Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 May 1962, p. 14

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14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, May 9, 1962 3 HAMILTON RED WINGS , their 7-4 victory last night in savor their Canadian «Junior | Kitchener, which gave the Hockey Championship victory | Red Wings the best-of-seven as they drink from the his- | series, four games to one. toric Memorial Cup following | Above, Howie Menard (far Hamilton Red Wings Capture Memorial Cup KITCHENER (CP) -- Three|explosive former defenceman of goals in a minute and 23 sec-|Detroit Red Wings who was de- onds of the third period Tues-jmoted to Edmonton Flyers of day night brought Hamilton|the Western League last season Red Wings their first Memoriallin hopes of cooling him down. Cup. z : Bush emerged from the tus- The scoring spree, climaxingisle unscathed. The policemen a wild game that took 3%/went to hospital with facial cuts hours to complete, gave the/and Young wound up in the jug Wings a 7-4 victory. over Ed-|awaiting possible charges. monton Oil Kings to sew hed b e) The spectators, doing their best-of-seven series act e "@\best to prolong the struggle, <n oe the ice with debris. in He wes : cluding a bottle of green ink. twee Played before. a A further delay was caused in Fat uid ved a cnn oe of the third period when Harri- a teas ae son Gray, Edmonton's brilliant $16,402 at the beautiful Kitch-| -oaltender, wns strack in the ener Memorial Auditorium head by the puck and had to worth more than $9,000 to the retive for stitches two clubs and the biggest gate vistiabe : : : in the hockey history of this) The Kings, trying desperately city, the home of Kitchener-|t0 keep alive, more than held Waterloo Beavers of the East-|their own until Hamilton cut ern Professional League. loose in the final period. 'It was a lot of hard work! Lowell MacDonald scored by a lot of good hockey players|twice for the new champions as that won it for us," summed up|/did Wayne Rivers. Howie Me- Hamilton coach Eddie Bush/nard, Pit Martin and Paul Hen after the smoke had settled. {derson added singles Marc Dufour, Roger Bourbon- FIGHT IN STANDS nais, Butch Paul and Vince And.smoke there was -- not/nowney scored for the western- only on the ice but in thelors, stands, where two fights devel-| oped. |COACH PHILOSOPHICAL One involved Bush, Det. Sgt.| Edmonton coach Buster Bray- Charles Bignell of the Kitch-|shaw, who has led the Wings ener police and Howie Young,'in two of three successive Me- SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell | SPORTS EDITOR | 'Everything From Soup To Nuts WILD SCENES and hockey history featured the final game of the 1961-62 Memorial Cup, Canadian Junior hockey championship series, last night in the Kitchener Auditorium. Hamilton Red Wings won the game 7-4, to clean up the series in five games but it was closer and more exciting than this score might indicate. Red Wings grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first period, one of the goals being a rather fortunate deflected shot, off an Edmonton player. The Oil Kings snapped back with two quickies in the second stanza and then went ahead, for a brief time, 3-2. But in the third period, the Red Wings broke up the game and salted away their first Memorial Cup for Hamilton with three goals in 83 seconds. The game, delayed by fights in the stands and an ice-littering session or two, took three-and-a- half hours to play. Biggest hockey crowd in the history of Kitchener's beautiful ice palace, a sellout of 7,071, was on hand and the gate receipts of $16,402 meant more than $9,000 for the two clubs. A turnout of hockey fans in such numbers 'as late as the 8th of May--could trigger some thoughts of having a Junior "A" team, in the minds of Kitchener- Waterloo hockey men and with their Junior "'B" champions --Waterloo Siskins--as a nucleus, this could quite easily hap- pen, Something