Phils' Brown slams lid on i-v-, •« •'A 1 **jV*Y ifaj? VVJS .uV.tW4fMWa.iw* Philadelphia second base man Dave Cash (30) "turns two" near the second base bag, forced Rennie Stennett (6), and the hard way —by himself. Cash fielded A / Oliver's grounder threw to first to complete the D.P. in first inning of Saturday's second game. Veteran's Stadium: brawls, blondes, and brotherly love “This is a sport a professional sport and when some donkey throws Something out of the stands that could injure somebody, I’d like to get him into a room for about five minutes by myself and just knock the SHIT out of him.” —Danny Ozark, Phillies manager PHILADELPHIA ( .drunk heaves a bottle.from the center "field stands of Veteran’s Stadium in Philadelphia Saturday at the Pirate’s A 1 Oliver. Oliver narrowly escapes injury. One of the Phillies’ usherettes is choked by a fellow who doesn’t like where he’s sitting. He throws the pretty young girl down onto a concrete ramp, pending her to the hospital. ' Several fights erupt in the box seats along third base during the middle of the second game of the doubleheader this, same night. Thousands of fans arise from their seats to see the blood. The Pirates and Phils burst out from the dugouts and bullpens ready to ’do battle over a heated exchange be tween two players. When is it going to stop? A 1 Oliver knew. As soon as that bottle came so perilously close, he walked off the field, not intending to return. That’s when it stopped for him. The game was of monumental importance. But Oliver valued his life more than a Pirate win. Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB 61 29 .688 52 43 .547 13 50 48 ‘.510 16'A 42 52 .447 2214 39 56 .411 26 ' 30 59 .337 32 Phillies Pirates New York St. Louis Chicago Montreal Cincinnati 60 36 .625 Los Angeles , 54 43 .552 - T Houston ' 50 50 .500 12 San Diego ' 48 50 .489 13 Atlanta 44 52 .458 • 16 San Francisco 42 57 .423 1914 , 'Yesterday’s Games *- Phillies 13, Pirates 7 Montreal 2, New York 1 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3 Houston 1, San Francisco 0 Los Angeles 1, San Diego 0 Cincinnati at Atlanta AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB 60 33 .645 46 45 .505 1214 46 48 .489 14 43 49 .467 16 42 51 .452 18 41 50 .451 1714 New York Cleveland Baltimore ; Detroit Boston Milwaukee Kansas City 58 36 .617 (.Oakland 50 46 .521 9 ' Texas 46 47 .495 1114 Minnesota 46 48 .489 1214 Chicago 43 52 .453 15'* California 41 57 .418 19 . Yesterday’s Games Cleveland 9, Detroit 1, first game Minnesota 13, Chicago 8, first game New York 6, Boston 5 .Milwaukee 3, Baltimore 1 Texas at California Kansas City at Oakland & ' 'i A malicious ~ til i • ,7 • * * ' - , y‘ f&r ' "«| y a"*. i|§§ Incidents of fan violence have been on the increase for some years now. It has even crept onto the playing field; baseball has had an uncommon number of team brawls, this year. ; And its not only in Philadelphia. Pittsburgh, Minnesota, New York the stories are similar. Fans throwing bottles, eggs, anything short of ballistic missiles with the intent of doing physical harm. Sporting events are becoming hazardous to one’s health. A sign of the times, I guess. And the answer is to put the offender in a room and just whail away at him, right Danny? That’ll teach him never to do it again. I think I like Oliver’s solution better. Tim McCarver, who caught Steve Carlton’s exceptional three-hitter Saturday night, was dressing in the locker room slowly afterwards, in no The Phillie's Veteran's Stadium on Saturday night drew 57,723 fans the largest crowd ever to see the Philadelphia dub play the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Pirates met with disaster at the Phil's new home, dropping four out of five. The Phillies lead increased to a rather comfortable 13 games Photos by Julie Cipolla { ■>>;.■•. V>AmV '•' ...... v,;,' ■ U.\‘~; .