Newspaper Page Text
Page 18
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, August 16,1973
Bill Simons wins
senior men’s title
Three division titles were
decided here yesterday in the
Middle Georgia Tennis Tourna
ment.
Lowery Hardesty won the
women’s division. She defeated
Roberta Steele of Griffin 6-2 and
6-2.
Keith Carlisle of Manchester
defeated Robbie Kyker of
Warner Robins 6-1 and 6-4 to win
the boys 15 and under cham
pionship.
Bill Simons of Griffin won the
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senior men’s championship. He
beat Eugene Ray of Jonesboro
7-5 and 6-1.
Jimmy Jordan and Scott
Thompson advanced to the boys
18 and under finals.
Jordan defeated Robert
CoUins of Forest Park 6-4 and 6-
2 in the semi-finals.
Thompson advanced to the
finals by defeating Jeff Watkins
of Griffin 6-2, 3-6 and 6-3.
Jordan and Thompson will
play for the 18 and under
championship today.
Robert Collins and Scott
Thompson defeated Robbie
Kyker and Chris Hale of Warner
Robins 6-1 and 6-4 in the boys 18
and under doubles.
Sonny Shockley of Griffin
defeated Dyke Goodin of Griffin
6-3 and 7-6 in the men’s division.
Chris Hale beat Frank Jolly 6-
1 and 6-4.
Bill Kallenberg and Kevin
Gross defeated Frad Smith and
Chester Wilkes 6-3 and 6-3 in the
men’s doubles.
Lee Christian and Jim Mischo
defeated Al Jolly and Jim Whit
mire 6-4 and 6-1.
Tom Grayson and Lin
Thompson beat Ken Woods and
Clark Raby 7-5, 3-6 and 6-3.
Pete Shumway of Zebulon and
Henry Walker of Griffin beat
John Hemphill and Rusty
Boggs.
Bobby Baer and George
Brown defeated Russ Spangler
and Ike Woodruff 6-0 and 6-1.
BASEBALL
By United Press International
National League
East
w. 1. pct. g.b.
St. Louis 62 59 .512 —
Pittsburgh 57 60 .487 3
Montreal 57 62 .479 4
Chicago 56 63 .471 5
Philadelphia 55 64 .462 6
New York 53 65 449 7 1-2
West
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Los Angeles 76 45 .628 —
Cincinnati 74 48 .607 2%
San Francisco 65 53 .551
Houston 64 59 .520 13
Atlanta 58 65 .472 19
San Diego 43 77 .364 32%
Wednesday’s Results
San Fran 11 Philadelphia 2
Atlanta 15 Chicago 1
Cincinnati 1 Pittsburgh 0
Houston 3 St. Louis 0
Los Angeles 7 Montreal 2
New York 7 San Diego 0
Today’s Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
Atlanta (Harrison 7-4) at
Chicago (Pappas 5-10), 2:30
p.m. t
Philadelphia (Brett 12-4) at
San Francisco (Bradley 9-11),
3:15 p.m.
(Only games scheduled)
Friday’s Games
Los Angeles at Chicago
Atlanta at Montreal, night
Cincinnati at New York, night
San Fran at Pittsburgh, night
San Diego at St. Louis, night
Philadelphia at Houston, night
American League
East
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Baltimore 65 52 .556 —
Detroit 66 54 .550 %
New York 66 57 .537 2
Boston 62 56 . 525 3%
Milwaukee 59 59 . 500 6%
Cleveland 47 73 . 392 19%
West
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Kansas City 70 51 .579 —
Oakland 68 51 .571 1
Minnesota 58 60 .492 10%
Chicago 58 63 .479 12
California 54 63 .462 14
Texas 42 76 .356 26%
Wednesday’s Results
Oakland at Boston, ppd., rain
California 3 New York 1
Baltimore 5 Texas 1
Kansas City 5 Cleve 1
Minnesota 9 Detroit 7
Milwaukee 5 Chicago 4
Today’s Probable Pitchers
(All times EDT)
Oakland (Blue 12-7) at Boston
(Curtis 11-9), 1:30 p.m.
Cleveland (Tidrow 9-11) at
Kansas City (Splittorff 15-6),
8:30 p.m.
(Only games scheduled)
Friday’s Games
Kan City at Boston, night
Chicago at Baltimore, night
Minnesota at Cleve, night
New York at Texas, night
Detroit at California, night
Milwaukee at Oakland, night
Four winners
OCEANPORT, N.J. (UPI) -
Jockey Mike Hole booted home
four winners at Monmouth
Park Monday, including As
sagai Jr. ($6.20) in the SIO,OOO
allowance feature.
Hole earlier won the second
race with Key To The Gun
($7.20), the fourth race with
Book and Lyrics ($7.60) and the
fifth race aboard Dot’s Imp
($4,00).
New assistant
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (UPI)
— Joe Faragalli, assistant
coach at Brown University, was
appointed Monday as an
assistant at Marshall Universi
ty in charge of the defensive
secondary.
Athletic Director Joe McMul
len said Faragalli will succeed
William A. “Red” Dawson, who
resigned recently.
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SPORTS
Ray Nitschke
Third string
middle LB
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) -
A man has to swallow his pride
sometimes, and Ray Nitschke
already has done that.
He knows some of the Green
Bay brass figure he’s all done
and sort of wish he’d go way
quietly, but that doesn’t bother
him at all.
Not outwardly anyway.
Inside Ray Nitschke, it’s
altogether different.
