OD geo emma es pe ae Mg GS pe THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, September 29, 1965 ]] BASEBALL SCORES| A I, Teams Scrambling EDMONTON WINS 9-3 = AND STANDINGS For Runner-up Positions and Fred Whitfield in their vic-|headed for their worst finish in ane Be es tory over the Yanks, who are|40 years. : L Pct. GBL Los Angeles 93 592 San Francisco 92 586 1 cence 0 nie meetin ainthannameenenaiaNeeaste ania eo yom co ona Cee aoe te eel Rookie Guides Eskies To Upset Over Ticats years' retirement by the Esks last week, was to handle the signal-calling. MILTON: (CP)--Don Getty)in a Canadian Football League 't start at quarterback|84me. 561 544 535 516 487 Cincinnati 88 Pittsburgh. 86 Milwaukee $4 Philadelphia 81 St. Louis 76 Chicago 72 456 Heuston 64 93 .408 New York 50108 .316 Tuesday's Results and Kerbow got a reprieve. He made the most of it, set- ting up Edmonton's first point 5 ™% 9 12 1644 21% 29 43% ft onton Eskimos Tues- d , 80 rookie Randy Ker- ngineered them to a 9-3 upset.over Hamilton Tiger-Cats Kerbow was destined for the bench after disgracing himself in Edmonton's .40-1 drubbing by Ottawa: Rough Riders Satur- day. Getty, lured out of two But Getty showed up with a sore arm he got by throwing nine passes in the last five minutes of Saturday's setback NHL Camps Resemble Medical Convention gons, four and five years old, By THE CANADIAN PRESS Reports from the National Hockey League training camps today-sound like the agenda for -- a Canadian Medical Associa- tion convention. | Items: : 'Goaltender Roger Crozier Sof Detroit Red Wings is on a ' gpecial diet 'that cuts out ice cream and fatty foods. | =--Ron Ellis of Toronto Maple Leafs, who had cartilage 'fragments removed from a knee in July, reported the | fdint felt fine after his first ' sqrimmage. ;--Goalie Terry Sawchuk of 'Leafs was sent home to re- cover from two cracked ribs. ' =--Ed Lanyon, 26-year-old de- fenceman with Cleveland Barons of the American Hockey League last season, became the first serious cas- walty of Monireal Canadiens' éamp with a cracked bone in _right forearm. azingly enough, Boston B Jast-place finishers in the--NHL for six seasons-- seemed the healthiest of the lof tier the Bruins went through théffsecond day of workouts without injury, coach Milt Schmidt credited their good health to isometric exercises. He's convinced that the muscle strengthening exercises are re- sponsible for the lack of groin frjuries, of which the Bruins had seven at this stage a year ~~ TERRY SAWCHUCK He's recovering from an oper- ation on an arm fractured last season ~ In Chicago Black Hawks' camp, Golden Boy Bobby Hull! became a spoiled boy to owner Jim Norris. Norris indicated that Hull may have financial rather than physical problems if he doesn't return to camp within a couple of days Norris said in Miami that Hull was "taking a_ spoiled boy's attitude toward training rules." He threatened to fine his star $1,000 a day if he doesn't show up at camp soon, Miami News. | ago. «Only centre Bobby Leiter was thissing in body contact drills. 'CARDS TROUNCE GIANTS Dodgers Win Again according to a report in thel/ins, Hull left camp when his two'are training at Kingston were barred from team prac- tices. Amid reports that Hull is de- manding a $100,000 salary, Nor- ris was quoted as saying: "The economy of our league can't afford that kind of salary. We don't intend to pay him any $100,000." Hull was reported on a famr ily outing on a friends farm in Illinois. Neither side in the dis- pute appeared to be budging. "There's nothing I can do," said general manager Tommy Ivan. "I've got to back my coach. It's a matter of dressing room procedure and that's all." The Leafs' Ellis reported on his doubtful knee after his first scrimmage at Peterborough: "T was really happy with it The stops and starts didn't bother me at all." He scored a goal as