Page Twelve THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 5, 1973 Royatc ingaids B0 sx wln KC hurler walks in . three, Fisk hoers WFromWire Service Reports BOSTON - The injury-plagued Boston Red Sox proved anew the old Little League adage that a walk is as good as a hit last night, as they capitalized on eight free passes served up by Kansas City pitching and hobbled their way to a 9-3 victory over -- the high-flying Royals. In a nationally televised game which featured the sage com- mentary of former Cleveland pitching great Satchel Page, the Minnesota swept the District Four regional and middleweight champ Carlos Manzon talks of leaving the ring after Saturday's fight. The full stories can be found on Page 11. Bosox wiped out an early Kansas City lead in the bottom of the, third, when they pushed across four runs on a mere two hits. Royals' starter Gene Garber, noticeably parsimonious with the bases on balls in his past per- formances, walked the always ailing star Reggie "The Rifle" Smith after two leadoff hits to load the bases, setting the stage for two dramatic walks to Carl Yastrzemski. and Carlton Pudge Fisk, which forced in two more Sox tallies. The scoring for the inning was - completed when Bruce Dal Can- ton, in what was less than a memorable relief stint, hit Or- lando Cepeda and forced in the fourth run for the Hose. It was only later on in the game that the Red Sox proved that an assortment of bad backs, pulled muscles, and stretched AP Photo Achilles tendons could not still their vaunted double-barreled hitting attack, which proceeded to turn a cliff-hanger into a mashes a Tom Gorman volley typical Fenway Park slugfest. avis Cupper, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1, and In the sixth, all-star catcher Carlton Fisk plugged his tenth Reds w ip NY; Phil1s fall again homer of the year off a light standard high over the screen in left-center field, driving home three runs and upping the score to 7-2. Bt the Sox, ever mindful of the fragility of big leads in Fen- way's hitters' paradise, scored again in the seventh.after Fisk's mighty blow. Tommy Harper, rnning with the Ditch, turned on his blinding speed and scored all the way from first on a single by Macio Ouerrero. The latter, acquired in what rnv Sox fans look upon as the disastrous trade which sent Al "Soarky" Lyle to the Yankees for noted benchwarmer Danny Carter, had two hits on the eve- ning. In the eighth, Rick Miller cop- ped his third hit of the game, a triple to the deepest reaches of the park in right-center field. Miller later scored on a sacrifice fly to Carl Yastrzemski. . ' Former Clemson great and aspiring sorts writer John Cur- tis was the winner, though he was nicked for two RBI's by league leader John Mayberry. Don Newhouser provided some clutch relief work for the Sox and earned the save. Major League Stundings American League East W L Pet. GB Detroit 27 P.2 .551 - New York St624 .5e i1 Baltimore 22 22 .500 2 Boston 22 25 .4S 4 Milwaukee 22 26 .458 4 Cleveland 20 3 .407. Wrt Chicago 27 18 .00 - Kansas City 30 24 .5t 1/ Minnesota at 21 .553 2 Caifornia 25 22 .532 3 Oakiand 2t 25 .510 4 Texas 16 31 .348 ll Yesterday's Results Boston 9, Kansas City 3 Milwaukee at Oakland, night Other clubs not scheduled Today's Pithers Minnesota Woodson 4-3 at Cleeand Bisman 2-t. Chieago Wood 3-4 at ealtinore Cear 2-. Kansas City Drago 5-4 at Boston Pattn 4-. New York Stottemyre 7- at Teas Sieber 3-3. Miwaukee Short -i at, Oakland Hamilton 0-. netoit Petty -3 at Caiiorna Hand 3-3. National League East W L Pt. Gel Chicago 31 20 .t08 - Pittsburgh 23 22 .511 5 Montreal 21 23 .47 6/ New York - 22 25 .48 7 St. Loos 22 25 .48 7 Philadeiphia 19 31 .30 1i5/" West SFrancisco 3820 .643 - Los Angeles 31 21 .596 3 Cincinnati 29 23 .558 5 Houston 30 25 .545 5 Atlanta 18 32 .360 15 San ito 19 34 .35 54 Yesterday's Results San Francisco 7, Pittsburgh 2 Cincinnati 5, New York 0 Houston 7, Philadelphia 0 Other clubs not scheduled Today's Pitchers Los Angeles Osteen 5-1 at Chicago Jenkins 6-3. Atlanta Niekro 3-2 