2 TH OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, October 1, 1962 WHATTA DIFFERENCE ONE RUN MAKES! DEJECTED DODGERS walk from thei: dungout and head for the dressing room, after losing 1-0 to St. Louis Cardinals yesterday after- noon--knowing that their ri- vals, the San Francisco Giants had won their game and that now they must win a special 2-out-of-3 playoff, in order to qualify for the World Series. Included in the camera's range here are Ken McMullen 14), Pete Richert (foreground) Willie Davis (with his hand on the rail) and Maury Wills (30, in the background). | s| damper on the festivities as 18,- | |PLAY. ARGOS TONIGHT | Stampeders, who have won five ;\tonight as they take on the :|luckless Argos, who have won By THE CANADIAN PRESS The lower echelons are still stirring up trouble in what promises to be the closest bat- tle in years in the Western Football Conference. Saskatchewan Roughriders and British Columbia Lions took a turn in scrambling the stand- ings Saturday in a race in which everybody still stands a good chance to make the play- offs. The chief sufferers in t heir upsurge were Edmonton Eski- mos, who went into the week- end in a third-place tie in the five-team standings and came out of it in the cellar. The undermanned Esxiraos took a"46-24 pounding from the Lions Saturday night, putting a 322 fans turned up to honor Rollie Miles, the retired Ed- monton halfback. Meanwhile, the Riders pulled out a last - minute squeaker, edging Toronto Argonauts 21-17 in an interlocking fixture with the tail-enders of the Eastern Conference. The second - place -Calgary games in a row and still only lead the Riders by two points, have a chance to widen the gap Argos Drop Another; Lions Claw Eskimos only one game in eight starts. Rider halfback Ray Purdin completed an 80-yard pass-and- run play with quarterback Bob Ptacek on the last play of the game Saturday after Saskatch- ewan had trailed the visitors most of the way. Earlier, a similar Ptacek-Pur- din play had covered 60 yards to set up the first Rider touch- down by Bill Gray early in the fourth quarter, when Toronto was leading 10-1, Fullback Ferd Burket scored the other major and Reg Whitehouse added two converts and a single. Aubrey Linne and Dick Shatto scored touchdowns for the Ar- gonauts and Bill Mitchell booted a field goal, a convert and a single. The Argos bottled up Sas- katchewan's ground attack to a net gain of 36 yards but were unable to cope with Ptacek in the air. The Rider quarterback completed 16 of his 22 passes for 323 yards. Argonauts, normally a pass- ing club, mustered their most effective ground offensive of the season, rolling for 212 yards with fullback Gerry McDougall doing most of the work. Quar- terback Tobin Rote picked up 167 yards by completing 15 passes in 27 tries. Veteran quarterback Joe | Kapp took personal charge of B.C.'s demolition job on the Es- kimos, passing for six touch- downs and going over for the seventh himself. Mack Burton and Tommy Larscheid each took a pair of his touchdown heaves and Jim Carphin and Willie Fleming cashed in on the others. Vic Kristopaitis con- verted four. Eskimos, trailing by 20 points before hitting the score-sheet, replied with touchdowns by Jim Walden, Bob Walden and Ton Kehrer, a single by Bob Wal- den and two converts by Ted Tully. The Eskimos actually picked up 22 first downs to B.C,'s 20 but Kapp's passing told the story as he made good on 13 of 22 tries for 427 yards. Don Getty and Jim Walden, sharing the Edmonton quarterbacking, picked up 230 yards by com- pleting 1 5of their 30 attempts. Lions went for 145 yards on the ground to Eskimos' 113. B.C, also looked sharp defen- sively, picking off three Ed- monton passes and recovering a fumble. Apart from tonight's Toronto- Calgary game, everyone is idle| until Saturday night when Win- nipeg Blue Bombers, currently three points ahead of the pack, entertain the Lions while Cal- gary visits Edmonton. Vic Chapman To Quit Football EDMONTON (CP)--Vic Chap-| jman, 30, has decided to retire jfrom professional football \rather than continue his career; jwith Montreal Alouettes of the| |Eastern Football Conference. Chapman, one of the Western OTTAWA (CP) -- Smarting from three straight losses, Ot- tawa