Page 12 University Daily Kansan, August 30, 1982 Lead Angels by two Royals win three from Chicago By United Press International Larry Gura and LaMarr Hoyt were two of the hotter pitchers in the American League early in the season. He was master while the other just a disaster. Amos Otis' two-run double highlighted a four-run first inning and Gura became the American League's first 17-game winner yesterday, helping the Kansas City Royals to a 7-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox The triumph was the sixth straight for the Royals and their ninth in their last 11 games. It gave the first-place California in the American League West. Otis' double came off loser no. 14-13, and followed walks to U.L. Washington and George Brett. Hal McRae then singled home Otis for his major-league leading 114th RB. Wille Alkens' single sent Brett to third and Jerry Martin singled home the final run of the inning. CHICAGO SCORED in the fourth when Harold Baios and Greg Lazinski won on Friday. Kemp bounced out, but Brett's 18th home in the seventh made it 5-1. Brett got his 1,500 major-league hit in the fifth on a single to right and he finished with three hits in four trips. In the three-game series, Brett went on to win six doubles, two triples, a homer and six RIP to raise his batting average to .316. The Royals added two insurance runs in the ninth off Sparky Lale on Willie Wilson's RBI triple and Washington's sacrifice fly. Gura allowed only five hits over the first eight innings but was knocked out in the ninth when the White Sox scored three runs on RBI singles by Carlton Fisk, Aurelio Rodriguez and pinchhitter Mike Squires. Dan Quisenberry, despite giving up the single to Squires, got the last out to record his tast save. IN OTHER games, New York beat Toronto, 8-2; Baltimore downed Texas, 3-2; Minnesota defeated Cleveland, 6-3; Minnesota defeated Milwaukee, milkweed Oakland, 8-1. At Toronto, Dave Winfield knocked in four runs with two homers and Lee Mazziell belted a solo hero to support the three-hit pitching of Tommy John and give the Yankees a victory over the Blue Jays. John, who retired the final 13 batters, evened his record at 10-10 with his ninth complete game. At Baltimore, Eddie Murray ripped a pair of run-scorning singles to back the six-hit pitching of Mike Flanagan and pace the Orioles. At Minneapolis, Sal Butera's two-run single capped a four-eight innings that lifted the Twins. Bobby Castillo, 8-10, allowed five hits — only one over the last eight innings — in going the distance for the victory. AT BOSTON, Jim Rice and Dwight Evans slammed three-rank runers and Dennis Eckersley notched his first victory in 34 days in leading the Red Sox. At Milwaukee, Cecil Cooper drove in three runs with his 26th hater -- a personal season high - and a single to the Brewers. Bob McCurel limited the A's to three hits in raising his record to 10-6. In National League games, Philadelphia downed Cincinnati, 3-1; Montreal beat Boston, 5-3; Atlanta edged New York, 4-2; Toronto beat Louis, 9-4, in the first game of a double-header; Pittsburgh nipped San Francisco, 4.4; and Chicago got by los At Philadelphia, Steve Carlton threw a three-hitter to lead the Phillies over the Reds. Carlton, 17-9, struck out 11 to raise his season total to 211. AT MONTREAL, Andre Dawson knocked in three runs, two with his 18th home run, to spark the Expos. Scott Sanderson, 8-11, picked up the victory. At New York, Claudeil Washington had three hits, two RBI and scored twice to spark the Braves. Atlanta has been in first place in the Western Division. At San Diego, rookie Rick Lance-liotti's first major-league hit, a three-run double, climaxed a five-run uprising to lead the Padres. At San Francisco, Jason Thompson's two-run homer and scoreless relief pitching by Rod Scurr gave the Pirates the victory. At Los Angeles, Bump Wills hit three straight singles and drove in two runs in support of Ferguson Jenkins' 274th career victory to pace the Cubs. The Dodgers are now one percentage point behind the Atlanta Braves. Scoreboard Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE East W. L. Pct.. GB Milwaukee 76 52 14 Baltimore 78 58 14% Baltimore 70 58 547 6 New York 70 58 568 11 Detroit 64 63 594 10% Cleveland 64 63 594 10% Cleveland 61 70 498 16% Kansas City 78 54 554 9 California 64 62 555 9 South Carolina 61 67 73 443 10 % Texas 90 78 384 10 % Oklahoma 90 78 384 10 % New York 8, Toronto 2 Boston 9, California 3 Albuquerque 10 Chicago City 7, Chicago 4 Minnesota 6, Cleveland 3 Milwaukee 8, Oakland 1 Detroit at Seattle LAWYER LEAGUE R. Lorca W. 7 L. Pct. GB Philadelphia 75 34 58 Montreal 72 27 58 Toronto 69 41 53 Tampa Bay 69 41 53 Iowa City 69 41 53 Chicago 69 41 53 Atlanta 72 57 558 - Los Angeles 71 58 549 - San Diego 67 611 616 - San Francisco 65 