Daily Times-Gazette, 13 Sep 1951, p. 9

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& ii SEPTEMBER 13, 1951 TME DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE NIN™ ENTER TORONTO FINALS, . Transporters By BOB RIFE Toronto -- Oshawa Transporters advanced to the Toronto Minor Baseball Association finals against Milwaukee Sports when they de- feated a surprisingly efficient Moss Park club 5-1 last night at Millen Stadium. The NTBA champs won the best of three series in straight games and if all goes well in the commit- tee rooms, should open their best- of-five Toronto fina] either Friday or Saturday at Earlscourt Park. WILL PULL OUT Manager Ab Walker has stated flatly that if TMBA doesn't follow the schedule handed to him some weeks back he will, and we quote, "pull the club out of the play-offs." That schedule calls for a first game at West Toronto, a second at Eglinton Park and the third at Oshawa on Monday. In the game last night, Coach Willson started Ab Gilbert on the mound with young Hank Jozkoski behind the plate. He stuck to that arrangement until the fifth inning when Bill McTavish took over on the mound and Frank Hooper took care of the receiving chore. Aween them the Oshawa hurl- allowed two hits; struckout 19 batters and walked but three, Mc~ Tavish accounted for 12 swinging outs out of a possible 15. He walk- ed two. Gilbert fanned seven out of 12 and walked one. From this one might suspect that McTavish has regained that lost control of his . , . could be. His , curve-drop was really cutting the air. . A FAIR HURLER George Baker was the enemy hurler. He fanned seven and walk- ed six. He allowed nine safeties for five runs. A medium speed fast- ball and a side-arm curve were his implements and he mixed them very well. And unlike last time, he had the SCISSORED SPORT By The Canadian Press .COMMERCIAL SPORT John Pearson, director of recrea- tion for Brantford, said Wednesday that commercial sports cliques '"'monopolize" public park facilities at great expense to the taxpayer. Mr. Pearson told the Canadian Parks and Recreation Association at Toronto; "I knew of one Ontario town where the taxpayers were "called 1} on to pay several thousand dollars to cover the loss suffered by a semiprofessional hockey team last , season. "Teams like these are occupying park arenas and stadiums. . .in many cases, the commercialized sports are forcing other more de- serving - sports out of the picture," Discussing the problem, the panel, of which Mr. Hardman was a member, suggested that an ad- visory committee be set up in each community to pass judgment .on the merits of commercial or- ganizations before they were per- mitted to use public parks. .SEE FIGHT - Thirty - five thousand fight fans jammed -- and in Chicago even fought -- their way into 14 movie houses in 11 United States cities Wednesday night to see the theatre television broadcast of the Robin- son-Turpin fight. Outside the fight arena they were the only persons to see the battle for the world's middleweight championship. The International Boxing Club, the promoters, banned broadcasts by radio or television of running, round - by - round accounts of the bout. Most of the movie houses doubled their prices with minimum charges varying from $2 to $2.60. GETS DISCHARGE Art Houtteman, former Detroit Tigers' pitching ace, will be re. leased from the United States Army this week-end. Officials at Camp Pickett an- nounced several days ago that Houtteman would be given a me- dical diseharge for a disability in- Siived prior to his induction last PLAN TRAINING About 50 players will be fighting for positions when Guelph Bilt- mores of Ontario Hockey Associa- tion Junior A League open their training camp here next week, Coach Alfie Pike said Wednesday. Pike said that despite a holdover of 11 players from last year's team and seven promotions from Bilt- more Bees, every position on the teal would be open for competi- on. QUEENS PRACTICE Frank Tyndall, coach of the Queen's University senior football team, Kingston, Wednesday had 48 candidates working out for posi- tions on the 1951 edition of the tricolor squad. Five players are trying for the quarterback spot. Favorite is Don Griffin, veteran halfback for the Gaels. Others making bids for the spot are Norm Dyson of Toronto, Emil Vhrynyck of St. Catharines, Al Poutanen of Sudbury and Walter Miller of Ottawa. WINNIPEG FUTURITY Mpybesttoyou, owned by Dave Diamond of Vancouver, Wednesday came on in the stretch to win the $2000 Winnipeg futurity for two- year-olds foaled in Canada. It was the Colt's first Winnipeg appearance but he had won six of seven previous starts and paid the same price, $2.75 for straight, place and show. Gala. Spring was second and just hour third. .CODY ARRIVES A New Toronto Argonaut half- back arrived last night from the United States. Ed (Catfoot) Cody, with four years of professional football ex- perience with Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers behind him, aaa be in uniform Saturday when Woniveal Alqusties bow ia hase. Eliminate Moss Park 5-1 full support of his team. They came up with but one error and played great defensive ball , . . pushing a double-play into the books. Brian McAllister walloped a triple into deep centre-field to spark a two-run rally by Oshawa in the top of the third. Another extra-base knock, this time a four-ply blow was the rally- ing point' for another two-run splurge in the top of the fourth. Ted O'Connor slashed the ball high over the right field stands to score Sarnovsky from second and make it a 4-0 game. Moss Park broke the scoring ice Ontario Senior Baseball Games In two central Ontario Senior Baseball League semi - final gon- tests last night Brockville Memos defeated Smiths Falls Royals 13-7 while Belleville Redmen swamped Kingston Disney Leafs 11-4, The win put Brockville one ahead in the three games of their best-of- seven series while Belleville tied up their series at 1-1. y In the Brockville - Smiths Falls contest Joe Levandoski hit a homer and a triple for the Royals. Heavy hitters for the Winnipeg Memos were Buzzy Weaver with two doubles, Bucky Ashley with four for five and Red Coleman who knocked out a triple. {The two teams meet for their fourth encounter at Smiths Falls tonight. Last night's game was at Brockville. At Belleville the Redmen rallied after a three-run splurge in the seventh had given Kingston a 4-3 edge. Vern Goyer hit a homer in the bottom half of the 'seventh, scoring Dick Fitzpatrick, and the Redmen took it from there to score six more runs. Niagara Falls Fords made it three straight last night in their Niagara District Senior Baseball League finals with Welland Stokes, as they scored a, 7-1 win. Fords Pitcher, Gord Johnson, started badly but came through with the 1ssistance of s- ne sparkling field- ing to give «.ay only four hits in the best-of-seven match. Schottke scored the single Wel- land run with a homer in the sixth. He batted out a triple in the early innings but over-ran third base and was put out. Playing Coach Bill Whittet led the Fords 11-hit attack with a double and two singles. Ted Schroeder May Join Team Davis Cup Play Los Angeles (AP) -- Whether he wants to or not, Ted Schroeder of California may be drafted for duty with the American Davis Cup team. That was the opinion of many to- day as the surprise laden Pacific Southwest Tennis Tournament swung into another quarter final stage featureing Frank Sedgman, Wustralia's no. 1 Davis Cup player and 1951 American champion. Sedgman was booked to meet the man he succeeded as the U.S, tit- list, Art Larsen of San Leandro, Calif. in one quarter final, and domestic rivalry bloomed in an- other match between Vic Seixas of Philadelphia and Herb Flam of Los Angeles. But main tennis talk centred on Schroeder and his well - earned triumph yesterday over the no. 2 Aussie Cup star, Ken McGregor. Durable Ted, always the com- petitor, defeated McGregor before a wildly cheering gallery, 6-4, 0-6, 6-3, 57, 6-2. It was more Schroe- der's play than the score itself Which gave rise to the Davis Cup Schroeder was cautious with ans- wers about his availability. "I have to work for a living. I don't know whether I could take the time off to train and play in the Cup matches," he said. The American team is composed of Dick Savitt, who is not playing here; Seixas, Hamilton Richardson, Budge Patty, Tony Trabert and Billy Talbert. Only Trabert and Seixas are left in the tournament. World's Record For Harness Racing May Fall Tonight Westbury, N. Y. (AP)-- A world record will be in jeopardy tonight when 11 of the fastest trotters in the land tangle in the $50,000 Roose velt two-mile trot at Roosevelt Raceway. The star-studded field is headed by Star's Pride, a four-year-old bay son of Worthy Boy owned by E. Roland Harriman of Goshen, N. Y., and L. B. Sheppard, Han' over, Pa. Star's Pride will be coupled in the betting with Flori- can, owned by Harriman. With such speed in the race -- four times around Roosevelt's half mile oval -- Racing Secretary Walter Gibbons predicted a new mark of around 4:15. The present record of 4:17 was set by the great Proximity in winning the 1948 race. Demon Hanover, winner of the 1948 Hambletonian, is the 5-2 se- cond choice behind the entry. Mimico Hangs On With Home Victory Over Boxla Petes Mimico, Ont. (CP) -- Mimico Mountaineers took a firm grip on their bootstraps last