Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 27 Jun 1959, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdey, June 27, 1959 Ingemar Joh | » ol 5 mi ansson Is New itle Holder Two Questions Remaining In American Loop By ED WILKS Associated Press Staff Writer Only two questions remain fo- day about that American League race: Inge's 'Right Hand' Proves Big Weapon 2, When will the Yankees take the lead? The Orioles climbed back into second place Friday night with header at Detroit. That left 'em the U.S. in September. Patterson just one game behind Cleve- will collect about $560,000 from land's first-place Indians, who all sources of revenue, gate, the-|belted Boston 11.5. It also left the atre-television, radio and movies. Tigers, who have misplaced their But ahead of the dimple- magic, four games behind in chinned Swede, fifth non-Ameri-| fifth. can to win boxing"s most prized] New York's defending champ title, are countless riches. He|Yankees, crunching along on may earn as much as a $1,000,000{their avenging adventure, for a return with Patterson. {whipped Chicago 8-4 and gained The punch that sent the 182-|a third-place tie with the White pound Patterson, 24, on his way Sox, two games shy of first. The "was a straight right--and flush champs haven't been this high soaked Yankee Stadium Friday|on the chin," Johansson seid. (Since April 24. night, "It was my best shot and INATS LEAVE BASEMENT 1t was a right-hand bomb that|thought the fight was over there.| wachington's homer - happy burst against the jaw of the 5-to-1|1 was surprised when he got up.|geators belted four, with Har- favored American seconds after| Usually when I hit Ja man like| mon Killebrew getting his 25th, the third round had started, It that he stays down, But I had tin an 8-4 victory at Kansas City smashed him to the canvas on|hit him again end again.' that sprung the Nats out of the his back and left him senseless. | Until that blow was landed cellar and dumped the Athletics Calmly and coldly, the hand- neither had done much. Ingo, six|into last place, |feet, one-half inch to Patterson's] By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK (AP) -- Ingemar Johansson"s mystery right hand turned out to be an etomic weapon--an explosive force that ed him to the world's heavyweight boxing champion. ship, The "thunder and lightning" he had promised was unleashed in a dramatic third round that saw de- fending champion Floyd Patter- son felled seven times in rain. 1. How long will Baltimore of last? a 12-7 and 4-1 sweep of a double-| ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- On- tario's amateurs are pressing hard for honors in the 36th On- tario Open golf championship. Amateurs Strive For Open Honors xBob Bradley, Oshawa 41-40-81 xBruce Bradley, Oshawa 30- 1 Hal Butler, Oshawa 36-38--74 George Clifton, Maple 39-38-77 Fred Dienesca, Galt 42-41-83 xKen Doig, Goderich 87-35-72 Fred Hardwicke, St. Davids 38-38--76 Peter Hildrop, Brantford 77 36-- Alf Hill, Peterborough 30-4180 Bob Panasiuk of Windsor Rose- land, 1958 Ontario junior ama- teur champion, hit a 75 and failed to qualify, Canadian amateur h jon Bruce Castator of Tor- 41- A total of 29 s were lamong a field of 73 qualified to | tee off today for the final 36 holes the 54-hole tournament and {leading them all was 20-year-old |Kitchener Rockway George Kelly, Stratford 37-43-- 80 Bill Kozak, Niagara Falls 37- 3572 xW. Lathrop, Welland 37-30-76 G. Lee, Peterborough 43-38--81 onto Weston, who was three over par after three holes, made a coméback to qualify at par 71. Ontario scores included (x- denotes t Gary Cowan. : | Unperturbed by a 20 - minute downpour around midday Friday which soaked the St, Catharines 36--77 |Golf Club course, Cowan shaved {four strokes off par to register a 67 in the 18-hole qualifier. | Cowan, lowest amateur or tied | |for that spot in this tournament | (for the last two years, carded five birdies and missed par only once--on the parfive 16th, xBob Mason, Welland 38-33-71 Joe Mate, Welland 43-4285 J. R, McGee, Sarnia 37-36-73 Ralph McInnis, St. Catharines 41-35-76 | xL. A. Molnar, Brantford 38- Neil Armstrong, Port Credit 43- 39--77 --84 | xBill Parkes, Woodstock 36-35 Jack Pullen, 8t. Thomas 41- 8--79 Lionel Ross, Cobourg 41-40-81 Bob Rothwell, Maple 44-40-84 Harry Allard, Parry Sound 39- 38--77 Ed Anderson, Woodstock 41- Harold Anderson, Ingersoll 39- 5--84 Pete Atman, Lindsay 37-36--73(71 George Balazs, Belleville 44-38 eh |8 Bob Barringer, North Bay | 38--75 KESSELRING | Gerry Kesselring, also of Kitch-| |ener and four-time winner of the | |$5,000 championship and last |year's runner-up, is one stroke |behind Cowan. An inches-short putt for a birdie three on the 18th robbed him of a tie for the lead. Gary Black, 15-year-old ama-| |teur from St. Catharines, pulled | {the day's biggest surprise. An early finisher, he shot a three- |under-par 69 that stood as target until late afternoon when Cowan came in. | Bill Morland of North Bay was BEST BUY'S BUICK! DAVE PEARSE 1. Sp 4 some, modern - day Viking Bob Nieman had four hits, one . 