Giants Top Braves, Aided By 'Bush Play' By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS If anyone asks Bobby Bragan next winter what finally knocked Milwaukee Braves out of the National League pennant race, he can blame it all on a slow roll and a fast burn. They came jin rapid succes- sion in the eighth inning of the Braves' game against San Fran- cisco Giants, With the score tied 2-2 and Hal Lanier on first, pinch-hitter Jim Davenport of the Giants dropped a sacrifice bunt down the first-base line, Milwaukee first-baseman Joe Torre watched attentively while the ball trickied along the chalk line and stopped 15 feet from the bag, then confidently picked it up figuring it had rolled foul. "Fair ball," yelled umpire Billy Williams. Infuriated, Torre slammed the ball down and charged at Wil- liams. Lanier rounded second and kept running. By the time Torre realized what was hap- pening, the Giant second base- man was on his way home with the tie-breaking run and the Gi- ants went on to win 4-2, The victory, San Francisco's 16th in 17 games, kept the Gi- ants 344 games ahead of the second-place Los Angeles Dodg- ers and dropped the fourth-place Braves eight full games off the pace. ZOILO VERSALLES Magic Number Now Three Twins Wallop Senators, By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer Zorro is leaving his mark on} the American League. But it's not a Z, it's MVP. driving force behind Minnesota Twins who reduced their magic pennant - clinching number to) three Sunday by walloping| Washington Senators 8-1 for their ninth victory in 10 games. And as the Twins continue to| close in on their first American League pennant, Versalles con- tinues to improve his standing) "I pulled a bush play,"' was Torre's rueful post-mortem. Lanier said he would have scored anyway. The Braves had no one covering home plate: DODGERS BLANK CARDS Elsewhere in the NL, the Dodgers whipped St. Louis Car- dinals 5-0, Cincinnati Reds edged Houston Astros 4-3 after losing 8-6, Pittsburgh Pirates nipped Philadelphia Phillies 1-0 in 10 innings and New York Mets beat Chicago Cubs 86. In Saturday's games, the Gi- ants downed Milwaukee 2-0, the Dodgers nipped the Cards 1-0, the Cubs edged the Mets 4-3 and the Pirates defeated the Phils by the same score. After Lanier scored, the Gi- ants added a run in the eighth on Willie McCovey's sacrifice fly. Juan Marichal then came on in relief and stopped Mil- waukee in the last two innings. Torre, at bat, had a home run and a run-scoring double. The Giants' Willie Mays and Jim Hart each had a home run. Ron Perranoski rescued Claude Osteen in the ninth in- average as Carl Yastrzemski of Boston Red Sox went 0-for-7) jand sl:pped to .315. \SOX EDGE ATHLETICS The Red Sox, however, edged) while the Dodgers built their|(ss), Zorro is Zoilo Versalles, the|Kansas City Athletics 3-2. Sun-|lead with the help of homers by|Burke (cf), Sox|Jim Lefebvre and Wes Parker.| (rf). day, Chicago White whipped Cleveland Indians ,7-5 and New York Yankees blanked Detroit Tigers 3-0. Baltimore (dened and California Angels, scheduled for a doubleheader, were rained out. The Twins took care of the Senators 4-2 Saturday while Chi- jeago thumped Cleveland 8-5, as a contender for Most Valu-|Boston downed Kansas City 5-3 able Player honors. The- short- land Detroit--outlasted---the-Yan- stop has hit at a .384 clip since|kees 4-3 in 10 innings. The Ori- Aug. 1, lifting his over-all mark|oles and California again were to .270. rained out. "When it comes to actual) The Twins continued their to the club, my vote has got to| rush to the pennant Sunday by go to Versalles," says Twins'|belting the Senators with an 11- third base coach Billy Martin./hit attack, including a two-run "He's won more games for us|double in the third inning by in more ways