PAGE TEN Mazeroski's HR Ruins Yanks By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer PITTSBURGH (// 2 ) Bill Mazeroski's ninth inning home run gave delirious Pittsburgh its first world championship since 1925 with a 10-9 victory over the favored New York Yankees yesterday in.a.heart stopping seventh World Se- rie:; game. Mazeroski leaped into the air d waved his plastic helmet as he rounded second base, and Pi rate fans surged onto the field to greet their hero. Plate Umpire Bill Jackowski extended his arms wide to keep home plate open for the stocky second baseman from Wheeling, W. Va. Hats skidded through the air and pennants waved gaily as men, women and children surged around the two dugouts to celebrate this triumph after 35 years of bitter frustration. It was the third Pirate chain- : pionship in five World Series and, the third defeat for Manager Ca-! sey Stengel in his 10 Ser:cs and! probably his last year as manager, of the New York Yankees. The Pirates had come back with a big eighth inning to go ahead 9-7 with five runs, eli-! coaxed by catcher Hal Smith's 3-i run homer. Until then, the Yan kees were riding high with a 7-4 i edge. New York tied it 9-9 in, their half of the ninth, but that merely set the stage for Mazer oski's heroics. Happy faces among the crowd of 36.683 glowed when Pittsburgh knocked out Bob Turley and scored two in the first and two more in the second for an early 4-0 lead. The Yanks routed Vern Law and continued to blast Elroy Face, the scrawny relief ace. with a three-run homer by Yogi Berra in a four•run sixth inning after Bill Skowron had hit a homer in .the fifth. xx-Law 5 4 _ 3 IS s-Friend 0 2 Haddix 1 1 x-Turley 1 2 Stafford 1 2 Y-Shantz ..5 4 Coates __ 2-3 2 az-Terry 1 x—Faced 1 hatter in second. xx---Fared 2 hatters in sixth. y---Faced 3 hatters in eighth. .z---Faced 2 hatters in ninth. By 808 SEGAL Sparran then kicked the extra!zz.---F.,, , ,i I batter in ninth. 11--Lace I, Kubek, Face 1 Berra. Tur- Alpha Chi Sigma, sparked point. 145 , 1 Skinner, Stafford 1 Hoak, Shantz 1 by the suberb passing ofl AEPi immediately bounced U---3 eknweki INr pirate, Chylak tA) first base, lioireess IN) second } Am , flack with a spectacular 6: 1 -yardsh,,,,,, ifkr tird hale, Landes (NI let; Garry Bergholtz, i:rushe dlpass play with Ken Myerson hit fiefs, lionurhiA lAI right field. T-2:30. Alpha .Chi Rho, 20-0, in theki"g Jules Garfunkel for the TD.• - I\lyeron kicked the tying point top IM football game last Pi Sigma. Upsilon dropped Leading 5-4, the Yanks pushed Bergh°his Passes Spark Alpha Chi Sig to 20-0 Win its game to Beta Theta Pi, 1-0. I. In independent action, Walnut Alpha Chi Sig's first tally came.beat Cottonwood. 8-6. Walnut on a 10-yard pass from Berrboltz'seored first on a safety. to Aldo Casseri. George Maver , • • Cottonwood retaliated with a booted the first of his two extra' 35 pass play from Art. Ma point and Alpha Chi Sig had a ri :, : acion to Alan Pratt. Makaden's lead thee never relinquished. extra point attempt failed. BeiTholtz hit Buzzy Moran. Walnut then came from behind from five yards out a few min- , when Dick Dugan intercepted a tiles later and Moran drove over gtwl f the second score. Cottonwood, pass and ran it 50 or Beraholiz put the finishing ,yards only to be stopped on the, touch on the game in the last one-yard line. quarter by completing an 8- Dick Foote made the score 8-6; yard TD pass to Jim Schlegel. by plunging for the TD. The extra Acacia and Alpha Epsilon Pi point attempt failed. feught to a 7-7 tie. but Acacia The remaining independent; came out on top in first downs.lgames were won In first downs.l 1-0. iNittany 26 beat Watts Hall: Cam-li Acacia scored first on a 35-yard bria topped Montgomery: Cen-11 pass and run play from Jchn tre beat Schuylkill: Luzerne be t Black to John McSparran. Mc- Lehigh: and Cedar edged Larch. Wanted ! ~... , 4 A A cheer from you ~ , - N . ti -SS-'s for PSU Prizes • 0 1 ``-6 tickets to Pitt game to 2n d -4 tickets to Pitt game 0 3r d -2 tickets to Pitt game Applications available at HUB desk * * * RALPH TERRY . . . Takes Loss * * * over two more runs and the Pi rates came up for the eighth trailing 7-4. Then came the fantastic acci dent that opened the gates to the surging five-run Pirate inning. Gino Cimoli opened the attack on Bobby Shantz, who had been pitching superb relief ball, when he dropped a pinch single into right. Bill Virdon's hard grounder 'took a crazy hop and hit short stop Tony Kubek on the larynx. Down went Kubek as though he had been felled by a shot.. He was taken to a hospital for examina ition while the Buc rally caught Dick Groat's single knocked in one run and brought Jim Coates as a replacement for Shantz. A sacrifice, an outfield fly and Roberto Clemente's sin gle on a ball hit to Bill Skow ron but on which Coates ap peared slow covering first, nar rowed the Yank lead• to 7-6. ! Up came Smith, who