Daily Times-Gazette, 23 Jun 1953, p. 12

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SPORT ROUNDUP TV Customers Confused By Sport Announcers : B Dancer won it from Jamie K. i select group of 10-game winners REW aE Ta or the | the: remarkable time of 2:28 3. as he checked the Pirates on eight "HW i 3 Tear there for the mile and one-half, only twc | hits. Enos Slaughter drove in three fifths of a second off the record fc seems to be some confusion among runs with a double and another! 5 iddle. | the 85-year-old event. Althor those who witnessed the middle screens in millions of hor |GIANTS "WARMING UP ' Durocher"s Team Show Signs Of Coming Out of Doldrum's By BEN PHLEGAR Associated Press Sports Writer Leo Durocher's 'Giants, finally exhibiting signs of arousing from their spring doldrums, move in on AMERICAN AND NATIONAL LEAGUES HRs: Chicago -- Kiner, Brooklyn--Belardi. | Pittsburgh ~~ 002 000 001-- 3 8 0] |St. Louis 200 040 00x-- 6 8 0 | Lindell and Sandlock; Staley and Rice. 35 Sauer; 35 32 29 21 16 .556 12% 547 13 508 15% .460 18% 323 27% .262 30% By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League Chicago Boston 1 Washington 101 001 011-- 5 14 1. philadelphia Washington 000 200 000-- 2 10 St. Louis Feller and Hegan; Schmitz, 3 Dixon (6) Sima (9) and Fitzgerald. | Detroit First Cleveland no mystery to the other clubs but he has baffled the Red Birds regu- larly. This season his magic has been missing. He's tried twice and WL rioB failed against St. Louis but he won LP: Schmitz. HR: Cleveland--Doby. Second Cleveland Washington Lemon and Ginsberg, Hegan (7); Masterson, Stobbs (8) and Grasso. LP: Masterson. HRs: Cleveland--Lemon, Mitch- ell, Doby. W L Pct. GBL 46 14 .767 3B 24 New York Cleveland Tuesday Chicago at New York (night) Cleveland at Boston (night) 000 004 100-- 5 7 0|St. Louis at Washington (night) 010 000 100-- 2 8 0 Detroit at Philadelphia (night) National League 001 000 021-- 4 300 402 00x-- 9 13 0 Brooklyn Chicago Erskine, Black (4) {Branca (8) and Campanella; Hac- Iker, Leonard (9) and Garagiola. 593 10% WP: Hacker. LP: Erskine. Milwaukee Brooklyn St. Louis Philadelphia New York Cincinnati Chicago 9 1|Pittsburgh Podres (6) Philadelphia at , 130 21 Tuesday Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (night) Brooklyn at Cincinnati (night) New York at St. 4 20 .672 23 .623 24 600 4% 24 571 6% 30 .500 10% 36 38 4% 3 379 17% .345 19% 318 22%, Chicago Louis (night) INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Syracuse Montreal 008 243 04x--21 23 0 Lovenguth, Markell (3) Griffore Partee; Ludwick, Mossor (3) and | Thompson. | WP: Mossor. LP: Markell. HRs: Montreal--Nelson (3), Mos- | sor. ! First 013 010 000-- 5 7 0 ton, Romberger (9) and Shantz. LP: Harrington. HRs: Rochester--Burgess, Kress, (3) Woop (5) Robinson (8) and Ortiz; Ottawa--Spruill. 000 002 002-- 4 043 100 00x-- 8 17 0 Baltimore Buffalo 9 Yorkshire Give Aussies Stiff Game | St. Louis Cardinals tonight for their second straight showdown series with a first-division club. Flushed with success after gain- ing two victories and a tie out of a four-game series with the league- leading Milwaukee Braves, New York has a chance to prove to its followers that it may yet fulfil pre- season predictions. Leo's lads generally were picked to finish no worse than third. But most of their battling so far has been to keep up to the .500 mark and somewhere within striking dis- tance of the first division. Durocher is going baek to one of his old reliables in an attempt to whip the third-place Cards. He's sending lefty Dave Koslo to the mound. For several years Koslo has been | a game in Cincinnati last week. |°n€ With a single. If Leo can get by with him to- night, he will know there's hope for his club yet. The Giants will be meeting St. Louis during one of the Cardinals' better periods. In the current home stand the Cards have won six out of seven including a 6-3 verdict over Pittsburgh Monday night. Brooklyn continued its miserable western trip with a 9-4 loss to Chi- cago Cubs while in the American League Cleveland Indians won a the Dodgers. singled in both leagues had the day off. The Dodgers' loss shoved them | three full games behind the Braves. Cleveland trails New York Yan-| kees by 10%2 games. distance. The tremendous home run threat the Cubs were hoping for when they bought Ralph Kiner to team with Hank Sauer worked against Frank Baumbholtz and Dee Fondy in the fourth and Kiner delivered them with his 15th homer. The crowd was still cheering when Sauer promptly parked his 10th circuit blast into the same section. n | The Indians combined timely hit- pair of 5-2 contests from Washing- | ting with competent pitching to win £ ton Senators. The rest of the clubs two games in a row. Bobby Feller |been fetched a hook on the jaw and Bob Lemon both went the|With a balled-up fist. His teammates backed |, ¢ i : Feller with a 14-hit attack in the | this, where there obviously is a first game and Lemon started a Wide divergence of opinion be- {home run barrage against Walt Gerry Staley joined the so-far Masterson that won the second. weight fight between Bobo Olson i5ten r and Paddy Young the other night | £hsiened with moisture and ever, he television ans pm they called the racing strip "fast at what they saw didn't jibe wil : oi what they heard. Some thought this gave Alf Var } They say they saw Olson belt- ing Young all over the ring and raising 'welts on his features, while at the same time the commentator was assuring them that. Bobo merely was slapping Paddy with open gloves and wasn't hurting him much, really. Some thought they saw Paddy stagger a time or two, as though he might have for his great achievement. ! _ Not at all, says our horse rac ing agent. The fellow who's goin to "call" the track knows it's rair ing, all right, but he's more ir terested in the times made in th preliminary races. On Belmor day he saw a number of averag nags whom he knew personall come bouncing down in near-re cord time just before the big rac was run. He knew then that jus: {the right amount of water was o the track to make the horses lov Our advice in such a case as |tween the commentator and the boxer who is getting hit, is to hitch up a little closer to the Seeded Stars Advance screen and sharply reduce the Starr, Mrozinski (3) and Kluttz; Nevel and Lakeman. LP: Starr. . HR: Buffalo--Chapman. SHEFFIELD, England (Reuters) Yorkshire batsmen reached 377 runs against the Australian tour- ing team here Monday--the highest | score against the 'Aussies in an In All-England Tennis LEADERS IN MAJOR LEAGUES Up to 150% More Spark Plug Life! volume of sound. That should even things up. A second group which appears to | be having, some trouble since the | advent of TV is the horse racing | audience. ! One of the things they do not |understand, for example, is the Cars seldom retained thek derbilt's col' less than full cred | By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League AB R H Pet. 156 24 51 .327| 233 58 76 .323 246 42 80 .325 y : : innings of their current tour. WIMBLEDON, England (CP)-- Australia, polished off Bill Seymour Doe Australians Them ur | Soudon players moved ahead in an |6-4, 6-2, 7-5, after snuffing out a for six wickets by close of uns unbroken phalanx Monday as the rally by the South African in the oy close OF Play. |All England tennis championships |third set. | Goodman, Bos In county cricket, Middlesex i | - made sure of first innigs Er started here. The top-ranking fa- | Other highly-regarded players to | Mantle, N.Y. 7 J S vorites made it look