PACE ft-A Monday. July 1. 1963
HERALD AND VEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon
Keller, Oivings Pace HAedo-Bels To Happy Camp Victory
at"
1
A GOOD BLAST Tony Lema It shown blasting out of a
sand trap on the 17th hole during $110,000 Cleveland
Open golf tournament. Lema shot a par on this hole and
ended the day with a score of 273, as did Arnold Palmer
and Tommy Aaron. A playoff is scheduled for today.
UP I Telephoto
PCL Lead Closed
By Oklahoma City
' By United Press International
Northern Division
W. L.Pcl. GB
Tacoma 44 .14 .504
; Spokane 44 36 .550 1
; Hawaii 39 39 .500 5
; Portland 37 39 .487 6
; Seattle 33 48 .418 11! i
Southern Division
'" W. L. Pet. GB
, Dallas - Ft. Worth 41 36 .532
Oklahoma City 40 36 .526 Ik
San Diego 40 42 .488 3'i
Salt Lake City 35 40 .487 5
Denver 36 41 .468 5
" " ; Sunday's ltcsults
Spokane at Dallas - Ft. Worth, 2
games, postponed rain, wot
grounds.
"fait Lake City 6 San Diego 4 (1st
game, 7 irmings)
Salt Lake City 4, San Diego 0
42nd game, 7 innings)
'Tacoma 5 Hawaii 1 (1st game,
7 Innings)
" Hawaii 4 Taeoma 1 (2nd game,
- 7 innings)
Oklahoma City 5 Portland 1
Denver 8 Seattle 7 (2nd game)
By DAVE HOWE
UPI Sports Writer
Ilainouts and Oklahoma City's
recent splurge are giving south
ern division leader Dallas - Ft.
"Worth 6ome uneasy moments in
the Pacific Coast League.
Oklahoma City pulled within
one-half game of the Rangers
yesterday by tripping Portland 5-1
iiv a single game while Dallas-Ft.
Worth was rained out of its double
header with Spokane.1
; The rains also hampered Spo
. kane's chances of moving up on
' northern division leader Tacoma.
The Giants split with Hawaii,
winning the first game 5-1 but
falling 4-1 in the second.
Salt Lake Cily and Denver won
doubleheadcrs. The Bees edged
San Diego 6-4 and 4-0 while the
Bears squeezed past Seattle 5-4
and 8-7.
Four Straight Wins
Jerry Nelson led Oklahoma City
to victory with a five-hit pitching
performance. It was the fourth
straight win for the 89ers. Nelson
had held the Beavers to two hits
going into Die ninth.
Offensive weapons for the 89ers
were outfielder Carroll Hardy and
first baseman Dave Roberts. They
drove in two runs each and Rob
erts banged a home run with
one man aboard in tlie third.
Ted Newman hurled Hawaii to
a 4-t verdict in the second game
after die Islanders lost to the
Giants in the opener 5-1. Tim
Hunt slashed a 350-foot home run
for the Islanders In the second in
ning and then the Huwaiians
moved in font for keeps in the
fifth when they tallied a single
run, adding two more in the next
frame for insurance.
Ilrrhrl Wins Klghlh
Ron Herbd gained his eighth
decision against seven reversals
in the opener.
Wayne Carlander of Salt I-iikc
wmssiamaaiaBMni
City fired a shutout against San
Diego while Gordon Seyfried gave
the Bees a 6-4 victory in the first
game. It was Seyfried's fifth
straight win, although he needed
help from Fred Brudette in the
eighth.
Salt Lake City now is 114 games
away from third place San Diego.
Denver won its sixth and
seventh straight games, coming
from behind against Seattle in the
first to win 5-4 and having to hang
on for dear life in the nightcap,
winning 8-7.
Drmctcr Winn It
Ethan Blackaby scored the ty
ing tally in the seven-inning first
game and Steve Demcter singled
in the winning run moments later.
Noel Mk'kelson collected h i s
first victory in relief while starter
Jerry Stephenson was nicked for
his ninth loss against two wins.
In tiie second game the Bears
blew an eight run lead and only
fine relief work by Johnnie Scale
put the damper on the Rainicrs.
Dennis Hlbant had held Seuttle
scoreless for six innings but then
the visitors exploded for three
runs in the seventh and lour in
the eighth.
Ribant got his sixth victory
against three losses and Bill
Spanswick was the loser and now
has a 6-5 mark.
(1st game)
Salt Lake City 1 12-001-001 6-13-0
San Diego 100-100-011 4-112
Seyfried and Holdenor; Breed-
on, Sislcr (3), Fodor (8) and Saul.
(2nd game, 7 innings)
Salt I-ake City 004-000-0 4-70
San Diego 000-000-0 051
Carlander and Holdcner; Wills,
Jancich (6) and Pcdcn.
(1st guinc)
Hawaii 010-000-000 1-10-3
Tacoma 002-000-037. 581
Sovdc, Pepper (3, Morgan (7)
and Hannah; Hcrbcl and Tallon.
LP-Sovdc.
