Ontario Community Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 7 Nov 2001, D3

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The Oakville Beaver, W e d n e sd a y O c to b e r 31, 2001 - D3 Playoff bound in first year The Oakville U-19 field lacrosse team made it into the play-offs in its very first year of operation. Unfortunately, the clyb lost its quarterfinal playoff game to Ottawa on Sunday, Oct. 28, in overtime by a score of 10-9 and was eliminated from further play. Oakville fought back from a 7-3 deficit in the third quarter and took a 9-8 lead into the last minute of regulation time. However, Ottawa, the favourite going into the game, tied it up with seconds to go and then added another in the extra peri od to win the game. Scoring for Oakville were John Hibberd (3), Josh Smyth (2), Kyle Johnson (2) Ryan Shaw and Andrew Kingston. Oakville goalie Mike Willis (a member of the Oakville Buzz junior B box lacrosse team) played a stellar game in nets. The defence, lead by co-captain Geoff Farrer, Craig Henderson, both teammates of Willis on the Buzz, and Oakville midget grad Nick Ledderhof were solid all game. During the season, the Oakville players, whose average age is 16.5, in a league made up mostly of 18 and 19 year olds, improved steadily. Coach Bruce Donovan feels that the team will be a serious contender next season and was very happy with the team's progress, despite the tough loss against Ottawa. During the regular season Oakville's goals were scored by Junior `A' players Eric Beatty (12) and Ryan Shaw (9), midget player Patrick Farrer (8), Buzz player Paul Winger (7), David Cosmo (6), Kyle Johnson (5), John Hibberd (5), Oakville ban tam standout Garrett Ince (5), Josh Smyth (4), Shawn Gonneau (3), Mimico Jr B player Matt Walsh (2), Andy Hunter (2), James Walsh, Kyle Fountain, Chris Butt, John Barton and Henderson and Geoff Farrer. Oakville now has a junior field lacrosse program which will only improve as Oakville's minor field system graduates more players. Oakville's minor teams (novice, peewee, bantam and midget) play their field lacrosse games in April and May, before many of these players head into the arenas for the sum mer box lacrosse season. The U-19's, are junior players, who are 17 to 19 year olds, mostly. Their field lacrosse season is in the fall. Some of the league players are also on university teams, so the games are held on weekends in September and October. The teams play 13 league games and then the play-offs, which culminated on Oct. 28 in Oshawa. Incidentally, Niagara Region won the gold medal game in the A division against Oshawa. Peterborough beat Halton Hills for the B champi onship. Anyone interested in playing should contact Oakville Minor Lacrosse Association. Halton high school sports round-up Kyle Jones is top local finisher: 13th at OFSAA O akville m issed out on the medals at the OFSAA track and field cham pionships in O ttaw a on Saturday. The best finish was Q.E. Park's Kyle Jones in junior boys with a 13th place finish. But h e's likely not too ecstatic with that, having fin ished fourth in the junior cat egory the previous year. The only other top-20 fin ish from the Oakville contin gent was R ichard Garton, also o f Q.E. Park, who had a real good run to finish 17th in his first year in the senior category. Not surprisingly, his Q.E. Park senior boys team posted the best result of the Oakville contingent, just missing the medals with a fourth place finish. The entire senior team placed in the top 100 -- all easily inside the top half of the 231-strong field. A thletes qualified for OFSAA at the recent G-HAC (Golden Horseshoe Athletic Conference) meet. The top two team s advanced from each division as well as the top three individuals (not on a qualifying team). G-HAC results w ere in Sunday's Beaver. Standings & scores G IR L S B A S K E T B A L L V o lp e D iv is io n S e n io r Team W PF PA P Aquinas 449 157 16 8 Iroquois Ridge 6 318 264 12 Bishop Reding 5 297 256 10 Blakelock 272 267 10 5 Oak. Trafalgar 5 238 257 10 4 Loyola 313 303 8 4 Milton 261 281 8 Q.E. Park 2 4 220 280 1 E.C. Drury 153 258 2 White Oaks 0 137 306 0 Last week's scores: Loyola 44, Bishop Reding 40: Iroquois Ridge 43. White Oaks 19; Aquinas 52, Blakelock 20; Q.E. Park 37, E.C. Drury 23; Oak Trafalgar 