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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Mar 1963, p. 14

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{14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, March 27, 1963 GOAL-MOUTH ACTION AS STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS GET UNDER WAY ae PORE ERERER SRR ARERR ERR RET RRR ESE, BOB PULFORD TAKES WHACK AT PUCK AS PLANTE TRIES TO SMOTHER TOE COULD BE RIGHT Leafs Dump Habs First Of Series By BILL MacDOUGALL TORONTO (CP)--Go far, Toe Blake looks like a pretty good the last two Leaf goals, but he might have stopped the first, by Pulford at 3:30-of the first pe- riod, if his defence had been night, their most recent playoff By: PRONOVO; Ze By JACK SULLIVAN |Canadian Press Sports Edilor ST (3): GETS GOAL-SCORING S ine nA jto 5-2 after the second period jand then held on with the Wings HOT AWAY DESPITE MacN A all By TED SMITS SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)--This is the portrait of a man with a single, corroding ambition. He wants to pitch and win one ma- jor league baseball game. He is a solid, 43-year-old busi- fhessman who owns and oper- ates a large restaurant and bowling alley at South Venice, Fla. He has left his office there to run, pitch, exercise, sweat and strive without benefit of pay with Chicago White Sox in training here. His name is Early Wynn, in a major league career that started in 1939 he has won 299 games while losing 242. Like all baseball players he has a myst- ical reverence' for numbers, articularly round numbers, he number 300 has become an y | Obsession. i; EILL Bobby Hull Sparks Hawks First Win On Two Early Goals victory over Montreal was in) the third game of the 1959 final.| Abel. "And it could be a differ- ent series when we get Chicago "It's mot pride," he says, "I just want to win. . ." Wynn won seven and lost 15 with the Sox lust year and was then released to clear the roster for younger players. He accepted this blow philo- sophically and is back in the Sox camp at his own expense in the hope he will be placed on the regular roster at the start of the season. If he is, he will bargam hard over sal- ary. He does not propose to win for charity, ONLY 13 DID IT To put his ambition in per- spective, note that only 13 pitchers in the annals of base- ball have won 300 or more games. Warren Spahn of Mil- waukee Braves did it in 1961. Prior to that, the last to do it was Lefty Grove of the Phil- adelphia Athletics and Boston Red Sox in 1941, No big winning pitcher active today has a chance to reach 300. The nearest is Robin Rob- erts of Baltimore Orioles with 244, but he is 36 and near the end of his career. Whitey Ford of New York Yankees, with all his redoubtable reputation, has won only 175, Early Wynn Wants: Just One More Win Wynn is a baseball player in the old tradition: big, swarthy (he has Indian blood), salty in conversation, with a start on a paunch, and a oe & gout that bothered him recent years, ( i "I'm back here at 218 pounds, which is what I was at end of last season. I hav any aches and pains, anyhow oot more than ordinary, I've got to do it now. I can't quit a year and then come back, It's now or never, I would prefer win- ning more than one, What I'd like to win is my 18th 'mn Sep- tember." ; He has done just that and then gone on to a 20-game sea- son on five occasions, -- Looking back on 1962 and how close Wynn came to his goal, one game stends ie 8 set down the Boston Red Sox Aug. 1 with a single run and a few scratch hits. But Bill Monbou- quette of Boston pitched a no- hitter and won, 1-0, By MIKE RATHET FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -- Al Kaline's in the groove, cutting a record that has Detroit Tiger manager Bob Scheffing whistling a happy tune, Just 10 months ago Scheffing was singing the blues when Kaline suffered a broken collar. bone making a diving, game- ending catch of Elston How- ard's line drive in the Tigers' 2-1 victory over New York Yan- kees. Now Kaline is back in shape and having the best exhibition season of his career. He con. Al Kaline Is Hot, Tigers Are Happy! 