Show heart in loss Team Canada not out of place MOSCOW tCPt For the first time since it arrived at these world hockey champion ship Team Canada looks as though it belongs The Canadians who got into the championship round on the strength of some nottoo impressive wins over young collegeoriented United States team and Finland in the preliminary round were beaten $2 Thuisday by the defending champion Soviet Union But it was welldisciplintxl exhibition that restored some hope for the sparse anadian contingent in the crowd of 12 000 at the Lizhniki Ice Palace that medal here is not unthin kable We showed out there tonight we can play their hockey and it lniuries key factor in NHL playoff result The Canadian Press Even when they were healthy Chicago Black Hawks scarcely ranked as favorites to win the Stanley Cup And the lowestranking survivors in the National Hockey League playoffs are far from healthy Their mast experienced for ward and defenceman Stan Mi kita and Keith Magnuson have been missing for some time More recently the hicgo casu alty list has been augmented by defenceman Doug Wilson and forwards Grant Mulvey and as ofWednesday Ted Bulley New York Islanders who have twogame lead in their bestofseven quarterfinal 43point edge over the Hawks in the final NHL standings and in the eyes of most experts the team most likely to deny Moir treal Canadiens their fourth stright Stanley Cup meet hi cago tonight with no absentees llTIE 1HOIIH absence hurts Penguins from their regular lineup Boston Bruins hugged by iii jiiries all season got everyone back just in time for their series with Pittsburgh Pen guins who have been without Oro Jets tourney good for Rockets Oro Rockets opened the Seventh Annual Oro Jets Ladies Hockey tournament on winn ing note Thursday with il win over King City at the Oro arena Marsha Gourley scored to ice and Paula Smith scored once for Oro In the second game of the oening nights action Ivy lost to strong Thornhill club so new equipment sports shorts Country club opens nine Golf season began Tuesday at the Barrie ountry lub Although the complete course is still not open nine holes are ready for early bird golfers until warmer weather pch mits opening of the full 187hole course Saturday the pro shop will hold an open house featuring The tournament continues to day through Sunday There are six divisions in the litteam tournament The minor and major midget teams are classed according to player age The four other lettered divisions are determined by team scaling and performance in the early rounds of the toiiit nanicnt Barrie Country lub will be the site of Golf ard Interna tional Tournament May 26 Golfers from the IS and Canada will be entered in addition to local Golf ard holders Area gymnasts off to OFSAA Three area gymnasts will be among the competitors at the Ontario Federation of School Athletic Assmialions chain pionships Saturday in lcterborough Tim Lee student at tentral ollcgiafe will represent Barrie while Jeff Rubin and Todd Generini ill compete for Allistons Banting Memorial High school Lee recently placed first in two events and second in four Others at the Georgian Bay Secondary School Athletic Association finals held at Banting The provincial finals ill be held at Adam Scott tollcgiatc Vocational Institute in Ictcrborough Curling Club meeting set Barrie urling lub shareholders meeting canchch April due to weather conditions has been re sclicdulcd for Aprilzo The meeting will include Illt election of seven directors and the amending of hylaw No to permit the presidents of the Ladies and Business iirls sections to scrvc on the board ofdirectors The meeting has bccn scheduled to begin at it 111 at the Curling lub facilities on Essa Rd Ottawa trades for QB Jones OTTAWA ltIi Willi quarterback lom lcmcnts champing to play in the National Football League Ottawa Rough Riders covered their flanks lhursday by acquiring Jimmy Jones from Hamilton Iigcrtats Clements and ondrcdgc Holloway combined as the most potent quarterbacking pair in thc anadian Football League last season But the Riders had to give up pair of classy youngsters wide receiver Bill llataiiaka and defensive tackle Mike Riley to get Jones 28ycarold veteran of Montreal Alouettes and thc Ticats since coming to tanada from the University of Southern alitornia The trade was announced Thursday night in both Hain ilton and Ottawa Equestrian art on display Barrie artist Syril Leepcr will be present at show and sale of equestrian art in Thornhill Saturday Sponsored by the Eglinton Equestrian lub o1 Thornhill and The Royal Toach Antiques of Barrie the show will feature Lecpers works in collection of about too paintings and etchings Anyone interested in Viewing the exhibit can go to thc Lan don Bladen Farms in Thornhill at the intersection of loliii St and Don Mills Rd Juckes elected to Hall of Fame TORONTO 1Ili Gordon Juckes of Ottawa former president and later executivelirector of thc anadian Amateur Hockey Association was elected Thursday to the Hockey Hall of Fame in the builder category The announcement was made by Clarence Campbell chairman of the halls governing committee and honorary president of the National Hockey League following committee meeting The 64yearold Juckes born in Watrous Sask became president of the Saskatchewan Amateur Hockey Association in 195351 and then rose through 7AHA ranks to the office of president in 195960 Appointed AHA secretaryrmanagcr in I960 777 the position was later renamed executive director he continued to serVe that organization until his retirement in 1978 He still serves on the board of Hockey Canada and the Canadian Olympic Association Juckes becomes the 60th builder elected to the hall which also has 155 player and eight referee members veteran centre lete Maliovlicli for the last 20 games of the regular season Boston takes 241 series lead into Pittsburgh tonight Meanwhile New York Rangers entertain Philadelphia Flycrs with their series tied and key personnel missing from both teams PARENTINJlREI Bernie Parent the goaltender who was largely resixinsihle for the Iycrs Stanley up victories in 1974 and 1975 is out for the season with serious eye injury The Rangers are missing Ilf Nilsson their highscoring Swedish centre and Jocelyn Guevrcmont the seasoned defcnceinan they obtained from Buffalo late 111 the season Wounded pride IS the chief at tliction of Toronto Maple Leafs who come home Saturday for pair of weekend games with the anadiens after losing 32 llll 31 in Montreal The anadiens overflowing bench has overcome the loss of three lifllllWlllï¬tlS Yyan tournoyer chean llonlc and Mario Ircmhlay and llltll lllOllIllIlt strength will be bol stcrcd Saturday by the return of centre Doug Jaryis The Black Hawks struggling ti end string of conseciitivc playoff losses accomplished feat that few NHL teams have matched this season when they kept the Islanders Bryan Trot tier Mike Bossy lark Gillies line off the score sheet for oo minutes Wednesday night The only flaw in thc perform ance was that no one scored at either end of the ice The game went into overtime and Bossy with his lltth goal in four games and his 71rd ot the season broke it up aftcrz1 IlllllllltS wouldnt take much for us to be as good as they are on their own ice surface Bobby Smith said in the Canadian dressing room later Heck weve been working on system for It days its taken them since 1968 to per fect Vladimir Petrov scored twice for the defending world chain pions their other goals going to Sergey Makarov Alexander Yakushev and defenceman Zinetula Bilyalctdinov Smith 2tyearold centre and leading candidate for the National Hockey League rookicoftheyear honors scored the second Canadian goal CONTROLLED PLAY His Minnesota North Stars lincmates AI MacAdam and Steve Payne also played prominent roles in the contest and on the whole controlled play whenever they were on the ice MatAdam also scored while layne played strong game and should have been given an assist on the MacAdain goal since it was his shot that sent Soviet netminder Vladislav Trctiak sprawling and opened thc goaliiioiitli for MatAdams shot In the other championship round game played lhursday Sweden almost pulled major upset but had to settle for 33 tie with Czechoslovakia after blowing oneand twogoal leads BengtOke Gustafsson speedy 20yearold who may be Edmonton Oilers second pro tectcd player for the NHL ex pansion draft in June scored for Sweden as did Leif Holm gum and Tomas Wallin Jaroslav Pouzar Ladislav Svozil and Milan Figala tallied for the zechoslovaks The results left the Russians on top with four points followed by Czechoslovakia with three Sweden with one and Canada without point Although Canada won two of three games in the preliminary round only the points resulting from games involving other championship game opponents count The format was adopted for the first time this year While the loss all but elimi nated the Canadians from the hunt for the gold it was evident to most observers they were ads justing to the bigger European surface Team Canada took five of the six minor penalties called by West German referee Wilhem Edelmann but they could conr ccivably have had several IIlOIt Neptunes to send l5 to provincial finals Fifteen members of the Bar rie YMtA Neptunes swim club ill compete at the Ontario AA championships Sunday at the Etobicoketilympniin IIach swim club III the pro vince is allowed to send 13 swimmers in maximum of five events each Neptunes highest hopes will rest on top swimmers Leslie Stephens 12 Tracy Paddison 12 Peter Loin 11 John anv cilla 12 and Karen St Laurent In Other swimmers competing from the Barrie club are Karen Dryden Mary outts lit Trudy hristy 16 Paul lll 15 Rhonda Wiles 10 Lisa Wiles 12 Heather llrydcn 13 Iitki Loin 12 athy Foster 11 and Wayne Roberts 13 Christine Forbes qualifml to compete in the provincial meet but injured licr knw and will not take part onnic Brien Neptunes coach said she expects all Bar rie club swimmers to lower their best times The biggest meet of the year the provincial championships re the culmination of the years competition This year it will also mark the end of another coaching career iii Barrie as Bricn will leave the tem in two weeks Brien said she IS being llLllletllttl to rillia where she will coiitintic to work lltitsc She says she plans to Olllllllti holding practices with the team until she moves to irillia Orillia CC Panters were wellcovered by Barrie Blues in the fourth game of their SCMl basketball league final series Thursday so well in fact they were trounced 8967 forcing deciding fifth game Tuesday Here Blues Mike Rudkins with ball and Paul Lemmon attempt to set up another scoring play Examiner Photo Blues effort forces one more Everybody on the Barric Blues roster chipped in to help the team beat Orillia Ianters 89437 III the fourth game of their Siiiicoc County Mcns Intcrmmliatc basketball league final series Thursday at Base Borden Collegiate In stitutc The bestoflfivc series is now won at two games apiece and the deciding inatchup is slated for April 24 it pro at Orillia District ollcgiate Vocational Institute lop scorers for the winning squad were lat Rudkinds with 16 Brian Murray with 14 and Jim Rudkiiis with12 points John Thompson led the Orillia team with 14 points and Dennis Hearn added 13 Five of the ten Blues players scored ten points or more The Barrie club led through the first half but was Nighthawks By THE KANHAN IRIISS New Haven Nighthawks idle for 11 lays wasted little time getting back into the swing of things Thursday night Mike Mclougal and Bud Ste fanski struck for goals in the first three minutes of play as the Nighthawks opened their American Hockey League semifinal series with +2 victory over Binghamton Dusters The second game in the best hampcrcd by foul trouble which helped Orillia pickup 11 of their 37 points Blues scored 45 in the first half down Dusters in opener ofscven series for the Southern Division title will be played tonight in Binghamton much to the chagrin of Nighthawks general managerrcoach larker McDonald who wanted the opening two games played in New Haven In other action Thursday Nova Scotia Voyageurs downed New Brunswick Hawks 42 to capture their bestoffive quar terfinal 32 The Voyagueurs now meet Maine Mariners in smarts wheel By El HARPER hayl The Stanley up emblematic of the worlds profcs sional hockey championship will soon he won lot of hockey has been played since Lord Stanley gave $50 gift used to buy cup named after him The donation of the cup and the extraordinary changes in the ownciship of hockcys most plllttl possession are quite story Lord Kilcoursic later Lord arvcir Field Marshall in the British Army during World War wa in anada in 1mm and became interested in hockey When he had gained enough knowledge of the gamc to play with finesse iiicmb hers of the ltehcls Hockey lub in the Ontario Hockey Association asked him tojoin their team Learning the brave lads had previously been competing for nothing more than the honour and glory associated with winning Lord Kilcoursie spoke with his friend Lord Stanley and the 53o cup was donated