100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 26, 1967 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1967-09-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TUESPAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1967

TRF MTv ffir&z AL1%T 71 t TT v

- JP1ik~ KTUESP~, SPTEMBR 26,1967'X'IEUl' 1WU16UA' £l ULA1LU

--- .

Tigers,

Twins

pset by-Non-C
Astros Slip By
Games Remaining HOUSTON - Joe Morgan
" cmshiai hmm +hn ,:i,-", ^,,^,.~^.s'^

ontender

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Al Downing
pitched a four-hitter and started
a two-run rally with a ,walk as
the New York Yankees jolted De-
troit's pennant - hopeful Tigers
2-0 last night.
The loss prevented the Tigers
from gaining valuable ground on
first-place Minnesota, which lost
to California 9-2 earlier in the
afternoon. Detroit is fourth, 11/2
games behind, with 'only five
games left to play.
Downing, who won his 14th
game, a career high, was sharp
all the way. He set down the first
11 batters in order before Al Ka-
line dropped a fourth inning
single in front of Roy White in
right field for Detroit's first hit.
By then, the Yankees had the
lead. Earl Wilson,, 22-11, walked
p Downing with one out in the
third and it proved his undoing.
The Epd
After Horace Clarke bounced
out with Downing moving to
second, rookie- Jerry Kenney
singled to center, scoring the first
run. Mickey Mantle followed with
a walk and Joe Pepitone singled
to right, scoring Kenney with
the second run of the inning.
That was enough for Downing,
who struck out six and walked
two. Kaline singled again in the
ninth and the, only other Tiger
hits were Bill Freehan's one-out
single in the seventh and Jim
Price's pinch single in the eighth.
A spectacular play by White,
saved Downing from trouble in
the seventh after Freehan's hit.
Don Wert lined a drive that
seemed headed for the right cen-

DETROIT
Sept. 26 at N.Y. (N)
Sept. 27 Open
Sept. 28 Calif. (N)
Sept. 29 Calif. (N)
Sept. 30 Calif.
Oct. I Calif.

MINNESOTA
California
California
Open
Open
at Boston
at Boston

CHICAGO
at Kan. City (N)
at Kan. City (N)
Open
Washington (N)
Washington
Washington

BOSTON
Cleveland
Cleveland
Open
Open
Minnesota
Minnesota

r,%i%}?:{? ir, ist;:di,'"{;:"'."}:dt:4''};}v'"};:':' ".?" }}" .:?":"::fi:Etb: 'r}Y.:r. v rs^:."":

The Moose
California's Moose Showron rolls
by Minnesota's Rod Carew at s
downed the Twins, 9-2.
ter field alley but White dashed
far to his right and made a slid-
ing catch, robbing Detroit of a
run and Wert of a possible triple.
It ,was the second straight loss
for the Tigers, who were beaten
by a three-run ninth inning rally
in Washington Sunday. ,Detroit
plays in New York again today

{ Fregosi's safeties included a
two-run triple in the second in-
ning when California scored
three times to take a 4-0 lead.
Califorina belted Merritt, now
' *13-7, for six hits and four runs
In two innings. Consecutive
singles by Fregosi, Reichardt and
Bubba Morton got the Angels
< a run in the first.
Angel starter George Brunet
and Aurelio Rodriguez singled
. ahead of Fregosi's triple, sliced
into the right field corner in the
second.
Fregosi then scored as Reic-
$ a, hardt's wind-blown popup into
short right fell for a single and
-!Associated Press Jerry Zimmerman dropped the
ball for an error on Tony Oliva's
K icks H igh throw to the plate.
The Angels added three more
on his back as he is tagged out runs in the fourth with four
econd base yesterday. California straight singles off Boswell - by
Fregosi, Reichardt, pinch hitter
Jimmie Hall and Don Mincher
and then returns home to finish -- plus Roger Repoz' pinch sacri-
the season with a four-game fice fly off Jim Grant, who re-
series against California. lieved Boswell.
Rodriques singled home two
Angels Drop Twins more Angel runs in the seventh
of Jim Roland.
MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL - The Twins chased Brunset in
The California Angels dropped the fourth inning, with successive
Minnesota into a first-place tie singles by Bob Allison, Rod Ca-
with idle Boston yesterday by rew, pinch hitter Rich Rollins
defeating the Twins 9-2 on a 15- and Ted Uhlaender producing
hit attack and strong relief two runs.
pitching by Jack Hamilton and Hamilton relived Brunet and
Curt Simmons. squelched that rally by getting
The Twins and Red Sox both pinch hitter Frank Kostro on a
have 90-68 records with four fly ball and Zoilo Versalles on a
games remaining. The third- grounder back to the mound.
place Chicago White Sox, also Simmons relieved Hamilton,
not scheduled, moved to within who was lifted for a pinch hitter
one-half game of the American he seveth, a finh up.
League co-leaders. in the seventh, and finished up.
Jim Fregosi and Rick Reic-
hardt each collected three hits Orioles Clip Nats
in the first four innings, when
the Angels cuffed Jim Merritt BALTIMORE - Curt Motton's
and Dave Boswell for seven runs. run-scoring single in the ninth
--- inning gave the Baltimore Orioles
SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: a 3-2 victory over Washington
ANDY BARBAS last night.

