Orioles Gain Respect | For A. L. With Sweep By MIKE RATHET BALTIMORE (AP) -- Out- side Mamarial Stadium. an ane of the approaches to the ball park, a big, bold sign asks the question: "Would you believe four straight?" The sign belongs to the City of Baltimore and so does the World Series following the Ori- oles' amazing--and convincing four-game sweep of Los An- geles Dodgers, But now a bigger question is being kicked around: 'the Orioles, in holding the Dodgers scoreless for a record 83 consecutive innings while putting together the first Amer- ican League sweep in 16 years, destroy the myth 'of National League superiority? Strangely enough, Frank Rob- Anson, the guy who did the most to destroy the National League representatives, thinks not. Robinson, who supplied the only homer in Sunday's 1-0 Series fi- nale. "I still think over-all the National League 1s stronger, but it's not so much different in the two leagues as you're led to believe." Not many experts agreed be- fore the Series. The myth of su- periority had been built through three straight World Series tri- umphs by National League teams and a succession of All- Star game victories, The Dodg- ers were installed as 8-5 favor- ites for the Series. Then it happened. The names were Moe Drabowsky, Jim Palmer, Wally Bunker and Dave McNally--and they stifled the Dodgers, holding them scoreless from the third inning of the first game of-the best-of- seven set to the end of the Ser- es. Was it American League su' periority? cheen, pilcninig Guperwag 2 2555 Wills, the Dodger captain, saw it more as Los Angeles' inade- quacy at the plate, OFFERED A CHALLENGE "To me I gotta say it's good pitching," Brecheen explained. "We didn't hit and they didn't hit. It's gotta be real fine pitch- ing. I think the kids were able to pitch against Koufex and Drysdale because it was a chal- lenge that they were pitching against a superstar and a siar, "Over the last few years I've watched guys who've left one league or the other. I aon't think there's that much differ- ence. I think if Brooks Robinson went to the National League, he'd play great. If Willie Mays went to the American League, he'd play great." Said Wills: on the point of view, Hazs> Bre- the Orioles' pitching coach, said it was Baltimore's The answer, as it came from the dressing rooms, depended "T believed that when I was in the National League," said "With all due respect to their) pitching a lot of it had to do | with the fact that we were lousy . * " with the bat, We had a bad hit- | ting Series. They had a good : 0 inson ccomp jpitching Series. It was a com-| | bination of both. ® * * | "But when the ball is right) Two Main Objectives |there without too much velocity jand we pop it up, it's us. When | i la curve doesn't break and we! run-in with Mathews in 1960."|hit it in the ground, it's us. And| He continued: when we take two down the} "T hit a ball. . middie and swing at a pitch| By MIKE RATHET BALTIMORE (AP) -- Frank . and it rolled left to right, Wally Bunker, Jim Palmer, Dave McNally and Moe Drabowsky. The first three tossed shutouts for victories while Drabow- FOUR ACES Balti- more Orioles four pitching aces, who established a World Series record by blanking the National League champion Los An- geles Dodgers for 33 con- secutive innings, were, from sky struck out 11 batters in winning the first game of the four-game sweep in re- lief. Robinson wouldn't say he was a superman but as the hero of Baltimore Orioles' World Series triumph stood jammed in his cubicle in the dressing room he acknowle: that he had ac- complished his two aims--wip- :ing out the old man and bad- guy raps. » "I've been playing this sea- en since Dec. 9," said Robin- son, who learned then that he had been traded to the Orioles "by Cincinnati Reds. "I wanted te have a good year--it was the first thought in my mind at that time. "And I wanted to show the people, the officials, the City of Baltimore they were getting a guy who still could play base- ball." WON TRIPLE CROWN Robinson accomplished that during the regular season by becoming the first player in a decade to win the batting triple crown. | And he emphasized his claims in the World Series, hitting a homer in the first game, then putting his stamp on the finale Sunday whan he previded the only run as Baltimore com- es a four-game sweep of Angeles Dodgers: He said he felt he had proved! is point. "It's not just what I did, but to the bullpen, When I hit sec- ond, the ball was still kicking around so I started for third. Mathews took the throw in the baseline and I slid. "T guess he figured I slid un- necessarily hard. I said I can't jwait for him to tag me. And |then we tangled." : Both fired fists. "It was the only fight I ever had. I lost. My left eye was almost completely closed. That was enough for me." | .But he played the second game, hit a two-run homer, col- lected a second hit, made an outstanding catch and the Reds won 4-0. And the he plays-well- when-mad label was pinned on him eidents this year and Robinson even survived the extra pres- sure he felt was on him, partic- jularly in the series. |FEELS PRESSURE | "There's more on me than on the little fellows, I'm written up in the paper, everybody says you gotta stop him and the op- position figures if they stop the he guy they stop the whoie m. "The little guy just walks up and smashed the ball." But Robinson did that against the Dodgers Sunday despite a There were, however, no in-| over our heads, it's us. 'But it won't encourage any lscared anyone. The teams in spect us either. "They say when you watch the Dodger bats, it's just like j watching a silent movie." J/ENDS WITH FOUR-HITTER It was just that after McNally the opener. Drabowsky pitched § 2-3 innings of shutout relief in winning 5-2, Palmer won 6-0 while allowing only four hits, Bunker won 1-0 while allowing only six hits and then MeNally came back Sunday and finished it off with another four-hitter. The only run was supplied by Frank Robinson, who powered the first pitch to him by Don Drysdale in the fourth some 410 feet into the left field stands for a homer and the final revenge shot heard back in Cincinnati. Robinson had been traded to the Orioles Dec, 9 and labelled with an old-man tag. And his only thought had been to wipe it out. "P've been pleyiig this sea- son since Dec, 9," he said after the game. "I wanted to have a g year---it was. the first thought on my mind. I wanted to show. people that I wasn't washed up." jother team because we: never) cum oe Lions Still Kicking By JOHN SHORT Fullback Larry Eilmes | Canadian Press Staff Writer |smashed for 153 yards on 22 | British Columbia Lions en-\carries and one touchdown | joyed a Thanksgiving feast Mon-| against Edmonton, Willie jday with Edmonton Eskimos as| Fleming flashed four yards the main course. |for the other score while Bill | The Lions chewed up the mid-| Mitchell contributed a field \dle of the Edmonton defensive) goal, two converts and a single line for a 19-7 victory before 18,-| on a wide field goal attempt. A 003 fans to move within three} 74-yard punt by Neil Beaumont points of a traffic jam in the| provided the final B.C. point. last Western Football Confer:| i ence playoff spot. COFFEY DID IT ALL | The Eskimos are tied with' Tommy-Joe Coffey collected \Calgary Stampeders and Winni-|Edmonton's touchdown on a 13- peg Blue Bombers for second|yard pass from Bill Redell, place, three points ahead of the|then added the convert. cellar - dwelling Lions; Calgary; Flanker Terry Evanshen joined the pileup Saturday by| capped a brilliant pass - catch- rapping the first - place Sas-iing performance for Calgary katchewan Roughriders 35 - 18! with two touchdowns, Halfbacks before 16,392 fans in Regina. | Howard Starks and Jeff Aiche- Each club except B.C. has|son caught one each, Fullback played 13 games. The Lions|Bill Goods earned the other have a game in hand. 