The cup that was to become the most prich possession in all of hockey Opposition teams offered money At first the Stanley up was emblematic of the world amateur championship but late in thc ltttlo star amateur hockey players desired by opposition teams were offered money to switch sides This of course made them prolc sionals lntil about 11km teams presumed to bc amateur outfits actually had as many as four professionals in the lineup But noonc fussed about it They had no simoii pure scruplcs lti hockey in that era In Mitt the organization that is now the National Hockey Imaguc was formed and bccaiiic professional circuit The Pacific oast Lcagiic another professional unit started play in Itlll At the end of the year the lacific oast championship To go at CFB Borden Rotary team ready for final Barrie Rotary Iccwecs will play liatham for the eighth time Sunday at the Andy Anderson Arena anadian Forces Basc Boidcll John liirth Barrie team manager said both teams agreed to the time and location and the game will definitcly takeplaccSunday Its all been cry confiis ing lllill said lhursday but the game will be played wcc hccn guaranteed it will takc place Gamctinic isjp in The decision to hold the gainc Sunday ends several days of confusion over when and where the two teams would finally meet to end the Ontario Minor llockcy ssociation OlllrJ championship Olll officials set up it Saturday game in Aumra but Barrie was allowed to reschedule the game for Sun day at lB Borden llllll said he hoped Barrie fans would Olilt out to the arcna to support his tcani cvcn though the game could not ltt played at Barrie arena The eighth game in the best Bayfield Furniture has new faces in lineup Bayficld Iurmtiirc Mart of the Barrie and District In termediatc Fastball League will have some new faces III the lineup this season Willi the departure of team stalwarts Mark inccr Bill licrchctte and Murray leiry for hurch Homes of the Senior league the team is looking to acquire some new talent Newcomers Bill lahcy and Gary Smockinn should make up for the loss of Vinccr and Perry Owen said but it will be harder to replace Itcrchette one of the leading pitchers II the league last season liahey member of lifton Hotel of the Barrie and District League will probably play first base while Smockum former baseball player from Toronto will play outfield Iahcy hits hard and llt hits long ball Owen said Smockum is the quickest of tlicquick There will be seven teams in the league this year Owen said and each will play schedule of seveninning games rather than iiininning games Owen said the shorter games would make scheduling easier Teams for the 1979 season the lestof3scveii Division final New Haven finished the regii Iar season 23 points ahead of secondrplace llcrsliey Bears knocked off in four games in their bestoffivc quarterfinal against Binghamton and drew firstround bye After Jeff Mcllill gaVc thc Nighthawks 1H lead early in the third period the Iusteis got pair of goals from Norm Iubc in less than 61 minutes Nort hcrn arc Starr Electric Barrie Co Op Georgian Sports tlarkson Hotel Bayticld Mister Iransinission and Barrie lloor andWall Teams are not allowed onto the citys ball diamonds until May 15 Cloutier wins last WHA title llARllORlgt onii itli The World Hockey Associations final statistics released lhursday confirmed Real loutier of Quebec Nordiqucs as winner of the leagues last scoring chain pionship Cloutier who also won the scoring lltlt lll 1976377 joined teammate Marc lardif and Andre Lacroix of New England Whalers as two time winners of the Hunter Trophy Mike Walton now back in the National Hockey League was the only other scoring chain pioii in the WllAs sevensycar history The WHA will go out of exis tcncc when four clubs join the NHL for the 1117980 season and thrcinaiiiing two teams tinr cinnati and Birmingham close up shop loutier collected total of 75 goals and 54 assists for 129 points to easily oiitdistaiicc run ner up Robbie Ftorek of incinr nati in the 1971t7t1race Ittorek had lift goals and 77 assists for lltipoints Rookie sensation Wayne Gretlky of Edmonton Oilers finished third with 46 goals and assists Dave Dryden of Edmonton Oilcrs claimed the Ben llatskin lrophy as the seasons top goalie recording 289 goals against average team challenged the National Hockey League winner for championship game for the Stanley Cup The trustees of the cup objected at once claiming that the cup was for amateur competition only The pro leagues retaliated by saying the different clubs which won the cup had been at least partly professional and that to ban wholly professional teams from competition was hypocrisy The trustees finally yielded to the logic of the situation The pros played for the cup won it and it has been profes sional trophy ever since Allan up donated 151th Sccond in importance only to the Stanley up in annual competition is the Allan iip donated for amateur competi tion in the senior class The trophy was gift of Sir Montagu Allan of Montreal The fist team to win the trophy was the Ottawa litfside in 190 Queens lniveisity won in 1909 It is interesting it note that ice hockey as played in Canada and the started in Belgium and France in 1907 The followng year the Ligc Internationale dc Hockey sur glacc was formed in Paris for the purpose of developing the sport throughout Europe Representatives from France Belgium England Switcrland and Bohemia later zecliosloiakiai attended and these countries become charter members Other nations affiliated with this amateur hockey group wrctlcrmany 151W and Russia 1911 llockcy 111 Europe did not gain real impetus until Canada and thc sciit teams to compete in the Olympics at Antwcip in la The progress of the European lcaiiis since then has bccn splendid and it seems that it will only be short time lllllll the IIuropcan teams come into the NHL and maybe the old Stanley up will add yet more history by llltlllllll to Europe the examiner Friday April 20 1979 OlStYlIl series became necessary when the OMII upheld Barrics protcst of the fifth gamc ovci coaching clcgibility The Barrie Minor Hockey Association sent let tcr to the lMHA lhursday ap pcaling the decision to have tlic game replayed and asked that thcy bc awarded the game The OMIIA executive 1S not sclicdulwl to meet until Sunday morning and will hear the Bar rie appeal then ll it still stands The format of the game is to be three 13minute periods of stoptime and if necessary an additional lllvlllllllltt overtime lorminute suddendeath over time and second loininutc suddcnrdcath overtime If the game is still tied ninth game would be played in hathani Quebec team wins again in tourney WIITIllCGiIl lheOuc bec team from Ste Ioy recorded another oiiesidcd icr tory Thursday at the tinadian midget hockey championship touinaiiient Iicrrc Rioiix had three goals and Claude Ilrouin added pair as the Qucbcccrs skated to in easy it win over Moncton The lone goal for New Brunswick was by Shane Hughes So far Quebec has t1 for against goals total Quebec On taiio represented by St Mi chaels tollege BiiIcis and Ottawa all how three straight wins Ontario Ken right ingcr Strong continued his pace of two goals gainc as the Bur vers won 52 over Thunder Bay Ont Strong has six goals iii the tournament Ottawa led by the tworgoal ixrformance of centre Geoff Dervin had 52 victory over lrince Edward Island which has one win and two losses Saskatchewan represented by Notre Dame Hounds of Wilcox edged Britiin oluinbia Li with Mike Newman scoring the winning goal early in the third period The loss was the first in three games for British oluiiibia represented by the North Shore Winter lub of Vancouver sports calenda lRIlY Ilockcy 711 pm Oro Jets Ladies Invitational Hockey Tourna ment Oro Tow nship ommumty arena Brampton vs York Oro vs Noblcton Beetoii vs Little Britain Agincourt vs llattsville lournanient continues through Sunday urling pni Hot Shots and lournament of Champions both conr cludcat Barrieturlingtlub Essa Rd Rugby Ilziitt pni North ollcgiate vs Eastvicw Secondary School exhibition rugby match at Eastyicw midget and junior games SllRlY Basketball 91 aIn Areas One and Six lIlemcntaiy School finals Eastview Secondary School gyinnasiuins Harness Racing 713pm ani ltiiace card Barrie Raceway Essa Rd Oro Jets Ladies Invitational Hockey tournament Orolownship oinmiinity arena Play continues through 10 p111 Gymnastics Ontario lltederaton of School Athletic Associations boys gymnastics championship leterlxnougli Golf Barrie tountry tlub has opened nine holes of its ltt hole course on St Vincent St lhercwill also he anOpen House at the Pro shop Bad in iiitoii ELI Georgian Associaton badminton finals boys girls mixed Base Borden Collegiate Bay Secondary School Athletic