THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1964 T8E MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN' Bronco Pitchers Blank Diamondmen SPORTS ROUNDUP: Amateurs Turn Pro Golfers By JIM LaSOVAGE Special To The Daily KALAMAZOO-A strong-armed trio of Western Michigan mounds- men combined to shut out the Wolverines 3-0 yesterday and al- lowed the Maize and Blue only five hits. Curt Cleaver, the first of West- er's three pitchers, worked three innings and was credited with the win. During his stint he faced only 10 batters, walking two and allowing no hits. One of the walk- ed men was erased in a double play. Bronco coach Charlie Maher then continued his pre-game plans and put in Bill Vroegop for the second third of the game. Vroegop gave up two hits, walked one bat- ter, and fanned another. The final Bronco pitcher, Dave Bitante, yielded three hits, but also struck out three Wolverines. Goes Distance Clyde Barnhart, the southpaw who threw a five hit shutout at Central Michigan last Saturday, went the distance for the Blue and was tagged with the loss. The first score of the game came in the third inning, and the run was unearned. With one out, Bronco Dan Mehling was safe on second after a throwing error by shortstop Dave Campbell. He took third on the next play, as Fred Decker grounded out short to first. Jack Reeves followed with a grounder to first baseman Chand- ler Simonds who bobbled it mo- mentarily and then tossed the ball to Barnhart, who was covering first. The pitcher dropped the throw for an error and allowed the run to cross the plate. Going, Going, Gone The rest of the scoring occurred in the fifth inning, after Dick Ginste led off with a bunt single. He was forced out at second by John Sluka, who took over pos- session of first. Mehling then clouted one over the left field MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Gonzalez Homer Downs Mes fence, 320 feet down the line at Hyames Field, for his third round- tripper of the year, which missed the five o-clock train by about 20 feet. No Michigan man advanced far- ther than second during the entire game. Twice potential threats were wiped out prematurely by twin killings by Western's short to sec- ond to first combination of Dan Mehling, John Sluka and Jack Reeves. In the fifth stanza Bob Gil- hooley led off with a single, and was safe at second on a fielder's choice when Mehling tried to cut him down after gloving a ground- er by George Skaff. However, both runners were stranded as Vroegop got the next two batters, Chan Simonds and Clyde Barnhart, on outfield flies, and then fanned Tom Laslo. Rallies Thwarted Again in the sixth and the eighth frames the Wolverines put two men on the basepaths, but clutch pitching again put the Broncos out of trouble. Bob Charmada provided some excitement in the seventh inning when Skaff came to bat and hit a looping line drive to left-center- field. Charmada chargedthe ball and made a spectacular diving Long Season? catch of it, rolling over on his shoulder and coming up with the ball still in his glove. Michigan's next opponent will be Eastern Michigan. The two teams will meet Saturday, April 20, at 1 p.m. on the Varsity Field for a twin bill. Kubek Wants PayTV Cut MILWAUKEE (4P) - J u d g e Robert Cannon, adviser to the Major League Baseball Players' Association, said yesterday that Tony Kubek's remarks about play- ers' interests in pay television be- ing introduced on the West Coast July 1 were "unfortunate." The Yankee shortstop was quot- ed Tuesday as saying that "we ought to get a piece of extra money from pay television since we are the performers who make the show go. We are now closer to a ball players' union than we've ever been before." Emphasizing t h a t he was speaking only as an individual, Cannon said he felt the "threat of a union" was ill advised. "If pay television proves suc- cessful and is extended," he said, "players obviously would be in- terested in its effect on the game. "They should be," he added. "Pay television could be a giant with tremendous effect on their lives. But this is hardly the time to pose a threat." By The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY - Labron Harris Jr. of Stillwater, Okla., the 1962 National Amateur golf champion, and Richard Sikes of Springdale, Ark., runner-up in the 1963 