else that could also happen--Memorial Cup finals, when played in the East--may never leave Maple Leaf Gardens again! SO MUCH for the facts and figures. The main excite- ment, other than the enthusiastic and jubilant celebration of the several thousand Hamilton fans, was provided by Howie Young, former Detroit Red Wing NHL performer, who early this past winter was demoted to the Edmonton Fylers, Young apparently set himself up as No, 1 rooter-tooter for the Oil Kings of Edmonton and no doubt the fact that the opposition, Wings, had something to do with his boisterous enthusiasm Hamilton Red Wings, are directly sponsored by Detroit Red Young got into a scrap with Hamilton coach, Eddie Bush, and he was finally escorted from the Kitchener Auditorium -- to jail, and he may have faced charges this morning. At any rate, a Kitchener policeman, a Detective-Sgt., received facial cuts in the hassle and required medical attention. * Bush eame out unscathed. BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa Lawn Bowling Club holds its annual spring meeting tomorrow evening, at the clubhouse, just another of the certain signs that summer sports activity is just around the corner -- like the corner of the holiday weekend coming up in 10 days time ... TORONTO LEAFS, who open their home season this afternoon, will have their games broadcasted, most of them, this season, by Radio Station CFGM, with Joe Crysdale and Tim Ryan doing . the play-by-play of both home and away games, on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and Canadian holiday dates. Fridays will be full game coverage, Saturdays will see home games at two o'clock broadcasted and the away night games will be done in full also. Sundays it will be the second games only and holidays Mondays, second games only. Away broadcasts will be dramatized, from wire reports. ewe ee [Emille Griffith 'Memory NEW YORK -- The fighter sat in a wooden chair and stared at his hands. How many times he has done this since the night of March 24, 1962, he cannot say. But the fear always is the same. There will come another night when a man will knock on his dressing-room door and shout, "C'mon, you're on, champ." He will walk down the aisle to the ring in his sill: bathrobe, and pray nobody yells: "That's Griffith, the killer." "If it happens," Emille Grif- fiths said yesterday, "I'll just try. not to hear it. I did not mean to kill him. God knows this." In the twelfth round of a welterweight itle fight at Madi- son Square Garden on March 24 -- a round that neither time nor glorious triuniph ever will erase from the fighter's memory -- Emile Griffith knocked Benny (Kid) Paret against the ropes and belted him senseless. Ten days later, Paret died of brain injuries without regaining con-| sciousness. For nights after the knockout Griffith could not sleep. And Ithen, a few nights before The Kid died, Emile Griffith had a --CP Wire |dream: se la cas | "I was at a fight. I don't re-| jmember who. was fighting. I went home, closed my door be- |hind me and went to sleep. Soon |I wakened, sat up and saw Benny standing in front of my bed. He was all dressed up. I said to him, 'Hi, how ya doing? What are you doing here?' he} didn't answer me." Gil Claney, Griffith's co-man- ager who is also a close friend of the fighter, has attempted to convince Emile that he must staal left-to-right, are 'Pit' Martin, John Gofton, Jack Wildfong and Earl! Heiskala. | right) holds the cup for | teammate Jim Peters, in the room following the dressing i In the background, | | triumph. jused only the Is Disturbed By Of Paret life must go on -- for his sake and theirs." And so Griffith tries to keep from thinking of March 24, 1962. He organized a teen-aged soft- ball team and coaches the boys every afternoon. He watched television and movies, took laugh, Then, a week ago, he got into a ring for the first time since March 24 -- and his memory became champion. For 45 minutes he hesitantly wrapped his hands in adhesive 10 minutes. Clancy put the gloves and the headguard. on him and told him to work over the heavy bag. Griffith pushed a soft right into it and walked away. "T started to think a little of Benny," he said. So he skipped rope and in a few minutes he was in the ring, sparring with a _ lightweight named Jackie Kelley. Emile jab. Once he backed Kelley against the ropes. The champion dropped his hands and walked away. or a cross,"' he said. Griffith said he would like a tune-up bout before putting his title on the line. Clancy appar- ently feels that a title fight would be best. "It might make him go all out,"" he said, 'where he may hesitate otherwise." Clancy looked for a sign of approval from the fighter. There was none. Griffith just stared at his hands and said: "It isn't possible. These hands are so small. How can they hurt morial Cup defeats, was philo-/ WHOOPS IT UP sophical. Young had been serving as} "I thought we deserved a bet-| seif-appointed cheerleader for ter fate tonight," he said. "I)the Oil Kings the previous two jthought we more than matched games, Tuesday night, dressed continue his career. "Boxing has been good to him,"' Clancy said. "It enabled him to bring nis family together someone like that?' There will come another night and the fear always is same. them, but they only count thejin black 10-gallon hat and cow- shots that go in boy boots, he was leaping to the| In shots on goal, the play|rail and whooping it up for the! was close. Gray stopped 26,| western visitors. Buddy Blom of Hamilton 27.) tyentually he was asked by |There were 19 minor penalties); 34 Crosby, manager jof which the Wings drew 10. to| Kitchener Memorial Gardens, |to take his seat. Hamilton was lucky jemerge from the first period! B ; ale Che Jack Roxburgh of Simcoe, jwith a 2-0 lead on goals by cs : |Henderson and MacDonald, the|President of the Canadian Ama-| Hatter deflecting past Gray off|teur Hockey Association, said) Bourbonnais' skate. he will recommend to the as-| Edmonton scored twice {n| Sociation that Young be barred half a minute of the second pe-|{rom all rinks staging CAHA) riod to tie it up on goals by Du. |5@mes. , |four and Bourbonnais and Paul| Roxburgh also said: he will jput. them ahead with a 40-|make a full report of the mat- footer through Blom's legs./ter to Clarence Campbell »presi-| Martin quickly got that one/dent of the National Hockey} |back, setting the stage for the|League, who has jurisdiction Ifinal onslaught. over professional hockey. METS OUT OF CHICAGO (AP) -- Casey Stengel peered out of the dug- out at Wrigley Field --the first time he had been there since leading his old Boston Braves against Chicago Cubs in 1943. "Must be a dozen fans up | in them stands," said the New | York Mets manager. "Must be cold weather. It couldn't be because the Cubs are play- | ing us." | The opening of the three- | game series--the battle of the National League cellar--actu- ally drew 1,396 customers Tuesday. Ii was the smallest Wrigley Field gathering of the season, The Cubs lost 3-1 as Jay Hook stifled them on four hits in his second route-going performance of the 1962 cam- Coach Eddie Bush Praises Everybody KITCHENER (CP)--"It was; Bush added that his club had CELLAR, CASEY CAN STILL JEST Billy Williams and George and to take care of them, His tape. It's a job that usually takes "T was afraid to throw a hook the! ews wee 7 walks with Clancy and tried to} ? g | passes out some sage advice to his club. The Mets emerg- ed from the National League cellar yesterday for the first time by beating Chicago Cubs 3-1 and it was the first CASEY STENGEL, in a typical pose for the old vet eran, is shown leaning out of the New York Mets' dugout yesterday in Chicago, with the pointing finger as he | | | By JIM HACKLEMAN |ping in with vital hitting help.) Associated Press Sports Writer Cepeda slugged a two-run dou- | | San Francisco's