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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 38

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
38
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4C St. Petersburg Timet, Wednesday, June 2, till A Loafer But' Johnson: Humble, Affable, -r- -4. I NEW YORK (LTD Alex Johnson's sense of values are a little distorted, that's all. There are times he gives 100 per cent. Like In the batting cage and against those mechanical batting machines.

Other times he gives only 10 per cent. Like when he runs out a ground ball or dog-trots after one which gets by him In the outfield. Alex Johnson jakes. There is no other way to put It. The first one to know when another ballplayer jakes, or loafs, are his teammates so it's not much of a secret among the California Angels what Johnson does.

Last year he was the American League batting champ with a .329 figure and everything was sweetness and light for the most part. But now his average Is down 70 points, so is his disposition and the feeling is he'll be traded again. Not right away. Mainly because the Angels can't get much for him. Oh sure, a club like the Yankees might offer a Curt Blefary for Johnson before shipping him to the A's, but if the Angels were to turn around and ask what about a Roy White or a Thurman Munson, the Yanks would look at them as If they were crazy.

Alex Johnson, because of his surly attitude and the indifferent, who-cares manner with which he plays ball sometimes, has worn out his welcome already In such diverse American cities as Philadelphia, St. Louis and Cincinnati. He came reasonably close to wearing it out with the Angels in Anaheim, recently. Johnson is so strong he can break the ordinary man in two. For some inexplicable reason, though, he has an exasperating way of growing weak all of a sudden.

So weak that he can't summon np the strength to run out a fly ball or keep it from falling at his feet In the outfield. Lefty Phillips, the Angels' manager, tried fining Johnson. That didn't help. Things reached the point where Johnson and Phillips, and even Johnson and his own teammates, were on such completely different wave-lengths recently that the Angels' manager felt the only possible avenue left wai a personal confrontation between him and Johnson, just the two by themselves. The meeting took place in Oakland and lasted an hour and three-quarters.

Some of Lefty Phillips friends who got wind of the session beforehand warned the manager Johnson could be so infuriated with him because of all the fines and a couple of benchings that he might take him apart, but Phillips wasn't worried. "Alex isn't a violent man," Lefty Phillips says about his 6-foot, 205-pound slugger now hitting a rather peaceful .258. "He's only violent with his mouth. I feel we reached a good understanding when we talked alone in Oakland. He told me what he thought and I told him what I wanted.

You know, he has a lotta virtues. He's punctual; he'll never ask to get out of a game; he's a wonderful family man and great with kids for whom he'll sign autographs hours at a time; he has good theories on hitting; he works hard on what he wants, but there's something about him that makes him a completely different individual once he puts on a baseball Many theories have been advanced for Johnson's erratic behavior. His resentment toward the majority of writers, for example, has been traced to a long-ago episode in which he supposedly gave one some information off-the-record and later discovered it in print. Supposedly he has never forgotten and now tars all writers with the same brush. Another theory has it that Johnson basically is a loner who knows he isn't particularly liked by the other players and that this actually bothers him deep down more than he lets on.

No matter what, all these theories cannot possibly explain away his general pattern of behavior. "I'll say one thing about him," says another California player. "He proved his point all right. He showed them (management) he can do whatever he damn well pleases and still get away with it." Not quite. Time has a way of taking care of all the Alex Johnsons.

"A lotta clubs have talked to us about him," says Lefty Phillips, who has set a record for tolerance with Johnson. "They think we're mad at him and that they can jump right in and get him for nothing. I'h uh," Phillips says, spitting out some of his chewing tobacco. "We're not that mad." Maybe Lefty Phillips should've added the word "yet." LEFTY PHILLIPS much patience. ALEX JOHNSON problems afirld.

From l-C Tarpon km New Relabeling May Put Devils Back To Old by Phil Gulick I Of The Times Staff ning at 5 p.m. Boys must weigh less than 123 pounds and will be assigned to league according to weight. Total fee is $20. Lakewood's consistent Jim Oescher became the first to sign University of Florida tennis grant-in-aid this season. UF Coach Bill Potter predicts the 5-foot-ll, 160-pound player could develop into a first-rate collegiate star.

Jim was All-City, All-District and a runnerup in the singles of the state prep meet. $1.00 Off With Coupon DEEP SEA FISHING Vi DAY M00 8 A.M.-12N41-5 P.M. ATLANTA BOATS 391-6111. NW end Jehm Peil lr. Sports In Brief REX SNYDER TEACHING PRO GOLF 300 After 2:30 $1.75 Par 58 18 Holes PINECREST GOLF CLUB 1250 8th Ave.

