The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 05.09.1942, Blaðsíða 7

The White Falcon - 05.09.1942, Blaðsíða 7
7 Mauriello Is ‘White Hope* By Gene Graff A handsome Italian youth who packs lethal power in both hands is the current shot-in- the-arm heavyweight boxing has been lacking since Joe Louis joined Uncle Sam’s fighting forces. He’s 21-year-old Tami Mauriello of New York’s Fordham district, and Promoter Mike Jacobs has been forced to recognize the titul- ar aspirations of the heralded youngster whose rise on the fistic ladder has been meteoric this past year. In fact, experts say Tami is the greatest hitter since the days of Paul Ber- lenbach, who, somehow, failed to win the title. Berlenbach’s sensational string of knockouts in old Madison Square Garden when the late Tex Rickard was plagued by a famine of color- ful lightheavy and heavyweight talent revived public interest and attracted plenty of dollars into the Rickard ledger. Like Berlenbach, Tami is a terrific puncher, as evidenced by his re- markable record of 30 knockouts in 41 profes- sional starts, and already he’s being groomed as the likely successor to such noble knock- outers as John L. Sullivan, Jack Dempsey and Louis. Mauriello, although reaching the big money while still a youngster, is the same unaffected fellow he was when he started, and that pla- cid attitude has been responsible for his ever- increasing followers. In Jimmy (Lefty) Remini, he has a kindly, understanding manager, and their fighter-manager combination is one of the finest in the business. After daubling in simon-pure matches, Tami bowed into the pro ranks in 1939, registering a one-round knockout over a lad named Vas- ques at the Queensboro Arena. Then in rapid fashion he stopped Jimmy McDowell in four rounds, evened the score with Corky Delgari- an, who had whipped him in the Golden Glov- es, and powdered Frankie Velez and Larry Esposito. Tami’s crowning achievement came this sea- son when he battled veteran Bob Pastor to a draw in ten rounds at Madison Square Garden. Pastor, known as the spoiler of youthful title dreams although he, himself, has failed three times against Louis, wa^ a 6-1 choice when the fight began, and fans demonstrated their disinterest in the match by staying away in droves. But Mauriello apparently hadn’t seen advance newspaper reports of his “impending defeat” because he made a courageous stand, and al- most drew the nod over his older foe. Lions Advance to Softball Finals; Face Winner of Cobra-Shark Tiff Three teams are still in the chase for The White Falcon trophy, emblematic of the Com- mand Softball tourney chain pionship, but only the finalists will remain after tonight’s semi final clash between the favored Cobras and the Sharks on the Millers’ field. The Lions, unheralded survi- vors, are marking time in the title bracket, having qualified for the climactic game by virtue of photo-finishing the suburban Villagers, 3-2, this week. In the semi-final contest against the Villagers, the Lions were held to a lone single by the slants of Pvt. Robert Lobeck, but capitalized on 13 walks to eke out the close decision. Pvt. Morris Masters, Lions hurler, was equally as effective, limiting the losers to two singles, neither of which figured in the scoring. The Lions scored first, clus- tering their only hit—a single to left field by Outfielder Ed Vanek —a stolen base, passed ball and Jong fly to centerfield. They added two more counters in the third frame when Lobeck’s wild- ness filled the bags, and two runners scampered home on in- field outs. The Villagers threatened only once, in the fifth inning when they scored their two runs. Load- ing the bases with no outs, they chased two runs across the plate when Catcher Lukwitz, trying to complete a double-play after a forceout at home, threw the ball into right field for an error. Neither team was able to score after that session. The Lion’s # futile batting against the Villagers establishes the winner of the Cobras-Sharks game as a definite favorite to capture the trophy. On season records, and the fact Don Harris is the league’s outstanding pit- cher, the Cobras are conceded an advantage in their meeting with the Sharks. However, the Sharks sailed through their preliminary sche- dule without defeat, and flashed signs of championship form when they eliminated the Jacks, 2-0, in the quarter-finals, so Harris & Co. will have to be at their best to get past the Sharks tonight. Jim Turner (left) returns to Major leagues in New York Yankee uniform, after tra- veling from Bos- on to Cincinnati to Newark of