THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursddy, August 4, 1966. 9 FLOYD FIGHTS AGAIN weight title fight, said Wednes- LAS VEGAS, Neb, (AP)--jday that former heavyweight Harold Conrad of New York,|champion Floyd Patterson will here to promote the Jose Tor-|meet Henry Cooper in London res-Eddié Rotton light heavy-ion Sept, 20, Twins Dave Boswell Hurls His Seventh- Straight Win | By DICK COUCH 12 decisions. Koufax, Los An-| Elsewhere Wednesday night,; Max Alvis' bases-loaded triple Associated Press Sports Writer|geles Dodgers fabulous left-\New York Yankees ended a and Fred Whitfield's two-run Dave Boswell's barnyard im-|hander, was 9-1 on June 1 andjfive-game tailspin by trimming|homer led Cleveland past the pressions still break up his) has been 8-4 since then. Boswell| California Angels 9-0 on Mel| Orioles, who wasted two homers team-mates, but the Minnesota|has won his last six starts;|Stottlemyre's two-hitter; Cleve-jeach by Frank Robinson and Boog Powell and another by Twins' funny man is dead seri-| Koufax has won two of his last land Indians overcame five Bal- ous about his new act--imper-| six, timore Orioles homers for a 9-6)Sam Bowens. Robinson's pair sonating Sandy Koufax. Sandy's earned run average| victory over the league leaders; | boosted his league-leading total Boswell, 21, fired a four-hit-jof 1.64 is far superior to Bos- Washington Senators edged Kan-|to 33, FRIDAY SPECIAL FABULOUS ED ULMER was one of the stars for Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Tuesday night and he's shown here admiring his new helmet decorations. Coach Bud Grant told his players be- fore their game against Edmonton Eskimos _ that any player intercepting a pass this season. would be rewarded with a_ special stick on his picked off claim the helping Eski- to Ulmer to prizes,' thump decal, helmet two passes first two the Bombers mos 26-7, Riders Nip Alouettes In Battle Of Defence By BOB MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) -- Ottawa Rough Riders turned the tables on the experts Wednesday night and used a strong defence to post a 10-8 win over Montreal Alouettes in the opening game of the Eastern Football Confer- ence season. The Rider's supposedly - ex- plosive offence was muffled by the Alouettes in the battle be- tween two strong defences, but a touchdown set up by a pass interception provided a happy ending for 19,599 Ottawa after a rather dull game Defensive halfback Joe Poirier made what turned out to be the key play of the game when he intercepted a pass by Montreal quarterback Bernie Faloney on the Montreal 25-yard line late in the third quarter. Poirier raced into the end zone on the play but a clipping penalty against Ottawa moved the ball back to the Montreal 32 Even then, the Riders needed two successful third-down gam- bles before quarterback Russ fans Jackson hit flanker Whit Tucker) with a nine - yard touchdown strike. Moe Racine's convert and his 20-yard field goal on the last play of the first half provided Ottawa's only other points. The Alouettes broke into the scoring column the first time they got the ball in the third quarter but couldn't get going again until the dying minutes of the game. The clock ran out just as they reached the Ottawa 30-yard line Faloney sparked the 60-yard touchdown drive with passes to end Peter Kempf and halfback Donnie Davis and finally car- ried the ball over himself around right end from four yards out. Kempf booted the convert and end Gino Berretta added a sin- gle on a 50-yard single mid-way through the final period Montreal defensive halfback Larry Fairholm emerged as the star of the game, intercepting three of Jackson's passes. Two of the interceptions in the first half halted Ottawa penctrations that could have resulted in scores, Fairholm grabbed a first- B.C. Lions Claw