SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN SUNDAY, O~I'0BER 3, 1948 PAGE SEVEN Bearden Blanks Tigers, 8-0; Tribe Keeps A. L. Lead Line-Ups... C Rifenburg Clary Allis Soboleski Wistert Tomasi Heneveld Erben Dworsky Wilkins Sickels Kohl Wahl McNeill Wisniewski Elliott Ortwuann Lentz Koceski Teninga Van Summern Peterson Kempthorn LE Gar za Boston Whips New York To Stay in Pennant Race Doby Sparks Indian Attack with Four Hits; Kramer's Five-Hitter Spotlights Bosox Win +A~irLhiat ilg Football Scores Robinson LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB Roberts Dotur Berwick Melund Ecklund Daniels Chrobot Stanton Nevills D. Wilkins Anderson Bartholemy Johnson Van Brocklin McKay Lewis Bell Hines Easter Aiken Holcomb Sanders SEYMOUR SONKIN, Night EditorI - - - - -- -- - -- - ---- --- I PASS DEFENSE-Oregon end Dick Wilkins stood little chance of grabbing this last period desperation pass from ace quarterback Norm Van Brocklin. He was closely covered on the play by full- back Tom Peterson and halfback Chuck Ortipann, who leaped high in the air to bat the pigskin from his outstretched fingers. Walker Sparks SMU DALLAS-(')-Doak Walker set Southern Methodist on fire and kept the flame fanned yesterday as the Mustangs ripped battling Texas Tech, 41-6, to keep one of the longest winning streaks in college football going full blast. A crowd of 23,000 saw the Meth- odists bore to a sluggish 13-0 half- time lead with Walker alone play- ing up to standard. Then the p crowd winced before the terrific power of an aroused Mustang team that shattered the Techsans with two touchdowns in fou rand one- half minutes of the third period. Mustang reservesplayed the rest of the way and got a couple of touchdowns of their own. (By The Associated Press) NEW YORK - The Cleveland Indians assured themselves of at least a tie for the American League pennant yesterday as they routed the Detroit Tigers, 8-0, to remain a game ahead of the second place Boston Red Sox. The Sox snapped their second place tie with the New York Yan- kees and eliminated the Yanks from the contention by humbling the defending World Champions, 5-1. Tomorrow Cleveland can win its first pennant since 1920 by again beating Detroit. They can also cop it if the Sox lose to the Yanks. Should the Sox win and the In- dians lose, the two will be tide for the top. In the event of a tie for the lead, the Red Sox and Indians will meet in Boston Monday in a playoff for the championship. Gene Bearden, rookie Indian lefthander, blanked the Tigers on eight scattered hits in recording its 19th victory of the season be- fore a Cleveland ladies' day gath- ering of 56,238 fans. Lou Kretlow, recruit Tiger pitcher, gave Bearden a battle until the fourth inning when the Tribeknocked him out with a five-run, four hit outburst. Bearden fanned four and walked only three in hanging up his sec- ond straight shutout and his sixth consecutive triumph. Brilliant pitching on the part of Jack Kramer knocked the Yanks out of the fight. The Red Sox righthander allowed the Yanks only five hits in gaining his 18th success against five losses. The Sox also collected only five hits but bunched the blows along with 11 walks to win going away. Ted Williams put the Sox in front to stay in the first inning when he followed a walk to Johnny Pesky with his 25th homer of the season. Tommy Byrne, Yankee starter, was knocked out in the third after yielding another run on a walk, double by Williams, intentional pass, and single by Stan Spence. Joe Page came on and gave up a run on Bill Goodman's fly. The Sox clipped Page for their final run in the fourth, Vern Stephens' driving in the counter with a long fly. Kramer blanked thre Bombers until the seventh inning when Joe DiMaggio doubled, moved to third on a ground out and scored after pinch hitter John Lindell flied out. In the other American League game the Washington Senators trounced the Philadelphia Athle- tics, 7-1. The National League's pennant winning Boston Braves split a double-header with the New York Giants, winning the nightcap, 2-1 after dropping the opener, 8-2. The Brooklyn Dodgers scored four runs in the first inning and went on to beat the Phiadelphia Phillies, 5-4, in the only other day{ game. ° m BLANKS BENGALS - Gene Bearden, rookie Cleveland pitcher, scattered eight Tiger hits in scoriig his 19th victory of the season. Yesterday's vic- tory was his second consecutive shut-out, and his sixth this year. 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