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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 16

Publication:
El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NipCapt urns ains: fmi 35 tri 1 i Close In On Giants tef ---vtrd UnI LI- Tuesday, June 6, 1972 JPage 4-B revmo iiven JL Golf's First Triple Crown SHREVEPORT. La. The El Paso Sun Dodgers halted a late Shreveport rally here Monday night to preserve a 4-2 victory for pitcher Greg Shan-anan and move within one game of Texas League Western Division-leading Amarillo. who lost to Memphis 5-2. Shreveport drew first blood on the game, scoring in the first on Paul Dade's single and a RBI double by Larrv Mansfield.

El Paso tied the game in the fourth inning when Bob Cum-mings reached losing pitcher Sid Monge for a walk, stole second and scored on a single by Lee Lacy. Catcher Dennis Haren picked up the second run for the Dodgers after leading off with a single. Shanahan sacrificed his batrymate to second and Jerry Royster doubled him home. The Sun Dodgers got to reliever Jack Donvan for two runs after two were out in the ninth. Lee Robinson drew a walk on a full count and was relieved by pinch-runner Tom Jenkins.

Bob Lon singled Jenkins to second before Haren hit an the boards in right center that brought both runners home, outside curve for a triple off The Captains, drew a spark of life in the ninth when John Doherty lashed an infield single that first sacker Terry McDermott couldn't handle. Mansfield walked to put runners on first and second before Randy Niies popped to right for the second out. Sammy Ashford then stroked a single to ledt that scored Dohrty. Out went Shanahan in favor of David Hernandez who worked Captain rightfielder David Chorley to a full count before forcing him to ground out for the final out to preserve the win. Shanahan war the sePnnd straight pitcher to strike out nine Captains in a game, equaling a fete performance by Bernie Beckman in Sunday's ovpener.

Shanahan's walk to Mansfield was his only free pass in the game as he raised his record to 2-0. yt El Poso ob bi Shreveport ab Johnson ss i 0 0 Martin 2b 4 0 0 0 Rovster 3b 4 0 11 Dade 3b 10 Cumrrvngs If 3 1 0 0 Doherty If ,4 1 1 0 McDer'tt lb 2 0 0 0 Mansf'eid lb 3 0 1 1 Locy 2b 4 0 2 1 McCowan rr 0-0 0 Robinson rf 2 0 0 0 Niles 4 iO 1 0 Jenk's pr-rf 0 10 0 Ashfcd cf -401 0 Lona cf 3 110 Chorley rf 8 1 0 Haren 4 12 2 Mllbou-ne 2b 3-0 0 0 Shanahan 2 0 0 0 Monge 3 0 0 0 Hernandez 0 0 0 Donovon t0 0 0 0 Totals 28 4 4 4 Totals 3J 1 I El Paso 003 100 Oil 4 Shreveport ICO 000 001 Long. DP Shreveport 1. LOB El Poso 5, Shreveport 4. 2B MansfieldNiles, Chorley, Royster.

3B Haren. SB Mc-Dermorf, Cummings. Lacy. l.bno, IP ER SO Shanahan 0 83d 4 2 2 1 9 Hernandez 'aO 0 0 8 0 Monqe (L.2-3) 8 4 2 1 6 Donovan 1 2 2 ZjT) 0 Save-Herrandez. 2:17.

wv I I' ri' B'f r' fe 1 i PORT ERIE, Ont. (AP) "Lee Trevino's sweep of the Canadian, United States and British Open golf championships in 1971 has earned him golf's first Triple Crown award. Fight Tonight In Juarez Ready Castillo, jlj 0.12 X- CHESS CHAMP IN TENNIS TOURNEY Bobby Fischer, American chess master who'll meet Boris Spaseky of Russia for the world championship in Iceland in July, hits a serve while competing Monday in the second annual Dewar's Sports Celebrity tennis tournament at La Costa Country Club in Rancho La Costa, Calif. His partner is Gail Goodrich of the Los Angeles Lakers professional basketball team. The tournament was won by Hank.

Greenberg and Bob Boyd, Southern California basketball coach. (AP Wirephoto) The popular Mexican-American became the first winner of the award, inaugurated for his accomplishment by the sponsors of the Canadian Open, Peter Jackson cigarettes. The award, worth $25,000, was presented to Trevino Monday at the Cherry Hills Club, site of the 1972 Canadian Open July 6-9. The presentation made by L. E.

Ricard, president of the sponsoring firm, who also announced a similar award will be offered annually as an incentive to professional golfers duplicating Trevino's feat. Following the presentation, Trevino earmarked $5,000 of the prize money as an initial deposit to the Lee Trevino-TJni-versitv of Texas at El Paso Endowment Fund to provide financial aid to deserving young Canadian and American athletes attending the university. The fund will be supplemented by donations from other sponsors. "I almost won this much yesterday," Trevino said. He 'inished one stroke behind Doug Sanders Sundav in the Kemper Open at Charlotte, N.C.

He played three holes at the Cherry Hill club and pronounced the course "beautiful." Trevino, who has won in the last three weeks, says his momentum is roughly what he had going just prior to winning the U.S. Open last year which began his big streak. his position among the top twenty. Tickets are available at Dominguez Sheet Metal Company 3128 Alameda and at. the Kentucky Club on Jurez Avenue in Juarez.

Tickets are'-also available at the Plaza Monumental bullring on the PanAm highway in Juarez. sions to Raul (Ranita) Robles and to Chucho Castillo last summer in Juarez, and he was stopped early in his career by fifth ranking Ramon Bravo of Venezuela. Castillo is ranked second among the world's bantamweights and Large maintains Darwin Doubles Minnesota LEE TREVINO Baltimore aiterin iKemper Win Gives Doug Baseball Draft Opeiis Padres Get First Pick ing batting practice which followed Sunday's double header shutout loss to Oakland. -Eighth Spot NEW YORK (AP) Doug Sanders' victory in last week BALTIMORE ab BALTIMORE (AP) Bob Darwin, who singled to launch a two-run Minnesota rally in the fourth inning, doubled home the tie-breaking run in the sixth as the Twins edged the slumping, Baltimore Orioles 3-2 Monday night. The winning hit scored Harmon Killebrew, who had reached second when Dave Johnson fielded his leadoff infield hit and threw wildly past first base.

It snapped the Twins' losing streak at four games. Minnesota's other runs off loser Dave McNalaly, 5-5, came on singles by Darwin and Steven Brye and a two-run double by Eric Soderholm. The Orioles, who have lost four in a row and six of their last seven games, managed just five hits off Dick Woodson, 4-3, and reliever Wayne Granger after a Monday morn Buford If Watt Scott Ootes Rettenmd cf Powell lb Snopay If Baylor rf BRobinsn 3b Crowiey If MINNESOTA ab bi Tovar rf 5 0 0 0 Tnompsrt ss 4 0 2 0 Carew 2b 5 0 10 Killebrew lb 3 1 1 0 AAonzon pr 0 0 0 0 Roof 0 0 0 0 Darwin cf 3 12 1 Brye If 4 12 0 Soderhlm 3b 3 0 1 2 RWoodsn 3 0 0 0 Manuel ph 10 10 Kaat pr 0 0 0 Granger 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 4 4 3 0 4 3 1 2 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Former World bantamweight champion Chucho Castillo and El Paso's Earl Large wound up training sessions Monday and began the process of "psyching" themselves up for Tuesday night's 10-round revenge match at Plaza Monumental bullring in Juarez. The Castillo-Large rematch tops Plaza Monumental's main event program. Two strong preliminaries begin the action at 9 p.m.

Knockout artist Memin Vega, one of Mexico's "hottest" young fighters, takes on rugged Vidal Rios of Torreon, Mexico in the second main go. Juarez's unbeaten Octavio Amparan gets into the big time in the third main event when he collides with Agustin (Kangaroo) Estrada. Mario Mendez meets Mosco Lozano in a supporting eight rounder and El Paso's tough Mono Torres trades blows with Trini Garcia in the opening six rounder. Castillo, winner of 40 out of 50 professional bouts, has knocked out 21 of his opponents, including the man from whom he took the title in 1970, Ruben Olivares. Castillo has suffered five losses via the decision route and has been kayoed five times.

Large, winner of 22 fights out of 25 ring battles, boasts wins over former Mexican bantam champion Alfredo Meneses, top Philippine boxer Frankie Cabanig and Mexican Pablo Vega. He has dropped close deci McNaliy ph 1 1 Hendr.Ks Grich ss prospects expected to be picked in the regular ptiase are pitchers Bob Grossman of the University of Maryland; Larry Christiansen of Marys-ville, Dick Ruthven of Fresno State College anrTStott MacGregor cf El Segnndo, Calif. Also, catchers Richard Bengston of Peoria, 111., and Bobby Goodman of Memphis, and infielders "Dave Chalk of the Universiiy of Texas, Dave Roberts cj the University of Oregon, Danny Thomas of Southern Illinois, Roy Howell of Lompoc, and Richard Manning of Niagara Falls, N.Y. 34 3 10 3 Total 30 2 5 2 Total Minnesota Baltimore 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 03 0 1 0 0 0 02 NEW YORK (AP) The San Diego Padres will open the regular phase of the two-day summer professional baseball draft which begins Tuesday. The major league clubs will select in inverse order of their 1971 finish in the regular phase.

