The Oshawa Times, 24 Apr 1961, p. 10

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70 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, April 24, 1961 WHITE SOX' MARTIN CATCHES A POP FOUL, THE HARD WAY Tigers Roar With even Victories hind Pedro Ramos and Camilo|ton 4-3 although his arm tight- By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer Bob Scheffing, Detroit's fifth manager in three years, looks Pascual, | 1-0 with four hits. He also drove in the only run with a fifth-in-| shut out Washington) ened and he left the game after eight innings. In Saturday's games Kansas TORONTO (CP) --St. Mich- ael's College Majors won a berth in the Memorial Cup final Sunday after a whirlwind series that left the opposition shaking their heads in bewilderment. "Pll never know what hap- ed," said coach Ron Gaudet | the gloom of Moncton Beav- ers' dressing room. What happened was that the champions of the Ontario Hockey Association Junior A Series demolished the Beavers in the first crack at the East- ern Canada final a Maritimes team has had in 27 years. The Majors wrapped up the best-of-five series in the min- imum number of games by bombing Beavers 11-2, the same score as in W 's opener. In between they eased off for a 6-2 victory. ! Next stop for St. Michael's is Edmonton and a best-of-seven set for the Dominion junior ti- tle against Edmonton Oil Kings. Moncton fired the first goal Sunday and St. Mike's came on with 11 straight before the Beavers managed the final tally. Andre Champagne was the Majors' big gun with four goals and two assists to give him a total of six goals and seven as- sists for the series. Brian Walsh with two, Terry O'Malley, Paul Jackson, Duncan MacDonald, Barry McKenzie and Sonny Os- borne scored the other goals. Oscar Gaudet and Bernie Keating were the Moncton scor- St. Mike's Win East Canada St. Michael's picked up 31 scoring points in the game, out- shot Moncton 47-18--20-7 in the last period alone -- and drew even with the 26 penalties handed out. A Beavers return to Moncton with some added hockey knowl- edge and the satisfaction that they advanced as far as they did. Said coach Gaudet: "We should have done better be cause we played better during the season." As far as the game went, Keating put Moncton ahead at 5:53 of the initial period but less than a minute later, MacKenzie tied the score. Walsh put the Majors ahead to stay at 13:45 and Jackson pnotted the even tual winner at 16:04. Champagne, after scoring his first goal at 4:40 of the second period, connected for two more late in the same period. At 14:57 he relayed Osborne's pass behind goaltender Emery Cor- mier to make it 8-1 and then took Bruce Draper's rebound and whipped it in the short side at 18:16 for a 9-1 lead. He made it three in a row and 10-1 at 8:21 with his fourth goal, a shot through a maze of legs at the goalmouth. Lionel Fluery of Quebec pre- sented the Richardson Memor- ial Trophy to St. Michael's cap- tain O'Malley as winners of the Eastern Canada junior hockey final. Fluery is junior convener for the Canadian Amateur ers. Hockey Association. Peg Maroons CANADIAN 10-PIN CHAMP RETAINS TITLE Gerard Lapierre (left) is shown above congratulating Tony Chibi, 25-year-old elec- trician from Leamington, On- ( 21). Memorial Cup Moncton 2 Toronto St. Michael's (Toronto wins best - of -five semi-final 3-0). Eastern Professional | Hull-Ottawa 2'Sault Ste. Marie $ (Best-of-seven final tied 3-3). Ontario Junior B New Hamburg 3 Port Perry 1 (New Hamburg leads best-of- seven final 3-1). . OMHA Bantam B Gananoque 6 Goderich 3 ; Ra wins best-of-five GOLFERS ! PLAY YOUR GOLF IN OSHAWA GRANDVIEW GOLF CLUB Open For Play Saturday, April 22 Corner Grandview & Bloor H. Trudells, Pro, real. Chibi spilled 3,001 pins in | 15 games for a 200 average. He will represent Canada in the All - American Masters Halt Terriers straight defeat on Dick Dono-|5-2; Minnesota edged Washing-| tario, who