Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1941 — Page 10
By Eddie Ash
INDIANAPOLIS pitchers and catchers start tossing the ball around in the Bartow, Fla., training camp tomorrow under the alert eyes of Skipper Wade Killefer who is
beginning his second hitch as field chief of the Indians. The Tribe batterymen will get in five days of exercise before the
infielders and outfielders report on batting practice artillery.
St. Patrick’s Day to roll out the
Manager Killefer has mapped out a speed-up program without _demanding too much out of the pitchers the first week in camp. . .. They will have to do a lot of running during preliminary training - because the legs and wind are first in his book. In Bartow with Killefer are Owner-President Norman A. Perry Sr., General Manager Leo T. Miller, Secretary Dale Miller and Trainer Al Ritter. . . . Therefore, everything is all set to go in hign
gear and Indianapolis fans will soo
n be reading reports on the ups
~ and downs of the Tribe’s 1941 hopefuls. The Indians will start their exhibition schedule on March 22
against Birmingham at Bartow and open date . . outset of the camp’s opening. The following Redskin hopefuls tomorrow: Pitchers—Don Bayliss,
play 11 straight games before an
. . and this arrangement calls for heavy duty from the
are due to say hello to Bartow
Jack Bastien, William Cox, Edward
Dersch, Glenn Fletcher, Don French, George Gill, Charles Moncrief,
Bill Phoebus, Pete Sivess, Ray Starr, Jake Wade. John Deets is to report
Lee Stuckman, Paul Taylor and later.
Catchers—John Pasek, Albert Lakeman and Bob Matthews.
Indians Were at St. Pete In 1920
THE INDIANS’ first trip to Florida for spring training was in 1920 when they pitched camp at St. Petersburg, . .. The late William
C. Smith owned the club and Jack Hendricks was manager. . .
But
the Indians muffed a grand opportunity by moving elsewhere the
next year
St. Pete swiftly picked up in populatioin and became a choice
spot for big league clubs. . New York Yankees and St. Louis
. . Teams in training there now are tne
Cardinals and their exhibition
games draw the largest crowds in the Sunshine State.
The Hoosiers have trained in
other Florida spots but®none
measured up to St. Pete for gate receipts. . . . The Indians also had a good thing at Sarasota only to move out and permit the Boston Red Sox to snatch it for a permanent base.
8 8 2
#5 a
THE INDIANS once trained in the “Umbrella League,” at May-' field, Ky., where .it rained so often the ball players sprouted web
feet. .
. « Most of the conditioning was indoors, at the town’s gym-
nasium, sincé the ball park was usually under water. - That was one camp in which the boys got plenty of sleep as they
lolled about the hotel between showers. .
to be a lively place for ball clubs trained there in 1926. . . . At one
. » Hot Springs, Ark., used in the spring and the Indians time four clubs were in Vapor
Valley, the Indians, Milwaukee Brewers, Pittsburgh Pirates and Little
Rock of the Southern Association. The Indians and Pirates shared their exhibition games were gems.
the same field for a spell and
Patrick Advocates Streamlining Baseball
THE ZONING of baseball playing fields is advocated by Frank A. Patrick of Montreal, the man who streamlined professional ice
hockey."
Writing in the Montreal Star, J. L. McGowan says Patrick’s baseball plan is not revolutionary, but concerns only the markings on the field, especially the outfield territory; warning lines near fences and grandstand barriers to eliminate or reduce the number of accidents to the game’s most valuable commodity—the player.
” # o
2 ” ”
PATRICK was struck by the notion the diamond sport might be
dressed up somewhat with the use of (A)—To enable spectators to jud
chalk stripes: ge just how far a ball has been
hit or the distance a fielder covers to make a catch or the length of
a throw to nail a runner at a base.
(B)—To make the field more attractive and provide more inter-
est for the fan.