66 496 B - Houston 61 69 810 - Oklahoma City 61 69 824 % YESTERDAYS RESULTS Atlanta 9, New York 4 Montreal 5, Houston 3 San Diego 8, Miami 1 San Diego 9, St. Louis 4, 1 game Football AMERICAN CONFERENCE Baltimore W L. T. Pct. Pct. PA Baltimore 2 2 0 0 0 0 84 Buffalo 2 2 0 0 0 0 84 Miami 1 1 1 500 55 41 New York 1 1 1 500 55 41 New England 1 1 1 500 55 74 Pittsburgh 3 0 0 1.000 74 45 Cleveland 3 0 0 1.000 63 56 Heaton 2 1 0 .667 59 94 Cincinnati 1 0 0 .000 70 94 Denver 3 0 0 1.000 77 61 San Diego 2 1 0 1.067 75 62 Kansas City 1 1 1 1.500 46 43 LA, HAIDER 1 1 1 1.500 46 43 NATIONAL CONFERENCE Green Bay 0 0 1.000 62 49 Tampa Bay 2 1 0.667 68 41 Minnesota 2 1 0.667 73 56 Detroit 2 1 0.600 75 52 Chicago 2 1 0.333 51 52 W L. T. L. Pct. Pct. PF 72 Dallas 1 2 1 0 60 72 Dallas 1 2 1 352 74 St. Louis 1 2 1 333 23 33 NY Giants 1 2 1 333 46 42 NY Giants 1 2 1 333 46 42 Atlanta 2 1 0 .667 47 72 New Orleans 1 2 0 .667 43 45 San Fran 1 2 0 .333 38 53 LA, Matta 1 2 0 .333 66 72 Pittsburgh 12, Baltimore 15 Detroit 7, Cincinnati 21 Columbus 9, Detroit 24 N.Y. Giants 22, N.Y. Jets 10 New Orleans Wake Forest 13 Denver 17, Minnesota 17 New England 17 San Diego 11, New York By United Press International NEW YORK — The Pittsburgh Panthers, despite being faced with a schedule that was obviously designed by fans of Attila the Hun, have been installed as the favorite to win the national championship in college football this season by the International's Board of Coaches. It's enough to make the Panthers' new head coach Serafino "Foge" Fazio wonder what his fellow coaches have against him. "I know the coaches don't like me, but they don't have to kill me right off the bat," said Fazio, a former Pitt assistant who takes over from the departed Jackie Sherrill. "I hope this can be used as a motivating tool, or go with it; stay member of the team we have to win, we control our own destiny." It won't be easy for the Panthers, despite the return of 18 starters from last season's 11-1 squad. Very few teams ranked No. 1 in the pre-season ever finish there at the end of the season. "I hope this can be used as a motivating factor. If our guys want to stay No. 1, they have to win. If we win, we control on own destiny." "Yes, there's a lot of pressure," Fazio said. "There's pressure from within, pressure in that, as you know, I'm a Pittsburgh guy. I've been as an assistant coach. There's pressure because the players want to win. Pitt's schedule is brutal, however. It begins with games against North Carolina, Florida State, Illinois and West Virginia. The Panthers also meet Penn State and Notre Dame later in the year. "I think this is the toughest schedule Pill has faced in the past 10 years. With the first four games—North Carolina in particular and then Florida State, Illinois and West Virginia—well, it's going to be very demanding, very tough to get through," said Fazio. The Panthers, who finished second in UPF's final ratings last year after beating Georgia, 24-20, in the Sugar Bowl, received 26 of 42 games for the 86 points. 68 points cast by the Panthers nationwide panel of coaches. Washington, with 17 starters from last year's Rose Bowl champions returning, finished second in the pre-season balloting. The Huskers first right first place votes and 513 points. Nebraska, the defending Big Eight champions that lost to 1981 national champion Clemson in the Orange Bowl, grabbed the No. 3 position with three first-place votes and 483 points. Alabama, 9-2-1 last season as Coach Bear Bryant became the winningest coach in college football history, came in fourth in the voting with three first-place votes and 432 points and Penn State, which handed Pittsburgh its only loss of the 1981 season, finished fifth with 373 points. Roundup out of the Top 10 were No. 6 North Carolina, one first-place vote, No. 7 Georgia, No. 8 Oklahoma, No. 9 Minnesota, No. 10 Clemson and No. 10 Michigan. Southern Methodist, the Southwest Conference champions that was on NCAA probation last year, headed the second 10 followed, in order, by No. 12 Arkansas, No. 13 Texas, No. 14 Ohio State, No. 15 Miami (Fla.), No. 16 Florida, No. 17 UCLA, No. 18 Notre Dame, No. 19 Brigham Young and No. 20 Texas A&M. Miami (Fla.) also was on probation last year and thus ineligible for consideration for the rankings by agreement with the American Football Coaches Association. Teams currently on probation and ineligible have UPI ratings are Arizona State, Oregon and Southern California. Pittsburgh, which won its only national championship in 1976, will be relying heavily on its star quarterback Dan Marino and a defense that was tops in the nation in 1981. Washington, coached by Don James, appears ready to take over the top spot if the Panthers should falter. A well-balanced offense, directed by quarterback Steve