Rough Riders came bound- ing out of their slump Saturday, Ottawa Blanks Tiger-Cats 27-0 Flemming took a pass from Jackson on a gallop that ate up 50 yards. Then Jackson punched his way through the shaky Ticat Trainer Freddie Brown (right) and manager Johnny Buckley admire the mighty right fist of Blair Richardson, new Canadian Middleweight | Champion. Relying heavily on right crosses, Cape Bretoner Richardson (he's from South Bar, N.S.) dethroned Wilf Greaves of Edmonton and De- troit, in their title bout at | MARITIME BOXER NEW MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMP Glace Bay on Saturday night. Richardson sent Greaves to the canvas three times in the bout and was awarded a TKO victory in the 8th round. --(CP Wirephoto) Cleveland Indians Drop Mgr. McGaha CLEVELAND (AP) -- Gabe Paul, the general manager of THIS IS 4TH TIME _ When There's A Playoff, Cleveland Indians, announced Sunday that the contract of Mel McGaha to manage the club would not be renewed for 1963. Paul said McGahan, just fin- ishing a disappointing freshman season s skipper of the Indians, "has been offered a job by an- other club, and was granted mission to leave the Indians to- day to confer with officials of that club." tional League pennant. Paul did not identify the other| Just as in 1951, it was the team. |Giants who ov rhauled the |Dodgers. San fhe tae PLAYOFF DATES | itt tem capi, cen hay FOR N.L. CROWN team captain, didn't have to make up as much ground this SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Here is the game schedule for time, but in some ways the Los Angeles Dodgers collapse was even greater-than that of their Brooklyn predecessors. the National League pennant | The three-game series, to be playoffs: televised nationally in the U.S., First game today at Candle- |Starts here today. The second stick Park, San Francisco. and third a are necessary~are at Los Angeles Second game, Tuesday at Tuesday aiid Wednesday. Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles. > The 1951 Dodgers lost a 13%- Third game, pt mong Wed- |-ame lead under a tremendous| nesday at Los Angeles. Giants' surge. This time the Time of all games, 4 p.m. EDT. World Series opener, Thurs- day, San Francisco or Los Angeles, 1 p.m. crunched through Hamilton Tiger-Cat defences, and wal- loped the visitors 27-0 to ease their way to within one point of first place in the Eastern Football Conference. To the 17,124 fans, it was a decidedly different affair than the season's opener here when Riders took a whacking from the charged-up Ticats. This time, without the experienced hands of Bernie Faloney to pass out the ball, the Hamilton team seldom got within shouting dis- tance of Ottawa's goal posts, On the other hand, Rough Riders played throughout as though they were trailing in the last quarter. When Canadian quarterback Russ Jackson took the first snap of the game, he zipped a pass i. s First Winners 'Sir Winston' a the field that had touch- Ir inston liners writes all over it--it 'Ron MONTREAL (CP) -- McGill|Stewart could have grasped it. University Redmen nipped St.|That was only the start. Francis Xavier University] Ottawa didn't give up posses- X-Men 18-6 in the Sir Winston|sion of hte ball until they Churchill Trophy benefit foot-/marched down the field in 10 ball game Saturday, _|plays to score the first touch- One long pass, the thing/ down. Len Chandler was sitting Xavier coach Don Loney said| pretty in the end zone to snare before the game could "'kill us,"'| the pass. and a flurry of devastating run- ning gave McGill the victory in} defences for the second major. Again in the third quarter, Jackson slipped through from the Hamilton 15-yard line for an- other touchdown. And in the final frame, Flemming polished off the touchdown parade with his charge into the end zone. Rough Riders piled up 28 first downs compared with Hamil- defences for the second major. ton's 10. They gained 287 yards rushing against Hamilton's 115, and the home team piled up 170 yards in the air compared with) Hamilton's 127, Ticats lost 121 yards in 13 pen- alty calls, compared with Riders 30 yards in three calls. | Canadian Frank Cosentino | started at quarter for the vis- itors, and he returned later in the game