1 / WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine Nine Blasts Wayne, A's Beat Tigers In Eleventh, 9-1 Major League Standings AMERICAN W Cleveland 8 Washington. :8 New York 9 Boston 7 Chicago 6 Detroit -3 St. Louis 4 Philadelphia 2 * * LEAGUE L Pct. 3 .727 3 .727 4 .692 5 .583 5 .545 3 .333 9 .333 12 .143 * GB R R .. 1/2 11/2 3/2 5 7 NATIOMAL W St. Louis 7 Boston 10 Brooklyn 8 Philadelphia 8 Pittsburgh 6 Chicago 5 Cincinnati 4 New York 4 * * LEAGUE L Pet. 3 .700 6 .625 6 .571 '6 .571 5 .545 6 .455 8 .333 12 .250 GB 1- 1 1 2% 4 6 DETROIT-The last place Phil- adelphia Athletics, who hadn't won in their last 10 starts, battered the Detroit Tigers 9 to 1 yester- day with an eight run barrage in the 11th inning. A small crowd of 3,583 saw Rookie pinch hitter Lou Limmer start the game winning rdIly with a bases loaded double off losing pitcher Dizzy Trout. BFFORE relief pitcher Gene Bearden could retire the side, Pete Suder, Eddie Joost, and Dave Phil- ley blasted home five more runs to give the A's their second win against 12 defeats. Relief pitcher Hank Wyse who replaced starter Carl Scheib in the ninth, received credit for the win, his first. The Tigers got only six hits. If it hadn't been for an eighth inning error by Detroit center fielder Johnny Groth, Trout would have. gained the victory. Instead he suffered his second loss. Louis Favored In Agramonte Fight Toniht DETROIT-(IP)-If Joe Louis gobbles his Cuban opponent, Omelio Agramonte, here tonight in a fight-for-peanuts, the Inter- national Boxing Club plans to match the old, former heavyweight champ in two summertime, big- dough shows. Nick Londes, IBC promoter, said he hopes to pair off Louis and Lee Savold in Briggs Stadium here in June or July, and heavyweight king Ezzard Charles outdoors in Sep- tember, possibly in Chicago. * 1 * * JOE SAYS he is "dead serious" about regaining the crown from Charles, something he failed to do last September after a series of "comeback" bouts with the likes of Agramonte. Charlek picked up the crown by whipping Joe Walcott in 1949 after Louis voluntarily abandoned it. The need for ready cash, which Uncle Sam says Joe owes in a bunch of income taxes, drove Joe back to the ring. So naturally he'll be thinking of Savold and Charles and money, possibly more than Agramonte, Wednes- day night. For one thing, Joe will be fight- ing for a $6 top. For another, there's a city-wide strike of bus and streetcar operators. GROTH misplayed a line drive single off Scheib's bat. The ball bounced out of his hands and roll- ed almost to the center field wall while Scheib circled the bases. Detroit tied it up at 1-1 in the ninth. Pinchhitter Charlie Kel- ler walked and Neil Berry ran for him. Joe Ginsberg, whose two singles led the Tigers at bat, punched a hit into -right field. Pat Mullin, who hit a pinch home run earlier this season, batted for Johnny Lipon and drove a long fly to right to score Berry from third. That run broke Detroit's string of 18 scoreless innings over three games. George Kell, Vic Wertz, ang Jerry Priddy got Detroit's other hits. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Yanks 8, Chisox 3 Indians 7, Red Sox 1 Senators 9, Browns 8 Athletics 9, Tigers 1 'TODAY'S GAMES New York at Chicago-Shea (1-0) vs Littlefield (1-0) Washington at St. Louis (night)-Consuegra (2-0) or Ross (0-0) vs Overmire (0-1) Philadelphia at Detroit-Cole- man (0-1) vs Rogovin (1-1) Boston at Cleveland-Parnell (2-1) vs Lemon (2-1) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Giants 5, Cubs 3 Cards 5, Braves 2 Phils 6, Reds 5 Bucs 6, Dodgers 2 * * * TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Boston-Staley (2-0) vs Spahn (1-2) Pittsburgh at Brooklyn - Dickson (2-0) vs Newcombe (2-0)' Chicago at New York - Schmitz (0-1) vs Bowman (0-2) Cincinnati at Philadelphia- Blackwell (2-2) vs. Heintzelman (1-1) or Church (1-1). AP BASEBALL ROUNDUP: Yanks Best Rejuvinated Pale Hose, 8-3 YANKS 8, CHISOX 3 CHICAGO-The Chicago White Sox' first Negro player, Orestes Minoso, made a gaudy start, but the Pale Hose wilted before the New York Yankee power, 8-3, in a game spiced by three homers at Comiskey Park yesterday. In tailor-made dramatics be- fore a shirt-sleeved throng of 14,776, third-sacker Minoso pol- ed a 425-foot homer in the first inning, driving across left field- er Paul Lehner, who also made his White Sox debut. Lehner had bowed in with a single. The Sox acquired Minoso from the Cleveland Indians . and Leh- ner from the Philadelphia Athlet- ics in a three-club deal which ex- tracted outfielders Gus Zernial and Dave Philley from the Sox. CARDS 5, BRAVES 2 BOSTON-The St. Louis Card- inals broke their first-place tie with the Boston Braves with a 5-2 victory behind the six-hit pitching of rookie right hander Tommy Poholsky. Stan Musial and Big Steve Bil- ko each homered to ruin Boston's 1951 floodlight iniaugural for the 15,213 spectators. The Tribesmen opened with Johnny Sain but he wobbled getting underway and passed two batters before Joe Garagio. la lashed a two-run douae off the left field wall with t o out in the opening frame. Bilko's four bagger came in the fourth and Musial's was struck in the sixth after Sain walked Enos Slaughter. PHILS 6, REDS 5 PHILADELPHIA - Robin Rob- erts survived a five-hit, five-run eighth inning to chalk up his third pitching victory of the season as the Philadelphia Phillies nosed out the Cincinnati Reds 6-5. The big blow of the Reds' of- fensive was Joe Adcock's third homer of the season. It account- ed for three runs. Before the eighth-frame uprising, Roberts had allowed only two hits and he gave up another in the ninth. Del Ennis paced the Phils' 12- hit attack with three blows, in- cluding a double, but home runs by Granny Hamner and Dick Sis- ler were more effective. * * * BUCS 6, DODGERS 2 BROOKLYN - Cliff Chambers silenced Brooklyn's home run hap- py crew with six hits as Pitts- burgh roughed up the Dodgers, 6-2, with a 15-hit spree that in- cluded Ralph Kiner's third homer. The Pirates had themselves a day against the four Dodger pitch- ers, starting with loser Erv Palica. Everybody in the batting order hit safely and Pete Reiser had two Fanfare Wins Derby Trial LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Fanfare, Calumet farm's Kentucky Derby Hope, won the $13,875 Derby trial here today. Bernwood was sec- ond and King Clover third in the field of 14 Kentucky Derby eli- gibles. King Clover actually finished second but after the race Jackey Ken Church on Bernwood claimed he was forced to the rail. br King Clover. The judges allowed the claim and moved Bernwood up to second and moved King Clover back to third place. Read and Use Daily Classifieds doubles and a single stamping grounds. in his old * * GIANTS 5, CUBS 3 NEW YORK-Alvin Dark's home run with the bases full in the sixth inning gave the New York Giants a 5-3 victory over the Chi- cago Cubs. A crowd of 12,009 saw Jim Hearn and Sheldon Jones pitch the Giants to their second straight triumph following 11 consecutive setbacks. Hearn started for the Giants and posted his second victory of the year, but worked only seven innings. Jones was sent in to finish up after Hearn showed signs of tiring. Dark, in addition to his homer, collected two singles to account for three of the five Giant hits. Monte Irvin and Henry Thomp- son, with a double apiece, got the others. TRIBE 7, RED SOX 1 CLEVELAND-Bob Feller, who couldn't beat the Red Sox all last season, did it for Cleveland, 7 to 1, before 53,462 fans-the biggest major league crowd of the young season. It was the third straight victory for the big righthander. He held the Bosox scoreless until the eighth. The big turnout at the first night game here included thou- sands who came to see Lou Bou- dreau, the Indians' manager in the previous nine seasons and now Boston's shortstop. The Tribe scored runs in pairs in the first, third and fifth to get Feller off to a 6-0 lead. SENATORS 9, BROWNS 8 ST. LOUIS -- The Washington Senators, trailing by seven runs after five innings, worked up to an 8-8 tie which Mickey Vernon broke in the 13th with a home run for a 9 to 8 decision over the St. Louis Browns last night. M'Slams 16 Safeties, Gets 13 Passes in Rout Enemy Tallies Unearned as Carpenter, Yirkosky, Johnson Combine in Two-Hitter By GENE MACKEVICH second pitcher, struck out catche Special to The Daily Jue Rsu Jules Russu. DETROIT-Michigan's baseball * * * squad carried their hitting clothes WITH ONE OUT and a man o with them yesterday when they first, John Williams hit a double journeyed to the Motor City to play ball to Mogk, who let it g decisively defeat a weak Wayne away from him. After Yirkosk University nine, 19-2, struck out Gene Zang, John Wir The Wolverines slammed out 16 go doubled scoring both runner hits and were handed 13 walks in In the final two frames t winning the one-sided non-con- Maize and Blue squad added nir ference tilt played at Royal Oak more runs to their colection. Si Field, bases-on-balls, four coming in tt * * * ninth, added in the two innir WAYNE'S SOLE RUNS, which nine run total. came in the seventh inning, were Yesterday's game gave the Wo both unearned. verines good hitting practice i Michigan pitchers Bob Car- preparation for their weeken penter, Dick Yirkosky, and Jim double-header at Indiana. Johnson permitted only two hits * * * among them. MICHIGAN AM R H P A 1 Carpenter allowed only one man Howell ef 6 2 4 4 0 to reach first base via the base- Haynam ss 4 1 ,2 2 1 on-ball route, while he struck out Koceski if 3 1 1 I 0 four in the five innings he pitched. painter c 0 2 0 5 00 Yirkosky walked two and fanned Weygandt 1b 4 2 i 60 three in three frames. Johnson Kein lb 1 0 0 1 0 gave one batter a free pass in his Dorr 3b 4 3 2 1 1 ninth inning effort. 'Harrington rf 2 1 1 009 * * Sabuco 2b 2 1 1 0 1 THE VICTORS showed they Carpenter p 3 0 1 1 1 were going to waste little time in Yirkosky p 2 1 0 90 getting started when they jumped Hen0 1 1 1 00 0 off to a six run lead in the first TOTALS 42 19 16 27 s inning. x singled for Yirkosky in 9th. Frank Howell led off with a * * double. Bruce Haynam singled WAYNE AB R H P A Howell home, and Captain Leo MacMillan 2b 4 0 0 2 1 Koceski singled Haynam to Komblevicz 3b 3 0 0 2 3 third. After Pete Palmer struck Vahratian rf 0 0 1 9 0 out, Al Weygandt singled home Verban rf 3 0 1 2 300 Haynam and Koceski, who had Herzberg c 1 0 0 3 0 stole second. Russu c 2 9 9 2 1 . Williams cf 3 1 0 5 0 Gerry Dorr kept the ;rally going zang ss 3 0 9 0 1 with a single. Bill Mogk flyed to wingo 1b 3 9 1 7 1 center field for the inning's second Volgt p 1 0 01 1 1 out. Gil Sabuco walked, filling Finkestein p 2 0 9 0 9 the bases. Carpenter came through Silverstein p0 0 0 0 9 with a single, scoring two, more TOTALS 28 2 2 27 s runs. IN THE SECOND frame a walk to Dorr and singles by Mogk and Sabuco produced another Michi- gan run. The winners picked up an- other run in the fourth inning when Palmer singled, stole sec- ond, and came home when Dorr knocked out his second hit of the afternoon. In the sixth frame, Coach Fish- er's squad brought home two more runs to make the count 10-0. PALMER OPE-NED the inning with a triple. Weygandt walked. With men on first and third Mich- igan successfully pulled a double steal. - Weygandt then stole third and scored on an outfield fly. In the home half of the sev-.*coi enth, Wayne scored its two un- earned tallies on one hit. Ervin Vahratian lead off with a walk. Dick Yirkoshy, Michigan's I I r I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I t~. ry atea t I." for the.eyes Spring is the time -for GENERATION OUT SOON! I Next best thing to living in Hawaii-is living in Vanuana-new Van Heusen sport shirt that will have you humming sweet Leilani all season long. Plenty soft, plenty smooth-then shirts, that is-and they're as cool as a night in Waikiki. $365 and $450 Vanilouson sit REQ. 1T. d. t stIe world's smartest" PHILLIPS.JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. ENGINEERS Receiving bachelors & graduate degrees in AERONAUTICAL MECHANICAL ELECTRICAL Investigate Career Opportunity That May Be Available For You in Aerodynamics as applied to the aircraft propulsion means. Experimental stress analysis. 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