'tinued his torrid pace Tuesday KEEPS TIGERS GOING How important is Kaline to the Tigers? Scheffing says: "He does something for us every day he's out there. He helps us in so many ways, it's almost unbelievable, Even when he goes zerofor-ive, he helps us in the field with a catch or throw to pull us owt of trouble. He's the complete player." Other one-man shows were put on by Minnesota Twins' pitcher Jack Kralick, who checked Baltimore Orioles 2-0 on six hits in a nine-inning per- formance and Tommy Davis, who drove in five runs as Los Hull-Ottawa Bows To Braves By THE CANADIAN PRESS St. Louis Braves allowed, Hull- Ottawa Canadiens to take a 2-0 lead against them Tuesday night, then proceeded to fatten up their individual scoring sta- tistics in a 7-2 romp. The fattening was all that St. Louis could accomplish. With three games left in the regular schedule, the last-place Braves trail the third-place Sudbury Wolves by nine points. The loss at St. Louis all but confined Hull-Ottawa to second place. The Canadiens trail the first-place Kingston Frontenacs by five poins with each club having three games left before the schedule ends Sunday. Murray Hall shot into a tie with Marc Dufour of Sudbury Blake ascribed the Canadiens' for the league scoring lead with prophet on behalf of his Mont- CHICAGO (CP)--There have|catching fire early in the third.J}on our own ice." in another 2-1 triumph over the|Angeles Dodgers whacked Pitts- willing to hit, real Canadiens. Unless they improved, Cup semi-final to Toronto Maple Leafs in four straight games. The Habs promptly dropped the opener 3-1 Tuesday night and looked as if they could keep on doing the same all through the best-of-seven series. The Leafs, who finished in first place by a whisker in the regular schedule, played. well. But, had the Canadiens pro- vided the formidable opposition they did in days gone by it might have been a different story. Jacques Plante, the veteran Canadiens goaltender continu- ally beset by physical ailments who only Tuesday complained to Blake of an attack of asthma, played the role he so often does in time of need--a sensational one. PREVENT RUNAWAY Plante, Billy Hicke and vet- erans Jean Beliveau and Ber- me Geoffrion provided the met- 7 that kept Leafs from making e 800 fans, the smallest crowd of the season here. Second game of the series is here Thursday night. The ac- games Saturday and Tuesday. ee RES OREO RRR ETRE peere Bower. yur George Armstrong were Toronto marksmen. Plante, who made 31 saves to|seven post-season the Montreal coach said Monday, they could lose their Stanley TREMBLAY IS 'GOAT' Bower, who got an assist on the goal, cleared the puck to de- fenceman Allan Stanley and Stanley passed'to Pulford, Mont- real defenceman J. C, Trem- blay stayed in front of Pulford while the Leaf skated across the goalmouth, but he made no apparent effort to squeeze Pul- ford out of scoring position. Pulford shot -hit Tremblay's stick and it trickled by the off- balance Plante, who had braced for a hard shot. As Plante put it: 'Those kind usually end up in the seats but this one just slowed down. I was going one way and it was going the other." Duff scored at 1:42 of the sec- ond period after taking a pass- out from Dave Keon in the cor- ner. Montreal centre Henri Ri- chard faemed on a try at inter-| cepting the pass and linemates) Dickie Moore and Claude ai vost all helped to block Plante's| | 5: ame a rumaway before 13,-|nast Plante from close in. Geof-|semi-final series 1-0) tion then swings to Montreal for| All the scoring was in the first two periods, with the Leafs getting their goals before Jean eliveau scored the lone Mont- teal goal. And the Leafs were short two men for the second|saves on such Leafs as Red H Chi time in the game when he beat|Kelly, Keon and Pulford. One} cay? ' Toronto goaltender Johnny/save, a beautiful catch, of a view. Armstrong made it 3-0 at 35, swatting a bouncing puck) frion was off for high-sticking) |Pulford at the time. Pulford and Ed Litzenberger were in the penalty box when |Beliveau beat Bower at 8:46, | scooping the rebound of a blue-| line shot by rookie defenceman! Jacques Laperriere into the net.! GRABS KELLY'S SIZZLER Plante made particularly good) {screened sizzler by Kelly in the Bob Pulford, Dick Duff andisecond period, brought a roar the