National Amateur, turned professional yesterday, the Daily Oklahoman said in a copyrighted story. Both Harris, 22, and Sikes, 24, were members of the United States team which successfully de- fended the Walker Cup champion- ship against Great Britain last spring. Harris, son of Oklahoma State University golf coach Labron Har- ris Sr., was a star golfer for OSU in his undergraduate days. He is in graduate school at OSU. Sikes, a former University of Arkansas golfer, is a two-time winner of the National Public Links Championship and is a former NCAA champion. Both Harris and Sikes said they intend to join the PGA tour. * * * Rickover Criticism WASHINGTON - Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rickover says "over- organized varsity athletics" at the U.S. Naval Academy are a waste College Scores BASEBALL Univ. of Detroit 14, Toledo 11 Illinois 4, Quincy (I1l) 3 Notre Dame 9, Purdue 4 Minnesota 7, Augsburg 0 Central Michigan 14-5, Hillsdale 4-2 TENNIS Minnesota 8, Carleton 1 of time and energy "which should be devoted to the more important aspects of education." "It is not an essential function of the Naval Academy to engage in large-scale competitive spec- tacles for the benefit of the gen- eral public," Rickover told the H o u s e Defense Appropriations subcommittee. Rickover, key man in the de- velopment of the nuclear navy and a frequent critic of American education, made the comments in testimony last March 6. It was released Thursday by the sub- committee. He said this overemphasis on sports even extends to intramural sports because they count heavily in company competition. * * * Antitrust Bill WASHINGTON--A bill to spell out antitrust exemptions for pro- fessional team -sports was intro- duced yesterday by Rep. Frank Horton (R-NY), former president of the Rochester Red Wings of the International Baseball League. The measure would affect such practices as player drafts, reserve clauses and territorial franchises. Horton introduced the bill in response to Supreme Court deci- sions which he said urged Con- gress to clarify the relationship of professional team sports with the antitrust laws. In subsequent decisions, the court affirmed a 1922 ruling that baseball was exempt from anti- trust action, Horton said. But he said the court has ruled that other organized sports, in- cluding football, baseball and hockey must abide by antitrust restrictions. His bill is almost identical to one which passed the House in 1958 but died in the Senate. In urging approval of the meas- ure, Horton said competition-not monopoly-is the best assurance of high profits for both team own- ers and players. ... 1 By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA--Tony Gonza- lez' eighth inning homer, follow- ing an error, drove in three un- earned runs and gave the Phila- delphia Pillies a 4-1. victory, over the New York Mets last night. The blast broke up a pitching duel between winner Jim Bun- ning and Tracy Stallard. Bunning winning his first game as. a Na- tional Leaguer, checked the Mets on seven hits and struck out 11. Stallard yielded six hits and fan- ned six Phillies. Bunning spent nine years in the American League with Detroit. Bobby Wine opened the decisive eighth for the Phillies with a double. He went to third-after. two were out-when first baseman Tim Harkness dropped Amado Samuel's throw, letting rookie Richie Allen reach first safely. Then Gonzales connected. The Phillies had opened the scoring in the third when Wine singled, moved to second on a grounder and scored on Allen's single. The Mets tied it in the fifth as Stallard doubled off the left field wall 'and scored on Tim Hark- ness' single. * * * Skowron Homers WASHINGTON-Bill Skowron's first home run in a Washington uniform touched off a six-run second inning last night and led the Senators to a 6-4 victory over. the Los Angeles Angels. After Skowron's homer over thew fence in right, the opposite field for him, Barry Latman loaded the bases on two hit bats-men and a walk. John Kennedy flied to short left, but Bennie Daniels beat out a high hopper, scoring one, run. Don Blasingame singled in two more, and Chuck Hinton's triple to right drove in two additional runs, giving the Senators, their biggest inning in two seasons. The Angels scored two in the first on Billy Moran's single and Jim Fregosi's home run, and add- ed two unearned runs off winner Daniels in the sixth on an error and three singles. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct., GB Kennedy cut off a threatened ?ally in the seventh with a spec- tacular stab of Joe Adcock's bid for an extra base hit. Pirates Beat Cubs PITTSBURGH - Bill Virdon drove in the tying run in the ninth inning, then walked with the bases loaded in the 12th inning, forcing the winning run as the Pittsburgh Pirates edged the Chicago Cubs 5-4 last night. Don Elston had come on to pitch for the Cubs in the 12th and immediately was touched for a single by Bob Bailey. Bailey moved to second on a sacrifice and took third on a wild pitch. Elston then - issued two inten- tional walks, filling the bases. He got Dick Schofield then issued a walk ended it. to pop up but to Virdon that The Pirates had tied the game in the last of the ninth, striking for three runs and overcoming a 4-1 Chicago lead built on Ernie Banks' three-run homer in the seventh. Cub rookie Fred Norman had allowed only six hits through eight innings, but the first two Pirates in the ninth reached base and he was lifted in favor of re- liever Lindy McDaniel. Pinch hitter Jerry Lynch sin- gled, loading the bases, before Smoky Burgess smacked a two- run single and Virdon singled in the tying run. Wayne Schurr came on to put down the uprising. 6"tj MICHIGAN Laslo, 2b Sizemore, c Campbell, ss Tate, ef Meyers, If Gilhooley, rf. Skaff, 3b Simonds, lb Barnhart, p AB R H RBIJ 4 4 4 42 4 4 2 2° 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1' 0 0 2 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 F Abel Keeps Players Calm As Leafs Continue Practice DETROIT (P)-Coach Sid Abelv of the Detroit Red Wings lost $18 at the races Monday; but he fig-' ures the loss put him in. real good' position in the tussle with the Toronto Maple Leafs for the Stanley Cup. The teams, even at a game apiece in the best-of-seven series, will meet in the third game to- night. The side trip which Abel and1 his Wings took to the Fort Erie race track Monday was part of1 his strategy of relaxing the team for the National Hockey League's playoff finale. Detroit had no practice session Sunday or Monday in advance of the Tuesday night game at Tor- onto which the Wings won 4-3 in overtime. Coach Punch Imlach's Toronto club, on the other hand, had prac- tice sessions every day. In fact, after Tuesday's loss, the Leafs held a noon workout at Maple Leaf Garden yesterday before tak- ing a train to Detroit for game No. 3. Imlach's players say they have no quarrel with his strategy of practice every day. "After all, this is the third Stanley Cup final in a row for us and that sort of proves Punch's strategy is good," said one of the Leafs. Detroit, which outskated and outshot the Leafs Tuesday night, is not so convinced of the sound- ness of the Imlach strategy. But the Wings hope he does not change it-at least until the Stanley Cup series of 1964 is fin- ished. "That Punch Imlach -is nuts," '500' Ups List INDIANAPOLIS UP)-The entry list for the Memorial Day 500- mile race increased to 57 yesterday as the midnight deadline for en- tries approached. said Red Wing defenseman Bill Gadsby. "Those old guys like George Armstrong, Red Kelly and Allan Stanley can't take it-this business of working out every day. It's killing them. "I went into Tuesday's overtime feeling good and I looked at guys like. Stanley and knew they were. bushed," Gadsby added. "We had been sitting around for two days resting and we had it. Yes sir, you know something, we are going to take that- Toronto club." Totals 33 0 5 0 WESTERN MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Ginste, rf-if 4 0 2 0 Sluka, 2b 4 2 20 Mehling, ss 3 1 1 2 Decker, cf 4 0 1 0 Reeves, lb 4 0 0 0 Predovic, 3b) 4- 0 0 '0 Guerrant, rf 2 0 0 0 Charmade, if 2 0 0 0 Bales, c 4 0 1 0 Cleaver, p 0 0 0 0 Vroegop, p 1 0 0 0 Bitante, p 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 7 2 PITCHING SUMMARIES IP H R ER BB SO Cleaver 3 0 0 0 2 3 Vroegop 3 2 0 0 1 1 Bitante 3 3 0 0 0 3 Barnhart 8 7 3 2 2 3 MICHIGAN O000 00-0 5 2 W. MICH. 001 020 00x-3 7 2 E-Mehling, Bitante, Campbell, Barnhart. DP-Mehling, Sluka, and Reeves (2). LOB-Michigan 8, West- ern M chigan 8. HR--Mehling. 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