3 igh i | | dropped his bleeding ji reeling five - foot - eleven, had kept the a homer, and drove in five uns other ameteur high n the eld. ! foe to the canvas until referee|champion back with a flicking in the first game for the Orioles, [Sian of London Highland; Rudy| 4 Ruby Goldstein ended the slaugh-|Jab- |who cashed four Tiger errors for|Horvath, Windsor Essex: George ! ter with a wave of his hands. |NEVER LET LOOSE [seven unearned runs. Billy Knudson, Toronto Oakdale and| RAPID-FIRE KNOCKDOWNS | Patterson didn't get in under D'Gel (06) was the winner AliNorm Haeiner, Batavia, N.Y.| CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. ¥ -- INGEMAR JOHANSSON, Swedish challenger, is weighed in by Melvin Krulewitch, chair- man of the New York State Athletic Commission (left) fie SMA u while heavyweight world's champion Floyd Patterson (right) awaits his turn at the scales, It's all history now -- but the weigh-in was preceded | aa ' by a one-day delay and then last night, Johansson whipped Patterson, to become the new heavyweight champion of the | world. --AP Wirephoto SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' Oshawa Greens Named As Site Prov. Playoffs The Provincial Lawn Bowling It went into the record books as a technical knockout. The seven counts were nine, nine, six, six, seven, nine and one, all in two minutes and three seconds. It was a massacre. The right, never displayed dur- ing training here, made the 26- year-old, 196-pounder the first Swede to win a world ¢boxing title. The upset--witnessed by some 130,000 at the ball park and thou- |sands more over closed - circuit |television--must rank with such shockers as Max Schmeling's |kayo of Joe Louis in 1936, Jim | Braddock's triumph over Max | Baer in 1935 and Jersey Walcott's jpundadation of Ezzard Charles in 1951. Johansson earned about $248,- 000--most of which will be either |attached in lawsuits or held in |escrow for his return bout the jab and never let loose with {his combination body punches Kaline, Gus Zernial and Charlie|hit the same mark Maxwell homered for the Tigers. | : Six were bracketed at 70, | 266 KING ST, WEST ot Park Road hes. After being felled, Patterson| Singles oy Gus Triandos andlamong them amateurs Dave |picked himself up at nine on rub. {Billy Gardner, Walt Dropo's dou-| Morland of North Bay--brother of | |bery legs. [ble a 2 Jorce out sored Wo Bill---and Nick Weslock of Wind-| runs in the nightcap second for sor. a hanson {hes sitdehed Mm the Birds as they picked up their] Sixteen Americans met the | seventh victory in the last 10 qualifying score of 74. NEVER SAW IT |games, Jerry Walker (5-3) won| Defending champion Moe Nor-| "I couldn't see the com- (it. |man was four strokes off the lead ing," said Patterson. "The first| The Yankees, who have won 21|at an even par 71. Nine former one hit flush on the forehead,|of their last 30, smacked Billy winners are playing this year. {When I got up I didn't know|Plerce (8-8) for home runs by|Besides Kesselring and Horvath, where I was. I didn't feel the sec-|Hector Lopez and Gil McDou-|others qualifying were Nick Wes- ond punch but after that I think|g2ld while building a 6-2 lead.|lock, winner in 1946 and 49, and | I started to come out of it. But/Art Ditmar (65) won it with re-(Phill Farley, 1042 and '45 cham-| ef O foe "The Year's Best Buy" The Beautiful '59 BUICK RA 34634 Phone Anylime RA 8-5776 © PONTIAC eo BUICK eo VAUXHALL oG.M.C. TRUCKS © GOOD USED OF ALL MAKES! I couldn't criticize the referee for [lief help. a I pion. stopping the fight." As he talked in his dressing room, Johansson walked in. "Are you hurt, Floyd?" asked. "No," replied Patterson. [ "Patterson will be the first| heavyweight champion in history to regain the title," said Floyd's | he | Association of Ontario has an- nounced that the finals of the Ontario playdowns will be held at INGEMAR JOHANSSON is the