e ' ' DICK DUFF, Toronto Maple Leaf reaches for puck (not shown), during NHL action in Boston last night as goal- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Maple Leafs' Frank Mahovlich ended his famine with a feast in Boston Thurs- day night, firing two goals and adding two assists in the Leafs' 63 win. Mahovlich's linemate veteran centre Red Kelly, sparked the Leafs with a goal and four assists. Mahovlich had gone nine games without scoring a goal 1Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Jonuary 25, 1963 2 tender Don Simmons and Leo Boivin (centre) look on. To- ronto won the game 6-3 to going into the game. But his torrid goal-a-game streak in December was enough to main- tain the National Hockey League lead in goals, He now has 25, In Thursday night's other game, Dickie Moore scored early in the last period after a dazzling series of fakes by line- mate Henri Richard to give move into a second place tie with Montreal Canadiens. -AP Wirephoto Left Portfolio Home But Kelly Leads Leafs To Liberal 6-3 Victory Montreal Canadiens a 1-1 tie with Detroit Red Wings. Moore, considered just about through at the start of the sea- son because of two dinky knees, has made an amaizng come- back. He has averaged a point a game in Canadiens' last 18 games and has been a big fac- tor in their drive upward from fourth place. TIE FOR SECOND 'SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' > LOCAL CURLING enthusiasts watched with interest yes- terday as both clubs were privileged to hold "provincial championship" playoffs, in the big annual double-rink com- petitions, Ontario Silver Tankard and Governor-General's Oup, with their respective "'consolation events" -- The Burden 'Trophy and The Globe and Mail Trophy. This was the On- tgrio Curling Association's divisional playoffs, embracing the various district winners, for the area extending from Unionville, east to the Quebec border. The various district winners represented such clubs as Camp Petawawa, Carleton Place, Kingston, Peterborough, Bancroft, Unionville and Osh- awa Golf Club, Winners in the four events moved into the semi-final round this morning, with the trophy finals carded fer this afternoon, Murray Roberts and Bob Lawrie put Unionville in the Silver Tankard heat, coming from behind With a brilliant finish to beat out a pair of determined Kings- ten rinks, skipped by Jake Edwards and Al Cromarty, It was a last-rock finish, to qualify Unionville representatives to defend the Tankard, which two other skips from that club won last year. They play at Burlington Golf and Country Club. The Burden Trophy play concludes at Burlington Curl- ing Club, with Peterborough rinks earning this chance, Camp Petawawa, in their first time out of their own territory, ipset the others in Governor-Geneal's Cup bid. They beat out Oshawa Golf Club in the morning and ousted Kingston's Gc entry in the final. Oshawa Golf Club curlers will be at Humber Highlands today, bidding for The Globe and Mail Trophy. All tied, on total score, with the rings completely empty, skip Bruce Bradley drew to a "'live stone' in the forner, and with this as his backing, stayed for the lone counter that put out the Bancroft curlers. x x x x = CHARLEY POWELL will have to believe it now! About a week ago, the talkative Cassius Clay predicted that he would put Powell away, via a K.O., no later than the fifth round. Powell pooh-poohed the prediction as just another statement so Cassius quickly answered with a new prediction, this one fh verse, in which he said he'd stop Powell in three rounds, just to make him believe. Last night in Pittsburgh, that's exactly what the brash young heavyweight did do. He got to Powell with a good one and then put him away a few seconds later. Now Clay wants to meet Sonny Liston for the title -- which he has said he'll own by November. The way Cassius is Going, he's apt to find his bid frustrated, without a chance, Liston and Floyd Patterson are booked for a re-match and it's likely that no matter who wins, he'll insist either that November is too soon for another title-match or that Clay must fight the loser and win, before being considered for a chance at the crown, : x x x x * BRIGHT BITS: -- Toronto Leafs moved up into a tie for second place, with Montreal Canadiens, when they won their fecond game in as many nights, a 6-3 triumph over the Bruins in Boston, The Habs protected their slim margin of "a-game-in-hand by claiming one point, on a 1-1 tie in De- froit. . . . KNOB HILL knocked off Brampton 7-Ups last night, to continue their see-saw battle for third place. The 5-4 win put the KH Farm club up a point ahead of Bramp- ton. . . . A RECORD, MAYBE? Peterborough and St. Cath- arines played to a 0-0 draw last night -- which is certainly something for Junior hockey, . . . OTTAWA District Assoc. has suspended a Junior player, Dick Dorion, for three years, for a stick-swinging duel which gave Howard Arthurs a con- cussion. That's the kind of penalty that will put a stop to this stick-swinging mayhem. . . . OSHAWA HAWKS, facing the task of winning their remaining games if they are to catch a playoff berth in the strong Senior Basketball League, are at home (Donevan Collegiate) tomorrow night to the powerful Sarnia Teen-Towners.. This could prove one of the best cage contests of the season. .. . OSHAWA MINOR Hockey Assoc. officials, with five or six members of the Boston Bruins, including Ed. Westfall (an Oshawa "City League" grad) will hold special ceremonies at Oshawa Chil- dren's Arena, 11:00 o'clock tomorrow morning, to launch their "Minor Hockey Week" program. It's to be hoped a large crowd of parenis and minor hockey fans take in. the show. As a result of Thursday's games, Leafs and Canadiens are tied for second place, two points behind Chicago Black Hawks, But Canadiens have played one game fewer than Chicago and Toronto. Detroit follows five points be- hind in fourth place. Rangers are 14 points behind the Wings in fifth and the Bruins are floundering seven points farther back in the cellar. Mahovlich moved back into the league lead in the points race with his output, a position he hasn't occupied alone since late December. The Big M, a 200-pound na- tive of Timmins, Ont., now has 49 points, one more than Boston' veteran Johnny Bucyk,. who ga-| thered two assists, | Pint-sized centre Dave Keon Nevin, who plays ona line with Kelly and Mahovlich, scored the other Toronto goal. It was the 18th and 19th goals of the season for Keon, who ap- pears certain to extend his per- formance by scoring 20 goals in scored twice for Leafs and Bob) p By MURRAY CHASS PITTSBURGH (AP) -- "I'm the greatest" chirped irrepres- sible Cassius Clay after easily disposing of Charley Powell Thursday night in the round he calied, Then he offered to fight two boxers in one night. Clay, 21, the sport's prognos- ticating poet, referred to his next heavyweight fight with Doug Jones and a possible re- match after that with Billy Daniels. He had just finished playing punching bag with Powell's head by knocking him out at two minutes, four seconds of the third round. The victory was his 17th straight without a loss and his 14th by knockout. Clay weighted 205, Powell 214. "Jones must fall in six," Cas- sius predicted about his March 13 fight in New York. 'Daniels must fall in two. I'd like to fight Daniels and Jones in one night and get it over with." Clay's ambition is to become {thee youngest heavyweight champion in boxing history by beating Sonny Liston by next November. READY FOR SONNY ? "I'm ready for Liston tomor- row," he said My managers and Liston are the only things keeping me from him." One member of Clay's board of directors, William Cutchins, said Clay is "a year or so" away from a title fight. The Louisville Lip, his own label, unabashedly discussed the victory. "I'm making history calling all those rounds," he boasted, "No other fighter does that. I'm the prophet of the fight game." He told of the circumstances that led to his 13th correct pre- diction witnessed by 11,238 who paid $55,782. SAYS POWELL ROUGH "That big monkey was rough," he said of Powell, 28, a former pro football player from Los Angeles. "They couldn't call him a pushover. He was hitting and moving fast. He was hoping he'd RED KELLY in goals by Kelly and Nevin and breakaway score by Keon within 144 minutes to lead 3-1 at the end of the first period. Oliver and Mahovlich traded goals early in the third period to make it 4-2, and after West- fall had scored his first goal of the season early in the third eriod, Keon and Mahovlich drilled home their second goals of the might to make it 6-3. Rookie goalie Ed Johnston of Bruins made 34 saves, com- pared with 27 on Toronto goalie Don Simmons. Toronto's ag- each of his first three NHL season, Boston's goals were counted by spare forward Wayne Hicks, Murray Oliver and defenceman Eddie Westfall. Hicks opened scoring in the second minute of play. The Leafs came back with two close- FRANK .MAHOVLICH gressive Eddie Shack and the | Bruins' hard-hitting defenceman \Ted Green had just brawled land been given major penalties | when the Leaf scoring outburst jtook place in the first period. | In Detroit, right winger An- |dre Pronovost scored Detroit's | only goal early in the first pe- riod. Pronovost played for Ca- nadiens two seasons ago. CHECKING CLOSE The game then became a de- fensive battle, with play close- checking and extremely even. Both goalies made 26 saves. After a scoreless second pe- riod, Moore took a pass at the Detroit blue line from Richard, who had just deked two Red Wings, and came in along on left wing. He beat Detroit goalie Hank Bassen with a low 15- footer.for his 12th goal of the season and his fourth in the last five games. Moore's goal also gave him third place im goals among modern-day left wingers. Moore CHISOX SIGN THREE CHICAGO (AP) -- Chicago White Sox have signed three more players for 1963, including third baseman Pete Ward, a key man 'n the recent big White Sox-Baltimore Orioles swap. Wednesday's other two new signees, also infielders, were shortstop Al Weis, 22, a .293 hit- ter at Indianapolis last season, and Sammy Esposito, 31, start- ing his eighth season as a utility man. Ward, 23, was one of four Or- ioles who came to the Sox Jan. 14 in exchange for the veteran Chicago pair of shortstop Luis Aparicio and third baseman. outfielder Al Smith, Smith's third-base job is Ward's for the taking and the same applies to Weis in filling Aparicio's fleet shoes at shortstop. Sweet 'Cass Pumps Powell In Third To Fill Prediction tag me with one good punch and end it, "He hurt me to the body in the second round, "He kept saying, 'C'mon, sissy, you're not hitting hard enough. C'mon, big mouth, you've been talking. Now let's do it. This is the third, "I didn't pay any attention. I said, 'Just be cool It's com- ing.' "You see how when the third round came, he got in that cor- mer. He looked wary. He was cautious, I shook him with a jab and three left hooks. I was working on seven, but he didn't stand up long enough." In contrast to Powell, who suffered a deep gash above his left eye, Clay was unmarked and free of sweat. "I'm so pretty," Clay con- cluded. "Let me get dressed. I have some pretty girls waiting for me outside." , FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pittsburgh--Cassius Clay of Louisville, 205, knocked out Charley Powell, San _ Diego, Calif., 214, in 2 minutes, 4 sec- ends of third round of sched- uled 10-rounder. San Jose, Calif.--Luis Molina, San Jose, Calif., 136, knocked out Chihuahua Kid, Sonora, Mex., 135, in second round of scheduled 10-rounder, Milwaukee--Billy Braggs, Mil- waukee, 140, decisioned Way- man Dawson, Ohio, 140, 10-rounder. Worchester, Mass. -- Johnny Collins, Jersey City, N.J., and Mike Pusateri, Dedham, Mass., middleweights, fight cancelled due to cut eye suffered by Col- lins in training. HAWKS FLYING Bowmanville Olympias drop- ped their eighth decision in a row last night whea Uxbridge Black Hawks handed them a 6-2 drubbing in the Bowmanville fixture. It was the second time in a week that Olympias fell victim to the Black Hawk attack. On Monday Black Hawks edged Olympia in overtime. The win pushed Black Hawks to three points of the league- leading Treaton Globetrotters. Hawks are firm favorites to take the top spot. They have played two games less than the Globetrotter squad. As a result of the loss Bow- manville dropped deeper into third place. They have 19 points on six wins and one tie. Two of the wins were four-point games played in Picton. Picton is in last place with 12 points. Black Hawks opened a three- goal lead in the second period on goals by playing-coach Fred Etcher, Dick Bertrand and Verne Ferguson. Ferguson, Art Rennick and Murray Jones added another |three goals in the final period. Dean West and Paul Wakely scored the two Bowmanville markers in the last period, Olympias journey to Port Dover Sunday to take on Niagara Loop intermediate "B" leaders and all-Ontario 1962 champions, Port Dover Sailors. The pair return to Bowmanville Arena the following Thursday, Uxbridge -- Goal: 3 de- fence: Jones, Todd, Atkinson; for- wards: Rennick, Lehman, Cornish, Ber- trand, Ferguson, Etcher, Tomlinson, Redshaw, Ashton, Bowmanville -- Goal: Vanstone; de- fence: T. Masters, Preston, Mercer, J. West; forwards: Roberts, Brown, D. has 242 goals, one more than Harvey (Busher) Jackson, a former Toronto great. He trails] only Ted Lindsay, former De-| troit star, who had 365, and) Aure! Joliat, old-time Montreal By THE CANADIAN PRESS Earlier this season it ap- peard Hamilton Red Wings, last year's Memorial Cup cham- pions, would be lucky to get as far as the playoffs in the On- tario Hockey Association Pro- vincial Junior A Group. Tursday -night the Wings knocked off the league-leading Niagara Falls Flyers 4-1 to prove to the satisfaction of 1,985 hometown fans that they will likely be around for the post- season scramble. The result still left the cham- pions four points behind the third-place Peterborough Petes, who were held to a scoreless tie by the fifth-place Black Hawks at St, Catharines in the night's other game. Already shorn of seven reg- ulars when the season opened, Hamilton suffered a shattering blow on the eve of its first game when godltender Buddy Blom decided to accept a scholarship at a United States college. | Flyers Grounded; Petes, Hawks Tie Canagipn, who had 270, After a few disastrous experi- ments: the Wings finally came up with Ludger Doucette as Blom's successor, The return of Bob Wall, sole survivor of last year's capable defence corps also helped settle them down and thé team has gradually gained confidence. FOUR SHARE SCORING Tursday: night they got goals from John Gofton, Pit Martin, Bryan Campbell and Bob Thomas as they took a 2-0 lead in the first period and made it 3-0 in the second, Billy Glashan was the Niagara Falls marks- man. A crowd of 1,500 watched the goalies' duel at St. Catharines between Chuck Goddard of the Petes and Jim Horton--a Peter- borough native--of the Black Hawks, A The Black Hawks outshot the Petes 28-22. In Metro Junior A play, Tor- onto Knob Hill defeated Bramp- ton 5-4 at Brampton. West, Wakely, D. Masters, Marijerrison, K, West, Sneddon, Crossey, Fairey, First Period Scoring -- None. Penalties -- Etcher (tripping) 1.20; T. Masters (hooking) 6.47; Lehman Saints Successful In Puck Tourney Debut GUELPH (CP)--St. Jerome's College of Kitchener made a winning debut Thursday in the Central and Western Ontario Secondary Schools' annual hockey tournament, defeating Brantford's Pauline Johnson 6-2 in the championship game of the five-team tournament, Guelph's John G. Ross school won the consolation honors by edging Galt Collegiate 4-3. In preliminary games St, Jer- ome defeated John F. Ross 5-2, Galt defeated Kitchener East- wood 4-1, Pauline Johnson edged Galt 5-4 in overtime, ane J. F; Ross blanked Eastwood) "0. REMEMBER WHEN .. .? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Maple Leafs famed "kid line' led all NHL point-getters 31 years ago. today, with Charlie Conacher, Joe Primeau and Harvey Jackson each hav- ing 29 points. At the end of that season Jackson was first with 53 points, followed by Primeau, 50, Howie Mor- Arena in a Lakeshore Int, "B" " Drop Eighth Straight To Black Hawks, 6-2 (holding) 17.30; Atkinson (cross-check- ing) 16.40; Todd (roughing) 19.35. Second Period : Etcher (Rennick) A coe toes AO ( 13.40; Redshaw (misconduct) 13.40. Third Period 7.21 + 16.55 18.05 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. +» 19.28 Penalties -- Rennick (holding) 1.43; rirand (hooking) 4.30; Preston (inter- erence) 12,10; ¢ Ferguson (tripping) 12.10; Preston (tripping) 14.42. " HOCKEY SCORES STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | National League Chicago Toronto Montreal Detroit New York Boston 8 27.11 131 190 Thursday's Results Toronto 6 Boston 3 Montreal 1 Detroit 1 Saturday's Games New Rork at Montreal Boston at Toronto Chicago at Detroit Sunday's Games Montreal at Chicago Toronto at New York Detroit at Boston OHA Senior A WLT APt 17 9 1 211 122 335 1710 1171 103 35 1614 0171 146 32 1018 2 132 155 22 1019 0105 144 20 Thursday's Result |Woodstock 4 K.