Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Sep 1962, p. 10

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ye eteeae ae . iiiiaiia x sts I Sm AO, : [ 1]-INNING BATTLE WO THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, september 4, 1702 AN EXTRA LOAD doesn't bother George Dixon too much --when he knows its a pay- load. The Montreal Alouette ground-gainer. (No. 28) is shown here toting the ball and @ little extra weight, Hamil- ton Tiger-Cat Grant McKee (17) over the goal-line for yesterday's 25-25 tie. Dixon had taken a pass from quart- er-back Sandy Stephens to Montreal's first hdown in lete this scoring play. Montreal's Marvin Luster (72) is shown at right and Tiger- Cat Joe Zuger (9) at the left. -- (CP Wirepnoto) Tied With Tiger-Cats, Al's Miss Point Kick Twice In Last 22 Secs. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The scene was Hamilton's| to be exact--with 22 seconds to @o. The score: 25-25. Montreal Alouettes had pos- session of the ball with Hamil- ton Tiger-Cats goal within pass- ing, running or kicking range. Montreal's Cam Fraser kicked into a strong east wind and prayed for a single point. Ron Howell kicked back. Ham- itton was called for a no-yards penalty and play started again on the Ticats' 25-yard-line. «Fraser kicked again. Howell réturned the kick again. But this time the gun went to end tWe game. And the Alouettes h@tt missed a glorious change to break the deadlock. at. was a wild end to a wide- ence game in which the Tiger-| Cats failed to catch the first-| the league race. | BEAT ARGOS The Riders had solidified their hold at the top of the ladder Saturday with a 26-8 victory over Toronto Argonauts, the only Canadian Football League team that hasn't collected a point this season. The Monday tie was-a dra- matic come-from-behind effort for Hamilton, the only CFL club that hasn't lost a game this sea- son. The Ticats broke loose for 22 points in the third quarter to overcome a 22-3 count. Each team scored three con- verted touchdowns, a field goal and a single. George Dixon, Sandy Stephens and Bobby Lee open Eastern Football Confer- Thompson scored the Montreal, touchdowns, Bobby Jack Oliver! Nobby Wirkowski's debut as Belleville Belleville Trudeau Motors 17-2 in the third and deciding game of the OASA Intermediate "AA" series, at Port Hope, on Satur- day evening, to capture the Eastern Ontario zone honors. The Vending squad had their ace Ron Taylor back from his holidays for this big game and he made it a big win with a brilliant four-hit pitching chore, striking out 11 batters and walk- ing one, of the 13 he faced in the first four frames. He added eight more strikeout victims before it was over, for a total of 19. Plata opened the fifth inning for Belleville with a single, their first hit of the game. Sheridan followed with a single, Baker popped up then Casey singled to score Plata and Sheri- dan came home when Powers was safe on Nelson's error. Taylor then fanned the next two batters and faced only 13 more in the last four innings. Whiting opened the 9th with a walk but Taylor got the next three, two via the strikeout method. While Belleville batters could do little or nothing against the Oshawa pitching, the Pic-0- Mats, on the other hand, -pound- ed out 17 safeties for the same number of runs. They opened their scoring with three runs in the third, after Jack Mackness had walked in the second but | was thrown out trying to score on Harry Snow's long double. In the third, with one out, Bill Berwick singled, Dan Tur- eski doubled, Nelson grounded Pic-O-Mats Oust Oshawa Pic-O-Mats defeated, Club then George Brabin tripled and scored on Armstrong's single. Belleville's -defense cracked wide open in the fifth. Berwick was safe on an error to start it off then Tureski walked. Nelson singled but was forced by Bra- bin, as Tureski scored. Arm- strong grounded out, then Joe Melnick drew a walk, Mack- ness was safe on an error and Harry Snow smashed a homer to complete a six-run rally, that made the score-board read 9-2. By this time, Powers had giv- en way. to Day and in the very next inning, Pic-O-Mats scored another half-dozen runs, this time on three walks and five hits, including two hits in the same inning by Bill Berwick and two-baggers by Taylor, Mel- nick and pinch-hitter Jack Sned- don, A couple more in the 7th com- pleted Oshawa's total. George Brabin paced the Osh- awa attack with a pair of triples and a two-bagger. Bill Berwick had three singles while Tureski, Nelson, Melnick, Snow and Tay- lor all had two hits apiece. BELLEVILLE: -- Wardaugh, ss; Potter, c; Whiting, 3b; L. Wannamaker, cf; Plata, = If; Sheridan, 1b; Baker, 2b; Casey, rf; Powers, p; Day, p in 5th; LeSage, ss in 7th; Maraw, cin th. OSHAWA:--Berwick, cf; Tur- eski, 1b; Nelson, ss; Brabin, If; Armstrong, 2b; Melnick, c; Mackness, 3b; Snow, rf; Tay- lor, p; Sneddon, 1b, batted in 6th and Campbell, 3b, batted in 6th. n |kicked three converts and the|Argonaut coach at Ottawa Sat-) Civic Stadium--the 19-yard line} place Ottawa Rough Riders injfield goal, Fraser added a sin-|urday didn't make much differ- gle. raced 104 yards on the second- half opening kickoff for the| Tiger-Cats' first touchdown and} Hal Patterson and Garney Hen- ley each added another. Suth- erin kicked three converts and ee field goal and Zuger the sin- gle. FALONEY HURT | uarterback Bernie Faloney injured his right hand in the first half and aggravated a knee injury in the fourth tent of the injuries w: known but he is considered a doubtful starter for the Ticats' next game, Monday against Winnipeg Blue Bombers in Hamilton. ence as far as the Rough Riders | For Hamilton, Tommy Grant|were concerned. Argos couldn't cope with Ottawa's short pass- ing in suffering their fourth straight defeat. Canadian quarterback Russ Jacksgn twice fired touchdown passes to halfback Ron Stewart from inside Toronto's 10-yard jline. He clicked. on a third to |Ernie White and Moe Racine kicked three converts, a field goal and a single. Jim Conroy also had a single. For Toronto, quarterback Tom Dublinski, subbing for the injured Tobin Rote, threw a 12- yard pass to Ron Stover for a touchdown and Bill Mitchell converted. Dave Mann got Ar- gos' other point on a single. Allison Helps Twins Gain One On Yankees By. JIM. HACKLEMAN Associated Press Sports Writer 'it Bob Allison is straightening out for the stretch drive, it id prove a big factor in Winnesota Twins' longshot ctack at the American. League pennant. {The hefty outfielder, whose batting graph for the season les a seismograph chart, had:one of his most productive afternoons of the year Monday a&the Twins swept a double- header from Washington Sena- térs. 9-3 and 4-3. 'Allison opened up a decisive fi burst' with a second- inning single in the first game and won the second with a three-run homer in the eighth-- his fifth hit. and second homer of the day. The Twins closed to within three games of the league- leading New York Yankees, who split a twin bill with Los Angeles Angels. The Yanks cut 'loose for five runs in the seventh inning and ran off with the opener 8-2, but the Angels staged a rally of their own in the ninth inning of the second game and won 65. The third-place Angels re- mained 4% lengths behind New York. Detroit Tigers continued their domination over Baltimore and took over fourth place with two victories over the Orioles, 1-0 in 10 innings and 4-1, Cleveland Indians edged Chicago White Sox 43 and 6-5 and Kansas City Athletics divided with Boston, the Athletics taking the first game 8&5 and the Red Sox winning the second 3-1. TWINS LOSE SATURDAY The Twins dropped a 5-4 deci- sion to Boston Saturday. Balti- more belted Cleveland 8-2, New York beat Kansas City 3-1, Detroit