his team, the Blues, lost 4-3 to the Whites. Centre Larry Keenan, a 35- goal scorer for Leafs' Victoria farm club in the Western Lea- gue last season, was reported out for about two months after having torn cartilage removed from his knee. jers divided into six teams as |their Montreal workouts and coach Toe Blake seemed satis- fied with their conditioning and hustle. | Signings reported Tuesday in- icluded: Right winger Yvan Cburnoyer with Canadiens; de- fenceman Leo Boivin with Bri- and centre Jean Ratelle with New York Rangers, who! with a long pass and plunging two yards for the game's only touchdown. Tommy Joe Coffey kicked the single and Kerbow added the touchdown, which Coffey con- verted, all in the first quarter. The points came off Edmon- ton's new I-formation, in which two backs line up directly be- hind the quarterback. Two other Western Football Confer- ence teams, British Columbia Lions and Winnipeg Blue Bombers, use the formation but the Eskimos tried it out for the first time Tuesday night after working on it in two practices. CANCELS SIDE TRIP Edmonton coach Neill Arm- strong, disgusted with his club after Saturday's sorry effort, cancelled a scheduled sightsee- ing trip to Niagara Falls Sun- day and called a_ workout. |That's when the team first at- tempted the new formation The Eskimos, who trail in the five - team WFC, perfected it enough to baffle Hamilton's vaunted defence through - the first quarter. By the time the Ticats adjusted to the surprise formation, thee damage was done. | Edmonton centre Bill Mit- chell added another single on a quarter after Don Sutherin got | Hamilton's three points on a field goal in the second quarter. The Joss left the Ticats with 12 points in the Eastern Con- ference standings, the same as Ottawa, but Hamilton has lost three games to Ottawa's two. Milwaukee 7 Houston 1 St. Louis 9 San Francisco 1 Chicago 2, Philadelphia 1 New York 1 Pittsburgh 0 Los Angeles 2 Cincinnati 1 Probable Pitchers Today St. Louis (Gibson . 18-12) San Francisco (Shaw 16-8) Cincinnati (Maloney 20-8) at Los Angeles (Koufax 24-8) (N) Pittsburgh (Friend 8-12) at New York (Selma 2-0) Chicago (Hendley 4 - 4) at Philadelphia (Culp 13-10) (N) Milwaukee (Johnson 15-10) at Houston (Lamabe 0-4) (N). American League Wwe Pet. 99 627 92 590 6 92 579 7% 87 547 12% 84 535 75 472 U% California 74 465 25% Washington 68 430 31 Boston 61 384 |Kansas City 59 373 |x-Clinched pennant | Tuesday's Results |Minnesota 2 Baltimore 4 |New York 3 Cleveland 6 |California 4 Boston 3 | Detroit 3-4 Chicago 43 |Kansas City 1 - 8 Washington 6-6 Probable Pitchers Today at GBL |xMinnesolta - | Beltimore |Chicago Detroit Cleveland New York 40 '| field goal attempt in the third| Minnesota, Grant (20-6) at Bal- |timore, Barber (14-9) (N) New | York, Downing 12-14) at Cleve- land, McDowell (16-10) (N) | Los Angeles, Newman (14-15) lat Boston Wilson (12-14) Kansas City, Segui (5-14) at |Washington, Hannan (0-1) (N) Thursday's Game By JIM BACKLEMAN Associated Press Sports Writer Three things are sure in the American League -- Minnesota Twins will finish first, Washing- ton Senators will finish eighth and there is a scramble for the eight other places, After Wednesday's action, and with five days left in the season, the pennant - winning Twins and also-ran Senators have their spots clinched. ° Otherwise -- Baltimore's streaking Orioles are in second, just 1% games ahead of Chi- cago White Sox; two games sep- arate Detroit Tigers and Cleve- land Indians in the fight for fourth; New York's sixth-place Yankees have only a one-game edge on California Angels; and Boston Red Sox are just 1% games ahead of Kansas City's last-place Athletics. The Orioles made it nine in a row Wednesday night, getting two runs in the fifth inning with- out a hit and trimming Minne- sota 4-2. Danny Cater's 11th-inning ho- mer gave the White Sox a