than any player|winning pitcher Jim. Perry that on the club." |built their lead to 6-0. Versalles, 24, who hit the! Any combination of Minne- ning and saved the Dodgers' Jay Cees Oust Port Perry In Extra Contest Dave Leaming scattered eight hits and hit three himself Satur- day, to lead Jay Cee Juveniles to a 9-5 win over Port Perry Tripp's in Port Perry. The win gave Jay Cees their best of three playoffs two games to one. The clubs split the first two games before a third ended in a 4-4 deadlock at curfew, forcing the fourth contest. Dennis Ewart also cracked three hits for the winners, in- cluding a two-run second inning home run. Juveniles led all the way, by scores of 1-0 after one inning, 3-1 after two, 7-5 after four and 8-5 after five. Leaming fanned eight batters and walked four en route to the win, John Popovitch pitched just one and one-third innings but took the loss. He was re- lieved by George Redshaw. The pair gave up 12 hits, fanned five and issued seven walks. Jay Cees now play Genosha Aces in a 3-of-5 final series, opening at 6.00 p.m, Tuesday at Alexandra Park, JAY CEE JUVENILES -- D. Leaming (p), D. Ewart (c), K second straight shutout over St. /Louis. Osteen, 15-14, didn't al- jlow a Cardinal past.second base! Jim Gentile's three-run, pinch-| lifted Houston past Cincinnati in| the first game. | Tommy Harper's homer in ithe Cincinnati seventh Arnage broke a 3-3 deadlock in the nightcap and left the Reds 414 games from the top. Bob Veale, 17-11, allowed the Phillies_only.one hit. in 10 in- nings -- Tony Taylor's two - out single in the sixth. He also} jstruck out 12, breaking the Pi-| rates' team record for strike- outs in one season. Roberto Cle- mente singled across the only run. Dleon Jones and Bobby Klaus led the Mets' attack, Jones |driving in three runs and Klaus scoring three, Twins' only homer in the last|sota victories and Baltimore de- seven games against the Sena-jfeats totalling three will bring \(c), B tors Saturday and stroked three singles and drove in two runs Sunday, leads the league in! runs scored with 121 and dou- bles with 43. He is second in hits with 171 and in triples with 10. The fleet - footed Cuban has) also stolen 25 bases--16 in a row without being caught--and, has not been thrown out all sea- son long stretching singles into) doubles. However, he undoubtedly will face stiff competition in the| MVP balloting from at least one of his team-mates, Tony! Oliva, Oliva, who sat out the weekend games, took over the AL batting lead. with his .317 | the Twins the pennant. | The Red Sox got the job done| |against the As with a three-run! |third inning as Jim 'Gosger hit an inside-the-park homer and} Felix Mantilla stroked a two-| jtun single. Joe Pepitone's single and a| double by Roger Repoz in the) jeighth inning brought in the| Yankees' first run and broke up| a scoreless duel between Rich/| Beck and the Tigers' Dave Wic- kersham. A three-run double by Tommy Agee _ highlighted Chicago's four-run rally in the fourth that sent the White Sox ahead of| Cleveland to stay. | OLD COUNTRY SOCCER LONDON (Reuters)--Results of Old County soccer played Saturday: ENGLISH LEAGUE Division I Blackburn 1 West Ham 2 Blackpool 1 Suderland 2 Everton 3 Arsenal 1 Fulham 3 Aston Villa 6 Leicester 3 Leeds 3 Man United 4 Chelsea 1 Newcastle 3 Burnley 2 Notts F 1 Northampton 1 Sheffield U 1 Sheffield W 0 Tottenham 2 Liverpool 1 West Brom 6 Stoke 2 Division I Birmingham 1 Portsmouth 3 Bury 2 Norwich 5 Cardiff 4 Man City 3 Coventry 0 Crystal P Derby 1 Rotherham 3 Huddersfield 2 Preston 1 Ipswich 2 Bolton 0 Leyton Or 0 Plymouth 1 Middlesbrough 2 Charlton 2 Southampton 9 Wolverh'pton 3 Division II Rentford 2 Syansea 0 Bristol R 3 Oxford 1 Exeter 0 Queens P R 0 Gillingham. 