edged Chicago 2-1 and Washington defeated Los An- geles 3-2 in 11 innings, New York picked up a 2-1 triumph over Kansas City Sun- day. Minnesota beat Boston 5-2, Los Angeles decisioned Wash- ington 4-2 and Chicago defeated Detroit 10-8. Baltimore swept a doubleheader against Cleveland 4-1 and 2-1. Allison, league rookie of the year in his 30-homer season of 1959, has seen his batting ave- rage fluctuate radically since April and is now at .261. He led off the second inning of the first game Monday with a single off Bob Baird before the Sen- ator rookie gave up three straight walks. The Twins Pushed across three more runs off. Ed Hobaugh on a ground out, a fly and Rich Rollins' OLD COUNTRY | SOCCER . double. Allison homered in the fifth inning with one on. New Records Set LONDON (Reuters) -- Re- sults of soccer matches played inthe United Kingdom Monday Football League Cup To! 2 0 ienesre 2 Carlisle 3 English League Division J 1 2 Notts F 1 wast Ham 1 Liverpool 0 Division IIIf Miliwall 5 Hull City 1 Port Vale 4 Colchester 2 Queen's P R 4 Crystal P 1 Southend 3 Shrewsbury 1 Division 1V Chesterfield 1 Stockport 2 Hartlepools 6 Darlington 2 N 2 Lincoln 1 3 Barrow 3 Scottish League Division Tt Arbroath & Cowdenbeath 1 At Old Woodbine _TORONTO (CP) -- Old Wood- bine concluded the most successful meeting in its eight- year-history as a harness-racing track Saturday night when 9,207 patrons boosted the 54-night attendance to 355,828. Wagering over the two-month period totalled $14,280,942, an increase of $1,953,366 over 1961, Top event on the closing card, a $4,000 invitation pace, was taken in a swift 2:02.2 by So Long's Prince owned by Mrs. Edmond Filion of Angers, Que., and guided by Henri Filion. Filion and his gelding held off a challenge by Keith Waples, driving Bucky North from the Miron Brothers' Stable of St. Augustin, Que. New wagering records were set @n closing day on the double Minnesota was trailing 3-1 with two out in the eighth inning of the second game when Allison came up against Bennie Daniels after a single by Vic Power and a walk to Harmon Killebrew. Allison slammed his 23rd homer of the year.- Camilo Pascual was credited with his 17th victory in the opener, getting relief from Bill Pleis after loading the bases in the eighth, and Ruben Gomez won the second game with a five-hitter. SPLIT DOUBLEHEADER The Angels, who seemed doomed to a double defeat at Yankee Stadium, got only two hits through seven innings of the second game against Jim put them in the running with a two-run homer in the eighth. Then the Angels erupted in the ninth, pouring across four runs off Coates and loser Luis Arroyo. George Thomas sent in the winning run with a pinch single after singles by Lee Thomas, Leon Wagner and. L20 Burke and a double by Bob Rodgers. Tom Tresh and Roger Maris hit two-run doubles. as the Yanks scored five times in ihe seventh frame for their first- game victory. The Tigers have beaten the Orioles seven straight times. Dick Brown delivered the only run of the first game with a bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the 10th, giving lefthander Don Mossi his first victory since July 20. Phil Regan won the second battle with an eight- hitter, getting home run support from Rocky Colavito, Al Kaline and Mike Roarke. The Indians, losers in 10 of FOOTBALL SCORES 11 previous meetings with the White Sox, nipped Chicago in the opener when Jerry Kindall's bloop single in the ninth inning cashed in an unearned run. The loss went to Early Wynn, in his fourth try for a 299th career victory. Cleveland ran up a 5-0 lead in the second game and produced. the clinching run on Al Luplow's double and Tito Francona's single in the seventh. Don Schwall's four-hit pitch- ing in the second game led the Red Sox as they gained the split with the Athletics, Ed Charles, George Alusik and Norm Siebern paced the