surging Gi-| ble against Jackson (3-3) in the} we time since the new club en- tered competition that Casey had been able to raise them above last place in the stand- ings, -AP Wirephote Skys The Limit As Giants Soar Reliever Ron Perranoski (2-0) was the winner, Altman gave the Mets two |ants march on while other Na-|first inning, then he and Alou|COLTS HIT FREELY unearned runs as they climbed out of the basement for the first time while the Cubs dropped to the last spot. Stengel was in a talkative mood. He told reporters: "Our pitching staff is really shattered and I always have a lot of rearranging to Wi vis "And that reminds me. We lost nine of 11 games at home in the Polo Grounds, The secret there --and I found it out when I was playing for the Giants in 1921-22-23 --is to keep the pitches low and make the batters hit to cen- tre field. If you have a good centre fielder you are all right. Apparently we aren't getting our opponents paign. Fielding errors by a lot of hard work by a lot ofjplayed 85 games this season to hit to centre field." good hockey players that won it}and lost only 17. for us," said Hamilton Red) "That's a lot of hockey and I} Wing coach Eddie Bush after|thought we were starting to run| his team won its first Memorialjout of steam in the last two BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS Cup here Tuesday night. games of this series."' "It was a tough series, too,""; Seven of the Red Wings were he shouted over the tumult of a|Playing their last junior game) jubilant band of Red Wings|in addition to Macdonald, whooping it up in the dressing)Howie Menard, Roger Lafren- room following their 7-4 victory|iere, Larry Ziliotto, Ron Harris, over Edmonton Oil Kings that|Joe Bujdoso and Wayne Rivers| Pittsburgh gave them the series four|80 Over age this year. |Los Angeles games to one General manager Leo Leclerc] Philadelphia Bush was high in his praise of Edmonton added one bright | Cincinnati lof the players, but also credited Note despite the fact his team| Houston lgeneral manager Sid Bibby and|!@d just gone down to its third|/Milwaukee owner Ken Soble for a share of|St'aight Memorial Cup defeat.|New York the Hamilton victory, And he|eclere said gate receipts from| Chicago also had some kind words 'for the five games of the series Detroit Red Wing farm direc-|Were just about the best ever|\New York 600001 200- 3 70) ltor Jimmy Skinner, who helped as far as he was concerned. Chicago 100 000 000 - 1 43] jprovide talent for this year's! Hook (2-1) and Taylor; Card-| . well, B. Anderson (6)} jis an Ontario Hockey Associa- YESTERDAY S [Schultz (8) Hobbie (9) and Ber-) jtion Junior A farm team for De-| tell, Thacker (3). "It's the biggest thrill 'Ive STARS St. Louis ... 000 011 001- .3 .50 ever had," forward Lowell Mac- Marichal (5-2) and Bailey, loften get a chance to win the| Pitching -- Jay Hook, Mets,|/(8) and Sawatski. HRs: StL-- 'Memorial Cup." |pulled New York out of Na-| Musial 2 (5) Sawatski (4). hitter that beat Chicago Cubs Cincinnati 000 010 021- 4151) Macdonald, who scored eight) 3-1. Short (1-1) Green (8). Bald- goals in the series, 24, in the championship team. Hamilton (0-4) troit. San Fran, 200 000 020. 4 91 donald said, "You don't very;By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Haller (8); Jackson (3-3) Bauta tional League cellar with' four-| Phila. 051 002 000- 6103 TEEPS TOUGH TOO Batting -- Al Kaline, Tigers,|schun (9) and White; O'Toole playoffs and 70 over the entire|drove in four runs with his|(2-4) Nunn (5) Ellis (7) Bros- By THE CANADIAN PRESS: | National League | WL Pct. GB 6.788 6254 | 609 5 593 5 545 614 3 .480 8 L| | San Francisco ~ |St. Louis 14 .417 934 | 5 16 .238 13 6 20 .231 14%) National League | season, felt the only. other club/eighth homer, a triple and ajnan (9) and Edwards, HR:Pha/Dallas-Fort Worth 6 Oklahoma! dians t to give the Red Wings as tough/single, helping snap a_five-|--Klaus (1). as Edmonton was St. Cath-|game losing streak in Detroit's|Los Ang. 103 0200003- 9152) jarines Teepees in the OH/10-1 victory over Los Angeles | Houston 001 003 2000- 6112) semi-finals. Angels. Koufax, 1. Sherry (6) Perran-| Regan (2-2) and Brown; Grba (1-1) Botz (3) Donohue (6) Fowler (6) Morgan (9) and Rodgers. HRs: Det--Kaline (8); LA--Bilko (3), Probable Pitchers Today Boston (Monbouquette 2-2) at New York (Ford 2-1). nesota (Kralick 1-2) night. Detroit (Regan 1-2) at Los Angeles (Bowsfield 1-0) night. Kansas City (Rakow 3-1) at |Baltimore (Pappas 2-1) night. Chicago (Buzhardt 4-1) and Herbert 1-1) at Washington Ru- dolph 0-0 and Hamilton 0-0) night. International League Unchanged from Tuesday Tuesday's Results No games scheduled Games Today Jacksonville at Toronto Atlanta at Buffalo Rochester at Richmond (N) Syracuse at Columbus (N) American Association Tuesday's Results City 10 Louisville 1 Indianapolis 2 Omaha 3 Denver 7 SPORTS BRIEFS REFEREE RUBY GOLDSTEIN "ts ssi 8 'HAS SLEEPLESS NIGHTS son, Umbricht (3) Cicotte (6) Tiefenauer (1-1) (7) Ferrell (10) and Ranew. | NEW YORK (AP) be | | for the world welterweight smoked eight cigars a day | championship. before the fight, now I'm up Paret remained in a coma Houston (Stone 2-1) night. | to 18, I couldn't tell you how | for 10 days and finally died | Pittsburgh (Francis 1-2) at; } Many sleepless nights I've | in the early morning of April |Milwaukee (Piche 1-0) night. had." | 3. The tragedy brought down Philadelphia (Mahaffey 2-3) t. tuby Goldstein, the referee, | a landslide of criticism on |at Cincinnati (Purkey 4 - 0) is still living with the night- | Goldstein and worldwide de- | night. | | mare of the death from ring | mands that boxing be banned. New York (Jackson 1-3) injuries six weeks ago of A former fighter himself, |Chicago (Ellsworth 2-3), Benny (Kid) Paret, the Cuban | Goldstein said if he had a American League fighter choice today he wouldn't go 5 WL Pct. GBL| j "To say I had some (sleep- | into boxing and wouldn't per- ; 7 667 i | less nights) would be putting | mit his son to do it, but he 619 1 | | it mildly, even though I felt 560.2 | then, as I do now, that I acted * properly in halting the bout when I did," Goldstein said in an interview. "Any human with respect for his fellow man, with senti- ment and sympathy, would react the same way." | Goldstein, a veteran official, | was the third'man in the ring at Madison. Square Garden that fateful night of March 24 when Emile Griffith ham- | mered Paret into insensibility in the 12th round in a fight Probable Pitchers Today | San Francisco (Sanford 3-1) St. Louis (Simmons night. | Ic New York 14 Cleveland Minnesota |Los Angeles |Chicago |Boston | Detroit Kansas Cily Baltimore | Washington | Cleveland would not outlaw the sport. Goldstein said the harrow- ing_experience had convinced him that there were more reasonable than unreasonable people in the world. Of the some 135 letters he had re- ceived after the fight, only 19 | were critical, and 10 of these, he said, came from apparent crackpots Would he ing? "Why not?" Goldstein re- plied. 'I'll work if they call me." 524 3 520 3 500 344 .476 4 462 4% 2 455 4M .200 9% 002 000 202- 6 90) Minnesota 000010002- 3111 Donovan (5-0) Latman (9) and Romano; Kaat (1-4) Boni- | kowski (7) Stange (8) and Bat- |tey. HR: Min--L. Green (3). | Detroit 205 002 001 - 10120 |Los Angeles 000010 000- 1 62 continue referee- HAS BIG LEAD | DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) -- Ar-|Tasby nold Palmer, the golfer with the 4-0)|midas touch, leads other profes-| jsionals by more than $20,000 in| 'rhe 99-year-old Los Angeles (Podres 1-2) at the 1962 money-winning range. | pit ' The professional Golfers As- sociation said Tuesday Palmer has won $52,308. In second place on the PGA's weekly list of top 10 wage earners is Bill Casper Jr. with $31,008. They are followed by Gene Littler, $25,391; Phil Rodgers, $20,114; Bob