“This is the first time I’ve
been a third-string middle
linebacker since my high school
days,” says the Packers’ 36-
year-old several times All-Pro,
who has been with them 15
seasons.
Ray Nitschke smiles when he
says that, but you can tell he
doesn’t think it’s such a joke.
The Packers have tried to tell
him they think it wouldn’t be a
bad idea for him to quit in a
number of different ways.
Only One Start
Last year, for example, Dan
Devine started him in only one
ball game and Nitschke spent
most of the season on the
bench.
This year they didn’t think he
was coming back. So if you
look at the Packers’ media
guide, the little book put out for
the benefit of the press, radio
and TV, you’ll see his name is
the only one not lined up
properly, suggesting it was a
last-minute insert. His picture
isn’t where it ordinarily should
Reaves to start
V <■-<•-. »
against Steelers
BY JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
John Reaves will be wearing
the green and white of the
Philadelphia Eagles tonight and
hoping to avoid the Greene and
White of the Pittsburgh Stee
lers.
New Coach Mike McCormack
will start the second-year
quarterback against the Ameri
can Conference Central Divi
sion champions and two of the
biggest obstacles Reaves will
have to overcome will be Joe
Greene and Dwight White.
Both rate among the best
pass rushers in the game and
young Reaves will be put to a
stern test behind an inex
perienced line. Roman Gabriel,
acquired from Los Angeles in
the off-season but a flop thus
far in pre-season play, probably
will quarterback the second
half.
The Eagles were clobbered,
45-21, by Cincinnati last week
after a 13-0 victory over Buffalo
and Reaves’ play was one of
the few bright spots. He
directed the Eagles to three
second-half touchdowns and
just missed a fourth.
Terry Will Start
Steeler Coach Chuck Noll,
whose club opened with an
impressive 34-7 victory over
Baltimore before bowing, 10-6,
be alphabetically either, but
clearly out of context in the
front of the book.
If any of this is demeaning to
Nitschke, he does a superb job
of not showing it.
“I’m wise, old and mature
enough to know and understand
that the Packers are rebuil
ding,” says the deep-voiced 6-
foot-3, 240-pound Elmwood
Park, 111., native, who was one
of the key members of the late
Vince Lombardi’s two Super
Bowl teams.
Still Has the Desire
“Just because I’m 36 and
have played 15 years doesn’t
necessarily mean I’m done,”
says Nitschke. “I live a good
life. I don’t abuse my body as I
used to do when I was younger
and didn’t know any better.
When will I quit? I’ll do that
when I no longer have the
desire. I still have it along with
a lot of pride and ability.”
Jim Carter, who is 24, has
tremendous range and is a
hitter, has Green Bay’s regular
middle linebacking job locked
up. Larry Hefner, a 22-year-old
former taxi squadder, also is
ahead of Nitschke.
He understands all this and
accepts it.
What he doesn’t accept is the
fact that some young kids in
the league who are knocking
him down are the same ones
who looked up at him in awe
when they were going to high
school.
to Minnesota last week, will go
with his regulars a good part of
the way. Terry Bradshaw will
start at quarterback but Noll is
undecided whether Terry Han
ratty or Joe Gilliam will relieve
him.
Franco Harris, Pittsburgh’s
star running back and Rookie
of the Year in the AFC last
season, is expected to play
after missing the Minnesota
game with a leg injury.
The Pittsburgh-Philadelphia
game tonight at Veterans
Stadium begins a four-day pro
football weekend. On Friday
night, Washington is at Buffalo
while on Saturday Baltimore
meets Detroit in Memphis, St.
Louis is at Denver, Houston
takes on Green Bay at
Milwaukee, Minnesota is at
Kansas City, Chicago at Miami,
New England at Atlanta, New
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“I’m doing what I have to d<
to get ready to play,” say:
Nitschke, almost oblivious to al
the signs which indicate hi
won’t play a whole lot mon
this year than he did last, i
that much.
He Can Play on Instinct
Ray Nitschke has so mucl
experience he can play almos
on instinct alone right now. Hi
is football’s counterpart o
Willie Mays trying to recaptun
some of those wonderful mo
ments of the past.
Nitschke is something of <
legend here in the state o
Wisconsin.
When he first came to tht
Packers back in 1957, he drank
he busted up people, pitching
one guy through a bar roon
window, and carried on gener
ally like Attila the Hun.
Then he changed his life styli
completely.
He became a pillar of th,
community. He and his wife
Jackie, adopted three children
and Nitschke no longer could lx
found in any bars.
There was a time Raj
Nitschke was called “Tht
Animal” because of the ferocitj
with which he played football.
Now he’s not that ferociou
any more. He still look:
somewhat like a lean old wol
thought as he forages aroum
here “getting ready.”
Getting ready for what?
Now there’s a leading ques
tion.
Orleans at Dallas and Oaklan
plays Los Angeles at Berkeley
Calif.
On Sunday, the New Yorl
Giants take on the New Yorl
Jets at New Haven, Conn.
Cleveland plays Cincinnati a
Columbus, Ohio, and San Diegi
is at San Francisco.
News from the Camps
In news from the camp
Wednesday, Giant Coach Ale
Webster announced that Nori
Snead, the NFC’s leadin
passer last season, would stai
at quarterback against the Jeb
Snead is battling Randy Johr
son for the starting job.
Veteran middle linebacker Ei
Beard of San Francisco an
nounced his retirement and wil
join the 49ers’ coaching staff.