The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 14.08.1943, Blaðsíða 11

The White Falcon - 14.08.1943, Blaðsíða 11
11 Gas House Gang Slaps Down Bucs; Rip Sewell’s Streak Ends At 11 It doesn’t make much difference who occupies second place in the National League these days. They all look alike to the front-running St. Louis Cards, and the Gas House Gang has been killing ’em off as fast as they get within range. The Pittsburgh Pirates serv- ed as guinea pig this week, in- vading St. Louis ten games be- hind the champs and departing 13 games in arrears. The Bucs salvaged a 4-1 verdict in the five-game series, but dissipated every chance to tighten the race. The Cards rudely jolted Rip Sewell’s 11-game winning streak with an 8-3 triumph, then grab- bed the rest, 5-2, 8-6 and 5-2. However, Sewell still is the lead- ing moundsman in both circuits with a record of 17 victories and three setbacks. Cincinnati took three out of four from the Chicago Cubs to replace the foundering Brooklyn Dodgers in third place. The Daffy Lads protected their string of consecutive defeats by hand- ing the Boston Braves four straight wins, 4-3, 7-4, 6-2 and 5-4. Brooklyn has lost ten in a row, and trails the Cards by 16 games. League Leaders BATTING American League AB R H Pet. Appling, Chgo .. 369 37 113 .333 Wakefield, Det.. 416 57 135 .325 Curtright, Chgo. 262 45 85 .325 Stephens, St. L.. 309 43 94 .304 Hockett, Cleve. . 351 45 104 .296 National League AB R H Pet. W. L. Pet. G.B. Redskins, pro champions. New York . 61 37 .619 With Sammy Baugh, Redskin Washington 55 49 .527 9 aerial wizard, pitching passes, Chicago .... 50 48 .515 11 the Stars will have their work Detroit .... 50 48 .515 11 cut out for them. However, Coach Cleveland .. 49 48 .511 li'A Harry Stuldrelier’s eleven has Boston 48 51 .487 13 Vt plenty of punch, too, so some St. Louis ... V 54 .448 17 Yt 50,000 fans can look forward to Philadelphia 40 61 .396 22 Yt an action-packed- affair. NATIONAL LEAGUE Some of the early arrivals at W. L. Pet. G.B. the Stars’ camp include: Line- St. Louis .... 66 32 .670 .... men Don Currivan, Boston Col- Pittsburgh 54 46 .547 13 lege; Pat Lyons, Wisconsin; A1 Cincinnati 53 47 .529 14 Wistert, Michigan; Del Dicker- Brooklyn .. 52 50 .510 16 hoof, Iowa, and -Leslie Kalchik, Chicago ... 46 53 .467 20'A Marquette. Backs are Cammille Philadelphia 47 56 .451 21 Vi Piccone, Notre Dame; Boh Steu- Boston .... 43 52 .451 21 Yt her, Missouri; Roy McKay, Tex- New York . 37 63 .374 30 as, and Joe Winkler of Purdue. Musial, St. L. .. Herman, Bkn. . Vaughan, Bkn. Cooper, St. L. . Dahlgren, Phil. Hack, Chgo. .. 399 67 137 .343 386 50 124 .321 406 81 127 .313 284 32 88 .310 379 39 117 .309- 375 53 116 .309 HOME RUNS American League — Keller, NY, 17; York, Det., 15; Stephens, St. L„ 14. National League — Nicholson, Chgo., 15; Ott, NY, 14; Di- Maggio, Pitts., 13. RUNS BATTED IN American League — Etten, NYT, 72; Johnson, NY, 64; Laabs, St. L., 60. National League — Nicholson, Chgo., 76; Herman, Bkn., 69; Elliott, Pitts., 67. STOLEN BASES American League — Moses, Ch- go., 34; Case, Wash., 31; Tuck- er, Chgo., 22. National League — Vaughan, Bkn., 13; Lowery, Chgo., 8; Gustine, Pitts., 8. LEADING PITCHERS American League — Grove, Ch- go., 10-2; Chandler, NY, 13-3; Smith, Cleve., 10-4. National League — Sewell, Pitts., 17-3; Cooper, St. L., 15-6; Riddle, Cinci., 14-6. Umpire Jocko Conlan chased Manager Leo Durocher and Pit- cher Whit Wyatt in the sixth inn- ing of the series opener when they disputed a decision which gave the Braves the tying run. The Dodgers lost the argument, and the game, too, when Char- lie Workman cracked his ninth homer of the season in the tenth. Washington bounded back in- to second place in the American League this week, dumping Chi- cago and Detroit into a third place tie, only half a game in front of Cleveland. New York, of course, maintained its firm grasp on first place. The Boston . Red Sox ended Washington’s eight-game win- ning streak by topping the Nats, 7-5, aided by Bobby Doerr’s 12th Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE homer and Jim Tabor’s ninth. But the Nats recovered to sweep the next three, 4-2, 4-3 and 5-1, while other clubs were killing off each other. The White Sox pounded Hal Newhouser for a 7-4 victory to give bespectacled Bill Dietrich his seventh conquest of the sea- son. But the Bengals captured the next three, 6-0, 8-2 and 3-0, Orval Grove, Chicago’s freshman sensation, absorbing his second loss in the 6-0 affair. Grid Stars Open Drills Dozens of gridders, many garbed in service uniforms, are converging on Dyche Stadium in Evanston, Ill., to begin drill- ing this week for the annual All-Star football game to he play- ed Aug. 25. The star-studded squad will meet the