(C)—To afford radio announcers and commentators a better chance to accurately describe the flight of the ball, tell where the
catch was made, where the action positional play pf the outfielders.
took place and to indicate the
; (D)—To reduce the number of accidents caused by players colliding with each other and to minimize the accidents that result from players running against fences and grandstand abutments by the use of warning lines to give players more confidence and assur-
ance of safety in going after balls hit close to these barriers.
(This
applies particularly to games played at night, notably in parks not having the very best in lighting equipment.) (E)—To improve the game as a spectacle by showing players making catches or plays in the various areas and to illustrate more clearly to the fans the defensive maneuvers of the teams.
Greatest Pitche
r of Them
All—the Mechanical Arm
BY HARRY FERGUSON United Press Sports Editor ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 11 (U. P.).—The greatest pitcher the world has ever seen is buzzing ‘em up to the batters here in the camp of the St. Louis Cardinals. This pitcher never has a sore arm. Every pitch is across the plate. There are no arguments with umpires and no hold-outs for more money. It’s a machine that looks like an anti-aircraft gun and will fire baseballs as long as someone will stand there and feed ’em into the slot. This deadly looking contrivance is only nne phase of the new training methods of the once rowdy Gas House Gang. Everything is so scientific and methodical around the camp that any day Manager Billy Southworth may announce that the boys have squared the circle and perfected perpetual motion. It’s a far cry from the days when Pepper Martin, Dizzy Dean and Leo Durocher were the terrors of the National League. The pitching machine is a giant sling-shot operated by electricity. The batter crawls into a wire cage with a round hole in the wire at one end. Through that hole the machine fires baseballs as fast as the batter can strike them. If he wants to practice on fast ball pitching, they step up the speed. If he wants slow balls, they slow it down. President Sam Breadon of the
Bulldogs Will Be Honored by Utes
Members of the 1940-41 Butler University basketball team, which shared its third consecutive Indiana College Conference title this year . with Indiana Central and Evansville, will be honored. tomorrow night at the annual Utes banquet at 6 o'clock in the Campus Club. . Pred G. Winter, instructor in dra‘matics in the English department, will be the principal speaker. Max Wildman, senior class president, will act as toastmaster. Prof. Warren R. Isom, chairman . of the faculty athletic committee, will announce the athletic awards and next year’s team captain will be announced. Paul D. Hinkle, athletic director and coach, also will speak. :
BRUNSWICK BOWLING BALLS
S0c WEEKLY
Cardinals beamed with pride today as a curious crowd surrounded the awesome machine, peering in at the batters much as a child looks at animals through the bars at the 200. “It’s a great thing all right,” Sam said, “but there's a better story than that in this camp. Heard about our vitamins yet?” = The visitor said no. . “Everybody is taking vitamin pills. I'm taking ’em myself and I never felt better in my life. You take three a day and you feel like you could lick the world.” : Ancient Lon Warneke ran the base paths just then and everybody on the Cardinals’ bench watched with admiration as the lanky pitcher turned on a burst of speed. “B-1 vitamins,” they said to one another proudly. “Lonnie couldn’t have done that last year.” Radiating energy from his vitamins, Breagdon. then proceeded to predict that the National League race would be a three-club affair among Cincinnati, Brooklyn and St. Louis. The B-1, he believes, will give his boys the necessary edge to win the pennant. The next step will be to develop
the pitching machine, science marches on.
a means of feeding vitamins to Verily,
Cu bs Tro
01d Meal Check Takes Mound For the Giants
Reds Down Yanks; Rookies Please Peck
AVALON, Cal., March 11 (U. PJ). —The Chicago Cubs continued preparations today for their opening exhibition game with the Philadelphia Athletics at Los Angeles Saturday. (But Manager Jimmy Wilson was worried about negotiations ‘with 'holdouts Bill Lee and Hank Leiber, due for a showdown this week. Another problem was Rookie Lou Novikoff’s growing fondness for the mainland. He failed to show for training duties yesterday.
ORLANDO, Fla. March 11 (U. P.).~-The New York Giants have nominated Carl Hubbell, Cliff Melton and Ace Adams for mound duty against the Washington Senators in their exhibition baseball game scheduled for today. Hal Schumacher, Bill Lohrman and Paul Dean are the likely nominees for mound chores tomorrow,
S17. PETERSBURG, Fla, March 11 (U. P).—The New York Yankees meet their first minor league competitors of the spring season today when they play the Louisville Colonels : The Cincinnati Reds put together a pair of singles by Frank McCormick and Mike Christoff with a walk to. Bobby Mattick for a 3-2 victory over the Yankees yesterday. Billy Werber’s homer with one on provided the first two Reds’ runs..
FT. MYERS, Fla, March 11 (U. P.).— Manager Roger Peckinpaugh of the Cleveland Indians said today that Dewey Adkins, lanky rookie pitcher, made the outstanding impression during the Indians’ three games with the Brooklyn Dodgers in Havana. Peckinpaugh doesn’t expect to use any rookie pitchers in the forthcoming heavy exhibition schedule which begins against the St. Louis Cardinals Thursday, but said he would find a spot for Adkins.
LAKELAND, Fla. March 11 (U. P.) —The “highest salary” squabble between the Detroit Tigers and Cleveland Indians apparently was ended today after an unofficial report that Hank Greenberg, Tigers’ star outfielder, would receive approximately $40,000 this season. Blick Newsom, Detroit pitcher whose $35,000 contract precipitated an announcement from Cleveland that Bob Feller would be “highest paid” hurler, said he didn’t care whether Feller and Greenberg made “even $50,000.”
PASADENA, Cal, March 1l1.— The Chicago White Sox training program was handicapped today by four cripples. Catcher Mike Tresh was suffering from a head injury received in Saturday’s allstar game, Pitchers Bill Dietrich and Thornton Lee developed head colds and Taft Wright was in bed with the flu. Manager Jimmy Dykes awaited results of correspondence between John Rigney, the Sox’ ace pitcher, and the River Forest (111:) Draft Board. Rigney had a low draft number.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla, March 11 (U. P.).—The St. Louis Cardi‘nals resume play in the Grapefruit |League today with an exhibition game with the Boston Red Sox. Manager Billy Southworth picked three right-handers for mound duty —John Pintar, Murray Dickson ats Sam Nahem.
SAN BERNARDINO, Cal, March 11 (U. P.).—Rookie Southpaw Aldon Wilkie, Mace Brown and Russ Bauers were to take the mound today as the Pittsburgh Pirates met Seattle in the first of 31 exhibition games on consecutive days. Dissatisfied with his pitching staff, Manager Frankie Frisch released lefthander John Copple to Harrisburg of the Inter-State League and threat-, ened to make more - drastic changes unless the pitchers improved. The Pirates have lost two of the thiee exhibition games they have played. } ANAHEIM, Cal., March 11 (U. P.). --Another late rally gave the Philadelphia Athletics an exhibition game record of five wins against only one loss today. The A’s came from behind again yesterday to de{feat the Hollywood Stars, 5-3. Hollywood pushed over two runs in the first and one in the eighth. The A’s tabbed two in the sixth and three in the seventh, outhitting the Stars, 8-6. ;
THE INDIAN
ubled by
5
POLIS TIME
I eiber, Loz and No
Betty Bemis
These five Riviera Club lassies, ranging in age from 12 to 18, have their eyes on an assortment of national senior and junior indoor swimming titles and will begin their shopping next week= -end. They will leave Friday, and after a stopover at Columbus, O., for an exhibition, they will compete in the junior championships
Joan Fogle
at Cleveland Saturday night and then =move on. to Buffalo for the senior meet, scheduled from March 19 to 22. . At Cleveland Betty Bemis, Jo Fogle and Patty Aspinall will compete in- the 100-yard free style event, and the Fogle sisters, June .and Joan, and Ann Hardin will make their bids in the 100yard breaststroke event. Fourteen-year-old Patty Aspinall
Ann Hardin
They're Going Shopping for Swimming Titles
June Fogle
will attempt to defend her national senior women’s title in the 220-yard breaststroke on the opening day of the Buffalo meet, Also entered in this event are June Fogel, 14, and Joan Fogle, 12. Eighteen = year - old Betty Bemis and Joan Fogle will compete in the 100-yard backstroke, and Miss Bemis, Joan Fogle and Miss Hardin, who is 16, will vie in
Patty Aspinall
the 300-yard individual medley. Miss Bemis and Joan Fogle also are entered in the 100-yard free style event, while June Fogle and Miss Hardin will compete in the 220-yard and 440-yard free Style events, The Riviera Club also will be represented in the 400-yard and 300-yard medley relays. Bud Sawin, Riviera Club swimming coach, will accompany the team.
