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The Daily Telegraph from London, Greater London, England • 12

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London, Greater London, England
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12
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Socrrr 2 Daily Telegraph and Morning foal Friday May I 1941 Davis Cup INSIDE TRIO ON TRIAL TO-NIGHT BRITAIN CRUISE GENTLY TOWARDS NEXT ROUND AUSTRIANS FAIL TO TAKE SET IN SINGLES By LANCE AY BIRMINGHAM Thursday A USTRIA had small share in lawn tennis events to-day and accidents apart Great Da vis Cup tie in the first round of the European zone at the Tally Ho! club may be reckoned as all but over Charnlev and Curvis meet again in June Bv DON 41 SAUNDERS 1 SAVE CHARNLEV the British hghtvseight champion is to receive an early opportunity of avenging his recent points defeat by Brian Curvis holder of the welterweight title The two southpaws who on March 24 staged the best fight seen in Britain for many a day will meet ag in the same Wembley Poo! ring on June 2 jack Solorruns completed negotiations vesterdav after flving back from Accra where he is promoting the world featherweight championship bout between Sugar Ramos and Floy Robertson Mr Solomons said that he is paving Charnlev and Curvis twice as much for this Derby Fve bout ax they received for their first encounter these close rivals are lktv to share a purse of more than £10000 DECISION BOOED Return fight a natural The first fight ended with Curvis who had taken a long count in the eighth round being declared the winner bv the referee Jack Hart This verdict was greeted bv the crowd with a storm of booing and left ringside critics rveniv divided In the rcumstanccs a return bout was clearly indicated The match has been made as before at 10s 91b 'wo pounds above the welter limit and he fought over 10 rounds CHALLENGE TO CHARLTON By BRYON BI TIER ALF RAMSEY team manager of England hopes to take a small but positive stride to-niht towards solving his most acute problem: finding an insidc-forA ard trto that is both balanced and potent The match between England and Voung England at Stamford Bridge is little more than an aperitif before to-morrow's Cup Final but Jimmy Greaves Roger Hunt and George Fast-ham will be ill-advised to regard the occasion light-heartedly Th trio together th Fred ekenng of Fverton and Johnny Ryrne of West Ham are the live men on whom Rmsev pins his hopes Bat wrn important South American tour imminent he is undecided which three have most to offer Hunt Bvrno and lastham were cm-ployed against Scotland at Hampden Greaves Bvrne and Eastham get their chance aga nst Uruguav at VAemhuev on VAednesday Hunt rKering and Rvrnc are pressed into service the 'owing Saturday when the 1 -otball League play their Italian counterparts in an Bobby Smith for transfer Bobhs Smith England's cnre-forward unlit Iasi autumn is on of four players placed on the open-to-transfer list hy Spurs at £466(1 Bill Nicholson the Spars manager said Smith has given us verv good service and ve hope that this move will enable him to get another club quickly Smith a burly bustling York-shireman was in favour with the I ngland selectors up to last autamfl when he played against Wales the Rest of the World and Ireland Altogether he won 11 caps Also for transfer are John Hollow bread goalkeeper Mel Hopkins Welsh international back and Eddie Clayton forward 1at Might's Sorter A two-nil lead no more than expected was easily though I would not sav commandinuly achieved A Knight beat Herdy 6-0 6-4 6-1 and Tailor defeated Blankc 6-1 6-2 6-4 the whole business occupwng just I) Herdy of Nustiia at full stretr as he tries to return a 'hot in his match with A which he lost b-0 tv 4 I Hickstcnd Sliotr The Details A Knight GB) bt Herdy 6 tl 6-4 6-1 Taylor (GB) bt Blanke 6-1 6-2 6-4 Kuyby Union Review BEDFORD SOAR TO SUCCESS ON ATTACKING WINGS By RUPERT CHERRY my mind the