SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1933.
THE CHINA MAIL.
HOLE SPORT PAGEEDER
E. F. FINCHER HITS 146 OUT OF 246
K.C.C. Intra Club Produces 470 Runs.
NEW TALENT TRIED OUT
E. F. Fincher followed up his
49 on Thursday by registering
his first century of the season
at the K.C.C. yesterday.
He hit up 146, which included a alx and twenty-three boundaries. He scored his runs out of 246. In partnership with P. Q. Dunne he helped to add 93 runs for the sixth wicket.
E. C. Fincher, who scored 48 on Thursday, went in late in the innings and mado 53 before stumps were drawn. He hit nine bound- arles in his undefeated innings.
Scores:
.
F. Goodwin's XI.
E. F. Fincher, c Perry, Smith
THE WAY
MY
WAY TO PLAY A KISS CANNON
By JOE DAVIS (Billiards and Snooker Champion).
dotted Your ball will take the photo makes clear one of those tricky little positlens line in diagram, and as there is no by which amateurs are often ball- room to miss the cannon "behind! ed. Red is just whore it is next to the white," the shot may be reckon- impossible either to pot it or go in ed an easy one. If you preserve off it, and to make matters worse be sure to make it. Then you will with Ifor a new minutes you will
24 right-handed player must use see how well it leaves the red, offer-[
ing a shot into the corner pocket, and that will make you appreciate the real beauty of the shot..
145
12
N. A. E. Mackay, 6 Lyal
1. McInnes, c Smith, b Lee
F. E. Lawrence, b Smith
Great to cope with the shot.
Lt. Cragg, e Wright, Lee
4
F. Goodwin, c Hunter, b Burnett
19
P. O. Dunne, st. Hunter, b Fin-
cher...
A. C. Maucaulay, not out
10
D. S. Green, not out
0
Extras (B.8, L.B.4, N.B.2)
14
Total (for 7 wkts. dec.) 263
28
T. Overy, S. MacNider and G. Spary did not bat.
*Simpson
Lyal
Smith
Leg
* Burnett
BOWLING ANALYB19.
O. M. R.
the
the
The white ball lying near centre of the top cushion does not appear particularly helpful, yet it is the ball that really saves the situation when you know the best
shot to play. This is the
On the right of my diagram 1 show the "long jenny" which an ax an "i" many amateurs grade
themselves shotronal Jering lucky "if they get it. There is no need to take this chance view of kiss cannon. Strike your bali a shot which can be reduced to a low, taking your cue-contact certaluty if played at all well. The red one thing necessary is to be able to my photo. Hit fairly full and a kiss will result put plenty of real side on
ball. You must send it away from red spinning like a teetotum with powerful right-hand side to pull the ball into the pocket on its arrival.
CRISP SHOT
from
W
which scores the cannon.
10 0 47 0
15 0 79
1
10 1 38 2
E. C. Fincher ...
E. C. Fincher's XI.
X 2 37 Σ
11 2
1
44 4
1
1
• bowled one no bali.
C. 1. Stapleton, c Goodwin, b
Overy
20
G. C. Burnett, e Spary, b Dunne
46
J. C. Lyal, b Meinnes
30
B. M. Trowt, run out
14
A. E. Perry, runt out
151
VINES LOSES TO
I. 3. W. Smith, b Finder
0
E. C. Finchor, not out
53
MCGRATH.
G. Lee, l.b.m., b Fincher
2
J. Hunter, c and b Fincher
4
A. Lewis, e Fincher, b McInnes
11
R. A. J. Simpson, not out....
0
Extras (B. 12)
12
207
L. Wright did not bat.
BOWLING ANALYSIS.
O. M. F. W.
Goodwin
9 2
27
0
McInnca
11
1
2
5 0
1
Dunne
5 0
1
E. F. Fincher
10 F
36
8
Overy
Total (for 9 wkts.)
មុខឌ
SENSATIONAL CRICKET
N.S.W. Lose 5 for 11 And M.C.C. 5 for 36 At Sydney.
SLOW BOWLER'S FEAT
Sydney, Yesterday. New South Wales ore 17. runs ahead of the MC.C. with nine second innings wickets to tall.
Commencing play on a wicket
Australian Prodigy's Greatest Game.
CRAWFORD BEATS ALISON
Melbourne, Yesterday. Elsworth Vines, ranking No.
1 tennis star in the world, was beaten by the Australian pro.
digy, Vivion McGrath, by scores
of 6-2, 2-6, 8-6, 7-5 in the quar- ter finals of the Australian Champlonships.
McGrath played, the greatest
your
INTERNATIONAL CHARITY SWEEPSTAKE
Shanghai Aid For Chinese War Sufferers
Shanghai, Yesterday. In bleak weather and with anow falling lightly, the Inter- national Charity Sweepstake WDA run off this afternoon, when a huge crowd saw Peony (Wour up) coma in first, fol- lowed by Ontario (R. N. Har- ría) and Adalia (H. Maitland).
The first, second and third prizes amounted to $390,000, $160,000 and $60,000. These prizes were drawn respectively by ticket numbers 68,456;' 105,784 and 53,458.
The result of the Sweepstake is that $250,000 is being davot- ed to the relief of the Chinese sufferers in Shanghal.
war
-Router.
MENAGERIE RACE TO-DAY
New Chief Yeoman Of Signals.
NORSEMAN WINS
(By CAPTAIN CUTTLE.)
BORDERERS RUGBY FIFTEEN TO-DAY
Against Navy,
The following will represent The South Wales Borderers Rugby fifteen against the Navy at Sookun- poo this afternoon at 4 p.m.
HONGKONG DEFEAT MANILA AT GOLF
PEARCE'S REMARKABLE
RECOVERY
CONTENDERS FOR WORLD TITLE
HONG
(By Divot.)
Sgt. Gould; Pte. Lewis, Pte.
TONG KONG defeated Manila At the present time Sarazen, ab Walters, Lieut. Galletes, Cpl.
by 6 matches to 8 in the the holder of both the American Shaw; Pts. Hoskins, Pte. Stevens; Triangular Golf Interport yester and British Open Championships, Pte. Watkins, Cpl. Tratt, Pte. day when they won three of the six might fairly claim to be the world's Bromley, Pte. Gilmore, Pte. Lloyd, singles matches played yesterday. champion without any contest, but Licut. Crowe-Read, Pte. Jones, and
Cotton, as the holder of the British Pte. Whelan.
Reserves-L/C. Hewitt, Pte. 25
Jones.
THE
THE following were the resulta: P.G.A. Champlonship, has undeabt-
Singles
edly the best right of any of the M. W. Budd (Hong Kong) lost to professionals on this side to put Referee:Major Mcintyre, R.A. A. V. Ednie (Manila) by ose hole. himself forward as a challenger.
O. E. C. Marton (Hong Kong) beat N. S. Wotherspoon (Manila) Tree-Top Golf. 10 and 9.
SHANGHAI TEAM T. A. Pearce (Hong Kong) lost to
FOR TO-DAY
*
*
EORGE REID, playing in the A. D. Gibbs (Manila) by one hole. final of the Pakenham District L. R. Andrewa (Hong Kong) beat Golf Championship, Melbourne, J. Mason (Manila) 8 and 6.
which he won, pushed his drive at A. E. Lisseman (Hong Kong) the second hole behind a clump of
Hay Given Half-Back beat J. R. McFle (Manila) 8 and 6. trees. He tried a low shot to avoid
Position.
TO-DAY, there is a Menagerie. Only one change in the Shang-
E. J. R. Mitchell (Hong Kong) the branches, but the ball struck lost to J. R. H. Mason (Manila) 5 a root, bounced high into the air, and 3....
and remained in one of the top Fourballs.
branches of a tree.
T-DA, all classes together, hal team is being made for their (Hong Kong) beat N. 9. Wethers- the ball on
over
*
:
L. R. Andrews and T. A. Pearce
#
M. W. Budd and O. E. Marton Reid climbed the tree and played to the edge of the course "A" Lycemun Beacon match against the Combined Chin-poon and A. V. Ednie (Manila) by green. Then he sank a long putt
ese at the Club ground to-day at 9 and 10. to Rumsey Shoal (port), Channel
and got a bogey four. Rocks (starboard) a distance of
9 pm. 8.1 miles.
Hay, the Argylle player who was (Hong Kong) bent J. R. McFle and Cue freely when imparting this side.
HIEF Yeoman Swetland has picked as
A. D. Gibbs (Manila) by 3 and 6. Ninth In One. a reserve, will come
A. E. Liesamen and E. J. ROMETHING of a record in golf You need a crisp shot which sends your
taken over the duties of Chief Into the right half position in Mitchell (Hong Kong) beat J. R. H. cuo well through the ball as far to the
SOMETHING of a record in gol rights as you can will never succeed. Yeoman of Signals at the Yacht place of Remedios,
| Mason and J. Mason, Jnr. (Manila) You may be trying to hit your ball
The China Mail learned this by 2 and 1.
visitor to the Emerald English that the strikable surface of a billiard Yeoman of Signale Kelsall who has morning that Shanghal will be impossibly for to the right. Remember Club, taking the place of Chief
Country Club's links in Victoria. ball is net much more than the size loft for Home. Mr. Kelsall recent-playing Bossuet, the brilliant Pearce Vader Bogey.
Mu,succeeded in piùying from the Brat tee to ninth hole for a scors of a forin. Keep the above in mind us you swing your cue, make, a half ball angle for the pocket, and the shot. is youre every time,
A cor respon- dent sets
-
me a me
ker poser, the gist of which ls the sti- pulation that a
nust "try to the best of hi
bility" to hit sall "on." Je veral
posit tons can be
shown in which
It
is most
aw kwaju,
рет пар
ly was the recipient of a gift from the Yacht Club as a token of ap
preciation of his services.-
NORS
TORSEMAN won the night race
round the Island last Tuesday. | It is understood that her crow have
been considering that had they sailed outside of Poutoo and Lam ma Islande they would have come in much earlier than they did. The wind was stronger some miles from shore,
*
THERE was an interesting whal Ter um yesterday afternoon
with naval crews, the second of its kind, the course being-(1) Chan- nel Rock (P), (2) Kowloon Rock (P), (3) Mark on Line (5), (4) Rumsey Shoal ¡(P).
2ND RACE Distance:7 miles. Started at 14.01.
game of his career. His maguiù. almos i cont variation of pace and length Impossible, frequently forced Vines into errore, for the sail "on" to be struck. There Whalers is only one thing to do in the circum-Whitshed while his brilliant returns of can-stances. The player must not try to Cornwall (1) non ball services frequently non-evade a penalty, but make a sporting Wishart plussed Vines.
shot whatever the consequence,
Wren Keppel Jack Crawford, Australia's lead- hope for better luck next time.
Cornwall (2) ing player, entered the Semi-Final; He also wants to know what hap- Verity whan he beat Wilmur Allison, an- pens if, after taking a red, the cue ball Hermes (2) is left touching pink and the striker Hermes (1) other American contender, by 6-8,"plays away" and pockets blue. This 3-6, 8-6, 6-0, 6-3,--Reuter,
stroke is quite fuir..
H.
COCHET ANALYSES WORLD CHAMPION
HOW TO BEAT ELLSWORTH VINES.
and
Timo
Finished Pos'n. Pts.
3.28.40
8.28.30
8
8.28.48 3
3.29.20
4
3.82.18
3.83.31
в
3.33.32
3.42.10
8.42.48
French Club inside left, in, Mon-
*
day's game against the Combined DEARCE made a magnificent re- of one stroke, says Austral News. The club's ninth green is about Services on the Kowloon Footballcovery against Gibbs. He Club's ground,
finished the morning round 7 down 50 yards to the right of the first The following will represent owing to poor form on the greens, tes, and the visitor played what In the afternoon, however, he re-test cricket writers would describa Shanghai in to-day's game:—
Bradley (Police); Voong (Tung turned a card of 35 at the turn as a magnificent square cut, and Hwa) and Turner (Police); Hay-two under bogey-and lost final- bis ball dlasppeared into the ninth
"4in. (Argylls), Gash (captain) (Police) ly by only one hole. Vance (R.A.S.C.); Keats (as afternoon play were 4, 3, 6, 3, 4, Byden Cup Captain. Lancs.), Jack (Police), Collat (French Club), E. C. Chan (Tung Hwa) and Hughes (Argylls). Reserves:LA Ning (3
(Tung Hwa), Boisserie (S.R.C.) and Bon-
'VARSITY RUGGER
HERO.
Prodigious Work of Pope for Cantabs.
Pearce's outward strokes in the
4, 8, 3, 6.
Mason Slicing.
*
I
SHALL be surprised if Walter
Hagen, the world's greatest golf personality, is deposed as captain NDREWS had little difficulty of the American Ryder Cup team In defeating J. Mason and visiting England next year, in Because the stood 6 up after the morning favour of Sarazen. round. Mason was finding difficulty latter is the champion of Britain with his tee shots and sliced his and the United States it has been drives at the 16th, 17th and 18th assumed that he will be given the In the afternoon Andrews maiu-honour bestowed on Hagen in all tained his lead and eventually previous matches between the two countries.. The assumption, I won by eight and six.
think, is ill-founded. It has even been suggested that, having lost his flair for the game, It is doubt
Shangbal v. Manila.
TODAY Shanghai will be opposeful whether he will get a place In
ed to: Manila in the fourball the team. Those who talk in this: foursomes. Play commenced on way must surely have overlooked a the old course at 8.45 this morn- recent performance of Hagen's. In ing and at 12.45 on the new course a wonderful and characteristic in the afternoon,
In days to come, when the young sters of yesterday are doing a job of work to far-flung outposts of the
finish- 69 in the fourth and Empire, they will light another pipe
dazzling 65 in the last round-he THE Commodore v Members sail and tell unbelievable stories of a World's Golf Title:
won the St. Louis open champion="/ The
del little fellow paned or ea
ship with the remarkably low score Thursday se a number of the parti-scrum-half for Cambridge in 1952, THE proposed challenge match of 281, five-strokas ahead of Mac- cipants wished to cruise over the writes Trevor Wignall in the Daily between Cotton and Sarazen donald Smith. Such an achieve holidays.
Express, and the
for the unofficial Golf Champion-iment scarcely supports the view They will relate that he was only ship of the World is a revival of that, at the age of 40 Hagen is too about knee-high to a grasshopper an idea that for a time proved very old for the competitive arena. or, if they are sticklers for greater successful in the States. In 1921, accuracy, about the cize and weight when Hutchinson took the British
NEW FORWARD FOR THE SPURS.
19-Year-Old Costs Thousands.
London Dec, 27:/
of Steve Donoghue--and then they Open Championship across the All The Difference. will inform whatever world may be Atlantic for the first time, Barnes
NE of the best stories about
listening to them that he seemed to was the winner of the American Harry Vardon, who bas apent
London, Jan. 13. hand, taken at average height," are
be attached to the bull by s string, Open, and a 72-hole decider was COCHET has made an exceptionally consistent, says the Frenchman, considering their speed
that he threw out perfect passes to staged between them for the first thirty years at the South Herts. interesting comparison be and the very narrow allowance for
his partner, that be performed pro- unofficial "World's Championship." golf course, concerns the time which was affected by early morn tween the services of W. T. Tilden error which the extremely flat tra
digious deeds in defence, and that The idea caught on, and for five, when he went to see a great ing rain the home team lost their
he was so far ahead in prominence years a similar match was played specialist concerning a cyat on his last five wickets for Il runs, Ham and H. E. Vines. He is quoted in jectory of the ball permits. This is Tottenham Hotspur F. C. Inst
of all others on the field that he each year between the holders of leyelid. After a long walt he was mond and Verity being unplayable. "American Lawn Tennle" as stating a curious point, and one which week completed negotiations
the American Open and the British shown into the presence, and after for the transfer of G. W. Hall,
appeared to be surrounded by & The M.C.C. had acored 168 for 6 that Vines's service to not as swift Cochet belleves Law observers have
radiant light.
Boty Open The only British winner in a brief examination the surgeon |noticed. If one considers the height | the Notts County inside-left. when a sensational rot set in as Tilden's, cannon-ball. "Tilden's to which the majority of balls
the series was Havers, who, when gave him a prescription and fixed Hall, who was regarded as the Others, like Jenkins, and Lor-on tour in America after winning further visit the following week. and the tourists were dismissed for 199. Wyatt and Verity added cannon-ball was absolutely flat, it bound, it will be apparent that County's best forward, is only 18 raine, and Parker, and Waller, and the British Championship of 1923, "What is the name?" said the 71 runs in 73 minutes for the third had no apin, nothing slowed it up. Vines himself is exactly the ideal years old. The exact transfer fee Owen-Smith, and Minns, and Fyfe defeated Bobby Jones, who had surgeons "Harry Vardon, geld wicket. Chilvers, a slow bowler Vince's service, on the other hand, height to permit the formal reach was not disclosed, but it amounts to were undeniably good, but it was just won his first American Cham-Harry simply "Not the Hazry
of the arm, in a horizontal plane, several thousand pounde
the mila Pope who dominated planship.
Vardon, the great golfer?" queried fast approaching Test standard, has a good deal of spin, it loses to return the ball with a minimum Representatives of the Tottenham everything, from beginnlag to end.
the specialist, "I don't know about caused the English collapse, therefore in speed what it gains in chance of error clos went to Bradford on Saturday
them, sald Vardon modestly, "T Scores as cabled by Reuter were
am a golfer," as follow weight, sureness and length. In As to how to beat Viper, Cochet the 17th to see Notts County's match
TN 1926 Jones was the holder of "We'll have that thing ont in NSW 180 (Brown 6, Rowa 70, any event, for execution, co-ordina- nakz:- What new weapons to find? with Bradford, Hall scored a goal
Bradman1, Fingleton 1 on and mution, power and supple-
What tactics to commence? How to for Nette, who wan the castch. It CANADA AND EMPIRE GAMES I
both titles, and his success in thirty seconde," said the surgeon. this and subsequent years caused And It was so. "Now there is Mitchell 8 for 82, Hammond 2
derango this mechanism as sound as was his fourth goal for his club this 3 for 22, Very 2 for 9)sess, I know of no service in the it is precise and powerful Per season
The Amateur Athletis' Union de the match to be dropped.. The only something wrong with my mashle
general World's Championship Match since shots M.C.C. 199 (Patsed) 2, Ham world to compare with Vides's haps it is along the lines of precl Last season he played in 21 cided at their annu
Cochet attributes the powerful afan which it is useful to search. League matches and stored three meeting at Ottawa not to put in then was in 1928, when Hagen and In the and Vardon spent about I have said that he allows a mini- goala Hall Joined Notts County a bid for Canada for the 1934 Em-Farrell, as British and American an hour in the surgery demonstrat- mum margin of error in the execut from a works club at Newark in the pire Games. "The last Empire champions respectively, played offing approach shots while an aver leverage which is long arm gives tion of his basic stre The least 1930-1: sekson, in which he played Games held in Canada, at Hamil-In a series of five matches, Hagen growing queas of patients famed
in the waiting-room- orshahid and bla öback- deviation costs hhh the point. [only one League game for Notts ton, Ontario, cost about $12,000. winning by the odd match.
mond 19 Wyatt A.. Verity 88, Leyland 29, F. L. Brown 29, Chilyere 6 for 18 Hil's forting of Vines to the treme
89 Howell 2 (640)
N.S.W.: 86 for 1.
The Best Right.
No comments yet.
Private notes are available after approval.