from the crowd. The Leafs had lost their last encounters Bower's 19, had no chance on|with Montreal. Before Tuesday troubles Tuesday night to a lack of drive. "There weren't enough guys giving,"' he said. "We have. to have everybody up at the same time and that sure didn't hap- pen tonight." Toronto mamager-coach Punch Imlach expressed qualified sat- isfaction in his club's perfor- formance, but he didn't think Leafs' victory was all their own joing. "They (the Canadiens) didn't have their usual zip and drive," he said. '"'We both slowed down some in the third period." Stanley Cup Statistics By THE CANADIAN PRESS Series A WLT F APt a9 8 i e131 leads Toronto Montreal (Toronto 30 best-of-seven Series B wor FT Art 1060 3.43 Detroit @10 4508 (Chicago leads best-of-seven semi-final series 1-0) The leaders: Chicago ull, Chi 2 Delvecchio, Det 2 2 eon, Tor 2 |Wharram, Chi A 0 1 1 2 2 2 Dodgers Take Duke Snider Off SPORTS MENU Waiver List By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' THE STANLEY CUP playoffs got upder way last night and in both cases, the first game of the two semi-final sets saw the expected winners, the "home team", come out on top. In Toronto, the Maple Leafs whipped Montreal Cana- diens, 3-1, and but for some sensational puck-stopping by Jacques Plante, the score in this one could have been a lot higher. Pulford, Duff and Armstrong scored the Toronto tal- lies while Jean Beliveau got Montreal's lone counter. In Chicago, Bobby Hull made a surprise appearance and scored two goals in the first period to get the Black Hawks wing- ing -- and they went into a 5-2 lead but had to fight hard to hold off a Detroit rally in the third period, when Wings scored two in the first three minutes to make it 5-4 but just couldn't get the equalizer. Hull's injured shoulder is now admitted to be "'a slight separation' and while he earned star rating with his two goals last night, it has been hinted that 'he was "hurting" after the game and so he may miss the next one. Both rounds resume tomorrow night, still in Toronto and Chicago. x x BRIGHT BITS: -- We hav x x e a letter from Len Gaudette of Galt, who is organizing a re-union of former Scottish hoc- key players, for the weekend of Saturday, April 20, to be held in Preston. They expect about 300 former Canadian and Scottish players on hand, Jack Thayler, Ron Lintner, Syd Arnold, Bob Reid, etc., are among the Oshawa players they hope to have on hand. Those comprised of Mr. and Mrs. "T: nudged Greenwood Combines, Peaerrteevereae Gaudette, c/o Galt Arena Gardens. . interested should write to Len . . AN OSHAWA RINK, ab" Gearing, Mrs. Beth Kemp and 'Bob' Coppin, skip, copped top honors in the mixed. bon- spiel held at Bowmanville on Saturday. . . . SCHOMBERG 4-3, in their Ontario Rural Inter. "C" quarter-final series, a 2-out-of-3 affair, with the second game scheduled for Whitby Arena this night... . ARCHIE MOORE recommends that they do away entirely with the bottom or lowest strand of rope that en- Saturday (~S-eireles the boxing ring. Archie and many others insist that w the bottom strand is a real hazard to a fighter who is knock- ed down or falls in stich a way that his head hits the rope. VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP)-- Duke Snider's name has been taken off the waiver list. If New York Mets want the veteran Los Angeles Dodger outfielder, | they can get him for about $40,- ;000, or twice the waiver price. The Duke is still a big draw- |ing card in New York and some| |of the Dodger brass estimate his value to the Mets at the }game at about $250,000. The Yankees also put in a could get away with three or| claim for Snider when General|four players not playing up to) Manager Buzzie Bavasi placed the 36-year-old outfielder's name on the list. Bavasi said Tuesday he will decide what to do about Snider Saturday. The grey-haired vet- eran has played in six World Series, five with Brooklyn, has hit 389 home runs and had his best years in 1953 and 1954 when he batted .336 and .341, respectively. . 