most heartening facet of English club Rugby in the season which ended yesterday was the success achieved by what I ter mthe old-stvle wing forward in brilliant 1 jumpin' mood ALAN SMITH HICKSTEAD Thursday VORKSH1REMAN Harvey Smith rook the two open classes with The Sea Hawk and O'Malley on the opening day of the Wills Jumping Tournament here to-day The mam event the Wills Woodbine Stakes was jumped over a fairly hig 12-fence course which included the Temws Court There will be room for all of course during the full tour PROLONGED TRIAL Interesting experiment once Rjmscv decides permutations have provided an answer he can be expected to give the chosen three a prolonged trial next season The most interesting experiment perhaps is the nt-Pickering-Byrne link-up in Milan In this game Bvrne will use his volatile talents in a providing role He is used primarily as a striker hy West Ham but if he can discipline hinivelf to meet Ramsev's requirements he could begin a long international run Martin Uhlvers the young Southampton centre-forward could also do oer two hours in all In the doubles to-morrow A Mills and Sangster play Herdy and Pokornv The strength of the Austrians that has been revealed so far indicates there should be a conclusive result by the end of the day In which case Brtdin will look forward to the second round Either Ire and or Switzerland will prov de the opposition and if Ireland the venue will be Eastbourne in two Mme if Switzerland then a journey to Lausanne will be needed This was not a great lawn tennis Indeed the second rubber between lav lor and Blanke each playing in the Davis ('up for the first time was of moderate qualitv and the inevitable strain of the occasion for both was nw helped bv a curious musical accompaniment MUSICAL BACKGROUND troubles This emanated from somewhere behind the ground It reached a crescendo with the strains of You Were Made for Me" which 1 rook to be a reference to forehand far as Tavlor was concerned Blanke was far short of capacitv but the Sheffield left hander had troubles of his own His main bother was double-faulting Even so Taylor worked out his Tictorv mostlv agains that very vulnerable foreiand of nppmtnt an) he eannot ave been expected to do more Me never looked like not nntng easily and there was iu a had five minutes for hm at the end when po sed at 5-2 for c-torv he let slip a couple of uneasy games What he dd not achieve was a confident winning groove But then poor Blanke achieved verv 1 ttle of any lend and mv were not elaborate enough to compute whether hr or Taylor delivered the more double faults More sport on Pages 10 11 Amateur Soccer HERTFORD GAIN PROMOTION IN LAST MATCH Bv DAVID Mil Aveley 0 Hertford 3 Hertford for so ong the most powerful side in the Delphian League before that competition amalgamated with the Athenians this season ci nched promotion to the First Division in their Final match at Aveley last night Aveley needed to win to retain a chance of ga ning the last of the successful places The four to go up are Harrow Tiibtirv Harlow and Hertford The top of the tabie reads: and no doubt would have pursued an entirely unchecked course had it not been for the tension of the occason Tne onlv check that dd come to hngnt ws a deficit of love-3 in the second set a deficit that was withn a pont of be ng turned to love-4 and that left mm trading 2-4 before he wiped it off Since Kmght took the first six games thout loss and 10 of the last II games the rubber can in no way be sa to have strained his capacity But Davis Cup matches being what thev are never looks like a joyous excursion The nerves from which Herdv suffered were concentrated in the first set in which he won only 12 ponts Thi dark dispirited voung man was too obviously aware at th stage that he was placing out of hs class Subsequently he better Kmght it seemed reacted from the paucity of opposition he had had because he is alwas one to throe on strength on the other de of the net CRISP SHOTS I Lead erased At anv rate Herdy produced some nice crisp shots in the second set to get himself temporarily in the match But he never achieved the four-love lead he threatened and his 4-2 advantage was quickly erased as Kmght knuckled down to the business at hand It paid Kmght to he cautious rather than hold to give little pace rather than to force it especially against Herdy backhand which was liable to break down in a long rally These tactcs did not give rise to much excitement but thev enabled Kmght to advance on an irresistible winning course GIFJTNGHAM BECOME CHAMPIONS Newport 0 Gillingham 1 DY their 1-0 win at Newport last niRht Gillingham became Fourth Division champions They head Carlisle on goal average Gillingham conceded only 10 goals in their 46 games The Kent side snatched the lead at Somerton Park in the 32nd minute It was a reward they scarcely deserved for Newport hid played far superior football and were unlucky to have goal-bound shots blocked by Gillingham defenders UNLUCKY BONSON Cleared off line The goal which enabled Gdltncham to forge ahead was also on the lucky side Newman lobbed th ball speculatively into the goalmouth nd Gill nghani centre-forward Krancts managed to head it goalwards Wcarc had the bill covered and he grasped it without fhculty But he fumbled it and could not prevent it rolling over the goal line Previously Bonson need ng one goal to set a Newport post-war individual scoring record was unluckv to have a header cleared almost on the I bv Stacey and then Sheffield hail a tremendous drive blocked by Arnott Throughout the second half New port continued to hammer hard and often at the Gillingham defence hut Burgess and Simpson refused to yield Xporl VSrftr VA II 41441 VA a (r H'M hhrvnr Rowland Rerf Sheffield Ct KctnolOft Ronton Pr nj tllingiifti mptnn Sifv Hiidvxn: Amoit fturie Farrell Newman I tanoi hM Mfrfdnh IV I gris who contributed so much to Bedford's triumph int season whose usefulness is admirably illustrated by magnificent record For so long has the wing forward been looked upon principally as an agent of destruction that his extreme usefulness in attack has been almost forgotten Rogers the England player who leads Bedford ano Colev on the other flank are essentially attackers who keep close to the scrum and also fan out to lnk up with the centres Thev have resuscitated the functions of the attacking forward of the when for instance A Voice was so successful Rogers Colev and Perrv too at No 8 were stopped by only the strongest defences If the opposition were at all weak Bedford ran up hig scores They achieved 41-9 against London Irish 13-14 aga nst l-ondon Hospitals and 41-6 against the Territorial Armv for example OVER 6(H) POINTS achievement Thev won 26 matches scoring 622 points against 342 a splendid record to which Colev their principal place-kicker contributed 160 point This back-row attack can I imagine be even more successful under the altered laws next season So will those teams who base their game on running with the hall The obvious example is Bristol who also topped 600 points They won 27 matches but sustained 1 6 losses due I think in some measure to the considerable shuffl ng of their ream Frequently their changes caused surprise but the selectors would not have a man out of form Metropolitan Police were another side to reach 600 points While their fixtures are not so formidable as those of most hrst-class clubs I am told their triumphs are likely to continue They rely on young players -their three-ejuarte rs were the previous season and there is excellent coming on Coventry with 221 points from their remarkable rlace kicker Cole were well up to their own exacting standard being unbeaten for the first 1 1 matches Their formidable pack was matched perhaps only bv Leicester probably did not expect Consequently in 64 minutes Kmght had put Britain in the lead It was neither more nor less than expected Herdv