-W. 7 | Tonight's Games K.-W, at Woodstock |Windsor at Galt OHA Junior A WLT APt Niagara Falls 2010 5 139 108 45 Montreal 1711 7 184 105 41 Peterboro 16 8 9112 8441 Hamilton 1412 8 130 120 36 St. Catharines 917 8 112 152 26 Guelph 624 5 10417117 : Thursday's Results Niagara Falis 1 Hamilton 4 St. Catharines 0 Peterborough 0 Tonight's Games Hamilton at Guelph Peterborough at Niagara Falls Western League Calgary 2 San Francisco 6 Spokane 3 Los Angeles 6 Eastern League Greensboro 1 Nashville 4 Johnstown 3 Long Island 10 New Haven 5 Chariptte 4 International League Muskegon 4 Fort Wayne 9 Windsor Chatham Woodstock Galt |St. Paul 2 Minneapolis 3 Northern Ontario Senior | Timmins 8 South Porcupine 3) Nova Scotia Senior New Glasgow 3 Halifax 8 Windsor 6 Moncton 4 Cape Breton Senior Glace Bay 1 Sydney M. 3 Ottawa-Hull Junior A Arnprior 3 Ottawa M, 15 Pembroke 5 Hull 0 Metro Toronto Junior A Knob Hill 5 Brampton 4 Manitoba Junior Winnipeg B. 3 Brandon. 10 enz of Canadiens, 49, Con- acher and Bill Cook of New | York Rangers, 48. St. Boniface. 7 Winnipeg M. 5 Thunder Bay Junior Pt. Arthur 2 Ft. William 5 IO A! YOO IS el OOTY AE PET" Youngstown, | eI Ves SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY HOCKEY QHA Intermediate "B" Lake- shore League -- Picton Mac- Farlands vs Trentom Flyers, at Trenton Arena, 8.30 p.m, BASKETBALL COSSA Lakeshore District "A" Group -- O'Neill CVI vs Central Collegiate, at Central CVI and Dr. Donevan Collegiate vs McLaughlin Collegiate, at McLaughlin Collegiate; Ban- tam, Junior and Seniors games, first game at 5.30 p.m. "B" Group -- Dunbarton at Pickering, 5.30 p.m.; Courtice at Whitby Henry, at 5.30 p.m. and Ajax at Clarke, 5.30 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL Y's Men's Minor League -- St. Hon's Cadets vs Provincial Tile, at Central Collegiate, 9.00 a.m.; Bolahood's Sportshaven vs CKLB, at Simcoe Hall, 10.00 a.m. and Firefighters vs Kin- loch's Men's Wear, at 10.45 a.m., Simcoe Hall. Ontario Senior League -- Sar- nia YMCA Teen-Towners vs Oshawa Hawks, at Donevan Collegiate, 7.30 p.m. HOCKEY Neighborhood Assoc, Pee Wee| Boys League -- 7.00 a.m. East-| view A vs Sunnyside; 7.45 a.m. Rundle vs Kingside; 8.30 Brook- side vs Connaught; 9.20 Wood- view vs Lake Vista; 10.05 Fern- hill vs Nipigon; 10.50 Southmead| vs North Oshawa; 11.40 Valley- view vs Bathe; 12,25 Radio vs Harman and 1.10 Eastview B vs Storie. | ABOARD KITE Thomas Selfridge rose 168 feet above Cape Breton in 1907) NEW YORK (AP) -- "You don't have to be French Cena- dian to be a favorite of the fans in the Montreal Forum, but it sure helps,"' says Ab McDonald, star left winger of Chicago Black Hawks, National Hockey League leaders. Three years ago, at the height of the Canadiens success the depths of Ab's esteem with the sometimes fickle supporters of the flying Frenchmen, Mc- Donald was traded from Mont- real to Chicago. That was like moving from Florida to Siberia because the Canadiens had just won their fifth consecutive Stanley Cup title, which enabled McDonald Razzed McDonald In Forum Times "They used to boo me 80 much in the Forum that the coach (Toe Blake) wouldn't put me out on'the ice," McDonald said Thursday. McDonald has scored five of his 17 goals against Jacques Plante of Montreal and Ab doesn't want to cover up the fact that he's happy about it, "It's not that I have anything against Plante or the Cana- diens,'" McDonald said. "I guess mayos I just try a little harder when we play them--particularly in the ° real Forum," As they say in French, "la vengeance c'est douce," or in English, "revenge is sweet." ane': to pocket some $3,000 in playoff money. The Hawks had gained a playoff berth only on the strength of a spirited second- half surge. 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