Nichols, $19,228; Doug Sanders, $16,984; Jack Nicklaus, $15,907; Gary Player, $15,380; Mike Souchak, $15,219; and Dow Finsterwald, $14,244. HURLER DEMOTED BOSTON (AP) --Tracy Stal- lard, the man who threw the 61st home run ball to Roger Maris, was sent back to the minors Tuesday by Boston Red Sox. The 24 - year - old right- Boston's farm club at Seattle in the Pacific Coast League. He had only a one-inning relief job this season. Billy Muffett, another handed pitcher, to Seattle. right- tional League contenders stand|connected for successive dou-| still--or worse. And whatever|Cessive doubles in the eighth,| |became of that multiple-team, breaking a 2-2 tie. Bailey came |wire-to-wire pennant race? through with a single, deliver- | Taking on their closest pur- ce ig proved to be the win- le x 4 itehi ad lea Pella pier noe The Cards hit the long ball! | esis sda} . riants vainst Marichal h d lcarried away a 4-3 victory over|282!nst Marichal, a homer an ist outs: Candinaln: Haan |double by Stan Musial, a homer at. Hoult §, boosting by Carl Sawatski and Ken Boy-| their lead to four games. fags fae uctbar ee eee at et er's double, Sawatski's homer} To gain the narrow win, the and Boyer's double came in} Giants had to beat Larry Jack-|the bottom of the ninth, but son--who'd whipped them eight|Marichal weathered the upris-| straight times over a two-sea-|ing for his fifth complete game} son span--and withstand a late|and the ninth in 11 games for Cardinal threat: But they did|Giant pitchers. | both on the pitching of Juan| The amazing 41-year-old Mu-| Marichal (5-2) and the hitting|sial, with a host of records al-| of Orlando Cepeda, winning for|ready to his credit and on the! the 12th time in the last 13) way to more, climbed into the} | games. league batting lead with a .388 | Meanwhile, Los Angeles Dod- @Verage. ee gers counter - rallied against] The Dodgers dissipated a Houston Colts for a 9-6 deci-|five-run lead against the ram-| The Colts collected 10 hits « against Sandy Koufax and Larry Sherry, who also gave up a bases-filled walk apiece. Cincinnati was given one chance after another by Phila- delphia's shaky pitching and de- fence, banging out 15 hits, drawing four walks and helped... along by three Phillie errors. But the telling figure was the - 16 runners stranded by the | Reds. Winning southpaw Chris { Short (1-1) yielded 12 hits be- :: fore he was replaced in the * eighth by Dallas Green, who was tagged for Frank Robin- son's two-run single. Jack Bald- schun took over in the ninth * with one on, gave up two sin- « gles, then set down the final three batters. Billy Klaus' two-run homer ; was the big hit as the Phils sion in 10 innings, Philadelphia Phillies trimmed Cincinnati Ri JACKSON VICTIMIZED ylipe Alou and Ed Bailey chip- | | By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Cleveland general | bunctious Colts but pulled' it|built a 4-0 lead against Jim out behind the hitting of rookie|O'Toole (2-4) and they nailed it - pinch single. eds 6-4 and New York Mets\Larry Burright and Maury|down with two more off Howie ; got out of last place for the first| Wills. Burright, who tripled and) Nunn in the sixth. time in their young history and|@oubled earlier, legged out a The Mets eased out of the cel- shoved Chicago Cubs int othe|bunt single off Bob Tiefenauer lar with help from the Cubs' cellar by downing them 3-1. The| (1-1) with two away in the 10th erratic outfield. One New York Braves and Pittsburgh Pirates|49d moved to third on Frank)run came in when Billy Wil- |were rained out at Milwaukee, Howard's Wills) liams muffed a pop fly for his cashed in the winner with his|}second two-base error of the ; third single of the night, then|game and the Mets wrapped The Marichal-Cepeda combin-|two more runs scored on Dick|it up when Felix Mantilla's key Merritt Ranew's bad throw. 