S.W. LARGO West of Alt. 19, Ph. 584-6497 Petty Driving Toward Million Dollar Career beaten him up in a bar failed to show up in court. tarpon will go into the world record books.

Bob believed the line test was 30 pounds, but be is not sure. If It was 30, it does not beat the record of a 283-pound tarpon. If the line came down to an unlikely 20-pound test it would be a record if other factors of judgment held up. It also appeared the tarpon might have been considerably heavier than the 201 pounds recorded. Sometime after it was weighed there was a discussion as whether the scale was accurate.

A known weight of an object was tried on certified scales and then applied against the original scale. It showed that the scales used for weighing the tarpon were about 4 pounds off per 100 pounds. For a 200-pounder the correct reading for the fish might have been somewhere a ro nd 210 pounds. The measurements for the tarpon tend to support the tarpon being much heavier than 201. By using the measurements of the tarpon 82 14 inches long, 46 inches girth there is a system wherein the length times the girth is squared and divided by 800.

The poundage would then be more like 226 according, to Col. Tom Bonsall of Crystal River, who has a background in mathematics. The telephone number for Capt Buddy Maris, who is to lead the Project Loop Current, was incorrectly given in The Times Tuesdav. It should be 391-7614. FISHING Potluck PALMETTO PINES 36 I do most tarpon but Eustace, who is my brother-in-law, was yelling it should be brought In along with a 90-pounder I had caught several minutes before.

Eustace is still guiding and it is good business to bring the fish in and put them on the dock." The catch of the first 200-pounder on the Suncoast in more than a half century has many ramifications. Tarpon weighing 210 and 205 pounds were caught In 1916 in the Fort Myers area. And back in 1S98 a 210-pounder was landed at Captiva Pass. Bob was with Locklear and Don Bradshaw, Trotter's attorney. It was about 9:45 a.m.

The location was near the No. 4 marker in the Homosassa Channel. The three men were in a drifting, 24-foot boat. There was very little breeze and the water was near slick calm. Tarpon were showing everywhere.

One school of tarpon came toward the boat. Trotter estimated there were 80-100 tarpon in it. He made a cast right into the pack. There was a mighty swirl and the 200-pounder came exploding out of the water. The line peeled off Trotter's Penn 209 reel.

A good 100-yards of it went out before the tarpon jumped again. It was to jump four times. The struggle of angler versus giant tarpon went on for one hour, 55 minutes. Bob was taking a whipping, but so was the tarpon. Two times Bob worked the tarpon near the boat, almost to the gaffing point, but the tarpon summoned new strength and made off each time.

The third time Trotter got the tarpon to the side of the boat, it was almost lost. Locklear, a 220-pounder himself, hit the tarpon with the gaff but the handle broke. In desperation, Locklear grabbed the metal shaft on the imbedded gaff hook and manhandled the exhausted tarpon over the side of the boat. REGULATION HOLES COURSE $050 Mm Any Day Wednesday Saturday from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

aboard the 65-foo't MS Happy Dolphin. Complete with all electronic gear including sea scanner. $15.00 per person includes rod, reel and bait. SPORT FISHINGl For information or reservations, call 360-701 1. Leaves the Dolphin Marina at Dolphin Village on Gulf Blvd.

St. Pete Beach. JOE STURSA, P.G.A. Pro Rent Clubs. Pul li' or dec.

carts DIRECTIONS; From Skyway BriJ9t, Timis Win Strvicei Richard Petty, en route to becoming the first million-dollar driver in stock car racing history, added another $10,000 to his winnings Tuesday when NASCAR distributed the first $25,000 bonanza from the $100,000 Winston Cup program. Petty, who finished with a 106-point edge over James Hylton, also has a headstart toward first-place money when the second $25,000 is divided in September, and when the final $50,000 is divvied up at the end of the season. The Randleman, N.C., driver began racing in 1958, and since has won $962,648. So far this year he has won $133,740 in his Plymouth, his fourth season over $100,000. drit lout I.

JUI inttr- chongi. Prottd north en U.S. 301 through Ellonton and 5 miloi boyw 76 Station ond signs to courio. This is The JOIG CEITHOOD People llEJEl SEX FISHING Giant Grouper, Rod Snopptr DAILY DEEP WATER TRIPS 7 A.M. 1 8-Hour Snapper Bank Trips Sails Saturday Midnight 5 HR.

HALF-DAY TRIPS Thirty teams have indicated they will play in the National Team Championship golf tournament at Laurel Valley Golf Club in Ligonier, July 28-Aug. 1. Defending champions Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer and seven other teams are exempt from qualifying this year because of last year's finish. The field of grandmasters seeking to dethrone the Soviet Union's world chess champion next spring has been narrowed to four. They are the survivors of the quarter-finals of the challengers tournament, a slow ritual that began last year and will climax in September when the two finalists battle for the right to meet Boris Spassky.

The four surviving grandmasters are Bobby Fischer of the United States, Bent Larson of Denmark and TigTan Petrosyan and Viktor Korch-noi of the Soviet Union. A federal grand jury In Cleveland investigating possible antitrust violations by the National Football League heard testimony from Chicago Bears' assistant coach Abe Gibron. Bert Ironmonger, one of Australia's greatest cricket players, has died at the age of 88. He is best remembered for his outstanding play in the 1931-32 series aginst South Africa. One famous story is told about Ironmonger.

A notoriously bad batsman, once he was walking out of the Australian dressing room to face a fiery English bowling attack when a friend told him there was a telephone call for him. them to hang on," he said. "I'll be back in a 8 A.M.-1 P.M. 1 P.M.-6 P.M. Reach for This Coupon $1 is worth I ON ALL BOATS KING All Day 9 A.M.

to 4:30 P.M. HUBBARD'S PIER 8th St. Pete Beach Phone 360-5386 or 363-9711 EDWARD INVINCIBLEOELUXE Every two or three years the Florida High School Activities Association (FHSAA), Floyd Lay executive secretary, reclassi-' fies the quota for boys in the upper three grades of the state's senior high schools. This is one of those years. Not only has the FHSAA boosted the number by some 100, but it has relabeled schools from AA, and to AAAA, AAA, AA and A.

The quota now reads: For a 4A school, 701 boys and up en-t rolled in the upper three grades; for SA, 216 to 700 boys, for 2A, 101 to 215, and for single 1 to 100. "When I came to Gainesville in 1954 as Lafayette Golden's. assistant," Lay said the other day, "a Class A school had a quota of 1 to 40 boys. "Because of the tremendous growth of the state, especially Ihe past five years, we have had to adjust this quota upwards Hf 100. The relabeling is only psychological people would rather be called or "AA" than or There now are 452 members of the association, some of them junior highs which do not receive a classification because varsity sports are prohibited there.

The only change affecting Pinellas County schools may come at St. Petersburg, which was Double-A last year. It all depends upon the rezoning, which awaits finalization by the school board. It's possible the Green Devils will drop a classification, to 3A under old system). The reclassification is effective with the new school year this September.

Boca Ciega looks very strong for next football season, Dixie Hollins, 0-10 last season, is hurting for linemen and receivers, and Gibbs High's Al Campbell just shakes his head. The Gladiators, who pulled together a 5-3-1 season in 1970 after all manner of adversity, lost 14 seniors. Because of rezoning, Campbell doesn't know what talent he might pick up, or lose. The returning seniors have the option to attend Gibbs or ''the school into which they maybe rezoned. Boca Ciega, which matched the school's best mark with an 1(8-2 record, lost 22 seniors including quarterback Pete Ramsber.

gcr, fullback Richard Blood and guard Keifcr Calkins. Still, the looked very strong physically in their spring game last Friday, showing more speed and perhaps a lighter ball club. vv Larry Cameron, facing his second year as head coach of the Rebels, finds his task a bit tougher. The Rebels lost 24 seniors, including All-County, All-City flanker Rick Rozelle and tackle Dan Bench. It will be a mostly senior ball club return-- ing, with quarterback John Davis eexpected to go both ways, middle linebacker.

Rusty Leavitt will be his backup. For the second successive year, Clearwater has sent nine players to the college ranks under grants. They are: Tom Fleischer to Davidson; Brian Nemeth to South Carolina; John Webb to Rice; Frank Duncan to Tyler Junior College; Bill Kes-senich to the Coast Guard Academy, Barry Ward to West Point; Steve Fritz to The Citadel and Tyson Sever and Paul Parker to Florida. The high school athletic shakeup in Hillsborough County continues to puzzle and anger principals, athletic directors, coaches, athletes and parents. A full-scale sports de-emphasis is occurring, with most athletic directors losing their jobs, as such, and a yet unnamed activities director planned to oversee the county's athletic programs.

Some effects already felt were that no ninth graders could attend spring varsity football practice; basketball has been assigned 20 spring days of practice with fall drills not to begin until Oct. 15, and no practice session in any sport may last longer than two hours. Here are some other regulations laid down by School Superintendent Raymond Shelton and the school board: No organized basketball practice during the summer. The baseball season has been cut nearly in half: no more than 16 regular season games. No swimming practice before June 1.

All spring spTts are limited to a 14-event schedule, not Including FHSAA-sanctioned meets. No county team may participate in post-season games, except those sanctioned by the FHSAA. All afternoon practices must end at 6 and night drills at 9 p.m. The county has dropped competitive weightlifting from the program. Hillsborough fielded state champions the past two years in the sport and had a solid program going among the schools.

There are other minor, but no less restrictive, rules being applied, and, on top of it all, the county is in for a fiery fall 'over integration and the possibility of Middleton and Blake closed. Tampa Catholic will be the scene July 12-16 of one of three Sunshine Wrestling Camps. Florida State wrestling coach Jerry Maurey Is camp director. Instruction and demonstration of wrestling techniques will be staged under Charlie Spcidel and Dick Bedics, former Liberty High (Pa.) coach. Steve Fluharly, a St.

Petersburg resident and graduate of Berkeley Prep in Tampa, was named the most improved on the Washington and Lee University football team. He's completing his second year there. Registration for prospective Largo Blue Devil youth foot-I ball players will be held at the Largo Auditorium June 4 begin- There is little chance the CODSTI JHEHI mm ITherefe no frterod like old If need ElECTRIFIING ACTS A Sarasota court clerk says Atlanta Hawks' basketball player Pete Maravich has changed his plea on a drunk driving charge from innocent to no contest. Maravich, who was arrested in April while vacationing, will be sentenced June 28. Mill Reef, the American-owned favorite, has drawn the No.

13 position for today's Epsom Derby in Epsom, England, but jockey Geoff Lewis isn't worried. "No. 13 suits me just fine," Lewis said. "I'm not superstitious." Mill Reef will be starting near the middle of the 21-horse field. Stan Smith of Pasadena, blasted his way Into the quarter-finals of the French Open tennis tournament in Paris, but fellow Americans Cliff Richey and Bob Lutz were eliminated.

Emile Griffith has attempted to make arrangements to fight world middleweight boxing champion Carlos Monzon of Argentina in September, but can't come to terms. "We plan to lodge a protest about the terms offered Griffith," said Gil Clancy of New York, one of Griffith's co-managers, A charge of simple battery against Louisiana State football player Arthur Cantrellc was dropped when the student who alleged Cantrell had sf ffi 18 HOLES of GOLF only $2.00 THURSDAY 8:00 P.M. AFTER 3 P.M. $1.50 10PIAY $17.50 PAR 60 JOHNNY ROBERTS TEACHING PRO Fal in ill One of the nicest things you can do for an old friend is to introduce him. to another old friend.

Old Charter. Aged just right to give it the kind of smoothness a bourbon drinker appreciates. Country Club Mobile Horn Pork 401 8th Avenue, So. West, Largo PH. 584-9810.

TORNADO STOCK CAR RACES I mm 27 HOLE CHAMPIONSHIP 3 GOLF HOLIDAYS GOLF Per Person Double Occupancy $30 Plvi Tn Flo. 688 Just East of U.S. 19 ST. PETE ill twom SPECIAL! 18 HOLES WITH GOLF CART FOR 2 Monday $10 Thru 10 Friday 3 Dayi 2 Nighti. Golf with golf cart, pool, clubhouse facllitioi.

Phono 393-2055 BARDMOOR COUNTRY CLUB lotwoon St. PtUriburf ind (loorwotor OH 4-lano Storkoy U. 1 Yi miUi North Pork (74th Avo. lorgo GATES OPEN 6:00 P.M. COME Aged Kentucky BourboaThe smoothest one you'll ever know.

PONY RIDES FOR THE KIDS! FREE Phone 391-0258 for Storting Times STRAIGHT BOURBON WHiSKEi 5 PROOF 7 YEARS OLD OLD CHAJtTU SIST. lOUISVlllE, KY,.

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