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Fort Lauderdale News from Fort Lauderdale, Florida • Page 48

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4C NewsSun-Sentinel, Saturday, May 21, 1988 HF AMERICAN LEAGUE AL STANDINGS EAST Last 10 Wynegar's double leads Angels to win five previous starts, struck out six Won Lost Pet. GB Gamt Streak Homo Away New York 25 14 .641 5-5 Lost 2 14-8 11-6 Cleveland 25 15 .625 V4 8-2 Lost 1 13- 6 12- 0 Detroit 23 15 .605 Vh 6-4 Won 2 10- 8 13- 7 Boston 20 17 .541 4 5-5 Lost 1 12-12 8- 5 Milwaukee 20 19 .513 5 2-8 Lost 3 13-10 7- 9 Toronto 17 23 .425 8V4 4-6 Won 1 7-12 10-11 Baltimore 6 34 .150 19V4 2-8 Lost 3 5-16 1-18 WEST Last 10 Won Lost Pet. GB Games Streak Horn Away Oakland 29 11 .725 6-4 Won 1 10-6 19-5 Texas 20 18 .526 8 8-2 Won 2 12- 9 8-9 Kansas City 20 20 .500 9 6-4 Won 3 8-9 12-11 Chicago 18 20 .474 10 4-6 Lost 4 10-10 8-10 Seattle 18 23 .439 11V4 4-6 Won 2 7-9 11-14 Minnesota 16 21 .432 11tt 5-5 Lost 2 11-10 5-11 California 17 24 .415 12V4 5-5 Won 3 6-11 11-13 son's two-out double in the eighth inning scored Bill Pecota with the winning run for Kansas City at Kansas City, Mo. The Royals, who prevented Cleveland from moving into first place in the American League East, had blown a 3-1 lead. But Bill Buckner's infield single in the eighth was followed by Jackson's double off the left-field wall off John Farrell, 4-3.

Athletics 11, Yankees 3: Carney Lansford, the major league's leading hitter, had four singles, Dave Parker homered and Ron Hassey drove in three runs as Oakland beat New York in the first meeting of American League division leaders. Lansford now is batting .396. Dave Henderson got three hits, including a pair of doubles, and Glenn Hubbard also had three hits in the 14-hit attack. Bob Welch improved to 7-2 as the Athletics, with the best record in baseball at 29-11, won for the 14th time in their last 16 road games. Blue Jays 3, Brewers 1: Jim Clancy got his first victory in a month and Lloyd Moseby homered as Toronto Blue won in Milwaukee.

Clancy, 2-4 and winless in his leading Detroit at Chicago. Ray Knight and Darrell Evans each had three of the Tigers' 20 hits. It was Detroit's third straight victory and Chicago's fifth loss in a row, their longest losing streak of the year. Frank Tanana, 7-2, gave up three runs and three hits all in the fourth innine. Mariners 3, Orioles 2: Alvin Davis singled home Harold Reynolds in the eighth inning, giving Seattle a victory Baltimore.

Reynolds reached first on an error by second baseman Bill Ripken to open the inning, and advanced on a sacrifice bunt and an infield out before Davis' single. Mark Langston (4-3) worked into the eighth inning, leaving after a leadoff walk to Fred Lynn. Mike Jackson pitched two scoreless innings for his first save of the season. Mark Williamson (1-3) took a no-hitter into the fourth inning before Scott Bradley got a leadoff single. Bradley was erased on an unassisted double play by Eddie Murray, and the Mariners didn't get another hit until Davis opened the seventh with a single.

Royals 4, Indians 3: Bo Jack NewsSun-Sentinel wire services BOSTON Butch Wynegar lined a tie-breaking double after failing to sacrifice in the 10th inning, lifting the California Angels to a 4-2 victory over the Boston Red Sox and Roger Clemens Friday night at Fenway Park. Chico Walker led off the 10th with a walk, just the second issued by Clemens, 6-2. Wynegar fouled a bunt attempt and then lined a double to right as Walker scored easily. Mark McLemore's run-scoring single made it 4-2. tClemens walked two while raising his major league-leading strikeout total to 102.

