Rural Pennsylvania Newspapers - May 17, 1980

Lancaster Intelligencer Journal

Ruthven’s Shut Out Beats Richard, 3-0

  

HOUSTON (AP) — Philadelphia's Del Unser tripled in the fourth inning and scored the winning run on Mike Schmidt's sacrifice and Dick game Ruthven scattered five hits to lead the Phillies to a 3-0 victory over the Houston Astros Friday night.

 

It was Houston's fourth consecutive loss, their longest losing streak of the season, and the shutout extended the Astros' scoreless string to 22 straight innings.

 

Philadelphia took the lead in the fourth off right-hander J.R. Richard when Unser tripled to right-center field fence just out of the Cesar Cedeno's reach. Unser trotted home on Schmidt's fly to Cedeno.

 

The Phillies added two runs off Richard, 4-2, in the eighth inning on Bake McBride's two-run single. Philadelphia had loaded the bases on an error, a single by Manny Trillo and Pete Rose's walk.

 

Ruthven improved his record to 4- 2, walking but one batter in his route-going performance.

Talks Hit New Snag

  

NEW YORK (AP) — Major league baseball appeared to move closer to the second general strike in its history Friday after management rejected a player association offer that might have ended the stalemate.

 

"I think they're farther apart now than they have been," said Kenneth Moffett, deputy director of the federal Mediation Service. "Unless we start spending time at the table there is the likelihood of a strike."

 

The negotiation atmosphere turned gloomy Friday morning when management turned down the union proposal that would have isolated the compensation free agent issue for two years while the question is studied by a joint committee.

Reading Eagle

Ruthven’s Arm Sound Again

 

HOUSTON (AP) – Philadelphia pitcher Dick Ruthven realized Friday night after he had shutout the Houston Astros 3-0 that he made the right decision to have arm surgery last winter.

 

“I would have hated to start the way I did last year (6-0) and then have my arm go south,” Ruthven said. 
I decided that I could survive the mental side of surgery.”

 

Ruthven, 4-2, also apparently survived the physical side of his off-season surgery to remove bone chips from his elbow.  He yielded five hits and beat Houston’s J.R. Richard in his first complete game in recent history.

 

“That must be the first time I’ve gone nine in about a year – since I started having arm trouble last year,” Ruthven said.  “I never feared going nine, just getting the strength to be effective in the ninth inning.”

 

The Astros, who have now gone 22 innings without scoring a run, would offer testimonials that Ruthven is fully recovered.  So would Phils Manager Dallas Green.

 

“I kept running him in there because he is a big part of our pitching staff,” Green said.  “He finally built up his arm strength to go nine innings.  He’s back to where Dick Ruthven should be.”

 

The Phils got the only run they needed to beat the slumping Astros in the fourth inning when Del Unser clubbed a triple just out of the reach of center fielder Cesar Cedeno and scored on Mike Schmidt’s sacrifice fly to Cedeno.

 

After Richard, 4-2, loaded the bases with two out in the eighth inning, Bake McBride blased a two-run single that extended the Astros’ losing streak to four, their longest of the season.

 

Green said Richard, who dropped to a 4-2 record after winning his first four starts, appeared to tire after the fourth inning.

 

“We knew he’d been having some issues with tightening up,” Green said.  “We tried to make him throw as many pitches as possible.  He was up to the challenge for the first four innings.”

 

The Astros lived up to their preseason billing of strong pitching and weak hitting.  Their most serious threat came in the third inning when Craig Reynolds, breaking out of an 0 for 12 slump, tripled to the right field corner to open the inning.

 

But Richard grounded out and Reynolds was thrown out by Phils left fielder Greg Gross, who made a perfect throw to home plate after Denny Walling flew out.

 

Despite their recent ineffectiveness, Reynolds says the Astros aren’t panicking so early in the season.

 

“I don’t see anyone in here breaking earth,” he said.  “Everybody is calm and confident.  We all know there are going to be stretches like this.  We’ll be breaking out soon enough.”