Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Jun 1967, p. 7

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RS TODAY i t concerning goal- low for a two- | during a sub- er the goalie is her a coach de- ment is neces- faulty. play. period will be irst time it oc- feree is author- 1e practice time he expects to manager and a »s Angeles team xt 'couple of so searching for his Springfield uld like to have Kelly, retired Leaf centreman, est coast entry een approached ming Ajax n Mosier, also with d double, Walt Kolo- air of singles, and co, One single. son hit a double in nning for Georgian ; were hit by Wes and John Cook. scored all their runs t inning on three a double, combined passed balls. runs were scored in second, eighth and gs, with the second Za six-run rally. and Mosier hit singles came from irnes and Boivin to cth inning rally sub- tcher was B. Sweet, Konopacki got the g out 14 batters, wa & District FTBALL BLE HEADER NIGHT! xandra Park t Game 6:15 Game 8:15 , AUDITORIUM ith, 8:30 P.M. TCH t ISK! CHAMPION KINISKI "I SAID OUT" -- Umpire Augie Donatelli (left) points to dressing room as he throws: Chicago Cubs man- Gotay Means To Stay, Gets Swinging Start By ED SCHUYLER Jr. Associated Press Sports Writer Joe Morgan and Julio Gotay are on two-week reserve tours, but Gotay, unlike Morgan, would like to see his stint stretch through September at least. Morgan, Houston Astros' sec- ond baseman, is on two-week army reserve training, and Go- tay has .been called up from ager Leo Durocher out of Cubs - Philadelphia Phillies game in Philadelphia Mon- day. Durocher continues Oklahoma City to fill in for him. "They say I'm just up for two weeks," Gotay said Monday night, "but I don't want to go back down again. | SPARKS ATTACK If his performance in Hous- ton's 5-2 victory over St. Louis Cardinals is any indication of what his fill-in tour is going to Yankees Getting Premiums On Last Season's Trade By MIKE RECHT Associated Press Sports Writer Thad Tillotson, who was icked up by New York Yan- Oe with a bundle of cash from Los Angeles Dodgers for Dick Schofield last September, cashed in another premium Monday night. Tillotson pitched the Yankees to a 4-2 victory over Washington Senators, his third triumph with- out a loss in his first major league season, At the same time, Detroit's Dennis McLain pitched the Ti- gers past Kansas City Athletics 3-2 in 11 innings. In the other American League games, Cesar Tovar scored on a wild pitch with two out in the last of the ninth inning for Min- nesota Twins 5-4 victory over Cleveland Ingians and reliever Bill Kelso's five shutout innings helped California Angels past Baltimore Orioles 3-2. Chicago and Boston were not acheduled. 12th homer in the eighth inning that broke a 2-2 tie. A second run scored in the inning on a sacrifice fly. Tom Tresh homered earlier with a n.an on for the deadlock after Mike Epstein made his debut for the Senators with a fluke inside-the-park homer. McLain allowed only seven hits in his effort and one of the runs off him was unearned. Jim Northrup singled and scored on Norm Cash's double for the win- ning run. Steve Bailey's control was not as good for Cleveland. He made the wild pitch that got Tovar home after the reliever walked Tovar, who reached third on Rod Carew's gafety. Bob Allison homered earlier for the Twins and Tony Oliva pulled them into a 4-4 tie in the sixth inning after Fred Whitfield and Max Alvis hit solo shots for the Indians. | Kelso, 3-1, took over in the} fifth inning for Nick Willhite, 'omer with two out in the fifth talking in rhubarb over Donatelli's call of a pitch by Phils Larry Jackson in third inning. Cubs' Ron Santo (background), who was at bat and was called to dugout