Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1945 — Page 26
Battle
By HARVEY HARRIS
: Thi d Til Howe's Hornets are ready to do] n 1r t ~ | some stinging this year.
The Eastsiders have had to rele-|
By EDDIE ASH Ww Times Sports Editor | gate their football activities to sec
You never can tell in baseball ond place the’ past two seasons in and it's possible that the Indians!tavor of the army development prowill “fool em” tonight and turn gram for high school students. ‘ the tables on the St. Paul Saints But this year the picture looks in the third encounter in the Amer=! different. The Hornets have the jean association’s first round play-! experience gleaned from two preoff. |vious seasons of ‘limited football Rain washed out last night's play, scheduled tilt at Victory field and, More than that, they have a the rivals hope for a break in the spirit and will-to-win that would weather to permit them to reach make many high school coaches a decision tonight, The contest is git up and sigh remorsefully. booked to get under way at 8:30. | It's not that Howe will play any So far. the Saints are riding in gtartling football this year. But, the driver's seat with two victories as Coach Sam Kelly will quickly in two starts, putting the Tribesters | point out, “This is the finest group two down, a tremendous handicap of boys I've had the. pleasure of in a brief best-in-seven series. training. Their spirit just can't be After the third game is played here, peat.” the teams will move to St. Paul to Boys Conditioned complete the play at Lexington coach, Kelly's optimism is based park, {on the fact that for the past two Cuban Is Rugged |years Howe's athletic department Pedro Jiminez is slated to toe has concentrated on developing the rubber for the Redskins tonight seniors. They were meeded in the and the rugged Cuban is all set military service and so it was natto give the Apostles a rousing lural that they get conditioned bestruggle. He was the Tribe's best fore graduating high school.
righthander in late regular season| As a result of this emergency games and is anxious to try his arm setup, underclassmen "were left to| out against the St. Paul club.
Saints is expected to send Tom tent,
Sunkel, veteran southpaw, to the, But this year the situation 1s mound although he now is in a ‘different. With the end of thé the Notre Dame shift. Following | the successful style of the Chicago
good spot to: gamble, use a right-| war, Kelly can concentrate on de-
hander and save Sunkel for the veloping his sophomores and juniors| Bears,
opener in St. Paul, Otho Nitcholas, - a righthander, future, defeated the Indians, 2 to 1, in 10 Kelly is a great believer in the!
han, southpaw, turned 'em back, 8 value of this type of play while!
forage athletically for themselves at Boonville.
| those days.
| Tribe. ir s Hornefs Hope to Do Some Stinging This ig) Tonight | With Their Version of T- Formation; Coach Optimistic
This is the Howe version of the T-for mation with the back in motion. through the play are (left to right) Joe Weaver, left halfback; George Spradling, fullback; Jim Hill, right halfback (receiving ball); Paul Eicher, quarterback (handling
ball) and Don Coffey, center,
Coach Kelly uses a variation of |
back in motion,
The Howe coach lists Don Coffee, |the Howe attack. Innings Tuesday, and Dick Lana- T-formation. He first learned the center; Fred Deitz, end; Jim Jacobs,
guard; Ron Roach, guard; Dave
the team.
His team was known |Schorenstein, end; Karl Stoneking, | berth, where the husky 6-footer is Skipper Ray Blades of the as best they could, to a large ex- (as the point-a-minute squad in |quarterback, and Joe Weaver, half- | expected to do some outstanding {back, as returning mainstays on work as a pigskin snatcher, The team is scheduled to open its The Hornet skipper is loeking|season Sept. 21 at New Augusta with pleasure on the work of two against Pike Twp: In-addition, the the East Side pilot favors|sophomore tackles this season. Both | Hornets will play Sept. 28 at Manfor a well-rounded team of the using the T-formation with ~one|180-pounders, Spencer Gaarder and ual; Oct. 5, Westfield; Oct. 12, Ben Tom Wilson, will carry the brunt of | | Davis;
{the Detroit Tigers in the desperate
Running
“| Chicago CEA, 86 50 632 : ISt, Louis ,...... $4 B3 613 2%
Oct. 9, at Southport; 24, Warren Central; Nov. 2, Sacred | In addition, Kelly is counting on{Heart; Nov. 9, at Silent Hooslers, | the work of Schorenstein at the end | land Nov, 16, Broad Ripple.
to 2, Wednesday although he was | relieved by George Coffman when |
ina ne rene he vin, Cathedral Bows Hoosiers Seen as Big Ten's
Possible 1945 'Giant Killers’
By WALTER BYERS United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Sept. 14 —Coach Bo McMillin's “pore little boys” af | Indiana probably will be the “giant killers” of the 1945 Big Ten foetball
four hurlers, Jim Wallace in ah 0 25frst game and cin meiner, ma IN Opener, 25-0
Hutchinson and Wes Flowers in the
second. Cathedral's Irish dropped their
Get Some Runs, Boys nu start of the 1945 football seaBut the Indians haven't heen | son to a strong Evansville Memorial hitting in the clutches and they|team in the Pocket City last night, have been ragged on infield defense. 35 to 0. And the Saints have been quick to] Memorial tallied its first touch-|
take advantage of any kind of an | down’: midway in the initial period | assist. |when Paul Weaver went 39 yards
In the other half of the league's to score. The try for extra point
first round playoff, Louisville {s|Was no good.
leading the pennant winning Mil-| Coach Joe Dezelan's charges waukee Brewers two games to one, Played on even terms with the and the Colonels gained this edge | downstaters for the remainder .of in the Milwaukee park. The teams the first half but Memoria] scored twill resume play in Louisville to. again late in the third quaXter, A {pass interception set this one up, The Colonels won in Milwaukee Fullback Tom Pirnat finally buck.
- morrow night.
: last night, 3 to 1 by staging a Ing over from the 2-yard line after ninth<inning two-run rally. |a series of line plays.
Brawl Breaks Out In Senator Camp WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 (U. P.). [been aided by a Cathedral penalty.
Senator pitchers Alex Carrasquel | Jim Reeves scored later in the pe-
and Marino Pieretti bore battle riod and Charlie Schmidt converted.
marks today of a brawl which Man-| Memorial led in. first downs, 10
ager Ossie Bluege attributed to ten- to eight. sion over the hot pennant race.
It was said that Pleretti, Italian] Cy Blanton Dead
left-hander, hit Carrasquel, a Vene- SHAWNEE, Okla. Sept. 14 (U: guelan Indian, in the left eye, {P) ~Puneral services will be held
blackening it, after the Latin al- | tomorrow for Darfell (Cy) Blanton,
legedly swung on him with a bat, one-time major lea gue pitcher who hitting him in the pitching arm | died yesterday at a Norman (Okla)
and raising a welt, hospital He was 36 years old,
Standing of Clubs, Results, Schedules
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION AMERICAN LEAGUE
[Cleveland ........... 000 000 000-0 2 3 im ; (Playoff Brian) Lost rok Cobar Won Lost Pel Washington ........ 000 310 00x— 4 7 0 pete hn place him ¢ j Geto 81 59 579, Meller, Cent dH M | Wi INDIANAPOLIS a 3 e|Nesningon 61893 Ferrell. nd Haves: Masterson andipack the line, Meyer, 195-pound Hyde ner — | New York |... . A Se sophomore, should be enough. Each I —— 1 3 353 Cleveland 67 800 Pugroll® o.oo... 000 010 001-3 9 1iway from center, the line is solid |terday at the Country Club of Inwakes 1 3.333 Chicago MAT pcos 000100 000 18 3yith, veterans. At the flanks will | gianapolis to win his second straight em, i Boston Ce 78 468 SE and Mancuso; Johnson and] apo INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 49 90. 353 Pytiak. be two of the conference's better title in the Real Estate board's an- ;
(Playoff Series) Won Lost Pet. |
Toronto ...... ‘rng 2 1.867] NATIONAL LEAGUE and . Ted Kluszewski. Lou Mitz~ | sociate member with! Newark .......... eed 3 enicape 0 { (Firs: Game) jlovich tops a trio of good tackles, 278 has the xe Montreal «..orirrrii. 1 1. .soo.8t. Louis 3 Boston ; «+. 000 010 002 3 9 2|while Ciolli and his running mate, aise Baltimore oo 800 | pL rg . ‘381 Pittsburgh - 000 030 01x-- 4 4 2i9g0.pound Joe Sowinski, form the ouT- c1M95 |
New York ....
SCHEDUL E TODAY
MERICAN ASSOCIATION St Paul at INDIANAPOLIS (8:30 p. m.). | Only game scheduled . Te
INTERN ATION AL LEAGUE
| Newark at Toronto (night) Montreal at Baltimore (night), |
AMERIC AN L LEAGUE Chicago at New York,
F HM | D A Y | 8t. Louis at Boston an d Detroit at Philadelphia S A + ; | Cleveland at Washington, U R D A Y NATIONAL LEAGUE {-New York at Cincinnati, | Philadelphia at Chicago (2)
¥ Brooklyn at St. Louis (2, night), 90 ] APS | Only games scheduled, RESULTS YESTERDAY AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Milwaukes 000 001 000 1 Diehl and Walters; Pyle and Stephenson
| | St. Paul at Indianapolis (rain), INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
(Playoff series)
and State Road 52
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season caliber, Heber
McMillin, the prayin’ quarterback of Centre college's famed “Prayin’ and 204.