revealed at times a useful service His volleying though was poor Blanke also hardly excelled as a net man KNIGHT SUPERIOR Tense occasion Knight had hs opening win over Herdy with the comfort a vastly superior and more experienced player to fare so well when they lost 1 Horrocks-Tavlor hut in fact Wade fitted well into his place at flv-half and the club finished with a tine record Thev won 26 games and scored 418 points They II benefit from the new laws as will Harlequins with their usual wealth of talent including voung Hiller who scored 78 points So will London Scottish who played spectacularly behnd the scrum and were beaten onlv seven mes New Brighton also enjoyed a good season losing only five matches and winning 26 with 472 points scored Richmond employed an attacking hack-row Although Cook their promisng voung ng three-quarter scored 22 tries the team performed most inconsistent! Saracens well led by Wyness had one of their best seasons since the war wirh one sequence of 11 victories atta'nmentt were something I kc those of the davs of Madge lust after the war The gieatcst disappointments included the nubility of Rlackheath to maintain the improvement shown at the end of 1962-63 Then there were the poor results which haunted Northampton until near the end of the season they won six games in a row London Uliainpionsliips and finishing over a water jump and a double of planks and rails in and parallel poles out Only five of more than 40 starters went clear hut they wpre a high-class quintet O'Mallev Ann Townsend's Dunbovne HI Peter Fire-crevr Mrs Bates Oldham's Brule Tout ridden bv Fred Welch and Ann Sandra who is in good form just now Merely a-Monarch making his first appearance of the season had a pole off the white post and rails and tnen stopped when all wgong at the last Beethoven hit the first before he had really got his mind on the job hut lumped faultlessly thereafter Dunbovne was first to go in the barrage over a shortened course stopped when turned sharply into the post and rails and finished with three faults in ITtsecs SANDRA STOPS Impetus gone German-bred Sandra after starting well lost impetus over the water s-opped tn the middle of the double and totalled seven faults then swept round in the atvle one has come to regard as well-nigh infallible clear in 378sec Firecrest was equally chanceless but nearly 7sec slower and finally Brule Tout had a pole down going on to the tennis court It was Smith and Robeson first and second also in the Solent Stakes with The Sea Hawk having 22sec to spare over Barsac Marion Coake and her cons stent Stroller were a creditable third While these competitions were holding the stage in the International Arena the novices were trying their Paces in the Foxhunter Ring In the oxhunter competition itself Sheila four-year-old Summertime lived fully up to the prom se she had shown at Taunton last week-end WILIS WOODBINE Wi Hinton i 0MtH (H 1 Robf- vM Firtcrtftt 2 Sirs Rum Oldhim i Rm I not WeL i SOLF-M AT A KM Smith' A Ts Sit HaW 1 Barite 2 Mm C'oiScft siroMff 5 FOTHI MKR Mm Barnet siimmeetim 1: Patteraon't (ranhaia king 2 Harm's Mlaa Pwn-4mm 5 CRSDF Croktrt IrWh Ran III Mm Vrnthlfft IK Flirt trft-6 Stllopian AOIS sISkFS 'Vhuftg ridfMl Ml 66 Cli'kf ft PaH4a PrIB II Mtfti SmrtA inofti id Maa Nptff aritart rout! CR SDk Si Hr war Fmlanct Renom i 1 1 WaaflNiry 'Mm Nash 2 PovNb's Pan fair II 5 Ol Soccer xm P1L triumph leaves Hemcl without a chance in their hnai match to-night at Brentwood Only a heavy score by Tlbury to-morrow aga nst VA ndxor can claim the title from Har- row who last right won 4-1 at himc to Windsor Centre-half Dicks deputising for Shilling presented left- half Polling with the first goal after! nine minutes He failed to control and clear a centre from Whyte Ten minutes later Polling scored aga this time as Betf-nson parried a close range drive hv Hurst Two minutes before the interval a corner by Hurst went in off back as he and Bettinson