(2nd game, 7 Innings)
Hawaii 010-012-0 4-10-1
Tacoma ' OOl-OOO-O 16-2
Newman and Hannah; Hands,
Goeti (5', Pregcnzer 6l and
Bnrtoh. LP-Hands.
(1st game, 7 Innings)
Soattlo 100-210-0 4-10-0
Denver 01X1-120-2 581
Mirkclson (7) and Porter. WP-
Mickelson. LP-Stephenson.
(2nd game)
Seattle 000-000-340 7-11-0
Denver 200-130-OOx 8-120
Spanswick, Nippcrt (3), Ritchie
, Grilli (81 and Gibson; Hibant,
Foss (8', Scale 8i and Ucckcr.
Portland 100-000-000 1-43
Oklahoma City 013-OOO-lOz 50-0
Santiago, Handrahan B t and
MacKcnzic; Nelson, Borland tl
and Woolen.
Dullah-Fort Worth at Spokane. 2
games, ppd rain, wet grounds.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
LEAGUE
Scott Valley, 41 .800
Weed, 41 .800
Klamath Falls, 32 .600
Dunsmuir. 32 .600
Happy Camp, 1 I .200
Mount Shasta, 05 .000
KF 70 Happy Camp
Weed 121 Mount Shasta
Dunsmuir 6 1 Scott Valley
Mount Shasta, 1-71, J. Le
mos, Palfini '71 and Woods.
Weed, 12-16-0. B. Smith, De
1 Bortoli (71 and Pauletto.
Scott Valley, 436, Sage and
Mclntyre.
DuiiMiiuir, 650, Marske and
Blevins, Hisey 7 .
An air tight hurling job by
Jim Keller plus some power
punching paced by player-coach
Ron Owings led I ! Klamalh
Falls Medo-Bels to a 74) victory
over Happy Camp Sunday and
moved them to within a game
of the Northern California League
leaders.
Keller went the entire route
Lema, Palmer, Aaron
In Cleveland Playoff
CLEVELAND (UPI I - Tony:
Lema, who sank a pressure putt;
Arnold Palmer, who missed one,
and Tommy Aaron, who birdicd
four holes in a row, met today
in a playoff for the $22,000 first
place money in the Cleveland
Open golf tournament.
In the closest and most pres
sure-packed tournament in PGA
history they tied for first place
with 11-undcr-par totals of 273
Sunday over the sun-baked and
heat-scared Bcechmont Country
Club course.
There were actually 12 players
in contention in the fourth
ound, but one by one they fell
by the wayside until Lema and
Palmer, who led most of the
wuy, charged to the wire to tie
Aaron.
The 26-ycar-old Aaron, who just
a week ago finished last in the
U.S. Open after shooting a third
round 91, was sitting in the club
house after shooting birdies on1
tlie final four holes when Palmer;
and Lema, playing in the final
threesome, teed off for the final
three holes. They were 11 under
par. the figure ut which Aaron.
atoning for his sorry open s)iow-
ing, had finished.
Both Par Kith
It didn't look too good for
Aaron after both parrcd the 16th
because the 17th and 18th are
relatively easy birdie holes.
For Lema, it looked like cur
tains on the par-four 17th when!
his approach shot buried in a
sand trap. But he blasted out to
within 10 feet of the pin and sank
what he called "a real money
putt to stay in contention.
Palmer, meanwhile, parrcd the
hole, so they teed off for the fi
nal hole, needing pars to tie
Aaron and birdies to beat him
Playing with them was Jackie
Burke, just one stroke off the
pace.
Burke hit the rough with his
drive, put his second on tlie green
of the par-four 385-yard hole, 12
feet from the pin. Lema, in the
fairway, went to the fringe of the
green. Palmer, who outdrove
them all, flipped his second shot
10 feet from the cup.
Lema Pulls First
Lema putted first and went two
feet past the hole. He tapped it
in, tying him with Aaron.
Then Burke, with a chance to
tie, rimmed the cup and was out
of it.
That left it up to Palmer,
golf's "money bags."
His putt went on the high side
and missed. So, for the third time
in three weeks, he found him
self in a playoff.
Last week, he lost to Julius
Boros in the U.S. Open; the week
before, he had beaten Paul
Harney on the first e fa hole of
sudden death affair for the
$25,000 first-place money in the
Thundcrbird at Rye, N.Y.
'It was a putt I felt I was
going to make and should have
made, said Palmer.
'When he hit it,' I thought it
was going in, said Lema.
"I was just hoping I d be in
the playoff today," said Aaron,
who seemed to be the happiest of
them all.
Boros Is Next
Also happy, or at least he
claimed he was, was Boros, who
had finished an hour before the
last group with a 10-undcr-
par 274.
I m just too tired for another
playoff," said Boros. "I just want
to go home and rest."
As it was, that gave Boros
$4,316 as he tied for fourth place
witli Burke and Sammy Snead
They were one stroke off the pace
at 274.
Then came Jack Nicklaus, who
birdicd the last hole for a 275 to
pick up $3,450.
Behind him at 276 came Gary
Player, former Masters cham-j
pion Art Wall and Don January,
all at 276.