Colonels” of 1919, bemoans the fate of his “pore little boys” this season. which should win more games than
Yet, he is priming a “spoiler” team it loses as well as knock off several favorites along the way, The Hoosiers, who never have won a Big Ten championship in 44 years of trying, have a veteran line and strong’ first-team backfield but they lack the over-all depth and versatility to keep pace with Minnesota, Ohio State's defending
Two more Memorial markers were | registered in the last quarter. Tom | Ossenberg tallied on an end around play after the Evansville team had
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champions and Illinois, McMillin, still a staunch single | wingback man, loves to score “up|sets,” such as Indiana's 20-to-0 victory over Michigan last fall, and he has more tricks up his sleeve this season, His one scoring ace is a 185-pound Negro freshman from Gary, Ind., George Taliaferro. A booming punter, long-distance passer and an outstanding runner, Taliaferro takes over at left halfback for the Hoosiers. Fourteen lettermen, headed hy John Cannady at fullback, are hold~ overs from the ‘44 team. If Cannady’s legs can stand the pace of a 10-game schedule, Indiana should equal or hyiprave its 1044 record of
seven victories and three losses— fifth in the Big Ten.
will make the difference. The 210- Dick (Hon, Automotive pound junior from Owensboro, Ky.,|Spiv Ward "Printeraft ............. it the Big Ten's “hard luck kid.” His| Duke Sohoiter gC Atkinson alert generalship and jolting plunges marked him as one of Indiana's : coming greats in 1943. But he in-| Howard Caulfield, Marvin Shell Service jured his leg and McMillin had 10] Ren Arabces, Coeooala owers. .... shift him to guard last season. Ben Raimondi, an 180-pound | H. Imler, Pittman Food Market, mised 5 letterman from Brooklyn, will start at quarterback. His passes should | Bernie Lee, Riviera Club.. be enough of a threat to spread the defense for such Hoosier backs
Tavener, all-Big Ten center, left the only hole but Bob Meyer |porothy Dietz, Budweiser
’
41 {and
“ 3 S49} Bingieton Logan and Masi, Gerheauser we Raton, best guard combination in the Big | N' 5 s { Boston ed | Ten. { $ | Phiindeiphia eaians a ne 43 moton ' S00 G00 g00- 9 8 : = . re | Pittsburgh 200 000 00x 2 3 0! eB A S k Bk A L L | SUITS Ottery ta n a i
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New York . teres 100-000 100 2 10 0 Cincinnati . «ooo DOO 000 30x 3 B 1 Brewer, Adams, Fischer and Kluttz, Har. rist, Kennedy and Lakeman Philadelphia at Chicago (rain) Brooklyn at St. Louis (2 postponed, rain),
Braves fo Train At Ft. Lauderdale
BOSTON, Sept. 14 (U, P.).—General Manager John Quinn today confirmed earlier reports that the Boston Braves will train at Fort | Lauderdale, Fla., next spring,
Police and Firemen's Shoes. You men who need good shoes well fitted, here you
in all leather shoes. Some with cord soles, others with + with leather,
Cannady, with Taliaferro's help, Miller Ensminger, Unlversal
Ed Hick, Koerner Optical,
Dewey Dommel, Shrine
Les Miller, Holy Trinity .... as Taliaferro and Dick Deranek. Bigh Swwart, Sturm Reed. uF Deranek, 180-pound sophomore Middleton, Basco ....«o..ocvinviiiiinn 56:
xed Death Petty, Coca-Cola
Al Bleck, Rainier Furniture : of Indianapolis, who lettered at Lillian ‘Cunningham, Rainier Purniture 415] Wilbert expects fo drive the same
ends, letterman Bob Ravensberg | nual golf tourney. Lou Bola with!
Clevenger Leads
Pinmen With 667
Scoring In last night's tenpin lcops continued to be of the early-
tossing the top ‘otal of the evening with 667 in the Elks league at.the Antlers. His games were 246, 217
Women’s scoring was also on the light side, J, Fulle producing the best series of the evening, a 552 in the Antlers ladies league. OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS
8 Olmo, Brooklyn ...120 512 58 160 .313
3 Holmes, Braves.. 28/Stephens, Browns 2
Herman Deupree, Parkway Recn. . 615] Workman, Braves 22i0tt. Giants .....
D. Keever, Allison Executive
By CARL LUNDQUIST
Walter Masterson today as the “secret weapon” which might defeat
Washington | Hails Pitcher W alter Cg
As ‘Secret Weapon’ in American Pennant Drive |
their military service by Owner eventually got td third. That was United Press Staff Correspondent Clark Griffith and the 25-year-old NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—Baseball- right hander went right out and mad Washington hailed ex-sailor earned every penny of the gratuity.
Masterson was greeted a little coldly by the Senators, who had expected Dutch Leonard or Mickey
the only hit he gave up until Frankie Hayes singled in the“
jeighth,. Only four Cleveland play-
ers got on base, the other two on walks, That was quite a stunt, facing batters he hadn't seen before and being matched against the
stretch battle for the American Haefner for this crucial contest. jEreatest major league pitcher in
league pennant.
They remembered him only as a kid | Masterson rose from obscurity by who had an’ unimpressive record of
more than a decade. Feller Off Form
beating thé most famous pitcher inifive victories and nine defeats in, Feller was off form. In the third baseball} Bobby Feller, and the 1942 his last year before going to inning he walked Buddy Lewis and
Cleveland Indians with a two-hit,|gea,
4-t0-0 shutout that put the Senators
a half game behind the tense Tigers, Harris, previously manager who dropped their second game in|washington,
a row to the Athletics, 3 to 2.
|Joey Kuhel outwitted him by They forgot that Stanley (Bucky) | |dumping ae bunt over his head. at | {Both players scored on George the | |Binks’ hit and Binks came in on a ungster off a Philadelphia sand- Isingle by Gil Torres. In the fifth
Masterson as a “secret weapon”|lof after seeing him throw just one | George Myatt beat out a hit; stole was strictly legitimate when Man- pitch, He played only two minor second and scored on a fly to left,
ager Ossie Bluege brought him outijeague games of the dugout last night and intro- career,
duced him again to Washington|
fans. He and Cecil Travis were superb.
in his four-year coming on home on a bad relay,
The Tigers, acutely short of
was | sound pitchers, lost at Philadelphia Lou Cihocki tapped him when Jin Tobin walked home the
presented with $500 war bonds for'for a single in the second and winning run in the ninth. He had
Pennant Race At a Glance
By UNITED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit. .......... sl 50 B19... 1"
Remaining SE
NATIONAL
one inning of suspended game of
23 (2). St. Lohis—25, 26. At Cincinnati— 27, 28. At Pittsburgh—30.
|delphia—15, 16 (2), 17. Chicago—18, 19,
Cincinnati—29, 30 (2), AMERICAN Detroit—At Philadelphia — Septi. 14,
land—19, 20. St. Louis—22, 23. Cleveland— 25, 26. At St. Louis—29, 30. Washington—Cleveland—Sept. 14, Detroit | ~15 (2), 16 (2), 17. At New York—20, 21. | At Philadelphia—22, 23 (2).
with Pittsburgh to be replayed if necessary |
Major Leaders
LEADING BATSMEN American League
: G AB R H Aye. Bourdeau, Clev. .. 97 346 50 106 .306 Case, Washington 113 456 66 138 .303 Cucecinello, Chi, 380 48 116 .305 Mayo, Detroit . 1h 459 67 139 .303 Heath, Cleveland. 91 320 55 99 .301
National League
Cavarretta, Chi....115 433 89 156 .360 Holmes, Boston ..140 577 118 202 .350 Rosen, Brooklyn ..120 540 114 180 .333 Hack, Chicago ....137 545 101 175 .321
HOME RUNS
Adams, Cardinals 22]
600 | xxv “m0 Wilbert to Race J. M. Davis, Building Trades ........ H. Doriot, Commonwealth Loan
3 73] It's going to be “welcome home” Ed Dankert, Indpls, ower & Light. .
-3 NAN
Joe Verderoga, Riviera Club Earl Perkins, Stewart-Warner.
er 569 + Ralph Brooks, Beanblossom mortuary. . 568 former local midget racing driver
566 {competes in the East side track's : + Bes regular 90-lap program against a . 550 | field of 30 other pilots, + 3571 Wilbert arrived home on leave 544 | yesterday from his duties as test
ti3| pilot for the: U. 8. navy at its air
Chas. Matthews, L. 8. Ayres & Co who averaged 7.1 yards per crack last| carl McAfee, P. R. Mallory... ...
