Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Jun 1963, p. 16

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16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, June 12, 1963, SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' CITY AND DISTRICT softball fans who showed up at Alexandra Park last night, were privileged to see another sparkling doubleheader with Bad Boy Appliance knocking off Heffering's Imperiais, 7-3, and MacLean's Esso winning @ clean-cut verdict over Scugog Cleaners Juniors. MacLean's grabbed off a half-dozen runs in the first inning against Scugogs afd then made that stand up for a comfortable win by virtue of a solid defensive play and an attack that added to the total, as they went along. In the other game, Hickey stopped Bad Boys almost completely for seven innings and then he ran out of gas -- With Bad Boys scoring two runs in the 8th to tie the score and five in the 9th to put the game on ice. Games in the Northern Division of the City and Dis- trict Assoc. were rained out last night, both Brooklin and Port Perry being unable to get their diamonds in shape, following Tuesday night's rain -- which was heavier back near the ridges, than down this way. x x x x MAJOR LEAGUE baseball results yesterday served to add more interést to the current red-hot pennant races that are being waged in both the American and National League cir- cuits. Boston: Red Sox went 15 innings and finally nosed out the Tigers right in Detroit, 11-19. Cleveland Indians upset the leading Orioles, 9-5, while Kansas City turned back the Angeles, 5-2, and Minnesota Twins clipped the Chicago White Sox, 8-6. Yankees and Washington were idle. In the National League, Cincy Redlegs defeated the N.Y. Mets, 8-3, and St. Louis Cards went up with their 3-1 win over the Pirates while San Francisco Giants were blanking the Dodgers, 3-0. Chicago Cubs lost ground, bowing to Houston Colts, 6-2, while the Braves nipped Phillies, 8-7, in 10 innings (tied 6-6 at the end of nine) and all this made the National League about the tightest race they've had in 20 years. x x x x SPORTS BRIEFS: -- Sam Snead moves into the United States Opén at Brookline, Mass., next week and it will be the 23rd time he's competed in this tournament -- one of the few titles he's never managed to win... . THREE CANADIANS, George Knudson, Rudy Horvath and Bob Panasiuk, all failed to qualify but Bill Ezinicki, former Oshawa Generals star, carded a 69-76-145, to make the title round... . BRUCE KIDD has an infected heel. Reports are that he'll be out of action for a few weeks, but that a complete trécovery is anticipated. If he fails to responds, of course, it could mean the end of his great track career... . MONTREAL ALOUETTES have traded fullback Larry Hickman and guard Don Brooks, to Saskatchewan Roughriders in exchange for fullback Ferdie Burket, guard Darrell Aschbacker and defensive halfback Bob Miller. . RICK POTTER, veteran Winnipeg Blue Bomber linebacker, has announced his retirement. JACK NICKLAUS Golf Schedule Is Too Crowded BROOKLINE, Mass. (OP)--|move would guarantee the spon- Professional golf's tournament|sors good fields and that way schedule is "getting out of/golfers could play exhibitions hand" the big man on the cir-jand take part in unofficial cuit, Jack Nicklaus, said Mon--money competitions in the) day. His solution: Trim the tour) weeks in between. program to 30. : | "I think it's eventually com- The oo rag Sore. who ing to that. is preparing to en s US.) « Open crown at the Country Club Some of us can afford to take here June 20-22, was reflecting) on the frantic pro pace between) practice rounds. } The blonde belter from Co-| | | | tournaments like the Open. Oth- ers can't. Take the Buick tourn-| ament last week. a sal ; mer, Gary Player and I skipp lumbus, Ohio, who has jumped)it 'that's not fair to the spon- thee Masters, eaid there wae|sors who should get the field. need of off-weeks before the big-| 'I don't believe the week be- ger tournaments. He said the| fore the Open should have a for- circuit now has more than 