DeWayne Buice, 1-2, who replaced starter Chuck Finley at the start off the eighth, got the victory. Bryan Harvey pitched the 10th for his second save. The Angels ended Clemens' scoreless streak at 19 innings with two runs in the second. Clemens, who threw three-hit shutouts at Kansas City and Seattle last week, allowed eight hits and struck out nine. Tiger 14, White Sox 6: Alan Trammell hit an upper-deck homer, a double and two singles in Friday'! retulU Winning pitcher Losing pitcher Oakland 11.

New York 3 Welch (7-2) John (2-1) California 4, Boston 2. 10 Inn. Bulce(1-2) Clemens (6-2) Seattle 3, Baltimore 2 Langston (4-3) Williamson (1-3) Toronto 3, Milwaukee 1 Clancy (2-4) Wegman (4-5) Kansas City 4, Cleveland 3 Gublcza (5-4) Farrell (4-3) Minnesota at Texas, rain Detroit at Chicago Today's games California at Boston, 3:20 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 3:20 p.m. Oakland at New York, 7:30 p.m.

Seattle at Baltimore, 7:35 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m. Toronto at Milwaukee, 6:35 p.m. Minnesota at Texas, 8:35 p.m. Thursday's results Kansas City 14, Minnesota 1 California 2, Baltimore 1, 10 first game NATIONAL LEAGUE eds defeat Cubs NL STANDINGS EAST for Soto's 100th and gave up seven hits before giving way to reliever David Wells with one out in the seventh after a single by Jim Gantner and double by Paul Molitor.

Parker answers charge PITTSBURGH Major league teams ignored evidence in the late 1970s and early 1980s that many top players were drug abusers because the teams wanted them to keep playing, lawyers for Dave Parker charged. Bowie Kuhn, baseball commissioner at the time, failed to act against known abusers even after his investigator uncovered heavy cocaine use, in order to contain adverse publicity that could have damaged baseball's image, Parker's attorneys said in court documents filed Friday. Former Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Dock Ellis, himself a former drug user, said in a sworn statement that in the mid and late 1970s, "the overwhelming majority of major league baseball players in both leagues were substance abusers and the symptoms were evident and ignored by management." mer of the season. But the Pirates came back with three runs in their half of the inning. Barry Bonds singled to lead off the Pirates first and Andy Van Slyke followed one out later with an infield single, breaking an 0-for-18 slump.

Consecutive singles by Bobby Bonilla and Diaz produced two runs before Ortiz's sacrifice fly made it 3-1. Diaz had been 0-for-9 since coming off the disabled list earlier this month. He had torn a ligament in his thumb during spring training. Walks to Van Slyke and Diaz and third baseman Ken Oberkfell's error loaded the bases in the third. Ortiz then drove in two runs with a double and Felix Fermin drove in another run with a sacrifice fly to make it 6-1.

Glavine left the game after giv- ing up a two-run single to Diaz in the fourth. Reliever Juan Eichel-berger then gave up an RBI single to Randy Milligan before, getting Ortiz to hit into an inning-ending double play. Astros 5, Cardinals 3: Billy Hatcher went 5-for-5, including a tie-breaking RBI single in the ninth inning, and unbeaten Bob Knepper won his sixth game as Houston beat the St. Louis for its fourth straight victory. Loser Scott Terry (2-2) walked pinch-hitter Terry Puhl to open the ninth with the score tied 2-2.

After Gerald Young's sacrifice moved Puhl to second, Todd Worrell relieved Terry and gave up a run-scoring single to Hatcher on his first pitch. Kevin Bass and Rafael Ramirez added two-out RBI singles to make it 5-2. Last 10 Won Lost Pet. GB Games Streak Home Away New York 27 11 .711 6-4 Won 4 11-3 16-8 Pittsburgh 24 16 .600 4 5-5 Won 1 15-5 9-11 St. Louis 20 20 .500 8 7-3 Lost 1 10-10 10-10 Chicago 18 21 .462 9V4 3-7 Lost 4 6-9 12-12 Montreal 17 20 .459 9Vi 3-7 Lost 1 9-7 8-13 Philadelphia 14 22 .389 12 5-5 Lost 1 7-7 7-15 WEST Last 10 Won Lost Pet.

