Daily Times-Gazette, 28 Sep 1953, p. 11

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L] OSHAWA PITCHERS (?) GIVE 19 WALKS 'Transporters Get More Safe Hits But Crowland Evens Series, 25-7 CROWLAND -- The McCallum Transporters suffered their worst setback since the team was band- ed together some four years ago, when the Crowland Bisons ti their Intermediate "A' OBA semi- final series at one game apiece with a 25-7 victory here Saturday afternoon. The locals used six different pit- chers during the fidSeo «ie f was outfielder George Brabin! Bill McTavish started, and was clipped for four runs in three in- nings. He gave way to Ted Stone in the third. Stone was issued a pass to the showers in the fourth when Jack Durston came in. Durston got into an argument with the n ie umpire, and was rom| ejected. ; BEAVERS AND TOSSERS Bill Gingerich came on point, the fifth inning, and showed nothing but wildness. George Bra- bin figured he could hold the en- emy as well as anyone at this point with the score something like 16-3 . . . 80 he tried his hand at pitching. Coach Willson came on in the sixth for a bit of relief work for George, and then retired to first- base again to leave George the re- mainder of the work in seven- th, eighta and ninth innings. Actually, this duo looked better than any of the "regular" pitchers. The regulars allowed 17 of the wild figure of 19 walks during the tussle. It is obvious that Crowland has some heavy hitters on their club, COACH WILLSON « « «» Roof Caves In CHECKING SPORT By BOB RIFE but the Transporters, minus their Bunny Maeson (who is the regular cleanup man) certainly looked as inept as any club could. The third and decidin, the series will be played next Sat- urday in Crowland if present re- ports are correct . . . which means the locals lost the toss for the final game of the series too! Besides losing the toss, and the game . . . it is now known that the team arrived in Crowland without their regular equipment on Satur- day. They had to stop and buy or borrow what they could in stores along the way to Crowland' As, Manager Ab Walker said . . . "It was a bad day all around!' BLOW-BY-BLOW Checking back over the blow by blow work of the Bisons . . . they scored two runs in the first inning when Homenuk doubled with men in scoring position. They added two in the third when Buckowski homered. Six runs crossed the plate in the fourth inning sparked by doubles oft the bats of Spitali and Home- nuk. Six more rambled over the plat- ter in the fifth inning on a splurge that saw not one hit scored for the winning club. Then in the sixth, Homenuk homered with the bases game of loaded to power a five-run spurt. & Buckowski homered with the sacks loaded in the seventh to make the four runs that gave a final score of 25-7. Oshawa scored a single run in the first when Varga and Jozkoski doubled. They added one in the second on errors, one more in the fourth when Willson, Brabin and Varga singled, and one in the sixth when Gingerich homered. Singles by Brabin, Hall and Joz- koski notched another lone run in the seventh and Varga's double in the eighth led a two-run rally. Spitali, Buckowski and Home- nuk paced the winners with Varga and Gingerich shaowing the only bright rays in the Oshawa rae Oshawa 110 101 120-- 7.16 3 Crowland 202 665 40x--25 15 1 OSHAWA: Varga, ss; Barnes, cf; Etcher, 2b; Joskoski, 3b; Hall, rf; McArthur, c¢; Brabin, If, p in 5th, If in 6th and p in 7th; Willson, 1b, p in 6th and 1b in 7th; McTavish, p; Stone, p in 3rd; Durston, p in 4th; Gingerich, p in 5th, If in 5th, 1b in 6th and If in 7th. CROWLAND: Kereluk, 2b; Zem- lenko, 1b; Spitali, 1f; Homenuk, cf; Buckowski, 3b; Guzda, rf; Bleze- tich, p; Menard, ss;' Benko, c¢; Smith, p in 7th. Umpires: Martin and Kerrich. SUDDEN-DEATH GAME Chatham Takes Bantam Title, Defeat Chatham Legion scored a 6-4 victory over Oshawa Starks Plumb- ers in the sudden-death final of the Ontario Baseball Assocaition Bant A" championship played This column, written