ine | "Twins Dominate Dodgers _ In Hitting Categories By THE CANADIAN PRESS On paper, the 1965 World Series shapes up as a contest between the pitching and base- running of Los Angeles Dodg- ers and the hitting and base- running of Minnesota Twins. The odd thing about it is the Twins' superiority at the plate in a year in which the National League outshone the American "League in every hitting cat- egory. Minnesota's team batting av- ee erage of 2.54, a league-leading mark, was inferior to that of three National: League clubs-- Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and Mil- k -- and equalled by t. Louis. But the Dodgers won the pennant hifting. a modest. .245, which ranked no better than seventh in the National League. The Twins' offensive margin over the Dodgers carries across the board. They have a 774-608 edge in runs scored and 711-548 in runs batted in. In home runs their output almost |doubles that of Los Angeles-- Rochester Dumps Leafs, Habs Win 3rd Straight _ By THE CANADIAN, PRESS Punch Imlach or Milt Schmidt who wrote that old song hit, How're You Goin' to Keep them Down on the Farm? S| Schmidt and Imlach, the re- aispective coaches of Bostdén Bru- ins and Toronto Maple Leafs, are: still two weeks. away from trimming their rosters to the National Hockey League limit of 18. And already their early rejects are coming back to haunt them. It happened to Schmidt Sat- It must have been eitherlers to a 4-0 lead over the Aces be- fore Wayne Hicks put the los- on the scoresheet in the third period, Red Berenson, Jean Beliveau and Gilles Trem- blay were the other Montreal scorers. No other exhibilion games were played by NHL clubs but the Bruins and Rangers 'were. busy sorting out personnel pro- blems. Boston stacked away the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, October 5, 1965 7. Angels Have 3 On Rookie Team NEW YORK (AP) -- Three members of California Angels of bs Fagg sep League 'were nam the all-rookie team of! 1965 Monday. : The poll was made by a ehewing gum company for the seventh straight year. A total of 578 votes were cast with Marcelino Lopez, young right-handed pitcher of the An- gels being mentioned on 472. He won 14 -ganies and lost 13. Other Angels on the first " are Paul Schaal, at third, : outfielder Jose Cardenal. £ Other players on coat are: Tony Perez of ; Reds, first; Joe Morgan of Houston Astros, second; Rica Petrocelli of Boston Red Sox;- shortstop; outfielders Ron Swo-- boda of New York Mets and Curt Blefary: of ote Or- ioles, catcher Pat Corrales Philadelphia: Phillies Frank Linzy, lefthanded. gal of San Francisco G signed contracts of Reggie Fle- ming and Johnny Bucyk, two of 150 to 78--and the edge in hits is 1,396 to 1,329. On a man-to-man basis the issue is clouded by the Twins' policy of platooning in left and centre field. With Bob Allison J. H. Jackson May Not Show urday when the Bruins were|Schmidt's top scorers last sea- flattened 4-2 by Oklahoma City|son, plus rookie goaltender Ber- Blazers, their Central Profes-\nie Parent, defenceman Bob sional League affiliate. It was|woytowich and right # winger Imlach's turn Monday night as)Ron Stewart, Pin, ald ~~. the Leafs were beaten 3-2 by|club from Toronto in an off-| For Hearing TORONTO (CP) -- John Henry Jackson, Toronto Rifles' quarterback who was arrested on a charge of draft evasion by Federal Bureau of Investi- gation agents Sunday in Wheel- ing, W. Va:, may not appear at his hearing. Jackson was arrested as he was dressing for Sunday's Con- tinental Football League game between the Rifles and Wheel- ing Ironmen, which the Rifles won. He was released after the game on $1,000 bail and a hearing was set for Wheeling Oct, 22. ' Jackson, a 25-year-old native of Columbus, Ga,, became a Canadian citizen Aug. 25. . He visited RCMP headquar- ters on his return to Toronto Monday. "Tl was told I don't have to go to the hearing,' he said. "But if I didn't, I naturally wouldn't be allowed to enter the United States seein. 