2 been all sorts of heroics per- formed by individuals in the 60- year history of the Stanley Cup. Bobby Hull has added another. The muscular young Chicago Black Hawk leftwinger spiced jit up with a two-goal perfor- mance Tuesday night as the Hawks defeated Detroit Red Wings 5-4 in the opener of the best-of-seven cup semi-final. He accomplished it with a bum {right shoulder, diagnosed as a i"slight separation." "I can't do the club any good playing with one arm," Hull told reporters a few hours be- fore the faceoff. He said he would watch the game from the stands, But the blonde bomber, a mainstay of the Hawks the last couple of seasons, later decided to give it the old college try. "He gave us a terrific boost" chortled. coach Rudy Pilous. "We had a meeting of minds this afternoon after Bobby |worked out and we decided he \could give it a try." |GAVE THEM LEAD His goals gave them' a 2-1) |first-period lead and they never jlooked back. They increased it "It hurts more now than be- fore the game, "Hull said in the dressing room. 'I was lucky I could shoot at all and both of my goals in the first period were wrist shots." The Hawks, who frittered away the National Hockey League lead by winning only two of their final 12 regular- scheduled games and finished The second game will be played here ursday night with the third and fourth games at Detroit Sunday and Tuesday. Hull, who opened the scoring at 9:08 of the first period, got his second while defenceman Pete Goegan was sitting out a holding penalty. Howie Young, fiery Detroit defenceman - for- ward who was chased off on second behind Toronto Maple |Leafs, deserved the win. But there were times when it ap- peared neither team wanted the game, played before 15,491 fans. The defensive corps were loose and the Hawks, who usu- ally try to soften up the opposi- tion with stiff bodychecking early in the game, played it cozy. Despite this, referee Vern Buffey called 14 penalties, only five against Chicago, with winger Murray Balfour getting three for roughing, high sticking and holding. The game was "kind of loose," summed up Pilous. MAY BE DIFFERENT "I think this will still be a close, hard series," was the comment of Detroit coach Sid | By DAVE BETTS | TORONTO (CP)--'I have no | predictions,' said former crys- }tal-ball- gazer Punch Imlach after his team went one up in the Stanley Cup semi-finals Tuesday night. "I'm just glad that one is over." Even after his Toronto Maple |\Leafs overpowered Montreal Canadiens 3-1 in a tough, hard. checking contest, Imlach re- fused to go out on a limb about how long the series would last. In the losers'. dressing room, coach Toe Blake sounded nos. \talgic about his third - place |club, squeezed out of the Na- tional Hockey League penant |by the Leafs this season for the first time in six years. "There was a time when we par and still run in three or four goals," Blake said, "But |not now, "We have to have everybody up at the same time--and that sure didn't happen tonight.' Imlach agreed that Canadiens were under par. "They didn' have their usual zip and drive. We both slowed down some in the third period, but all in all I thought we played a very good game." OLD COUNTRY SOCCER SCORES Centre Bob Pulford, the man who started it all off with a goal in the first period, said Montreal netminder Jacques Plante didn't have a chance on LONDON (AP)--Old Country]! |soccer results Tuesday: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division 1 |Arsenal 4 Everton 3 {Man City 2 Burnley 5 Sheffield U 0 Leicester 0 | Division 11 \Scunthorpe 4 Preston 1 |Walsall 2 Plymouth 2 } Division II |Bradford 2 Shrewsbury 1 |Halifax 2 Carlisle 4 |Northampton 1 Swindon 1 Watford 1 Bristol C 4 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division 1 Aberdeen 4 Queens of $1 | | t. "Tt tipped off (defenceman J. C.) Tremblay's stick," said Pulford, "I shot it hard enough but Tremlay slowed it down. "Plante made the routine move for the fast shot but he didn't have a chance on it when it slowed down." - "Sonof-a-gun," Plante grum- bled in the other dressing room. |'We gotta win some time." He |praised Pulford's effort. 'That |was a good shot," he said. 'He hit my. defenceman's stick. Those kind usually end up in the seats but this one just slowed down. I was going up and it was going in." Billy Hicke, one of Montreal's No Predictions, xm BUt Coach Punch 'Is Happier Now |best, was having his knees taped. "Ran into the boards," jhe said, pointing to .is band- jages. "Cut one and bruised the other, But it won't bother me. | "Look," he said with a wan smile. 