Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Nov 1966, p. 10

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TM eR ah e 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, November 7, 1966 Veteran -Rookie Duo Spark Bombers Drive WINNIPEG (CP)--The run- ning of a rookie and the alert calls of veteran quarterback Kenny Ploen provided an 81- yard thrust Sunday that car- ried Winnipeg Blue Bombers into the Western Football Con- ference final. ' 'fhe Bombers beat Edmonton Eskimos 16-8 in the sudden- death semi-final, Marty Rosen, who saw lim- ited action in 10 previous games, ran a kickoff his own end zone to the Winnipeg 29-yard line, starting the series of. that led the Blue Bombers to victory. The Blue Bombers now meet Saskatchewan Roughriders in ths Best geome of the. best-of- three final at Regina Sunday. "We were in an ideal situa- tion," said, Edmonton coach Neill Armstrong, referring to Jim Thomas's sweep left past hetange oe | defenders Phil Min- nick and Norm Rauhaus for a 21-yard touchdown that left Ed- monton behind 9-8 with 94 min- utes left to play. "The wind was at our back . « » but we couldn't stop them." HITS ON SHORT ONES After Rosen's runback, Ploen rolled right for seven yards then began to throw short passes into the cold northwest wind which was gusting to 24 miles an hour. Forgetting bone - chilling 20- degree temperatures, 15,463 fans cheered each of six con- secutive completions--to Rosen for 11 yards, to Dave Raimey for 11, Raimew for 18, to Rosen for three at the Edmonton nine- yard line, Ploen went back to pass, rolled left under pressure. Mar- shall Starks of the Eskimos, FOOTBALL SCORES, STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League Eastern Conference « WLT F A Pet St. Louis 1212 147. Dallas 1 289 130 . Cleveland 0 240 140. Phila. 0 187 207. 0174 201. 1 149 224 . 1 2 3 4 4 5 6 8 Eastern Conferen: Edmonton 8 Winnipeg 16 (Winnipeg wins sudden-death Western Conference semi-final) National League St. Louis 20 New York 17 Pittsburgh 16 Cleveland 6 Detroit 10 --. 10 - ashington more Dallas 23 Philadelphia 24 Minnesota 20 Green Bay 17 Los Angeles 13 San Fran 21 American League Se he 4 Se 23 Oakland 38 (St. James wins sudden-death final) SATURDAY Continental League Norfolk 20 Montreal 10 Philadelphia 30 Charleston 9 Wheeling ® Toronto 10 Brooklyn 20 Hartford 6 Orlando '26 Richmond 6 Western Intercollegiate 6 UBC 35 Saskatchewan 40 ae aa | Western 20 Toronto 21 McGill 0 Queen's 30 Ontario Intercollegiate introducing the barefoot comfort OF... + «« the softness of carpet +s» the toughness of vinyl «++ how combined in one revolutionary new floor covering, never needs wax- ing. See TAPIFLEX today at: SHEWRING BROS. Floor Fashion Centre St. et Bond 728-3980 | | | | Montreal 42 Laurentian 26 Waterloo Warriors 20 Loyola 22 Ottawa-St, Lawrence Bishop's 63 College Militaire 0 Bluenose Conference St. Mary's 55 Dalhousie 0 St. Francis X 39 Acadia 0 St. Dunstan's 25 Mt. Allison 14 Eastern Canada Senior Montreal 7 East York 41 (East York wins. sudden-death semi-final) Bestern Const Innior Brantford 0 Montreal NDG 51 (Montreal wins sudden-death final) Canadian Juvenile Montreal 27 Winnipeg 26 (Montreal wins sudden-death final) EAST Princeton 18 Harvard 14 Cornell 23 Brown 14 Dartmouth 56 Columbia 14 Yale 17 Pennsylvania 14 Duke 9 Navy 7 Army 20 Geo Washington 7 Colgate 20 Bucknell 0 Syracluse 12 Penn State 10 Boston Coll 15 Wm and Mary 13 Holy Cross 16 Massachusetts 14 Rutgers 32 Lafayette 28 Boston U 30 Connecticut 16 Buffalo 36 Delaware 6 SOUTH Alabama 21 Louisiana St. 0 Georgia Tech 14 Virginia 13 Georgia 27 Florida 10 Tennessee 28 Chattanooga 10 | Virginia Tech 11 Wake Forest 0| Kentucky 14 Vanderbilt 10 Miami, Fla. 10 Tulane 10 Clemson 27 North Carolina 3 West Virginia 35 The Citadel 0 Auburn 13 Mississippi St 0 MIDWEST Notre Dame 40 Pittsburgh 0 Michigan State 56 Iowa 7 Nebraska 24 Kansas 13 Colorado 26 Missouri 0 Oklahoma 37 Kansas State 6 Purdue 23 Wisconsin 0 Ohio State 7 Indiana 0 to Rosen for 26, to) 1961 apparently thinking Ploen was abext to run, moved away from the man he was covering flanker Billy Cooper. Ploen promptly lobbed the! ball to Cooper who grabbed it! for the clinching points, | The Eskimos made one more) desperate bid. Randy Kerbow tried to hit Tommy-Joe Coffey with passes, but Ed Ulmer stepped in to intercept and Win- nipeg held on to the ball until the final gun, "Ploen did a tremendous. job in executing the short pass," lamented Armstrong, who had squeezed the Eskimos into the playoffs for the first time since F FUNSTON SCORES Farrell Funston, who an- nounced his intention to retire after eight seasons as a Win- nipeg end, collared another! ee ee ee een en the second quarter as the) Bombers held 1-0, 81 and 9-1! quarter leads. Ulmer contributed a single,} Norm Winton two converts and ja single, Bud Grant, Winnipeg coach jand general - manager, said }quarterback experience spolled| } the difference, "Tt took us a long time to get \through their tough defence. |They never seemed to give up) j~-they just kept coming," he i said, : | Ploen completed 