4 IJ THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 k .. r ... t .. .. . . 7 N r" A .' "^"Mt : .....,:.w y}v: r ": ti:+ . v "" , .x r r f"v."r."" '"Y i . : .,..ti",.,vv i'^r. r fivF 5: 4r:FJ'r r~fJr " " " r +'? ". rrr ' - br v r fi y yr { w; " d x :. :W . .. :. ..,. 3 a'F. " tsr . S..:.z.s..._.... .. ...... ..... .Ja . offr'. 71r S .1 u ?c'"so''".+, 4 h' AFS kt:Yrt9{- ...$a ..a M'":L4:'a::+-':wYrC: "ie WELCOME TO MICHIGAN by -.s(. .. c,. ~4 'C * Kt C.v cc.c -.. S.. A. By TOM WITECKI Competition with a capital C- that's the outlook for Michigan's 1960 baseball team. With all but two members re- turning from last year's 21 man squad and a promising flock of players from last spring's frosh team also on hand, a starting job will be hard to come by. However Don Lund, entering his second season as the nine's coach, is pleased with the over- crowded situation. The former Detroit Tiger out- fielder believes the competitive at- mosphere will have each player giving his all; thus giving him one of the top contenders for next spring's Big Ten crown. Last season was a disappointing one for Lund. Handicapped by hot and cold hitting and a gen- eral lack of pitching quality, the team finished with a 5-7 record for a seventh place Conference finish Disaster Hit Despite the inadequacies the squad was still in contention till the next to last week of the sea- son. Then disaster struck. On a road trip to Illinois and Purdue, the team managed to collect just 10 hits in three losing efforts. This was followed by a rainy Ann Arbor weekend, which saw the season's final three games be- ing rained out. Included in the washout, which removed all hope of a second division finish for the nine, was a doubleheader with Minnesota, the Conference champ for the last two years. But with the help of the capital "C" things look bright for next spring. In the outfield all three starters are returning. In center is senior Jack Mogk flanked by last spring's soph sensations Wilbur Franklin and John Halstead. Mogk - the team's leading RBI man with 12 in as many games; Franklin - a stocky leftfielder with speed on the paths and afield, solid af, the plate where his batting average hovered around the .300 mark all season; Hal- stead - the Big Ten's leading batter for most of the season, ending up at the .364 mark-this will be a tough trio to break into, but the new sophs may do it. Three Strong Sophs They are: Ed Hood, whose fly- snagging talents have already caught Lund's eye and Dick Dela- millieure, a power hitter whose homer in the annual varsity-frosh game was the longest hit of the season at the Ferry Field Sta- dium. John Danovich, last spring's "fourth outfielder" and soph Ron Walker will also be in the run- ning. In the infield, competition will center around the keystone sack since seniors Bill Roman at first and Dave Brown at third seem to have things well under control. Roman, the team's captain- elect, had a bad, spring last sea- son, but is expected to regain the sparkling form he showed his sophomore year. Brown, named to the NCAA's midwest all-star team last spring, is the team's most dangerous power hitter, touting a .300 aver- age last season. A good spring for either of the two seniors might find one of them receiving a professional con- tract along with a diploma next June. Second base will be a hot-bed of activity with last spring's start- er, smooth-fielding Bob Kucher, in danger of losing a job because of a weak batting average. Battling Kucher will be junior Barry Marshall, who has proved he can hit with power but not with equal consistency. In a crucial switch Lund says he will try to convert last spring's regular shortstop, Gene Struczew- ski, into a second baseman. Key to the switch is whether promis- ing sophomore Dick Clark can fill the gap at shortstop. Just to keep things interesting, George Fead, who did a good job in a reserve role last spring, will be on hand along with another returnee Terry Ziegler. Back behind the plate will be Dick Syring, who caught several games last spring. Hia biggest competitor will be sophomore Joe Morullo, whose rifle-like throwing arm has drawn attention. Pitchers Battle The pitching mound will be the site of the biggest battle. Re- turnees Joe Brefeld, Al Koch. Nick Liakonis, Bob Marcereau and Gordon Rinckey have all shown promise at one time or an- other. It will simply be a case of who performs the best. Lettermen Jim Bradshaw and George Weemhoff will also enter into the fray along with John Berr, Larry Demrick, Dennis Rob- ison and Paul Osterbeck, all mem- bers of last spring's frosh squad. A consistently good pitcher was something Michigan lacked last spring and Lund is out to find one. In order to give all the players a good looking-over Lund is hold- ing a three-week fall practice. It will stress fundamentals and give .the Wolverine coach a chance to do some weeding out in advance of the spring workouts. Members of Bump Elliott's gridiron corps: Halstead, Syring, Brown, Frank- lin and Hood will be exempted. But there should be enough players around (Lund expects up- wards of 40) to provide ,plenty of competition - that's with a- cap- ital C. -v < Baseball Prospects Face Heavy Competition for Starting Slots 1. WILDSA State Street on the Campus f FINE FURNISHINGS BASEBALL CAPTAIN-Captain Bill Roman of the baseball team rounds first base in a game against Michigan State last spring. Roman, a sophomore hitting sensation, Is expected to spark the team next spring. Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES New Books If You Prefer .,f^..?. i :"v r r.,roi, r:" AL Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classifieds! POLL STATE STREET at K*TT8 NORTH UNIVERSITY SAFE AT FIRST -Michigan third-baseman Bob Brown' stratus to* beat out a grounder to the second baseman during, s gam* with Wayne State. Brown was one of the hitting mainstaysof the tem bit~ing *I~well over .300 p ~~~~I . * kU . ~wtcwa,.f.a. Vtn crwv a u. UWad EVERYONE _( . IN ANN ARBOR SHOPS AT e I - U __