2 Watford 2 Grimsby 3 Walsall 1 Hull City 1 York City 4 Millwall 2 Scunthorpe 2 Peterborough 2 Brighton 2 Swindon 0 Bournemouth 0 1 EUROPEAN SOCCER RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Italy Brescia 0 Milan 3 ' Cagliari 0 Fiorentina of Flor- ence 1 Catania 1 Lanerossi of Vicenza 3 Foggia 2 Bologna 0 Juventus of Turin 9 Napoli of Wales 0 Lazio of Rome 2 Varese 1 Sampdoria of Genoa 0 Roma 1 Spal of Ferrara 9 Torinto 0 West Germany Bavaria Munich 5 Karisruhe 1 Meidericher 2 1860 Munich 3 Hamburg 5 Moenchengladbach 0 Nuernberg 7 Berlin 2 Hannover 6 'Neunkirchen 0 Kaiserslautern 1 Brunswick 1 Stuttgart 0 Frankfurt 0 Cologne 2 Bremen 0 Schalke 2 Dortmund 3 PORTUGAL Benfica 6 Cuf 1 Leixoes 1 Oporto 2 Beira Mar 2 Lusiano 0 Barreirense 3 Varzim 1 Braga 2 Academica 3 Rporting 1 Guimaraes 1 WEST GERMANY South Ingoistadtd 1 Offenbach 2 Augsburg 2 Schweinfurt 1 Freiburg 0 Weiden 2 Fuerth 2 FC Pforzheim 1 Hof 0 Frankfurt 1 Kassel 1 Mannheim 2 Stuttgart 0 Reutlingen 2 Waldhdof 0 Ruesselsheim 9 Darmstadt 2 West Oberhausen 1 Duisburg 0 Hamborn 3 Gelsenkirchen 1 |Chester 4 Wrexham 2 Division IV Barrow 2 Torquay 0 | Bradford C 1 Stockport 7 | Colchester 2 Rochdale 0 Halifax 0 Notts C 1 Hartlepools 5 Newport 2 Luton 1 Chesterfield 2 Port Vale 3 Lincoln 0 SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division I Aberdeen 2 Dundee 3 Clyde 3 Partick 1 Dundee U 5 St. Johnstone 1 Falkirk 2 Stirling 0 Hearts 0 Hibernian 4 Kilmarnock 3 St, Mirren 1 Morton 1 Dunfermline 1 Motherwell 4 Hamilton 2 Rangers 2 Celtic 1 Division II Albion 2 Airdrieonians 1 Alloa 1 Steinhousemuir 1 Berwick 2 E Stirling 2 Cowdenbeath 3 Ayr U Forfar 2 Artbroath 3 Montrose 3 Brechin 0 Queen of S 4 Stranraer 1 Queens Pk 0 Thd Lanark 2 Raith 1 East Fife 3 IRISH LEAGUE Ards 1 Linfield 3 Ballymena 8 Cliftonville 0 CRusaders 4 Coleraine 2 Derry City 1 Glenavon 3 Distillery 0 Glentoran 4 Portadown 0 Bangor 0 i | 1 Ist. {San Francisco 2 Milwaukee 0) san Francisco 4 Milwaukee 2 |Los Angeles 5 St. |Milwaukee, Blasingame (16-9) BASEBALL SCORES AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National . League w Pct. GBL | .597 | .573 567 544 -539 514 490 450 land San Francisco 89 Los Angeles 86 Cincinnati 85 Milwaukee 81 Pittsburgh 82 {Philadelphia 76 72 Louis 73 76 Chicago 68 83 Houston 62 89 .411 |New York 48103 .318 Saturday's Results 3% Mid 3 12 16 Philadedidphia $ Pittsburgh 4 New York 3 Chicago 4 |Los Angeles 1 St. Louis t Sunday's Results Philadelphia 0 Pittsburgh 1 New York 8 Chicago 6 Louis 0 Houston 8-3 Cincinnati 6-4 Probable Pitchers Today San Francisco, Boljn (11-5) at Cincinnati, Maloney (19-7) (N)|' Philadediphia, Culp (11-10) a | New York, Fisher (8-21) at} Pittsburgh, Sask (6-3) (N) American League L Pet GE GBL 55.636 65 .572 64 .565 67 .553 70.527 78 .487 80 .467 65 85 433 301 Boston 60 92 .394 36% Kansas City 54 94 .365 40% Saturday's Results | Washington 2 Minnesota 4 | Chicago 8 Cleveland 5 | Detroit 4 New York 3 | Kansas City 3 Boston 5 Baltimore at California, rain 96 87 83 83 78 74 70 | Minnesota Chicago | Baltimore | Detroit |Cleveland |New York | California Washington in 24 254% ppd., Sunday's Results Washington 1 Minnesota 8 j |Chicago 7 Cleveland 5 Kansas City 2 Boston 3 ~| Detroit 0 New York 3 Duesseldorf 4 Essen 1 Bochum 1 Aachen 0 Marl-Huels 3 Herne 0 Leverkusen 1 Wuppertal 2 SW Essen 4 Bielefeld ddl Bottrop 1 Muenster 1 Horst-Emscher 0 Cologne 2 North St. Pauli 2 Bergedodrf 3 Bremen 4 Cbncordia Hamburg 3 Friedrdichsort 2 Altona 1 Hildedsheim 0 Goettingen 1 Itzehoe 6 Hannover 3 Osnabrueck 2 Kiel 2 Wolfsburg 2 Oldenburg 0 Viktoria Hamburg 1 Luebeck 4 Berlin Viktoria 2 Spandadu 2 Hermsdorf 2 Gatow 3 |Staaken 2 Zehlendorf 2 | Reinickendorf 4 Neukoelln 1 Lichterfelde 0 Berliner SV 3 Tennis Borussia 3 Wacker 1 Hertha 2 Suedring 1 Tegel 0 Flauweiss 4 SPAIN | Elche 3 Espanol 0 |Malaga 1 Cordoba 3 |Real Madrid 1 Pontevedra 0 | Mallorca 0 Sabadedl! 