when import Joe Zuger also failed to get the Ti- gets on the march in the second quarter. Dave , Thelen led Ottawa's rushing with 68 yards in 14 car- ries. Cosentino gained 40 yards on five carries for Hamilton. By whipping first-place Ham- ilton, Ottawa now has 10 points in the Eastern Conference stand- ings, one point behind Ticats. Montreal has six points, four In the next quarter Millard' more than one-win Toronto. |Conference's top punters since he broke in with British Colum- bia Lions in 1954, was traded to the Alouettes this week by Edmonton Eskimos. Chapman played with Montreal Thursday night in Winnipeg. "| Chapman said Saturday, "My d\wife and I talked it over and 4 \decided the wisest thing to do would be bow out now. I'll ad- mit I could use the money, but I'm just not interested in mov- = \ing my family to Montreal or lcommuting for the games." McGill Redmen | Those Dodgers Are In It! By JOE REICHLER SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The players are different and the home cities have changed but it's 1951 all over again with the Giants and Dodgers in another post-season playoff for the Na- day. I would just blame it on a horrible slump. We're just not vo | worth a darn." ers named southpaw Sandy Koufax (14-6) to pitch today's opener and the Giants plan to start Billy Pierce (15-6), veteran left-hander. _Alston nominated Stan Wil- liams (13-12), a strong-armed right-hander, to pitch the second game while the Giants will go with Jack Sanford, their 24- game winner, If athird game is necessary, it will be Don Drysdale of the Dodgers against either Juan Marichal or Billy O'Dell, and Dodgers The Giant fought evenly during the regular season, each winning nite games. The Giants, however, won six of the last seven from the Dodgers. : This is the fourth playoff in National League history and the Dodgers have. been in all of them. They lost to the Cardinals in 1946, lost again to the Giants in bites and defeated. Milwaukee in ; Dodgers held the lead since July 7 and only a week ago led the Giants by four games with only seven to play. Los Angeles lost six of those seven while the Giants won five of their seven | JUBILANT GIANTS 'whoop it up' in their dressing room, after nosing out Houston Colts 2-1 and then hearing over the radio that Los An- eles Dodgers had lost to St. is Cardinals 1-0 -- thus Two Home-Run Blows. One Good, One Bad creating a tie for first place in the final standing of the National League. _ Now the | Giants get a big chance to en- | ter the World Series, with a 2-out-of-3 playoff series against the Dodgers, opening in San Francisco today. Those iden- tified above are left, pitcher | Jim Duffalo, Billy O'Dell | (stripped to waist), Harvey | Kuenn (behind O'Dell) and manager Alvin Dark, at ex- treme right. --(AP Wirephoto) Force Playoff Set "I knew it was gone," said, On Saturday the Giants split)Jerry Lynch and Gordie Cole- emiling Willie Mays. "Damn it, damn it," said de- jected Johnny Podres. That summed up the feelings of the players Sunday at the two focal points of major league baseball -- in San Francisco, where the Giants won, and in Los Angeles, where the Dodgers lost. The combination brought about the fourth pennant playoff in National League annals, Mays led off in the eighth with Houston and San Francisco tied 1-1, and slammed a one-strike pitch over the left field fence for his 47th homer and a 2-1 Giants' victory. Podres, who had a_ two-hit shutout with one out in the eighth, served up a pitch to Gene Oliver, and the St. Louis catcher hit it into the lower left field stands for a homer that carried the Cardinals to a 1-0 triumph over. the Dodgers. A. three-game playoff begins today in San Francisco. The World Series, with the American League champion New York Yankees furnishing. the opposi- tion, starts Thursday. BLANK THE PHILLIES In the other closing NL games Sunday, John Tsitouris' five-hit- ter led Cincinnati Reds to a 4-0 victory over Philadelphia Phil- lies, Pittsburgh Pirates edged Milwaukee Braves 4-3 on Dick Groat's decisive double and Chi- cago Cubs pulled off a triple play in a 5-1 decision over New York Mets. "In the American League, Chi- cago White Sox belted the Yan- kees 84M nnesota Twins blanked Baltimore