Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1941 — Page 31

L

bases on balls

Iron Man Ray BA Takes Mound

Again Sunday

(Continued from Page 30)

FRIDAY, APRIL 25 1041 i 'Golf Championships Are Won on d, Winner of the Masters

Says

| ! | 1} \

10;

wild ‘pitches, none. |

on

thick answer is ine ‘physical and determi rorkhorse at 3¢ a

rE

Oral Hildebrand opposed yesterday and cc Tribeste three hits in €r two coming in the

Orand was solved f

eighth r eight

Hilde

aa 1

114d NOL mab

r. Ray held the Apostles to i Fa \ nh

seven innings, the oth-|

in any Starr's condi- | : nation. |

‘elishes | SN

Starr | the |

ch =

n

Hilde. |

blows in

s and then stepped aside

LAC

een ty ee, Sta

the

arveq

fanned IT fanned

Saints

Visitors tried ‘the

S11 H abd nS. aouble stea] wit} ress on

Bauer on f bluffed a thre ting it of between third a easy out The Redskins In the first

beat o a

Catcher

CU!

Kress

was t

broke the iC "ri 1 ice inning. Bla <ientara's s

the rat

third and

Pasek

0 second with Starr

rapped

nd home and was an |

SCONE

ckburn

8 | t an chas gy

COT Wow Craig Wood putted in 1953, when Penny Shute defeated Yim in British Open plavofy,

e ‘eight

Y t

nd the ball salary whip backfirec Joe Bestud yesterday and got along &

meg

in throwing

the field bv start

two

n & four

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26-28 E. Wash. St.

imeup on injury receive; ~pw YORK, April 25.—A golfer O06 muce

and his

1K, rookie, played third

1 right in

of our colorful sport slacks in the mew browns, tans, blues and

Winner of Masters’ Tournament and Golf's Foremost Teacher

sack-

must hole two and three-foot putts |

to win a major tournament {| A slip on the green erases any advantage & player may enjoy on a| hole or whatever ground has been| made up by the finest recovery shot. | My putting style used to be sim-| : ilar to that of Paul Runyan. I bent | the body a lot. had the feet apart and putted off the left foot. My | A grip was the same as on the other, the Vardon over-iapping 1 OW straighter, my are closer together and I play bal he center. I employ the reverse overlapping grip The blade of my putter 1s square to the line of the putt It is kept close to the carpet Mm | the backswing and follow through { Until IT won the Masters’ Tournament this spring, 1 was referred to as a hard-luck player. I built a reputation as & runner-up erratic putting probably cost me { the British Open plavoff with Denny Shute at St. Andrews in 1938, feats approaching miracles by opponents | really deprived me Of eternal credit the records I lost the National Open of 3% | and the Masters’ of '35 because opponents holed approach shots of

h be-

double

-game s closhe In-

May NS

shots stand feet in putting.

the

mn a deuce on both occasions—that

Nelson and Gene Sarazen.

Nelson, current P. 'G. A.

tional Open crown 210 vards out.

pin

lifted Had Nelson shot par on

¥ | final putt ro tie him aghin.

t wood shot for a double eagle on| | the 485-vard 15th hole of the Ay-| little Greg Rice of Notre Dame will|

Winner of Masters’ Tournament emplovs reverse overlapping grip

more than 200 vards in length for on the 38th hole

title- | holder, holed a No. 1 iron shot on! game through 36 holes of qualify- [Gene Littler, Nebraska's the 4th hole of the Philadelphia ing play, but also every second durWhile Country Club's Spring Mill course ing five long match play rounds in our second playoff for the Na-| This remarkable shot was hit from | change my putting stvle The ball came tO rest against the cent Masters’. I putted better than Tt dropped in when the flag was)

the ~

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ Greens,’ (1000 Athletes Ready for Drake Relays

P.—Star performers among

ced & half dozen records ss the

Drake Relays opened today.

high jump and 100-yard dash were due for changes as tracksters from 60 schools went all-out before an

audience expected to number 10,000 both today and tomorrow. Oldest of the records considered likely to fall were in the high jump, where Harold Osborne of Tilinois set & mark of 6 feet 6 inches in 1922, and in ‘the 100-yard dash, where the 9.5 seconds run by Roland (Gipper) Locke of Nebraska has stood since 1926. | Texas University was favored to | set & new mark in the university |

