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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1959)
HERALD ANT) NEWS, Klamath rails. Ore Tuesday, Julv 21. lflSO PAGE ELEVEN Built-ln-Sneer Adds To Drysdale Terror PITTSBURGH (NEA1 Don Drysdale is six feet six inches and f M pounds of righthand pitcher. The way he throws this Dodger u should never be beaten. Drysdale is a good-looking horn bre from Van Nuys. Calif., whose ; appearance could be that of the a general opinion of an amateur ten. nis bum, if there is such a portrait. . The Drysdale looks are marred only by something of a built-in .-'i aneer. This indicates a meanness that a lot ot people desire in pitch- i ers, providing they are on the .; tame club. 'i Drysdale confesses that he nev- ! er would be elected chaplain of t the National Society for the Pre- t ventton of Cruelty to Batters. He f hates 'em. They hate him, in a proiessionai manner. J Drysdale wouldn't think of send ing a batter sprawling with a fast ball, thrown from the general di rection of the shortstop's position, unless he was making an attempt to hit against him. There are eas ier ways of making a living than facing his leverage and ve locity at 60 feet, six inches. Se curity, among other things, is lacking. Drysdale will be 23 years old en the 23rd of this month. This made him the youngest pitcher in the first All-Star Game of this erason by six years. He also was the best in the 26th annual and what are they going to call the benefit in Los Angeles on Aug. 3? Maybe the 2fi'i annual. Drysdale has to pitch his home games in th. Los Angeles Coliseum with that 250 oot left field. He got a look at It last year and almost never recovered. This year he al ready has more complete games and strikeouts than he recorded in 1958. "I don't pilch to ball parks any more, he told us in the club house. "Last year I tried to ad just my pitching to the Coliseum and failed. Now it's just another park to me. 1 can look at hitters and usually tell whether they'll be hitting or taking the first pitch When they're hitting I pitch them tight, and they hit the ball with the handle." Almost everybody says Drysdale is another Kwell Blackwell. He an- gles the ball' into the hitler with the terrible speed possessed by the old whip of the Reds. "But Drysdale has more rhythm, more polish than Blackwell," Ed die Sawyer, manager of the Phil lies, contributed the last time he had a look at the big kid who stirs Los Angeles' pennant hopes "Blackwell's arm used to look like a snake, the way he snapped it Don Drysdale pitches with natural movement, and as Eddie Sawyer stressed, it's nice to have that kind on your side. Oregon's Top Stars Return After Meet By BEN OLA.1 One of the hardest dec!- iuni for baseball managers to make it one involving a change of pitcher. Pennant have been won and lost with the correct strategy in these situations. Here' a theoretical caM hi which tutting pilcher was relieved. Yon know your baseball rules h yoa pro dure the right answer. Pedro Ratnoi of Washington h pitching to Charley Maxwell of De iroh. The bases are filled with two out io the last of the seventh inning. The Senators are leading 54. The count on Maxwell goea to two balls and one strike. At this point, Wash. ington manager t.ookie Laragetto decide! to bring In relief aee Dick Hyde. Hyde comes in and walks Maxwell, forcing in the tying run. Do yoa think than a Ramoi should be charfeei with the base on balls T b. Hyde should be charged with the bate on balls! PORTLAND AP) Three of Oregon's top track stars returned here Monday from Philadelphia where they competed on the U.S. team against a Russian group. A fourth Oregonian went on to Eugene. Jim Grelle. Sharon Shepherd and Dave Edslrom landed Mon day at Portland International Air port. Dyrol Burleson, a University of Oregon sophomore-to-be, went worked to his disadvantage. "The difference is not great enough. 1 think it has just worked out that way so far." Dave Edslrom, the decathlon runner-up. said he was inclined to agree with the Russian coach who said the hot, sticky weather held back first-place Vasily' Kuznetsov; with 8.350 points. Edslrom, who scored 7.590 points, said he felt he would bet- ,, l. i . . ' ter 8.000. but was not so optimis- Grelle, who was so close behind ,. ... ' , H Burleson as they finished 1-2 in the 1500 meter run they both werci timed at 3:49 4. was reluctant to discuss the rivalry with his school mate. TIME OUT I i , iw.rn iterJSli5i urn jsa n PCL Looks At Problems SAX DIEGO, Calif. (AP) i Perkins of Portland said. Directors of the Pacific Coast I Nat Bailey of Vancouver added: League, facing troubles which' "Wi,h a" the entertainment op- . ,. , ,, , , , portunitirs available today, peopls 3'" u,d. pUl hc l0"p "1 0fjjust wont pay to see . game when S.'.'r. "f , h they can see one on television for , " "" P"-! nothing." in ,ii ,iuiii iiuus gate re ceipts. A committee of three general managers was named ! a direc tors meeting here Monday to look into the situation and report. They are Cedric Tallis of Vancouver. Spencer Harris of Spokane and Rosy liyan of Phoenix. Both agreed that the league might fold after 10. Other direc tors, including Dick Walsh of Spokane and James Mulvaney of San Diego, were more optimistic. JEEP 4-WHEEL DRIVE REPAIR OUR SPECIALTY tic when it came to saying whether hc would ever take the measure of Kuznetsov. Kunetsov was first in five events, while Edslrom garnered: . sn hannv Junior Is takincr an "The Pacific Coast League is in CLIFFORD VOSS GARAGE very unhealthy state because of . Ja.! C C monopolislic practices Of IhC B Across from Ned Futnam'e a the major leagues." director Clydel. raona TU 8-SI3S When asked if he could have'0"1' ,wo firsls- and settled 'or a ' interest in sailing and forgetting won by running differently, Grelle ; second in three others Miss Shepherd, who finished fourth in the shot put for women, threw the weight 41 feet 4. inches, compared to the winning toss of 55 feet 'i inches by Russia's Ta- club in the majors, and one good blast from Willie Maya could give' San Francisco its first World Series. Mays is batting around .300, fair enough for most, but not for a guy thoroughly capable of car rying a club. His long ball has been sadly missing when needed most. Bill Rigncy is hoping for one of the protracted .400-to-.500 bat ting streaks Mays used to throw while the Giants were tenants at the Polo Grounds. This might en able the Giants to pull away from the four - way scramble which threatens to last down to the wire. Manager Rigney's natural buoy ancy is contagious, which is a fine thing for the outfit from the Golden Gate, but the young Giants have now been around long enough to realize that it isn't go ing to be easy. They couldn't beat the Braves a year ago end are ' not having any better luck against Blast From Willie M May Bring SF Home By HARRY GRAYSON IMilwaukee this trip, They fat PHILADELPHIA (NBA) Again tened up on the Dodgers in 11158 the Giants are the most exciting but have had nothing more than an even break with Los Angeles this season. The Giants are vastly better off at this stage than they were a year ago, after which their thin pitching collapsed in August from overwork. The starting pitchers are sounder. The phenomenal re cruits of last term have a year of National League experience un der their belts. Daryl Spencer has turned out to be a more effi cient second baseman than a shortstop, where Eddie Bressoud moved in to give the club a slick double play combination. In the pitching department, Sam Jones and Jack Sanford are a tremendous Improvement over temperamental Ruben Gomez and Ramon Monzant, but the Giants still lack a competent relief work er. After Johnny Antonelli, Sam Jones, Sanford, Mike McCormlck and Stu Miller, Rigney doesn't know quite where to reach. Al Worthington, Gordon Jones and Billy Muffett have been of little assistance. The hope here is that Eddie Fisher, called up from Phoenix with limited profession al experience, might help with a knuckle ball. Meanwhile, starters are reliev ing and that could be bad in the long haul. It took Rigney until July 3 to convince Owner Horace Stonehsm that Andre Rodgers, the six-foot-three former cricket player, would never be a shortstop, or anything else in a major league, for that matter. The Giants made 17 er rors in their first half dozen games, and the miscast Rodgers' lack of range, bad hands and throwing were still hobbling the club when the accomplished Bres soud took over for the fourth and perhaps the last time. Rigney further cemented the Giants' defense by installing Jack ie Brandt In left field against both kinds of pitching, eliminating the risk of Leon Wagner emulating Smead Jolley. A lot of learned baseball men consider the Giants the most for midable club in the National League. They have the starting pitchers, speed and defense and the hardest working manager, There isn t too much to heat. so all Willie Mays has to do is catch fire. v replied: "Sure if I had run a 3:50 mile or a 50-second final lap." Thev have now met three times. Grelle winning the Oregon AAU mile and Burleson winning bothjmaia Press. their lsnn-meler events. But Miss Shepherd, who again "No," Grelle replied when j finished behind Earlene Brown of asked if he thought the extra 120' the United States, appeared to vards in the 1500 meter race! have a goal. to beat Miss Brown. ' When asked if she thought she would ever do it, Miss Shepherd said: "By gosh, I'm going to keep trying fflMOS) lutfj tiit jms ttipfot jeta jnnq m tJfDM MI sqolWflOTM pfOlf ton , ntfitpl ftijai a oj runac) jo DjUDap tnt pejepttuoe s uno afjtt awo-jpo oast y t;fo wo eeoq yt tjiaa pef jmp q Ptnmft toutnyy i of BALLFARE SS LITTLE LEAGUE 5:30 Metier Bros. vs. House Discount at Kingsley 5:30 DARCO