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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1965)
PAGE SIXTEEN Osteen Keeps Dodgers Breathing Associated Press Sorts Writer LOS ANGELS (AP) Claude Osteen, btom man of the Dodgers big áree, succeed- ed Saturday whee Sandy Kouf- ax and Don Dridale failed and pitched Los Areles to its first World Series actory 4-0 after the two aces ad lost the first two games the Minnesota Twins. The form American League left-hander/ho never lost to the Twins in days with Washing- ton, carr his charm through nine brilint innings with a five hitter. A Diger Stadium record. crowd /25,934 saw the Dodgers gang on Camilo Pascual for two rs in the fourth on a sin- gle John Roseboro with the base loaded. Lou Johnson's dou, following Willie Davis' si, gave Los Angeles a third ren the fifth before Pascual fed for a futile pinch hitter. im Merritt, a Dodger club- se boy in 1961, gave up the lal run in the sixth on a single Wes Parker and a double by laury Wills. With a chance to square the Series Sunday, Dodger Manager Walter Alston had announced he yould call on Drysdale, loser of the first game, to face Jim Grant, the man who beat him Wednesday 8-2. The Twins lost more than the game when Earl Battey, their No. 1 catcher, ran into the rail- ing near the Twins dugout while trying to catch a foul in the sev- enth. He was forced to leave the game. Los Angeles also had a casu- AP Wirephs DODGERS CLAUDE OSTEEN STOPS MINNESOTA Twins Fall In Third Game Of World Series DODGERS CLAUDE OSTEEN STOPS MINNESOTA Twins Fall In Third Game Of World Series from second on Roseboro's hit in the fourth. Xrays proved neg- ative, but Dick Tracewski took over. While Osteen was baffling the slugging Twins with four singles and one double, the supposedly weak-hitting Dodgers ripped into Pascaul and Merritt for 10 hits, five of them doubles. It was obvious at the start that Pascual, who missed seven weeks in August and September due to an operation in his right arm pit, was not sharp. The Dodgers were hitting long fly balls, and the Cuban's curve ball was not as effective as usu- al. Pascual skirted serious trou ble in the first three innings but the Dodgers finally got to him in the fourth. Ron Fairly led off with a double past third base down the left field line and Johnson sacrificed him to third. Zoilo Versalles made a fine stop of Lefebvre's hard smash, holding Fairly on third but had no play at first base as Lefebvre was credited with a single. Parker walked on four pitches, loading the bases. Roseboro, the fellow who was hit on the head by Juan Mari- chal's bat in a big rhubarb at San Francisco in late August, singled to right field and two big runs scampered home. That really was all Osteen needed. The 26-year-old pitcher, whose 64-year-old father, Claude Sr., sat in the stands watching his son pitch his first Series game, had the Twins un- der control. Osteen is the man who came to the Dodgers last December from Washington with third baseman John Kennedy and $100,000 for five players. It was only the third time the Twins had ben shut out this season. NL Series, 36, season. Most of the game was played under lights because of a heavy grey fog. The sun finally broke through in the late innings. When Versalles rifled Os- teen's first pitch to left field for a ground rule double, it looked like another chapter of the Min- nesota story. But the Dodgers came through with a key play after Harmon Killebrew walked with two out. When the Twins tried a double steal, Wills took Rosebo- ro's throw and switched to the plate in time to trap Versalles. Zoilo finally headed back for third and was thrown out. "This was our type of game," said Manager Walter Alston of the Dodgers. "We finally had a chance to do some running." Wills stole his first base in the third inning and Parker and Roseboro worked a double steal in the fourth after the two runs were in, but they were stranded when Osteen and Wills popped up. Auburn Whips Mocs Behind QB By REX THOMAS AUBURN, Ala. (AP) Alex