Ath- letics in the opener, combining for six hits and six runs batted Coates before Albie Pearson|'" Canadian Tire Le- |gionnaires advanced through their first round of Ontario Baseball Association Junior "A" playdowns in two-straight games when they nosed out Burlington Fuller Brush, in Bur- lington, on Sunday. afternoon, 32. John McTavish, pitching for the homeste®s, gave up six hits and walked just three batters but errors were also a big fac- tor in Oshawa's scoring success. |McTavish fanned nine batters. Rival pitcher Gary Newitt struck out nine batters also out while he gave up nine walks, he and his mates were able to leave most of the Burlington base-runners stranded. Oshawa scored first, in the second inning. In the first, Al Etchells walked with one out, was forced by Ron Bell then Ted Whiteley was safe on an error but McTavish fanned Al Ter- williger. In the second, with two out, Jim McConkey drew a walk, advanced on Newitt's single and scored when Bob Reid was safe on an error. Burlington got it right back in the same in- ning when Mike Deacon walk- ed with one out, stole second base, went to third on a passed ball, as Tom Richardson drew a walk after Bob Pitt fanned, and then Gerry Plasky singled to score Deacon. Int he top of the fifth, Ron Bell singled to right field and advanced when that outfielder bobbled the ball. Ted Whiteley then singled to the same terri- tory, scoring Bell, to make it 2-1. Again the homesters came right back with the tying run. With Ben Heersink on with an opening walk, Newitt got the next two batters to fly out but a passed ball put Heersink on second and he scored when Mc- Tavish came through with a timely single. In the 7th, Dennie Whalley walked but was thrown out, try- Oshawa Jr. Legionnaires Drop Burlington In OBA Playoffs ing to steal second base. Then Sharpe also walked, he stole second and went to third on an error-throw by Etchells. Jeffer- ies flied out to Roger Reeson in left and Reeson's fine throw to the plate nipped Heersink, try- ing to score after the catch Oshawa broke the 2-2 tie in the top of the 8th. Ted White- ley opened with his d hit of the game and advanced on a passed ball. Terwilliger popped up but Roger Reeson's second hit advanced Whiteley to 3rd base and he scored on Ted Lut- ton's sacrifice fly to left. Jim Pipher replaced Newitt as the Oshawa pitcher, to start the last of the 8th inning and he fanned the first two he faced and got the next on a weak rol- ler to the box. hy In the 9th, Burlington made a last-ditch stand when Bob Pitt worked Pipher for an opening walk but Richardson forced Pitt at 2nd, then Plasky grounded out to Lutton and Pipher fanned Whalley, to end the game and series. OSHAWA -- Reid, 2b; Etch- ells, c; Beil, nf; Whiteley, Ib; Terwilliger, 3b; Reeson, H; Lut- ton, ss; McConkey, cf; Newitt, Pipher pin 8th. i : BURLINGTON -- Plasky, rf; Whalley, 3b; Heersink, ss; Jef- fries, cf; Tufford, c; McTavish, p; Deacon, If; Pitt, 2b; Richard- son, lb; Shanpe, ss in 8th. WINS DALLAS OPEN DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -- Billy Maxwell played down the mid- die with deadly. approaches Monday to win his first tourna- ment in a year--the $35,000 Dal- las Open--with a closing one- over-par 71 for 277 and $5,300 first money. Starting the final round with 206 and a four-stroke bulge over Johnny Pott, he never gave the stretch finishers a chance and won by four strokes. BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American League WL Pct. GBL 82 58 .586 79 61 .564 3 77 62 .554 4% 70 67 .511 10% 70 69 .504 11% 70 70 .500 12 68 73 .482 1414 65 73 .471 16 Kansas City 62 77 .446 191% Washington 54 87 .383 28% SATURDAY Minnesota 4 Boston 5 Baltimore 8 Cleveland 2 Kansas City 1 New York 3 Chicago 1 Detroit 2 Los Angeles 2 Washington 3 SUNDAY Kansas City 1 New York 2 Baltimore 4-2 Cleveland 1-1 Chicago 10 Detroit 8 Minnesota 5 Boston 2 Los Amgeles 4 Washington 2 Monday's Results New York 8-5 Los: Angeles 2-6 Minnesota 9-4 Washington 3-3 Kansas City 8-1 Boston 5-3 New York Minnesota Los Angeles Detroit Chicago Baitimore Cleveland Boston Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia 84 55 .604 614 82 56 594. 