easy. a | Vernon, Was against Gloucestershire to increase| The first surprise occurred when | advance were Vic Seixas of Phil-|\p,co, "cle : 220 34 71 .323 its lead at the top of the champion- | Britain's Tony Mottram, Britain's Umphlett, Bos 184 22 59 .321| ship table, No. 1 Davis Cup ace, lost to Hugh | 22th TORE Or robny, | Runs: Mantle, 58 | Close-of-play scores: | Stewart, six-foot American playing 8 f-exiled Czech r playing | Runs batted in: Mantle, 51 York : in his first Wimbledon tournament {the self-exiled Czech now playing Hits: Vernon, 80 . Yorkshire 377, Australian Tour- * {for Egypt, No. 4; Gardnar Mulloy| pov, (S00 ists 243 for six. 6:4, 306 25, 63, 64 |of Coral Gables, Fla., No. 5, and| doubles: Kell, Boston, 17 Surrey 81 and 142, Derbyshi The opening day's matches-- | San Laandry. Call Triples: Jensen, Washington, 6 | 20 HS wll pr ToYShire |imited to men's singles--were | At Jarsep of San Leandro, Calit| Home runs: Zernial, ® Philadel. 24. 3 A A i x ¥ , hia, 18 nings and one run, played in traditional Wimbledon | Seixas, 1952 U.S. Davis Cup cap- |? on a recent Saturday. Native | Kent 116 and 133. | weather under a bright sun. R : A Stolen bases: Rivera, Chicago, 131 gine Secar and 1 for wu | Fie vesr id Kon Rosewan tain fed in a smasing | Biker inh ote, (lOgan Alter . 8 | i i | "J * bh Ss: i i | Sussex won by 10 wickets. of Australia, seeded No. 1, led the a nae To. 1] eouts: Pierce, Chicago, | Ottawa 000 000 010-- 1 3 1 Springfield at Toronto (night) Reeder and Fusselman; Harring- Baltimore at Buffalo (2-twi-night) Glamorgan 424 for seven 'de. Dig-timers' victory parade. He 6-1. Rose was forced to 50 oll out { agw clared, Somerset 100 and 150. Gla. |Prushed aside Michael Davies. a hi foil Bahu ee: out | ritis pen H Pet. | PRESTWICK (AP)--Ben Hogan Nelson's Homers ; nd | 17-year- sh y tho hitch- A ' hd Hogan won by an innings and Loe Meio Youll who bist little-known R. Kirshnan of India. : ar (0) a ) 1n Northemplonsire 202 and Drobny walloped Bernard Destre- Robinson, Bkn 68 .342 i | S % 89 .341 landed in Scotland today after a 6-2. 198 3 Schoendienst, Stl {for six, Essex 102. Lewis Hoad, seeded No. 6 from mau of France 6-0, 6-1, 6-2. Anions 8 5 : : ; 1 - : £ . ¢ a s-Atlantic flight to prepare for ; i i Middlesex 201 for six declared IR 229 41 73 .319 trans-Atlantic flig prep By THE CANADIAN PRESS over from Bob Ludwick in the] X re ; To a If . Rocky Nelson is the talk of the!third, got his second victory 68 .315 ne major golf tournament he ggom this fast-actin, 3 = o Irvin, NY 216 36 and 80 for four, Gloucestershire [|] iti | has { -- S International Baseball League to- 'against one defeat. He also belted See | efty 0 Doul As 75 .314| has never won--the British Open additive . . . so got 104 Spider, Bho 239 49 | his fi : | ¢ i iversi uns: Schoendienst, 53 He's never tried it before. day, 20d Why ont he first round-tripper of the sea-, Cambridge University 8 and 200 It was a tanned and smiling Ho- | with TCP. Springfield 010000 3-- 4 8 0 Toronto 0010001--2 7 1 Montreal Pyecha and Burbrink: Johnson, Buffalo Main (7) and O'Neal, Keller (1) Rochester LP: Johnson. | Baltimore Second STS Springfield 001 110 000-- 3 11° 1|Ottawa Toronto 021 100 00x-- 4 9 3 Syracuse, d Tarabilda and Burbrink; Hogue, |°P Shore (7) and Keller. { WP: Hogue. w 34 30 30 31 29 27 27 21 i Tuesday | Syracuse at Montreal (night) Rochester 010 210 022-- 8 12 0 Rochester at Ottawa (night) original pep prior to Shell' discovery of TCP! The natura by-products of fuel combustios accumulating on spark plugs an in combustion chambers cause: spark plugs to misfire and the fue mixture to pre-ignite--especialk when accelerating, hill-climhbin or touring the open highway. TCP in Shell Premium Gasolin | overcomes this power-wasting | fuel-wasting eendition. It