Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1951 — Page 38
3
yesterday batt their 14th World
Has Made B 3 breaking into the series than any
NEW YORK. Of 13 — The wild, woolly World Series of 195 Other, too. THe 24 Giants and went into the books today, fattening the volumes with a vas : array of records broken or Previous high of 23 equalled. 20 Braves who got into the 1948 A preliminary check today re-iSeries. The 24 Giants also were] vealed there were 17 records set high for one club. and at least 13 others equalled. For. the players it’ was the And perhaps others will be dis- richest series. They will split a} covered by fans and statisticians four-game receipts pot of $560,
23 Yankees in the lineups made]
winter. | Of course the Yankees picked Boston in 1948. up a few records just by showing) Among the recérds tied were a up. Since they had dominatedfcouple by Yankee Rookie Gil Mcthis autumn show for so long Dougald with his grand slam they had a new one automatically homer, first by a. rookie. He when they appeared for their 18th moved in with two old timers, | World Series. They had anothfr Tony Lazzeri of the '37 Yankees! When they won it—14 champion-iand” Elmer Smith of the '20 Inships, Their four victories gave gians as the only grand slamthem the most for all time—85. mers in series history. And,
# ” = 1 bat : AT THE same time the Giants 108ically, the four runs batted
|in, were tops for any player in Tasted le Me hegalive high one World Series inning. He just total of most World Series losses, ™issed batting in the most runs the four defeats givihg them ag for a six game series, gétting| losses in the 13 classics they|SeVer to fall two shy of the nine have been in. |set by Bob Meusel of the Yankees
A fellow name of Joe DiMaggio in 1923. ’ also automatically improved his| nore IRVIN, shining star of lot by being more times on 2 the Giants who tried so hard for world championship club, 10, than) more hit,’ tied a six-game any other man who ever lived,| : hin i les Ils ow, 2 other | Robertson of the -1917 Giants. marks and they're likely to stand)ARd he joined 26 players, the quite awhile. With the six games lst In 1946, who went into the he played he brought his total to| books with four hits in one an all-time high of 51, topping/8ame. He tied another record of the record of 50 by Frankie 10 one base hits, set by Red Frisch. The fact that he did it Rolfe on the Yankees for a sixall with one club, the Yankees, 8ame series in 1936. enabled him to add to his own, Hank Bauer joined a list of record, since Frisch set his with 23 players who have batted in two clubs, playing 24 with theithree runs on a long hit, his Cards and 26 with the Giants. triple yesterday putting him, in 8 8.8 ; (that distinguished company. BY BEING at bat 23 times in Bobby Brown, whose .357 averthis series, DiMaggio topped age topped the Yankees, joined Frisch’s record total of 197 byia list of players whe have batted
-
Little Phil Rizzuto was the busi- World Series playing three or est guy in contributing to two more games each series. other important records. The 8 8. 8 Yankee shortstop, with 39 chances; TRVIN WITH a .457 average for a six-game series, set a new and Alvin Dark at .417, the only mark, topping the 36 total of Ev- two .400 or better hitters in the erett (Deacon) Scott of the 1918 series, joined thé ranks in that Red Sox. He had a near miss on|
His 15 putouts and 24 assists each! were one shy of the records. And asking man-of-the-Yankee- infield; Rizzuto set the pace on the new Yankee double play mark of 10 for a six-game series, topping the nine by Cleveland in 1948. The 10 double plays also tied a high for a series of any length. Equalling the mark of the 1924 Senators against the Giants. The Yankees were sure shots to set a couple of other records which were routine for them — impossible for anybody else. That was for the most times at bat in the World Series, 3130, while the Giants added to their National League mark of 2601 at bats for
(Hank Bauer's sixth inning triple with the bases loaded drove in the three runs that
over the Giants yesterday. It also gave the Yankees the World Series, four games to two. In the following dispatch, he tells how he did it.) By HANK BAUER As Told to the United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 11—I pulled into third base, took a deep breath
” ® | IT WAS a wild series for pitch-/in there! : ers who set a new bases on balls] That was the sweetest sight in record. The 26 walks by the the world, seeing those three run-
ries of 1937. hog, I'll settle for a triple. There were more playersi Dave Koslo threw a lot of
DiMaggio’s Pay—$850! : Yanks Won, Giants Lost; Uncle Sam Got Money
By HOWARD ROBERTS {their base pay in tax. A © Times Special Writer cut would hoost them at NEW YORK — Joe DiMaggio, |into - the $10,000-$12,000 who has played in more World With a 38 per gent tax. Series games than any other) player in baseball history, wi THESE figure have earned $850 or less in take-| home pay for his role in helping, +" 0 rces of outside income Ie Yankees to their third straight. ,,, individual may have. ne, ts of ball players’ On the other hand, Ralph Houk,| 604 The 0 BL BroCy third-string catcher of the Yanks! yaggerated. who didn’t even break into a boX| = pppoe ig nothing indefinite, Seore ar series may pocket j,wever, about the fact that the rougn'y . »s split their end of the Those are extreme examples of Y anieees De into ,36 shares how Uncle Sam's tax bite will nip worth $6539.89 each or that the) into the series share of individual Giants drew 3f shares of] players. 4 $5192.17.