the International lea- gue. And Dom Di Maggio (right) of the Boston Red Sox soon will be a member of Uncle Sam’s Navy, pro- bably when the season ends. Daffy Lads Hold Lead; Yanks Spurt Nothing less than a cata- strophe can halt the Yankees’ march to their fifth A.L. pen- nant in six years because the second place Boston Red Sox are eight full games off the pace with only 20 games remaining on their schedule. And the Daffy Lads of Brooklyn, having reco- vered from a momentary lapse, now hold a four-and-a-lialf game margin over St. Louis in the N.L. whirl. The Red Sox have been play- ing good enough ball to win any pennant—excepting against the red hot Yanks, who apparently have forgotten how to lose. Capi- talizing on a potent combination of timely hitting and brilliant pitching, the Yanks bowled over Detroit four times in as many starts, 7-1, 4-3, 8-3 and 6-1, then trounced the St. Louis Browns, 3-2 and 6-0, in a doubleheader, Wednesday. A scoring discrepancy kept Hank Borowy, Yankee pitcher, from entering the Hall of Fame as a no-hit twirler in Wednes- day’s nightcap. The fans thought Borowy had gone the limit with- out allowing a hit, but the of- ficial scorer ruled a grounder to Joe Gordon in the first in- ning had been decreed a single, (Continued on Page 8) Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE. AMERICAN LEAGUE. He startled the fans by dropping Pastor to the canvas in the first round, and only his Brooklyn .... W. 90 L. Pet. 40 .694 G.B. New York . . W. 88 L. 42 Pet. .677 G.B. lack of ring knowledge kept him from ending St. Louis .... 86 45 .657 4'/2 Boston 82 52 .612 8 the fight then and there. He missed many New York ... 72 58 .585 18 Cleveland . . 67 63 .515 21 punches because of his anxiety to make good, Cincinnati .. 64 64 .500 25 St. Louis ... 65 65 .500 23 and absorbed plenty of punishment for the Pittsburgh . . 59 67 .468 29 Chicago .... 60 65 .480 25 Vt same reason, but he showed skeptics that he’s Chicago 67 75 .444 32'/2 Detroit 63 69 .477 26 definitely a serious contender for heavyweight Boston 51 79 .392 39 Washington 49 78 .386 37 Vi honors. Philadelphia 36 90 .286 52 Philadelphia 49 89 .355 43 The West All-Army football squad’s debut this week was far from an artistic success. Johnny Kimbrough, backfield alumnus of Tex- as A&M., gave the Stars an early lead when he dashed 58 yards to score on the second play of the game. But Sammy Baugh’s pitches to Dick Todd were too much for the Stars and they bowed to Washington Red Skins, 26-7, in Los Angeles’ Memorial Stadium. Meanwhile, the powerful Chicago Bears trounced the Collegiate All-Stars, 21-0, in the annual charity classic at Soldier Field, Chicago. • Cecil 'Isbell's touchdown pass to Don Hut- son in waning mjnutes of the game brought the Green Bay Packers a 21-16 triumph over the' Brooklyn Dodgers in a National Football League exhibition game at Ebbets Field be- fore 11,083 fans. • Bob Zuppke’s College Stars couldn’t stop Tommy Thomas’ passes so the Stars lost to the Philadelphia Eagles Monday night in Philadelphia’s Municipal Stadium. Thom- as connected with two touchdown passes, after Zuppke’s gridders had opened an 8-0 margin. • Enos Slaughter, St. Louis Card .outfielder, today awaited call into the Army Air Corps as an aviation cadet. Slaughter, currently battling for the N.L. bat- ting crown, enlisted this week as a reserve, hut probably will he permited to finish the season before reporting for duty. • t Roy Cullenbine is a mighty lucky gent. Tom- my Henrich played his last game with the Yanks Sunday, then reported for active duty as a Coast Guardsman. So the Yankee front- office purchased Cullenbine from Washington for an undisclosed amount. He will be eligible for the series, and will share in the dividends, while the Senators are hopelessly marooned in seventh place. • Judge Kenesa.w M. Landis met in Chicago this week with Ford Frick and William Har- ridge, president of the N.L. and A.L., respec- tively, to formulate plans for the World Series. Possibility of donating a share of proceeds to War Relief funds, and proposal to play all games in Yankee Stadium because of its greater capa- city, were under discussion.

x

The White Falcon

Beinir tenglar

Ef þú vilt tengja á þennan titil, vinsamlegast notaðu þessa tengla:

Tengja á þennan titil: The White Falcon
https://timarit.is/publication/382

Tengja á þetta tölublað:

Tengja á þessa síðu:

Tengja á þessa grein:

Vinsamlegast ekki tengja beint á myndir eða PDF skjöl á Tímarit.is þar sem slíkar slóðir geta breyst án fyrirvara. Notið slóðirnar hér fyrir ofan til að tengja á vefinn.