8 83 65 .529 17 72 67 .518 18% 68 74 .479 24 Chicago 52 86 .377 38 Houston 50 87 .365 3914 New York 35 106 .250 56 SATURDAY Houston 3 Chicago 4 : Cincinnati 0 San Francisco 5 Pittsburgh 7 Philadelphia 6 New York 5 St. Louis 10 Milwaukee 3 Los a 5 _ SUNDAY --e at Philadelphia ppd, ra New York 4 St. Louis 3 Houston 3 Chicago 1 Milwaukee 0 Los Angeles 8 Cincinnait 4-San Francisco 6 Monday's Results San Francisco 7 Los Angeles 3 YESTERDAY'S STARS Chicago 6-5 St. Louis 2-2 Pittsburgh 2-5 New York 0-4 Cincinnati 3 Milwaukee 0 Philadelphia 3-5 Houston 2-3 Probable Pitchers Today . New York (Anderson 3-15) at Pittsburgh (Haddix 8-5) N. Cincinnati (O'Toole 14-13) at Milwaukee (Spahn 14-12) N. Chicago (Koonce 9-8) at St. Louis (Jackson 12-10). Philadelphia (McLish 9-4 0 Short 8-8) at Houston (Bruce 8-8) N. San Francisco (Pierce 11-4) at Los Angeles (Richert 4-3) N. International League WL Pct. GBL Jacksonville 90 56 .616 Toronto 85 61 .582 5 Atlanta 80 68 .541 11 Rochester 78 68.534 12 Columbus 76 70 .521 14 Buffalo 70 76 .479 20 Richmond . 56 92 .378 35 Syracuse - 51 95 .349 39 SATURDAY Toronto 0 Buffalo 8 Columbus 9 Richmond 5 Cleveland 4-6 Chicago 3-5 Saturday's Results Ottawa 26 Toronto 8 ORFU Senior London 15 East York 10 Sarnia 14 Oakville 20 ORFU Junior Windsor 25 K-W 0 -- Monday's Results Hamilton 25 Montreal 25 Winnipeg 30 Regina 7 Calgary 49 Edmonton 17 ORFU Senior Sarnia 8 Oakville 8 East York 13 London 3 Junior Conference pool ($26,960) and the quinella (925,792). C Detroit 1-4 Baltimore 0-1 Probable Pitchers Today New York (Ford 14-7) N. Kansas City (Rakow 12-15) at Boston (Monbouquette 11-12) N. Detrdit (Bunning 15-8) at Bal- timore (Roberts 9-7 or Hoeft 5-7) N. Minnesota (Stigman 9-4) at Washington (Stenhouse 11-10) N. Cleveland (Donovan 18-7). at Chicago (Buzhard 7-11) N. National League WL Pct. GBL Los Angeles 90 48 .652 2 e Balmy Beach 19 Burlington Yalan Francisco 87 50 .635 2% Los Angeles (Lee 11-10) atii4th j By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pitching -- Jack Sanford, Giants, posted 20th victory and in a row by limiting Los Angeles Dodgers to eight hits in 7-3 triumph that moved sec- ond - place San Francisco to within 24% games of National League leaders. Batting--Bob Allison, 'Twins, stroked five hits in eight at- bats, including two homers, for and 4-3 doubleheader sweep over Washington Senators that pulled second-place Minnesota three games behind New York Yankees. five runs batted in, pacing 9-3} . Jacksonville 4 Atlanta 5 Rochester at Syracuse ppd, rain SUNDAY Toronto 5-5 Buffalo 3-2 Rochester 2-0 Syracuse 3-4 Columbus 6 Richmond 4 Jacksonville 2-0 Atlanta 4-1 Monday's Results Rochester 2-3 Toronto 6-6 Syracuse 5-3 Buffalo 9-5 Atlanta 5 Richmond 3 Jacksonville 5-2 Columbus 2-1 Games Today Rochester at Toronto (N) Syracuse at Buffalo (N) Atlantasat Richmond (N) Oshawa MacLean's Esso nosed out Peterborough "Geor- gies" 3-2 in their third and de- ciding game, here at Alexan- dra Park on Saturday night, to win the Eastern Ontario zone honors in OASA-: Intermediate "A" playdowns. The sudden-death tilt between these two evenly-matched clubs ton a real thriller with Ron hillips and Mel "Lefty" Meule- meester facing Terry Shaugh- nessy in a stern pitching duel that saw the Oshawans collect a total of nine hits -- three of them in the big 11th inning, while Phillips and Meulemees- ter limited the Lifflock City club to six safeties, four off Phillips in the -first five in- nings, two off Meulemeester for the rest of the distance. Both teams scored in the first inning. Tom O'Connor