1 Barcelona 4 Betis 1 FRANCE Valenciennes 1 Monaco 0 Rennes 4 Sochaux 3 St.-Etienne 5 Strasbourg 1 Bordeaux 1 Nantes 2 Rouen 2 Stade Francais 1 Sedan 3 Cannes 1 Lille 1 Angers 0 Nice 2 Toulouse 1 iNimes at Lens, ppd. |Baltimore at California |South jvious year. 9 2, ppd., rain Probable Pitchers Today Kansas City, Hunter (6-6) Minnesota, Grant (19-5) Detroit, Aguirre (13-10) at Cleveland, Tiant. (11-11). (N) Baltimore, Barber (13-9) California, McGlothlin (0-0) 'Nicklaus Sets Money Record PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Jack Nicklaus became the big- igest money winner in golfing history by shooting his fourth' consecutive sub-par round Sun- day to earn the $50,000 Portland Open tournament title. The $6,600 Nicklaus won | boosted his season total to. $134, 1045, breaking the record of |$128,230 set by Arnold Palmer jin 1963. Nicklaus was 15 strokes un jder par with rounds of 69-68-68 /68--273 on the par 72 Portland \Golf Club course. Dave Marr, the PGA cham was runner-up, -- three at VFR Pforzheim 1/Sevilla 1 Atletico ded Madrid 1 yoked behind Nicklaus Billy Maxwell captured third place with 278. Bob Verwey of Africa was fourth, a istroke behind Maxwell. Billy {Casper finished fifth, at 280. For Nicklaus it was his fifth' tournament victory of the sea- son, equalling 1963, his best pre He had won the Portland Open twice previously. | | Hockey {Detroit Red Wings, |his 1965-66 contract. Brack (lb), W. McGahey (2b), T. McQuade (3b), R. Korback R. Willoughby (if), B. jestablished, the 1-0 score that 'man, well inside the line, clear- and §. Hyrcanuk PORT PERRY TRIPP'S: J . Lee (lb), Hughes (2b),} B. Oke (3b), S. Foster (ss), \Pickard (If), Powell hit homer in the eighth in ig) Popovich (p and rf), Dowson| brs Brockville Jrs. Put Out Scugog Cleaners In OASA Hits were as scarce as the base but despite Oshawa's proverbial hen's teeth, here at Alexandra Park, on Saturday night, when Oshawa Scugog Cleaners faced Brockville "Dig- ers" in the second game of their OASA Eastern Ontario Zone finals, in the Junior "A" category -- so with this fact gave Brockville the series in two-straight games, is not such a shock. Brockville won the first game 2-1, a week ago, when Russ Hodgkinson, their one-man team pitcher, hit a two-run homer, in the 9th inning. Saturday night he blanked Scugog Cleaners, limiting them to one lone hit, a two-bagger by Tilk, that came after there were two out, in the sixth inning. Other than a couple of walks, one to Pete Norris in the fourth and one to Bob Mason, in the 7th, no other Oshawa batters got as far as first base. Hodkin- son struck out a total of 18 Osh- awa batters in this game. What lodked like Oshawa's best scoring opportunity came in the 9th inning with one out when Ron Siblock slashed a drive that! bounced in front of the 3rd base- ed the baseman's outstretched hands. and then bounced the sec- ond time, | line. Siblock ended up on third) Concretes Cop -- G. Redshaw (rt and i Inter. sO Set Mantle Day Held In N.Y NEW YORK Mantle, slugging star, New York Yankees' was honored on his day Saturday as he played) in his 2,000th game for the American League baseball __. |club. Some 60,000 fans were on hand when Mantle, his wife Merlyn, and their four sons re- ceived thousands of dollars worth of gifts, including an au- jtomobile, two quarter horses free vacation trips to /Rome, Nassau and Puerto Rico. Mayor Robert Wagner pro- claimed Saturday Mickey Man- tle Day in New York. Red Bar- ber, master of ceremonies, read a congratulatory telegram from President Johnson. Joe DiMag- gio, former Yankee great and a member of baseball's Hall of Fame, presented the switch- hitter to one of the largest crowds of the year at Yankee Stadium. Donations of more than $10,- 