16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thoredey, April 5, 1962 It's No Cinch Anymore, Picking Stars Is Tough M. McINTYRE HOOD pecial London, England Correspondent To The Oshawa Times LONDON -- European Cup games, English cup replays, and the championship and rele- gation struggles of certain teams are giving the Football Association selectors a hard time of it in lining up the play- ers who will be taken to Chile for the world cup tournament. Players who would normally be taking part as internationals, in which their current form could be assessed, are having to be left out of the team selectors' reckoning until the schedule congestion is cleared up. This is seen in the selection of the 11 players to represent England in its international fix- ture with Austria at Wembley. Jimmy Greaves and Bobby Smith are out because of Tot- tenham's European Cup game with Benfica. Ronnie Clayton and Bobby Robson are also list- ed among the unavailables. So some new talent of a surprising nature is being blooded in the game of Austria. | George Anderson of Sunder-; land, last capped as an under-| | 23 player five years ago, is at right half. Alan Peacock of Middlesbrough, whose last inter- national appearance was in an England youth side seven years ago, is centre forward. And Roger Hunt of Liverpool, the league's leading goalscorer of this season, is played at inside right. All three of these, it is noted, are with second division teams, which may indicate a scarcity of top players in the first division. TO MEET AUSTRIA The 11 players to meet Aus- tria at Wembley are: Springett (Sheffield Wednes-| day); Armfield (Blackpool) and) Wilson (Huddersfield); Ander-| son Sunderland), Swan (Shef-| field Wednesday) and Flowers) (Wolverhampton); Connelly (Burnley), Hunt (Liverpool), Peacock (Middlesbrough), (Manchester United). SCOTS PREPARING Meanwhile, the Scottish FA selectors are doing some pre- paratory training for the big in- ternational of the year, against England at Hampden Park on April 14. They have picked 19 players who will be called to- gether for weekends and train- ing sessions between now and that date. Notable is the fact that of the 19, five are Anglo- Scots and 14 players with Scot- tish teams. The five exiles recalled from England for international duties are goalkeepers Bill Brown and Laurie Leslie, of Tottenham and West Ham respectively, wing- half Dave Mackay of Totten- ham; inside forward John White of Tottenham and Ian St. John, centre forward, of Liverpool. So far, Turin of Italy will not re- lease Denis Law, outstanding Scottish forward, to play against England, but the selectors are still hopeful that he will be available. The 19 players who form the basis of Scotland's hopes for a victory over England and the winning of the home inter- | | Haynes (Fulham) and Charlton national championship, are as | follows: Goalkeepers: Brown (Totten-| |ham); Leslie (West Ham). Backs: Caldow (Rangers), Hamilton Dundee), Kennedy} | (Celtic), Duncan Mackay (Cel-| jtic). | Half-backs: Baxter (Rangers), | Crerand (Celtic), Dave Mackay (Tottenham), McNeill (Celtic), Ure (Dundee). Forwards: Brand (Rangers), Divers (Celtic), Millar Ran- gers), Quinn (Motherwell), Scott (Rangers), St. John (Liverpool), White (Tottenham) and Wilson (Rangers). Some other players in addi- tion to these will also be con- sidered by the selectors before the team to meet England is finally chosen. REMEMBER WHEN... .? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Jes Willard won the world heavyweight boxing cham- pionship 47 years ago today by defeating Jack Johnson over 16 rounds at Havana. Willard lost the crown to Jack Dempsey four years later, | Soccer Players GREAT JOCKEY Take Own Step To Clean-Up LONDON (CP)--The Profes- sional Footballers' Association, union of 2,500 English soccer] players, has taken the first steps towards cleaning up the ame. Each year the PFA is to award a silver trophy to the "most sporting team." The judges will probably be from the Referees' Society. Eddie Arcaro Decides To Hang Up His Tack NEW YORK (AP)--Eddie Ar-;nominated for the Kentucky caro, one of the greatest jockeys|Derby classic. in horse racing history, has| The master, or Old Banana come to the end of his riding|Nose, as many folks called the career after 30 years in the sad-|46-year-old veteran, made offi- die. He might have stuck around/cial his retirement Tuesday another year if Jaipur had been|night. Similar awards are made in Belgium. They are designed to cut out the rough play, flare- ups and tough tackling that have become commonplace in recent years. This season 21 players in the English Football League have been sent off the field. The sea- sonal average is around 20. With three months of the sea- son left, it could be a record year for players getting march- ing orders. One reason put forward for the increase in foul play is the policy of paying win bonuses. Spurred by the thought of re- wards, players pay less heed to the rules. OSHAWA BOWLING NEWS NEIGHBORHOOD LADIES Congratulations to the "Peerse's" on winning the third section with 24 points! Sollins' and Bracey's ended up with 21 h, DePratto's 19; Reading's 18; Me-| de's and Ward's 17; Alexander's| and Ca' *s 15 and Lenius' 14. SPORT SNAPSHOTS Old Stanley Cup Has Fine History By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor When the Chicago cops nabbed the would - be Stanley Cun stealer the other night, it marked yet another incident in the life of the old trophy. All sorts of stories are connected with it but, as far as anyone knows, this was the first time a person tried to cart it off. At least he was a daring the arena without someone ask-|home to show his mother after|Melindiess 226 - 205; ing questions? | ja celebration in a downtown) Next Thursday starts our Playoffs|banquet, let Bob or Flo know no later tit and the following teams will compete] for the Championship. Reading's, Bra- cey's and Pearse's, (Section winners). | Campbell's (high pinfall). The remain-| ing six teams will bowl for the Consola-| tion Trophy. Captains will draw for Al-| leys. Come early! | Again this week Chris Collins was) our top bowler with a dandy 757 triple| (263, 230, 264) Phyl Barnes was next with 660 (278, 227); Maria Cummings 630 (248); Yvonne Duguay 623 (261); Wilma MeQuae 611 (242, 212); Kay Manila 607 ((260); Mildred Witterick 603 (258, 209). Good single games were rolled by-- Marg Gray 253, Helen Legge 246, Mary | Hobbs 246, Ev Broadbent 243, Betty! Pearse 240, Winnie Tennier 234, Dot Mrs. "Mighty- lite' Keeler 223, Enid Greenway 222, 'arg Germond 219, Betty Campbell M | ~ 1 lemon league scores, we feel bad! it is. Remember Invitation Tourna- ment, Saturday, April 7 and if you should have any monies or tickets out please see they are returned next Fri- day, If you are bringing a guest to the iy as the than next Friday. If necessary to bow! off, will be at alleys next Friday, 1 p.m., if this is not convenient, please call, missed your 212 score (Bell), before Joyce ELECTRICAL MAINTENANCE CLUB Standings -- High Tensions 20, Live Wires 17, Dead Shorts 13, Anti Shorts 12, Short Circuits 11, Slow Blows 10, Little Amps 8 and Breaker 85. One more week to go and the scores are starting to rise. The playoffs are - 7 at 1 p.m. sharp and no bowling Marion Hutchins 776 (308, 220, 248), Ab. Hutchins 727 (288, 181, 257), Ross Sutherland 723 (197, 268, 258), Bill Cor- If he had postponed his at-jhotel. He later pitched it overjoi9, Marg Daniels 218, Hazel Rumple|bett 719 (313, 188, 218), Diane Charuk and disguised himself as worker, it's a good bet he would have got away with it. There | because, although Lord Stanley) paid only £10 ($48.67) for it am) 1893, it now is considered a priceless piece of silverware young man, much in the class of people who figure they can pinch those big ashtrays around hotel elevators and get safely out of the place. If he had been successful it would have been the story of the current Stanley Cup series. But the odds were too tough. The Stadium was crawling with ushers and extra police and, FELL FROM AUTO | It has travelled across Canada|; numerous times dating from the! challenge for it. It tumbled out} of an automobile and bounced} along a Montreal street one} dark night in the distant past| and in Ottawa it was supposed) to have been booted into the) after all, how can anyone hide| a four-for-high trophy under} Rideau Canal which, luckily, | was frozen over. | Another time, an Old Ottawa days when any senior club could |S oiey Cup." tempt until the daylight hours!a fence in the dark and then/2i4, Doreen Keleman 213, Julie Roesch ajstarted a laborious search for it in the long grass. There was one incident, would be a lot of screaming|though, that wasn't funny. It happened in 1907 and an irate Kenora Thistle club exec-) utive was heading with the cup) in the general direction of the/zratulations, Norm O'Reilly 804 |Lake of the Woods. He stormed out of a meeting with a declara- ion to cup trustees that '"'they) naver again see the! Archie Moore Is Now Listed Sixth In Heavyweights Richardson, European cham- pion from Wales, was removed from the elite group. NEW YORK (AP) -- Ring magazine today withdrew its recognition of Archie Moore as Sorry 1) world light-heavyweight boxing champion and installed the old gladiator sixth among heavy- weight contenders. Ring, in releasing its latest monthly ratings, declared the light-heavyweight title vacant land named Harold Johnson of Philadelphia recognized as champion by the National Box- jing Association as the No. 1 con- ltender. Johnson meets Doug |Jones of New York May 12 in a ltitle fight which will probably lclear up the disputed cham- |pionship. Ring said it took the action against Moore because major boxing bodies, with the excep- tion of the California State Ath- letic Commission, had followed the lead of the NBA and New York State Athletic Commission in stripping Moore of the crown for failure to defend it in the proper time. Ring noted Moore weighed 197 pounds -- 22 pounds over the light-heavyweight limit of 175-- | Only one Canadian is in the listings, heavyweight Bob Cle- roux of Montreal. He is ranked fourth behind champion Floyd Patterson of New York, Sonny Liston of Philadelphia, Eddie Machen of Portland, Ore., and Zora Folley of Chandler, Ariz. Ring also recognized the fol- lowing as champions: Middle- weight Terry Downes of Eng- land; Welterweight Emile Grif- fifth, New York; "lightweight Joe Brown of Houston, Tex.; featherweight Davey Moore. Co- lumbus, Ohio; bantamweight Eder Jofre, Brazil and flyweight Kingpetch. Arcaro has probably ridden more star horses than any jockey in United States turf an- nals. He quit as the outstanding money rider of all time. No other jockey has won five Ken- tucky Derbies, six Preakness Stakes and six Belmont Stakes. "TI sincerely believe that if Mr. Widener was going to run Jaipur in the derby, I'd have stayed -- another year,"' Arcaro said. Jaipur was a top two-year-old of 1961 and Arcaro rode him, But George D. Widener, chair- man of The Jockey Club and former president of Belmont Park, has a consuming desire to win the Belmont Stakes. He didn't name Jaipur for the May 5 Derby and the colt hasn't raced since last fall. Trainer Bert Mulholland has been tak- ing the colt along slowly with June 9 Belmont in mind, will give his initial 1962 start the $50,000 Gotham Stakes, Sat- wie Or har aaah rearo e tative for the American Totab isator Company, which leases the tote machines at tracks. American Tote is a divi- sion of Universal Controls. Arcaro won a record 849 stakes on tracks in part of the U.S. He rode 4,779 win- ners with total purses of §30,- 039,543, another record. His total victory list is exceeded only by Johnny Longden, with more than 5,500, and Britain's Sir Gordon Richards, with 4,870. The dapper little Italian-Amer- ican from Cincinnati hasn't rid- den in the U.S, since last Nov. 18 at Aqueduct, SPORTS IN BRIEF FORM ASSOCIATION SALISBURY, N.C, (AP) -- A committee of sports reporters from throughout the United States voted Tuesday to form the National Association of Sportscasters and Sportswriters. The vote was taken prior to an annual banquet at which Red Smith of the New York Herald- Tribune was honored as out standing in the United States as a sportswriter and Lindsey Nel- son, of the New York Mets base- ball network, as a sportscaster. WANTS NEW YORK FIGHT NEW YORK (AP) -- Heavy- weight champion Floyd Patter- son returned Tuesday night from a 24%4-week exhibition tour of Egypt and said the date and site of his title fight with Sonny Liston will be announced within two weeks. Patterson said he would like to "fight in New York because it is home" but said Seattle, Minneapolis, Los Angeles and San Francisco are still in the running. | Dervent 651 (223, 264), Josie Brown 639) |666 (213, 224, 224), Lorne Pollard 645 1213, Ede Reading 209, Molly DePratto| '20% 192, 154) and Pat Mowbray 6% |208, Mary Pirie 206, Olive Morrison 206,| 260. 198, 170). |June Smith 206, Gladys Knight 204, 203,) 200 Games -- Glen McGee (237, 227), |Marie Heath 203, May Lenius 203, Bea/Stan Taylor (207, 226), Dan Charuk Alexander 202, Edna Hall 201, Phoebe|(200, 221), Dean Fry (211, 201), Walli |Mullen 291 and Ella Hall 200. |Kappl 251, Lorne Curry 233, Ivan Par- |rott 220, Jean Taylor 219, Ruth Pollard |216, Ruth Parrott 212, Hugh McMahon 211, Betty Corbett 209, Bud Manning 208, Rita Elliott 208, Dud Mills 207 and Ed Solski 200. COF LEAGUE Our two regulars came up with a) solid 800 and 700 triple so again, oy (230, | when he knocked out Alejandro Lavorante, the Argentine con- tender, last week, Lavorante, who had been sixth in the rat- ings, was dropped to eighth. CLEROUX IS FOURTH To make room for Moore in the heavyweight top 10, Dick (294, | 295, 279) and Arn Greene 718 228). 695 234, Len Horace Hartshorn (339, 242), Dick Stata 665 (216, 215), Ron Swartz 654 (242, 216), (217, 263), Douglas Smith 619 (225), SALES REPRESENTATIVE The story was told to Sports|nay Bennet 625 (214, 275), Don Robin-| Editor Bill (Ottawa Journal)/son 609 (260), and Al Smith 604 (253). | Westwick by the late Alf Smith,| «200s -- Vic Pratt 281, Flo Tip-| a great right-winger with the) pett 272, Doug Kerr 244, Ewart Cars-| Silver Seven who was one of!wen 239, Wes Stata 239, Hilda Ridley/ the principals in a big contro |o38, Bill Ejliott 235, 218, Don Brown 224, | versy. Molly Virgin 223, Lucy Peeling 215, Wes | Richards 213, 213, Molly Hartshorn 209, RULED INELIGIBLE |Jim McConkey 209, Cecile Branton 209, TO MANAGE OSHAWA AREA FOR GENERAL INSURANCE (Direct Writer) Guaranteed Salary plus Commission and excellent fringe benefits and working condi- tions. Must own a car. Good education and appearance. For the right man this is a career opportunity with a National Company. Age is no barrier. Insurance experience an asset, but not essential. REPLY WITH ESSENTIAL DETAILS TO BOX 203 OSHAWA TIMES I) PITT pa prepared to pay for it. He was actually heading for the Lake of the Woods to throw it in. "He would have done it, toc, his overcoat and expect to leave|Silver Seven player carried it) It appeared that Smith and/art Peeling 207, Ross Reid 206, Mar- at the time, said the Ottawa|2851 Jets 2.800 Untouchables 2,789,) The 24-year-old champion, whoijplications of brain injuries sus- juries in the bout and died after |Harry (Rat) Westwick, Bill's|garet Gilpin 205, Joyce Bell 205, Joe) players were not eligible to play|"?t™s 278» Aces 2.580. regained the title by knocking|tained as the result of the boxing being hit with pr onia. scattered small traumatic hem- orrhages in the brain substance and were associated with cere- bral concussion." Meanwhile, District Attorney Frank Hogan of New York stepped up his investigation "to determine if culpable heligence is involved." if he hadn't been restrained, and it was no easy job to humor him, "That cup sure was heading for a place at the bottom of the lake." The series was switched to Winnipeg, Smith and Westwick played and Wanderers won 12-8. father, left the Silver Seven to|£!% 2°, 2, Dorothy Eilot 20, 216 join the Thistles who were pre-| Gibbs 200. paring to meet Montreal Wan-| 3ra Section winner, -- Flops with) lerers in a two-game total-point| some pins over the tying team. S0/ series, P. D. Ross and William|{rin, 207 stsptees? asso tears T - R Foran of Ottawa, cup trustees|2,9990, Flops 2,932, Smarties 2,890, Jams| @) 'oe | ke est Y} Possibly by the scores, some felt for Kenora. |same as we, at least the teams would ' 8 i | At one meeting, Smith re-|have fared better with a dummy NEW YORK (CP) -- Emile|ical examiner at Roosevelt Hos-|cajjed, 'a Kenora club official|Sco 8° Won't mar the season listing' Griffith of New York, who fa-|pital, said Tuesday an autopsy|nicked up the cup and prepared| tally injured Benny (Kid) Paret/on Paret "did not reveal any|ty jeaye the room with it." | in their world welterweight title|gross evidence of old brain in-| «askea what he intended to| bout March 24, says "it will be|jury."" |do, he replied that he was fully| some time before I fight again."| 'Death was caused by com-| pr, 7 out Paret in the 12th round of|bout. These injuries consisted of their scheduled 15-rounder, was shaken when he learned of Benny's death at Roosevelt Hos- pital here Tuesday. He said he does not plan to retire, "'but it will be some time before I fight again." Paret, 25, suffered brain in- Griffith said he will "do any- thing in his power" to help Paret's. wife, who has a two- year-old son and expects another child in seven months. "That means money or any other assistance I can render. It also means the future as well as now." There has been criticism that Paret fought too soon after taking a severe beating in a 10- round knockout loss to middle- weight champion Gene Fullmer last Dec. 9. SHOWS NO OLD INJURY Dr. Milton Helpern, chief med- EXPORT PLAIN or FILTER TIP CIGARETTES EVIN APRIL It's al show. the fa BROOK' 4 wea | A a ee to NEW ORLE 'all family' BOAT SHOW See what's new in boating! 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