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v ve ] @he Eoening Star CHANCE TO CATCH | TRIBE BUOYS CLUB Sixth Win in Row Recorded | by Solid Hitting, Though Pitching Is Weak. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ITHOUT attempting to ar- gue the case for perma- nent disproval, Mr. Clark Griffith's rampaging Na- tionals today were able to point out & few interesting flaws in the adage that says pitching is 70 per cent of base ball. Take, for instance, that winning streak they carried into the final fray with the White Sox yester- day. The Nats won their sixth straight ball game yesterday to set a new rec- ord winning streak for them this sea- son. They have been winning be- cause of fine hitting and improved flelding—and despite no PITCHING. The last well-pitched games by Washington hurlers were registered more than a week ago in Chicago, before the winning streak was started. Bince starting their sensational bid to overhaul the fifth-place Indians the Nats have watched their flingers give up 38 runs and 67 hits. ‘This is an average of more than #ix runs per game and slightly less than 11 hits. No.-6-in-a-roéw, coming yesterday, saw Eddie Linke, Monte ‘Weaver and Syd Cohen stagger away with an 11-to-8 victory on the strength of a 16-hit attack by their mates. And this was typical. .300-Hitting Class Grows. E first two games of the streak, played in St. Louis last week, found the Nats winning 6-to-5 de- | cisions. Neither of the starters, Linke | and Ken Chase, was able to last. Pete Appleton, who has done the only high- class hurling during this victory stretch, put on his fire helmet to save both games. The next day found the Nats win- ning a double-header by scores of 16 to 10 and 15 to 5. Wes Ferrell and Jimmy De Shong both went the route, but Ferrell was pounded for 14 hits by the Browns and De Shong gave up 12. Another dozen-hit attack won the opener of the Chisox series here | and yesterday there were those 16 blows. The Nats have no idea how long this business is going to last, and they don't care, especially as long as they keep winning. The hitters are finding life extremely pleasant now. Less than a week ago only Cecil Travis and Johnny Stone were in the .300 class. | ‘Today they are joined by Mel Al-j mada and Buddy Lewis, wtih Joe | Kuhel and a couple others ready to step into the select group. Base hits, nearly 100 of them, really | tell the story of the Griffs’ streak. In | their last six games the Nats have | scored exactly 60 runs on 94 hits, | which is an average of more than | 15 per game. | “Nobody's Getting Pitching”—Griff. BIR. GRIFFITH is very philosophi- cal about the lack of pitching. *“We're not getting much,” pointed out Mr. G., “but neither is anybody else in this league. Lookit those White Box pitchers—Whitehead and Ken- nedy. They're as good as anybody | Dykes has, and they couldn't pitch up an alley. “For that matter,” continued the old gentleman, “look how Gomez and Ruffing are getting their ears pinned back lately. Looks like there ain't no pitching going on.” In taking yesterday's game the Nats These hall-of-fame players, BY DILLON GRAHAM, Associated Press Sports Writer. AKE it from four American Leaguers who have hurled no- hit games, the pressure really I gets heavy in those last few innings of a perfect-pitching job. Between warm-up tosses in the Washington ball yard they looked back on those memorable games. They told of nervous tension, fear, an ex» ultant feeling of triumph and—com- plete exhaustion. Three of them—Vernon Kennedy and Bill Deitrich of Chicago and Wes Ferrell of Washington—thought al- most to the end an early-inning scratch hit had spoile¢ things. Ted Lyons of Chicago, the fourth, saw a one-handed stab of the last ball save his game. League Statistics JULY 29, 1937, AMERICAN. RESULTS YESTERDAY. Des Boston. uis. 4. Philadelphia, 11: Cleveland. 