'Castotts Earn : Keep, ndians Down Twins |Gabe Paul has come up with a|played. Boston-New York, Kan- pair of key additions to the In- jdians in pitcher Dick Donovan jand outfielder Willie Tasby. The two often-peddled play- | sas City-Baltimore and Chicago- Washington were postponed due to rain. Donovan had a 6-1 lead going ers, both acquired from Wash-|into the ninth when the Twins, ington inesota Twins Tuesday jthat pulled second-place Cleve- land within one game of the| gle chased'Donovan. Reliever eague-leading New| Barry Latman gave up singles to Rich Rollins and Harmon |Killebrew before ending it by|by Steve Bilko. Eli Grba (1-1) jAmerican I |York Yankees. | Paul got Donovan in the trade that sent Jim Piersall to Wash- ington and raised a howl from Cleveland fans. He_ picked for two lesser lights in |brow. Tasby, who .251 last season, made his first start for the Indians and} responded with a 2-for-5 perfor mance, knocking in three runs, the clincher in a two-run sey- fenth inning. cause with a_bases- Single that his own loaded stroked his hit. without a loss. Meanwhile, Al Kaline drove jin four runs with his eighth jhomer, a triple and a single, WAS WORLD CHAMP | €INCINNATI (AP)--Freddie \handed pitcher was optioned to|Miller, 51, world feather-weight {boxing champion from 1933 to 11936, died Tuesday |books show Miller fought 237 two draws 'and three no cisions. accounted | @onzalez, Phil for one run before Tasby|Dalrymp Tasby's clincher provided), Donovan with his fifth victory)" Boston also sold|times. He won 210, lost 22, hadjnati, O'Dell de-|Francisco .and Simmons, 'Louis, 4-0, 1.000. Senators, carried the In-|with a four-game win streak on 0 a 6-3 triumph over Min-|the line, began to make menac- night/ing gestures. Lennie Green's homer after Bernie Allen's sin- striking out pinch-hitter George Banks, Jim Kaat (1-4 )was the UP! loser. The Indians had just scored | Cleveland (Bell 2-1) at Min-|ation paced the Giants, with Fe-| Farrell's wild pitch and catcher! single skittered through George Altman's legs. \leading Detroit Tigers to a 10-|half of the inning as Ty Cline . | triumph over Los Angeles An- manager| gels in the only other game jdrove in one and the other jscored when Don Dillard crashed into Twins' first base- man Don Mincher as he |stretched for a bad throw. Min- |cher had to be carried from the field, and was taken to a hospi- tal with a possible concussion, While Kaline was providing the hitting, Phil Regan pro- vided solid pitching for the Ti- gers to snap a five-game losing skid. Regan (2-2) limited the Angels, winners of four in a row, to six hits--one a homer | i took the loss after allowing Ka- |line's first inning two-run homer and opening the door for a five- run third with a two-base throw- | a deal that raised not an eye- two insurance runs in the topling error, MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS National League AB RH Pct. In that stanza, Donovan aided Musial, St. Louis 67 14 26 .388 Kuenn, San Fran 63 17 24 .381 64 14 24 .375 le, Phil 60 11 21 .350 F.Alou, San Fran 27 18 38 .349 Runs -- Mays, San Francisco, Runs Batted In -- Cepeda, San Francisco, 31. Hits -- F. Alou, 38. Doubles -- Robinson, Cincin- nati, T. Davis, Los Angeles and Oliver and Boyer, St .Louis, 8. Triples -- Williams, Chicago, 4, Home Runs -- Mays, 10. Stolen Bases -- Wills, Los An- Record geles, 10. Purkey, and Pierce' Pitching _ Cincin- San St, inclulding what proved to be BY THE CANADIAN PRESS _ Strikeouts -- Koufax, Los An- geles, 62. American League AB RH Pet. 64 10 25 .391 97 11 37 .381 60 19 22 .367 Jimenez, K City Robinson, Chi |Mantle, N.Y. |Kaline, Detroit 87 20 31 .356 Rollins, Min 97 15 34 .351 Runs -- Del Greco, Kansas City, 23. Runs Batted In--Robinson, 27, + Hits--Robinson, 37. Doubles--Del Greco, 12. Triples--Cimoli, Kansas City, 4. Home Runs--Wagner, Los An- | geles, 9. Stolen cago, 9 Pitching Donovan, land, 5-0, 1.000. » Strikeouts |cago, 32. Bases--Aparicio, Chi- Cleve- Pizarro, Chi-

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