|
1967 FOUNDER'S CUP
Froggy
Claps His Hands
Detroit Wins First
Cup
MANHATTAN (July 10) -- The Detroit
Griffins won their first UL hardware today, defeating the Los Angeles Outlaws
7-1 to capture the sixth Founder's Cup and the inaugural $3 million in prize
money. Bill "Froggy" Hands was the man of the hour, pitching a five-hit
complete game and contributing a two-run homer off Fritz Peterson. The two
pitchers were both first-round picks in the 1966 draft, Peterson going sixth,
and Hands going eighth overall, and coming into the Founder's Cup, Peterson was
the better pitcher this year (8-4, 2.84 vs Froggy's 5-8, 4.05). But Hands
was one of the top pitchers of the tournament, beating Atlanta 2-1 with a
six-hit CG, and going the distance again in the final.
Detroit took the lead in the first with RBI singles by
sluggers Dick Allen and Frank Howard, who combined for 119 home runs over the
last two seasons. Center fielder Cesar Tovar hit a two-out, two-run single
to double the lead in the third, and his two-out triple in the sixth set up
Hands' homer, which made it 6-0. Hands took a three-hitter into the bottom
of the sixth, when he surrender a 444-foot Bill White launch. Ironically,
it was White's last game as an Outlaw; he was traded to St. Louis during the
tournament and joined the Maroons on June 11. Lee Walls singled home Eddie
Bressoud off Dean Stone in the ninth inning for the seventh run. Walls had
four hits in the game, including two doubles, but the game MVP could only be
Froggy.
Detroit was 3-1 in the group stage, losing only to
Boston in their second game. Bob Gibson and Hands pitched 2-1 wins, and
Tex Clevenger held back a San Francisco rally for a 7-6. Eddie Bressoud
(9-20, 3 RBI) was a key man at the plate, as was Denis Menke, who hit two home
runs, including the game-winner against Atlanta.
The Griffins are 42-47 as of July 15, in fourth place,
eight games behind Cleveland in the East Division, and appear unlikely to
challenge for the pennant. But their Founder's Cup triumph, and the
emergence of their new ace, gives them hope for the future.
|
FOUNDER'S CUP: SEMIFINALS |
|
Johnny Socks Sox
Los Angeles 3, Manhattan 0
MANHATTAN
(July 10) -- Johnny Antonelli
notched his third shutout of the
year, and 50th of his career,
blanking the hosting Manhattan
Gray Sox 3-0 to advance the Los
Angeles Outlaws to their first
Founder's Cup final. The
37-year-old southpaw was
stellar, striking out 12 and
walking just two en route to his
10th win. Frank Robinson's
two-run blast off Bob Anderson
in the first was all Johnny
needed to win with.
Anderson settled down and kept
the Sox close through five
innings, but lost control in the
sixth, giving up two walks, a
single, and an error to let in a
third run. Hank Aaron had
three hits and scored twice.
Anderson has just one win and
three losses in his last eight
starts. Sophomore Fritz
Peterson (8-4, 2.99), 25, is on
tap to pitch the final against
either Cleveland or Detroit.
|
Griffs Rally Past Cleveland
Detroit 4, Cleveland 3 (10)
MANHATTAN (July 10) -- The Detroit
Griffins spoiled the script by
coming back from 3-1 behind to upset the
East-leading Barons and win a
place in the sixth Founder's Cup
final. Cleveland struck
first on RBI singles by Johnny
Roseboro and Curt Flood in the
second. Detroit's Eddie Bressoud halved the lead with a
third inning sac fly, but
Roseboro scored on a Jim Busby
groundout two innings later.
On most days, a two-run lead in the fifth with Earl
Francis on the mound is a recipe
for an
automatic win for the Barons. Francis came into the game as
one of the league's hottest
pitchers, with a 11-2 record,
2.19 ERA, and a four-game win
streak. But past
performance counted for nothing
on this day, as
Francis encountered control
problems in the bottom of the
fifth, allowing a hit and three
walks to bring home Cesar Tovar.
Francis faced the minimum in the
sixth and seventh, but Jim
Cunningham's leadoff homer tied
the game in the bottom of the
eighth.
With the game tied 3-3 in the top of the tenth, Detroit's rookie reliever Dave Giusti, inducing a
critical double-play ball with
two on and no outs after issuing two walks.
But while Tom Acker retired the Griffins
in order in the ninth, in the
tenth Bressoud and Jimmy Piersall hit
back-to-back doubles to put the
finishing touches on the Detroit rally.
Detroit (4-1) will be underdogs again in the final against the
undefeated Outlaws. Bill "Froggy"
Hands (6-8, 3.83) will face
Fritz Peterson (8-4, 3.19).
|
|
|
FOUNDER'S CUP: GROUP STAGE |
| |
GROUP A |
GROUP B |
|
July
1 |
Boston 5, San Francisco 4
Bill Freehan's three-run homer
gave the Feds a 4-0 lead, and
Mike Cuellar held on for the
win, allowing eight hits and
striking out six. Ray
Narleski notched his 11th save,
and Ron Kline homered but took
the loss for the Spiders.
Detroit 2, Manhattan 1
Bob Gibson spoiled the hosts'
party with a six-hit complete
game, earning just his second
win in 12 starts in a pitchers'
duel with Bob Anderson.
Johnny Edwards doubled to lead
off the fifth, and scored on
GIbson's RBI groundout, and
Eddie Bressoud added an RBI
single in the sixth.
Atlanta idle
|
Group A |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Boston |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
|
Detroit |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
|
Atlanta |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
Manhattan |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
|
San Francisco |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Los Angeles 6, St. Louis 4
Frank Robinson hit a 3-run homer
off Don Sutton in the first
inning and Jimmie Hall was
4-for-4 with a home run as the
Outlaws coasted. Tony
Perez had half of the Maroons
eight hits and drove in three
runs.
Dallas 6, Washington 5
Reliever Casey Cox helped
himself win after hitting a
leadoff double in the seventh
that led to the go-ahead run.
Washington outlhit the Texans
12-6 and blew a 4-0 lead in the
fourth, when Bobby Del Greco hit
a two-run double. Bob
Trowbridge, 37, earned his first
save of the year.
Cleveland idle
|
Group
B |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Los Angeles |
1 |
0 |
+2 |
|
Dallas |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
|
Cleveland |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
Washington |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
|
St. Louis |
0 |
1 |
-2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
July
2 |
Boston 8, Detroit 3
Jimmy Wynn homered twice and
Herb Score fanned 10 Griffins as
the Feds rolled to the top of
the group. Denis Menke and
Frank Howard homered for
Detroit, but Boston led 5-0
after two, chasing Pedro Ramos
after five innings.
Atlanta 3, San Francisco 2
Steve Carlton went the distance
with a six-hit gem for his 10th
win, and Harmon Killebrew drove
in all three runs, including a
fifth inning home run off Fergie
Jenkins, as the Spiders suffered
their second one-run loss.
Manhattan idle
|
Group A |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Boston |
2 |
0 |
+6 |
|
Atlanta |
1 |
0 |
+1 |
|
Detroit |
1 |
1 |
-4 |
|
Manhattan |
0 |
1 |
-1 |
|
San Francisco |
0 |
2 |
-2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cleveland 3, Dallas 0
Earl Francis anchored a two-hit
shutout, with Jackie Collum
closing down the ninth, as
top-seeded Cleveland rolled to a
3-0 win. The Barons broke
a 0-0 tie in the seventh,
scoring twice on a single,
error, wild pitch, and sac fly,
and added a spare rib in the
eighth on Gene Freese's second
hit of the game.
Los Angeles 13, Washington 2
The Bandits ripped Rick Wise and
Bill Monbouquette for 15 hits,
including five doubles and two
homers en route to a 13-2
blowout. Frank Robinson
was 3-for-4 with 4 RBIs and five
other Outlaws had two hits.
St. Louis idle
|
Group
B |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Los Angeles |
2 |
0 |
+13 |
|
Cleveland |
1 |
0 |
+3 |
|
Dallas |
1 |
1 |
-2 |
|
St. Louis |
0 |
1 |
-2 |
|
Washington |
0 |
2 |
-12 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
July
3 |
Manhattan 8, San Franciso 6
Rico Carty's 3-run homer off
Bill Fischer erased a one-run
Spider lead in the eighth inning
and Dick Radatz pitched two
shutout innings for his third
win. Willie Stargell was
3-3 with a homer and 3 RBI.
