'Ta Michi swept visitil tball Goph Wolvi two elimir the Bi The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 8, 1984 -, Page 19 Revenge: Gophers swept By DOUGLAS B. LEVY bunt by leftfielder Thomas. Morrow ake that Gophers, said thee tt retired six of the final seven batters ignIoens otblltamastey S SP tc e with ease to complete the sweep. gan women's softball team as they "They're the best coached team in last Sunday's doubleheader from the conference," said Michigan skipper ng Minnesota at the Varsity Sof-' h e " ia pe Diamond. Saturday it had been the o r o w s a r o r easilywon both gamnes, could have ers taking a pair from the erines, but Michigan took the final Michigan is now 27-21, 8-10 in the con- games, 3-2 and 2-1 to all but Allen, helped her cause with a deep second game led by freshman Vicki ference and plays host to Michigan nate any Gopher hopes of winning triple to left-center, scoring two runs. Morrow (7-8), who pitched a four-hitter State in a doubleheader today at 1:00 STen title . Following a Gonher pitching change, . and had five strike outs. "I wasn't p.m. Minnesota fell to 26-17 and 12-6. Minnesota seemed poised for another, sweep when it scored a run on a double and bloop single with two out in the top of the first inning Sunday. But winning pitcher, Linda Allen (7-9) got out of the inning on a pop out to short. THE WOLVERINES succeeded in getting the lead-off batter aboard in each of the first three innings but were not successful in pushing across any runs. Meanwhile Minnesota loaded the bases on Allen in the third but left all three runners stranded. Michigan finally struck in the bottom of the fourth, when with two outs, senior centerfielder Carol Patrick walked, catcher Leslie Bean singled and pitcher shortstop Lisa Panetta singled in Allen with what proved to be the winning run. The Gophers roared back in the fifth when third baseman Danne Leininger homered and they loaded the bases with only one out. But relief pitcher Mari Foster was able to escape the inning thanks to a great throw to home plate by leftfielder Missy Thomas to nail a runner. MINNESOTA threatened again in the sixth but left two more runners stran- ded. The Gophers went quietly in the seventh, having wasted nine baserun- ners for the contest. Charged up by the victory, Michigan played near flawless softball in the really putting my pitches in the right places, but I guess I pitched pretty well," said Morrow of her performan- ce. Michigan scored first in the bottom of the second when Panetta came through with another RBI single after runners had advanced to second and third with two outs. But the Gophers tied the game in the fifth with two singles and a sacrifice bunt which amounted to their only threat of the contest. THE WOLVERINES came right back in the bottom half of the inning on a walk, sacrifice bunt, force play to second leaving runners on first and third and the game winnning sacrifice Panetta ... gets game-winning hit Cagers topple Dutch squad Soto pitches hot Reds past New York, 11-2 From staff reports After experiencing one game of basketball using international rules and foreign courts, the Michigan team got their act together and defeated the Dut- ch National Team, 74-68, Sunday night in Rotterdam. The Wolverines lost to the same squad Saturday night in the opening contest of their seven-game European swing. THE SPECTATORS in the Netherlands got a sneak preview of what Michigan is going to look like next season since guard Eric Turner cannot play with the team now that he has declared himself eligible for the NBA draft and Tim McCormick stayed home to go to the Olympic tryouts. So instead it was Richard Rellford who took over top scoring honors with 21 points, including 8-of-11 from the field. Antoine Joubert poured in 14 and Rob Henderson added 11 points along with 10 rebounds. The Wolverines got off to a slow start and trailed by seven at halftime, but a 12-point run midway through the second half brought them from six down to six ahead with six minutes remaining. Netherlands quickly tied the score again, but Rellford hit two straight buckets to put Michigan on top to stay 66-62. The win evens the