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6A —THB GABOUNA TIMES SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1971 Question Puzzles Team, Foes ORIOLES TO MISS VET. ROBINSON MIAMI > There ia no tu. Baltimore Orioles will miss Frank Robinson. The fnssttoa ia how much? The question tickles Robin son's ego when he 's asked "I hope I will be missed." •ays Robinson. "Something like that has to make you fed good. But there's no reason they shouldn't win it again this year without me " The question brings a smile to Ralph Houk's face when he's "I think they're really going to miss Frank," says the man ager of the New York Yankees. "He was the man in the eighth and ninth inning who was the tough out. I think we could haw a real good race this year." The question brings puzzling answers from the Orioles when they're asked. "J don't think it's going to be that big a minus." says Gener al Manager Frank Cashen "I'll say this—we'd miss eas ier with Frank here than with out him," says Manager Earl Weaver. "I don't think it's going to hurt the club that much," says shortstop Mark Belanger. "We have to wait to find out—maybe now we don't need a guy to jump out and lead u#," says catcher Andy Etche barren. "I don't think we're going to miss him very much," says pitcher Pat Dobson. "I think we'll miss him—you always felt be was going to do it. and majority of the time he did it." says pitcher Dave McNall.v And, when you add it all up, it adds up to a mixture of feel ings—confidence, on one hand, that those who remain can achieve without Robinson what they did with Robinson, and. on the other hand, a lingering doubt that is a product of their reliance on him the last six years. That is the state the Orioles appear to be in as they prepare for the start of the 1972 season, minus Robinson, his bat and his leadership. The bat produced a .281 aver age with 28 homers and 96 runs batted in last season bekre it was traded to the Los Angeles North Carolina Central Eagles hep First Baseball Team ... . - . « . i i ii n a iir:l Faced with the task of building a baseball team at North Carolina Central Univer sith which traditionally has not participated in the sport has posed problems for Coach Paul Swann. Dispite the absence of scholarships and student body enthusiasm there have been some pleasant surprises. An initial turnout of between 55- 60 players for tryouts is one reason that the upcoming sea son is looked upon with opti mism. After practicing about a month, the squad has been trimmed to 25 potential players. At this time no cuts have been made with the pre sent squad simply outlasting others who voluntarily drop ped because of talent superior to theirs. Of the present hope fuls about 22 will be selected for a 18 man traveling squad. With the spirit and determine- Simpson who also doubled I*^ 9fP "jf P fl i| .' |ff JHgk ■r iriSH ti^^BP u m " John Ural Cfcveton Arthur . . . two All-East sharpshooters Dodgers lor pitcners uoyle Al exander and Bob O'Brien, catch er Sergio Rob lei and out fielder Boyle Stillman. . |3p P^pjppr FRANK ROBINSON There is no way to measure the leadership—and it appears that is the question-mark dan gling above the Orioles' heads. There is little question that the three remaining holdover outfielders—Paul Blair, Don Buford and Merv Rettenmund Plus the new Robinson, rookie Don Baylor, can pick up the slack. "If you're talking about tal ent." Weaver points out, "we have no one player who's going to replace Frank by himself. The others have to be them selves. But if Buford is Butora. Rettenmund is Rettenmund and Blair is Blair, we made a hell of a trade. "It allows us to bring Baylor along like we brought Retten mund along. Our organization feels Baylor is another Frank Robinson—a guy who in five years will be what Frank was." That appraisal is built on Baylor's minor league career, which reached a peak last sea son when he hit .313 with 20 homer* and M runs batted in at Rochester In the International League. To have retained Rob inson would have left no room for him to break In. But Weaver also acknowledg es what he gave up, pointing tion of those left before a final cut, it will be bard to decide who will be left out. At this stage of the season practice sessions are becoming more intensified with emphasis on offensive aspects of the game. Working without any