prior to the Transporters' game Satur- day, will therefore mot reveal any vital facts about the game. For that info look round for the game story. The big news contained here- in is a story out of Stouffville that as much as calls the OHA . a dictatorship and rumors the Clippers may drop from Senior ranks if their requests for affil- {ation aren't met. The quote "For management of the Stouffville Clippers has been attending various meetings of the OHA. in an effort to gain entry into the Metropolitan Hockey League. The idea behind the Stouffville move is to get away from the long trips to King- ston, Belleville, Peterboro, etc., which are not only expensive but tiresome to players who" must earn their bread and but- ter by means other than hock- ey. Up to the sent time how- ever the OHA has taken a dim view of the Stouffville request and have stated in so many words that the Clippers must remain in the 52-53 grouping or pull out. With this one-sided insight into the matter the OHA must surely be forgetting two main points: (1) Stouffville is in the Metropolitan hockey area and (2) The Clippers have lined - coffers of the OHA in past , a fact that should cer- considered before of waving them good-b; -bye. If the Sr. B. Clippers are re- fused entry into the Toronto group they will be the first club in the Metropolitan area that has been refused admittance. To make matters worse, the Sr. B. grouping to which Stouff- ville was connected las. © n is not satisfied to form »~ in- terlocking schedule with the distant centres of Peterboro, Kingston and Belleville. A club would have to be made of money to stand such an expensive operation dur- ing the season. The OHA's view on this matter appears somewhat, one-sided, putting it mildly. Time is running out and a decision will have to be forth- coming very soon. If our infor- mation is correct, the life of our CV 'o rest in the hands of O.H.A." Whica igs look a little upset . . . at least not as calm as one might hope for when a season opens. the past few weeks, the |. If Stouffville does drop from the league, the trips around the circuit will be long ones for avery team. No short hauls at That plus the fact that the Bangays et al were good draw- ing cards may make the local league give the Clippers some * kind of "'talking' point to stay ir the fold. _ CHECKLETS ~-- .Reports around Orillia way have it that their coaching problem is their biggest one at the present time. Al Shewchuk and Bruno Fa- vero are the rumored types, but both are indefinite about Banging around the team. says he hasn't signed a card yet and is still free to play anywhere . . looking around before he buys sort of stuff. Meanwhile Favero is wanted by the Owen Sound Mercurys, but they don't want fo pay what the Terriers are Unless do, they don't Unjess' they hey So it looks as if Favero has the inside track for the job. Speaking of Orillia reminds us that Earl McCrone, their top scorer and the second high man in the league statistics, has written the Trucker man- jement saying he'll turn out re. The local crew haven't seen him as yet, so perhaps the Terriers have told him he won't get his release . . . es- pecially if he wants to play with Oshawa. The Trucker president, Wren. . Blair, says that the Produc- tion Line of last season . . . Gerry Scott, George Samolenko and Jed Wilson . . . are work- ing "as if they had taken no rest since the play-offs last year". They are working like a well - oiled machine and shoul be the top line in the league again this season. Bob Shropshire brought a young player from Fort Wayne with him to the workout the other evening. His name is Paul Jage and according to Wren, is setting the world afire. Coach E: Dickens fig- ures Max Yourth, Bowman- ville defence star, as the find of the year. He thinks Max will round out the Oshawa rearguard corps to a "'T". ch makes the Truckers sound like a fine team for the coming season, wot? Better find out about those season tickets. Remember the Bowmanville Arena seats just 1,800! : by Bob Rife. «en at Brantford Lion's Park last Saturday. Reaume pitched all the way for the winners allowing eight scatter- ed hits for four runs. McMahon heaved for the losers, giving up but six hits for six runs. His mates committed six errors and these had a great deal to do with the final score . . . even though the tussle could have gone either way. Chatham strdack for one run in the last of the second when Mills scored on two hits and two errors. The added one in the third when Babcock walked and scored on a single by Kucera. Two runners crossed the plate in the fifth on three more errors and two singles. Another run was scored by Chatham in the sixth on two errors and walks brought home the sixth tally in the seventh inning. Actually Chatham had but two earned runs! Oshawa counted all four of their runs in the seventh inning. A two- base outfield error put Simcoe on second. McMahon's single sent him to third and Ryan's single to left scored both runners as the Stark's 6-4 ball was muffed in the outfield again. Newey walked and Fry gained first on a force play that nipped Newey at second. A balk was called and Ryan now on third, was waved in to the plate. Fry went to second and headed in to third on Minac's single. He scored on Jeffs' deep fly to second. That made the four runs. Melnick walked, but Simcoe flied out to left on his second trip to the plate. Neither club threatened after that and the game ended 6-4 for Chath- am. - Hearty congratulations are to be extended to the Stark's crew for their courageous comeback after those early error-filled innings. They rallied and very nearly up- set the applecart. .R.H.E. Oshawa 000 000 400-- 8 4 6 Chatham 011 021 10x-- 6 6 8 TAKE TAB WORK TWO LINES... OSHAWA STARKS--Goodall, If; Minacs, ss; Jeffs, rf and ¢ in 7th; Melnick, ¢ and ss in 7th; Simcoe, 2b; McMahon, p; Ryan, 3b; New- & 1b; Fry, cf; Marden, ss in CHATHAM---Marucka, 2b; Mon- tagu, ss; Babcock, 3b; Israels, c; Kucera, cf; Mills, 1b; Mitchell, If; Koning, rf; Reaume, p. Umpires: Cullaton and Tait. BOWLING INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Storie Park bowling d Sat- urday night like a big reunion of old and new friends. Art Tuson, a new member, really led the night with a lovely single of 304. Nice bowling Art! Also Marg. Smith, an- othe new bowler, had a high single 1. The points were fairly evenly div- ided with one exception: Tresanes 2, Colleges 2 Simcoes 2, Mills 2; Hillsides 3, Cromwells 1; Oxfords 4, Burtons 0; Cuberts 2, Hibberts 2. Ladies over 600: Joyce Porter 667 (206, 222, 239). Ladies over 200: Marg. Smith 261 Bea Simmons 229 and 201, Mickey Smith 215, Doris Pascoe 211, Ruth Gibson 204, Eva Arkwright 203. Men over 600: Geo. King 668 (288), Geo. Northey 650 (229, 213, 208), M. Meulemeister 648 (287), Geo. Arkwright 637 (279), Art Tu- son 632 (304), Earl Deverell 627 (201), 216, 210), Len Blackler 623 (231). Men over 200: Don Rorabeck 250, J. Wetherup 235, Den Williams 232, Bill Short 214 and 208, Leo Smith 212, Frank French 210, Stan Mac- Arthur 210, Joe Emmons 209, Bill Gibson 208, Al Porter 207 and 200, | Gordon Scott 200. Any bowler who has decided not to continue with us this year should notify the secretary as soon as pos- sible at 3-2897. International League Montreal 100 100 720--11 15 © Rochester 000 012 121-- 7 11 © Roebuck, Fabbro (9) and Thomp- son; Papai, Crimian (7) Hoch (7) Reeder (8) and Kahn, Rapp (8). (Montreal leads best-of-seven fi- nal series 2-0) A By THE CANADIAN PRESS Remember When. . . Andre Routis, the game little French featherweight, stripped Tony Canzoneri of his world title 25 years ago tonight at New York. Routis staged a whirlwind come- back in the late rounds to win the 15-round decision. Routis later lost the featherweight crown to Bat Battalino, while Canzoneri moved up to win the world lightweight crown. Average daytime winter tem- perature at Victoria, capital of British Columbia, is 42 degrees. Theneme "John Player . Song ® on the package i your guar every cigarette is smooth end fresh. Brooklin Lacrosse Team Showing their old form, the form that knocked Bradford out in the semi-finals 4 games to one, the Brooklin Dodgers took an early lead and led the way throughout the whole tilt to down Georgetown 6-4 in the fifth game of the best- of-seven Intermediate "B" final se- ries at Brooklin on Saturday night. This win puts Brooklin back in the running whittling Georgetown gevles lead down to three games o two. All the Brooklin scoring was down by their ace marksmen Don Craggs and Gord Cook. Brooklin's defence, looking the best it has in the'last few games, kept their adversaries well out of shooting range of the Brooklin twine and fojsequently Georgetown didn't get half the shots on Bradley as did E [the Brooklin sniper on Cuthbert in the Georgetown net. Len Caruso the big threat of the Georgetown club, who came down from the Brampton seniors after they folded up this sprin~, is usually good for six or seven goals each game, at least for two or three. But on Saturday night Caru- so was held to a goalless game as Brooklin's Al Kivell did a mag- nificent job of covering this pace- setter of the visiting club. Kivell was with his man every minute he was on the field and he gave him no opportunity to score as he kept the sparker of the N. and G.'s from getting the ball and when he did get a shot away it was jolted out of range of the net. Kivell, though no scorer himself, must be given a great deal of credit for Brooklin's win .as he kept the main cog in the George- town driving force out of action for the whole game. Brooklin led 2-1 after the open- ing phrase, 3-2 at halftime and in- creased their lead to 5-3 as the game entered the last quarter. Don Craggs scored four of Brook- Back In Contention lin's goals while Gord Cook scored a pair. These two ace snipers were given help by Robie Robson with two assists and Bruce Mitchell with one. Georgetown's goals were all sin- letons A cored by G. Wilson, D. Ross, J. Haines and B. McCand- less. Line-ups: BROOKLIN -- Goal, Bradley, defence, Lintnor,. Mitchell; rover,' Ravery, centre, A. Mackey; wings, Craggs, Cook, alternates, Branton, Kivell, Robson, Deschamps, B. Mackey, Wilson, Elliott. GEORGETOWN -- Goal, Cuth- bert; defence, Ross, Beaumont; rover, Townsend; centre, J. Haines, wings, G. Grasby, Guardhouse; al- ternates, Wilson, McCandless, Cleave, Barber, Caruso, Moddeson, B. Haines. Referees -- Piper Bain and Mickey McDonald. FIRST PERIOD 1. Georgetown, Wilson (Moddeson) 2. Brooklin, Craggs 3. Brooklin, Craggs Penalties -- McCandless Lintnor (5 min.). SECOND PERIOD 4. Brooklin, Cook (Mitchell) 11.25 and 25 ne SOLE OF ECONOMY AT ALL FINE SHOE REPAIRERS THE DAILY TTMES-GAZETTE, Monday, September 28, 1088 . 5. Georgetown, Ross " Grasby, Craggs. THIRD PERIOD 6. Georgetown, J. Haines (Caruso) 7. Brooklin, Craggs (Robson) 8. Brooklin, Cook (Robson) Penalties -- None. FOURTH PERIOD 9. Georgetown, McCandless (B. Haines) 10. Brooklin, Craggs Penalties Robson, Cook and Cleave (5 min.), Craggs and Wilson (5 min.). On clear days the Nova Scotia coast can be seen from Table mountain in Newfoundland, 80 miles away and 1,300 feet high. Oshawa Sea Rangers In Cutter Victory TORONTO (CP) Toronto's Haida sea cadet corps nosed out the defending champion Drake corps of Oshawa by one d Saturday to win the senior cham- i pionship cup for ten-oared cutters. The winner's time was two min- utes and 50 seconds for the half mile course. The Lion corps of Hamilton was third, five seconds off the pace. In the junior championshi the Haida juniors won wi Drake juniors second. In a ten-oar cutter race for sea rangers the Oshawa Crusader corps defeated the Princess Royal corps of Toronto. race the ROCKY MARCIANO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT PICTURES SHOWING MON., TUES. and WED. ROLAND LA STARZA ELECTRICAL INSTRUMENT the coupon today! Royal Get the 'gen' from the men you know in the Air Force. 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