40| midable tournament like the tournaments each year. Thun : "What I would like to see is| Nicklaus said he would com- the tournament schedule cut to)pete in the $100,000 Thunder- about 30 because it's getting out|/bird, which starts Thursday at of hand," Nicklaus said. "This|Rye, N.Y. OLD COUNTRY SOCCER English Internationals Undefeated In Europe By M. MCINTYRE HOOD Special London, England tour, England is looking for- ward to the 1966 world cup! Correspondent series with more hope. In this To The Times group of 19 tested players, plus LONDON --England's inter-|the gifted Under-23 side, and national team has returned from| the youth side coming along be- its contintal tour in a blaze of hind that, there is a wealth of glory. By defeating Switzerland talent which has three years in 8-1 at Basle, England, for the | which to develop into a combin. first time in 26 years, completed) ation which, under Ramsay's a European tour by winning all|leadership, is considered to of its games. have an excellent chance -- And the man to whom most|Making a much better showing of the credit has been given is|in the world cup competition Alf. Ramsay, the new England|than was the case in 1958 and team manager. His handling of | 1962. the squad of 19 players he took} And with the 1966 world cup) on the trip has been masterly.| being played in England, a win. All of the 19 players got into|/ning English team would make action. Ramsay made a bold/it a memorable series. decision when he made seven' And this possibility is all the changes in the team which beat) more likely because of the great| Czechoslovakia and East Ger-| side which Scotland can now many for the Swiss game, put into the field, a side has Although the seven who came won the home international! in were nominally classed aS championship without losing. or reserves, they put up a brilliant/qrawing a game in the past performance, and showed that! two seasons. the team suffered little from -- - their inclusion. Charlton was the hero of the game, scoring three goals, and showing a return to the form which made him the; most feared. winger in England.| Only Jimmy Greaves of the forwards failed to score. NEW FORMATION In addition to infusing new\terweight champion, -- knocked life and spirit into this English|out French champion Maurice XI, Ramsay has adopted a new) Auze! in 15 seconds of the eighth formation for his team. Actually| round of a controversial bout at he has geo gen two todd rang bora Albert Hall Tuesday wings, an wo centre-backs.| night. Moore and Flowers performed) Auzel protested he was felled| ap ge 2 rol ---- SS by an illegal punch to the back! m midfield, Kay an immy of the head. Melia acted as links between! 'The Welshman's victory kept bos oe _ Psd attack. alive his hopes for a title fight) fren ag, This new sttteny| yc Sth sed chats Pa has worked well in these tareel Guat of daw tone -- games of the tour, largely be-| 'The finish of the scheduled 10-| cause Ramsay had dependable | rounder was a stormy one as «men to whom he could entrust/angry fans tossed various ob * the key positions jects, including a bottle and a As a result of this triumphant' pair of binoculars into the ring.| Brian Curvis Drops Auzel LONDON (AP)--Brian Curvis, British and Commonwealth wel- OTTAWA'S PERENNIAL S' He's a Canuck! Co-captain Kaye Vaughan of Ottawa Rough Riders Football Club, | Teceives his Canadian citizen- 'Tylsa, Oklahoma, will be play- McCovey Makes Like "ni : Drysdale Is A Cousin Today's Ball Player By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer To Don Drysdale of Los An- geles Dodgers, William Mce- Covey is the big gun of San Francisco Giants. vv 4, _cswoweveuurvwe,w _--~ Tew ee , MacLean'ss Thump Scugogs; Bad Boys. Upset Heffering's In the Oshawa City and Dis. trict Softball Association dou- bleheader, jast night at Alex. ander Park, MacLean's Esso whipped Scugog Cleaners 11-3 in the opening game and in the fightcap, Bad Boy Appliances upset Heffering's Appliance 7-3, MacLean's established their superiority early in the game when they scored six