Michigan's seven-year reign as university team champion over the Butler Indoor Relays is tottering while three other schools plan a “trip to the cleaners” for the Wolverines when the ninth annual Butler carnival is held Saturday afternoon and night at the Field House. Champions so long they have become a fixed ornament around Relay time, Michigan will be pushed by Indiana, who replaced Michigan last week as Big Ten indoor champions; Notre Dame and Pittsburgh, who finished first and second respectively, last Saturday at the C. C. C. indoor show in South Bend. Ray Sears, Butler coach and. Re-
Londos Grapples Gino Garibaldi
Facing Jim Londos in the Armory wrestling ring tonight is the high-powered and skilled Italian matman; the 221-pound Gino Garibaldi, who touts co... ” triumphs over ae ; just about all of the present-day “big timers” in the mat game. Londos, who generally islist- :° ed as international heavyweight champ, will be showing here for the first time in FE three years and the ‘Greek Gino Garibaldi Adonis” is expected to attract a big crowd. Jim McMillenu, George Zaharias, Danno O'Mahoney, Gus Sonnenberg and Joe Savoldi are a few of the topnotchers who have fallen before Garibaldi and the husky Italian hopes to add Londos’ name to that list. The match is for one fall to a finish. In other tussles, Buck Weaver opposes Whitey Wahlberg, Cal Reese goes against Jack Hader and Harry Kent meets Irish Jack Kennedy.
Smith and Nelson In $3000 Playoff
BELLEAIR, Fla, March 11 (U.
P.).—Horton Smith and Byron Nel-
son, two veteran golfing professionals, meet in an 18-hole playoff
match today for top prize in the $3000 Belleair Open championship. Smith and Nelson tied at the end of the regulation 54 holes yesterday with 206’s. vy Craig Wood, Mamaroneck, N. Y,, and Willie Goggin, Miami, tied for third and won $315 each with 207s. Sammy Snead, Hot Springs, Va. finished fifth with 208. : :
GRAY, GRIBBEN & GRAY
103 N. linois St.
tiny fingers, John will take the
in St. Paul, Minn., March 16.
’
J -
Youngest Kegler of Them All
‘Youngest entrant in 41-year history of the American Bowling Congress is 3-year-old John Edward Zager of Chicago Heights. Just topping the tenpins in height, and using a duckpin ball drilled for his tournament lanes seeking national honors. . He bowls at the ABC meet
I. U., Irish, Pitt Might Take Relay Champs to Cleaners
lay director, believes that keen competition in the individual events and Hoosier supremacy in the relay
.| events will relegate Michigan to sec-
ond or third position Saturday night. In the relay races, worth 10 points to the first finisher, Indiana is a heavy favorite to annex three championships, while Michigan’s one-mile combination of Bob Barnard, Jack Dobson, Alfred Thomas and Bob Ufer is expected to set a new Butler indoor record. Michigan will be very much overshadowed in the individual events. Schools sharing points in these six events will add to the team power of Indiana. Pittsburgh's Bill Carter and Harold Stickel and Butler's Ray Alsbury are strong favorites for 60-yard-dash honors. Carter is detending champion. Jim Delaney of Notre Dame and Archie Harris of Indiana are contenders for the 16pound iron shot title. Ohio State's Bob Wright and Michigan Normal’s Charles Hlad are two of the best hurdlers in the Middle West. If Roy Cochran of Indiana is entered in these events, he will become a definite contender. The pole vault is expected to present the best competition in recent Relay carnivals.