» » | ’ ” o ou DIMAGGIO, whose season sal-| FROM the gross gate of $1,633ary is reported to be between $90,457 the government will extract 000 and $100,000 falls in the cate- one-sixth or $272,243 in admisgory of those who must pay 87 sions tax. per cent of their income to the! It wiil take its share, too, from government. the leagues, commissioner, clubs! Players of the Yogi Berra clas- and players of the first division; sification, whose pay is said to be teams in both leagues, all of | about $35000, must pay 65 per/whom share in the series wealth. | cent to the government in tax. Thus it seems that the Yankees Those rookies and reserves got the championship, the Giants, yWho draw the major got the licking and Uncle 8am wage of $5000 pay 25 per t of got the money. :
i
serie least class
ack . - .
{ Thomson, 3b.
series record«of 11 held by Davis
two, moving his own total to 199.. 300 or better in four or more
two other six game series marks. Sweetest Sight in World—
Bauer Says ‘I'm no Hog, I'll Settle for Triple’
spelled a 4-3 Yankee victory |
Take Gol
nai motrin.
3
THE WINNING HIT—Hank Bauer, right fielder, leans into the pitch for a bases-loaded triple in three runs in the sixth inning for the New York Yankees as they pulled down | Series championship. Note ball (arrow). The catcher is the Giants’ Wes Westrum.
Wild Yank-Giant World Series Record Book Fatter
rgelect group. Irvin was 15th on ‘the all-time lst while Dark ranked 32d. Irvin, the Giants’
otal of 47, four more than the leading batter was the best in| tja toisl o Indians and|the series for the N. L. since Stan
|Hack in 1938 while Brown didn't! : : ‘key hit of the series, 1.429 mark of last season which {put him in as the A. L. top man.| : ‘But he showed as much poise as any one out there. It.
even come up to Gene Woodling's
Larry Jansen joined a list of eight pitchers who have lost two games in a six-game series, while
sitting around the hot stoves this 562.37, surpassing the previousii;. og pases on balls for the & ‘high of $548,214.99 by Cleveland-| yankees “tied a record for one
club in a series, set by the ‘36 Yankees. Ed Lopat, with only one earned run in two victories, tied the alltime carned run mark for a pitcher in a six-game series. It was 0.50 set by Lon Warneke of the 1935 Cubs.
