Indianapolis Times Sports

Indianapolis Times Sports

Trips Ud Chisox By HOGSETT. the redskin Joe Williams ELONpitcher with the Detroit Tigers, Indianapolis Sports was responsible Thursday for the Baer, Kinjf Kong Times first White Sox defeat in Meet of Heavies Chicago eight games. He pitched two innings • am in a relief role, singled in the INDIANAPOLIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 9, 1933 PAGE 22 eleventh inning and scored the Handles German in Easy Fashion winning run. mam Schmeling Game and Courageous Down Goes Schmeling—And Maxie Baer Wins! Indians Extend A ictory March to mNEW YORK, June o.—Gentlemen, I #ive you Max Baer Twelve in Stirring Slab Conflict the Kinp Kony of the Kauliflowers. And if I were a prize fighter, I would give him to you for life. I mean to say, I Better of Shores in Fast, Close Tilt: Sigafoos would want no part of him in the ring. Burwel! Has Clean Sweep In a steaming inferno of summer heat, Continues Batting Streak: Millers Here for before 56,000 (A* Perrv Stadium Thursday) people in the Yankee Stadium Thursday night, this un- Twin Bill This Evening. KANSAS CITY AB R H O A E believable man-brute, a laughing BY EDDIE ASH executioner, battered the Connntser. lb 4 0 0 9 2 0 i uggcd Max Schmeling Germany Times Sports Editor Grigsby. If 4 0 0 1 0 0 of into abject in Mosolf, cf 4 1 2 3 0 0 submission Red Killefer's Indians made a clean sweep of the five-game series Schino. rs .3 0 0 1 0 0 ten rounds. Taylor. City march twelve 3b 4 0 0 0 2 0 with the Kansas Blues, stretched t.beir - victory to Cronin. 2b 3 0 0 3 6 0 With 0 one minute and 51 seconds of tile tenth round gone, Arthur straight without a defeat, Frank Sigafoc* rattled the scoreboard with Wilburn. ss 3 0 1 2 1 Donovan, the referee, stepped Pick 1 0 1 0 0 0 between the two men and mercifully and a two-base hit and the veteran Bill Burwell pitched marvelous ball—all Niggelmg 0 0 0 0 0 0 wisely stopped the uneven struggle. in the swift staged Perry Connolly, c 4 0 0 4 0 0 Schmeling had just gotten up from this entertainment was included struggle at Shores p .3 0 2 1 2 0 & terrific right-hand knockdown, and had tottered over to the ropes. stadium Thursday night. The score was 3 to 1 and the triumph enabled Willingham l o 0 o 0 0 If the ropes hadn’t been game there, he would have tottered further and the Tribesmen to climb within one and a half of first place. Totals 34 1 6 24 13 0 gradually fallen into collapse. He was in one of those mysterious twi- The pitching of Bill Shores, Kansas City, also was high class and Pick batted for Wilburn in ninth lights of the mind wgKII Niggeiing ran for Pick where nothing functions but instinct. All that IF the contest required only one hour twenty-eight minutes. Burwell held Willingham batted was for Shores in ninth. normal about his brain had disappeared ** with that . hits and Shores kept the Tribe hit total down to five. blasting punch to m M * the Blues to six INDIANAPOLIS the head. The Cowboys were desperate to win and break their losing streak, and As the hung m AB R H O A E German over the ropes with his weary arms raised the Indians refused to bend, a situation that resulted in one of the most White, high j| ss 4 1 2 1 3 1 and his glazed eyes blinking in pain, this new strange terror of interesting games of the season. Callaghan, cf ... 4 1 i 2 0 0 the ring, this mirthful Coonev. If 2 0 0 3 0 0 Mephistopheles, who had been outrageously brutal When Frank Sigafos doubled in | Sigafoos, 2b 4 0 1 4 6 0 from the Wingard. opening gong, stepped back and made a brief, silent gesture, third round it marked the | lb 1 i 0 12 0 0 the in the sixth, however, and Manager Chapman, rs 2 0 o 2 0 0 as if to say, “don't you think this has gone far enough?” twenty-sixth consecutive game in j Angley. c... 2 0 0 1 0 0 Killefer was “pacing the deck” in Riddle, c 1 a a a which he hit safely, and on top of 0 0 1 0 0 a a a the dugout. Grigsby opened the Bedore, 3b.. 3 0 1 1 2 0 he played bang-up ball at Burwell. p 3 0 0 since the early days of Dempsey—the Dempsey that frame by reaching first on White's 0 2 0 \[OT at Toledo—has second, accepting ten chances with- the ring seen such a startling as this 24-year-old giant J wide throw and the dangerous Totals 25 3 5 27 13 1 character out a bobble, some being of the Kansas City .Ironi the little hamlet of Livermore, Calif. Mosolf was up. He forced Grigsby 000 ;00 000— l He is more like Tarzan than variety. The slugger Indianapolis . that lurid fictional character of spectacular at second and Schino drew a pass. 012 000 00’— 3 tire wilds himself. An incredible contrast is batting .423 and is the talk of the of savagery, good pity. Mosolf and Schino moved up on Runs batted in—Bedore Callaghan Siga- humor and American Association. foos. Schino. Two-base hit--Sigafoos. The King brought into play a blunt, fnlless technic of the sort that Taylor's out and Burwell elected Three-base hits—White. Mosolf Sacrifices Champ Millers Invade first, —Chapman, Cooney Left on bases—lndi- must have been popular back in the stone age when hairy Neanderthals to give Cronin a free ticket to anapolis. 4: Kansas Citv, 8. Base on balls sat. shoulder to stodgy filling the bases. —On Burwell. 2: off Shores. 3. Struck out shoulder with dinosaurs in the waste lands and A twilight-moonlight double- 2; by the then connected for —By Burwell. Shores. 3. Umpires— watched heavyweights of that period do unto death one after another. both games for the price of Wilburn what McLaughlin and Donnelly Time of gam* header, —1:28. Behind every punch was a lethal purpose. If the punch happened to admission, will the Indians looked like a safe blow’, but Sigafoos | one see back be legitimate that v.as all right. If it didn't, it was just a slight social tangled up with the champion Min- went on the grass, snared the paused pellet with tossed error. Repeatedly he to smile his apology after backhanding, neapolis Millers this evening, and one hand and to Tribe Statistics butting and hitting low. To him a prize fight is rowdv business, and both be free to Wingard for the side-retiring out. battles will women was a should be conducted as such. fans. The first tilt will start at 5 “whisker escape.” HOW REGULARS ARE a a a Angley BATTING a a a p. m. and the second under the Banished AB H Pet. will the Tom Angley A” 1 0ING into the ring with a weight of 13 pounds lights at 8:15. It be big- was banished by Sigafoos. if 195 82 .423 advantage U and a of the year, and Umpire Donnelly in the fourth and Coonev. n-of 94 33 .372 VJ" much greater gest ‘ladies’ night” I j Rosenbere. of 114 35 .307 reach, the King readily demonstrated his physical the Riddle went in and finished out the superiority. Hr handled with the champs serving as i Bedore. if . 125 37 235 the German in the clinches as if he were one it is believed the backstop duties. It looked as though 1 Chapman, of 135 40 .295 of Mr. Morgan's migdets. visiting attraction, Wingard. if 183 54 .295 It was astonishing to see him take Schmeling had beaten hard ' Riddle, c 72 20 .278 with largest crowd of the season will turn Tom out a smash one arm and shove him clear across the ring. In relative power, that was deflected by Shores to | Anglev. c 108 29 .269 a child out. ! White, if 142 38 268 was battling a man. Cronin and when the umpire said Callaghan, of 187 51 .259 Indianapolis was first to score At no time was there any serious doubt as to the outcome. With “out,” Angley took exceptions and Lee. if 94 21 .223 Thursday and a walk paved the first flurry of punches in the opening round, it was clearly evident night, drew a ticket to th? clubhouse, that Baer the way. Wingard drew a free PITCHING RECORDS was the harder hitter, the stronger man and the adven- house. Won Lost more as first up in the second, turous. It was a question only of whether he would continue to be ticket The Indians launched their win- Jack Tising 5 0 serious, Chapman sacrificed, Wingard ad- Jim Turner .. 5 1 and whether he could stand up under the blasts of drive on Decoration day at Co- 7 3 scorching vanced to Cronin made ning Bill Thomas the heat. third when lumbus by taking a double-header Bill Burwell 4 2 : stop and threw’ out | Johnnv Coonev 2 1 By the second round another vital point was established, which a back-handed and their record since is twelve vic- | Stewart Bolen 2 quite reassuring Angley and Bedore beat out a hit Pete Dailia 1 was to the Californian’s followers.

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