new word's heavyweight f champion and if you think you're surprised just have a guess at the Oshawa Lawn Bowling Club how some of those "wise boys" across the border are feeling this Saturday, Aug. 1. morning. The Swedish laddie, who was suppsed to train on golf-| The winners of the rinks, ing, dancing and holding-hands with his girl friend, and never doubles, singles and colts com- did disclose the right-hand punch that put Eddie Machen away in|petitions from many sections of about two blinks -- came out after two rounds of casual sparring the province will be on hand to last night and belted Floyd Patterson into bye-bye land with a/decide the teams which will) series of right-hand punches that had authority. So much author- enter the Canadian championship| ity, in fact, that Eddie Machen may have changed his mind in|competition which will be played the last 24 hours and may not wish to. pursue his claims for a re-\n Toronto a short time later. turn match, The result, of course, was the best thing that could imi : happen to boxing in general and to the heavyweight division nly2 Similap Playdows Jo decice particular. Now we all know there'll be a re-match within a she Tt at the local club several years time and from here in, we can expect just a little more action ago. At that time provincial as- than we've been getting. Johansson's victory was clean-cut and | ociation executives voiced high "the boys" who figured a K.O. in five rounds, had something --|o St CRCH GEFIIITR tH Cel AE but in most cases, they didn't have the right boy, Oshawa greens and of the high Canadian outdoor sportsmen can be grateful to the C-I-L [calibre of hospitality by the city Wildlife Conservation Plan, which has produced fellowships [and local club members. and summer grants to seven students undertaking post-gradu- The finals of the Eastern On- ate research work in wildlife m nt, at Canadian Uni- |tario Zone will be played at| versities, ground squirrels, beaver, buffle-head duck, elk, [Belleville Wednesday, July 22. moose, deer and buffalo, mule deer, vegetation and American |The winners of the zone com- hare, these are a few of the subjects that are being given |petitions will then meet the win- close ecological strdy, investigation of range, reproduction, [ners from other zones in the final etc, It's a worth-while step towards preserving one of Cana- |in Oshawa. | da's greatest and most valuable natural resources, the wild |against Patterson, probably in|manager, Cus D'Amato, Ford Frick Balks At Third League By WILL GRIMSLEY more teams to build two 12-club | NEW YORK (AP) -- Baseball|leagues. | {commissioner Ford Frick said| = "Having reached that point, we | |Friday backers of a third major then could all sit down and re-| league may find oue--once they explore the picture. That would | get into the matter--that this is|be the time to decide on addi-| not the best way to meet the|tional leagues." game's need for expansion, Frick emphasized that he did | "My personal atitude on the not want to be put in the position {proposed third league has been (of throwing cold water on the |distorted somewhat and I would [third league idea. | like to make my position clear," | Preliminary plans for a third| the bushy-haired executive said major league already are in the| in an interview. works, Bill Shea, chairman of] "I am wholeheartedly for ex- Mayor Wagner's New York base- pansion. and I am for it the best|ball committee, recently identi- | |way we can get it. If the third fied the perscns behind the New major league is the answer, then|York entry. Among other cities | I will throw my full support be-|suggested for the new league are hind it. But for years I have had|Toronto, St. Paul - Minneapolis, | other ideas about how we should| Houston, Buffalo and Dallas-Fort { life of the country -- and the project deserves the td rnest sup- + go about this thing. Worth, "I am in favor of adding teams port and ec pe of every wildlife sportsman. Frick said the topic may be | | Woodview Park sports and gradually--first four teams, mak- ing 10 teams in each league and | then a couple of years later four cago. ) discussed at the joint meeting of the major leagues July 10 in Chi- | h MAMMOTH SALE We're Going To Move | . . Leads Kiwanis BRIGHT BITS: -- Vjto Ragazzo, former Hamilton Tiger-Cat end, has been signed by Ottawa Rough Riders as assistant coach to Frank Clair . . . NORTHERN ONTARIO hockey clubs will make Bantam League a study this week-end, to see if they can organize once more a hockey league that embraces only Northern Ontario teams . . .| Kiwanis Bantam Softball A TORONTO SOCCER player has been suspended for life, for at- League standings as of June 25: tacking a referee. Congratulations to that league--it's this kind of 3 W L PTS. severe discipline and this type alone, that will quickly convince | Woodview 016 some of these new soccer enthusiasts who have arrived in Can-| Eastview 014 ada, fairly recently--that sport is sport and not a life-or-death|Southmead occupation. And if these newcomers--and some of our own home-|Simcoe Hall ws too, have to learn the hard way--then the quicker the les-|Bathe son is given, the better . . . GARY COWAN and Gerry Kesselring, | Fernhill a couple of Kitchener golfers of repute, are one4two in the Ontario Thornton's Corners Open golf tournament play, following yesterday's qualifying|Radio rounds. The real action is today . . . A BRITISH CYCLIST has| North Oshawa been clocked at 140 miles per hour, and recently to win a big|Nipigon meet in Germ he (25-year-old John Surtees) averaged 123 Kingside + TIC » JONES was given an easy decision over Vic-|Storie tor Zalazar of Argentina, last night, in their 10round New York Rundle bout and if you saw ; one--then you can try to figure it out for| MIDGET LEAGU 1 . . ALONSO COY rode four winnters at New Woodbine | Sunnyside yest but was set back on a fifth winner--and it could be|Kingside that he'll draw a suspension, which would keep him from riding|Storie in the Queen's Plate race on Tuesday , . . LEW HOAD and Tony|Woodview 1500 TIRES IN 10 DAYS!! You have only 4 days left to cash in on the safety and savings of- fered by this Tire-A-Thon Tire Sale . . . Don't buy any tires anywhere this week-end until :you get our price. Here Is Blow-By-Blow Story Of Three Rounds NEW YORK (AP)--Here is the the body. Ingo again stabbed over | round by round Associated Press| two left jabs. The Swede drove | account of the Johansson-Patter-/a hard short right to the side of | son heavyweight title fight: Patterson's head but missed with | Round One: Ingo jabbed lightly|a left hook. Ingo sent over an- to Patterson's head. Ingo was other right but it was short. Pat-| short with four more jabs as Pat-|terson drove a left hook to Ingo's| terson moved cautiously. Ingo body. Ingo kept on the offensive was short again with three more with his left jabs. Patterson sent | left jabs and then missed a left|over a long left hook to the jaw hook. Patterson scored with a|but Patterson replied with four |looping left hook and a left jab left jabs. Patterson smashed a to the head. Patterson missed |left hook to Ingo's ribs and then with a leaping right aimed for another left hook to his chest. | the head. Ingo landed three light| Patterson now was moving in on | » I] -- oN ATNRNRD OPEN A BUDGET ACCOUNT ATOR BR WWN pt BOON Trabert won the doubles tournament at Forest Hills yesterday, beating Aussies Frank Sedgman and Mervyn Rose in the final . , . TEN O'CLOCK this morning is the deadline for Queen's Plate en- tries and the final payment of a $500.00 fee, and right now they figure about 20 or 2 noon -- of an original nomination of 71 horses . . . WILLIE GOG- GIN, 53-year-old U.S. PGA Seniors champion, won the world's pro- fessional senior golf title yesterday in Scotland, defeating Arthur Leas, his British counterpart, 5 and 3 Oshawa Merchants Fold | In New Toronto Tourney Oshawa Merchants suffered el- led and Petch, folowedl with a fmination in the New Toronto/double. Melchoir was walked in- 1 horses will still be in the race by today] |jabs as Patterson bobbed and weaved. Patterson got in a light | left hook to the body. Ingo moved around Patterson working with |his left jab. Patterson moved | cautiously from side to side. Ingo |landed three more light jabs but took a stiff left jab to the head. Patterson got in another stiff left jab. Ingo threw a hard right . § hand to the top of Patterson's Woodview Park Midgets, in an head. He threw it fast but it did Oshawa Minor Softball Assoc.|not" have much effect on the league game last night, defeated champion. North Oshawa, at North Oshawa| Johansson's round. diamond, 14-5. Round Two: Ingo again moved Hobbs, pitching for the winners, [in and landed a left jab. Floyd | Fernhill 6 | Southmead North Oshawa CHUA UNO HOH NWW ALND IR Woodview Midgets Beat North Oshawa gave up two runs in the second|also got in his own left jab to the on a hit by Walker; an error to head, Ingo kept popping his left {Anderson and a couple of infield(hand at the cautious champion, the challenger. Patterson's round. Round Three: Ingo started the| |the third round with two left jabs {to the head. A right hand sent Pat terson on his back. He staggered | to his feet at nine, A right hand | dropped Patterson again for Dive. Another right dropped Patterson | for nine again. A light left hook | sent Patterson to the floor for six. | Johansson smashed the bleeding groggy champion with both] hands. A left and right dropped Patterson again for seven. An-| other left and right dropped Pat- terson for nine. A left and right dropped Patterson again and ref- eree Ruby Goldstein immediately | outs, Walker clicked again in the|Patterson dug two left hooks to stopped the fight. The time was softball Inter. "A" tournament tentionally but a wild pitch spoil-|4th inning then in the fifth, John- last night, when they dropped aled this strategy and Gancher|Stone and Zuby both scored, but 20 decision to the Long Branch|scored. Then in the 8th, Long that proved the end of North Ogh- m= | 2:03 . | TIRE SELLING SPREE DOWN DON'T MISS OSHAWA'S GREAT ANNUAL PRICES SLASHED TO MOVE TIRES FAST WEEKLY Merchants Branch added their other run, |8Wa's scoring success. Lascills, pitcher for Long brother Bob Gancher hitting a|, oodview Park lads struck for, Branch, was top form. He homer, after there were two out. | five runs in the first frame. walked Tommy O'Connor to open| OSHAWA MERCHANTS: -- | Williams started on the mound for| the game and then struck out the O'Connor, ss; Edwards, If; Knight| North Oshawa and gave up three | next three batters. Before it was! c; Nichol, of; Walker, 1b; Hubble walks and three hits, for a total| all over, he had fanned 15 batters 3b: Keenan, rf; Masiewich, p;|Of five runs. The winners added | in the 9-inning stint and he gave|Tilk, 2b; Buzminski, if in 6th: [Our more in the second, two in| up five walks and the same Boyce, batted in 9th; Courtney, the 4th, when Dougles hit a two. | pumber of hits. Knight walked to|batted in 9th. {run homer and then in the 9th, | open the fourth and Gordie Nicholl LONG BRANCH:--Gordoneer,|they clinched the win: with three doubled and that was Oshawa's|2b; Dimitro, If; Bob Gancher, More runs, Russell hitting aj best bid Knight walked again|3b: Scott, ss: Hanmivan rf; Bil homer. Russell, Flegg, Bickle, A Business Opportunity | with Character in PUTS A DOMINION ROYAL ON YOUR CAR ® NO RED TAPE . .. OR EMBARASSING QUESTIONS ® FREE MOUNTING . . . NO HIDDEN EXTRAS --for a man or firm with Character A Nationally distributed food beverage item, handled by promi nant wholesalers and progressive individuals throughout the country. Not a vending machine business -- no equipment to buy. This is a year-round reputable business in protected territory with a fine future in the sixth and Walker singled Gancher, 1b; Petch, 8b; Melchoir, with one out and in the 8th |e; Lascills, p. pinch-hitter Ray Buzminski doub- led but was caught going to 3rd, Hobbs, Douglas, Ryan and Gibbs | all hit well for the winners. Walker was the best at bat for North Oshawa, with Johnstone REQUIREMENTS: Good reputation and honesty; $1,800 cash or more, according to area requ ired, to secure merchandise; a you always save more at your... so the Oshawa team went score- Jess, in spite of Nichol's double which followed to hold the world heavyweight| Johnny Masiewich, pitching for| boxing title, defeated Frank] Oshawa, gave up a double to Moran in 20 rounds at Paris, 45 Beman, the British Amateur golf Scott in the fourth and another|vears ago today. Johnson had|champion, lost in the first round to Melchoir in the fifth but he won the crown from Canada's|of the Maryland amateur cham- maintained the 0-0 deadlock until Tommy Burns at Sydney, Aus-| pionship here Friday one up, to the bottom of the 7th, and then tralia, in 1908, and he lost it to John Eiseinger, host club cham- after two out, Bill Gancher sing- Jess Willard at Havana in 1915 |pion, REMEMBER WHEN? . . .|next in line. Jack Johnson, the first Negro|~ EARLY LOSS BETHESDA, Md. (AP)--Deane f | | |@ car and a minimum of eight hours per week, or full time, for {ll this distributorship, | |@ We provide everything necessary to set you up in this business. Write, giving full particuiors, address, phone number, etc, -- | for interview in your City shortly BOX 208, THE OSHAWA TIMES 48 BOND W Dominion Tire Store RA 5-6511

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy