PH WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
1938.
TSUI YUN-PUI FULLY EXTENDED BY C. K. CHAN
SPLENDID MATCH IN HARDCOURT TENNIS TOURNEY
LEE WAI-TONG, CRAWFORD UNABLE TO COMPLETE TIE
By "Vertian")
Driving ferociously on the forchand, Taui Yun-pui and C. K. Chan yesterday indulged in what is likely to be the quickest tempo match in the current hardcourt tennis championships. Taui ultimately won 6-4, 4-6, 6-2, but even if he advances through the remaining four rounds of the tournament, it is not likely that he 'will meet with stiffer opposition.
Chan, former Kwangtung
repre-playing desperately, and regaining sentative in China National Meet-accuracy off the ground, ings, had two spells yesterday when two games out of Tsui before con-j
squeezed he literally scintillated. Unfortun- ceding the match on an error. ately for him he could not sustain
them suficiently to make victory his.
But it was a grand match to watch,
'A SPEED THEME
Speed was the theme of the en-
the onlookers.
and most certainly added much-counter which thus made it an ex- needed lustre to the day's program-citing spectacle for
The success of Joe Louis, the heavyweight boxing champion of the world, has often been attributed to the guiding genius of Jack Blackburn, his manager. It is said that the famous old Hghtweight does just about everything but fight for the negro champlon.
me, which otherwise produced dis- Tsul deserved to win because he As I See Sport
appointh standards of play.
But
played with more purpose than the Nevertheless Chin
sult,
nearly
Chan had a great chance of win-loser. bing the opening set; when he went battered down his defences with to a 3-1 lead while Trui was still those raking forchanders, and if his endeavouring to find control. Chen falled to consolidate on his he might well have reversed the re- backhand had been half as attacking, own service and Tsui, getting into his stride, and Anding
Chin quick
On another court to react to the adverse run of play, and A. Crawford played a marathon Lee Wal-tong finally clinched the set at 0-4.
The
feature of this set was the
which, in comparison to the match, splendid forehand driving of both -Chan game, was purely pat- players. Chun was
I could not help thinking it was vastating on this hand, and when win, instead of sharing two sets and
especially
de Crawford's own fault that he did not ever he could manoeuvre for the thus necessitating a replay. right shot, usually aced, or forced. Tsui into un error-with-a-terrifically fast and deep drive to the backhand
corner.
TSUI'S ADVANTAGE Comparatively spenking Chan's backhand was purely defensive, and was here that Tsui had a decided edge over the Canton man. Tsul clipped the lines with beautifully inade backhanders while Chan, gen- crally speaking, had to
to rest content a straightforward return to his ready and
and waiting opponent.
with his
By "Abe"
South African Tour Rumour Premature
London, Aug. 12. "The announcement is pro- mature," stated an official of the Football Association in regard to a report that the F.A‚ˆ are sending a team to tour South Africa at the end of the corning football season.
He added: "We are await- ing a communication from South Africa, upon receipt of which the question will be decided by our committees and council. Negotiations with the South African authorities are still in progress."
LOCKE DEFEATS PADGHAM
£100 A SIDE
100 GOLF MATCH
BARTLETT'S SECOND FASTEST IN FIVE YEARS
Should Give Him Lawrence Trophy For 1938 Season
SHUTE TWINS MAY BECOME THE
SECOND RENSHAWS, SAYS WALLIS MYERS Create Record In Winning Public Schools' Doubles
The full story of how the Shute twins, Kenneth and Warwick, former competitors in the Colony tennis cham- pionships, won the Public Schools' Doubles Tennis Cham- pionship of England, and at the same time established a new record, is now to hand.
The Shute boys amazed everybody by going through the tourney without losing a set, and finally, winning the final by 6-0, 6-0. They beat the Charterhouse pair J. Michelmore and D. N. Cobbold in the ultimate round.
Mr. A. Wallis Myers, commenting on the match in the Daily Telegraph said: "Another record was establish- ed when the twin brothers Shute of King's, Rochester, won the doubles final in two love sets. They were in a class above the Charterhouse pair, Michelmore and Cobbold, scor-j London, Aug. 15. A. D. Locke, the brilliant younging freely all round the court with South African golfer, beat A. Inggressive strokes and punishing Padgham, former Open champion, by two holes in their 36 holes challenge
almost every lob, Their fearless maich for £100 n side, on the Sels- don Park Club's course yesterday.
Locke generally played the steadier golf, but it was not until the six- teenth hole of the evening round that he was able to lead.
A crowd of 2,000 people followed
union, supported by sound tempera- ment, suggested that the line of twin patra, made famous by the Renshaws, Baddeleys and Allens, might be restored."*
Kenneth Shute almost mode 崩
the play, but they were not always great effort to win the singles, sur- fully under control and in the ex-viving five rounds to the semi-final, citement of the rush in the after-
noon nobody could say that Locke's where he was beaten by the eventual bail, at the eighteenth hole, was not champlon, G. L. Palsh. trodden on
After he had won the first set by wary tactles, which were quite com- mendoble as they gave him a
a chance to get ha strokes in working order, Crawford made the supreme blunder of continuing along the same lines. in fact he became more and more defensive as the match progressed. This suited Lee up to the hilt, for IT his century, scored in 57 permitted him to dictate the terms, He had Crawford guessing drop shots, which,
minutes, against the Australian cricket tourists, H. T. Bartlett, the made,
reaped such former Cambridge captain now play- should not have cleverly rich reward on a
bunker and in the crowd's haste a ing for Sussex, is almost certain of John Cobb Now After hardcourt, Crawford seemed foot-weary at-winning the Lawrence Trophy, pre-
sented in 1934 by Sir Wälter Capt. Eyston's Mark
Bonneville Flats,
Utah, Aug. 30. John Cobb, the British racing driver, had two runs to-day in an attempt to break Capt. George Eyston's newly-estab- lished world land speed record
Another those did not ter the first set and was only happy Lawrence for the quickest hundred
play was his
dcore
in the loser's
not when the ball was being driven to the of the season. In with enough consistency from baseline. Lee realised this and kept Fink Woolley won it with a cen- the first year, the forecourt, sometimes being in everything as two minds about the stroke he should
short short as possible.
ave tury for Kent against Northampton- make, with unhappy results. Taul. Nevertheless Crawlord could haveshire in 03 minutes; in 1935, it was although not such a gay attacker, changed the conditions had he wish-
cd. He not attack, and when it won by Harold Gimblett, who scored
was discreet in his
net
with the ball, made his work a decided asset.
the fact
him.
forecourt
did
an
and because of this, plus
advances, come to pure defensive tennis, Lee his hundred for Somerset against that he knew precisely what to do was always more likely to outlast Essex at Frome, also in 63 minutes;
The K.C.C. player had nothing in 1036, Leslie Ames had the
quick- to lose by forcing the exchanges after eleven against India at Folkestone in
est hundred playing for winning the first
act. Instead he to play Lee's walling game, staff, of agreed
minutes;
and last year, Joe Hard- and thereby lost his citance.
tury of all had the fastest cen-i when he renched three
Chan leapt into dazzling form in the second set, running away with a tead of four-love, the outcome of a steady stream of whipping forehand
One admired Lee for his fine con- figures ut Canterbury against Kent sorties sistency in returning the ball and his
y 51 minutes. Bartlett's
he wus
of
whole of
tion. Two months
time.
Let's time,
a hundred in 73 minutes; but re-
in a Railton car.
His time was not officially given but Cobb was unofficially timed at 300 miles per hour in his first run and 325 in_his second. Reuter's Special,
drives, a few neat headwork.stubtleties in mixing-pace, direction therefore, is the second fastest since and some decisive This was Chan's brightest period and and flight. He had Crawford out the trophy was put up for compett-
Vas a delight to watch. Tsui generalled practically the whol was nonplused, but in the fifth game the second set, and ran the youngster man, the Australian captain, scored Don Brad- he recovered, and actually forced the off his feet with adroit placements. issue to the tenth game before con- Crawford played the right kind of cently E. R. T. Holmes, the Surrey hours. He gave only one chance ceding the set.
tennis in the Ars
Arst set, when The effort appeared to take a lot guardedly felt his way ubou; e captain, beat him by eight minutes, a dificult one, high and going away out
while the subsequent strange court, but having mastered tury against Sussex. During Chan,
aking only 65 minutes for his cen-fast-to third slip, off Smailes, when play suggested the reverse had its pace, he should have pressed Lee
the 62.
His sixes sailed immense dis- Gerved only to stiffen Tsui's
for all his worth. Choosing a base boy, R. B. Proud, captain of Win- cn-
present season, however, a school-
on to the roof of the inncestwo deavours. Anyway, mainly through line Kame was a tretical blunder
grandstand-and two for a series of inexcusable nettings by which brought its own punishment.
chester
up the fastest Mound. But perhaps the finest of College, scored Chan, the Hongkong player went into The full results of the afternoon's he made 100 in 46 minutes for the off Smailes which went first bounce century recorded this summer when all his strokes was a straight drive a Ave-love lend, and looked as though matches follow. he would win the set without con-
SINGLES
Rest against the Lord's Schools at over the rails at amazing speed. In ceding a fame. Chan, however, Tsul Yun-pul beat C. K. Chan 6-4.quality for the Lawrence Trophy as sixes
Lord's; but his innings does not one over of Peter Smith, he hit two and four four's. Bartlett is it was not scored in first-class crie-only 23, and was one of seven Cam- bridge Blues playing for the Gen- tlemen."
Sykes
BRITAINS
SPORTS SPECIALISTS
"FLIGHT COMMANDER"
BADMINTON RACKETS
ARE USED BY ALL THE
CHAMPIONS IN MALAYA
THE BADMINTON CENTRE OF THE EAST
ket.
Great Hitter
Highest Innings
the
Again, at the fourth in the second Warwick also advanced through round, Locke drove to the top of a
two rounds, and then fell a victim man accidentally kicked the ball to Palsh, who subsequently become into
the hazard. On consultation his brother's conqueror, und with Padgham in agreement, the bali was replaced on the top of the
.:DETAILED SCORES bunker.
Both players went round in 68 inj the afternoon, and in the evening Locke took 67 to Padgham's 69.
DIEGEL INJURED
The detailed scores of the twins' progress in the doubles cannot be given complete. However, in the third round they beat A. and E. B. Dawes 0-3, 6-2, in the fourth round they beat Tufanell and M. W. II. Calver! 6-1, 0-0, and in the seml- final they beat D. W. and R. H. Emmett -1, 0-2.
Toronto, Aug. 15. Leo Diegel, the American golfer, was struck by a car and badly in-
Kenneth Shute's successes in the jured at Cleveland, Ohio, yesterday. singles were as follows: 1st round. He was taken to hospital suffering beat R. M. Shepard 6-0, 6-0; 2nd severe head injuries, face round, beat V. Dive 3-0, 0-1, 6-0; lacerations, and possible fractures of 3rd round, beat J. L. Whitmore 6-2, the skull and left thumb.
from
6-1; 4th round, beat W. O. Weyman Born in 1890, Diegel was American professional champion in Cobbold 0-2, 6-1; semi-final lost to the 6-2, 7-5; 5th round, beat N. D. N. 1928 and 1929 and has won Canadian Open championship four
times.
the G. L. Paish 4-0, 3-6.
→
Warwick's singles progress was: He was setond to Bobby Jones in 1st round, beat R. Galsford 6-1, 6-2; 1830 in the British Open at Hoylake: 2nd round, beat D. J. MacCollen 6-2, being beaten by two strokes, and U-1; 3rd round, lost to G. L. Paish was third to Walter Hagen in 1929. 6-4, 2-6, 4-0.
YORKSHIRE RETAIN COUNTY CRICKET
CHAMPIONSHIP
Middlesex Fail In Fixture Against Surrey At Lord's
LEFT-HANDED bat, Hugh Bart- lett is regarded as one of the TNCIDENTALLY the 453 scored by greatest hitters in the game to-day, Sussex in the match is the Playing for the Gentlemen against highest put up by any county side the Players at Lord's in mid-July, against the Australians during the ho played an innings which will present tour. Previously long be
the 377 remembered. Tall and scored by Kent at Canterbury in the loose-limbed, he is a bad starter, but second Innings was the best, Apart which set drives a very long ball, from Bartlett, Cox contributed 70, using his wrists as well as his arms James Langridge 68 and Stainton and shoulders. Or bim the special 58. All the Australian bowlers were
ht of The Cricketer, in
in badly puntahed, F. A.
As a result of Middlesex's defeat on first innings by Surrey at this match, Indeed B
said, "Но six for 184 being the most successful Lord's to-day, Yorkshire have retained the County Cricket Cham magniflecht left-handed with White's three for 75 next in pionship. Yorkshire have one more match to play, against Sussex hitter with ramensa range and line. It is significant, though that
was
Ward with
wonder!
London, Aug. 30.
Northanta scored 200 and 140
power of strokes. I do not recall both O'Reilly and Fleetwood Smith, at Hove, but the result does not affect the championship as, assum» even a Jessop treating professional the Australians' best bowlers were ing that Yorkshire are beaten, they will finish ahead of Middlesex. bowling quite so roughly as he did not
no playing. And In this innings (he made 175 not out). These two bowlers were given such He hit 24 fours and four sixes, and a gruelling time by the English Test Surrey made 306, thanks to 120 by (Howorth 5 for 513), while Worcester-
In reply to Middlesex's score of 241, at the wicket exactly three team at the Ova! that they must be R. J. Gregory and (Continued on Next Column.}
116 by H. S.shire minde 104 (Timms 0 for 18) and badly in need of a rest. McCormick, Squires, who did not play in the Fifth Test, AL
237 for eight wickets: conceded 88 runs without talking a with, Sussex. Against Sussex's total Hove, the Australians drew wicket.
of 433, the tourists made 300.
MIDDLESEX v. SURREY At Lord's, Surrey bent. Middlesex on first innings.
4-8, 0-2.
Lee Kam-ming beat K. K. Fung Woolley Says "No"
G-4, 9-7.
Peter U beat J, F. L. Smalley 6-3
6-8.
0-3,
HAMPSHIRE . NOTTS
At Bournemouth, Nottinghamshire defeated Hampshire by 167 runs.
Notis scored 203 (Boyes 5 for 50) Middlesex scored 241 in their first and 349 (G. F. H, Heane 100 not out, 303,
to which Surrey replied with Heath B for 78), and Hampshire
twiner
Blok Breto beat S. 5. Leons 2 ARANK WOOLLEY, the Kent and inregory contributing 129 and replied with 310 and 75.
A. Crawford and Lee Wal-tong 6-4, 0-11 (unfinished), ・・・
DOUBLES
Pang Ol-lam and Mok Fuk-in beat II. W. Lee and 8. W. Liang 6-4, 4-6,
England cricketer, has now put
was thinking of playing for Kent six wickets for 76 runs. an end to persistent rumours that be Squires 118. I. A. R. Peebles took again hext season. He is wise to go In their second knock, Middlesex while his batting retains so much of scored 183 for eight wickets,
any
SUSSEX v. AUSTRALIANS At Hove the match between Sussex and the Australians
till it is on tis decline. It would, in At Blackpool, Lancashire beat Its old glory, instead of walting on LANCASHIRE WARWICKSHIRE drawn.
ense, be rather difficult for Warwickshire on drat
In answer to Sussex's first innings ley to go on in view of the farc-{
Innings. demonstrations ho has been wickets declared in their firet innings, Hassett 89. H. E. Hammond took The following is the programme to given up and down the country. At top-scorer being Hopwood with 120 Ave wickets for 107 for Sussex,
total of 403, the tourists scored 300, hit up 338 for seven Badcock making 58, Barnett 58 and day:
0-%
STOCKED BY
Lano, Crawford, Ltd.
China Sports
China Emporium . International Sports
SOLE AGENTS
DENIS H. HAZELL & CO., Marina House, (Denis 15. Hasell, Eastern Director, WM, SIXES, LTD.)
TO-DAY'S PROGRAMME
SINGLES ·|
P. Kong v. H. D. Rumjahn,
Tsul Wal-pulv. Pang Ol-lam
I. Agefuróff v. 8. A. RunJahn. DOUBLES
EE, Storey and J. J. Ferguson v.
A. Chan and J. Hou
GE, Ry Divett and C. W. Bewell
W. D. 5. Sad and F. Cross
a round of
the Wilmickshire repued
with 821,
to
the Oval recently, E. R. T. Holmes, the Surrey captain, collected Surrey players round Woolle
taking five wickets for 79. In their second Innings, Sussex had In their second innings, Lancashire made 63 for two wickets when cheers when he declared at 152 for seven, and War stumps were drawin Anished his last innings on that wickshire had scored 91 for two пощій. born; and Tunbridge Wella hays
Tonbridge where” he was wickel when stumps were drawn: hid
STERSHIRE angers Javericketer ban usace only good-bye to him. Unlike some
RTHANTS
Walker, the Australian wicket- keeper, who infitred a Anger restor day, bad his finger X-rayed and a bone was found to be chlope de. Ho pluckily insisted on Battin
scored two not out Reuter
Hendren May Coach At Nottingham
London, Aug. 15. Hendren is mentioned as the next likely coach at Trent Bridge, to be vacant through james Iremonger retiring at the end of the summer.
"Patsy" is a candidato, along with Alah Fairfax, the Austra- lian Test player.
Tremonger has done great things for Notts cricket, apart from the valuable work he put in when Larwood and Voce came under his care
as raw youngsters.
HOME SOCCER RESULTS
London, Aug. 30.
The following are the resulta of matches played in the English Foot- ball League to-day:
SECOND DIVISION Burnley
2. Southampton 1 THIRD DIVISION (SOUTH) Bristol R
0 Brighton THIRD DIVISION (NORTH) Rochdale
2 Carlisle
-Reuter.
ARMSTRONG TO FIGHT GARCIA
ON NOVEMBER 2
New York, Aug. 30, Mike Jacobs, the boxing promoter, announced to-day that Henry Arm- strong, the triple champlon, will meet Ceferino Garcia, of the Philip- pines, in a welterweight title bout on November 2.
The terms for the fight will be announced later-United Prost
KING'S
COMING SHORTLY!
DRAMATIC TRIUMPH!
the famous
Erich Maria
ROBERT
TAYLOR SULLAVAN
MARGARET
FRANCHOT
TONE
ROBERT
YOUNG
THREE COMRADES
CUS MEDI
ATWA 4 DRY HE
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