Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1940 — Page 20
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WHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1940
Bimelech Can Lose— Other ‘Good Things’ Have
Big Lom Pricks Help Your Golf Game—No. 4 Winn Thinks Brooklyn's | With Woods It's Power and Control—Nelson Back and Does
Big Bubble " Some Advising
Homer With 3 On Puts ‘Spokane Once Defeated Him in Good Graces An Unbeatable in ’89
(More Derby News, Page 22)
By Eddie Ash
THE SPORTS situation was back to normal today. J Cincinnati snapped Brooklyn's winning streak, the Yankees beat the Browns, the Athletics spanked Cleveland and rain threatened the Kentucky Derby. Rabble rousers of two weeks ago who scolded base-
ball for playing games in April ducked into a shell as May
] arrived With a mixture of rain, cold and snow. . . . That “two weeks ater” sermon rolls off a weatherman like peas off a knife. n Early season winning streaks are great while they last, but they have been known to react and explode like firecrackers. The inneapolis team of 1931 won nine of its 12 games on its first swing through the Eastern end of the American Association. The 1931 Millers won those nine games in a row and then went home to lose nine in a row, no less. Tom Sheehan, the Millers’ current manager, thinks only in terms of high finance. . . Gloating over his team’s early season success, Long Tom has placed a “tentative” price of $150,000 on his pony battery of Southpaw Mickey Haefner and Catcher Russ Roland-
Son. . . . He figures that Rolandson alone should be worth $100,000 at the end of the season.
Giants Need Hometown Talent Scout
MAURICE HARRIS furnishes the newest evidence that the Giants Soa use a talent scout who knows a young ball player when he sees Mickey Harris, the wiry southpaw who won his first two games for the Red Sox, comes from Queens Village, right across the river . Not far from Belmont Park, New York. Harris, who has been in professional ball only two years, spent two months at the Polo Grounds in the summer of 1937 trying to convince Bill Terry and his then coach, Tom Clarke, he could pitch. Frank McCormick resides near tlie Polo Grounds. . . He was let Giant fan, but after taking a look at him, Terry advised C cCormick to stick with his job as a shipping clerk in an antique And Giles Was Right Colonel saw his first Derby in 1875
shop. | i : Two years ago ths six-foot, four-inch McCormick took his place | There are many ramifications to : —and that was the first Derby—he among the great first basemen. . . . He has led the National League |Lombardi's grand-slam homer, For warned me never to believe that In total hits the past two campaigns, and in 1939 showed ghe way in la time last winter it seemed that : any horse was a sure thing in the runs batted in with 128 in helping the Reds to their first pennant in the lumbering Cincinnati catcher _ Dick Nelson emphasizes that you should get a good At the top of the backswing Derby. 20 years, ah § {might be wearing a Brooklyn uni- turn with the hips and shoulders on wood shots. Here the shoulders and hips have ’ Terry still isn't sure he has a first baseman. [form himself this season, returning is the position at address, with the hips and shoulders been turned freely. The club is - to the club he played for when virtually parallel to the intended line of flight. being held firmly.
By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 2.—The sleeping giant rose in all his might and smashed Brooklyn's dream of a perfect season. Not far from the spot where he sprawled last October while Yankee runners raced across the plate in the fatal fourth World Series game, Erie Lombardi came out of his coma yesterday and dealt a crushing blow to the Dodger juggernaut. The big Cincinnati catcher slugged out a home run with the bases loaded, a stroke which popved Brooklyn's bubble of [invineibility. Lombardi’s four master sparked lan eight-run inning in which the [Reds routed Hugh Casey and ended |. {the Dodgers’ winning streak at nine straight. Bucky Walters, last! |season’s “player of the year,” inflicted the first defeat on the high | flying Dodgers, holding them to six| scattered hits to win his third] straight game.
By HENRY M'LEMORE United Press Staff Correspondent
LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 2. —I am no bloodhound of a reporter, and there are tens of thousands with better noses for news, but even to me it was obvious that the best source of information on the Kentucky Derby was Col. Matt Winn. So I went to see the Colonel sunk deep in an old leather chair, in his office in a wing of Churchill Downs that commands a view of the
turn into the stretch. Over a glass of bourbon that must have dated back to the day the
Note that the shoulders and hips have made nearly a complete turn from the top of the back swing to the top of the follow-through.
‘Nothing Is Sure’
“Everybody says Bimelech is un=
» beatable now,” Col, Winn said,- “bus
HIS PLAY with the Gastonia. N. 1932-33 earned John Kelly Lewis Jr. trip with the Giants in "34. Terry told Buddy Lewis he was too slow and lacked pep. . Lewis has batted from 291 to .319 for Washington for four seasons. He switched from third base to right field this spring to make room for Cecil Travis, who moved over from shortstop when Jimmy Pofahl checked in. y Terry would have been in sorry straits for a third baseman this spring had not Burgess Whitehead shaken off completely the effects of last year’s nervous breakdown.
Harris Tired of Pitching Batting Practice
BUT TO GET back to the 22-year-old Mickey Harris, who so quick= ly took his place as a starting pitcher for the Red Sox. “All I ever got to do at a sort of school the Giants conducted in the mornings at the Polo Grounds was pitch batting practice,” says Harris. Sometimes Terry would show up, sometimes he wouldn't. “I finally quit and went back to pitching amateur ball. I pitched for the Bellair Civics in the Queens Alliance League. That was where Jack Egan, the Red Sox scout, picked me up.” Last year with Scranton, Harris led the Eastern Teague with 17
victories and only four defeats . . . topped all rivals with 147 strike outs
C.. American Legion All-Stars in a six weeks’ trial and a Western
{he first came up. Brooklyn was | willing to trade Catcher Babe Phelps
By J. E. O'BRIEN
{to the Reds even up for Lombardi, |but the Dodgers would go no farther | than that. Warren C. Giles, Reds’| business manager, rejected the (offer. “We can’t trade Lombardi on | that basis,” said Giles. “We have tv have more for him. He's the] kind of a ball player who can come! back to Cincinnati and break your heart.” | | What Giles had in mind is exactly! what happened yesterday when Big Schnozzola hit his devastating home| run wallop. Now Lombardi is back in the good graces of Cincinnati | fans, who thought big Lom’s career might end tragically as a result of | the World Series incident. When the Dodgers blew up, they | 'did it completely and thoroughly. They had held the Reds hitless and | runless for 12 straight innings—Tex |
| |
WITH THE WOOD clubs of golf —the driver, brassie and spoon—the one goal is to hit the ball as hard and straight as possible. That's why Digk Nelson, Meridian Hills professional, thinks
you can't put too much stress on simultaneous power and control. Nelson doesn’t advocate many hard and fast rules to get this power and control. He's willing to allow Mr. Duffer his choice in several fundamentals. On grip, for instance, he says there is a number of correct styles. “You must find one suited to your hands,” he explains. “But the main point is to have your hands lined up with the club face, keep-
ing them together so they can work as a unit.” He believes you'll find the square stance the best suited for wood shots. Your body then will be parallel with the direction of the hole. “Take a stance in which your feet are far enough apart so you are well braced and still able to turn your body freely,” Nelson recommends. “Tee the ball a little ahead of the center of your stance.” Teeing the ball too far off the left foot tends to start the club back too much on the outside, putting the club at the top of the swing in a position that makes for cutting across the ball at impact. “In starting the club on the backswing, make the clubhead,
wood shots, the clubhead should be swung straight through the ball for at least six inches.” Here again Nelson stresses that the shoulders should make a free turn. “To hit hard with wood clubs, you must learn to keep good control of the club with your hands and learn to balance well,” he said. The big fault in playing wood clubs, Nelson pointed out, is the tendency to hit the ball too soon. This can be remedied by remembering to keep the clubhead low on the backswing and to let the shoulders and hips do their share of the work.
NEXT — Long irons, by Chuck Garringer.
your hands, arms and shoulders move together, keeping the clubhead low and in an almost straight line back from the ball for about six inches. Make it a swing and not a lift, push or drag” Nelson suggests.
Like the other professionals who have been interviewed in this series, Nelson puts plenty of emphasis on getting a good free turn with your shoulders and hips. “Keep the club firmly in your hands on the backswing,” is his advice, “and don’t let it drop below the horizontal. Start the club down in the same arc as that of the backswing, making the club, hands, arms and shoulders move together as the clubhead speeds up coming through the ball. “On the follow-through with
I won't believe it till his number and his price go up on the board under the official sign. As long ago as 1889—or 51 full years—I learned that nothing is sure on a race track. Because it was in 1889 that Proctor Knott was thought to be so invincible that the mention of any other horse brought jeers and hoots and all the other standard forms of derision. He was even more of a standout than Bimelech is today. “You must know what happened. A thing called Spokane—on which I bet $100, which is the most I ever have bet on any race—won it easy, Back of the bams, Spokane’s traine er had brought him along. No shouting, no great times in worke outs, no dazzling past performances, in fact, no advance notice of any sort. Spokane was just another
horse.” As a Bimelech supporter of the
He is not a big fellow at 5 feet 11 and weighing 167 pounds, but he has the speed, a crackling curve and poise .
Eddie Collins, Frank Frisch, Waite Hoyt, Lou Gehrig, Mule Haas, Tony Cuccinello, Hank Greenberg, Joe Medwick, Johnny Murphy, Bill Jurges, Buck McCormick, Buddy Hassett, Harry Eisenstat, Marius Russo, Phil Rizzuto and some more also were developed in the New York area. It just might be a good idea for the Giants to take a look around at home. :
Baseball at a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
RESULTS YESTERDAY yes. Lost
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION No games scheduled.