runs on as many hits in the first infing, a flock of singles, spaced by a couple of errors. Once in front, Maclean's never let go. Ted Jones hurled & five five-hit game for Mac- Lei#i's and held Scugog Clean-; MACLEAN'S E880 -- Bilen- ers to two runs on two hits, in}duke, 2b; Copeland, tb; T. the first inning, via a walk to|O'Connor, 3b; McMahon, cf; March, an infield error after|McKee, ss ;Elliott, rf; Weldon, one out, followed by singles by Suddard and Sadowski. With Ted Jones stopping them at every threat, Scugogs had to settle for just one more run, a singleton in the fifth when Davis got on via an error and scored later On a single by pinch-hitter Mapes. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- March, 3b; Davis, ss; Yahn, ef; Suddard, if; Sadowski, rf; Wilson, 2b; Siblock, Ib; Solo. man, c; Hobbs, p; Young, cf in 5th; Mapes, rf in. Sih; Me. Namee, ib in 6th; Cheeseman, ¢ in 6th. ¢; Courtney, rf; Jones, p. That tied the score at 2-3 and BAD BOYS WIN in the top of the 6th, id Hefferings scored single runs| Boys exploded against Hiekey in the first and third innings, off for five runs on four hits, plus "Sambo" Smith but Bad Boy|a walk and an error. Sned. Appliances rallied in the bot-|don's double, hits by Reilly and tom of the 8th inning to tie the| Brabin, an infield miscue and a score and went on to win 7-3. {double by Mackness, completed "Sambo" Smith chalked up|the fiver-run rally that won the eight strikeouts for the winners|game for Bad Boys, and managed to keep out off BAD BOYS -- Berwick, ef; trouble in most frames, al-/Sneddon, 1b; Tureski, rf; Bra- though Hickey, with a single!bin, If; Reilly, 2b; Melnick, c; and homer, gave him a little|Solomon, ss; Mackness, bj trouble. Smith, p; Wright, rf in 7th; Hickey blanked Bad Boys) Snow, ss in 8th. until the 8th inning when they) HEFFERING'S O'Reilly, scored after two were out, as/2b; Shearer, cf; Piontek, If; Joe: Melnick walked, Snow was Knight, ¢; Simcoe, 3b; Hickey, safe on an error, then Mack-|p; Cole, ss; Carnwith, Ij ness singled. lGray, tf; Burke, rf in 9th. Maybe Billy Re By JACK SULLIVAN 'the American division with a Canadian Press Sports Editor |sad season's record of 14 wins *% dh ME Dy dee - TAR NOW A CITIZEN ing his 11th season with the Eastern Conference club, this season, He has twice been named best lineman in Cana- dian football. aan ship certificate from Judge J. A. Dawson, of the Citizen- ship Court, at Ottawa. Vaugh- an, from the University of over Pittsburgh Pirates on Bob/the ninth of Dick Bertell's triple Gibson's pitching and batting, and Don Landrum's single. are sitting on top of the stand-|Then, in the 10th, winning re- ings. Tn other NIL games, Houston) Colts' started with a single, Chi- Colts belted Chicago's Cubs 6-2)cago reliever Lindy McDaniel) A few days ago Billy Reay and 7 ties o . fa gd | : g snach| Were oints behin oston |srabbed at the chance to coach Bruins, the division leaders. jChicago Black Hawks of the; |National Hockey League. It CUP NOT ENOUGH |makes you wonder, Somehow they got to the final Chicago, as every hockey ex- against Toronto Maple Leafs pert knows, is the graveyard of and, almost unbelieveably, won |NHL coaches. Reay is the 22nd the Stanley Cup. in the club's 36 - year history; Stewart soon learned that and this statistical information there is nothing like success. should be enough to scare any-- He was fired the next season. body off. The next Celebrated case was Each winning coaches get the|th firing of Rudy Pilous after gate. Possibly the most cele-|this year's Stanley Cup, when brated case was the firing of|Chicago was knocked out in the Bill Stewart in 1939. semi - finals by Detroit Red In 1938, when the NHL was a Wings. two-division league, the Hawks, Pilous went to the: Hawks on were a'stumbling, fumbling out-|Jan. 4, 1958, when the team fit. They had finished third in'was in last place. He managed NEW YORK (AP)--The major|and mercy of the club owne ay Did Rush In Where Angels Fear To Tread? to get them to fifth place that'games to improve the team's season and into the- playoffs\low