Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 April 1946 — Page 7
| down the river” °
first opportunity eam that had no n. Bought for the , price of $25,000 e sale in which nan Jack Graham osen made no se-
hat he was bitter- |
Both Games
ing pace in both
ree sharp singles
and a three-run |
e in the second umacher, a topner, won the open-
start, distributing
vely. Rookie Bob | |
* his third straight
n after the Giants 1 lead in five in- |
y, Buddy Blattner | | Giant homers and
d Dixie Walker hit
n the two games. ied a seven-game
ak and an eight- |
inning streak, algers retained the
vere tripped at Sf. down for a double cago Cubs, 9 to 7 ubs tied the opener ickey ~ Livingston's ed across two runs
er in Form aves took a firmer ace with a double
Phils, 6 to 1 and 2
rtening news was
rm of fork-baller °
who pitched the
ned his second vie-
Sundays over the ,
hem 7 to 1 at Cinds made it four in ucs. Grady Hatton ins with a homer eld fence, a double
ed Sox regained ne American with victo at Philahe fine pitehing of zhson and Mickey
Backfired
y Embree ruined ) customers, largest Detroit Tiger his-
ioubled home two ; to give Cleveland a
knocked New York with a 3 to 1 vicgton, Stan Spence ins with an eighth~
at spoiled a good | Roger
Al Gettel. second win.
ox split with the ]
go, winning 4 to 3 | Ted Lyons turned
-hitter, then losing
ld game in which nine unearned runs
tures
rent
jaled through rain to victory yesterday time trial, first of is to be run this club championship d@ Wheelmen. ime for the course, measured 9.3 miles, 38 seconds. John
second, 20 seconds and Eddie Dusing, tain, placed third.
| MONDAY, APR 29, 1046 _ —m # 2
Indians Redskins Away
Sibby Sisti’s Bat Gives Tribe Coes Victory Over Colonels
By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor f The Indianapolis-Louisville series, cut from three games to one in
|
i Indianapolis, moved on to Louisville today where the Americin associa- | tion's traditional rivals resume action ukider the Parkway fleld lights
| tonight.
! The teams will finish their abbreviated series in Derbytown tomor-
row night and then both will shove « western wheel, with the Indians, | 'now second, opening in St. Paul and | the Colonels in Minneapolis, The | Tribe will be away until May 11. In Louisville tonight, Al Treichel ! was slated to pitch for the Red- ! skins and Emery Rudd for the Kentuckians. The Indians won the only game played here, 7 to 6. After Saturday night's scheduled tilt was postponed on account of cold weather, the rivals tried to stage a double-header yesterday and collided with tain | and wet grounds. i Come from Behind However, the clubs staggered through the first half of the scheduled twin attraction and the Tribe sters finally won it by coming from behind in the eighth with a threerun splurge. Sibby Sisti’s bat was the deciding factor. The Tribe shortstop batted in two of the eighth-inning runs after belting one in with a triple ESS ——————————————————————————————————.
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Until Ma 11; Box Score : Y LOUISVILLE ABR HO A E Bennington, rf ..r.. 4 0 1 1 0 0 Genovese, cf ¢ 3.2.4 0 ¢ Lewis © 0000 Wela), 1 ¥y 0.3 0.90 sho 0 0 1 t : DES MOINES, I April 38 (U. ofner, sy , Towa, Apr ‘ 0 0 ] Seven, Ib 0 88% o{P)—A dismal ed the 37th eT 1 1 3 1 llannual Drake relays here Saturday, Diehl, p ] i 0 o 1 1iland not a record fell. . LaForest 0 0 0 0 0 The crowd numbered 12,000 beTotals . 34 6 5 24 8 g|fore showers chased many of them LaForest batted for Diehl in ninth, home. Lewis batted for Genovese ninth,
off for a swing around the league's Blackbumn. if RB n 9 A Sisti, 88 ...... 1 23:4 in the seventh and scoring himself Nieman iN fs $ 1 0 on a long fly. Wentzel, cf .. 1 1.6 0 The second half of the contest|gnube 1b -- ? 109 was played in a drizzle and on a|Brady, c ..... 1 0.4 1 slippery field. But it was too wet|Derringer, p 1 3 i to start a second fracas and the 0.0 @ 1 umpires guessed o. k. on that de- 3 : 3 3 cision. It really rained shortly after] = 1 ie wi —- -- they inspected the field and told the| Totals .. # 71017173 fans it was all off for the afternoon. English batted Jor Dessinge 1, eveath Routbville .......ixrsnvenin. 000 201 300—86 Crowd of 6830 bh O way a 001 010 23x17 But despite the rE a batted ia - Nieman 2 Parks, tudil , t 9, ington, weather before game time at 1: 90, 7 Two- base Ba Genovers Koney. rn plus an early afternoon drizzle, a base hit—8istl. Sacrifices—8isti, Drews.
tuckians.
the Colonels five. Two costly er-| rors by Joe Bestudik at third base and another miscue by Catcher Bob Brady contributed to the Louisville scoring. Likewise, two Louisville miscues also helped the Indians manufac ture runs. It was a case of the Indians giving the game to the Colonels and the Colonels giving it back. In addition to spearheading the Tribe attack, Sisti also sparked in the fleld and handled six chances without a boot despite the heavy going. Wayne Blackburn was back at his old post in left field, beat out two of his specialties—infleld hits— scored twice and defended his position in polished fashion.