42, Milton 41; Aquinas 51, Bishop Reding 24; E.C. Drury 35, White Oaks 20; Oak Trafalgar 29, Q.E. Park 21; Iroquois Ridge 66, Loyola 41; Blakelock 39, Milton 31. J u n io r Team W PF PA P 467 227 16 Aquinas 8 Bishop Reding 7 261 221 14 Oak Trafalgar 226 198 12 6 Blakelock 5 274 237 10 Iroquois Ridge 5 287 274 10 4 249 232 E.C. Drury 8 2 191 264 4 Loyola 2 171 278 4 Milton White Oaks 1 183 265 2 Q.E. Park 0 169 272 0 Last week's scores: Bishop Reding 39, Loyola 22; Iroquois Ridge 40, White Oaks 20; Aquinas 61, Blakelock 22; E.C. Drury 52, Q.E. Park 25; Oak Trafalgar 33, Milton 16; Aquinas 61, Bishop Reding 19; E.C. Drury 44, White Oaks 20; Oak Trafalgar 31, Q.E. Park 21; Iroquois Ridge 25, Loyola 19; Blakelock 32, Milton 13. FOOTBALL S e n io r D iv is io n o n e Halton `Metro Bowl' Division One Championship, Tuesday, Nov. 6, 10:30 a.m., Notre Dame vs Nelson at Ivor Wynne Stadium. D iv is io n tw o SEMIFINALS (Fri, Nov. 9, 2 p.m.) Aldershot at Assumption (at Nelson Stad.}; Burlington Central at Bishop Reding; Milton at Iroquois Ridge; Q.E. Park at Oak Trafalgar. J u n io r D iv is io n o n e SEMIFINALS (Thurs, Nov. 8, 2 p.m.) Assumption at Nelson; Notre Dame at Loyola D iv is io n tw o SEMIFINALS (Thurs, Nov. 8, 2 p.m.) Milton at Burlington Central; Lord Elgin at Blakelock. MIDGET GIRLS - 231 INDIVIDUAL Place Tim Name School 1 12:49.7 Kohlmeier. Alyson St. Pat's Samia 30 14:24.3 Matheson, Kathryn White Oaks S.S. 56 14:54.7 Cicchini, Amanda Aquinas 62 14:59.7 VanVeen, Stephanie Aquinas 104 15:40.8 Terceira, Kelly Aquinas 123 16:01.1 Lizarazo, Cristina Aquinas 138 16:14.0 Bums. Megan Aquinas TEAM 10 (of 37)... St. Thomas Aquinas M IDGET BOYS - 237 1 17:56.2 Woods, Michael Hillcrest Foreshew, Matthew 43 19:57.3 Oak. Trafalgar 54 20:08.5 Teixeira, Dave Aquinas 20:18.4 61 Diochon, Arthur Loyola 96 21:02.2 Samuel, Scott Loyola 151 22:13.5 Maduri, Adam Loyola 212 24:13.0 Malenfant, Jason Loyola TEAM 20 (of 37) ...Loyola JUNIOR GIRLS - 231 1 15:44.6 Brown, Megan St. James CHS 18:19.4 58 Vaccariello, Hailey Loyola 59 18:20.5 Hyland, Melissa Loyola 66 18:28.4 Weagant, Leah Loyola 105 19:15.6 Robertson, Kelsey Loyola 115 19:26.7 Telehar, Lisa Loyola TEAM 7 (of 36) ... Loyola JU NIOR BOYS - 232 1 20:29.3 Morrill, Jay Collingwood 13 21:39.3 Jones, Kyle Q.E. Park 75 23:40.9 Prostran, Filip Q.E. Park 130 24:48.5 Shepherd, Cam Q.E. Park 141 25:02.8 Tschan, Marco Q.E. Park 153 25:25.3 Chase, Scot Q.E. Park 10 (of 38)... Q.E. Park SENIOR GIRLS Kohlmeier, Amy Kirkby, Courtney Jones, Shannon Lapp, Leanne Koenig, Nikki Evershed, Devon 227 St. Pat's Samia Q.E. Park Q.E. Park Q.E. Park Q.E. Park Q.E. Park 1 104 182 191 221 225 19:30.3 24:11.9 26:29.5 26:47.7 28:56.2 29:50.3 33 (of 37)... Q.E. Park SENIOR BOYS - 231 1 24:24.0 Dionne, Joe Paul Dwyer 17 25:45.2 Garton, Richard Q.E. Park 42 26:41.8 Kozak, James Q.E. Park 83 27:30.5 Kilmartin, Jon Q.E. Park 93 27:42.7 Hartt, Don Q.E. Park 99 27:54.3 McDonald, Bob Q.E. Park 4 (of 36) ...Q.E. Park * top four counted towards team total ** to advance to OFSAA a team had to finish top two at the recent G-HAC cross country championship. As well, the top three individuals, not on the qualifying teams, also advanced. Full G-HAC results were in Sunday's Beaver. *** the top finisher in each category is listed, as well Cru also had second and third teams in last weekend's semifinals (Continued from page D1) compared to 12-1-1 for the Cru, were fashioning a David and Goliath story in these playoffs, dumping host Balmy Beach in extra time in last weekend's quarterfinals and shocking the visiting Crusaders the previous week 15-8. Fortunately, for the Cru, in the somewhat con voluted playoff structure, it wasn't an elimination game, but just made their lives tougher by forcing them onto to the road for the previous weekend's quarterfinal game, which they won 18-0 over Gttawa Irish. It was their fourth straight road game. Their win set up last Saturday's rematch with Brantford -- this time at the Cru's Ninth Line home turf and this time with the Cru fully pre pared. Any lingering disbelief about Brantford's play o ff transformation were quickly erased with Brantford opening the scoring on an early penalty kick (3-0). The lead would change hands several times -- including a final 15-13 lead for Brantford early in the second half -- before the Cru were able to nudge ahead for good. Even then, there were some tense moments as they had to preserve their final 32-25 margin. Brantford's scoring all came via the penalty boot with their kicker good on four of five first half kicks (with Brantford trailing the Cru 13-12 at the half) and then good on his first second-half boot, which gave Brantford their last lead of the game at 15-13 (they had earlier led 3-0 and 6-5). The Crusaders, on the other hand, had failed to hold earlier leads in the first half of 5-3 and 13-6 before taking the lead for good in the second half at 18-15. They then increased it to their biggest lead of the game at 26-15 only to have Brantford, at one point whittle it down to less than a try at 29-25. Besides leading the team as captain, Ryan Morrison also led the Cru scoring charge with three tries and two penalty kicks (for 21 points). Guy Vorster actually provided all of the insur ance points with the final six points on two drop kicks through the uprights. Stewart Riley also had a try, which put the Cru up 18-15 (erasing the final Brantford lead of 1513). STRONG PROGRAM The Cru showed the strength of its rugby pro gram with both their second and third squads also seeing playoff semifinal action last Saturday. The second team finished first in the regular season in a close race but then squeaked in to the final round in the fourth and final spot. That did come back to haunt them as they lost 25-12 to top seed Balmy Beach. Balmy Beach will face Yeoman in the championship game. The third team won 30-11 in a rematch over Aurora. They will face Balmy Beach in the cham pionship game. The above two games are also on the McCormick Cup slate at Fletchers Fields with the thirds at 11 a.m. and the seconds at 12:30 p.m. COME CHECK OUT OUR NEW OFFICE ' .-ft o O A K V IL L E G Y M N A ST IC S C L U B W IN T E R SE SSIO N o ' > /^ y v JANUARY 5 - MARCH 8, 2002 376 KERR STREET November 15,2001- 9 am to 7 pm (905) 8 4 2 -5 5 5 6 « °a J . ; R E G IS T E R N O W ! N o v em b er 12 - 16 N o v e m b e r 17 & 18 9 am -8 p m 9 a m -1 2 p m M on.-Fri. Sat. & Sun. Our Mission Statement: To Promote, Support and Foster a Love for the Sport of Gymnastics. L ib e r t y Tax S e r v ic e O Our General Philosophy We strive to ensure that each and every eliild in our program is made to feel special. We offer growth in the areas of strength, flexibility, peer interaction, development of self-confi dence and overall well-being in conjunction with skill acquisition. We offer organized gym nastics instruction with state-of-the-art equipment in a fun-filled, controlled environment PARENT & TOT PROGRAMS Ages 18 m onths - 2 years A fu n filled environment complete with music, circuits and games. Unique cir cuits will be used to explore dominant movement patterns used in gymnastics, each child receives a poster to monitor its progress. GYM MINI CRICKETS Ages 3 - 5 Your child will be introduced to basic gym nastic skills and combinations. Circuits will include the vault, bars, beam, floor, parallel bars, trampoline, tumble track and pit. TH R EE M A STER M U SICIA N S An Evening O f Lyric Entertainment GIRLS & BOYS RECREATION Ages 6+ Saturday, November 10, 2001 At 8:00 p.m. You w on't w ant to miss this w onderful oppor tu n ity to enjoy the art o f Valerie Tryon (piano), Suzanne Shulm an (flute), and M ark Fewer (violin), three m aster perform ers on their visit to Oakville. You will be delighted w ith an evening o f beautiful masterworks by j.S . Bach, Frederic C hopin, N iccolo Paganini, Richard Strauss and m any others. The skills are based on the nationally used CAN-GYM program. There are fourteen levels fo r the both the boys and gids. We use creative and challenging circuits relating to the various apparatus. TRAMPOLINE & TUMBLING Ages 7+ This is a very unique program that is very exciting and popidar with young athletes. There is a ten-card skill system with a very specific focus on the tra mpoline and use o f the tumble track. For tickets and inform ation please call: (905) 844-3972 Adults: $ 2 0 .0 0 (students/seniors $18.00) St. Jude s Anglican Church 160 William Street, Oakville Registration Information: (905) 847-7747 V isit u s at 4 6 1 N o r th S e r v ic e R o a d W est

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