ys. Oregon Food at Capehart MEN'S SOFTBALL LEAGUE Conger Field 6:45 Elbo Benders vs. Church of Nazarene 8:30 Market Basket vs. Moulding-craft BABE RUTH LEAGUE Gem Stadium 6:30 Fluhrer's Bakery vs. Hen ley Sptg. Goods 8:30 Gun Store vs. Superior Troy BANTAM SOFTBALL LEAGUE Klwanis Park 6:30 Hilltop Devils vs. Fran's Food Field No. 1 6:30 Motor Investment vs. Cub Pack 3 Field No. 3 MIXKD rOUkSOMES So GeUeef 4-Notlnis Swaepe Price Wise Country four Flippers Woolle Banian Ylnl Yang Polka Data Dead Balls Maple Mailed Four More M 21 ' 22 21 14 14 12 10 9 S Monday resulta: weeps 4, Mailers fl Ying Yang 4, Four More 0 Price Wise 4. Dead Balls O Go Oettart S. Country Four t 4 - Noting 3, Woolla Booeers 1 High team ganu Country Four SI 6 Hkffh team series Go Getters 2.141 High lnd. game (women) Clara Beard 213 Rlah lnd series (women) Clara Beard R48 Bish lnd. game Imenl Clift Stemler 226 i High lnd. aeries (men) Johnny Baley 600 M1XF.D DOUBLES B-M Hansram A-S Baldwin V-B Srort M-R Wilkinson Sproat-Allen 6D Lagan M-F Sutton Duus-DIUslrom Monday resulta: B-M Hanscam 2. Top Row, one of the top hand icap horses almost 25 years ago, was claimed by A. A. Baroni for $3,500 out of a Narragansett race in 1934. Kentucky Derby winner Tomy Lee won three stakes races at Hollywood Park in 1058. Steve Kraftcheck of the Roches ter Americans has been named the outstanding defenseman in the American Hockey League for last season. 21 so 17 is 10 M-R Wilkinson 1 A-S Baldwin 4, Duus-Dlllslrom t0 Blgh team game M-R Wilkinson 46Q Huh team series M-R Wilkinson 11:16 Blgn lnd. game Imenl R. Wilkinson 300 i .i Bish lnd. series fmeni R. Wilkinson- Si. Hansram 4DA itlei Blgh lnd game (women) M. Wilkin son 20ft- Blgh lnd. sereiea (women) M. Wilkin son 4H4 TWO MORE KELLERS ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. UP The St. Petersburg Saints of the Class D Florida State League have two familiar names in their lineup. They are Charlie Keller Jr., an outfielder, and Don Keller, his vounger brother who plays third base. Pappa Keller was the New York Yankee left fielder for 10 seasons. STANFORD HAS AMATEUR STANFORD, Calif. ifi-The 12th junior amateur championship of the U.S. Golf Assn. will be held at the Stanford University course August -8. The tournament is for golfers between 12 and 18. Gordon i Buddy) Baker of Florence. South Carolina, won the title last year at St. Paul, Minnesota. Bob Allison, star rookie with the Washington Senators, led the Pied mont League in putouts with 289 and in assists with 24 when he played for Hagerstown in 1955. NW Stars Powder Salemites SALEM, Ore. (AP) A com binatlon of extra base hitting and in depth pitching brought the Northwest League All Stars a 4-2 baseball victory over Salem Mon day night. The three All Star pitchers Jack Curtis of Wenatchee, Roger Clapp of Yakima and Gene Calder of Eugene limited the Senators to two runs on seven hits and had a shutout going until the ninth. Krause and O'Neil both doubled in the fifth to bring in the first run. O'Neil led off the seventh with his second double. Robertson hit one over the left field wall. Harry Dunlop of Tri-City singled and after a Salem error so did Chuck Hiller of Eugene. Duke Du cote's ground out brought in the third run of the mning. The first half champions got both their runs in the ninth, on a walk and singles by Herb Ander son. Manager Karl Kuehl and Bob Folkert. All Stars 000 010 3004 12 0 Salem 000 000 0022 7 2 Curtis, Clapp (5), Calder ) and McNamara, Dunlop (6); Fahne- stock and Littlejohn. about girls for onre in his lite!" Jim McAnany, rookie outfielder with the Chicago White Sox, hil .400 or Colorado Springs in 1058. He was called up in late June to replace rookie Johnny Calhson. 1 Rtdm the rlosMng CUSHMA.SI, n m oot d loirinc ptrftmnarir Huiky J-rvrlf niint FLEETS Let Us Show You Some Excellent Values in Mohawk Rugs & Carpets Coll TU 2-4688 today to see carpet samples and colors in your own home at your convenience. Absolutely no obligation to buy! BUSH Furniture Co. Open Till 8:00 Next to Willard Hotel p.m. 221 Main Jimmy Norris of Coleman, Tex., at 6-foot-l, is the tallest halfback on the Hardin-Simmons football team. Royal Orbit, winner of the Preak- ness, was purchased for $19,500 at a dispersal sale by the L. B Mayer estate. 7 ?4fc , 11 . -r VS224attJati, Cleveland's Rocky Colavito hit 23 home runs for Daytona Beach in 1951, his first year in organized ball, to pace the Florida State League. He later led the Eastern League with 28 and the American Assn. with .18. OSBORN HOTEL EUGENE, ORE. s. 1. B. larlrJae larir Jr. Prearietert faaroaghljr Modem USED BOATS 12 Foot Metal Boat 15 Foot Decked Wood Boat $9900 2 Man Rubber Raft $ 1000 19 New Motors 25 Off Buy a New Motor For the price of a Used One! All Scott Motors 25 OFF New Yalco Aluminum Boats at Wholesale Prices Reg. 249.00 12 ft. 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