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Tesreau—That’s Why Giants
Have a Look-in, Says Tinker
By Joseph B. Tinker.
Acting Manager Chicago Cubs.
Chicago, oct i.—" Big" Jeff
Tesreau, the spitball pitcher,
looms up as the hope of the
Giants in their series with the Red
Box for a world’s championship
If Tesreau falls to come through
I can see no hope for McGraw’s
men. If Tesreau does come through,
then the Giants will stand an ex
cellent chance of winning the
world's championship
Mathewson may pitch a. good
game. Marquand, in my estima
tion, isn’t likely to Rut Tesreau Is
the key to success when viewed
from the standpoint of the New
Yorkers
Here is the way I look at that
series between the Giants and the •
Red Sox: I do not believe that the
Giants have a chance to win if
many runs are scored. In that
event the Red Sox will surely have
the better of the argument. But if
Tesreau can hold the Red Sox,
then his pals will have a chance.
If I were managing the Giants I
would start Tesreau in the first
game, with one proviso, and that
would be this: If Tesreau can go in
there and pitch in a world’s cham
pionship series without being over
come by nervousness he Is the log
ical pitcher. Now. no one save
Manager McGraw is In a position
to determine whether the big fel
low Is likely to suffer from stage
fright or whether he is of the tem
perament which will make it possi
ble for him to go In there and pitch
his beat with the large crowd pres
ent and the stake a world’s cham
pionship
Tesreau May Start Series.
If McGraw figure,-, that Tesreau
can pitch his best article of ball re
gardless of the stake, then he is the
man to start in the first game
I have a most wholesome respect
for the pitching staff of .lake Stahl.
I do not believe that the Giants ate
going to hammer that ball to all
corners of the lot and score a lot of
runs That is the reason that 1
make Tesreau the hinge upon
which victory or defeat will swing
Because if it comes to a series of
games In which runs are scarce
Tesreau Is the man who will have
to carry the New York club Math
ewson Is smart He Is experienced.
He can go out there and pitch the
kind of ball we call "heady ” But
whether he is the factor to be de
pemdod upon in several games of a
series like the one which decides a
world's series Is a question in my
mind
Marquard has displayed little
since he won tils nineteen straight.
1 do not figure him an important
factor In the world's championship
Regardless of how you attempt to
figure that series, you must get
right back to the fact that Tes
reau. the recruit. Is the big factor
from the New York end
Now, if Tesreau can pitch that
first game and win it tin chances
of the Giants are very bright Be
cause Tesreau is a giant in phys
ique and a glutton for work In a
short series like this and with the
rest which he is certain to have
before it begins, he could go on
the mound and pitch four or five
games in a row The chani-s of
the Giants in this series are consid
erably lessened by the fact that
Tesreau is a recruit and a young
ster. I think he possesses the nat
ural ability to hold bls own in any
series of games lam judging his
worth by what he has displayed
again-' u- till- season
More Than Base Running Needed.
It is all wel and good to talk
about the bus.-running ability of
the Giants They ,an run bases
and that's adm tted. But there Is a
I saying in i. . ball that you < an't
st<a first b.is' Before you can
rim those I ... - ?I , u ha ve to reach
first And the 0r... way you can do
that to any extent is by hitting the
ball My opinion of the Boston
pitching staff, gained from reading
and from hearing ball players talk,
is that the men are mighty effect
ive and not likely to allow’ many of
of the opposing team to get on.
That is the reason that 1 place so
much emphasis on Tesreau. Be
cause If the Boston pitchers hold
and keep tho Giants off the bases
it naturally follows that the New
York twirlers also must be good
and keep the Boston men off the
paths. And Tesreau is the man to
do It if It can be done.
Tesreau may emerge a hero and
he may come out with a reputation
considerably soiled. Just the same,
at this stage of the game he seems
like the big hope.
Mathewson's- fast ball isn’t work
ing like It did in years gone by. He
may pitch wonderful bull after a
rest. But since I am asked to size
up the situation as it appeals to
me at the present time, I must do
it In these words:
In my opinion the Boston pitch
ers will hold the New York batters.
That means that the New York
pitchers must hold the Boston bat
ters.
Mathewson’s experience, Ais
he a dy pitching, may be a big as
set, but it's my opinion that Tes
reau, the youthful giant, is the man
who will have to do it.
Therefore, ] pick the recruit as
the most valuable man the New
Yorkers possess in this series for a
world's championship and claim
that he is the man upon whom the
Giants must base most of their
hope.
KETCHEL DOWNS KILBANE;
WANTS WOLGAST’S GAME
WINNIPEG, MAN., Oct. I.—Steve
Ketchol, of Chicago, decisively defeated
Tommy Kilbane, of Cleveland, here last
night in a twelve-round contest.
Ketchel had every round to his credit
f*n< 1 was selected by the National Sport
ing i lub here to meet Champion Ad
Wolgast in the very near future. Al
though Kilbane put up a classy tight,
he was up against too strong a boy.
Ketchel scored a knoekdow n over the
Cleveland boy In the seventh round
IF MANDOT IS WHIPPED
HE LOSES DALY CITY GO
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct I—Despite
the fact that Wolgast and Mandot have
signed for a battle at New Orleans No
vember 2, CoiTroth is going ahead with
plans tor their battle at Dalv City
Thank-giving day In case Mandot is
decisively beaten by the champion, a
nt w opponent is to be found, probably
Willie Ritchie or Frankie Burns
THE BASEBALL CARD.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Games Today.
I-.-ion in YY ashington
New York in Philadelphia
Standing of the Clubs.
w i, re w i pc
Boston 102 til 68‘( i "land. 72 77 ist
Wash S'.' 59 601 Detroit 69 80 463
Plnla 88 60 5h.. S Louis 52 !'S 347
'Chicago 74 76 403 N York 49 99 329
Yesterday's Results
I'hiliuh'lpnia 11. Now York 10
Heston 7. Washington 5
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Games Today.
Brooklyn in Boston
Philadelphia in Now York
Pittsburg in Chicago
Cincinnati in St Louis
Standing of the Clubs
YY 1. PC W I. PC
X York 101 15 61.2 Phila 70 77 47f
P'burg si ;,7 615 s Louis 62 88 413
Chicago 69 58 605 Hr'klyn 57 :•! ::C
I' natl 74 71. Boston 48 100 321
Yesterday’s Results.
X> w York 4. Philadelphia 2
Pittsburg 9. Chicago 3
Brooklyn 6. Boston 5
I st Louts 6, Cincinnati 4
I’llE ATT.AXTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
Fight Fans Lose Interest Under New York System
NO DECISION BOUTS HAVE HURT BOXING GAME
By Ed. \V. Smith.
Chicago, ill., oct. l—Per
haps the loss of interest in
the boxing game, now so no
ticeable in New’ York contests, may
be traced to the no-decision system
that prevails there.
The system gives the fighters
plenty of leeway. There is little
chance for a dent in reputations If
a man can stick the ten rounds and
there is a good chance that a
friendly’ critic or two might be
induced to give him an even
break, thus enhancing his chances
of getting other bouts.
There is a false ring about the
■whole thing that isn’t pleasing.
In bouts where decisions are giv
en it is an absolute certainty that
the fighters will do their level best.
Knowing that the contest is to go
to a referee’s decision, the fans
naturally will feel more concern
and interest in such a meeting
than they would in a contest in
which they feel that one man could
stall pretty much all the way
through without seriously hurting
his reputation.
Even Title Contests Fail to Draw.
New York is complaining of the
» —• i
The Big Race
He e is the up-to-the-minute dope On
how the "Big Five" batters of the
American league are hitting:
PLAYERS— AB. H. AV.
COBB 545 222 .408
JACKSON 556 218 .392
SPEAKER . 568 217 .382
LAJOIE 425 149 .351
COLLINS 521 174 .334
Only two members of the exclusive
"Big Five” played ball yesterday—
Speaker and Collins. Each man made
a single hit, but Speaker had only three
times at bat, while Collins was five
times up.
TICKETS FOR SERIES
WILL SOON BE ISSUED
NEYY YORK, Oct 1 At National
league headquarters Secretary John A
Heydler is busy preparing his list of
preferred patrons, including organized
baseball otlicials. season box holders
and authorized major league newspa
per men. He announced that this list
would be closed promptly at 6 p. m. to
day, ami that no applications for res
ervations after that hour would be con
sidered.
These preferred patrons are io be ac
commodated at the three-dollar rate in
the upper tier of the grandstand, nd
after the list has been deducted fiom
the 8.000 seats available in that sec
tion. the remainder Is to be placed on
public sale in advance. The time and
place for this sale probable will lie
announced on Thursdav. said Mr Heyd
ler
The rest of 30.000 seats at the Polo
grounds can be bought only at the
grounds on the days of the games
SEWANEE OPENS SEASON
WITH PREP GAME OCT. 9
’ SEWANEE. TENN. Oct 1. —The
first gam. of the Sewanee football sea-
; son will be played with Morgan Prep
I school, on October 9, at Sewanee.
it looks now. i lie line-up for this
contest will be somethin- like this:
Stoney or Mact'alluin. .enter, Halton.
Maet'allnm or Stoney, guard- Mag
no...l, Moore or Ham. tackles; Gillem
' Mei'lellehan or Eggleston, etuis. Tolley
ot Hammond, quarter. Parrish, Gilles
i pi. Sheldon or Parker, backs.
Practice has been going on for over
two weeks now. and the prospects are
better than they have been for years,
(’ope has over forty men out each aft-
I ern'oon
With th. < x. eution of Movers. Eckert
| and Gillette, all fit old vatsity men
‘inve returned tc dcllege
HEDGES TO LOOSEN UP:
BROWNS TRAIN IN TEXAS
ST LOVIS Oct. 1 President
'Hedges, of the St Louis Browns, has
announced that his team will train next
spring at Wnro, Texas, and that all the
negotiations for tin trip to the Ijone
| Star state had been completed
small houses and hence the boxers
are not so eager as they were to
perform there.
Even championship contests with
a strong international flavor are
not doing well in Gotham towrn.
Eddie McGoorty didn't get fat
financially through his feat of
whipping the Australian and Brit
ish stars, Dave Smith and Jack
Harrison. On paper and in ad
vance better bouts than these could
hardly’ have been asked for.
Yet they didn’t draw. The mid
dleweights, it is true, received sev
eral black eyes In recent bouts in
New’ York because of the sheer
mediocrity of their performances.
And this same Eddie McGoorty was
one of those who contributed to the
general feeling of disgust at the
middleweights because of his so
called Indifferent showing with
Bob Moha, the Milwaukee strong
man. But this should have been
forgotten when Dave Smith land
ed here and later when the English
champion, Harrison, came here
with a flourish of trumpets and
was acclaimed one of the best
Great Britain has sent here in a
Ffodder FOR FANS - !
, _ -
■
When the Reds departed last from
Chicago they carried a new man with <
them. Albert Kuhn. He was a product (
of the back lots of Chicago. t
lim. Delehanty batted .438 this season. 1
Mauling the pill is a family characteris- (
tie with the Delehantys.
A fine lot of youngsters are found in ‘
the select batting circle in the American ,
association, such juveniles as Corriden,
Rossman, Carr, Clymer. Altizer, Hulswitt
and the rest.
• • •
Capron, the former college wonder, 1
managed to hit 281 with St. Paul
• • ♦
Left handers have had small success I
against the Red Sox this year. The Sox ,
have won 17. lost 9 and tied 1 against (
. the performers of the southpaw persua- ,
Nslon . . .
I j Wonder how Charley Murphy will come
out in his effort to clamp prohibition on ]
liis Cubs. Frank Chance says it's all .
rot and that players should be allowed to
I drink, in moderation. He does not, how
ever. go on to give a definition of the j
word "moderation.”
Howard Camnitz will lead a band of |
Pirate barnstormers through Pennsyl
vania and Ohio after the season ends, j
The trip will last as long as the money’ ,
does.
Don't count too strongly on Jeff Tes- '
reau for the world's series. He's just ,
' tonight a new yellow automobile
i • • •
Victor Munoz has the honor of being the
, first sporting editor on the job for the
, worlds' series. He landed in New York .
1 several days ago from Havana. He picks ,
' the Giants. Also he pays 5 cents a word
- to get his stories back to his paper.
, Market item: Boston Common is re
, ported strong.
* • •
The Battle Creek formal school of
Physical Education, which has dropped
football because the beastly game’s bru
tal. still clings to baseball.
• • •
| \nswer \n.\ioiis Yes. yes We are
f picking the Red Sox. Therefore, go bet
on the <Hants with the full assurance
that you can't be far wrong
• * •
Evet \ b<»d\ in the Southern league wants
to se< \1 I Tmaree make good, but few
believe that he will Somehow. Al isn’t
our notion of a icalix great pitcher
• * *
Mike Ponlin has taken to Christian
Science He sajs that it saved his wife’s
lift* when she was so sick in the summer,
and he’s converted. It’ll do him good,
. too. no doubt.
• • •
Pitcher \l Klawitter, who was drafted
from Portland by Detroit, says be would
1 lather do any thing on earth except pitch.
11. claims that he played several games I
. at short for Knaupp last year and subbed i
so well that the official scorer took him
sot the real thing and credited fourteen (
. hits out of fifteen times up to "Knauppv " j
♦ * ♦
1 Ijelivvlt finished second among the reg- ‘
alar pitchers of the American associa
tion this year. That's marvelous, con
sidering that he was always nowhere or
worse In the Southern league
• • *
' Glenn Liebhardt < outd not manage to
' win half his games this year with Min
nea polls
t ...
s Frank Dessau, over whose departure
( there was so much moaning last season. I
, managed to win but two games out of
* seven for Kansas City, and was next to I
• last among the American association
pitchers
long time.
But the New York fans seem to
be tired or something else is wrong
w’ith the rvhole situation.
It’s a fact, however, that the box
ing game, in common with many
other sports, needs to be rested up
for a time. The promoters there
have been running It summer and
winter, and it is small wonder
that even the most attractive of
cards f ills far below’ the expected
mark ' vhen the dollars are counted.
Billy Papke made his first ap
pearrnce of the season against Jack
Denning in New York the other
night and as a majority of the re
ports say that Billy worked pretty
wrell against his seasoned opponent
we are forced to take that view
of it.
It looks very much as if Papke
is the only one of the middle
weights w’ho will be given a coun
try-wide chance against Eddie Mc-
Goorty now in the race for the
middleweight title. And as Papke
intends to go to Paris in a short
time under the management once
more of Al Lippe, there is but a
slim chance of seeing these two
good fighters together.
—■— - -
Horace Fogel tries to be a press agent
of the Charley Murphy stamp, but he
doss not do it as well. His charge that
the umpires deliberately handed the
pennant to the Giants is so ridiculous that
it hardly stirred a breeze in sporting
circles
• • •
Fans in Boston are already staking out
camping sjiqs where they will squat while
waiting for the dally sale of tickets to
begin
• • •
Fred Clarke lia»s-signed a 1913 contract
with the Pirates—w’hlch was rather to
have been expected.
• • •
After refraining for years to protest
an umpire. August Herrmann has landed
on one. The. object of his wrath was
I'nipire Fipneran. He put Player Egan
out of a recent game for bad language.
Herrmann says he can prove that Fln
neran used worse language than Egan.
• • •
Head in big league paper: "Chance
Done as Leader of the Chicago Outfit.”
Query: "Done what?”
* » *
Josh Devore, the "diamond king" of the
big leagues, w’ent into Diamond John’s
place in New York the other day, just
looking around John had a stomacher
lie had picked up at a pawnbroker’s sale.
It was about 4 inches by’ 6, and con
tained samples of all the known precious
stones. "Here.” said Diamond John, hu
morously, "is sumpin’ niee for your
scarf, Josh." Mr. Devore inspected it
gravely "That would be a grand piece
of Junk to keep your chin up with, John,"
he asserted, but ain’t you afraid some
folks might call it loud?"
• • •
Hank O’Day was recently interviewed,
as follows: “1 have nothing to say. I've
said it all before." He did finally’ admit,
though, that it was easier to manage than
to be an umpire.
ATLANTA SOCCER CLUB
TO MEET OCTOBER 3
The Atlanta soccer football club will
hold a meeting at their headquarters. A
G. Spalding A Bros., 74 North Broad
street. October 3. at which time offi
cers will be ejected for the ensuing year
and plans discussed for the season.
The question of forming a football
league for soccer players will be dis
cussed. A league is now organized in
the East, covering the entire section and
the We.si. The local players propose to
organize such a league in the South and
have it a member of the American as
sociation
The local club won all of its games last
season, ami with many more clubs and
colleges taking up the game this year
it expects to play many games this fall
BALL PLAYER FOUND DEAD:
GAS TURNED ON IN ROOM
POTTSVILLE, PA , Oct. I.—Michael
: Sheridan, formerly’ a pitcher on the
: Pottsville team of the Atlantic league
ami later with the New York State
league and tried out by the Athletics,
was found dead in a suburban hotel.
The gas in tlie room was turned on. but
death is believed to have been acci
dental.
Your vote and influence
is solicited for R. M. Clay
ton for Chief of Construc
tion.
Boston Kids Build Tunnel to
Get Into Red Sox Ball Park
By Bill Bailey.
Boston, mass., oct. i.—Did
you ever stop to wonder what
happened to the old-fashioned
kid who shinned up over the fence
at the bail park and saw the game
for nothing?
You know the type. Maybe hr
happened to have a quarter in his
pocket. But it didn’t got for a
ticket. The chances were that he
had nothing but a longing desire
to see that ball game, some well
muscled toes that made It easy’ for
him to climb the highest board
fence ever built, and the most guile
less face that w r as ever put on a
youngster.
He could look Innocent when you
know he was guilty and prove hls
Innocence If you gave him a chance,
and maybe swear at you if you In
sisted that he get out.
• • •
IirELL, that old-fashioned kid Is
’ still in existence and doing
business at the same old stand. The
fact that they built ball parks of
bricks and concrete and have walls
of brick and stone didn’t interfere
with him
He passed out of your existence
because you became prosperous
enough to sit in the grandstand.
But he is among those present at
every ball game.
Here is one that Robert McKoy
was telling. Mcßoy, you know,
was formerly the secretary of the
American league. Last winter he
purchased an interest in the Bos
ton Red Sox.
"Don’t ever get the impression
that the concrete and the, brick
walls make any’ difference to the
kids,” said Mcßoy.
“They’ll get in all right. The
only difference is that they have
kept pace with the times and in
stead of going over the fences when
they are difficult to climb they go
under.”
"Tunnel?”
• » »
. fiTUNNEL is right. J was stand
ing a short distance from the
general admission gates one Sat
urday afternoon when 1 saw the
GEORGIA ELEVEN READY
FOR ITS OPENING GAME
ATHENS. GA., Oct. I.—Bowden, left
end: Harrell, left tackle; Malone, left
guaid; Henderson or Wood, center:
Lucas, right guard; Peacock (captain),
right tackle: Parrish, right end: Cov
ington. quarter back; McWhorter, right
half; Paddock, left half; Wheatley, full
back.
This in all probability will be the
line-up that Coach Cunningham will
put on the field for the first game of
the season with the University of Chat
tanooga here Saturday.