Calgary In Their Western Opener CALGARY (CP)--British Co lumbia Lions proved accom plished mudders Wednesday as they battered Calgary Stamped- ers 21-3 in the first game of the Western Footbal! Confer- ence season for both clubs The Lions clawed their way fo a 19-0 halftime lead before 19,536 fans and had little diffi culty holding the Stampeders in check the rest of the way. The game was slowed by thunder and hail in. the last half Touchdowns by Willie Flem ing and Bill Munsey wrapped up the decision. Bill Mitchell converted both scores and ad- ded a field goal and a single Neil Beaumont also had a sin gle and the Lions earned an early safety touch. Calgary's points were pro vided early in the third quarter by Larry Robinson on a 42-yard field goal. Robinson led the WFC in scoring last season B.C., which fell to fourth place last season after winning the Grey Cup in 1964, led 3-0 after the first quarter and 20-3 at the third intermission Precise offence, Munsey's inside geared to running Calgary defenders too much to handle in the first half. How ever:the Stamps fought back in the last half on long runs by Lovell Coleman and Ted Woods but could not narrow their defi- cit The had Stampeders some and the Kapp's passes to Fleming, gave Coleman charged for 127 yards on 14 carries to lead all ball carriers, Munsey was best for B.C. with 98 yards in 15 carries Fleming caught seven of eight for 164 rds as Kapp completed 15 attempts for 267 yards. Eagle Day and Pete Liske of Calgary managed 12 completions in 24 tries for 135 yards Kapp tossed which Fleming carried into Stampeder territory and B.C used the resulting field position for the first five points. Mitch- ell's field goal was a 28-yarder In the second quarter, Beau- mont forced the Stamps back fo their one with.a good punt and Stampeder kicker Jim Fur long conceded the safety on third down The second quarter settled the issue. Norm Fieldgate _.inter- cepted a pass to give B.C, pos session at the Calgary 35. Mun completed the march by bulling in from the six with three tacklers on his back Kapp staged a sparkling ef fort in the final seconds to elude a tackler and find Fleming in opening. Fleming snaked vast two defenders to score, The field was muddy at game time, shortly after an rain. The second half became unpleasant for players and un- bearable for many spectators when rain, liail and thunder set- tled in over McMahon Stadium The downpour came long after passes an early pass sey reason to regret the game was;the Lions had wrapped up the not played on the scoreboard.! verdict hour of| Continental French Buffet i IGHLY RECOMMENDED Che Rih Room Will Be Closed Sundays For The Summer Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL quarter. pass intended for Ot- tawa fullback Rick Black on the Montreal 14 and on the first play of the second quarter took another one away from halfback Ronnie Stewart, also on the 14. Ottawa's pass defence also sparkled, intercepting four of Faloney's throws. In addition to Poirier's catch, halfback Gene Gaines caught two and _ line- backer Ken Lehmann grabbed the other. Jackson had a poor night the passing department, com- pleting only eight of 18 attempts for 92 yards. Stewart missed on his only pass when Jackson was the intended receiver. PILES UP YARDS Ottawa had a better record on the ground, piling up 204 yards through the middle and off tackle. But their wide run- ning was stopped short .Black, who alternated with Jim Dillard at fullback, ran 82 yards in 10 carries while halfback Bo Scott added 61 in 14 trips. The Alouettes, hampered by injuries to offensive guards Tony Pajaczkowski and Kaye Vaughan, managed only 58 yards on the ground but got 192 yards through the air as Fa- loney completed 12 of 24 passes. Pajaczkowski injured his knee early in the game but returned later and