Atlanta 8,
Boston 3
Eddie Kasko and Harmon Killebrew
each hit two-run homers and Pete
Richert and Hal Woodeshick
allowed five runs in the last
two innings as the Toppers
overtook first place in the
group. Steve Bilko had
three hits, including a double.
Detroit idle
|
Group A |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Atlanta |
2 |
0 |
+6 |
|
Boston |
2 |
1 |
+1 |
|
Manhattan |
1 |
1 |
+1 |
|
Detroit |
1 |
1 |
-4 |
|
San Francisco |
0 |
3 |
-4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
St. Louis
6, Dallas 5
Bob Aspromonte doubled home two
runs in the bottom of the ninth,
the third lead change in the
last 1 1/2 innings, after Dallas
blew a 3-0 lead. Jim
Fregosi was 3-5, as was Curt
Blefary, who also homered.
Cleveland 6, Washington 3
Russ Nixon's RBI single broke a
3-3 tie in the seventh, and the
Barons pulled away with two runs
in the ninth, including a Johnny
Roseboro homer. Davey
Williams' 2-run homer tied the
game in the sixth, before Billy
O'Dell and Terry Fox put the
clamp down.
Los Angeles idle
|
Group
B |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Los Angeles |
2 |
0 |
+13 |
|
Cleveland |
2 |
0 |
+6 |
|
St. Louis |
1 |
1 |
-1 |
|
Dallas |
1 |
2 |
-3 |
|
Washington |
0 |
3 |
-15 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
July
4 |
Manhattan 5, Boston 4
Pete Ward's three-run homer in
the sixth gave the Sox a 3-2
lead, and RBIs by Willie
Stargell and Felipe Alou kept
the Feds at bay. Don
Larsen earned his 10th win,
allowing two runs in 7.2
innings.
Detroit 2, Atlanta
1
Denis Menke's two-run homer in
the sixth provided all the runs
Froggy Hands needed, as he
pitched a six-hit complete game.
Bob Veale took the hard-luck
loss to fall to 6-9.
San Francisco idle
|
Group A |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
Atlanta |
2 |
1 |
+5 |
|
Manhattan |
2 |
1 |
+2 |
|
Detroit |
2 |
1 |
-3 |
|
Boston |
2 |
2 |
0 |
|
San Francisco |
0 |
3 |
-4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
St. Louis
5, Washington 3
Jim Fregosi tripled and scored
twice, and Bob Sadowski held the
Mons to four hits and one run in
seven innings. Bob Locker
saved his 10th after Frank Linzy
nearly let the game slip away in
the ninth.
Los Angeles 7, Cleveland 6
Tom Acker walked Ken McMullen
with the bases loaded and the
game tied 6-6 in the ninth.
Hank Aaron was 4-5 with a homer
and Harvey Kuenn and pitcher
Fritz Peterson had three hits.
L.A. qualifies for the final
four.
Dallas idle
|
Group
B |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
*Los Angeles |
3 |
0 |
+14 |
|
Cleveland |
2 |
1 |
+5 |
|
St. Louis |
2 |
1 |
+1 |
|
Dallas |
1 |
2 |
-3 |
|
Washington |
0 |
4 |
-17 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
July
5 |
Manhattan 7, Atlanta 3
Joe Torre was 4-for-5 and Willie
Stargell homered as the Gray Sox
chased Stan Williams after just
3.1 innings. Five Sox had
at least two hits in a 14-hit
barrage that clinched a spot in
the semifinals for the hosts.
Detroit 7,
San Francisco 6
Detroit held on after the
Spiders nearly rallied from four
runs down in the ninth with a
two-run triple by Lou Brock and
a sac fly by Pete Rose.
Joey Jay got the win and the
Griffins won the group by virtue
of their win over Manhattan in
game one.
