DETR Vance L to back t Lamp as the Detro ping a fiv The vi ning stre games. IT ALS shutout Comiske five-hitte first shut The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 20, 19$2-,PgR 11 Sox blank Bengals, 6-0 OIT (AP)- Harold Baines and tempt by Black and scored on Garth' tsburgh to a 5-4 victory over the Cincin- gaining his 13th save. aw hit third-inning solo homers Iorg's groundout. Bonnell followed with nati Reds and snap the Pirates' three- Dave Parker and Mike Easier ignited he seven-hit pitching of Dennis a towering blast over the left-field fence game losing streak last night. the Pirates' sixth with singles. Parker the Chicago White Sox downed for his sixth home run. Berra's sacrifice fly capped a two- scored on Tony Pena's single that tied oit Tigers 6-0 last night, snap- Toronto stretched its lead to 3-0 in the run sixth inning that led the Pirates to a the game 3-3 and sent Easler to third. e-game losing streak. second when Buck Martinez doubled to come-from-behind victory over Reds Berra followed with a sacrifice fly deep ctory extended Chicago's win- right center and scored on Lloyd starter Frank Pastore, 4-7, who came to center field for the Pirates' go-ahead ak against the Tigers to seven Moseby's triple to left. Roberts, pur- off the disabled list Monday. run. chased- last week from the Texas MANNY SARMIENTO, 4-1, was the Berra's homer in the eighth, gave the SO was Lamp's second straight Rangers, led off the fourth inning with winner with 4 % inning of three-hit Pirates a 5-3 lead and provided them against Detroit. On July 7 at his second homer of the season. relief pitching. Rod Scurry, who gavew with their eventual winning run. y Park, Lamp, 7-4, tossed a The Royals scored both their runs in up eighth-inning homer to Paul Dave Concepcion drove in a pair of er, beating the Tigers 7-0 for his the eighth when Frank White slapped a Householder, and Kent Tekulve fin- runs for the Reds, including a sacrifuce tout in more than two years. leadoff double and scored on Willie ished up for the Pirates, with Telulve fly for a 1-0 lead in the first inning. Detroit starter Milt Wilcox, 6-6, hurt his own cause with a streak of wildness in the first inning that led to three Chicago runs. Wilcox retired leadoff batter Rudi Law, then loaded the bases by giving up a single by Tony Bernazard and walking Steve Kemp and Greg Luzin- ski. THE RIGHT-hander then forced home Bernazard when he hit Tom Paciorek with a pitch. Harold Baines walked on four pitches to force Kemp in and Carlton Fisk singled Luzinski home. Baines hit reliever Dave Rucker's 1-1 pitch into the upper right-field stands in thethird inning for his 13th homer of the season, equalling his major-league season high. Vance Law added a two- out solo shot into the upper left field stands to make it 5-0. Paciorek delivered an RBI single in the ninth to close out the scoring. Blue Jays 4, Royals 2 TORONTO (AP)- Leon Roberts and Barry Bonnell belted solo homers to back Luis Leal's six-hitter last night as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Kansas City Royals 4-2 to extend their winning streak to five games. The victory ended a four-game per- sonal losing streak for Leal, 6-7. The right-hander struck out four and retired 11 batters in a row during one stretch. ROOKIE left-hander Bud Black, 3-3, took the loss for the slumping Royals, who have lost eight of their last nine games. Toronto took a 2-0 lead in the first. Damaso Garcia extended his hitting streak to 12 games with a leadoff single, raced to third on an errant pickoff at- Wilson's vtriple. U.L. Washington's sacrifice fly closed out the scoring. Red Sox 9, Rangers 5 BOSTON (AP)- Carl Yastrzemski capped a five-run eighth inning with a three-run homer last night as the Boston Red Sox rallied from a five-run deficit for a 9-5 victory over Texas, handing the Rangers their seventh con- secutive loss. The Red Sox closed to within one run on two-run singles by Rich Gedman and Dave Stapleton in the seventh before unloading on relievers Danny Darwin and Jon Matlack in the decisive eighth. RICK MILLER led off the big inning with a double, took third on a single by Jerry Remy and scored the tying run on rookie Eddie Jurak's single up the mid- dle. It was Jurak's first major-league RBI. Jim Rice put Boston ahead with his third hit, a single to right as Matlack replaced Darwin on the mound. Yastrzemski drilled Matlack's first pitch into the Texas bullpen in right for his 12th homer of the season and No. 438. of his career. Mark Clear, who replaced starter Chuck Rainey as the start of the eighth, collected his eighth victory in 12 decisions. Darwin, 6-5, was the loser. Texas starter Doc Medich was staked to a 5-0 lead and blanked Boston on seven hits for 6 2/3 innings before the Red Sox erupted for four runs. Pirates 5, Reds 4 CINCINNATI (AP) - Dale Berra drove in three runs with a home run, single and a sacrifice fly to lift Pit-' AP Photo Rain, rain go away Baseball great and former Atlanta Braves player, Hank Aaron looks on as rain delayed the start of the first annual Cracker Jack Oldtimers Baseball Classic played yesterday at RFK Stadium in Washington. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Heritage arrives first at Mackinac .._. MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. (AP) - Defending champion Heritage won a tacking duel with the 61-foot-long sloop Brassy yesterday to be the first boat to cross the finish line in the 58th annual Port Huron to Mackinac yacht race. Bad weather gave the advantage to smaller boats, however, and the 37-foot sloop Woodpecker took the lead on corrected time. HERITAGE, A 63-foot-long Morgan sloop piloted by Don Wildman from the Chicago Yacht Club, crossed the finish line first of the 279 boats at 4:38 a.m., CDT. But Heritage had no handicap becuase it was the Division I scratch boat, Rabe said. The Heritage finished the race in 38 hours, 28 minutes and 8 seconds. The Woodpecker, with owner C. Schreck from Tawas City at the helm, finished the race about 10:30 a.m. with a corrected time of 36:31:30. Corected time takes into consideration a boat's size and other factors. The lead also was held briefly by the 41-foot sloop Coug from Burlington, On- tario, owned by Tony Ronza, and Fujimo, a 44-foot-sloop from Detroit's Bayview Yacht Club, owned and piloted by Jerry Shostak. Brassy held the lead briefly in the race, with a 15-minute corrected time advantage over Heritage. LeFlore may be fined DETROIT (UPI)- Chicago White Sox outfielder Ron LeFlore may be fined as much as $17,000 and suspended from three to five days for reporting late for Sunday's game in Milwaukee, it. was reported yesterday. Sox manager Tony LaRussa would not confirm LeFlore's possible fine and suspension but did say he planned to meet with the centerfielder prior to last night's series opener against the DetroiLTigers. THE CHICAGO Tribune said it has been indicated LeFlore, who earns an annual salary of $625,000, will lose one day's pay for each day of his suspen- sion. A three-day suspension would result in a fine of $10,416 and he would be docked $17,360 for a five-day suspen- sion. LeFlore missed Sunday's game because LaRussa would not allow him to suit up after he arrived late. He also missed the team's flight to Detroit from Milwaukee and arrived on a later flight. LaRussa had planned to start LeFlore in center. But when LeFlore didn't show by game time, he was replaced by Rudy Law. LeFlore wat- ched the game from a box seat adjacent to the Sox' dugout. Bud Selig, the Brewers' majority owner, was asked if LeFlore paid for his seat. "No, he didn't," Selig said. "And I plan to send the White Sox a bill for $7." Judge rules against NFL LOS ANGELES'(AP) - U.S. District Court Judge Harry Pregerson denied yesterday for the second time a National Football League motion for a stay that would keep the Oakland Raiders from moving to the Los Angeles Coliseum. NFL attorney Patrick Lynch filed the second motion for a stay to delay enfor- cement of an injunction stemming from the league's court loss to the Raides and Los Angeles Colisum Commission last May. In that trial, a six-woman federal jury found that the lesgueviolated an- titrust law by blocking the Raiders' shift to Los Angeles. An injunction then was issued forbidding the NFL to block the team's move. PREGERSON earlier had denied a similar request by the NFL for a stay of the injunction. Lynch said previously that, if Pregerson denied the second request for a stay, the NFL would appeal direc- tly to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals.