Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1952 — Page 11
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Section Two
SPORTS
“The Indian
apolis Times
Colum
SUNDAY, SEPT
EMBER 28, 1952
PAGE 11
Editorial :«c.vivivivasanr 20 World Report ,......... 21 Amusements .a...e0q M, 25
ns reser tT eT 19
Notre Dame .. 7 Pen... viiiv 7
Purdue ......20 Penn. St. .....20 |
Ohio St. ......33 Indiana ......13
Butler ....... N.Central . :
Yaipo ......
DePauw ..... Carroll ....
nd. S%...... 27
Football Scores
0SU Scores Three Times
PORN i.v.ccrneee 0 0 7 0— 17] nn ero Notre Dame .... 7 0 0 0— 7] : Penn St. ....... 0 7 6 7—20 BS Yuiteq Press Purdue .........7 0138 ¢—20 2 COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 27— Ohio St. ........ 8 7 0 20—s3 Ohio State, with freshmen Indiana ........ 7 6 0 0—138 Howard (Hop-a-Long) CasN. Central ...... 0 6 0 0— 6sady running wild for three Butler .......... 14 7 6 2047 (,uchdowns, came from behind to DePauw .....,.. 0 20 7 0—27 beat Indiana, 33-13, with three Carroll ....:.... 7 6 0 0—18last-periodgouchdowns before 70,Wabash ........ 6 0 6 0—12 208 fans Here today in the first Albion .........7 0 0 6—18 Big Ten game of the season. AR Te —— re | cogs een Indiana, outweighed 20 pounds Jranchester “ese S : : [0 8 per man, held the Buckeyes to a A sansa A 13-13 tie in the first half and Ind. State ...... 0 0 0 0— 0 scoreless in the third period. But Valparaiso seaees 0 : 0 0-0 NEXT OPPONENTS Anderson ...... 0 0 0 0— 0 oct: au at an state, Hanover ....... 0 7 6 12—25 i; the fourth period the Hoosiers Mich. Normal ... 6 7 0 13—26 tired and Ohio ripped their lines Ball Staté ...... 7 0 0 7—14 for threé touchdowns and spoil ¥nd Central 60 12 6—24 Bernie Crimmins debut as InFranklin ....... 0 0 0 0— o dlana coach. i ene f t was Cassady, a 168-pound Georgetwn (Ky.).13 13 18 12—51| right halfback, who applied the Taylor vosiess. «0 0 0 0— 0 necessary spark. Coach Woody Evansville... ... 0 06 0 0— 0, Hayes sent him in midway in Western Kentucky 7 6 18 13—39, the second period, and on the ts ~—— ——————| next play, he took a 26-yard MIDWEST | touchdown pass from Fred Soe m———— i te Bruney. It put Ohio ahead 13-7. Michigan .......13 0 0 0—13 Yo Put OLHO
Mich. St. ....... 713 7 0-27
Pil, + .ceveeree B13 76-26 Jowa ... 7 0 7T 0-14
Wisconsin ....... 7 14 21 0—42 Marquette ...... 6 0 7 6—19
Nlinois ..........12 7 14 0—83 Jowa St ..ecie.. 0 00 7%
Kansas ...;... 0: 7 7 71-71 Santa Clara ... 0 9 0 0— 9 Akron 27, Wittenberg 6. Allegheny 40, Oberlin 83.
Baldwin: Wallace 18, John Carroll 7.
Brigham Young 44, New Mexico 10.
Cedarville 18, Alma 6.
Cent. Michigan 56, Northern Illinois 7. Central (0.) State 21, Morgan State 6.
Coe 22, Knox 6. Cincinnati 13, Kansas State 6. Dayton 34, Drake 13. Eastern Kentucky 26, Marshall 19. Towa Teachers 32, N. Dakota St. 0. Lake Forest 12, Dubuque 0. Lincoln 49, Miss: Industrial 6. Louisville 19, Wayne U. 12. Lawrence 28, Grinnell 6. Midwestern 21, Austin College 7. Miami (0.) 42, Bowling Green 7. Monmouth 19, Carleton 6. Morningside 21, Omaha U. 14.
INDIANA STRUCK back quickly to tie the score, 13-13 at the half. It was not until the final period Cassady put Ohio State ahead for keeps with a 7lvard touchdown plunge that climaxed a 48-yard drive in which he had played :.a prominent part. {He added another with about a minute and a half to go when he intercepted Lou D’Achille’s pass and ran it back 48 yards to Indiana’s 4 where John Zuger pulled him down. But he bowled over a touchdown on the next play. Ohio State started quickly, scoring in three minutes and six seconds. The drive started when Halfback Bruney, who played both offensively and defensively, intercepted a D’Achille pass and ran it back 20 yards to Indiana's 17. Three plays later, Quarterback John Borton passed to Bruney in the end zone. Thurlow Weed, the 135-pound sophomore Ohio placement artist, {booted a perfect point after touch-
penalty. Ohio State led 6-0. Indiana eame back to score
Hanover ... Anderson .... 0
Earlham ... Manchester .. 0
Colgate .....14 ~ Wisconsin ....42 ..13 -Cornell,"..... 7 Marquette ...19
..25 Ga. Tech
Florida
Texas U. N. Carol
Virginia
Holy Cross ...27 Dartmouth ... 9
Rutgers ......19 Muhlenberg ..19
13
Vanderbilt ... 0
w+ M7 .. 14
Cilia lB ina .. 7
«27
Harvard .. Springfield
“se
Auburn ...
Wake Fores Wm.-Mary
sinew
Maryland ....13 Furman thes 20
io 27: Albion .... ... 1 Wabash ..
“oe
... 7 W.Yirginia
t..28 Kentucky . eo. 21. Miss. U. ...
ix 13
Pitt Ty
lowe .....
Mich. St. . Michigan
32 22
13 13
Iinois ....
TOUCHDOWN JAUNT—Norm Ellenberger, Butler's hard-hitting fullback, is seen here as he climaxed a 53-yard touchdown run against North Central College early in the first quarter yesterday afternoon at Butler Bowl. This is the first of two touchdowns Ellenberger scored
in leading the Bulldogs to a 47 to 6 victory.
Butler Power Plays
Set Up 47-6
By JACK WELSH Butler University struck In| ash's Little Giants. 3 every quarter yesterday afternoon, pinkie em ptied the bench
| tunity to sharpen their guns for {next week's encounter with Wa-
to shatter North Central College’s| against Bill Olson’s game but out-|
opening day hopes with a 47 to 6 classed Cardinals, but it didn't victory at Butler Bowl. {thwart Butler's continued ride to It was the second straight tri- touchdown land. Nearly every-
and gave them a thorough oppor-'every conceivable fashion.
when Jerry Ellis plunged over from the six-inch mark. The touchdown was set up when Sam Talarico fell on Bruney's fumble. D’Achille converted and Indiana led 7-6. = ~ 5
Slippery Rock 33, Ashland 12. Beott Field 83, Ill. Normal 83 (tie), | | Toledo 10, Western Reserve 9. | Washington (St. L.) 27, Missouri] Mines 6. ° | W. Michigan 44, Ill. Wesleyan 86.] Youngstown 18, Gustavus Adolphus 12. :
EAST Columbia’ «...... 0 0 0 0— 0 Princeton ....... 7 0.0 1-14 Cornell .........0 0 0 7— 7 Colgate ........7T 0 7 0—14 Dartmouth ..... 2 0 7 Holy Cross ..... 0 7 7 NAVY cioeversens @ 7 8 21-81
Yale 4i00000i0sv 00 0 0-0
Army ..........14 T 7 0-28 8. Carolina .... Adelphi 19, Penn Military 18. | American International 21, Amherst 0. i Bolling Field '28, Williams 0. Brandeis 32, Bridgeport 7. BuckneH 45, Lafayette 13. Coast Guard 41, Norwich 20. Conn, Wesleyan 83, Middlebury 6. Connecticut 47, Buffalo 7. California (Pa.) Tchrs 27, Carnegie Tech 21. | Ft" Belvoir Navy 18. Gettysburg 14, Delaware 18. Harvard 27, Springfield 7. Hobart 48, Brooklyn College 12. Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 26, Thiel 0
King College 38, Delaware State 6
Maine 18, Rhode Island 0. Mansfield 20, Ithaca 18. Massachusetts 39, Bates 6. Millersville 7, East Stroudsburg 0. Maryland State 32, Grambling 0. New Haven Teachers 18, Kutztown Teachers 12, Northeastern 34, Rensselaer Poly 27%. New Hampshire 18, Upsala 7. NYU 10, Lehigh 7. Rochester 20, Kings Point 7. Rutgers 19, Muhlenberg 19 (tie). Susquehanna 26, Nat'l Aggies . Shepherd 21, Glenville State 6. Shippensburg 40, Trenton State 0. St. Lawrence 20, Union 19. Tufts 85, Bowdoin 20. Trinity 21, Dickinson 0. Vermont 38, Champlain 0. Westminster 27, Juniata 20. W. and J. 13, Denison 7.
SOUTH Clemson ....... 0 0 0 7-7 Villanova 0 014 0-14 Tulane ..........0 6 7 3-16 Georgia asssrensdl 1 0 1-2 Kentucky ....... 0 0 0 13—13 Miss. U. ........0 7 6 0-13
ese
84, . Bainbridge p
OHIO STATE came back midway in the second period with Cassady’s picture-catch of Bru-
ney's pass and led 13-6 but Indi-|_Mmighty Michigan State, famous Ellis Duckett. Leroy Bolden car-|
ana wasn’t through. The Hoosiers stalled off an Ohio drive to Indiana’s 27, where they took over
last season for come-back vic-iried over but Slonac’s try for the| tories, handed Michigan a two-iextra point was wide. € touchdown | on downs. Indiana scored in five | stormed back for its 16th straight|stay midway in the second period 8ainst such outmanned opposi-|
Mighty Spartans Club Wolves, 27-13
By United Press the Spartans’ key play was 41ANN ARBOR, Mich, Sept. 27 yard pass from Yewcic to End
lead today, then| Michigan State went ahead to
NORM ELLENBERGER continued as the Butler powerhouse. | The rugged fullback scored twice, {picked up 107 yards in 8 rushing NEXT OPPONENTS
| Oct, 4—Wabash at Butler, Oct. 4—Kalamazoo at N. Central,
down, but it was nullified on & umph for Tony Hinkle's athletes body got into the scoring act in| 08 Artistry with an average of
45.7 yards per kick. Don Kelly, fleet halfback from Noblesville, took a share of the Butler spotlight. scored once and gained 89 yards in 12 rushing plays.
Butler's rolling loffensive Which pégan at
amassed 263 yards while the boys| from Naperville, Ill, gained 4% Yards on the ground. In more crucial circumstances) penalties would have slowed But- | ler’s chances as the Bulldogs lost| 86 yards on 8 miscues, » n ” . BUTLER’S performance!
plays with D’Achille passing four gridiron trrumphy, 27-to-13, before|to turn the tide. Michigan had tion must still go in the books)
yards to Nate Bordon. D’Achille missed the conversion, and the score was 13-13. Neither team threatened seri-
{22 to the Spartan 18, but Half-|
ously in the third period. In the
coaches poll put on a brilliant dis- on his own 14. final period Ohio drove 51 yards play of power running and sharp “0— 9 ending with Cassady’s 7-yard passing with Quarterback Tom plays to move 86 yards, McAuliffe 18-27 touchdown plunge. Three minutes |Yewcic and Halfbacks Billy Wells tiring 39 yards to End Paul Dek-| later Ohio’s Irv Denker tackled and Don McAuliffe leading the ker on the Wolverine 10.
It took Michigan State nine]
Ellis hard and he fumbled. Bill
Vavroch recovered on Indiana’s!|Oet. &—Michigan at Stanford. a dia | Oct. 4—Mich, State at Oregon State.
Wells | NEXT GCPPONENTS |split the middle for the touchdown | land Slonac kicked his second of
35 for! Ohio and Cassady rammed
+0 7 0 0— 7 to the 23 where Senior Fullback Way to the longest winning streak |
John Hlay cut through left guard |! to dash for a touchdown. Cas-| sady's long 48-yard runback of a i
i -state rivals, pass interception set up his final intra-s he 2 : touchdown plunge with less than capacity crowd with two early
{three extra points. n Spartan history. . ? Er. : Michigan, a decided underdog LATER IN the quarter Michi-| n the 44th meeting between the 8an State nine. The Spartans amazed the Were unable to move and Yewcic kicked to Lowell
cores but Michigan State was sprinted back to the Spartan 22.
two minutes left, Jy Statistics: sol rw. | skirted right end on the fifth play| Pirst downs ........ 14 IMMEDIATELY after the from scrimmage for the score. Rushing yardage .. 140
Passing vardage ... Passes attempted ... 23 Passes completed ... 14 Passes intercepted . unts ue Punting average . Fumbles lost Yards penalized
1 52
a Sl
£
Wm.Mary .......0 714 0—21
Wake Forest....14 0 7 7-28
ai : SO
- ——————————————_ - Nr | — Anbirn .....ien @ T 0 07
Maryland LEE EERE 6 0 0 7-18 ?
»
PASSING THE BUCK—Ohio
164 second Wolverine tally, McAuliffe |
John Borton in the first period bio State won, 33 fo 13. pried ug
The Wolverines scored again
streaked down the right sidelines two minutes later on a 37-yard | 3/ for a 70-yard touchdown and pass from Quarterback Ted Topor 40 Evan Slonac converted.
ito Perry,
Russ Rescorla con-| As the second period opened, (verted.
| fensive strength. Jay Jacobs
State's Fred Srwiey dipped behind Indiana's Bill Holzbach (40) fo take a touchdown pass from ainst the Hoosiers at Ohio State yesterday. Ohio's No. 10 is Bob Grimes, Ohio end.
a sellout crowd of 97,239 in marched 60 yards from its own 25 highly creditable. Michigan Stadium. | The nation's No. 1 rankingback Frank Atwell fumbled and aerial game went astray and their Underdog, surged goalward on team in the United Press football Safety Man Jim Ellis recovered pass defense left much to be de- three different occasions and once| | sired. But Hinkle can speak of his had a first down en the Irish|
Occasionally the Bulldogs’
freshman with a smile today. In the line burly Bill Norkus, a freshman from Marion, and | Dick Berndt, a linebacker from | Logansport, repeatedly stripped North Central's line of its of- |
and Gene Kuzmic were also standouts for their defensive work in the backfield. Butler hit paydirt the
t
Ellenberger stepped around right
lers and ran 53 yards to score. Bill Hughett kicked the extra point. » » » i THE BULLDOGS made it 14 to! 0 before the quarter ended. Eng Continued on Page 12, Col. 8 |
|
iy |
He |
Times Diagram Photo by Raymond Bright and J. Hugh O'Donnell.
Behind to
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. the third period with a pictu
came from behind to tie Notre Dame, 7-7, in a bruising football game before a sellout crowd of 74,711 at Franklin Field
in the season's opener for each team,
The long score, a soaring 35-
{yard pass from Glenn (Bones)
attempts and continved his punt- Adams into the arms of tall Ed|
Bell, and a 30-yard race for the |goal by Bell, equalized the first NEXT OPPONENTS
{ Oct. 4—Notre Dame at Texas. : | Oct, 4—Wm, & Mary at Penn State.
J {period touchdown the Irish had {ground out “in a jolting drive their 11 and carried right over the Penn goal.
tra point. The two scores, Bell’s gallop, and the one yard plung by
tiret Notre Dame took over on its 41.|
Perry who time it got its hands on the ball.|Ralph Guglielmi completed three passes in a row and then hit Latt-|
Staying: on the ground, Kress end, slashed through three tack ner for his fourth straight dn the
Penn 24. But Bell, in a last second gesture, grabed the ball from | Lattner’s arms and Noel Schmidt recovered for Penn. Two Penn line rushes ended the game, Notre
Dame's touchdown be-
Penn Comes From
Tie Irish
By United Press
27—Pennsylvania, striking in re-book 65-yard scoring pass,
...14
cov 27 creed
wi 33 lawa S§. ..... 7
Army ........28 S. Carolina ... 7
eens] vee 0
wee 1 ees 0
Navy .... Yale .....
Princeton . Columbia .
Irish, Purdue Are Tied, IU Loses
Boilermakers
Tied 20-20 By Penn State
By United Press
STATE COLLEGE, Pa, Sept. 27—Plucky Penn State scored a mild surprise today by tieing powerful Purdue, 20-20, in a thrilling pitchers battle féaturing Dale Samuels and Tony Rados. Rated favorite because of the sharpshooting passing of Samuels, Purdue learned Penn State
NEXT OPPONENTS Oct. 4—Purdue at Ohio State. Oct. 4—William and Mary at Penn Siate,
had a passer to surpass their own. Rados completed 17 of 30 tosses for a gain of 179 yards. Samuels 14 of 28 for 130 yards. Tony's passes enabled Penn State to come from behind after trailing, 7-0, at the end of the first period, ‘and to lead the ‘rugged Boilermakers, 13-7, after five minutes of the second period. » » » THE BIG TEN runer-up of 1951 then went quickly ahead on Phil Klezek’'s two touchdowns from scrimmage, but Penn State tied it up midway in the final period on Rados’ sneak from the two. Next to Rados, Halfback Don Eyer, contributed most substantially to the Lion effort. His 52yard punt return set up Penn State's second touchdown in the third period, his fourth period in-
the 30-yard marker that tied the score. Another intercepfion squelched Purdue's last minute battle to pull the game out’ of the Tire. Fd After Samuels heaved a fourth down touchdown pass to Bernie Flowers-late in the first period it looked like only a matter of time ufitil the Boilermakers started rolling. ‘It was then that Rados kept intact an march by pasing sucessfully
pass and then rushed Lattner to the 1. FP | pe J ~ . | THE, TRISH split-T squeezed together, filtered over. added the point. Penn's third period touchdown began when George Boessler took a fair catch on his 35. Adams faded back while Bell scooted down the sidéline behind the Notre Dame secondary. A point-
|Carl Sempier added the tying ex- Perfect pass which dropped into
{Bell's hands left him in the clear
lon the 30, and he raced unchecked |
ito the goal.