GB Games Streak Home Away Los Angeles 22 14 .611 5-5 Won 1 12-9 10-5 Houston 23 15 .605 7-3 Won 4 16-7 7-8 Cincinnati 21 19 .525 3 7-3 Won 2 11-9 10-10 San Francisco 20 20 .500 4 6-4 Won 1 12-12 8- 6 San Diego 13 26 .333 10V4 3-7 Lost 4 11-14 2-12 Atlanta 11 26 .297 11V4 4-6 Lost 2 4-14 7-12 Friday's results Winning pitcher Losing pitcher Cincinnati 7, Chicago 2 Soto (3-2) Sutcllffe (3-4) Pittsburgh 10, Atlanta 3 Dunne (2-2) Glavlne(1-6) Houston 5, St. Louis 3 Knepper (6-0) Terry (2-2) New York at Los Angeles Philadelphia at San Diego Montreal at San Francisco Today's games Montreal at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Chicago at Cincinnati, 7:05 p.m. Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. Houston at St.

Louis, 8:05 p.m. New York at Los Angeles, 10:05 p.m. Philadelphia at San Diego, 10:05 p.m. Thursday's results St. Louis 5, Chicago 1 PITCHING FORM American League California 9, Baltimore 6, second game Cleveland 1, Chicago 0 Seattle at New York, rain Sunday's game California at Boston, 1:05 p.m.

Oakland at New York, 1:30 p.m. Seattle at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m. Minnesota at Texas, 2, 2:05 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 2:30 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 2:35 p.m.

Toronto at Milwaukee, 2:35 p.m. New York 9, San Diego 4 Los Angeles 2, Montreal 0 Sunday's gamea Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m. Chicago at Cincinnati, 2:15 p.m. Houston at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.

New York at Los Angeles, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at San Diego, 4:05 p.m. Montreal at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE Through Thursday's games Minimum of 109 at -bats AS Pet Winfietd NY Lansford Oak Brett KC Henderson NY Davis Sea Cotto Sea Carter Cle RayCal Puckett Mln Bogga Ban 37 38 39 34 36 32 38 37 37 35 135 163 147 136 125 120 150 147 155 129 32 35 28 35 23 18 28 19 24 26 53 63 52 48 43 41 50 49 51 42 .393 .387 .354 .353 .344 .342 .333 .333 .329 .328 RUNS Matting ly. New York, 38; Canseco, Oakland, 37; Lansford.

Oakland, 35; Henderson, New York. 35; WlnfteW, New York, 32. RB Winfleid, New York, 38; Canseco, Oakland, 36: McGwire, Oakland. 34; Pagllarulo, New York, 34; Carter. Cleveland, 33.

HITS Lansford, Oakland. 63; Winfietd, New York, 53; Brett, Kansas City. 52; Puckett Minnesota. 51: Carter, Cleveland. 50.

DOUBLES Flay. CaMomia, 15; Gladden, Minnesota. 13; Lemon. Detroit. 13; Mattingly, New York, 13; Puckett, Minnesota.

12; Slaught, New York. 12; TartabuU, Kansas City, 12. TRIPLES Reynolds, Seattle, Wilson, Kansas City, Franco, Cleveland. GBell, Toronto, 3: Gagne, Minnesota. StlltweH.

Kansas City, 3. HOME RUNS Hrbsk, Minnesota, 11; McGwire. Oakland, 11; Canseco. Oakland, 10; Carter. Cleveland.

Incaviglia, Texas, McQrffl. Toronto, 9: wmfleid. New York. 9. STOLEN BASES fl Henderson.

New York. 32; Pettis. Detroit. 21; Canseco, Oakland, 14: Moil-tor. Milwaukee, 11; BJackaon, Kansas City, 10: Moseby, Toronto.

10. PITCHING (5 decieione) Swindell. Cleveland, 8-1, .689, 2.18; Candiottl. Cleveland, 6-1, .857, 2 04; Clemens, Boston, 6-1. .857.

1.78; Viola. Minnesota. 6-1. .857, 2.76: Dotson. New York, 5-1.

833. 3 05: Hurst. Boston, 5-1, .833. 3 99. STRIKEOUTS Clemens.

Boston. 93: Langston, Seattle. 80; Morris, Detroit. 60; Candiottl, Cleveland. 55: Viola.