first- game victory over Detroit, 4-3, but the Tigers won the second by the same score with a four-| by Jim Northrup's two-run tri le. Rocky Colavito's three - run homer helped the Indians deal the Yankees their sixth straight} |loss, 6-3. |SON LIKE FATHER | Joe Coleman Jr., 18, son of ja former big league pitcher, | made his debut ir the majors and pitched Washington to a 6-1| win over Kansas City. The Ath-| letics won the second game of| the doubleheader, 8-6. | And the Angels pushed across| two runs in the eighth inning! on an error and a bases-filled| walk, edging the Red Sox 4-3.) run rally in the eighth capped| | in the fifth that proved decisive against Al Worthington, Minne- sota relief ace who had been sidelined for three weeks with a sore right arm. He loaded the bases on two walks and a hit batter, then walked Brooks Robinson and Curt Blefary on eight straight pitches. Harmon Killebrew, recently returned to the Twins line-up after seven weeks absence due to a dislocated elbow, homered with a man on for Minnesota's two runs--his first homer since July 28. The White Sox scored three times in the first inning of the opener against Detroit, then were shut out until Cater led off the last of the 11th with his ho- mer, The Tigers won the sec- ond with the four-run cluster in the eighth--with Jerry Lumpe's single, Gates Brown's sacrifice fly and Northrup's triple knock- ing in the runs. In addition to Colavito's three- run homer, the Indians had timely singles by Leon Wagner A top quelity professional in- sulating service for new or old homes end other buildings fee- turing PAL-O-PAK Blown In INSULATION to essure meximum customer satis- faction. 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Minnesota at Baltimore (N) |fourth in 11 games and broke|------ se. ane dana Baltimore netted the two runs dition. fs ALL SALESMEN LICENSED and BONDED | The Canadiens had 86 play-| a two-game losing streak. The key to Edmonton' tory was a stout defence by linemen Jim Battle and Al Ecuyer and halfback John Skol- pan, a recent recruit from New York Jets of the American Football League. Skolpan hit hard and knocked down several passes despite playing with a cast on his right wrist which protected a broken bone. Kerbow, a substitute for in- jured quarterback Bill Redell in Saturday's game, went all the way against Hamilton. The I-formation suited him well as he utilized the additional room svic- le 'Yesterday's Stars By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Batting --Lou Johnson, Los Angeles, lashed three singles, then hit a home run in the 12th inning that gave the Dodgers a} 2-1 victory over Cincinnati Reds} and a one-game lead in the hec-| tic National League pennant) race Pitching -- Joe Coleman Jr., Washington, pitched a four-hit- ter in his major league debut as the Senators downed Kansas City Athletics 6-1 in the first) game of a doubleheader. to roll out and turn on_ his speed. He also made excellent use of his backs for running} plays. Hamilton's offence, sporadic } SCUBA SOCCER CLINIC COACHES, MANAGERS and INTERESTED PERSONS Te Be Held Sunday, October 3rd, 1965 From 9:00 A.M. --- 5:00 P.M. The Oshawa Recreation Centre 100 GIBB STREET For further information Phone 725-1111 @ SERVICE DEPT. @ OPEN EVENINGS MON. THROUGH FRI. 6 P.M. TO 3:30 A.M. FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY IN THE CITY ELLIOTT MOTORS (BELLEVILLE) LTD. PHONE 962-4584 i 366 FRONT STREET NORTH (Highway 14 -- 1% Mile South ef 401 Cloverleaf) 7995 4 at best this season, fared/ poorly under the guidance of quarterback Joe Zuger. Zuger | |repeatedly threw passes astray |when he had the team in scor- _ DIVING The Oshawa Underwater Association 'To Take Over Lead OPEN Associated Press Sports Writer|given the last day of springlin the last of the 12th on Ron | ing position and when he wasn't Lou Johnson has been bat-jtraining off after hitting .500/Hunt's two - out, bases - loaded/errant with his tosses, his re- tered with baseballs from front and behind. Once in a while though he does some battering of his own. for Chicago. | He. was sitting with 30 other} Tony Cloninger stopped Hous-| players watching the Cubs play) single. ton on six hits as he won his iceivers missed. Kerbow connected on six of 18 passes for 98 yards and |the Dodgers when Del Rice hitjo4th game. against 10 defeats.