TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1955 T'HE MICHIIGAN DAILY i aa.a iraa VaaiVlptV .VCiliUl PAGE Yanks, Dodgers Drill For Subway Series; Leg Injury May Sideline Mantle In Opener Brooklyn Seeks First World Series; New Yorkers Favored at 13 to 10 I NEW YORK (R)-Carl Furillo rested with a cold and Mickey Mantle tenderly tested his injured right leg Monday as the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Yankees held final workouts in their own parks for Wednesday's World Se- ries opener at Yankee Stadium. Furillo is expected to be in the opening-day ,lineup" at his usual right field spot but Mantle may not be ready. The final decision on the Yankee center-fielder prob- ably won't be made until shortly before game time Wednesday. Leg Improved "It feels better," said Mantle 4 after swin'ging away for about 10 minutes at the pitching of Coach Frank Crosetti. Batting lefthand- ed, he smashed one pitch into the second deck in right field. How- ever, he still couln't run freely. Instead of going to the outfield, he fooled around with a first base- man's mitt, just to limber up. The Yanks will work out at Eb- bets Field Tuesday afternoon while the Dodgers will get a look at the Stadium where the first two games will be played. Usually, Manager Casey Stengel turns down an invi- tation to practice in the other club's park. Phil Rizzuto, veteran shortstop, said this would be the first time he remembered a Yank pre-Series practice scheduled for the Brook- lyn park. Rizzuto and his short- stop rival, Pee Wee Reese of the Brooks, have played in, all five previous Yank-Dodger series. Yanks 13-10 Despite the doubt about Mantle's status, the betting men stretched the odds favoring the Yankees to 13 to 10. The Yanks remained the 6 to 5 choice in the opener. As for a sweep, you could get 11 to 1 the Yanks wouldn't do it and 19 to 1 that the Dodgers wouldn't. The Dodgers, of course, never have won a Series. ,This will be their eighth try. The Yanks hold the record with a 16-4 mark for 20 previous' series and five straight under Stengel from 1949 through 1953. 19Stengel confirmed his earlier announcement that Whitey Ford (18-7) will work the opener and Tommy Byrne (16-5) the second, on the theory that his lefthanders would be more effective at the I. Stadium than at Brooklyn with its convenient fences for righthanded hitters. Unless he has to use him on re- lief in the first two, Stengel prob- ably will start Bob Grim (7-5) in the Ebbets Field opener Friday, following with Bob Turley (17-13) and Don Larsen (9-2). Grim has been his most efficient pitcher in recent weeks. Walter Alston, Dodger manager, said Billy Loes (10-4) probably would start the second game at New York. He had listed Don New- combe (20-5) as his opening day pitcher when he announced his batting order in Pittsburgh Sun- day. Big Newk, who -won 10 straight at the start of the season and had an 18-1 record on Aug. 4, had a 2-4 record the rest of the year. Carl Erskine (11-8), another righthander who struck out 14 Yanks for a new Series record in 1953, probably will work the Fri- day game with either Johnny Pod- res (10-10) or Karl Spooner (8-6) going Saturday. Newcombe prob- ably would be able to come back Sunday with three days rest, pro- vided the best-of-seven series goes to a fifth game. Clem Labine (13- 5) and Don Bessent (8-1) will be the relief men. Sellout Crowd Another big sellout crowd of close to 70,000 was due to jam the S ta d i u m Wednesday. Reserved seats have been sold out for days. However, 14,000 bleacher seats at $2.10 each and standing room in the grandstand at $4.20 each will go on sale Wednesday when the gates open at 8 a.m. CST. The series will be beamed across the nation by network radio (Mu- tual) and television (NBC) to mil- lions of fans. The opening game will start at 11 a.m. CST. Alston's batting order produced no surprises although it did settle Tryouts for freshman and varsity tennis teams will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. for the remain- der of the week at, the varsity courts. -Bill Murphy a question about left field, third base and second base. Junior Gil- liam, who has played second and left, will start in left with Don Zimmer at second and Jackie Robinson, slimmed down about 10 pounds in the last two weeks, will be at third. Mantle Big 'If' The big "if" of the Yankees is Mantle. If he plays, the lineup is pretty well set with Irv Noren in left, Mantle in center and Hank Bauer in right. Joe Collins will be on first, Billy Martin on second and Gil McDougald on third. Sten- gel is torn between Rizzuto and Gerry Coleman for short but is expected to lean toward the vet- eran Scooter. If Mantle can't play, there could be all sorts of changes. Against a righthander, like Newcombe, Nor- en could play