assistants has made it extreme ly difficult for the Central Coach to drill all the funda mentals he's like to. This week scrimmages will concentrate on establishing a defensive game. Several preseason practice games are tentatively scheduled with Shaw University during the first week of March. Con ference opponent Delaware State which has usually fielded fine teams will furnish the op position in the March 17th opener. Personnel for most positions have been secured although none guaranteed. Leading the string of pitchers is Daryl as a quarterback during foot out it wa£ calculated. "Frank can still play 150 games for the next two years and play 'em well," Weaver said, "lie's not old. But we'd be wasting talent on the bench. No one is going to say we made a good trade no matter what. But if we don't get in—that's it, they'll say 'bad trade.' "But it was calculated. Our job is to wind up on top and we feel we're still going to win. But this trade keeps us oper ating until 1980 Football trades draft choices and we think we got ourselves four first and sec ond round draft choices for Frank." What about Robinson's lead ership qualities? "You ain't going to replace that," Weaver said without hes itation. The hope is that the qualities Robinson brought to the Orioles have' been transmitted to all who are left. "Those qualities he's instilled in us," said Dobson, "We're not going to forget in one year." "I would think that after Frank has taught us so much about playing the game of baseball maybe now we don't need a guy to jump out and lead us," Etchebarren said. "We're older now than when Robinson came. We know how to (May baseball much better. "I know now to play better than when Frank got here be cause of his attitude, his teach ing skills, how he showed us how to play the game hard. He taught us even if you don't get a hit maybe you can help win a game another way—break up the double play, take the extra base. With him, there was al ways another way to get a run across. "He showed us if you had nine guys playing like that you can win—that it doesn't matter if you don't hit one night; there are other things you can do to score a run, and it might be the winning run." Now, however, Robinson is gone—and In his place is that little question-mark. "I don't think we have any one who can stand out person ality-wise to take charge like he did," Etchebarren said. "And that's what we have to wait to find out—what affect it will have on us." ball season. Fred White, Wil liam Witherspoon, and Ron McClaln are the other right handers vying for positions be hind Simpson. Southpaws Charles Ellis and Donald Cradle may find relief on the pitchers mound if Mahion Williams can play while participating in spring football practice. Having its first team has presented problems for Central but Coach Swann says he will have everyone next year in terms of eligibility. Catcher Alien Edwards is the only non freshman on the squad. In the hitting department Louis Ro senboro has stood out as hav ing the most potential along with Alexander Jonea. But the Eagle mentor cautioned that the pitchers haven't had a chance to bear down yet. Their throwing arms are becoming stronger everyday in getting TODAY'S PEOPLE HAVE SEEN THE LIGHT 489 i HH ||P|p \ I —H If you can find a lighter bourbon, buy it ANCIENT AGE SUtM )SJOS 4/5 OMrt SIMS KM. STUIBHT KUTUCKY WUMM WHISKEY - 88 PtOOF ■ OWdOT ICE MSTIUIM CO.. FMMfOIT, ICY. w^VM >.- j ; fti»3i£Sj££^ ROOKIE OF THE YEAR John Brockington of the Green Bay Packers picks up a new Dodge Charger as a result of his being awarded the Ntional Football League Conference "rookie" title in a poll. R. D. Loomis, Los Angeles Regional Sales Manger, makes the presentation to the former Ohio State running back from Brooklyn, N. Y. Coach Melvin Groomes Aggieland Baseball Legead GREENSBORO Men can accomplish a lot in life just by picking up the pieces and putting them together. For 16 years North Carolina A&T State University's Head Base ball Coach Melvin H. Groomes has put up with pieces of glass while others played on diamonds. And some say Black higher educational institutions are dying out and with them Black coaches, but Groomes' 1/5 century as coach at A&T and his nine conference champion ships make him college base ball's grand slam personage deserving recognition for his uphill sports