14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 12, 1961 NATIONAL LEAGUE BATS "BOOM TO WIN IN 10TH AFTER LOSING LEAD ON ERRORS Sey Se oR fn. | HERE IS THE BOBBLE that tied the score in the 9th erican League's Al Kaline (Detroit) heads for the plate hind Boyer is shortstop Maury Wills. Catcher is . Smokey Charles Leads British Golf Open BIRKDALE, England (CP)--|and there were 10 amateurs 's b Charles, and seven professionals Ww New ads Boh Ch golf-| came within the 148-stroke limit ¥ 7 [to qualify. ers in the world, leads a fiel [CANADIANS OUSTED of 108 competitors into the first : round of pe year's British open| Both Canadian competitors golf championships today. finished just one stroke above The 25-year-old southpaw, who he qualifying limit. set a record on the Royal Birk-| Bill Wright of Edmonton shot dale Course with a 66 Monday,|2 70 at Hillside Tuesday but it headed the qualifiers for the 72-(Was not good enough to make hole championship with a 70 over [up for his 79 strokes at Royal the near 6 Hillside Course Birkdale Monday. Tuesday. Ray Mclnnally had a 75 at He thus totalled 136 for the| Hillside. He shot Birkdale in 74 two qualifying rounds -- two Monday. strokes better than South Afri- British Ryder Cup captain Dai ca's Gary Player, the 3-to-1 sec-/Rees had a record 66 at Hill- ond choice to take the open ti-/side Tuesday. He shot 76 Mon- tle. day. The 5 - to-2 favorite, Arnold Titleholder Kel Nagle of Aus- Palmer of the United States,|tralia came off the Hillside Tuesday fired a 68, two strokes| course with a 68 Tuesday for a over Charles's record and six total 141 for the two qualifying strokes under par for the tough, rounds. 6,844-yard Birkdale course. On| Frank Stranahan of the U.S., the 6,603 - yard Hillside course a former British and Canadian Monday, Palmer came off with| Amateur c h a m pion, finished a one-under-par 71. | Hillside with a 73 to qualify. He There were 350 golfers taking shot Royal Birkdale in 71 Mon- part in the qualifying roundsiday. NEW TITLE HOLDER path between second and | third is Roger Maris of the | Burgess and the umpire Stan | Yankees. The pitcher is Stu | Landes. Colavito is headed | Miller of the Giants. inning of yesterdays All-Star with the tying run as third | they are Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh; Willie Mays of San Francisco and Hank Aaron of Milwaukee. Aaron, a pinch- hitter, opened the 10th with a | single and advanced on a BIFF ! BING! BANG! de- scribes how these three Na- tional League stars gave the National League a come- from-behind victory with two runs in the 10th inning, for a 5-4 decision in yesterday's All-Star game. Left-to-right, Willie Mays doubled. Pitcher | Hoyt Wilhelm hit Frank Rob- passed ball and scored when | SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' UAW Picnic play, yesterday at (ga THE ALL-STAR game yesterday had a bit of every- thing to satisfy the whims of all baseball fans--with the one exception of course, the American League rooters didn't get to cheer a victory. For eight innings it looked as if they wouldn't even be close--and didn't reserve to be, with Warren Spahn pitching three perfect nnings, Bob Purkey and Mike McCormick both pitching brilliantly as well and the National League establishing a clean-cut 3-1 lead. But then came the 9th inning. They say the wind blows so hard most of the time in Candlestick Park that it makes the ball "do tricks" and it was doing this yesterday obviously, in the last couple of frames--in fact, it was blowing so hard it even had the players doing tricks too. Tricks like you might expect on the sandlot--but not from special selected All-Stars. The American League tied it up on Ken Boyer's error in the 9th and then as if that wasn't enough, he had another in the 10th that the let the AL squad go out in front. But them Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Roberto Clemente smashed out some solid blows, to score two runs and victory for the Nationals. As a spectacle, the weird happenings of the last couple of innings topped off the superlative ball that was dis- played in the early frames. Like we said already--there was a bit of everything. LOCAL softball fans saw the top two teams of the Oshawa City and District Association get their lumps in the doubleheader last night. Scugog Cleaners said it with homers (four of them in the last three innings) to knock off the league-leading Tony's Vendors and MacLean's Esso climbed out of the cellar by knocking off the second-place Heffering's Imperials. There's another twin-bill tomorrow night Tony's meeting Hefferings in the early game and MacLean's facing Scugogs in the floodlight fixture. Looks as if it will be a real exciting finish in their schedule race, with every game being very important. OSHAWA TONY'S are at their regular Wednesday night stand tonight, with Randall-Roy Metals coming to Alexandra Park for a Beaches Fastball League schedule inson with a pitched ball and then Roberto Clemente singled to score Mays with the win- ning run--the third extra- inning game in All-Star his- fory and the 10th ational League victory in the last 14 games --(AP Wirephoto) Town - Country Defeat Horne's In Picnic Game Town and Country scored a 6-3 victory over Horne's Esso, in Alexandra Park. Both teams scored two runs in the first inning. Jordan and Asseltine both singled to open for Horne's then a passed ball and two sacrifice flies by West- fall and Gardiner, brought them home. After that, Mullens pitch- ed fine ball, giving up only two more hits. Woodcock doubled to open the fourth and scored after there were two out when Mullens went wild and walked! three batters in succession. That proved Horne's final counter. Town and Country got two runs off Ross in the first inning when Finch got a walk to start, Furgeson singled, Grabko sac- rificed then Westfall walked. Finch scored on the sacrifice and Weeks singled to score Westfall, after Furgeson had been nipped at the plate In the next inning, Zurba doubled, Comerford singled, Mullens and Finch were both safe on errors at shortstop and Grabko's sacrifice fly scored Mullens with the third run of the inning. The sixth and final run came in the fourth on singles by Grabko, Westfall and Brean, in that order. Fernhill Beats Bathe Midgets game in San Francisco. Am- Wind And Errors baseman Ken Boyer "boots" | | Rocky ColavMto's smach. Be. | for first base and on the base Make All-Stars Look Like 'Joes SAN FRANCISCO ndlestick Park's celebrated wind swept down on the all- star teams of the major leagues Tuesday, blowing up havoc as the National League went to a 5-4 10-inning win over error- ridden American Leaguers. For seven innings, Candle- stick's heralded wind was only a myth as far as the players and the 44,115 customers were concerned, and it was a contest of finesse, dignity and occa- sional brilliance With Milwaukee's Warren Spahn perfect, Cincinnati's Bob Purkey near-perfect, and Pitts- burgh's Roberto Clemente lead- ing the attack against New York's Whitey Ford and Wash- ington's Dick Donovan with a triple and sacrifice fly, the Na- tionals surged into a 2-0 lead after the fourth The Americans got one run back in the sixth when Minne- sota's Harmon Killebrew slammed a home run, their first hit, off Giant southman Mike McCormick. That's the way things stood from the bay to bedevil the teams and turn an unspectac- ular but uniformly played game into a spectacle. In the last three innings, the all-stars committed five of the game's seven errors. San Francisco pitcher Stu Miller was charged with a balk, New York catcher Elston Ho- ward was guilty of a passed ball and Cincinnati outfielder Frank Robinson was hit by a pitch. The National appeared to have the victory, fourth in a row over the American and fifth in the last six games, all wrapped up when pinch hitter George Altman, Chicago Cubs' outfielder, hammered a home run off Boston's Mike Fornieles in the eighth. But in the ninth, with Pitts- burgh's Roy Face pitching, the Americans tied it at 3-3 on a double by Norm Cash, singles by Al Kaline and Maris, and an error by third baseman Ken Boyer on Colavito's grounder, BASEBALL STANDINGS THE CANADIAN PRE American League Unchanged from Sunday. Tuesday's Result All-star Game By ss | Fernhill Park Genosha Aces defeated Bathe Park Midgets 14-3 in their game at Fernhill Park last night Mason was the winning pitcher for the Aces and gave up only five hits. Tropak got American 4 National 5 Today's Games No games scheduled. Thursday's Games Baltimore at Boston (N) K. City at Washington (N) Sidney Cole, Veteran Rider, Is Killed NEW YORK (AP) -- Sidney Cole, a veteran jockey and the father of four children, thrown and killed Tuesday dur- 8Fox 2b Mantle cf Kaline cf i Maris rf 1 h | Colavito If {Kubek ss ing a workout in view grandstand crowd at Race Track. It was the second jockey deat at the track this season and the Aqueduct (AP)-- until the eighth came swirling two more errors in the inninglone of the worst playing fields but Kansas City's Dick Howser flied out, leaving three runners stranded. By the 10th, swirling winds were blowing dust into the play- er's eyes and caps off their heads. Miller, with his flutterball do- ing tricks in the wind, fanned! the first two batters but walked Fox. 'Kaline bounced to Boyer but the third baseman's throw sailed past first and Fox scored with the tie - breaking run with Kaline racing all the way to third. Henry Aaron opened the bot- tom of the 10th with a single off Baltimore's Hoyt Wilhelm, reached second on a passed ball and scored when Willie Mays bounced a double over third baseman Howser's head After Robinson was hit by a pitch, Clemente singled Willie home to end the game PLAYED NO FAVORITES Terry Downes Beats Pender | LONDON (AP) -- Terry|Then it was Downes who re- | Downes, 25, a battling Cockney tired with a cut nose after seven {who once served in the US.|. --.c Marines, Tuesday night de-| "| : " |prived Paul Pender of his share 'I just didn't have the speed,' |of the world middleweight |Pender said. "It seemed to get | championship before 12000 worse as the fight went on. I | cheering fans here. felt weak. I wasn't making any Pender, from Brookline, impression on him." | Mass., retired with a cut over] Most of the fans were sur- | his left eye at the end of the prised when the fight ended. { ninth round. | Pender, with good defence and There is an agreement for a penetrating left jabs, had held return bout in the United States his own on points with a fighter vithin 90 days. 11s likely to be/who attacked from the first : ; ag 2 . {in Boston, but Downes's man-|bell. In the Ja jor leagues bit bo Cea ager, Sam Burns, said that| Pender had the better of the for one club as for the other wi since both men suffered cuts ninth round, although blood : * [there might be a slight delay. |streamed from his left eye. At Pender, 31, in his dressing/the end of the round referee --(AP Wirephoto) he said. chads players were nol as|,.,o at' Wembley indoor sta-|Ike Powell talked with Pender charitable. |dium after the fight, was sur-|in his corner and then raised ,. I had to play here all the| rounded by friends congratulat-| Downes's hand in victory. time," growled Roger Maris of ling him on the news that his! Boston promoter Sam Silver- New York, "I'd quit." | wife had given birth to a daugh-|man, who immediately started Wilhelm, the losing pitcher, | ter in Boston. ' |talks with Downes's manager said the wind was constantly] 'Downes is a great fighter," on the return bout, said: "This blowing on his back and af-|Pender said. "He