Minneapolis INDIANAPOLIS ........ § Kansas City thr hhanay Louisville Toledo St. Paul .. Milwaukee Columbus
IBBRA-
AMERICAN LEAGUE won Ront
Cleveland Boston Fess Ababa Detroit "shear shane ¥ Washington % St. Louis
New York ! Philadelphia ........... 3
hicago cahbeniur 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE
«33 Cleveland 333 Philadelphia .....
Allen, Zuber, | Potter and Hayes
Detroit 102 820 230-10 10 4 Washington . 300 130 000— TT RO
St. Louis Pittsburgh Philadelphia Boston
Other games postponed;
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New York at St. Louis. Entries for the 28th 500-Mile R - nrries or e ne un i One of Shaw's chief foreign wreats will be the combination of | Sisto} Mgtor Raul Riganti, South American pilot, | vm and his eight-cylinder Maserati. cr 3 Like Shaw's car, this one also is a 253 » Al supercharger and burns alcohol in- | 253 stead of gasoline. | ao Two other Maseratis have been! Sy entered by Mrs. O'Reilly Schell, | 181 y American widow living in France, | Susy and she has informed Speedway! 182! officials that she is attempting to 9 . have two French race drivers re- | 179.2 lieved from military service to pilot 268+ the cars. 257.2 Fastest of the Alfa Romeos is 183* that entered by Wharton Dewart 255 Motor Racing, Inc. organized by 270 two young New York sportsmen, 180.395* Richard Wharton and Thomas De180.395* wart. They purchased the car from 270.2 Raymond Somer, star French driver 183* now serving with the military on 262 the Western Front.
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Cyls. ENTRANT — Joe Marks Lou Moore, Inc. Lou Moore, Inc. Bill White Racing Cars, Ine. Merril Williams Leon Duray Wheeler's Lunch Boyle Racing Hdqtrs. Boyle Racing Hdqtrs. Boyle Racing Hdqtrs. Sampson Motors, Inc. Bill White Kelly Petillo Eddie Offutt Eddie Offutt Ed. Walsh Raul Riganti Frederick A. Surber Phil Shafer Anthony Gulotta Frank T. Griswold Jr. Russell Snowberger Paul Weirick Murrell Belanger Bowes Racing, Inc. Joe Marks Joe Lencki Joe Lencki Harry Hartz Wharton-Dewart Mot. Rac, Inc. Joe Thorne, Inc. Joe Thorne, Inc. Ted Nowiak—Carl Magnee W. C. Winfield Bob Wilke Walt Woestman Wilbur Shaw Mrs. Lucy O'Reilly Schell Mrs. Lucy O'Reilly Schell V. H. Phillips Frank Briske Elgin Piston Pin Co. Marty Keller Hollis A. Cheesman Wm. A. Schoof
DRIVER Duke Nalon, Chicago Cliff Bergere, Hollywood, Cal. Mauri Rose, Columbus, O. Harry McQuinn, Indianapolis M. (Doc) Williams, Franklin, Ind. Sam Hanks, Los Angeles Unnamed Wilbur Shaw, Indianapolis Ted Horn, Los Angeles Chet Miller, Detroit Bob Swanson, Los Angeles Joie Chitwood, Topeka, Kas. Kelly Petillo, Los Angeles Unnamed G. Barringer, Wichita Falls, Tex. Unnamed Raul Riganti, Argentina Shorty Cantion, Detroit Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Russ Snowberger, Detroit Unnamed Emil Andres, Chicago Rex Mays, Glendale, Cal. T. Hinnershitz, Reading Pa. mnamed . OT: San Bernardine, Cal. Melvin Hansen, Los Angeles Unnamed Joe Thorne, Tucson, Ariz. 7 med DN Terre Haute, Ind. Ralph Hepburn, Los Angeles Tony Willman, Milwaukee Unnamed Unnamed Unnamed Tanam hime Phillips, Los Angeles Frank Brisko, Chicago amed nd Martinson, Denver, Col. Henry Banks, Royal Oak, Mich.