'Stampeder touch down * and (AP Wirephoto) In Western League was lifted in the third inning of| |Larry Robinson provided four jconverts and a single. Not untl Redell replaced Randy Kerbow at quarterback | jin the final quarter did Ed- monton mount any sustained of- jfence. The Lions established |their ground superiority in the early stages and Eilmes, Flem- ing, quarterback Joe Kapp and = Bill Munsey all contributed j damaging bursts, Saskatchewan's tou c hdowns |were shared by Wayne Shaw and Jim Worden. Jack Abend-|~ schan converted both and added two singles on field - goal at-- WEEKEND FIGHTS tempts that went awry. Calgary} | also conceded a safety touch. | Manchester -- Howard' Win- | Shaw clomped 32 yards toi stone, ii Bagisnd, bd ted i Don 125,-Les Angeles, gd Bay: Bev: oi wise aSt|4. Johnson disqualified for low up Worden's touchdown by pick- Mowe: ling up a Keeling fumble in|, Walpole, Mass, -- Lee Carr, Stampeder territory. /201, New York, outpointed Bob Shaw's heroics prapelled Sas- WILLIE FLEMING Tahvw nee ¥Gi8sGn, |Stallings, 192, New York, 8, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, October 11, 1966 @ By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada's national team proved it's no pushover in Na- tional Hockey gue competi- tion. The Nationals won two of three Thanksgiving Weekend _jexhibition games against New York Rangers, last - place team in the NHL last season. They beat Rangers 5-2 Friday night in Winnipeg, lost 7-0 in Calgary Saturday and came back for a 4-1 win Sunday, back on their home Winnipeg ice. The Rangers closed out the holiday weekend by beating Toronto Maple Leafs 3-2 at Kitchener Monday night, the only NHL exhibition action Thanksgiving Day. The Leafs split two other weekend games, losing 3-2 to Chicago Black Hawks at Tor- onto Saturday and beating the Red Wings 5-3 Sunday at De- troit. Chicago trounced Green Bay of a minor U.S. league 11-1 in a Sunday exhibition at Green Bay, Wis. HABS FINALLY LOSE In other weekend action, Bos- ton Bruins clipped Rochester Americans, American League champions, 5-2 at Rochester and Montreal Canadiens fell 4-1. to Houston Apollos, their Texas farm team in the Central Pro- fessional League. The Nationals' strong showing surprised Emile Francis, Rang- ers' general-manager,. "T haven't seen them for quite a while but they played real well," he said. 'They were -|really skating and checking." Francis had no alibi. 'Look what happened to the Cana- diens, They lost to Houston. No excuses."' Roger Bourbonnais got two of the Nationals' goals Sunday. Veteran Don Marshall had ive goals for Rangers Satur- ay. Nationals Stop Rangers Again In Exhibition Be Blech RBs Bole Shy in Ths Bhs Bs ey oso a sii, a Coa Johnny Bucyk and Pit Martin scored two goals each to the Bruins over the A Johnny McKenzie scored other Boston goal. Bronco vath and Gerry Ehman, for the Americans. Stan Mikita scored the win. ning goal midway in the third period to give Chicago a 3-2 3 over Toronto, Fred e and Doug Mohns got the others: Rookie Wayne Carleton got both Toronto goals. iil Red Berenson's third periéd goal gave Rangers the Mi Wilcke ond 'Phil Govotie' ge icke an oy! the other goals. Peter Rave ski and Brit Selby were .the Toronto scorers. " Defenceman Bob Baun broke his thumb in the game and Red Kelly suffered a torn leg mus- cle to join five other Leafs the injury list. Harry Hi veteran New York defenceman, injured 'his ankle. Selby and Dave Keon each scored two goals in Toronto's 5-3 win over Detroit. Carleton got the other goal to boost this weekend total to three. Norm Ullman, Paul son and Bryan Watson for Detroit. Tauniy Canadian 'Koil NDON WINES i ~ FOOTBALL SCORES, STANDINGS National League |Edmonton 5. 