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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1962)
By Wenatchee Ems Handed Defeats Two WENATCHEE The Eugene Emeralds played errorless ball, outhit the Wenatchee Chiefs 17-13, but the Chiefs posted 4-2 and 5-1 decisions in a Northwest League baseball doubleheader Fri day night. The Ems left 20 men stranded on the bases an im portant factor. The two clubs meet again tonight and play a doubleheader Sunday. Three home runs accounted for all the Wenatchee runs in the second game, the big one a three-tally poke by Dan Combs in the second inning. Ken Fruchter and Nelson Mathews hit back-to- I back round trippers in the third. Dick Dictz had given Eugene the lead with a two-run circuit clout in the second. The Emer alds picked up two earned runs in the seventh but saw the rally fizzle with the bases loaded when pitcher Don Isaacs retired the side. Eugene also counted first in the opener when pitcher Ed Feldman singled home a tally from third in the second frame. Wenatchee countered with two, on three singles and a force play, and was in front to stay. Manager Bud Bycrly's new in field combination for the Ems Mays Leads Giants Past Pirates, 6-3 PITTSBURGH (UPI) The Pitts burgh Pirates may be baseball's hottest team, but they seem to be the same old pushovers as far as the San rrancisco Giants j of Julio Linares at second and are concerned. Don Pope at short came up with San Francisco cooled off the three double plays in the two red-hot Bucs, 6-3. Friday night games. Damaso Blanko has before an overflow crowd of j been moved from short to third. s i.iuo, largest nere in two years. first game Kansas, Feldman, p Arneson, p a-Llnzy Holbrook, p b-Patykula Squires, p 0-0 Totals 8-29 2- 0- 4 M 1- 4 12 1-2 11 01) 0-1 00 0-1 0-O 00 n-o 0-0 0-1 0-0 00 O-A 0-0 0-0 0-1 SO 2-2 20 SO 0-0 0-0 00 0-0 0-0 2-1 18-8 a-Struck out for Arneson In 4th: b Grounded out for Holbrook in 6th. It was the sixth time in seven i Emraid rnu tries that the Giants have j S?' cf,-H 5J bounced the Pirates this year j cockreii. rf ... and ended a four-game Buc win Ifaiero, lb -,: Linares, 2b String. I pope, M . Tho fiianlc A lltfln Kit f McLaughlin, If everything to win pitching, power and defense. Willie Mays slugged his 27th homer with a man aboard in the first off Vcrn Law and the Giants were never headed. It swelled Mays' RBI total to 85 for the year. Willie McCovey drilled his 13th roundtripper in the third and by that time it was 4-0 and time for Law to head for the showers. Pittsburgh fought back off the Giants' Jack Sanford. The Pi rates picked up one in the i fourth and might have violently changed the course of events! E'1!" I'? 'JJ 0 j . . ... Wenatchee 022 000 x 4 then and there had not Mavs hauled down a 425-fnnt drive hv ! p,,c," Ip ab r h er so bb w I nautea aown a to-iooi drive Dy feldman (7-9) 2'4 11 4(4 1 10 1 iron rioaK in sensational style. Arneson 1320001000 Pittsburgh scored two more in the seventh and Don Larson was called in to cut the rally short. The big guy did not allow a hit over the last 24 innings. H-B 1-3 1-3 1-2 Wenatchee Popovlch, 2b . Campbell, 3b Frauchter, lb Mathews, If ... 1-2 Cowan, cf 1-2 Murphy, rf 1-3 DcMoss, ss 0-3 Churchlch, 0 0-3 saporltl, p 0-1 RBI 0- 0 1- " 0- 1 1- 0 1-0 01 0-1 0- 0 1- 0 O-A 0- 2 2-2 10-0 (Ml 1- 0 1-0 02 7-1 0-5 Totals 6-22 4-4 21-12 1 Giant! ab r h bi Pirates abrhbl Hllll.r.Jb 3 0 10 Vlrdon.cf 4 111 d-Nleman 1 0 0 0 Groat,ss 3 0 11 Bowmn,2b OOOO Sklnner.lf 3 0 0 0 Dvnprt,3b 3 2 0 0 Stuart.lb 3 0 0 0 Mays.cf 4 2 2 2 Clmnte.rf 4 12 0 McCvey.lf 0 0 0 0 BurRess,e 3 0 10 e-Kuenn.lf 0 0 0 0 Hoak,3h 3 0 0 1 F. Alou.rf 4 0 0 0 Mzrskl,2b 4 0 10 Cepeda.lb 4 0 10 Law.p 0 0 0 0 Haller,c 4 12 0 a-Scliofld 10 0 0 Pagan.ss 4 0 0 0 Lamabe.p 0 0 0 0 Sanford.p 3 0 11 b-Marshal 10 0 0 Larsen.p 1 0 0 0 Strdvnt.p 0 0 0 0 r-Goss 1110 Olivo.p 0 0 0 0 Francls.p 0 0 0 0 f-Logan 10 0 0 Holbrook 2 Squires 1 Saporltt (9-71 7 2B Fruchter. 