Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1952 — Page 33

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Lakers End

Hoosier Redskins 0lymp Playoff

Need Help in Dreams, 34.81

| I De arrment was no glass slipper for pro- . S fessional basketball's “CinBy EDDIE ASH

Times Sports Editor

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.

iv FRANK ANDERSON MIDNIGHT CAME. There

derella” team.

> : . George Mikan's big feet. Ground » Mar. 26—As the Indianapolis into bitter, brittle pieces lay

Indians today prepared to open their nine-game regular the playoff dteams of the Indian-

exhibition schedule, observe

ownership were convinced the parent Cleveland club will fairy tale”

have to speed up and increase its promised shipment of replacements, So it can be taken for granted --the unloading and reloading. are in the offing. Fact is, ‘the Hoosier Redskins will have to be ened in all departments, pitching, catching. infield and out field. Since the Cleveland varsity seems to have an ample supply of surplus talent, and is willing to let go of it, Hoosier Manager Gene Desautels thinks" he’ll have a well-plugged

Eddie Ash

and well-balanced new batting]

order to write out in the near future,

” ” ~ IN THE regular exhibition with the champion Milwaukee Brewers scheduled here today, and canceled because of rain, Desautels planned on using three pitchers, two new to the Indians, Jim Vitter, Dave Hoskins, and one veteran from last year, Inman Chambers. What Florida doesn't want northern or California papers to copy happened here yesterday and today. It rained all day and this huge Indianville training camp couldn't turn a hand in the hig outdoors. It was too wet even for running the players over the greensward. No practice of any kind was held and, of course, an In-dianapoljs-Dallas intersquad game scheduled in the afternoon washed out. ” ” » AN INDOOR “clinic” was held .in the morning, however. All players in camp, managers,

coaches and instructors lectured!

on baseball in general, physical preparedness and how best “to work and win.” Movies also were famous stars batting, catching, base running, sliding and fielding. It was a wellplanned “clinic” for a rainy day, after which the boys were dismissed for the afternoon. The Indians will make up for some of the practice that wasn’t held by working longer hours tomorrow. Only thing they sort of missed yesterday was batting practice. The Indians also have exhibi-

shown of pitching,

tion tilts carded with Columbus Reading (group three). He won thing.

3), Rochester (3), Louisville and Toronton, all in early April.

Tribe Training Notes

The Dallas Texas ILeaguers broke camp today and walked off with the intersquad series over Indianapolis, four games to three. Little importance was attached to the series by the parent Cleveland officials, but Dallas Manager Dutch Meyer crowed about it and the Indians had to stand for some good-natured ribbing. Dick Burnett, the Dallas club's president, said the fact his team won the last three made good publicity back in the home town. ; ” » s LOOK WHO'S leading the Indians with the bat. The veteran Frank Kalin got into five of the seven games. and combed .the sphere at a .538 clip. Harry Malmberg, new shortstop, sur-

prised everybody in the hitting |

department. In eight games, including, in his case, the AllStar game. He averaged .474. Dave Pope, the outfielderinfielder, hit .444 in four games. Challenged. for the first base job, big Ed Stevens appears fairly safe with a .348 hitting average, plus superior skill at fielding the position. ” = » CHARLES PROCKMAN of Indianapolis radio station WXLW pulled into Indianville late yesterday. He will make tape re-

cordings of interviews with Tribes

officials and players. n acs

THE FOOD is especially goou at this Cleveland farm system's spring training base and generous portions are served. Young

players are encouraged to order all they feel they can hold. Everybody lines up at mealtime and it's a long line, what with more'_

KNOW YOUR INDIANS—Two of the Tribe mound staff are Johnny McCall {left) and Ernest Trujillo. McCall, a lefthander, .is 27, had a 10.won-9-lost record with the Tribe last season. Trujillo, a righthander, is 22 and had a-12-9 record last season with Wichita. |

strength-|

apolis Olympians. What if it does read like a It was, had been all __ season, this Olympian tale of Herm, heart and hustle. But it was a good story. Not even the 94-87 score of last night's second playoff game before 7016. fans

rs of the team under new

than 400 persons camp grounds. But about 30 outsiders, young

living on the

men who coujJdn’t be dis- i y : Mi ag 8 Cf ‘hange it tinguished from ball plavers, wi Jinn ipolis can change § cras i x ; shed the dinner line the other Herm Schaefer wrote the

evening and gorged themse a free meal. The difference was spotted when the food checkers in the

Ives on ump story without a hero. But he had 10 heroes whens he shut the book on the season last night in Butler Fieldhouse. Each .one

kitchen balanced their books. had given something extra of & A new order went out. ldenti- yi. cajr playing, sweating it out fication cards were issued and ,n the bench. practicing the “new

must be /displayed and checked gir" tof beat the Lakers. off at the dining room entrance 4 x #2 0» This writer's card number is 429 EVEN A book with 10 heroes

on un a : ” : v y TE . ( ldn't avoid a last unhappy TEMPERAT 0 . Tv ou ) tona “lr URE in. the Day chapter with Mikan and the : Ach area soared fo 83 Lakers. Known as an almost

the other day and northerners sweltered, It still was extremely warm after sundown and this brought out the insects for dive-bombing exercises at the expense of sleepers. Then a hard rain brought relief.

irresistible force, the Lakers usually forced something to give. {And the Olymps gave in two straight playoff games, the first in Minneapolis, the second and last here last night, 3 qe Adversity often brings out the THERE IS no sheltering shade Dest in a man. It Worked thusly at the Indianapolis Indians’ dia- with Olymp Joe Graboski. He mond, No. 6, which is Nap Lajoie took 48 minutes to show local Field, No covered stands for fans or writers. Just bleachers and benches. Maybe the sizzling sun does something to a person. At any rate, Tribe General Manager Chuck French sold his’ car in Daytona Beach yesterday morning; then turned around and rented it back for a week.

leave town to get a Mikan, juniorgrade. Playing~superbly, Grabo scored 29 peints, just eight less than Mr. Basketball. The Lakers are the New York ankees of professional basketball. They are long on old pros . .. the money down, clutch, chips ; : : _ type. When they lead you, they Tne Inglanville reservation is eat you. And when they trail

four miles out. Buses run an hour " 7 cho at apart. The end of the line at camp you, they throw: psychology

is about half a mile from the offi-{¥°’ wen » cials’ quarters. This partly ex-| THE OLYMPS had to win last plains French's car deal puzzle. night So they threw all their Anyway, Monday, French drove chips in the pot. to Kissimmee and back for the! ji.ked their hustle never better, All-Star game, totaling about 160 their shooting never deadlier. miles, without incident. Then And still they lost. while driving half a mile early Why? Who really knows? Was yesterday, the car was nudged , {pa yakers outshooting them by a truck. Damaged only slight- 452 to .416? Was it 36 points ly, however. . a by Mikan, 16 by Pollard, 15 by Slater Martin, 16 by Bobby Har-

STEVE O'NEILL, who was brought up in Daeba re did Tison? Was it on the boards? school,” visited Indianville re. All those things entered into

cently. He’s connected with the it. The officiating was good. |Boston Red Sox, whom he for- There was no major weakness {merly managed. He's also an ex- in the Olymp machine. The manager of Detroit and Cleve- Lakers merely hit when they had land. The Tribe's Owen J. Bush to. Unfortunately for the Olymps, still is one up on “Stout Steve” the Lakers had to hit late in in the majors. Bush piloted four the game when the Olymps were different big league clubs, two in cool. the American, Washington and 2 a 4 the White Sox; two in the Na- THE OLYMPS led at all quartional, Cincinnati and Pittshurgh. ter stops. At the end of one it | itr Nes was 24-23. Indianapolis was 49-44 ARTHUR WOOD, southpaw! s vair. Mikan and Graboski Pitcher, Has heer promoted to 1n- made the third quarter a personal dianapolis (group one) from Mr. Basketball got 14 10 and lost the same number with Points in the 12 minutes and |Wilkes-Barre last year. He's a 6- Graboski 13. The Olymps were {footer and weighs 165. The 25- 0n top, 70-69, when the fourth [year-old hurler still is listed on Period opened. {the Reading roster, however. The, Then the bad things began to Indians have come up short in happen. Olymp marksmanship the southpaw mound department. fell off. And Olymp defenses pulled back for Mikan. George

Student Demonstration was crowded under the basket,

£ i ‘5 ; C h but Bobby Harrison wasn't. ails to Save’ Coac

LOGANSPORT, Mar. 26 (Up) set shots, He hit three and the —A demonstration by high school Lakers led, 77-73. {students here yesterday failed to Harrison shot four-for-four in

halt the resignation of Football the 12 minutes. Martin hit two-|

Coach Robert Faris. for-two, Pollard two-for-three, Faris submitted his resignation And that's what wrecked Indianto Superintendent Carl Zimmer- apolis. Sure, the score was 81-81, man and told the students it “was With 6:15 left. But the press box of my own free will.” knew it couldn't last the way Nevertheless, nearly 400 pupils the Lakers were hitting. Pollard marched around the school before Planed in from the corners, slid classes shouting, “we want under on a steal, Olymps hurried Faris.” Others carried signs shots. It couldn't last for the “Come. back coach. ' Olymps and it didn’t. The Lakers Faris’ team ran up an 8-1-1 Were ahead, 92-86, at 1:22, jrecord last year for the best mark ar of a Logansport eleven in many SATISFIED the Lakers were | * ticking, too, the clock ran on.

years. : AR And the Olymps began to think of summertime employment. On the Ice The I.akers flew out ‘today. AMERICAN HOCKEY LEAGUE PLAYOFF They open a best-of-five series (Series "A" —Best-of -Seven) . ihe Pitts Won st in Rochester, Saturday night. sbhur 3 1 hi y Hsputen 3 }! Which shows how Western Di(Serles “B =Rexi-af. Five} vision pieces fell ‘into place in Cleveland ; 2 the playoffs. The Lakers finished ON AE ries “Co Resiini Fives second to the Royals during the Cincinnati Wn Lost regular season. Third-place Inarcinn . . . 0H : : - Buffalo ¢ y dianapolis and fourth-place Ft. Cincinnati won series Tuas a Heras RESULTS LAST NIGHT Wayne are kaput. Feraney 3 pyagnurgn So the Lakers leave town, Only games schedu the season's over and a sports

ed | TONIGHT'S SCHEDULF

No games scheduled writer sits at home today in

NATIONAL LEAGUE PLAYOL} tan . ink ho St RNa) idle bliss. Just think of the Detach) Won Lost trouble Mikan went to to get Toronto 0 1 me a dav off, v Montreal . vom Los Oh. well, Minneapolis has 16 Boston ) 1 inches of snow, anyway.

RESULTS, LAST NIGHT Detroit 3, Toronto 0 Montreal 5. Bosto: TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE

INDIANAPOLIS (87) FG FGA FT FTA PF TP qf 9 ‘3 EY

Pro Basketball

NBA PIAYOFFS

xMinneapoiis wine series RESULTS LAST NIGHT Minneapolis 84 INDIANAPOLIS B87. GAME TONIGHT

New York at Boston.

~

o Glass Slipper For Cinderella Te

The: Slipper lay shattered under,

fans the Olymps don’t have to

Their new stuff |

Bobby was out in left field taking]

+ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

®

-

INJUN STUFF—Olymp Paul Walther (5) isn't leading a tribal war dance. He's just trying to dodge Laker Pep Saul, who seems floored by it all.

St. John's Hopes |

For One More Miracle Tonight

By United Press

SEATTLE, Wash., Mar. 26—St. John's rampaging Red-

‘men from Brooklyn, the “miracle” basketball team of the year, will battle it out with record-busting Clyde Lovellette lof Terre Haute, Ind., and his Kansas Jayhawk mates tonight for the NCAA basketball cham-) —————— reer pionship.

* | The Redmen astonished tne B 10 8 cage world again last night by] 1g ans |

\upsetting Big Ten Champion II-|

ERE LR ae ruiting

{gional finals. But the general opin-| ion is the Brooklyn five will have

ito spring another “miracle” © By Phone | > i

whip. Lovellette and Co. tonight. ” ” ” By United Press

LOVELLETTE, who soars 6-9, CHICAGO, Mar. 26 (UP)-Big racked up a mere 33 points in Ten Commissioner Tug Wilson | leading the Jayhawks to an easy Das cracked down on conference | 174-55 victory over Santa Clara |Fecruiting practices, banning any in. the . Western regional final. | telephone contact with propeci : 8 ‘tive athletes, it was learned today. That was a comedown from his] His . ; 8 policy statement means 44 points in an earlier regional, . hare can contact prospective game, but still it enabled him to g41 10168 in the future only by| smash two more records. mail, or when the boy visits the] Big Clyde thus ran his total campus. of field goals in three games to y 8 ! 41, busting the previous record] OBVIOUSLY the institutions] of 31 set by Kentucky's Alex cannot refuse to conduct tele-| Groza in 1949. And his three- phone conversations with athletes] game total of 108 points wiped who might call the school, but | out the old record of 82 set by they were instructed to break off] Groza in 1949 and the four-game such contacts as quickly as posrecord of 83 set by Don Sunder- sible. Likewise they were iflage of Illinois last year. structed they could not accept What's more, Lovellette now collect calls. has 26 free throws, only one less| Big Ten presidents endorsed the | than Sunderlage's record of 27. report approved by the American 7 na Souncll on Education calling for | IT'S NOT hard to see that St.|de-emphasis on intercollegiate John's hopes for another upset athletics, but held that the Big ill depend on how they handle en needed mostly more strict enw I y =o forcement of its present code. Lovellette. -In December, 1950, Recrutiing’ was tabbed as one when the two teams clashed ino the major problents of athletics New York with much the same by the presidents. cast, St. John's Center Bob —

Zawoluk outscored Lovellette, 19 . points to 15, but Kansas won, Track Clinic 52-51, on a last-second goal by . . big Clyde. Billed Friday

“I'd rather play St. John's than The THSAA’ , ia 1? 5 an oar $ 8 track clinic at [ilinis, SAmite] Xantas Coach Butler all day Friday will feaDr. orres g . ture several of the state's out-

But St. John's is not to he : . E : i lightly held in its battle with the sanding high school and college

F: re No. 3 the nation. team ranked No } In n Among the college mentors For the riotous Redmen have : leading the seminars are: Dave now bowled over in succession, i A Z Kentucky. ranked No. 1. and ili- Rankin, Purdue; Gordon Fisher, =n hed No a Indiana, and Galvin Walker, Butois, Ht eo ler. High school coaches include:

“Providence appears to be with : = Lou (Bo) 0ac Gary us,” said Coach Frank McGuire Mallard, coach of Gary

| | | |

of St. John's. "What world is lovsevelt's currént state prep this? It's impossible—first Ken. champions; John -Wonsowitz, : pos! hy Hammond; Chet Hill, Kokomo;

tucky and now Illinois.” n =” »

Melvin ‘Wilson, Muncie Central; : J : Rolla P. Chambers, Ft. Wayne ZAWOLUK was the key man North Side, and Walter Mowery, in the Redmen win last night. warren Central, chalking up 24 points. Ten of Registration will begin those markers came in the fourth 1. m quarter which began with the two teams tied.

The teams had been tied, too Shortridge Honors

at the end of the first period, 18 18. But the Redmen reeled off 10 Cage, Mat Teams

at 9.30

No wames schedu ed, = = 6 15 2 4 3 4 straight points to open the sec- Carl Meyer received the most 1 $ 8 0 2 2 ond period and were on top by valuable player award as mem12 26 5 8 1 29 six at the half. Illinois came driv- bers of the Shortridge basketball 3 a 5 1% 4 ing back to tie, sparked by little and wrestling teams were hon5 3 } 1 9 Jim PBredar and Rod Fletcher, ored at their annual banquet by ‘a 2.71 21 mm 20 .a7who tallied 14 points each. the Dads’ Club last night MINNEAPOLIS (91) “x a Dr. Frank E. Sparks, president ent IFTOR FE PIAPF TE KANSAS NEVER was in Of Wabash College, delivered the Pollard.f . Tt 18 2 2 1 16tuble against plucky Santa principal address, Meyer received Fl & 0 11 "ag Clara, which simply ran out of the Underwood trophy as cap M r E 4 4 5 surprises after upending 1 CILLA tain of the hardwood tear Baule } 5 2 2 2 3 and Wyoming. Powered by l.ovel Awards included: are : 2 lette, the Jayhawks pulled steadi- Basketball — Bob Bruce, Carl Mever, Totals ead preity. 23 22 94 ]y further ahead, When big Clyde Holiett, Larry nen ake! Ra or INDIANAPOLIS 24 23 21 17-#7 sat down for a While with Kan. Duncan and Larty Stallweod. =~ = " Offcinls -Sid Borgia and Arnold ST 8as8 on top, 65 42, Santa Clara jim Bose, 135-pound ie Chaplet: 0) K

staged a desperate rally that nar- Anthony, 17§-pouna state champion Jack . GGlanzman, Sam Greenstein, Bill Baker

‘rowed the gap to 67-54. But then gnd Ed Praed Lovellettee came rumbling in ¥ -

(Eastern Division—RBest-of- Three) again to break the Broncos’ | xSyraciise © Won Los! heart with.three quick baskets. College Basketball Philadeiphia ok a 1 2 The winner of tonight's final NCAA TOURNEY a : ; Won Lost Bame will meet Southwest Mis- (At Seattl®, Wash.) Rast or 1 0 o » . : New- York i} | soyri. NAIB champions, in the gg 3,14 61, ilinols 59 (Eastern (Western Division—RBest-of . Three) opéning round of the Olympic regional final) Wor ast , 3 { ‘ity - : : <Rochester 2 13 ‘ tryouts at Kansas City, Satur Kansas 74, Santa Clara 55 (WestPt. Wayne : o 2 (day night, The loser will meet ""_ regional final) xRochester wins series " . La Salle, National Invitation: ____ = ___.__~~*'< xMinrieanolis : Yop 14 champions, at New York Satur- A a S INDIANAPOLIS’ 4 2 day. dditional ports

Illinois and Santa Clara will

es. a fonsviation game to- On Pages 34, 35 |

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PAGE 33

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