center, leaving Bob Cerv or Elston Howard in left. Stengel might even decide to send Collins to rfght field, move Bauer to left and install Eddie Robinson on first. However, Collins still can't run at top speed due to a torn muscle. series Opens On Wednesday NEW YORK (P)--Schedule and starting times of the games in the 1955 World Series (Times are East- ern Standard): Sept. 28, Wednesday, noon, Yan- kee Stadium. Sept. 29, Thursday, noon, Yan- kee Stadium. Sept. 30, Friday, noon, Ebbets Field." Oct. 1, Saturday, noon, Ebbets Field. Oct. 2, Sunday, 1:05 p.m., Eb- bets Field (if necessary). Oct. 3, Monday, noon, Yankee Stadium (if necessary). Oct. 4, Tuesday, noon, Yankee Stadium (if necessary). (All games will be telecast and broadcast nationally). Walker Uncertain ST. LOUIS (RP)-Manager Harry Walker of the seventh-place St.1 Louis Cardinals said Monday he has received no word on his future with the club and "I guess maybe they don't know yet, either." 1 Walker, leaving for his home in Alabama, said he plans to returnr to St. Louis early next month for an organization meeting unless no-1 tified otherwise.Z CARL ERSkINE MICKEY MANTLE ... to start third game ... doubtful starter SURPRISING WEEKEND: Browns, Lions, Bears Upset in NFL Contests Q University of Michigan Students CAMELET BROTHERS WELCOMES YOU BACK! and presents to you the finest in traditional Q ~University clothes and furnishingsa Authorized agents for the following world famous firms 0 ROBERTSON of Scotland 0WELCH-MARGETSON Ltd. 0 LYLE AND SCOTT 0 NORMAN HILTON * SAMRBOOKS of London, IVY LEAGUE pS SPORT JACKETS AND 0 COX AND MOORE * SUITS 0AQUASCUTUM S JOHN ALEXANDER I * J.J.C. DORWOOD Ltd. of New Haven AND THE WORLD'S BEST REPS. Lam+Gete (LrolherPj 1119 South University V TAILORS - CLOTHIERS - FURNISHERS BRITISH & FRENCH IMPORTS I Upsets were the feature attrac- tion last week end on the pro football front. The first slate of the regular National Football League season found the Washington Redskins spilling the world champion Cleve- land Browns while the Green Bay Packers stunned the Detroit Lions and the Baltimore Colts knocked off the Chicago Bears. Lebaron Stars Diminutive Eddie Lebaron led Washington to its stunning 27-17 upset of Cleveland, throwing two touchdown passes, running 13 yards for another six points, and pitching to Leo Halter for 70 yards to set up the final counter. It marked the first time the Skins have beaten the Browns since the champions joined the league in 1950. Lebaron, who played Canadian ball last season, conceded that it was his finest performance in a Redskin uniform and emphasized, "If we can play this way the rest of the year .. . we'll be among the top teams." Cleveland's chagrined head coach, Paul Brown, concurred with Lebaron's statement. "The Red- skins are better this year and we're worse," he commented after seeing his boys suffer their fifth straight contest, including exhibi- tion games. Graham Fails The Browns, with once-retired Otto Graham calling signals, failed to score throughout the first half, and although George Ratterman replaced the ex-Northwestern flash for the final two periods and fired two scoring aerials, little ex- marine Lebaron proved too much for the once-invincible Ohioans. Another score of long standing was settled at City Stadium in Green Bay as Quarterback Tobin Rote led the Packers to their first conquest of Detroit in 12 games, 20-17, in a spine-tingling climax. With less than 20 seconds re- maining, Rote rendered the 22,217 Packer backers breathless by firing an 18-yarder to Gary Knafelc for the six-pointer that started the Wisconsinites off right in the Western Division. The Lions went ahead in the third quarter, 17-13, when Doak Walker booted a 12-yard field goal, the score remaining the same until Rote took charge of the final 80- yard march to pay dirt. The Baltimore Colts startled the Chicago Bears to kick off the new season on a winning note, whipping the Windy City eleven, 23-17, at Baltimore. Alan Ameche, former Wisconsin flash, launched his pro career in brilliant style, bulldozing 79 yards" the first time he carried the ball for a touchdown. His 194 yards rushing represents a new Colt one-game record. Rams Whip 49'ers Another mild upset on the West Coast found the Los Angeles Rams topping the San Francisco Forty- Niners, 23-14, at San Francisco. Touchdowns by Tommy McCor- mick and Porky Taylor plus a safety iced the fray for Frisco in the first half. Saturday night the Philadelphia Eagles downed the New York Giants, 27-17, while the Pittsburgh Steelers, who had to wait until the baseball Pirates vacated Forbes Field, nipped the Chicago Cardin- als in action last night, 14-7. Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results Hre's Your Chance mm II SPECIAL! Official U.S. Navy Type I I