Y COACH RALPH SAZIO AND QUARTERBACK BERNIE FALONEY HOLD THE GREY CUP ON HIGH Bernie Faloney Pilots Hamilton Tiger-Cats To Shades tions a cessful With darted YOUTH SNATCHES TIGER-CAT CAPE VANCOUVER (CP) -- of 1960! Despite all police precau- fan managed to get onto the Empire Stadium and swipe something. In the 1960 Edmonton-Ot- tawa game with 41 seconds remaining and Ottawa ahead 16-6 fans invaded the field and a youth snatched the ball and made a suc- getaway. Officials called the whole thing off right then. about three minutes to go Saturday in the Ham- flon-British Columbia Lions game, a youth jumped the fence from the stands, across the cinder track and snatched a play- er's cape from the Hamil- ton bench, NEW Britian's ZEALAND WINS EXETER, England (Reuters) New Zealand All Blacks beat southwestern counties 38-6 in their Rugby Union match here Saturday. At half-time the touring team led 8-6. jing. Gate movie, nal when final: Faloney, Gossage; Barrow, receipts, dented $341,576.50, plus returns from the radio and program rights, promised a return of ap- proximately $590,000 from the fi- Hamilton -- Halves: Hmiel, Bethea, vino, Goldston, Sutherin, Kuntz, Baker, Henley, Pace; quarters: tres: Cappetelli, guards: Cureton, Kilrea, Kelly, players to maintain their foot- an unprece- sale of television, all bills are paid. The highest previous total was last year's $567,000 when Winnipeg beat the Ticats 28-27 in Toronto. VANCOUVER (CP)--Lineups of the Hamilton-B.C. Grey Cup Krouse, Grant, Canna- Cosentino, Zuger; cen- Miksza; tackles: Nagurski, DeNobile, Pikula, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, December 2, 1963 ]}] Walter Alston Will Manage Dodgers Again SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) -- Walter Alston, dean of active major league baseball mana- gers in point of continuous serv- ice with one club, signed for his 11th season with the world ---- Los Angeles Dodgers Faloney-Patterson Passing Combo Is Record Producer VANCOUVER (CP) -- Three years ago Hamilton Tiger-Cats' most potent passing combina- tion -- Bernie Faloney to Hal Patterson -- almost died at birth. The two veterans of Canadian professional football were cen- tral figures in an abortive trade between Hamilton and Mont- Dodger contracts, this one runs one year. Since Alston became manager in 1954 the Dodgers have won four National League pennants and three world championships. SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges Decler im your ores. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 was the longest offensive play of the day. Faloney's 32-yard run from his five-yard line in the fourth quarter was the most successful ground play by. either aes He said he wants to retain Few other players compiled) He. bid Pa anything a an porte all his coaches, including Leo vidual record. Tommy Grant ag i 7 caught six Faloney passes for), *° bagi ' ae was fe- real Aloueten, 10 yards and Garnoy Heniey seed Duta reliable source sai * The plan had been to send Fa-|in for one offensive play, snared $7,000 Bleit than he rocetcor loney and Don Paquette tojanother for 40, this year. Like all his previous Montreal in exchange for Pat-| Hamilton also displayed the ial P terson and quarterback Sam/more explosive running attack. Etcheverry. Four times they were able to Etcheverry balked and after|gain more than 10 yards on a the smoke had cleared the only|single rushing play. Faloney players who moved were Pa-|did it twice--his 32-yard gallop quette and Patterson, thoughjin the fourth and a 14-yard run Etcheverry took leave of the Al-jin the third. ouettes to poin St. Louis Car-| Bethea raced 28 yards to the dinals of the National League./Hamilton 40 just before the long With Patterson's arrival Fa-jpass to Patterson and Art loney had an ace receiver, a lit-/Baker rambled for 20 during tle slower now than in his prime/Tiger - Cats' first touchdown but an end who makes the most|march. of his experience, He caught 41 passes during the regular 1963|"Oniyatce sy ong turn the season for 841 yards and threeltricy" Fullback Nub Beamer touchdowns. plowed 10 yards in the fourth DUO WAS EFFECTIVE quarter and it took a measure- If anyone had doubts, Tiger-|ment to give B.C. the first Cats' 21-10 victory Saturday|down. He finished with 48 yards over B.C. Lions in the Greyjon 10 carries, Cup final showed the effective-| Baker and Jim Pace each ness of the combo. carried 11 times for Hamilton, Faloney hit Patterson for|Baker picking up 52 yards and three passes. One was a sen-|Pace 29. Bethea gained 36 in sational 70 - yard pass-and-run|three carries. play for a touchdown and the] Star halfback Willie Fleming other two. set up Tiger-Catsjof B.C. carried five times for scores, 14 yards before he was injured The touchdown by Patterson,jand left the game in the sec- early in the second half,» wasjond quarter. Quarterback Joe his fifth, an individual Grey|Kapp