7. uosuyys watched with pleasure the second | straight beating given the Indians by the A's. They are banking on the Tribe folding on this road trip, as the Indians have a habit of doing, and if Mr. Steve O'Neill's gang does a more or less complete job, the Nats may sneak up a notch. Today they | |-~ a10x man L - smoq were only four games behind the |- Tribe. There was nothing to recommend | the game yesterday except the final | soore. The base ball was pretty aw- | ful, what with the Sox kicking in with five errors and aiding the Nats to eight unearned runs. ‘Two Red-Hot Buddies. WASH[NGTON took a lead in the D first inning and never was over- hauled, although the Pale Hose al- ‘ways kept close enough to make trou- ble. Linke was no howling success and Weaver, who followed him, twice ‘was struck on his bare hand attempt- ing to field line drives. He finally left the game with his paw resembling a hunk of chopped hamburger and Co- hen finished, stifiing a spirited ninth- dnning rally by the Sox. Buddy Lewis continued his sensa- tional hitting, even with a borrowed bat. He doubled the first time up and tripled the next. He got another double on his final trip, to run his splurge to 17 hits in the last 22 times at bat. This is an average (whew!) of .773. Among other pleasant items was the completion of four double plays by the Nat infleld. This can mean only one thing, from a local viewpoint, and that is that Buddy Myer is coming around at long last. Up to a week or so ago the Washington keystone combination of Travis and Myer was the weakest in the league on double plays. 1If Buddy can hold the pace the Nats ought to do all right, pitching or no pitching, and recent signs point to success for Myer. He collected two hits, incidentally, drove across two more, and stole a base for a real field day. STEVENS LIFTS GRILLS Gets Three Runs as He Pitches Club Into League Lead. O'Donnell’s Sea Grill was holding first place in the Industrial League to- day, thanks to the all-round work of Lefty Stevens on the mound and at the bat yesterday. Although yielding 11 hits in beating National Savings, 5-2, Stevens struck out 10 batters at crucial moments and accounted for three of his team’s runs. He drove in two with a single in the fourth and scored himself later in the same inning. GAMES TODAY. 2:18 Cleve. at Wash. 3:15, it at New York.St. L. at New York, Louis at Boston. Chicago at_Phila Phila. Detroit at Boston, GAMES TOMORROW. De st Cleve. at NATIONAL. RESULTS YESTERDAY. New York, 8: 8t. Louis, 4. Chicago, 7; Brooklyn. 5 Pittsburgh.’ 6: Philadelp! Cincinnati, 6 g3masing | \qapRpenYd GAMES New York at St. L. Bkin. at Chicago. Boston _at_Cinc. Phila. at Pitts. N. Y. at Chicago. Bklyn. at St. Louis. Boston at Pittsburgh. Phila. at Cincinnati. WA left to right, are: Wes Ferrell, Washington; Luke Sewell, receiver, and Bill Dietrich, Vernon Kennedy and Ted Lyons, hurlers, all of the White Sox. At Fear, Nervous Tension, Drama Mark Late Frames of No-Hit Games, Say Four Slab Heroes "YOU have fine control and more ‘stufl’ than usual such days." said Lyons, who earned a ‘perfect’ game against Boston in 1926. “Then nervousness gets you in the late innings and you begin to give more thought to every pitch. Your | heart jumps into your mouth each | time a ball is hit.” The last batter against Lyons | banged one far off first base, but Earl | Sheeley made a brilliant back-handed catch. | “Luck and fine fielding count the most,” observed Dietrich, who pitched St. Louis June 1. | vet drive | hands.” Early-inning bingles, which could be cataloged as hits or errors, were made against Ferrell, Dietrich. Therefore, they explained, they gave little thought to a no-hitter. “When I heard the crowd yelling I realized I was near a perfect game,” explained Kennedy, who won from Cleveland August 31, 1935. it right into a fielder's Good Fielding Vital. A RUNNING catch by Al Simmons saved Kennedy, while Hank Bo- nura made a couple of timely stops to help Dietrich. 5 Ferrell's big day was against St. Louis on April 29, 1931, while he was with Cleveland. Luke Sewell, the Chicago backstop. caught three of these games. right pitches,” grinned Kennedy. “I had no idea Kennedy or Ferrell would pitch no-hitters. That is, until near the finish,” Sewell said, “but I tha\b Dietrich might get one.” MEADES NINE EARNS -THIRD CORPS TITLE Joiner Hits Well, Pitches His Team to 14-4 Victory Over Fort Washington. FORT MEADE'S base ball team is the champion of the 3d Corps Area as a result of its 14-4 conquest of Fort Washington in the final game of & three-game series yesterday on the ‘War College diamond. Although it got off to a 2-0 lead in the fourth, Meade did not sew up the|_ game until the sixth inning, when It scored seven times. Five more added insult to the injury in the eighth. Joiner not only pitched Meade to the title, but also got a single, triple and home run. Miller also collected three of the winners’ 12 hits. SHINGTON, D. | this season’s only