pre | vents these deposits from caueisy misfiring and pre-ignition. Thi | results in an increase of up 15% more power and 150% mer | spark plug life and greater gase Hne mileage, soo! New and old engines bene gasobin Premios fact that a good, steady rain in the {course of an afternoon may ac- tually make a track faster than it would have been if the sun had remained out, They want to know how come the announcer says the track is fast when they can see the water coming down with their own eyes. The case in point was the run- {ning of the Belmont Stakes here 21 23 adelphia, No. 2; Mervyn Rose, left- | handed member of Australia's del- | National League AB R 199 47 261 23 i i : Runs batted in: Ca |for eight, Nottinghamshire 268. : : mpanella, { : : real first-baseman's bat exploding !. Warwickshire 260 and 104 for en 280 heal hose Wile eatvie Jo : : for three homers Monday night was Hits: Schoendienst, 89 heard all over Montreal stadium. He also got two singles for a clean sweep at the plate in pacing the top-spot Royals to a 21-5 victory over Syracuse Chiefs. Dennis Reeder hurled a three- hitter as Rochester Red Wings jumped Ottawa Athletics for 12 hits--including three homers--to down the A's 8-1. Reeder fanned five and walked three. Charlie Kress, Lou Ortiz and Tom Burgess five, | Oxford University 235 and 146 for two. Worcestershire 381 for six declared Leicestershire 165 and seven. Lancashire 244. Hampshire 138. By GAYLE TALBOT 165 for -- !the inquiry, has there been no Hall of Fame Candidate and .383. In his last big year, 1932, he clubbed .368 for Brooklyn. NEW Y yi NEW YORK {AP)--Why, comes") sftv is tied with Bill Terry of Doubles: York, 18 Triples: Home runs: waukee, 20 Snider, and Dark, New Bruton, Milwaukee, 7 Mathews, Mil Stolen bases: Bruton, 13 13] SHELL trip for three reasons: "Everyone |back home wanted me to, this | year the British Open doesn't interfere with anything I wanted | to play in America and because ! I am told Carnoustie is one of the the Giants for having made the organized move to elect Lefty most hits a National League | 74 1.000 0'Doul to baseball's Hall of Fame, |season, 254. George Sisler holds Strikeouts: : ; | considering the fact that the re- he American League record with | xcouts: Roberts, Philadelphia cord shows the "man in the green "goa of the more rabid Yankee | Out through the steaming western hat" hit for an average of .349 rooters are chiding this corner blr, hat big tadiam at Cleve- i 4-3. {in 11 big league seasons, a lifetime | gently for having suggested that | S going to.look awfully empty Bad seas a figure topped only by Cobb, [their team's runaway threatens after tiose 70,000-plus throngs it girs oe League, batted. in 10 runs--a rec- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hornsby and Joe Jackson among Serious damage to American Lea- | hed When there still was a race.| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ord so far this year for a single Brooklyn -- Carmine Fiore, 146% th end, 4 gue attendance. They point out das Decomes more. evident each | Batting: Enos Slaughter, St. game. Brooklyn, decisioned Joey Klein, | "€ abd that more than 30,000 crowded into LAY at he fans no longer will | Louis Cardinals, singled, doubled Every Royal, except one, got : ; eld 114715, New York, 10. The answer is that Lefty, now | Yankee Stadium to watch St. Louis | t4 De il arge numbers just |and drove in four runs in the part of the 23 hits off five Syra- Toronto to seven safeties, including| Miami, Fla. Rocky Casillo, managing at San Diego, wasted Browns break the Champs 18-110 § 20 a asenall game. There are | Cardinals' 6-3 triumph over Pitts- cuse pitchers. Roy Hartsfield hit Mike Goliat's homer. 