World Series Finale
NEW YORK GIANTS AB RH O Stanky. 2b Dark, ss nr man, 1b
Deaty
Irvin, Thompson, rf rs
a - =o
Hearn. p | Noble. ¢
{ « Totals 3 24 { Rigney singled for Koslo in 7th Williams ran for Westrum in 8th, a re lined out for Hank Thompson | sStartinz pitcher. NEW YORK_ YANKEES A R H
| coconoowosw
2
S| moomoo wanting w! coco~ooooscoo—— Cl comonoo momo ©! ~oo~o~cooccconad>
B oO A Rizzuto. ss ..v.eo.. 4 91 4 4 oproved the track, safety fence > 7 & : (Berra. c geo 4 1 2% 0 0and judges stand for racing and, THE YANKEE infield was MeDossid. 35 110% 0 8 1 2 @has reported that Troy Ruttman, great. , Especially Rizzuto, but Collins, 1b 1.1 1 2 0 0 8 0puane Carter, Bill Schindler, they were really all working toNoodiine.1£ 203 8 6 52 8 0 Tommy Hinnershitz and others gether and they gawe those pitchEasehl'y "... +1 8 8 8 8 8 will race here Nov. 4 even though ers a lot of help. McDougald Yankees Kuzava,p .;........0 0 0 0 0 0a 100-mile big car race is sched- showed he can play either second Totals ......29 & 1 23 “8 ouled the same date in Phoenix, or third as good as you'd want New York (N) “eiiers. 000 010 002—3 | A pix ‘it played. New York (A) . : .. 100 003 00x—4 v : » | ;_*Runs Batted In—McDougald, Stanky.| Several of racing's name; Bauer 3. Irvin, Bobby Thomson. Two-Base
Hits— Berra, DiMaggio. ThreeBase r. Left on Bases—Giants 12, Yankees 5° Bases on Balls—Oif Raschi 5, Koslo 4. Sain 2. Struck Out—By Raschi Kosio 3. Sain 2 Hits and Runs—Off Koslo, 5 and 4 in 6 innings; Raschi, 7 and 1 in 6: Hearn, 1 and 0 in 1; Ssin, 4 and 2 in 2: Kuzava, 0 and 0 in 1; Jansen. 1 and 0 in 1 Wild Pitch—Koslo Pagsed Ball —Berra. , Double Plays—Rizznte "ta “{i-» (21; Rizzuto to Coieman to Mize; Dark te Stanky to Lockman. Winning _Pitcner— Raschi. Losing Pitfher—Koslo. Umpires—
Ballanfant (N), plate; Paparella (A), 1b; Barlick (N). 2b: Summers (A), 3b. Gore (N), and Stevens (A),
\ foul lines. Time— 2:58. Attendance—=61,711
»
knucklers out there today but the {pitch he threw me when I hit that {triple was a belt-high fast ball. | 2 + a | UNTIL then, I had a pretty
{poor series but I'm satisfied now |
| even though I only collected three {hits in the entire six games. | 7 1 seemed to be hitting the ball well but somehow there were fieldlers catching it everywhere. I (looked. : | © That catch I made for the final
me almost as big a thrill as that triple I hit. After Sal Yvars connected, I
their over-all series competition. land said thank God, the ball fell put out of the World Series =: Monopoly Probe | | |
Yankees and the 25 drawn by the ners cross home plate ahéad of lost the ball in the shadows that! Giants put a new total of 51 into. me in the sixth. I thought the form in the corners of the out- DiMaggio and Phil Rizziito of the the books, surpassing the 47 bases ball I hit was going into the field. I didn’t know I had caught world on balls in the Giant-Yankee se-'stands for a homer, but I'm no the ball until I saw it in my glove. Yankees probably will be called
n = 5 1 HARDLY realized I had slipped after I caught the ball I guess I did because I remember |picking myself off the ground.
t
affair it's hard
Auto Racing
w| coooooooo~oo0d
in
g test Board secretary,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
d, Leave Giants Gio
Rainout of Game. Sunday Proved Turning Point for Miracle Team
By LEO H. PETERSEN United Press Sports Editor
NEW YORK, Oct. 11 — Champions of the baseball world for the third consecutive year and for the 14th time since 1920, the Yankees today had the respect and admiration which their many skills and great record demanded. And Manager Casey Stengel-—once the ridi-
culed goat of the old daffiness Dodgers—was enjoying the last
No other manager in all baseball history had
ever won three world champions
three years at the head of a club.
But the real, moving story o
season and the 1951 World Series will always
be the Giants—the miracle ‘team thing except ability.
And, when baseball men look back on the
' 1951 series they will say the Gi
their chance to It would be
victory. They
great tactical days with the laugh. : THAT WAS hips in his first
f both the 1951
that had every-
win it on a day they didn’t play. unfair to take anything away
from Stengel and his Yankees in their hour of
won and they were the better
team. But.the real turning point came last Sunday ‘when rain. poured down on the Polo Grounds and washed out both the game and the
advantage Manager Leo Duro-
cher's team had gained in the first three games,
eSB the day the Giants would have
been sending 23-game winner Sal Maglie against Rookie Tom Morgan. A victory by Maglie over the Rookie would have given the Giants a 3-1 edge and a virtual lock-up of the world title. But it did rain and Stengel was able to come
back the next day with an ate of his own—Allie
ants really lost enough ‘to beat
‘Gets Hero
Musial Reports the Series—
Gil McDougald
Vote
By STAN
Copyright, 1851; By the New
He drove in the most that home run of his in the
me. Being a first-year man I
‘seemed to me he came to bat
Terre Haute Boosts AAA
| {
Times State Service i | TERRE HAUTE, Oct.’ 11—In-|
E .
sprint-car race track next year. | Joe Quinn Jr., safety director for the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and president of the Wabash | Valley Fair Association, has an-| nounced that a sprint race show has been scheduled here Sunday, Nov. 4 at the fairgrounds track. The rain date will be Nov. 11.
{ » » = JAMES H. LAMB, AAA Conhas ap-
{show because they want to make lcertain that Terre Haute is in{cluded on the Midwest racing cir-| cuit next season. . =
DRIVERS like Ruttman and
iCarter pocket more cash from! The key inning was the sixth
| |
MUSIAL
(Baseball's Greatest Player)
York World-Telegram Corp.
NEW YORK, Oct. 11—As soon as the Yankees won the last game I heard people starting to argue who was the No. 1 hero of the World Series. different names mentioned, and it really was such a team to pick ouf any one man. But if I had to name one, I would vote for Gil McDougald.
I bet I heard six
runs for the Yankees, and big deciding game was the
I thought. McDougald surprised
thought he might be jittery.
in the tough spots more than
nyone else, and he kept delivering.
* 8 @ z e OF COURSE, he wasn't th only one. Rizzuto had a terrific series and you can't leave Lopat out. He won two big games
[2nd gave the Giants only. one
run each game. And when DiMaggio and Berra started hitting
{that kind of sparked the Yan-
kees. Just about every man on the club did something. Collins hit that big home run in one
% diana will have a third AAA- of the games and then Bauer
hit that drive yesterday.
The series was played in two parts, I thought. It looked to me like the Yankees were a dead club the first three games. But then it rained one day, and after that layoff the Yankees
came back hitting better. They. {got that big hit when they consecytive singles to open the needed it and the Giants just seventh The Giants really had
|couldn’t.
only two guys who were hitting, Irvin and Dark.
Reynolds. Maglie, who might have had just
Morgan, wasn’t good enough to best Reynolds and the series was evened when the Yankees won. For it was in that fourth game that the Yankees took charge for the first time. They looked different — refreshed, aware of the fact that they had been granted a reprieve and confident that they would take advantage of it. That was the game in which
E Joe DiMaggio came out of his
“oh-for-11 coma” and started to hit. That was the big game of the 1951 World Series.
ONCE EVEN, the Yankees went to work like purposeful Young businessmen about to complete a transaction. They smeared the Giants, 13-1, the
‘they must have expected that yesterday's game would be a mere coup de grace.
If they did, they did not know these Giants, who had careened down the National League stretch run with 37 victories in 44 games to gain a tie with the Dodgers and beat them, 5-4, in the final game of ‘the three-game playoff series when Bobby Thomson hit a three-run homer in the ninth inning. Even the Y#nkees admitted that Vic Raschi “had nothing” yesterday but the Giants seemed deep in a coma such as the one they were in when they lost 11 consecutive games at the beginning of the season. They could not crack through Raschi, except in the fifth inning when they scored one run, and the Yankees appeared to have the game won easily when Hank Bauer's sixth‘inning triple with the bases
filled put them in front, 4 to 1. = = s BUT THE Giants forced
Raschi out of there with two
inning and Johnny Sain came in to retire Eddie Stanky, Alvin Dark and Whitey Lockman in order. They filled the bases with two out in the eighth inning but Sain had enough to slip a third strike past pinchhitter Ray Noble.
It was in the ninth that the were to win their world championship. Also that the Giants, the greatest comeback team of all time, were to
As far. as yesterday's game, Stage their last magnificent |drivers will pass up the Phoenix the Giants had men en in every futile rally.
inning but couldn't get runs. |Finally they made a terxifia come- Alvin Dark bunted and beat it back in the ninth. That last in- . ning was typical of the sway crowd of 61,711, which had year,
they've been playing ail never giving up!
Stanky singled past third.
out for a single. The massive come to -see the champions crowned, awakened. Lockman slashed
a- line
sprint racing than they do in when the Yankees got thres runs 9rive to right field, It was a the big cars. Ruttman is believed on Bauer's triple. He hit that ball Single. Durocher, arms stretched {to have made $15,000 for himself so hard it almost went into the ©ut. ftagged down Stanky at
fon the high-bank tracks in 1950.
stands even against the wind.
third base. Stanky’'s run meant
The fairgrounds here is located Irvin wasn't playing back too ROthing. The bases were loaded.
on the south edge of Terre Haute
steel grandstand was constructed last year and financed through the ‘purchase of bonds by the 17,000 members of the Wabash Valley Association. Other AAA tracks in the state] are located in Winchester and! Salem.
DiMaggio, Rizzuto May Testify at
{
1
| By United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 11—Joe
Champion New York
i | | | | |
|
las witnesses in the second round {of the House monopoly investiga-
tion beginning Monday, a com-
mittee spokesman said today. The tentative list of witnesses
Anyway you look at it, I'm glad|includes club owners, players, and
that series is over now and that | “it came out the way it did. All of lus felt confident we'd win from/|
the start but I'll admit they threw
went out to my pesition and felt
|real good when the fans in right weeks of hearings last summer, s, of course, rep- field gave me a hand. That al-/and r ] t the roughest of estimates, ways makes a ball player, téel League's fight for major league for there is no way to determine great and don’t let anyone tell status.
you it doesn’t, ! But after I made the last out, catch on Yvars, I didn’t care] about anything any more. | All I was interested in was getting to the club house to sit down one second, and enjoy -the| victory, | it was one I won't forget for! a long time. As a matter of fact, I'll prob-| ably be thinking about it many] times back home in Kansas City| this winter. {
|
Dunkel on TV
Dick Dunkel, whose football ratings are published in The Times each Weédnes- | day, will appear in person | tonight on WFBM-TV, - Dick Dunkel will give ‘his
°
grid selections for TV ly s from 10:35 to.
10: pe m,
[Pirates last year on the strength
sportswriters from leagues to the bushes. The monopoly subcommittee is! investigating whether baseball!
the big
laws. The inquiry is expected to subject to such testimony in two
into the Pacific
Coast
A subcommittee spokesman said a tentative schedule has been set up but that not all those invited have indicated they will appear,
Pettit Back in School
WILMINGTON, Cal, Oct. 11 (UP)—Paul Pettit, the Pittsburgh Pirates’ $100,000 bonus rookie pitcher, returned to Harbor Junior College today to resume his studies for a physical education degree. Pettit was signed by the
of his sensational record as a high school hurler. He was farmed out to New Orleans, but an injured arm limited his action.
Basketball
The~ Em-Roe Sporting , will ts at South * side" a: as
far because of the wind, but even
think he would have caught It. The ball was too well hit.
Stengel came out of the
lon U. 8. 41. A new concrete and if he'd been playing back I don’t Yankee dugout and stood glar-
ing -at-the -Giant -dugout:—You could almost hear him mumbling to himself, asking what meat these little unskilled men
KOSLO GOT in trouble in the in Giant uniforms fed on.
sixth when he threw a wild pitch with men on first and second. That put them on second and third with one out. Koslo got McDougald out and then it looked to me like he was trying to be careful with Mize, not giving him anything good. The Giants were hoping Mize would swing at a bad ball, and if he walked they could still work on Bauer. Up to then Bauer hadn’t done much, 3 they probably weren't afraid of im. But they were really afraid of Mize. I noticed that with the count’ three and nothing Koslo threw him a curve. You never throw a curve there unless you're afraid the hitter is going to swing. Koslo wasn't going to give Mize any cripple to hit at in that spot. John laid off the curve for a strike and then he walked and Bauer hit his triple. Sain pitched fine relief in the seventh and eighth and - then Kuzava helped him out when the Giants filled the bases in the
ninth, The Giants hit three balls
<a scare in us when they won the|should be exempt from anti-trust] 4 of _XKuzavs,
first two out of three games. After I smacked that triple, Igo deeply into the reserve clause,
but all were
caught. Bauer went on his knees to catch the last drive by Yvars. Up to that last out the Giants looked like they were putting on another one of their great finishes. game out of it anyway. The last {game was the most exciting of the whole series.
They did make a real
Series Facts, Figures
NEW YORK, Oct. 11 (UP)— Facts and figures on the World Series: y ' Final standings: New York Yankees—Won 4, lost 2. New York Giants—Won 2, lost 4. Game scores: First—Gilants 5, Yankees 1. Second—Yankees 3, Glants 1. Third—Giants 6, Yankees 2. Fourth—Yankees 6,
Giants 2. TFifth—Yankees 13, Giants 1. Sixth—Yankees 4, Giants 3. .