Minnesota. 55. SAVES Eckaraley. Oakland. 14; Henneman, Detroit 10; WrHiame, Texas.

Plesac, Milwaukee, Henke, Toronto, 7. AP photo Pirates' Barry Bonds pulls in safely to second base before the tag of Braves' Ron Gant Friday. Pirates went on to win 10-3. 1988 1987 Vs. opponent Lest 3 outing W-L W-l.

ft Career HA IP ER W-L ANGELS (3:20) Krawczyk (R) 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 at RED SOX Hurst (L) 5-1 15-13 1-0 4-3 4-0 19 13 1-1 TIGERS (3:20) Morris (R) 3-5 18-11 1-1 10-10 3-2 23 10 1-2 at WHITE SOX Blttlger (R) 0-0 1-O 0-0 0-0 0-O ATHLETICS (7:30) CYoung(L) 3-1 13-7 1-2 4-2 3-0 21 7 2-1 at YANKEES Rhodon (R) 1-3 16-10 1-0 1-0 1-1 14 12 0-2 MARINERS (7:35) BankhcflR) 0-1 9-8 1-0 1-0 0-1 6 2 0-1 at ORIOLES Ballard (L) 0-0 2-8 1-2 1-2 0-0 INDIANS (6:05) Balles (L) 2-4 7-8 0-1 0-2 1-3 18 10 1-2 at ROYALS Bannister (L) 6-2 16-11 0-0 3-9 2-1 23 7 2-1 BLUE JAYS (8:35) Stleb (R) 5-3 13-9 0-4 10-11 2-1 23 6 3-0 at BREWERS Boslo (R) 6-3 11-8 2-0 2-0 4-0 24 1 2-1 TWINS (8:35) Blyleven (R) 2-3 15-12 at RANGERS Kllgus (L) 5-3 2-7 0-0 0-0 3-3 22 6 2-1 National League 1988 1987 V. opponent Last 3 outings W-L W-L 97 Career HA IP ER W-L EXPOS (4:05) Youmans (R) 0-3 9-8 1-2 3-4 0-0 18 10 0-2 at GIANTS Reuschel (R) 5-2 13-9 1-0 22-18 2-2 20 10 1-1 BRAVES (7:05) Coffman (R) 2-3 2-3 0-0 0-0 1-2 18 3 2-1 at PIRATES Fisher (R) 3-0 11-9 0-2 0-2 2-0 11 6 0-0 CUBS (7:05) Tewtisbury (R) 0-0 0-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 at REDS Jackson (L) 5-1 9-18 0-0 0-0 2-0 23 4 2-0 ASTROS (8:05) Darwin (R) 2-3 9-10 0-1 0-1 0-2 19 9 1-2 at CARDINALS O'Neal (R) 2-2 4-2 1-0 1-0 0-1 19 13 1-1 PHILLIES (10:05) Rawtey (L) 2-5 17-11 2-0 3-0 2-2 23 5 2-0 at PADRES Grant (R) 0-3 7-9 1-1 1-1 0-2 17 8 0-0 METS (10:05) Gooden (R) 7-0 15-7 0-0 5-1 5-0 21 12 1-0 at DODGERS Belcher (R) 3-1 4-2 1-0 1-0 3-1 19 11 2-0 Eckstein's Line STANDINGS NewsSun-Sentlnel wire services Paul O'Neill drove in three runs and Mario Soto won the 100th game of his career as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the Chicago Cubs 7-2 Friday night. Soto (3-2) allowed five hits, three of them by first baseman Mark Grace. He struck out six and walk one in his third complete game of the season. Reds rookie Jeff Treadway had three hits, extending his hitting streak to 13 games.

O'Neill hit two hits, including a homer, and scored three runs. The Reds scored four runs on five hits in the second inning. Buddy Bell singled and scored on O'Neill's second homer of the season. The Reds then loaded the bases on singles by Treadway and Terry McGriff and a walk to Kal Daniels, his league-leading 30th of the season. Barry Larkin drove in two more runs with a ground-rule double.

Pirates 10, Braves 3: Mike Diaz drove in three runs with his first two hits of the season as Pittsburgh snapped a five-game losing streak. Junior Ortiz also drove in three runs for the Pirates, who scored three runs each in the first, third and fourth innings off Braves starter Tom Glavine (1-6). Mike Dunne (2-2) picked up his first win since opening day. He allowed nine hits and three runs over 7 23 innings, struck out four and walked three. Dunne was on the disabled list from April 6 through April 28 with a muscle strain in his left side.

