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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 8

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Greenville, South Carolina
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2D (The CTmuntle News SPORTS Tuesday, July 4,1989 AMERICAN NATIONAL NATIONAL Unnoticed 'stair Brewers' Mr. Reliable joins elite group East Division Pet. GB Montreal 46 36 .561 New York 41 36 .532 Vh Chicago 42 38 .525 3 St. Louis 39 38 .506 4tfr Pittsburgh 34 43 .442 9V2 Philo. 29 49 .372 15 West Division Pet.

GB S.F. 48 33 .593 Houston 46 35 .568 2 Cincinnati 42 39 .519 6 San Diego 40 42 .488 8ft L.A. 39 42 .481 9 Atlanta 33 48 .407 15 NEW YORK (AP) The goals that Robin Yount never thought about all seem very possible now. Things like, 3,000 hits, 200 home runs and someday perhaps a place in the Hall of Fame. For 15 seasons, Yount has been one of the most reliable players in baseball.

Yet his success has often gone unnoticed. He has played in just three All-Star games, the last time in 1983. Yount got some recognition on Sunday at Yankee Stadium when he got the hit of his career. Reaching that mark also put Yount along side some very recognizable names. Yount reached the plateau at 33 years and 10 months.

Ty Cobb was the youngest to get 2,500 hits, at 31 years and seven months, and Pete Rose, the all-time hit leader with 4,256, was 34. Others to reach 2,500 hits at a younger age than Yount include Rogers Hornsby at 33, Hank Aaron at 33 and four months and Met Ott at 33 and five months. Yount has a hard time putting himself in that company, though. "The career batting average (.291) isn't all that great, so the reason there's that many hits is because I've gone up there a lot of times," said Yount, who started his major-league career as a shortstop with Milwaukee at age 18. "I don't set personal goals," Yount said.

"If you're thinking about 200 hits from now, I don't think your mind is where it should be at the present time." There are 16 major leaguers with 3,000 or more hits and 15 are in the Hall of Fame. The other, Rod Carew, isn't eligible until 1990. At one time, Yount almost left baseball to pursue a career as a pro golfer and those close to the Brewers feel he's likely to leave baseball as soon as his numbers decline. But right now, there's no sign of that, and another 500 hits seem three or four years away, bles, triples, home runs and stolen SUNDAY Atlanta 3. Phi lodelphia 1 Montreal 13, Houston2 New York 7, Cincinnati 2 San Diego 5, St.

Louis2 Los Angeles 3, i Itsburgh 2 San Francisco 4, Chicago 3 MONDAY Pittsburgh 4, Los Angeles 2 Phitodelphia2, Cincinnati 1 Montreal 3, AtlantaO New York at Houston, (n) TUESDAY San Diego (Whitson 10-5) at Chicago (Bielecki 6-4), New York (Oieda5-7) at Houston (Scott 13-4), San Francisco Robinson 7-5) at Pittsburgh (Kramer 2-4), Los Angeles Valenzuela 4-6) at St. Louis (Ma-grane 7-6), Cincinnati Browning 6-6) at Philadelphia Montreol (Gross 7-7) at Atlanta (Clary 1-0), THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pittsburgh's John Cangelosi can't avoid tag of Los Angeles second baseman Willie Randolph Pirates dump Dodgers, 4-2 Higuera still owns New York, 8-5 AMERICAN East Division Pet. GB Baltimore 44 34 .564 New York 39 41 .488 6 Boston 38 40 .487 6 Milwaukee 39 43 .476 7 Toronto 38 43 .469 7ft Cleveland 37 43 .463 8 Detroit 31 47 .397 13 West Division Pet. GB Oakland 49 32 .605 California 46 32 .590 lft K.C. 44 35 .557 4 Texas 44 35 .557 4 Minnesota 41 40 .506 8 Seattle 37 43 .463 11 ft Chicago 32 51 .386 18 scoring double play.

Fred McGriff homered in the second, his 18th home run of the season. BOSTON TORONTO ab bi ab bi Boggs 3b 5110 Felixrf 4 0 0 0 Reed 2b 3 111 Fernndzss 4 0 0 0 Esaskylb 4 0 2 0 Gruber 3b 4 110 Greenwl If 4 0 10 GBell If 4 12 0 Evansdh 3 0 10 McGrifflb 3 111 Rominerf 2 0 10 Mosebycf 4 0 0 0 Heeprf 1 0 0 0 Whittc 2 0 0 0 Ceronec 4 0 10 Borders fc 10 11 Riverass 3 0 0 0 Myersdh 2 0 0 0 Kutchercf 3 0 0 0 Leeph 0 0 0 0 Gedmnph 1 0 0 0 Liriano2b 2 0 10 Totals 33 2 8 1 Totals 30 3 4 2 Boston Toronto 200 000 00O2 010 000 20x 3 AP reports Even though the defending World Series champions are 39-42 at the halfway point, Tom Lasor-da is not planning any changes. "I don't know if that will help," Lasorda said Monday after the Los Angeles Dodgers lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2 Monday in Los Angeles. "The only way they can hit their way out of it is to play their way out of it. If they're OK physically, we have to keep playing them.

They're just trying too hard." Mike Morgan, 5-8, leads NL starters with a 1.82 earned-run average but hasn't won a game since June 12. He has not allowed more than three earned runs in a game this season, but the Dodgers have scored three runs or less in 14 of his 15 starts. Los Angeles has scored five runs in his last four starts. Los Angeles is batting .218 with runners in scoring position compared to .263 last year. On Monday, Gibson and Eddie Murray each struck out to end innings with two runners on.

Dann Bilardello's RBI ground- SUNDAY Milwaukee 10, New York 2 Detroit 7, Baltimore 3 Oakland 1 1, Cleveland 3 Boston4, Toronto 1, 1 1 innings Minnesoto2, California 1 Chicago 7, KansosCity3 Seattleat Texas, rain MONDAY Milwaukee 8, NewYork5 Cleveland 4, Chicago2 Toronto3, Boston2 Detroitat Baltimore, (n) KansasCity at Oakland, (n) TexasatColifornia, (n) TUESDAY Detroit (Tonana 7-7) at New York (Cadaret 1-0 orPlunk2-l), Chicago Perez 5-9) at Cleveland Bailes3-3), Milwaukee (Bosio 7-5) at Boston (Dopson8-5), Baltimore (Schmidt 7-7) at Toronto (Stieb 7-4), Minnesota (Dyer 0-1) at Seattle (Bankhead 6-4), Texas Brown 7-4) at California (Witt 6-7), 9 P.m. Kansas City (Saberhagen 7-4) at Oakland LOB Boston 8, Toronto 4. 2B Boggs, Reed, Evans, GBell. HR McGriff (18). Romine.

IP ER BB SO Boston Smithson L.4-7 4 1-3 4 3 3 0 1 Murphy 2-3 1 0 0 2 0 Gardner 1 10 0 10 Toronto Cerutti W.4-4 7 8 2 2 3 2 DWardS.4 2 0 0 0 0 2 Cerutti pitched tol batter in the 7th. WP Murphy2. 2:26. A 48,483. Indians 4 bases since 1945: Yount, George Brett and Mickey Vernon.

"When you retire, I guess you can look back and the numbers will mean more," Yount said. "But right now it's not what keeps me going. What does is actually the competition of the game. Going out there and trying to do what it takes to beat the other team. That brings great satisfaction." Yount would like another shot at the World Series.

In 1982, he helped the Brewers win the AL pennant with an MVP season of .331, 29 homers and 114 RBIs. In the Series, won by St. Louis in seven games, Yount was 12-for-29 with six RBIs. "I'm not playing the game tq get 3,000 hits," Yount said. "I'm playing the game because I enjoy the competition.

"There's no guarantees in the game, in life, in anything. You could be here today and gone tor morrow. I don't look that far ahead. I approach everything one day at a time." Yanks get 'hidden' run in victory NEW YORK (AP) Some teams try the hidden-ball trick. The New York Yankees pulled the hidden-run play and it worked so well even they didn't know they scored.

A rare "fourth-out" call changed the final score, but not the outcome, as the Yankees beat the Milwaukee Brewers 5-1 Saturday night. Everyone except the umpires left thinking the scoreboard was right at 4-1. It wasn't until after the game that crew chief Larry Barnett explained it was wrong. "I haven't seen that play in 26 years. I'm just glad I recognized it when I did see it," Barnett said.