added 24 on seven runs. Cup record. Mack Burton, who caught a The six points gave Patter-|five-hard pass for Lions' only son 28, two behind Joe Krol, ajtouchdown, and Jerry Janes great wit h Hamilton Flying|were Kapp's favorite receivers. Wildcats and Toronto Argonauts/Burton snared five passes for in. the late 1940s. In previous|54 yards and Janes three for 72,| Goes Berserk! He's Blowing High Prices to Smithereens! --ON «= e@ Furniture. @ Appliances e Hi-Fi e TV @ Radios Etc. If You Don't Buy It At Bad Boy's YOU PAY TOO MUCH!! BAD BOY = APPLIANCES Crushing Grey Cup Win VANCOUVER (CP) -- Hamil- ton Tiger-Cats, bridesmaids in their last four appearances, have finally reached the Grey Cup altar. Few of the 36,465 fans attend- ing the ceremony at Empire Stadium Saturday would have called the Ticats the prettiest brides of the season as they took the honors with a 21-10 victory over British Columbia Lions. But the efficiency of their h ts was keeping arrang ond reproach. anehay directed by vet- eran quarterback Bernie Fal- oney, aided by his sure-handed receivers and hard-running of- fensive backs and brutally thor- in their defensive meas-| ures, Hamilton rolled to a 14-3 lead at halftime, widened it/Sey. "But mainly they were real with a spectacular touchdown in/©onsistent on the 10- and 12- great,"' the coach said between quaffs of champagne from the Grey Cup in the dressing room. Asked what won the game for' him, he replied: "Thirty play- ers.' Lions coach Dave Skrien was philosophical in defeat. He con- ceded that his club would have been beaten Saturday even if all his injured players had been sound, "They played hard and they played rough and tough," said. "When we come back and get into this Grey Cup game again we've got to be able to play that kind of football." B.C. defenders gave full credit to Faloney. "They were the third quarter and, almost|yard gains." condescendingly, yielded a|MOSCA CALLED VILLAIN touchdown to the Lions in the dying minutes. The victory, Hamilton's eighth in 15 tries for the Canadian championship, gave the East a 25-11 edge over the West, al- though Western clubs had won|, seven times in the previous nine years, The Lions, unsuccessful in their first Grey Cup appearance after 10 years of professional existence, responded willingly to the encouragement of the) hometown crowd, watching Van- couver's fourth cup final, but matched their opponenets in lit- tle beyond enthusiasm. ATTACK FIZZLED OUT Their running attack sputtered and died in the second quarter when an injury forced speedy Willie Fleming out of their of- fensive backfield. Their pass re- Big Angelo Mosca, the 258- pound tackle whom B.C, sup- porters nominated ag villain of the piece for his part in the play on which Fleming was hurt, shrugged off a stream of abuse fter the incident. "They don't bother me as long as we win," he said. Mosca barrelled in as Flem- ing was tackled by Hamition's Joe Zuger near the sidelines af- ter taking a pitchout for a six- yard gain, The fans vainly cla- hurting us all over,"' said halfback Bil] Mun-|attack was unimpressive, pick- mored for a penalty, apparently field. There were early fears that he had suffered serious head and neck injuries but he revived in time to watch the second half from the bench in street clothes before going to hospital for precautionary x-rays, He remembered nothing of the incident until he found himself under medical treatment in the dressing room. Released from hospital, he spent a comfortable night, The injury was tentativ- ely diagnosed as a mild con- cussion, GROUND ATTACK FAILS Even with Fleming. opera- tional--he gained 14 yards net on five carries--the B.C. ground ing up only 93 yards to Hamil- ton's 172. Faloney, rolling out effectively, picked up 56 yards himself on nine carries, includ- ing the day's longest individual rush of 32 yards. The passing statistics were less lopsided. Faloney - com- pleted 14 of 20 for 262 yards while Kapp was good on 17 of 34 for 254 with each side inter- cepting once. But Faloney's best efforts came when they counted. He mixed four passes, the longest a 24-yarder to Tommy Grant in the 10-play sequence for the first Ticat touchdown Passes of 40 yards to Garney Henley and 15 to Patterson put the ball on the one-yard line for Baker to take it over on the next play for the second Ham- ilton score. On the third, Pat- terson deftly outmanoeuvred rookie Steve Shafer in the B.C. defensive backfield to grab Fa- loney's heave for the 70-yard pass-and-run play, longest offen- Sive thrust of the game, Patterson, playing on his first Grey Cup winner in five tries with Hamilton and Montreal Al- ouettes, broke a tie with six other players by scoring his fifth touchdown pass. His total of 28 points scored left 'him two behind Joe Krol of Hamilton Flying Wildcats and Toronto Ar- gonauts, the all-time leader. Faloney moved one behind a Krol record in another category, touchdown passes. TURF WAS OKAY The notorious Empire Stad- dium turf, drenched by heavy November rains and mangled by two Western Conference fi- nal games a week before the big day, was vastly improved measures. throwing his fifth and sixth}, by day - and - night emergency . Mosca; ends: Viti, McKee, Neu- mann, Karcz, Patterson, B.C.--Halves: Morris, Flem- ing, Munsey, Homer, Shafer, Beaumont, Kempf, Lasseter, Beamer, Vicic, Bailey; quar- ters: Kapp, Ohler; centres: Hagemoen, Bilicki; guards: Therrien, Hinton, Cotter, Brown; tackles: Dennis, Mar- tin, Cacic, Frank; ends: Fouts, Seale, Fieldgate, Burton, Janes, Claridge, Findlay Referee: Ray Boucher, Ot- tawa; umpires: Bill Nairn, Win- nipeg, Seymour Wilson, Hamil- ton, Al Dryburgh, Winnipeg; head linesmen: Tom Cheney, Calgary; field judge: Bill Dell, Toronto. SUMMARY | First Quarter No scoring. Second Quarter 1. Hamilton, touchdown (Be- thea) 5:5 2. Hamilton, convert (Sutherin) B.C., field goal (Kempf) 10:17 4. Hamilton, touchdown (Baker) 5. Hamilton, convert (Sutherin) Third Quarter 6, Hamilton, touchdown (Patter- son) 1:37 7. Hamilton, convert (Sutherin) Fourth Quarter B.C., touchdown (Burton) It turned out to be soft in spots but firm enough for the 13:42 9. B.C., convert (Kempf) which ended with a three-yard flip to Bethea, who stepped over from the one-yard line, feeling big Angie was either late 2 ee ee ee ee cup finais, Patterson scored twice in both 1955 and 1956 when Edmonton Eskimos defeated the including one that covered 42) yards--B.C.'s longest offensive] play of the game, Open Nightly (Except Saturday) 'Til 9:30 KING gr. E. aT TOWNLINE 728-46 Alouettes. In 1955 a touchdown was worth five points and in 1956 the value was increased to six. Patterson's touchdown also extended his own mark for touchdown passes caught in Grey Cup, competition, Faloney, who also pitched a touchdown pass to Willie Bethea now has six in six Grey Cup games. He is tied with Etche- verry, one behind Krol's all- time mark, set in seven games. WAS TOPS FOR DAY The cagey Hamilton pivot had a great day both passing and running. He clicked on 14 of 20 aevials for 262 yards and car- ried the ball nine times for 56 yards, tops for either club. Emphasizing the dominance of the 31-year-old quarterback and his 30-year-old sidekick, their 70-yard touchdown pass Stafford Smyth said earlier this year-- "'Marlboros are the best Junior "A" club in 10 years!" It would appear he's right. See them Tomorrow. TUESDAY -- DEC. 3rd 8 P.M. TORONTO MARLBOROS OSHAWA GENERALS Bowmanville Community Arena ° Tickets Now On Sale At These Locations: 5 ie e JIM BISHOP SPORTING GOODS--151 King £., Oshawe @ BOLAHOOD SPORTSHAVEN--61 King East, Oshawe e@ BOWMANVILLE ARENA BOX OFFICE " Rod Seiling SARRAARARAAAAAARANAARA ALIA MAUNA MARINE CHRISTMAS GIFTS on the play or that he had hit Fleming out of bounds, "Fleming was still running," Mosca said. "That was why I Have Your Suit Styled. and Tailored by SAM ROTISH a reminder came in." Fleming, and had to be helped from the 183-pound Western Conference all-star, was dazed 7 KING ST. EAST From A Large Selection of Fine British Woollens ceivers, many of them hobbled by injuries, were consistently beaten by Hamilton defenders on payoff plays. And the famed "thead-hunters" of the B.C. de- fence grudgingly yielded to the variety of Faloney's offensive strategy. The 31-year-old quarterback, ripened by the wisdom gained in five previous Grey Cup fi- nals, tossed his first touchdown pass to Willie Bethea in the opening minutes of the second quarter, Peter Kempf put the Lions on , the scoresheet shortly after Fleming's. injury with a 29-yard field goal but the Ticats struck back shortly before halftime with a three-play scoring drive from their own 54-yard line, with fullback Art Baker barging over from one yard out for the touchdown. The game ceased to be a con- test at 1:37 of the third quarter when Faloney caught Hal Pat- terson wih a 50-yard pass and the 30-year-old end rewrote the Grey Cup record book by ambl- ing the remaining 20 yards to the goal line. B.C. quarterback Joe Kapp, moving into a short-punt forma- tion, began clicking on his pass attack in the fourth quarter. A missed third-down gamble, an interception and a pass-interfer- ence call thwarted the Lions' first three drives but the fourh paid off as Kapp found Mack Buron in the end zone with barely a minute to play. Don Sutherin converted all three Hamilton touchdowns and Kempf kicked. the extra point on Burton's touchdown. . EXCHANGE BACK SLAPS Unable to beat Winnipeg Blue Bombers in 1958, 1959, 1961 and 1962, Hamilton came through this time for Ralph. Sazio, serv- ing his first term:as head coach efter 13 years as a tackle and assistant coach. Sazio and his players generously exchanged post-game compliments, "Faloney and Patterson were The "makings" of a fine cigarette! 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