Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 10 Oct 1984, p. 22

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

a a i Ea (SEES « i aii EE MS Gu he BIS 4 SR EE iE Ch i Sr iii iB iii up ll Si 22 -- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wed. October 10, 1984 ports Exhibition record of two wins and three defeats ad he = a oo " ig y py w & pw oe . RE ~ AY > fl visions & Now, where's that gosh darn puck There was plenty of action around the MoJacks net Sunday evening as the Bowmanville Eagles dumped the home town team 6-2 in an exhibition game at the Scugog Arena. In pre-season play, MoJacks won two and lost three. Things get serious this Thursday night when Mo- Jacks travel to Port Hope for the season opener, and on Sunday night will host Cobourg in the first game at the Scugog Arena. TTI I i rT HI HT HE =m MoJacks open Jr. C. season this week The Port Perry Mo- Jacks have concluded their pre-season exhibi- tion schedule with the first league game set to go this Thursday night against the Port Hope Panthers in Port Hope. First home game for the MoJacks will be this Sunday night when the Cobourg Cougars pay a visit to the Scugog arena with face off at 7:30 P.M. In five pre-season games the MoJacks won two and lost three, including a pair of defeats at the hands of the Bowmanville Eagles, who look like they may be the team to beat in the Central Junior C league again this year. MoJacks also lost a pre-season match to Lindsay Muskies. They defeated Uxbridge more than a week ago, and came out on top of the Muskies 8-6 in a game played Friday night in Lindsay. On Sunday night at the Scugog Arena, the MoJacks and Eagles showed their isn't much love lost between the two squads as players threw their weight around and the odd high stick and elbow. The game was close to about Legion Pee Wees off to flying start Well the Legion Pee- wee A's are at it again with another exciting season of hockey and they are off on the right track. The Legion met and defeated Pickering in an exhibition match four to one on Wed- nesday October 3. Port Perry started out slowly only to see a deflection go by goaltender Jamie Brown from out in front. After that Port Perry settled down and put the pressure on. In the dying seconds of the first period Jarret Harman opened the scoring for Port Perry with Brian Appleby and Jan Heyes assisting. After a pep talk and a Crestwood golf news by Bill Huestis Crestwood Golf Club's Eighth annual Best Ball Tournament was held Sunday Sept. 30. At completion of play two teams were tied with a score of 58. After a sudden death play-off, the winning team was MacRowland and Bob Shearer from Country Lane G.C. Second place winners were: Brian Manorek and Lorne Brown of Crestwood. Other winn- ing teams were: Bill Dalby and Peter Cliff- ord; Bob Rylett and Ron Richards; Jim Coombs 2K BR] and Steve Brooks, Bruce Haugen and Murray Empringham, Chuck and Gene Culli- gan; Jim Kight and Bruce McMillan; Keith Crawford and Dale Parks, Howard DeGeer and Art Kight; , Kevin Huestis and Mark Adams. The long driv- ing contest was won by Dean Haugen of Port Perry with a distance of approx. 305 yards. A great time was had by all and a sincere thank you went out to A&D Beef Jerky of Lindsay for their continued spon- sorship. flood, Port Perry came out with flying colours. Clair Cornish started out only 2 minutes into the second period with a goal from and lead pass from Sean Bradbury. Less than a minutes later Jan Heyes slipped one between the pipes with Clair Cornish and Jarret Harman assist- ing. Later in the second period Danny Maw wrapped up the scoring for the game with a blazing slapshot from the point with Clair Cornish assisting. 9-3 Win On Saturday Oct. 6 the Legion Pee Wee A's met and defeated the Oshawa Dines in an exhibition match, 9-3 played at North Oshawa Arena. Port Perry did not score in the first period and to their disappointment Oshawa scored twice. In the second period with less than four minutes gone Clair Cornish opened the scoring on a power play from Jarret Har- man and Chris Legere. Then Oshawa scored again to end the second period. In the third period Port Perry came out flying with a goal by Clair Cornish assisted by Paul Teno at the 14 second mark. From then on Port Perry took it away with 7 more goals. Jan Heyes with 3 goals, Jarret Harman 1 goal - 2 assists; Clair Cornish 1 goal - 1 assist, Brian Appleby 1 goal - 1 assist; Sean Bradbury 1 goal; Eric Grosvenor 1 assist and Cole Parry 1 R.H. Cornish forward Jon-David Rod- way gefs a good shot on the Grandview net during soccer action last week. R.H. Cornish went on to win 4-0 with George Kosurko kick- ing three goals and Norm Gourlie the other assist. Special congracu- lations to Jan Heyes and Clair Cornish on their hat tricks. The league opener will be played at 9:00 on Sat. Oct. 13 against Lindsay. one. The R.H. Cornish girls team carried a wide margin of the play in their game against Grandview, but could not get the ball in the net. They lost a tough one: 1-0. the mid-way point when Eagles broke it open en route to a 6-2 victory. The previous Tuesday night in Bowmanville, the MoJacks took a 4-3 lead into the third period, but the Eagles netted two in the final frame for a 5-4 win. This game also featur- ed a lot of hard hitting and some chippy hockey with over 100 minutes in penalties, and game misconducts to Scott Wallace of the MoJacks and John Thompson of the Eagles. Brian Nicholson had a pair of goals with singles going to Kevin Trapp and Jeff Johnstone. Against the Eagles Sunday night at the Scugog Arena, Mike Ryan and Brian Nichol- son found the range for the MoJacks. Eagles seemed to have the better of the play for much of the game, and goalie Clay Lovering, who played the first half, had to be very sharp to keep the score close. Paul Goreski played the second half between the pipes and he too saw plenty of rubber direct- ed his way by the Bowmanville team. The MoJacks this year don't appear to have the same scoring punch of last season and team officials say a lot of emphasis will have to be placed on defensive hockey. Although the team has signed its core of veterans returning from last year, there are still several spots on the roster still to be filled. TEN

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy