The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 30, 1982-.-Page 11 Braves trip Padres, 6-2 ATLANTA (AP)- Dale Murphy smashed his 27th and 28th home runs of the season and Jerry Royster belted a two-run triple as the rampaging Atlan- ta Braves stretched their National League West lead to nine games over San Diego by beating the Padres 6-2. The victory completed a four-game sweep of the PadresAtlanta's closest rival in the division race. MURPHY HIT his solo homers off Chris Welsh, 5-5. He opened with a towering shot to left field in the third inning and followed with a liner over the fence in left in the fifth. Murphy also singled in the first inning and narrowly missed his third homer on a foul ball before striking out in the seventh. Royster drilled his triple into the right field corner in the fourth inning following singles by Chris Chambliss and Bruce Benedict. The victory went to Rick Camp, 8-4, who yielded seven hits, walked one and fanned two before being relieved in the eighth by Carlos Diaz, who picked up his first major league save. San Diego got its runs on homers, Gene Richards' second of the season in the third inning and Sixto Lezcano's 11th in the seventh. Phillies 3, Cubs 2 PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Mike Sch- midt homered and Gary Matthews' two-out single in the seventh scored Ivan DeJesus with the winning run as the Philadelphia Phillies beat Chicago, 3-2, for their 11th victory in 15 games. It was the Cubs' sixth consecutive loss. Right-hander Mike Krukow, 10-6, allowed seven hits over 7 2/3 innings and reliever Ron Reed picked up his fif- th save. PHILADELPHIA'S Manny Trillo, who Tuesday night set the National League record for consecutive errorless games in one season by a second baseman, played in his 88th in a row without a mistake. He is three games short of Joe Morgan's major league record of 91 flawless games, set during 1977-78. Matthew's winning hit came off Dick Tidrow, 4-2, who replaced starter Doug Bird at the start of the seventh. Tidrow retired the first two batters before DeJesus lined a double to right field. Matthews, who has now hit safely in 20 of his last 22 games, singled up the mid- dle to break the 2-2 tie. The Cubs took a 1-0 lead in the first when Ryne Sandberg beat out an infield hit and scored on the first of Leon Durham's three doubles. The Phils tied it in the fourth when DeJesus singled, moved to second on an infield out and scored on Bo Dial's single to left. Pirates 4, Mets 1 NEW YORK (AP) - Don Robinson pitched a seven-hitter and Dick D a vis slammed a two-run homer last night as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat New York 4-1, handing the Mets their fourth con- secutive loss. Robinson, 0-3 last year, gained his 11th victory against five losses. The 25- year-old right-hander struck out eight and walked three in his fourth complete game of the year. DAVIS'S FOURTH home run of the season came in the fourth inning off Pete Falcone, 6-7, and followed a double by Bill Madlock. Falcone lasted only 2% innings. It was the 57th consecutive game in which a Mets starter has failed to go the route. Consecutive singles by Davis and Tony Pena, a sacrifice by Johnny Ray, an RBI single by Dale Berra and Robinson's sacrifice fly gave Pitsburgh 2-0 lead in the second inning. New York avoided a shutout in the fourth when Joel Youngblood singled and Wally Backman doubled. Expos 4, Cardinals 3 MONTREAL (AP) - Tim Wallach's bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the 10th in- ning scored Andre Dawson and boosted the Montreal Expos to a 4-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals last night. Dawson led off against reliever Doug Bair, 3-2, by lininga double to left field. He continued to third when the Carid- nals were slow returning the ball to the infield. BAIR intentionally walked Al Oliver and Gary Carter to load the bases and retired Warren Cromartie on an infield pop, but Wallach delivered a fly to center field that produced the winning run. Woodie Fryman, 5-2, held the Cardinals to one hit over the final two innings for the victory. The Expos tied it with three runs in the eighth. Singles by pinch hitter Brad Mills and Jerry White chased St. Louis starter Bob Forsch. Bruce Sutter retired Tim Raines on a fly ball but Dawson's double scored pinch-runner Bryan Little. After Oliver was intentionally walked to load the bases, Carter walked on four pitches, forcing in White. Jim Kaat replaced Sutter and Cromartie hit a high chopper to the right side, sending Dawson home. The Cardinals got a run in the third off David Palmer when Tom Herr walked, reached second on a fielder's choice, stole third and scored on a wild pitch. Rhythmic champ Valerie Zimring of Los Angeles took the gold medal yesterday in rhythmic gymnastics for this performance at the National Sports Festival in In- dianapolis. _ San Francisco drops basketball SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The University of San Francisco, which produced such stars as Bill Russell, K. C. Jones and Phil Smith said today it was abolishing men's basketball because misconduct in the program had cast doubt on the "integrity and credibility of the university." "Anyone who is familiar with this in- stitution and its proud history will un- derstand what a painful decision this is," said school President Rev. John LoSchiavo. ON LoSCHIAVO'S recommendation, the Board of Trustees voted Wednesday to drop the progam. "The circumstances centrally in- volve problems with the basketball program, which have been plaguing us and which the university has been un- successfully trying to solve for many years," LoSchiavo said. "The price the university has had to pay for those problems has been much greater than the heavy financial price. there' is no way of measuring the damage that has been done to the university's most priceless, assets, its integrity and its reputation." THE NCAA nailed USF on recruiting violations over a period of six years and placed the basketball program on probation for one year, with sanctions prohibiting post-season competition. In 1980, -the university's basketball program was charged with recruiting violations, placed on one year probation and blocked from post-season play. The school was on "unsanctioned probation" last year, meaning it could appear in tourament action. For. a small school with an enrollment of about 7,000, San Francisco has been remarkably successful in college basketball. The Dons won the national championship in 1955 and 1956, with Russell and Jones, reached the final Four three times and have been in the NCAA playoffs 14 times. Today's announcement followed an inhouse investigation which began following a June 25 probation report issued on former San Francisco basketball star Quintin Dailey. THAT REPORT, issued as a result of charges tht Dailey had assaulted a nur- sing student at the school, showed Dailey had been paid $1,000 a month by alumnus Luis Sabala for a "no-show" summer job. Sports Illustrated has since reported that Dailey got as much as $5,000 Zabala, as well as cash from Coach Pete Barry. Those revelations are clear violations of NCAA rules, which require a student- athlete to work for any money he is given. Tom Yeager, of the NCAA en- forcement division, said today from Kansas City that the NCAA would not comment on whether the university was currently under investigation. However, the termination of the basketball program was expected to head off a new NCAA probe of the school. 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