endeared himself to Pirate fans forever by THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA hitting Coats' 2-2 pitch over the; left field wall, a drive of over 400! feet for`three runs. The Yanks started to maul Bob! Friend, the third Pirate pitcher,! in the top of the ninth. Singles by Bobby Richardson! and pinch hitter Dale Long ended Friend. Manager Danny Mur-, taugh brought in Harvey Haddixi to face an array of left-handers. Haddix made the dangerous! Roger Maris foul out but Mickey Mantle singled to right center,' scoring Richardson. The Yanks tied the score with Gil McDougald. running for Long, scoring from third, when ' Rocky Nelson took Yogi Ber ra's smash, stepped on first for the out and then missed Mantle sliding back. The scrappy Pirates, who, had been no match for the Yankees in ,home runs and power in those wild scoring orgies of the -second, third and sixth games, beat the. iNew Yorkers at their own game yesterday 'with three big home, :runs. They had hit only one in , the first six games. !Skowron's blast in the fifth was the Yank's' ninth of the Series. NEW YORE (A) PITTSBURGH (? Ab 11 11 Ab R Itith'ilsort,2b 5 2 2 Virdon,cf 4 1 . I Kubek.Fs 3' 1 0 Croat. 4 1 incmate.stri,Es 0 0 0 Skinnera 2 1 0 Id -I mig 1 0 1 Nvison,lb • 2 1 I e-1 1 .1c1Vg . d,211 0 1 0 Clenwnie,rs 4 1 1 ihtstris,rf 5 0 0 Iturgefok,c 3 0 2 iMantle.cf 5 1 3 b•christvoher 0 0 0 I'' Berra,lf 4 2 1 Sntitb.c 1 1 1 ; Skowron,lb 5 2 2 Evuk.3l.) 3 1 0 111nnchard.c 4 0 1 54.10.4er0gki,2b 4 2 2 Boyer:Aims 4 0 1 Law,p 2 0 0 ITurley.p 0 0 0 Facc,p Q 0 0 Statfortl,p 0 0 0 c-Cinroli 1 1 1 ;a-Lopez 1 0 1 Frientl.r 0 0 0 Shantz,p 8 0 1 liaJdix,p . 0 • 0 ;Cloatc.o 0 0 0 'Tel ty,p 0 . 0 0 Totals 40 9 13 Totals ,a--SinglM for Stafford in Zri. b—Ran for Burgoss in 7th. e—Singled for Face in Ath. !fl—Sinirlud for Dentarstri in Ath , le--Ran for Long in 9th. ;New York lAI .000 014 022 9 Pittsburgh (N.l 220 000 091-10 ! DP—Stafford, Blanchard and iSkowron: Richardson, Kubck and Skowron iKubeck, Richardson and Skowron. None out when winning run scored. LOS—New inill (At 0. Pittkburgh INI 1. f 211—Boyer. ER—Nelson, Skowron, Berra. !Smith, Matertski. S--Skinner. IP BULLETIN 114/ismer Says Stengel Has Resigned Post NEW YORK (fP) Harry Wis mer said in his sports broadcast last night that Casey Stengel al ready has resigned as manager of the New York Yankees and that Mayo Smith, former 'man ager at Cincinnati and Philadel phia in the National League, would take over next season. Smith now is connected with the Yankee front office. • GALA OPENING • KYLE'S SUNOCO SERVICE N. Atherton St. and Clinton Ave. State College OCTOBER 14 -15 FRIDAY and SATURDAY FREE: 10lb. Potatoes with 3.00 purchase 5 Turkeys Awarded at Drawing -- October 15 - 9:30 p.m. Also 25 A-Z Lubrications . Free Lollipops and Balloons KYLE'S- SUNOCO SERVICE State College's most modern service center MaZ Says He Hit Fast Ball PITTSBURGH (WP) Cham-Ileft-hander who picked up he pagne bottles popped a merry i victory in relief, Galbreath said: tune in the Pittsburgh Pirates:i"This boy and I grew up in the dressing room yesterday after:same county Madison County, their come from behind 10-9 vie- Ohio. He was great, simply to•y over the New York Yankees:great." in the final game of the World'. Rocky Nelson, the balding first Series. _ , :sacker, said _he hit a high and The players huggand ed, they' theY; away fast foran the kissed, they , first inning off Bob Turley to put drank champagne. The center of!the Pirates ahead 2-0. attention was young Billy Mazer- i Billy Virden, the fleet footed oski whose home run blast won' Icenter-fielder who made several the ball game. "I hit a fast ball," chortled the; beamed catches . in the Series, with pride as he accepted Bucs second sacker. "It was the congratulations. second pitch and I knew it was going all the way as soon as its. "It's hard to believe it's true," left my bat." ;he said. "It certainly was a hel- It took newsmen almost 15 min- Iluva ball game. I've never seen utes to get into the jubilant Pi-; anything more exciting or dra rates' dressing room. !medic." ' John Galbreath, the Pirates' 1 Dick Groat, the Pirates' team owner, was the first to work his'captain, summed it up this way: way through the vast throng of,"This to me was a typical Pi writers to congratulate his tearn.'rates' ball game. We came from "They did a helluva job," he behind all year and again today. said. :Yes sir, a typical, typical Pirates' Turning to Harvey Haddix. the game." HEAVY SHAKER 12211 Here's the very popular heavy shaker R ER 8 8 4 4 2 2 0 0 8 3 1 1 8 8 2 2 1 1 sweater of pure 100 per cent virgin wool. Hand-fashioned, sturdy, good-looking and warm. In white, black, dark green, maroon and navy. Sizes 36 to , 46 SWEATERS agt 9 1 y MEN'S STORE STATE COLLEGE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1960 10.95
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