000 were given to the Mickey Mantle Fund for Hodgkins Dis- ease Research Foundation. Mantle's father died 13 years ago of the disease, which is */F. Dennis (p), form of cancer. (AP)--Mickey|in the third inning on two sin- Brooklin "Concretes" over. jcame a 3-0 fifth inning deficit, | just outside the foul) -- tests that the hit was 'fair' when it went past or over 3rd base, the umpire "ruled" foul and Siblock later struck out. Coach Roger Plancke protest so vigorously that he was eject- ed from the game. Bob Mason made a great bid to keep his team in the running for an Ontario softball cham- pionship. He practically match- ed Hodgkinson, striking out 13 batters, yielding only one walk and giving up only t » hits. Shoney singled with two out in the second inning and Patterson opened the third with a alk. Brockville got their lone run, the only one of the game, in the sixth inning. First batter of the inning, Emmons, dropped a bunt which, Siblock fumbled. Then Stewart promptly . sacri- ficed and Christie's solid single from 2nd base -- and as it turn- ed out -- that was it! BROCKVILLE -- Stewart, 3b; Christie, ss; Hodgkinson, p; Du- val, lb; Kirkland, cf; Shoney, 2b; Peyman, If; Patterson, c¢; Emmonds, rf. OSHAWA SCUGOG CLEAN- ERS -- Tilk, If; Siblock, 3b; SPORT BRIEFS ey gag pee penn Ho et THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, September 20, 1965 7 RIDES TO VICTORY TORONTO (CP) -- Hicken of the Queen City Bi- cycle Club won the Ontario 25- mile bicycle racing champion- ship -- with a time of 1:02:13, RUNS MARATHON ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-- Herb Reichert of the North York Achilles Track Club in Toronto Saturday won the an- nual 26-mile St. John's mara thon run, crossing the finish line in 2:58:17.4 to beat last year's champion, Don Croaker of St. John's. INSUUATE ay top quelity professionel in- bole Bh service for new er old homes and other buildings fee- turing PAL-O-PAK Blown In INSULATION te assure meximum customer satis- fection, FREE ESTIMATES, PP se ge! 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RUGER -- MARLIN gies, a double and a walk. ith two out and two on in the sixth frame, second base-| man Vern Ferguson cracked a hore run to his wrong field to| deadlock the score. In the 8th,| a fly ball by Ferguson was lost| WE'VE STOCKED OUR STORE WITH NAME BRAND HUNTING EQUIPMENT .SO.GET.SET FOR. A GOOD SEASON NOW Soe those Now REMINGTON SHOTGUNS in the heavy fog by a Selkirk| outfielder. Two runs scored, giv-| ing '"'Concretes" their margin of victory. John Hill singled twice for the winners, as did J. Hare for Ithe losers | Doug Scott went the route on the mound for Brooklin, giving up five hits and two walks, and striking out 12. R. Snider took the loss, and was relieved by F.| Dennis in the 8th. The two allow-| ed five hits, issued four bases on| balls, and fanned nine. | BROOKLIN "CONCRETES" | -- Doug Scott (p), Tom Simp-) son (c), Murray Jones (c), Don|| Ferguson (Ib), Bill Cornish) (2b), Vern Ferguson (3b), John} Hill (ss), Garnet Warriner (If), | Emo Gibson (cf), and Glen Till (rf). | SELKIRK -- R. Snider (p),| F, Moersenfel-| |der (c), 1. Moersenfelder (lb), || Mantle's speech was brief @5|J, Hare (2b), Steele (3b), Lind- || promised. Without eluding to say (ss), Metcalfe (If), L. the talk this may be his last der (ct), White (rf). year, Mantle said; "I hope to be able to play another 15 years. This game has been great to me and my family. So have the Yankees. I only. hope that my dad could jhave heen here.' * Toronto tal Ink Pronovost PETERBOROUGH (CP) -- Toronto Maple Leafs an- nounced Sunday that defence- man Marcel Provost, traded to the Leafs after 15 National League seasons with has signed Terms were not disclosed. 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