fall, will team with Taliaferro at| Hank Mueller, St. Catherine the halfbacks while Indiana's No. 2, fullback, 175-pound Bill Arm- | Harold Carr, Mitchel-Beott strong, probably will open at full, McMillin will send a veteran line, |Tillle Jardina, Bowes ................ marshalled by scrappy Frank Ciolli |p at guard, against Michigan. a typical McMillin-coached line, fast, aggressive and tough. D. Kenninger, Koerner Optical, mixed 488 | Speedrome’s No. 1 and No, 2 drivers
The departure of apt. John | M. Sanford, Pittman Food Mkt. e pari) G p has Jo Berkopes, Wayne Township Courier al Dora Monroe, P, R, Mallory
Leroy Kerst, Stevens Mortuary. ...... Frank Dickerson, Stevens Morsuary.,
OTHER LEAGUE LEADERS (WOMEN) 537 | fans, eager to see him back in acoris Parsons, Brightwood Puel....... 532 ed onnie Hickey, St. Philip No, 1. .... 3519 tion, are predicting that both T! It is Tillle Deputy, Beanblossom Mortuary o
515
mixed 481) of the present season, may have a
430 1 him.
Edward A. Hyde shot an 80 yes- lap record of 14.74 seconds in 1942,
x At East Side Oval
for Bus Wilbert tonight at the, Indianapolis Speedrome when the
base at Corpus Christi, Tex., and
Hartley of Roanoke and Duane Carter of Los Angeles, the
445 hard time trying to keep up with
outboard racer with which he established the Speedrome’s present one-
RACING
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-\ Indoor Grappling Season to Open
The indoor wrestling season for the Hercules A. C. will get under way next Tuesday night in the Won Lest Pet. GB GR'Armory where a pair of top rank18 ling junior heavywegihts will head a card of three bouts. Matchmaker Lloyd Carter has Washington .- 61 5% 4% Ilisigned Steve Nenoff, Russian grappler from New York, to meet Put | Chicago—Philadelphia — Sept. 14 (2).|Riley of Chicago in a tussle listed Brooklyn—15 (2) (including Semblotivn of for two falls out of three. It also with Brooklyn ahead 10 (4 4), 16 (3). 17 |is announced that Gil La Gross of At St. Louis—18, 19, 20. Pittsburgh—22, Boston will be in: the semi-windup. Riley, a favorite with local fans, St. Louis—Brookiyn—Sept. 14 (2), Phila- has established a strong record, Cincinnati—22, 23. At Chicago—25, 26. ai] including triumphs several “big time” opponents. Nenoff, also touting victories against some of Washington—15 @), 16 (2), 17. At na ‘the best, is an experienced veteran of the mat game.
*Does not include 12-ihning tie game | 2 Local Scribes
'y decide race. Win A, A. Prizes
would finish than in 1945. Last spring, the scribes came up| were the winners. with the prediction that the Toledo | The Reds topped the Giants, 3 Mud Hens would win the pennant. |to 2, at Cincinnati before only 281 | .| paying fans. Steve Mesner singled The best prognosticator of the lot | home the winning run in the seve this year turned out to be Al Roche | enth for pitcher Earl Harrist. of The Indianapolis Star who picks up the first prize of $25.
1{ They finished sixth.
gone into the inning with a 2-to-1 lead but Bill McGhee tripled and scored on Bobby Estalellas’ single. Dick Siebert doubled and George | Kell walked to fill the bases. An|other walk provided the clinching run
Rain complicated the National league picture. The Cubs, two and a half games ahead, play the last place Phils in a double header toe day while the Cardinals meet the revenge-bent Dodgers in another double bill at St. Louis. If rain interferes again in either case, the games may be washed from rhe schedule since the teams change opponents tomorrow.
Win Weird Game
The White Sox won one of the weirdest games of the year at New York, getting seven runs on seven hits in the 10th for a T-to-0 vice tory. Bill Zuber had held them to
rich was the winner, giving up six 10th and yielded one more.
2 to 1, at Boston when Skeeter
COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 14.—It has| Newsome, trying for a double play been a bad year for the American/in the ninth, threw the ball into association oracles. At least it has|the stands and a runner scored from been for most of them. : Never have the pencil-pushing| The Pirates won two from the gentlemen who narrate the happen- | Braves at Pittsburgh, 4 to.3 and 3 ings of things baseball] in the A. A. been quite as wide of their mark in|win the opener and bunched three predicting how the league campaign | hits to take the second game. Al Gerheauser and Fritz Ostermueller
second.
to 0. They got only four hits to
Taking Yesterday's Star—Walter Masthe second prize of $20 was Bob terson, back after three years in Hooey of the Ohio State Journal in| the navy, who gave the Senaters Columbus. William FP. Fox Jr. of| a two-hil, 4-to-0 victory over The Teisapois News snares ak Cleveland moved thém within a
half game of-first place.
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