Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 5, 1980 Page: 15 of 20
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J
VI
Arizona hands Hawaii
first series loss 6-4
THE NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Texas, Thursday, Jun® 5,1980—15.
By CHUCKSCHOFFNER
AP Sports Writer
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - His
teammates at the University of
California call Tom Colburn
“Clutch Cargo.”
At the College World Series
Wednesday night, Colburn
showed why he has earned the
nariie.
The senior catcher smacked
a two-run homer in the eighth
inning to tie the score and
California went on to eliminate
Miami 4-3.
A throwing error gave
California, 44-22, the victory
and set up a showdown with
Pacific Ten Conference rival
Arizona tonight. The loser of
that game goes home. The
winner will play Hawaii, 60-17,
for the NCAA title Friday night.
Arizona, 43-21, stayed alive
by handing Hawaii its first loss
of the series, 6-4 in 11-innings,
in Wednesday night’s second
game.
“If it was the eighth or ninth
inning, in a clutch situation, I’d
give my right arm to have
either Colburn or (Greg)
Zunino up to bat,” California
Coach Bob Milano said.
“We’re lucky. Colburn is
good in the clutch.”
Teammate Lyle
Brackenridge, “We call him
(Colburn), Clutch Cargo (after
a cartoon character). He really
comes through when we need
him.”
California trailed Miami 3-1
and the Hurricanes’ ace pit-
cher, Neal Heaton, 18-4, was
working on a six-hitter through
seven innings.
But Jeff Ronk walked to lead
off the eighth and Colburn
tagged a 3-1 pitch from Heaton
over the 376-foot mark in left-
tenter.
“All I was thinking when I
was going up to bat was this
might be my last time up in
college ball,” Colburn said.
The Golden Bears pushed
across the winning run in the
next inning. Rob Jessen led off
with a single and pinchrunner
Mike Buggs was sacrificed.
Buggs then scored with the help
of two errors.
Third baseman Mike
Pagliarulo couldn’t handle
Brackenridge’s sharp grounder
and Buggs broke for third.
Shortstop Ross Jones picked up
the loose ball and tried to throw
out Buggs, but the ball glanced
off the runner’s helmet and into
the Cal dugout, allowing Buggs
to score.
Miami took a 3-1 lead on a
run-scoring single by Matt
Tyner in the first, an RBI single
by Jones in the third and Tony
Barguin's run-producirtig triple
in the seventh. Colburn drove in
a run with a sacrifice fly in the
first.
Mitch Hawley, 6-3, got the
victory with 21-3 innings of
relief.
“We just didn’t hit. It’s a
heckuva way to end the
season,” said Miami Coach
Ron Fraser, whose team
finishes 59-12.
The Arizona-California
matchup will be the seventh of
the year between the rivals.
Arizona won four of the six
games.
Arizona came back from a 2-0
deficit to beat Hawaii. The big
blow was a grand slam in the
top of the eighth by Scott
Stanley.
Hawaii pulled to a 4-4 tie in
the bottom of the inning, only to
lose it in the 11th when
Arizona’s Dwight Taylor and
John Moses crashed con-
secutive triples and Terry
Fracona followed with a single.
Rangers split twinbill
to end Chicago series
By FREDGOODALL
AP Sports Writer
CHICAGO (AP)-Oh, what a
difference a couple of hours
matt-.
’‘We’re averaging five runs a
game, so we’re going to put a
lot of baserunners on. And
we're going to leave a lot of
people on base because of
that,” Texas Manager Pat
Corrales said after his team
stranded 11 baserunners in a 4-3
victory over the Chicago White
Sox in the first game of a twi-
night doubleheader Wed-
nesday.
But that was before Game 2
of the twin bill when rookie
right-hander Richard Dotson
shut down the Rangers on three
singles and Texas managed to
leave only four men on the
basepads,
“I felt real good about the
pitches I was making,” said
Dotson, a 21-year-old rookie. "I
had full command and didn’t
feel like I struggled any.”
Lamar Johnson, who had a
two-run homer in the opener,
crashed his eighth round-
tripper of the season and Thad
Bosley drilled a solo homer and
RBI double to provide the of-
fensive firepower for Dotson’s
5-1 victory in the nightcap.
Richie Zisk smacked a two-
run homer, his 10th, and Jim
Sundberg drove in a run with a
double to pace Texas' first-
game victory.
Doc Medich, 5-3, pitched 72-3
innings to post the win. Sparky
Lyle earned his fifth save.
“I think Richie’s swinging
the best I’ve seen him since
he’s come to Texas,” Corrales
said of the former White Sox
slugger who signed with Texas
as a free agent in 1977. “We got
him to hit home runs and he’s
Howe calls it quits
after five decades
By MARK SULLIVAN
Associated Press Writer
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -
Middle-aged hockey fans who
have watched Gordie Howe
play through five decades and
perhaps thought maybe they
could do it too will have to look
for new hero.
The seemingly ageless
wonder from Saskatchewan,
whose teamates could and did
call him “Gramps,” retired
from active playing Wed-
nesday, saying he will stay on
with the Hartford Whalers of
the National Hockey League as
director of player development
“I probably have another
half year in me,” he said. “I’d
hate to go out after 32 years and
find out in the middle of the
winter I’ve run short.”
But Howe, who broke in with
the Detroit Red Wings in 1946,
said he still feels “damn good
enough to play” even though he
will confine any future ice time
to old-timers’ games.
Howe has said in the past
there is no one shining moment
that stands out in his career,
but Wednesday he said the
“fulfillment of a dream” was
the 1979-80 season when he
could (day in the NHL with Ms
sons, Marty and Mark.
doing it.”
Zisk’s home run highlighted a
three-run uprising in the fifth
inning. Sundberg’s run-
producing double came later in
the inning.
The Rangers added another
run in the seventh against loser
Francisco Barrios,1-1, on Dave
Roberts’ sacrifice fly.
Chicago erased a 1-0 deficit in
the fourth inning of the
nightcap as Greg Pryor hoisted
a sacrifice fly and loser Dave
Rajsich, 0-1, uncorked a wild
pitch which allowed Wayne
Nordhagen to score from third
base.
Johnson’s solo homer and
Bosley’s RBI double in the sixth
hiked the advantage to 4-1 and
Bosley's first home run of the
year, an upper-deck rocket to
right field, provided the White
Sox’ final run against reliever
Adrian Devine two innings
later.
Dotson, 6-2, retired the
Rangers in order five times,
walked three and struck out
four. He said the triumph had
been reassuring to him.
“I had been pressing my last
two outings and did poorly,”
said Dotson, who had a per-
sonal four-game winning streak
stopped on May 29 against
Minnesota. “A lot of people said
I was a rookie and probably had
had it. But I wanted to show
that I was not ready to give up.
“It was really nice to go out
there andgoallthe way...really
nice," he added.
On Taxes
• ••
LOWELL CABLE believes big and small
businesses should be taxed as equally as possi-
ble. He will support Senator Peyton McKnight’s
amendment to equalize utility taxes.
HIS OPPONENT voted to remove the utility sales
tax from big manufacturers, but keep it on small
businessmen, including the druggist, auto ^
dealer, grocer, and restaurant owner.
I*
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m
1
HELP US ELECT
-CflBLE
■DEMOCRAT
STATE REPRESanxriVE
Paid for by Chad Cabla, Sulphur Spot., Taxaa
Genuine Risk, Codex
renew old rivalry
By FREDROTHENBERG
AP Sports Writer
CBS, the beneficiary of
ABC’s lead-in coverage of
the Kentucky Derby and
Preakness, gets to finish the
Triple Crown story Saturday
when Genuine Risk and
Codex renew their rivalry in
the Belmont Stakes.
Genuine Risk won the
Derby while Cqdex was not
entered. Then todex was
first across the wire in the
Preakness but had to
withstand a foul claim for
bumping the filly. The in-
cident, labeled a mugging by
backers of Genuine Risk but
considered a mere love tap
by Codex’s supporters,
serves to build interest and
excitement for CBS’
Belmont.
“Everybody wants to
know what’s going to happen
when the two race again,”
said Mike Pearl, producer of
the telecast.
And if Genuine Risk and
Codex decide to dance cheek
to cheek again. Pearl can air
the exact videotapes the
Belmont stewards used, to
rule on any foul claims.
The New York Racing
Association has a
sophisticated closed-circuit
TV operation at Belmont.
Cameras are stationed at
five strategic points around
the track. The stewards, in
constant communication to
the production truck, can get
tape replayed from the
camera with the best view of
any incident.
“Once the stewards
release the tape to the
public, we can feed them
right on the air," said Pearl.
Even if CBS’ cameras had a
better view of any possible
foul, it’s good that TV
viewers* can see exactly
what the stewards saw in
reaching a decision.
With post time scheduled
for 5:38 p.m. EDT, this could
mean an extension beyond
the 6 p.m. scheduled signoff.
Pearl doesn’t have the final
decision on a runover, but he
says: “If there is an inquiry,
the stewards' tapes would be
shpwn on CBS. I would ask to
stay on the air until the full
story is explained.”
Pearl also said a shot of a
possible photo finish, like the
one in last month's
Metropolitan Handicap at
Belmont, could be shown as
soon as it’s released.
The tapes used by the
Pimlico stewards in ruling
on the May 17 Preakness foul
claim were not available to
ABC right after the race but
were seen on "Wide World of
Sports” one week later.
ABC’s ow'n cameras at the
Preakness showed Codex
raying wide and moving into
Genuine Risk, but that was
only a side angle. A head-on
camera, which would have
provided the best view of any
contact, was not possible
since the horses were ap-
proaching the turn for the
homestretch and were not in
the stretch itself.
Senior League
games changed
Following is a revised
schedule for the Hopkins
County Boys Baseball
Association Senior League.
June 2, Cumby vs. Herschel’s
(H), 8:00.
June 3, Swatsell vs. Sports
Center (H), 6:00; Carothers .vs.
Herschel’s (H), 8:45.
June 5, Sports Center vs.
Cumby (H), 8:00.
June 6, Carothers vs.
Swatsell (H), 8:00.
June 7, Herschel’s vs. Cumby
(H), 6:00; Carothers vs. Sports
Center (H), 8:45.
June u, Swatsell vs. Cumby
(H),6:00; Herschel’s vs. Sports
Center (H), 8:45.
June 17, Herschel’s vs.
Swatsell (H), 6:00; Carothers
vs. Cumby (H), 8:45.
June 19, Sports Center vs.
Carothers (H), 6:00; Cumby vs.
Swatsell (H), 8:45.
June 20, Cumby vS. Carothers
(H), 8:00.
June 21, Sports Center vs.
Herschel’s (H), 6:00; Swatswll
vs. Carothers (H), 8:45.
June 23, Carothers vs.
Swatsell (H), 6:00; Cumby vs.
Sports Center (H), 8:45.
June 29, Swatsell vs. Cumby
(H), 8:00.
June 25, Swatsell vs. Her-
schel’s (H), 8:00.
June 24, Sports Center vs.
Cumby (H), 6:00; Herschel’s
vs. Carothers (H), 8:45.
June 27, Herschel’s vs. Sports
Center (H), 8:00.
June 28, Herschel’s vs.
Cumby (H), 6:00; Sports
Center vs. Swatsell (H), 8:45.
June 30, Herschel’s vs.
Swatsell (H), 6:00; Carothers
vs. Cumby (H), 8:45.
July l, Carothers. vs. Sports
Center (H), 8:00.
July 3, Swatsell vs. Sports
Center (H), 6:00; Cumby vs.
Herschel’s (H), 8:45.
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) - Steve
Carlton and Mike Schmidt, both
of the Philadelphia Phillies,
were named the National
league pitcher and player of
the month for May.
Carlton went 6-1 during the
month with a 1.65 earned run
average. Schmidt walloped 12
home runs and drove in 29 runs
during May. .
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 134, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 5, 1980, newspaper, June 5, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth823855/m1/15/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.