-r > ‘ - t *. ,v Bob Buday ,v; ; * ti« , ' v? V, « *W|S f * Collegian sprorts hurry to fight the Philadelphia traffic. I crept up beside him by his locker stall and fired my question: “Tim, how would you compare the Phillies to the 1964, 1967, and 1968 Cardinals you were a member of? (All were World Series teams).- “The biggest difference in the ’64 and ’67 and ’6B Cardinals and the Phillies,” he says repeating my words in his Southern twang, “is that there were no hairdryers on the ’64, ’7, and ’8 clubs.” “That’s kinda’ cute isn’t it?” he said during the ensuing laughter. I waited for an answer. “Now all right, okay.” He got serious. “I don’t like to compare ballclubs. I think that the ’67 ballclub was as sound fundamentally as any team I’ve ever been on. “This team is, by far, the most talented. The difference in those two traits are that talent can overcome mistakes. “The 1967 Cardinals made very few mistakes very, very few,” he said. And they made very few against the Bos ton Red Sox in the World Series that year —the year of the champion Cardinals. And he explained 1964. “We were victims of four good ballclubs in the same league and we just happened to be one game better than the Phillies.”. The Veteran’s Stadium Press Box is an experience in royalty. The Phillies treat the press like kings. The two decks in the pressbox were situated to the right of home plate, of fering a perfect view of the action. Behind me was an enclosed press club featuring free food, cokes, and Schmidt’s on tap. The Phillie assistants handed me statistics sheets filled with enough facts to rewrite the Baseball Encyclopedia. Two color TV monitors flanked me from both sides. The instant replays were run constantly. As if this wasn’t enough, the Phillie’s version of the Playboy bunnies the Phillie usherettes strolled down the walk behind me. The lovelies were decked out in Phillie red hot pants and inviting smiles. If this is the Phillies’ idea of trying to make a good impression, then I’m very impressed. And not only with their first-place team. Phillies 13, Pirates 7 PITTSBURGH PHILADELPHIA ab r hbl ab r hbi Taverasss 42 10 DCash2b 5 12 1 Stennett2b 5 12 0 Bowass 5 2 10 AOlivercf 4 0 0 1 Schmidt 3b 5 2 3 4 Stargell lb 5 2 2 1 Luzinskilf 42 2 1 WRobnsn3b 4120 Martinlf 0 10 0 Zisklf 4 111 RAllenlb 2 10 0 DParkerrf 4 0 3 3 Hutton lb 0 10 0 Sanguillnc 4 0 10 OBrownrf 4 2 3 4 Candlriap 2 02 0 GMaddoxcf 3 133 Demeryp 0 0 0 0 Oatesc 4 0 0 0 Helmsph 1 0 0 0 Kaatp 4 0 10 Langfordp 0 0 0 0 Reedp 10 0 0 Kirkptrckph 10 0 0 Giusti p 0 0 0 0 Total Hemandzp 0 0 0 0 38 714 6 Pittsburgh 011000140—7 Philadelphia . 02004016 X—13 DP —Pittsburgh 1, Philadelphia 2. LOB Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 10. 2B 0. Brown, Candelaria, W. Robinson, G. Maddox 2, Taveras, Zisk. HR Stargell (13), Luzinski (14), Schmidt (26), O. Brown (4). SB G. Maddox, Bowa 2, Schmidt. SF G. Maddox, A. Oliver. IP H R ER BB SO 41-3 6 6 6 5 4 12-3 2 0 0 2 1 111110 0 4 5 5 1 0 12 110 0 71-3 11 6 6 0 1 Candelaria Demery Langford Giusti L.O-2 Hernandez Kaat Reed W, 8-3 12-331113 Balk—Langford. T — 2 : 4o. A— 37,692. Battlin' Bucs By DON HOPEY Collegian Sports Writer PHILADELPHIA Ollie Brown’s grand-slam home run capped a six-run, eighth inning for the Philadelphia Phillies yesterday that broke a 7-7 tie with Pittsburgh and gave the Phils thirteen game lead, their largest ever in the NL East. Greg Luzinski, Mike Schmidt and Garry Maddox took turns driving nails into the Pittsburgh coffin with timely hits before Brown lined a 3-2, Dave Giusti fast ball over the left field wall, thus putting the stake through the heart of a Pirate team that wouldn’t quit. Pittsburgh, down 2-1 after two innings, 6-2 after five innings, and 7-3 after seven innings, battled for 4 runs on 6 hits in the top of the eighth inning to tie the score. Prior to the wild eighth inning, the Pirates could grab the lead only once. Stargell broke the