coach Darrell Mudra said he did not think the injury was serious. Vaughan; however suffered torn calf muScles and is expected to be out for a week or 10 days. Kempf and Davis were Fa loney's favorite targets, catch- ing four passes apiece for 68 and 58 yards, respectively. Halfback Don Lisbon produced more than half of Montreal's rushing total with 30 yards in nine carries The Riders had the best scor ing opportunities and just missed another three points when Racine's field goal at- tempt from the Montreal 45 hit the upright and bounced back to the 20-yard line. Racine was wide and short on a third field goal try, from 47 yards out. NO DRINK ON DRINK "If you drink, don't drive" applies to boaters as well as motorists, Lands and Forests safety officers advise Come ter against Boston Wednesday night for his seventh straight) victory and added 10 strikeouts to his American League lead as} the Twins battered the Red Sox! 7-2. Before June 1, Boswell's ma} jor contributions to the Twins! were his hilarious imitations of the animal and bird kingdoms. Since June 1 he has won 11 of National League WL Pet. GBL 593 585 1 att 2 542) 5M 514 Ba) 500 10 462 14 462 14 5R 448 15% 72 .314 2014 64 62 60 58 54 53 49 49 44 44 44 49 51 53 57 57 San Francisco Pittsburgh [Los Angeles | Philadelphia St. Louis Cincinnati Houston Atlanta New York 47 Chicago 33 Wednesday's Results San Francisco 11 New York 1 Houston 6 Philadelphia 7 Los Angeles 1 Pittsburgh 3 Atlanta 2 Chicago 0 Cincinnati 3 St. Louis 1 Probable Pitchers Today San Francisco (Marichal 17-4) at New York (Ribant 7-4) Houston (Farrell 4-7) at Phil- adelphia (Bunning 11-7) (N) Los Angeles (Osteen 12-8) at Pittsburgh (Law 6-5) (N) Atlanta (Lemaster 9-7) at Chi cago (Ellsworth 4-17) Cincinnati (Ellis 7-14) Louis (Jaster 6-2) (N) | American League | 7 WoL Pet. GBL | Balltimoré x' 67 368 660 | Detroit 57 48 543 Cleveland 55 49 «(520 California b 56 50 .528 Minnesota 54°52 .509 Chicago 52 55 .486 New York Bob Veils H He's Hurting By RON RAPOPORT at St 1244 14 14 16 1814 21% Bob Veale has a pain in the back. And he's giving Los An lgeles Dodgers one in the neck Los Angeles has faced Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher twice this season and has collected a grand total of one unearned run, 12 hits and two walks off him. 'In beating the Dodgers 3-1 Wed- nesday night, Veale struck out 11, just as he did when he beat them back. in May. It was Veale's first game in more than two weeks and the first complete game by a Pirate pitcher in 16 attempts. Veale's back, the cause of his disap- pearce from the starting rota the} well's 3.00 mark, but the Min- nesota fireballer will take the victories any way he can get them, | SECOND IN STRIKEOUTS Boswell's 10 strikeouts against the Red Sox increased his sea- son figure to 158. Koufax, with 210 strikeouts, is the only pitcher in the majors ahead of} him, | BASEBALL SCORES, STANDINGS | Washington 49 62 441 23% Kansas City 46 59 .488 23% Raston 45 64 413 2644) Wednesday's Results | New York 9 California 0 Washington 4 Kansas City 3 Boston 2 Minnesota 7 Chicago 1-6 Detroit 3-3 Baltimore 6 Cleveland 9 Probable Pitchers Today New York (Peterson 8-7) at California (Lopez 4-10) Washington (Ortega Kansas City (Nash 4-0) Boston (Santiago 10-7) at Min- nesota (Kaat 14-8) (TN) Baltimore (Short 2-2) Cleveland (Bell 11-7) (N) International League d Pct. 565 563 536 536 495 4186 454 7-9) al at 61 47 49 51 51 55 5h Cabimhy tochester Toronto Toledo Richmond Buffalo Jacksonville Syracuse 70 364 Wednesday's Results Toledo 3 Toronto 2 Columbus 11 Buffalo 14 Rochester 8 Richmond 9 Syracuse 10 Jacksonville 1 Today's Games Toledo at. Toronto Columbus at Buffalo Rochester at Richmond | Syracuse at Jacksonville urting But -- Dodgers, Too John Callison rapped out four in Associated Press Sports Writer hits and Bill White contributed a grand-slammer as the Phillies made their way past Houston, jLarry Jackson won his 11th! game of the season and the} |Phils captured their sixth in a lrow. tion, still bothered him a little! Wednesday, he said. When the current series be- tween the two pennant contend- ers began, the Dodgers were leading the league. Now they're in third place, a game behind the Pirates and two in back of the league-leading San Fran cisco Giants San Francisco took its third straight from New York Mets by an 11-1 score, In other Na tional League games, Philadel-| phia Phillies beat: Houston A tros 7-6, Atlanta Braves blanked Chicago Cubs 2-0, and Cincin nati Reds won a 16-inning mara thon over St. Louis Cardinals Roberto Clemente's two-run homer in the first inning gave Veale all the room he needed to put down the Dodgers. His} earned-run average is now a} sprightly 2.64, best on the club,} as are his 12 victories, 156 strikeouts and nine complete ~ |games A grand-slam home run by Jim Ray Hart and two solo shots by Tom Haller gave Gay lord Perry nine Giant runs more ,; than he needed for his 16th vic- tory to the RACES! eet en OSHAWA FAIR Fri. and Sat. AUG. 5 & 6 Alexandra P ark, Oshawa HARNESS RACING FRIDAY 6 P.M. @ WAGERING SATURDAY 1:30 P.M, PRIVILEGES @ TROTTING PONY RACES Sat. 6 P.M. 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PH, 655-4411 sas City Athletics 4-3 and De-' troit Tigers split a doubleheader with Chicago White Sox, winning the opener 3-1 before bowing 6-3, Boswell, who had pitched a one hitter against Baltimore in his previous start last Saturday, gave up bases-empty homers to Pinch hitter Dick Nen rapped a two-run double in the sixth, breaking a 2-2 tie and propelling the Senators past the Athletics. Frank Howard delivered the other two Washington runs with a third inning single. A two-run homer by pinch Hwy No, 2 --- -- K-mart 723-6756 Boston's Carl Yastrzemski and hitter Don Demeter but was in control} all the way. a four-run burst in the fifth in- ning, Earl Battey capping the| rally with a two-run double. Stottlemyre scattered two sin gles and belted a homer as the Yankees beat Dean Chance for the fourth time this drove in two runs Detroit's winning three + run |rally in the ninth inning of the The Twins wrapped it up with| first game and decided a pitch- ing duel between winner Lolich and the White Sox' Bruce Howard, Ken Barry's homer in the top of the ninth had given Chicago a 1-0 edge. John season.|five-run outburst. in the eighth Stottlemyre, now 10-12, Mickey|inning of the nightcap with a Mantle and Roger Maris each|two run homer as the Sox er- ased a 3-1 Detroit lead. | Jim Northrup climaxed ickey Romano triggered a GOODFYEAR vARiN MER elt cA Here's your chance to buy GOODYEAR quality at MONEY SAVING <> NYLON ALL-WEATHER Cord and Tufsyn rubber. l0 750 x14 | 0 tubeless) 775 x14 Whitewalls $19.65 Here is a quality tire with a proven tread design, plus all the safety and durability of Goodyear's 3-T Nylon Suggested List Price $22.80 SALE PRICE (blackwail Plus the old tire off your car, ke SIMILAR SAVINGS ON OTHER Sizes J <> NYLON SAFETY ALL-WEATHER This tire, built with durable Tufsyn rubber, has a modern wrap-around tread with thousands of gripping edges for sure-footed cornering, safe stops, Suggested List Price $27.30 Size 750 x 14 or j TB x14 Pius the old tire (blackwall tubeless) Whitewalls $23.10 off your car, \_ SIMILAR SAVINGS ON OTHER SIZES POWER CUSHION The original equipment tire chosen by most car manufacturers, Lower profile, contoured shoulders, wider tread pattern, gives more traction, greater stability, Suggested List Price $32.95 SALE PRICE - $9 4" (blackwall Whitewalls $27,85 tubeless) Plus the old tire es SIMILAR SAVINGS ON OTHER SIZES J) off your car. 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