Showing posts with label Sal DeGeorge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sal DeGeorge. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 December 2007

Opening Day, Tuesday, April 22, 1952

S T A N D I N G S
W L PCT.
Victoria ..... 1 0 1.000
Spokane ...... 1 0 1.000
Wenatchee .... 1 0 1.000
Lewiston ..... 1 0 1.000
Vancouver .... 0 1 .000
Salem ........ 0 1 .000
Tri-City ..... 0 1 .000
Yakima ....... 0 1 .000


YAKIMA [Victoria Colonist, Apr. 23]—Manager Cece Garriott got his Victoria Tyees off to a flying start at Yakima last night but it is entirely possible that he will remember his W.I.L. debut for a long time. In fact, he will probably have nightmares about it.
It was a nightmarish sort of a game with Garriott doubling in the tying and winning runs with two out in the ninth inning to give his team a 14-13 decision after an apparently safe 12-5 lead was erased in a wild, eight-run, eighth inning.
And so, for one day at least, the Tyees find themselves sharing the league lead with Wenatchee, Spokane and Lewiston, winners in the other three inaugural games.
BLOW EARLY LEAD
Scoring in each of the first three innings, the Tyees romped into a 5-0 lead for Ben Lorino, but the Bears scored three times in the third and kept picking away at the southpaw until they tied it in the sixth. Jehosi Heard, the new colored lefthander down from Portland, put out the fire in the sixth and carried a seven-run lead into the eighth as Tyees erupted for five runs in the seventh and added two more in the eighth.
Then, as Garriott put it, “base hits started flying all over the place.” Before George Randolph, huge colored righthander, stemmed the Victoria attackm eight runs were in and the Bears were ahead
JUST IN TIME
Two were out in the ninth when Luther Branham drew a walk and Bob Moniz legged a hit to set the stage for Garriott’s game-winning two-base wallop. Randolph held the Bears in check in the ninth to gain credit for the win.
Although not unhappy at the final count, Garriott was worried over the balance of the series. “I’ve only got seven pitchers and I used three of them tonight.” He intends to start Jim Propst in the second game and uttered a fervent wish that the unpredictable lefthander would go the distance.
MONIZ AND MARTIN HIT
Moniz and Milt Martin each had three of the 15 Victoria hits with Moniz including a double. Granny Gladstone, who played at shortstop, had a double and a single.
Garriott’s batting order was Branham, Moniz, Garriott, Pries, Abernathy, Gladstone, Treece, Martin and the pitchers.
Victoria ........ 122 000 522—14 15 1
Yakima ........ 003 011 080—13 14 2
Lorino, Heard (6), Randolph (9) and Martin; Stites, Monahan (3), Dials (7), Clancy (8) and Donahue.

WENATCHEE [Clancy Loranger, Province, April 23]—It’s one down and 153 to get even for the Vancouver Capilanos.
A big seven-run sixth inning by Wenatchee Chiefs blew what had been a tight ball game high and wide at Recreation Park here Tuesday night and spoiled the debut of Bill Schuster’s 1952 Caps.
Final score in what eventually developed into a free-hitting game was 9-6 for Dick Adams’ Chiefs, with big Jerry Barta being charged with the loss.
The defeat merely confirmed, for Schuster, what he had said Monday: that spring training was a bust and the Caps are going to have to play themselves into shape.
“Look at that Barta,” said Schuster after. “For five innings, he pitched a great ball game, then he had nothing left.”
Then Barta’s Hopes Crumbled
Barta, showing no signs of the wildness that plagued him in past seasons, did look mighty sharp, too, until the sky fell in on him in the sixth.
He had walked only one man and went into the “disaster” frame holding a 2-1 lead over Frank Dasso, who was pitching equally well.
Wenatchee’s Ross McCormack gave an inkling of things to come by starting the inning with a double, one of three extra-base hits he collected. A walk, plus an error by Jesse Williams, sent one run across and then the balloon went up.
Four consecutive infield hits—one a bunt that caught Schuster flat-footed at third—climaxed by a triple by McCormack, made the Wenatchee total seven for the inning and sent Barta shower-wards.
Harry Butts and Paul Jones finished up, Jones allowing one more run in the eighth.
Ritchey’s Arm Troublesome
The Ca’s, whose ten-hit attack was paced by lanky Jim Wert’s three singles, bounced back to drive Dasso from the mound and pushed four runs of their own across in the seventh. But that big seven on the scoreboard was too much for them.
Another spring training victim, according to Schuster, was catcher John Ritchey, who was late in reporting to Penticton and who retired in the sixth with arm trouble.
Schuster took him out after he’d almost tossed a couple into centre field on Wenatchee steals, and snorted later that “you can’t cram three weeks of training into one.”
But as Schuster said, “The first-game tension is over now. The weather is good and tomorrow is another day.” He’ll send Van Fletcher, brother of Coast League Guy, to the mound tonight to try and get even.
Vancouver ...... 000 002 400—6 10 1
Wenatchee ...... 000 017 01x—9 12 1
Barta, Butts (6), Jones (8) and Ritchey, Lundberg (6); Dasso, Bauhoffer (6) and Pocekay.