'I'm a race horse." Rookie defencethan Jean Gauthier received a lump on his forehead. But Hicke and Gauthier will be in uniform for the second game here Thurs- ay. Toronto's Frank Mahovlich required eight stitches to close a cut in his lower lip in the first period but returned to ac- tion less than 10 minutes later and finished the game. De- \fenceman Allan Stanley re-| jceived a three-stitch cut over} ithe eye from a flying stick in |the second period. Bob Baun suffered a bruised knee that | caused him the limp slightly to- |ward the end of the game and |Tim Horton received a minor gash on the elbow. EPHL Point Race Changes Rapidly OTTAWA (CP)--The scoring leadership is changing hands at a frenzied pace in the Eastern Professional Hockey League as forwards make their final spurts before regular play ends Sunday. Right winger Mare Dufour of Sudbury Wolves took over the lead last week, becoming the fourth player to turn the trick in the last four weeks. League statistics issued here today show that Dufour picked up three goals and Your assists last week to bring his total out- put to 47 goals and 46 assists for 93 points. He has a two- point edge over teammate Cord Labossiere and Don Blackburn of Kingston Frontenacs, each with 91 points, Last week's leader, Murray Hall of St. Louis: Braves, went scoreless in three games and dropped to fourth spot with 90 points. Another former scoring leader, Jeannot Gilbert of Kingston, joined Boston Bruins. four o scored for the Hawks. Other Chicago scorers were Eric Nesterenko and Red Hay. Detroit marksmen were Marcel Pronovost, Vic Stasiuk, 'Alex Delvecchio and Gord Howe. keeper who won the Vezina Trophy this season for the first time, made 29 saves against 31 by Detroit's Terry Sawchuk. ,» was watching from the penalty box in the sec- ond period when Ab McDonald Glenn Hall, Chicago's goal- Yankees as he belted his fifth homer for the decisive run to bring his average to .373. "I feel good, real good," said Kaline. "My shoulder doesn't bother me a bit. Even the numbness I had in my hand is gone." Kaline's injury kept him out of the lineup for 57 games at a time when he was hitting .345 with 13 homers and 38 runs batted in for 35 games. Without him, the Tigers were unable to make a serious run for the American League pennant. IN VANCOUVER Canada Badminton Titles burgh Pirates 19-6. Southpaw Ted Bowsfield picked up a victory in a seven. inning performance as Kansas City Athletics edged Washing- ton Senators 7-6. Los Angeles Angels beat San Francisco Giants 4-2, Philadel- phia Phillies clubbed St. Louis Cardinals 16-8, Chicago White Sox edged New York Mets 2-1, Cleveland Indians defeated Bos. ton Red Sox 5-3, Houston Colts downed Chicago Cubs 6-4 and Milwaukee Braves downed Cin- cinnati Reds 7-5. 93 points, The St. Louis forward had a goal and two assists Tuesday night. Rookie Al Caron, goal-scoring leader, had a goal and an assist to give him 54 goals and a point total of 84, good for a tle for sixth place. Other St. Louis goal-getters were Phil Esposito and Duke Harris with two each and Den. nis Kassian. John Rodger an Keith McCreary scored for Hull-Ottawa. f Moncton Hawks Waltz ToN Allan Cup MONCTON, NB. ( HOCKEY SCORES |__ STANDINGS Moncton Hawks scored day night to crush Pregcott- Kemptville Combines 12-3 \and win the Eastern Canada Go Up For Grabs Today By DENNIS ORCHARD VANCOUVER (CP)--The Ca- rated ahead of Yves Pare of Montreal. | By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League Eastern Division WLT F APt 3526 8 256 220 78 36 28 5 222 19477 33 28 11 208 210 77 Baltimore 3230 7 212 239 71 Springfield 3131 @268 232 70 Western Division Buffalo 40 22 7 232 186 87 Cleveland 3032 7 250 241 67 Rochester 24:37 9 238 259 57 Pittsburgh 19 46 4190 295 42 Tuesday's Results Rochester 1 Quebec 5 Pittsburgh 2 Hershey 5 Tonight's Games Cleveland at Baltimore Hershey at Pittsburgh Eastern Professional WLT F APt 4119 9 287 218 91 40 23 6 268 199 86 Sudbury 26 30 12 276 285 64 St. Louis 23 37 9 260 298 55 Tuesday's Results Hull-Ottawa 2 St. Louis 7 Sudbury at Kingston resched- uled for Sunday Tonight's Games HullOttawa at St. Louis Kingston at Sudbury Western League Edmonton 2 Vancouver 7 International League Omaha 1 Fort Wayne 7 Minneapolis 9 St. Paul 4 Allan Cup Prescott-Kempt. 