The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 16, 1975, Image 8

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Page 8 THE BATTALION
THURSDAY, OCT. 16, 1975
AGGIELAND
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Boston evens series up
with 5-4 win in Cincy
Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Dwight Evans
tripled home two runs and scored
another in Boston’s five-run fourth
inning explosion that carried the
Red Sox to a 5-4 victory over Cin
cinnati Wednesday and tied the
World Series at two games each.
Remarkable Luis Tiant battled
his way through one jam after
another to pitch the Red Sox to the
victory that knotted the best-of-
seven Series. Game 5 will be played
in Cincinnati Thursday night before
the teams return to Boston for
Saturday’s sixth game. A seventh
contest, if needed, would be played
Sunday in Boston.
Evans, whose two-run ninth
inning homer had tied the game
Tuesday night, delivered the key
blow in a rally that gave Tiant just
enough of an edge to hold off the
Cincinnati bats.
Boston center fielder Fred Lynn
made a running catch near the wall
of Ken Griffey s long fly with two
men on base in the Cincinnati ninth
to preserve Tiant s nine-hit victory.
The Reds threatened to kayo Bos
ton s ace when they scored two
quick runs in the first inning. But it
was still 2-0 in the fourth when the
Red Sox came to bat against Cincin
nati starter Pred Norman.
Carlton Fisk opened the fourth
with a line single to left and moved
to second when rookie Lynn singled
to right.
Rico Petrocilli popped out but
then Norman’s wild pitch moved
the runners to second and third.
Evans tagged a 1-1 pitch up the
right-center field alley and by the
time Cesar Geromino got it back to
the infield, Evans was sliding into
third base with his triple and the
score was tied.
The relay skipped by Reds third
baseman Pete Rose but Cincinnati
got a break when the ball hit the
fence in front of the Red Sox dugout
and Evans had to hold. It was a tem
poral) respite for the Reds.
Rick Burleson followed with his
seventh hit of the series, a ball that
looked like a routine single to left.
Evans scored easily. But Burleson
never stopped as he rounded first
and hustled it into a two-base hit,
beating George Foster s throw by
an eyelast.
That finished Norman, with Reds’
Manager Sparky Anderson bringing
in Pedro Borbon, but the Reds re
liever fared little better than their
starter had.
Tiant delivered a single to center,
another unexpected hit for the
pitcher who batted only once during
the regular season because of the
American League’s designated hit
ter rule. In the first game of the
Series in Boston, when Tiant throt
tled the Reds 6-0, he got a key
hit in a six-run rally in the seventh
inning.
Burleson stopped at third on the
play out of respect for Geronimo s
arm. Unaccustomed as he is to run
ning the bases, Tiant took a big turn
at first. Johnny Bench faked a throw
but couldn’t try it because first
baseman Tony Perez had moved
over into a cutoff position. Tiant
made it back to the bag without a
play.
On Borbon s next pitch, Juan Be-
niquez checked his swing and sent a
roller between first base and the
mound. The ball was tapped so
lightly that even on the speedy arti
ficial surface, it traveled no more
than 30 feet.
Perez raced in for the play but
never came up with the baseball.
Burleson scored on the play and
Tiant, advancing cautiously, stop
ped at second.
Denny Doyle then fouled out but
the Sox still weren’t through.
Carl Yastrzemski dropped a soft
single to right-center and Tiant was
off and running.
„ *- ’ll sLiiiji
Photo by Alan Killingsworth.
Bucky Sams bulls in for a score in last Saturday’s game versus Texas Tech.
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