opened with a good bunt and went all the way to third when the catcher made a wild throw, then Mike Tutak's sacrifice fly to centre scored O'Connor. "Georgies" got .he'r run in more legitimate fashion when Ralph Rowe, second batter of the inning, homered. Tommy O'Connor homered in the third inning to break the 1-1 tie and the tight struggle went along until the sixth before Peterborough was able to tie it up. Ralph Rowe singled but got trapped off first base, then Jack Kane singled. Phiilips made a bad throw that permitted Kane to go to third and he beat the throw to the plate when Shaugh- nessy grounded to the infield,' lieved Phillips at this point. Wayne Haig's double in the 9th, with one out and Neil Thompson's single, in the 10th, with two out, were the only hits the visitors could collect after that, . MacLean's threatened in the 7th, when McKee singled with one out, was forced by Minacs but Meulemeester drew a walk, but O'Connor popped up to end this inning. MacLean's Capture. 3rd Game Of Series There were two out in the top of the 11th when "Butch" Mc- Mahon launched Oshawa's vic- tory rally. He had fanned on three of four previous trips but te deep centce, Gary Galas leep centre. Ga who had driven pean Onnawars of the series, Shaughnessy got McKee to pop up, ending the inning. ; In the bottom of the Ith, Meulemeester set Georgies down in 1-2-3 order, to end the game and series. OBA PLAYOFFS People's Clothing, Oshawa Le- on Minor Baseball Associa- ion's representatives on On- tario Baseball Association Pee Wee playoffs, eliminated King- SPORTS CALENDAR OASA Senior "B" Playoffs -- Oshawa Heffering's Imperials vs Belleville Joyce Realty, at Belleville Fair Grounds, 8.15 p.m.; 3rd and deciding game of series. OASA Squirt Playoffs -- North Oshawa vs Port Perry, at Port Perry, 5.45 p.m.; Ist game of |Eastern Ontario Zone finals. OASA Pee Wee Playoffs -- Lakefield vs Oshawa Sunnyside Park, at Sunnyside Park, 5.45 p.m.; 2nd game of 2-out-of-3 Eastern Ontario finals. Inter-County League -- Hou- daille Industries vs Genosha Aces at Alexandra Park, and Ukrainian Aces vs_ Foley's Plumbing, at Lakeview Park; both games at 6.30 p.m. WRESTLING Professional wrestling, three bouts, at Oshawa Children's Arena, 8.45 p.m. WEDNESDAY SOFTBALL Oshawa Minor Assoc. -- (Ki- wanis Bantam League- Semi- Finals) -- Nipigon "*k.. Vs Storie Park, at Stor.c Park, 6.00 p.m. sharp; Ist game of 2-out-of- 3 series. 4 OASA Squirt Series -- Port Perry vs North Oshawa, at North Oshawa, 5.45 p.m.; 2nd ame of 2-out-of-3 series. OASA Juvenile "A" Playoffs -- North York Fairbanks Le- gion vs Oshawa Genosha Aces, at Alexandra Park, 5.30 p.m.; 1st game of 2-out-of-3 series. UAW League -- Karn's Drugs vs: Ward's Billiards and Plaza Foods vs Oshawa Quality Fuels; both games at Alexandra Park, 6.15 p.m. Beaches Major Fastball League -- Randall-Roy Metals vs Oshawa Tony's, at Alexandra Park, 8.00 p.m. Sunnyside Park Tops Lakefield PeeWee Opener Sunnyside Park scored a 15- 10 victory over Lakefield Bowl, in Lakefield on Saturday even- ing, in the first game of their OASA Eastern Ontario PeeWee finals. Second game of the 2-out-of- 3 series will be played here at Sunnyside Park this evening, at 5.45 p.m. Cc. Crowe started on the mound for Lakefield and had serious trouble with his control, right at the start. He walked four of the first five batters he faced, then Thajer singled, Her- cia was safe on an error and Starkey homered, for the sixth run of the outburst. Lakefield got one run on an error and two. singles. Hall took over in the second inning and again wildness was a problem as the Oshawa boys added four more' runs, on four walks, a sacrifice and two bad errors--but not a single hit. That made it 10-1. Calder homered in the third, Hercia singled in the fourth and came home on a wild pitch. Graham homered in the fifth and in the sixth, Hercia singled and Ash- ton homered, to make it 15-2. Lakefield got one more fun, their second, in the third frame. Enjoying a big lead, the Osh- awa pitcher was a little care- less in the bottom of the sixth, when he walked the first two batters. Then Crowe singled, Trwin singled with one out, Yale drew another walk and Chittick completed the six-run rally with a homer, In the 7th, a hit batter and triples by. Crowe and Irwin, gave Lakefield their last two runs, OSHAWA SUNNYSIDE:-- Boivin, ss; Eldridge, 2b; Calder, rf; Graham, c; Woermke, If; Thajer, 3b; Hercia, 1b; Starkey, p; Ashton, cf. LAKEFIELD:--Yale, 2b; Chit- tick, 1b; Hendren, 3b; Dixon, c; Hall, ss and p in 2nd; Nichols, rf; Crowe, p and ss; Clarkson, Jacksonville at Columbus N. ef; Irwin, If. ston boys over the holiday week- end in a stern 2-out-of-3 OBA' playoff series that saw the Osh- awa youngsters win at home on Saturday and then win the third and deciding game, in the sec- ond half of a doubleheader, play- ed in Kingston on Labor Day. Oshawa People's defeated Kingston 4-2 in the epening game of the series, here at Al- exandra Park on Saturday af. ternoon when Joseph held the Limestone City lads to four hits. A single to Larry Lawson with two out, followed by a stol- en base and an error, gave King- ston their first run in the sec- ond stanza. In the 6th inning, Murray Douglas opened with a single and scored on Dave Gil- mour's triple, that came with only one out, but he wasn't able to get "'home". Oshawa got two runs in their second inning, when Pete Mc- Namee was safe on an infield error, after two out, then Bob Logeman singled and so did Ron Joseph, with a couple of stolen bases by Logeman putting him in position to score on Joseph's blow, for the second run of that inning. Bernie McGuire got.on via an error and scored on another, in the fifth and Joseph homer- ed w ' 'he bases empty in the sixtl, fo: Oshawa's final run. Ted Paradis and Hugh Har- vey, Kingston's battery, shared those duties, with Paradis pitch. ing until the fifth, when he took over the big mitt and Harvey went to the mound. : KINGSTON TIES IT UP In the first game at Kingston, early Monday afternoon, Barry Jones blanked the Oshawa team 7-0, by virtue of some fine clutch pitching. Oshawa outhit Kingston by7-to-6 in base hits but most of their safeties came after there were two out and they couldn't get a single run. Chris. Christenson pitched the game for Oshawa and had two bad frames, the first when the homesters scored three runs on Jim Murtaugh's double, a walk, Ron Grey's single and a couple of bad errors, plus a sacrifice. In the sixth inning, Kingston bunched three hits, a walk and an error, for their other four Oshawa Legion PeeWees Eliminate Kingston Lads runs, Jones belting a homer in his own cause. The third and deciding game in Kingston's Kingscourt Park, later on Monday afternoon, pro- ved a nip-and-tuck thriller with Oshawa People's winning the series with a 3-1 victory, al though outhit by four-to-two. Andy Kit pitched the win for Oshawa and had 11 strikeouts, while giving up four walks. Tom Toner singled to open the third inning for Kingston, advanced on Kit's error and scored wh urtaugh forced Franklin &t second base. Kit had two. anxious spots after that. In the sixth, Mur- taugh singled with one out, Gil- mour followed with a safe hit then Harvey doubled, scoring Murtaugh but Gilmour was thrown out at the plate trying to score the tying run and Kit got Grey to fly out to centre, ending that inning. In the final 7th, after fanni: |the first two batters, Kit issue: walks to Doug Bart and Mur- ray Douglas. With the tying runs in scoring position, Kit struck out Murtaugh to end the game and series. Franklin, pitching for- King- ston, was tagged for two runs in the second inning and the Oshawa boys never looked back, D. Paradis opened with a walk but was doubled off when Bill Tymchuck flied out to Paradis, at 2nd base. But with two out, Kit was safe on an error, 4 nie McGuire drew @ walk' and after a stolen base, both run- ners came home on a two-bag- ger by Pete McNamee. 7 In the fourth, Oshawa added an insurance run when McGuire was safe on an error at first second double. Dave Prest and Dave Warner then both drew walks to fill the bases but Bob Logeman popped up to end the inning. The Oshawa team never got a runner to first base in the last three innings but they back- ed Kit's fine pitching with fine support, especially in the out- field, to make their slim lead stand up for the big win. OSHAWA -- McGuire, 3b; McNamee, 1b; Prest, ss; War- ner, 2b; Logeman, If; Josep, cf; Paradis, rf; Tymchuck, c; Kit, p; Taylor, rf in 4th. KINGSTON -- Douglas, cf; Murtaugh, If; Gilmour, ss; Har- vey, rf; Grey, 3b; Paradis, 2b; Fretts, Ib; Toner, c; Franklin, p; Bart, p in 5th. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Home may be where the heart is, but for Jacksonville Suns the road is where you win. The league-leading Suns, only 39-35. in their' Florida home, broke an International League record for road game victories Monday, topping the mark set by Newark Bears in 1937. The Suns swept a double- header from Columbus Jets, 5-2 and 2-1, to run their road win total to 51. Newark won 49 in 1987. And Jacksonville has a chance to widen the margin--all their eight remaining games are road contests, In other league games, At- lanta Clippers slipped into third place by dropping Richmond Virginians 53, Toronto Maple Leafs whipped Rochester Red Wings twice, 6-2 and 6-3, and Buffalo Bisons trimmed Syra- cuse Chiefs 9-5 and 5-3. In Sunday's games Toronto swept a doubleheader over Buf- falo 5-3 and 5-2, Columbus downed Richmond 6-4, Syracuse took two from Rochester 3-2 and 4-0 and Jacksonville dropped two to Atlanta 4-2 and 1-0. Buffalo blanked Toronto 6-0 Saturday while Columbus de- feated Richmond 9-5 and At- lanta nipped Jacksonville 5-4. Rochester's: game at Syracuse was postponed. TAYLOR WINS AGAIN Ron Taylor of Leaside, Ont., won the opener Monday for the Suns, who protected their five- ame bulge over Toronto. In the nightcap, Columbus southpaw Bob Veale lost another heart- 'breaker. Veale, who fanned 22 Buffalo batters Aug. 17 for a league record but didn't get credit for the win, this time lost Jacksonville Suns Set 'Road' Record strikeouts to bring his season total to 173 in 127 innings. The damage was done in the eighth. Duke Carmel beat out a slow roller by an eyelash for the only hit. After a walk, the bases were loaded on an error. A sac- rifice fly: scored one run and another error let in the winner. The Crackers got the winning runs across in the ninth, on a walk, a sacrifice, an intentional walk, a fly out, and a slow in- field hit, Angel Scull then chopped a_ bail off pitcher George Haney's glove for one run, and Haney walked in the second, Toronto dropped the Red Wings into fourth, scoring all their runs in the opener in the fifth inning as ve Ridzik pitched a three-hitter. In the nightcap, a two-run homer by Mack Jones broke a 3-3 tie in the fifth. Both Buffalo starters, Jack Kerrigan and Ken Lehman, pitched no-hit ball until the next- to-Ist inning. Two homers each by John Herrnstein and Jackie Davis powered the Bisons to the double win. Nick Westlock Wins Willie Park Event TORONTO (CP) -- Nick Wes- lock, 44-year-old Mississauga amateur, shot a three-under-par 68 Saturday to win the Willie Park golf tournament -- and regain a ftitle-he first held in 1945, . Tied for second place with 738 on the par-71 Weston Golf and Country Club course were Gary Cowan of Kitchener Rockway and Alf Heakes and Terry Sy¢ a'pne-hit game. He also had 13 of " Weston. winning run in the second game | ec rc OAC: base and scored on McNamee's

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