Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 Nov 1962, p. 10

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A ty ty My DROP TOUGH ONE * i, =~ 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 12, 1962 | FOF OP Oe Cee eee ey * MIKITA SUBS IN HAB COAL Leafs Grab Two 5-3; Red Wings Win, Tie As Central Collegiate juniors tra- velled to Belleville Saturday to drop the final game of the sea- son to BCI Redmen by an 8-7 Score. It was a tough loss for the juniors who had battled uphill all season to win the Oshawa collegiate crown, advance to the COSSA championship round and then lose a close ball game on a windswept, Mud - soaked Belle- ville gridiron. On paper, the hometowners should have been shoe-ins for the title. The fierce ground at- tack headed up by Central standout, Bill Fedorczenko, roll- ed out 312 yards against 120 from the Belleville crew. Considering the mud, rain and the greasy field there was only one fumble. (Two teams on the same day at Lansdowne Park managed a few more.) The one fumble cost the home- towners the game. Late in the first half, a Cen- tral fumble rolled into the arm's of a Belleville attacker. He scampered unmolested into end- zone for the major. Central's touchdown came late in the first quarter when Bill Fedorczenko carried the pigskin over from the two-yard line. An earlier 70-yard dash by Jimmy Nawrot was called back. The Belleville Nips Central On Final Minutes Kick major would have provided the! Oshawa entry with the win. The big difference in the game was an ankle injury to Central Mainstay, Fedorezenko in the third quarter. Belleville blocked six punts in the second ha.f 19 offset any of the loser's running gains. One of the blocked efforts gave the BCI team a first down on the Central four-yard line. Central held out for two downs but conceded the single point and a wonderful season of foot-| Ul. | | | WIN RUGGER CROWN KINGSTON (CP)--University| of Toronto Blues captured the \Intercollegiate. Senior Rugger| League champioship Saturday, blanking Queen's Golden Gaéls' 5-0.-Larry Johnson drove over from the two-yard line for a Toronto tfy with less than 10 minutes remaining in the game and Paul Wilson kicked the convert. WINS GRAND PRIX CAGUAS, Puerto Rico (AP) Favored Roger Penske of Glad- |wyne, Pa., won the Grand Prix de Puerto Rico Sunday, cover- ing 153 miles and 90 laps in the two-hour endurance test. Penske, driving a Cooper Spe- cial averaged 76.5 miles an hour. He won $2,000. Habitants Win, Lose Montreal Canadiens, whose directing spirits haven't com- mitted themselves on the Abel- Imlach dispute, took a 3-1 lac- ing from the Hawks at home Saturday and rebounded for a 4-2 victory at Boston the fol- lowing night. WORSLEY KEPT BUSY In Toronto Saturday, New York goalie Gump Worsley kept. Rangers in contention un- til the 12-minute mark of the third period, though Leafs had By THE CANADIAN PRESS Gentle Syd Abel, who be- Heves strenuous practices make tired hockey players, still has his Detroit Red Wings in first place in the National Hockey League. But Punch Imiach, who cracks the whip on his hirelings when things go sour, is bringing his Toronto Maple Leafs along fast. Abel's coddled Detroiters picked up three points of a pos- sible four during the weekend, tying Boston Bruins 3-3 and downing New York Rangers 3-2 in successive nights. But Imlach's chastened Stan- Jey Cup champions hung a pair|ond, goals by Frank Mahovlich and of 5-3 defeats on Chicago Black Hawks and the Rangers em- erging as the weekend's only double winners and running/tic their winning streak to three since Imlach routed them out of bed for 8 a.m. practice after an inept performance a week earlier. a wide edge in play. mille Henry of. Rangers scored in the first period. In the sec- early in the final period, but Leafs pulled away on goals by Dave Keon of Leafs and Ca-| Leafs took a 3-2 edge on Bobby Baun, countered by a marker by Rangers' Den Pren- e. Andy Hebenton tied it up 3-3 Billy