Boston idle
|
Group A |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
*Detroit |
3 |
1 |
-2 |
|
*Manhattan |
3 |
1 |
+6 |
|
Atlanta |
2 |
2 |
+1 |
|
Boston |
2 |
2 |
0 |
|
San Francisco |
0 |
4 |
-5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cleveland 2, St. Louis
1
Johnny Podres' three-hitter beat
Don Sutton's five hitter, as the
Barons held on to qualify for
the semifinals. Johnny
Roseboro had two hits and Podres
doubled home Matty Alou for the
winning run in the fifth.
Los Angeles 4, Dallas 0
Larry Dierker shut out the
Texans on three hits and Earl
Averill was 3-5 with a first
inning two-run homer off Gaylord
Perry, as the Outlaws completed
a four-game romp through Group
B. They face the hosts
Manhattan in the semifinals.
Washington idle
|
Group
B |
W |
L |
R-RA |
|
*Los Angeles |
4 |
0 |
+18 |
|
*Cleveland |
3 |
1 |
+6 |
|
St. Louis |
2 |
2 |
0 |
|
Dallas |
1 |
3 |
-7 |
|
Washington |
0 |
4 |
-17 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
W E S T
D I V I S I O N |
E A S T
D I V I S I O N |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
L E A D E R B O
A R D S |
|
BATTING
AVERAGE |
HOME RUNS |
RBI |
VORP |
RUNS
/ GAME |
|
Dick Howser, WAS |
.382 |
|
Mike de la Hoz, WAS |
.344 |
|
*Joe Adcock, CHI |
.331 |
|
Rico Carty, MAN |
.328 |
|
Ron Hunt, ATL |
.325 |
|
Roger Maris, STL |
.325 |
|
Rod Carew, DAL |
.323 |
|
Jim Fregosi, STL |
.322 |
|
Rocky Bridges, CHI |
.318 |
|
Joe Torre, MAN |
.317 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Frank Robinson, LA |
26 |
|
Orlando Cepeda, BOS |
22 |
|
Harm Killebrew, ATL |
20 |
|
Mickey Mantle, BRO |
20 |
|
Roger Maris, STL |
20 |
|
Joe Adcock, CHI |
19 |
|
Willie McCovey, SF |
19 |
|
Frank Howard, DET |
18 |
|
Don Pavletich, ATL |
18 |
|
Don Demeter, CHI |
17 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mickey Mantle, BRO |
79 |
|
Joe Adcock, CHI |
78 |
|
Orlando Cepeda, BOS |
77 |
|
Dick Stuart, WAS |
75 |
|
Harm Killebrew, ATL |
72 |
|
Frank Robinson, LA |
68 |
|
Ron Santo, WAS |
67 |
|
Frank Howard, DET |
63 |
|
Rico Carty, MAN |
60 |
|
Jim Gentile, BRO |
59 |
|
*Roger Maris, STL |
59 |
|
|
|
|
|
Dick Howser, WAS |
56.6 |
|
Frank Robinson, LA |
45.7 |
|
Joe Adcock, CHI |
43.5 |
|
Roger Maris, STL |
42.5 |
|
Mickey Mantle, BRO |
41.6 |
|
Ron Santo, WAS |
36.8 |
|
Don Demeter, CHI |
34.6 |
|
Dick McAuliffe, BRO |
34.2 |
|
Mike de la Hoz, WAS |
31.0 |
|
Ron Hunt, ATL |
29.4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
WASHINGTON |
5.2 |
 |
LOS ANGELES |
5.2 |
 |
ATLANTA |
5.2 |
 |
BROOKLYN |
5.0 |
 |
CHICAGO |
5.0 |
|
|
BOSTON |
4.6 |
 |
ST. LOUIS |
4.4 |
 |
MANHATTAN |
4.4 |
 |
SAN FRANCISCO |
4.4 |
 |
DETROIT |
4.2 |
|
|
CLEVELAND |
4.1 |
|
|
DALLAS |
3.6 |
|
|
EARNED
RUN AVERAGE |
WINS |
STRIKEOUTS |
VORP |
RUNS
ALLOWED / GAME |
