Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 21 Nov 1979, p. 23

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Fs FAW NCD PWVHS Gia ~ 2d 133 | from broomball tournament 3 J by Danny Millar C & B Livestock represented "Port Perry at a Broomball tournament held in the Edelweiss Sports Complex in Bolton, Ontario. They won three games and lost two, good enough for fourth place, over the weekend. Port Perry was eliminated at 5:00 o'clock Sunday morning by the Hagersville Spacemen in a 1-0 cliff- hanger. The winning goal did not cross the red line until 4:51 left to play in the second period. All the games were two periods long, and 20 and 25 minutes in length. Robert Evans, who had been a standout in the previous contests did not don the C & B uniform for the semi-final match. He had been hit on the shoulder, which was operated earlier this year, in the previous game. Evans did dress for the league game later that day. . . . Port Perry held the upper hand in the first period but couldn't score. The Space- men pressured early in' the second session and eventual- ly scored. Early in the second period Port Perry held a two man advantage for over two minutes but could not put the ball past goalie Russ C and B undefeated after easy 4-l victory by Danny Millar C & B Livestock, Utica Farm Auto Body, and Emmerson Insurance were all winners in Sunday's Port Perry Broomball = Associa- tion games on November 18. C & B remained undefeat- ed in-league play as they beat Brian's Towing 4-1. C & B had competed in a tourna- ment earlier in the weekend so they were playing their sixth match in two days. For the first time in circuit play this year C & B fell behind in a game as Brian's opened the scoring at 3:32. ® Finley Peeters beat goal- tender Rick Fraser after taking a two on one pass from Greg Hildebrand with Rob Evans the lone defender. ) Harvey Parrinder set up the tying goal for C & B on a shot from the point that was deflected by Ken Fraser past goalie Bill Peeters. It came with 5:04 remaining in the period. C & B's second goal came on a dazzling triangle pass- ing play. - Ron Redman initiated the action when he took the ball down to one corner in the Brian's end. He passed back to Mark Lee in the slot. Instead of shooting, Lee swept off a pass to Bruce Woodrow situated at the corner of the net. Woodrow redirected the orange ball in, with under two minutes remaining. Finley Peeters was injured after a center ice collision with Parrinder early in the second period. He was down for several minutes but did continue, seemingly unaffected. C & B dominated the frame but could not score. They must have been saving their offence for the last period when they popped in three. Doug Scott opened the scoring 1:33 into the third when his shot from the corner was only partially blocked by Peeters. Ken Bryant, who played a very strong game, put it in. Bryant was robbed of an assist on Don Phinney's next Business seminar A business 'management seminar primarily for people o interested in small business will be held in Port Perry at the Railroadhouse Motor Hotel, on November 28th, 1979. Arranged by the Management Services Department of the Federal Business Development Bank, the seminar will be one of several hundred conducted by the Bank in smaller cities and towns across Canada. Some 25 to 30 people interested in business are expected to attend the Seminar. They will be using the case study method to examine a small business - "The Corner Store," its financial statements, and the effects that an expansion would have on them. The Bank's Management Services has three main spheres of activity: Manage- ment Training, Management Counselling and an Infor- mation Service. The Information Service provides details of approxi- mately 100 Government Assistance programs to business. There is also a pamphlet series entitled "Minding Your Own Busi- ness' which now contains 19 pamphlets on various sub- jects. The Small Business News is issued quarterly. The Management Counsel- ling provided by the Bank is done mainly by retired executives and concentrates on solving problems of small business which cannot afford to employ experts on a full time basis. This service is provided at a nominal daily rate. The Management Training program, as well as provid- ing seminars on various subjects of interest to busi- ness people, also provides management courses to provincial educational institutions for the owners and managers of small businesses. Midget Hockey (From page 22) goaltending has been the big plus." Pete Bateman, who is Bantam age, and the am- bidextrous Christie are the puck stoppers. Port Perry has a fairly aggressive team. "They hit well but they also take a lot of penalties," says Orr. Other than the netminding Orr has complimented the work of Wallace, Menzies, and Healey, as part of the reason they are "scoring a lot more." Orr believes that his team will reach peak form sometime in January. goal. Bryant fired the ball from the corner with 1:06 left and Phinney tipped it in. According to the official scorecard, Phinney scored it unassisted. Utica dominated Larocque Electric and walked away with an identical 4-1 victory. Utica's lone loss of the young season came last week at the hands of C & B. Similar to the first game, the losing team scored the first goal. Barry McClure deflected a shot by brother Harris at 2:19. It marked the only goal of the opening frame. Utica wasted no time in knotting the score. It came on a swift passing play from Mike Mitchell to Bernie McEnany at the edge of the crease. Mitchell picked up another assist and a goal later in the contest. Utica jumped out in front with three third period points. Left winger Keith Ellicott put Utica in front as he went around Barry McClure. It came while Harris McClure was in the penalty box. Utica struck again 46 seconds later. Keith Ellicott scored on a shot from Mitchell. McEnany finished off the scoring from Ellicott late im the match. Emmerson defe®ted Blackstock 3-1 in the night- cap, and opened the scoring with five seconds to play in the first period as Brian Jury converted a rebound. Black- stock controlled the tempo of the play but couldn't beat Emmerson netminder Bill Gerber. Emmerson jumped ahead 33 seconds after the whistle had blown to start the second session. Hugh Yake punched in a Bart Wagar rebound. Two minutes into the period Wayne McGuigan put Blackstock on the board as he carried the ball around the net and swept it in the short side on 'Gerber. Emmerson had one goal disallowed on a high broom shot by Wagar who instead of getting a goal, ended up with a penalty. Unlike hockey, where if a player knocks down a puck with a high stick, the action is simply halted, in Broomball the player is assessed a punish- ment of three minutes. Emmerson scored with 4:11 left in the match as Blackstock was two men short on penalties to Dave Dalton and Cordell Kuening. Terry Bryant took a pass from Wagar and beat Rick McLean in the Blackstock net. McPherson. One Spaceman had been sent back to his home planet on a game misconduct for butt ending at the Port bench. In the previous game, played at 1:45 a.m., Port dropped a 4-1 decision to Plaza Hotel of Cobourg in a very chippy game. Cobourg went on to win the cham- pionship. Don Phinney potted a rebound from a Bill St.John drive from the point to give Port a 1-0 lead after 2:50 of play. St. John joined the team for the last two games and was a key player on defence as he stopped a couple of clear chances. St. John had the misfor- tune to deflect the ball into his own net on the first. Cobourg goal. It came after Jim Thorne had shot. Port was to receive a slashing penalty on the play to Evans and Cobourg was playing with six attackers as the goalie had been removed. During the game both teams took a lot of cheap shots at each other but few penalties were called. It was - clear that both referees had lost control of the game. It was so bad, in fact, that the Cobourg coach had threaten- ed to remove his team from further competition after the game. The