Sunday/ May 13, 1973 THE STARS AND STRIPES D Page 25 M Henderson smashes 2 marks p „, 7 fall to OSDeseA meef By BEN ABRAMS smashed the record of Berlin's the Northern Regional he set a staff writer Harry Smith to smithereens. USDESEA mark of 9:37.5. Satur- MUNICH, Germany (S&S) — Everyone knew it was a great day he the tape almost six Another USDESEA record! leap, but no one suspected that seconds faster in 9:31.6. With monotonous regularity Smith's old record of 45-8% had Burdan broke the four-minute that message boomed from the been broken by nearly two feet barrier in winning the 1500 meters loudspeaker at Dante Stadium until it was measured and anoun- in a torrid duel with Heidelberg's here Saturday. ced that Henderson had gone George Jackson that had the No less than seven times did 47-71/2. several hundred spectators USDESEA standards tumble on a London's Graylon Walch, Man- screaming all during the last lap. perfect track day as the com- nheim's Tony Belcher and Bit- The timers caught Burdan in petitors found the lightning fast burg's John Burdan carved the 3:59.5 and Jackson came home in Tartan turf very much to their other individual records and both 4:01.3, both under the USDESEA liking. relay marks fell, the 800 to Man- mark of 4:01.4 Bitburg's Bill Frankfurt's Doug Henderson nheim and 1600 to Wiesbaden. Teasley set last year. etched his name in the annals The Mannheim 800-meter relay twice with spectacular efforts in Walch erased Clyde Wooten's team of Sherman Oglesby, both the long and triple jump — 10-year-old 200 meters standard Dietrich Oglesby, Jerry Poluka going 22-1114 in the long jump to from the books with • a '21,8 and James Redwine really sizzled shatter the mark of 22-7^ set by clocking in his preliminary heat in winning in a record time of Frankfurt's Bernie Smith in 1968. earlier Saturday. 1:31.1. Redwine ran a fantastic Henderson got the record and the Belcher, moving as smooth as a anchor leg erasing a five-yard Doug Henderson win in that event on his last jump. gazelle, loped to his third 3200 deficit by overtaking Wiesbaden's John Burdan . . , spectacular leaps But he didn't tarry on the triple record in two weeks. Last week in (Continued on Page 26) . . . breaks 4 minutes Tigers tip Rams, then lose Rockets, Flyers Hahn split two-time Ramstein rolls in nightcap, 10-3 twin bill By DON SAUER ned. grounder to end the frame. staff writer With one out, Scott Boyd singled He seemingly had the game in HAHN, Germany (Air Force) — Hahn and Rhein-Main divided a Sheiks SEMBACH, Germany (S&S) — behind the mound, then tried for tow with two quick outs in the SPANGDAHLEM, Germany Lefthander Ray Tompkins, with Rams' seventh, but Huff's third Continental Sports Conference third on Monfre's to center. baseball doubleheader here Satur- (Air Force) — The Wiesbaden some one-pitch relief help from Boyd appeared to be dead at third, miscue and Jim Antunez's infield Flyers swept both ends of an single brought on Monfre from day with the Hawks taking the southpaw Chuck Monfre, limited but Bobby Adams let the throw get opener, 2-1, and the Rockets cap- opening day doubleheader, 9-4 and Ramstein to four hits as the Tigers past him for an error, allowing right field to wrap it up with his 16-6, here Saturday over the held off the Rams, 5-4, here Satur- first delivery. turing the nightcap, 10-2. Monfre to go to second. Royel Odell's Hawks Spangdahlem Sheiks. day in the Continental Conference Boyd scored on a wild pitch and Two former Wiesbaden players In the opener, the Flyers picked had a hand in the Rams' scored two runs in the bottom of baseball opener for both teams. Wayne Anderson's long sacrifice the seventh in the opener for lef- up where they left off last year at The Rams pounded out 19 hits, fly to center scored the go-ahead second-game triumph. Young- the expense of the Continental strum, catching in the nightcap, thander Al Stender. Stender, who 18 of them singles, to blast Sem- run. fanned 10 and walked three, Sports Conference's latest expan- bach, 10-3, in the second game, The Tigers put it away in the (Continued on Page 26) limited the Rockets to one run and sion team. evening both teams records at 1-1. fourth, started with John Schultz's FIRST GAME five hits in besting loser Tom Lefty Bill Pacella went the route Tompkins, in constant trouble one-out infield safety. Tompkins RAMSTEIN • SEMBACH , ab r h ab r h Cichy. — seven innings — to pick up the because of wildness — he walked ripped a single to right, and with White 2b 200 Boyd cf 411 Cichy .wild pitched in the win- win. He fanned nine without eight Rams — was replaced by two outs, Monfre found the Clark ss 400 Monfre rf 322 Adams 3b 411 Huff ss 302 ning run after a walk to Bob giving up a walk and scattered Monfre in the final frame with two right-center alley with a Ygstrm Ib 401 Andersn Ib 300 Washington and bunt singles by eight hits. out and the potential tying run on two-bagger that scored Schultz. Wdswrth cf 300 Palmer c 302 Dudek 0 301 Jarrett If 301 Chuck Wibbing and Buddy Baugh- Wiesbaden, '72 USAFE champs, second. Monfre's first pitch to Ed Huff drove one to the base of the Antunez If 301 Cantway 2b 300 man loaded^ the bases. Dan Den- parlayed back-to-back four-run Shroads was popped weakly to fir- center-field fence for two bases Shroads rf 310 Scho tz 3b 31 Brown c 110 Tmpkns p 3 0 1 nison unloaded a squeeze-play innings to rout the Sheiks. st to end the game. and two more Tiger tallies, and Gutrez dr 010 Hutyra dr 010 bunt single to tie the game before Spang hurler Joe Joseph was his Sharing the spotlight with the the home team led 5-1 to the Totals 27 4 4 T°'a'* ** 5 ™ own worst enemy as the Flyers Ramstein 001 J03 0-4 Rick Racquer squared around to veteran lefty were Monfre and delight of nearly 2,000 sun-dren- Sembach 002 300 x-5 do the same thing — and the wild took a 4-0 lead in the third. Larry Huff, whose back-to-back ched home boosters. E—White, Huff 3, Adams, Cantway. Joseph committed two errors, DP—Sembach 1. LOB—Ramstein 11, pitch did the job. doubles in the Tigers' fourth The Rams battled back in the Sembach 5. 2b—Youngstrum, Monfre, •In the nightcap, Rhein-Main threw two wild pitches as inning plated three runs. Huff's sixth with three runs despite no Huff. 3B—Adams. RBI—Youngstrum, bombed three Hawk pitchers for Wiesbaden tallied four unearned Anderson, Monfre, Huff 2/ - Clark. long smash to dead center hits. The first of Tomkins' three S_Antunez. SF—Anderson. 10 runs and 12 safeties—including runs without a hit. There was also knocked in the eventual deciding passes, a sacrifice and Huff's one passed ball. IP H R ER BBSO (Continued on Page .26) tallies. second boot plated one. Two more Dudek (L, 0-1) 6 10 5 3 0. 2 The four-run fourth was more Inability to find the plate was walks loaded the bases. Tompkins (2, 1-0) 62-344084 legit for the winners. Monfre 1-300000 more of a problem than the Ram George Clark's fielder's choice Save—Monfre. WP—Dudek. T-2:03. Roughriders sign tight end Terry Hansel, who had two hits bats ' for Tompkins. Ramstein grounder scored a second tally REGINA, Sask. (AP) — The in five trips, singled, went to SECOND GAME managed two hits in the third and when the late, -play Ramstein Oil 303 101—10 19 1 Saskatchewan Roughriders of the second on a wild pitch and scored inning when the visitors scored relay was thrown away by Steve Sembach 001 002 000— 3 9 1 Canadian Football League have on Chico Santiago's single to left. Searson, Montclova (6) and the game's first run, on Huff's Canway, the visitors closed to 5-4. Youngstrum. Boyd, Myers and Palmer. signed Jim Forrest, a tight end Santiago took second on a error — one of three — and Daryl But Tompkins got Adams on a^ W—Searson, 1-0. L—BoydJ-1. from Washington State U. fielder's choice and then scored on Youngstrum's double to right-cen- two straight passed balls. ter. Chico Fernandez, two for three The Tigers backed- him with a for the game, tripled. Then Bob 10-hit attark including four in their Antone and Rick Luna both big fourth frame. They also got doubled to account for the other four in the third inning, though two runs. FIRST GAME both the runs off Steve Dudek — Wiesbaden ....004 410 0—9 8 3 also a lefthander — were unear- Spangdahlem 000 103 0—4 8 4 • Pacella and Stout; Joseph and Williams, Smith (5). Torrejon whips W—Pacella (1-0). L—Joseph (0-1). Warriors twice CSC standings TORREJON, Spain (Air Force) Baseball AMERICAN DIVISION — Chuck Dawson's Torrejon W L Pet. GB Raiders finally got 'a chance to Wiesbaden 2 0 1.000 — Rheln-Maln 1 1 .500 1 play. Hahn 1 1 .500 1 Torrejon, which didn't play a Bltburg 0 1 .000 l'/2 Spangdahlem 0 2 .000 2 single exhibition game and had to NATIONAL DIVISION live on a fare of intra-squad games, Torre|on 2 0 1.000 — Ramstein 1 1 .500 1 responded to live competition by Sembach 1 1 .500 1 blistering Zweibruecken, 9-1 and Zweibruecken 1 2' .333 IVi Saturday's results 17-3, in an opening day' Torrelon 9-17, Zweibruecken 1-3 doubleheader here Saturday. Sembach 5-11, Ramstein 4-L Huff in the nick of time Hahn 2-2, Rheln-Maln 1-10 The double defeat dropped the Wiesbaden 9-16, Spangdahlem 4-6 Warriors to 1-2 while the Raiders Sembach's Larry Huff (8) hustles safely back to the third-inning play. The Tigers took the CSC Slow-pitch softball jumped into the top spot of the second base as Ramstein shortstop George Clark opener at Sembach Saturday, 5-4. The Rams won Zweibruecken 20-8, Bltburg 10-10 CSC National Division. tries for the tag. First base ump Joe Petrick covers the second game, 10-3. —S&S photo by Phelps Rheln-Maln 18-4, Rothwesten 8-11