o i i J0 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Moncey, December 1, 1938 lue Bombers Are Winners . Grey Cup's Greatest Day By W. R. WHEATLEY VANCOUVER (CP) -- Jimmy Van Pelt, 23-year-old rookie quar- terback, led Winnipeg Blue Bombers out of the Grey Cup wilderness Saturday in a spectac- ular 35-28 upset victory over Hamilton Tiger-Cats. The annual football classic--the + 32nd meeting between East and . West for the national title--pro- duced perhaps the most bitterly . fought games in cup history. + For the Bombers it was a cup- brimming measure of revenge. They lost 32-7 to the Ticats in Toronto last year to run a win- less Winnipeg streak to eight. The last Winnipeg Grey Cup victory was an 18-16 decision over Ot- tawa Rough Riders in 1941. It was the fourth w vie- tory in five years -- nton Eskimos won the cup in 1954, 1955 and 1956, each time against Montreal Alouettes. On the damp turf of Vancou- ver's Empire Stadium Saturday the Bombers and Ticats sawed off at four touchdowns each in the rough, tough, even vicious, struggle. KICKING GIVES MARGIN In the end result it was two field goals by Van Pelt and a booming single by big Charlie in the third quarter. Steve Ones- chuk converted all four Hamil ton touchdowns. Between Howell's touchdowns, |Shepard rammed over from a yard out and it was his kick for a single in the fourth quarter that left Hamilton with the need of a ers this year from University of converted touchdown to pull into Michigan, was the standout fig-|a tie. Pass interceptions by Rau- ure in the scoring. He counted haus and Ploen ruined Ticats. two touchdowns, four converts gpporay, PLAY CLICKS 2nd two eld Sous for a record Western supporters were jolted The hard-hitting Ticats, fight- when Ticats set up a 14-0 lead in ing back to a one-point lead in He {Ut quarier bit were ea the third quarter when quarter- ony ive 1 back Bernie Faloney threw two Felt Scored on 3 play Sua Sickel A on two e three times it was touchdown passes into the end, 0 zone Howell, were blanked i in Eo Rona] 15 minutes. The fy Was 8 passing Play, Hsiung Bombers i off a out or pitchout., Van Tacked ap eight points. Ov used it twice in Winnipeg's RAUHAUS STARS [first touchdown march. Norm Rauhaus, a Winnipeg] Bombers were bidding boy, blocked a Hamilton kick in| first score when Van Pelt handed the second quarter to score a off to Ploen, who tossed to Shep- touchdown and was a lifesaver ard at the Hamilton 31 for a 22- for the Bombers in the last quar-|yard gain. ter when he intercepted a pass.| Shepard then plunged to the Kenny Ploen came up with an-| Hamilton 20 and Van Pelt boldly other pass interception in the went for the play again. He same quarter. It was the coup handed off to Lewis who passed, de grace for the Cats. The game [3S he was tackled, to Van Pelt ended on the next play with Van|and the quarterback scooted hugging the ball th |across for a touchdown. ol hugging e as Dew The same play was tried in the The scrappy Ticats, set back five times by roughing, piling-on and clipping penalties, lost Ralph Goldston in the second quarter. The two' - way Hamilton back- fielder was thown out of the game for slugging Leo Lewis. Van Pelt, who came to Bomb- Shepard that gave Bombers their victory margin, Bombers needed everything to squelch Hamilton, They had just| enough offensively and defensi- vely. They wiped out an early 140 Hamilton lead and blanked the rampaging Ticats in a fourth-| quarter thriller. | third quarter, with end Ernie ilton's first touchdown on a sweep | Fitts. as Lewis' pass target, but around right end and Goldston, | 1* missed. snapping up Van Pelt's fumble BASHING AFFAIR on the Hamilton 45, raced all the| way for the next. Gerry McDougall scored Ham ec, | at four games. Each 15-minute {period was a smashing, bashing | affair. ' | After the initial kickoff, Ticats {went from their 12-yard line for a touchdown in 12. plays. From the Winnipeg nine McDougall skirted right end for the first | touchdown. | Little more than two minutes later Ticats struck again when |Goldston broke through to scoop |up Van Pelt's fumble at the Ham- |ilton 45 and sprint on for a touch- The Bomber offensive took over after the kickoff and in nine| {plays from the Winnipeg 32, (heiped by a couple of penalties, the Bombers had halved Hamil- iton's 14-point lead on Van Pelt's |first touchdown. | Van Pelt's two field goals in for their the second quarter cut Hamil- {5 ~ bers swarmed Jn, {ton's lead to 14-13 and on the| |final play before half-time Rau-| [haus cracked through the Ham- | |ilton line to block Cam Fraser's| [kick and fall on the ball for a| touchdown. |THIRD-DOWN RUN | Don Sutherin's recovery of a fumble by Lewis on the Hamil- ton 50 early in the third quarter | started Ticats on their way again. | On a third-down gamble with five vards to go Milt Campbell raced] Six minutes later McDougall fumbled and Gordie Rowland re- covered for Bombers on the Ham- iltor. 