Hunt Is Best.
Nebraska's Harold Hun{, who cleared 13 feet 10%; inches at the Illinois meet this year, is the premeet favorite, although Doyle Rhcades and Maurice Jessup of Pittsburgh and Charles Decker of Michigan have been coat - tailing Hunt's vaults. Keith O'Rourke, Notre Dame sophomore, and Capt. Don Canham of Michigan loom as the two outstanding high jumpers. Canham is defending champion. The three-year hold Butler has retained upon the college teain championship also is expected to be lost and won this time by Michigan Normal. Coach L. W. Olds will bring but six men, yet his group is favored to win. His two-mile and distance medley relay teams are defending champions. The same men run both races and three are veterans from last year. With Hlad
sure to place .in both hurdle events,| .
the Ypsilanti runners may win easily. = Nine More Enter
Nine more schools became a, part of the Relays yesterday as their entry blanks were received, boosting the total number to 22 schools ‘and 269 individuals.: Several entries are expected yet this afternoon. VYesterday’s entries included Pittsburgh, Nebraska, Ball State, Prairie View College, Ohio University, Earlham, DePauw, Michigan Normal and Drake University. Butler University officials predict a sell-out attendance for the championships, Saturday night at: 8 o'clock. Elimination in the hurdles, dash and shot-put will be held Saturday afternoon. A. S. Kendall, acting bursar and director of ticket sales, announced today that all box seats have been sold. Only 300 unreserved seats remain unsold. The advance ticket sale will close tomorrow at noon, at which time general
| admission tickets ‘will be sold at
$1.10 instead of the advance sale of 85 cents. for $1.65. They may be purchas today for $1.15. .
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Zimmer Named I. U. Captain
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. March 11 (U. P.)—Andrew (Red) Zimmer, junior guard from Kentland, was named captain of ‘the 1941-42 Indiana University basketball team at a winter sports banquet last night. Bob Dro, stellar guard of Berne, was selected honorary captain of the team which closed its season last week, while Bill Menke of Huntingburg was named the most valuable player, Also at the banquet Rober: Antonacci, Hammond, was chosen honorary captain of this year’s wrestling team. He holds the National Collegiate title in the 121-pound class.
Layden Honored At Notre Dame
SOUTH BEND, Ind., March 11 (U. P.).—More than 400 persons last night honored Elmer Layden at a civic testimonial for the former Notre Dame University football coach. Layden’s seven years of tutelage were reviewed by the Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, C. S. C., vice-president of Notre Dame. The former mentor resigned his post to become commissioner of the National Professional Football League. Layden introduced his successor, Frank Leahy, formerly of Boston College,
Amateurs
BASEBALL The Lebanon baseball team under the management of Stan Sutphin, 228 Madison Ave., Anderson, Ind. would like to book state teams for Sunday afternoon games.
Ten teams have entered the EmRoe Church tournament to be held at School 9, March 17-18-20-21. The first sixteen teams to enter will close the tournament. Church managers wanting to enter their teams are requested to phone Everett Babb at Li. 3446.
SOFTBALL : The first meeting of the BushFeezle Softball Association will be held tomorrow at 7:45 p. m. at the Bush-Feezle store. Teams interested in playing night softball at the Softball Stadium or Twilight Softball on the city parks should attend this meetinig. For further information call Ri. 4443. i
Billiard Champ
SCRANTON, Pa., March 11 (U. P.) —~Onofrio Lauri of Scranton, ran off a new high of 127 for the billiard season last night in defeating Joe Procito of Boston, 125-127 in the ' World's Championship Pocket Billiards League.
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Box: Seats, §1.25—Reserved Grandstand, $1.00—Grandstand, 80c.