won the Canadian van. ton Senators 1.0; Boston KITCHENER (CP) -- Winni- Hockey Association senior Z¥-pin singles championship | . whipped Chicago 7-6 and Balti- peg Maroons found the Kitch-|champions. or the second year in succes- LED ATTACK i more Oriles defeated New York ener ice much to their liking]. But it failed to develop and{ sion, on Saturday, at Mont. Tournament, in Detroit, early next month. Lapierre, of Val- leyfield, Quebec, was runner- up to Chibi on Saturday. --(CP Wirephoto) like the man who came to stay ning single that hung a third City defeated Cleveland Indians| at Tiger Stadium with his youth movement paying big dividends. The Tigers lost their opener and then reeled off seven straight victories, taking over the American League lead in their weekend series with Los 'DOLLARS OFF' Quality Retreads and Brooks yankees 5-3 in the first game.|Sunday and blasted their way|only 29 seconds were left in the Robinson led a 13-hit Baltimore The second game, tied 5-5 in the pack Ye the running for the|game when Joe Malo cut in attack in a 4-1 victory over New|seventh inning, was called be-|Canadian senior hockey champ-|from left wing and fired the York Yankees despite Mickey cause of rain. The game be-| puck into the right corner past Angeles Angels who now have lost seven in a row. Jim Donohue, 22 - year right - hander not expected to stick with the big club, figured| prominently in both of Sunday's victories, 3-1 and 3-2 in 11 in- nings. The youngster, up from inning rally and saved the first| ning. Jack Kralick, a young lefty Mantle's fifth home run. Cleve- with the help of a wild pitch and a throwing error in a game that set a new American League record and tied the ma- jor league mark when a total pis St. Paul, stamped out a ninth/0f 14 pitchers--seven on each|when Ted Klusezewski homered The side--saw action. game for Bob Bruce. He won| Bob Shaw, a stubborn holdout| Angels. the second in relief of Jim Bun-|in spring training, pitched Chi-Terry Fox who hit two men,| |cago White Sox to a 7-1 decis- loading the bases. {ion over Bosto with a chance to be the No. 3/break in a d man on Minnesota's staff be-'Brewer won the first for Bos-jon pop flies. and an even leheader. Tom n n. tween Los Angeles Angels and) . old/land shaded Kansas City 10-8 Detroit was rained out. Scheffing, fired as boss of Chi-| cago 'Cubs in 1959, continued to| get the most out of his Tigers. | Bruce was two outs away from first big league shutout and Bob Cerv doubled for -the| Scheffing brought in Donohue, bailed him out by retiring pinch| hitters Ken Hunt and Leo Burke! Spahn, Mahaffey, Moon, All Shining By JACK HAND Associated Press Staff Writer slap those "Moon shots' over Mahaffey, a talented fast baller Art Mahaffey, 22, a Philadel: phia right hander, came within| one strikeout of joining Bobby homer of the season, all to the haffey struck out nine men. Go- Feller and Sandy Koufax in the|"wrong field" for a left handed|ing to the ninth he had 16. He record books Sunday by ¥ekirine} 17 Chicago Cubs on strikes in the top feat of a busy day. | If it had not been for Mahaf-| fey and Frank Sullivan, whol teamed up with a startling pair of 1-0 and 6-0 shutouts for the| last-place Phillies, the big newsito take over first place after|lowed only three hits in the first might have been Milwaukee's Warren Spahn who won game|opener. The Giants took a 4-2|hind Sullivan when Bobby Gene lead into the ninth inning of the Smith crashed a home run in No. 289 on his 40th birthday. Spahn just missed a shutout when Don Hoak homered for Pittsburgh in the ninth, but he won 3-1. | Or it might have been Wally| Moon, the spectacular Los An-| |geles Dodger who continued to first of many to come from the left field screen at the Coli- seum, He hit another, his eighth batter. Moon's hit that gave| him a .500 batting average helped the league leading Dodgers trim Cincinnati 5-1 on a six-hitter by Roger Craig. HAD A CHANCE San Francisco had a chance in the} beating St. Louis 2-1 second game but the Cardinals rose up with five runs in the| McDermott's drove in three big runs. Sunday's feat may be only the pinch double IT'S A GOOD TRICK Home Runs Main Weapon In International Action By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The not - so - secret weapon| 12-2 Saturday. Toronto at Jer- sey Citv and Buffalo at San that has moved San Juan Mar-|Juan, Saturday's other sched- lins into the International League's first division is a 21- year - old outfielder named James Edward Beauchamp. The Marlins have won three| of the six games they have played so far and Beachamp, who hit .258 at Tulsa last sea- son, has personally accounted for two of them. He broke up Friday's game against Buffalo with a three - run eight-inning homer and Sunday he clouted a ninth - inning homer with one on base to give the Marlins a 5-4 decision over the Bisons at San Juan. The second game of the stheduled doubleheader, which drew only 1,000 spectators, was rained out. Toronto's torrid Maple Leafs had to go 11 innings to beat Jersey City Jerseys 11-7 in an- other poorly - attended game, but they moved into a tie with Richmond for first place as the Virginians split a doubleheader with Syracuse Chiefs. The game at Jersey city drew 2,002 fans. Syracuse took the opener Colum made it four straight with a 4-2 first - game iy oes but the Red Wings came back to win 10-5 on Co- "Jumbus errors. It was the first victory of the season for both Syracuse and uled games, were rained out. The Bisons, with homers by Felix Torres, Billy Tylor and Jackie Davis accounting for three of their runs, led 4-1 Sun- day going into the eighth. Then San Juan's John Glenn and Ben Mateoski homered off Max Surkont in the eighth to make it 4-3 and Beauchamp broke it up after Henry Mason relieved Surkont with one out in the ninth. Toronto scored six runs in the 11th inning against Jersey City to gain its fifth straight victory after an opening-day-loss. The last two came on Steve Dem- eter's second home run of the game. Demeter's first tied the score 5-5 in the eighth and sent the game into overtime. Bob Darnell, a pitcher who hasn't yet pitched for Syracuse, smashed a pinch-hit homer with the bases full in the eighth in- ning to give the Chiefs their victory. The second game went into the 10th with the score 3-3 Then Tom Tresh's homer for Rich- yjmond broke the deadlock. The ,|Vees went on to score three more runs. EX-SHORTSTOP DIES SHREWSBURY, Mass. (AP) Jack Barry, 73, famed former major league shortstop, died Sunday of lung cancer. Barry played four world series with Richmond walloped Syracuse with Philadelphia ¢Athletics and one Boston Red Sox. In the first four innings Ma. struck out the first man but fell one short of the record of 18 set by Feller of Cleveland in 1938 and tied by Koufax of the Dodgers in 1959. Mahaffey al- lowed only four hits. | Although Dick Ellsworth al- game, the Phils beat him be- {the ninth. Spahn was closing in on his| ninth and got a split 7-4. Maury|52nd shutout when Hoak hit his home run in the ninth. He gave {up seven hits and struck out four, boosting his lifetime total {to 2,085. Vern Law, the Pirates' {200game winner of last year, [suffered his third straight de- eat . MOON STRIKES AGAIN Moon continued his fantastic spring spurt in the Coliseum where he has hit safely in all 12 games. Although he hits left- handed, he has punched all of his eight homers to left or left |centre, most of them over the left field screen. Don Demeter ionship. They scored two first - period goals and made them stand up for a 2-1 victory over Galt Ter- riers in the third game of the best - of - seven Allan Cup final which Galt now leads 2-1. Maroons promptly said it would be better for both clubs to have more games transferred to Kitchener, complaining the suface at nearby Galt is "like gravel." The Terriers have not been too happy