WINS SEVENTH GAME... Sandy Dandy By JOE REICHLER the ability of Lox Angeles' sup- EAPOLIS (AP)--Sandygposedly weak hitters to all but Bgl phe te Aoetate te match the Twins in home-run World Series before it started,Jpower that swung the oaiance. and it turned out just that way. IRD IN ROW 29-¥' L Hepes a Mg Ue ial ae Rec It was another satisfying tri- ..» THREE - HIT SHUTOUT |_ R 4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, October 15, 1965 - As Ex May after Tommy Davis suf- fered a broken ankle, Johnson sparked the Dodgers in May anG June. in tie imi game of the series, it was his home run off the left field foul screen that gave Koufax all the margin in Al Stan! inted fi th Ce ™ or ™€'of former Toronto players, The Leafs picked up eight of Stewart and goaltender: Gerry p 13 penalties called by referee|Cheevers, steal the show in th the third base line that Gilliam|Vern Buffey. __._}sloppily-played game. 4 gloved behind the bag in time : rca for the vital force play at third -------- = ~Repeat Offer ! Angeles Dodgers, who is calle the best pitcher in baseball, won| Thursday's clincher 2-0 with a brilliant three-hit effort. The left-hander struck out 10 Min- pesota Twins, Although he lost his first start in the second series game, Sandy allowed only one earned| run in 24 innings in three starts. His final strikeout total of 29) was only two short of the se- ries record of 31 set by Bob) Gibson of St. Louis Cardinals last year. Koufax' performance in com- ing back with only two days of rest made him the Dodgers' No. 1 hero. Jim Grant, who beat Don mph for the National League, ich has won eight of the last 12 series and three in a row. The Dodgers go into the record ks along with the 1921 New York Giants, 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers and 1956 and 1958 New York Yankees as the only clubs to bounce back and win after losing the first two. The startling difference be- tween'the games played at Met- ropolitan Stadium and at spa- cious Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles was reflected by the re- sults.. Not until the final day did they have to play the last lof the ninth inning. Maury Wills and Ron Fairly, leach with 11 hits, were the big he needed, DOOMS KAAT the fourth, doomed Jim Kaat, who also was pitching with two days' followed with a double to the right field corner and Wes Par- ker singled to right i Kaat was done for the ay. stopper to the Dodger attack but it was the same old story-- too late. Gilliam, an old sidekick who) was coaching staff to the active list six in the first three innings and then let the fielders do the work, closed with a flourish, After Harmon Killebrew singled with one out in the ninth for the third Minnesota hit, Koufax struck out Ear] Battey and Bob Allison for the final outs. The southpaw star was an iron man all year despite an arthritic elbow that had threat- ened to curtail his career. He finished the regular season with 26 victories, leading the Na-! tional League for the fourth suc- | cessive season in earned run) percentage, Adding his achievements, starts in 1965, completed 28, | Joh di 's homer, | g off MAHOGANY Even-Colored Panel PANELLING Koufax, who had struck out rest, Pre-Finished When Ron Fairly scoring Sam Mele's relief men put the Koufax' best friend was Jim brought back from the! Drysdale in the opener and also' e caine back with we days rest¥producers for the winners, but \to whip Claude Osteen in thegLou Johnson, the much-traveled 'sixth game, rates high on theg3l-year-old out-fielder, was a iTwins' totem pole. key man for the Dodgers Thurs- win over Minnesota Twins. Johnston's bases empty homer in the 4th inning was all that' Koufax needed. --AP_ Wirephoto who had forced e|masterpiece working with only remarkable. "T think I was fortunate that YOUR SATISFACTION 18 OUR AIM All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disney Used Cars crowd were aware that Koufax, allowed Twins only two runs in 24 World Series in- nings, striking out 29, has been to swallow anti-inflam- An-|matory capsules three times a he was sev-|able to accomplish his latest two days' rest was all the more! at|it was a cool day. I don't think {I would have been able to gojcach George (Punch) Imlach|scored for the Bruins. nine had the day been warm." huddled here celebration was pitcher Johnnyjhas had the ailing elbow in ice} 1200 Dundas E. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS | i J in May to fill a third base emer- gency. When Sandy gave up a dou-| ble to Frank Quilici in the fifth| and walked pinch-hitter Rich Rollins, manager Walter Alston came out to talk with him. The|cuts, It was estimated that each jnext batter, Zoilo Versalles,|Dodger would get about $9,900 |slammed a hard grounder down! and each 'TWin about $6,500, | turned in 28 victories, pitched 359 innings and struck out 411, The payoff will be rich, al- though nothing official will be known until commissioner Ford Frick announces the financial vet 9.05 a eis 4% aaa FREE HOME DELIVERY ea ' | SANDY KOUFAX Boston Bruins | GETS NEW CAR Tie Mapleos MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Sandy Koufax of Los An- PETERBOROUGH (CP) --| geles Dodgers was named {Boston Bruins blew a two-goal! Winner of the Sport Maga- |iead and had to settle for a 2-2| tie against Toronto Maple Leafs | zine Award as the outstand- ing player of the 1965 World | i jin an exhibition National Series. He will receive a 1966 |Hockey League game Thursday convertible sports car. Inight Koufax also won the award | ... in 1963. Bob Gibson, St. | The Bruins took 43 seconds to! get on the scoreboard and jadded their second goal just be-| Louis Cardinal pitcher, was the 1964 winner. fore the halfway mark of the {first period. BAUN STILL DICKERS | Leafs tied the game early in | PETERBOROUGH c-cd "Hl LUMBER CO. Tororito Maple Leafs defence-| Ron Stewart, a former Tor- " [man Bob Baun and Torontolonto player, and Murra Oliver jonto player, } y | 725-4709 || 1 | >} R.R. No. 1, Oshawa at 5-Points Thursday but|Stemkowski, who has been as-| Baun still hasn't signed. signed to Toronto's farm club! NOW IS THE TIME TO BUILD 8 THAT MUCH-NEEDED | | | DROP IN YAY LANA ZA AGASSI, Go Joe PISPIVOTI TS RAZA AZANNUY ANNAN YAY I, Ni 1) 4) WM 1 4) J f Sa RF NZ A of We NS 1) AS C35 LV Nt TZN : NY, y SS Raion NAN AN A, \ Re Ro NS NN \ 7) NO N . ASK FOR "THE BEST IN THE HOUSE" AWW) ENE NEF RY ) NS SN S CA st, Was NY NS i) f In essence, it was Dodger day. é oie [pitching with three shutouts and® Called up from Spokane in ¢THE HEROES! Sandy each other in the dressing |e -- Koufax (left), with a bril- room following yesterday's | - liant three-hit pitching per- 7th game of the World | Sand Will Rest Elbow formance and Lou Johnson, Series, when Los Angeles | a. y Dodger teammate, embrace took the classic with a 2-0 | s Maybe Not 'Greatest -Far-Away Sunny Clie y : ; y JOE REICHLER the next 4% months makes it MINNEAPOLIS (AP)--Sanfyfeel even better." But Battled Hardest = 2scelSiccinyaee land forgetting about baseball as Few among the capacity s \long as he can. By MIKE RATHET |World Series winners over Min-jclubhouse, Koufax fielded ques- sg! Sid too late for Minnesota nesota Twins than anything he|tions. Twins. They gladly would shave] MINNEAPOLIS (AP)--As the| would say directly when asked 'How does it feel? This one paid ail his expenses if he had bediam subsided in the Los An-\tg compare the present club feels better because it's the last departed a day earlier geles ,dressing room, Dodger) with his three other series' win-\one. It's over." Before leaving for Los ' owner Walter O'Malley care-| ners Of the two other Dodgerj,oies. Hawaii and points west,|day for months in order to re fully pushed through the crowd,! «The 1955 one was our first,"|heroes, Lou Johnson and Jim Koufax lingered there long|duce the fluid in his elbow joint threw his arms around mana-|aiston said, 'so that was ex-/Gilliam, Johnson easily was the onough to shut out the Twins| Thus,. the fact that lle ae said: citing. Then in: 1959 we cameimore excited. 2-0 on a three-hitter in the "Walt, it's getting to be Alfrom behind to win in a tight) He was one of the first in theonth ana final game that gav habit." dg(face and in 1963 they came/dressing room and hopped UP)the Dodgers the World Series. | "But," replied Alston, "Welnack after blowing it the yearjand down as he talked about) «Good-bye and good rid-| sure did it the hard way. |before. his homer. dance," growled a Twins' fan-| That was more indicative of "This is a club that all year parse atic after watching the gre Alston's feelings toward his 1965/iong has had to battle. All year HIT FAST BALL Dodger left-hander blank his f Pee --------ltong this team has scratched,'| "I hit a fast ball, and I havely rites for the second time ' ® Alston was more than willing/to say I was looking for it. The! fot of the other 50,595 loyal) Koufax credited his fast ball TO Cl m° make comparisons when he|whole series I've been getting|pying' rooters, however, stood|with his latest success. S al jwas asked about Sandy Koufax,|nothing but curve, curve, curve. up and cheered Sandy when he wy didn't have my curve ball jwho pitched a three-hit, 2-0 met t| vie ~ -- gone," | went to bat in the ninth inning. ns gl he a ae aie ® | . shutout with two days' rest. {he added. 