The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 01.05.1943, Qupperneq 11

The White Falcon - 01.05.1943, Qupperneq 11
11 Derby Sleeper? Wave By Gene Graff Matt J. Winn’s “street car Kentucky Derby,” so dubbed because of transportation bans est- ablished by the ODT to discourage out-of-town horse fans from flocking to Louisville today, may be a closed affair in more ways than one, For when the nation’s fleetest 3-year-olds par- ade postward this afternoon in the $75,000 ad- ded classic, the smart money will be riding on the whiskers of Count Fleet, a prohibitive favorite. To the mutuel-window addicts, the winter book listing of odds is law. Count Fleet, they point out, was quoted at no better than 5-2 in the opening figures, a more cautious cal- culation than any other Kentucky Derby candi- date ever warranted. Even Alsab and Whirl- away failed to attract such an awesome atti- tude from the betting commissioners who “make book” on the thoroughbreds. On his record, Count Fleet is deserving of all the praise offered by veteran horsemen. The big, bay colt, owned by Mrs. John D. Hertz and trained by Don Cameron, uncorked plenty of solid speed as a juvenile last year, and has been dominating the ranks of 3-year-olds thus far in the current season. The Count was a four-time stakes winner as a 2-year-old, lead- ing the field under the wire in the Wakefield stakes, Cainpagne stakes, Pimlico Futurity and Walden stakes. This year he’s already won the Jamaica handicap, Wood Memorial, and several other lucrative purses. Count Fleet frightened his backers two weeks ago when he suffered a slash above his right rear hoof after winning the Wood Memorial. But treatment at Belmont Park healed the wound in a hurry and he was shipped to Louis- ville in plenty of time for today’s mile-and- a-quarter test. Any sane judgement points to Count Fleet as the logical winner. But since we’re proud of our record of ignoring winners in favor of “under-dogs” who invariably re- main under, our kiss-of-death rides with an- other havburner. The unfortunate colt who must navigate the distance under this writer’s curse in addition to the alloted 126 pounds is Ocean Wave, a handsome speedster with plenty of class. Own- ed by Warren Wright and sired by Blenheim II., Ocean Wave was nondescript as a 2-year- old, but sudenly blossomed forth lately to esta- blish himself among the leading Derby candi- dates. He registered two impressive victories on the Churchill Downs strip last month, in- cluding (he $10,000 added Blue Grass stakes. A1 Simmons’ Blue Swords, sired by Blue Larkspur, one of the 68 favorites who failed to win, is another threat in today’s race. His recent workouts have impressed horsemen. And although he’s the "always-a- bridesmaid” rup- ner-up to Count Fleet since the rivals began campaigning, his stable claims he’s ready. Assuming the horses all reach the post, we expect them to finish in this order: Ocean Wave, Count Fleet, Blue Swords. But don’t pawn the family jewels. Matt Winn’s classic is fabulous for its surprises, Count Fleet, I -2 Choice, Heads 69th Derby Field Jovial Col. Matt J. Winn probably will lose plenty of $$$. . . .Racing patrons from other sections of the nation will be conspicuous by their absence. . . And railbird dockers say owners are foolish to send their thoroughbreds postward against a brilliant speedster like Mrs. John D. Hertz’ Count Fleet. Nevertheless, the 69th Kentucky Derby will be run today as scheduled at Chur- chill Downs, with a purse of $75,000 dangling before the noses of the fleet 3-year-olds. A slim crowd of 25,000 fans is the brightest prospect since the ODT restricted attendance to the Louisville district. If cautious customers and trembling bookies—the “back room gents” will lose a tidy sum if Count Fleet wins—needed con- clusive proof of The Count’s sta- mina and speed over the mile and a quarter Derby route they got it Thursday. In a workout over the regulation course, The Count turned in a sizzling 2:07 performance, practically fast enough to win today. With veteran Johnny Longden aboard, Count Fleet will reach the post at the prohibitive odds oi 1—2 or less. Xo other Derby candidate ever has been as high- ly regarded. Chief threats to The Count loom as A. T. Simmons’ Blue Swords, sired by Blue Larkspur, and Calumet Farm’s Ocean Wave, an offspring of Blenheim II. Both have registered credible records during the season, but a victory (Continued on Page 12) Fitzpatrick of Cods reaches for ball as two Dodger cagers shut out Harold Fritz, star Cod forward, from action. Cods followed usual pattern, coming from behind to conquer Dodgers, 37-36, in overtime thriller for the Ace of Diamonds title. Anti-Tank Grabs Ace Cage Title SHORT SHOTS Same Old Story: Yanks Occupy First|Place If the opening brace of games is any criterion, it’ll be the Yankees and Dodgers when the | World Series rolls around in October. But with daily man- power changes becoming the vogue, anything can—and pro- bably will—happen before the 154-gaine scramble is ended. Joe McCarthy’s American lea- gue champs, operating without Joe DiMaggio, Red Ruffing, Phil Rizzuto, Tommy Henrich and George Selkirk, have turned up with sufficient power among the newcomers to present a formid- able front once again. The Yanks clipped Washington twice, then grabbed two out of three from the Red Sox to assume the lca- (Continued on Page 12) Anti-Tank added another tro- phy to ils fast-growing collection Saturday by photo-fiuishing the Engineer Dodgers, 37-36, in a bit- terly contested overtime thriller which concludued the Ace of Dia- monds basketball marathon and ended local cage warfare for the season. With sharpshooting Harold Fritz sidelined by a knee injury, Anti-Tank encountered plenty of opposition from the Dodgers in the first half and lagged, 25-20, at the intermission. But the Tank Busters turned on the steam in the last two periods, although Nick Rocknick, peppery guard, was ejected via personal fouls. Fritz, bum leg and all, enter- ed the game late in the third quarter, and his teammates launched an offensive spree al- most immediately. Less than a minute remained when Fritz converted two chari- ty tries to reduce his team’s de- (Continued on -Page 12) Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE: W. L, Pet, GB New York . . . . 4 1 .800 Vi Cleveland . .. . 6 2 .750 . . . St. Louis 3 2 .600 i a Washington 4 3 .571 1 Vi Detroit 3 4 .333 2/2 Boston 2 4 .838 3 Philadelphia 3 5 .375 3 Chicagq ...... 1 5 .167 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE: w. L, Pet G,E, Brooklyn . . . . . 4 1 .800 Cincinnati . . , . 3 3 .500 1/2 Chicago . 3 3 .500 1/2 Pittsburgh . 3 3 .500 1/2 St. Louis ,. , . . 3 3 .500 1/2 Boston , 2 2 .500 1/2 New York ,,, , 2 3 .400 2 Philadelphia . .. 1 3 .350 2/i Even champion trotting horses are eccentric. ....Frank Sayers revealed that his victorious trotter, Peter Guy, eats chewing tobacco and inhales his owner’s cigar smoke... .Speaking of eating, Mgr. Steve O’Neill has banned pre-game hot dogs for his Detroit Tigers, saying a snack before playing slows down athletes. .. .Regard- less of what it is, something definitely has slowed down the Tigers. The American league reports more than 150 former players are now in the Services.... Henry McCann, president of Norfolk in the Piedmont league and scout for the Yankees, died in New York this week... .Robert Emelie, retired National league umpire, died at St. Tho- mas, Ont..... Emelie was 84....Lt. Arthur Nehf Jr., Marine flyer and son of the former Na- tional league southpaw pitcher, Art Nehf, re- cently bagged three Jap planes over Guadal- canal. Rufus Gentry, veteran Buffalo pitcher, notch- ed the fourth no-hitter of his career Sunday, stopping Newark, 1-0, in 11 innings... .Henry C. Paulssen, 39-year-old railroad conductor in New York, also turned in a perfect perform- ance. .. .Paulssen bowled two 300 scores in three weeks....The Cincinnati outfield situa- tion was jumbled as the result of Harry Craft becoming a Navy ensign and Mike McCormick leaving the Reds for California to await Army induction. .. .Gee Walker has replaced McCor- mick in the Reds lineup. Pete Watkins oi Texas shattered the 21-year- old high jump record when he cleared the bar at 6 feel 8 inches ... .His leap broke the mark established by Harold Osborne of Illinois.... Princeton nipped the Penn crew by two feet in their annual meeting on the Schuylkill.... Rutgers finished third... .Capt. Eddie Ricken- backer has accepted the chairmanship of the National AAU track and field championship.

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The White Falcon

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