Tuesday June 10, 1975
. . . where the 1970s live forever!

MLB standings at the end of June 10, 1975

A.L. East
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Boston Red Sox 50 28 22 0 .560 244235 15-1413-86-4Lost 3
New York Yankees 54 29 25 0 .5371.0 260200 13-1116-149-1Won 1
Milwaukee Brewers 52 25 27 0 .4814.0 213239 10-1215-154-6Lost 1
Detroit Tigers 50 23 27 0 .4605.0 198237 11-1312-144-6Lost 3
Cleveland Indians 53 23 30 0 .4346.5 204239 12-1711-134-6Lost 3
Baltimore Orioles 52 22 30 0 .4237.0 176191 15-147-166-4Lost 2


A.L. West
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Oakland A's 55 33 22 0 .600 225200 21-1012-125-5Won 3
Kansas City Royals 57 32 25 0 .5612.0 249238 18-914-165-5Won 2
Minnesota Twins 51 26 25 0 .5105.0 246239 10-1216-133-7Won 3
Texas Rangers 55 28 27 0 .5095.0 260246 11-1617-115-5Won 3
California Angels 57 28 29 0 .4916.0 225219 14-1714-126-4Lost 1
Chicago White Sox 54 23 31 0 .4269.5 214231 11-1412-173-7Won 1


N.L. East
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Pittsburgh Pirates 51 29 22 0 .569 211184 17-1012-126-4Won 2
New York Mets 50 27 23 0 .5401.5 204192 17-1310-106-4Won 1
Philadelphia Phillies 54 29 25 0 .5371.5 216204 22-87-177-3Won 1
Chicago Cubs 55 29 26 0 .5272.0 236244 19-810-184-6Lost 1
St. Louis Cardinals 51 26 25 0 .5103.0 211205 16-1310-128-2Won 7
Montreal Expos 47 18 29 0 .3839.0 157209 12-136-164-6Won 1


N.L. West
GPWLTPCTGBRFRAHOMEROADLAST 10STRK
Cincinnati Reds 58 34 24 0 .586 271203 22-712-177-3Lost 2
Los Angeles Dodgers 59 34 25 0 .5760.5 256202 18-1016-154-6Lost 1
San Francisco Giants 55 28 27 0 .5094.5 231236 15-1113-165-5Lost 1
San Diego Padres 56 27 29 0 .4826.0 187224 13-1314-164-6Lost 1
Atlanta Braves 57 25 32 0 .4398.5 208259 13-912-233-7Lost 2
Houston Astros 61 21 40 0 .34414.5 237263 12-169-241-9Won 1



Today's scores and summaries:

A's 3, Orioles 0 at Baltimore (night game):
Jim Perry allowed only one hit and pitched his first complete game of the season to beat the Orioles, 3-0, for his first victory since being obtained by the Athletics in a trade with the Indians. Perry gave up a leadoff walk to Al Bumbry, but then retired the next 17 straight batters before Bumbry spoiled his no-hit bid with a single after two men were out in the sixth inning. The A's scored all their runs on homers. Gene Tenace hit for the circuit after a double by Joe Rudi in the fourth and Claudell Washington added the other run with a round-tripper in the sixth.

Rangers 8, Red Sox 3 at Boston (night game):
Jeff Burroughs smashed a two-run homer and Roy Smalley drove in two runs with a pair of hits to escort the Rangers to an 8-3 victory over the Red Sox. Burroughs' homer after a safe bunt by Jim Sundberg in the third inning was the sixth for the Rangers' slugger over a stretch of seven games. The Rangers added two runs in the sixth on a single by Lenny Randle, triple by Roy Howell and single by Smalley. A safe squeeze bunt by Smalley produced one of the Rangers' four runs in the seventh. Bernie Carbo hit two homers for the Red Sox.

White Sox 9, Brewers 2 at Chicago (night game):
The White Sox ended a six-game losing streak, their longest since 1972, by piling up 14 hits to defeat the Brewers, 9-2. Wilbur Wood also ended his personal four-game losing streak, pitching his first complete game since April 19. Pat Kelly ignited the White Sox scoring by hitting a homer in the fifth inning. Three more runs followed on singles by Jorge Orta, Bucky Dent and Carlos May, a sacrifice fly by Ken Henderson and two wild pitches by Bill Champion, who replaced Pete Broberg in the midst of the outburst. The White Sox added three runs in the sixth on a single by Tony Muser, double by Brian Downing, walk to Kelly, single by Orta and infield out by Dent.

Twins 5, Indians 3 at Cleveland (night game):
A run-scoring single by Steve Brye and pass to Tony Oliva with the bases loaded in the 12th inning enabled the Twins to defeat the Indians, 5-3. The Indians grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first inning before Tom Kelly singled and Dan Ford hit his first major league homer to tie the score in the fourth. Oliva put the Twins ahead with a circuit clout in the eighth. but George Hendrick hit a matching blow in the Indians' half. The deadlock persisted until the 12th when the Twins broke away. Ford walked and stole second. After Danny Thompson grounded out, Phil Roof drew a pass. Brye then singled, driving in Ford with the tie-breaking tally. A walk to Larry Hisle loaded the bases and a pass to Oliva forced home an insurance run.

Royals 4, Tigers 3 at Kansas City (night game):
Marty Pattin, making his first start of the season, gained credit for the Royals' 4-3 victory over the Tigers with help from Lindy McDaniel, who ended the game by inducing Gates Brown to hit into a double play. The Royals, who had a homer by John Mayberry, broke a 2-2 tie with a run in the fifth when Cookie Rojas grounded into a forceout at second with the bases loaded. George Brett then drove in what proved to be the winning run with a single in the eighth, scoring Jim Wohlford, who had singled and stolen second. Willie Horton homered for the Tigers in the ninth. Leon Roberts and Tom Veryzer followed with singles before McDaniel relieved with one out and saved the game for Pattin.

Yankees 6, Angels 4 at New York (night game):
Nolan Ryan, who pitched a no-hitter and a two-hitter in his last two previous starts, was knocked out in the sixth inning after giving up seven hits and all of the Yankees' runs in a 6-4 victory over the Angels. Larry Gura, who started for the Yankees, was in constant trouble, allowing eight hits and seven walks in 7 2/3 innings, but gained his first victory of the season with help from Dick Tidrow. The Yankees jumped on Ryan for four runs in the second on a walk to Thurman Munson, homer by Chris Chambliss, pass to Ed Herrmann, singles by Sandy Alomar and Walt Williams and an error. The Yankees added their other pair off Ryan in the sixth on hits by Williams, Roy White and Munson and a sacrifice fly by Chambliss.

Pirates 9, Reds 5 at Cincinnati (night game):
The slugging of Willie Stargell, who hit three doubles and a single, driving in five runs, powered the Pirates to a 9-5 victory over the Reds in a sweep of the three-game series. Stargell knocked in two runs with a double in the first inning and scored himself on a two-bagger by Richie Zisk. A walk to Rennie Stennett, single by Al Oliver and another double by Stargell added two more runs in the fourth. Zisk singled and Manny Sanguillen homered for a pair in the fifth. Stargell's single accounted for one of the Pirates' last two runs in the eighth. Cesar Geronimo hit an inside-the-park homer with a man on base for the Reds.

Astros 4, Cubs 3 at Houston (night game):
The Astros snapped their nine-game losing streak behind the pitching of Doug Konieczny, who also helped himself at bat by driving in two runs with a double and single while defeating the Cubs, 4-3. Konieczny got off to a shaky start, giving up two runs in the first inning on a walk to Don Kessinger, singles by Jose Cardenal and Bill Madlock and a sacrifice fly by Jerry Morales. The Astros used a walk to Cesar Cedeno and singles by Larry Milbourne and Konieczny for a run in the fourth before tying the score in the seventh on a single by Milbourne, sacrifice by Konieczny and single by Greg Gross. Then in the eighth, Cedeno and Milt May walked, Enos Cabell batted in a run with a single and Konieczny doubled to plate what proved to be the deciding tally. The Cubs scored once in the ninth on singles by Rick Monday and Morales and a wild pitch.

Expos 5, Dodgers 4 at Los Angeles (night game):
An infield hit by Pepe Mangual, together with errors by Ron Cey and Mike Marshall, enabled the Expos to score the deciding run in the seventh inning in a 5-4 victory over the Dodgers. Burt Hooton, who started for the Dodgers, was hit on the arm by a line drive and yielded the mound to Al Downing in the third inning. The Expos promptly counted twice off Downing and then tied the score at 4-4 when Barry Foote singled and Bob Bailey homered in the sixth. After Marshall took the mound in the seventh, Mangual beat out a grounder to Cey and reached second on the third baseman's wild throw. Marshall then tried to pick Mangual off base, but his throw bounced off the runner's arm and ricocheted into right-center field, giving Mangual plenty of time to pick himself up and race home with the Expos' winning run.

Phillies 7, Padres 0 at San Diego (night game):
Jay Johnstone, Terry Harmon and Mike Schmidt each drove in two runs and Larry Christenson gained his first victory of the season as the Phillies defeated the Padres, 7-0. Christenson was removed after yielding two singles to open the eighth inning and Tug McGraw finished. Johnny Oates singled, Dick Allen walked and Johnstone doubled to produce the Phillies' first two runs in the fourth. After Jerry Martin received an intentional pass, Harmon sent two more runs home with a triple. Schmidt batted in his runs with a double in the seventh and homer in the ninth.

Mets 5, Giants 0 at San Francisco (night game):
Tom Seaver pitched the Mets to a 5-0 victory over the Giants and wound up his first shutout of the season by striking out the side in the ninth inning. The Mets began their scoring with a run in the second on a double by Ed Kranepool and single by Jerry Grote. A two-base error by Glenn Adams on a drive by Rusty Staub, singles by John Milner and Mike Phillips and a double by Seaver produced two runs in the fourth. The final pair crossed the plate in the seventh on a single by Phillips, double by Grote, a sacrifice and infield out by Felix Millan.


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