night to win their first victory in the Senior Ontario Lacrosse Association final with. Peterboro Petes. Led by red hot Denny Peterson, who scored seven series 3-1 in favor of the Petes. The Mounties s! started slowly, be- hind 3-0 at the %end of the first period and" 5-4 at half-time. They went ahead 8-6 in the third, period and lengthened the lead In the final session as Peterson, the rug- ged Mimics forward, scored: five in the last of the fourth when Norm Blackman got to first on an infield error. He stole second under 2 close throw and moved to third on an infield out. Another such out sent him across the platter. LAST RALLY Oshawa's final run came in the first of the fifth when Jake Hast- ings made first on a fielder's choice. He was wild pitched to second, stole third and scored when the next three men in order received 'bases on balls. Another fielder's choice ended the inning. McTavish took over in the fifth and had no trouble in that frame, but in the last of the sixth, an er- ror, a walk and a single loaded the bases with none out. Bill then proved he was back in shape by camly fanning three batter in-a- row. He got the next nine batters in- a-row after that to finish the game in great style. Other than the pitching, the big show was Ted O'Connor's surge back into the batting limelight. Ted had been moved out of the third batting spot due to his slump, but last night he slugged three-for= three, including two walks, two doubles and a homer. Whew! R.H. E. Oshawa 002 210 000--5 9 2 Toronto . 000 100 000--1 2 1 TORONTO MOSS PARK --Mill- eh, If; Anderson, 3b; McIllwaine, 2b; Blackman, cf; Banks, 1b; Morrit ss; Corby, rf; Rogers, c; Baker, p; and Shanahan, rf in 6th, OSHAWA TRANSPORTERS -- O'Connor, ss; Coggins, 2b; J. Joz- koski, 3b; McAllister, 1b; Mroczek, rf; H. Jozkoski, c; Hastings, If; Sarnovsky, cf; Gilbert, p; Neal, rf in 7th; Hooper, ¢ in 5th; and Mec- Tavish, p in 5th. Umpires--Ken Cockhill, plate and Joe Hill, bases, both of Toronto. LEGION MINOR BASEBALL OSHAWA DAIRY WINS CITY TITLE Oshawa Dairy bantams won the Legion Minor Baseball Association championship last night when they clipped Stark's Plumbers by a 7-4 | score in a game played at Alex- andra Park. The Milkmen won the series three games to one. | Again it was the superior pitch- ing of Palm Knight that did the | trick. The young slabman whiffed 17 batters in a seven-inning game | and allowed three hits and one | walk for a magnificent job. | Kemp went the route for the losers and gave up six hits for seven runs. His mates bobbled three times behind him. Three singles in the last of the third shoved over four runs for Starks. Kelly, Vaughan, = Melnick and McConkey did the scoring. Oshawa Dairy counted one in the second, three in the fourth, two in the fifth and one in the seventh for their total. Knight, with three walks in four trips .. . the fourth trip, he got on base through an error, was the big gun. He scored each time he got to first base, Woods also had a good night getting twq hits in two trips with a pair of walks thrown in. 010 320 1--7 6 3 004 0000--4¢ 3 3 OSHAWA DAIRY -- Howe, If; Marks, 1b; Humphrey, c; Knight, p; Eagleson, cf; Woods, 2b; Scott, ss; Medland, rf; and Salter, 3b. STARKS PLUMBERS -- Kelly, ss; Vaughan, 2b and ¢ in 7th; Mel- nick, If; Turner, c; Tureski, cf; Kemp, p; Lawrence, rf; McConkey, 3b; and Darling, 1b. Umpires -- D. Stauffer, and R. Aselstine, Detroit Red Wings Try Out New Rule,. Bigger Goal Crease Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. (CP)-- Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League Wednesday night tried out the new NHL rule which enlarges. the goal crease. It was the first application of the rule which extends the crease one foot in front of the net and six inches on each side and puts the face- off circle in front of the net. The test came in an exhibition game between the Red Wings and their American Hockey League farm team, Indianapolis Capitols. The rule, which eliminates the face-off circles in the corners, is being given a try-out by the var- ious teams in pre-season exhibi- tions and at the all-Star game in Toronto, Oct. 9. It will then be voted on by league officials to de- termine if the change will be adopted. OUTFIELD START Brooklyn -- Burt Shotton, the former manager of the Dodgers, began his legendary baseball career as an outfielder .in the old Ohio- Pennsylvania league back in the season of 1908, OLD BILLIARDEER DIES Farnborough, Hants, Eng. --Mel- bourne Inman, famous pockethil= liards player," died in August in hospital. He was 73. Inman was world champion in 1908-09, 1912-14 and 1919. Call McLELLAN'S OSHAWA . . . 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