10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, September 14, 1961 YANKS RAINED OUT Tigers Blank A's; Indians Win 5-0 Sunnyside Wins 2-1; Radio Ousts Fernhill A single by Bonnetta brought Spiers home and Parsons to third, but then Hornsby ground- ed out, In the third inning, Bryan drew a walk off R. Cullen, after there were two out and Steva- son followed with a home-run blow, to make it 3-2 at the time. But Fernhill never scored again. They had two men on in the sixth, via walks, with none out but Cullen tightened up to leave them stranded. Radio Park got two runs 'in their second inning when Stap- ley opened with a single, Mc- Donald was safe on an error ¢; F. Mitchell, If; Black, p; B.|and then Shackleton doubled, to { Mitchell, rf; Chapman, 2b; Der-|score his two mates and was vent, 1b; Korback, 3b; Hyrcan-| thrown out later himself, trying ut, ss; Cockerton, cf. to advance on an outfield fly. Sunnyside tied the score in the fifth when Hyrcanut homer- ed into right-centre. The winning run came in the 7th when Korback drew a walk with one out and then Hyrcanut belted one through the middle of the College Hill infield, good for extra bases and Korback ing, six o'clock, at College Hill|sprinted all the way home with diamond. the winning run, to end the In the other semi-final brack-| game. et, Radio Park completed their, COLLEGE HILL: Solomon, upset threat when they whipped p; Logeman, 2b; Wright, rf; T. Fernhill Park 9-3 to take that|Peel, 1b; Cameron, ss; Taylor, round in two-straight games|3b; Ham, cf; Clark, If; R. Peel, Sunnyside Park nosed out Col- lege Hill 2-1 in a thrill-packed playoff game last night at Sun- nyside Park, to tie up their Oshawa Minor Softball Associa- tion's Kiwanis Bantam League semi-final series, at one win apiece. Third and deciding game will be played on Friday even- By MIKE RATHET ers margin to 11 games by Associated Press Staff Writer [blanking Kansas City Athletics Hurricane Carla has stuck a|8-0 behind Jim Bunning's five- ¥ finger into that home run chase hit pitching and home runs by and both Roger Maris and|Rocky Colavito and Norm Cash. Mikey Mantle figure he nap LOSING STREAK hampered 5 : a | Cleveland Indians snapped a hele Sones of SUrPassig six-game losing streak by beat- Carla tossed her fringe ef.|iN8 Baltimore Orioles 5-0 on # fects into the midwest Wednes.|Gary Bell's four - hitter, and t day night, forcing postpone Washington Senators 'won two ment of the New York Yankees-|!! @ TOW for the first time since Chicago White Sox game with pus, A by Supping Eston Maris at bat in the third inn.|Red Sox 4-2. A twi - night dou- ing and causing the American Bicheade? betwee Lot Angeles ¥ test to b 4.|Angels and 'Minnesota Twins : Tague contest 10 be reched wes postponed. and so cam berth nthe chan today Maris and Mantle each got to| Pionship finals, to open on Mon- vs : how Pv il {oo Pat once before the all - day|day evening, against either Sun. ie ye one: iq |rain made the field unplayable|nyside or College Hill. well in doubleheaders = sald|jn the third with the Yankees| The game at Sunnyside Park Maris, the leader with 56 home| ,. 40 9.1 Maris singled and|last night was one of the closest "SUNNYSIDE PARK: Bradley, "batter's helmet". He is letics, in Detroit. Wood drop- | relay from outfielder Jim | runs and a three - game edge nronia fouled out to the cat- over Ruth's record 60 pace of cher in the first inning. 1927. | The postponement left the "I'd rather play them one yanks' magic number at seven. game at a time," said Mantle, They'll be trying to extend their three games behind the Bam-|13 . game winning streak today bino with 53 homers. |with Roland Sheldon (9-4) and and best-played of the entire Kiwanis Bantam League season, with Solomon for College Hill {and Black for Sunnyside, stag- ing a real pitching battle. Black struck out six batters and Sole mon fanned seven. Black gave RADIO REACHES FINALS The score stayed at 3-2 for Radio Park completed their Fernhill until the bottom of the semi-final upset of the favored |fifth when DeMille opened with Fernhill Park team, taking the|a single. L. Cullen fanned but series in two - straight games|D. March tripled. R. Cullen then with their 9-3 victory last night|popped up but D. Bennett hom- at Radio Park diamond. ered, so did Stapley and that JAKE WOOD, Detroit Ti- gers' second baseman, is one of those speedy base-runners who frequently sprints right out from under his hat, es- pecially if wearing the rigid sports menu Hastings Edge By Geo. H. Campbell Burnaby, Even shown above, as he loses his hat but makes third base safely, with a triple in the third inning of yesterday's game with Kansas City Ath- | while umpire Larry watches the ped his hit into the right- | Rivers, field corner. A's third base- man Wayne Causey is shown | waiting for the throw, on a Napp closely play. --(AP Wirephoto) ers took the opportunity to re-|zaro (13-6) and Ray Herbert] Solomon's best effort was in booted a few but after Fernhill in the sixth on home-run blows J GC 4 I 20th back-to-back singles and then|found his bearings and his| Stapley, with three-for-three, chell and Chapman and got Der-| catcher, DeMille, Cullen struck] FERNHILL PARK: Hornsby, By MIKE RATHET and lowered the Reds' magic ning when Wright opened with Spiers was safe on McDonald's|7th; Densham, If in 6th. SPORTS EDITOR {who became a big leaguer, to-| The Pirates, with reliever|pitch. With two out, B. Mitchell|in right field, Spiers advanced.|Bennett, 3b; Stapley, 1b; Me- While the Yanks were idle|Jim Coates (11-5) scheduled tolup only one hit and Solomon| R. Cullen, pitching for Radio, made it 6-3. duce the American League lead-! (9-12). the first inning when Bradley had taken the §ead with a hom- by DeMille, L. Cullen and R. Black walked to fill the bases. mates settled down to give him was the big hitter for the win- vent to ground out; leaving the out eight batters, six of them in|c; Dearborn, 1b; Griffin, ss; Off Former Mate three runners stranded. |the last three innings. Bryan, cf; Stevason, If; Spiers, | College Hill got the first run| In the second, Stevason open-|p; Parsons, 2b; Cole, 3b; Bon- Associated Press Staff Writer number to nine with the aid of|a two-bagger, advanced on an|error, Then Parsons singled and] RADIO PARK: L. Cullen, cf; |day savored his 20th victory and Harvey Haddix pitching two-|made a great shoestring catch|gteyason had already been|Donald, 2b; Shackelton, If; No- 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' the second - place Detroit Tig- go against Chicago's Juan Piz- was touched for five safeties. got a shaky start as his mates. The winners added three more -- and F. Mitchell opened withler in the third inning, Cullen Cullen. {Solomon then fanned B. Mit-/good support, especially his ners. |of the game in the fourth in-|eq for Fernhill with a walk and|netta, rf; Morrison, batted in Joty Jay, the little leaguer Pittsburgh Pirates. |infield out and scored on a wild| when L. Cullen bobbled the ball March, ss; R. Cullen, p; D. {that last' full measure of re- THE MINTO CUP finals, Canada's Junior lacrosse championship series, drew only 225 custorhers in Port Credit last night, when Hastings Legion nosed out Burn- aby B.C. Juniors 12-11. Apparently the Canadian la- crosse brass thought that Port Credit as a hotbed of sen- jor lacrosse, would provide strong patronage for the Junior finals. But Brampton put out Port Credit sen- iors, the defending Mann Cup champions, Tuesday night, and apparently lacrosse interest in Port Credit practic- ally "died" right there. We think the entire Minto Cup series should have been played in Peterborough -- where accommodations are ideal and where in addition to having the entire population of Hastings available with- in less than an hour's drive, the series would have spec- . ial appeal for Liftlock City sports fans, since they are lacrosse-minded and there are several Peterborough boys on the Hastings' team. Peterborough may be in disfavor with the lacrosse moguls but they have, we think, cut off their own financial nose in not taking the series to the Liftlock City's big auditorium. And while on the topic of lacrosse, we note that last night Vancou- ver Carlings defeated New Westminster O'Keefes, for the right to represent the West against