The Braves took a 1-0 lead in the first on Andres Thomas' third ho Standings Relief Man KEY: W-Win; I rhn departstm the save up the lead. RELIEF Player, team D. Eckersley, Mike Henneman, Mitch Williams, Dan Plesac, Mil Tom Henke, Tor Doug Jones, Cle Dale Mohorclc, Dave Righetti, Bobby Thigpen, Rick Honeycutt, Player, team Todd Worrell, Dave Smith, Hou Atlee Hammaker, Randy Meyers, Jim Gott, Pit Roger McDowell. Tim Burke, Mon John Franco, Cin Jay Howell, LA Jeff Robinson, TEAM Team Oakland Athletics Texas Rangers New York Mets Detroit Tigers St. Louis Cardinals THROWN FOR A LOSS Relievers won't make points for being burned.

through May 18 in the Rolaids competition; AMERICAN LEAGUE Red Sox 9-1 1 over Angels: Tigers 6-7 over White Sox; Yankees even-6 over Athletics; Mariners even-6 over Orioles; Royals 6-7 over Indians; Brewers 6-7 over Blue Jays; Rangers 6-7 over Twins. Giants 7-8 over Expos; Pirates 7-8 over Braves; Reds 8-9 over Cubs; Cardinals even-6 over Astros; Phillies even-6 over Padres; Mets 6-7 over Dodgers. Bnjmin lm Eckstein LEADERS Sv BSv Pts Oak 0 1 14 1 38 Pet 0 1 10 1 26 Tex 0 1 9 1 23 1 0 8 2 22 0 0 7 0 21 116 2 14 Tex 2 0 3 0 13 NY 1 0 6 4 12 Chi 1 3 6 1 12 Oak 0 0 4 0 12 NATIONAL LEAGUE Sv Bsv Pts StL 2 2 12 3 30 1 2 8 2 18 SF 3 0 4 0 18 NY 2 0 5 1 17 115 0 15 NY 3 0 4 2 14 1 1 6 3 12 1 3 5 0 11 1 0 3 0 11 Pit 3 1 4 3 10 BULLPEN LEADERS Sv Bsv Pts 5 3 21 4 59 3 1 13 2 39 8 1 10 3 38 4 3 12 2 34 8 9 15 5 33 League Cy Young Award, he got it not for his five wins but his 40 saves. It was with that in mind that the folks who administer the Rolaids Relief Man Award changed their scoring system this season. For a dozen years, saves and wins were weighted equally, with two points awarded for each.

Losses cost the candidates one point off their total. The new arrangement awards three points for each save and two points for each win. In addition, a loss costs two points and blown saves also result in a two-point deduction. A blown save is defined rather directly. The rules read: "When a pitcher enters a game in a save situation and departs with the save situation no longer in effect because he has given up the lead, he is charged with a blown save." So Gossage's adventure in Montreal gave him two points for the win, but they were balanced because the blown save deducted those same two points.

That seems much more equitable than the previous rule, which would have awarded two points for the win and completely ignored the mayhem Montreal committed against the Goose. Gossage remains second in career points for the dozen years Rolaids has been honoring relievers, trailing only Bruce Sutter. It was Sutter's free-agent departure from St Louis for Atlanta in 1985 that produced what Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog views as the best season-long bullpen performance in history. Forced to replace the league-leading 45 saves Sutter took with him, Herzog created a bullpen by committee, spreading the relief work around instead of depending on one stopper. The result was seven pitchers combining for a Sutter-esque 44 saves.

That, however, was not what impressed Herzog most about his relief corps. "That year, we were 83-0 in games we led after eight innings," he said. "A bullpen can't be better than that" The Associated Press A couple of weeks ago, veteran relief pitcher Rich Gossage came lumbering in from the Chicago Cubs bullpen, preparing to do his best imitation of longtime stopper Lee Smith, who now works in Boston. Gossage's assignment, with two out in the ninth inning and a man on base, was to protect Rick Sutcliffe's 7-4 lead against Montreal. Save the game, Goose.