would beat/was the greatest middleweight fected his pitching. Gene Fullmer." fight I've ever seen." "There were times when 1| Fullmer is recognized as thought the wind would knock|world champion in most of the ? me over," he said. "It's enough|United States. The crown which| ALMEMBER WHEN. yn to give a pitcher a sore arm." Downes won is recognized in| A Crowd o i Arges eyer Even the Nat [New York, Massachusetts and|t0 attend a Canadian swimming n the National Leaguers Europe meet, saw Hamilton's Irene had some uncomplimentary| ™ : Barr break her own record in things to say about the wind.|WAS TOO SLOW |the * junior women's 10.vud "I thought a couple of pitches! Pender said he thought he|free style with a mark of 1704! were coming back in my face," was slower than when he beat|at Verdun, Que., 21 years ago said Miller, who fanned four|Downes at Boston last January. today. batters in the ninth and 10th to | gain the victory. "The wind was | as bad as I've ever pitched in| here. I'd start to wind up and | Paul Richards, American|the wind was blowing so hard | League manager, said the |it was hard to keep my balance The Nationals were guilty of (winds made Candlestick Park 'on the pivot." THE BOX SCORE SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Box score of the 30th annual all- star baseball game played here Tuesday: American Temple 2b fGentile 1b 2 AB R H RBI PO A K 0 0:1 0 0 0 0 2| | a-Doubled for Spahn in 3rd; | {b-Flied out for Purkey in 5th; | c-Homered for Donovan in 6th; d-Struck out for Bunning in 8th; | e-Homered for McCormick in| 8th; f-Struck out for Temple in| Thursday - Friday - Saturday of the was Cash 1b 1 1/9th; g-Ran for Cash in 9th; h-| 0/Safe on error for Romano in| 0|9th; i-Singled for Miller in 10th. | 0|American 0000010021 - 4 0! National 0101000102. 5 0 E-Cepeda, Kubek, Boyer 2, 2| Burgess, Zimmer, Gentile. LOB 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Clearing FORSYTH SHIRTS New York at Chicago (N) Romano c (Only games scheduled) National League 0|--American 6, National 9. 2b- the first one, a single in the | 0{Stuart, Cash, Mays. 3b-Cle- | fourth, then Spencer doubled and both scored, via an infield third of the year in racing. hBera o Cole, 31, was working Laurel Hon Mae, a filly who appeared to B.R'son 3b ° Short and long sleeves. Colours and whites game. Haven't heard whether or not Charlie Justice is to pitch tonight's tilt but we think it'll be Mel Meule- 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3.75 0| mente. HR-Killebrew, Altman. AND 2|SB-F. Robinson. SF-White, Cle-| meester who'll get the call. quad rather handily already 1 halk u the out that the Randall-Roy s brand of ball right now. Caterers to an 1l-inning tie will rookie infielder suffered a co foot, in an accident at work He has handled the Metals this season and should be although word is quad is playing a snappy They extended Dependable on Monday night. Tony's not have the services of Danny Price tonight. The uple of broken bones in his last week. BRIGHT BITS:- The American Football Conference accepted the entries of Port Golden Bears at their meeti Huron-Detroit and Sarnia ng the other day and also passed a rule that calls for overtime play in their league this fall--in case of a tied score at the end of regulation time. They will play until death point to decide it . . . Paul Pender, on a TKO, last sO now we may see a scrap be there is a winner, sudden- TERRY DOWNES defeated night in London, England, tween Fullmer and Downes Carpin's 3-Hitte Defeats Leaders By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .001 percentage point ahead of this game. The team collected New York Yankees just might the fifth-place Rochester Red 4h even dozen walks have another Whitey Ford-type left hander ripening on the farm. Frank Carpin, a 22-year-old Brooklyn native, seems to have solved some of the mysteries of the International League hitters after spending last season with Binghamton in the class A East- ern League. Ford pitched for 3inghamton in his minor league days. Carpin pitched his third straight three - hitter for Rich- mond Virginians Tuesday night, beating league - leading Colum- bus 3-2. It was only his second straight victory, for he lost a three-hit duel with Toronto's Rip Coleman earlier this month for his fifth defeat. He now is 2-5. In pther games, Jersey City ble by Harry Anderson and Dan winning reliefer Russ and Husfalo tied for third place,/Morejon's single drove in the the ninth. Wings. The Jerseys won over second place Charleston 4-3 {while the Bisons beat Rochester 14-2. Toronto Maple Leafs in sixth place, only 10 percentage points behind the Wings, edged Syracuse Chiefs 2-1 STRUCK OUT FIVE Carpin, in pitching his fourth complete game and third in a row, struck out five and did not allow an earned run Richmond, behind 2-1 in the last of the sixth, won the game when, with Bill Carr on base, Columbus right-fielder Larry El- liot let Jake Gibbs' single roll through his legs for a three-base error, letting both runners score. Jim Pendleton's single, a dou- cuse had tied the game against| Union, were admitted to the con-|a | batting out and an error at first base 3athe got their other run in the 8th when Tropak got his second hit of the game, ad vanced on an infield out and = scored when McKnight was safe on a bobble in the outfield Nosal pitched for Bathe and was in trouble almost every inning, usually due to his own wildness. He walked Mosier and G. Zarowny to open the first inning and the former scored on Nelson's sacrifice fly March doubled in the second, Columbus T. Zarowny was safe on the Charleston shortstop's error and Mason's Buffalo single scored them both. Vernon Jersey City homered in the third inning. In Rochester the fouth, Fernhill added four Toronto runs on Mason's walk and four. [Richmond 3847 447 straight singles by Mosier, (; Syracuse 30 57 345 Zarowny, Gaskell and Nelson Tuesday's Results then an infield error Toronto 2 Syracuse 1 The winners put four hits Buffalo 4 Rochester 2 with a couple of walks, Gaskeli's Columbus 2 Richmond 3 grand-slam homer climaxing the Charleston 3 Jersey City 4 five-run rally, in the seventh and they got another run in the 8th. Mosier, Gaskell, Vernon and Mason each had two hits in Unchanged from Sunday. Tuesday's Result All-star Game American 4 National 5 Today's Games No games scheduled. THURSDAY'S Games Chicago at Cincinnati (N) Milwaukee at St. Louis (N) Phila. at Los Angeles (N) Pittsburgh at San Francisco International League / L Pct. GBL 5233 .612 47 36 566 4139 513 4139 512 4442 512 40 40 4 814 8% 8% 9% 14 23 .500 Toronto at Syracuse (N) Juffalo at Rochester (N) Columbus at Richmond (N) Charleston at J. City (N) -- No Tie Games In SETS POLE VAULT MARK : 8 NANAIMO (CP)--Bob Watson This Grid League TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -- The of Vancouver set a Canadian junior pole vault record of 12 p 'has Saturday to hi jest, 3 in hes Saturday to igh. American Football Conference Highland Games." Watson Dele announced the adoption Monday tered by. two inches the mark of a no-tie, sudden-death rule to : , Yl a iam go into effect with the opening he set himself a week earlier. of the exhibition season next month Jersey City runs, breaking a 2-2| (ommissioner Dale Heddon tie and giving the Jerseys their|gaid the rule was recommended third straight victory by the rules committee at a Jim Frey, the defending IL | meeting Sunday. Under the rule champ, beat his Old|if the game is tied at the end Rochester mates with a two-rtn of the fourth quarter, it will con- homer in the seventh tinue until one team scores. Joe Hannah hit a 10th inning Sarnia Golden Bears, formerly homer for Toronto after Syra- of the Ontario Rugby Footbail Heman in ference #» Sunday along with ielub from Port Huron, Mich shy and turned toward the rail on the backstretch. Cole was thrown over the rail and landed | on his head. He failed to re- spond fo a heart massage by doctors in an ambulance en route to a hospital. Cole was born in Brooklyn| but lived in Elmont, N.Y., site| of Belmont Park, The youngest of his children--he has two boys and two girls--is only 14 months old. Cole, who had a repuiation for bringing in long shots, scored his biggest stakes vic- tory aboard Misty Morn in the Gallant Fox Handicap in 1955 He worked for several trainers, | but rode a number of horses trained by Sunny Jim Fitzsim- mons. Sulky Driver Turns Jockey To Halt Horse TORONTO (CP) --The com- bination of the four - year < old aelding Baron Atom and driver Neil McRann is becoming a 0 0 0 LU] 0 0 0 {1} 0 0 0 0 LU] 0 0 Bunning p dBrandt Fornieles p Wilhelm p Ford p Lary p 0:00 Donovan p 0-0 0 cK'brew 3b 2 1 1 1 Howser 3b 0 0 Totals 38 4 4 3 x27 x-None out when winning run| scored in 10th National AB R Wills ss 3:0 Mathew 3b 2 0 Purkey p 0 0 bMusial 0 0 0 0 McCor'k p 0 0 0 9:0 eAltman il me le Lo Face p 0-0 0 0 0¢ Koufax p 0 0 0 0 0 Miller p 0-0-0 0 ¢ iAaron 1 0 Mays cf 2 1 Cepeda If 0 0 FF.R'son If 0 0 Cl'm'nte rf 1 2 White 1b 0 1 Bolling 2b 0 0 Zimmer 2b 0 0 Burgess ¢ 0 0 Spahn p 0 0 aStuart 0 0 Boyer 3b 0 0 Totals 5 5 0 0 0 0 0 0} 0 1 EE EE EE I A) RBI PO A $0 3 0 0 0-1 H 1 0 0 ScScooN ~-oooOooDSS 0 1 0 1! 8 IES mt 2 i bt 33 20 da = 23 TN = SODDWS HIN ~~ -- DD De bE DS e2 0 McCormick |F A mente. 4.50 0.50 99- 1.50 Reg. 5.00 and 6.00 SUMMER SUITS Reg. 55.00 All Wool SUITS Reg. 65.00 TIES Res. 1.50 and 2.00 Reg. 2.50 COLD? Winter Suburbans Reg. 21.50 0.99 SHOES 1d Spahn Purkey eel ace 1-3 yKoufax Miller (W) Ford xLary Donovan Bunning Fornieles 1-3 zWilhelm (I) 1 2-3 | BB - McCormick 1 (Maris), | Miller 1 (Fox), Wilhelm 1] (Boyer), SO - Spahn 3 (Cash, Mantle, Maris), Purkey 1 (Ro-| mano), McCormick 3 (Cash,]| Mantle, Brandt), Face 1 (Gen- itle), Miller 4 (Kubek, Wilhelm, | Gentile, Maris), Ford 2 (Mays, | Bolling), Donovan 1 (Boyer), Bunning 2 (White, Boyer), Wil-| helm 1 (Clemente). HBP--By Wilhelm (F. Robin-| son). Balk--Miller. PB-Howard. | U-Landes (N) plate, Umont (A) first base, Crawford (N) second base, Runge (A) third base,| Vargo (N) left field, Drum-| mond (A) right field. T-2:53. - 44,115. Receipts (net)-$259,- 230.81. 12.3 | TPES 1 2 0 0 1 0 | 0 0 1 2 )s tough one to top at Old Wood- bine park In Tuesday night's feature, a B pace for $1,500 before crowd of 6,089, Baron Atom took a four - horse photo finish in a swift 2:03.2 for the mile. It was the gelding's third straight vie- tory at Old Woodbine, the meet- ing's top winner. Driver Duncan MacTavish pulled off the driving stunt of the year in the fifth race. Just as his horse, Rod Hanover, crossed the finish line, a piece of equipment broke and the horse began to pull away from the sulky. Quick - thinking Mac- Tavish leaped from the cart in low dive, landed on the {horse's back and rode him, {jockey style, to a halt. | al QUALIFY AS Until August 15, The Certified of Ontario will id li PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT ions for Reg. 9.95 Reg. 19.95 3.99 12.99 Please Note: John Preston's some high quality and style prevails, A CERTIFIED Public Accountants Association i ion as students in the five-year course leading to qualification as Certified Public Ac s. Training ¢ tension, tension, your own choice. of a five year course conducted by the Department of Ex- University of Toronto plus University of Toronto plus For further information, write to:-- The Certified Public Accountants Association of Ontario, C.P.A. Building, 228 Bloor Street West, Toronto 5, Ontario. satisfactory completion Pp concurren acceptable concurrent acceptable hn Prestons. MEN'S SHOP Simcoe St. .S 725-1551