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Show Ute Diamondmen Crush Weber State I record at home and a 7 e I for overall early season The Redskins meet um. Thursday at 1 p Field for a By CARRICK LEAVITT Utah baseballers quietly took Idaho State by the hand and gently led them to the Magna City Ballpark where they soundly sound-ly stomped two wins 6-1 and 5-0 from them in a doubleheader Saturday. ALTHOUGH the 16 miles trek across town was made to escape the weather, the two schools played under clouded and chilly skies. However the pitching of Ute Dave Varvel was anything but chilly as he left 14 of the Bengals Ben-gals fanning the breeze on the number three strike in the first game. THE UTES started well with a couple of solid singles. Then Craig MacKay wielded the money stick for the Skins with a two base hit, bringing Beyeler and Johansen across the plate. Steve Radulovich brought Mac-Kay Mac-Kay back to the bench with tally number three. Idaho State's Bill Leland re linquished singles to Disorbio and Varvel in the second inning. Vic Johansen boomed a high fly into Bengal land and little Dave Disorbio scooted home. MacKay cracked the second of his three doubles, sending Varvel home with run number five. JOHN TOLMAN banged a double dou-ble in the third inning, bringing Radulovich round with the sixth score. State gave up on Leland and turned to Kumera (Pineapple) for reserve pitching strength, but the damage was done. Coach Summerhays' boys picked up ten hits in the first game. THE SINGLE Bengal tally came when Larry Swallow walked and teammate Bill Fraz-ier Fraz-ier brought him round the horn with a long two base hit. In the nightcap John Noriega led the Utah nine from the mound. He held Idaho to two hits and a snappy Ute infield held them to no runs. UTAH PICKED up eight hits from Bengal hurlers Lindy and Varjes. Singles were issued to Beyeler, MacKay and Freeman. Beyeler came home to rest on Freeman's hard ground ball. Jerry Fisher cleaned the bases off with a long hard fly, but he overran second and the ball beat him back to the base. Fisher set the stage for Steve Radluovich, who took the long, long way across the fence in dead centerfield. The ball ended up some 400 feet away, around the ninth hole of a neighboring Golf Course. THE FINAL point came in the third inning. A shakey Bengal pitcher threw Radulovich four straight balls. Barry Arnold brought him around on a base hit. Utah currently boasts a 4-0 |