The Padres, who had the worst record in the National League, will be followed by Cleveland, owner of the worst record in the American League. World champion Pittsburgh will pick 23rd and American League champion Baltimore will select last. Selections in the secondary phase were determined by a draw. The Los Angeles Dodgers will pick first, followed by Cleveland, the New York Mets, Texas and San Diego. The secondary phase covers free agents selected in previous drafts but not signed.

D.Johnson. DP Baltimore 1. LG Minnesota 9, Baltimore 7. 2B Oates, Soderholm, Darwin. HR B.Robinson (1).

SB Belanger, Rettenmund, Baylor. D.Johnson, Darwin. IP Granger 1 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST ER BB SO 0 0 11 2 2 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 GB end's Kemper Open golf tournament boosted him to eighth place on the season money-winnings list, the PGA Tournament Players Division announced Monday. Sanders, who won only $24,891 in all of 1971, earned $35,000 for winnin gat Charlotte, N.C., raising his season's total to $74,232. That purse moved Sanders from 26th place to eighth on the list.

kNicklaus, who skipped the Kemper Open, continues to head the list with $156,051. Lee Trevino, who finished second by one stroke to Sanders at Charlotte, earned $19,950 and jumped from fourth to second on the list with Jerry Heard is third with $110,011, George Archer fourth with $106,963 and Tom Weis-kopf fifth with $97,179. Completing the top ten are Bobby Mitchell, Bruce Crampton, Sanders, Bob Murphy, $72,482, and Dave Hill, $71,977. Sanders and Hill were the only newcomers in the top ten this week, replacing Grier Jones and Bob Rosburg. McNally ...7 9 3 Watt 12-3 1 0 Scott 1-3 0 0 Save Granger (9).

WP Watt A 5,235. 3 0 0 Detroit 24 Cleveland 2:38. PCt. .500 .436 .429 .395 WL 17 20 21 22 24 23 6 7'2 Baltimore Boston New York Milwaukee BEST SANITARY-supply COMPANY 101 CHELSEA PHONE 772-3702 Among the highly regarded Campaneris Powers A's Past Tribe CLEVELAND (AP) Bert Campaneris slammed a two-out home run in the 10th inning Monday night to power Oakland to its fourth straight victory as the A's beat the Cleveland Indians 3-2. Texas League Scoreboard OAKLAND ab bl Campnris ss 4 12 1 CLEVELAND ab h.

bi M.Crw cf 4 0 10 WEST Oakland 29 13 633 Chicago 25 17 .595 4 Minnesota 25 16 .590 4 California 20 24 .455 9 Texos 18 26 .409 11' 2 Kansas City 17 25 .405 11 Vi Monday's Results Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2 Oakland 3, Cleveland 2, 10 innings Other clubs not scheduled. TUESDAY'S GAMES Milwaukee (Brett 2-5) of Kansas City (Murphy 1-1), night. New York (Peterson 3-7) at Tedas (Bosman 3-5), night. California (Wright 4-2 and Rose 1-0) at Detroit (Lolich 8-3 and Coleman 7-4), 2, twi-niaht. Oaklond (Blue 0-2) at Cleveland (Colbert 0-3), night.

Minnesota (Woodscn 3-3) at Baltimore (Palmer 6-3), niaht. Boston (S i 4-2) at Chicago (Wood 8-3), night. NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST Pet. GB New York 31 13 .705 Pittsburgh 27 16 .628 3V4 Chicago 24 18 .571 6 Montreal 19 24 IIV2 St. Louis 17 23 .378 14'2 Philadelphia 16 28 .364 15 WEST Los Angeles 28 18 .60" Cincinnati 27 18 .600 V2 Houston 26 19 .578 IV2 Atlanta 20 23 .465 6V2 San Diego 16 29 .365 11 "2 San Francisco 17 34 333 1 3'2 Monday's Results Pittsburgh at San Diego, ppd.

rain Other clubs not scheduled. TUESDAY'S GAMES Atlanta (Reed 3-6) at Montreal (McAnolly 1-5), night. Cincinnati (Nolan 7-1) at New York (McAndrew 4-1), night. Houston (Roberts 3-3) at Philadelphia (Fryman 2-3), night. Chicago (Hands 4-1) at Los Angelos (Downing 2-2), night.

Pittsburgh (Moose 3-2) at San Diego Kirby 3-6, night. St. Louis (Wise 4-5) at Son Francisco (Stone 3-4), night. Rudi If C00 001 1002 10 0 000 100 22x 5 12 0 Amarillo Memphis and Sterling and Russell Brohamr 2b AJohnson If Fosse Chmbliss lb Nettles 3b Bell rf Unssr ph Leon ss GPerry Sterling, (5-4). Russell, Nolan.

0 1 0 4 12 2 4 0 0 0 10 10 2 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 8 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 110 0 0 0 0 RJockson rf Bando 3b Epstein lb Hegan lb Mangual cf Duncan LBrown 2b Odom Knowles (A-l) Lowenstn ph 0 0 0 0 RFoster ph 10 0 0 34272 1 i r-w Ft I Total 36 3 8 3 Total Oakland 002000000 13 Cleveland 000 006 110 0 2 G.Perry. DP Oaklond 3, Cleveland 1. LOB Oakland 5, Cleveland 4. 2B Rudi, A.Johnson. HR R.

Jackson (11), Leon (3), Componeris (2). MR Memphis, Adams (1). Midland 000 040 2017 8 2 Alexandria 000 600 02x 8 8 3 Compton, Schroeder (4), Pipes (7), Rickey (8) and Lundstedt; Graczyk, Boynton (5), Hardy (7), Simpson (9) and Goddard. Hary, (3-4). Pipes, (0-1).

HR Alexandria, Larson (1), Ivie (7), Elliott (5). FIRST GAME San Antonio 001 000 01 5 3 Arkansas 020 020 4 6 1 Harvey, Chandler (2) Lowson (5) and Parks; Pooe, wi I I I I a (7) and Nitschke. Pope, 3-3. Chandler, 0-1. SECOND GAME San Antonio i00 000 0 1 i 1 Arkansas 000 012 3 7 0 Koble and Chlia'ers; Arroyo and Auferio.

Arroyo, 4-0. Koble, 1-5. HR Arkansas, McBride 6. TO MISS KENNEDY GAMES Pole vault world record holder Kjell Isaksson, shown setting his mark of 18'4'2" recently in El Paso, will miss Saturday's Kennedy Games in Berkley, because he allegedly exceeded allowed expenses while competing in other U.S. track meets earlier this year.

Friidrott Larsson, head of Sweden's amateur sports organization, informed the U.S. Amateur Athletic Union by mail this week that Isaksson would not be able to compete overseas "at this time." ER BB SO 7 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 IP Odom (W.3-1) 9 2-3 Knowles 1-3 G.Perry (L.9-4) ..10 8 3 3 0 Save Knowles (3). HBP by G.Perry (Epstein). WP G.Perry. 2:25.

A 7,863. gear -After 46 Happy Years insurance dividends? Schumacher, Giants To Part Ways State Farm is now paying eligible Texas policyholders a big 20 dividend on expiring six-month policies. See: By ERIC PREITT Associated Press Sports Writer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A little bit of the San Francisco Giants New York heritage was lost when Willie Mays was ltraded to the New York Mets '-last month. A huge chunk is leaving when Garry Schumacher, the "team's colorful 72-year-old public relations director, retires. "I'm stickin' around till the end of this home stand.

Then the wife and I are goin" on a trip. My first summer vaca- had an exhibition game scheduled in the Polo Grounds two days before hhe opening of the season. "I had a great idea pitch Feller against Carl Hubbell. The manager, Bill Terry, didn't like it 'cause he wanted to pitch Hubbell in the opener," Schumacher recalled. "I probably shouldn't have done it, but I mentioned the idea to Horace and he went along with it.

They packed the place I think that's when he began to take notice of me." house, cause when the ninth inning started, it looked like we were beat. "He wanted to be there to till the boys he was proud of 'em anyway." Schumacher, who has been with the Giants organization since 1946, began his baseball writing career covering the Dodgers for the Brooklyn Standard Union, but was hired by the New York Journal in 1926 and assigned to cover the Giants. One spring, as the Giants worked their way north from training, Schumacher was marveling at the speed of young Cleveland pitcher Bob Feller. The Indians and Giants tion in 55 years," said Schumacher, whose official retirement date was June 1. The home stand ends June 11.

Schumacher is one of baseball's great story tellers, and he talks with a Brooklyn accent that has lost none of its flavor through 46 years with the Giants in New York and San Francisco. He calls Mays, who broke in with the Giants in 1951, the greatest Giants' ballplayer in history. His greatest thrill? "No doubt about that Bobby Thomson's home run," he said. Then he told a story about his boss, Horace Stoneham, Han 1951 homer that beat the Brooklyn Dodgers and won the National League pennant for the Giants. "Horace didn't see it," Schumacher said with a chuckle.

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