Orioles 1-0 behind Camilo Pascual's three- hitter, Detroit Tigers whipped Kansas City Athletics 6-1, Cleve- land Indians defeated Los An- }with the Colts, winning 11-5 and \losing 42 while the Cardinals jbianked the Dodgers 2-0. Mil- waukee downed Pittsburgh 7-3 and the Mets ended R. L. Mil- ler's 15-game personal losing streak by edging Chicago 2-1. In the American League the Yankees topped the White Sox 84, the Angels split with Cleve- land, winning 4-1 and losing 5-1, the Twins overpowered - Balti- more 8-4, Detroit edged Kansas City 3-2 and a Washington-Bos- ton doubleheader was cancelled because of rain. "T hit it good," said Mays, of| the shot that tied it up for the Giants. "I don't know if that} not. Podres was sure. LOSES 'BEST' GAME "This was the best game I had pitched in my life. Just one blankety blank pitch and I get beat." Mays' homer came off Hou- ston starter Dick Farrell (10-20), who had been touched for Ed Bailey's 17th homer in the fourth inning that sent the Giants out to a 1-0 lead. The Colts tied it in the sixth against Billy O'Dell on singles by Ro- man Mejias, Bob Aspromonte and Jim Pendleton. O'Dell left for a pinch hitter in the seventh and Stu Miller (5-8) received credit for the victory with no-hit relief over the final two innings. At Los Angeles Cards' starter Curt. Simmons (10-10) allowed straight St. Louis shutout against the Dodgers. Podres (15-13) had given up only the two hits and hadn't permitted a runner past first base when clincher. = Angels twice 4-3 and 6-1, Sox split, faking @ 31 decision. of Tsitouris with home runs by was my biggest' homer ever--or Mi only five hits, hurling the second! man to beat the Phillies and Art Mahaffey (19-14). The Pi- rates rode Groat's eighth inning bases-loaded double to their vic- tory over the Braves and the Cubs turned back the Mets for Bob Buhl! (12-14) with the aid of the key eighth inning triple play. Mickey Mantle went 2-for-3 for the Yankees, but lost his bid to overtake Pete Runnels of Bos- ton for the AL batting title when Runnels was forced to sit out the Red Sox games with the flu. Runnels wound up at .326 to Mantle's .321. The White Sox got a pair of e runs from rookie Brian icCall and one by Nellie Fox hom jas Ray Herbert posted his 20th | victory. Pascual also got No. 20, pitehing the Twins to their vic- tory over the Orioles. |. Jim Bunning pitched a four- |hitter and Norm Cash hit a ithree-run homer as the Tigers |walloped the Athletics. The In- dians took the opener against the Angels on Jerry Kindall's single and won the nightcap with ja 12-hit attack. Don Lock hom- lered in the Senators' first game |victory, but the Red Sox came back to make it a split as Gary Geiger and Don Gile connected! in the second' game. YESTERDAY'S | STARS | ASSOCIATED PRESS | Batting--Willie Mays, Gie, ay |hit his 47th home run, in the eighth inning, snapping a 1-1 tie, giving San Francisco a 2-1} victory over Houston Colts and) sending the Giants into a play- |By THE i Pitching--Curt Simmons, &t. | Spills were plentiful on the rain- the first playing of the trophy! game. | Halfback Eric Walter, 19,| from Baie D'Urfe, Que., figured in both. He took a pass from quarterback Tom Skypeck for one touchdown and then cli- maxed a drive which he had spearheaded with a three-yard plunge to score the other. The X-Men were strong on defence. but off-and-on offen- sively, They scored with a play eut of Skypeck's book--a 48- yard pass-and-run effort with quarterback Roger Sevigny throwing to end Joel Lamorre. Alex Oakley 'Sets Canadian Walking Mark | CAMP BORDEN, Ont. (CP)-- Alex Oakley of Oshawa set a Canadian record Saturday in his third successive win in the anftual 50,000 - metre walking race, He trudged through the mud in four hours, 2 minutes and 51 seconds, almost seven minutes better than the record he. set last year. Valdemar Grandy was second and Felix Cappella third. All | three are members of the Glad- FOOTBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Eastern Conference Ww Hamilton Ottawa Montreal Toronto Western Confe: 8 2 4 ice N APt 270 174 16 6 4 1237 216 13 5 1151 168 11) B.C. 5 6 0231 3110 Edmonton 461211 47 9 Results Saturday Ottawa 27 Hamilton 0 Regina 21 Toronto 17 Vancouver 46 Edmonton 24 Game