Auburn Whips Mocs Behind QB Bowden Bowder The number two quarterbal alty. Jim Lefebvre suffered a measured up to the opportunit bruised right heel while scoring By REX THOMAS AUBURN, Ala. (AP) Bowden stepped into Alex - Quarter- back Tom Bryan's shoes Satur- day and threw two touchdown passes to lead Auburn to an easy 30-7 gridiron victory over Chattanooga University. Bowden, a senior signal caller from Brundidge, Ala., who spent every minute of his first two varsity years on the bench, en- gineered the Tiger offense in the closing minutes of the first half and for all but one play the rest of the game. First string quarterback Bry- an put on quite a show himself before retiring to the bench. He marked up the first Auburn score and put the Tigers within range of the second touchdown with two successive passes coV- ering 77 yards. With Auburn safely ahead. Coach Ralph (Shug) Jordan called Bryan from the field and gave the 22-year old 6-foot-3 Bowden his chance. The number two quarterba measured up to the opportuni On one spectacular pla trapped behind the line, rig hander Bowden shifted the bil to his left hand and threw a 3 yard scoring pass to fullbat Mike Perillard. Auburn held Chattanooga to: scant 16 yards running. The 1 gers rolled up 213 yards on th ground and another 227 by air Chattanooga, undefeated unt today, deprived the Tigers ( two more touchdowns with i batted down pass in the end zon and a masterful closing minute goal line stand. Auburn, wif Bowden repeatedly hitting re ceivers, got a first down on th three, but the stiffened Mocca sin line held. Chattanooga 007 0-1 Auburn 7 10 13 0-3 Aub-Bryan 5 run (McDavid kick) Aub-Perillard 1 run (Lewis kick) Aub-FG 29 Lewis Aub-Hardy 13 pass from Bowden (Mo David kick) Aub-Perillard 35 pass from Bowder (kick failed) Chat-Simcox 3 run (Ferria kick) |Box Score LOS ANGELES (AP) The box score of the third game of the 1965 World Series: Minnesota A Versalles ss Nossek cf AB R H BIOA 30203 3 401030 4 0 1 0 20 Oliva rf Killebrew 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 300000 Battey c Zimmerman c 1000 11 Allison If 3000 30 301070 Mincher 1b. Quilici 2b Pascual p aRollins Merritt p bValdespino Klippstein p 300042 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 00 000002 1 0 0 0 0 0 000000 30 0 5 0 24 10 Totals Los AngelesN AB R H BIO A 4 0 1 1 2 5 4 0 1 0 1 1 000000 4 1 1 0 2 0 4 1 1 0 10 20 21 00 2 1 1 0 1 3 200023 3 1 1 0 14 2 3 0 1 2 2 2 2010 22 30 4.10 4.2718 Wills ss Gilliam 3b Kennedy 3b W.Davis cf Fairly rf Johnson If Lefebvre 2b Tracewski 2b Parker lb. Roseboro c Osteen p Totals HARVEST TONES by KNOX The crisp colors of Autumn captured in Knox Harvest Tones. Styled for town or country, but specifically designed for that subtle, casual touch in every man's hat wardrobe! gibson's BEECHWOOD SHOPPING CENTER $15.00 a-Grounded out for Pascual in 6th. b-Popped out for Merritt in 8th. Minnesota (A) 000 000 000-0 Los Angeles (N) 000 211 00x-4 E-Kennedy. DP-Tracewski and Parker: Zimmerman and Versalles; Wills and Parker. LOB-Minnesota (A) 5, Los An- geles (N) 6. 2B-Versalles, Gilliam, John- son 2. Fairly, Wills. SB-Wills, Parker, Roseboro. S-Johnson, Osteen. IP H R ER Pascual (L) 5 8 3 3 Merritt 2 2 1 1 Klippstein 1 0 0 0 Osteen (W) 9 5 0 0 BB-Pascual 1 (Parker), Klippstein 1 (Johnson), Osteen 2 (Killebrew, Versalles). SO- Klippstein 1 (Tracewski), sec- teen 2 (Oliva, Allison). U-Flaherty (A) plate, Sudaol (N) first base, Stewart (A), sec- ond base. Vargo (N) third base, Hurley (A) left field, Venzon (N) right field. T-2:06. A-55.934. Florida Rips Mississippi OXFORD, Miss. (AP)-Flori- da's awesome aerial attack sank once powerful Mississippi deep- er into the Southeastern Confer- ence cellar Saturday as the No. 10 ranked Gators thrashed the Rebels 17-0. Fantastic catches by Florida ends Charles Casey and Barry Brown made Gator southpaw quarterback Steve Spurrier look tremendous throughout the af- ternoon and spoiled homecoming for Ole Miss fans. It was the third straight de- feat this season