15 of 20 pass} attempts for 151 yards, Rose) {caught six for 71 yards, | In contrast, Edmonton's| |Randy Kerbow completed only | |four of 17 attempts for 48 yards. | |Coffey, who kicked a_convert| jand a single for the Eskimos' | other points, caught two for 29) yards, | PERKINS TRAVELS Art Perkins: charged through, the Edmonton line 12 times for| 71 yards as the Bombers col- lected 160 yards on the ground in recording 20 first downs. | Thomas, Edmonton's only re-; maining ground threat after} Trent Walters suffered a con- cussion in the third quarter, hit for 49 of the Eskimos 109 yards | on the ground, Edmonton had nine first downs, Penalties hurt the stubborn/| Eskimos, costing them 91 yards for seven infractions, An illegal j}use of hands call helped shatter their only other threatening march 'in the first quarter, Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth arp. slip or wobble when you talk, eat, laugh or sneese? Don't be annoyed and emba: by such handicaps, FASTEETH, an alkaline (non-acid) powder to sprin- kle on your plates, Keeps false teeth more firmly set. Gives confident feel- ing of security and eaded, com SOR io SuMMYy, gooey, Pr Ma e |. ing. Get FAS' today at drug counters everywhere, Tilinois 28 Michigan 21 eae OO OO Be eer He ee ee ee ey Sled futons COACH DIES Bill Smyth, assistant coach of the Ottawa Rough Riders of the Eastern Foot- ball Conference. died in Ottawa~ Sunday at the age of 44, He had been with the Ottawa team 'since 1956, (CP Wirephoto) REMEMBER WHEN , . .? | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Gaye Stewart of Toronto Maple Leafs and Jimmy Orlando of Detroit démon- strated their patriotism 24 years ago today--in 1942, Frank Calder, president of the National Hockey League, made each pay $100 to a war charity for fighting on the ice during a game, en ee ee ee Be bee Manchester United Tops League Leading Chelsea LONDON (CP) -- John Aston slammed home 'two goals for Manchester United Saturday and sparked his team to a 3-1 victory over Chelsea, the Eng- lish Soccer League leaders, in the day's highlight match, Manchester United's victory opened up the top of the First Division -- and now it's any- body's title. Chelsea leads the standings with 21 points followed by Stoke City and Everton, each with 20 points, The three leaders have played 15 matches in the 42- match program, Manchester United has 19 points from 14 games, A crowd of 55,958 turned out for the Manchester United-Chel- sea game--despite the fact Man- chester was without star for- injured players, United went ahead two min- utes before half time when Chel- sea goalkeeper Peter Bonetti failad ta hold » cross from Man- had to do wax tap the ball into the net, United winger George Best made it 2-0 after 62 minutes, Chelsea came back with a goal from John Hollins in the 74th minutes, Two minutes later As- ton shot his second goal, from 15 yards, and that was the end of Chelsea, chester's Pat Crerand, All Aston |~ er er ere ere ew feat by Southampton, Southamp- ton went ahead on a goal in the fourth minute by Terry Paine. Two more, from Davies, gave Southampton a 3-0 halftime lead, Denis Violet and John Ritchie scored for Stoke in the second half but Southampton managed to hold on, Everton was one goal down at half time at Sheffield Wed- nesday, But a goal from Derek Temple in the 50th minutes put life into Everton, Four minutes later Alan Ball, the £100,000 ($300,000) transfer man, gave Everton the winner from six yards, Leicester City defeated Burn- ley 5-1 on goals by 'Peter Rod- rigues, John Sinclair (2), David Gibson and Mike Stringfellow. The win left Leicester with 18 points, Tottenham aiso has i8 points, The Second Division leaders all recorded victories, Ipswich Town (22 points) downed er ere ton Wanderers (291) defeated Millwall 2-0; Bolton Wanderers (20) topped Birmingham © City $-1, and Crystal Palace (20) de- feated Bury 3-1, Bristol Rovers stayed on the top of Division IIT with 25 points, despite a 1-1 tle at Peterbor- ough, Queen's Park Rangers have 23 points with three games in hand, following a 4-1 victory over Workington, TWO TIED FOR TOP In the Fourth Division, Stock- port and Southport lead with 22 points, Stockport, which has played two games fewer than Southport, was idle. Southport downed Halifax Town 2-0, Celtic, the Scottish First Di- vision leader at 17 points, was held to a 1-1 tie by St. Mirren, It was the first time in 24 pick up all. the points, vals, downed Motherwell 5-1 and moved into second place at 13 points, with a game in hand over Celtic, Morton retained a three-point lead in the Scottish Second Di- vision, downing Forfar 3-0. Raith Rovers and East Fife, tied at 20 points, also won their Northampton 6-1; Wolverhamp- a SOUTHAMPTON TAKES OVER Stoke's chances of putting on the pressure failed on a 3-2 de- GLECOFF'S SUPERMARKET / HOUSEHOLD FINANCE has moved to a new, more convenient location... at games. GeorGian mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH, OSHAWA "earn EN games that Celtic had failed to . 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