23. After a scries of plays, Shepard slammed over, Back came the Ticats. In six plays they moved 72 yards for a Howell touchdown to grab a 28-27) lead as the third quarter ended. The Bombers finally took over the lead for keeps. Van Pelt was trapped once and broke loose for a 15-yard gain but his passes to Lewis and Ploen proved the payoff. Ploen made a sensational catch on the Hamil- ton 15 and fought his way to the one from where Van Pelt threw C himself over the line. Less than four minutes later Shepard booted the all-important single from the Hamilton 31. Ho- well conceded the point as the] Faloney tried to get the Ticats rolling again. Three passes in a; row carried Hamilton to the Win- nipeg 23. From there Faloney, looking in vain for a receiver, fought his way to the 18. The crowd waited breathlessly | when Faloney faded back again | for another pass. Rauvhaus raced | in for the interception and the| Hamilton march died. | It still wasn't over. The Bomb- rockey scores | Maple Cleaners In AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WL F APts Montreal 86 57 29 Boston 70 Detroit 60 New York 68 Chicago 99 60 Toronto 613 48 Saturday's Results Detroit 2 Montreal Chicago 2 Toronto 1 Boston 3 New York 1 Sunday's CResult Montreal 7 Detroit 0 Toronto 2 Boston 1 New York 2 Chicago 2 Wednesday Game Chicago at New York Eastern OHA Senior A WL T F APis. 12 3 2 82 432 1 9 2 91 7724 6 825TH ornwall 58 2 46 5212 Kingston 410 2 57 7910 Saturday's Results Belleville 2 Whitby 4 Hull-Ottawa 2 Kingston 5° Sunday's Results 13 7 11 10, 21 89 Whitby Belleville Hull-Ottawa [Kingston 2 Cornwall 2 Belleville 6 Hull-Ottawa 4 Tuesday's Game Whitby at Belleville OHA-NOHA Senior A WL TF 13 3 0 60 1:2 171% 60 63 49 45 Chatham Kitchener . S. Marie Windsor Sudbury North Bay Saturday's Resulis 7890 610 .1 5 8 2 314 0 MD-| to the Winnipeg 28. McDougall hit|ers were halted and had to kick. |g abury 2 Sault Ste. Marie 1 for a yard and Ticats found them- selves on the Winnipeg 12 when | Once more Faloney tried. [ With the minute flag up, he North Bay 3 Kitchener Thursday night at Simcoe Hall, in an Industrial Basketball Lea- gue contest, . Ajax journeyed over looking for their first vic- tory of the season but when the game was over, they found them- selves still winless as they were subdud 101-76 by th red-hot Maple Cleaners squad. Maple Cleaners wasted no time in taking the lead in this game as they quickly jumped into a six-point lead, outscoring their rivals 24-18. Ed Kolodize and Ralph Riseborough split nine to push the winners ahead while Ed Bibeau with seven and Bob Rey- nold's six kept Ajax in the game for the early stages. AJAX FIGHT RACK Ajax showed the Cleaners that they were not going to roll over and play dead, as they fought back to outhoop the Cleaners 26- 23 in the second quarter. Big Bob Reynolds, Ajax's flashy cen- tre, netted 11 points to pull them |closer along with Myron Mech and Ed Bibeau's 12 while Gord Davidson, Ed Kolodzie and Joe Olinyk hooped 20 between them to leave the halftime score read- ing Maples 47, Ajax 44. CLEANERS PULL AHEAD Seeing the Ajax meant busi- '| ness, Maples, in the second quar- |ter, started playing closer ball las they ran in 26 to Ajax's 19. Carl Cheski, the league's top scor- |er netted eight along with Gord Davidson's six, to pull the win- |ners ahead to stay. | Bob Reynolds, who played a tremend game, hooped eight Top-Scoring Form more for Ajax along with Pio- trowski's six to leave Maples ahead 73-63 going into the final quarter. Maple Cleaners continued to put on the steam in the last quar- ter even though they lost Joe Olinyk and Ed Kolodzie on fouls as they outhit Ajax 28-13. Carl Cheski ran in 10 along with Ed Koldzie who hit for nine before being fouled out while Ed Bibeau and Myron Mech split eight. HIGH SCORERS Maple Cleaners were led by Carl Cheski, Ed Kolodzie and Gord Davidson with 25, 24 and 19 points respectively while Ajax had Bob Reynolds, Ed Bibeau and Piotrowski with 27, 15 and 14 points. CA GE COMMENT -- Maples have now won six straight games after dropping their first contest of the season. . . Gord Davidson, Maples new player, is proving very valuable to them. The three stars went to Bob Reynolds, Ed Kolodzie and Gord Davidson. Ajax are now winless in 'six games. MAPLES -- Cheski, 25; Kolod- zie, 24; Vouge, 5; Olinyk, 11; Da- vidson, 19; Wrubel, Risebrough, 10; Worsley, 0; Winter, 7. Fouls 17 out of 28. AJAX -- Hill, 1; Bibeau, 15; Piotrowski, 14; Bullock, 0; Boyd, 6, Rennick, 2; Mech, 9; Dickson, 9 Reynolds, 27. Fouls 12 out of Officials -- Bill Dell and Bill Gingerich, Timekeeper -- Ray Quddard Sunday's Result There were so may tense|the Bombers were penalized for passed to MsDaougall at the Ham-| Chatham 1 Windsor 6 moments 'and crucial plays that roughing. Faloney promptly ilton 45. On the next play Ploen | Tonight's Game Both of Howell's touchdowns, [the screaming crowd of 34,246 passed deep to Howell in the end charged in to intercept a pass. gitchener at Chatham |on passes fired by Faloney, came 'might as well have been looking 'zone. That was all for the Ticats. Van Pelt Filled In' For Bombers mark equalled--by Howell of the Ticats, who caught two touch-| down. passes in a losing cause. This matched = performances of Patterson and Red O"Quinn of] Montreal in 1955 and 1954, re-| spectively. OHA Junior A WL T F APis. 16 2 0 91 44 32 96 2 7 542 7 5 4 59 5820 4 7 52°61 17 10 3 51 6113 Marlboros 12 2 39 7710 Hamilton 2 94 4 66 8 St. Cath. Pete. xSt. Mike's Guelph 5 Barrie 5 4 | HOCKEY'S BIG 7 WEEK-END NHL STARS Jean Beliveau who contributed; three goals as Canadiens whipped Detroit 6-2 Saturday in Montreal. Pierre Pilote, Chicago defence- man whose second goal of the season, with 74 seconds to play, gave Black Hawks a 2-1 edge over Toronto Saturday. Veteran goalie Harry Lumley, 32, called up from Providence, led Boston to a 3-1 win over New York Saturday afternoon. Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion who scored three goals and added an assist as Canadiens smothered Detroit 7-0 Sunday. Andy Bathgate of New York who got both goals as Rangers and Chicago tied 2-2 Sunday. Toronto's Frank Mahovlich who notched the eventual winner as the Leafs beat Boston 2-1 Sunday Sharpennig SUDDARD'S 497 Simcoe S. RA 5-3979 By THE CANADIAN PRESS Andy Bathgate, six-foot, one- {inch New York Ranger centre |scored two goals Sunday night |against Chicago to stay* three points ahead of Montreal's Ber- nie Geoffrion in the National Hockey League scoring race. - Geoffrion added seven points-- including the hat trick--in two Sets Grey Cup Point R d Then e S re up olin ecor The game statistics Saturday showed the clubs played a fairly By JIM PEACOCK | Fullback Charlie Shepard was ceiver was end Paul Dekker of The one-game scoring record Sven Contest. Bombers Scored 2 RE v (CP) -- T wo another standout as he let the Ticats, who caught all five for- was the only individual mark es- Irst downs on 247 yards rushing ' NCO key per. | ground gainers with 121 yards wards thrown to him and gained tablished in the game, which and 187 yards passing, with Van Hamilt Sumday 2 Rusuhs sonnel with Winnipeg Blue Bomb- rushing, took two forward passes|78 yards. Halfback Ron Howell, |drew a crowd of 34,426, compared Pelt, Leo Lewis and Ploen com- pam wo h a (i hael's 2 ers pede the way for Canada's(for 23 yards and averaged 43/an outstanding Canadian, took with the record 39,417 in 1955 pléting 11 of 20 forwards "at-| ol rong Inter ne aa : hewest Grey Cup football hero | yards in five punts. |four forwards for 76 yards while when the Grey Cup was played tempted. Uni on ora Too pia Gill 3 hes Sutton Van Pelt. Haltback Leo Lewis carried 13 McDougall grabbed five for 53. here for the first time. | Ticats got 23 first downs on 151 versity bE 1 Me The 23-year-old Chicago - born|times for 67 yards to become the| End le Pitts grabbed two BIG GATE [Jas fushing snd 2 Yeres pass Quebec League Dutchman in his first year with|s.cond biggest ground gainer