about their ice either. But the fourth game will be played there tonight and Jack Roxburgh, president of the Ca- nadian Amateur Hockey Associ- ation, indicated it is too late to change the rest of the schedule which calls for only the seventh game, if necessary, to be played in Kitchener next Sunday. The Winnipeg win toppled the Terriers' unbeaten streak at 13 playoff games and 16 including league play. | So pleased was Maroons coach Gord Simpson that he predicted the series will not go the seven - game limit. He praised his club for an "all-out effort" but said the bigger, bet- ter Kitchener ice made the dif-| ference. HAS NO EXCUSES | Galt coach Lloyd Roubell of- fered no alibis although he said he felt the second Winnipeg goal came on an offside play. "We didn't skate or check as we did in the first two games and our shooting was terrible," said Roubell. "I think our play- ers were trying too hard, al- though 1 figure we outplayed them after the first 10 minutes." As they did in the first two ames, the Maroons took the lead early. John Rendall, a leftwinger playing his first game of the series, broke the ice with the Terriers short. handed and Reg Abbott made it 2-0 before the period ended. The second period was score- less and in the third the sea- son's record crowd of 7,366 fans began to chant for the kind of late rally that has become al- most routine for the Ontario also homered for the league: leading Dodgers and Jerry Lynch smashed his second pinch homer for the Reds. PRIME AGE The average age of 44-year- old President John F. Ken- Gord Dibley to save the Ter-| riers from a shutout. Galt outshot the Westerners) 35-30 but Dibley was equal to the occasion and his mates ef- fectively killed off seven minor penalties, compared with only four to the Terriers. ARRIVED SATURDAY Rendall and Dibley, who took over from replacement goalie Don Collins, flew from Winni- peg to join the club Saturday. Rendall got his goal at 6:15, batting in a rebound from the crease with Galt's Pete Kowal- chuk in the penalty box for el- bowing. Abbott and Ross Parke broke behind the Galt defence at 17:36. , Boat Hurley stopped -a rising shot but it bounded into the air, hit him on the back as he fell and trickled into the net. Galt protests that it was offside went for nothing. Swim Records Fall During London Meet LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Three| Canadian records and one On-| tario time were beaten Satur- day in a non - championship swim meet here. Erika Mittlehamm of London swam the girls' 11-12, 50-metres backstroke in 38.5. The Cana- dian record is 40 seconds. In the boys' 10 and under, 100-metres freestyle relay, Ha- milton Aquatic posted 1:07.6, beating the national record by 1.3 seconds. Galt and District Y won the girls event in the same category with a time of 1:15.4, 0.3 sec- onds better than the Canadian ark. Abby Hoffman of Etobicoke Memorial cut 1.8 seconds off the Ontario record for girls 13- 14, 100-metres backstroke event, with a time of 1:23.8. Hamilton took top honors with 188 points, followed by London YM-YWCA with 175, Etobicoke with 149, North York 58, Lake- shore 40, Galt 32, Leaside 23, West End Y 15 and University {nedy's 34 predecessors was 55. of Western Ontario 10. BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League Pct. GBL 875 -- a8 % 6252 556 2 14 500 3 443 4% 3754 3333 = | Detroit |Minnesota New York Cleveland Boston Chicago Baltimore Kansas City Washington 3334 1% Los Angeles 1258 Saturday's Results Cleveland 2 Kansas City 8 New York 3-5 Baltimore 5-5 (Second tie, called in seventh, rain). Washington 0 Minnesota 1 Boston 7 Chicago 6 Los Angeles at Detroit, rain. Sunday's Results Los Angeles 1-2 Detroit 3-3. New York 1 Baltimore 4 Boston 4:1 Chicago 3-7 Washington 0 Minnesota 1 Cleveland 10 Kansas 'ity 8 | Probable Pitchers Today Cleveland (Perry 1-0) at Balti- more (Pappas 0-1) (N). New York (Turley 2-0) at De- troit (Lary 2-0). Los Angeles (Grba 1-1) at Chi- cage (Score 0-0) (N) Minnesota (Kaat 1-0) at Kansas City (Larsen 0-0) (N) A (Only games scheduled). CORD 0 A STU ~~ El EE ped, Games Tuesday Washington at Boston Cleveland at Baltimore (N) New York at Detroit (N) Los Angeles at Chicago (N) Minn. at Kansas City (N) National League W L Pct. GBL 5 .615 5451 5451 5001 3 5001 35 Los Angeles San Francisco St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Chicago 455 2 Cincinnati 5 A455 2 Philadelphia 3643 Saturday's Result: Chicago 6 Philadelphia 4 St. Louis at San Francisco, ppd, after four, rain. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, ppd, rain. Cincinnati 0 Los Angeles 1 Sunday's Results Chicago 0-0 Philadelphia 1-6 Milwaukee 3 Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 1-7 San Francisco 2-4 Cincinnati 1 Los Angeles 5 Probable Pitchers Today Milwaukee (Buhl 0-1) at Pitts burgh (Friend 2-0) (N) (Only game scheduled). Games Tuesday Phila. at Pittsburgh (N) Cincinnati at Chicago. Milwaukee at St. Louis (N) San Fran at Los Ang. (N) International League WL Pct. GBL 833 833 500 2 Richmond Toronto Columbus San Juan Jersey City Rochester Syracuse Buffalo : Saturday's Results : Richmond 12 Syracuse 2 Toronto at Jersey City, pd. ppd, rain. ts rain. Buffalo at San Juan, Sunday's Resul Buffalo 4 San Juan 5 (Second game ppd, rain.) Columbus 4-5 Rochester 2-10 Toronto 11 Jersey City 7 (11 innings). Richmond 3-7 Syracuse 7-3. Games Today Toronto at Jersey City (N) (Only game scheduled). Games Tuesday Toronto at Columbus Buffalo at Richmond Rochester at San Juan Syracuse at Jersey City American Association SAULT STE. MARIE (CP) The Eastern Professional Hockey League wraps up its 1961 championship series Tues- Canadiens favored to grab the glory in a showdown with Sault Ste. Marie Thunderbirds. Thunderbirds seat the best-of- seven final into a seventh game when they beat Canadiens 3-2 here Saturday night. The decid- ing game is set for Hull, Que., and Canadiens are favored be- cause of the home-ice advant- age. Thunderbirds, second during the regular season, deadlocked the set when they scored two goals in the first period and one in the second, then held off a rally by Canadiens. Hull-Ottawa moved to within one goal of catching Thunder- hirds when centre Bill Carter scored with 33 seconds remain- day night with Hull - Ottawa | Soo Thunderbirds Force 7th Game |ing in the third period. But {that was as far as Canadiens {got as 4,349 customers looked on. Merv Kuryluk, Ed Kachur {and Fred Hilts scored for Sault | |Ste. Marie. Terry Gray fired {the other goal for Canadiens, first during the regular cam: paign. GOALIE SHARP Thunderbirds goaltender Roy Edwards played an outstanding game as he turned aside 20 shots. Ed Johnston made 23 saves for Hull-Ottawa. Kachur gave Sault a 1-0 lead on a power play at 11:28 of the first period as Bob Ellett of Ca-| nadiens sat out a high-sticking| penalty. Kuryluk made it 2-0 at| 12:33 while both teams were shorthanded. I Gray came up with Cana. | diens' first goal at 19:35. | If you are budget-minded while this offer lasts | -- | TIRE STORES \9.49 EXCHANGE Instaliation and need tires . . . Hurry $1 Down $1 Weekly 48 BOND ST. . (Corner of Church) RA 5-6511 | TERMS i ( Saturday's Results Houston 4 Dallas-Fort Worth 2] Omaha 5 Louisville 6 | Denver 5 Indianapolis 2 Sunday's Results {Omaha 5-3 Louisville 4-2 [Huston 3:0 Dallas-Fort Worth| SAVINGS WERE NEVER BETTER MONEY-WISE . . . BUYS JUST IN TIME FOR HOLIDAY PLANNING NOW AVAILABLE Take your pick . . . come on down and give them a try. Sparkling clean demonstrators in showroom condition. Complete with new car warranty. All set ready to go . . . at TREMENDOUS SAVINGS. Time to pick your car for pleasant holiday cruising this year. ... ® 1960 CHEVROLETS ® 1960 ENVOYS ® 1961 OLDSMOBILE F-85 WAGON (ONE ONLY) ONTARIO MOTOR SALES | 140 BOND WEST | LIMITED A

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