Willie McCovey, Kuenn
Carrying Giant Attack
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-Wil-
lie McCovcy and Harvey Kuenn,
who used to earn their pay for
the San Francisco Giants as pla
toon men, rated an accolade from
manager Alvin Dark as the "guys'
who are carrying this club.
"McCovcy never used to have
much of a batting average against
left handed pitchers but he's do
ing all right now," Dark said :ol
lowing Sunday's 7-3 win over the
Cincinnati Reds winch willowy
Willie triggered with a lie-break
ing home run off southpaw Jim
O Toole. "And Harvey Kuenn is
getting his hits. He's doing a fine
job filling in for Jim Davenport
at third base."
Dark added that Davenport, who
is sidelined with an injured heel
and sore wrist, hasn't been swing
ing the bat well. Kuenn collected
another single Sunday and scored
twice while hitting safely in his
11th straight contest.
Muloncy vs. O'Dell
The four game series ends to
day when hard-throwing Jim Ma-
honey 111-3' of the Reds faces
lefty Billy O'Dell (10-31.
Another left-hander, ancient Joe
Nuxhall, struck out II giants Sat
urday in hurling the Reds to a
7-3 victory and his 100th win as
a major leaguer.
Willie Mays exploded a three-
run homer off relief Al Worthing-
ton to cap a five run rally in the
sevenlh inning Sunday and cinch
the game.
But (he star of the game was
McCovcy, who drove in two runs
one with a 410-foot homer over
the right center field barrier in
the sixth inning and then with a
hard single during Worthington's
sunt in the seventh.
Great Catch
McCovev also made a great
catch in the first game, drifting
back to left center and back
lianding Don Pavletich's smash
with two out and the fleet Vada
Pinson on first base.
for the Medo-Bels. scattering sev
co hits along the way. He was
in trouble several times with run
ners reaching third, but managed
to preserve his shutout.
Leadoff hitter Don Frcsdel, cen-j
ter fielder, opened the scoring for!
the Medo-Bels in the opening
frame. He walked, moved around
on a single by Blake Griggs
scoring on another single, tiiis
one by Owings, one of three for
him for the altcrnoon. Griggs
and Owings both scored as Dave
Sigado singled.
With this three-run jump, the
'Bels were off and running and
the game wa? already put away.
Dave Saks opened the second
inning with a single, and scored
singles by Keller,
Grcsdel and John Bianchi.
Another tally came in the sev
enth inning as again the leadoff
hitter. Owings rapped a single
and scored after Sigado and Hi
Hatfield sacrificed, Dave Saks
walked and Keller was hit by a
pitched ball.
The final two tallies came in
the eighth frame. As in previ
ous scoring, leadoff hitter Griggs
rapped a double, the only extra
base blow for the Medo - Bels,
and singles by Owings and Ray
Taylor scored both Griggs and
Owings.
Happy Camp threatened in the
opening frame when Mike Fitz
gerald, on because of an error,
moved to third on a sacrifice but wins and two defeats and moved. In the other Northern California. its first loss of tlie season Sun-
them to within one game of thejLcague action, Weed moved into day six to four on a neat three
two leaders, Scott Valley anda two-way leadership tie by down-Liter. Scoti W.iey committed six
Weed each of whom have a rec- uls " ioia u. w i. errors while Dunsmuir was error-
ord of four wins in five outings. I Dunsmuir handed Scott Valley! less.
died there as both Chuck Sut
cliffe and Dave Titus grounded
out.
In tlie fourth inning, Sutcliffe
was on due to an error, Titus!
singled him to second and an
other error, this time putting
Griffin on moved him to third
to load the bases with none out,
However, Sutcliffe was nailed at
third base. Don Zink struck out
and Ray Metcalf grounded out In
end the inning.
Happy Camp loaded the bases
again in the fifth inning with one
out only to have Keller strike out
Sutcliffe and get Titus on
a ground bell to end the threat.
The win boosted the Medo-Bels
season conference record to three
Happy Cimp (0)
Fitzgerald, is
Wollish, cf
SutcliMe. p
Beck, p 16th)
D. Titui, lb
Grlllln. 3b
Zink, 2b
Metcalf, If
B. Tltul. rf
Davis, c
Totals
KF Medo-Bels (II
Gresdel, cf
Griggs, ss
Bianchi, II
Owings. 3b
Sigado, 7b
Talyor, rf
Dunson, lb .
Hatfield, lb
sv, c
Keller, p
Totals
Score:
Happy Camp
KF Medo-Bels
AB R H Rbl
5 0 1 0
4 0 10
4 0 2 0
4 0 0 0
0 7 0
AB R H Rbl
2 111
4 2 2 0
5 0 1 0
5 3 3 2
000-000-000 0- 7-0
31O-O0O-12X 7-14-5
; ",
fff nil k -
SS,. "
CONTINUES MASTERY Ken Rosewall, left, continued his mastery over fellow Aus
tralian Rod Laver, right, fo win singles title in the U.S. Pro Tennis Championships.
Rosewall won 6-4, 6-2 and 6-2 at the Forest Hills Stadium. Rosewall was in control
of the grass court event from the start and threatened to break Laver's service twice
in the first set before the decisive break in the seventh game. UPI Telephoto
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