7 Jackson said he planfied to have Canadian and United States lawyers appear at the hearing on his behalf. "I hope this can be cleared up without me going there, The RCMP has mailed photostats of my citizenship papers and some letters to the FBI office in Wheeling," he added. L.A. Do and Joe Nossek in the outfield gainst left - handed pitching, the Dodgers have a 5-3 edge on batting average, although the count is reversed with Sandy Valdespino and Jimmie Hall facing the righthanders. Either way, the Twins are superior at six of the eight positions in runs batted.in and at five in home. runs. BOAST SUPERIORITY In pitching it's another story. Sandy Koufax, Don. Drysdale and Claude Osteen, the three Los Angeles starters, all have superior earned - run averages to Jim Kaat, the best of three! Minnesota starters. Koufax leads the majors with a 2.04 mark. Drysdale's E.R.A. is 2.78 and Osteen, despite his mediocre won - lost record of 15-15, is right behind him at 2.79. The Twins' trio consists of Kaat, 2.82, Jim (Mudcat) Grant TEAMWORK paid off. for Saskatchewan Roughriders last night as safety Dale West (12) and right corner linebacker Henry Dorsch (16) combine to deter an Ottawa Rough Rider ball . carrier, Saskatchewan left. defensive halfback Bob Rosid (24) watches the play. JACKSON HURTS THUMB at 3.30 and Camilo Pascual, | 3.35. i | The Dodgers' big three have a total of 64 victories, topped by Koufax at 25, to the Twins' 48 with Grant high man at 21. Topped: by Sandy's record 382, the three Los Angeles pitchers total 753 strikeouts to the Min- nesotans' . 377. Full statistics aren't avail-| able on the clubs' base-running ability but Los Angeles short- stop Maury Wills is in a class by himself with 94 stolen bases --easily best in the majors. dger REGINA (CP) -- Fullback George Reed propelled Saskat- chewan Roughriders to a 21-14 victory over Ottawa Rough Ri- ders in a Canadian Football 'Hurling To Shorten Series? By JOE REICHLER MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- "Win it all, Twins," the signs here implore but the feeling is Min- nesota may not take a single game from Los Angeles Dodg- ers, whose matchless pitching may perpetrate a four - game sweep of the World Series by the National League champions. In 1968, the same Ddogers, behind the dazzling pitching of Sandy Koufax, Don Drysdale and John Podres, stunned New York Yankees in four straight. Koufax and Drysdale are still around, more menacing than ever. Podres has been replaced on the big three by another southpaw, Claude Osteen. Osteen's 15-15 record for .the campaign is modest compared to Koufax' 26-8 and Drysdale's 93-12, but Dodger manager Wal- ter Alston is mindful that when Osteen pitched for Washington Senators in the American League, he defeated the Twins six times without a loss. Minnesota's Jim (Mudcat) Grant, Jim Kaat and Camilo Pascual do not exactly com- prise a sickly trio but not even the most avid American League rooter would put them in the same class. Pitching, as everybody con- cedes, is 75 per cent ofthe game. In the Dodgers' case, it is 90 per cent. Since good pitch- ing ustelly steps goed hitting it would not cause too much o a stir if the Dodgers won in the shortest time possible. Sandy Will Hurl _ Second Contest LOS ANGELES #AP)--Sandy sweep. The odds against a Dodger, sweep in 1963 were 27 to 1. Power must win it for the Twins. Manager Sam Mele will rely on the heavy hands of Har- mon Killebrew, Tony Oliva, Jimmie Hall, Don Mincher, Bob Allison aad Earl Battey to off- set the Dodgers' superiority in speed and pitching. Los Angeles writers called the Dodgers a 'cap gun" offence team. One writer said he'd seen more power in a second-hand lawn mower, "I keep hearing that we don't score any runs," observed Al-- ston, "but we usually manage to score more than the opposi- tion. We use what you might call a seratch, slide and steal type of attack." MIGHT CHANGE TACTICS "We may surprise somebody in the World Series," Alston added. "We might change tac- tics and even hit a home run or two." Grant has never pitched against the Dodgers. Neither has Drysdale against the Twins, but Don has the advantage of World Series experience. The 29-year-old Drysdale Chicago White Sox in 1959 and shut out the Yankees in '63 This will be Grant's World Se- ries debut. Thursday's maich-up figures to be Koufax against Kaat. Sandy, virtually certain to be voted the Cy Young Award, de- noting baseball's best pitcher, won his 26th game in pitching The Series, 62nd between the rival league champions, opens Wednesday with Drysdale op- pésing Grant. The 30-year-old ace of the Twins' staff posted a 21-7 rec- ord during the regular season. Professional odds-makers fa- vot the Dodgers- behind the right-handed Drysdale by 10-to- 11 odds for the opening game despite the Twins' home ad. vantage. The same betting gen- try rule the Dodgers a 5-to-7 fa- vorite to win the Series and will give 15 to 1 against a Dodger Entire Series On Television TORONTO (CP) -- The CBC announced Monday its radio and television networks will carry all games in the World Series between Minnesota Twins and Los Angeles Dod- gers, beginning Wednesday in Minneapolis. Broadcast time for the first two games in Minneapolis Wed- nesday and Thursday will be 2:45 p.m. EDT, Broadcast times for the third and fourth games in Los Angeles Saturday land Sunday will be 3:45 p.m. EDT. If a fifth game is needed it will: be played in Los Ange- les next Monday with the broadcast starting at 3:45 p.m. |EDT. | The sixth and seventh games, if necessary, will be played in defeated} Regina Tops Ottawa, Dillard Is Injured League interlocking game here Monday night. | Reed scored three touch- |downs, ran for 165 yards, }eaught one pass for 13 yards, | moved into third place in the WFC scoring race, and moved Ottawa coach Frank Clair, a 15-year veteran of Canadian! football, to exclaim: "I have never seen anyone; , run as hard as Reed did to-| Rochester Americans, champ- ions of the American Hockey League and the No. 1 Toronto farm club. The dignity of Toe Blake, whose Montreal Canadiens won the Stanley Cup last spring, re- mained unruffled Monday as the Habs whipped Quebec Ace: 5-1 for their third successive victory over minor league op- position. pin and Ed Joyal, The westerners defeated Ottawa, 21-14, handing them their second loss on their current western swing. hero seven years doesn't figure to be back. TOOK EARLY LEAD nights. Two of the three Rochester goals were scored by Jim Pap- players loaned to the Americans for the evening. The third came from Gerry Ehman, a Leaf playoff ago who Dave Keon and Bob Pulford gave Toronto an early twogoal lead before the roof fell in on the Leafs, who were playing their third game in as many } A former Leaf, left - winger| Dick Duff, fired two goals for| season trade. The Rangers signed goal-| tender Ed Giacomin, their ac-} quisition from Providence Reds} of the AHL, and defenceman| Wayne Hillman and assigned right-winger Marc Dufour to Baltimore Clippers, another AHL club. | | Halfback Bullocks Out For 6 Weeks 'VANCOUVER (CP) -- Half- back 'Amos Bullocks of British Columbia Lions broke a bone in his ankle Saturday night and| will not play for at least six weeks, the Western Football| Conference club said Monday. | Ajox, Whitby, Oshawa -- COMMERCIAL @ INDUSTRIAL DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING AREAS NO DOWN PAYMENT @ 20 Months to Pay © 3 Yeor Guerantee CALL OSHAWA 728-1541 MARCI PAVING COMPANY LLL TEM. OSHAWA JUNIOR CONFERENCE The injury came during the| Lions 41-27 victory over Ed-| the Canadiens as they rompedimonton Eskimos. Clair said he has a possible broken shoulder, He said x- rays will be taken in Ottawa today. £ Jack Abendschan kicked two converts for Saskatchewan to hold fourth place in the scoring race with 54 points. Martin Fabi kicked a 60-yard single. Moe Racine converted both Ottawa touchdowns. er. x night. He was better than I've! ever seen Lovell Coleman." It was no small tribute. Cole-| man, Calgary Stampeders' full-| back, has been a Western Con- \ference all-star for the last two years and was named Canada's outstanding player last season. Reed broke 24 yards off tackle for the first touchdown, smashed one yard for the sec- ond after getting the team a crucial first down on a third-/ and-one situation and carried) three yards around: right end! for the third. It gave him 55 points on nine touchdowns and a single and moved his league-leading rush- ing total to 11191 yards in 12) games. | It also gave Saskatchewan another chance to take a good solid look at a playoff position, moving them into a third-place tie with British Columbia Lions at 13 points. Calgary leads with 16 and Winnipeg Blue Bomb- jers have 14, but B.C. has a game in hand. 'More than 12,500 fans in Tay- llor field watched as Saskatche- wan took a: 21-0 lead into the }fourth quarter. | Ottawa quarterback Russ) Jackson struck for two quick! touchdowns on passes to end| Ted Watkins to. move within a converted touchdown late in the fourth quarter. Ee | "Jackson showed great cour- age out there," Clair said. "He jammed his thumb badly in the second quarter. It swelled | badly and he practically had to paim his passes in the second half. But he almost pulled it out." Ottawa lost fullback Jim Dil-| lard in the first quarter and |] 1964 JOHNSON FALL CLEARANCE USED BOATS @ TRIM McCULLOUGH LUMBER Co. Lt. @ PLYWOOD Call Now 728-4688 1270 Simcoe St. N. FOOTBALL Hamilton Hurricanes VS HAWKEYES WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6th Kinsmen Stadium -- Admission -- contal @ DOORS ADULTS 75¢ CHILDREN 25¢ eccaaes oo MOTORS 40 bp. electric ¢ sees $50.00 1962 JOHNSON 28 hp. electric « . ' 1961 JOHNSON 40 hp. electric 1959 MERCURY 75 hp. electric with controls 1956 MERCURY 30 hp. with controls 1954 JOHNSON 25 hp. electric 1961 ELGIN 10 hp. .. 