'But thought it) ought my curve was just fair 'might go foul." LEAVE FOR HAWAII in the first three innings; then Ladies Title 'JUST THE BEST' | Gilliam, the 36-year-old vet-, The splendid southpaw said|suddenly I lost it. I finally gave : "He's just the best lefty I'veleran third-baseman who started/he would 'eave shortly forjup and relied on my fast ball ever seen,' said Alston who|the season as a coach, talked/Hawali and then go on from|through the last four or five GM ) {tball jadded that at no time did helevenly about his great stop on|there. Where I don't know--andjinnings." . 0 \consider removing the Dodger/Zollo Versalles' smash with two|I really don't care right now."|~------ ace. on in the fifth inning. | Before he leaves Los Angeles, The GTO's captured the 1965) "When I went out to talk to) "I didn't even have time tojhe will undergo a thorough ex- championship laurels. in the/him in the fifth inning he wasithink about it," said Gilliam./amination of his arthritic left Oshawa General Motors Ladies'|stili throwing good," Alston ex-|'It was about a foot from thelelbow, which he is forced to Softball League, when theyjplained. 'Even if Versalles' hitibag and as I grabbed it I|pack in ice for at least a half defeated Corvettes 10-3, Wed-/gets by Gilliam I kind of doubt/slipped to one knee. But I sawjhour after every game. | nesday -night at North Oshawa, |if I'd take him out that quickly.|the runner and knew I had time| Sandy made 41 starts during] to wind up. the final 3-out-of-5|I know he's throwing good. {so I got up and stepped on the|the regular season and three in| title playoff series, at three) "He has a habit of rearing|bag." lthe World Series. That means games to one. {back and throwing too hard| Looking a little forlorn in the the 29-year-old Brooklyn native! In claiming their champion-|When he's in trouble and 1 ship win, GTO's opened with a\didn't want him to. That's why|Podres. at least 22 hours since April four-run rally in the first inning|! went out. The 1955 World Series hero,| The Dodger club physician and added to their total in every, "Then I checked with him onjhowever, had this tribute for|will take x-rays of the arm to inning, except the third and|the bench in the seventh inning/his team-mates. see if there has' been any| no . jand he said he was all right.) "This team has the greatest|change In the condition of ed, ecaphand d by Joy After that I'd almost made up)spirit of any club I've ever been arm. | sl laced il apts tee Mo {my mind it's Sandy's game tolon. It's had to battle all year.| "Right now it feels fine," eee, ee ee ae va|win or lose." I think winning that way has|/Koufax said. 'The fact that I) Gregor, Marilyn Gibbs and)" 6) 'the opposite side of thelto be more satisfying." 'know I don't have to use It for! Leola Stoneberg, clicked for) acd ai A ee he RE PEED HL : ; four runs at the start and in Wy SGN ANG ZG IARNY ARNT NWPIZANY second stanza, Mary Jane i, A ae on ASN) 47) A y, Z, sisosnairg and Jackie Skea both WW SB VANE NENA ANE scored, to make it 6-2. ny SAV WP Uw CAIVP G IVS Hercia and Skea scored in the| fourth, aided by McGregor and in the fifth frame, Nova Strachan and M-J Stoneburg both scored, to complete their) team's total of 10 runs. Joy Hercia, pitching for GTO"s, gave up two runs to Corvettes in the first inning when Gibbens and Halliday both scored, aided by Stettler: In-the}- third, Gibbens scored and this proved the final tally for Cor- vettes. CORVETTES -- Gibbens, p; Halliday, ss Ralph, 1b; Collins, 1b; Stettler, c; Merrill, 2b; Milne, If; Pittens, cf; Bulmer, rf; Allchorne, rf. GTO'S -- Hercia, p; Burke, ss: Skea, c; McGregor, 2b; Gibbs, cf; -L. Stoneburg, If: Dryden, 1b) Strachan, 3b; M-J Stoneburg, rf G. 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