Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jun 1962, p. 12

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YQ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, June 19, 1962 HOCKEY MARKET NHL Drafts, Waivers Are Explained For Fans By W. R. WHEATLEY MONTREAL (CP) = Hockey fans undoubtedly follow closely the National Hockey League's draft but most are vague about tts vpaegen4 and the ramifica- dase -- such as loans, waivers and player status -- that may crop up vie following season. As at the recent NHL annual meeting in Montreal, there are two distict drafts. First, NHL clubs draft players from two minor leagues -- the Western Hockey League and the Eastern Professional H oc k e y League. The players usually are owned by parent NHL clubs. The following day NHL clubs draft from each other directly. The draft price in each in- stance is $20,000. No protected list is involved in the first draft. In the intra - league draft each NHL club can protect 18 play- ers and two goalies against the draft. When the NHL draft ends, protected lists are automatically frozen for the following season. STARS PROTECTED In the first draft, clubs may be looking to increase their depth and also, in many in- stances, to strengthen their farms. In the second draft, they prob- ably are looking more for bal- ance, They won't be able to grab big stars but they may be able to fill weak spots with ac- ceptable talent -- sometimes veterans -- who for some rea- son were left unprotected. Again, they may be seeking farm - club strength or possibly Player - coach material. When an unprotected player is taken at the intra - league draft he automatically goes on the claiming club's protected list. Lf the list is already at the) maximum, the club must name a player it is dropping. | This process sometimes leads) to a chain reaction. »A player drafted from the minors the first day can be drafted the second day unless he has been put on the first/ drafting club's protected -- F Otherwise, unless clatmed, he considered to have been waived automatically, He can be loaned to the minors next season with- out necessity of waiver, but if he is on the protected list waivers must be asked. REMEMBER WHEN... ?) By THE CANADIAN PRESS Kathlene McKane of Eng- land defeated Helen Wills Moody of the U.S. 6-2, 6-2 at Wimbledon to clinch the Wightman tennis trophy 38 years ago today. The trophy . for women's teams had * gone up for competition a year earlier, and the U.S. had won it the first time. The last English victory was at Wimbledon in 1960. EQUALS RECORD DUBLIN Antao of Kenya outran Paul White of Cornell University by eight yards Monday -night and clocked a fantastic 9.2 seconds for the 100 yards in an interna- tional track and field meet. That equals the world record. But Antao's run will not be put forward as a record because of (AP) -- Seraphino| The waiver system applies injtrade and lend among them- can Hockey League, which does other instances as well. Therejselves and also with the Ameri.| not participate in either graft. SPORTS IN BRIEF LEADS RACE NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -- Cor- nelius Bruynzeel's South Afri- ean scratch boat, the 73-foot ketch Stomvogel, led 131 yachts Monday in the 635-mile race from Newport to Bermuda. Closest to the South African craft was Northern Light, owned by American A. Lee Loomis Jr. The 72-foot yawl was about five miles west of Stormvogel. LARKSPUR FAVORED LONDON (AP) Larkspur, winner of the Epsom Derby, was made the 11-to-4 favorite to win the Irish Derby at a London call-over Monday night. The big race, to be run June 30 at the Curragh in Dublin, carries the Irish sweepstakes. SWEEP TOURNEY BERLIN (AP) South Af- rica's tennis team climaxed its rally Monday by sweeping the final two singles from West Germany for a 3-2 victory in the quarter-finals of the Euro- pean zone Davis Cup tourna- ment. The South Africans, who had dropped the first two sin- gles matches, now will meet Sweden in the semi-finals next month. ASKS RETURN MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) American tennis star Darlene Hard, who last Febru- ary called the Lawn Tennis As- sociation of Australia "stingy," now wants to return to Aus- tralia for the next summer sea- son. Miss Hard was quoted in the United States magazine World Tennis as saying she was treated like a puppet when she toured Australia last summer, and would never return. KIDD WILL RUN --TORONTO (CP) Bruce Kidd, the young Toronto flash, will go for the big double in the United States National Track and Field Championships at Walnut, Calif., this Friday and Saturday. Coach Fred Foot of Toronto said the 18-year-old Kidd would compete in the siz miles on Friday and the three- mile event Saturday. CANADIAN BEATEN ROEHAMPTON, England (CP) Alan Carpenter of Montreal was eliminated Mon- day in a long and tough first- round match in the competition to fill the eight open berths in next week's Wimbledon tennis championship, Rudy Hernando of Modesto. Calif., defeated the Canadian 2-6, 6-1, 5-7, 6-0, 6-8. are two forms: with right of re- call of the waiver offer and without right of recall. The' claiming club pays $20,000, same as the draft price. Immediately the draft ends players of unprotected status are considered to have been waived without right of waiver recall. An unprotected holdover can be farmed out next season at any time provided he has played in no more than five games. Waivers must be asked if he has played in more. Ei- ther type of waiver can be used. Here are various player-sta- tus situations: First time ever on a pro- tected list: He can be sent to the minors any number of times without waiver. He must remain at least two weeks each time unless called back under emer- gency regulations. First year in pro hockey and} unprotected: Waivers must be} asked if the player has played in six or more games and is! to be sent down. | GOALIES EXEMPTED Protected pl ayer: Waiver without right of recall of the of- fer is necessary to lend him to the minors. In effect the club asks to remove him from its protected list. He has unpro- tected status with the claiming club but can't be sent down by it except through the waiver process. Goalies: Any goalie, whether protected or not, may be loaned to a minor club without being put on waiver. Player trades: If two pro- tected players are swapped each is considered unprotected with his new club but waiver is necessary to send him down. When waivers are asked, clubs have 72 hours in which |to file claims. If several file, |the player goes to the club low- est in the standing at the time the waiver was sent out from NHL headquarters. Amateurs can play in a max- jimum of five games without S/hurting their amateur status. The WHL and the EPHL can SIGN PITCHER NEW YORK (AP) The New York Mets signed Larry Bearnarth, a right-handed pit- cher with a 33-2 record at St. John's University, for a bonus! estimated at $25,000 today. He) will report to Syracuse of the| International League. ' SERVICE MAKES LIVING A PLUEASGRE! a none-mile-an-hour following wind. THIS WHISKY KEEPS ITS FLAVOUR Even melting ice cubes can't dilute the true taste of Adams Gold Stripe. It will keep its flavour to the very bottom o of a great whisky. 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Falcon goes miles farther faleon ! quality! on a gallon of regular gas, and up to 6.000 miles between oil changes. Choose from nine models of Falcon--Canada's proven economy leader! Test drive the Lively Falcon today! Faleon fordor Sedan Si in , Galaxie/500 Tudor Hardtop--one of Ford of Canada's fine cars, built in Canada. fairlane ! Fairlane Tudor Sedan Fairlane--the new standard size Ford... with a quiet ride | that outclasses all competition! It's the result of solid ® single-unit construction; extra insulation in the roof, trunk and under the floor; and four new torque boxes help eliminate road noises and vibrations. Fairlane interiors are as roomy as those of big cars of several years ago. You get top per- formance from the economical Fairlane "'Six""'; the 221-cu. in. V-8; or the new, more power- ful 260 V-8! Plus Ford's famous Twice-A-Year Maintenance. Drive the Lively Fairlane! Certain features Ulustrated or mentioned are ootional at extra cost. 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