Today Toronto at Calgary 2 0 re < 0 Winnipeg Calgary Sask. Ontario Intercollegiate Carleton 39 RMC 7 Ottawa 6 OAVC 20 Waterloo 7 McMaster 44 Intercollegiate Athletic Ass'n Hamilton 0 Waterloo U 46 ORFU Junior St. Thomas 12 Windsor 14 K-W Dutchmen 19 Sarnia 34 Ontario Junior Burlington 7 Lakeshore 28 Exhibition Verdun 10 Queen's 38 McGill 13 St. Francis Xavier 6 Western 1 Toronto 24 Atlantic Conference |Dalhousie 6 Acadia 7 St. Dunstan's 7 UNB 7 Shearwater 2 Mount Allison 0 SUNDAY ORFU Junior | Games Saturday Hamilton at Toronto Calgary at Edmonton Vancouver at Winnipeg Senior ORFU 4 2.1128 99 9 3.2 1.14115 7 2 2 2 97.06 6 2°50 83.02 4 Results Saturday Oakville 6 London 18 Saturday's Games Oakville at East York London at Sarnia SATURDAY Western Intercollegiate Oakville East York Sarnia London | stone Athletic Club, which spon- sors the event. Manitoba 22 Saskatchewan 8 Kitchener-Waterloo 19 Sarnia 34 Northern Cntario North Bay 13 Kirkland Lake 7 Sturgeon Falls 12 Sudbury 15 Ontario Junior Burlington 28 Lakeshore 7 National League Chicago 0 Green Bay 49 Cleveland 7 Philadelphia 35 Detroit 29 Baltimore 20 New York 31 Pittsburgh 27 St. Louis 14 Washington 24 Dallas 27 Los Angeles 17 Minnesota 7 San Francisco 21 American Leagu Denver 32 New York 1 San Diego 42 Oakland 33 Buffalo 21 Dallas 41 Rider Captures. M'Cycle Crown ORONO, Ont. (CP)--Gerald Rocket of Philadelphia captured the Canadian National road rac- ing championship for 250-cc motorcycles Saturday at Mo- sport Park, 40 miles east of Torsato. Rocket also won the unlimited section for motorcycles of 500 ce or more, He won over 11 other competitors. 1 Ron Rouillard of Ville Les Saules, Que., took the Junior Natjonal Open championship. More than 125 drivers from United States and Canada took part in the eight-race program. slicked, 2.5-mile track, but there were no serious injuries. Louis Cardinals, pitched a five-| Oliver connected for theloff with Los Angeles Dodgers| hit 1-0 shutout over the Dodgers,| Mantle, NY for the National League cham- forcing Los Angeles into a play-| Robinson, Chi | The Reds backed the pitching) pionship. off with San Francisco for the| Najjonal League title. Philadelphia _MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Fermandez Cut But Gets Win In Wild Brawl LAS VEGAS N,ev. (AP)--Ar- gentina's Jorge Fernandez won a unanimous decision oven Charley Scott of Philadelphia Saturday night in a brawl that ference, Houston 2-1 and St. blanked the Dodgers 1-0. Manager Walt Alston refused to blame the Dodger collapse on tenseness from the pressure of the pennant race. "I don't know whether they were tense or not," he said. "I didn't see any evidence of it to- Louis was a slugfest for the' full 10 rounds. Fernandez weighed 150% and Scott 149%. Fernandez, who had his 27th BASEBALL SCORES to make up the four-game dif- The double crusher came Sun- day when the Giants nipped Louisville Can End It Tonight LOUISVILLE, Kentu' (AP) Louisville Colonels tabbed reli- able Fred (Chi Chi) Olivo te pitch against Atlanta Crackers tonight when the Colonels seek to wrap up the 1962 Little World Series. Atlanta assigned Frank Fanok to pitch. Olivo bested him 3-1 in the second game. birthday Friday, and the 26- year-old Scott brought the small crowd in the Las Vegas Conven- tion Centre to its feet as they staged a wild exchange in the 10th round, both going all-out for a knockout. Fernandez had the game Phil- adelphian in distress in the ninth round but he could never |put Scott on the deck, Co-promoters Mel Greb and Jack Doyle announced as soon as the fight was over that they would offer welterweight cham- pion Emile Griffith $50,000 to defend his title against Fernan- dez in this same arena Dec, 8. Fernandez was a 3-to-1 favor- ite and many thought Scott would never last the distance. Fernandez has a record of more than 50 knockouts in his 81 fights but Scott was too durable to go down. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS| National League AB R H Pet, T. Davis, LA 655 119 227 .347 Robinson, Cin 609 134 208 .342 Musial, St. L. White, St. L: 614 93 199 .324 H, Aaron, Mil 592 127 191 .321 Runs--Robinson, 134: | Runs batted in--T. Davis, 150.| Hits--T. Davis, 227. Doubles--Robinson, 51. Triples--Wills and W. Davis,, Los Angeles, Callison, Philadel-| ag and Virdon, Pittsburgh,| Home runs--Mays, San Fran- cisco, 47. Stolen bases--Wills, 100. Pitching -- Purkey, Cincin- nati, 23-5, .821. Strikeouts--Drysdale, Los An- geles, 228. American League Final AB R HP 562 80 183 377 96 121 600 90 187 542 73 168 600 114 185 ct. Runnels, Bos .326 | 321 312 Hinton, Wash Siebern, KC '308! 433 57 143 .330| 999 ----- Los Angeles, Runs batted in -- Killebrew, Minnesota, 126. Hits--Richardson, New York, Doubles--Robinson, 45. Triples--Cimoli, Kansas City, 15 . e Home runs--Killebrew, 48. Stolen | bases--Aparicio, Chi- cago, 31. : Pitching -- Wickersham, Kan- sas City, 11-4, .733. Strikeouts -- Pascual, Minne- sota, 206. WINS TITLE ROME (AP)--Guilio Rinaldi, 25-year-old Italian, outpointed Britain's Chic Calderwood in a} 15-round bout Friday night and) won the vacant European light heavyweight boxing champion. ship, Rinaldi weighed 174 pounds, one less than Calder- wood. CROWDED INDIA India, with an area of 2,221,- .310|880 square miles, has a popula-|out tion of 438,000,000. a Scott op a bad cut over Fernandez' left eye in the first round and kept the wound as a target with his whistling right throughout the match. At times Fernandez was bothered by the stream of blood. WEEKEND FIGHTS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Glace Bay, N.S.--Blair Rich- ardson, 159, South Bar, N.S., stopped Wilfie Greaves, 159, De- troit and Edmonton, to win the Canadian middleweight crown, | Las Vegas--Jorge Fernandez, 150%, Argentina, outpointed Charley Scott, 149%, Philadel- phia, 10. " Dortmund, Germany -- Doug Jones, 181%, New York, and Erich Schoeppner, 177, Ger- many, drew, 10. Manila -- Solomon Boyshaw, 133%, Cleveland, stopped Kanzo Shimamura, 133, Japan, 9. Dibuna, Calif.--Wayne Thorn- ton, 172, Fresno, Calif., knocked Pete Gonzales, 172, Los Angeles, 4 By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League xLos Angeles 101 61 .623 -- xSan Fran, 101 61 .623 -- Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee St. Louis Philadelphia Houston 81 80 .503 19% 64 96 .400 36 Chicago 59 105 .354 42 New York 40 120 .25060 x-Meet in a best-of-three play- off to decide the league cham- ion Results Saturday Pittsburgh 3 Milwaukee 7 New York 2 Chicago 1 Houston 5-4 San Francisco 11-2 St. Louis 2 Los Angeles 0 (Only games scheduled) Results Sunday Pittsburgh 4 Milwaukée 3 New York 1 Chicagp 5 Houston 1 San Frantisco 2 St. Louis 1 Los Angkles 0 Philadelphia 0 Cincinnati 4 (Last regularly-scheduled g of season) Monday's Game Los Angtles at San Fran: cisco (First game of best-of-three playoff) American League L Pet- GBL 91 71 562 5 86 76 .531 10 85 76 .528 10% 85 77 525 11 77 +=85.475 19 76 84 .475 19 Kansas City 72 90 .444 24 Washington 60 101 .373 35% Results Saturday Los Angeles 4-1 Cleveland 1-5 Chicago 6 New York 8 Baltimore 4 Minnesota 8 Kansas City 2 Detroit 3 A asia at Boston (2) ppd, rain Minnesota Los Angeles Detroit Chicago Baltimore Boston Sunday's Results Los Angeles 3-1 Cleveland 4-6 Chicago 8 New York 4 Baltimore 0 Minnesota 1 - Washington 3-1 Boston 1-3 (Last games of season) WL Pct, GBL| The Colonels took a 3-2 edge in the. best-of-seven series §un- day. Danny. Schneider scam- pered home with the run that gave Louisville a 2-1 victory. It was a bases-loaded situation when catcher Phil Roof sent a drive deep to left centre. Schneider, a pinch runner, streaked in from third. On Saturday the Crackers got back into the series with a 4-2 victory as Ray Sadecki pitched his way in and out of jams and drove in a run for his second victory of the set. , More Homers This Season Fé previous mark was established in 1961, the Son the circuit played with 10 teams. Detroit Tigers paced the cir- cuit with 209 homers followed by New York .99, Minnesota 185, Cleveland 180 and Balti- more 156, Chicago White Sox hit the fewest, 92. The champion Yankees had 41 fewer homers than a year ago. Los Angeles Angels, who walloped 189 in the Wrigley Field bandbox a year ago, hit 137 in more spacious Dodger Stadium this season. The figures: Detroit .... « |New York . Minnesota Cleveland . Baltimore . Boston «.++++ Los Angeles Washington . Kansas City Chicago .. Totals .revvees | eoscgcas "O23 Skae sooesves 1552 1536