Paddock. Wheatley and Henderson
are the only new faces that appear. The
other men saw service on last season's
eleven.
The Georgia team expects a pretty
stiff game from the Tennesseeans, and
Cunningham will take no chances by
sending in anything but his best eleven
at the start of the game.
MURPHY MAKING PLANS
TQ GO-OUT AS SCOUT
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. L—Danny
Murphy, captain of the Athletics, prob
ably never will be able to play baseball
again, but he will retain his connection
with the Athletics in the capacity of a
scout. It has become known that the
accident Murphy had at Chicago has
left him with a stiff leg. Connie Mack
acknowledged today that it did not
seem likely that Murphy will be able to
play.
ground suddenly give way and go
down.
“A heavy rain had Just fallen
and I supposed that it was reaper
sfble for the cave-ln. Pretty geon
I saw a pair of hands emerge and
grasp at the sinking ground. Then
It dawned on me. A kid had tun
neled hls way Into the ball park.
"Well, we got busy right away.
We ran outside and found the en
trance to the tunnel. We plugged
this and told the lads that the jig
was up. Pretty aeon they began
to emerge. There were seven of
them there and we lined them up.
** ‘There’s three more In there
howled one of the youngsters. The
words were scarcely out of his
mouth when another of the young
sters swung on him. Which goes
to show that it doesn’t pay to be
even a young Informer.
"We yellted and shouted at the
three, but they wouldn’t come out
So we'got a hose, turned on the
water, swished It In that tunnel a
few times, and out they came
• • •
HI HEN we began an Investiga
’ ’ tion. We have a board walk
outside of the entrance, and this
continues for a short distance aft
er you get In the park. It was easy
for them to tunnel under this. I
suppose they tunneled a distance
of five feet after leaving the walk
They had a hole there that was
■ plenty large enough for a young
ster to crawl through on all fours
It was too near the surface, how
ever, and the heavy rain caused
the cave-ln w’hlch resulted in the
detection.
Those kids still go over the fence
Mcßoy told one story of a bunch
of youngsters who climbed the side
of the new grandstand.
Some of hls companion* went the
distance, but one fellow got to a
position where he couldn't go on
and he couldn't come down They
rescued him with the aid of lad
ders.
So the old-fashioned kids haven't
disappeared. They’re still getting
in without paying their way, and
the baseball men have an idea
that they always will.
TEAMS NEED MEN TO
MIX ’EM UP. SAYS YOST
ANN ARBOR, MICH., Oct. I—"A good
quarterback who knows how to mix his
plays and can open up the game when he
needs to will do a lot for the team under
the new rulas,” said Coach Fielding Yost
recently.
"A straight plunging game will not do.
and a heavy team will not have the ad
vantage that so many seem to think
"Os eourse, the unrestricted forward
pass will help a lot, but a proper mix
ture of the old style plunging tactics and
the newer open game will product the re
sult.
“Four downs will help a lot, but you
still have two and a half yards to gain 1111
a down, and under the old rules there
were many times that a team couldn t
make the yard and two-thirds it needed
to make Its distance.”
Henry Curtis, famous lineman back in
03 and 'O4, has been obtained as assistant
coach In place of Curt Redden, who could
not return this year. Only seven men
showed up today for early practice and
some of last years stars have not yet
sent word that they will be here, although
all but McKinnon are expected. Os l* 9t
year's team only Torbet, end and half,
and Barton, end. are here, although "Bub
bles” Patterson and Guard Quinn are ex
pected tonight.
BLOCK GETS NEWSPAPER
DECISION OVER GIBBS
NEW ORLEANS. Oct. L—Matt Bloc
of Cleveland, won from Willie Gibbs ’’
Philadelphia, in a ten-round bout la Jt
night at the Orleans Athletic club. 1> i' l ’
a newspaper decision, but a unanimoue
one.
Want to rent your rooms, apartn.er.tf;
houses, business locations, etc.? A '
tn The Georgian s Rent Bulletin or. tn*
want ad pages will fill your vacancie-
Try it and see.