no-hitter against | | “Batters can hit the ball hard and | Kennedy and | “I got mine because Luke called the | figured as early as the fourth inning | WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION ( e 3 bottom the moundsmen show t They were assembled for this gabfest at Griffith Stadium yes- terday. THURSDAY, Slap-Happy Nats Seek: Fifth Spot : JULY 29, heir favorite grip on the- ball. —Associated Press Photos. CARDS LOSE FLARE Gas Goes From Gas Housers |, in East—Cubs Win, But Yanks Are Repulsed. l BY SID FEDER, Associated Press Sports Writer. DD major mysteries: Whatever happened to the gas in the Gas | House Gang? Except for Ducky Wucky Med- ! wick, who hasn't changed a bit from | the villain role. the rough, tough and | nasty boys from the other side of the | a bunch of empty bags. all gone. To be sure, they still can knock off | those perennial pushovers, the Dodg- ers and Phillies, perpetual second- division lads, but when they come up against the big boys, or even against | the up-and-coming Boston Bees and the aspiring Cincinnati Reds, the Gas House Gang has become just a mild breeze. In fact, without Dizzy (Sore Toe) Dean, there isn't enough pitching and pep to get a rise even out of themselves. Their gas is | Cards’ Stock Sinks. IN THEIR last complete circle of the league, facing every one of the other seven clubs, they have lost 13 games, while winning 8, for a .381 percentage, which is good cellar ball, and not much else. They won Just | two of the seven series—against the Dodgers and Phils, They dropped four straight games to the Bees and three out of four to the Reds. At the moment their hold on a first-division berth is as shaky as wildcat stock. They're just three games out of fifth place There was a time when for any club to spot the Cards three runs in the first inning was an easy way to com- mit base ball suicide. But not any more. ‘The Giants did it yesterday. Cliff Melton let them pile up three runs in the opening frame and then proceeded to stop them cold with six hits through the last eight innings. Meantime, Mel Ott and Wally Berger belted out homers as the Giants clubbed Lon Warneke to the showers and went on to an 8-4 win. The victory didn't help the Giants much, however, since the Cubs clout- ed.the Dodgers, 7-5, to hold their three-game lead on the National League pack. Yanks Humiliated. 'HE Yankees, already suffering from broken-down pitching, found their bats shackled by the right- hand offerings of Elden Auker and went down to their most humiliating defeat of the year. Auker baffled AS GIANTS SURGE | We: railroad tracks appear to have become | (2 | tionals, the victory for Detroit put Chisox in Shreds Totals *Batted for Kennedy in ninth. WASHINGTON. AB. R. Almada. cf. 42 Lewis. ib. Travis. ss Simmons..1f. —msi20 EE Totals I nant still are long—but that doesn't i | MEANWHILE it is interesting to | knows how to put winning ball teams 1937.° Bees May Em No-Hit Pitchers and Catcher of Three Hold Reunion * ° v 'g‘f» ~ WIS Yy o CREAT FLAG DASH OF 1914 RECALLED Fiery Stallings Presents Contrast to McKechnie as Club Leader. . BY GRANTLAND RICE. EHIND airtight pitching the Boston Bees have come zoom- ing into an already exciting National League pennant race, thus confounding the Western clubs. Now the Bees are swinging through the West and no longer are the Cubs, the Cardinals, the Pirates and the Reds glad to see them. Notice has been served that they no longer are a soft touch, but that enemy hitters likely are to be in for a troublous afternoon whenever they tie up with Fette, Turner, Lanning or Bush. It was 23 years ago that a Boston team, starting from last place on the Fourth or July, swept to glory by win- ning the National League pennant and beating the redoubtahle Athletics in the world series. That Boston team also won mainly on remarkable pitch- ing, furnished by Dick Rudolph, Lefty George Tyler and Bill James. Nobody ever has forgotten that team and its amazing dash from nowhere to the top of the base ball heap. It is in- evitable that the memory of it should be called up again by this drive on the part of the present Boston array. Maybe it will not happen agajn— but it could. Base ball is the kind of game in which almost anything can happen, especially when a team can muster four pitchers with as much | on the ball as the Boston hurlers have shown up to now. The odds against the Bees winning this pen- seem to have the