by Durocher, heads back to the plate. (AP Wirephoto) be like, he might not. Gotay collected a double and two sin- gles, drove in two runs and scored once, In other National League games Monday night, Los An- geles Dodgers beat Atlanta Braves 4-2 and Chicago Cubs trounced Philadelphia Phillies 13-3, ~ Gotay, a 27-year-old Puerto Rican hitless in his last 20 at bats for Oklahoma City, tied the game at 1-1 in the fifth inning by doubling home a run and then scored on a sacrifice fly in the same inning. His third hit drove in one of two runs in the sixth inning when the Astros clinched the victory. Tony Cloninger started for Atlanta for the first time since April 26 when he was sidelined with an eye ailment. He was touched for all four Los Ange- les runs, the big blow being a two-run homer by Len Gabriel- son in the second. Manager Leo Durocher wasn't around to enjoy his Cubs' romp. Umpire Augie Donatelli thumbed Durocher in the third inning for arguing a strike call. Billy Williams hit a - solo to break a 1-1 tie and spark a four-run Chicago surge. Chicago came right back with four in the sixth. This outburst was capped by Ted Savage's pinch hit three-run homer. LEAGUE LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League AB R H Pet. .374 .357 174 36 154 24 Clemente, Pgh TO INDIANS Outfielder Don Demeter (above) and first baseman Tony Horton of the Boston Red Sox have been traded to Cleveland Indians for pitcher Gary Bell the American Baseball League teams announced Monday. Horton spent the last two seasons with Toronto Maple Leafs for the International League. Palmer Still Top Golfer PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP)--Arnold Palmer's un- official 1967 winnings so far are' $99,225.63, the Professional Golf Association announced Monday. He leals PGA standings by almost $22,000. official PGA winnings, unoffi- cial prize money and the totals: 1, Arnold Palmer, $91,213.21, $8,012.42, $99,225.63; 2. Gay By DAVID MILLER LONDON (CP)--The hunch bettors are placing money on a Canadian - owned horse in Wednsday's Epsom Derby, but at least two of his three own- ers aren't joining them. Calgary publisher Max Bell said in an interview Sunday night that some British news- papers have been referring to his three-year-old colt Domin- oe Day as "my centennial pro- lect." The hunch bettors see the con- nection between Dominion Day, his Canadian owner and Can- ada's centennial year as a nat- ural for the 188th running of the classic, and the dark bay horse has been backed down to 4 to 1. money is coming in from Can- ada and Ireland, where the colt is trained by Paddy Prender- gast. HASN'T WON A RACE Dominion Day has never won arace in his three previous starts and on the form looks like a risky pick behind 7-to-4 choice Royal Palace. Bell says he likes the odds, but will not place a bet. syndicate that includes singer Bing Crosby and oilman Frank McMahon. : here now," Bell "Bing is said, "and I hope Mr. Mc- Mahon can make it. Meanwhile, at least two Lon- don newspapers pick D i Day to win the annual classic. The Sunday Express says: "In Canada's great centenary year, expect the climax of this week's celebrations not on the Expo 67 site at Montreal, but in the unsaddling enclosure at Epsom, Surrey." Snead Set For Open Try By BOB GREEN Associated Press Sports Writer The signs were all there. The casualties, including Ed Furgol, were as prominent as the quali- fiers in Monday's sectional qualifications for the U.S. Open golf championship. But Sam Snead doesn't be- lieve in signs. "T don't think there's any- thing to this hex stuff, this business of signs," the old West Virginia mountaineer snorted today as he sought to make his way into his 26th U.S. Open tournament. He failed to make it last year. golf's major tournaments--ex- cept the Open--is among the field of 68 who will shoot for 24 spots in the sectional qualifica- tions at Detroit today. Other sectional qualifications in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington, Atlanta, Pittsburgh and Dallas will complete the field of 150 for the finals at' Baltusrol in Springfield, N.J., June 15-18. 