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(May 15 North Battleford Beavers kicked off the 1952
Saskatchewan Baseball League season by nudging the Saskatoon Gems 9 - 8
in a 10 inning game. Third baseman Curtis Tate's extra inning
single off the third Gems' pitcher, Chuck Holdaway, drove
home Bob Herron with the winning marker. Both teams banged
out 11 hits as the Beavers' Steve Wylie got credit for the
win. Cliff Jacobson, in relief of starter Bob
Singleton, was tagged with the loss.
Coleman, Wylie (W) (7) and Green
Singleton, Jacobson (L) (7), Holdaway (10) and Shirley
(May 16)
The North Battleford Beavers made it two straight in two nights as they
blanked the Moose Jaw Maples 4 - 0 behind the brilliant four-hit pitching
of Bob Herron. Jackie McLeod's two-run single in the
3rd inning gave Herron all the runs he needed in fashioning the win.
Herron (W) and
Green
Worth (L) and Harford
(May 17)
Louis Green's homer in the 6th inning, with Bob Herron
aboard, proved to be the difference as North Battleford topped Moose Jaw
Maples 4-2. Roy Dean added an insurance run with a
homer in the 7th. Don Hinchberger had two hits for
the Maples.
Alex Palica (L) and Harford
Les Dean (W), Lefty Coleman (8) and Green
(May 18)
Ken Nelson's three-run homer in the 5th inning paced North
Battleford to its 4th straight win 8-4 over Moose Jaw Maples.
Bob Herron had led off the frame with a solo homer.
Nelson and Emile Francis each had three hits for the
Beavers. Don Hinchberger led the Maples with a pair.
Jimmy Linnell picked up the win in relief of starter
Steve Wylie. Henry Pippen took the loss.
Pippen, (L), Art Worth (6) and Harford
Wylie, Linnell (W) (4) and Green
(May 20) The
Moose Jaw Maples finally crashed the win column, chalking up a decisive
8 - 4 victory over the Saskatoon Gems. Maples' hurler Berlyn Hodges
gave up 8 hits while fanning 6 in fashioning the win. Moose Jaw catcher
Jim Harford belted a home run off loser Cliff Jacobson.
Jacobson (L), Coben (9) and Shirley
B. Hodges (W) and Harford
(May 21)
The North Battleford Beavers suffered their first loss of the
Saskatchewan League season as the Saskatoon Gems edged them 3 - 2 in a
great pitcher's duel between the Beavers' John Coleman and the
Saskatoon's Chuck Holdaway. Both chuckers surrendered but
five base hits. North Battleford went ahead 2 - 0 in the top of the 7th but
the Gems roared back with three in the bottom half of the same inning to
cement the triumph.
Coleman (L) and Green
Holdaway (W) and Shirley
(May 25)
The Regina Caps were clipped 9 - 3 by the North Battleford Beavers as
they made their Saskatchewan Baseball League debut. Les Dean went
the route for the Beavers and, even though he was credited with the win,
he let the Caps rap out 12 hits. The Reginans, however, couldn't
come through in the clutch and left 14 runners stranded. North
Battleford knocked Caps' starter and loser Jack Denbol off
the hill in the 1st frame. Playing manager Bob Linck went the
rest of the way.
Denbol (L), Linck(1) and Kyle
Les Dean (W) and Green
(May 26)
Lefty Doug Dodd tossed a five-hitter and fanned 12 as Saskatoon
Gems beat Regina Caps 4-1 at Saskatoon. The win evened the Gems record
at 3-3 while the Caps dropped their second straight. Reg
Pendleton's two-run homer in the first inning proved to be the
difference.
Pete Bruni (L) and Kyle
Dodd (W) and Shirley
(May 28)
Moose Jaw Maples made seven errors, accounting for nine unearned runs,
in handing an 11-8 win to Saskatoon Gems. Len Breckner
led the Gems' offense with a three-run homer. Cliff
Jacobson had a solo shot. Archie Templeton had a
four-bagger for the Maples. Art Worth, the losing
pitcher, had three hits. Murray Coben, with four
shutout innings, in relief, picked up the win.
Singleton, Holdaway (2), Coben (W) (6) and Shirley
Worth (L), Hodges (8) and Harford
(May 28)
Regina Caps thrilled a home crowd of 2-thousand with an 8-7 win over
North Battleford in the home opener of the 1952 season. Caps
jumped into an early lead then held off a large charge by the Beavers to
take the victory. Catcher Gus Kyle drove in three
with a bases-loaded double in the first inning and winning pitcher
Lou Tost had a bases-loaded single in the 3rd to drive in a
pair. Roy Dean had a triple and double for the winners.
Herron (L), Linnell (8) and Green
Tost (W), Maze (7), Vogt (9) and Kyle
(May 29) The
Regina Caps took to the road and pounded the Estevan Maple
Leafs 20 - 5 in the Soo Line team's first taste of Saskatchewan Baseball
League action. Estevan managed only four hits against Regina
starter and winner Walter Buttgereit and mop-up reliever Jack
Denbol. Andy Lillie was scorched for 19 hits and had
to endure six Leaf errors in suffering the loss.
Buttgereit (W), Denbol and Kyle
Lillie (L) and Monroe
(May 30)
A three-run outburst in the 8th inning handed Saskatoon Gems a 7-5 win
over Moose Jaw Maples. Gems were behind 5-4 when Jim Shirley
belted a one-out double. A walk and a throwing error tied the
score. After a groundout, another error led to a run and Doug
Bentley stole home with another insurance marker. Shirley
led the Gems with a triple and double. Bob Singleton
picked up the win in relief.
Palica, B Hodges (L) (8) and Harford
Jacobson, Singleton (W) (4) and Reg Bentley, Shirley (4)
(May 31)
In the initial joust of a two game weekend set-to, the North Battleford
Beavers whisked by Lefty Lauer and the Saskatoon Gems 1 -
0. Lefthander Johnny Coleman and his Beaver mates narrowly edged
out the Gems in this exciting pitching duel.
Lauer (L) and Shirley
Coleman (W) and Green
(June 1)
The finale of the two game weekend series was equally as thrilling and saw
the Beavers again prevail, this time by a 3 - 2 margin. In this mound
battle, North Battleford's Steve Wylie outlasted the Hub City's
Chuck Holdaway.
Holdaway (L), Dodd (8) and Shirley
Wylie (W) and Green
(June 2)
Saskatoon Gems exploded for eight runs in the bottom of the 7th inning
to erase a 6-2 Estevan lead and went on to down the Maple Leafs 12-7.
Winning pitcher Murray Coben started the uprising with a
two-run homer. After Max Bentley beat out a bent and
Jimmy Shields singled the Leafs intentionally walked
Gordie Howe to load the bases. Len Breckner's
bases-loaded single scored two. Catcher Jim Shirley
had two hits in the inning. Reliever Pete McLeod was
the loser.
Torgenrud, McLeod (L) (7) and Munroe, Patterson (8)
Dodd, Coben (W) (4) and Shirley
(June 3)
The Moose Jaw Maples swept a double bill from the Regina Caps as two of
the Mill City's southpaws stymied the Reginans. In comparatively easy
fashion, the Maples put away their trans-Canada highway rivals by scores
of 8 - 4 and 7 - 0. It was a quiet day for Cap hickory as the most the
Queen City crew could muster in each fixture was three scattered safeties.
In the afternoon tilt, Archie Templeton went the route for the
Maples, besting the Caps' Pete Bruni. Moose Jaw recorded
six 1st inning markers in cruising to victory. Wayne Brock
slugged a two-run homer in the 6th for the Maples.
Bruni (L) and Kyle
Templeton (W) and Harford
Shortstop
Don Hinchberger belted two round trippers as the Maples
coasted in the nightcap. Jackie Harbourne shared the
batting spotlight collecting a double and three singles in four trips.
Berlyn Hodges pitched shutout ball, striking out 7, in
earning the win over Walt Buttgereit.
Buttgereit (L), Linck (7) and Kyle
B. Hodges (W) and Harford
(June 3)
Les Dean pitched brilliant two-hit ball to spark the North
Battleford Beavers to a 4 - 0 whitewash of the Estevan Maple Leafs. The
Beavers scored single tallies in the 1st and 8th to go along with their
brace in the 7th. off loser Pete McLeod.
McLeod (L) and Patterson
L. Dean (W) and Green
(June 4)
The Saskatoon Gems squeezed out a 2 - 1 decision over the Estevan Maple
Leafs in a closely contested Saskatchewan Baseball League game. Orest
Hryniuk, with 8th inning relief help from Cliff Jacobson,
got the win over complete game loser Wayne Stephenson.
Seventh inning RBI's by Len Breckner and Doug
Bentley brought in both Saskatoon tallies.
Stephenson (L) and Patterson
Hryniuk (W), Jacobson (8) and Shirley
(June 4)
The Regina Caps climaxed a wild, come-from-behind struggle by scoring 9
runs in the 7th and 8th innings to register an 11 - 8 victory over the
Moose Jaw Maples. With 2 players from the Southern League Regina Royal
Caps in their line-up, the Caps fell behind on Al Vogt's first
pitch of the game which Moose Jaw's Berlyn Hodges slugged
for a home run. "Butch" Buttgereit's hefty 8th inning triple off
loser Art Worth drove in the winning counters. Bob
Linck led the Caps offensively with a 3 for 3 evening while
Buttgereit, Gus Kyle, Cy Thorseth and
Jimmy Ross, up from the Royal Caps, all had a pair. Archie
Templeton paced Moose Jaw with 3 safeties while Hodges and
Wayne Brock had a pair.
Palica,
Pippen (7), Worth (L) (7) and Harford
Vogt (W) and Kyle
(June 5)
Young lefthander Bob Singleton fanned 19 and allowed only three hits
as the Saskatoon Gems nudged the Regina Caps 3 - 2. Despite the pitching
masterpiece, it appeared that Singleton might finish as a loser as a
combination of four Saskatoon errors and a double by Neil Decker,
who had two of the Reginans three safeties, had the Caps in front 2 - 0 after
8 1/2 innings. But the Gems kicked through with a belated bottom of the
9th rally for three runs to snatch victory from defeat. Reg
Pendleton's bloop single into left field off loser Cy
Thorseth with the score deadlocked plated Gordie Howe
with the winning tally.
Thorseth (L) and Kyle
Singleton (W) and Shirley
(June 5)
The Estevan Maple Leafs chalked up a 6 - 3 victory over the league
leading North Battleford Beavers. Ray Patterson pitched six-hit
ball for the Leaf win while his mates tagged loser Bob Herron and
reliever Jim Linnell for ten safeties.
Patterson (W) and Monroe
Herron (L), Linnell (4) and Green
(June 5)
Florida Cubans downed the Indian Head 8-0 for their second straight
shutout win over the Rockets. First baseman Pedro Seoane
went 4 for 4 while shortstop Marcelino Arozarena belted a
homer and a triple. Julio Bonilla and
Roberto Ledo each had three hits. Rockets' manager
Jim Williams is reported to have seven more players on the
way to join his club.
Forten (W) and Ledo
Donaldson (L) and Ford
(June 6)
Two large sized, solidly built fellows who earn their living in the
winter playing in the National Hockey League displayed their off-ice
ability on the diamond as the Saskatoon Gems and Regina Caps split a
twin bill. Gordie Howe, the Detroit Red Wings' scoring star,
whacked the horsehide hard as the Gems dropped the Caps 12 - 3 in the
afternoon tilt. Howe collected three singles and a triple in five trips off
loser Bob Linck while winning pitcher Chuck
Holdaway went 3 for 4. Gus Kyle pounded out a home run
for the losers.
Holdaway (W), Jacobson (8) and Shirley
Linck (L) and Kyle
The
picture changed in the nightcap as hefty Gus Kyle, a
defenseman with the Boston Bruins, sparked the Caps with three hits and
two
RBI's off loser Lefty Lauer and two relievers as the Regina
squad triumphed 9 - 3. Walter Buttgereit scattered eight hits
for the win and picked up two hits, both doubles, along the way. Catcher
Bob Shirley had a pair of hits for Saskatoon.
Lauer (L), Jacobson (6), Dodds (7) and Shirley
Buttgereit (W) and Kyle
(June 6)
The Estevan Maple Leafs and the league pace-setting North Battleford
Beavers divided a doubleheader with the Leafs losing the opening game 14
- 7 and then taking the nightcap 7 - 5. The Beavers greeted starter
Chuck Manning with nine runs in the 1st inning of the matinee which
essentially put the game on ice. Lefty Coleman went the
route for the Beavers in the seven inning contest. Leading hitters for North
Battleford were Curtis Tate and Bob Herron
with three knocks apiece, one of Herron's being a 7th inning homer.
Coleman (W) and Green
Manning (L), Stephenson (1) and Dickey
The Maple
Leafs bunched their ten hits to beat Steve Wylie in the
night game which was called at the end of the 8th. Doug Dickey
had two doubles and Charlie Selph a pair of singles for the
winners.
Wylie (L) and Green
Torgenrud (W), McLeod (6) and Dickey
(June 7)
The Estevan Maple Leafs held the classy Saskatoon Gems to a 5 - 5 tie in
a Saskatchewan Baseball League game. The nip-and-tuck contest had the
Leafs swatting eleven hits off four Saskatoon chuckers while the Gems came
through with seven safeties off a pair of Estevan hurlers. Charlie Selph
with 3 for 5 and George Montz with 2 for 4 led the Estevan
hitters. Max Bentley had a brace for Saskatoon.
Coben, Singleton, Dodd, Lauer and Shirley
Patterson, Manning and Dickey
(June 8)
The Saskatoon Gems nudged closer to the pace setting North Battleford
Beavers as they defeated the Regina Caps 12 - 8 in a slugfest that
produced 23 hits. The Gems ran up a 9 - 0 lead after three innings off loser
Pete Bruni. The Caps roared back scoring eight times during the next
two
frames but were never able to forge ahead. Orest Hryniuk, in relief of
Jack Eisner, got the win. Jimmy Shields set the pace for the Saskatoon
swatters with a triple and two singles in five trips.
Bruni (L) and Kyle
Eisner, Hryniuk (W) (4) and Gary
(June 9)
Dave Hammermeister was credited with an 8th inning, two-run
inside-the-park home run when Moose Jaw outfielder Jackie Harbourne
slipped on the grass in attempting to field the ball, twisting his
ankle, and allowing the Regina shortstop to circle the paths behind lead
runner Bob Linck to provide the Caps with the tying and winning runs in
an 8 - 7 victory over the Maples. Al Vogt, who pitched to only
five batters
in relief, got the win. Regina pounded out a total 13 hits off lefty Berlyn
Hodges who went the distance. Southern League call-ups Doug
Hingley and Jimmy Ross joined Cap regulars Gus
Kyle, Walter Buttgereit
and Hammermeister as the offensive pace-setters, each banging out a
brace of base raps, one of Hingley's being a triple. For Moose Jaw,
shortstop Don Hinchberger turned in an amazing batting performance,
banging out five consecutive hits off starter Cy Thorseth including
two
doubles. Harbourne, Archie Templeton, Art Worth and
Jim Harford all had
two hits for the Maples.
B. Hodges (L) and Harford
Thorseth, Vogt (W)(8) and Kyle
(June 9)
Moose Jaw shortstop Don Hinchberger topped the hitters in the
Saskatchewan Baseball League with a .421 mark and tied with Bob
Herron and Roy Dean of North Battleford for the
lead in homers, with three. Gordie Howe of Saskatoon was
third in average, at .386. Saskatoon's Len Breckner topped
the circuit with 14 runs batted in, one more than Hinchberger.
Les Dean of North Battleford was the top chucker with three
wins.
(June 11)
At the Lloydminster Tournament, Johnny Coleman tossed a
five-hitter with 12 strikeouts to lead North Battleford to a 11-2
triumph over Great Falls, Montana, Airlifters. Coleman allowed no
walks and just two hits after the first inning.
Coleman (W) and xxx
xxx and xxx
(June 12)
Rain washed out the finals of the Lloydminster Tournament. Three
teams - Florida Cubans, Saskatoon Gems and Indian Head Rockets - divided
the top prize money. Florida made the final with a 10-5 win over
North Battleford. Marcelino Arozarena led the way
with a grand slam homer in the first inning. Roy Dean, the
Beavers' playing manager, had a two-run blast for the losers. The
Saskatoon - Indian Head match was called off with play in the first
inning.
(June 12)
A five run outburst in the 8th inning wiped out a big Regina Cap lead
and gave the Estevan Maple Leafs a 9 - 7 victory over the Caps. Catcher
Doug Dickey's bases-loaded triple was the payoff blow in
Estevan's big inning . Credit for the pitching win went to Harry
Coe who made his first league appearance in the 7th to relieve
Wimpy Stephenson. Big Ray Bolger, who attempted to
extinguish the 8th inning fire, was saddled with the loss. The only home
run of the contest was a two-run shot by Regina's Fred Sommers.
Shortstop Dave Hammermeister went 3 for 5 for the Caps.
Warren, Wills (5), Bolger (L) (8) and Bennett
Stephenson, Coe (W) (7) and Dickey
(June 13)
Righthander Ray Bolger twirled a seven-hit shutout as the Regina
Caps, fortified with additions from Fresno State University, downed
Estevan 4-0. Bolger fanned eight and had no free passes.
Caps took a 3-0 lead in the first inning on a pair of bunt singles, a
walk and Gus Kyle's triple. Fred Bartels
doubled in the 5th to drive in Kyle with the final run. Charlie
Manning allowed just six hits in taking the loss.
Manning (L) and Dickey
Bolger (W) and Clevenger
(June 13)
The North Battleford Beavers improved their position at the head of the
Saskatchewan Baseball League standings by scoring twice in the top of
the 9th to snap a 3 - 3 tie and go on to knock off the Saskatoon Gems 5
- 3. Left fielder Andy Porter singled sharply to drive in both
big 9th inning runs and pin the loss on Lefty Lauer who
had battled winner Jackie McLeod on even terms for eight
frames.
McLeod (W) and Green
Lauer (L) and Shirley
(June 14)
Big "Butch" Buttgereit's three-run homer in the 6th accounted for all
the Regina runs as the Caps played a 3 -3 tie with the league leading
North Battleford Beavers in a game called at the end of 10 innings when
darkness set in. For the Beavers, the big hitter was third baseman
Curtis Tate who had 3 for 5 at the dish and doubled home the
tying run.
Hinckley
and Bennett
Les Dean and Green
(June 14)
The Moose Jaw Maples received stellar pitching from Archie Templeton and
Jack Harbourne to register a pair of wins over the Estevan Maple Leafs
in a double dip. Templeton, with relief help in the 8th from Art
Worth,
held the Leafs to a three spot as the Maples rallied for five in the 8th to
win the opener 7 - 3. Moose Jaw's Jerry Parker led all hitters going 3
for 4. Teammate Jim Harford and Estevan's Pete McLeod each hit twice in
four attempts.
Templeton
(W), Worth (8) and Harford
xxx and xxx
At night,
little Jackie Harbourne scattered four hits for a 5 - 1 winning verdict.
Harbourne and battery-mate Jim Harford had two hits apiece. The longest
blows of the game were triples by the Maples' Alex Palica and Estevan
pinch hitter Wayne "Wimpy" Stephenson.
Harbourne
(W) and Harford
xxx and xxx
(June 15)
The North Battleford Beavers blanked the Moose Jaw Maples 9 - 0 in a
rain shortened five inning game. Bob Herron and Art Stone homered for the
Beavers who scored six times in the 1st inning of this blow-out.
Palica
(L), Worth (1) and Harford
Coleman (W) and Prediger
(June 16)
A four-run 4th inning carried Regina Caps to an 8-4 win over Estevan as
the bottom of the Caps batting order provided the offensive punch.
Bob Linck, batting 7th, reached base five times on a double,
single, walk and two errors. Bill Clevenger drove in
three runs with a double and single before leaving with a knee injury
and pitcher Pete Bruni had a triple and single.
Bruni went the route for the win. Outfielder Pete McLeod
was the big gun for the Maple Leafs with three hits, a homer, a two-run
double and a single.
Coe (L), Stephenson (4) and Dickey
Bruni (W) and Kyle
(June 16)
Indian Head Rockets announced the addition of five players who've joined
the club on their Alberta swing. Three of the players --
Pumpsie Green, Nat Bates and Willie Reed
--were on the prairies last summer with the Medicine Hat Mohawks. Two
more newcomers - Winters Calvin and Emmett Neal
-- have just finished college programs in California.
(June 17)
Big Bob Herron poked a two-run homer in the 10th inning to give
North Battleford Beavers an 8-6 win over Regina Caps. Herron, who
worked out briefly with the Roughriders football team last fall, blasted
a Truman Clevenger fastball into the stands in left-centre to
plate Jackie McLeod, who had walked. Caps out-hit
the Beavers 10 to 8, but the visitors took advantage of seven walks.
Herron and Johnny Coleman each had two hits for the
winners. Art Shahzade and Gus Kyle
each had three safeties for the Caps. Butch Buttgereit
poked a homer for Regina. Andy Porter went the route
for the win. He fanned a dozen.
Porter (W) and Green
T Clevenger (L) and Kyle
(June 17)
Jim Morrow set down Estevan Maple Leafs on four hits as Saskatoon
Gems took the opening game of the Moose Jaw Tournament, 4-1. Gems
recently obtained Morrow from the Indian Head Rockets. Gordie
Howe drove in Doug Bentley with a run in the first
inning and Max Bentley notched what proved to be the
winner with a steal of home in the 3rd inning. Bentley singled and
moved to third on a single by Howe and scored on the front end of a
double-steal. Len Breckner drove in a pair in the
6th inning with a drive to centre field after Howe had walked and
Chris Makras doubled. Lou Pesce accounted
for the only Estevan run with a homer in the 9th. Jimmy
Shields had two doubles and a single for the Gems.
Morrow (W) and Shirley
Coe (L) and Monroe
(June 19)
Johnny Coleman held Estevan to four hits as North Battleford down
the Maple Leafs 6-2 behind a 15-hit attack. Coleman fanned 12.
Art Stone led the attack with three hits. Curtis
Tate added a triple and double.
Coleman (W) and Green
Manning (L), Patterson and Monroe, Dickey
Len
Breckner tripled and scored on a wild throw in the 6th inning as
Saskatoon Gems shaded Regina Caps 2-1. Gems had taken the lead in
the first inning as Jimmy Shields tripled and scored on Max
Bentley's single. Caps tied in the 4th as Frank
Ball's single plated Fred Sommers. In the 8th,
losing pitcher Larry Bolger led off with a triple but was
thrown out at home trying to stretch it into an inside-the-park homer.
Murray Coben was the winner with 9th inning relief by
Chuck Holdaway.
Coben, Holdaway (9) and Shirley
Bolger and Kyle
(June 20)
Indian Head Rockets downed Pincher Creek Dominoes 11-7 in an exhibition
match at Pincher Creek.
" ...
the outcome of the comedy-filled session was unimportant. Rockets
stuck to their knitting for seven innings, building up a comfortable
lead ... and then proceeded to unload numerous antics on the diamond
that had the fans howling with laughter. The colored team
introduced a new invention from their bag of tricks, a dice game back of
the mound, while the pitcher himself was in the process of throwing to a
bewildered batter, with one player losing his glove, spikes, socks and
almost his pants and shirt. Even the umpire got into the game,
pinch-hitting for a Domino batter while a Negro player called the balls
and strikes ... During the half-way of the game, 65-year-old Upton
Williams, who has only one arm, entertained the paying customers with an
imitation of a famous step dance routine by the late Bill
Robinson,
Negro tap-dancer." (Lethbridge Herald, August 14,
1952)
(June 20)
The Saskatoon Gems captured a Saskatchewan Baseball League doubleheader
from the Moose Jaw Maples with both games going into extra innings. Gems
won the opener 3 - 2 in 10 frames as three Saskatoon hurlers held the Maples
to just five hits. Bob Singleton, the last of the trio, got the win over
Art Worth.
Worth (L)
and Harford
Rubcic, Lauer (6), Singleton (W) (8) and Shirley
It took 12
stanzas before the Gems could cop the aftermath 6 - 5 as Jim Morrow
hurled 11 innings for the Gems with Lefty Lauer relieving in the 12th
and picking up the win. Southpaw Art Worth, coming to the aid of
Jimmy Linnell, was tagged with the loss, his second of the day.
Linnell,
Worth (L) (9) and Harford
Morrow, Lauer (W) (12) and Shirley
(June 20)
The Regina Caps fell just short of a first game victory, falling 5 - 4,
but made sure of an even break in the spoils by nipping the North
Battleford Beavers 2 - 1 in the evening encounter of a twin-bill. In the
afternoon, the Caps lagged behind 5 - 1 and their three-run rally in the
bottom of the 9th was simply a case of too little, too late as Steve
Wylie's 8 2/3 innings on the hill was good enough to best Pete
Bruni.
Fred Sommers and Larry Bolger each whacked
three safeties for the Caps while
Curtis Tate with a triple and single and Louie Green with a double and
single were the best stick swingers for the Beavers.
Wylie (W),
Les Dean (9) and Green
Bruni (L) and Kyle
In the
nightcap, rival pitchers Jackie McLeod of the Beavers and
Cless Hinkley
of the Caps both surrendered 7 hits as they went toe-to-toe in a tense,
thrilling struggle which was scoreless for the last six frames. Fred
Sommers' fly ball out in the 3rd inning plated the winning run for the
Caps. Regina's Earl Huffman and North Battleford's Curtis
Tate each had
two hits.
J. McLeod (L)
and Green
Hinkley (W) and Kyle
(June 21)
After presenting the North Battleford Beavers with a 7 - 5 gift triumph
in the matinee, the Moose Jaw Maples rallied for a brace of markers in
the last of the 9th to gain a 2 - 1 nod in the night game and a split of
the double dip. The afternoon tilt had the Maples comfortably in front 5
- 2 going into the 8th but Moose Jaw's defenses collapsed in that frame,
handing the Beavers 5 unearned runs and hanging the defeat on John
Bilbrey. Lanky Andy Porter of North Battleford handed out 15 hits to the
Maples, three each to Don Hinchberger and Archie Templeton, but was still
able to pick up the hollow victory. Top hitter in the game was Bob
Herron with a double and three singles . Ken Nelson's 4th inning home run
was the only North Battleford earned run.
Porter (W)
and Green
Bilbrey (L) and Harford
The
evening affair saw Herron and Moose Jaw's Berlyn Hodges hook up in a
duel which was scoreless after 7 innings of play. A pair of Maple
miscues gave North Battleford a 1 - 0 8th inning lead. In the 9th,
Herron loaded the bases and Les Dean was summoned from the bullpen.
Art Worth's one out base hit drove in the tying marker. Gerry
Parker later
ended things once and for all with a solid two-out single to left field.
Herron
(L), Les Dean (9) and Green
B. Hodges (W) and Harford
(June 23)
The Estevan Maple Leafs defeated the Moose Jaw Maples 9 - 3 behind the
six-hit pitching of Harry Coe who struck out 6 and set the rival Maples down
in order in 5 of the 9 frames. Moose Jaw starter Archie Templeton was
the loser. Coe, Charlie Selph, Pete McLeod and
Doug Dickey each
collected two hits for Estevan while Berlyn Hodges had a pair of singles
for Moose Jaw.
Templeton
(L), Harbourne (4), Palica (7) and Harford
Coe (W) and Patterson
(June 24)
Pete McLeod was the story as Estevan upended Moose Jaw
8-1. McLeod, with a no-hitter into the 7th inning, finished with a
brilliant two-hitter while belting a two-run homer and scoring three
times. The only run against him was unearned. Charlie
Selph had a two-run triple for the Maple Leafs.
P. McLeod (W) and Monroe
Linnell (L) and Harford
(June 24) Jim
Morrow topped Truman Clevenger 1-0 in a 10-inning
thriller at Saskatoon as the hometown Gems shaded Regina Caps. Morrow allowed just three hits and had 14
strikeouts in capturing his second win of the season. Clevenger
had allowed just five hits in getting the first two outs in the bottom
of the 10th. Three straight singles, by Jimmy Shields,
Doug Bentley and Max Bentley accounted for
the winning marker.
Clevenger (L) and Lewis
Morrow (W) and Shirley
North Battleford 16 7
Saskatoon 13 8
Regina
8 11
Estevan
6 10
Moose Jaw 7 14
(June 25)
Saskatoon Gems, blanked for eight innings, erupted for three in the bottom
of the 9th to edge Moose Jaw 3-2 in the opening game of the North Battleford Tournament. A sharp single by Jimmy Shields
knocked in the winner after losing pitcher John Bilbrey
had walked in the tying marker. Bob Singleton fired
a three-hitter for the win.
Bilbrey (L) and Harford
Singleton (W) and Garcia, Shirley (4)
Regina Caps
scored a pair in the top of 9th and held off an Estevan rally in the
bottom of the frame to take a 3-2 decision. Bob Linck
made a sensational catch in centre field to end the Maple Leafs
uprising. Butch Buttgereit was the winner with relief help
from Frank Warren.
Buttgereit (W), Warren (9) and Lewis
Patterson (L) and Monroe
(June 26)
Regina Caps took top money in the Saskatchewan League Tournament at
North Battleford shading Saskatoon 4-3 in the final after dumping North
Battleford 10-4 in the semi-final round.
Gus
Kyle's 7th inning double scored Fred Sommers with the
winning run in the title game. Gems took the lead in the 3rd frame
when Doug Bentley doubled and brother Max drove him
home with a triple. Regina took the lead in the bottom of the 3rd
on Larry Bolger's double, a walk to Earl Huffman
and singles by Fred Sommers and Kyle. Saskatoon
again went in front in the 4th on Jim Shirley's two-run
homer. Caps rebounded with a run in the bottom of the inning on
singles by Glen Lewis and Fred Bartels and
Bob Linck's sacrifice. Cless Hinckley
was the winner.
Holdaway (L), Coben (8) and Shirley
Bolger, Hinckley (W) (6) and Lewis
In the
semi-final, Caps battered three North Battleford pitchers for 11 hits to
take an easy 10-4 victory. Jack Hannah held the
Beavers to four hits in registering the victory. Beavers pulled an
unusual double-play in the 8th inning as catcher Pete Prediger,
replacing an injured Louis Green, tagged out two runners
on the same play. With Bob Linck and Fred
Sommers aboard, Gus Kyle belted a double to centre and
both base runners took off for home. Ken Nelson threw
to second baseman Art Stone who relayed the ball to
Prediger with both runners nearing the plate. Prediger tagged
Linck then Sommers in quick order.
Porter (L) Wylie (4), L Dean (5) and Green, Prediger (6)
Hannah (W) and Kyle
(June 27)
The Regina Caps had to hang on for a difficult 5 - 4 win over the Moose
Jaw Maples. After pinch hitter Larry Bolger had come through with a base
hit to spark a three-run rally in the 8th that had pushed the Caps into a
temporary 5 - 2 lead, the Maples came roaring back with two of their own
in the 9th and had the potential tying and lead runs in scoring
position. At this point, reliever Cless Hinkley was able to get Moose
Jaw's Berlyn Hodges to pop up and end the game. Caps' starter
Ted Wills
got credit for the win. Alex Palica went the route for the Maples and
absorbed the loss. Don Hinchberger had a triple and two singles in
five trips
for the Mill City nine. Hank Weaver helped out with a pair of hits. For
the Reginans, Gus Kyle, Art Shahzade and Walter Buttgereit all went 2
for 4.
Palica (L)
and Harford
Wills (W), Bruni (9), Hinkley (9) and Lewis
(June 27)
The Saskatoon Gems needed 10 innings to nose out the Estevan Maple
Leafs, 4-3. Lefty Lauer picked up the win in relief of starter
Cliff Jacobson
while Harry Coe was charged with the defeat.
Stephenson, Coe (L) (5) and Monroe
Jacobson, Lauer (W) (9) and Garcia
(June 29)
Gordie Howe's
three-run homer and outstanding relief pitching from Chuck
Holdaway led the Saskatoon Gems to top prize of $700 in the Prince Albert
tournament. The Gems beat the Regina Caps 9-1 before 5-thousand
fans in the final of the third annual Kinsmen event.
Holdaway came on with the bases
loaded and one out in the fourth. He shutdown the Caps on
one hit the rest of the way and aided the Gems cause with a pair
of hits. Starter Truman Clevenger took the loss for
Regina.
George Read, Coben (4), Holdaway (W) (4) and
xxx
Clevenger (L), Sommers (7) and xxx
Saskatoon reached the final with
a 6-3, 11-inning win over the Great Falls Montana Army Airforce
Airlifters. Bob Garcia had a homer for the
Gems.
Saturday night, Roy Taylor's
Kamsack Cyclones beat Gull Lake 8-3 to move into the semi-finals
only to lose to Regina 8-2.
(July 2) A
seventh inning splurge which produced four runs off the offerings of
Regina's Frank Warren propelled the Saskatoon Gems to a 6 - 1 triumph
over the Caps. Bob Singleton picked up the complete game victory for the
Hub City brigade, shutting down the Caps in five-hit fashion. Cless
Hinkley
started on the hill for the Queen City crew but left the game after
three
innings with the score knotted at 1 - 1. The Gems' Max Bentley was the
potent man at bat, slapping out three hits in five trips. Gus Kyle was Regina's
top gun at the plate with a brace of raps.
Singleton
(W) and Shirley
Hinkley, Warren (L) (4) and Kyle
(July 3)
The Saskatoon Gems swept a doubleheader from the Estevan Maple Leafs 6 -
5 and 3 - 2. The lowly Leafs didn't go down without a fight as they
extended Saskatoon to 13 frames in the opener, a replay of a previously
tied encounter. Lefty Lauer who came on in relief for the Gems was the
winner while Harry Coe took the loss. Lauer also scored the winning
tally after singling in the 13th and eventually and eventually romping
home when Max Bentley was safe at first base on an error.
Bob Garcia and
Len Breckner each had three hits for the Gems.
Read,
Jacobson (6), Lauer (W) (8) and Garcia, Shirley (10)
Frady, Coe (L) (3) and Patterson, Monroe (8)
Murray
Coben hurled a three-hitter for Saskatoon in the owl encounter while losing
twirler Pete McLeod fashioned a six-hit job. With the game
tied at 1 - 1 in the 4th, Coben also delivered at the plate with a
two-run double to
give the Gems the lead for good.
Coben (W)
and Shirley
McLeod (L) and Dickey
(July 6)
The North Battleford Beavers split a doubleheader with the Saskatoon
Gems and, in doing so, remained in top spot in the Saskatchewan Baseball
League standings by one percentage point. In the matinee game, Saskatoon
defeated North Battleford 7 - 6 as reliever Lefty Lauer notched the win
over complete game loser Andy Swota. Max and Doug
Bentley topped the
Saskatoon hitters as each rapped out 2 for 4. Barney Fox had a 2 for 5
day for the Beavers.
Read,
Lauer (W) (5) and Shirley
Swota (L) and Green
The
Beavers scored five times in the bottom of the 9th to pull out the victory
in the evening tilt by a 9 - 8 count. Lauer, again in relief, was this
time tagged with the loss while Johnny Coleman notched the win.
Jackie McLeod and Ken Nelson both belted
three-run homers for the Beavers.
Bob Garcia propelled a two-run shot for the Gems.
Jacobson,
Lauer (L) (9) and Shirley
Les Dean, Coleman (W) (4) and Green
(July 7)
Jackie McLeod hurled four-hit ball as the North Battleford Beavers downed
the Saskatoon Gems 7 - 3. Jim Morrow started on the mound for Saskatoon
but didn't get out of the 4th after giving up four counters in that inning
alone. George Read of the Gems had a triple and double to lead all
swatters.
McLeod (W)
and Green
Morrow (L), Singleton (4) and Shirley
(July 7)
The Moose Jaw Maples were drubbed by the Regina Caps, falling by an 8 -
2 count in a game which was deadlocked 1 - 1 after four innings but then
quickly became a Regina runaway. Both chuckers, southpaw winner Pete
Bruni of the Caps and Moose Jaw's loser Johnny Bilbrey went all the way.
Leadoff hitter Art Shahzade slammed out a single and 2 doubles for the
Caps.
Bruni (W)
and Kyle
Bilbrey (L) and Harford
(July 10)
The North Battleford Beavers built up an impressive lead and then
weathered a belated bid by the Moose Jaw Maples in the bottom of the 9th
to walk off the diamond with a 6 - 4 triumph in an afternoon joust. The
Beavers were breezing by with a 6 - 0 lead when Moose Jaw came to life
in their last turn at bat, chalking up all of their tallies. Southpaw
Andy Swota got the win and would have had a complete game except for
being inserted temporarily in right field while reliever Les Dean faced
dangerous Don Hinchberger in the 9th. Archie Templeton lasted into the
7th for the Maples and took the loss. A second fixture, slated for the
evening, was rained out.
Swota (W),
Dean (9), Swota (9) and Green
Templeton (L), Bilbrey (7) and Harford
(July 11)
Jim Shirley's solid single scored Jimmy Shields in the bottom of the
10th as the Saskatoon Gems squeezed past the Estevan Maple Leafs 3 - 2.
Ray Patterson's two-run homer in the top of the 1st inning shot the Maple Leafs
into an early lead. The Gems narrowed the margin to one by counting a
single tally in the bottom of the same inning and tied the game in their
half of the 9th. In the extra frame, Jimmy Shields drew a walk, was
sacrificed to second by Bev Bentley and came around to tally on
Shirley's drive. George Read fired a five-hitter, fanning 12, for the Gems,
besting Estevan's Bill Frady whose 10th inning walk of Shields could not
be cancelled out by reliever Harry Coe's pitching.
Frady (L),
Coe (10) and Dickey
Read (W) and Shirley
(July 11)
The Regina Caps withstood a last-ditch North Battleford rally to chalk
up a 4 - 2 victory over the Beavers. Husky righthander Cless Hinkley,
with 9th inning help from Cy Thorseth, was able to dispose of the
Beavers who threatened to pull the game out of the fire. Loser Johnny
Coleman lasted into the 5th when the Caps drove him from the mound while
plating their four tallies. Regina's Fred Bartels paced all hitters with
three.
With two safeties were Earl Huffman and Fred Sommers of the Caps and
Ken Nelson of the Beavers.
Coleman
(L), McLeod (5) and Green
Hinkley (W), Thorseth (9) and Bennett
(July 12)
Exploding for a trio of tallies in the 10th frame, the Regina Caps
downed the Moose Jaw Maples 7 - 4. It was a see-saw battle over
regulation play but the Caps made no mistake about it in the extra
inning, hanging the defeat on Alex Palica who gave up 10 hits while
striking out 3. Lefty Ted Wills yielded 8 safeties and fanned 5 in
registering the win. He also aided his cause at the dish by contributing
a double and single. Lowell Hodges led the Maples' offense with
two
doubles.
Wills (W)
and Bennett
Palica (L) and Harford
(July 13)
The North Battleford Beavers gained an even share in their doubleheader
against Estevan, dropping the opener 10 - 9 and winning the nightcap 8 -
4. As a result, the Beavers are now tied for the league lead with the
Saskatoon Gems. Both teams have 20 - 10 records. A home run by Lou
Pesce
in the 8th gave Estevan the cushion they needed to maintain their
earlier lead and ultimate afternoon victory. Wimpy Stephenson got the
win over the Beavers' Jackie McLeod. Barney Fox had a 4 for 5 afternoon
and teammate Andy Lillie went 4 for 6 for the Maple Leafs. Leading the
Beavers offensively were Roy Dean with 3 for 5 and Curtis
Tate with a
home run.
Stephenson
(W), Frady (7) and Dickey
McLeod (L), Les Dean (6), Strickland (6), Coleman (7) and Green,
Prediger (8)
Home runs
by Doug Dickey, George Montz and Pete
McLeod got Estevan rolling in the second game but the Beavers fought back to eventually deadlock the score. Then,
in the 8th, Barney Fox jolted a grand slam homer to push the Beavers
over the top and, in the process, made a winner out of Andy Swota while
hanging the defeat on Ray Patterson.
Patterson
(L), Stephenson (8) and Monroe, Dickie (8)
Swota (W) and Green, Prediger (8)
(July 14)
The Saskatoon Gems finally climbed in front of the North Battleford
Beavers in the Saskatchewan Baseball League standings when they set down
the Estevan Maple Leafs 4 - 1. The triumph, well earned on 10 hits off
the Leafs' Harry Coe, shoved the Gems in front of the idle Beavers by
half a game. Lefty Lauer, who this season has become a bullpen
specialist for the Gems, picked up the win in relief of Bob Singleton.
Coe (L)
and Dickey, Monroe (6)
Singleton, Lauer (W) (4) and Shirley
(July 14)
Notorious all season for blowing big leads, the Moose Jaw Maples came
close to tossing another one away but finally regained their composure
and hung on for a 9 - 8 victory over the Regina Caps. The Reginans kept
pecking away at the early Moose Jaw 9 - 3 advantage and had the tying
run on base in the 9th before Art Worth, who staggered through the
entire 9 innings, doused the flickering Queen City flame. Worth gave up
a total of 12 hits but his offensive production, 3 singles in 5 at bats,
helped to make up for his mediocrity on the hill. Losing chucker Pete
Bruni didn't get out of the 3rd inning. The Maples were without the
league's leading hitter, Don Hinchberger, who left the club and returned
to the United States. For the Caps offensively, Gus Kyle had a trio of
hits. Walter Buttgereit hit a bases empty homer. Catcher Jim Harford
nailed a pair of triples for Moose Jaw.
Worth (W)
and Harford
Bruni (L), Thorseth (3) and Bennett
(July 15)
For nine full innings, the rival elbowers were in control of proceedings as
the Moose Jaw Maples and Estevan Maple Leafs were deadlocked 1 - 1. Come
the extra frame, however, there was a complete reversal of form and the
two twirlers found themselves in hot water. The Soo Line gang got the
best of the new turn of events when they eventually prevailed 5 - 2 as a
10th inning double play snuffed out the flickering Maples' candle.
Estevan's Bill Frady outdueled Moose Jaw's Berlyn
Hodges to earn the
hard fought victory. Maple Leafs' second sacker Bill Shea enjoyed a
perfect afternoon at the plate collecting four safeties in as many tries.
The evening contest of the scheduled doubleheader was rained out.
Frady (W)
and Monroe
B. Hodges (L) and Harford
(July 16)
The Saskatoon Gems moved a game and a half in front of the North
Battleford Beavers when they defeated their northern rivals 6 - 3. Max
Bentley belted a triple and double to ignite the Gems' offense against
loser Jackie McLeod. George Read picked up the victory in relief of
starter Murray Cohen.
J. McLeod
(L), Coleman (5) and Green
Coben, Read (W)(5) and Shirley, Garcia (5)
(July 16)
The Moose Jaw Maples defeated the Estevan Maple Leafs 7 - 5 in a
Saskatchewan Baseball League encounter which pushed the Maples into 4th
place and dropped Estevan into the basement. Moose Jaw pitcher Archie
Templeton limited the Leafs to seven hits in his complete game win.
Pete McLeod was nicked for ten safeties in taking the loss.
Templeton
(W) and Harford
P. McLeod (L) and Monroe
(July 17)
Proving handier with the willow than their opponents, the Saskatoon Gems
turned back the Moose Jaw Maples 7 - 2. While the Gems only outhit the
Maples 12 to 10, their blows came when they needed them the most as they
racked up a decisive victory. Saskatoon's Chuck Holdaway, pitching out
of some bad holes but receiving fine defensive support from his mates,
staggered through the full nine to get the win. Shortstop Jack Walker
was the biggest thorn in the side of loser Alex Palica as he slammed out
a home run, double and single in three official trips to the plate. Doug
Bentley boomed out a trio of singles in five turns. The Maples' Wayne
Brock
had a triple and double off Holdaway while Jim Harford collected a
triple and single.
Holdaway
(W) and Garcia
Palica (L), Weaver (8) and Harford
(July 17)
A bunch of players from faraway Havana, Cuba and its' environs, who
speak only broken English, better known as "Spanglish," but who can put
plenty of "English" on a baseball, walked off with the $1,300 first
prize money in Indian Head's annual baseball tournament, a competition
which has been described as the greatest baseball classic on the
prairies.
The happy,
excitable Cubans, playing under the banner of the Florida Cubans,
defeated an all-colored club that is also playing a long way from home -
the Hardwood Sports - from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The final score was 6
- 4 in this classically played final. The Cubans had to come from behind
with 2 runs in the top of the 8th inning to gain the verdict. That gave
them a 5 - 4 lead and they added an insurance marker in the 9th to sew
it up. Their victory was a popular one in Indian Head as the pretty,
tree-lined town has been their operational base for much of the time
since they came to Canada via Lakeland. Florida in June.
In a
semi-final round, the Cubans, behind the shutout pitching of Roberto
"Chico" Barbon, blanked the Indian Head Rockets 4 - 0 while the
Baton Rouge crew knocked off the Regina Caps. The fleetness afoot of the
young Cubans delighted the throng of about 6,000 that encircled diamond
#1 for the final game. They ran the bases and outfield like scared deer
and it was their speed and boundless enthusiasm that helped them turn
apparent defeat into an uplifting victory in the 8th inning. They left
the older and slower Hardwoods a weary lot at the finish. With the
Louisianans leading 4 - 3, Juan Prats led off the 8th with
a base hit to center field and, without missing a beat, stretched it
into a double with some daring base running. He came all the way home
from there as Baton Rouge pitcher, O. B. Robison, threw wildly
to first base on a bunt by Cubans' shortstop Ezequiel Diaz who
subsequently moved to third base when the Hardwoods' catcher was guilty
of a passed ball and then scored the eventual winner when catcher
Roberto Ledo socked a long fly out to center field. Both teams used
more than a single chucker. Jose "Hippy" Hernandez started for the
Cubans and gave way to Carlos Forten in the 4th. Workhorse
Frank Pickens, the Hardwoods' starter, and 2 relievers
toiled on the hill for Baton Rouge. Center fielder Mario
Herrera made a number of outstanding catches in this final. The
Cubans had one other advantage in this showdown - besides their speed,
aggressiveness, intensity and enthusiasm, they were also able to
communicate many of their signals orally in Spanish without the fear of
their rivals catching on. At the conclusion of the tournament,
Gilberto Yzquierdo, Cubans' manager accepted the Coca-Cola
trophy and briefly thanked the organizers and fans in broken English.
Hernandez,
Forten (4) and Ledo
Pickens, Robison (4), Jefferson (9) and Jackson
(July 18)
A ninth inning rally by the Estevan Maple Leafs gave them a 5 - 4
victory over the Saskatoon Gems. After 8 1/2 frames, Estevan trailed 4 -
3. With one out and two runners on base, Saskatoon second baseman Max
Bentley committed two consecutive errors, sending in the tying run. Then
with the sacks full and two out, Ray Patterson drew a walk to force in
Bill Shea with the winning tally. Bob Singleton suffered his first loss
of the season for the Gems, bowing to Estevan's Harry Coe.
Singleton
(L) and xxxx
Coe (W) and xxxx
(July 18)
The Regina Caps finally reached the .500 percentage mark in the
Saskatchewan Baseball League standings when they swept a doubleheader
from the North Battleford Beavers by scores of 4 - 3 and 6 - 2. In the
first game, Jack Hannah tossed a four-hitter and out-pitched Andy
Swota. Big Bob Herron did his best to pull the game out of the fire for the Beavers,
going 3 for 3 with a homer and triple included. The game was limited to
seven innings by mutual agreement as the Caps arrived late as one of the
vehicles they were travelling in overturned in transit. Fortunately, no
injuries were sustained.
Hannah (W)
and xxxx
Swota (L) and xxxx
Regina
pitcher Frank Warren was the big noise of the second game. Not only did
he pitch five-hit ball for the Caps but he also collected 3 hits in 4
tries. Beaver errors proved costly in this affair as only one of
Regina's runs was earned. Johnny Coleman, the Beavers' starter was
replaced by Les Dean in the 6th. Ken Nelson accounted for both North
Battleford runs when he belted a homer with Louie Green aboard.
Warren (W)
and xxxx
Coleman (L), Les Dean (6) and Green
(July 19)
The Saskatoon Gems defeated the Regina Caps 6 - 2 on the strength of a
four-run, 5th inning outburst which featured a hotly disputed base umpiring
decision. Cliff Jacobson outdueled southpaw Ted Wills to get the win.
Fred Sommers had a circuit clout for the Caps.
Wills (L)
and Bennett
Jacobson (W) and Garcia
(July 19)
The North Battleford Beavers had things to their own liking in
outclassing the visiting Moose Jaw Maples 10 - 0 as Jackie McLeod tossed
a two-hitter. The Beavers scored early and often, chalking up a 13 hit
attack against the Maples' Hank Weaver.
Weaver (L)
and Harford
J. McLeod (W) and Green
(July 20)
Life was made miserable for the Regina Caps when the North Battleford
Beavers hung a double defeat on them by scores of 14 - 8 and 2 - 0. Pete
McLeod, recently obtained in a trade from Estevan for Carl
Strickland,
was the winner of the matinee affair. It was pretty much all Regina for
six innings and the Caps were ahead 8 - 3 when the Beavers erupted for
eight
runs in the 7th to shackle Walter Buttgereit with the loss.
Bob Herron
started the big comeback with a three-run homer. Earlier in the game, Roy
Dean cranked out a two-run shot for the Beavers.
Buttgereit
(L), Thorseth (7) and Bennett
P. McLeod (W), L. Dean (8) and Green
The
pitchers took over in the owl affair of this twin bill as North
Battleford's Les Dean three-hit the Queen City contingent to best
Fred Bartels.
Bartels
(L) and Bennett
L. Dean (W) and Green
(July 23)
Sloppy fielding by the Moose Jaw Maples combined with seven Leaf safeties
gave the Estevan Maple Leafs a 10 - 2 victory. Harry Coe, toiling on the
mound for the Soo Liners, was never in trouble after the 1st when Moose
Jaw notched both of their markers. Coe scattered seven safeties in recording
the complete game win. Jim Harford, the Mill City catcher, leaned into
two
of Coe's slants for triples.
xxxx (L)
and Harford
Coe (W) and xxxx
(July 24)
The Estevan Maple Leafs pounded out 18 safeties off loser Berlyn
Hodges
and his relief help to demolish the Moose Jaw Maples 11 - 8. Bill
Frady
pitched 8 innings of solid relief to score the victory. Leafs' Lou
Pesce
with a double and two singles wielded the most authoritative willow while
teammate Charlie Selph collected a trio of singles in five trips. Catcher
Jim Harford was best at the dish for the Maples, clouting a triple and a
pair of singles in five at bats. Jackie Harbourne socked a
two-run homer for
Moose Jaw.
Strickland, Frady (W) (1) and Monroe
B. Hodges (L), Weaver (7) and Harford
(July 25)
Left fielder George Montz's 2 RBI single in the 1st supplied the Estevan
Maple Leafs with all the runs they needed to shade the Moose Jaw Maples
2 - 1, a win which kept Estevan ahead of the cellar dwelling Maples. Ray
Patterson went the route for Estevan allowing 6 scattered hits,
including Jim Harford's double and Jackie Harbourne's 9th inning triple
which produced Moose Jaw's only run. Lowell Hodges pitched a stellar 2
hitter for the Maples but just couldn't get any run support.
L. Hodges
(L) and Harford
Patterson (W) and Monroe
(July 27)
The North Battleford Beavers let loose with enough runs to do them for a
week as they humiliated the Moose Jaw Maples 27 - 5. Using a combination
of 22 hits and 7 Moose Jaw miscues to the best advantage, the Beavers
scored in every inning except the 1st and 5th. Bob Herron and
Pete Prediger homered for the winners.
Worth (L),
Devine (3), Brock (6), Parker (7) and Harford
J. McLeod (W), L. Dean (8) and Green, Prediger (6)
(July 28)
Walks proved to be the difference as the Estevan Maple Leafs squeezed by
the North Battleford Beavers 4 - 3. Beaver chucker John Coleman filled
the bases with two free passes in the 9th after an error allowed a runner
at first. Then George Montz was the recipient of another base on balls,
forcing in a run. Estevan's Harry Coe gave up nine hits in garnering the
win while Coleman, who was pinned with the loss, and starter Pete
McLeod
were touched for ten blows by the Leafs.
Coe (W) and xxxx
P. McLeod, Coleman (L) and Green
(July 28)
Lanky Fred Bartels took personal charge to escort the Regina Caps to a 9
- 8 victory over the Saskatoon Gems. Besides pitching steady relief
work, Bartels also won his own game by slamming a two-run homer in the 8th
inning. At one stage of this game, the Caps trailed 7 - 1 but the
Reginans stayed the course and ultimately prevailed. The losing pitcher,
the Gems' George Read, also had a home run in this tussle.
Art Shahzade
with three hits sparked the Caps' offense before Bartels' winning blow. Bob
Garcia had a trio of base knocks for the Gems.
Holdaway,
Jacobson (5), Read (L) (8) and Shirley
Hinkley, Bartels (W) (5) and Bennett
(July 29)
Successive 9th inning home runs off the bats of Barney Fox and
Ken Nelson turned apparent defeat into an exciting 6 - 5 victory for the
North Battleford Beavers over the Regina Caps. Both blasts came off the
offerings of loser Frank Warren who was then replaced by
Cless Hinkley.
Lefthander Andy Swota of the Beavers set down the Caps on
six hits to
register the win in complete game fashion. North Battleford's Ken Nelson
was the game's leading hitter going 3 for 5.
Swota (W)
and Green
Warren (L), Hinkley (9) and Bennett
(July 29)
Aided by the six-hit twirling of 17-year-old Lowell Hodges and abetted by
the hitting of Gerry Parker and Jackie Harbourne, the Moose Jaw Maples
ended a drought by whipping the Saskatoon Gems 5 - 1. For five innings, the
fixture was a tight pitching duel between Hodges and Saskatoon's Murray
Coben. In the 6th, the Maples began to find their batting eyes and went
on to score a pair off the Gems' rangy lefthander. Parker pulled out of
his long slump, rapping out four singles in as many tries. In the 8th,
Harbourne slammed Coben's first pitch over the right field fence for a
home run, a blast which drove Coben from the slab.
Coben (L),
Pickens (8) and Shirley
L. Hodges (W) and Harford
(July 30)
The Saskatoon Gems carried the day in winning both ends of a
doubleheader from the Estevan Maple Leafs, 12 - 4 and 6 - 1, to take a
firmer hold on the top rung in the S.B.L. standings. In the opener, both
teams were hard on the pitchers with the Gems cranking out 15 hits and
the Leafs managing 11. Estevan used four pitchers in the fray. Ray
Patterson was nicked for the loss while the Gems' Frank Pickens got
credit for the win. Saskatoon's top hitters were Jim Shields who went 4
for 5 and Jim Shirley who had a 3 for 5 game. Lou
Pesce led the Soo
Liners going 3 for 4.
Pickens
(W) and xxx
Patterson (L), xxx, xxx, xxx and xxx
The second
contest featured no-hit twirling by two Saskatoon moundsmen until the 8th.
Bob Singleton and Lefty Lauer blanked the Maple Leaf stickmen up to that
point but, in the 8th, the Maple Leafs struck for 3 of their 4 hits. Mel
Torgenrud was the losing hurler. Shields and Shirley once again were at
the forefront of the Gems' offense with Shields going 3 for 5 while
Shirley came through with two base blows in five attempts.
Singleton
(W), Lauer (6) and Shirley
Torgenrud (L) and xxxx
(July 30)
The 9th inning blues continued to haunt the Regina Caps as, for the
second night in a row, the Reginans dropped a game in the last frame.
This time it was the improved Moose Jaw Maples that turned the trick,
clicking for two runs in the top of the 9th and then holding the Caps to
one in their half, for an 8 - 7 victory. Bobby Knight, a newcomer from
the touring Hardwood Sports club of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, delivered
the big 9th inning blow with a two-run single off Pete Bruni. Tall southpaw
O. B. Robison, another recruit from the Hardwoods, went all the way on
the Moose Jaw mound to pick up the win. Both the tying and lead runs
were charged to Caps' loser Ted Wills. Fred Sommers,
Fred Bartels and
Art Shahzade all belted round trippers for the Caps. Rip
Collins and
Jackie Harbourne both had three hits for the Maples, one of Harbourne's
being a triple.
Robison
(W) and Harford
Wills (L), Bruni (9) and Kyle
(July 31)
After dropping the first tilt by an 8 - 4 count, the Moose Jaw Maples
managed to gain a split with the North Battleford Beavers when they
squeezed out a 4 - 3 triumph over the northern squad in the second game
of a
doubleheader. In the opener, winning chucker Bob Herron, with the Maples
leading 3 - 1 in the 4th and given a reprieve after Moose Jaw catcher
Jim Harford dropped his foul pop-up, hit the next pitch over the right
field fence. Moose Jaw's Jack Devine yielded 10 Beaver blows in taking
the loss. Curtis Tate with a double and three singles was North Battleford's
leading swatman. For the Maples, Art Worth went 3 for 5.
Herron (W)
and Green
Devine (L) and Harford
Brothers
Berlyn and Lowell Hodges shared the limelight as the Mill City crew
garnered the spoils in the owl contest. Berlyn handcuffed the Beavers
giving up but four blows while Lowell singled in the bottom of the 9th off
Jackie McLeod to drive in the tie-breaking marker. Big Bob
Herron's
first inning three-run circuit clout had staked the Beavers to an early lead
but that was all they could muster off the offerings of the elder
Hodges.
J. McLeod
(L) and Green
B. Hodges (W) and Harford
(July 31)
Regina Caps pounded out 16 hits including a grand slam homer by Art
Shahzade to clobber Estevan Maple Leafs 14-0. Gus
Kyle had four hits in five trips for the Caps and newcomer Johnny
Lloyd, obtained from the touring Baton Rouge Hardwoods, had three
hits and scored three times. Jack Hannah and
Frank Warren combined on the shutout.
Ray Patterson (L), Glen Patterson (2) and Monroe
Hannah (W), Warren (6) and Kyle
(August 1)
In a darkness shortened 7 inning battle, the Moose Jaw Maples made a
remarkable comeback to earn an 11 - 11 stalemate with the Saskatoon Gems.
After just an inning and a half, the Gems were out in front 11 - 0 and
no one could imagine that the greatest comeback of the season was in
store. Batters who shone in this game were Moose Jaw's Ray Nutzhorn who
had a triple and a single as well as the Maples' Wayne Brock and
Jim Harford who each had a double and single. Those with
two singles were the
Mill City's Bobby Knight and Bob Garcia along
with
Jimmy Shields of the Gems.
Singleton,
Lauer (2), Holdaway (5) and Shirley
Worth, Robison (2), B. Hodges (3) and Harford
(August 1)
First baseman Fred Bartels pounded out a pair of four-baggers, the second
one in the 6th inning providing the winning margin, as the Regina Caps
edged the Estevan Maple Leafs 3 - 2. In this tight battle of
lefthanders, Pete Bruni of the Caps doled out only five hits in picking up
the win while Regina nicked loser Harry Coe for only one more. As for
Coe, it might have been a different story had he not grooved the two home
run pitches to Bartels. Ray Patterson had two hits for Estevan.
Coe (L)
and Monroe
Bruni (W) and Kyle
(August 2)
The Moose Jaw Maples pulled out of the S.B.L. cellar when they swept a
twin bill from the Estevan Maple Leafs . The vastly improved Maples
nudged the Leafs by a close 4 - 3 count in the afternoon tilt and then
hammered out a decisive 9 - 3 win in the night game, a contest which was
shortened to 8 frames once darkness set in. O. B. Robison hurled
four-hit
ball at the Soo Liners as the Mill City nine tallied in the bottom of
the 9th to break a 3 - 3 deadlock and garner the spoils in the initial
fixture. Rip Collins raced home with the winning run when Estevan
catcher Doug Dickey heaved the ball into left field in a vain attempt to
prevent the Ripper from pilfering third. Bill Frady, who was nicked for
eight safeties while fanning 12, was the loser.
Frady (L)
and Dicker
Robison (W) and Harford
Lowell
Hodges got credit for the nightcap win but needed bullpen help from
Art Worth. The Maple Leafs' Glen Patterson was the losing pitcher of record.
Wayne Brock and Jackie Harbourne of the Maples each had a double and
single in four trips.
G.
Patterson (L), Frady (6) and Dickey
L. Hodges (W), Worth (5) and Harford
(August 3)
The North Battleford Beavers improved their position in the S.B.L.
ladder as they turned back their two closest threats in the five-team
circuit, edging the league leading Saskatoon Gems 5 - 4 in the afternoon
and the dumping Regina's third place Caps 4 - 1 in an abbreviated
nightcap which ended prematurely after 5 innings because of a Sunday
curfew. In the opener, the Beavers' winning margin came from Bob
Herron's triple and Jackie McLeod's follow-up single in the bottom of
the 6th. Winning pitcher Johnny Coleman was strong down the stretch to
preserve the lead.
Pickens
(L) and Shirley
Coleman (W) and Green
As the
Reginans arrived late for the evening tilt, they were fortunate that the
Beavers didn't just take a forfeiture win. It didn't matter, however, as
Les Dean fanned 7 and retired the side in order in all but the 4th
inning.
Wills (L)
and Ball
L. Dean (W) and Green
(August 4)
The Saskatoon Gems regained their winning ways with a 6 - 4 victory over
the Regina Caps. The Hub City squad collected 13 hits off the offerings
of two Regina pitchers. Chuck Holdaway went the distance for Saskatoon and
held the Caps to 8 hits. Caps' starter Jack Hannah was tagged with the
loss. Jim Shirley had three hits for the victorious Gems. Fred
Bartels of
the Caps had a triple and single while reliever Ted Wills socked a home
run.
Hannah
(L), Wills (6) and Bennett
Holdaway (W) and Shirley
(August 5)
The Regina Caps pretty well assured themselves of a playoff berth when
they slipped by the Moose Jaw Maples 4 - 3 in a game called after 8
frames because of darkness amidst a storm of protest from the Mill City
players and supporters. Maples' management lodged an official protest
over an apparent 8th inning theft of third base that was negated by the
base umpire who thought that time had been called. Caps broke up a 3 - 3
stalemate with a single tally in the 7th, making Frank Warren a winner
over Moose Jaw's Berlyn Hodges. Regina's Gus Kyle, the league's top
hitter, fattened his batting average with a double and three singles. Coming
up with a brace of safeties each were the Maples' Art Worth and
Jim Harford as well as the Caps' Fred Bartels.
Warren
(W), Bruni (8) and Kyle
B. Hodges (L) and Harford
(August 6)
Umpire E. C. Terry forfeited a S.B.L. game to the Estevan Maple Leafs
because of stalling tactics employed by the North Battleford Beavers.
With the score knotted at 10 - 10 and playing in the bottom of the 9th,
Estevan had one man on base with two out when stalling was alleged to have
occurred in hopes that the game would be called because of darkness.
which would have then negated Estevan's tying marker in the bottom of
the 9th. Harry Coe, the Maple Leafs' winning chucker, also had a field
day at the dish going 4 for 5. Doug Dickey, Andy Lillie and
Ray Patterson all had home runs for Estevan.
P. McLeod,
J. McLeod, Coleman and Green
Coe (W) and Monroe
(August 6)
Pete Bruni hurled his second consecutive five-hitter to pace the Regina
Caps to a 4 - 0 blanking of the Moose Jaw Maples. The Caps managed only
six hits off loser O. B. Robison, two by Dave Hammermeister who had an RBI
single in the 1st and a run scoring double in the 6th. Bobby Knight and
Ray Nutzhorn each bagged two hits for Moose Jaw. The longest blow of the
night was a triple off the bat of the Maples' Berlyn Hodges.
Robison
(L) and Harford
Bruni (W) and Kyle
(August 6)
The classy Florida Cubans, winners of the prestigious Indian Head
tournament, rode roughshod over the Indian Head Rockets in the first
game of a best-of-3 provincial final conducted by the National Baseball
Congress. The hard hitting Cubans took a liking to the home-town Rocket'
hurlers and walked off with a 9 - 2 victory. The second game of the
series is scheduled for Moose Jaw's Exhibition Park one week from
tonight.
(August 7)
The Moose Jaw Maples improved their chances of landing the final playoff
spot in the Saskatchewan Baseball League as they defeated the Saskatoon
Gems 8 - 3. Young Lowell Hodges limited the league leaders to 5
scattered hits, including 2 doubles by shortstop Johnny Walker, in
picking up the win. Gems' starter Lefty Lauer was
ineffective in his 3
1/3 innings on the hill and took the loss. Berlyn Hodges, younger
brother and winning hurler Lowell, Bob Knight and Jack
Harbourne all
contributed two hits to the Moose Jaw cause.
L. Hodges
(W) and Harford
Lauer (L), Holdaway (4) and Shirley
(August 7)
A strong pitching performance by Cless Hinkley gave the Regina Caps a 4
- 0 S.B.L. victory over the Estevan Maple Leafs in the first game of a
scheduled double dip. The evening encounter didn't get the required
number of innings in to become official as rain brought the affair to a
premature ending. Hinkley limited the Maple Leafs to three hits in the 7-inning opener and fanned 11 batters. Bill Frady worked on the hill for
Estevan and took the loss. The Caps' Dave Hammermeister led the hitters
with two doubles.
Hinkley
(W) and xxxx
Frady (L) and xxxx
(August 8)
The Estevan Maple Leafs kept their hopes of landing fourth in the S.B.L.
and a resulting playoff spot in tact when they came away with a 4 - 3
win over the Saskatoon Gems. Saskatoon had 10 runners stranded and their
inability to hit with runners in scoring position cost them the game.
Down 3 runs to 2, the Maple Leafs tied the score in the 6th on Andy
Lillie's home run and then scored the winning run in the 9th on a
Saskatoon infield error and a double by Charlie Selph. Ray
Patterson
started for Estevan but was replaced in the 6th by winning pitcher Harry
Coe.
Patterson,
Coe (W) (6) and xxxx
xxx and xxx
(August 9)
The North Battleford Beavers walloped the Estevan Maple Leafs 19 - 2 to
move a half game behind the league leading Saskatoon Gems.
xxx and
xxx
xxx and xxx
(August 9)
Prior to the start of the regularly scheduled Regina - Moose Jaw
encounter, the two teams took the field to continue with the last part of
the August 5th tilt wherein Moose Jaw's potential tying run had been
sent back to second base from third, a decision which led to a Moose Jaw
protest, one which was upheld. For the Maples, Lady Luck was finally at
their doorstep as they pulled this one out of the fire by plating a
bottom-of-the-ninth-inning run to tie it and scored the winner in the
extra frame to snatch triumph from defeat, reversing the previous Regina
win. The crux of the dispute centered around Art Worth of the Maples
taking 3rd base in the bottom of the 8th as Caps' catcher Gus Kyle was
conveying his difference of opinion with the plate umpire. Thinking that
time had been called, the base umpire sent Worth back to second where he
died on the base paths as the Moose Jaw rally fizzled. The league
moguls, however, upheld the Mill City protest that time hadn't been
called and the fixture was replayed starting in the bottom of the 8th
with Worth at third and Jackie Harbourne at first. Worth then raced home
on a double steal to deadlock the issue before Jerry Parker, who had
been fanned by Pete Bruni in the original game, grounded out. The Regina
nine were set down in order in the top of the 10th and the Maples
clicked for a tally in their half to win 5 - 4. Lowell Hodges crossed
the plate on a one-out fielder's choice to sew it up for the Maples.
Berlyn Hodges was now declared the winning pitcher while
Ted Wills was
tagged with the loss.
Warren,
Bruni (8), Wills (L) (9) and Kyle
B. Hodges (W) and Harford
In the
regular scheduled contest, both Berlyn Hodges and Ted
Wills remained on
the hill as starters, with Hodges nailing his second victory of the day
and Wills his second defeat, as the Maples registered a 7 - 5 win over
the Caps. Art Worth sparked the Moose Jaw gang with a double and
two
singles in four trips while teammate Jim Harford and the Caps'
Gus Kyle
both rapped out a double and single.
Wills (L),
Bruni (6) and Bennett, Kyle (8)
B. Hodges (W) and Harford
(August
10) Certainly not losing their hitting touch over 24 hours, the North
Battleford Beavers came right back after their win of the previous night
and again dumped the Estevan Maple Leafs, this time by a 12 - 3 count.
The victory moved the Beavers 3 percentage points in front of the
Saskatoon Gems and, unless the league's brain trust orders all postponed
and tied games to be played, this could clinch first place in the S.B.L.
standings for North Battleford.
xxx and
xxx
xxx and xxx
(August
11) The Saskatoon Gems scored in the last half of the 9th to gain a 4 -
3 victory over the Moose Jaw Maples. In the top half of the inning, the
Maples had come from behind 3 - 1 to tally twice and deadlock the
contest. The third Gem tosser, Chuck Holdaway, was the winner.
George Read, Lefty Lauer and Holdaway held the Moose Jaw crew to
seven hits.
Saskatoon whacked seven safeties off lefthander O. B. Robison.
Robison
(L) and Harford
Read, Lauer (4), Holdaway (W) (7) and Shirley
(August
11) There was some high class hurling when the Regina Caps nipped the
Estevan Maple Leafs 1 - 0 in S.B.L. play. Cless Hinkley allowed only
two
hits and struck out six in his four inning whirl on the hill for Regina. Then
Jack Hannah took over pitching chores and set down the Leafs with
three hits
while fanning four. Southpaw Harry Coe struck out 11 and threw a very
effective five-hitter for Estevan. Hannah was the winning pitcher of record
and won his own game in the 7th when he ripped a double that plated
Frank Ball with the game's only run. Gary McKechnie, a homebrew Leaf,
collected three hits in four trips to spark the batters.
Hinkley,
Hannah (W) (5) and Kyle
Coe (L) and Monroe
(August
12) The Regina Caps wound up the S.B.L. schedule by defeating the
Estevan Maple Leafs 10 - 7. The game, called after the 7th inning
because of darkness, had no effect on league standings. The Caps had
already clinched third place while Estevan had no chance of escaping the
cellar. Most of Regina's scoring came in the 4th and 5th when they
plated a total of 9 runs. The Caps' Frank Warren, in relief of
Fred Bartels, picked up the win.
Bartels,
Warren (W) (4), Bruni (7) and xxxx
xxx and xxx
(August 13)
For four innings the Indian Head
Rockets appeared well on the way to forcing a deciding game in
their provincial championship series with the Florida Cubans.
The Rockets had built a 7-0 lead. It looked liked a
complete reversal of the series' opener when the Cubans trounced
Indian Head 9-2.
But, Florida scored five in the
fifth and nine in the eighth to whip the Rockets 16-11 and claim
the Saskatchewan title. There were 28 hits in the game, 14 of
them for extra bases. The Rockets committed nine errors.
Indian Head's Percy Trimont was the leading hitter with a
pair of homers, two doubles and a single in five trips. Hiram
Marshall and Winters Calvin also homered for the
losers.
Barbon
(W), Hernandez (9) and
Yzquierdo. Seoane (8)
Bates, Donaldson (5), Trimont (8) and Green, Ford (8)
Semi Final
Series :
(August 13)
Regina Caps downed Saskatoon 8-1 in the opening game of the Saskatchewan
League semi-final series. Cless Hinckley fired a
four-hitter for the win. Johnny Lloyd led the Caps'
offense with a triple and two singles. Gems made seven errors.