Announce Tech
High Schedules
Tech's 1941-1942 basketball schedule, released yesterday by Athletic Director R. V. Copple, shows that the Greenclads will play seven games on the home floor and eight in foreign territory. In addition, Tech will be host to the city tourney January 15, 16 and 17, One open date remains to be filled. Tech will play Howe. High School as a regularly scheduled game, the first time in the history of the two schools. Basketball Schedule . 28 at Washington, . 29—Howe. at Kokomo.
t New Castle. Cathedral.
2 a . 13 . 20—Frankf
2 . 2
5 2 1
ort.
WIIG EC. . 2 at Rushville. + 3=—Richmond.
. 9 at Logansport. . 15, 16, &ity tournament,
. 23 at Lafayette. . 30 at Muncie. . 6 at Southport. . T=Marion. . 14—Anderson, « 21=—Open. Football Schedule
Sept. 19—Southport. Sept. 26 at Lafayette,
go. 3—Muncie. ct. 10 at Anderson, Manual.
0 6Nov. 14—Shortridge.
Gallon or Florimel
GOSHEN, N. Y.,, March 11 (U. P.). —Bill Gallon, a colt, and Florimel, a filly, stand one-two in the spring books here at 2-1 and 3-1 respec-
tively to win the 1941 Hambletonian Stakes, richest purse in harness racing.
|Aces Lose Ist Game of the
a wh a.
N.LB. Tourney
Almost - Uninvited Squad Triumphs
KANSAS CITY, Mo. March 11 (U. P.).—St. Marys College of Winona, Minn. unseeded and ale most uninvited to the National In« tercollegiate Basketball Tourna= ment, today was the tournament's first giant killer. St. Mary's knocked off the defending cham« pion, Tarkio (Mo.) College last night, 38 to 28. j irst round victories were won by, teams from Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Texas and North Caro lina. Eight games today and to« night will complete the first round, and halve the starting field of 32 teams. St. Mary's finished in second place in its Minnesota conference and only got into the tournament because the winner waived its right to enter. The starting team played the entire game, putting up a de« fense that Tarkio could not punce ture. Offensively, yesterday's standout was Texas Wesleyan of Fort Worth, a “run-shoot-run” quintet whicle turned in a 71 to 62 victory over Evansville (Ind.) College. Paced by Jack Thornton, a fast guard, the Texans paid complete attention to their opponents’ goal, and almost none of their own, Evansville shot at will, but missed enough baskets to win half a dozen games. Evansville’s Wilford Doern« er was the day's high scorer, with 27 points, despite the loss. West Texas State of Canyon, the tallest entry, broke the tournaments scoring record with a T7 to 39 vice tory over an outclassed Dubuque University quintet. Delta State of Cleveland, Miss. put up a strong zone defense against Sioux Falls, S. D., and coasted to a 52 to 35 win. Culver-Stockton of Canton, Mo., and Maryville (Mo.) Teachers ran into hard competitors and only su perior height brought them through, Maryville defeated Dakota Wesleyan of Mitchell, S. D,, 35 to 31. Culver= Stockton pulled away late to defeat Texas Mines of El Paso, 40 to 26. - Appalachian State of Boone, N, C., beat Baker University of Bald win, Kas., 63 to 42.
Golden Gloves
In Semi-Finals
NEW YORK, March 11 (U, P.).—= The tournament of champions, fea turing Golden Gloves champions from 14 eastern cities, moves inta the semi-final stage tonight withy 24 bouts in Madison Square Garden, Results of the first 56 bouts held at the Coliseum last night, in the elimination which eventually des termines ‘eastern finalists to meefi western titlists in the annual intere city clash at Chicago stadium, March 26.
WRESTLING
ARMORY—Tues., March 11—8:30 P. M.
mw LONDOS WEF Vs. svoGaribaldi "RY -—3 OTHER BOUTS— Prices—General
Admission, 60c: Re- ; Ringside, $1.50. All Tax Paid. Tickets at Haag’s Claypool Hotel Prag, Store and Lemcke Service Shop, 108 E. Market. ~—HERCULES A. C.—
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