Barrett Is Winner
The Indians employed. three hurlers, Paul ‘Derringer, Red Bar- | rett and Wes Flowers, and the Colonels used George Diehl all the] way. Barrett emerged as the winning pitcher. i It was anybody's ball game right down to the last rain drop as the Colonels filled the bases -in the ninth on free tickets issued by | Flowers. With the Indians hanging {on the ropes and the dripping fans in an uproar, Flowers finally worked on Pinch Hitter Al Mazur and! fanned him for the game- ending out. | The Colonels held a 6-to-2 lead at one time and Louisville Manager| Harry Leibold worked up an agony act in the dugout as the Indians gradually made up lost ground and his own team faltered in the closing innings. Two Players Sold " The Indians used the pruning
Aderholt, outfielder, were sold to
ern association. - Frank Staucet, rookie shortstop, was optioned to Evansville.
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suffix 44 Interdict 46 Repulses 51 Consumed 82 Solar disk 54 He is — Chief of Naval
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Left on bases—Douisville 8, Indianapolis 8. crowd of 6830 turned out and saw Base on_bails—.ON Diehl 3; Derringer 4, Flowers 3. the Indians draw first blood in the | ringer 1, Flowers 1. 1946 rivalry battle with the Ken-| 3 in 7 innings, Barrett none in 1, Flowers, | Do:
The Tribesters collected 10 hits, { Dives -McKinley, Padden and Moore. Time
|at Meridian Hills Country club is
knife again over the week-end. Ted| Cieslak, third sacker, and Morris
the Atlanta Crackers of the South- 3
~ Some "close Tribe followers|
Mazur batted for Shofner a ninth,’ INDIANAPOLIS
Strike Outs—By Diehl 3, Der-
Hits—Off Derringer,
one in 1. Balk—Diehl. Winning'
Passed ball—
pitcher—Barrett. Um-
thought Cieslak warranted a longer tryout here. He looked like a consistent hitter and the guess is that the Tribe management did not like his fielding. However, Joe Bestudik is erratic at third, too, and Bob Detweiler, the new player, is untried in class triple-A. But the reliable Gil English is still around for the team to fall back on “just in case.” Manager Bill Burwell still is on a cane and off the coaching lines. He directs the boys from the dugout and does not don a uniform. A slight touch of rheumatism is the
B 0 0 0 2 . : mile champion, churned the anchor 0 eo 0 0 0
Four schools shared honors in this first prewar classic, but top individual honors went to Earl Mitchell, Indiana’s btilliant miler who anchored two fer relay champions, : Mitchell, ‘a former Wanamaker
mile of the distance medley relay in 4:19 Friday. He returned to the track Saturday to outrun Fred Feller, Drake university's durable distance man, in the last leg of
Mitchell Is Drake Relays Herel Bangert Sings and Wins Title:
the four-mile with a time of 4:23 to clinch Indiana's second champlonship. Mitchell brought the crowd w its feet when he came from far back to beat, Feiler. ana's winning time was 17:568, Baylor,"Miami university of Ox» ford, O., and Michigan State: were other schools to carry off two titles during the meet, which was back 9h & Jawa bass wiih 18 of the marks ‘better than one equalled and five not as good. Bill Bangert was one of two de-
last year, | YOrk state boxing
fending champions to repeat.: The
burly baritone from Purdue, who| featherweight champion Sal Bartolo opened the meet Saturday by singing the “Star Spangled Banner,” won the shot put crown for the third straight year.
Favor Larkin Over Tove.
BOSTON, April 20 (U. P.)~Tip- of New York. puts. his title" ‘on the py Larkin of Garfield, N. J, will|line against Jack (Spider) Arme step into the Boston garden tonight a 10-68 favorite to dusky Willie Joycé of Gary, Ind, | in a 12-round bout for the world junior welterweight crown.
round bout.
Unbeaten since 1943, Larkin whipped Joyce in a torrid 10-round battle a year ago at Madison Square garden and is confident he can repeat. The Indiana lad, who holds a decision over Henry Armstrong, battered Bobby Zollo in his most recent Boston appearance. |
Both the N. B. A. and the New commission have approved the title go for the 140pound ' championship,
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reason. He felt better yesterday,
however—after the Indians roared from behind.
Women to Open at Meridian Hills
The women's regular golf season
to open Wednesday with nine-hole competition starting at 9:30 a. m.! A luncheon will follow at the club- | house. Women's links chairman at Meridian Hills is Mrs. Ray H. Biggs and! co-chairman is Mrs. O, ‘W, Bogda. | Other chairman: Mrs, Carroll E.| Roach, handicap; Mrs. Horace E| Storer, rules; Mrs, Harold T. Rans- | | burg, awards; Mrs. C. A. Weller, | nine holes, and Mrs. Richard T. Hill, publicity.
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