SPORTS Thursday, June 2, 1983 4 Page 20 The Michigan Daily CR USH MOREHEAD IN FINALS Baseballers take Mideast I By PAUL HELGREN "We don't ever expect to lose," Michigan coach Bud Middaugh responded when asked if he was sur- prised that his Wolverines swept two straight tournaments, the Big Ten two weeks ago and the Mideast Regional last weekend. It is no surprise that Middaugh never anticipates losing. With the three tour- ney wins over the weekend, Michigan ran its record to 48-7 including wins in 21 of its last 22 games. Michigan, quite frankly, is on a roll, a roll that Mid- daugh hopes will continue into the College World Series which starts this weekend. THE WOLVERINES enter the World Series by virtue of a regional sweep that saw record Ray Fisher Stadium crowds, stellar-pitching performances by Rich Stoll, and a good dose of booming blue bats, too. Friday's opener against Morehead State saw an inauspicious beginning for Michigan and starting pitcher Gary Wayne. Wayne was rocked for three runs in 1 % innings and was relieved by freshman Casey Close in the second. At the same time Wolverine bats were silenced by lefthander Drew Hall, who pitched a no-hitter through five innings. While Close kept Michigan close, the. hitters rallied with a gift run in the fifth. With Fred Erdmann on first with a walk, center fielder Dale Sklar hit a lazy, two-out fly to right-center. But when both center fielder Alan Steele and right fielder Norm Brock con- verged on the ball, Steele dropped it for a two-base error, and Erdmann scam- pered home with Michigan's first run. MICHIGAN'S FIRST hit came in the next inning and it was a monster. Third baseman Chris Sabo hit one of his patented opposite-field blasts at least 400 feet to the base of the Track and Tennis Building. Sabo's four-bagger, his 15th, scored Mike Watters to tie the contest. Freshman shortstop Barry Larkin then put the game away in the seventh with an RBI single. Rich Stoll, who had Onto Omaha: Michigan advances to Series entered in the sixth, went the rest of the way for the 4-3 win. Saturday's game versus Miami of Ohio was just the opposite from Friday's - Michigan scored its runs early and its opponents rallied. But the result was the same, another Blue triumph, this time 6-4. ONCE AGAIN the pitcher was Stoll and for eight innings he was un- touchable. Going into the ninth Stoll held a6-1lead and appeared to be on his way to a complete-game victory. But the junior righthander tired and Tim Karazim had to be called on to put out a Redskin uprising. Karazim got three of the last four batters to preserve the Michigan win and pick up his seventh save. Despite the last-inning collapse that saw Stoll let the first four Miami run- ners reach base, the Attica, Ind. native was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player for his iron-man, 12- inning performance. "I thought Rich was outstanding...to go out there for four innings (on Friday) and come back to pitch the key ball game on Saturday," Middaugh said. "I think the (MVP) decision was very good." COMPARED TO the first two games, Sunday's final against Morehead was a breeze, even though Michigan trailed 1- 0 going into the fifth inning. Freshman Scott Kamieniecki conquered early wildness and held the Eagles in check until his teamates broke out with a five- run fifth inning. Once again Sabo got the big hit, a two-run single to left. Michigan piled it on in the later in- nings with two-run homers by catcher Rich Bair and first baseman Ken Hayward. Hayward's homer followed a triple by Sabo. Perhaps a bigger contribution Hayward made to the victory was a play the 6-4, 225 pound sophomore made in Morehead's top of the fifth. With the Eagles up 1-0, Steve Heatherly ripped a ball up the alley that appeared to be a sure triple. Heatherly held up at seond, however, and wandered off the bag (Continued from Page 1) really good shot at the national title." That kind of confidence can only aid Michigan with what surely will be a monumental task. To win the double- elimination tournament a team must win five games (seven if they lose one) against the best teams in the country. Among the seven other teams the Wolverines must overcome are top- ranked and perennial Series par- ticipant Texas and Midwest champion Oklahoma State, whose batters warm up with a sledgehammer to psych out their opponents. MICHIGAN has been pretty in- timidating itself this year. As a team the Wolverines are hitting .334 and score an average of 7.3 runs per game. Their pitching has been equally im- pressive with a team earned run average of 3.04. But how does this team compare to the two Michigan teams (1980 and '81) that won a grand total of one game in Series play? Daily Photo by BRIAN M/ Michigan centerfielder Dale Sklar makes the grab in a game earlier this year. Sklar is one of the main reasons Michigan's outfield defense has im- proved so much this year. because Michigan second baseman Jeff Jacobson was in shallow left field get- ting the relay throw. While Heatherly listened to manager and third base coach Steve Hamilton give instructions, Hayward snuck up behind him, got the relay from Jacobson and put the tag on the bewildered Eagle. MIDDAUGH SAID Hayward's play may have been the momentum change in the game. "I'd hesitate to call this a better team than the others," said senior co-captain Jeff Jacobson, who played on both the '180 and '81 squads. "But this is a closer team. We don't rely on one or two people, like before. Everybody con- tributes. We're a team." "I think this team has greater sen- timental value to me," Bair said, "sim- ply because we're very close." WHAT'S MORE, Middaugh thinks Michigan's brief performances in the past give extra incentive to his veterans. "It's more meaningful to (the veterans)," Middaugh explained. "They feel they've got something to prove." But would Michigan's season still be a success if it does not do well in Omaha? "Our goals are set higher than we've attained yet," said Middaugh "But we could still go out and lose two and still have a successful year." "You've got to make plays like that just to get that momentum coming back to you." The win and tournament victory give Michigan the opportunity to redeem itself in the College World Series. In two previous appearances there, Middaugh's Wolverines have won just one game while losing four. Their first game is Saturday against Maine. ..,,, " Middaugh ...third trip to Series