standing-or else. In that every year since, climaxed inifour - game trial, Leafs tied in 1961 when they won the Cup in'twice and lost a pair and Im- seven games against the Red lach let him go. Wings. "The move is being made in No reason was given for his What we think are the best in- fring and the likable coach tetests of the hockey club," broke a month's silence the /mlach said at the time. "Reay, other day when he told sports|@ Stellar hockey man, hasn't columnist Elmer Ferguson of been able to get the team roll- the Montreal Star that he was "8 the victim of 'a workmanlike. Reay's only comment at the Stiletto job" by General Man- ime was: "I've been coaching ager Tommy Ivan. since I was 24 (he was 40 at the time) all Over the country work- OLD STUFF TO REAY ing my way up to this job-and Reay knows what it is like to then I get underniined." be fired from a big - league) He'll get lots of chances to team. He was chopped from even matters when Leafs and Toronto Nov. 28, 1958, by Gen- Hawks meet next winter with eral Manager Punch Imlach. Imlach and Reay behind the Imlach had given Reay four benches. Syracuse Noses Out jhot McCovey did it again Tuesday|on Bob Aspromonte's 10th-inn-|committed an error on Ernie ya saball night, tagging Drysdale for aling grand slam home run; Cin- three-run homer that gave the/cinnati Reds whipped New York Giants a 3-0 victory over Los|Méts 8 - 3, and Philadelphia Angeles behind Juan Marichal's!| Phillies outlasted Milwaukee strong pitching and dropped the} Braves 8-7 in 10 innings. Dodgers out of the National; Marichal was in difficulty League lead. {only once, when the - Dodgers McCovey now has tagged/loaded the bases with two out in doubles, one triple and » covey|dale, Maury Wills and Jim Gil- of singles since he i the! liam irked out of the jam Giants in ; by getung Ron Fairly to lift a McCovey's homer provided! soft fly. more than enough margin for| Gibson, 5-3, checked the Pi- shutout of the season andithe run that snapped a 1-1 tie a week off before the prestige| brought lis record to 9-3 with a|with a single in the sixth inning) John Callison and following Julian Javier's double. The Cubs tied the Colts 2-2 in seven-hitter St. Louis Cardinals, 3-1 victors Fazio's bunt and Brock Davis was intentionally walked. Aspro- monte followed with his grand slam. Vada Pinson collected a | homer, double and single, lead- ing a 12-hit Reds' attack that against the igot the job done |Drysdale for eight homers, four|the third on singles by Drys-| Mets. The Braves scored in the top of the 10th when Mack Jones stole his fourth base of the game and came home on Roy McMil- lan's third run-scoring single. |Marichal, who posted his first)rates on six hits and drove in|But the Phillies came up with two in their half on a triple by singles by Don Demeter, Roy Sieveres and Clay Dalrymple, Indians Hot. Mann Cup Final Drop Orioles To Be In By JIM HACKLEMAN Associated Press Sports Writer ? ' : Cleveland Indians have wants it or not, Western Can changed their tune ada will stage this year's Mann They were singing the blues) Cup series for the Canadian Se- long ago but now they're/nior Lacrosse championship. making the hottest music in the; And the westerners American League. pect a much stronger eastern They made it five victories in| representative because of emer- TORONTO (CP)--Whether it a row Tuesday night with a gency action taken last week by;and was played last year atlyears ago Jackie Mudie, guest that/the Canadian Lacrosse Associa-| Brampton, Ont. However, the) soccer player for Toronto City, home run crescendo drowned out Baltimore's off-key, tion, Orioles, 9-5. | The CLA stepped in to settle The Indians, next-to-last inan East-West squabble which the standings and 914 games;almost resulted in cancellation behind just 10 days ago, now/of this year's national finals. have won eight of their last 10" CLA Secretary Gerry Johnson and climbed to seventh, five revealed the association's plans games off the pace. jin a telephone interview from Meanwhile, the Orioles have| his