Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jul 1965, p. 9

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FORMER CHAMP J, DEMPSEY STILL PUNCHING Both Dempsey And Tunney DODGERS BACK ON TOP By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer Lou Brock may be only the No. 2 thief in the National League but he tops San Fran- cisco Giants' most wanted list today. Brock, who has been chasing Maury Wills' shadow in the sto- len base derby, ran the Giants into'the ground Tuesday night in a 3-2 St, Louis vietory that stretched the Cardinals' win- Lou Brock Steals It As Cards Nip Giants The Dodgrs, although outhit 14-13 by Cincinnati, dropped the Reds back into second place, one game out, Lou Johnson leading the way with three hits, Johnson, Dick Tracewski and John Roseboro each knocked in two runs, Don Drysdale ended a five- game losing streak and belted his fourth home run but was knocked out in the seventh don Coieman hit successive ho- mers. = Cardwell, 8-2, drove in two Pittsburgh runs with a fifth-in- ning single and held the Phillies to one run and four hits until the eighth, when Johnny Calli- son unloaded a three-run ho- mer. The Pirates sewed it up with five runs in the fifth, four of them unearned as a result of a when Frank Robinson and Gor- throwing error by Dick Stuart. ning streak to seven. The St. Louis swifty collected three hits, drove in the first run and scored the last two--after setting them up with his base- running larceny. But, despite his 35th stolen base, Brock lost ground to Wills, who swiped two--for a total of 5i--as Los Angeles Dodgers outlasted Cincinnati 11- 7 and regained the league lead from the Reds. The Cardinals, meanwhile, stayed in seventh place, one game under the .500 mark and seven games off the Jimmie Hall's Two HR's Sparks Twins' 9-0 Win By MURRAY QHASS Associated Press Sorts Writer Jimmie Hall, /Minnesota's slugging centre fielder, drove in four runs with two*homers and added a single in three times at bat Tuesday night, sparking the Urge National Commission WASHINGTON. (AP) -- Two famous rivals from boxing's golden age, Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney, teamed Tuesday to throw a one-two punch at the fight game in its electronic age. Both former heavyweight champions from the 1920s came out strongly for a national box- ing commission at the opening round of hearings before the House interstate commerce e Twins to a 9-0 victory over Bos- pace. } i \ton Red Sox. Pittsburgh Pirates whipped! 'The Twins' sixth consecutive | Philadelphia Phillies 8-4, Donltriumph gave them a two-game i __ \Cardwell pitching a six-hitter\jeaq in the American League,| with his son, freshman Con-jfor his seventh straight victory,|the biggest bulge they've had gressman John V. Tunney,|in the only other league game.|since June 9, | (Dem.-Calif.). |New York Mets and Chicago) six weeks ago the Twins' [Cubs had the day off and the|pregi "al Griffi : HE'S IN FAVOR |Houston-Milwaukee game waster ere hes Sy ig ee Tunney said he was "strongly|rained out. ia Giei ane "Finley Me. the a in favor" of the bill to set up|SINGLE SNAPS STRING |place Kansas City Athletics, a national boxing commission | , ae iinatte sulal a scare But the deal fell thrdugh and , uaa va . ScOre-|about two ks afterward which could bar a pe aa innings at 20 with an RB Griffith Lanceaea: ee of any suspicious fight from|single in the first. Lou stretched| -«y can't trade Hall now. We being carried in interstate com-|a fourth-inning hit into a dou-|might get someone to help us, and a sacrifice fly and stopped Kansas City on three hits be- fore Dick Hall relieved him. One of the hits off Barber, now 7-6 was Rene Achemann's third-inning home run, Dean Chance gave up eight hits in five innings but still picked up his first victory for Los Angeles in five weeks, Jim Fregosi collected three singles and drove in three runs for the By THE CANADIAN PRESS National Lea, wL 48 46 42 42 42 38 40 37 Los Angeles Cincinnati San Francisco Philadelphia Pittsburgh Milwaukee St. Louis Houston Chicago 36 New York 29 ' Tuesday's Results Los Angeles~1j Cincinnati 7 Houston at Mifwaukee ppd, rain San Francisco 2 St. Louis 3 Pittsburgh 8 Philadelphia 4 Probable Pitchers Today Los Angeles (Koufax 14-3) at Cincinnati (Ellis 12-3) (N) BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wediesdey, July 7, 1968 9.2 Cleveland at Chicago , rain Baltimore 4 Kansas New York 0 Detroit 8 'Speedy Scot' Probable Pi aos Cleveland (Stange 3-1 and Is Favorite Waver 2-1) at Chicago (Peters 5-6 and Buzhardt 7-3) (TN) Boston (Lonborg 7-3) NEW YORK (AP) -- Speedy at Scot, the defending champion Minnesota (Kaat 6-7) (N) and American representative, : was made the 1-to-5 favorite to New York (Downting 7-8) at/win Saturday's $100,000 Interna- Detroit (Aguirre 9-3) (N) tional Trot at Roosevelt Race- Baltimore (J. Miller 1-2) at|W&y after drawing the No. 4 Kansas City (O'Donoghue 4-10)|starting position Tuesday. (N) , Speedy Scot, owned by the Washington (Kreutzer 1-3) aticastleton Farm at Lexington, tiLos Angeles (McBride 0-1) (N)|xy,, and driven by Ralph Bald- win, will be the shortest-priced San Francisco (Shaw 7-6) at St. Louis (Gibson 10-6) (N) Pittsburgh (Friend 4-6) at Philadelphia (Short 9-6) (N) Houston (Nottebar.t 1-6) at Milwaukee (Cloninger 10-7) (N) Chicago (L, Jackson 6-10) at New York (A, Jackson 4-10) American League WL Pct. GBL 49 636 46 613 587 570 558 ABL 463 402 Minnesota Cleveland Chicago Baltimore Detroit New York Los Angeles Washington |Boston 385 Kansas City 306 Tuesday's Results 2 A 5 6 12 12 18% 19% 24% 45 | Leafs-Bisons Split Bill On Fine Pitching By THE CANADIAN PRESS Buffalo baseball fans Boston 0 Minnesota 9 International League W L Pet. GBL{favorite Columbus 53 6: Atlanta 53 Toronto 47 Jacksonville 45 Syracuse 41 Rochester 37 Toledo 36 E Buffalo 24 62 .279 Tuesday's Results Rochester 4 Syracuse 2 Toledo at Jacksonville, 2,ppd., rain Columbus 2. Atlanta 0 Wednesday's Games Toronto at Buffalo Rochester at Syracuse Toledo at Jacksonville Columbus at Atlanta in the seven-year his- 1 SOVIETS TAKE WIN | PARIS: (Reuters)--The Soviet jUnion beat Romania 9-5 in the} }women's team foil 'final at the) world fencing championships there Tuesday night. | COMMERCIAL | FRI, --EXxcI | JULY HJ were) | NO DOWN TING-- POST TIME tory of the 1%- tace, to have horses countries, ©: 96° 7 The No. 2 post position 'wei to Canada's entry, Betsy bert, owned by William He: of London, Ont. 'The six-yee old Canadian mare also + made the 6-to-1 second | She has won seven. of her starts this year and finis! second in one other race, RONALD W. BILSKY, 0.¢. CHIROPRACTOR |. 100 King St. €, -- 728-5156 @ INDUSTRIAL DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING AREAS PAYMENT @ 20 Months to Pay ® 3 Year Guarantee committee, Hanging over the proceedings like a bad memory was the wire services. "Had such authorization been lout a bunt in the sixth, stole Ken Boyer's single, then sole| second and broke the 2-2 dead- merce by television, radio or|ble and scored the tying run on|put it would sure hurt us to give him up." And hurt it would since Hall, treated to a pair of fine pitch-| ing performances Tuesday lnight as the Bisons split an| CALL AJAX 942-3786 9 as Gee RACES PAVING COMPANY International League double-| header with Toronto Maple} Leafs, winning the first 7-0 in @ ALEXANDRA@ PARK ; : j|headed for the best season in in existence through a _ law\lock on a single by Curt Flood.|his three - year career, leads passed by Congress earlier, we) ~~ ~~} Minnesota in four batting de- Cassius Clay-Sonny Liston fight in Lewiston, Maine, last May. But with a standing-room-only Wegering Privileges crowd in the big hearing room one wit remarked; 'This is drawing a bigger crowd than the fight." Looking muscular and fit at 70, Dempsey told the commit- tee how he started out in the old days in Colorado when he was a teen-ager: ". . . I used to go into the back room of these saloons and say: 'I'll fight any man in the house.' . » « Then they'd pass. a hat," GOT A CRACK The way a fighter got a crack at the champion then, recalled Dempsey, was to whip every- one in his path. And that, he said, is the way it should be today. Although Dempsey had a re- turn - bout contract with Tun- ney after Tunney lifted his title, Dempsey said this practice was one of the things killing boxing. The practice of guaranteeing the champion a return bout if the challenger licks him has re- sulted, Dempsey said, in "one- round knockouts in return bouts between Sonny Liston and Floyd Patterson and Cassius Clay and Liston." Dempsey, who has a fair list of one - round knockouts in his record, acknowledged under questioning that a one - round knockout didn't mean that any- thing was wrong with a fight. Tunney was not on hand per- would not have had the sorry spectacles produced in the last four so - called heavyweight championship matches," Tun- ney said, The American people, he said, "were bilked out of at least $30,000,000 to witness these fiascos through closed cir- cuit television and live gate." Another, more recent heavy- weight champion, Rocky Marci- ano, echoed Dempsey's senti- ments that boxing is "getting worse every day." He asid it is necessary for the federal government to step in to control boxing because State boxing commissions are making a mockery of the sport. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bill Crothers | Cops 800-Metre | STOCKHOLM (CP - Reuters)| Bill Crothers of Markham, Ont.| won a thrilling 800-metre race} at a star-studded international] track meet Tuesday night in Stockholm Olympic Stadium. Crothers won in 1:47.3, equal- ling the stadium record, after} an exciting battle to the finish) with Kenya's Wilson Kiprugut.| Kiprugut was second in 1:47.5 | Crothers and Kiprugut were} second and third respectively to) New Zealand's Peter Snell in| the 1964 Olympic 800-metre fi- nal at Tokyo. Dyrol Burleson of the United States won the 1,500 metres-- the metric mile--in 3:41.8 with Carl - Uno Olofsson of Sweden second in 3:42.4, Simo Wazic of Yuoslavia was third in 3:44.8) and Dave Bailey of Toronto} Batting -- Lou Brock, St. Louis, rapped two singles and a double, stole his 35th base, drove in one run and scored the other two in the Cardinals' 3-2 triumph over San Francisco Gi- ants, Pitching--Denny McLain, De- troit, stopped New York on seven hits for his sixth straight victory as the Tigers whipped the Yankees 8-0, dropping them 12 games out of first place in fourth in 3:45.1, | CLARKE WINS | Ron. Clarke of Australia cap-) tured the 5,000 metres in| 13:26.4, just 6-10ths of a second} outside his world record clock- jing of 13:25.8 set in Los Angeles jlast month. | Clarke won comfortably against Kipchonge Keino, a 25- lyear-old Kenya policeman who jbeat him in Turku, Finland, llast Friday. partments. He is third in the league with a .325 average, tied for third with 16 homers, fifth with 49 runs batted in and tied for fourth with 87 hits. TIGERS BLANK YANKEES In other games Tuesday night, Detroit Tigers whipped New York Yankees 8-0, Balti- more Orioles defeated Kansas City 4-1 and Los Angeles An- gels downed Washington Sena- tors 6-2. Rain washed out Cleve- land and Chicago. Jim Grant scattered eight hits for Minnesota, gaining his ninth victory in 11 decisions. Don Mincher also homered for the Twins while Bernie Allen singled across two runs. Detroit's Danny McLain won his sixth straight by stopping the Yankees on seven hits, Bill Freehan and Norm Cash, both hitting near .200, each hit two- run homers and drove in three runs. Steve Barber drove in two Baltimore runs with"a homer seven innings before losing the| second 5-1. ; | The split allowed the Leafs to gain a fraction on second-place} MARC Ajax, Whitby, Oshawa SPONSORED BY OSHAWA HARNESS HORSE DRIVING CLUB Atlanta Crackers, who dropped ja 2-0 decision to Columbus Jets while Rochester Red Wings clipped Syracuse Chiefs 4-2. A twin bill between Toledo Mud Hens and Jacksonville Suns were rained out. Carl Willey turned in the first outstanding game in Buffalo as he held the Leafs to five hits for his first win of the season. In the second, rookie Gary Was- lewski turned the same trick for Toronto, getting home - run support from Russ Gibson, Atlanta failed to score in their 39th consecutive inning in their loss to Columbus as Jerry May homered to support pitcher John Gelmar and send the Crackers to their fourth Shutout in a row. 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