LEWISTON, Idaho, April 22—Manager Bill Brenner went the distance for Lewiston Tuesday night as the newcomers to the Western International Baseball League downed the Tri-City Braves 5-2 in their league debut.
Bill Brenner held the Braves to five hits as he struck out eight and walked three.
A crowd of 4200, including league president Bob Abel of Tacoma, turned out to cheer on the new team.
Butch Moran, right fielder, led the Broncs' hitting parade with a three for four night, including a double.
Tri-City led off the scoring in the second when Bill Rogers singled, moved to second on a balk and went home on a single by Frank Mataya. Lewiston bunched its five runs in the second and third innings.
Then Tri-City starter John Romero went out and Fatalich came to the mound for the Braves and ended the Lewiston scoring.
Tri-City scored its final tally in the sixth when Vic Buccola walked, went to second on a passed ball and scored on Tom Marier's single.
Tri-City ....... 010 001 000—2 5 2
Lewiston ...... 023 000 00x—5 11 0
Romero, Fatalich (3) and Pesut; Brenner and Helmuth.

SPOKANE, April 22—Spokane Indians, defending champions, opened their W.I.L. season with a 7-1 thumping over Salem on Tuesday night.
Herb Souell, flashy-fielding colored third baseman, a newcomer to the Tribe, was the star for Spokane. He had four hits in four times at bat, drove in two runs and scored two more, and came up with some fine defensive work.
John Conant pitched acceptably until relieved in the seventh. Ray McNulty took the brunt of the Indians’ 13-hit attack.
Salem manager Hugh Luby singled in Larry Mann in the seventh inning for the Senators’ only run.
A crowd of 4,561 turned out for the opening game in good baseball weather.
Salem .......... 000 000 100—1 6 0
Spokane ....... 000 033 10x—7 13 1
McNulty, Mann (6) and Nelson; Conant, Roberts (6) and Sheets.

