The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 01.04.1944, Page 6

The White Falcon - 01.04.1944, Page 6
Wartime Boxing Screwy, But How It Pays! If you don’t think American wartime boxing is screwy, try this one. Bummy Davis coldcocks Bob Montgomery in 63 seconds of the first. A week or so later Montgomery hands Beau Jack a solid thrashing to take the Beau’s lightweight title. A week or so after that, Jack climbs into the ring, takes the Davis left hook that kayoed Montgomery, then goes on to win every round. To top it off, that last fight set a financial record for the puny pugilists by drawing $132,823, and it wasn’t even a title fight, but a lightweight against a welt- erweight. • Dud DeGroot finally did sign as coach of the Redskins after many denials by George Preston Marshall, the football king of the Capital. The figure wasn’t an- nounced, but was supposed to be somewhere around $20,000 . . .. That Mike Gabark whom the Yankees recently signed as a catcher is the younger brother of the two Gabarks already op- erating as receivers in the maj- ors. The Yanks, incidentally, are starting the season with Pat Col- lins, up from Kansas City, and the said rookie Gabark as their only catchers after finishing last year with baseball’s best set of receivers in Dickey, Hemsley and little Ziggy Sears. Sears and Dickey are now members of the Armed Forces and Hemsley is going to stay on his farm. • Lt. Buddy Lewis, one-time Washington Senator third-base- man, was one of the first glider- towing pilots to land deep in the Burma jungles in the recent air- borne trap that the Allies threw in behind the Japs.....George Mikan of DePaul showed specta- tors the difference between a real goaltender and just some lug who just grew tall. Mikan timed his occasional leaps to per- fection in stopping the few shots that looked like certain scores while letting those in doubt go right on their way. The others spent the evening leaping wildly at any basketward toss .... Johnny Pesky, the Red Sox hot- shot infielder, is transferring from Bainbridge Naval to Atlanta for gunnery officer training. Johnny will wind up as an En- sign if all goes well. • Connie Mack and Bobo New- som have been having long talks about salary without Newsom ever inking a contract. Right after one of their debates in which Newsom failed to sign, Mack announced that his open- ing day pitcher would be none other than Bobo himself .... With a lot of schools still wond- ering where to get football play- ers now that the training pro- grams have been cut down, the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame called their first spring practice and had 133 candidates out for the squad. • Pfc. Bryan “Bitzy” Grant, the former Davis Cupper, is now a newscaster on a New Guinea radio station .... In the opener of the Madison Square Garden basketball tournament, defend- ing champ, St. John’s, dumped favored Bowling Green out of the picture, 44-40. The victori- ous Redmen completely outfoxed the Falcons. Instead of running and shooting, they played a steady short game, drawing the defenses out, then sending some- one in for layup shots after they faked 6-foot-ll Don Often out from under the basket. "ONt HELLUVA WIND OUTSIDE, FELLAS— IBC Boxing Team Concludes Tour Of England With Great Record A gallant little band of boxers wearing the spangles of the IBC had plenty of reason to feel proud this week as they turned their eyes once more toward “The Rock” after hanging up a record of eleven victories against any and all comers in a tour of England conducted by the athletic department of the American Red Cross. The IBC mittmen, who made a clean sweep of six bouts in their first night of action in Lon- don, were held to a 3-3 tie five nights later and were shaded three decisions to two in their final match against a squad of Engin- eer scrappers. Two of the lads from Iceland came through the action with perfect records. S/Sgt. Frankie Albano, IBC heavyweight king, and Pvt. Andy Riccardi, heavy, accounted for six of the 11 wins. The three winners in the sec- ond night’s battles at Rainbow Corner in London were Albano, Riccardi, and Pfc. Bill Romano. Albano, a stocky and clever New Yorker, easily outpointed Pfc. Don Crowton of Seattle, Wash., Romano did right by his home town of New Orleans when he put the kayo tag on Pfc. Emanuel Cisneros of Denver, Colo., in 1:38 of the second, and Chester Pa.’s Riccardi used a looping right to the face to good advantage in besting Pvt. Ralph Hallinger of Cleveland, Ohio. Pvt. Jim Karjanis, IBC light- heavy champ, ran into plenty of trouble in his second start and lost on a TKO in the second to Pvt. Tony Pontarella after being floored for a no-count in the first. Cpl. Bill McDonald, 138 pound IBC-man from Brooklyn, was outclassed in losing a three round decision to Sgt. Tony Ton- ore, a clever sharpshooter from Newark, N.J., and Pvt. Bill Roach, another 138-pound IBC slinger, lost on a TKO to Pvt. Herb Brin- ing in the second when referee Steve Hamas stepped in and call- ed a halt because of a cut over Roach’s eye. In their final night in British rings Albano and Riccardi ac- counted for Iceland’s two wins. The former outpointed Sgt. Bill Russe, 190-pounder from Cleve- land, and the tough Riccardi car- ried too much dynamite for 180- pound Pvt. Bob Lewis of Wilkes Barre, Pa. Romano lost via the kayo route in the third round of a torrid bout with Bill Brannick, 136- pounder from Pittsfield, Mass.; S/Sgt. Frankie Albano Bill Karjanis was decisioned by Pvt. Joe Johnson of Flemington, Ala., and Cpl. Bill McDonald lost to Pvt. Carleton Carlyle of Balti- more. Tommy Bell Scores 26th Kayo Tommy Bell, Ohio colored welter, who has fattened his to- tal victory streak to 37 straight victories, scored his 26th kayo when he blasted a knockout over Maxie Berger of Montreal in 2:27 seconds of the first round of a scheduled ten-rounder. Dusky Tommy dumped Berger, but he would have been able to continue except that he sprain- ed his right ankle in falling. Berg- er’s handlers had to carry him to his dressing room after he was counted out. A rematch is prob- able due to Berger’s injury. Filly Keeps Fading, Gets New Owner Alamo Belle, a filly who ran a slow race at Bay Meadows track in San Mateo, Calif., had one owner before the race started and had a new one before it ended. John Gregory Jr. watched his Alamo Belle lose her lead and heard Frank Burley, rival owner, ask if the horse was for sale. As Alamo Belle continued to fall back, Gregory said, “Right now I’ll take $750.” Just as she passed the 16th pole, Burley offered $500. “Sold,” returned Gregory. Alamo Belle came home a strong sev- enth. Spud Chandler Gets His Notice The latest “casualty” on the baseball front is Joe McCarthy’s headache. Spurgeon “Spud” Chandler, right-handed hurler of the New York Yankees, and the American League’s most valuable player last year, has been order- ed to report for induction at Roy- ston, Ga., April 14, having already been accepted for limited service. Chandler won 20 and lost four games during 1943 and had a 1.64 earned run average, making this the leagues lowest since the days of Walter Johnson. Although Chandler is Marse Joe’s biggest loss, the Yankee boss is confronted with two more head pains as a result of losing outfielder Johnny Lindell, who takes his pre-induction exam April 5 and shortstop Frankie Crosetti’s attitude of refusing to sign on the dotted line, unless he gets a better offer. Two Knockouts, Plenty Action At Fieldhouse Two knockouts and an exhibi- tion bout between British George Pull, RAF welterweight, and Thorsteinn Gislason, Icelandic 147-pounder, highlighted the And- rews’ Fieldhouse boxing show last Saturday night. The kayos came when Charles Cassia, 137, R.N., put away Sid Phipps, 142, R.N., in 1:35 seconds of the first round and Horace Stevens, 144, R.N., stopped Denny Morgan, 146, R.N., in 1:40 seconds of round three. George Pull, veteran British boxer, and Thorsteinn Gislason, welterweight from the Gisla Club in Reykjavik, gave the fans a fancy boxing demonstration in an exhibition which was the first of its kind from the standpoint of matching local leather artists with either American or British mitt pushers. In adddition to this feature, there were two bouts with the popular paperweights crossing gloves. Kristinn Gunnarsson, 103, defeated Fridrik GuSnason, 95, and Marteinn Bjorgvinsson, 100, took the decision from Bjorn Jonsson at 102. Following the nimble paper- weights came a battle between Edmond Loney, 126, RAF, and William Channing, 126, R.N-, which proved to be the best of the night. Loney had the crowd on their feet more than once with his furious rushing and in-fight' ing tactics. Although both these 126-pounders hit the canvas, Loney got the nod, main- ly because of his aggressiveness. In the other bouts, S/Sgt. Jim- my South, 176, Sulphur Springs, Tex., won in three rounds from Les Evans, 165, RAF; Pvt. Sal Mercurio, 142, Boston, Mass., bet- tered William Koch, 143, RAF; Cliff Brown, 150, RAF, defeated George Baker, 147, R.N.; Philip Calladina, 147, R.N., beat Des- mond Jarrett, 146, RAF; and middleweight Johnny Biggs fought a three round exhibtion with Thomas Bostock, 166. Mioland To Be Retired From Track Another great race horse has breasted the tape for the last time. Mioland, one of turfdom’s top handicap runners, has broken down and will be retired. The seven-year-old black Oregon- bred horse won 18 out of 50 starts, accumulating $244,270 for his owner, Charles Howard, who paid $15,000 for him. Mioland broke down while ih training at Charleston, S.C., for the recent Widener handicap at Hialeah. He will be shipped to Howard’s farm in California.

x

The White Falcon

Direct Links

If you want to link to this newspaper/magazine, please use these links:

Link to this newspaper/magazine: The White Falcon
https://timarit.is/publication/382

Link to this issue:

Link to this page:

Link to this article:

Please do not link directly to images or PDFs on Timarit.is as such URLs may change without warning. Please use the URLs provided above for linking to the website.