck out Lance Parrish to end the game. Parrish gave the Tigers an early ad- vantage when he led off the second in- ning by knocking a Mike Caldwell delivery off the facing of the upper deck in right. But the Brewers waisted no time in tying things up. Jim Gantner opened the third with a double and one out alter trotted home on a Paul Molitor single. The Tigers other run came on Mike Ivie's home run in the seventh. White Sox 11, A's 7 OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Tony Ber- nazard and Steve Kemp knocked in seven runs between them as Chicago mounted a 16-hit attack to defeat the Oakland A's 11-7 yesterday afternoon for a three-game series sweep. Bernazard, who committed three errors at secnd base, hammered a three-run double and scored in a four- run third inning. He singled home his fourth run in the fourth and scored again on Kemp's double. KEMP SINGLED in two of the White Sox's three runs in the fifth. Steve Trout, 5-5, had a three-hitter for Chicago when he ran into trouble in the seventh. He loaded the bases on a single and two walks, then gave up a two-run single to Dwayne Murphy. Reliever Eddie Solomon was touched for a run-scoring single by Cliff Johnson as the A's narrowed the deficit to 10-5. Jeff Newman's two-run homer, his fifth in the eighth inning made it 10-7. Mike Norris, 3-6, took the loss. After loading the bases in the third inning on two singles and a walk, he left com- plaining of a shoulder problem. Cubs 12, Expos 8 CHICAGO (AP) Bill Buckner, Jay Johnstone and Bump Wills all homered and pitcher Randy Martz hit a three- run double yesterday to lead the Chicago Cubs to a 12-8 victory over the Montreal Expos. The triumph was the fourth straight for the Cubs, but Martz was unable to hang around long enough for the victory which went to reliever Mike Proly, 1-0. DAVID PALMER,1-1, took the loss. Buckner had four hits and Johnstone three, and the two started the scoring in the first inning. Johnstone hit his fourth homer of the season and Buckner followed with a single, stole second and then went all the way home on a wild pitch for a 2-0 lead. MARTZ'S THREE-run double keyed a six-run third in which Johnstone and Buckner each singled in a run. Wills hit his fourth homer of the year in the fifth and Johnstone followed with a single and scored off Buckner's homer, his third of the season. Ryne Sandberg singled in Larry Bowa, who had tripled, eighth. Reds 4, Giants 2 CINCINNATI (AP)- Cesar Cedeno drove in two runs with a first-inning double and Eddie Milner batted in one and scored another in the second, leading the Cincinnati Reds to a 4-2 vic- tory over the San Francisco Giants yesterday. Charlie Leibrandt, 3-1, making his first start since May 17, was the winner. Rich Gale, 2-6, was the loser. LEIBRANDT won his last start, but since then has been working from the bullpen and did not have a decision in seven appearances. Tom Hume relieved in the eighth and earned his 14th save. Rafael Landestoy walked and Dave Concepcion singled, and both scored on Cedeno's first inning double high off the wall in left-center field. The Reds added two more runs in the second when Milner singled in Ron Oester, then scored on Concepcion's single down the right field line. San Francisco got a run in the second when Duane Kuiper doubled to lead off the inning, went to third on a sacrifice bunt and scored on Chili Davis' ground out. The Giants scored again in the third when Gale led off with a double and came home two outs later when Davis doubled to the right field corner. Caldwell ... beats Tigers SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Uzelac rejoins 'M' grid staff Elliot Uzelac, the Michigan football team's offen- sive line coach from 1973-74 and head coach of Western Michigan from 1975-1981, has rejoined the Wolverine football staff. A vacancy on the staff was created when former defensive coordinator Bill McCartney accepted the head coaching job at the University of Colorado last week: Uzelac's contract at Western Michigan wasnot renewed for this season after the Broncos compiled a 6-5 record during the 1981 campaign. Following his dismissal from Western, Uzelac became the offensive coordinator for North Carolina State and served in that capacity during spring prac- tice sessions. Georgia in trouble ATHENS, Ga. (AP)- The football scholarship given to one of Georgia's top recruits, 6-foot-2, 240- pound George Smith of Coffee County High School, has been invalidated because of "technical recruiting violations," Bulldogs football Coach Vince Dooley said Wednesday night. Dooley said he asked Southeastern Conference Commissioner Boyd McWhorter to invalidate the scholarship. "THE UNIVERSITY of Georgia, as well as the NCAA, have been conducting formal inquiries into the recruiting of this one student athlete only, and we think it is in the best interest of all concerned that no further comment from the University of Georgia be. made until all of the inquiries have been completed and the situation properly addressed," Dooley said in a statement. Smith, a fullback, tight end and linebacker who runs a 4.7-second 40-yard dash, is rated among the state's top prospects and was listed the second best player in Georgia by The Atlanta Constitution. When reached for further comment, Dooley said, "I really can't say anything more about the matter at this time. It's just one of those things and I hate it." When asked about the possibility of NCAA disciplinary action against Georgia, Dooley said, "There's no way I can know anything about that now. I think the matter will be resolved as quickly as possible." Smith, reached at his home, said, "I didn't do anything illegal and it's not my intention that the University of Georgia gets in trouble with the NCAA. I hope they don't. But I never was 100 percent sure that I wanted to go to Georgia and I guess by the fact he released me, Coach Dooley must not want anyone at Georgia who really doesn't want to be there." Owner may sell Clippers SAN DIEGO (AP)- A week after announcing plans to move the San Diego Clippers to Los Angeles, team owner Don Sterling also is interested in selling his National Basketball Association franchise, it was reported yesterday. Sterling says he's "willing to sell the team," Leon Parma, president of the Greater San Diego Sports Association, told the San Diego Union. Parma, a prominent San Diego businessman, said several local prospective buyeis have been contacted in hopes that the club can be kept in San Diego. The' newspaper said top NBA officials, meeting at neigh- boring Coronado this week, were working to put together a sale that would keep the Clippers in San Diego. Nuggets trade Thompson DENVER (AP)- The Denver Nuggets of the National Basketball Association have traded high- scoring guard David Thompson to the Seattle Super- sonics for forward Wally Walker and the Sonics' first- round pick, it was announced yesterday. "David Thompson has given Denver's basketball fans some tremendous thrills during the past seven years, and it's tough to let him go, but the time has come for us to make a change," said Carl Scheer, the Nuggets' president and general manager, in making the announcement. In seven seasons with the Nuggets, Thompson averaged 24.1 points per game, while scoring a total of 11,992 points. He once scored 71 points in a single game, a featbettered only by Wilt Chamberlain.