Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Jul 1965, p. 8

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Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, July 8, 1965 Nancy McCredie PETER SNELL New Zealand Marvel In Slump Or Finished ' ms | JACK SULLIVAN Press Sports Editor A few months ago when Peter Snell set a world record of 3:54.1 for the mile, his coach Hal Lydiard said that was noth- ing. A 3:50 mile was within the grasp of the 26-year-old wonder boy from New Zealand. Snell would do it this year be- cause he was getting a little tired of galloping around the world's cinder paths picking up gold medals and world records. He would retire in 1966, write a book, tend to his business as public relations man for a to- bacco company and let the world runners try to get under the magic 3:50 clocking. Track experts were inclined to go along with Lydiard's pre- diction. Here was a chap who came out of nowhere to win the 800 metres at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome, added two Toronto, ROBERTO CLEMENTE Jimmy Hall of Minnesota at bat during the week to boost Twins. Willie Horton, his average to .318 and jump fourth-place tie at .328. Do Clendennon of Pittsburgh held Adds To Events WATERLOO, Ont. (CP) -- Nancy McCredie of Brampton will make thé first move here 'Saturday towards pentathalon competition in the Olympics. 9 For the Ontario seniors track| jand field championships she ® |has entered the high jump in : _ \addition to her specialties, the "The more times a champion discus and the shot-put. , Vancouver, London,|is beaten, the less chance he} NEW YORK (AP)--Bypassed|b sn the National League all-star|p about getting his own kind of Arter six' sttptght:loises in revenge. He is taking his wrath). Ignored As All-Star, He's Third Best Hitter team, Roberto Clemente ofip Pittsburgh Pirates is B0INE) Reds. Alou got 10 hits in 29 timesilo from eighth to sixth. Virdon, Rojas and Robinson pushed their way into the top 10 for the first time, Virdon and Ro- jas were batting .311 and Rob- . |inson .303. The biggest loser was Henry Aaron. The Milwaukee Braves slugger had only six hits in 34 times at bat. This not only trimmed his average from .351 to .328 but plummeted him from the top to fourth place. Joe Torre, also of the Braves, st a point but stayed in a his sixth-place position despite losing nine points to .318. RETAINS HOLD Boston's\Carl Yastrzemski lost three point3\off his batting average. during 1 eek but retained his hold on first place in the American League. His .340 batting average was seven points higher than that of run- ner - up Vic Davalillo of Cleve- land Indians. Felix Mantilla of the Red Sox climbed six points to a third- place .319, two points ahead of league leader several ago, continued his slide, falling to fifth after getting only five hits in 27 times at bat. He was batting .308, a drop of 17 points. The biggest gainer was Rocky Colavito, who picked up 11 points to .301 and moved up from 10th to sixth. Leon Wag- ner of the Indians was seventh at an even .300. He was fol- lowed by Pete Ward of Chicago at .298, Brooks Robinson of Baltimore at .207 and Dick McAuliffe of the Tigers at .296. urgh's Billy Virdon, Philadel-| hia's Cookie Rojas and Frank obinson of the Cincinnati | It will be the first time she|out on enemy pitchers. has taken art in senior high) The Larrupin' Latin enjoyed, jump competition and her\a batting feast this past week, coach, Lloyd Percival, said in|hanging away at a .385 clip. : an interview Tuesday that she|This enabled him to climb from man who was shooting for ajbrought: Snell to the Toronto) i move gradually to the pen-/seyenth to third among the 3:50 mile a couple of months|International meet last June 10-\ssthaion events: The 80-metre ae ee A | ago now is satisfied to break) "Usually, the cure isn't more | hurdles, 200 metres, shoot-put, pocrtig May lass tae, ™ ual hee es i ee Jory Gad Nighy Julep. Clemente led the National © just managed jt in tis) "His loss to Bill Crothers in) 4 total of 225 competitors|League hitters in 1964 with al ast two ge ig otf os ~~ the 880 at Toronto was the start) nave enet red the champion-|.339 average. Dublin Yast Monday. "OF Snell's problem. That mustishins, including Cathy Chap-| Richie Allen of Philadelphia " tof breaking cavee he had beaten Crothers|man and Abby Hoffman, both| phillies. and Willie Mays of San The mere act of brea ing|cause he ha aten Crothers|¢ Toronto: Miss Chapman will Praiinny Gisatewere died tor! four minutes has satisfied me, |four times before and, when compete in the 80-mette hurdles|the | Staak tron Mbt. he said after his Dublin race.|you analyze that race, you willlanq 499 yards while Miss Hoff- aia he oh " 336 He said his legs were goingjnote that Crothers out-kicked ; es 7 pennies ; | i ' # |man was entered the 220 and/cjemente boosted his average dead on him when he was run-|Snell in the final stages and no the 880. \10 points. diriig the' week to ning but "it is not a physical! one had ever done that. : weakness so much as a mus-| "I think he might come back, /n the men's events top com-|.335. : : cular one." with a couple of easy races, |Petition will come from miler) Other gainers were the Possibly his current letdown, "He has. set himself up speeded Brampton; st bade Jesus, Alou, Pitts- can be traced back to a sunny|pretty rough world tour and he ino ae ; ee dee Wail day in Tokyo last October. He is hitting athletes in an off-year. soto anh "he and Ron Wall-) had just won his second gold/These guys are not building up//"8!ore, Hamilion. Dublin and elsewhere, peoplejhas of making a_ recovery," are having grave doubts about|says Ken Twigg of Toronto; who his ability to reach the heights|has been in the track game for once more, It is ironic that the)more than 10 years and Oshawa City and District more firsts in the 880 yards and mile at the 1962 British Empire Games and soundly whipped