for Ole Miss and the first time the Rebels have ever lost three in a row under Coach John Vaught, who be- came head coach 18 years ago. THE ATHENS BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA Series Now Stands, 2-1 Georgia Homecoming Scores, Thrills For Crowds By BILLY DILWORTH Old Glory never looked better waving in the Saturday late-afternoon breeze and victory somehow seemed sweeter than ever before for thousands of young and old Georgia grads who must have died a hundred times in a homecoming football game that produced enough scares and thrills to last all season. The Georgia Clemson game started strangely. Bulldog fans, realizing their team now was among the top five in the whole country, seemed stunned from the very beginning when the Tigers from across Lake Hartwell proved convincingly they came to Athens to play football. With more than 45,000 fans filling every seat in the stadi- um and virtually every spot on the hillsides, not counting free- loaders on the bridge between campuses and the railroad cut, he game began as a stem-winder and ended in the same manner. Somebody in the press box said the game's first score - six points for the Tigers came eight minutes and 47 seconds in the first period, but Bulldog fans didn't care about time. They knew they had plenty, but they obviously wondered how you score against a team that steals your thunder by scaring the daylights out of you and in plain view of that mammoth homecoming crowd. Coach Vince Dooley's boys from Georgia don't scare easi- ly. Already this season, they've downed mighty Alabama and Michigan teams and they've proved they can react best when acted upon. That's what happened Saturday afternoon out in Sanford Stadium when a fired-up Clemson bunch, hungry for victo- ry in the same state they faced defeat just a week ago - on Grant Field in Atlanta. Surely he didn't plan things that way, but Coach Frank Howard came to Athens dressed in a blue shirt. As things de- veloped, it matched a blue, blue day for the Carolinians. The tobacco-chewing Tiger coach paced up and down the sidelines like an expectant father. His boys delivered for a full 30 minutes, but that was all. The game really ended for Clem- son at the outset of the third period when Avondale's Jimmy Cooley blocked a Clemson punt and a Bulldog from Green- ville, S. C. by the name of Larry Kohn gathered it in his arms for a TD. That put the Bulldogs in the lead, 13-9, and that was enough for the multitudes to cheer, honk horns, and blow whistles. The game had its first. Never had a Don Barfield punt been blocked. A fan down in the stands yelled that Barfield couldn't have picked a better place to break his record. Bobby Etter missed his first extra point for Georgia-af- ter a string of 22. Later, he erred in a field goal try in the last quarter. The press corps obviously put a lot of stock in Bulldog Bob Taylor, the LaGrange senior. Writers tabbed him Geor- gia's "Most Valuable Player," an annual award sponsored by ATO fraternity. He'll receive a handsome trophy at a student pep rally Thursday night.. The match was a cliff-hanger throughout the first half and, while the Georgians were chewing up the second stanza, the game still had enough attraction and spark for practically all of the crowd to keep their seats. Dooley was a big name in the contest. Georgia seniors and their dates, taking their traditional walk around the play- See DILSWORTH, page 201 TURBO- POWERED NOW! '66 CHEVROLETS TURBO-CHARGED '66 CORVAIR Sporting America's unique Six Designed unlike any other American car; six-cylinder power unlike any other American car offers. It's in back for traction. Up to 180 hp available in Corsas-Turbo-Charged! Special steering and suspension you can add, too, for even crisper handling-more sports car feel. Corvair for '66! Corsa Sport Coupe TURBO-FIRE '66 CHEVY II New go, new look, new car! Sport coupes that are swept way back on top this year and definitely no slouches up front. 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