Wolverines' record on their European trip at 1-1. They played the Dutch team for a third time last night in Alban. NEW YORK (AP) - Mario. Soto won his third straight game, and Duane Walker and Wayne Krenchicki hit con- secutive eighth-inning homers as the Cincinnati Reds routed New York 11-2 last night, handing the Mets their third straight loss. Soto, 4-1, allowed five hits in seven innings, struck out five and walked two adding a single and a double as the Reds outhit New York 16-8. Tom Foley had two RBI and three singles, and Dan Driessen added two doubles, a single and knocked in a run. Tim Leary, 1-3, only lasted 2% in- nings, allowing four runs on six hits, while walking five. Leading 7-1 already, the Reds turned the game into a laugher when Driessen singled with one out in the eighth and Walker and Krenchicki followed with successive homers off Craig Swan. Walker has four homers and it was the first for Krenchicki. Cubs 10, Giants 7 CHICAGO (AP) - Leon Durham's three-run homer, his fourth in four games, keyed a seven-run second- inning yesterday and led the Chicago Cubs to a 10-7 victory over San Fran- cisco, snapping the Giants' four-game winning streak. Winning pitcher Chuck Rainey, 2-3, had a one-hit shutout going until the seventh inning when the Giants kayoed him with a five-run rally. The Cubs rapped loser Mark Davis, 0- 4, for two runs in the first inning. Durham singled home the first run and Ron Cey drove in the second with a sacrifice fly. Catcher Steve Lake, making a rare start, opened the big second with his first homer and closed the inning with a run-scoring double. SUMMER COPY SALE! ocopy loose sheets, overnight 2Accu-Copy L 402 MAYNARD Name, Pos. BarryLar Casey Close, Jeff Minick, KenHaywar Mike Watter Rich Bair,e Dan, Disher, C.J.Beshke MattSiuda, Chuck Froni Rob Huffma Hal Morris, Danny Tere Kurt Zimme Chris Gust, MICHIGAN Opponents . ''baseball statisties Hitting G AB H R SB BB 2B-3B-HR RB inSS. 29 9 33 27 8 i7 6-2-2 16 OF-P ....... 44 i24 44 34 4 17 8-2-6 3i OF .... . . 41 98 33 20 4 13 8-1-2 38 rd,IB-P............ 46 123 39 35 4 35 7-1-6 41 rs,SS-CF........... 46 127 39 39 11 32 8-5-1 18 C...................45 118 33 18 4 21 4-0-3 25 OF-P ............. 33 38 10 10 2 3 1-3-2 8 2B................ 33 65 16 17 2 18 2-2-0 8 3B................. 45 Ill 26 14 3 7 3-0-1 16 ing, OF-IF ......... 37 69 16 4 0 4 4-1-2 9 n,OF.............. 37 53 12 17 1 4 4-0-0 8 1B................. 30 31 7 3 0 1 2-0-0 2 sa,2B.............. 20 40 9 12 2 8 4-0-0 3 erman,OF ......... 38 46 10 19 3 19 0-2-2 8 OF ................ 24 29 5 6 1 5 1-0-0 2 ................... 46 1208 345 286 53 212 67-19-27 24: .................... 46 1243 319 229 45 216 61-13-27 21 BI 6 l 8 1 8 :5 3 3 6 3 1 3 12 11 AVG .5 .337 .317 .307 .280 .263 .246 .234 .231 .226 .226 .225 .217 .172 .286 .257 ERA 1.83 2.38 2.84 3.66 4.14 4.52 5.58 6.00 7.20 7.29 10.91 14.59 23.68 5.36 7.0 Pitching Name G CG Sav W-L JohnGrettenberger.................... 7 1 0 2-0 Ken Hayward ........................ 17 0 4 6-2 Scott Kamieniecki .....................9 4 0 4-2 Jerry Wolf..... . . ..5 0 0 2-0 Chuck Froning ........................ 2 0 0 1-0 Gary Wayne.. . . ..12 5 2 5-2 Dave Karasinski........... .11 0 0 3-2 Bill Shuta.. . . ..12 1 0 5-0 Jon Wood . . . ........4 0 0 0-0 Casey Close.. . . ..13 1 0 4-5 Kevin Gilles-. . . ..3 0 0 0-0 Paul Kasper....2...................... 2 0 0 0-0 Dan Disher ............................ 7 0 0 0-1 sin HIGAN... . ..46 12 6 32-14 Opponents ............................ 46 16 4 14-32 lP H 19.7 15 30.3 25 44.3 35 12.3 12 8.7 6 55.7 52 40.3 41 42.0 47 5.0 8 45.7 54 3.3 7 3.7 6 5.7 8 319.3 319 311.0 345 BB 9 13 26 9 3 29 32 25 1 33 5 6 18 216 212 so 12 23 29 13 3 48 38 25 4 27 0 4 3 2'29 179 CAMPING SEASON SALE Reg. Sale All frame backpacks & bags....................20% off Slumberiack "Bluebird" sleeping bags ....... $65.98 $48.98 21/2 lb. Holofil Two-person backpackers tent ............. $28.98 $19.98 All Bausch & Lomb Ray-Ban sunglasses ........ .....15 % off (Wayfarers included) Sale Ends May 14th 201 E. Washingon at Fourth MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-8 P.M. SAT 9 A.M -7 PM ARMY SUN. 11 A.M.-4 P.M. SURPLUS VI"A 994-3572