winning goal was scored on a breakaway less than two minutes into the second period as Brent Tapscott *went around defenceman Jay Williams and deked goaltender Rick Fraser. Fraser was possibly the best player in the tour- nament for Port and he sparkled in the second game as Port defeated the Hamil- ton Road Runners. Other tourney standouts included Phinney, Doug Scott, and Ken Bryant. Hamilton threatened to blow Port Perry right off the rink in the first ten minutes of th game but Port rebo d with some excel- lent play to win a 2-1 squeak- er. Port was completely out- played in the first ten minutes but Scott went down with Bryant to score on a two on one with 9:07 remaining in the initial frame. Scott set up the second score when he passed to Phinney. Phinney pounded a shot past a surprised Wilson Hunt in the Hamilton net. Hamilton had been favoured to win the meet so Port's win must be considered a major upset. Against Georgetown, Scott netted one with 7:14 to go in the match when he beat Hunt at a near impossible angle. Scott lofted a high shot over Hunt's shoulder from just a few strides in front of the red line. Port Perry played the very first game of the tournament at 8:00 o'clock Friday evening and looked impres- sive in tripling Georgetown 3-1. Bruce Woodrow put Port on the board at 6:38 on a shot just inside the face-off circle in the Georgetown zone. Bryant deflected a waist high shot from Mike Healey, who also performed well with his defensive style of play, with 3:03 remaining. C & B competes in another tournament next weekend. HITIFVE ERE §" UROL, | Port Perry team knocked FO i+ 2 oy I ALN BASEL 4s EE AY RAL Shad d. A a a A Nd PORT PERRY STAR -- Wed., November 21, 1979 -- 23 buy your next USED CAR ot TRUCK from your NEW CAR or TRUCK dealer - try P H i L P Pontiac Buick Limited 10 VANEDWARD DRIVE - PORT PERRY 1979 PONTIAC SUNBIRD COUPE 4 cylinder, 4 speed, low mileage. OMT844 1979 ACADIAN HATCHBACK SEDAN 3 door, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, paint stripes. OMT760. 1977 FIREBIRD TRANS-AM V8, automatic, black, all the extras. LMR 809. 1977 PONTIAC CATALINA SEDAN Fully equipped, one owner. NMW 884. 1977 FIREBIRD TRANS-AM V8, automatic, brown with paint stripes. LOK 983. 1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX One owner, fully equipped. LXM 203. 1977 PONTIAC PARISIENNE SEDAN Loaded with options, one owner. LLX 621. 1977 PONTIAC PARISIENNE BROUGHAM SEDAN Air and all the extras. LPN 558. a. 1979 CARRY-OVER INVENTORY OF PARISIENNES, GRAND PRIX, FIREBIRDS, ' G.M.C. PICK-UPS & VANS. -PRICED TO GO - Limited Selection Still Available - Hurry! 1976 CHEVROLET CAPRICE WAGON V8, automatic, roof rack. low mileage. HRJ 417. 1976 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SALON SEDAN Nice intermediate second car. KWH 770. 1975 MAVERICK SEDAN Economical 6 cylinder, certified. KST 528. 1974 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN SEDAN One owner, 65.000 miles. JED 093. 1973 BUICK CENTURY SEDAN V8, automatic, reconditioned. F BC 938. used trucks 1979 G.M.C. ¥/2 TON PICKUP 6 cylinder, 3 speed. only 3800 k.m. H75438 1978 G.M.C. '/2 TON PICKUP Short box 4x4 with plow. 'As-is' Special. M62276. 1977 G.M.C. % TON PICKUP 4x4 6 cylinder, 4 speed like new. H74123. BRAND NEW 1979 G.M.C. SUPER VAN, COMPLETELY EQUIPPED, SWIVEL BUCKET SEATS, ICE BOX, TABLE, DEEP PILE CARPET, READY FOR FLORIDA ANYTIME. STOCK NO. 91527 - REDUCED 1977 FORD = TON RANGER PICKUP Air conditioner, box cap. H75456. 1977 JEEP CJ5 SERIES 4x4 6 cylinder, 4 speed transmission, AM/FM. 0ZK 987. 1976 FORD 350 SERIES 1 TON STAKE V8. 4 speed, dual wheels. F34 059. *Optional M.R.P. Written Warranty Available. *Top Trade-in Allowances *Convenient G.M.A.C. Low Interest Rate Financing *Open Evenings to 9; Fridays to 6; Saturdays to 4. PHILP wre ™ 10 Vanedward Drive - Port Perry 985-8474 Br nr So +5 Oo ENR NE - a re TY 2 hy are 3d hv Fer, a bingy LY : os Ene 5 REY A ee Ro tL oo . PEE RTT Lp eT FF Er ras as Bae 2 vod

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