collided FA MAY ACCEPT COMPROMISE r'HF A will be failing in their 1 duty if they do not agree at to-days annual meeting that 1 the statutory declaration must be signed by clubs next season writes David Miller But the recommendation from the shamateurism committee will! come in for heavy opposition from professional as well as amateur cluhv The fact that the club president has alleged that pavmcnts have hern made to Hitchin Town players and that Wimbledon have decided to turn professional should persuade the I that they are right to make a stand i Where a compromse is necessary is in the matter of genuine expenses for midweek tran ng and someth ng of this sort can he expected BRITAIN OUT OF TOKYO Britain will not be re admitted to the Olvmpic soccer tournament In place of Greece who beat them 5-3 on aggregate in the qualifying tie reports Reuter from Zurich The International Football Federation announced yesterday that Greece who withdrew would continue in the tournament Bobbv (li niton Im will lx compared with the promising IVter 1 hompson at Slumlord lit i dye to night cause much good to-n ght Before the game is over Maurice Norman centre-half mav have joined the increasing hand of people who believe Chivcrs is a real prospect for 1966 Another pertinent comparison will hr possible between Bobby harlton and Peter Thompson Charhon's lease on the England No II shirt would seem to he coming to an end and Thompson a neat quick and inventive player is foremost challenger FX VXD Banks '1 fuf'ftl nhM tluihanv tiofi I futldrrr Ul Mtlw i fr- T' Noimin iNpurO I Inaer VA tin imp (travrv Hunt I iv po Fftsfhvm Xori hftrlton Xtdn chever wmc X1ullr ispurt) VUt I xt Konrili Bfttlar XbcBi I hntnviin A Bftt 'ft' I I i I c4 'liar Sunikt fiwl' lamhlina hcl'f-s' lutts soiithimp rnahiev (h sc I lni4n I Kficnc Itfakin on I 4 thirties CHATHAM CHAMPIONS As Cray Wanderers only drew at Faversham last night they needed a 5-0 wn to retain the title Chatham are the Aetolian Leagut champions BOXING XI lAftXfr 8 ft if ft RantamwaifeM At O'Xaill Re If Simon I tt 'X imai D0LLIM0RE RUNS FASTEST HALF-MILE By JAMES COOTE ATLANTIC WEATHER MAP 1JOGER DOLLIMORE whose times have been steadily improving of late ran a half-mile in )mm 506sec the Miss Jan Lehane in play (luring her winning match with Miss Carole Rosser at Murlmghim yesterday PHILLIPS BLASTS RICHEY INTO SHOCK DEFEAT BY A SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT )VERSEAS players dominated the London hard court championships at the Hurlingham Club Fulham yesterday capturing all places in the men's and women's smales semi-finals when running for Cambridge The Details 100 ih i Cok Camhr 101 2 A SmruM 10 1 kfUty AAS d-d OntftA fastest time of the season University in their match against the Amateur Athletic Association who won by 80pts to 72 at Milton Road Cambridge last night $0 ft 50 34c Johnson (CJ 154 St 5 5 A 2-2 4 120 HIM FS Pr Kr 1 4 5 gfc qtiU umi record orf A 15 11611 1 5 Manning Ai 1 4 220 US A it i 2 mc Sifne 2 1 2 ook 21N 5 A 1 hi A 440 SOS Ihnfttfwn 4 95 1 I ftser 40 A I( 05 5 I Pme 1 5 4 2 MIIFV Htrrina X- Ary 44 t'fv H'r 9 -X 4 9-5 5 XI she ft nuftd reword I An I Martini Golf LOCKE PLAYING AT WENTWORTH Rv I FON4RD 4VS I I A strong field will contest the Ma rtini Professional Tournament over the west course at Wentworth to-day and to-morrow Unhappily Peter Thomson has heen ill and has had to postpone hs departure from Australia and hs place will he taken hv A lockc the former B-itish Open champion There is a further alteration A Henning brother of Harold Henning of South 4frica has taken the place of Sota of Spain The strong VA wind and April showers have made the course long and such low scoring as at West Blums ch a week ago cannot be expected Yesterday moening holes were out of range in two shots and th only four short holes strict par would appear to be 73 This time achieved in blustery conditions also knocked 19sec off Kjs personal best time set two vears ago but far more important it is faster than Adrian Metcalfe has yet done in competition With Metcalfe not 100 per cent fit on the evidence of his injury at Loughborough on Wednesday this achievement has heartened Cambridge and must improve their chances of success in the University match tomorrow week Dollimorc was fortunate in that David lohnson of Jesus College sacrificed himself for a fast time and took the held through the first quarter in 531sec 5 4 4 DIM I I) rr 1 5 5 LONC Jl 51T Ak 25f? Tin Siftiei 22 A OventjfB "4 Ait! (C non-orer cleared 1 scramble backwards and forwards across the court as she took the first set but Miss Richey greater steadi- ness and retrieving powers enabled her to level and run out to a 1-1 lead in the final set hereas her brother lost through I mpat ence Miss Richev was calm- 1 ness itself The longest clash of the day found Saul survive a match point in the 14th game of the hnai set to beat John McDonald 6-8 6-4 10-8 alter two hours 20 minutes wtv UNCLES 4th I Me Donald 'X mj mo Wilton 5th nil PHilllpA A a fr cm INC i Rxixv 7-5 ff-4 Dr'1al Xf MiH Maud Afncmi fs- a 4 xut iA Africa Pd MwDx'fta-J in -4 0-8 II arMirhMl AaMrt a (M Hoe Aum a a 5-6 pi-5 O-A WOMkVS VIM KS 4fk Rd Mi (chan tAa4l a hi N1 Rv'ufr '4 Mika fttxh 1 i -ff cv 0-4 vhilii airitiiiii rv Jc 6-4 0-2 Mia Raioa Alien nai Mm lkr 6- America's Cup SOVEREIGN HAS SAILS TRIAL By DAVID THORPE Sovereign a potential America's Cup challenger and her trial-horse Sceptre spent seven hours scrutinising sails in sunny conditions off Weymouth yesterday wardrobe of sails has to be examined and re-examined in a variety of wind conditions to select those suitable for use against her rival Kurrewa in trials which are scheduled to start on May 9 off the Isle of Wight work-up was delaved for two days by bad weather but yesterday she examined two spinnakers two headsails and a mainsail in a lumpy sea kicked up by a fresh-to-strong westerly breeze RUNNING TOGETHER Spinnakers on both The spinnakers were tried on each vacht in turn as thev ran together in ev mouth Ba The changes in head-sails and mainsail were made only on Sovereign Erik Maxwell and Peter Scott were again steering Sovereign and Sceptre respectively lluli trill ilnit stnirlv into I-rant while hnli liantr little Inn will remain alrmut ttatumarv while low nurres steadily cast-north-cast lunr "II" will move cast into Finland while low "7 will dnjt a little cast and i Iotr ill change little I BRITISH ISLES WORLD CONDITIONS FORECAST FOR NOON MAY I Algiers 73 Lisbon 77 25 mtrdm 57 14 London 55 II Athens 64 IS Madrid Barcelona 64 IS Maiorca Beirut 68 20 Malta 70 21 mi SslLt II rctf 14) 1 Vi Sm 1 ft 12- 2 ninii i(i I 1 -s Siderto IC) 104 4-JSVgllN a klirhtn 1C1 2 I St: 3 'PH tr 20 2 Pr i(i lumrf i4 114-1 HKH II MP Ml -lO 2 4 I nn 4 -10 4 I Kur-fll 4 V10 HOT- ItrFiAn ft 10 1: I 1 4 Rr IQ (OO Hltrfi Si 4S 4 fftlPLF MP 1 -ih nwp 4 2 4n-l t-non 4 MILL VS 4 MM 4-Q I 41 'll 4 Mmrll 4 4 40 ns HI 41)1 IV rvnk I ndr-tra 4 rwa A -q frXind rcurd -d 1 4 na 9 Rlrf S' i 1 So 4 J000 MTIV sTFEPI FCM 4SE flkwn S' ''On 'p' 111 ff'Ma I (f 9- rn '( 10-2 4 vv vs Mr I 4 i no VOs i Mr ow If' 1 I'J irnn In Pr 1 Scnr Spr SI -4' 2 40 ID' 1cr'" SS mn Cr-t 9 Pr I (f lan1 rlnn V20 4 2 MslCH IIM It I ind P-rf- ps 4 ROp By then Watson had dropped out of the picture and Dolkmoee who had been tracking international Michael Fleet of Croydon Harriers started to make his effort Exactly 220 yards from home Doll more strode away and only 20 vards later Fleet had dropped too far behind to be a nuisance GOOD PERFORMANCE Winner fitter Fleet even so finished only 1 3 seconds hevnd Im 11 9sec with David Johnson third in 1mm 541sec Though Fleet wa well below best ne did well to track Dollimore as long as he did for Dollimore is far more match-fit Michael Parker a former President ct the Cambridge UimniQi thlef Club whose hurdl ng rxpio first came to note when he was an undergraduate at Cambridge won the 120 vds hurdles in 143pc IIS VIA Uf fc Hingfin fna 1m ft StacOen 4 ese 1 num rwiM icuin iuii s' NiihWi Mim I Itrat ftutlraltai bi '( UerfMft) 1 0-2 4o o-1 fah v( hna MmI'IMb NiM-a it Wffh A'lfllliftli 1 Mato A Pa mien 1 1 aly 0-2 9-7 I I A ft Mykiin Vui ral at A 'la BP Utah) A Snkoki ilA 61 I yOcney gm 20 flf Manchstr 14 12 Montreal 52 11 Moscow 66 79 York 45 7 Nice 64 IS Oslo 48 9 Ottawa 46 Paris 57 14 South Africa provided three of the survivors for the clash Boh Carmichael of Australia is the odd man out He meets Jack Saul while Cliff Drysda and Dave Pullips are the other semi-hnalists The women's singles have a der representation with an lehane Australia) facing Miss Helga Sohultze iGermanvi and Miss Nancy hey (L'Sl meeting Miss Norma ftavlon the Argentinian champion The championships were robbed of the expected men's final when Boh son the No 1 seed withdrew with a strained neck which had failed to respond to treatment and Cliff chey the American junior champion seeded No 2 met wth a shock defeat against Phillips SO NEAR DISASTER Tactical change Phillips nrov Jed a fantastic reversal of form when after being thin two points of defeat in the second set he came back to triumph 3-o 7-5 6-4 It was an incredible turn round for Richev had dominated with his power same winning the first set and tak ng a 1-1 lead in the second It seemed impossible that he could be defeated but he lost his concen-trat-or when Phillips changed his tactics and begun to extend the rail ex Richev with the impetuosity of youth was impatient get it over and consequently fell into error against the varied pace Hr suddenly lost II points in a ro Then he lost nine success! games to be love-3 down in the third set Vet Riches steadied himself to take the ext tour games forcing several good winners His big chance came when he was 40-love up on service for a 1-3 lead but once again lost his edRe through trving to be too impatient He let slip another 40-love lead in the ninth game and looked a sadly puzzled voung man as Phillips with clever placing of his cross-court drives tot oft the hook and went on to win display Miss Richev plaving on an adorning court also had manv anxious moments before overcoming Mss Elizabeth Starkie 3-n i to take her place in the semi-final ss made the American Birlin 10 10 Biarritz 6 If Brmnghm 14 72 Brussels 54 12 Cardiff 14 12 Cpnhagen 11 73 Dublin 52 11 Ldinbrgh 12 11 Florence 66 pi Alhlelira Rome 66 7V METCALFE TO COMPETE WITH PITIED MUSCLE Funchal 66 'v Ronldsw-y 52 Geneva 54 72 Stckhim 52 Gibraltar 70 21 Tel Aviv 66 79 Guernsey 52 11 Toronto 13 Helsinki 41 1 Vienna 37 HLRIS WOMFN I SHIP 'Porlfr Park Rft11 Am Mrs Knfhtv-fi hrirt (mm Xc'uift'T 4 XI ft Lndf' JoBnaoi Pk 5 A Xf ft Ir a A A RESULTS DIVISION IV XlWfom 100 (11 LI5CM4M l1 3229 hfKi4 LfAtHXf POXlllOSs VA A VA I A hiB 46 10 7 9 7' 2O0 1 ari4 461 5 0 CO 7 fi 4 5 5R 0 VA or'1 4 5 A 1 ft 9 9 9 I 4 6- 9 I 59 ft 9 3 4r1 I 4 to -s TOC ft -4 ov jr 2 A ca 3 xo I I HE ft Pr Do Di- fft'd Briif I 4 Mfttjn 4 li I 'lfv ft a mg FOOT ft I I COMBIN 4TION 2 Xfftwgfirld 1 I I ft cot IDA MftLX4 Bx 1 94 S' ft 9S' 0 I ABfS ri 2 xriOIIAN M) -Faf 4hfti4i 7 06 VA axJ I OX DO' I () I 6fS4l6 I II I I-- Xu4ft xto i---g RiffA I 4 Mmof 0 XYGUtxa 2 ex CB IN 1 HMI 143 A Jr Aft-kJ XAftltHamv A Xf re 2 XTHFXIXN i fF Oi4 II Xftt rv 0 Her'frrd 5 Harrow 4 VA vlvnr A 1 XfniOPOl lIXX I Cl Ota I Tom-t- AftHraif f'mm FmI 2nd I ft Ha a 2 5p'j' 0 AffiiM 'fl 4 or tr (TKMIFX LCC OF ft 5 Oiarl tfin 6 Mil I I ft ft Flaftl Trmr I i Irs a'rr et XOt TM Cl Final 1mA Ma- hMt( I 4 Nrn V4ft Ltd arm 4 on 4 ft RUGBY UNION CI ft V'fn 5 4 ftr 4 -V -J ua 9 xt rc ft fe- 9 VA rft nM4' Oft Stel'f rr1 A Oxford L'niv ersi-v Club oted a 't-ong team to meet lff 'ad '-morrow It is led by ke Hogan the President whi c'tnrvetcs i five events the three hurdles and two relays and dnar Metcalfe who hopes d'P tc a cmlv pj'led muscle to run in the 220 yards 880 and 4 440 relay Innsbruck 57 14 Warsaw (574 jersev 12 II Zurich 50 10 1 Palmas 59 I cloudy: fair rain: 1 sunny Temperatures at 12 o'clock GMT except noon locally evening looks a if he will be more of a match than wax expected for Michael Hogan in the 440 vards hurd'es After finishing second in the 100 vards in 10 Isec third in th 220 in 216 he beat Robin VNoodland in the 440 vards hurdles in the good time of 133 sec which broke his own undergrad late record set last sear by 9 10 of a second and equalled the ground record To round off the evening Cook ran a 4R iec last leg of the quarter-mile relay It was achieved face of a heaw head wind and is all the more remarkable when it is remembered that in I9el th the a of a slight breeze he returned I43sec to equal the then national record Parker has gone from strength to strength snce then th a best of 3 9sec for the metric dstincc He told me after the race that when he was warming up he was worried that he might mure himself because the nd was so strong that he had to lu-ge to reach the hurdles though during the race he gave every impress -n of smoothness FOOTBALL lirRkSIsrAlht-Eailiftd Young NMm'rft B- Jgf 7 50t ROITIIH IIMMII Ct P-DuftJf Ltd Di ftdtf l7 50 im III WalMtl i' 50l SOI I Hk BN 141 kr fv Dta 1 fturlo 1 jt i ImaO djf ft i 1 Sffi rr (fttf (V I Itf iigT Ss fd (HlUat I 66 ISMIRN COL ICS lid avf 4 LSMIMKSNt ill SRI IS ar-Fiaal Crufaift 0 SI ITU Iks I UK Waifoftl Arvtul (In'Hf) Grten A0 MIIROPOII1AN ICC Prnfr6opal Cat Fiftal 2nd leg Rdilfonl loan Hatiingi md (7 JO llUXiMC LCC Prapi Die 6 50) THam storm Motor LOSDOS ul Trap D4 (650) Weal ThufrncS 4 tsaarg MIDLAND LUC 6 50) 'hip Mitid inai 2d ia Heme Hemr fa-4 II Ml LGC (7 15 kingatoaidi Le opal one MINI AN ul Pram D4 Ca haiion 4 Finshiev Wealdnorx Ra'net II et 'si 4 Hemet Hrmpiicad I SPSRISN I 1 1 CLP iMl Mfouftt Mo ce iR jin Manor SO SftlOII'N if 4 rxu viou I V6 Be cnhft scioiisN igi RorsairNT cvr knjl last Ham Nherre BOSS riLBS IMHtNUIOML -In 4 6 4 4 I I if VA tstr Vfftilhhil I Mecn' tvjh iatffN aafpi-flppi I lit ctord 4 4 (T) warm n0NTcoto for OGCUJOCO HO" Ivvard at 639 Back circles show in Fahrenheit empera'ures expected The equ valent temperature in Cent grade is gven alongside brackets Arrow indicate wnd rection and speed mph Pressures in itws and inenes LONDON READINGS For 24 hours to 6 pm yesterday: Sunshne: 75hrs rainfall: trace max temp 59 115) mm 46 t8i In Britan yesterday: Warmest: Wrymiuth 61 1I6) coldest: Cape Wrath 48 9) wettest: Stornoway 0 sunniest: Margate IJJbrs pom it-- cvj-o jio mn W'ratt Mad'er A SnlMf 440 VrrWr 4 0 1 cS Fdmu-d 40 ts Mnolli 4 I Is a vmi ussm rd-usd 1 tarts 'Sr PettSi 1 MILES I UshOMMi If 4 BnosrV aOOO-M si (Eft tCH SSI A Vsaiss si dm I'd 170 ins HI ROLLS 4 A Rsiakl Fuel JJ0 Hi ROt IV Hnfi 4 RstsSt 440 HI RIM Hnsaa 4 I) hr HKH Jl MP (oi les A PC I 6 LOM JIMP PrrHI A mam I I PI Jl SIP I 4 4HO StotfMv a A Rfe I 4 I)IS( I 4 6 1 A Mr JsVFIlx Mam Ke I -N- Pt I si I 1 si If' A CrprRUBvki ayfnHf RMS'S 4 IIP SiO PrrBI I Mnftft A Sr4 I I lift 4s Lori SS Ls a A Sf FOUR RACES Record by Cook The second was Stuart Storey who on Wednesdav won the even- for Lougntw ugh atamst Oxford and Manchester in 153ec with Oliver Russell th rd in 115 John Cook the ('ambrdxe Pres-- dent who ran four times in the OTHER SPORT TO-DAY I HI TICS LopmSo La a ra' Px 50 rOUFATftUSlSM Hrk'f? Vrni OI fit ck Ilf lOWfNf -ftff 60 kiinf MorV akf XfrfDB AY- jj 6 Xfi o- Pftf' 1 50 Lffti fa'9 5 rfft BOf i Afftyaj a Ihibb urer-Mi't ECHO SATELLITE I Visible to-morrow from 1B2 to 112 am coming out of eclipse in SSE maximum elevation Udeg the SF setting in the Also from 217 to 314 am com out of eibps in the SW maxim elevation 6ftdeg in the SSL Mttfot in the I ighting-up time 851 Sun rives 5 31 am: 821 pm Moon rises 1222 am sets 812 ftm High water at London Bridge 1 2ft Ml pm Dover 213 am 233 nowis YOt ft MATCH pw ftx nf6ftHfthpf R9 A 55.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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