Dundas, Ont., home. dropped 10 of 12 and fallen) CLA President M. E. Fergu- from first to third, They're a,S0n of Vancouver said, however, game behind Chicago White|he was unaware of any change Sox, who were trimmed 8-6 by/in plans to hold the event in the Minnesota Twins and eight per-| East. centage points behind New, "We (the CLA executive) de- of York Yankees, who were idle. cided' the series will be played| OLA teams wouldn't consider it In other AL action, 15th-in can ex-| West in the West even though one or two. of the western clubs might not go along with it," said John- son, oq |GENERALLY ALTERNATES The series usually alternates annually between east and west {Ontario Lacrosse Association laccepted a western offer at the {CLA annual meeting to stage the event in the East again next year. "But when the OLA delegates returned, their association took ja dim view of it,' said John- \son. 'They wrote us to say in effect that it would be played jin the West this summer or not yat all." | The OLA felt staging the se- ries again would be too costly 'and no sponsor could be found. ning homers by Frank Malzone and Dick Stuart and another superb relief job by Dick Ra- WOODBINE RACE RESULTS datz .carried Boston Red Sox over '| Detroit Tigers 7-3 and Kansas City beat Los Angeles Angels 5-2. HIT HOMERS ... . TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1963. FIRST RACE 6% Furs. old Maidens. Cdn, foalea, Pursé $2100 8-Milator, Hale 21.20 13.70 11.50 12-Teardrop Lane, Dittfach "4 a oe '| -%-Little Baron, Gubbins Al Luplow, Fred Whitefield|start good. won driviag Dick Whitfield socked |, Also se in Order: Miss Speedy G., Ninenal ;,,|Senior Master, Summons Pat, Royal Cleveland homers off Robin|soubrette, Dark Gem, Select Tom, Roberts and Willie Kirkland|Gam, Hard Chrome and Gormiey Girl connected with two on against P00! 22,357. Double Pool 36,235 West Stock in the Indians' four-| sconn RACE -- 7 Furs. for -and-4 run seventh inning. year-olds. Clmg. all $2500, Purse $1800, N ee 9 a ; ' rg./% Keep A Thin'n, Hern'd'z 7,20 4.60 3.50 fudcat Grant yielded @ (WO-|saiannibal Miss, Uyeyama 4.30 3.50 run homer to Al Smith in Bal-|a#ight a Lot, Burton 5.40 timore's eighth, then was lifted Mag bP hong easily { | ath.-r % y iso )6Ran in Order: Right Bower, in a rhubarb-ridden ninth. With Goiden Lad, Auntie Nora. Sauvagette, one run in and the bases loaded, Aptly, European Jet, Harry G., Ohoir Bob Allen came on in relief and Gale patate Hip : f pitched two balls to Jim Gen-|poot ag233 en eee: ae tile. Cleveland anage i i Tebbett an : manager Bird ¢isyearolds, Can, foaled Purse $2100 ebbetts then called {n Ted|7-Canadilliss, Gubbins 5.70 3.50 2.90 Abernathy--despite the rule that|#Corinthian, Shields - . ' 2-Vetona, Diltfach s > | bit a reliever must finish|start good, won endily pitching to at least one man.|. Also Ran im Order: Fast Answer, Manager Billy Hitchcok of the | Bonne Vitesse, Kings Line, Aight End, Orioles protested. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Pool 37,858 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS), 3) Sacramento, Calif Paulie (e"; Good Old Jo, Fairmagoria, Mono . Bella, Armstead, 137%, Los Angeles, Pool ane ee eee ws outpointed Bobby Scanlon, 139 Sacramento, 10 London, England--Brian Cur vis, 145 %4, Wales, knocked out Maurice Aizel, 149, France, 8. . B10 THIRD RACE -- § S=-*. for Maiden 3.90, FOURTH RACE 6% Furs. for |Maiden 3-year-olds, Foaled in Canada, Purse $2100. |9-GRIFTER, DITTFACH 2-Rolling Hagan, Hale 5-Our Briefy, Fitzsimmons Start good, won easily Also Ran in Order: Menelaus, 4.4% 2.90 2.90 2.80 Dav- FIFTH RACE & Furlonas. 