} | | |

| Sprint ‘medley today. The Long- | horns, led by Billy Seay and CoCaptain Fred Ramsdell,

running the distance in 3:24 this

spring at Austin Relays. Against] them will be pitted fast outfits sjlow a run in Any of the spring from Michigan, Ohio State, Douis- {raining games We pitched, kept up,

{| Wool now stands more erect, his

oget | lana State and Nebraska | Ru . Her. We Wiews wh { Jack Hughes of

| Blozis of Georgetown sunk ‘my | finals in As it| holder of

I believe I would have

| strokes behind. {attempt to better the world's outSarazen sank a 220-vard, No. 4 door mark of 57 feet 1% inches

| | gusta National course. He finished Tun & mile and a half against an lin par to tie me at 282, and took invited former college foursome of the playOSt. |John MNunski, Missouri; Forrest Denny Shute turned th & tourth- | Fffaw, Oklahoma A & M, and Ralph round miraculous TS th A terrific | Schwartzkopf, Michigan. Rice will gale to tie me at 202 for the British en. os had at least a half-dozen three- [oT the high jump Saturday, Don DULL TEENS . + . iS several ShOTt [rep Oklahoma A & M: Dub | ones | Notre Dame, and Captain Don Cancahinte BASE oes 4h a, car, al have Betern | £ Dae, | OSDOTIIE'S Mark i G A. Championship in Buffalo The 100-vard preliminaries today in 34, but the Little Man a Che] ill draw a half dozen of America's | Big Spoon pulled them on ot ; ¢ | fastest sprinters since Jesse Owens bag and sank a 12-footer to prevail tied Lock's mark in 1985 and Ralph Metcalfe equalled it in 1932 Louisiana State's Billy Brown and

{two and three-mile laurels

«| Tommy Armour calls the P. G

I was In distinguished company | A. the toughest tournament to cop.| Texas’ Carleton Terry—have been of Byron

All entrants are topnotchers. [timed in 094 this spring. Their There is no time for laggard golf. [competition with Leo Tarrant A player must not only be on his/dusky Alabama State College ace. hope for another Gipper; Fred Ramsdell of | Texas and Myron Piker of NorthThe result of my British Open | Vestern—all of whom have been timed in 095 or :096-—may pro[duce a new record. | Putts dropped for me in the re-| re

| plavoft with Shute caused me to

Kovacs Wins HOUSTON, Tex, April 25 (U. P)

I had in two years Golf championships are won on the greens NEXT: No. § wood and irons, singles crown of the annual Oaks tennis tournament.

River

| Lightning-Fast Track Ready | For 3000 Penn Relay Men

ay

“J

PHILADELPHIA, April

iskies greeted 3000 of the nation's Quaker {track and field athletes today as | championship { they began their bids for Penn Relay i championships

Twenty-eight events,

annual camival 1 &

Ww row o® ® to cop the carnival championship holder in the shot put. and was the choice to win two of | ree major Stakes today, the | nee and sprint medleyvs. North | xas State and New York Univer. loomed as the Hoosiers’ outstanding rivals i The huge red brick stadium sur- | rounding Franklin Field was a blaze of color as the athletas tuned up for the start of the meet Lawson Robertson, the canny Scot who has guided University of Penn- | {sylvania track fortunes 25 years, | {watched the array of talent with] particularly envious eves. It's been! isix lean years Since Penn won a title at its own meet and the bumcrop which turned out from

at in

OF BRAND NEW

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FIRST QUALITY

pel

Top Bowlers Roll Tonight

ST. PAUL, Mian, April 2% (U \ P) —Joe Wilman of Chicago, 1939 gll-events champion: Adolph Carl | son of Chicago, Earl Shepherd of | Kansas City, and Charles Tierney of Kansas, all nationally-known | bowlers, lead entries in the five- | man event at the American Bowling Congress tonight Carlson is rated bv many A. B.C followers as. one of the greatest bowlers of all time, and Shepherd is a veteran star of Midwest meets In Thursday's competition, Vern Anderson, Cambridge, Wis., added (games Of 215, 258 and 239 to take | seventh place In singles With a { tournament record doubles game of 512, Anderson hitting 244 and Hoffman 268. Low-to-cash at the start of today's play were: Five-man, 2626; doubles, 1107; singles, 568, and all- | events, 1781. Standings of five leaders in each division were unchanged SIZE

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(U.P). [colleges throughout the mation left at the Greenfield Fairgrounds Track {-—A lightning fast track and clear him little hope that a mediocre Sunday on the program besides the squad would oapture

Only two special events were on|the cars are lined in single file ortoday's program but early indica-|der with the fastest cars in the last meluding | tions were that the contests would | positions, Whenever a car is passed

| three American relay championships pe strictly between Jimmy Delaney (by a faster car it is automatically and two special events, were listed top man of the Notre Dame en-| disqualified A J oR \ on today’s program. An additional trants, and Archie Harris, Indiana’s|are eleminated until only one reHh FR AN 47 events bring ‘the two-day 47th [Western Conference champion mains. close TOomOr- Their strongest competitors are Ed|

; {Beetham of Penn and Steve Lach Slim Rutherford of Whiting, Ind, Indiana ruled the prime favorite of Duke. Southern Conference title-

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DES MOINES, Ta, April 35 (U./streak to keep from finishing their 1000 first round trip of the year in ‘the college and university athletes men- | second division. |

|

Blues Are Sill Down in A. A.

By UNITED PRESSE The Kansas City Blues, pennant contenders every season since the New York Yankees made them a farm club, need a quick winning

Not since Bill Meyer became

| | | manager in 1938, have the Blues Drake marks in the shot, discus, come back from their first eastern | university spring medley relay, the junket with more losses than vice | | tories. This

vear, however, they got off to a bad start and haven't improved much as the trip progressed. Thursday, Toledo's seventh place Mud Hens moved into a sixth place tie with the Blues by beating them 11 t0 5. Cold weather hampered pitchers on both teams and they got ragged defensive support from their nfields. Bill Gill, starting

| Kansas City pitcher, issued seven

bases on balls in three innings, be- | fore Randall Gumpert relieved him. | Gumpert was no improvement and the Mud Hens got seven runs in a

rousing fourth inning rally. Tommy

| Reis and Jack Haley followed in a

already wrirkkala have bettered the world mark by! :

In a special exhibition tomorrow, cause of cold weather

{try for a world mark to go with his|

Marviand

1

| vain attempt to stop the Toledo batters, who made 13 hits, Tes the Toledo pitcher, also | was hit hard but he seldom had Yo { bear down.

| his form by shutting out the hard

Texas and Al pitting Minneapolis Miliers, 9 to 0, headlined the permitting only the discus, and Blozs, | Minneapolis errors aided the Louis. | the world’s mdoor shot ville fun-making, The Colonels got } (was T missed and finished three put record at 56 feet, § inches, will their nine tallies on only eight hits. | The scheduled Milwaukee at Oo- |

| |

five hits Pour

lumbus game was postponed be-

California Crew

LOS ANGELES, April 25 (U. P).| alters, Baylor; Keith O'Rourke. | —The University of California var

sity erew, a ranking contender for national honors, and an eight from the University of California at Los Angeles meet late today on the 2000-meter Ballona Creek course The California varsity, which last week lost to University of Washington, was expected to have little

trouble with the U. C. L. A. orew.|

The Bruins’ only competition this vear ended in a dead-heat Sacramento Junior ‘College. Both varsities outs yesterday, California on the Oakland Estuary. The Bruins showed improvement in their final tryout SIX minutes, 14 seconds

All-Round Man PHILADELPHIA, April 25 (NEA) Stan Benjamin, Phillies’ outfield |

—Frankie Kovacs today wore the er, won letters in baseball, football, |

basketball and track at Western |

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{

PAGE &1

Tom watched the opening races of the Mt. Lawn season last Sunday from the grandstand, a broken Fike ger preventing him from partivipats Racing Association's | NE. 1940 raed champion driver, Tom Kenny Eaton and Roy Brown, Cherry of Muncie, expects to be at|Newoastle drivers with exceptionally the wheel of his rebuilt car for the fast cars but who had bad second stock car program of the in last week's feature, also will head year at the Mt. Lawn track Sun- [line a speedy field for the second day. series, the first elimination.

To ———————————— ey

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