DeGeorge Too Costly, Tyees Pick Replacement
[Victoria Colonist, April 23, 1952]
Sal DeGeorge, who led the W.I.L. in earned run average last season with the Salem Senators, won’t be with the Victoria Tyees this year after all this season unless he’s had change of heart. And it’s unlikely even then.
Business manager Reg Patterson reported yesterday that the club had been unable to come to terms with the swarthy right-hander. DeGeorge was turned back to Salem club but the deal, in which the Senators obtained first baseman Dick Bartle and outfielder Ernie Sites, will stand. The Tyees are to get their choice of the Salem pitching staff, except Ray McNulty, veteran righthander. The choice will be made as soon as Patterson gets a list of eligibles from Salem Manager Hugh Luby, who decling to include McNulty.
DeGeorge, who left a bad impression with Patterson after a telephone conversation, demanded everything but the well-known kitchen sink for reporting and didn’t appear too anxious to play even if his terms had been granted. He asked for a salary of $650 a month, a bonus of $500 if he won 15 games, $1,000 if he won 20 games, half of his sale price if sold, and expenses from and to his home in San Diego. Needless to state, the Tyees weren’t interested.
The only other news on the player front was an offer from Syl Johnson, Yankee scout, to send catcher Roy Easterwood to Victoria if the Tyees would send another catcher to Boise. Easterwood, who has played in the Coast League, was assigned to Beaumont but had no desire to play there. However, manager Cec Garriott turned down the offer, claiming Easterwood did not hit enough to his liking.
WHITE TO RETURN?
Queried about the possibility that outfielder Bill White might join the club, Patterson stated that White is anxious to play and may show up as soon as school is out. He is teaching. There is also a chance the big fellow might be used in a trade or sold outright. Salem is interested.
Patterson also reported that demand for tickets for the Victoria W.I.L. opener against Wenatchee next Tuesday has been steady. Tickets for all games and season’s reservations are on sale between 9 and 5 at 825 Fort Street.

IT BEATS ME
By Jim Tang [Victoria Colonist, April 23, 1952]
Don’t sell the Victoria Tyees short. Pre-season reports have deliberately refrained from any undue optimism but the outfit manager Cece Garriott assembled at Salinas definitely has possibilities. It may not win the W.I.L. championship and it may not even come close but it is as “set” as any previous Victoria club at this stage of the season, and the addition of two of three of the right kind of players in the right spots could put it up among the leaders or, maybe at the top. And that’s as much as can be said for the best of the other clubs at the moment.
Much has already been written about the need of more pitching and the possible lack of consistent extra-base punch. Let’s take a look at the brighter side.
The Tyees have good speed, defensive ability, hustle and versatility and there is every chance that help will be forthcoming if needed.
There is nothing wrong with the infield. Chuck Abernathy should be adequate at first base, could be outstanding. If Granny Gladstone can beat Jim Clark at shortstop, that position will leave no fears and Don Pries, scrappy .322 hitter last season, will certainly do it at third base. If there is an infield question mark, it is at second base, where Luther Branham, the colored little speedster holds forth. He has looked good in spring training but it is still early for the final verdict. However, even if two infielders should falter, it wouldn’t prove disastrous. Clark can take care of second base if needed, Pries was a first baseman for most of his baseball career up until last season and John Treece is listed as an outfielder only because of Pries. Treece looked good at third base for Salinas in exhibition games, a cocky fighter who likes his baseball and who could turn out to be a fortunate acquisition.
If Abernathy, Branham, Clark and Pries all come through in the infield, there will be no outfield troubles. Gladstone and Treece would flank Garriott for a picket corps that would need no excusing. If either Gladstone or Treece is needed in the infield, either Bob Moniz, a smart veteran, or Harvey Allen, a loose-jointed Negro who has shown evidence of power, or both, could fill the bill. And there is very chance that Bill White will be back. The big fellow had a mediocre season last year but batted in 104 runs on his .283 average and it is not too much to hope that he could stage a real comeback.
Offensively, a pitcher facing Clark, Pries, Garriott, Gladstone, Abernathy and Treece in order won’t escape unhurt too often and if Lilio Marcucci comes back, it will be that much tougher. The Tyees may need help to be a contender but they don’t rate that last place guess made by a wire service Monday.

Wednesday, 26 December 2007

Pre-Season, Saturday, April 19, 1952

Lewiston Nine Ends Training
LEWISTON, Idaho, April 19—Eighteen players with the Lewiston Broncs of the Western International Baseball League arrived here Saturday from spring training camp at Porterville, Calif.
They will make up the team with which Lewiston will open its season here Tuesday against the Tri-City Braves.
A noon gathering opening day will fete members of both teams and a main street parade is scheduled in the afternoon.

Tyees Trade Bartle
By JIM TANG [Victoria Colonist, April 20, 1952]
Things look immeasurably brighter for the Victoria Tyees today. Receipt of a highly-rated lefthander from the Portland Beavers and a trade which brought a proven right-hander to the club in exchange for two players who did not figure in 1952 plans has suddenly transformed a “dark-horse” W.I.L entry into a club which appears to have contending possibilities.
Reporting from Yakima, where he was stalled on his return from the club’s Salinas training camp to Victoria by car trouble, business manager Reg Patterson announced last night that Sal DeGeorge, leading pitcher in the W.I.L. last season, will join the club Monday in Yakima.
DIDN’T FIGURE
DeGeorge was obtained from the Salem Senators yesterday in a trade for first-baseman Dick Bartle and outfielder Ernie Sites. Bartle had lost his first-base job to Chuck Abernathy and Sites was not expected to break into an outfield which already includes manager Cece Garriott, Granny Gladstone, Bob Moniz, John Treece and Harvey Allen, the colored rookie.
LEAD IN E.R.A.
Acquisition of DeGeorge for Bartle and Sites looms as the best deal the Victoria club has ever made. The swarthy righthander topped the earned run averages last season with a thoroughly respectable 2.57 and proved valuable as a relief pitcher as well as a starter.
He appeared in 36 games, 19 of them complete, and won 16 of 26 decisions. In 217 innings he gave up 200 hits, only five of which were home runs, struck out 83 and walked 98 batters.
COLORED PROSPECT
The lefthander is Jehosi Heard [sic], a colored rookie who has been with Portland since spring training. Nothing is known of his past record but the Portland management rates him highly as a future Coast League prospect.
There was further good news, too, in the near certainty that more help will come from the Beavers. Southpaw Cal McIrvin and righthanders Bob Drilling and Dick Waibel are possibilities for added mound strength and there still remains an excellent chance that catcher Lilio Marcucci will be returned. The Beavers reportedly plan to carry only two receivers and Aaron Robinson and Jim Gladd appear to have those jobs sewn up.
CATCHER ARRIVES
A third new player joined the club Friday. He is Don Willburn, obtained from Vancouver with Abernathy for Jim Hedgecock. Willburn, a powerfully-built youngster, played with Great Falls in the Pioneer League in 1950. A limited-service player, he is expected to remain with the club all year.
The two-for-one trade with Salem and releases to Rufus Johnson, the colored prep school athletic star, catcher Joe Yanchuk, and Larry King, veteran Salinas righthander, cut the Tyee roster to 18 players, only two over the league limit.
19 PLAYERS LEFT
Surviving cuts and trades are: Catchers Milt Martin and Willburn, infielders Abernathy, Luther Branham, Jim Clark and Don Pries, the five outfielders previously mentioned, and pitchers Ben Lorino, Jim Propst, DeGeorge, Heard, Walt Towns, Bill Wisneski, John Valerie and George Randolph.
Willburn, Brandham, Treece and Gladstone are limited service players while Heard, Wisneski, Valerie, Towns, Allen and Randolph qualify as rookies. This leaves the club within the player restrictions calling for not more than nine veterans and at least two rookies.
Lorino has been named to pitch the opening game with Martin doing the catching. Abernathy will be at first base, Branham at second and Pries at third with the shortstop position still in doubt. If Clark gets the call, Gladstone will join Garriott and Treece in the outfield. If Gladstone starts at short, Bob Moniz will likely be the third outfielder.
The line-up is versatile, with Gladstone available for both the outfield and infield and Treece normally a third baseman. The latter, voted to the semi-pro all-stars in the Wichita tournament last year, may be a fortunate pick-up. He looked great for the Salinas Brownies in exhibition games and should be able to step right in to the W.I.L.
Patterson also reported that the Tyees downed Pocatello of the Pioneer League, 13-8 and 10-2, in games Wednesday and Thursday. Gladstone hit two home runs, Abernathy was clouting the ball for distance and Lorino pitched seven good innings in the 10-2 conquest. Results of Friday’s game against Red Bluff and last night’s game against Pocatello at Red Bluff were not available.