| guided the Esks to 146 more One of these times of retali-|a grounder into the dugout. The|ye also triggered a three-run| yards on the ground for a total ation was Tuesday night when ball bounced off the wall and) Milwaukee third inning with a Johnson lined a 12th - inning|hit Johnson on the back of thelsingie and drove i ith ome run that gave Los An-|head. That one earned him ala eareioa fly Heese aie can geles Dodgers their 'ith traight victory, a 2-1 decision ever Cincinnati Reds, and a ne-game lead in the furious} ational League pennant race. "'The Dodgers had been tied] with San Francisco, but St. Louis Cardinals trounced the Giants 9-1, sending them one ame back with their fifth loss) seven games. Third - place €incinnati fell five back and vir- fiially out of the race. The three | second teams each have five games re-|Maury Wills Reds tied it in the eighth on a} maining. | The Dodgers grabbed the top) spot all by themselves for the first time in three weeks when) Jehnson connected off Joey Jay} with one out in the 12th. The homer was his 12th of the sea-| son but still left that total three! Hehind his record for being hit by pitches. "That's happened a_ league- leading 15 times this year,! which is just about normal for) the 32-year-old outfielder who spent 12 years with 15 minor league teams and three major, league teams before he got a Break with the Dodgers | this season. | *He got the break because of| @ break in Tommy Davis' ankle) éarly in May. But. no sooner| had he been called up from) Spokane Indians of the Pacific Coast League than Johnson was hit in the head by a pitch from Houston's Bob Bruce. That pitch punctured Johnson's bat- fing helmet and put him in the spital for three days. : Then, in June, New York's 1 Jackson put him out of ac- ion for 13 days by hitting him Fit the thumb. W THEM COMING + But Johnson at least had the advantage of seeing those balls Before they did the damage. in was the time a few years| a o when, as a rookie, he was: 'PENNANT RACE "AT A GLANCE By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 4 National League ' WL Pet. GRLTP tos Angeles 93 64 .592 - 5 ba Fran. 92 65 5H 1 5 cinnati 88 69 561 5 5 4 Los Angeles--At home 5; Cin- einnati Sept. 29 (N); Milwau Mee, Sept. 30 (N), Oct. 1 (N) 3. Francisco--At home 5; St, Louis, Sept. 29; Cincinnati Sept..30, Oct. 1 (N), 2, 3 +Cintinnati--Away 5: Los. An geles, Sept. 29 (N); San Fran- Agco, Sept. 30, Oct. 1 (N), 2, 3.! week's stay in the hospital. In other National League} games, New York Mets edged Pittsburgh Pirates 1-0 in 12 in- nings, Milwaukee Braves whipped Houston Astros 7-1 and Chicago Cubs nipped Philadel-! |phia Phillies 2-1. j Los Angeles broke a score-| less deadlock in the seventh] when Jeff Torborg singled, and| pinch runner Nate Oliver stole| and came home walk to Tommy Harper, a sac- rifice and Vada Pinson's double. } St. Louis' Larry Jaster scat- tered 10 hits in only his second major league start, shutting out the Giants until Willie Mays| hit his 51st homer in the eighth. | Jaster also singled across two} runs while Bill White lashed) four hits, driving in three runs.| Pittsburgh's Tommy Sisk and Roy Face battled New York's Dennis Ribant and Darrell Sutherland through 11% score- less innings, but the Mets fi- nally broke through for a run as) singled. But the| TRANSPORT sixth inning. 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