4-vear olds and up, Claiming all $3500. Purse £190 7-Croatan, Harrison f-House Boy, McComb |S'Ponder On, Terry 5.70 4.30 3.90 7.10 5.10 31.70 3-year-| 2.90 3.20) * CLOUDY AND FAST Also Ran in Order: Ocean Pearl, Count Page. Treasure Hunt 2nd, Wins- manship, Counthe Pieces, Sardonyx, 10.60 8.10) Rosequeen, Sports Lady, and Sunward. |ustrious past but no kick left. | Start good, won ridden out Winner dk, b or br, g, 6, by Mark Ye |Well -- Mixed Marriage, Trainer | Oliver Pool 54,237 SIXTH RACE -- 5 Furlongs. For 2- year-old Fillies. Claiming all $5000. |Purse $2100 |1-Hasty C., Turcotte 4-Bar Hostess, Lanoway 6-French Twist, Hernandez ... Start good, won easily Also Ran in Order: Another Holiday. Susie's Roman, and Gypsy Bala, |Late can,, Sinking Spell Winner, b, f, 2% by Hasty Prince -- Daughter ©, Trainer, F. HW, Merrill Jr. Pool 16,984 Quinella Pool 26,554 | QUINELLA, 1 and 4 PAID $19.70 SEVENTH RACE -- 6 Furlongs. For 4-year-olds and up. Allowance. Purse 3.60 2.70. 2.40 5.20 3.30 4.30, 2800. |4-Roman Anna, H'son |1-Windy Ship, MeComb |3-Alias, Dalton \Start good, won handily Also Ran in Order: Come of Age, |Lavella, and Mystery Guest | Winner, br, f, 4, by Roman Might -- | Withoutwithought, Trainer 8, U. Ross, | Pool 47,397 9.20 5.30 2.60 7.00. 2.60 2.20 About One and For EIGHTH RACE -- one-sixteenth Miles, Turf Course 4.70 3.10|4-year-olds and up, Claiming all $2500.) |Purse $1900. 6-Saqueador, T'cotte 5-Crystal Fire, Fitz'ns 7-Plin, Hernandez Start good, won ridden out Split the Loot, 9.30 4.50 4.10 3.50 3.40 7.10 Also Ran in Order Yola and, Whitville, Wels Monk, Mr Rooster, Swap Off, Sea A Head, and Late Can, Knuckle Duster Winner, b. g, & by My Love Queen. Trainer F. HW. Merritt Jr Pool 56,759 Total Pool 388,343 Attendance 5,798 Snow y ous and the hair a little sparser, 'pas player today simply doesn't know how well off he ly GIVES EXAMPLES For example: He has a minimum $7,000 an-| ; nual contract, he cannot be cut) "The club has the right to more than 29 per cent in any) to" notice, These. powers year, ale a ee i ae not limited to cases of dis.| ae age n° tiie of 'the| honest play or open insubordi- most-generous pension plans to|Mation, but include the right to be found anywhere. This in| discipline, suspend or expell for cludes a $20,000 life insurance|such conduct policy and health care benefits|garded as prejudicial to the not only for himself but all|¢lub interests in any respect. members of his immediate fam-| 'The player assumes all risk ily of .accident or 'injury, in play, Now compare the present|or otherwise, and of illness from player's status with that of the|whatever causes. If he years. |promptly suspend him, Some of the provisions of the) "As often as the club sees fit, player contract of 1887 give|the player has to submit him- credence to the. oft - repeated|self to medical examination at charge that early-day players|his own expense. were truly chattels at the whim| "The player has to provide as may be re-| falls} major leaguers of the early|sick, the club has the right to --National and American ASSO-| against feo eh tte Riding 'Gravy Train two suits of uniform--minutely described in the contract--at his own expense and to keep them in thorough repair. "While on the road with the nine a stipulated sum--usually 75 c&its--is deducted daily from the player's wages on account of his board. When at home he has to pay the whole of his own board and all other personal ex- penses. "The club reserves the right to terminate the contract at any time by giving 10 days notice." There was another major dif- ference, In 1887 the two major leagues ciations--had a maximum sal- ary. No player could receive more than $2,500 a season, This is half of what Willie Mays or Mickey Mantle earns jin one week. Crackers By THE CANADIAN PRESS | In a battle between the divi+ |sion leaders in the International jLeague Tuesday night, Syra- cuse Chiefs, the {eam that needed the win, edged Atlanta Crackers 3-2, The Chiefs have a slim 1%- game lead over Buffalo Bisons in the Northern Division while Atlanta, making a runaway in the south, enjoy a 7%-game |spread over the second - place |Indianapolis Indians. Toronto. Maple Leafs, in the Northern Division cellar, had to call off their- home game Jacksonville Suns when chilly weather set in at Maple Leaf Stadium. | In other action Tuesday, Buf- |falo dumped Columbus Jets 5-2, Richmond Virginians took an 11- |inning 5-4 win over Indianapolis |and Rochester Red Wings swept [SPORT FROM BRITAIN - Stanley Matthews, At 48 Still