7 1 188 262 11) Eastern Conference |B.c, 4 8 0200195 6 WLT F A Pet.| Eastern Conference 0138 77 1,000} sT FAP 0183 45 1,000 10 1 0.246 123 20 O 155 86 .600 8 3 Q 210 118 16 0111 118 5 6 0114 73 10) 0 88 140 3 8 0 128 227 6 1 98135 .250| MONDAY New York 1 84173 .000) Canadian League right thumb he jammed in the! first game at Los Angeles. And he admitted he played a guess- ing game with Dodger catcher katchewan to a 16-15 lead after| Philadelphia~-Gypsy Joe Har- three quarters, Punter Jim Fur-|T8, 151, Philadelphia, stopped long conceded a safety early in|Stanley (Kitten) Hayward, 'the fourth quarter to boost the|148¥, Philadelphia, 7. jlead to 18-15 before substitute} Stockton, Calif.--Rollie Pena- quarterback Pete Liske took|roya, 119, Ceub City, the Phil over for Calgary with touch-lippines, down passes to Atcheson, Evan-| Magallanes, shen and Starks, Mex., 7. RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH $8.00 PER DAY aittace cn MILEAGE CHARGE | 725-6553 | You get the quality you expect - RUTHERFORD'S | : CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS 725-6553 14 ALBERT ST. Oshewe winning," Robinson said calmly and quietly. "I would have felt good without winning but ang . Winning makes it better. "Now it's all gone. Next year John Rosebaro. I don't have to show Mr. De-| "Roseboro's thinking was I Witt (the Cincinnati owner). 1|was looking for one inside, don't have to show him what I|Robinson said. can do again. As far as that's! "So I just go up protecting concerned, it's gone." ngainat -* thinking that he'll] Also gone, he feels, is the)8°, or wey. 'he' rrying| Then when 1 walked up to | pt fin Darl bn gl S 4 the plate I said to myself that fe deer | Atlanta 5 0 68150 .000|B.C. 19 Edmonton 7 around since a run - in w (Russ) Snyder (the previous ing performance by Dodger wick. Goce Toronto 9 Montreal 8 third baseman Eddie Mathews batter) had gone out on the Southpaw Claude Osteen. | este 'onference |Winnipeg 7 Hamilton & of the old Milwaukee Braves. |" A ca nar | Osteen held Baltimore to|Green Bay B00 first pitch and maybe I'd bet-) hits but the Dodgers! Tos seca SUNDAY STARTED IN 1960 ny 5 "Over there (in the National vi j aaer pitch was dows the) punker, a 23-year-old right-! Detroit really began when I had that |hander. San Fran. |pitch to him 430 feet into the HOCKEY SCORES, STANDINGS __ pitch,'o,him orst in| the 63 years of the Worid Ser-| Canadian Major Junior Winnipeg Braves 5 Winnipegiies. They hit only .142, com-| Winnipeg Braves 5 Winnipeg Sherbrooke 6 Trois-Rivieres 3 11905 Series' against New York Monarchs 2 |Shawinigan 1 Drummondville 3 Giants. New York (NHL) 3 Toronto) Hspanoia pe Pond r] a record in that depart- (NHL) 2 x jon ment. Galt - Sr) 6 Guelph (OHA|Ne §r) It was only the Orioles' fourth homer in the Series, but it was enough. They hadn't needed much hitting the way the Dodg- ers were rushing toward the fu-| tility record. DECIDED ON HOMER | Saturday's third game also was decided on a homer, Centre fielder Paul Blair, another NHL castoff, belted a two-out shot in the fifth to spoil a great pitch- St. Louis Dallas Cleveland Wash. Phila. Pittsburgh Ottawa Hamilton Montreal "4no| Toronto knocked out Chango 119%, Monterrey, Hwunno> 5 4 3 3 2 1 0 0 go National League 5 Atlanta 20 Washington 33 "400 Baltimore 17 Chicago 27 | '338 Green Bay 20 San Francisco 21} : 09 | LOS Angeles 14 Detroit 7 "|New York 19 St. Louis 24 |Philadelphia 7 Dallas 56 Pt! SATURDAY rence FA Sask, Winnipeg YOU CAN WW LLY FOR ONTARIO SMOKERS ONLY 280 238 15 Canadian League 205 196 11| Winnipeg 21 Ottawa 20 163 202 11'Calgary 35 Saskatchewan 18 T 5 1 1 1 eving BAY way. six safeties they made against! Chicago mad to play good baseball. It geles native, hit Osteen's first peg Monarchs 4 Brandon turned out to be the worst in Manitoba Junior Provincial Junior by Philadelphia Athletics in the} Exhibition | 133 innings, they cruised past the NI WATN $ ter not. But 1 sald maybe I'l couldn't make effective use of| Baltimore League), they said I had to be So he whipped his bat into it init: Si-yeanold fou Akl Mipneser By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Manitoba Junior The Dodgers' feeble hitting MONDAY | Winni Calgary 2 Saskatoon 6 Warriors 4 pared to the previous low, 161 | Winnipeg Rangers 6 Selkirk 5/Sorel 4 Quebec 3 And by not scoring a run for a NOHA a LO w York (NHL) 1 Canada 4|. The Athletics had been held J U Quebec (AHL) 3 St. Hyacinthe| scoreless for 28 innings beck in ' 905 (PSHL) 1 SUNDAY Toronto (NHL) 5 Detroit (NHL) 13 Canadian Major Junior Edmonton 2 Moose Jaw 4 Calgary 5 Estevan 7 OHA Junior Hamilton 2 St. Catharines 5 Player Wins World Title (AP)--Gary Player of South Af-\sudbury 1 Sault Ste. M 0 rica defeated Jack Nicklaus of| wants gy Alara met Columbus, Ohio, for the world Kitchener 0 Oshawa 3 match play golf title Saturday Exhibition in a 36-hole final that wasichicago (NHL) 3 Toronto marked by so much tempera-| (NHL) 2 ment that the referee withdrew) poston (NHL) 5 Rochester midway in the morning round.) (ay) 2 Player, the defending champ-|New York (NHL) 7 Canada 0) jon, won 6 and 4 and held a 4-UP Victoria (WHL) 7 Seattie| margin after the first 18 holes,| (WHL) 4 | during which Nicklaus's anger)Houston (CPHL) 4 Montreal! at an adverse ruling caused ref-| (NHL) 1 eree Tony Duncan to quit. a {Lachine 2 Halifax 8 d at the) ---------------------.- dissent uintk ree Nicklaus, | iiown at the time, hooked his OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE RE-PRINTS shot into the rough. Available At When he reached his ball he) asked the referee for a free NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE drop, claiming that a billboard 60 yards away interfered with his line of sight to the green.) When Duncan, former British Walker Cup player, refused, | 251 King &. €., Oshewe 8 x 10 --- 1.50 each 5x7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of 3 er More Pictures The Orioles, meanwhile, com- pleted the first sweep by an Cleveland (AHL) 4 Providence|American League team since the 1950 New. York Yankees took four straight from Phila- delphia Phillies. AHL) 2 Rochester (AHL) 7 Buffalo | (AHL) 4 |Chicago (NHL) 11 Green Bay | (USHL) 1 |Lachine 3 Halifax 10 SATURDAY Canadian Major Junior Edmonton 5 Estevan 4 NOHA Fall Clearance Smoke V4 MATINE REGULAR or KINGS from Kaiser Aluminum Siding and Kaiser dealers. You can end maintenance worries, and make your home sparkling new with Kaiser Aluminum Siding. Your Kaiser dealer will show you e@ selection of modern colours, and explain the 20 year transfer- able guarantee which adds value to your home. When it comes to Aluminum Siding, Aluminum" Doors or Windows, you get the quality you expect from Kaiser and Kaiser dealers. 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Fin-| ally he shot, then conceded the' hole to Player's par 4. At the next hole Duncan} asked Nicklaus whether hej wanted a new referee and the! 1966 Masters and British Open champion snarled "yes."' Ger-} ald Nicklem, former chairman of the Royal and Ancient championship committee, took 'Gettcats be 204 Bond E.