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The Times du lieu suivant : Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 52

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Shreveport, Louisiana
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Sunday, April 2. 1973 Tiu Shk: H-niu 1 Ml Kelly Is Double Trouble (9 Hill Mrlntyre 9 Scouting Report (III) BOSTON (AD Pat Kelly sparked two rallies with doubles ..,1 1.... i orsier I (1 ime-uumiK renei, leaning the Chicago While Sox to a 2-t victory over the Huston Red Sox Saturday. Kelly doubled in the first innintJ tt tVa tolauicnrl gmne at Fenway Park and eventually scored on a AHen bouncer to eive the White l-ua a nj i-iiu. tox a l-o lead.

The Chicago outfielder drilled! anther double in the third inning and rode home with Chicago's winning run on i Yr 13 ill Vf It Boston scored its only run of i11? game in the bottom of the caiuun rs ioi double and then chased Chicago Starter Stan Bahnsen With a seventh-inning threat. After Orlando Cetieda sincled vith one out, orster came into (l i I I rest me umon we a i. driver." Gene while stranded in Little Rock, But it kept raining, and raining. It wasn't tunny any more. Thunder and Ligntning.

it ain't nice to fool around withj Mother Nature. pitcher Tom King had worked a throu.hittpr nn (Wnino Nioht hark nn Anril 14th. His next! start, in a 7-5 win at Memphis! nine nights later, he slipped I 4 1 i I ft i 55 T-; vW vh 1 ft ic; the Same and gave by a shuljnin but Alou singled and Mur- the mud of Blues Stadium and xt two batters to ena tne hurt his back. I threat. Pitcher Ken Collins was out of Forster pitched out of a the rotation with a sore elbow, bigger jam in the eighth inning Rotation? Ha, it is to laugh, when he loaded the bases with Kevin Kobel was supposed toitwo out.

work last night, Tom Hausman was down to pitch tonight's Twins-Yanks homecoming against the Blues at SPAR Stadium. NEW YORK (AP) Bobby Beyond that, Freese was Murcer drove in five runs with jarred it loose and Melton was credited with a double. Both players were shaken up but remained in the game, which the White Sox won, 2-1. (UPI Telephoto) Boston Second Baseman Doug Griffin (left) collides with rightfielder Ben Ogil-vie while chasing a fly ball by Chicago's Bill Melton Saturday afternoon. Griffin had the ball, but the collision playing it by ear.

The Caps had gone so long witnoui a game anybody cou uid take a turn on the rubber. Elsewhere, shortstop Whitey Adams went off to play soldier Friday and Saturday and was supposed to return by Sunday. And two of Freese's ribbie sluggers, Rick Richardson and! Dan Thomas, hadn't knocked, across a solitary marker be-j tween them through seven starts. All the power socking had, been by two wee belters in the' Dasture. Sixto Lezcano and Alex! Rodriguez.

Between tnem, mey had Dushed home 11 runs and rapped the club's only two homers. Sixto also had a couple of triples. It was coming from unexpected directions, all this Thunder and Lightning. 'a pair of two-run homers and sinule and Mattv Alou and Craie Ne (s aM) nmlUTed wjlh man on as the New York Yankees trounced the Minnesota I Twins 11-3 Saturday in an lAmerlcan Leayue baseball game. i ho B'? 'wo a single drilled his hit with two away in the onenine innine off nspr Ka! Muirer seuonu nome run oi i i "Ie season mio me anxee inmpcu hi rigm-cenier uem.

i was me xankees urst nome run 0J "minKs i They doubled the margin in the third when Roy White singled and Alou lined his first home run as a Yankee into the right field seats. Steve Braun homered in the seventh for Minnesota's second cer homered again in the Yankee half. May in April ANAHEIM (AP) Lefthander Rudy May, given a four-run cushion in the first inning, pitched his second straight shutout Saturday as the California Angels blanked the Cleveland Indians, 5-0. May stifled the Indians on four hits to notch his second victory in three decisions. The Angel hurler did not post his second win last year until June 29.

The loss was charged to Gaylord Perry, 3-3, who has yet to defeat California since coming over to the A i an League prior to the 1972 season. He is 0-3 against the Angels. Royals-Tigers DETROIT (AP) Lou Piniel-la's two-out, bases-loaded double in the seventh inning off reliever Fred Scherman scored three runs to snap a 4-4 tie and Werner Takes Two Divisions Werner Park and Linear shared honors in the SPAR Youth Track and Field Association city championship meet. Werner Park captured team titles in the fourth and fifth grade competition while Linear took the sixth grade division. Loyd Spence of Brookwood was the leading fourth grade point producer, winning the long jump, 50-yard dash, 75-yard dash and 100-yard dash.

But Brookwood fell short in total points to Werner Park, 53-55. Carl Young, a national Junior Olympics champion last year, won two events to pace Werner Park in the fifth grade division. In the sixth grade, Marvin Murry of Werner Park finished; on top in two events but Linear took team honors with 37 points. The SPAR Youth Track and Field Association had 22 teams and 350 participants entering four preliminary meets before the city championships. lead most of the rest of the way.

O'Brien's disputed shot came wun od seconas remaining in; reguiauon ume, a jumper trom the left corner. However, after a five-minute i-uiueieiice ai me scorer laDie, me snoi was aisanowea. Kentucky insisted that a previous shot had hit the rim, which would have started the 30-second clock again. But a a a i a Singing the lllues "We may don't come vn be here skipper of the Captains, on 27 April '73. Between Monday and Friday of last week, Shreveport's Cap tains kept their road uniforms neat and tidy.

Not once were the duds taken off their hangers on a innkpt that rnrrioH 'em nut Memphis and into Little Rock. uaA tha r-oo parlv.seasnn tpmnn Vmi Unnu, the Thunder and' "Tempo?" repeated Freese. "I didn't think we had any." "Bet you didn't know we had a split season in the Texas League, I said to Gene, who was on the other end of the line in Little Rock. Gene laughed, but he wasn't too joyful. KINGS OF THE ROAD His troops were rushing pell mell after a Texas League record for 'Games Not For 13 playing dates the Captains had gotten in but 5 nights of combat Gene's pitchers weren't pitching, his fielders weren't fielding, his hitters i weren't hitting.

i "We're trying to rent somei canoes," he said forlornly be-j fore Friday's scheduled match- up with the Travelers. Gene was also looking for somebody to drive the bus; the club had gone through five of the species between Shreveport and Mem phis and Little Rock. And there were other irri Un fitrtrttr hAlr in mid-April, when the Caps were 1-0 and went through three days of washouts. "Hey," Gene would laugh, "maybe we can win this thing on percentage. One-and-oh, one thousand." Counting the The Blues, who move in tonight at 7:30 for the opener of a four-same series with our Captains, have experienced sim- Uar discomfort back home in Memphis.

Six of their first ten home dates went down the drain as against only five rainouts all last year and at a con- servative guesstimate there was a financial loss of $38,000. t'The Blues, spoon fed by the New York Mets, are bossed by Joe Frazier. a former Texas Leaguer. Somewhere Joe picked irj the nickname of Cobra Joe in his playing days he's now 50 4-. and he was born in Liberty, N.C., but lives in Tulsa, Okla.

Frazier bounced around the Texas League between 1947-53, splitting his time between Oak City and Santone, and he led the bop in hitting with a .332 mark in 1953. The next year he was up with the St. Loo Cardinals and led both major leagues in pinch-hitting with 20-for-62 including three homers. SHORT ON POWER OI' Cobra Joe will bring in a club pegged to "strong pitching and playing tor the breaks." It should be a running ball club (one game was won by a man the with a bus I of I in in dm. I Dodgers Deal Bucs 3rd Straight Loss Fisk before striking out the COLLEGE BASEBALL Louisiana Tech 6, Abilene Christian 2.

Northwestern 6-1, Southeastern 3-12. Lamar 5-0. Southwestern 1-3. Arka'sas Stole 5 0, McNeese State 2-4. Wiley, Tex.

19, Univ. of Dallas 1. LSU 8-12. Ole Miss 3-15. Tulane Southern Alabama 2.

Alabama 5, Miss. State 3. Auburn 7, Vanderbm 4. HM ston 4, SMU 4. Baylor 11, Rice 2.

Texas 4, Texas A8.M 4. Texas Tech 5-4, TCU 4-0. Trinity 4-3, Pan American 1-7. Panola 11-1, Angelina 0-4 Gramolina 5, Prairie View 4. COLLEGE TENNIS Tulane 4, LSU 2.

Southland Conference Lamar 49, Southwestern 33, Louisiana Tech 30, Arkansas State 18, Abilene Christian 15, McNeese State 4. COLLEGE GOLF Southland Conference Lamar 1194, McNeese 1204, Louisiana Tech 1208, Texas-Arlinaton 1209, Abilene Christian 1277, Arkansas State 1294. COLLEGE TR4CK, FIELD Southland Conference At Ruston Gulf South Meet Southeastern 77, Troy Slate 68, Miss. Colleqe 54, Northwestern 51. Delta State 30, Florence State 5, Jacksonville, Ala.

2. Lorn Star Conference Howard Payne 96, S.F. Austin 47, Anoelo State 46, East Texas State 32, Southwest Texas 29. Texas AAI 24. Sul Ross 9, Sam Houston 2, Tarleton Stale 0.

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL Bossier Easter Meet Bossier 7, Minden 4. Bossier 3, Airline 1. i Anacoco 3 (Class regional). Caldwell 1, Rapides 0 (Class AA playoff). GIRLS' SOFTBALL State Meet, Sibley Abbeville 4, Andrew Jackson 2.

Semifinals Abbeville 4, Sam Houston 2 Andrew Jackson 3, B'aker HIGH SCHOOL TENNIS Regional Play, Querbes Byrd 13, Captain Shreve 12, Jesuit 5, Sprinrjhill 4, St. Vincent's end Southwood 3. Parkway, Plain Dealing and B. T. Washington, 2 each, Northwood 1.

PRO BASKETBALL ABA Playoff Indiana 111, Kentucky 107, overtime (Indiana leads best-of-seven series, 1-0). in Lrtfe3 House I i five the Kansas City Royals a i American eague imsii victory over the Detroit Tigers Saturday. The drive came after Tom Timmerman had gotten Amos Otis to hit into a force out at the plate and John May berry took a third strike from Schmnan. John Hiller had filled the bases with a walk to Fran llealy, a double bv Fred Patek and a wa to onkie Hoias. i The Royals drove Detroit starter Mickey Loncn trom me eajne witn tour runs in tne sixth, two on a double by Otis another on a double by Mayber-ry and one on a sacrifice liy by pinch-hitter Gail Hopkins.

Detroit tied it with four runs in the bottom of the inning off starter Paul Splittorff and Gene Garbcr. Bill Freehan walked, Willie llorton singled and Frank Howard drove in a run with a scratch single. Mickey Stamley singled in a run and Eddie Brinkman forced Stanley but reached second and a run scored when Roias threw the ball away. A wind-blown pop by Tony Taylor fell 10 feet in front of home plate, scoring Brinkman. Orioles-A'a OAKLAND (AP) Bobby Grich hit his first home run of the American League baseball season in the third inning Saturday to snap a tie and give the Baltimore Orioles and Jim Palmer a 2-1 victory over the Oakland A's.

Grich connected off loser Ken Holtziman, 3-2, with two out in the third and Palmer, a 20-game winner the last three years, blanked the world champion A's after the second inning to even his 1973 record at 1-1. The Orioles, who ended a three -game losing streak, nirked Holtman for a run in the first inning on Grich single and Tommy Davis' run-scoring double. The A's tied the score in the second on Gene Tenace's pop flv double which first baseman Boog Powell lost in the sun and a single by Ray Fosse. The A's had runners on second and third with one out but Palmer retired Dick Green on an infield pop and fired a third strike past Bert Campa-neris. Brewers-Rangers ARLINGTON (AP) Ollie Brown, Milwaukee's designated hitter, drove in one run with a second-innina double and two more with a seventh-inning single as the Brewers beat the Texas Rangers 4-3 Saturday night.

With one out in the second, Johnny Briggs singled off Texas loser Don Stanhouse. 0-3. Brown then lined a double to right to make it 1-0. In the seventh, George Scott walked with one out and moved to third on Briggs' double. Both runners scored when Brown singled to left center.

Jerry Bell, 3-2, pitched out of frequent jams, particularly in! the fourth, fifth and sixth innings when the Rangers stranded a total of eight men. but Indiana came back to widen their halftime margin to 65-51. Kentucky scored the first 17 points of the third period to take 68-65 lead. The Colonels, Eastern Division rhamninns new tne lead just about all the way until Roger Brown boomed in a three-point basket with 1:09 left in regulation time to lift the Pacers into the 100-100 tie. Indiana never trailed in over- Indiana Kentucky (103 a McGnis Rrown rrniiis Lewis 9 0-1 18 "Simon 4 1-1 7 2-3 17ss-l 15 3-4 9 JO'Imnre 5 5-7 4 4-6 8 1-1 i.

2' Mount 5 5-7 14 0 0 0 01 artner 0 0 0 0 eller 2 3-3 7Thnmas 5 0 0 10; Hilman 2 0-0 ilTRrien 2 1-1 51 Inhnsn 7 0-7 4Rnsell 0 0-0 0 Totals 46 16-24 111 Totals 4116-21107 Indiana 38 77 14 71 11-111 Kenturky 19 32 34 15 7107 Fouled out Kentucky Dampier Total fouls Indiana 24, Kentucky 78 Technical fouls Indiana, McGinnis Three-point goals Brown, Dampier Mount A 12,119. (2), time of 3:12.7 and Northwestern had a 3:13 to get second and a new school record Thirteen new records were set in the meet and one other standard was tied. ss oiiuiiiiarics Northwestern, 2. Lee Dukes, MC; Art Drevins, Troy, Be. "Mule" Reynolds (1-0) are other Biues starters with southpaw Ken Esposito (1-2) and portsider Bobby Bartlett, unscored on in three games and a product of Arkansas Tech, firming up the bullpen.

Esposito was dratted for $25,000 by the Texas Rang ers, who lost him right back to the Mets. Here's how the rest of the Blues will shape up against the Caps DESIGNATED HITTER-Benny Ayala, signed for the Mets by Nino Escalera, and a .333 hitter through Thursday. CATCHER Ron Hodges, a .714 hitter for Appalachian State college, but only .256 with 16 homers in pro bow with Pom-pano Beach. FIRST BASE Tommy Hal-lums, a holdover who goes by names like Bobo and Thumber, and was hitting .375 through Thursday. SECOND BASE Terry Deremer, a switch-hitter in his third season with Memphis.

SHORTSTOP John Busco. third-year pro with a fine arm! the field. Pacers Sneak Past Colonels THIRD BASE Three -L- 5. 1" DLL seconus icii. in uverume 10 give have nlayed the bag.

TnHiana Panprs rii tpH scoring trom urst Dase on a yrisco Giant in 1967-69: Terrv but there isn too much Senn, hitting 077 through Thurs-power swatting. This is a Lazaro Del Orbe. a utility-tailor-made for Blues Stadium, man jn pro ball since '68. where it is 426 feet to deadi TJTFTFTET.D Paul Womble, center and 340 down each line. hit .333 at Visalia in 1971.

then Ed Pate, a righthander whorir0oped ion points to .233 with replay ot tne snot snowed tnatitime S5J reliever Tug McGraw in the eighth. New York opened the scoring in the third when Staub slashed, a double down the left field line, scoring Ted Martinez, who had singled. Giants-Cards ST. LOUIS (AT)" Bobby Bonds hit Reggie Cleveland's second pitch of the game for a home run, powering Jim Wil-loughby and the San Francisco Giants to a 1-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday night.

After Bonds slammed his fifth homer of the season in the first inning Willoughby protected the slim margin the rest of the way with a four-hitter. Expos-Astros HOUSTON (AP) Jim Wynn's three-run homer capped a five-run rally with two out in the seventh inrnnjz Saturday night that propelled the Houston Astros to a 5-3 National League baseball victory over the Montreal Expos. Montreal starter Steve Renko held the Astros tof one hit until they exploded in, the seventh, with four of the tuns unearned due to a pair of fielding errors by shortstop Tim Foli. Doug Rader started the uprising with a home run, his fifth of the season. John Edwards singled and Tommy Helms was safe on Foli's bobble.