67 PASS TEST Sixty - seven made it through sectional qualifications at seven sites Monday and 27 others-- The top 10 standings, showing|including most of the big name touring pros--are exen.pt from all qualifying rounds. Five former PGA champions, Ron Cerrudo and two other Bookmakers say a lot of Bell is head of an ownership |~ Snead, who has won all of. It says the Epsom Derby "should be won by a Canadian- owned colt with the too-good- to-be-true title of Dominion day." The Observer lists Dominion Day as choice because of blood lines. Dominion Day is by Char- lottesville, sire of last year's winner, Charlottetown, But to win the Derby, Do- minion Day will have to break an old jinx. The last non-win- Merry Hampton in 1887. REMEMBER WHEN... Canadian hopes fell as Northern Dancer missed the Triple Crown of American horse-racing, coming in third to Quadrangle and Ro- man Brother in the Belmont Stakes three years~ago to- day--in 1964--after winning the Preakness Stakes and the Kentucky Derby. North- ern Dancer retired to stud in November, 1964, because of a bowed tendon, after winning 14 times and plac- ing four times in his 18 starts. ner to dash to Derby glory was Hunch Bettors Back 'Rich Canadian Owned Colt One man who is convinced of the colt's class is Prendergast. He rates Dominion Day well ahead of Meadow Court, an- other Bell colt. Meadow Court finished sec- ond to French colt Sea Bird II in the 1965 Derby for Bell and Prendergast. Twenty - two horses are de- clared for the 144-mile test and the winner will receive more than $185,000 in prize money. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, June 6, 1967 7 mond, Syracuse Win, Buffalo Biggest Loser By THE CANADIAN PRESS Richmond Braves and Syra- cuse Chiefs picked up victories Buffalo, however, lost general manager Clay Dennis who re- signed because of the team's fi-. in the only scheduled Interna- tional Baseball League games Monday night but the idle Buf- falo Bisons suffered the biggest loss. Richmond scored four times in the first inning and went on to blank league-leading Roches- ter Red Wings 5-0 and Syracuse trounced Jacksonville Suns 12-2. ial difficulties. Bison presi- dent John W. C. Guthrie said the club cannot afford to hire another general manager. "We would not have accepted Ciay's resignation except for the financial plight of the club," he said. "Dennis is highly capable. I think he's tops in his field and will be sorely missed." CANADIAN -SCHE a NLEY DISTILLERIES LTD Resounding taste...ata quiet price DISTILLED. MATURED AND BOTTLED BY VALLEYFIELD CANADA i Cepeda StL who left with a pulled muscle/ ede Brewer, $69,805.62, $1,090.92,|members of the U.S. Walker 209 38 354 Irs. 9 MANTLE HITS No. 12 Mickey Mantle made Tillot- #on's victory possible with his lafter giving up both Baltimore runs, one on a homer by Paul Blair. BASEBALL SCOREBOARD By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WL Pet. GBL 654 -- 600 3% 4 -583 556 | 51 522 7 478 9 458 10 438 11 Cincinnati 34 St. Louis 27 San Francisco 28 Pittsburgh 25 Chicago 24 Philadelphia 22 Atlanta 22 Los Angeles 21 Houston 18 31 .367 14% New York 15 333 15% Monday's Results Les Angeles 4 Atlanta 2 Chicago 13 Philadelphia 3 Houston 5 St. Louis 2 Probable Pitchers Today Chicago (Simmons 2-5 and Washington (Pascual 5-2) at New York (Stottlemyre 