at Montreal Stoneman 1-2 New York Koosman 5-4 at Cincin- nati Grimsley 5-4 San Francisco Bryant 8-3 at Pitts- burgh Brits 3-4. Philadelphia Twitchell 3-2 at Hous- ton Wilson 4-5 San Diego Greif 4-5 at St. Louis Fster 3-3 A Nasty smash Illie Nastase, the sometime clown and sometime bad boy of the courts, s in yesterday's French Open semi-final match. Nastase outlasted the Da will face Nikki Pilic in today's final. Sports of The Daily I the Big World beckons Two former Michigan football stars are going to try their luck in the pro ranks. Tom Coyle, Michigan's great offensive guard who was totally ignored by the pros in March's draft, is going down to Houston as a free agent. There he will try to gain a spot on the front line with old linemate Guy Murdock, now the number one center on the floundering Oilers. Former half- back Alan "Cowboy" Walker is heading north to Hamilton, On- tario, where he will vie for a backfield spot with the Tiger-Cats. Walther: stable According to a spokesman at the University Hospital's Burn Center, David "Salt" Walther, the injured Indy driver, is in serious but stable condition. Walther, who has burns over 40 per cent of his body, could spend two months or more in the burn unit. Swede Savage, burned in the actual running of the race, remains in critical condition. Qops Four misplays over this weekend made fielding news in Major League Baseball. Davie Lopes, the Los Angeles Dodgers second sack sensation, tied a record held by two others playing his position by committing three miscues in one inning. Lopes rode two boots and a bad throw to his record ineptness . . . Oakland's Mike Hegan saw his 178 consecutive games without an error streak tops among active first sackers, go by the boards Sunday as he bobbled a ground ball against the New York Yanks. Icing the puck Hockey, the winter sport that was supposedly finished a month ago, continues its newsmaking ways. The Rangers got a new coach, former center Dennis Popein . . . Guy Charron inked a contract with the Red Wings, ending speculation he might jump to the rival WHA . . . The Bruin's Mike Walton did just that, going to the Fighting Saints of Minnesota, who, by the way, denied that the Detroit group was going to buy them and move the franchise to Motown . . . Got all that? By The Associated Press CINCINNATI-Dave Concepcion and Bobby Tolan delivered run- scoring singles in the sixth inning for Cincinnati's first two hits fol- lowing an intentional two-out walk to Tony Perez and the Reds went on to score four times en route to a 5-0 victory over the New York Mets last night. Jack Billingham, 8-2, pitched a three-hitter to hand the Mets their eighth setback in 10 games and drop them behind Montreal into a fourth-place tie with St. Louis in the National League East. It was the fifth consecutive de- feat for Matlack. The National League's Rookie of the Year in 1972 hasn't won since April 28. The Reds added a run off Harry Parker in the seventh on a walk, Concepcion's single and an error. Astros exolode HOUSTON-Dave Roberts fired a six-hitter and Jim Wynn hit his 12th home run, leading the Houston Astros to a 7-0 win over the Philadelphia Phillies last night. The triumph ended Houston's losing streak at four games and extended Philadelphia's to seven in a row. Wynn's shot, a two-run blast, came in the seventh. The Astros scored their first five runs sn the fourth inning against rookie Larry Christenson, 1-4, and Dar- rel Brandon. Pirates sunk PITTSBURGH - Tito Fuentes and Garry Maddox drove in three runs apiece while Tom Bradley hurled the San Francisco Giants to a 7-2 victory over the Pitts- burgh Pirates last night. The Giants nicked loser Bob Moose, 4-5, for their first run in the fourth inning on a walk and singles by Gary Matthews and Chris Speier. They extended their lead to 3-0 in the fifth when Bobby Bonds singled and scored on a triple by Fuentes. M a d d o x brought Fuentes home with a sacrifice fly. Fuentes ripped a two-run sin- gle andtMaddox drove in two more with a triple in the ninth. Summer Daily Sports