Pinch hitter Bob Gallagher got an infield hit and Edwards scored on Foli's throwing error. Wynn followed with his seventh home run, giving 'league lead. him the major Montreal scored'single runs in the first, and seventh innings on Singles by Ron Fairly and Ken Singletoa and a sacrifice fly by Foli. 1 Bossier Track Club Has ileet The first of fiv meets was held Saturday at the Bossier High track to determine who will represent the Bossier Track Club in the Southern and Regional AAU meets to be held at a later date. A complete list pf winners follows.

JUNIOR DIVtsmN BROAD JUMP Jtri C. Harper, Princeton, 13-2. 75 James M. Harper, 8.4. 100 James M.

Hf4ief, Princeton, 1.5. 880 James C. Harper, Princeton, 2:27.5. 70 YARD HURDLES 'Robert Smith, Elm Grove, 1.1. rj 220 Andrew ClevtSWrlol, Princeton, 28.5.

80 WALK Scott Lane, 'Waller, 4:53.4. 440 James M. HarOer, Princeton, iSB.v. SHOT PUT John -SdN. Hauqhton, 40-7.

'-A DISCUS Kevin Cpwart, Princeton, BROAD jump wsi a prinreion. too David Causey Graenacres, 1.2 VAC! 2IL. DesMara. Lake shore, 0 Rodney Singleton, Lakeshore, 153.5. bantam division ball throw James pendarvis.

220 Davie, lausev, wreenacres, m.u. pb0ROad jump Donnie Johnson, i'5yDavidWaoqoner An)oM() 7J high jump Andy Peterson, Apoiio, 6f0 Alan Meyer, Piatt 1 tv a. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Freddie Lewis scored on a 111-107 victory over the Kentucky Colonels and a 1-0 lead in their best-of-seven series for the American Basketball Associa- tion championship. Kentucky had contended it won the game in regulation time on a shot by guard Jimmy 'B i making the score 102-100, but the referees ruled the shot came after the 30-sec-ond clock had expired.

Lewis, who finished with 29 points, added two free throws with one second left to cap the scoring. Dan Issel of Kentucky led all scorers with 33 points. Kentucky had rallied from a 19-point first-quarter deficit to go ahead midway in the third period and the Colonels kept the PITTSBURGH (AP) Los Angeles scored single runs in the third, fifth and sixth innings and Don Sutton scattered six hits as the Dodgers handed the Pittsburgh Pirates their third consecutive National League baseball setback 3-2 Saturday. The Pirates scored in the first on Dave Cash's single and two Los Angeles errors but the Dodgers tied it against Nelson Briles in the third when Dave Lopes singled, stole second and came around on an error by shortstop Gene Alley. Los Angeles went in front in the fifth on singles by Ron Cey, Lopes and Bill Russell and pushed across the decisive run an inning later when Willie Davis singled, stole second, continued to third on catcher Milt May's throwing error and scored on Joe Ferguson's single.

Sutton held the Pirates in check after the first except for an eighth-inning run on singles by Cash and Manny Sanguillen and Al Oliver's mtield grounder. Padres-Cubs CHICAGO (AP) Rick Reu-schel and Jack Aker scattered seven hits Saturday in pitching the Chicago Cubs to a 2-0 victory over the San Diego Padres. Rick Monday opened the Chicago first inning by driving his fourth home run into the right field bleachers. Monday doubled to open the Cubs' third and scored a second time on Jim Hickman's two-out single Reuschel pitched out of trou ble twice. The Padres collected two singles in the fourth before Clarence Gaston grounded into the tiurd out.

Leron Lee doubled to open the seventh, and took third on Nate Colbert's single. Phils-Reds CINCINNATI' (AP) Willie Montanez singled home the1 game's only run and Dick Ruthven, Billy Wilson and Ed Scarce limited Cincinnati to two hits as the Philadelphia Phillies downed the Reds 1-0 Saturday night. Terry Harmon started the Phillies' winning rally in the eighth with, a single and moved to second on pn ch-hitter Cesar Tovar's infield single. Larry Bowa forced Harmon at third and but the Phils loaded the bases on a walk to Del Unser, setting the stage for Montanez' game-winner. Tovar had pinch-hit for Ruthven after the rookie righthander appeared to suffer an iniurv to his shoulder while pitching to Tony Perez in the seventh.

Mets-Braves A 1 LAIN 1 A Ar Krane- pool's two-run single highlighted i a three-run single inning Satur- i i. ay mem as me lew iuiMvieis heat the Atlanta Braves 4-2 in National League baseball. Felix Millan opened the inninffj with a bad hop single off shortstop Sonny Jackson chest anrl U'illio Mous fnllnupH with a i a star-tor Ron 3 STAND Texas Arkansas SHREVEPORT Memphis Alexandria San Antonio E. Paso Midland Amarillo Saturday's Games SHREVEPORT 2, Arkansas Memphis at Alexandria Midland at El Pso San Antonio at Amarillo Sunday's Games Memphis at SHRcVEPORT Alexandria at Arkansas Amarillo at fcl Paso San Antonio at Midland American League East Pet. GB Baltimore 10 9 9 7 8 8 10 9 .556 .529 .074 .438 .412 .400 .650 .643 .600 Milwaukee Detroit Boston New York V2 2 2'2 Cleveland 3 West 13 9 9 9 Kansas Cltv Chicago 1 T2 2 4ij Minnesota California .563 .421 .333 Oakland Texas 5 10 Results New York 11, Minnesota 3 Chicago 2.

Boston 1 Kansas Citv 7, Detroit 4 Baltimore 2, Oakland 1 Milwaukee 4, Texas 3 California 5, Cleveland 0 Today's Games Minnesota (Hands 2-1 and Woodson t-0) at New York (Stollemyre 2-3 and Peter-son 1-3), 2, noon. Chicago (Wood 4-2) at Boston (Pattin i-ji, i D.m. Kansas City (Simpson 2-1) at Detroit (Coleman 4-1). 1:30 o.m. Baltimore (McNally 3-2) at Oakland (Flnaers 0-1), 3 30 D.m.

Cleveland (Strom 1-1) at California Milwaukee (Slaton 1-1) at Texas (Paul 2-0 or Hudson 0-0), 7:30 p.m. National Lea sue East 8 11 10 9 7 2 West Pet. .667 .579 .556 529 2 .118 .600, .565 .450 .368 .333 GB 1 Wj 3'j Pittsburqh New York Chicaqo PhiladeiDhia Montreal St. Louis San Francisco Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Atlanta San Dieoo 12 8 13 10 9 11 7 12 7 14 5 7V2 9 10 Results Los Anaeles 3, Pittsburgh 2 Chicaoo 2, San Dieoo 0 San Francisco 1, St. Louis 0 Mew York 4, Atlanta 2 Philadelphia 1.

Cincinnati 0 Houston 5. Montreal 3 Tofiav's frames Los Aroeles (Messensmith) 1-2 and Osteen 1-2) at Pittsburgh (Blass 0-1 and Ellis 3-0). 2. 12 35 o.m. Dieoo (Greif 1-1) at Chicaoo Jenkins 1-5).

1:15 D.m. San F'ancisco (McDowell 0-0) at St. IcK (Wlp 7-n 15 p.m. New vok (Koosma" 3-0) at Atlantr (Morton 1-1), 1:15 n.m. Phlarnhia (Christenson 1-2 or Lon-horn 1-3) at Cincinnati (Billinqham 3-0), D.m.

Montreal (Torrez 2-3) at Houston 'Wilsnn 1-3), 2 o.m. Ladd Is Tossed Out of Mat Ring The tag team of Spoiler and Bruiser Bob Sweetan was disqualified in its argument with large Ernie Ladd and Doctor during Saturday night's featured wrestling skirmish at Hirsch Coliseum on the Fair Grounds simply for pitching the 300-Dound Ladd over the tnn ring rope. vicKie wuiiams won tne pins battle royal, beating Toni Rose for that distinction, and the United States tag champions Rip Tyler and Eddie Sullivan lost their match when Tyler was counted outside the ring, but S' i kept tlieir title against UriZZly Smith and Dewey Robertson! because titleholders can't lose; then belts on disqualification In prelims between the gals. Susan Green beat Donna Chris- a 1 1 Evelyn Stevens dumped Barbara OalentO and Toni Pose beat Vickie Williams Rai tiers Close Willi Sweep LUBBOCK, (AP) -Texas Tech swept a season-ending Southwest Conference dou-bleheader from Texas Christian 5-4 and 4-0 Saturday. League East Pet GB io 3 4 4 .500 4 3 .444 4 2 8 .200 6' 1 West Pet GB 8 .415 6 5 .545 1 7 8 .467 2 4 7 .364 3 1 stands 6-foot-5, is 1-1 so far with a 2.57 earned run average, and lost a four-hitter Thursday night Alexandria, looms as a possible starter tonight at SPAR Stadium.

Ironically, Pate was drafted out of the Brewers' chain in November of 1971. He led the California League in hit batsmen last year while toiling for Visalia. Lefty Tim Juran, a knuckle-bailer in his second pro season, is probably the best chunker for the Blues. Over 13 innings he has struck out 20 of the enemy and in last Monday's 7-5 loss to the Caps he fanned 12 of our guys in six frames. Rick Baldwin (0-1) and Cecil Etheridge, player-coach and a Memphis in 1972.

Now hitting CENTERFIELD Jeff An-d stole 73 bases for Pompann Beach in '71, but now has problems getting to first RIGHTFIELD Greg Harts, called the Peanut Man, struck out 11 times in first 26 times at bat. Funny, though, he also hit sa'pl" in pach of those pames. UTILITY Bruce Boisclair, a hitter lfst summer at Visalia. Now hitting .190 or ihereahouts hut. stili regarded as sharp prospect.

Thpse are the They'll oIpv four games at SPAR. Weather willing. II 2B 3B 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 IIR 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 RBI SB Pet. 3 10 5 8 8 8 6 2 6 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .500 .333 .313 .308 .296 .267 .261 .250 .222 .125 .083 .000 .000 Charting the Captains (Saturday Game Not Included) Northwestern Has to Settle For 4th in Gulf South Meet CLINTON, Miss. Halfmilerl Trammel, a tireless freshman I by Troy State's Charles Oliver, Terry Skaggs, -m i 1 out of New Orleans, clocked a 1 who had a GSC record time of Frank Trammel and long jump-j 14:29.1 in the three-mile to edge! 47.5.

Moore set the record in the er Mike Brown set new Gulf Lee Dukes of Miss. College by a' preliminaries Friday night with South Conference records in step. It was the fastest time of a 47.9 clocking, winning their events Saturday, Trammel's career and the sec- Troy State's crack mile relay but Northwestern State Univer-1 ond best ever by a Demon team had enough to hold off sity finished a disappointing athlete. Northwestern in that baton fourth place in the 1973 GSC I Two other freshmen, John chase. Troy had a GSC record the ball had hit the backboard but not the rim.

Indiana zoomed to a 38-19 lead in the first quarter of the nationally televised game by outscoring the Colonels 18-2 in the last five minutes of the period. Issel was the only effective Kentucky scorer in the early going, hitting 15 of his team's first 24 points. The Colonels narrowed the gap to 44-37 midway in the second quarter. Been and Leo Gatson, added fourth and fifth place finishes in, the three-mile for Northwestern, In the 440-yard dash, North-1 western freshman A i Moore was nipped at the tape ml yjim ouuui TRACK EVENTS 440 RELAY 1. Trov State, 41.5; 2.

Southeastern La. 3. Mississippi Colleue 4. 4:13 2. Art Drevins, Troy State; 3.

Leo! Gatson, Northwestern. 120 HIGH HURDLES Robert Jo Jo Morris, wanm, snuineasiern 2. VMMC, U-CIIH 31(11 Cj J. WVTUf tJH uelt Mate. Trov.

T. DonC snort, "ouiheasKr 3. 'A No-thwestern. IHl; 2 Ike Ralev. Miss Tvlf Northwestern 40 HURDLES 1.

Georne Morrls, rit, 53 4, 1 Reoinma philips, Fi0r. mc Don Short, Southeastern; 3. Jamt. Balip; Troy. jmilE RUN I.

Frank Trammel, i i 2 AB Adams Jacobson Stedman Lezcano D. Thomas A. Rodriguez Moore Martz Sheldon Richardson Holmberg P. Thomas B. Collins 3 7 5.

7 7 7 6 3 7 7 5 2 4 6 30 16 26 27 30 23 8 27 24 12 2 3 2 2 1 6 4 5 4 2 5 2 1 0 1 SF- HBP A. Rodriguez, B. D. Thomas, Collins, Holmberg. Stedman.

Northwestern; 3Miss.CoM. FIELD EVENTS Track and Field Meet. Southeastern Louisiana versity's depth paid off as the Lions totaled 77 points for the title followed by Troy State (Ala.) with 68 and Mississippi College with 54. Northwestern managed 51 points, but came into the meet as the favorite. Delta State, Florence State and Jacksonville State rounded out the field.

I a Junior from rensa-: Skaggs, COla, Fla OUtdueled Miss. leffe's Ike P.aleV to Win a 1:53.1 time. It was the third fastest time in Northwestern nistory A n. 1 I 1 aim a yciauiicu uri iui uic red-haired runner. NSU's John Tavlor was third in the 8fl0.

Shrevepcrt freshman Mike Brown got his name in the GSC record book With hlS 23-10 leap in the long jump. However, i 1 I Brown has a career best of 24-0- NSU teammafe Reggie Thompson added a fifth place in I (l. i 1 the long jump. IP II BB SO ERA E.Rodriguez 2 7 2002 10 00 0.00 Sanchez 3 4 1000 110 0.00 King 2 12 7 3 2 3 12 1 0 1.50 Lawson 2 102.i 8 4 3 6 10 1 0 2 45 Kobel 1 5'n 5 2 2 2 1 0 0 3.60 O'Neill 1 52.i 8 4 4 4 4 0 1 6.00 Austerman 2 9'i 11 7 7 3 0 2 7.00 K. Collins 1 3'i 6 5 4 4 0 0 1 12.00 Hausman 1 25s 6 5 5 1 0 0 0 15 00 Stecn 1 2 6442 000 18.00 Save: Sanchez POLE VAULT 1.

Grady Saucier, Southeastern, 15-; 2. Dan Nelson; Southeastern; 3. Richard pope, Northwestern. HIGH JUMP 1. Walden Curry, Delta, 6-8; 2.

Kenny Saul, MC; 3. John Shirley, Southeastern. SHOT PUT 1. Andy Anderson, Troy State, 510; 2. Glen Guillory; Southeastern; 3.

Wavne Kofnovec, Northwestern. LONG JUMP 1. Mike Brown, Northwestern, 23-ln; J. Tommy Smith, Southeastern; 3. Willie Price.

MC. DISCUS 1. Bob Warerburv, MC 140-2; 2. Rusty Prire. Southeastern; 3.

Jon- Despeau. Southeastern. Team Scorino 1. Southeastern La. 77, Trov State 6, 3.

Miss. Colleqe 54; 4. Northwestern Stat? University 51 5. Delta State 30; Florence State 5. 7.

Jacksonville State 2. 100 David Waoqorer, Apollo, 13.7. Reed, whose record is now 0-4. David waqooner, aoouo, 31.3. Rusty Staub then drew an WALK Beau Rabinson' ApeMo intentional pass from reliever 4 iVe' 1:14 rr- MIUVET DIVISION Rone Harrison before Krane-, broad jump Lioyd spense, Forest pool delivered a ground Simmons 71 single past second baseman 'prHiGH jump Delias summepe, Dave Johnson.

Jerry Grote then 1 rme-nn Jones, FVWeton 133 Singled home SI ailb. willim Thcwaj, Princeton, The rally gave the victory to WcKl8(, Jon Matlack, 2-3, who fanned Park.s nine batters before leaving L'ovd.

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À propos de la collection The Times

Pages disponibles:
2 338 483
Années disponibles:
1871-2024