Total attendance: 341,977. Total receipts: $1,638,457.47. Commissioner's share, $245,
018.63. Players’ share: $560,562.87 (players share only in first four
fi ana leagues’ share:
Then he turned and waved in left-hander Bob Kuzava to replace Sain on the mound. = = =
THE HITTER was Monte Irvin, still looking for that ona more hit that would tie the series record of 12. He swung amd for a split second the crowd thought the Giants had dome it again. The ball traveled in a high arc toward left field. Woodling turned quickly and fled toward the left field barrier. It loaked like it would be close. But the ball, traveling into the: teeth of a strong wind, “died” and came down well inside the park and snugly in Woodlingfs glove. Stanky' trotted home with a run the Yankees didn’t care about but \Dark moved to third and Lockman-—-the man with the big run—raced to second base. Bobby Thomson hit a high fly, not as deep as Irvin's, which Woodling took easily. In came Dark with another run nobody cared about. And still on second was Lockman with the big one. Durocher nomrinated Catcher Sal Yvars, obscure third-string receiver, to get the run the Giants needed.
YVARS SWUNG on Kuzava’'s first pitch and hit it on a straight line toward right field. It was sinking and it appeared to be falling in for a hit. But Bauer was coming fast and he finally reached out, falling to Hs left knee as he did,'and held t. The Yankees were still champions of the world. Durocher turned in the third base coachingrbox and, head down, walked from the field. The Giants had been beaten at last. Much of the «crowd pouréd onto the field to congratulate the Yankees. They just stood
the Giants file off the Eo as ny 0 Tor 8 vs % - a ike
* »
next day to take a 3-2-edge and
>
“
THURSDAY, OCT: 11, 1951
A 3
ry
poi 5
“
GAZELLE—The Yanks’ second baseman Gerry Coleman evidently plays by pattern. In the top photo Coleman is shown twisting into the air to make the throw to first after Henry Thompson's single forced Monte Irvin in the fourth. On the very next play (bottom photo), Coleman twisted into virtually the same position “fo again fiw fo fist fo double Was Westum wha Thompson.
A
HE HUNG ON—Yank Right Fielder H
ank Bauer fell to the
forced
Re
ground in the ninth inning after catching Giant pinch hitter Sal Yvars' fly ball.
Composite Box Score
NEW YORK GIANTS
G AB R H2IBIBHR TBRBISOBBSBPt. O A E Pet Stanky, 2b ...4.. e 22 3 3 00:0 3 1 2.3 0.138 4 8 3 968 DOrk. 88 ...ovusiss 8.2 5 10.3 0:1 18 4 3 30 417 WB 18 6 1500 Thomson, 3b ...... ¢ nN. 1 5160 6 2 0 30 238 1315 3 HN Irvin, MH .......0000 8 24 4 11 0 30 13 2 1 2 2 458 SN S44. Lockman, 1b .i.... 6 25 1° 8 201 1 4 7 102300 48 35 3 984 Mays: €f ....xcnven ¢ 27 1 4.4.0 0 4 3 2 2340 63 18 3% -0 1000 Westrum, ¢ ...... 8 17 1 4 1:00 35 0 3 54 233 3% 3 1 46 Thompson, If ....3 14 ‘23 1 0 00 32 0 3 3 0 248 5 6 3 4 Hartung, rf ...... 2 $d 0.9 0:00 0: 0 0 0 0.000 1 3: 1 A487 Noble, ¢ ... vieavs 00-00-0010 1 0 0 .000 0 1 0 1.000 Koslo, p .... 5 0 04 0 0-0 0 2 0 0 .000 2 2 0 1000 Jansen, p .. 2-0 0 00086 6 0 0 0 0 .000 1 2 0 1.000 Bpencer. p .. 4:0 0 0 00 6 0 6 0 6 00 0 1 0 1000 Heal: P ..couanrss 3 0 008066 09 1 0 0 .000 0 2.0 1000 JORGE, Pr sevrvsveer 2 0 0 06 086 0 0 0 O00 000 0 1 o 1000 Maglie, p ... 1 6 :0:0.0066 0 ¢ 1 0 0 .000 | Te 000 Kennedy. p ...... 2 0 0 00 00 0 0 0 0 0D 000 0 1 0 1.000 Corwin, BO ..couss 1 @ 6 0.0.00 0 0 oO 80 000 1 0 6 1.000 Konikowski, p ...s 1 OO 6 00 00 0 8 0 0 0 000 0 0 8 .000 ARIENEY .......s¢0 4 4.9 1 800 1 + } 00 150 oe 0 0 400 aLohrks! ......cu0 2 2 0 0000 0 01 ao0o.000 oo 0 oo Guo aWIlliams ........ 2 1 0.0000 0 0 0 50.00 o 0 o Bo BYVRPE vsss nurse 1 1 8 6 0 00 06 6 oo 0 0 .000 So 0 6 00 zSchensz + 1 8 0-690 0-0 0 0 0 06 08 000 0 0 0 0M Totals ecivvvsnse 6 194 18 48 7 1 2 61 15 23 35 2 .231 156 65 10 Bil NEW YORK YANKEES . G AB R HIZBIBHR TBRBISBOBBSBB Pet. O A E Pot. Mantle, rf .....! 2 § 1-1 0-08 Fy 6 1 10 300 4 0 0 1000 Bauer, rf-if «8 18:6 39-0 3 3 1 1 0 .168 7-0 6 1000 Rizzuto. 88 ....... 8 25 6, 8 0 0 1 11 3 3 2 0 320 15 24 1 9 McDougald; 2b-3b.. 6 23 2 6 1 0 1 10 7 2. 3 0-281 10 14 1 ‘Deo DiMaggio, ef 8 33 2 6 301 LH 3 4 30 360 Te 0 rig BeITh, € «..isxsss 8 23.4 8.00 7% 0-1 20 251 353 1 Bod Weodling, If .....8 18 ¢ 3 1 1.31 9% 1 3 S350 487 9 3 1 Coleman, 2b ..... 5 8,2 2.008 2 0 32.10 230-0 1% Brown, 3b. ...vvs $ 4" 1 51040 6 0 1 1 0 a8 7 6 0 W000. Collins, 1b-rf «8B 18 3 4°04 by T 8.2 20 91 1 8 0 M00 Mize. 1b ......... 4 7°23. 2 10 0"3 1 0 20 28 12 0 0 1900+" Reynolds, DP ...... 2 6 0 2000 2 1 1 00.3 0 5 0 10000 Lopat BB ..cise 2 30 1000 1 1 2003 24 0 loge Raschl, Pp ....vvs0 2 2. 0.0000 0 0 1 2 0 ,000 0.0 0 Hogue, P ...cevve 2 oe 0 08 0.0 06 0 0 600 .000 Se 21 0 4 Morgan, p ......e 1 0 0 0 00066 0 0 0 0 0 000 9 3 6 .. Ostrowskl, Pp ..... 1 O 0u0 0 00 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0%: CE TR 1 1.00000 0 0 60 00000 0 0 0 As Kuzava, Pp ...5%.1 0 0:0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 000 0 0 0 00%" BHOPD .orveavsine 1 0 0°00 00 0 0 01 0 000 4 0 0 Sees EMATtID .eriisans 1.0 1 0000 0 0 0 0320 000 0.0 0 gos Totals .....ou0ve 6 109 20 40 7 2 5 75 25 23 26 0 246 160 68 4 983 NOTE: Irvin stole home ‘in 1st Inning of 1st game; McDougald scored on mpson's error in 2d inning of 1st game; Dark scored on Berra's error im Sth
Tho inning of 3 Dark
ored on Woodling's er Hartung's error in 6th inning a Pinch hitter,
id ganie: Rizzuto scored on Stanky’s error in 7th inning of 4th game; rer in 1st inning. of 5th game; Rizsuto scored on | a 5th game, .
z Pinch runner,
COMPOSITE SCORE BY INNINGS
New York (N) New York (A) ive nies Earned Runs—Giants 11, Yankees 27. Bactifices —Glants, Koslo 2. on fl Giants, Koslo 7, Hearn 8, Maxlle %oaon off “Yankges, Reynolds 11, Morgan 1, pat Giants, slo 6, Jansen 6, Hearn 1. Magli by Yankees, Reynolds 8B, Morgan 3. Lopat 4, Ra
Giants, Koslo 12
Jones 5 in 4%;
in 15 innings, Jansen 8 in 3, Mazlie 8 3.3
10, Bpenoer 6 in
410
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Jansen a Spencer 3 K nosy 4; i , 8 , Ken as ain 2 Struck Ou Kennedy 4,
, Bain 2 ha
Ki 2 faa
0 3
id ai Bases on Bat 2 Sine
—— e “-
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