line and Lattner| Menil Mavriades|
seven times to Joe Yukicka, Dick Jones and Matt Yanosich for 72 of the total yardage. Bob Pollard plunged over | from the 4 and Bill Leonard booted the placement for a 7-7 tie. The ensuing second period touchdown putting Penn State ahead, 13-7, gave Purdue a temporary scare, but the Boilermakers cashed in two quick ones to lead, 20-13, going into the final quarter. At this point the game looked like a sure victory for Purdue, but the tiring Lions suddenly stiffened on defense, smeared Sam-
every fan in the stands. » » » Colgate beat Cornell, 14 to 7. This always makes the toothpaste people happy.
North Carolina Gets
Rude ‘T’ Lesson CHAPEL HILL, N. C.—Texas’
Johnny Lattner, were the high Statistics: uels more than once, and packed spots A a game which saw mirst downs tic i Penm 3 3 together a final drive to knot the No 'e. re ame miss one o er | Passing. wise 18 1a score : | AY td have (EE Se jj Jj Satsties Penn 31. Pardge one -yar ouchdown pass |DAs = 1 A s recalled by the penalty route. [Punts Jmercemed 8 PR LR ren rans a Fr 118 ‘on Punting average .. 33 35 Passing yardage . 142 Taras penalised 1 ® ol Eamer siemiied i BUT PENN, a seven-point|’""" Venaiaed ............ {De : EE —— — | Punts © . Welsh Rare Bifs [|:":" i i um s 08 “es “eis f S dare | S Yards penalized .....c...... ; three yard line. Notre Dame dug] y > lip to blunt that opportunity, an-|\l By JACK WELSH i S lafe but jotted Shalice Wap Tumbled a After those Notre Dame and n ’ s | Purdue tie games, it's a shame | | | d hi { : | ’ fered away, Are With a. Tut Indiana had ‘to break the eve all asis u e Irish, Ith a last| monotony in such a sad way, minute thrill when they marched # x =» D i if 1 6 on the airwaves from their 41 to The way Butler's Bulldogs e rol y - the Penn 24. | keep piling up touchdowns, By United Press Just 150 seconds remained when! they'll soon have one for DETROIT, Mich. Sept. 27—
With the presstire off, the Cleveland Indians scored 10 runs off | Virgil Trucks and Billy Hoeft in the first two innings today and went on to defeat the Detroit Tigers, 11 to 6. The Indians, whose hopes for the American League pennant faded ‘Friday night, pounded Trucks and Hoeft for five runs on
fore Penn settled into its pattern POWernouse from the plains gave|six hits in the first and five runs
of holding its last seven oppo- | nents scoreless in the second half, |
which set up the kill. Back to their 11 by a punt, the Irish rolled scoreward in 15 plays. Lattner bit off 21 and 23-yard thrusts under the quarterbacking of Tom Carey. Then in the final 15 yards, | Guglielmi came in, flipped a |
TANDING
North Carolina, which is just learning the T-formation, a rude
was a combination of slashing 1¢$son in that style of play today | #® power climaxed by aerial artistry PY Piling up an easy 28 to 7 vic: ninth off Dick Marlowe, Detroit's {fourth hurler.
tory before 40,000 fans. Quarterback T. Jones, “Mister T" in Texas and a past master of the T-attack, plopped passes in
receivers’ arms, flipped pitchouts |
and darted away from grasping tacklers as nonchalantly as you please to lead the attack. |
NATIONAL LEAGUE oh 108 Pet.
GB BrookIYR ...eqs0i0ss 6 267 | New York ., 92 61 601 4 St. Louis .., 88 65 579 8 Philadelphia 86 67 562 10 Chicago 28 TT A497 20 Cincinnati 68 85 444 28 BOSIOND. ....vses0nsasa 4 89 418 32 Pittsburgs 42 111 2% 54 AMERICAN LEAGUE on Lost Pct, New York . 58 .621 5 Cleveland 92 61 601 3 Chicago ie 81 13 533 14 Philadelphia 8 15 510 117 Washington -, 27.78.5063. 18 ston Soke «96 17 497 1% Louis... cco. 63 90 412 32 | etroit 50 103 327 45 LITTLE WORD SERIES Rochester SE Ne a 0 000 Kansas City aise 1 1.000 YESTERDAY'S. RESULTS
AMERICAN LEAGUE | Chicago 8, St. Louis 4. | Washington 3, Boston 2, Cleveland 11, Detroit. 6, New York 3. Philadelphia 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE
bilsbureh 9, Cincinnati 6. i oston 11. Brgokvn 3. fladeiphts 7. New York 3.
Chicago A 5 1. ORLD SERIES * Kansas City 8. Rochéster 2,
-
| (Haddix (2-1)
| {Pierce 15-12)
N delp} x Ja veland (Roxek 0-0)
GAMES TODAY
AMERICAN LEAGUE | St. Louis at Chicago. | Cleveland at Detroit, New York at Philadelphia. Washington at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Brooklyn. Philadelphia at New York, Pittsburgh at Cincinnati. Chicago at St. Louis. LITTLE WORLD SERIES (Best of Seven) Rochester (Int.) at Kansas City (AA)
Probable Pitchers
NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia (Roberts 27-7) at New York (Harshman 0-1) | Boston (Johnson 6-3) at Brooklyn (Negray 0-0) Pittsburgh (Neccial 1-6) ‘at Cincinnati! Raffensberger (16-13). . | Chicago (Minner 13-9) at St, "Louis!
AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis (Pillette 10-13). at Chicago
Washington | asterson 10-9) at Boston (Me
ermott (10-8) at Phila
w York (Blackwell 1.0) ia (8cheib (10-6) at Detroit (Gray
vy ’
~
| Cleveland ' Detroit
fon four hits and an error in the second. Cleveland's last run came in the
The Indians wound up the day with 19 hits, including a home run by Jim Tipton in the second ine ning. Chakales registered his first victory of the season, giving the Tigers 14 hits,
CLEVELAND DETROIT AB HOA AB HOA Mitehellit 5 3°'1 0 Greeh.ef 54580 Avila. ’h 2 2 0 3 Hatfield3p 5 1 0 3 Majeski,2b 2 # 1 3 Kuenn.ss 506 3 4 Doby.ef 4 1 1 0 Dropeld 4 3180 Faster.1b 5 210 1 Sullivanset 31 1 0 Boonedh 5 1 0 1'Delsingft 20 1 1 Pope.rf 533 0 Ginsherge 3 2 5 0 Tipton.e 4 3°4 0 Federoffi2b 4 3 3 4 Strykndss 4 2 7 4 Trucks,p 6000 Jhaknles,p 4 2 0 0) Hoeft.p 1001 brnthiep 1 0 0 0) Pesky 1100 Wighf.p hoon Mapes 10600» Marlowe,p 0 6 0 0 | Hoop - 17000 Tolals 41192712) Totals 142713
Pesky batted for Hoeft in 5th, Mapes batted for Wight in 7th, Hopp batted for Marlowe in 9th. 1 .... B50 000 01-1 .. 010 010 11% RUNS—Mitchell, Avila, Doby 2, Easter 2. Boone, Jobe 3, Tipten, Drepe, Delsing, Ginsberg 2, Federoff 2. ERRORS—Boone, Sullivan, Hoeft. RUNS BATTED IN—Doby 3, Boone a, Tivton 5, Pope. Federoff, Pesky, Ginsberg, Groth. Drope, Hatfield, Vi THO. Bask HIT—Pope, Ll or IREE-BASE HITS—Avila, Poe, Fedoff.
nd and Majeski, Boone and Easter, Federoff, Kuenn and Drep eunn and 4
Topo, 5 . LEFT ON BASES—Cleyeéland 7. Detroit ‘
BASE ON BALLS kales 1, Abernathie 1. Trucks I, ft 2. i - STRUCKOUT—By ‘Chakales 3, H HITSOft Trucks in MN innin 8 in 4%. Wigh in 2, Marlowe LOSING pr EK kales. vs t R . Papal
rr,
terception launched the Lions on,
86-yard Lions
Fifiadaleniie ii