Johnny Walker had a single and double for the Gems.
Hinckley (W) and Ogle
Singleton (L), Pickens (6) and Shirley
(August 14)
Johnny Coleman and Berlyn Hodges hooked up in a
sparkling pitching duel in the opening game of their semi-final series.
Coleman fired a two-hitter as North Battleford topped Moose Jaw 4-0 as
the Beavers scored four unearned runs in the 8th inning for the victory.
Hodges, who had allowed just two base runners through seven innings,
allowed singles to Barney Fox and Ken Nelson
to lead off the 8th. After a pair of groundouts, Bob
Herron was handed an intentional pass to load the bases. As
Curtis Tate broke for third, catcher Jim Harford
fired the ball to shortstop Bobby Knight who fired back to
Harford as Roy Dean broke for home. As Dean
held up, Harford's throw to third sailed into left field as Dean romped
home with the game's first run. Jackie McLeod walked
and Tate stole home. Art Stone then poked a double
to plate Herron and McLeod to put the contest out of reach.
Coleman (W) and Green
B Hodges (L) and Harford
(August 14)
Saskatoon evened its semi-final with Regina at a game apiece with a 2-1
victory in a contest forfeited to the Gems after a rhubarb in the 9th
inning. The outburst followed Fred Sommers long blast
leading off the top of the 9th inning. Caps claimed it had cleared
a low fence for a game-tying homer but it was declared a ground-rule
double. After a verbal assault on the umpiring crew and the
appearance of Regina owner Denny Evenson on the playing
field, the game was called. Earlier in the game, Evenson had been
ordered off the field.
Regina scored
first. In the 4th inning Dave Hammermeister walked,
stole second, advanced to third on a groundout and scored on an error.
In the 7th, Gems took the lead as Bev Bentley knocked in
Jimmy Shields and Jim Shirley made it home
on an error. George Read tossed a four-hitter for the win.
Hannah (L), Bruni (7) and Bennett
G Read (W) and Shirley
(August 15)
Lefty Ted Wills scattered seven hits as Regina Caps beat
Saskatoon 6-1 to take a 2-1 game lead in their best-of-seven semi-final
series. Caps took advantage of three hits, a walk and two errors
to notch four runs in the 3rd inning.
Coben (L), Holdaway (3) and Shirley
Wills (W) and Ogle
(August 16)
North Battleford Beavers had 16 hits in trouncing Moose Jaw 12-4 to take a 2-0 game lead
in their best-of-seven semi-final series. Andy Swota
scattered seven hits to register the win.
Swota (W) and Green
Robison (L), Worth (4) and Harford
(August 17)
In another sterling pitching matchup, Frank Pickens stopped
Regina on three hits as Saskatoon posted a 1-0 win to square the series
at two games each. Before a crowd of more than 4,000 at Delisle,
Gems turned singles by Max Bentley and Johnny
Walker and an error into the only run of the contest.
Hard-luck loser Pete Bruni allowed just five hits.
Pickens (W) and Shirley
Bruni (L) and Bennett
(August 17)
North Battleford Beavers downed Moose Jaw 9-3 and 8-2 to take the
semi-final series in four straight games. Ken Nelson belted
two homers, a triple, two doubles and a single to lead the Beavers to
the sweep. Jackie McLeod fired a three-hitter to get the
win in the second game.
Hodges (L) and xxx
xxx and xxx
xxx and xxx
Jackie McLeod (W) and xxx
(August 18)
Frank Warren held Saskatoon to four hits in pitching the Regina
Caps to a 6-1 win and a 3-2 lead in their semi-final series.
Warren also starred on offense. He drove in a pair with a bases
loaded single in the 2nd inning. Fred Sommers,
Dave Hammermeister and Fred Bartels each had
two hits for the winners. The match featured sensational defense.
" ...
Johnny Lloyd's circus catch in right centre
field was the best of them all, and the most outstanding fielding play
of the baseball season in Regina ... Pitcher Bob Singleton was on first
with the Gems' second hit of the game and one was out. Veteran Jim
Shields lashed a drive almost over second base and it appeared in there
for extra bases. But Lloyd, who can run like a deer, came from
nowhere in right field and stuck up his glove hand on the run and the
ball stayed put. If he could have stopped in time, the starry
Negro might have doubled Singleton who was around to second when the
ball was caught." The Leader-Post, Regina, August 19, 1953.
Singleton (L), Holdaway (3) and Shirley
Warren (W) and Bennett
(August 19) Max Bentley
scored the winner in the eleventh inning as Saskatoon forced a seventh
and deciding game in their semi-final series with a 2-1 victory
before 3-thousand fans at Saskatoon. Bentley, who had singled
to centre, moved to third on a sacrifice and an infield out and
scored on an error. Doug Bentley had plated the Gems'
first run in the second inning on a single by pitcher George
Read. Frank Pickens, who relieved Read in the
eleventh, got the win. Johnny Lloyd had four hits in five
at bats for the Caps. Cless Hinckley went the
distance for the losers allowing just six hits.
Hinckley
(L) and Bennett
Read, Pickens (W) (11) and Shirley
(August 20) Right-hander Frank
Pickens tossed a six-hit shutout and the Saskatoon Gems beat
Regina 6-0 to move into the Saskatchewan Baseball League final
series against North Battleford. George Read was the star
at the plate with three hits, including a double. Ted
Wills, the first of three Regina pitchers took the
loss. 5-thousand fans turned out for the game at Cairns Field.
Wills (L), Bruni (5), Warren (7) and Bennett
Pickens (W) and Shirley
Final Series:
August 22 : Len Breckner raced home with the winning run
in the bottom of the eleventh inning as Saskatoon edged North
Battleford 2-1 in the first game of the best-of-seven final
series.
Lefty Lauer gave up just
three hits and fanned eleven in going the distance for
Saskatoon. Johnny Coleman pitched into the eleventh,
giving way to Les Dean after having loaded the bases with just one
out. Bob Herron had given the Beavers the lead with a
homer in the second. George Read drove in the tying run
in the third. 4-thousand fans watched the action at Cairns
Field.
Coleman (L), Dean (11) and Green
Lauer (W) and Shirley
August 23 : North Battleford
pounded out 17 hits and whipped the Gems 10-1 at home to even
their series at a game apiece. Andy Swota
pitched a six-hitter for the win. Murray Coben, Bob
Singleton and Max
Bentley worked on the hill for Saskatoon.
Coben
(L), Singleton (7), Max Bentley
(7) and Shirley, Garcia (7)
Swota (W) and Green, Prediger (9)
August 23) The
Saskatchewan Baseball League today announced that Gus Kyle, veteran
Regina Caps' catcher, had tucked away the 1952 league batting crown with
a .368 average. Kyle was followed by a pair of North Battleford Beavers,
Curtis Tate who stroked the ball at a .349 clip and Ken
Nelson who was one
percentage point behind at .348.
Other individual leaders were:
Runs
scored - 50 - Nelson, North Battleford Beavers
Hits - 72 - Nelson
Doubles - 12 - Nelson and Ray Patterson, Estevan Maple Leafs (tied)
Triples - 6 - Jim Harford, Moose Jaw Maples
Home Runs - 12 - Bob Herron,
North Battleford Beavers
Runs Batted In - 46 - Herron
Stolen Bases - 14
- Jimmy Shields, Saskatoon Gems and Bill Shea, Estevan Maple Leafs
(tied)
Les
Dean of the North Battleford Beavers wound up as the top
hurler with a record of 6 - 1. Bob Singleton of the Saskatoon Gems was
runner-up with 5 - 1. Singleton with 70 had the most strikeouts.
August 24 : Saskatoon scored
three runs in the top of the 12th inning and held on to beat the
Beavers 7-4. Gems were outhit 14-7 but walked away with a
2-1 game lead in the series. Frank Pickens was the winner
in relief.
Holdaway, Pickens
(W) (9) and Shirley
L. Dean (L) and Green
August 25 : George Read,
Saskatoon's "blond pitching ace", allowed just five
hits as the hometown Gems beat the Beavers 5-3 to take a 3-1
lead in the final series. Read fanned eleven and
allowed just one base on balls.
xxx and xxx
Read (W) and xxx
August 26 : Johnny Coleman
pitched a 4-hit shutout as the Beavers staved off elimination
with a 2-0 win over Saskatoon in a game at North Battleford.
Beavers scored in the third on a triple by Art Stone and
an error. Curtis Tate drove in Ken Nelson
with an insurance run in the sixth. Lefty Lauer
went the distance for the Gems allowing just five hits.
The game featured a triple-play by Saskatoon. In the
first inning, a walk and a single put Barney Fox on
second and Ken Nelson on first. Roy Dean's hard
liner toward first base was caught by Len Breckner who
tagged Nelson and threw to Walker at second to nip Fox.
Lauer
(L) and xxx
Coleman (W) and xxx
August 28 : North Battleford
hammered out 18 hits and trounced the Gems 12-3 before 6-thousand
fans at Cairns Field in Saskatoon to sent their final
series to a seventh and deciding game. The Beavers scored three
in the first and five in the second to put the game out of
reach. They drove starter Frank Pickens and
reliever George Read from the hill before the end of the
second inning. Andy Swota went all the way for the
Beavers. Bob Herron was the hitting star for the
winners. The league's home run champion during the regular
season, had four hits including a homer and a double. He
had six RBI.
Swota
(W) and Prediger
Pickens (L), Read (1), Holdaway (2) and Shirley
August 31 : The Beavers capped a
remarkable comeback with an offensive outburst to captured the Saskatchewan Baseball
League championship. North Battleford
handed the Gems an early 5-1 lead then roared back to whip
Saskatoon 22-9 in the deciding game of the best-of-seven final
series before 47-hundred fans at Abbott Field. It was the
largest crowd ever at the ball park, which normally seats about
26-hundred.
Bob Herron, who had four
hits, belted a pair of homers and knocked in five runs for the
Beavers. Art Stone had a grand slam. Max Bentley
had two homers for the Gems. Les Dean, who relieved
starter Johnny Coleman in the third, went the rest of the
way for the victory. The Gems used six pitchers -- Lefty
Lauer, Frank Pickens, Bob Singleton, Murray
Coben, Jimmy Shields and Max Bentley.
Lauer, Pickens
(L) (4), Singleton
(5), Coben (5), Shields (7), M. Bentley (8) and Shirley
Coleman, L. Dean (W) (3) and Green
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