scoring ice with a solo home run, his thirteenth of the year, into the right field seats in the top of the second inning. Greg Luzinski retaliated in the bottom of the second with a leadoff home run and the Phils tacked on another run by putting together a walk by Dick Allen, a single by Ollie Brown and Gary Mad dox’s sacrifice fly. The Pirates tied the score at 2-2 in the third. Pitcher John Candelaria led off the inning with a single.He was forced at second by Frank Taveras. Rennie t Stennett singled to right field and after ' Taveras had stopped at third, he sud denly sprinted for home when Maddox hobbled the ball,-just beating the throw with a head-first slide. In the Philadelphia fifth, Jim Kaat led off the inning with a drag-bunt single. Cash walked, and Bowa forced Kaat at third base. Mike Schmidt hit his twenty sixth home run on a no-ball, 1-strike pitch over the left field wall. The Phillies scored all their runs in the first inning off of Pirate pitcher Bruce Kison as Larry Underwood and Ron Reed combined to pitch a seven-hit, 3-0, shutout, Thursday. Jay Johnstone’s two run double keyed the three run Phillie first. In Friday’s game, Philadelphia broke on top and never was headed, putting three runs on the board in the third and five more in the sixth to win going away, 11-1. Cash (1), and Schmidt (25), hit homers for the Phils while Parker (6) provided the Pirate power. 37131513 Philadelphia left-hander Steve Carlton added to the Pirate downfall Saturday night with a 3-hit, 7-1 victory. Carlton received a 25 second standing o vation in the 7th inning. Phi I lie-Pirate series synopsis The Daily Collegian Monday, July 26,1976 5 Candelaria walked Luzinski and Allen and after Brown flied to Parker, Maddox singled to right field, driving in Luzinski. That made the score 6-2. The Pirates added a single run in the seventh, on Bill Robinson’s double and Dave Parker’s RBI single. In the eighth inning, Taveras led off against Kaat with a double down the left field line. Stennett’s single moved Taveras to third, where he scored on A 1 Oliver’s sacrifice fly to left field. Stargell followed with a single, and when Richie Zisk rapped a double off relief pitcher Ron Reed, scoring Sten nett, the Bucs had runners on second and third with two outs. Parker drove a single to center, scoring two runs to tie the score and breathe life into the Pirate corpse. The kicking around in the coffin was short lived, however, as the Phils came to bat in the bottom of the eighth and nailed down their fourth win of the five games series. Bowa singled and stole second, for the fourth Philly theft of the day. Schmidt got his third hit of the day, and his fourth run batted-in, when he lined a Giusti pitch to left field to score the fleet Bowa with the winning run. But the Phils didn’t stop. They weren’t .about to let this one slip away again. Luzinski followed Schmidt with a single and then Giusti walked Tommy Hutton, playing in place of Allen. The scene was set. Ollie Brown ap proached with bat in hand. He watched Gius'ti run the count full, then hit a bpit high fast ball for a grand-slam home run, as 37,692 fans cheered and screamed as though he had just planted the pennant in Philadelphia. Maybe he did. Maybe he planted it in the heart of the team that wouldn’t die. Maybe. The Pirates held on to win the first game of Saturday’s twi-night double header by a score of 8 to 5. The Pirates jumped on top with four runs in the first inning and forced the Phils to play catch-up ball for the rest of the game. The Pirates banged out 12 hits off five Phil hurlers. Dick Allen hit his thirteenth home run of the year. In Saturday’s night-cap, the Phillies chased across 4 runs in the sixth inning on doubles by Johnstone, McCarver, Cash and Bowa and went on to win 7-1. Luzinski hit home run number 13. Richie Zisk provided the Pirates only offense with his thirteenth home run.