The ballpark that made Ruth, Mantle and the pine-tar dispute famous added another bizarre play to its history. Here's what happened: with one out in the eighth inning and New York ahead 4-1, the Yankees had Mike Pagliarulo at third base and Bob Geren at first. Manager Dallas Green put on the suicide-squeeze play and both runners broke on a pitch to Wayne Tolle-son. Tolleson's bunt was caught in the air by pitcher Jay Aldrich on the first-base side of the mound. Realizing he had an easy double play, Aldrich took his time and tossed the ball to first baseman Greg Brock to end the inning.

Pagliarulo, knowing he had no chance to get back to third, kept running across the plate and toward the dugout to get his glove. The Brewers, meanwhile, trotted off the field. This is where it gets weird. Barnett, citing Rule 7.10, said after the game that Pagliarulo's run counted, even though he never tagged up. That's because the Brewers never appealed Pagliarulo leaving early, and because Pagliarulo got the plate before the final out was completed.

"It's a 'fourth-out' situation," Barnett told startled writers. "Milwaukee had to throw the ball to third base for what would be the fourth out. Then, they can choose to make that one the final out and prevent the run from scoring." "But Milwaukee didn't do that, and it's not's my job to tell them. They have to come up with it." Barnett said he pointed to the plate and motioned to the press box, indicating the run had scored. But no one except the other umpires saw the signal.

"If I had to do it again," he said Sunday, "I probably should have been more emphatic. I'd probably do some things different. Evidently, no one saw me do it." No one at all. Green didn't know the Yankees had scored until Barnett told him on the way to the locker room. AP reports Teddy Higuera won for the 11th time in 13 career decisions against New York as the Milwaukee Brewers got 16 hits Monday night and beat the Yankees 8-5 in New York.

Higuera, 3-2, allowed 10 hits and four runs in eight-plus innings, striking out six and walking none. Dan Plesac finished for his 20th save in 25 opportunities. Milwaukee, which had 14 hits in Sunday's 10-2 victory over New York, trailed 2-1 before rallying for five runs in the sixth off Dave Eiland, 1-2, and Greg Cadaret. Robin Yount opened the inning with a single and scored on Greg Brock's double before Rob Deer singled to finish Eiland. Cadaret got Gary Sheffield on a flyout but B.J.

Surhoff singled home Brock for a 3-2 lead, Mike Felder doubled in Deer and Gantner singled in Surhoff and Felder. Surhoff hit an RBI single in the seventh before Don Mattingly hit a two-run homer in the eighth, his 11th home run this season. It extended his hitting streak to 16 games. Sheffield and New York's Bob Geren hit RBI singles in the ninth. Terry Francona's third homer of the year gave the Brewers a 1-0 lead in the first.

Tom Brookens, Don Slaught, Alvaro Espinoza and Roberto Kelly stroked successive singles to open the fifth inning with Brodkens and Slaught cinnati before a fireworks night crowd of 56,498, the largest in the National League this season. Howell, 7-5, gave up a single to pitcher Jose Rijo and a leadoff single in the ninth to Lenny Harris. Roger McDowell relieved and the Reds scored on an error by third baseman Steve Jeltz and a two-out single by Paul O'Neill. McDowell got his eighth save. Howell, who struck out four and walked four, has never pitched a complete game in 20 starts in the major leagues.

The Phillies took a 1-0 lead in the fourth against Jose Rijo, 7-6. Ricky Jordan opened the inning with a single, stole second and scored on a two-out single by Jeltz, barely beating left fielder Kal Daniels' throw to the plate. Philadelphia made it 2-0 in the seventh. With one out, Tom Herr walked, reached third on a single by Von Hayes and scored on a double by Jordan. The Phillies loaded the bases in the sixth off reliever Norm Charlton, but Howell struck out to end the inning.

Charlton came in to start the sixth when Rijo was forced to leave because of back spasms while warming up. Barry Larkin drew a leadoff walk in the Reds' seventh and two passed balls put him on third base with one out. Howell escaped by getting Paul O'Neill on a grounder and Todd Benzinger on a fly ball. CINCINNATI PHILA ab bi ab bi LHarris3b 4 110 Dvkstracf 4 0 0 0 Daniels If 2 0 0 0 Herr 2b 3 10 0 Larkinss 3 0 0 0 VHavesrf 4 0 10 EDaviscf 4 0 0 0 Jordan lb 3 121 ONeillrf 40 11 DwMpvll 100 0 Bnznarlb 3 0 0 0 Dernier If 1000 Dibblep 0 0 0 0 CHaves3b 3 0 0 0 Wnghmph 1 0 0 0 Fordph 10 0 0 LQunns2b 2 0 0 0 Thonss 0 0 0 0 Diazc 3 0 0 0 Jeltzss 3 0 11 Rilop 2 0 10 Daultonc 2 0 10 Charlton 0 0 0 0 KHowellp 2 0 0 0 Griffey lb 1 0 0 0 RMcDwIp 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 1 3 1 Totals 27 2 5 2 SOUTHERN Second Half Eastern Division Pet. GB Greenville 8 3 .727 x-Orlando 9 4 .692 Jacksonville 5 .615 1 Columbus 7 5 .583 Va Charlotte 4 9 .308 5 Western Division x-Birmin9hm 9 4 .692 Huntsville 6 6 .500 2V2 Knoxville 5 8 .385 4 Chottonooga 3 9 .250 5Vfr Memphis 3 9 .250 5Va scoring on Kelly hit MILWAUKEE ab It bi NEW YORK ab bi 5 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 Molitor 3b Francndh Yount cf Brock lb Deer rf Sheffildss Surhoff Felder If Gantnr2b Sax 2b Polonialf Mtnglylb Balbonidh Barfieldrf Brokns3b Slaughtc Espnozss Geren ph Kellvcf Totals 5 12 1 5 110 4 13 1 5 3 3 0 4 0 11 5 12 2 4 12 1 4 0 2 2 41 8 8 4 0 0 0 4 112 4 0 0 0 4 110 4 12 0 4 110 3 0 2 0 10 11 4 13 2 37 5 11 Totals x-won first-half title.

Sundav'sGames Greenville at Chattanooga, rain Huntsville 3, Columbus 1 Jacksonville Memphis 3, Birminghom2 Monday's Gomes Orlando at Charlotte Green villeat Chattanooga Columbus at Huntsville Jacksonvilleat Knoxville Birminghamat Memphis Tuesday Game Oriandoat Charlotte Greenvi Heat Chattanooga Columbusat Huntsville Jacksonvilleat Knoxville Birminghamat Memphis, 2 Milwaukee New York .100 005 1018 -000 020 0215 00 000 0011 000 100 10X 2 Cincinnati Philadelphia DP Milwaukee 1, New York 1. LOB Milwaukee 8, New York 5. 2B Felder 2, Brock, Deer 2. Francona (3), Mattingly (11). SB Gantner (8).

IP ER BB SO Jeltz. DP Philadelphia 1. LOB Cincinnati 5, Philadelphia 11. 2B Jordan. SB-Jordan (3).

SKHowell, Dernier. IP HER BB SO Cincinnati 10 1 White Sox 2 CLEVELAND Joe Carter and Cory Snyder hit consecutive RBI singles in the the eighth inning as Cleveland rallied for three runs to beat Chicago. Bud Black, 7-7, won for the fourth time in five decisions, allowing two runs and seven hits in eight innings. He struck out five and walkied none. Doug Jones finished for his 19th save in 22 opportunites as Cleveland won for only the fourth time in 13 games.

Steve Rosenberg left with a 2-1 lead in the seventh after giving up one run and three hits in 6 innings, the longest outing of his career. But Felix Fermin led off the eighth with a single off Shawn Hill-egas, 4-8, and Jerry Browne moved him to second with a bunt single off the glove of a diving Hillegas. Dion James sacrificed and Joe Carter hit an RBI double off Bobby Thigpen. Browne stopped at third because he waited to see if Carter's hit would get past the infield. Snyder then grounded the winning single between shortstop and third.

The third run of the inning scored on Pete O'Brien's forceout. Dave Gallagher doubled off the top of the fence in left-center on Black's second pitch of the game and Fred Manrique singled Gallagher home on the next pitch for a 1-0 Chicago lead. Cleveland tied it in the third when the newly acquired James doubled in Browne, who had drawn a two-out walk. James was obtained from Atlanta for Oddibe McDowell on Sunday. Dan Pasqua's homer in the fourth, his seventh, put Chicago ahead 2-1.

It was the first homer this season by a left-handed hitter against the left-handed Black. Entering the game, Black had limited opposing left-handers to a league-low .113 average. Chicago blew a chance at another run in the seventh, when Pasqua was tagged out between third and home after Black pitched out on a squeeze play. CHICAGO CLEVELAND ob bi ob bi Gollghrcf 4 110 Browne 2b 3 2 2 0 Monria2b 4 0 2 1 Jomeslf 2 0 11 Boinesdh 4 0 10 Carter dh 4 111 Caldernrf 4 0 0 0 Snyder rf 4 0 11 Fiskc 4 0 0 0 POBrinlb 30 11 Pasaua If 4121 Komnskcf 4 0 0 0 Mormnlb 3 0 2 0 Aguavo3b 2 0 0 0 EWilms3b 3 0 0 0 Allansonc 2 0 0 0 Guillen ss 3 0 0 0 DCIarkph 1000 Skinnerc 0 0 0 0 Ferminss 3 110 Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 28 4 7 4 Milwaukee Plesac S.20 New York Eiland L.l-2 Cadaret 5 1 1-3 1 2-3 out in the second gave the Pirates a 1-0 lead and Bobby Bonilla's two-run homer in the third made it 3-0. It was his 10th homer this season, the first by the Pirates since he connected on June 24 at Pittsburgh.

Jeff Hamilton hit his eighth homer of the season leading off the bottom of the third to make it 3- 1 but Barry Bonds' sacrifice fly in the seventh gave Pittsburgh a 4- 1 lead. Hamilton hit a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the seventh. Jeff Robinson, 5-6 overall but 3-0 with a 1.42 ERA in three starts, allowed four hits in seven inings. "I've got a long plane ride to think about it," Pirates manager Jim Leyland said. "I wasn't even 100 percent sure I was going to give him this start." Bill Landrum pitched two innings for his 10th save in as many opportunities and extended his scoreless streak to 30 innings over 18 appearances.

He got Eddie Murray on a called third strike to end the eighth and Jose Gonzalez on a called third strike to end the game. "It was a tough one, because I know the damage (Murray) has done in that situation before," Pirates manager Jim Leyland said. "He's just a great player. You hope Eddie Murray comes up with nobody on base. You never like to see him the way we did in the eighth." PITTSBURGH LOS ANGELS ab bi ab bl Bonds If 3 0 0 1 AGritfinss 3 0 10 LindJb 4 0 0 0 Rndlph2b 20 10 VanSlvkcf 3110 Gibson If 4 0 0 0 Bonilla3b 4 112 Murroy lb 4 0 0 0 Wilson rf 3 0 10 Marshalrf 4 0 10 Landrmp 0 0 0 0 Sciosciac 4 110 Disttnolb 3 12 0 Hamlin 3b 3 112 ROunnsss 3 0 0 0 Gonzalzcf 3 0 0 0 Bilardellc 4 111 Moroonp 10 0 0 JRobnsno 2 0 0 0 MiDavsph 10 0 0 RRevldsrf 1 0 0 0 Belcher 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 4 4 Totals Mill Charlton Dibble 5 7 4 4 1 1 12 3 4 3 3 1 1 2 1-3 3 1 1 0 0 Mohorcic Philadelphia 8 2 1 0 4 4 RMcDwllS.8 1 1 0 0 0 0 KHowell pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.

PB Daulton 2. 2 34. A 56.498. SALLY Second Half Northern Division Pet. GB Fayetteville 11 4 .733 x-Gostonio 9 6 .600 2 Asheville 9 7 .563 2V Chorlesfn.WV 7 8 .467 4 Greensboro 7 9 .438 4Vi Sportonbrg 3 12 .200 8 Southern Division Chorlestn.SC 9 6 .600 Sumter 9 7 .563 Vt Columbia 6 5 .545 1 x-Augusto 8 7 .533 1 Sovonnoh 5 8 .385 3 Myrtle Beoch 6 10 .375 3V Eiland pitching to 3 batters in the 4th, Higuera pitched to 2 batters In the 9th.

2:47. A 23,035. Blue Jays 3 Red Sox 2 TORONTO Pat Borders' run-scoring single tied the game and Rob Murphy's wild pitch allowed in the go-ahead run as Toronto rallied in the seventh inning to beat Boston. With Toronto trailing 2-1, Kelly Gruber and George Bell opened the seventh with consecutive singles off Mike Smithson. After Fred McGriff popped out, Murphy relieved and got Lloyd Moseby on a popup for the second out.

Borders pinch hit and singled in Gruber and, with Manny Lee batting, Murphy threw a wild pitch that allowed Bell to score. John Cerutti, 4-4, allowed eight hits, struck out two and walked three in seven innings for Toronto, which ended a three-game losing streak. Duane Ward pitched two hitless innings for his sixth save. Smithson, 4-7, left with a sore left hip. He gave up three runs and four hits.

Boston had allowed one run in each of its previous four games. The four-game series drew the largest attendance for a four-game series in baseball this year and a Toronto record. Boston took a 2-0 lead in the first as Wade Boggs and Jody Reed opened with consecutive doubles, Nick Esasky singled and Mike Greenwell grounded into a run- Pitchers key to Reds' hopes AP report The Cincinnati Reds are struggling to stay in the National League West race, but they have reason to hope the status of their pitching staff could be improving. The Reds are hoping that left-handed starter Danny Jackson, sidelined since June 20 with an inflamed left shoulder, might return to start Thursday against the New York Mets at Shea Stadium. It all depends how Jackson fares in sideline throwing he will be doing this week.

Right-handed starter Ron Robinson, who has missed the whole season so far as he tries to come back from elbow surgery in each of the past two years, is on a 20-day medical rehabilitation assignment for the Reds' Nashville Sounds farm team. He is to pitch Thursday against Denver. In his first two starts with the Sounds, Robinson is 2-0 with a 1.38 earned run average in 13 innings. Reds officials said they want to see two or three more starts from Robinson before proclaiming him ready to pitch again in the National League. x-won first-half title.

Sunday'! Games Charleston. 5, Au9U9ta4, Winnings Mvrtle Beoch Sumter 1 Gastonia 7, AshevilleO Chorieston.w Vo. 8. Greensboro 4 Spartanburg 10, FovetteviMe4 Monday's Oomes Charleston, S.C.at Auausta Columbia at Sovonnoh Mvrtle Beoch at Sumter Ashevllleat Gostonio Greensboro at Charleston, W.Va. Favetteville at Spartanburg Tuesday's Garnet Savannah otChorles ton.

SC. Augusta at Myrtle Beoch Columbia at Sumter Spartanburg at Gastonia Asheville at Greensboro Charleston, w. Va.ot Fovetteville .012 000 1004 001 000 100 2 Pittsburgh Los Angeles Morgan. LOB Pittsburgh 5. Los Angeles.

2B Scioscia. HR Bonilla 10), Hamilton (8). Morgan. JRobinson, RQui-nones. SF Bonds, Hamilton.

IP ER BB SO Pittsburgh Robinson 5- 7 4 2 2 2 4 Landrum 10 2 1 0 0 2 2 Los Angeles S-Phillies win SPARTANBURG Designated hitter Joe Tenhunfeld homered, doubled and scored twice and Antonio Linares singled, tripled and also scored two runs as the Spartanburg Phillies topped Fayetteville 7-0 Monday night in a South Atlantic League baseball game that was called in the seventh inning. Fayetteville 000 000 8 1 1 Spartanburg 811 832 7 1 Gohr (L0-1 Torres (5). Marshall (5), Berri-osf)ondyVilev. Peek, RambofVv 1-1) (5) and Llndsev. 2b Morsh (S), Waller (S), Tenhunfeld (S).

3b Linares Mocaluso 1, 100 000 2 000 03x 4 -100 001 Chicago Cleveland 3 2 2 0 0 2 Ro- Morgan 5-8 8 5 4 Belcher 1 1 0 HBP Distefano bv Morgan, binson. 2 25. A 29.473. Fermin. DP Chicago 1.

Clevelond 2. LOB Chicago 4, ClevelondS 2B Gollagher, James, Corter. Barnes. Pasaua (7). SB POBrien (2).

James 2. IP ER BB SO This Date In Baseball July 105 The PhilodeiBhio Athletics scored two runs in the 20th inning to give Rube Wod-dell a 4-i victory over Cv Young ot Boston Red Son. Both went the distance and Young did not walk a batter. 112 George Mullin the Detroit Tigers ceiebroted his 32nd birthday by pitching a no-hitter over the St Louis Browns. ly3 Dove Righetti of the New York Yanteespitchedo4-0 no-hitter ogoinst Boston.

1 S4 Phil iekro ot the Yonkees struck out live to become the ninth pitcher to reach 1.000 strikeouts. Phillies 2 Reds 1 PHILADELPHIA Ken Howell allowed two hits in eight-plus innings and Philadelphia beat Cin- 42 3 2 3 23 8 1 Chicago Rosenberg Hillegos L.4-8 Thigoen Cleveland Block DJonesS.lt 2 27. A S3. 044..

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