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Daily Times-Gazette, 21 May 1953, p. 12

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42 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, May 21, 1953 IN 2ND SPOT | Red Sox Home Stand Against Western Teams Big Success | By BEN PHLEGAR Associated Press Sports Writer If Boston Red Sox figure out 2 some way to beat the other eastern teams, they will be a real pennant threat in the -American League. They've solved the western clubs. The Sox finished up a profitable home stand against the West in sensational fashion Wednesday. With two out in the 14th inning-- the season's longest game--Del MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League Detroit 200 051 000-- 8 Newhouser, Madison (6) Wight (8) Hebert (9) and Bucha; Lopat, Scarborough (5) Miller (6) Gor- man (6) Kuzava (7) Reynolds (9) .and Silver, Berra (9). . HR: New York--Collins. * WP: Reynolds, 48 Wight. Cleveland 000 000 003-- 3 7 Washington 020 000 60x-- 8 16 1 Feller, Hooper (7) Gromek (7) Wilks (7) and Hegan, Aylward (7); Shea, Schmitz (8) and Fitz- gerald. WP: Shea. LP: Feller, Chicago 000 100 000--1 5 0 Philadelphia 010 000 001-- 27 1 Pierce and R. Wilson; Martin and Astroth. St. Louis 000 000 200 000 00-- 2 11 2 Boston 002 000 000 000 01--8 9 1] Trucks, Larsen (7) and Moss, Courtney (7); Grissom, Freeman (7) Kinder (12) and White. WP: Kinder. LP: Larsen. HR: Boston--Wilber. Ww Pet. GBL 20 .690 18 586 19 576 15 16 14 » New York Boston Chicago Cleveland Washington Philadelphia &. Louis Detroit Thursday New York at Washington (night) Philadelphia at Boston. National League Brook! 213 100 000-- 8 10 0 Milwaukee 000 200 000-- 2 6 1 Loes and Campanella; Bickford, Johnson (4) Cole (9) and Cran- dall, St. Claire (5). LP: Bickford. HR: Brooklyn--Robinson. Philadelphia 002 030 000-- 5 11 Cincinnati 100 601 33x--14 14 1 Simmons, Miller (4) Peterson (8) and Burgess. Judson, Nuxhall (5) and Seminick. WP: Nuxhall. LP: Simmons. HRs: Wyrostek, Jones. Cincin- nati--Kluszewski, Adams, Borkow- ski, Seminick. New York 014 100 280--16 21 Chicago 100 002 003-- 6 10 Jansen, Wilhelm (7) and West- rum, Calderone (7); Rush, Lown €3) Jones (7) Leonard (8) Kelly (8) Baczewskl (8) Simpson (9) and Sawatski. WP: Jansen. LP: Rush, HRs: New York -- Irvin, Dark, Williams. Chicago--Fondy, Smalley Pittsburgh 001 203 000-- 6 14 0 St. Louis 233 010 20x--11 172 Friend, Bowman (2) Hetki (3) McDonald (5) Face (7) and Garag- Jole; Bresio, 0, Clark (6) Brazle WP: 'Presko. LP: Friend. HR: St. Louis -- Schoendienst. L Pct. GBL 854 . 3 Philadelphia Milwaukee Brooklyn St. Louis New York Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh 10 Thurs {ered for New York. | lefthander, s| Russie Olympic Planner Wilber blasted his third pinch-hit ui home run of the year to give them 3-2 triumph over St. Louis Browns. The victory moved the Red Sox into second place, three games behind the pace-setting New York Yankees. The Red Sox have the best inter- sectional record in either league. They burned up the West early this month on a 6-2 road trip and then won six more and lost only Ivo when the western teams came in to visit Fenway Park. Against the eastern clubs, how- ever, the Sox have won five while losing eight. The eastern American League clubs as a whole were inhospitable to their western visitors guring, the intersectional series and all four of them ended with victories. The Athletics defeated Chicago 2-1 on the five-hit pitching of Morris Mar- tin. Washington whipped Cleveland 8-3 and New York trimmed Detroit 9-8. In all, the eastern teams have won 20 and lost 11. In the National League the west- ern teams, pla aying at home, man- aged to gain the upper hand, but only by a margin of 16 games to 13. In Wednesday's finales Cincin- nati thumped the league-leading Philadsiplua Phillies 14-5; Milwau- kee bowed for the second straight day to Brooklyn 7-2; Chicago took |a 16-6 lacing from New York | Giants &nd St. Louis won a 11-6 Sluglest from Pittsburgh Pirates. e Giants collected 21 hits in smothering the Cubs. Monte Irvin, Al Dark and Davey Williams hom- Curt Simmons, the Phillies' ace couldn't last four in- nings against Cincinnati. He gave Toronto Paper Sees Sawchuk Traded TORONTO (CP)--The Telegram said Wednesday that all-star goal- tender Terry Sawchuk of Detroit Red Wings may be traded to New York Rangers of the National | Syrac Suse Hockey League. The newspaper sald in a sports page story: "A tipoff that something could be stirring is an admission by De- troit Red Wing general manager {Jack Adams that Frank Boucher | {of the New York Rangers, some time ago, made an inquiry as to| what or how much Detroit would | want for Sawchuk. . . '""'Adams, in a telephone conver- | sation, tended to minimize the Ranger overture but admitted that | even Sawchuk had been concerned | showy talk that he would be tra-| The newspaper said rumors in- dicate the Wings would want seven | players and $40,000 in cash for any Sawchuk trade. Hands in Resignation MELBOURNE (AP)--The chief Australian planner for the 1956 Olympic Games resigned Wednes- day night--an act whith was called a "national tragedy" by Mel- bourne's acting lord mayor. "There was nothing left me but to resign," said Arthur W. Coles, who turned in his post as chair- man of the Olympic Games con- trol committee. "My Position was untenable." Coles quit when the Victoria (state) government decided not to build the Olympic swimming 1 in Fawkner Park--the site whic was accepted by the International Olympie Committee at its April meeting in Mexico City. (In Chicago, Avery Brundage, president of the IOC, said "some- ing must be seriously wrong' with the plans for the games and that the IOC executive committee day Brooklyn at New York (night) Cincinnati at St. Louis (night) { Mossor | Ottawa | Syracuse 10 up seven hits and seven runs be- ore geadine for cover in the on burgh fell to last place by losing to the Cardinals who pounded out 17 hits. Red Schoen- dienst drove home six of the Card- inal tallies with a home run, two doubles and a single. Brooklyn stole bases in hand- ing Milwaukee its first series loss at home. The crowd of 23,450 swel- led the Braves' home attendance to 302,667 for 13 home dates, 21,389 more than the club drew all last season in Boston. The Yankees edged Detroit in the last of the ninth on Gene Wood- ling's bases-loaded single. Frank Shea throttled the Indians on two hits for seven innings but had to withdraw with a stiff neck. The Indians picked up five hits and three runs on his successor, Johnny Schmitz, but the Senators had sewed it up with six runs in the seventh, Philadelphia's winning run against the White Sox came in the ninth when Billy Pierce, trying for his sixth victory, walked three men, uncorked a wild pitch and then' watched Joe Astroth deliver a run-scoring single. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE By THE CANADIAN PRESS 030 100 201-- 8 11 3 Tor: 010 101 302-- 8 13 2 Markell, Williams (7) Robertson, Drescher (9); Post, Shore (2) Main (7) and Rossi. WP: Main. LP: Williams. HRs: Toronto--Mapes, Stevens. Syracuse--Rodriguez. Springfield 000/000 200-- 2 2 1 Ottawa 100 110 11x-- 511 3 Hartig, Pyacha (5) Hillman (6) Jacobs (8) and Meek; Mackinson and Watlington. LP: Hartig. HRs: Springfield -- Edwards; Ottawa -- Limmer. Baltimore 000 103 001 000 002-- 7 12 2 Montreal 100 100 300 000 000-- 5 12 0 Storr (9), Mills, and Fox, Heintzelman (7), Sanford (10) and Lovinett; (6) Roebuck (15) WP: Sanford. LP: Mossor. Buffalo 010 000 311-- 6 14 1 Rochester 301 000 010--5 7 .0 Poytack, Kapuscinski (2) Coppage (5) Jordan (8) and Lakeman; Con- !drick, Crimian (7) Tiefenauer (8) and Rapp WP: Coppage. wh Crimjan. | Toronto | Buffalo Rochester Montreal | Baltimore Ts 591 11 550 12 522 12 .480 11 440 13 435 Springfield 3 13 381 § | Thursd Springfield at Montreal (night) Baltimore at Ottawa (night) 13 {Buffalo at Syracuse (night) GBL Billy Pierce in a 2-1 duel. % | | { | which mi Yyery day, Ni Toronto Tops Loop Best Chiefs 8-7 By THE CANADIAN PRESS The top four International Lea- gue teams are so closely bunched that the lead can change over- nigh t--and frequently does. 'oday Toronto Maple Leafs are atop the loop, following an 8-7 de- cision over Syracuse Chiefs Wed- nesday night. Buffalo Bisons took over second place by downing Rochester, erstwhile leaders, 6-5. Rochester dropped to third.. The fourth-place Montreal Royals drop- | Ed ped .a 7-5 15-inning marathon to Baltimore Orioles and fell two games off the pa A wild pitch pale "Earl Mossor with the bases loaded in the 15th inning allowed the winning Balti- | Win more run to cross the plate at Montreal. The Orioles tacked on an insurance run before the inning ended. The Royals led 54 going into thes top of the ninth but a homer by Marv Rackley with one out tied it up and sent the game Russie Tourists Hold Decisive Cricket Lead LONDON (Reuters)--Australia's Jim de Courcy Wednesday scored 126 not out, almost twice as many runs as the entire Oxford Univer- sity team, on the first day of their three-day match here. The touring team dismissed the undergraduates for 70 runs in 90 minutes. The Australians opened their batting slowly but by close of play had a decisive lead with 295 for eight wickets. In county cricket, wickets fell quickly as bowlers made full use of pitches affected by rain. Hamp- shire dismissed Leicestershire for 91 first-innings runs. Close-of-play scores: Oxford University 70, Australians 295 for eight. Gloucestershire . 220, Surrey 31 | for none. Leicestershire 91, Hampshire 111 for four. Northamptonshire 276, Kent 64 for three. Somerset 156, Derbyshire 103 for | three Glamorgan 269, Essex 49 for none. Yorkshire 258, Worcestershire 60 for three. Yesterday's Stars By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting: Del Wilber, Boston Red | Sox, delivered his third pinch hit home run of the year with two out | in the 14th inning to give the Sox a 3-2 victory over St. Louis Browns. | Pitching: Morris Martin, Phila- | delphia Athletics, limited Chicago White Sox to five hits in besting 440M at ,90,607" -- Man You're Crazy Ding up up" 1 Tho ousands are peppy af th Ostrex. Donaits tonio Ry A lown iseung Sue 8 oles 8 lac k of iron n call * old." VA Ostrex Tonio Tablets 1 Tor Dep, youneer feeling, th . New "get acquainted" size only all grug Shores. every For sale Nelson Wallpaper & Paint 14 Bond St. W., Oshawa VEY I (01:0 Jo] VEN Jo 0:13 0: TV] £9 may hold an emergency meeting to consider another city.) HERE'S A REMARKABLE = OFFER FOR ALL DOC- NE / Look How You Save REG. FILL OUT and MAIL THIS ORDER BANK 2... BOX 444 GORDON ELDER PACKING CO, Walkerville P.O., Windsor, Ontario. Gentlemen: Enclosed are 25¢ and two labels dog food. Please-muil NAME ...7~, from tins of your the Society Dog Leash, EEE EE ADDRESS city A A FR Rr | ER ET EE) ooo Just imagine A strong leather Dog Leash and Tag for only 25¢,. when you send labels from 2 tins of Society or Pep Dog Food. You get both the 2 tins of dog food and the leash for half what, you'd ordinarily _{ poy for the leash alone. into extra innings. The Birds used four pitchers and the Royals three. Rookie John Mackinson pitched a two-hitter as Ottawa Athletics defeated Springfield Cubs 5-2. Mac- kinson struck out eight and walked four in his debut. A bases-loaded double by second baseman Bill Jennings in the ninth brought Toronto from behind to their victory. Jennings batted in three runs during the game while tevens also brought in three wii = a seventh-inning homer with WO Re Reier Bob Tiefenauer walked in the winning run in the 'ninth in- ning as Buffalo edged the host Red gS. Queen's Race Horse Favored for Derby LONDON (AP) -- Queen Eliza- beth's Aureole Wednesday was made a 7-2 favorite for the June | 6 Epsom Derby. Bookmakers shortened the odds as news leaked out that William Humble's Nearula, a raging favor- ite since his victory in the Two Thousand Guineas race April 29, missed exercise because of a bruised foot. Bookmakers did not quote Nearula. Captain Charles Elsey, Nearula"s trainer, said: "We shall have to remove his shoe to see the extent of the damage." ol NOW... is the time to eli00se Summer footwear for those busy, carefree feet! 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