147, Blue Island, Ill, won by athe first four of those years try- game winning streak the other too n oy 9 er things to do, tae burgh, four times in the same number of , Bobby Hogue took his fifth win/TKO over Richie Reed, 147, White 'ing to be a pitcher and was crowd- night. § TL {any er forms of entertain-| Pitching: Bob Lemon, Cleveland trips to the plate and Ken Wood in nine decisions in the second con- Plains, N.Y., 9. ing 30 before he discovered he was| That's not the proper test. Wait, en! ; fompeting far the sports Indians, gave up eight hits and | hit four gor six. Each got a tripleitest, but needed help from Ray Chicago -- Norman Webb. 146, meant to be a slugging outfielder. | until Stengel's mob hits the road a aii e baseball fan now hit a home run in winning his | and a {By | Shore in the seventh. Chicago. decisioned Bobby Jarvis, |In his two greatest years with the |next time with its wondrous lead demands a contest. ninth game, over Washington, 5-2. Nelson's big blasts included a' The rampaging Buffalo Bisons, 146. Chicago, 8. Phillies, 1929-30, O'Doul hit .398 'and goes. prospecting for dollars grand slam and.one good for two confidently in second place, | TT ~~ Tr runs. They brought his home-run |crushed Baltimore Orioles 8-4 un-| total this season to nine. \der a barrage of 17 hits. It was| + Pitcher Earl Mossor, who took 'Buffalo's 13th triumph in 17 games. BRANTFORD (CP)--Al : | when WILLIAM C. McFEETERS i Kitts ii ¥ NRPOR Big. A Football 44 Alger Building acrosse ea eague quarterback now operating two sporting goods st in Buf- | lj OSHAWA, ONTARIO oods stores in Buf- | falo, N.Y., has applied for a Phone: 5-4758 HAMILTON (CP)--The leading official's position in the National St. Catharines Athletics of the Football League, it was learned Senior Ontario Lacrosse Associa- | here Monday. However, Dekdebrun tion Monday night added another |Says he might not make it because | game to its lead with a 14-6 victory | he lacks whistle-tooting experience. | Pitching: Burdette, finest courses in the world." The open will be held on the! testi C tie 1 t July 6-10 PREMIUM esting Carnoustie layou! ul = yy WITH Yesterday's Stars TCP Nelson, who bats and throws na lefthanded, tied the Montreal rec- hit for the circuit. ord for the most round-trippers in The hustling Springfield Cubs a single game by a player. He fell and Toronto Maple Leafs split a one homer short of tying the loop twi-night twin bill, the Cubs taking FIGHTS Tera. rst baseman, who played dogg ki Aho LL LAST NIGHT Milwaukee, John Pyecha went the distance] for Springfield in the first game, | striking out nine for his third win since joining .the Cubs. He held WANTS TO BE REFEREE bsssssasssssssssa The game was a rough-and- tumble affair with 10-minute penal- | STRONG ONTARIO ENTRY WINNIPEG (CP)-=A total of 70 over Hamilton Tigers. E EX i D 0 X C ties going to Bill Nelson of the entries from five provinces are Athletics and Butch Gatbro of | registered with the Winnipeg Ath- Hamilton. Max Woolley and Bill |letic Association for the Canadian | Henderson of St. Catharines were each given five-minute penalties for fighting. Woolley led the Athletics with three goals. Al Frick and Jim McCann had two each. Singles junior track and field champion- ships July 3 and 4. The associa- tion expects about 125 entries. On- tario contributed 24 of the entries including 16 holders of Canadian: records from Toronto. \ INSURANCE], JF Econranv \"2 STRONG CANADIAN COMPANY were scored by Bill Bradshaw, Bill | Nelson, Don Moore, Derry Davis, Eric Uhrynuk, Ted Howe and Norm Corcoran. Hamilton's leading sniper wv -3 Doug Davidson with two. Single- tons went to Butch Guthro, Al Doyle, Chub Brown and Barney | elsh. Y7174./1.4 Se irestong TIRES ...then enjoy your vacation trip free of tire worries! 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