and|'orWards for 36 yards for Winni- Gate receipts, however, were!) 8 Juarie 27 erale fon. | Quebec 4 Chicoutimi 3 Bombers, moved in as quarter-he "took two forwards for 23 Dee JO end yank Gilism took the highest in history, estimated ye onp ee and have te Montreal 1 Trois-Rivieres 2 back when regular Kenny Ploen|yards. He also was the man who d rl 4 ois an Pelli t nearly $300,000, compared with intercepted, both in the last four was injured during the Western|tossed the touchdown pass to Van|SPread his pass-catchers among in. previous high of $187,182| mi ' k over Pelt Pitts, Gilliam, Shepard, Ploen : : minutes. Conference season and took over Pelt. and Lewis taken in through ticket sales here| The blocked kick against Ham- placement kicking Whet Jib ack Hamilton's leading rusher was| Van Pelt equalled one other in 1955. That year tickets topped|ilton punter Cam Fraser left the Sen Jaties Yas ocked out|fyllback Gerry McDougall, who mark and came close to three 2% 37-20 this ine at $10. Total combined total of 13 punts was with a broken leg. |carried 10 times for take, including $228,000 from tele-| the second lowest number in a xincludes one four-point game Saturday's Result St. Michael's 1 St. Catharines § weekend games against Detroit. The leaders: G A Pts. | 17 15 32 12 17 29 14 12 26 1412 26 11 14 25 717 24 12 12 Bathgate, New York Geoffrion, Montreal Beliveau, Montreal Moore, Montreal M. Richard, Montreal H. Richard, Montreal Howe, Detroit a Firestone + Eliminate these driving hazards pena SANT ii: be nie SE Ploen returned, but as a half-| Quarterback Bernie Faloney, run- back, as the smooth-working Jim ning eight times when he couldn't find pass receivers open, picked up 55 yards, but on three other occasions he was losses totalling 21 yards. SEVEN BREAKS Van Pelt took Bombers to victory after victory. Saturday afternoon in Empire tadium, Van Pelt scored a rec- ord 22 points' as Bombers de- feated the defending - champion Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the most memorable Grey Cup football final since Edmonton Eskimos| 26-25 triump over Montreal Al- 54 yards. more, all in scoring. His two field goals in a single quarter matched the performance of George Fraser of Ottawa in the 1941 Grey Cup final, and Van| Pelt's 10 points kicked was one {short of the record 11 set by {Fraser in that 1941 contest. The . {Bomber quarter's two field goals Halfback Milt Campbell broke tied him with three others--one thrown for seven times from scrimmage for| ss oy ¥ behind Fraser for second single - game and all - time field In passing, the leading re-igoals kicked in Grey Cup games. ouettes in 1954. SETS RECORD The total on two touchdowns, | two field goals and four converts was three more than the previous single-game record of 19, set in 1956 by Edmonton's Jackie Parker. It moved Van Pelt into a) fourth-place tie with Hal Patter- son of Montreal in the all-time Grey Cup scoring, led by former Toronto Argo Joel Krol, who ran up 30 points in seven Grey Cup games during his career. En route to his scoring mark, Van Pelt became the game's out- standing player. He threw 17 for- ward passes and completed nine; caught one forward for a 20-yard | touchdown; carried the ball four | times for 28 yards, including a one-yard over-centre plunge for his second touchdown. His performance far overshad- owed an early-game fumble on the snap from centre when he| lost the ball to Ralph Goldston, who scooped it up and rambled from the Hamilton 45 to a touch- down that gave Ticats a 14-0 lead. THROWN OUT | Goldston later was thrown out of the game for slugging Leo Lewis and the 25-yard penalty at- tached to the play, along with | two other 15-yard roughing pen-| alties contributed much to the] Cats' 97 yards lost in 10 penal-| ties. Bombers lost 39 yards in six | penalties.' | Van Pelt was by no means along among Winnipeg heroes. | Defensive end Norm Rauhaus set no records, but showed up in the] statistics with a blocked punt] that he turned into a touchdown | and with a key interception deep! in his own end zone to halt a late Ticat drive. [ I | . . i Specialize In | Ready-to-Wear Clothing & Furnishings FOR STOUT MEN OR TALL \ SIZES 38-56 61" TO 611" STOUT SIZES 46-60 200 TO 450 LBS. DUNN'S TAILORS 16 SIMCOE ST. 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