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Carleton’s nine perfect rounds wore. Hi h * S d E d C L d D P C ter bef the first t thi fay an asey’s three score- t - m Tt water before the first water, this vay DE er Bill| CW 1g in pee Xpec ¢ Oo eq er e aquw Oo es oO gave me pause. Did Col. Winn, I Werber touched off the dynamite. | B | D o reasoned to myself, have a mystery He opened the fourth with a double. | ¢ » u & r 1Q m Oo n 0 ay horse up his sleeve, so to speak? Then the Reds filled the bases and | S nter ace i . ; : Got a Long Shot? Lombardi delivered his blow. | DePauw University, co«eader today. Steiner, a pitcher for the : | with Manchester in the current In-| , Being a forthright soul, I asked y n { [last two seasons for Coach Tony|, . °°. : Werber Homers | 'diana collegiate baseball conference | pei 10 has been plavin second | BIO if he did. As a matter of fact, Later Werber, up for the second A new high In speed in this year’s 500-mile race ‘was predicted race, was scheduled to play Butler! yoo paying |I looked up his blue serge sleeve time. hit a homer. | today with the nomination of 47 cars for the Memorial Day event. University this afternoon on the base. Meyel Haack was expected to myself. There was nothing there Pete Coscarart hit his third homer ! Included in this field which will bid for the 33 starting positions [Fairview diamond. Yesterday's do the receiving. except normal sleeve equipment. So, in three games one of the two runs are 39 American-made speed buggies and eight Italian machines. Al- [rains may force postponement of| Tomorrow afternoon the DePauw When I left him I turned to the | h de off Walters | though the entry list closed at midnight last night, the Speedway [the game. : tennis team will meet Butler in the [record books to see if Proctor Knott ma Boston Red Sox’ power ele | Office still awaited any nominations that may have been mailed before| The Bulldogs were to seek their | Fieldhouse. The golf team, winner | were the only “good thing,” who had i ar o 0s oR : Ito 3 Bowe lace that time. | third victory in seven starts. They of four of five matches played to|missed on Derby day at the Downs. valen ho Re de pid c ron. |. The return of big scale interna- two cars, one of which he will drive won over Wabash in their opener date, meets Earlham at Richmond,| It was amazing to find how many tie with Clevelan ~ oD ge atory | tional competition was hailed in a | himself. 'and stopped Indiana University last Saturday. The track team will|great horses had failed in the run lin’s club sluggeq ou Re We Ly | statement from T. E. (Pop) Myers,| Miller and Swanson are two of Monday while losing to St. Joseph, round out the week's sport schedule |for the horseshow of Derby roses. {over the White Sox. Cronin TOVE | Spedeway general manager, when | the drivers injured in the three- Purdue, Earlham and Wabash in for the university by traveling to| So, be careful of wagering on In four runs himself. Jimmy FOXX | the entry list was released. He car wreck last year in which Floyd another tilt. (Kalamazoo, Mich, to meet West- Saturday's winner. Be careful that hit homer No. 5, a drive of more guid: “It is seldom that Ameri- | Roberts, the 1938 winner, was fa-| Lyle Neat or Jerry Steiner were ern State Teachers in a dual en-|you don't wager on anything but . AMERICAN LEAGUE than 450 feet, one of the longest of cans are pleased when a foreigner tally injured. to get the starting pitching role gagement. Bimelech. He is that much the best, 00 Si 010 110 000—3 5 o his career. Lefty Grove weakened | comes over and shows us he can do | New York . 310 010 00x35 9% @ in the fifth and Rookie Herb Hash | anything superior to us in the field | Pearson and Dread: Harris and Susee; relieved him, allowing only one hit./of sport. Yet the victory of an | Gua s —. Nelson Potter pitched the Phila-|Italian car in the 1939 race was a | I Shicage os 4s re 3} 2 delphia Athletics to a 5-1 triumph | fortunate happening for racing en8) Eaves. Appleton, Werland and Tresh, OVer Cleveland. Ray Mack’s homer | gineers on this side of the water. | 44] Turner; Grove, Hash and Desautels. was the only run off him. Wally| “The ending of American race | FREE 001 oo soo) 3 » Moses and Bob Johnson hit homers | car supremacy after two decades in - #00 111 02x35 11 0 for the A's, and Benny McCoy the 500-mile race has stimulated Dobson and Hemsley; smacked two doubles. | the building of higher-performing GET YOR FREE . M 9 “= motors in this country. This year's | onte Wins for Yanks test will be more difficult for the BRAKE CHECK TODAY! { : ; { 3 ; , 0 . ; Monte Pearson got the Yanks| foreign cars, and I am looking for- | ’ alt Tee Sao SESE NRE fsa N , Ne : . . ! It t cost t to let 3% | worth. Carrasquel, Masterson, Kravaustas back on the winning track with a| Ward to the fastest speed test in check your brakes. it they reed ad: : /’ 100 and eel ATIONAL LEAGUE 5 hit, 5-3 victory over the St. Louis | the history of the ‘500’. Justing, love wit you get wits, our 2 33 meosutyn ~... 900 011 po0—2 ¢ o Browns. The Yanks slapped Eldon| Two former Speedway winners | BRAKE SPECIAL » mea (Cincinnati ......."_. 000 500 lox—9 8 © Auker for three runs in the first are back seeking places and prizes | (ONE WEEK ONLY) y) i GAMES TODAY | prasey, Mungo. Tamulis and Franks, and were never headed. The vic-|in this year's contest. 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