Rated Mr. Soccer' By PAUL WESTBROOK _|tives on, Stoke's promotion to} LONDON (CP)--A couple of/the English League's first di-| | vision. | wrote. Stoke City Manager Tony, To add to the ecstasy Mat- noted more for setting | Waddington about a young Brit. thews, : , | lish lad in Canada who had|jup than scoring, popped in the) promise. |goal that gained his team's pro-| Waddington acted on his star}motion. He had just been forward's advice and signed the|dumped in the mud by an ex-! \**young lad" who, incidentally,|uberant defender, young enough was just approaching his 47th/to be his son, and next minute | birthday. he sprinted through a mesmer- | That's how Stan Matthews|ised defence and flicked home| came home to the old Victoriajone of his rare goals. Road stadium where his twinkl-/ Matthews' ambition now is to ing feet started on the road to out-iast Billy Meredith who kept |stardom 33 years ago. going on Manchester City's wing | "Of course, we were told weluntil he was 51. This means) |would have to shorten the pitch|three more years of spartan jfor him and bring in the touch-|{raining to keep the old limbs jlines,"" says Waddington. "Bul)in shape. jStan said make it wider." Every morning he ts out on | People were making cracksithe Lancashire sands breathing about Matthews' age as long @/i, the sea air. Next comes a 10 years ago. When Stoke tip trip to the brine baths, He never jhim back from ooh the/touches a ball from one match Jokers said it was rr ny to another because "you can see! ing an old racing car with an i '|to0 much of it." The most famous soccer player in the world keeps away) from the public eye: He always enters the stadium by the back) door "because walking in at the \front, with all those people |queuing, would embarrass me." The wrinkles are more obvi- | but the old tricks are still there. Fullbacks from Cape Town to Canada still go ga-ga as the old man flicks, swivels and fishtails up the wing. SO THE SCORER MAKES DECISION CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. (CP) -- The pitcher, Jackie Burke, had a no-hitter going with two out in the ninth. Up to bat stepped Harry Callaghan. In the official scorers' box was Pius Callaghan, the bat- ter's father, The younger Callaghan took a. vicious swipe at the ball. Burke got his glove on it but couldn't hold the line drive. It went right back to the pitcher, He picked it up and threw to first. But the batter beat him by. a step. How did the elder Callaghan score it? Well, Burke finished up the night with a one-hitter, You guess who got it, P.S. -- Burke's team, Flyers, beat the Rovers 2-0. CANDY SPOTS TO START CHICAG O (AP) Candy Spots, Belmont runner-up, will start in Saturday's ~ $100,000- added Chicagoan for three-year- olds at Washington Park. Candy Spots will be top-weighted at the maximum 126 pounds in- cluding Willie Shoemaker, who guided him to victory in eight of his 10 lifetime starts. Jet Traffic is. another possible Starter. the | ja doubleheader from Arkansas | Travelers, 3-0. and 7-2, | HOMER WINS Gates Brown's 11th homer of the season in the seventh inning gave Syracuse its win over At- lanta, The Bisons, who took com- mand early with five rung in the second inning, received Steady pitching from newcomer Ray Apple, despite the fact he allowed 10 hits. Larry Elliot slammed a two-run homer for Atlanta in the eighth. Don Buddin's two-out, two-on bloop single in the 11th inning scored pinch runner Jake Gibbs from second to give Richmond the win over Indianapolis. Nelson Chittum boosted his streak of scoreless innings to 21 1-3 as he blanked Arkansas. |Chittum, who walked none in |the seven-inning first-game job, has pitched seven complete games including four shutouts, \He has a 6-4 record. | LEAFS GET SHETRONE TORONTO (CP)--Barry Shet- rone has been optioned to Tor- onto Maple Leafs by Washing- 'ton Senators, it was announced |Tuesday. The Leafs will be the |fifth team Shetrone has played | for this season, Have Your Suit Styled and Tailored by SAM ROTISH 7 KING ST. 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