Sports Page 12 Tiger homers Saturday, July 17, 1982 The Michigan Daily rip Twil MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The Detroit Tigers used the six-hit pitching of Jack Morris and Dave Tobik and home runs by Lance Parrish, Tom Brookens and Lou Whitaker to defeat the Minnesota Twins 6-2 last night for their fourth con- secutive triumph. Morris, 11-9, settled down after a shaky first inning, while Minnesota rookie Frank Viola, 3-1, took his first major league loss. THE TWINS took a 2-0 lead in the fir- st inning. Ron Washington singled to start the inning and went to third on Tom Brunansky's ground-rule double. Kent Hrbek was walked intentionalley to load the bases and Dave Engle doubled home two runs. The Tigers came back with five runs in the second. Parrish led off with his 15th homer and two outs later, John hWockenfuss doubled and Brookens hit his sixth homer. The Twins should have gotten out of the inning without further damage ex- cept for some bizarre plays. Alan Trammell struck out, but reached first on a wild pitch. Whitaker followed with is, 6-3 a long drive to right which Brunansky kept from being a homer by knocking the ball back onto the playing field for a triple, scoring Trammell. THE RELAY trapped Whitaker off third, but catcher Tim Laudner's throw hit him on the back of the helmet and caromed away, allowing Whitaker to score Detroit's fifth run of the inning. Gibson out, Wilson in DETROIT (UPI)- Detroit Tigers' outfielder Kirk Gibson has been put on the disabled list and outfielder Glenn Wilson has been recalled from the club's Evansville, Ind., farm club, -the team said yesterday. A spokesman for the Tigers said Gib- son was placed on the disabled list ef- fective July 10, two days after he last played, for a minimum of 15 days because of a left wrist injury. Wilson, who is expected to report for the Tigers game with the Minnesota Twins today, was hitting .228 with 10 home runs and 29 RBI at the time of his recall. TIGER MANAGER SPARKY Anderson sits alone in the tunnel leading to the Detroit dugout last night after he was ejected from last night's game at the Minneapolis Metrodome. The Tigers beat the Twins anyway, 6-3. Reliford leaps, opponent weeps By RON POLLACK Richard Rellford is a player who makes his presence felt on the basketball court. He excelled in every phase of the game last night in the Sandy Sanders Summer Basketball League at Pioneer High School. Rellford led the Brewer's Gulf team to a 92-86 victory over Roundhouse Pizza by pouring in 29 points and blocking three shots. He also thrilled the crowd with a number of ferocious-looking, and equally acrobatic, dunks. , RELLFORD, WHO won dunking contests at two basketball camps last summer, said that his ability to slam it home can have a drastic effect on a game. "A lot ot times it motivates the team and everyone is ready to play after that," he said. "Sometimes it intimidates other players." And if opposing coaches and players don't already have reason enough to worry, Rellford said he expects to improve his ability to get off the ground. "RIGHT NOW I weigh 225," he said. "When I came to town (for the summer) I was at 235. If I get to 220 or 215 I'll excell. More than likely, it will make me quicker. And the quicker I am, the higher I'll be able to jump." Particularly impressive last night was the ability of Wolverine guard Eric Turner and Rellford to hook up on alley-oop passes. "Eric has helped me a lot, because he has something in him that really motivates players," said Rellford. "I love playing with Eric, because he always has the ball there on time. Because of that, I always want to run harder to get into position for a pass." SUMMER LEAGUE NOTES - This coming Thursday and Friday, Detroit Piston first round draft choice Cliff Levingston, Campy and Walker D. Russell, Greg Kelser and Alan Hardy will play at Pioneer High. Darryl Dawkins will play on Monday and Thursday. 4 Butch, Bubba sign NFL contracts 4 By The Associated Press Butch Woolfolk and Bubba Paris, mainstays of the 1981 Michigan football team, both signed professional contrac- ts Thursday. Woolfolk, the all-time Michigan rushing leader, inked a National Foot- ball League contract with the New York Giants. Paris signed with the world champion San Francisco 49ers, who announced he would start at left tackle. A FIRST-ROUND draft choice, Woolfolk signed a contract only hours before a labor impasse would have left his status for training camp in doubt. The agreement between the league and the NFL Players Association ex- pired Thursday night at midnight in a dispute that may eventually lead to a walkout by the league's players. The association, however, has also insisted that unsigned rookies would not be allowed to continue negotiating with teams, leaving their status confused. "The deadline actually helped us," said Gene Burrough, who with Jerry Argovitz, represented Woolfolk in the negotiations. 'We were concerned about not having jobs and the team was concerned about not having rookies in camp. The players who had the patien- ce to wait got better deals, I think. BURROUGH said there had been much movement during the last 24 hours of negotiations. The contract, which Woolfolk would not discuss in detail, means that the 6-1, 207-pound speedster will report to the Giants' training camp. It opens next Friday at Pace University in Pleasan- tville, N.Y. Paris signed a series of four one-year contracts in Los Angeles early Thur- sday morning. Terms were not disclosed. The 6-6, 295-pound tackle was picked by San Francisco in the second round of the draft.. I I Paris .. . joins world champions Woolfolk ... signs Giant contract