battle. After breaking the Detroit professional football club's color bar in 1948 and putting in two years as a first string defensive back, Groomes did a stretch in service and later coached football at Boilings Air Force Base in Washington, D.C. Then be journeyed to A&T in 1955. "Baseball was very good here when I arrived," Groomes noted. "The Aggies had won five championships under Fe lix Harris and at the time they were recruiting 18 scholarship players." Today the scholarships have been chopped and total two as football drains the budgets of most Black college athletic monies. But even though the financial means for successful teams decreased, the winning went on as A&T, under Groomes, won five Central In tercollegiate Association Championships (CIAA) in as many seasons (1958-62) and A&T became known as "The Home Of The Conference Champions." Behind the sterling mound performances of James Baten, probably the best pitcher in CIAA history, the Aggies won 42 consecutive contest. In the course of these events Baten never lost a CIAA endeavor and posted a collegiate earn run average of 0.57. The roughest competition during that run of victories came from Maryland State College and Shaw University, two consistently strong base ball colleges. And some of Groomes' worst experiences occurred at many of the con ference's schools. In one road game Groomes participated in an argument with an umpire while the point of a 32 calibre revolver sil houtted the official's inside coat pocket. "I had to take up for my boys who were playing their hearts out," Groomes sail When the temperature goes dowiv your electric bill goes up. P* * '« v> «>■ v* ** ■ J*'*' i lili iIV jfaOfiAS \AHntns B Inffnr For small meals, (oaster ovens, fry "■U'W I lUUIUr pans and similar small appliances ore you can Save. Don t set the water moreeconomicaltousethantherange v ia - u-ii •i_ • . . ... . heater thermostat I oven - Your electric bill is higher at this time higher than I When boiling water is used, set the of year. This is partly because of the re- necessary Repair /"TtTTN elementonhightocometooquickboil. cent rate increases—but mainly be- leaking faucets {ll J ) Then, use the lowest setting that will cause you use more electricity during Even a small drip continue the boil. Boiling border does the winter months. ping wastes water 'v | I not make the water any hotter, it just Here are some helpful suggestions on and can make your 11 \l—l wastes electricity. how to use electricity more efficiently water heater U J p(an me(j|s }Q uJ# fh# Qven }w |#vcr . in your home-ond reduce your elec- work overtime. a | f oo ds at the same time. Never use trie bill. particularly when the your oven to heat your kitchen. # water supply is much colder in f=Jh, 1 Q Use only enough hot water for the size actually * I and type of load. It costs less to wash needed. Set your thermostat at the lowest com- and dr * ? ne ,uM load ,hon ,wo smoM T " rn ' ?l , ™ I L°P? I ! i ?? cw ?? *?° n . °» fortable temperature. Each degree you ones, and saves you time. too. you re through with ,h*m reduce the temperature con reduce Clean lint filter after each load. Don t ' ' y |SWOS °by carelessness. yourheotingcostby 5V overdry clothes; overdrying wastes These hints can help you get the most Check for air leaks, and caulk or weoth- •'•ctricity and damages fabrics from .lectricity and reduce your elec erstrip as needed. Open draperies in / V the daytime to let in the sun's heat; IwelO® rv A - -T close them at night to keep out cold, Clean re-usable filters or reploce oth- ***** DUhP PntVA/OT ers often in furnaces. (Remember —it %/wwwl takes quite a bit of electricity to oper- \#Wll ate oil and gas furr -ces, too.) UP kl Making life.a little better Use flat-bottomed utensils that match the size of your surface units. Cover utensils when possible. . fIHpBHBHBk .H * • ■ ! ■ fl * Squires To Sue In Excess Of $1 Million PHOENIX SIGNS CHARLIE SCOTT Charlie Scott became the lat est member of pro basketball's growing list of "jumpers" Tuesday, signing with the Phoe nix Suns of the National Bas ketball Association. The 6-foot-6 forward, who be gan the season with Virginia of the rival American Basketball Association, quit the Squires late last week, accusing the team of breach of contract. Squires owner Earl Foreman, a corporation lawyer who has been involved in this kind of thing before, says he will sue Scott for damages in excess of $1 million and seek an in junction barring him from "any other act or deed in breach of contract." Scott contends Foreman failed to live up to an agree ment to pay off a $26,000 bank loan, causing him to be listed as delinquent and a poo* risk. The jumping act began back in June 1968 with Connie Hawk ins, who quit the ABA's Min nesota Pipers and joined the Suns. Oddly enough, it was the NBA which, eight years earlier, had barred Hawkins after he allegedly introduced a gambler to a college teammate at lowa. After Hawkins opened the door with his switch, the traffic both ways began in earnest with Zelmo Beaty, Rick Barry, Joe Caldwell, Spencer Haywood and Jim McDaniels following his route. Beaty made the move the op posite way, jumping from the NBA's Atlanta Hawks to the "but when the ump said he'd give me two minutes to 'get lost' before using his 'back up,' I utilized about one minute and forty-flw seconds before walking away." Not only have his teams played on cow pastures with makeshift bases, but almost every team in the league used to design their field to suit their best hitters. "If they had strong hitters to left field they would have a short left field fence and A >- ■.T r HI CHARLIE SCOTT ABA's Los Angeles Stars, who since have moved to Utah. Barry followed suit by quit ting the NBA's San Francisco Warriors to sign with. the ABA's Oakland Oaks. Then the entire team jumped, first to Washington, D.C.. then to Vir ginia and, when Barry became disenchanted with the South, the Squires traded him to New York. The NBA's Hawks lost anoth er star in Caldwell who went to the Carolina Cougars. But the older league returned to the plus side of the ledger with the acquisition by the Seattle Su- twice the distance in right field." And some of the officials were hard to stomach. Not only did one occaaionally pack a gun, but they wen sometimes inebriated and called games while puffing a cigarette. On the field and off Black schools had a hard go of things, not only in scholarships and playing surfaces, but even in getting a decent set of uni forms. , i. per Monies of Haywood, who jumped from Denver, and McDaniels. who a few weeks ago quit Carolina. In all cases, each shift has been followed immediately by damage suits, injunctions, pub lic outcrys by owners, players and their representatives and And, in a related move prompted by the two leagues' bitter battle to get the jump on each other, they have begun signing players with college eligibility still remaining, an action legalized when a federal judge struck down the NBA's rule prohibiting a team from signing a player until four years after his high school graduation, whether or sot he was attending college. Among the players to go this route were Haywood, who be gan it by quitting the Univer sity of Detroit to sign with Den ver of the ABA, Julius Erving of Virginia, Ralph Simpson of Denver, Johnny Neumann of Memphis, McDaniels, Howard Porter of the NBA's Chicago Bulls, and, most recently, Jim Chones of the Nets. Prep Net Results Hillside 4, Plnecrest 1 (at Pluetrest) SINGLES—Lucas (H) d. Dean, 4-1, *■!; Umsteadter (P) d. McKinnle, 4-1, 61; Gadd (P) d. O'Foohludha, 1-4, 4-3; C. Page (H) d. Kuimlnskl, 7-5. 4-3; Barnes (H) d. Dicker**!, 4-3. 6-3. DOUBLES Lucas-McKlnnje (H) d. Dean-Urmteadter, S-3; O'Foahludha (H) d. Johnson-Cadell, 1-3; Holder-Lara bee (H> d. Gadd-Kuminskl, callad be cauM of darkness. Danville, Va. », Durham Hl«h I SlNGLES—Williams d. Muse, 4-3, 6-J> Browning d Corcketl, 6-1, 4-4; Newnan d. Rlchlar, 4-4. 6-4, 4-3; Turner d. Arnold, 4-1. 6-0; Bakor d. Evans, 4-4, 6-11 Ben gali d. Fischer, 4-4, 61. 6-0. DOUBLES—Wlliiams-Newnan d. Mute- Richter, 4-0; Browning-Smoral d. Cor ekett-Andrewi, Hi Baker-Turner d. Davls-Undirwood, 61. Wrestling Results RALElGH—Tuesday night's wrestling results from Dorton Arena: David Finley d. Nick Russo; Rudy Kaye d. Bobby Paul; Vicki Williams d. Toni Rose; Art Nelson d. Johnny Heidman: main event, Paul Jones, Nelson Royal and Big Boy Brown vs. Playboy Gary Hart, Rip Hawk and Swede Han hon, no contest, referee disqual ifying both teams.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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March 18, 1972, edition 1
6
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