slighest effect on the young men. In fact, they do | not seem to be concerned in the least | about winning it. But they're going about it the right way—winning a game a day or, on days when there are doubie-headers, two games. McKechnie and Stallings. compare Bill McKechnie, man- ager of the Bees today, with George Stallings, the man who led them to the peak in 1914. McKechnie is one of the mildest of men, a quiet, soft-spoken, pipe-smok- ing, self-effacing chap who never was much of a ball player himself, but together. He had two pennants to his credit before he went to Boston— one in Pittsburgh in 1925 and the other in St. Louis in 1928 *Batted for Li Chicazo WASHINGTON Runs_batted Myer 221 002— & | 11 | Si Stone (), | gy 1 nedy. Kuhel, | Lewis " Ch/ Twobase 'hifs—Lewis (21| Travls. Simmons. Bonura. Three-base hit— | Lewis. Home run—Berver. Btolen base Mver. Double plays—Linke to Travis to | Kubel. Travis to Myer to Kuhel Berger 1o Haves to Bonura. Weaver to Travis to Kuhel. Mver to Travis to Kuhel. Left on bases-—Chicago, 7: Washinzton. 10.” Bases on balls—Off_Kenned Linke, Weaver. 3 by Linke. 4 by X in 5 innings nings: off Cohen pitch—Linke. Pa nine pitcher nedy. _Umpire, snd " Gelsel, 3500 inning. Losing pitcher—Ken- essrs Summers. Basil Attendance— iy 28, them all afternoon, allowed them just two measly singles, and the Tigers came through with an 8-1 victory. Since the White Sox were given & thorough going over by the Na- the Tigers in second place, although still leaving the Yanks with a six- game lead. The Athletics put on some astonish- ing batting fireworks to club the Cleveland Indians, 11-7, for the second straight day. The Boston Red Sox came from behind twice to top the Browns, 5-4. Peaches Davis turned in a nine- hitter, and the Reds whipped the Bees, 6-1. Pep Young's bat led the Pirates to 6-4 win over the Phillies Griffs’ Records BATTING. AB. R H. 2babHr RbiPet ) u Simmons yer W.Ferrell Sington Millies Mihalic _. Weaver Linke R. Ferrell Abpleton _ ohen = De Shong__ Chase Jacobs __ Linke De Shong 32 Weaver 11 W.Ferrell 11 hase 4 2 Appicton o 30 | cial crisis in the affairs of the Boston Cohen Jacobs Louis, the Silent, Emerges From His Social Shell Shields sacrifices movie pay to play tennis—San Romani off for European tour. BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, July 29—If they keep hustling, those smooth-stepping Boston Bees may grab themselves a first-division berth . . . Like old King Levinsky, Alice Marble, the American tennis champion, says the London climate “got her” . . . Levinsky couldn’t make up his mind between the weather or the tea—or was it the beer? About the only guys you'll rec- ognize on the 1938 Cardinals will be Joe Medwick and maybe Fran- kie Frisch . . . Archie San Romani, the Kansas miler,.is off on the Queen Mary today to campaign in Europe . . . Sonja Henie, the skate queen, went vacationing to Nor- way aboard the same boat. ‘The Giants have asked for waiv- ers on George (Kiddo) Davis and Pitcher Tom Baker . . . Terry had to do it to make room for Ben Oantwell, recalled from Jersey City, and Blondy Ryan . ., Davis is expected to wind up in Jersey City . . . but his stay in exile will be short . . . the Giants are high on him and he probably will be given the management of the next important farm they buy. Don’t know anybody who has come out in the last two years like Joe Louis . . . he used to live in a shell, but now he'll yell at you plumb across the room on the slightest provocation . . . there’s & boy who's been smartly han- dled. Over at Seabright the California tennis delegation tells you the main reason Helen Wills Moody is after a divorce is because her hus- band sailed & boat too much. ‘Tom Yawkey, who has decided to build a ball club the hard way— rebuild his Red 8ox with farm hands—may begin collecting real dividends next year . . . Mel Ott's batting alump is so serious Bill Terry 4 oconsidering benching the ) youngest 10-year man in the ma- Jors . . . Mayor Henry Wheeler of Newport, R. I, is taking bows for bringing Harold S. Vanderbilt and ‘Thomas O. M. Sopwith, rival con- tenders for the America’s Cup, to- gether socially for the first time since their rift began three years ago . . . they’ll attend a banquet tonight, but will sit one seat apart. Any pitcher who nolds the Yan- kees hitless for five innings (like young Jake Wade of Detroit did) has plenty on the ball ., . . his showing must have done the ail- ing Mickey Cochrane more good than a week in bed . . . Frank Shields, who hopes to be on the next Davis Cup team, is sacrific- ing $350 per week in movie pay to play at Seabright and show ’em he still knows how the game is played. At least 100 major league scouts get red in the face when they contemplate the Lou Fette-Jim . . . these two minor league vet- erans have accounted for 23 of the Bees' 43 wins so far . . . New York Sun calls Tommy Heinrich of the Yanks “the freshman who plays varsity ball.” —_—— . ‘Two guys: Jimmy Dykes says Connie’ Mack. is a great manager because he has patience, above all other things . . . Other base ball men say lack of same is all that kept Rogers Hornsby from becom- ing a really great leader ... George Zarifi, the tennis player, stars for Cambridge University in England, but is a naturalized Frenchman « .. his papa is a Greek. When Johnny Broaca’s name ‘was mentioned at the stadium yes- terday, Joe McCarthy said: “You can forget all about that guy.” Which probably means Johnny's number definitely is up with the Yankees . . . Tony. Canzoneri (and wife) and Bob Pastor, the heavy- weight, are among those relaxing the Baratogs races, | Columbus avenue, down by the railroad He knows how to handle men, how to get the most out of them with, apparently, the, least effort. He has | a world of patience and unlimited fortitude. The things that have hap- pened to him in the years that he has been in Boston would have wrecked the disposition and broken the spirit of the ordinary manager. They have put gray hairs in his head and fur- rows in his forehead, but they haven't taken that slow and friendly smile | from his face nor made even & dent | in his spirit. He passed safely through a finan- club which all but obliterated it. He survived the brief but tumultuous so- journ of Babe Ruth with the Bees and the crack-up that ensued when the Babe and Judge Fuchs crashed head- on, 50 to speak. He worked doggedly with hopelessly inept ball players, trad- ed skillfully in his attempt to get bet- ter ones, saw his carefully laid plans smashed before his eyes and suffered | many bitter and humiliating defeats. Maybe he is riding now, however| hopefully, to another crushing fall. But if he falls again, he’ll pick him- self up and brush himself off—and | start all over again without squawk- ing. George Was Dynamic. QTALLINGS was as dynamic as Mc- Kechnie is quiet. In his way— which was a far different way—he, too, knew how to handle men. Possessed of a terrific nervous energy, he ultimately wore himself down and ruined his health by the strain he imposed upon himself every time he entered the dugout—but while he lasted he drove his men hard, raged at the umpires, outwitted his rivals and took his place among the greatest managers base ball ever has known. Like McKechnie, he was a builder of base ball teams. The Braves were a pretty hopeless outfit when he took them over, but he reached out and grabbed such players as Hank Gowdy, Johnny Evers, Rabbit Maranville, Red Smith—and Rudolph, Tyler and James. He bullied his men, or whee- dled them or coaxed them—depending on the man and the situation. He fired them with his own fervor and almost made nervous wrecks of some of them—but he won with them. He won against obstacles as great as those which the Bees now face. He turned staid Boston town upside down —and his team drew crowds so great that Jim Gaffney, who owned the club, had to move out of the old park on tracks, and build the mammoth park where the Bees now play. Stallings had the heart and soul of & winner and suffered in defeat. Typ- ical of him is the story they tell of the time when, a very sick man, he was going home one Fall and suffered a heart attack on the train. A young doctor, summoned by telegraph, board- ed the train at a way station and, after treating him, asked: “What caused your heart trouble, Mr. Stallings?” Stallings looked at him for a mo- ment and then turned his gaze out the window. “‘Bases on balls,” he said. (Copyright, 1937, by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) BASE BALL Washington vs, Chicago AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK Semorrow—DOleveiend 9ul PIL TODAY 3:15PM. POPPI - OF i Potpourri. HE White Sox came to town firm kees fittery. They said so, some F 4o Features and Classified | C PAGE C—1 ulate Old Braves NG ‘&@ n 1y convinced they had made the Yane of them, when they blew in from out of the West on the same train with the Nationals. There seems to be an unwritten’ law among the Sox against talking pennant, but ape parently there was nothing to prevent them from calling the world cham= pions jumpy. “You should have seen them in Chicago,” declared one of the newspaper men traveling with the Box. “Why, the Yanks were pitiful. They made 10 errors in a four-game series. If it wasn'| t for Gehrig, Di Maggio and that kid, Henrich, they would have been slaughtered in all four games. “One of the Yanks . .. I won't mention his name, but he's a big shot . . . even admitted tne club was jittery. Before one of the Sunday games there was a roll of thunder. Jimmy Dykes, who is always ribbing, called out to this Yank: ‘You know what follows thunder, don't you? Lightning. Look oug that you don't get hit by a bolt,’ mean: ng the White Sox will strike them. 4 “Well, anyway, this Yank looks around and grins and says: ‘Well, Jimmy, I'm still getting eight hours sleep a night and that's more than some of the fellows on this club are getting. They+- can't sleep from worrying about not winning the pennant.’ " That was in Chicago a few days ago. Now the White Sox, once on the road, seem to be Jittery, too. Until the last two days they made a habit of mop- ping up the diamond with the Griffs. But they dropped the first game, 6 to 5, and yesterday they helped the Nats to EIGHT. unearned runs and ‘Washington won, 11 to 8. They were | charged with five errors afleld and probably should have been marked off for six. And they hit into four double plays, which represented as| many as the Nat infield has clicked | off in more than a week. | None of Landis’ Business. OGERS HORNSBY'S recent dis- missal as manager of the Browns, | supposedly because he played the | ponies, created no furore among mem- ‘bers of the Washington ball club. Nor did that story out of Chicago saying that Judge Landis would investigate charges of ball players betting on the | races. g “Bo what?” was, in effect, the re- action of the Nats. Several of them like to go down on a horse from time to time and they are no different than | players of other clubs. It is no rare sight to see Sonny Workman or Johnny Gil- bert, the jockeys, in the Wash- ington dressing rooms. Truth to tell, ball players think | that it is no business af Landis what | they do with their money, as long as | they don't bet on ball games. John McGiaw was a chronic bettor when he was managing the Giants and no- body found fault with his base ball work. Diamond people, as a matter of fact, always have been closely ' linked with racing. The late Frank Navin maintained a stable and Charles Stoneham owned 8 track, to name a couple, Nats Have Other Hobbies. 'HE days when ball players gambled large sums is just about over, any- way. Hornsby probably is the last of the big-money boys. Nowadays the average player is smarter and more careful with his money. He realizes the years when he can demand a high salary are limited and he invests in annuities and Government bonds and buys a few acres of farm land. ‘Those who take Hornaby's side of the case (and accept bettin: as the real reason for which he was fired) maintain they can name 50 American Leaguers who wager on horses. Okay. But there are not many more than 50. Gambling on the Washington club chiefly is limited to pinochle and pool and the stakes are not large. The Nats’ outside interests and hobbies largely are confined to other sports. Buddy Myer follows boxing closely, Bucky Harris in recent years has switched from racing to professional foot ball, Jimmy De Shong has a habit of getting to know all the band leaders by their first names, and you could hand the rest of them a doubles barreled shotgun and a bird dog and they would know how to seek a covey of quail. o Do You Remember Blondy? 3 New York base ball writers, wha confidently were expecting another subway series. aren't 50 sure now that the Giants will make the grade. The Cubs are pulling away and the Terry- go-round is breaking down, what with Dick Bartell and Clydell Castleman on the sidelines with injuries. Blondy Ryan comes back to the Giants after he was cut adrift in 1934 and left to bob around in the minors. With Bartell hurt, Terry looked in the bushes and the best shortstop § he could dig up was Ry: He re- " (See POPPING OFF, Page C-2.)" 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