6 0 0 0 3 3 0 30001000 29 2817310 DP Pope-Linares- Calero, Linares-Pope-Calero, Saporltl Campbell-Fruchter. HBP Cowan by Arneson, Linares by Saporltl. LOB Emeralds 10, Wenatchee 5. WP Holbrook, Saporltl. Umpires Stone & Hiclnbothem. Time 2:00. SECOND GAME EMERALDS Il-B ll-Hl O A' E Totals 33 t 8 4 Totals 31 3 7 3 Grounded out for Law In 3rd; b Grounded into force out for Lamabe In 4lh; c-Doubled for Sturdlvant In 7th; d-Flled out for Hlller in 8th; e Walked intentionally for McCovey in Rth; f-Grounded out for Francis In 9th. San Francisco 211 0O0 0206 Pittsburgh 0O0 100 2003 E Sturdlvant, Stuart. PO-A San Francisco 27-14. Pittsburgh 27-17. DP Pagan-Hiller-Cepeda 2; Clemente Burgess. LOB San Francisco 3, Pittsburgh 6. 2B Haller, Clemente, Cepeda, Goss, Mays. 3B Vlrdon. HR Mays, McCovey. SF Hoak. Sanford (VV, 12-6) 6M1 7 3 3 4 S Larsen 24 0 0 0 0 1 Law (L.8-5) 3 5 4 4 0 0 Lamabe . 1 1 w Sturdlvant - 3 10 Ollvo Mi 1 2 Francis 1 0 0 U Burkhari. Pelekoudas, Conlan. T 2:51. A 37.705. Dore, cf - ...2-3 Blanco, 3b 1-4 Cockreii. rf 1-4 Calero, lb 0-4 Linares, 2b 3-4 Dletz, c 2-3 Pope, ss 0-2 McLaughlin, If 0-3 a Kangas 0-1 Linzy, p 0-3 0- 0 1- 0 1-1 1-2 0-0 0-0 00 00 0- 0 10-0 1- 3 4-1 0- 3 1- 0 0-0 0-1 Totals 9-31 4-J 18-8 a Hit into fore play for A Laughlln In 7th. WENATCHEE H-B B-BI O-A Popovlch, 2b 1-4 Campbell, 3b 0-3 Fruchter, lb 2-3 Mathews, If 1-2 Cowan, cf 1-3 -Murphy, rf 0-1 De Moss, sa 0-2 Combs, e 2 3 Fraser, p 0-3 Isaacs, p 0-0 00 OO 1-1 1-1 0- 0 1- 0 1-0 1 3 0-0 00 2-1 0- 0 4-0 1- 0 1-2 7-0 0-0 0-0 ClayKOs Lavorante In Fifth Cassius' Win Was Expected LOS ANGELES OH Cassius Clay is proving himself a man of his word, far-fetched as it sometimes may be. For days he predicted he would knock out the giant Ar gentine heavyweight, Alejandro Lavorante. He named the round: the fifth. He told it to boxing writers, to radio and television audi ences. Friday night he knocked out Lavorante in the fifth round. A crowd of about 11,000 saw the prediction come true in the sports arena, and paid an esti mated $64,000 for the sight. Lavorante, at 208, nine pounds heavier than Clay, was unques tionably the toughest opponent in the unblemished 15-bout ca reer of the 20-year old Louis ville, Ky., youngster. He s won 12 by knockouts. The end came in 1:48 minutes of the explosive fifth round, only the fourth loss in 23 matches for the handsome 25-year-old Lavorante. Referee Tommy Hart didn't even bother to count on this, the second and concluding knock down in the final round of the scheduled 10-rounder. "It took the 'Old Man' 10 rounds. I'll do it in five," said the Louisville Lip in a pre-fight Clay pep talk to Cassius. "A good young man is twice as good as a good old man." The "Old Man" was Archie Moore, who knocked out Lavo rante in 10 rounds earlier this year. Sure enough, Cassius de posited Lavorante in a corner nearest where old Archie him self was sitting at ringside. Clay almost got his knockout in the second round. Lavorante was in trouble from Cassius' pinpoint rights and lefts to the head. But he didn't go down. "I didn't hold back that round, I just didn't go all out," said Cassius. "I wanted to make my prediction come true." He reflected a moment. "Peo ple get mad if I predict wrong." Consulted immediately after the knockout, Archie seemed undisturbed that he may soon meet Cassius. But first, he was interested in the financial as pects of such a match. "I'll be glad to accomodate Mr. Clay if the people want it."-. ,- , - -. - - c Palmer Still' ;.Trailirig: Ford in PGA Si Total 7-24 5-5 21-8 3 Emeralds .020 000 2 A Wenatchee 032 000 x 5 Pitcher ip ab r h er so bb w 1 Ltnz (5-5) 6 24 5755301 Krsr (1-1) 6Mi 29 4 9 2 7 4 1 0 Isancs ..Mi 2 0 000000 HR Dletz, Combs, Fruchter, Mathews. 2B Dore. Cowan. SB 0 0 0 i Linares. DP Pope-Linares-Calero, Oil Campbell-Popovlch-Kruchter. HBP 0 2 Oi Murphy by Linzy. LOB Emeralds 0 0 2 i 10. Wenatchee 5. WP Llnzv. Fraser Walsh-1 3- umpires Hiclnbothem & Mone. 1 .me 1:57. Attendance obi. Moyer-Fullmer Bout Rescheduled For August 10th Phil Moyer won't fight Don Fullmer August 8th at Bethel Park aftcrall. But unless Fullmer is beaten badly tonight in his 10-round televised bout against Rocky Rivcro, they'll still fight. The date of the Eugene fight has been changed, however, to Au gust 10 to accommodate the many people who might be un able to attend a Wednesday evening bout. August 10 is a Friday. In the event that Fullmer is badly defeated tonight or suf fers any severe cuts, Moyer's manager John Gabel has lined up ninth-ranked middleweight Joey Giambra to oppose Moyer. . - 'v ,f , -h9 V v-V'.. I -trf ficA "w , 'r i o-' "it V k ' ' i ft r 4. 1 , 1 - ! .a -is 3 fit i ' ' 3 f Arnie Five Strokes Off Pace In 13th With 36;Holes Left NEWTOWS S(U.RE, Pa. (file's five strokes be hind the leaden there are 12 players ahead of him and seven ljiore tied with him with only 36 holes to go. But Arnold Palmer doesg't think he's out of the PGA cham pionship. Palmer's cSmmrtitS, after surviving what he consid- ierd a sour round in .spite of the figures on the score board, were typical ot me atytude that has made the Latrobe, Pa., strong man one of the most exciting fig ures in sports. , I "I don t feci like I'm out of the tournament yet. I still have a chance," he sai4 be fore heading into today's third round. Palmer's 72 over the hilly, heat-drenched 7.045-yard A"roni mink course was" one thai would have satisfied most of the pros shooting for this big prize. Doug Ford shot a second ' straight 69 for the 36-holc lead. He's the only player who beat par on each of the -first tw rounds. Ford's 138 total put him just one stroke ahead of Cary Mld dlecoff, a two-time National Open champion, Gary Player of South Africa, and George Bacr of Miami. At 140 were Boh, VcCallistcr, a talkative young pro from Clarcmont, Calif., who seemed slightly dazed to find himself among the leaders, and burly, 50-year-old John Barnum of Bel mont, Mich., who shed hjs illu sions shortly after taking the first round lead. The crowds, which have ben setting records every day of this tournament, aren't counting Palmer out any more than Arnie himself. Ho isn't out of reach of the leaders and the Palmer fin ish in golf now is as famous as the Garrison finish in 'horse races was years ago. .TV Arnold Hidden iaP wircpnmu) Arnold Palmer is almost hidden behind a tree as he hits out of the rough Friday on the third hole at the Aronimink Golf Club in New town Square, Pa.( during the second round of the PGA. Palmer was in trouble several times during the day. Here he was about four feet from the tree but had comparatively free swinging space. World Marks May Be Set ForTelstar NEW YORK IB American spnrtter Wilma Rudolph Ward and Russian higb jumper Val cry Brumcl will attempt to establish world records Mon day on a live United Statcs-to-Europe Telstar television transmission, an ASE televi sion spokesman announced Friday. Both Mrs. Ward, a triple gold winner in the 1960 Olympics, and Brumel, holder of the world high jump record, will compete in the Russian-American track meet at Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif., this weekend. They will stay over for the Monday record attempts, which will be part of an 18 minutc transmission starting at 1:59 p.m. daylight, 12:59 standard. Their performances will be the only sports portion of the telecast. Jerome Runs 9.5 and 21.6 In Canadian Championships LAN E COUNTY'S HOME N.WSDAPFa SECTION B EUGENE, OREGON, SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1962 In Televised Bout Fullmer Meets Rivero Tonight Junior State League District Thru Cre swell 9. Oakrldge 4 NEW YORK m Juan "Rocky" Rivero is a fighter of the old school. The Argentine middle weight likes nothing better than taking on a rough, tough fighter like himself. The 25-year-old invader faces Don Fullmer, 23-year-old kid Square Garden tonight. The fight is rated about even in the betting. The slugging Argentine has won his last six fights by knock outs. He started the streak at tho Garden by stopping Canad ian Wilfie Greaves in the eighth brother of NBA middleweight I round, July 15, 1961. He has an He has a 26-6-1 record, includ ing nine knockouts. In two out ings this year he outpointed New Englandcr Joe Dc Nucci and dropped a close verdict to Terry Downes in London. He had the British champion on the deck. VANCOUVER (CP) Horry Jerome of North Vancouver romped to easy victories in his qualifying heats at the West ern Canada track and field championships Friday night, match ing his own Canadian record in the 100-yard dash run ning well off his time in the 220. The 20-ycar-old University of Oregon runner, who holds the world record in the 100 meters, ran the 100 yards In O.S seconds to equal the Canadian open mark. He was well off his best time of 9.3 and the world's rec ord of 9. 2. He will be pushed in the fi nals of both the 100 and 220 by Jack Higgins of the University of Higgins of the University of Pugct Sound woh qualified in both events Friday night. Higgins was not timed in the 100 because of a false start but was not called back when the starter's gun failed to work. He won his 220 heat in 22.1 Jer ome's best this year is 20.7. Track and weather conditions were perfect. Lynn Eves of Victoria and Oregon State University, who ar rived too late for the 100 yard heats, qualified for the 220 with a time of 22.1. PSC Won't Join ; New Conference ; PORTLAND R Portland State College declined Friday an Invitation to join a proposed basketball conference ot small Northwest schools. Branford P. Millar, school president, said PSC would re main in tho Oregon Collegiate Conference because it has nei ther the facilities nor personnel needed for the new league. The conference would sup posedly have included Idaho, Idaho State, Seattle University, Westminster, Goizaga and Port land. Millar said he taailed a copy of his statement to J. Neil "Skip" Stahlcy, director of ath letics at Idaho. champion Gene Fullmer, in a televised 10-roundcr at Madison Amaro Rejoins Phils PHILADELPHIA fUPD The Philadelphia Phillies have ship ped outfielder Jackie Davis to Buffalo of the International League to make room on their roster for infielder Rubin Am aro, who rejoined the club Fri dav after a 60-day stint in the U.S. Army. impressive knockout record of 1 QB 35 in 44 fights. His won-lost-draw record is 37-6-1. Young Don, who fights Eu gene's Phil Moyer August 10 if he comes out of the Rivcro bout in reasonably good shape, is confident he can handle the South American himself. The tall crewcut kid from West Jor dan, Utah, prefers to have an opponent come to him so he can meet him with crisp counter-punches. t 1h U - - 1 " j L -.. . -., . t'-t ' " --to : . 4V ", i "' Jl ' " "-. f .. ' w Staff Sez: t t!BBt,ftataartH.uj.uj.ii,fe.t.ij.Mn Check This Complete 'Sportsnon's Package' '142" ' w v Milwaukee outfielder Hank Aaron slides into third base Fn KPRTS day night after teammate Lee Maye lofted a fly ball to Phila- delnhia right fielder John Callison. Callison's thro- to Phili?e Roll -hird baseman Don Demeter was not in time to catch Aaron Uall it. fwt RravpShad Uceed ud at second following the t . J ' t, - "o . 0 1 Here's what you get: Rugged 14' SKI FLITE GLASTJtO MIT Powerfil 28' h.p. Jikisn Miler Liiile Dudp Trailer Pair of Water Skus V 4 Life Jachits Beal Wliislje rf- rf Fire Extinguisher Ski Belt ' ' Tie-up- Lines PaUle . H Start Your Water Kifn Todgi.' Stov at "The Home of frutant. i - Complete Package for onlw . $M5.00Dswfii $nii(Dioo 44.82 Monthly DAYfi A WEEK a a w ireiinrno I catch. The umpire is Augie Donatlli. The Brave went n to win this eamra the first of a twi-nieht doubleheader. but (Jhg Philfcame bck in the second game behind the pitching e oi An wananey to gain a spin oi tne twin oiu. o Jf'io " 7 ' . ' . ' ? . OPEN 7 305 Coburcj Road