4-5) N League L Pct. GBL -632 543 3% 486 514 International w Rochester 24 Toronto 19 Toledo 18 Buffalo 17 Syracuse 17 Richmond 19 Columbus 16 A771 Jacksonville 17 23 ».425 Monday's Results Jacksonville 2 Syracuse 12 Richmond 5 Rochester 0 Today's Games Toledo at Toronto Columbus at Buffalo Jacksonille at Rochester Rich d at Syracuse 486 5% 4756 Culp 3-3) at Philadelphia (Ells- worth 2-3) and Boozer 0-0) TN New York (Seaver 4-3 and Selma 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Ri- bant 1-3 and Pizarro 3-5) TN Los Angeles (Singer 1-2) at Atlanta (Lemaster 5-1) N Houston (Cueller 5-2) at St. Louis (Washburn 2-2) N American League WL Pct. GBL 617 -- 591 1% 523 4% 522 4% oll 5 500 5% 7 7% 9 -467 10% Detroit Chicago Baltimore Boston Minnesota Cleveland New York Kansas City Washington 426 California -400 Monday's Results Cleveland 4 Minnesota 5 Washington 2 New York 4 Detroit 3 Kansas City 1 Baltimore 2 California 3 Probable Pitchers Today Baltimore (Dillman 2-0 and Phoebus 4-1) at California (Clark 2-5 and Cimino 2-1) TN Detroit (Sparma 5-0 and Wickersham 3-0) at Kansas City (Krausse 3-7 and Odom 2-2 TN Cleveland (Siebert 4-4 and Tiant 3-1) at Minnesota (Kaat 1-7 and Perry 1-3) TN Boston (Brandon 2-5) at Chi- eago (O'Toole 2-1) N 458 Midgets Win, Lead League Oshawa Midget Green Gaels defeated Panthers 11-7 in Osh- awa Minor Lacrosse Associa- tion play Monday night to put themselves two points into first place. Eagles downed Hawks 11-5 in another game to retain a tie with Panthers in second place. Robert Reeson scored three goals for Gaels, while Tom Ibbittson scored two goals each, with Larry Moore and Andy Krontje scoring single goals. Panther goals were turned in by Dave Stones and Rick Lack, two each, Mark McConkey, Frank Jay and Paul Brisebois. Rick Lack scored four goals for Eagles in the second game as Frank Jay scored three, Jim Shortt, two and Paul Bycock and Randy Wiles one each. Terry Slack and Paul Brise- bois scored two goals each for Hawks and Bob Mitchell picked up a single goal. \Brock, 37. 486 51413 gicago, 5-0, 1.000; Veale, Pitts- |Kaline Det Simpson, Terry Lloyd and Greg 7 Brock, StL Staub Htn 128 9 Rose Cin 199 37 Runs -- Aaron, Atlanta, Brock, 38. Runs batted in--Clemente, 43; 344 342 40; Hits--Brock, 74; Rose, 68. Doubles -- Cepeda, 15; Allen, Philadelphia, 14. Triples--Rose, Williams, Chi- cago, Perez, Cincinnati, Pinson, Cincinnati, Morgan, Houston and Gonzalez, Philadelphia, 4. Home runs--Aaron, 15; Brock, Stolen bases--Brock, 22; Wills, Pittsburgh, 13. Pitching -- Holtzman, Chi- burgh, 7-1, .875. Strikeouts -- Marichal, San Francisco, 94; Nolan, Cincin- nati, 73. American League AB R H Pet. 166 33 58 .349 F. Robinson, Bal 163 35 54 .331 Mincher Cal 155 30 51 .329 Carew Min 173 22 56 .324 Petrocelli Bsn 165 24 52 .315 Runs--McAuliffe, Detroit and Tovar, Minnesota, 38; F, Robin- son, 35. Runs batted in--F. Robinson, 43; Kaline, 39. 58; three tied Hits--Kaline, with 56. Doubles--Tovar and Mincher, California, 12; Kaline and F. Robinson, 11. Triples--Buford, Chicago, 8; three tied with 4. Home runs--F. Robinson, 15; Mantle, New York and Kille- brew, Minnesota, 12. Stolen bases--Agee, Chicago, 18; Campaneris, Kansas City, Pitching -- Horlen, Chicago, 6-0, 1.000; Sparma, Detroit, 5-0, 1.000. Strikeouts -- Lonborg, Boston, 78; Peters, Chicago, 77. DENNIS RESIGNS BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) --Clay Dennis resigned Monday as gen- eral manager of the Interna- tional Baseball League's Buffalo Bisons, citing the club's finan- cial difficulties. John W. C. Guthrie, Bison president, said he does not plan to hire a re- placement because the club can- $70,896.54; 3. Julius Boros, $63,- 790.00, $1,791.48, $65,581.48; 4, 123.30, $78,369.05; 5. 