Brampton, in the Mann Cup set. They must have a real sudsy senior setup in British Columbia, JOE CRONIN, American League president, has said that if either Maris or Mantle, or both, hit 61 homers in the regulation 162-game league schedule, it must be re- garded as a record. Baseball commissioner Ford Frick has ruled that it must be done within 154 games -- same number as the league schedule in 1927 when Babe Ruth hit his 60. A lot of the major league baseball men figure that Frick should not have made this stipulation and if the two Yankee sluggers should hit 60 or 61 homers, before their schedue ends -- there'll be a lot of opinions voiced on this subject. The way we see it -- they have to do it in 154 games to tie Ruth's record -- but if they do it in 162 games -- then they certainly will have set a record of their own. LAST NIGHT'S softball playoff action saw Black's beat Karn's in a no--hit, no-run game. In the Inter- County finals, Houdaille nosed out Crawford's 1-0 to take the lead in their 3-out-of-5 series. Fourth game is next Tuesday evening. Kiwanis Bantam semi-finals saw Sunnyside Park win a 2-1 thriller over College Hill, to even the round. They'll settle it tomorrow evening, at College Hill diamond. In the other bracket, Radio Park advanced to the championship finals when they knock- ed off the favored Fernhill Park team in two-straight. Minto Cup Set PORT CREDIT (CP) -- Has- have emerged without injuries. tings Legionnaires go into the| Only 225 fans were on hand as third game of the Minto Cup la- | Hastings took a first-period lead crosse finals Friday night with|of 2-0 and Burnaby rallied for a hopes boosted but minus an-|4.4 tie at half time. The Le- other player. gionnaires moved in front again The Legionnaires bounced 8-6 in the third period and back Wednesday night from | clinched the win with two goals their first-game loss to Burnaby|in the final three minutes. Norburns and took a 12-11 vic-| ltory, but in the process they SCORE THREE EACH lost defenceman Bob Stickle for| John McAuley, a replacement at least two games. He was brought uy : struck in the eye by the ball in|paced Hastings with three goal the second period. The decision tied the best-of-| and three assists. Gary Curtis equalled that scoring punch rhe : : {while Paul Cannon and Pete seven junior Canadian final ati perge scored twice and Ron 3 fame apiece, : {Knox and Joe Todd drove in Hastings had previously lost|gingies. stars Grant Heffernan and Ken| po Boyd had a three-goal |Ruttan. Burnaby appeared 10| ..tormance for Burnaby. Jim | | Watson Mike imich, Dick | BURNABY IS NOT es BB dley PART VANCOUVER counted two each. Play was rough throughout as Hastings matched the Norburns' VANCOUVER (CP) -- Reeve Allan Emmott of sub- urban Burnaby has a geog- raphy tip for Canadian la- crosse fans. Burnaby is a municipality completely . separate from the city of Vancouver. "Every time a team from anywhere near Vancouver goes to Eastern Canada, it becomes a Vancouver team," Reeve Emmott com- plained Wednesday. "For the sake of the ci- vic pride of 100,000 Burna- bians, the Norburns should be referred to as a Burn- aby team," he said. {helped Burnaby to its first-.game |victory. Twenty-three penalties--a to- tal of 86 minutes--were ha .de lout, with Burnaby drawing 12 of them. Play erupted into a {fourth-quarter brawl that saw |all players on the floor involved. The referees cooled them off by sending Cannon and Bimich off with majors for fighting and |Burnaby's 'Gary Stevens an | Terry Downer of Hastings with 10-minute misconducts for join- ling in. In the final minute, net. {driving style of play which had | Watson and Dave Drummond of | Legionnaires were given majors |after tangling near the Hastings |venge after moving Cincinnati Reds a giant step closer to their first National League pennant [since 1940. | The 26 - year - (hander, discarded by Milwau- {kee Braves after he compiled an unspectacular 9-8 record {last year, blanked his former {teammates 4-0 with a four-hit- |ter Wednesday night and be- {came the first National League pitcher to win 20 this season. Jay, one of those most re- I|ing rise from a sixth - place |finish in 1960, joined Whity | Ford of New York Yankees and Frank Lary of Detroit Tigers as the majors' only 20 - game winners with his fourth shutout and 13th complete game. | He also scored the game's {only run in the fifth inning, | made it four victories without |a defeat over his onetime mates old right-| hit ball over the final eight in- ings, beat second - place Los| Angeles 82 and droped the! Dodgers 5% games back of the| Reds. Any combination of nine| Cincinnati victories and-or Los Angeles defeats will give the Reds' the NL flag. | TIE FOR THIRD San Francisco Giants moved into a tie for third place with| the Braves by defeating the last - place Philadelphia Phil lies 8-2. The Chicago - St. Louis up from Brampton, sponsible for Cincinnati's amaz-|game was rained out. Jay (20-9), first Cincinnati| hurler to enter the 20 - game circle since Ewell Blackwell won 22 in 1947, handcuffed the team that signed him for $20,- 000 in 1953 and traded him to the Reds last winter. Jay scored the Reds' run on a two - out single by Vada Pinson, who was 3-for-4 on the night. Carl Willey (5-11) was the loser. INDIANS DENY CLEVELAND (AP) -- Spies in the scoreboard? "We're completely inno- cent," Gabe Paul, general manager of Cleveland Indians said Wednesday. He added that the accusa- tion that Cleveland was em- ploying spies in the score- board to steal signs of oppos- ing. teams would be funny-- except that it came from American League President Joseph E. Cronin. Paul disclosed that he re- ceived a letter from Cronin St. Kitts Group Take Over Teepees ST. CATHARINES (CP)--A | group of 23 St. Catharines bus- |iness and professional men has |assumed control of St. Cathar- lines Teepees of the Ontario {Hockey Association Junior A | series. Wins Berth In Mann Cup Set Hank Greenberg "OLD COUNTRY Figures They'll SOCCER SCORES | At the initial meeting of the {new organization Wednesday, St. Catharines lawyer Ross Wil- son was named president. | Mr. Wilson is a former cap- | tain of Canada's Davis Cup 4-1. LONDON (Reuters)--Results|'ennis team and for several Need 162 (Games soccer games played in the CHICAGO (AP)--Hank Green-| United Kingdom Wednesday| berg who, along with Jimmy|night: Foxx, came closest to overhaul-| AGUR ing Babe Ruth's home run tec. FOOTBALL LEAGUE CUP ord, thinks both Roger Maris First Round » and Mickey Mantle will top the Barnsley 3 Southport 2 |years has been Teepees vice- | president. Rudy Pilous, ver take advantage of Westminster penalties (team, will be an adviser on the Mann Cup series since 1952. general committee, The new directors ratified the working agreement now in Vancouver Club A crowd of 3,850 saw Vancou- New in former owner|ywinning the Western Canada ti- {and general - manager of theltle and their first berth in the The winners will meet Bramp- {ton Ramblers in the best - of- stating that the president had received reports '"'of a suspi- STEALING RIVALS' SMOKE SIGNALS | some of the cat- | cion that cher's signals are being pick- ed up from either the centre field bleachers or the score- board outlets." Paul said: "The timing of the letter was quite peculiar. It came at a time when we were ge tting our brains beaten out." Paul wrote to Cronin: '". . . The manner in which the opposing clubs have been hitting home runs would seem to indicate that possibly the other side has been getting the signs." 'Black's Blank Kam's Drugs NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. 0 N Hi (CP)--Vancouver Carlings ad- n 0- itter vanced to the Canadian senior lacrosse final by downing New Westminster O'Keefes 12-5 here Wednesday 'night to win the best of-seven Inter-City League final Karn's Drugs 5-0 yesterday in a UAW Softball League game, when pitchers Al McKee and Bob Talbot combined for a brilliant no-hit, no-run perform- ance. McKee started for Black's and pitched the first three frames. He issued one walk and two other runners got on via errors. One was promptly thrown out trying to steal sec- ond base and the other, who actually missed the third strike Black's Men's Wear shutout | YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pitching: Joey Jay, Reds, shut out former Milwaukee team- mates on four hits and became first National League pitcher to win 20 games this season as Cincinnati beat Braves 1-0. | Hititng: Bill Mazeroski, Pi- |rates, hit two homers against Los Angeles, the last breaking 2-2 tie in the eighth inning and powering Pittsburgh to 8-2 vic- tory over second-place Dodgers. to rob Taylor of an extra-base blow. SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES FTBALL : Oshawa City and District Assoc. -- (City Championship Semi-Finals) -- Scugog Clean- ers vs Heffering's Imperials, at Alexandra Park, 8.00 p.m.) 2nd game of 2-out-of-3 series. UAW League -- Town and Country vs Kent's Western Tire, at Alexandra Park, 1.00 p.m. BASEBALL Leaside Junior League Play- offs -- Oshawa Legionnaires vs Moore's Drugs, at Talbot Park, 7.30 p.m.; 1st game of 3-out-of-5 championship finals. GAMES FOR FRIDAY SOFTBALL Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- (Ki- wanis Bantam League Semi- Finals) -- Sunnyside Park vs College Hill, at College Hill, 6.00 p.m.; 3rd and deciding game of series. thrown out going to third base. |wak, rf; DeMille, c. Linked with Canadian growth and progress CANADIAN OIL comeAanit ES , LIMITED WHITE ROSE GASOLINES « MOTOR OILS Bert Hedge's UY YEA NEW 196 DELUXE 23° ADMIRAL CONSOLE WALNUT GRAINED FINISH f f effect between the Teepees and seven final which opens Tues- = Babe's mark of 60--but in 162, Barrow 0 Portsmouth 2 " not 154 games. "I think the time limit of 154 * set by Commissioner Ford Frick . will shut them out," he said. Greenberg joined the fast growing list of baseball people who disagree with Frick's ruling that Ruth's mark must be topped in 154 decisions, the same + number engaged in by the Babe in 1927, to count as a record. "I don't think the public will * accept it," said the former De- , troit Tigers slugger who hit 58 » homers in 1958. '"'As far as I'm * concerned, a season is a season whether it's 140, 154 or 162 games." Maris currently leads Mantle, » his New York Yankees team- mate, 56 home runs to 53. Commenting that "the pres- sure is terrific" on Maris and Mantle, Greenberg said: "I {Birmingham 1 Swindon 1 Blackpool 2 Port Vale 0 Bolton 1 Sunderland 1 Bournemouth 2 Torquay 2 Bradford 3 Aston Villa 4 Cardiff 2 Wrexham 0 Chesterfield 2 Norwich 3 Colchester 1 Crewe Alex 2 Doncaster 3 Grimsby 2 Fulham 1 Sheffield 1 Leeds 4 Brentford 1 Lincoln 1 Accrington 0 Luton 2 Northampton 1 Milwall 1 Walsall 2 Newcastle 2 Scunthorpe 0 Preston 3 Aldershot 1 Queens PR 5 Crystal P 2 Reading 4 Chester 2 |Southampton 0 Rochdale 0 Southend 0 Stoke 1 | Tranmere 3 Middlesbrough 6 Workington 3 Coventry 0 York City 3 Bristol C 0 | | Chicago Black Hawks of the day at Vancouver. Other dates|arror, got as far as third] National League. have not yet been announced. but was safe on the catcher's| Golden Turkey base. Talbot pitched the last four] BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS Wins Feature TORONTO (CP) Golden Turkey, owned by A. G. (Bert) | frames and he had almost an| identical record. He also walk- |ed one and he had one batter By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League W L Pet. GBL New York Detroit Baltimore Chicago Cleveland Boston Los Angeles Minnesota Washington Kansas City 100 45 89 56 87 61 78 68 7274 7178 63 81 62 81 54 93 53 93 690 -- 614 11 .588 1414 .534 2214 .493 2814 A477 30 438 3614 A434 37 367 47 366 47 Wednesday's Results New York at Chicago ppd, rain. Kansas City 0 Detroit 8 Los Angeles at Minnesota (2) ppd, rain. San Francisco St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago 59 80 .424 26 Philadelphia 4299 298 44 Wednesday's Results 543 9% 51813 L489 1614 75 63 72 67 68 70 {Chicago at St. Louis ppd, rain. the first inning when Morden |tory for Despirito and Hedges, {Milwaukee 0 Cincinnati 1 Pittsburgh 8 Los Angeles 2 Philadelphia 2 San Francisco 8 Today's Probable Pitchers Philadelphia San Francisco (Loes 6-5) Chicago (Ellsworth 8-11 and with one out Louis Garry and Eldrich both drew Cardwell 1312) at St. (Broglio 9-11 and Simmons 8-10) (Night) (Owens 4-9) ' at|bases in most frames, until the| | get on base via his