the world in both the 800 and 1,500 metres at the Tokyo Olym- pits last October. He was the undoubted king of the half-milers and milers and even after Michel Jazy of France lowered his mile mark to 3:53.6 in a June 9 race at Rennes, France, generally conceded that would soon shoot that figure down in flames. But will he? jhimself another year and then it. was almost|steat who had beaten the best Snel]| with consummate ease. jsaying he has bumped into ajfipst, he's got to overcome his ' psychological barrier. SOFTBALL @ TONIGHT @ at 'Alexandra Park BAD BOYS vs. GALES SCUGOG vs. MERCHANTS medal of the Olympics, an easy|for Olympic or British Empire Irons and Knox will compete victory in the 1,500 metres, Games, they're just going out/in a mile which has 26 entries after a comparative breeze in| nice and relaxed and the ma- and has been split into two sec- the 800. jority of them are running bet-|tions with best times counting Surrounded by reporters, he|'€" than they've ever run be- especies worl run in the ime ' ,o| fore ree. § F aid at the time that he'd give f "Naturally, they. all go out, stated nis ooPRy, aveae harder. against Snell and, ap- parently, they've got his num- Ss quit track. There were no more worlds to conquer for this big. barrel - chested black - haired "But you can't under-estimate this guy. One of these days he could just bust out and make a Now, some track buffs are shambles of Jazy's record--but, psychological handicap." MALE PROS SAYS LADIES' CHAMPION By WILL GRIMSLEY NEW YORK (AP) -- The male tournament golf pros are a bunch of cry-babies who play too slowly and over- dramatize their shots, says the new Women's Open Cham- pion of the United States. "Why do the men pros take five and six-hours to play a round that the girls get over in three hours and a half?" Long - stemmed Carol Mann, repeated a question. "The answer is simple--the girls don't lollygag. They just step up and hit their shots." Miss Mann, 23, a profes- sional golfer from Towson, Md., chided her masculine counterparts today. "L try to find some justifi- cation for the way they act-- maybe it's all that tively ridiculous. "Put them on a course where they -have to hit two- irons or three - woods to a green and they yelp as if they had been stuck with an ice pick. 'WE NEVER COMPLAIN' "Why, the women play long irons and woods off the fair- ways all the time and never complain." Carol said she sees no rea- | son why the men should take almost twice as long to get around 18 holes. "It's true the men's courses are longer, but we're hitting the same clubs to the greens they are. A men's course of ""Rexco' Gets Win | Over Woods Team Rexco downed Wood's 7-3 | Tuesday night, in a Civil Ser time on the tee, waggling |vice Softball League contest, their clubs, while the women /staged at Radio Park step up. and hit the ball. We | Wood's opened the scoring in are disciplined to be ready jthe top of the first, taking a for our second shot. The men |2-0 lead on a pair of walks and study charts, walk up to the ja single. Rexco came storming green and back and hold long jback in their half of the first conferences with their cad- |frame, with two singles, a walk dies. Every shot is a life-or- jand a double, pushing across death decision. |three runs. A walk and a dou- "And on the greens, they |ble tied it up for Wood's in the mark every ball, whether it's lsecond, but Rexco tallied three 18 feet from the cup or 18 lmore runs to take the lead inches, whether it's picked up |again. The winners added one mud or not. The girls just |more in the fifth, to round out knock them in. |the scoring. "Byerything is so climactic | Giddings tossed a four-hitter with the men. If they miss and fanned eight, to pick up the a putt, they go back and |WiN, while the loss went to Pren- brood for five minutes and |tice. Wright and "Rick" Craggs| then they return, with a look |!ed the winners at the plate, of heroic pain, and hole out |Wright collecting a single and a} from six inches." jtriple and Craggs getting a pair lof singles. Moore singled and doubled for Wood's. CRY-BABIES, DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING AREAS NO DOWN PAYMENT @ 3 Year Guarantee 20 Months to Pay CALL AJAX 942-3786 MARCI 3:2 | COMPANY Ajax, Whitby, Oshawa 7,200 yares is equivalent to a women's course of 6,200, and remember, they shots. "The men waste a lot of SPORTS BRIEFS SUNNYSIDE PARK BOYS WALLOP SOUTHMEAD In a Bantam League softball game played on Monday night, at Bathe Park, Sunnyside Park Bantams defeated Southmead boys 41-5. The winners scored 12 runs in the first inning and scor- ed in every inning after that. Rout, Cappucitti, Wry, Howard, Eldridge, Reczukski and Woerm- ke all hit well for the winners, several of them having homers and other extra-base blows. Tate, Webster, Brudek, Graham and Hoy were best for South- mead. PIKULA RETIRES HAMILTON (CP) -- Coach Ralph Sazio of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Tuesday announced the retirement of tackle Joe Pikula, 21, of Brantford, after two years in the Canadian Foot- ball League with the Hamilton club. Pikula was the fifth vet- eran to leave the ranks of the Tiger - Cats this 'year. Other retiring players were ends Hal Patterson and Pete Neuman, tackle Gene Gossage and guard Hardiman Cureton. REMEMBER WHEN... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Joe Wright Jr., of Tor- onto, won the Diamond Sculls at Henley 37 years ago today -- in 1928 -- one length ahead of R. T. Lee of Oxford University, be- coming the first Canadian to win the event since Lou Scholes in 1904, John. Ovens. 6.D. OPTOMETRIST 8 BOND ST. E., OSHAWA PH. 723-4811 $ hit fewer | | | | | Don't risk starting on your vacation with unsafe tires. See us first for a safer trip -- BUY NOW at the year's lowest dependable performance prices and really save! Ww LIFETIME quality and road hazard Guar. 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