745.35; 6. George Archer, $60,946.78, $5,686.79, $66,633.57; 7. Yancey, $44,277.27, $4,252.42, $48,529.69; 8. Bob Goalby, $42,- 446.08, $3,223.92, $45,670.00; 9. Dan Sikes, $41,011.07, $761.69, $41,772.76; 10. Dave Stockton, $39,151.19, $1,516.43, $40,667.62. Doug Sanders, $63,245.75, $15,- Frank Beard, $61,751.66, $3,993.69, $65,- Bert Cup team also fell by the way- side in Tuesday's qualifications. Former PGA champs elimin- ated were Lionel (1957) and Jay' (1961) Hebert, Jack Burke (1956), Doug Ford (1955) and Dow Finsterwald (1958) Burke and Ford also won Masters championships. who missed were Dan Sikes, Tommy Aaron, Bruce Cramp-' tom, J. C. Goosie and Dave Ra- gan. By JACK HAND NEW YORK, (AP)--If the 1967 baseball free agent draft today and Wednesday turns up the likes of Ken Holtzman, Rick Roleman, Tom Seaver, Gary Nolan, Rich Nye and Bill Dill- man, the major leaguers will be satisfied. Among the 800 or more hoolboys and collegi who will be selected by the 20 big league teams and their farm club affiliates, the pros hope to find outstanding prospects to match the calibre of previous crops. New York Yankees, with first pick in the two-day ses- sion are eyeing shortstop Terry Hughes of Spartanburg, S.C. Monday, the regular centre fielder for Kansas City until he Yankees Eye Shortstop , In Baseball Draft Today phases -- regular and special. The regular phase covers ama- teur players not previously drafted. In compliance with the new college rule, no player in a four- year college can be selected in this phase until he is a senior or has reached the age of 21. In the secondary phase, players selected previously but not signed, are eligible. In the regular phase the clubs draft in inverse order of their 1966 finish with the Ameri- can first and then the National League alternating. The Yanks Among the prominent pros}, | GP PAINTS Cost no more than ordinary paints Beauty--becavse CILUX Hove Paint offers you rich, lasting colors--in op outstanding variety. Protection-- because CILUX House Paint can take the worst weather Canada can offer, without fading, eracking or blistering. So, for beauty and protection, make sure you get the "house coat" that gives you both. CILUX House Paint. It comes in any color, fits any size house. At your C-I-L Paiz* Dealer where you'll find C-I-L Paints ost no more than ordinary paints. are followed by the Cubs and so on down to the 20th and final pick by Los Angeles Dodgers. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Milwauk Alvin Lewis, De- was hit on the face by a pitched ball Saturday, was the No. 1 pick in the very first free agent draft in June, 1965. After two years in the minors, and a brief trial last year with the Athlet- ics, Monday came up to stay this season. Ken Holtzman, the 61st pick in the 1965 draft, was grabbed by the Chicago Cubs organiza- tion and came along so fast that he beat Sandy Koufax in a memorable duel last season and was 5-0 this year when called into service. not afford one. troit, knocked out Aaron East- ling, St. Paul Minn., 6, heavy- weights. Worcester, Mass -- Herman Harris, 206, Ashville, N.C., stopped Joe Roman, 190, San Juan, P. R., 10; Dave Ditn-ar, 152, White Plains, N.Y., out- pointed John Saunders, 154, Philadelphia, 8. Walpole, Mass -- Pat Staple- ton, 197, County Leeks, Ireland, stopped Barry O'Neill, 210, Providence, R.L., 8. Tokyo--Eigo Takagi, Japan, outpointed Arnulfo Tor- The draft is divided into two! revillas, 116%, Philippines, 10. WHITBY, ONT. BROOKLIN, ONT, 17% |QSHAWA, ONT. 107 BYRON PATTE'S PAINTS 85 SIMCOE DODD & SOUTER ST. SOUTH PHONE 668-5862 ST. NORTH - GREEN DOOR GIFT & PAINT SHOP PHONE 655-4531 PHONE 725-3529

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