Washington Joe Medwick (left) looks out from Shibe Park (Philadelphia) dugout with his boss, Manager Mel Ott. Blasting enemy pitch- ing with new fervor since the change, Medwick was snatched for the waiver price of $7,500 from the Brooklyn Dodgers by the New York Qlantg, Haegg Lowers Mark; Loses Handicap Event Army Backs Sports Ban Despite public sentiment and many petitions—including one signed by 256 Congressmen—the Army has • emphatically denied intercollegiate eligibility to GI’s assigned to colleges for military training. The Army attitude is that the men do not have time for athle- tics. Officers in Washington stated this week, “The question isn’t an open one,” meaning the ban will he enforced. The average soldier-student has six leisure hours weekly, not enough to keep in condition for a rigorous sports campaign. However, many men had indi- cated they would make a stab at it—before the edict was issued. The Navy is more liberal, per- mitting its sailor-students to play, but with specific restric- tions. Total freedom is not want- ed by the Navy, as Navy Secre- tary Frank Knox proved last week when he limited travel- ling distance for Navy men in colleges. The AAU finally has devised a plan to keep Gunder Haegg, the Flying Swede, from,winning races, hut the U.S. ruling body still can’t keep the speedy visi- tor from breaking records. An 18-year-old Day village, O., schoolboy, Bob Berger, took ad- vantage of a quarter-mile handi- cap to snap the tape 15 feet a- head of Haegg over the two-mile route, but the Flying Swede pro- pelled the distance in 8 minutes 51.3 seconds for a new American outdoor mark. Haegg didn’t even threaten his own world record of 8 minutes. 47.8 seconds set in Sweden. Haegg caught Bill Hulse of the New York Athletic Club and Gil Dodds, Boston divinity student, on the fifth lap of the eight-lap grind, but his efforts to nip Ber- ger failed. Hulse and Dodds, who started even with Haegg, finish- ed third and fourth, respectively. The Flying Swede’s perform- ance lowered his. own American outdoor record because he eclips- ed previous marks with a sizz- ling race in Los Angeles two weeks ago. However, he could- n’t surpass Greg Rice’s indoor record of 8 minutes 51 seconds. Savold Stops Nova In Second; Fritzie Zivic Whips McCoy Chicago fans who reached Wrigley Field late almost miss- ed the action Monday when Lee Savold of Paterson, N. J., one- time protege of Jack Dempsey, planted the birdie punch on Lou Nova’s chin in 1:40 of the sec- ond round of a scheduled 10- rounder. Nova, slowed down consider- ably since his last major en- gagement, was hardly a match for his youthful foe. Savold start- ed with a rush, had Nova in trouble in the opening frame, and floored him for the count with a barrage of hard rights to the head midway in the sec- ond round. Fritzie Zivic, former welter- weight champ, moved farther a- long his comeback trail this week as he pounded out a fourth- round technical knockout victory over Young Kid McCoy of De- troit at Forbes Field, Pittsburgh. Zivic, at 149 pounds, gave his opponent a four-pound edge. McCoy stumbled into a shower of fierce rights and lefts early in the fourth round when Zivic began to find the range. The Mit- chell Field sergeant managed to get to his feet, but Referee Buck McTieran stopped the slaughter after two minutes and 12 seconds of the fourth heat. Chalky Wright, who joined the MAKS EVERY PAY DAY ■X* BOND DAY Maritime Service yesterday, cele- brated his entrance into the ser- vices prematurely Monday when he turned in a seventh-round knockout win over Angiel Avi- as, Mexican lightweight king. Chalky put his opponent to sleep in two minutes and 17 sec- onds of the seventh round. —Softball (Continued from Page 10) who wins their lest—next week. The Beavers registered the first upset of the playoffs when they sidelined the Grease Mon- keys, 6 to 3, Thursday. The Bea- vers rapped out ten hits, while the Grease Monkeys were check- ed with five. With the Athletics eliminated, the out-of-town entry now con- sists of the Hustlers, Pirates and Roi Tans. Every sector of the Command had a favorite son in the tourney, an unusual devia- tion from last year’s localized whirl. The Pirates, a surprise 11th- 'hour competitor after indicating the long trip was impossible, will swing into action against the Duchins. The Hustlers will face the Whales. • The Pigeons,1 who reached the playoffs after a precarious jour- ney through the preliminary flight, will tangle with the wcll- rega'rded Indians to complete the elimination docket. The Pigeons, blvouaeed in ihe lower bracket far from the Racers, loom as the Hkely finalist,

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The White Falcon

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