C
New York
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Cleveland

rofession1a Standings

I

NFL
.entury Division
W L T Pct. Pts. OP
1 1 0 .500 61 58

1
1
0

1
1
2

0
0
0

.500 55
.500 48
.000 28

Capitol Division
Dallas 2 0 0 1.000
Philadelphia f 1 0..500
Washington 1 1 0 .500
New Orleans 0 2 0 .000
Central Division
Detroit 1 0 1 1.000
Green Bay 1 0 1 1.000
Chicago 0 2 0 .000
Minnesota 0 2 0 .000

wt

59
41
54
23
48
34
23
24
86
66
65
38

41
51,
52
38
62
45
57
31
27
54
66
37
16
28
76

AFL
Eastern Division
W L T Pet. Pts. OP
New York 1 1 0 .500 55 44
Miami 1 1 0 .500 35 45
Buffalo 1 2 0 .333 23 70
Houston 1 ? 0 .333 53 41
Boston 1 3 0 .250. 65 89
Western Division
Kansas City 2 0 0 1.000 49 20
Oakland 2 0 0 1.000 86 7
San Diego 2 0 0 1.000 41 17
Denver 1 3 0 .250 71 145
LAST SUNDAY'S RESULTS
New York 38, Denver 24
Boston 23, Buffalo 0
Kansas City 24. Miami 0
San Diego 13, Houston 3
NEXT SUNDAY'S GAMES
New York vs. Miami at Shea Stadium
Denver at Houston
Kansas City at Oakland
San Diego at Buffalo
* * *

Reliver Dave Baldwin h i t
Brooks Robinson with a pitch
to open the ninth and Robinson
raced to third on Curt Blefary's
single before Motton delivered
the winning hit.
The Senators, blanked on three
hits through seven innings by
rookie DaveLeonard, rallied for
two runs in the eighth to tie the
score.
Successive singles by Fred Val-
entine, Hank Allen and Frank
Howard produced the first run.
The other scored on Frank Cog-
gins' roller to first basempan Ble-
fary.
Paul Blair singled in the first
inning, moved to third on a wild
pickoff attempt ,by Senators
starter Dick Bosman and scored
on a single by Brooks Robinson.
Dave May's triple and a sacrifice
fly by Blair gave the Orioles
another run in the sixth.
Giants Top Mets
SAN FRANCISCO-Jim Hart's
10th inning single drove in the
winning run as the San Francisco
Giants nipped the New York
Mets 2-1 yesterday.
Hart, who had the Giants' first
hit I nthe seventh inning against
New York starter Danny Frisella,
lined his game-winning hit off
Dick Selma, who relieved Frisella
at the start of the 10th.
Tito Fuentes opened the 10th
with a single, moved up on a
sacrifice and raced home on the
hit.
Bilboar
There will be tryouts for all
girls interested in Joining Michi-
fish tomorrow night at 7:00 in
Margaret Bell Pool at South
Forest and North University.
Ready to fill
an engineer's job,
but not a blueprint?
At Ford Motor Company we
do a lot of engineering to
come up with better ideas. But
there's one we'll never blueprint.
Youl
if you're a graduating engineer
who doesn't fit a blueprint--
and doesn't want to-
we want to talk with you.
Call your placement office
for an appointment.
Dates of visitation: OCT. 5

Coas
Baltimore
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Atlanta

tal Division
2 0 0 1.000
2 0 0 1.000
2 0 0 1.000
0 2 0 .000

LAST SUNDAY'S RESULTS New Yor at WsiDY GAMES
Dallas 38, New York 24 Atlanta vs. Green Bay at Milwaukee
Baltimore 38, Philadelphia 6 Chicago at Minnesota
Detroit 31, Cleveland 14 Cleveland at New Orleans
Green Bay 13, Chicago,10 Detroit at St. Louis
San Francisco 38, Atlanta 7 Los Angeles at Dallas
St. Louis 28, Pittsburgh 14 Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
Washington 30, New Orleans 10 San Francisco at Baltimore

COMING SOON
ANGELIQUEi- iG
For her, love
is an act
of friendship! __a teif A d

W.

r

-" /

A"

F -

q

CHEETAH, a magazine born looking inftriate the AMA... A piercing
ii iartt r -nl-' - - "^*'^^'' nnn^^^ v "^"

lKe today, sr
of today. A rr
and designe
audacious, h
provocative1
A magazine t
Don't miss
colleges...j
drug scene tl
u nconventioi
whose uncor

how
does that
grab you?
PACE! For you! The person who lives

An action photo look at the Pani Ameri-
can Games-"Halfway to Mexico."
PACE is where Happenings happen.
From Expo '67 to Viet Nam. What people
are saying and thinking about God, their
life nhurneA cv andm arr;age

1 1
1 1
1 -pace 1
835 SO. FLOWER
LOS ANGELES CALIF. 90017

1

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan