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Page 8
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, August9,l972
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Braves win
for Eddie
By BRUCE B. BAKKE
ATLANTA (UPl)—l’m enjoy
ing this,” said new manager
Eddie Mathews after his Atlan
ta Braves won their first game
for him.
The Braves’ 8-4 win over
Houston Tuesday gave Mathews
a 1-1 record as a manager. He
didn’t have a lot of decisions to
make but those he did make
worked out.
He left Denny McLain in to
pitch the full nine innings and
though McLain was shaky at
the end, he held on for his first
complete game as a Brave.
Mathews also revamped the
Atlanta batting order, moving
Ralph Garr to No. 1 and young
third baseman Darrell Evans to
No. 2.
The change gives the Braves
a potent lineup of solid hitters
through the first six spots. All
of Atlanta’s runs were scored
by the first six men in the bat
ting order, even though Felix
Millan and Marty Perez, the
seventh and eighth hitters, ac
counted for three hits.
“I’ll keep Evans batting sec
ond for a while and see how it
works,” Mathews said. “He’s a
good base on balls man and has
a good eye. And he’s a left
handed pull hitter, so he can
advance the runner. With Garr
and Evans batting 1-2, we’ll get
some first and third situations
out of it.”
Hank Aaron, the all-time Na
tional League leader in home
runs, still bats third, in a posi
tion to take advantage of the
"first and third situations.”
Garr opened with a hit and
Evans and Aaron followed with
walks Tuesday.
Then Houston’s Don Wilson
fired a wild pitch that bounded
off catcher John Edwards to-
Hague’s single
ends marathon
By United Press International
Joe Hague singled home Ted
Uhlaender with the winning run
in the 19th inning to give the
Cincinnati Reds a 2-1 victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers
Tuesday.
Four Dodger pitchers—Tom
my John, Jim Brewer, Pete
Richert and Roti Perranoski
struck out a total of 22 Red
batters, tying a National
League record set by San
Francisco pitchers against the
New York Mets in a 23-inning
game May 31, 1964.
Pedro Bordon, the last of
three Red pitchers, blanked the
Dodgers the last five innings to
pick up his fifth victory in seven
decisions in a game which
lasted four hours and 17
minutes.
In other National League
action Pittsburgh defeated Phi
ladelphia, 4-2; St. Louis downed
New York, 6-5; Chicago topped
Montreal, 6-5; Atlanta beat
Houston, 8-4 and San Francisco
swept a doubleheader from San
Diego, 15-4 and 7-3.
Home runs by Earl Williams
and Dusty Baker keyed Atlan
ta’s victory over Houston.
Baker hit his homer with one
aboard in a five-run Atlanta
first inning and Williams hit a
solo homer in the second. The
winning pitcher was Denny
McLain, 3-2, who pitched his
first complete game for the
Braves.
Jim Hickman and Billy
Williams hit two-run homers to
lead Chicago past Montreal.
Hickman homered following a
single by Williams in the first
inning and Williams’ homer
came with a man on in the
seventh.
Luis Melendez tagged reliever
Danny Frisella for a two-run
To the Voters:
Thank you
I wish to thank each one of my workers
and the voters for their support.
Don Jackson
Candidate for
State Representative
(Paid Political Adv.)
ward the Braves’ dugout. Ed
wards wasn’t able to locate the
ball and when the dust had set
tled Evans and Garr had
scored. Dusty Baker followed
with a two-run homer. Later in
the inning a single by Perez
drove in the fifth Atlanta run.
McLain didn't need any more.
Through the first seven innings
he allowed only one hit—a sin
gle by Cesar Cedeno—although
his outfielders caught six fly
balls on the warning track near
the fence.
McLain weathered a storm
the final two innings, giving up
a run on three hits in the eighth
and three more in the ninth.
Doug Rader’s 17th home run
was Houston’s big blow.
After the game, McLain was
his usual self.
“What were you throwing,
Denny?” a reporter asked.
“Strikes. Plenty of them,”
was the reply.
“Was this your first complete
game this year?” McLain, who
pitched in the minors before he
was obtained by the Braves in
mid-season, said it was.
“I wasn’t tired at the end,”
he said. “I guess I threw about
110-120 pitches.”
The Braves were bunting in
batting practice—most Braves
laying down three or four bunts
before hitting for distance. Ma
thews had said earlier in the
day that he wanted his team to
run more, and to take advan
tage of possible running situa
tions, but he said he had not or
dered the bunting practice.
“We’re going to try to manu
facture some runs,” he said.
“We’ll be running often. I think
we have enough talent on this
club, and enough speed, so we
can score without waiting for
the home run.”
homer in the eighth inning to
give St. Louis its victory over
New York.
Melendez, who had replaced
centerfielder Jose Cruz in the
sixth inning, slammed a Frisel
la pitch into the leftfield stands
to score Matty Alou, who had
singled with two out.
Willie Stargell clubbed his
27th homer in support of Dock
Ellis’s three-hit pitching as
Pittsburgh beat Philadelphia.
Stargell slammed his fifth
homer in the last four games
with two on in the third.
Frank Reberger drove in
three runs with two singles and
a triple while leading San
Francisco to an opening game
victory over San Diego.
Willie McCovey, Bobby
Bonds, Dave Rader and Dave
Kingman added two RBI apiece
as the Giants teed off on four
San Diego pitchers for 16 hits
and every man in the starting
batting order had at least one
hit and one RBI.
Ed Goodson hit a three-run
homer and Ken Henderson
drove in two runs in the Giants’
second game victory. A single
by Chris Speier and a sacrifice
fly by Tito Fuentes accounted
for the other San Francisco
runs in the nightcap and
rewarded Steve Stone, who left
with a sore shoulder after six
innings, with his fifth victory in
12 decisions.
Jones to San Diego
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-K.C.
Jones, former Boston Celtic
great and an assistant coach to
Bill Sharman with the world
champion Los Angeles Lakers
last season, was named Tues
day as head coach of the San
Diego Conquistadors of the
American Basketball Associa
tion. ■