Mondays Sports Patrol, Daily Racing Form, 1951-06-25

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♦— °r is ■ JJ ■ dig • hil hit - Yc York Mi ,. tied 5 j hit ; ia] 1 f0- : on on • pi, sij 1 wj f c a „ 1 s 7 y 5 j t 3 g a " a K m g, lies I • b tl: the J -j g eye s g, l # the e T to e Q] y a] ~ ■ ] e , e , ;" , be e . ■ d II so ;° L lk g ■ c [y E c_ d h 2, 2 ld h 16. 6- f n j c" c in In : r Monday s I Sports Patrol I By STEVE SNIDER | United Press Sports Writer | NEW YORK, N. Y., June 23 UP.— 1 Orestes Minoso of the Chicago White Sox I paying the penalty for a high batting 1 average . . . The pitchers are knocking him | down to keep the bat-happy Cuban from i digging in at the plate and when Ed Lopat I him with a pitch during the last New I Yankee series it was the tenth time I Minoso had been conked this year . That I him already with last years most often I — Luke Easter and Al Rosen of Cleve- 1 land. Allie Reynolds of the Yankees says his four-hit shutout against the Detroit Tigers June 17 is the only full game he ever pitched in the majors without walking a single batter ... "After 11 years," he said with a grin, "its about time." Lou Rossini, a substitute basketball coach who led Columbia through an amazing unbeaten season up to tourna-1 ment time, would have left for another school if Columbia hadnt come through with a head-coaching contract for 1951-r 52 . . . Lou took over last fall when Gordon Ridings became ill. Ridings now has re-p tired officially. . "As long as I can find head-coaching job, Ill never be con-1 tent to be an assistant again, not even at Columbia," Rossini said . . Who would? Low ball pitchers are with us in the I majors again . . Eddie Waitkus of the Phil-e says Pittsburghs Bill Werle looks like a i bowler, not a pitcher . . Casey Stengel of ! Yankees reports Marv Rotblatt, little Chicago lefty, "throws grounders." Amateur tennis officials will keep a sharp on the box office take at Forest Hills Wednesday and Thursday nights when Bobby Riggs puts on two night sessions of [ I National Pro tournament . . . U. S. Lawn Tennis Association is scrambling for ideas , put tennis back on a "standing room j r only" basis and floodlights may be the e * answer. This about sums it up: We asked Joe t Louis if he were surprised that Lee Savold f wasnt any faster than he showed the i night Joe knocked him out in six . "I I wasnt surprised," said Louis, "after all, neither one of us is young no more." i Helen Hicks, one of the first successful gal golf pros, has quite a reputation for being an expert at getting out of sand traps ... "I went to a fellow who could | break 100 and learned from him," she said. "He was in the traps so often, he had to learn how to blast out or lose his mind." . . Makes sense, at that. Incidental Info.: Stan Musial and Red d J Schoendienst, top hitters of the St. Louis Cards, are roomies on the road . Yogi r5 i Berra of the New York Yankees made a a p discovery the other day: "I kin hit lefts ;- handed pitchers better than right-handers ■ now," said the lefty swinger . Surprised d | him, too . . Benny Friedman, Michigan All- l" , America signal-caller in the 1920s, leaves !S for Europe July 9 to help conduct football 1 I clinics for GIs in Germany . Hes athletic ic director at Brandeis U., a real newcomer.


Persistent Link: https://drf.uky.edu/catalog/1950s/drf1951062501/drf1951062501_2_3
Local Identifier: drf1951062501_2_3
Library of Congress Record: https://lccn.loc.gov/unk82075800