This is your time, the moment, the circumstance for which the boss of a bullpen waits. Some relievers, like Craig Lefferts of the San Francisco Giants, are so excited about the prospect that they run all the way to the mound. Gossage, who has been doing this for a living for nearly 20 years now, usually takes a more leisurely route. The first Montreal batter Gossage faced was Tim Raines, who hit a two-run home run. That made the score 7-6.

Next, Wallace Johnson singled, moved to second on this season's obligatory balk and scored the tying run on a single by Hubie Brooks. Only then did Gossage record the one out the Cubs needed by retiring Tim Wallach on a fly balL The Goose's feathers were only sightly ruffled by the rough outing. "I've done this before," he noted rather matter-of-factly. Most relief pitchers have, at one time or another. It is the nature of the job.

Occasionally, the firemen turn into arsonists. Gossage might have been a bit embarrassed, however, by what happened next Chicago scored three runs in the top of the 10th, while Gossage remained the pitcher of record. When Les Lancaster shut out the Expos in the bottom half of the inning, the Goose had himself a victory. A win for a relief pitcher should almost always raise suspicions, since, unless they come into tie games, their job is to secure saves. Last year, when Philadelphia reliever Steve Bedrosian was voted the National NATIONAL LEAGUE Through Thursday' game Minimum ol 99 at-bat AS i Pet.

Palmeiro CN Bonilla Pit Galarraga Mon Guerrero LA McGee StL S'rawberry NY Dawson Chi Larktn Cin Bass Htn McRevnolds NY 38 39 143 145 21 30 26 16 24 29 20 29 13 19 50 49 50 42 52 42 46 51 37 36 .350 .338 .336 .333 .319 .309 .307 .307 .303 .295 37 149 35 126 39 38 163 136 37 150 39 166 36 122 32 122 RUNS Bonds, Pittsburgh. 30; Bonilla, Pittsburgh. 30; Gibson. Los Angetee. 29: Larkin, Cincinnati.

29, Strawberry. New York. 29. RBI GOavis. Houston, 36; Bonilla.

Pittsburgh, 30. Parrlsh. Philadelphia, 29: KHernandez, New York, 28: Guerrero, Los Angeles, 26; Marshall, Los Angeles, 26: Mitchell, San Francisco, 26. HITS McGee. St.

Louis, 52: Larkin, Cincinnati. 51: Galarraga. Montreal. 50; Palmeiro. Chicago.

50; Bonilla, Pittsburgh. 49; Coleman. St. Louis. 49 DOUBLES Palmeiro.

Chicago, 14: Galarraga, Montreal. 12; Sabo. Cincinnati. 12: Bonilla. Pittsburgh, 11; Dawson, Chicago, 11; Pendleton, St Louis.

11. TRIPLES Coieman, St. Louis, VanSlyke, Pittsburgh. Bonds. Pittsburgh, Mitchell, San Francisco, Raines.

Montreal. Sand berg, Chicago. 4 HOME RUNS Bonds, Pittsburgh. 10: Bonilla, Pittsburgh, 10. Dawson.

Chicago, 10; Strawberry. New York. 10: GDavia. Houston, 9. STOLEN BASES QYoung, Houston, 25: Coteman, St.

Louis, 19; EDavis, Cincinnati, 15; tsrkm Cincinnati. 15; Raines, Montreal, 15. PITCHING (S decieione) Cone. New York. 5-0 1 000.

1 79; Gooden, New York. 7-0, 1.000, 3 15: Knepper, Houston. 5-0, 1.000, 0 85; Scott, Houston. 5-0, 1 000. 2 61; DJaokson, Cincinnati, 5-1 833 2 17: Rijo.

Cincinnati, 5-1, .833. 2 41. STRIKEOUTS Scott, Houston. 73: Ryan, Houston. 68: KGross.

Philadelphia. 55; DeLeon. St Louts, 54; Gooden, New Yor, 49 SAVES Worrell. St. Louis.

12; DSmith. Houston, 8 Burke. Montreal. Franco. Cincinnati.

Gotl, Pittsburgh. Myers. New York, 5. lo Saw: BSv-Blown save Pts Pont a pitcher antar ttw gams a save situation and situation no longer in affect because he has given.

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