3 Moncton 12 (Moncton wins best - of - five Eastern quarter-final 3-1) Saskatchewan Junior Weyburn 2 Melville 3 (Melville wins best-of-seven semi-final 4-3) Hershey Providence Quebec Kingston Hull-Ottawa Cup quarter-final, The first lopsided win in the best-of-ive series gave the Mar- itime senior champions a 3-1 edge in games and the right te advance ag ainst Sherbrooke Braves in an eastern semi-final. That best-of-five series, to be played in the Eastern Town- ships city, likely will get under way this weekend. It was 4-1 for Hawks when the third period opened. Play- ing near-perfect hockey, Monc- A defending champion seri- ously in danger, however, is Victoria's Judy Humber. Bev- erly Chittick of Windsor, Ont. and Toronto is said to be an even bet to take away Miss Humber's Canadian junior women's title. Toronto schoolteacher Doro- thy Tinline will make a formid- able team with Miss Shedd as they go after their third wom- en's goubles title in a row. But the ncouver pair of Macdon- , nell and Bert Fergus, best injton shot eight straight goals in Canada, is not likely to make|the first 15 minutes and their much impression in the men's|forechecking bogged down the doubles. Ottawa-Hull and district team. Combi who won the sec- ond game 6-2 after losing the first 5-3, managed to score two late goals. Oregon State Star Will Be With Rams jor the series 43 Sunday sight LOS ANGELES (AP)--Terry|"!! games were here. sii atest ay professional' '| FIGHTS LAST NIGHT pr 1 football with Los By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS nadian Badminton Champion- ships open here today with eight titles at stake and the promise of another showdown between two players rated among the best in the sport. If the early matches of the men's singles go as expected, it will man a Saturday night final between Erland Kops, taciturn Dane and acknowl- edged world champion, and a rising and _ unpronounceable name -- Chanarong Rattana- Saeng-Suang--of Thailand. Kops won the Canadian title on his first tour through Can- ada in 1061, and has every other major badminton trophy on his shelf. Chanarong- has beaten him once. In their latest big meeting last Saturday, Kops won the All - England championship, the unofficial world championship. A spectator at that match was Wayne Macd ll of Van- couver, top Canadian player, who called it the best duel he has ever seen. The championships have a to- tal entry of 194. It will take two days-to slug through the 430 first-round matches in open and consolation events. Toronto's Marjorie Shedd, who holds more than a dozen Canadian singles and doubles championships, is expected to score again without serious threat from second-seeded Jean Miller of Montreal. Burly Ed Paterson of Van- jcouver is defending champion jin the junior men's bracket and Angeles Rams. The All-American quarter- back, United, States College Player of piece Year in 1962, signed a three-year. contract with the National Football|, 1¢ndon-- Henry | Lp yen ging League club Tuesday night. Ria nd, eh Wr " 4 Terms were not disclosed, but|ichardson, 207, Wales, 5, Billy Baker is believed to have been|Walker, 193, England, knocked guaranteed $25,000 a year plus|%Ut Joe DiGrazio, 198, Philadel- a bonus for signing. He was the|Phia, 3. first draft choice of the Rams,| New York--Frank Narvaez, was also picked by Oakland|136, Puerto Rico, outpointed Raiders of the American|Tommy Griffin, 133, Philadel- League and was reported to|phia, 8. ys ; ' have been offered $100,000 by| San Jose, Calif--Luis Molina, Toronto Argonauts of the Cana-|139, San' Jose, outpointed Bobby dian Football League. Scanlon, 138, San Francisco, 10. In my judgment, you can't go wrong watching the trotters in Toronto tonight. GREENWOOD ACTION ON CKLBI Dial 1350 Every Night 10:15 - 10:30 p.m. Free parking. The finest dinners and refreshment in town. First post 7:45 p.Ms GREENWOOD (THE NEW NAME FOR OLD WOODBINE) Queen St. E. at Kingston Rd.

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