Pellner, and the Pacific-10 Conference's second-rated defense is set for another run at the Rose Bowl. For the first time since 1928, Southern California is not on the Huskies' schedule while non-conference opponents are Texas-El Paso, San Diego State and Texas Tech. Offense rolls during weekend scrimmage "I was pleased with the offense," Coach Don Fambrough said. "We worked on a lot of situations that we handled effectively and the offense handed them well. 106 w. North Park 843-9111 hours 11-11 Sun-Thurs 11:1-10 Fri-Sat By GINO STRIPPOLI Sports Editor The offense, led by quarterback Frank Seurer and freshmen Robert Mimbs and Dave Gernot, scored eight touchdowns in scrimmage image held at Memorial Stadium. "The most improved area over last week was our offensive line. They cut down on their mistakes and they were knocking people back off the line." The Jayhawks have an offense and if Saturday is any indication of how they will play this season, it will be the best offense. It will be taken the field for SEURER the offense, hitting 7 of 11 passes for 154 yards and two touchdowns. Back-up Mike Frederick was 3 of 3 for 56 yards and one touchdown and Mike Bohn was 1 of 4 for 9 yards. Mimbs led the Jayhawks for the second straight week gaining 70 yards on 18 carries. He was followed by Geroux and Dino Bell, who each had 61 yards. Geroux got his on 11 carries, and Bell had 12 carries. The big play of the scrimmage was a Seurer-to-Wayne Capers pass that went 90 yards for a touchdown. Capers had three catches on the day for 408 yards. The second catcher, Jiahawk to catch more then one pass. He caught two passes for 24 yards. "WE UTILIZED our kicking game today," Fambrough said. "Extra points and field goals, but not punting." He continued, last scrimmaging some time next week." Bruce Kallmeyer and Dodge Schwartzburg connected on all eight of their extra point tries and Kallmeyer kicked the field goal to close out the scoring. "I was pleased with the way Geroux and the younger players played." Fambrough said. "It gives us the depth we're looking for. All The Pasta You Can Eat For $2.50 Despite the large amount of backdowns, Fambridge said he still found parts of the defense's play that he liked. "I have always loved them and their aggressive play," Fambridge said. "There were some mistakes made, but not many." After the opening scoring pass from Seurer to Capers, the scoring was a little bit less spectacular. Mimbs had two touchdowns, both on 1-yard runs. Geroux and Charlie Cooper each had one, 1-yard touchdown run. Bell scored on a 16-yard run from scrimmage. Bentley scored on a 39-yard pass from Seurer and Richard Estell had the last touchdown on the day on a 39-yard pass from Frederick. Fambrough said that the team would start concentrating on Wichita State a little more this week and they would play against it in the contest. The Jayhawks open their season against the Shockers on Sept. 11 at Memorial Stadium. "Some of the younger players I feel can play now that I wasn't sure could at With Coupon Monday, August 30th 6 P.M. 242 Robinson No Solo Material Required Call 864-5552 for additional information. UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY OPEN AUDITION Frank Seurer Sunday Sept. 5th Only Dino Bell OMNI STUDENT CARD SAVE MONEY ALL SEMESTER For $5.00 you get • Photo ID • Savings all over town * New discounts each month Delivery only good Mon. 8/30-Thurs. 9/2 With Coupon Every month you get a brochure in the mail to inform you of Any Med. or Large Pizza 1/2 Price Bod Jackingham Carpet Bedding Unlimited Chocolate Cookies Dairy Queen Eating Out Garling Glenns Hilton Illinois Bank Beaumont Lauren Bank Denverbank M & B Office Supplies Mall of America Natural Way Pacifica Shoe Source Pacifica Beach Rosewood Eagle Southwest Eagle Hawaii State Air Farm Cooperative Group The Sanctuary Farm Southern Hill Plant Southern Hill Plant Superior Goods Tea Plant TWILIGHT IMONOIDS unflower Travel Service mian Fidelity Life Product and Distributed by OBNT MARKETING 2014-A. N. Shrimp 14 Halliday '13 - Holiday '13-82-667-882 all new discounts and businesses. GET YOUR CARD AT JAYHAWK BOOKSTORE THE 1ST KU FALL BACKGAMMON TOURNAMENT The KU Strategy Games Club Presents Wednesday, September 1, 1982 Register at the SUA Box Office, 4th Floor, Kansas Union before Wednesday; 5:00 Entry Fee: $3 Double Elimination, Win 7, Win-Bg-2 Entry Fee: $3 Double Elimination, Win 7, Win-Bg-2 Sponsored by SUA Indoor Recreation Prizes furnished by Larry Courneius of FUN & GAMES 1002 MASSACHUSETTES FOR MORE INFORMATION. CALL SUA 864-3477 OR FUN & GAMES 841-4550 FREE air pump·lock cycling cap·t-shirt All this free with the purchase of any adult bicycle through Sept. 4 400 bicycles in stock RICK'S BIKE SHOP 1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642