DON CARLSON
[Vancouver Province April 19, 1952]
WIL Needs ‘Em
Organized baseball’s strangest assortment, the Western International League, Tuesday opens what we hope is its last season so constituted: we hope next year we’ll have something better than Lewiston or Tri-City as drawing cards in what is meant to be a class A league in this city of half-a-million.
There is little doubt that R.P. Brown, of Vancouver, at least, the sage dean who saved pro ball in Victoria during the winter months, wants Edmonton and Calgary in next season.
I am quite sure he has not changed his mind from that over the winter. I am equally sure he is amenable to such comments as one of our office wags came up with when we were going over the places included in this year’s league: “There are some laughs there, alright.”
• • •
Hockey demonstrated with practical clarity this season that a regular trans-mountain schedule is workable, and desirable. And the WIL has this advantage of people already possessing an intermediate point between the coast and the prairies, namely Spokane, a baseball hotbed, one of the kinpins of the circuit.
To the casual fans of baseball, who do not comprehend the inner workings of the game, it must be incredible that Vancouver, Spokane and Victoria are scheduled with regularly with places like Lewiston, Pasco and even Wenatchee.
It is a tribute to the game itself, and some of the excellent talent in the WIL, that last year 180,000 people jammed Cap Stadium to watch.
Calgary and Edmonton are definitely baseball hotbeds. Last summer they sent feelers to the WIL, but were held off for another season.
How long can centres, booming in population and wealth as they are, be denied membership in favor of obscure towns in southern Washington and Idaho?
• • •
I can think of no finer attraction than to see the flannels of Edmonton or Calgary back on a Vancouver diamond after many years’ absence. The eyes of Vancouver fandom, at least, will be on the weak spots in the WIL this season.
If the weaknesses become too flagrant, the league can depend on it that it will face a back-to-the-prairies demand by the public.
And I, for one, will be right for it.

ON THE INSIDE
By DON BECKER, Herald Sports Editor [from Apr. 20, 1952]
ALL ABOARD THE LOOT TRAIN
Wondering where that next Cadillac is coming from? Or perhaps the little woman would like another mink coat or two. If so climb aboard the wagon. . .get out all your gelt and make ready to do a bit of guessing. For today we have the stellar picks of the upcoming WIL race which gets away from the post Tuesday. . .here they are.
1. Vancouver—They'll overpower the field.
2. Spokane—Best pitching in the league
3. Victoria—Going all out this time.
4. Yakima—Seals could lift them higher.
5. Salem—Senators need a lot of help.
6. Tri-City—Seem to lack power and pitching.
7. Wenatchee—Need a lot of help.
8. Lewiston—Vets too old, rookies too young.

There’ll be those who disagree with that order of finish. . .but then as the faithful few know. . .they aren’t driving those big cars.
VICTORIA MUST WIN THIS TIME
This could be the last year for Victoria. All their chips are in the center of the table. . .they’ve got to have a winner. For another bad year such as they have known will probably put them out of business. It's hard to visualize their situation in any other manner. But it's under those conditions when the team and fans respond the best. Sports Editor Jim Tang is convinced the A’s will hustle. . .something new for the fans. . .and it could make the difference.
SOMEBODY'S OFF BASE HERE
The mystery of Buddy Peterson’s trade to Louisville by the San Diego team becomes more puzzling with each passing day. A friend In Los Angeles has sent us some clippings from San Diego newspapers which haven't helped much either. At the start Peterson was hailed as a new Padre star. . .reams of publicity and plenty of pictures.
However, there is one interesting note. Clay Hopper, manager of Portland, told Lefty O’Doul (says our friend) that Buddy wouldn't be able to stick. Hopper’s reason was supposed, to be that Peterson was too apt to tighten up.
This is interesting because where did Hopper get this information. He never has been on the Coast before and to the best of our knowledge the only time Buddy was anywhere but on the Coast was the tryout at the Cardinal camp two seasons ago. Ergo. . .the Portland sportswriters must have told Hopper because Buddy did play for the Beavers about four years ago. But they were both wrong, because at this writing at least, Buddy is still in AAA baseball.