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Show 0 i&"V4k ,.,19te, - 0 1 , 4v4, !11 4,40, in I tn4140 .44. HACKMILLER n qm9 AUox g Business THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1975 By Brent Checketts News sports writer When Gary Ross pitched for the Salt Lake Padres in 1970, he had his problems. The righthander compiled only a 4 record ne,.husky ' 1Ch 5.80 earned run average . anti iI. While he had problems pitching for a Salt Lake team, Ross doesn't have much trouble 1 pitching against Salt Lake teams. Ross extended his scoreless inning streak I insn 0., , , , ry 44, agasuaL 1.11C OctiL Lake Utillb rieutttau y t of front 5,420 fans at Derks Flea He night in i was credited with the pitching victory as the 1 Hawaii Islanders held on for a -- 2 win in Game ., ; ' tone of the Pacific Coast League championship C., IDeseret t 4k4e.;-- 44; Y44 You learn a lot more abbut fishing if you fish only of the time and listen most of it. ! , part -t There's a way to shortcut your wisdom in the of taking trout. : And when you cant get fishing very often. as this fishermans fate this year, hstening is fun. - tricks ... " :' .4 .'"' 7';11k.'1.'- b :.,:,f' it , W:., :".'- 6:I' :; Game Two of the series is tonight at 7:30 at Derks. The Gulls' leading 1 winner lefty Sid Monge (14-9- ) will hurl against Butch Metzger ,(154) of the Islanders. : '''. For eight innings, Ross limited the Gulls to ..,s lour singles while walking none and fanning , , eeven. Good news for the Gulls was that in the 1 ninth they finally got to his slants and sent him I ..t0 the showers one out short of a complete ., cegi.ir:z3y,; Ak,)6,,0 ,L'q ,4.2.' -- '1,ti ' r Igame. Trailing t ; 0 entering the ninth, Salt Lake .3tMf S', got something started with one out when Gil Flores lashed a singled that bounced off Ross' :,Y, leg between his knee and ankle . :t e- t' After about five minutes of medical O4,,:attention Ross resumed pitching and retired F, cwq;'Yt!v&O,11 Ron Jackson on a pop fly for the second out. ts se, Ass - -- - Dan Briggs then extended his hitting streak to 18 games, however, with a line drive double ,,k,sis:Ta , :.;.,,,.:,'..:9'::':i:t.:::'.'.':ii:;.::v.:'; , left center seoring Flores.. lied-ho- t Paul .:$,,,ef,,,A3'1'r.W,fix.M.W,,m.;;4.3.0ii4,,6,:4 VMM4Uilklan2fao .40 ;,:A Dade followed with a line single to center Deseret News bboto by Paul 0 Barker u scoring Briggs and the Gulls had the tying run first base. Sliding Islander Jim Essian is safe with triple as he touches third before throw reaches Gull Ron Jackson. Hawaii skipper Roy Hartsfield brought on second baseman Darrell Darrow turned in a third on a F ! passed ball by Gulls catcher Ike Islanders over be the final three inaings and s reliever Larry Hardy at that point as fans who beautiful play on Rod Gaspar's ground ball to Hampton. After Gus Gil worked Gulls pitcher pitched well in defeat. were heading for the exits stopped in the aisles 1 retire him in the third and first baseman Gary Wheelock for a walk, Sonny Jackson e The Gulls seemed encouraged with their eyes glued to the field. , Briggs turned in several excellent scoops of topped a grounder between home plate and the by their rally in the ninth inning and still mound that scored Hilton from third. ; Billy Smith greeted Hardy with a line drive low throws along with two lunging plays on displayed confidence.' '.;. to the left of shortstop Bill Almon. The lanky ground balls. to the before Wheelock ball Hampton got , 5 Islander, who will join the San Diego Padres "The fact that we finally got to Ross after Despite those excellent plays, however, two but had no play at first. He fired wildly to third, E s the conclusion of the PCL playoffs, gloved the Gulls in sixth made the errors the not doing so all season and part of last season inning Gil. to who to on score what came r k ball inches off the infield dirt with a diving difference in the game. get trying was encouraging," Gulls skipper Norm Sherry catch to end the game. ii proved to be the winning run. said. "We'll likely have another chance at 0 Islanir the the ess sixth, Leading entering Almon's excellent defensive play was one ders seemed headed for a three-up- , ' three-dowlater in the series." run in when came the Hawaii First fourth, i .e of many turned in by both teams in a game inning when Dave Hilton lifted a high Jerry Turner led off with a double. advanced "You saw some good defensive plays from d ss s that was for the most part. infield pop-u- p with two out. Third baseman to third on a ground ball and scored on Hilton's us tonight, but you also saw some key errors infield single. The Gulls seemed to have the edge in Jackson dropped the ball near the mound, we usually don't make," Darrow said. "We were tight, but we got the adrenalin flowing in standout fielding gems. Rusty Torres trade an however, and the miscue got the Hawaii team Ross weakened in the late innings Mile excellent throw from center field to retire started. the ninth inning. We plan on continuing the Wheelock got stronger as game progressed. Steve Hunt at the plate in the second inning, Hilton went to second on the play, and to He allowed only one hit in blanking the charge in Game Two." - -- fe ton post-gam- n , ! Let the boat give the action 'Tc ' I I ;:'; s 1 tright , These men have a new way to fish Strawberry Reservoir when there is a light wind wisping about. ,T.; ,, 3-- , Fenwick rods, must field test the store s,ock constantly. His favorite implement is a new line of Fenwick carbon graphite fishing rods casting, or 11 y. With him was Elliott Wolfe who entrepreneurs a few sporting goods establishments of repute and vibe al sq field tests his store's stock. 61;1,,,,:r.ke-,- best-of-sev- , , Like the two ardent souls who sat in my ince tne', othei day and told me a5out their tricks at fly fishing. John Reck is a well,wern angler. He's represents ,.4 :": ; , . .',,serics. d 1E; A c 0,w32K760,r- TOR Lt-Spl- flP2 ,43a,,,,ceesde, xt, afd4o k t6e E Di Latest trick p.11 :47 AAt, tal at Strawberry , I SPORTS r ' well-playe- - They motor upwind. cut power and drift with a full fly line out. They sink it to the bottom. "Got ta be on the bottom," Wolfe repeated. This means you have your fly line out to your backing. y The fly is a brown type. not too large and on about 10 feet of and maybe barber-poled- , leader. They let it come along. just off the bottom, at wind-drif- t speed. But what is new about that' Nothing, perhaps, But their trick is to lay the fly rod flat in the boat and then let the bobbing boat give the fly its action,. "The boat must do it. Man's hand, if you hold the rod, does not give the true action the floating boat does. Sometimes it works. The force of the wind la an and you have to be on-timportant factor ' bottom," John stressed. fuzzy-wuzz- f - he - Why the fly line outfit? That's a new one on me. I thought I had more filies'se than an old tin boat. Maybe I don't. But drill fishing with flies has been super sport for a long time. And you might ask why not go down with lightweight transparent line? Why not use a leaded fly which would go to the bottom, or a bubble full of water as a sinking aid? Or a couple of split shot? I've tried them all. So have Beck and Wolfe. But they say this is the better system e I remember the trick from 20 years age when a Provo piscator named Ed Rambeaux, wh( invented Pokey Bait, which was a swirling ot tht swills with a cheese base, showed Casey Bown an me a trick or two. fly-lin- Vi las ' 'F i''4 4' a- Sect' FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) mid seeded Guillermo Vila s crushed 1 Jaime Fiflol of Chile 64, today and become the fit man to enta the semifinals of the U.S. Open Tennis , sr ,' third-seede- , , :::1 .1,; Championships. Vi las will play the winner of the d match between Manuel Orantes of Spain and eight-seede-d Ilie Nastase of Romania in Saturday's round of four. The rugged Argentinian virtually hammered his South American rival 't into submission after a hard-fougopening set. Starting at the ninth game of that set, he won 12 games in a row, using a t destructive topvin backhand with effect. sledgehammer s Fillol sought to take the momentum, from Vilas by surging to the net on g almost every point only to b caught flatfooted time and time again by rifle shots that kicked up the chalk of the :T - t:::::'!...::..?.::::. 6-- 6-- exhibition season marred by bad injuries NFL varices to semis - I "Tgf,-- Front-lin- , I 1"," 4 j ,1,0; I 1,.idelines. pe? d, r , ki,; !;:, - I 1: ' , , ',a of two-fiste- . 4 trt , '- re - 4., ;11 - - tournament." fa.t, ' I Billie I romp over Wimbledon champion set .A.Ta '" tennis 01 thin-- Ashe who p aas his oea,. ,3 A k. grass. Most people thought it was an .aaapset, Not Dibbs. e. 1, "He A as the favorite bran'' he won :a7 ,WittibiNinn," said the chunky former z at Miami University, 'and because he's got a lot bigger name I 5 than me. But I waan't surprised. thw..1,;ht I was guing to win all the tune. a The only thing that surprised me was-- that I won so easay, nobs was expected to have his az hands foil against toe leane-eaire; .7. e Harry does that and he's a great fishermen, Btit I have to try everything I'm told and that, to me, is the All-Pr- fun in fishing. have already got my rig ready to system at Strawberry Reserwiir. Curiosity is killing my cat! It might he one of those bad days when the winds are wicked. But I'm ready to try. For instance, try Others lost for the season include quarterback Al Woodall and running back Bob Burns of the Jets, guard Pete Adams of Cleveland, and running back Leon Crosswhite of New England. the - si), , - -- 4' , cc, Maybe ln the experiment I might find which would come as a the fish and me, Wolfe-Bec- k a new trick of my own surprise to both parties -- ' .4;T:Jrr...A Martina Navratiiova of Czechoslovakia slices bail during action in defeating Margaret Court Smith at Forest Hins, Borg, a youngster with all the strokes. Borg has diveasimari just nrte oet en for that to Australian veteran Rod Laver. Borg won this years French Open on clay. In other quarterfinal matches on tap today, Connors met Andrew Pattison of Rhodesia and Nastase played Manuel Orantes of Spain, British veteran Virginia Wade, seeded second. Miss Wade cratIrl y West Germany's ICatja Ebbinhaus 6-- 3, 6-- 0. TRUCK TIRE FREE Mounting .41,1 30 JI , Specials For Campers, Pickups and Recreational sl Vehicles , - TRACTION POWAY ',', 1st $25.35 6 5 $28.45 6.50-1- 6 $28.70 7 5 $29.80 7 6 $39.05 7 6 00-1- ift ()Li fi'b d play Wednesday, Chris Evert continued her awesome display with a 2 6-- romp over Australian Kerry Melville Reid, The Floridan has now won 82 straight matches on clay and has dropped just eight games in four matches here en route to the semifinals. "I have to admit it. I felt a little pressure out there today," Miss Evert said. "I'm sure the next match I'll be nervous Chrissie will go against her doubles partner and best friend in the semis, Martina Navratilova of Czechoslovakia. Miss Navratilova was 64 victory over impressive in a Australian ace Margaret Court in Wednesday's featured night match. rvonne Goolagone, the blithe spirit from Australia who doesn't believe the dam has burst until her ears get wet, survived a scare to slip hy Japaiwse player Karuko Sa7amatsu She come from a 4 deficit in the first set, staving off sot point with a forehand that hit the to of the net and trickled over, 5 disadvantage in the second, winning, the final five games with the loss of only five points. 00 ), top-see- 6-- 0'0-1- 50-1- 9, 1 k 2-- , ' 1 :',':.: - ' e''''.A , k ,' ' 1 '.P - - $39.85 $46.25 $49.95 11 Price,5 pius $2 at, to $3 tig F E eiftaWatrie ca stng P.II'.-:'- ' "I'' .4 .' ,:, .i,i73k.73' Tor.atte,rve ,,, Dompattiolow ININAY A,,';',. ., $4995 $63.95 1t- e- atixotV. .g.kk 4 - qt," A, j t 0:11 4,411;, TRACTION 8165 $41.9.5 $46.85 $49.95 $49.95 S63.95 s.ply 8.75-16.- 5 9 5 61 50-1- 6 10-1- 6 5 1216.5 601v 61., ,....00, - ' I k AcIsv ',5411 - 44 7: . Z., ' WIDE BELTED SPECIALS ki Mount on regular rims. Belted principie gives up to 504,, more mileage. Greater carrying capacity for campers, vans, pickups. TRACTIO4 ; v 1 -- ;ii 11 1,0 Sale continues on 1975 Oldsmobiles. d discounts have been increased and 'Traditional yar-enyou can avoid the pace increases on 1976 models. Year-en- d Clean-70- p 2-- Miss Goolagong's opponent in the wth ut 4vt par Fi1 ' 4114.00tottx, kts Ida $25.95 $29.60 $30.95 a2.60 $42.95 70-1- IN .211f,t,. ..,,,,,,f Our Soot WE 04,:da won Ken Ger I State at 5th South SU', Utah dgronoblie 521-611- 1 Open. 83n1 $34.85 $39.25 $47.40 42.25 546.50 H78- - 156-Pi- S33.90 $42.95 $52.95 S43.87 $49.95 H78-1- 5 1.78- - 16 10-1- 5 11-1- .5 IPACTION $17.93 670,-1- 5 $IG.50 700-1- 5 $18.95 700-1- 6 $19.50 750-1$20.95 Fius F.I. Cscd C,!in 650-1- 6 5 322-139- 1 irg2k 0044;k:.qlieArs;lal.Ar 1 Ze z J fzi ttLit1; marovem.IMEEONEEMONIMOR ,;,!'!,,1 ki.WAY $16.90 $17.50 $17.95 $18.50 $19.95 523 So. 330 West ' spm TRUCK RETREADS I tOAN 11 I I Beck-Wolf- e Jean honored NEW YORK (UPD Wimbledon queen Bilhe Jean King has bcen named Player of the Year by the Woi id Tennis Association, the group ammunced Wed- nesday. Other results of the voting conducted among WTA members listed Francoise Durr of France and Betty Stove of the Netherlands as the best doubles team and Sae Strap of Fairfield, rd., as the most improved player on the circuit. 6--2, Mb? last victory was a straight if you're still fishing?" .44 I,- - ws sidelined for the season. That group is headed by Buffalo o Robert James and lip eludes Thom Darden of Cleveland, Steve Tatmen of the New York Jets and Clarence Ellis of Denver. Tackle Tom Neville of New England is done for the year because of a broken bone in his v 1 defensive backs who are Claude Humphrey of Atlanta, one of the league's top defensive linemen, is in the hospital with a torn-o- p knee. New Orleans' quarterback Archie Manning is out for six weeks with a chipped bone in his elbow. 41; Vilas operated with pinpoint accuracy. r, In other quarterfinals. Eddie Dibbs, a feisty little pepper pot from Mi2ird Beach, was to have played the most important match of his career when he stepped in with the heavyweights today. "I feet I m playing me best tennis of my life right now," said Dibbs Wed,rx.s- day night. "I thought that since they changed the surface from grass to clay Af I would do all right here. Now I think I !';'; can win this tournament. I really do, r:, "This is the best I've ever played. If I don't do it new ..." Dibbs made his bid for glory against Swedish star Bjorn Borg, seeded fifth. Dibbs has played Borg, one of the tournament favorites, twice ' a and lost both times. -I'm gonna have to be more aggrossive against Borg this time." he said. "I may come to net more. I think I can he him." Dibbs, a claycourt specialist, buzzed through the early rounds here, losing just one of 10 sets a against four opponents, behind a ferd backhand and a tightcities lipped determination to run down every , ball r: : This is the farthest he's ever gone in e In Caen hat he's iidt awed i with the likes of Jimmy Connors, Hie T Nastase and Borg. The quaraers notaing, he said 7 "I mean, they're all right, but since I've a gone this far I feel I can go all the way. can win this think Like I- say, falling with games during the and several stars have sustained injuries that will finish them for the year. , And it's a little like Harry James once said to me, You use so many lures and tricks while your fishing. Why don't you just stay with leaded lines and Triple-Tease- r lures when trolling, and a gob of cheese list of first-clas- s . Got to try them all pre-seas- ht 1 They join a next boat with Ed side-by-si- . night's game against Minnesota and the Vikings, not to be outdone, lost one of their defensive secondary regulars, Jeff Wright, also with a banged-u- p knee. players have been alarming frequency e were fishing was catching fish with his full fly line out. We use( monotilamcnts as Aforementioned. Ed caught fish Casey and I, using the same bait but not the sanu old polecat. , technique, got the With that background, when a feller tell6 me hi! ...., system works at the Strawberry I believe him foot Miami safety- Dick Anderson reinjured a knee in Monday Associated Press With a roll of bandage in one hand and a bottle of liniment in the other, the National Football League warily approaches the final two weeks of the exhibition season. I! We Ed - 5th So. & 521-43- 300 West I |