Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Sep 1963, p. 15

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, September 19,1963 15 TURNSTILES BUSY . eke thik diag have-siens saenghan es ee b the panie buttens==- ing to do before much longer.!ana atelift Americans in desper- Transportation companies arejate bids to plug the holes on making a nice little killing as{their rosters. | Dodgers' Great Rally Overtakes St. Louis, 'Win It In 13th Inning By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Dick Nen was in Oklahoma City Tuesday night, in St. Louis Wednesday night and in seventh * heaven today, "Nen was the unknown com- modity who tured into a valu- able piece of merchandise with one swing of his bat as the National League leading Los Angeles Dodgers crushed St. * Louis' pennant hopes by edging the second-place Cardinals 6-5 in 13 innings Wednesday night. Nen, 23, was in sige earn Tuesday playing for Spok- of the Pacific Coast League playoffs, With that ended, he was called up to the Dodgers and joined the club in St .Louis just before the finale of the three-game series between the contenders. When the Dodgers got in- volved in a late-inning shuffle, the southpaw wound up playing first base. He came up in the ninth inning with the Dodgers trailing 5-4 and immediately col- lected his first major league hit --a home run that tied the score. The Dodgers went on to win in the 13th with the help of a two-base throwing error by Jul- fan Javier as relief ace Ron Perranoski got credit for the victory that dropped the Card- inals four games behind and virtually out of the running. 'I WAS SCARED' "I was scared stiff," Nen said later. "I had no idea I'd be called upon." Nen, who has averaged only one homer ever 17 games in the PCL, said he hit a fast ball, low and inside. "I knew I hit it good, but I had no idea it was a home run) until I saw*the umpire give the home run sign. "It was a strange feeling." The loss left the Cardinals with the almost impossible task of making up five games in the loss column with only seven games remaining. The Dodgers, meanwhile, will return home to close out the season with a nine- game stand. In other NL action Wednes- day, Philadelphia Phillies belted|C: New York Mets 5-1 in the last|D baseball game to be played at the Polo Grounds, Milwaukee defeated San Francisco Giants 6-4, Chicago Cubs edged Pitts- burgh Pirates 2-1 and Houston rie walloped Cincinnati Reds 4. In the American League, Chi- cago White Sox swept a double- header from Boston Red Sox 8-3 and 4-3 Camilo Pascual pitched a two-hitter as Minnesota Twins crushed Detroit Tigers 10-0, Kan- sas City Athletics edged Wash- ington Senators 5-4 and Balti- more Origles downed Los An-|I pi le: el Di wi geles Angels 3-1 and 7-5, with Steve Barber becoming a 20- game winner in the opener. The American League cham- ion New York Yankees and Cleveland Indians were not scheduled. GIBSON WINS IT The Cardinals built a 5-1 lead on a two-run homer by Charley James in the second inning off Pete Richert and a three-run third inning capped by Curt Flood's two-run double. Cardi- nal starter Bob Gibson took the wa a a four-hitter into the ighth. A two-run single by Tommy avis and a sacrifice fly by Willie Davis brought the Dod- gers to within one run, then Nen tied it in the ninth. Perranoski (13-3) took over in the eighth and checked the ardinals on three hits until the odgers finally broke through against Lew Burdette (9-12) in the 13th on a single by Willie Davis, the throwing error by Javier, fielded Dick Tracewski's groun- der, and a grounder by Wills on which the speedy Davis sped home. who stumbled as he That was it. The Cardinals ent down quietly in their half. Perranoski '"'was great, just great," said happy Dodger Man- ager Walt Alston. '"That's the way he's been all year. He's just the gol-darndest relief man ever saw." Perranoski was making his 65th appearance. As for the game, Alston said: "This is the biggest win of the three here. Coming from behind the way we did must make this the biggest game of the year for the boys." KEANE. WON'T QUIT St. Louis manager Johnny Keane, however, refused to ad- mit defeat. "I'm as far from giving up s I am from the Indian Ocean,": he said, In some of the other games: Rookie Gary Peters won his 19th game for the White Sox in the nightcap triumph over the Red Sox and: rookie teammate Pete Ward of Montreal hit a homer in each game of the doubleheader sweep, AL home run leader 'Dick Stuart hit his 41st homer for Boston in the opener, remaining one ahead of Minnesota's Har- mon Killebrew, who connected in support of Pascual against the Tigers. The Cubs edged the Pirates on a two-run, two-out homer by rookie Bill Cowan in the ninth inning after Joe Gibbon had al- lowed only four hits through eight innings. Roy McMillan's two-run dou- ble in the eighth inning enabled the Braves to end their losing streak at eight games. Willie Mays hit his 36th homer for the By JACK SULLIVAN Remember when the West took regular beatings from the East in the Grey Cup final? It became sort of a ritual--the western champion would travel East to Toronto, Hamilton, Sar- nia or Montreal, have its ears pinned back and go home, There were times in the 1920s when the westerners saved themselves the trouble of being clobbered by simply saying they didn't wish to meet the East. They had all sorts of excuses. There were times when the players fought with the club ex- ecutive over the rail line to be taken, and by the time their differences were patched an all- Eastern cup final would have been set up. There were other times when the western title- holders would claim they were Now It's denly rejuvenated Brit lumbia Lions were in the final, Vancouver fans would storm the gates, The Lions have jelled| ! after many frustrating seasons and their supporters have stopped kidding themselves and pea believe they've got a cham- n, WON SEVEN OF NINE The CFL scheduled 20 East- West interlocking games this season. Nine have been played to date and the western clubs have become fat and prosper- ous at the expense of their not- so-tough eastern cousins. who has taken a close games so far this have to admit the And just as long as those sud- tish Co- broke and couldn't afford to make the trip east, or that it was too late in the season to arrange a game. It didn't matter. The blase eastern football fans wouldn't have knocked the gates down to get into the park anyway be- cause they knew the West hadn't a chance. ALL-WEST FINAL? Things have taken a big change in the last few years and right now it might not be a bad idea if the Western Con- ference put it up to the Cana- dian Football League commis- sioner, Sydney Halter of Win- nipeg, to declare that this REMEMBER WHEN .. .? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Richard (Pancho) Gon- zales of Los Angeles de- fated Eric Sturgess of South Africa 15 years ago today to take the United States national amateur tennis championship 6-2, 6-3, 14-12. Tho swarthy 20- year-old was the sensation of the tournament after be- ing seeded eighth. He re- peated the feat next year and then turned profess- sional. : West's Turn Dominate Grey Cup urday, Nov. 30, would be en all-)They've won seven and, with western game, Wouldn't that be something? Anybody look at results of the East-West|@™mers are jolly well pleased inter! year woul idea has some merit. the results counting in the re- ive conference 8s, it's easy to see that the west- with this interlocking business. They wouldn't be out of line if they made a big pitch for a full interlocking East-West schedule next season. The easterners realize, too, EXCLUSIVE HAIR STYLING MEN i642 WILSON RI A name for fine clothes Fine tailored clothes by Doug Witson ere timely, yet timeless. Their eosy, youthful lines ore the best fashions for the sixties year's final at Vancouver Sat- K-W Panthers Lead Brantford In 1-C Finals KITCHENER (CP) Kitchener - Waterloo Panthers, a team that sneaked into the senior Inter - County baseball playoffs by winning six of their last seven seheduled games, took a 3-2 lead in the best-of- seven finals here Wednesday night with a 3-0 victory over the defending champion Brant- ford Red Sox. Left-hander George Valesente led the Panthers to the win by holding the Red Sox to three hits, walking four and' striking out 12. He didn't give up a hit until the seventh inning. Panthers jumped on loser Al McQueen for two unearned runs in the fourth inning on singles by Walt Bradley, Nick Rintche, Wayne Litzgus and Valesente and a costly error by Brantford eecond baseman Bob Frazier, Panthers got their third run fm the seventh on Wayne Litz- gus's bunt single, a stolen base The San Francisco BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS Giants, National League WL Pct, GBL| 94 59 614 -- 91 64 587 % 83 70 .542 11 81 72 52913 |B 81 73 .526 13% |K 81 74 52314 |L 77 77 500 17% 72 81 .471 22 Houston 59 94 .386 35 New York 49 104 32045 |B Results Wednesday Philadelphia 5 New York 1 San Francisco 4 Milwaukee 6 Chicago 2 Pittsburgh 1 Los Angeles 6 St. Louis 5 Houston 8 Cincinnati 4 Games Today No games scheduled Games Friday Milwaukee at Chicago St. Louis at Cincinnati, N. Philadelphia at Houston, N. Pittsburgh at Los Ang., N. Los Angeles St. Louis D Philadelphia Milwaukee Cincinnati Chicago Pittsburgh Chicago Minnesota Baltimore Cleveland Washington 88 65 87 67 81 72 74 78 73 81 73 82 69 83 68 86 53 99 x--Clinched pennant. Results Wednesday 'oston 3-3 Chicago 8-4 575 12 565 13% 529 19 487 25% 'ATA 27% A71 28 454 30% 442 3244 349 4614 etroit 'oston ansas City os Angeles Kansas City 5 Washington 4 Detroit 0 Minnesota 10 Only games scheduled ' Probable Pitchers Today Detroit, Bunning (11-13), at Minnesota, Stigman (15-14). Only game scheduled Games Friday Chicago at Detroit Los Ang. at Cleveland, N. Washington at Baltimore, N. wan, City at N ~~ York, TN. Jdinnesota at sion, N. Telephone Your Home Better with FUEL OIL -- FROM -- McLaughlin's 723-3481 Prompt Delivery ! y 24-Hr. Service Plan -- A McLaughlin Coal 110 KING ST. W. ic Weather-Controlled Delivery "Turn To Modern Living With Oil Heat" & Supplies Lid. 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