1956 SCOTT 30 hp. with controls ne 1956 JOHNSON 54 hp. .- 1955 JOHNSON 51% hp. . 1954 MERCURY 5 hp. .... 100.00 1955 MERCURY 714 hp. .. 120.00 1953 EVINRUDE 714 hp. .. 85.00 1952 ELTO 12 hp. ......-- 73.00 - 425,00 430.00 . $49.00 225.00 - 149,00 sees 149,00 145,00 125,00 1964 CRESTLINER Imperial Mus- tang . . . complete 'with top, side curtains, rear mooring cover 849.00 1961 CANADIAN LAURIER 14° Fibreglas complete 425.00 PETERBOROUGH ROYAL 15'... complete, needs varnish job 300.00 14° PLYWOOD 'all equipped NEW LOW FARES _|Minneapolis Oct. 13 and 14 with broadcasts starting at 2:45 p.m. EDT both days. Richmond To Get the pennant clincher against the Braves last Saturday, He set a major league season strikeout mark with 382 and tied another 'Warren Godfrey | 14° CANADIAN MAHOGANY jmajor league record by wining jhis fourth straight earned run title at 2.06 Kaat's 1965 record is 18-11: Memphis Captain MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) --; |Warren Godfrey, a veteran of| 1/12 seasons in the National Koufax of Los Angeles Sandy | Atlanta Franchise ers, ,whose 26 victories this) RICHMOND, Va. (AP)-- season made him the winning-|Richmond, which lost its In- est pitcher in the majorjternational League baseball) leagues, will end a 24-hour fast|franchise, to Toledo, Ohio, is has been} Memphis Profes- The third game, first at Los|Hockey League, Angeles, next Saturday, will pit'named captain of Osteen 15-15 against Pascual 9-)Wings of the Central 4, 'sional Pro League. this week in time to regain hisjslated to be awarded Milwau-| strength before his first World/kee Braves' Atlanta franchise, | Series appearance Koufax is scheduled to. start) the second game of the World Series Thursday against Min- nesota Twins Dodger manager Walter Al- ston tabbed Koufax for the sec- ond game because the series opener will be played Wednes- day, Oct. 6--a Jewish holiday. - Don Drysdale, who won 23, will pitch the opener. Koufax at sundown today will begin a fast that will last through Yom Kippur--or day of atonement. He will be free to eat at sundown Wednesday. C.P.H.L. HOC TU it was indicated Monday. Milwaukee President John McHale left no doubt in a visit| here that the Braves plan to come here. | "We are negotiating with no other city," McHale said. He said, however, the parent| Milwaukee club must work out! some complications before a final agreement can be made, with city. officials. He said the Braves will oper- ate in Atlanta next season,) hence the search for a site to! move their AAA franchise in the International League. THUR OCTOBER 7t 1 1 There Are Special Fe? personal use or for Compeny use ore definite edvonteges when you lease e/new... Ne insurence costs. . . PHONE 723-4634 LTD. BUSINESS EXECUTIVES AND SALESMEN No maintenance costs One rate cover, 4 : . eee 1. Fg! be ge oe ae tee ee rome Pepe + « « Phone or come ia MILLS AUTO LEASE Benefits For All TICKETS ON SALE AT:-- @ Bolahood's Sportshaven -- mtown Oshawa @ Jim Bishop Sporti Downtown Osha Civic Auditorium Box Office ACADIAN = Medel PONTIAC BUICK Other Request 266 KING ST. WEST rT. Maple Leaf Farm Club OKLAHOMA CITY. Boston Bruins Farm Club Junior "A" Hockey Segson Ticket Holders Must Pick Up Their Ticket by 9 p.m. Friday Night KEY LSA SDAY h, 8:00 P.M. Bus Service:---- Leave Downtown at 6:30 -- 7;00 -- 7:30 . troiler | ALL MARINE ACCESSORIES plywood, complete 229.00 14' PETERBOROUGH complete 14' PETERBOROUGH Cedar strip ONE PLYWOOD ONE TEE NEE 1,000-ib. ONE TEE NEE trailer SEVERAL NEW BOATS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, ACT QUICKLY FOR A REAL BARGAIN 25% OFF Return After the Game OR] U | bite cto free of charge. e g™ ITH' PORT . 353 KING ST. W, OSHAWA "PHONE 728-7341 OWE 2 STERN CANADA Trips every day Via Trans-Canada Highway ONE PLYWOOD, needs deck 75.00 |] ONE PLYWOOD, needs deck 50.00 TRAVEL ANY DAY STOP-OVERS ARRANGED ONE WAY RETURN WINNIPEG . REGINA... 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