|
Johnny Podres, CLE |
1.45 |
|
Johnny Antonelli,
LA |
2.31 |
|
Rich Nye, DAL |
2.43 |
|
Earl Francis, CLE |
2.63 |
|
Joey Jay, DET |
2.83 |
|
*Don Larsen, MAN |
3.02 |
|
Gene Conley, BRO |
3.10 |
|
Fergie Jenkins, SF |
3.16 |
|
*Steve Carlton, ATL |
3.18 |
|
Fritz Peterson, LA |
3.19 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bill Singer, CHI |
14 |
|
Johnny Kucks, BRO |
12 |
|
*Johnny Antonelli,
LA |
11 |
|
Steve Carlton, ATL |
11 |
|
Earl Francis, CLE |
11 |
|
Don Larsen, MAN |
11 |
|
Jim Palmer, ATL |
11 |
|
6 tied
with |
10 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Johnny Antonelli, LA |
148 |
|
Whitey Ford, BRO |
148 |
|
Bill Singer, CHI |
144 |
|
Johnny Podres, CLE |
141 |
|
Herb Score, BOS |
135 |
|
Johnny Kucks, BRO |
133 |
|
Gene Conley, BRO |
129 |
|
Bob Friend, CLE |
128 |
|
Pedro Ramos, DET |
126 |
|
Fergie Jenkins, SF |
121 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Johnny Podres, CLE |
61.4 |
|
Johnny Antonelli,
LA |
42.5 |
|
Earl Francis, CLE |
39.6 |
|
Steve Carlton, ATL |
37.9 |
|
Joey Jay, DET |
35.0 |
|
Fergie Jenkins, SF |
34.9 |
|
*Don Larsen, STL |
30.4 |
|
Ken Holtzman, DAL |
30.4 |
|
Pedro Ramos, DET |
28.7 |
|
*Rich Nye, DAL |
28.5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CLEVELAND |
3.8 |
|
LOS ANGELES |
4.1 |
 |
BROOKLYN |
4.1 |
 |
CHICAGO |
4.2 |
 |
ATLANTA |
4.5 |
 |
ST. LOUIS |
4.6 |
 |
SAN FRANCISCO |
4.7 |
 |
DETROIT |
4.7 |
 |
MANHATTAN |
5.0 |
|
BOSTON |
5.0 |
 |
DALLAS |
5.0 |
|
|
WASHINGTON |
5.4 |
|
|
A W A R
D S & M I L E S T O N E S |
|
Batter of the Month |
Pitcher of the Month |
Rookie
of the Month |
Milestones |
|
APR
|
Harmon
Killebrew, ATL |
|
MAY
|
Ron Hunt, ATL |
|
JUN
|
Joe Torre, MAN |
|
JUL
|
|
|
AUG
|
|
|
SEP |
|
|
|
APR
|
Johnny Podres,
CLE |
|
MAY
|
Gene Conley, BRO |
|
JUN
|
Jim McGlothlin,
LA |
|
JUL
|
|
|
AUG
|
|
|
SEP |
|
|
|
APR
|
Rod Carew, DAL |
|
MAY
|
Rod Carew, DAL |
|
JUN
|
Jim McGlothlin,
LA |
|
JUL
|
|
|
AUG
|
|
|
SEP |
|
|
|
Mickey Mantle, BRO
2,500
hits (July 13), #1 all time
Johnny Antonelli, LA
50 shutouts (July 8), #1 all-time
Herb
Score, BOS
3,000 strikeouts (July 12), #5 all-time
|
|
|
Player of the Week |
|
4/10
|
Don Demeter, CHI |
|
4/17
|
Orlando Cepeda,
BOS |
|
4/24
|
Jim Fregosi, STL |
|
5/1
|
Rod Carew, DAL |
|
5/8
|
Lou Clinton, ATL |
|
5/15 |
Ron Santo, WAS |
|
5/22 |
Rod Carew, DAL |
|
5/29 |
Ron Hunt, ATL |
|
6/5 |
Frank Robinson,
LA |
|
|
6/12
|
Lee Walls, DET |
|
6/19
|
Frank Robinson,
LA (2) |
|
6/26
|
Joe Torre,
MAN |
|
7/3
|
Jimmie Hall, MAN |
|
7/10
|
Mickey Mantle,
BRO |
|
7/17
|
|
|
7/24 |
|
|
7/31 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
8/7 |
|
|
8/14
|
|
|
8/21
|
|
|
8/28
|
|
|
9/5 |
|
|
9/12 |
|
|
9/19 |
|
|
9/26 |
|
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