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The Boston Globe du lieu suivant : Boston, Massachusetts • 30

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Lieu:
Boston, Massachusetts
Date de parution:
Page:
30
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

30 The Boston Globe T-eday, July 11, 1ST: AMERICAN LEACl'E ROUNDUP ij Royals hand Orioles fifth straight defeat, 3-2 BUD COLLINS IS From Wire Se. vices If the lowly Texa- Rangers can do it, well surely expec tr.e Kansas City Royals to follow suit. The Rangers went into Baltimore over the weekend and handed the defending American League champions tour straight losses, three of them one-run deci-si ns. In ilte process they limited the slugging Orioles to an average 01 two runs per game. fox Jt i sc: remains the same in Baltimore.

Last s. riding 2-1 on Mike Cueilar's umbed to a late (two-out in-the-ninth) Smith waltzes after the hall LONDON The first tine San Smith beat li three years ago in a Davis Cup match, he was so happy that he drank a little too much, ar.d the next day his pal. Bob Lutz, repcrted: "Stan went crazy, and now he's suffering from a Pepsi hangover. Some peop'e should realize when they can't handle more than four Pepsi's. It was disgusting." The morning after hs defeated Nastase asam in the spectacular 5-set Wimbledon final Sunday, Smith himself reported on his ceiebrational bout with a more substantial elixir champagne.

He said the cure for a cham- Jim benefitted from Bobby Darwin's 406-foot 1st inning slam as the Twins blasted the Brewers, 8-1. The elder Perry. 7-8, left the game in the eighth after being hit on the left leg by pinch hitter Brock Davis's line single. He suffered a bruise just above the knee, but is not expected to miss a turn. Gaylord continues to keep the Indians' heads above water.

(He owns 44 percent of Cleveland's victories). Behind his four-hitter, Cleveland edged the White Sox, 2-1. The decision was Gaylord's 14th against seven losses, and ties him with Mickey Lolich for the most wins in the American League. Ironically Ron Lolich, Mickey's cousin, hit his first major league homer to hand Perry the victory. Chicago manager Chuck Tanner played the game under protest because Perry was allowed to use what he insisted were "illegal Tanner registered his protest with plate umpire Bill Haller after Carlos May was called out on strikes in the third.

ui Rovais' ral BOBBY DARWIN grand slam GAYLORD PERRY wins 14ta Richie Scheir.blum and Lou Piniella, the league's two lending hitters did the Orioles in as Piniella followed Schei.nblum's bloop single with his eighth homer into the setts in left to defeat the Orioles, 3-2. Detroit took advantage of the Orioles' fifth successive loss, ripping the Rangers, 8-3, to gain sole possession of first place in the East. Texas, fresh out of miracles, was easy pickings tor Coleman (11-7) and the Bengals. The Tigers pounced on Ranger rookie Don Stanhouse for seven runs in the first three innings. Norm Cash hit two homers (he now trails Dick Allen by one.

16-17) and Jim Northrup had a two-run job. The Perry brothers enjoyed themselves yesterday. NATIONAL LEAGUE ROUNDUP pagne neaa was a Van Dilien (his doubles partner) dumped a couple of bottles all over me in the dress-ingroom later." conceded Smith, whose concept of hedonism is a beer, a hamburger-with-onions ar.d skipping Sunday school (which he did to play the final). McMahon, 42, rescues Giants; Phils gain split for new boss "Later, at a party, I did have a few glasses of cham Daene. because it was such an I i occasion.

The only thing that hurt this morning was my legs. I've had a sore leg, and two STAN SMITH little above av- hours and 43 minutes of running was a ism Ok their doubleheader under new manager Paul Owens. Pete Richert pitched two innings of scoreless relief as the Dodgers won the opener 6-4 in the 11th on Wes Parker's tie-breaking sacrifice fly and Bill Buck-ner's run-scoring single. Ken Singleton and Mike Jorgensen ripped consecutive eighth inning homers leading the Montreal Expos to a 6-3 victory over San Diego in a game which saw two Padre players wind up in the hospital. In the first inning, San Diego catcher, Fred Kendall crashed into a guard rail between the backstop and the Padres' dugout while trying to run down a foul ball.

He was carried off the field suffering a bruised shoulder and a bad cut on his forehead. In the third Leron Lee was hit on the batting helmet with a pitch and like Kendall taken to a hospital for X-rays. From Wire Services Don McMahon. who pitched for the Red Sox some years back, is still pitching and winning. At least, the 42-year-old, who doubles as pitching coach and occasional reliever for the San Francisco Giants, was the winning pitcher last night as Giants edged the sliding New York Mets, 5-4.

McMahon came on in the eighth after both Jim Barr and Jerry Johnson ran into trouble, and kept the New Yorkers in check. Chris Speier's two-run single in the eighth gave the Giants the edge, with Tug McGraw, the Mets' relief ace, the loser. Jim Fregosi had kept the Mets in the ball game with a two-run homer and a run-scoring single. Willie Montanez drove in five runs to power the Philadelphia Phillies to a 9-1 victory over the Dodgers and a split of LAZ-RO HONORED Joe Lazaro and Jim Plunkett get together at Marlboro Country Club at "Joe Lazaro Celebrity eral times national blind champion. Tournament." Lazaro, of Waltham, is sev-(Jack Sheahan photo) M.

R. MONTGOMERY Carrozzella scores biff at Suffolk A whale of a tale of the tagging of tuna for scientific research of South Westport. Carrigaholt paid $10.40. With 66 winners, Car-r 1 1 a leads Alberto Ramos by 18 and the meet ends Sunday. "And he'll be on top at Rockingham Park, too." says his agent, Virgil Sebastian Iantosca.

erage." He was glad he didn't have to go dancing, a duty expected of the Wimbledon champion at the ball traditionally following the final. The ball went on as scheduled Saturday night, even though rain had postponed the title match until Sunday. Customarily, the male and female champions embrace in the opening fox trot, and Saturday it looked as though Billie Jean King would have to do a solo. She was told, however, that in the absence of a championship partner, it would be permissable for her to share the first dance with her husband. As Billie Jean and Larry King led each other across the ballroom, a tall, mustachioed blond advanced on them and cut in on Larry.

Billie Jean had to resort to all her celebrated agility to avoid Stan Smith's size 13V2 feet as her fellow Southern Californian took a prophetic turn around the floor. "Last Year, when I was playing John Newcombe in the final, and I was ahead 2-sets-to-l," winced Smith, "I was thinking about what it would be like to have that first dance with Evonne Goolagong that night. Obviously when you start thinking things like that while you're playing for a title, your concentration is gone and so are you. I didn't even get to the dance." Chris Evert confessed before flying home to Ft. Lauderdale that pleasant dreams of the future had intruded at the worst time during her semifinal loss to Goolagong.

"There I was, ahead by a set and 3-0 in the second, and I started thinking about playing Billie Jean in the final." She didn't get to the final, or the ball either. Chris has amended her earlier thought on not being "disappointed because I did get the semis. I'm really let down," She said just before taking off. "So close, but there's only one thing on my mind playing Evonne the next time in Cleveland 'The Bell Cup, Australia against the US' at the end of the month." Smith, who had dreamed ahead carelessly a year and then fallen behind Newcombe, reminded himself i of that frivolity as he and Nastase entered their fifth set. "Don't let it happen again, I kept telling myself," Only super-volleying and all-out blasts of his returns prevented a recurrence of 1971, and brought down the electrifying Romanian, a man of blazing shotmaking and temperament.

Stan's reach, moves and anticipation at the net would terrorize any boardinghouse in creation if he 1 were brandishing a fork instead of a racket. So who is the absolute champion Stan Smith, victor at Wimbledon, or Kenny Rosewall, winner of the world pro title? I'll take Rosewall, day after day, but the answer is to match them up in a showdown at the end of the year, which certainly will be done. Rosewall's opposition was tougher in the pro playoffs Lutz, Arthur Ashe. Rod Laver but Smith's was a longer grind, seven matches in two weeks. Both finals were magnificent.

Meanwhile, "I don't have much time to reflect on winning because we're off to Chile for our next Davis Cup said Smith. He hopes Chileans realize that By Sam McCracken Globe Staff Mike Carrozzella wasn't really worried that he would lose the riding title at Suffolk Downs this Oakley golfers beat all visitors for pro-am title Oakley golfers are hard to beat on their home lay-oit in Watertown as Paul Donahue and Mike Ohani-an proved again in yesterday's NEPGA pro-am meet. It's just that he still likes money and the green stuff makes more than just the mare go. The i i horsebacker added three more winners to his total yesterday and, oddly, none of them was favored by the crowd of 7053. With A Flourish, a New York import, provided Mighty Mike with his 64th victory of the meet when she won the fourth at $11.20.

Debonnaire Host found the range in the fifth for a 015.60 return and Carrigaholt recorded his second straight win in the seventh for the patriarch of New England racing Bayard Tuckerman Jr. King o's impressive victory over the grass course in the sixth race was little or no consolation to his owner, Dr. William S. Karutz. Lightning struck and killed four broodmares, all in foal to classic stallions, at Dr.

Ka-rutz's Bourbon Hill Farm in Ocala, Fla. Small bluefins are now taken for canning in Puerto Rico and New Jersey. The giant, full-grown bluefins are taken by long-lines and harpoons, mostly for the fresh-frozen market in Japan. The determination of an Atlantic quota system will require more scientific information about the growth rate and migration patterns of the bluefin, and Tudor Leland's tagging will be part of the knowledge, when the international agreement is reached. So, when he found a free day in his charter schedule last week, we roared up to the Annisquam to meet him, and try.

And try, and try. Although the big bluefins have been off Rockport and Halibut Point for 10 days now, we picked the wrong day. The tuna were there, showing as strong blips on Tudor's fish-finder, and once, along the 20-fathom curve, Joey the mate spotted fish broaching. But it was not our day despite Joey's carefully sewn baits, Tudor's navigating electronic aids, chumming, and mildly reverent prayer. If you'd like to try it yourself, or keep the tuna for that matter, Tudor can be reached at his home in Beverly.

Reaching the tuna, well, that is more difficult. GLOUCESTER This is Chapter One in what may turn out to be the longest fish story since Moby Dick. (Persons with pens poised to inform me that Moby Dick was a whale, not a fish, could better use the time to write the Department of Natural Resources and demand an end of the filling in of the Ipswich River wetlands just downstream from Rte. 93.) Sooner or later it's going to be a story about catching, tagging, and releasing a bluefin tuna. The heroes, when and if, will be Tudor ceress, charter skipper of the Flying Sorceress', his mate Joey Simpson, and the author.

Tudor is the first of a small number of North Shore captains who are tagging and releasing bluefins, using the tag system of Frank Mather, the Woods Hole biologist. The Atlantic tuna is still not governed by a cjuota system, while the heavily-fished Pacific tuna are managed by an international commission. The Pacific fishery, once almost destroyed by over-fishing, is responding to management, with consistent catches from the renewed tuna population, and reasonable profits for the commercial fishermen. But the limits on the Pacific tuna has encouraged West Coast and foreign fishermen to invade the Atlantic. Spassky-Fischer World Championship Chess Tournament Duplicated play-by-play coverage featuring chess master Shelby Lyman, chess writer Frank Brady, and experts from the Marshall Chess Club of New York.

championship. They took the title with rounds of 64 and 68 for a 132 total which was one better than that posted by Weston's father-and-son combination of Jim and Joe Browning. The Brownings were 65-68-133. An approximate 66 by former State Amateur champ Ohanain was the deciding factor in the morning round. Ohanian had five birdies in that 18, with Donahue providing two.

Donahue who also was the winning professional in a pro-member tournament at Oakley Sunday. even tnougn ne empioyea oy me government, as an Army corporal, he has nothing to do with ITT or the CIA. "I guess they really love us down there," he grinned. leads slar balloting; Kessinger, loo Morjmii Game I I pm, July 1 1 Game 2 I pm, July 1 3 Game 3 I pm, July 16 7 I NicM had 812,185 votes to for r-u Ron Snnto. Reds catcher Johnny Bench continued to dominate balloting for his position, leading Manny San-guillen of Pittsburgh, Henry Aaron of the Braves leads balloting for the outfield, followed by Roberto Clemente and Willie Stargell of the Pirates.

loting which concludes next week, moved past the Mets star, Morgan closed fast to lead Glenn Beckart of the Cubs, 398.785. Third baseman Joe Torre of St. Louis and first baseman Lee May of Cin-c i a i maintained lopsided leads in their positions. May led Willie Mc-Covev of the Giants, while Torre Associated Press NEW YORK Cincinnati second baseman Joe Morgan and Chicago shortstop Don Kessinger took over the lead in their respective positions yesterday as fan balloting continued 'or ike National League All-Star team. Kessinger.

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