catcher's|Hedges and ridden by Barry |error but nobody scored. Mc-|Despirito, won the 68th running | Kee fanned four in three frames, of the Maple Leaf Stakes at [Talbot whiffed five in four in lola Woodbine Park Wednes- nings. / Wallace was the pitcher for y Karn's. Black's got a run in It was the first stakes vic- homered with one out and the/@ Toronto district turkey far- bases empty. mer and former National They didn't score again, al- Hockey League and Ontario though they had runners on |Hockey Association referee. Golden Turkey, a three-year- sixth when McMullen homered |old filly, led all the way as she and then Mec- ran the mile in 1:38 1-5, defeat- ing Menelodie by 1% lengths. Victoria Regina finished third. Golden Turkey, which would walks, an infield out and an error at shortstop scored both « ought to know. When I hit my = 57th and 58th home runs in my SCOTTISH LEAGUE cup Quarter-Finals (First Leg) Baltimore 0 Cleveland 5 Boston 2 Washington 4 Pittsburgh (Sturdivant 5-2) at|McGarry and Eldrich, to make Los Angeles (Williams 12-11) it 4.0. the Today's Probable Pitchers (Only games scheduled) The final run came in have been a long shot under or- |dinary circumstances, went to the post as favorite because she Trade $10.00 DOWN DELIVERS $3.00 WEEKLY *229* NEW BUDGET ACCOUNTS WELCOME! . ULTRA-SLIM CONSOLE 1623" DEEP . TOP-FRONT CONTROLS . PUSH-PULL ON-OFF CONTROL . NEW VERTICAL - CONTRAST - BRIGHTNESS CONTROLS . ADMIRAL PIONEERED ETCHED CIRCUIT, 5-YEAR WRITTEN WARRANTY No Outside Financing 9. TINTED OPTIC FILTER MIN- IMIZES REFLECTION AND GLARE . TWO FULL FIDELITY ALNICO V SPEAKERS . 5-YEAR WRITTEN WARRANTY ON ETCHED CIRCUIT BOARD -- 1-YEAR WARRANTY ON PICTURE TUBE -- 90-DAY WARRANTY ON OTHER PARTS 6. NEW "GOLDEN SIGNET" EX- TENDS ""SNOW-FREE" RECEP- TION AREA TO BRING IN DIS- TANT STATIONS SHARP AND BRIGHT . SUPER RANGE FINDER , NEW WIDE ANGLE 23" ALUM- INIZED TUBE PROVIDES FULL 282 SQ. IN. VIEWING AREA 5 YEAR WRITTEN WARRANTY . 149th game, I figured I was a «. cinch. I had five games in which to hit three home runs. I fig- ured I'd have 20 at bats, and even allowing for extra careful pitching, I still figured to get at least 25 good pitches to swing at "But I hadn't counted on the pressure. . , . In my anxiety, I started swinging at bad pitches. Other times, I'd become para- lyzed at the plate. Afraid I would swing at a bad pitch, |Ayr U 4 Stirling 2 {Motherwell 2 St. Johnstone 3 [Rangers 3 East Fife 1 SCOTTISH LEAGUE | Second Division |Arbroath 2 Alloa 0 Brechin 1 Berwick 3 Cowdenbeath 1 Clyde 0 {E Stirling 2 Queen of S 3 Morton 3 Albion 0 |Stranraer 2 Dumbarton 2 'Queens Pk vs East Fife ppd. Milwaukee New York (Sheldon 9-4 and Coates (11-5) at Chicago (Pizarro 13-6 and Herbert 9-12) Kansas City (Shaw Detroit (Foytack 10-9) (Bowsfield 9-6 Los Angeles 10-12) at and McBride 12-12) at Minne- sola (Lee 3.5 and Kaat 7-15) (Only games scheduled) National League W L Pct. GBL Cincinnatl Los Angeles 87 56 79 59 76 64 608 572 5% 543 914 International League Rochester 2 Columbus 1 (Best-of-seven semi-final tied 1.1) Buffalo 7 Charleston 4 (Buffalo leads best - of - seven semi-final 2-0) American Association Houston 6 Indianapolis 0 (Houston wins best-of - seven semi-final 4-1) Denver 5 Louisville 3 (Louisville leads best of seven semi-final 3-2) (7th. Sutton opened with a {single and Mordan was safe on a choice play. Knox grounded out. Then McMullen was safe on an error, after Sutton had been thrown out at the plate. Mordan scored on the error and | then McMullen was thrown out going to third base, was coupled in the wagering with Reluctant Deb which re- cently finished second in the $30,000 Prince of Wales Stakes. Reluctant Deb finished sixth but the entry paid $5.90 to' win. KARN'S DRUGS -- DeGray, | BLACK'S -- Sutton, cf; Mor. 1b; McPhee, cf; Wallace, p; dan, ss; Knox, 1b; McMullen, Brooks, c; Nash, If; Butler, rf; If: McGarry, c¢; Mason, rf; Legree, 3b; Harmon, 2b; Lyons, Clark, 2b; Garrow, 3b; McKee, Judd, p in 6th; Pettes, rf in p; Talbot, p in 4th; Price, 3b'in ot 4th; E in 4th. | Hodgson, ss in Sth. N 8 ne fl -- - el --_-- me -- a Marshall, 2b in 5th and 88 KING WEST 725-4543 *