Harris and Red Kelly. Tommy Williams scored his first goal of the season in the third period to give Bruins a 3-3 tie with Detroit. Murray Oliver gave Boston a 1-0 lead at the end of the first period. Goals by Pete Goegan and Gordie Howe of Detroit and Boston's Don McKenney |made the score 2-2 at the end of the second, and rookie de- fenceman Doug Barkley gave Detroit a 3-2 edge early in the third. |ROOKIE FOILS HABS In Montreal Saturday, Cana- diens put on a lack-lustre dis- play of skating and passing, while rookie goalie Denis De- jordy was nearly unbeatable in the Chicago nets. Chicago's scorers were Ken Wharram, Ron Murphy and Stan Mikita, while Montreal's only goal came on a long pass halfway through the third pe- riod by defenceman Tom John- In Boston Saturday Bruins' son which deflected in off Chi- cago defencemen Jack Evans. Sunday night in Chicago, De- jordy was businer as his team lost to Leafs, who pelted him with 35 shots, compared with 19 on Toronto's Don Simmons: Hawks held a 1-0 lead at the end of the first period on a goal by Wharram, but in the second Leafs Dick Duff, Kent Douglas and George Armstrong connected along with Chicago's Ab McDonald to put Toronto in front. Kelly scored what proved to be the winner early in the third period, and after a Chicago goal by Murphy, Mahovlich connected to put the game out of Chicago's reach. TAKES SCORING LEAD In a fight-studded contest at New York Sunday night, De- troi's Alex Delvecchio was the central figure, backed up by steady netminding by Terry Sawchuk. Neither team scored until Henry counted for Rangers early in the second. Detroit came back with two second-pé- riod goals by Delvecchio and rookie Alex Faulkner. Earl Ingarfield tied the score 22 in the first minute of the third, but Delvecchio scored the winner at the 14-minute mark. His two goals were his fourth 'and fifth of the season, and together with 11 assists put him atop the league . scoring race, A free-for-all erupted at the seven-minute mark of the sec- ond period, touched off by a collision between Faulkner and Dave Balon of Rangers. Balon got a minor and a major, and Bruce. MacGregor and Billy MeNeill of Wings got minors. In Boston, Canadiens needed a last-minute goal by Donnie Marshall into am open net to sew up their win. Boston goalie Bob Perreault kicked out 38 of 41 shots against him, compared with 19 saves by Canadiens' sub-goalie Cesare Maniago. Gilles Tremblay, Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion and Ralph Backstrom also for Ca- nadiens. Williams and Cliff Pennington countered for Bos- ton. NEW LIFE-SAVER A new-type life jacket which the makers claim keeps the wearer in the right position in the water has been developed SANDY STEPHENS (20) AND TWO G ii RIMY MATES _ hapman Toe Pays Way To 18-17 Lark Victory | was still on Cloud Nine when reporters talked to him in the Montreal dressing room Satur- day after Alouettes entered the Eastern Football Conference fi- nals With their 18-17 win over Ottawa Rough Riders: In his hand was a copy of the game statistics which showed that quarterback Sandy Stephens hadn't completed one of his three passes during the sudden-death -semi-final. "We won it and still didn't get a yard passing," the. Mont- real coach exclaimed. Losing coach Frank Clair ip- peared shocked by the result. "T predicted it would be close but I was sure we would win," e said. Clair refused to take refuge in excuses because of »weather conditions. Rain which began early in the day had reduced the playing field at Lansdowne Park to mud, Players were were plagued by uncertain fot- ing and the wet ball produced eight fumbles and almost eli- minated passing plays. SAME FOR BOTH "But it was the same for each team,"' Clair said. Ottawa halfback Ronnie Stewart was slightly bitter. "They fumbled five times and only lost the ball once," he said. "We fumbled three OTTAWA (CP)--Perry Moss two - game, total - points series against Hamilton Tiger - Cats next Saturday. Clair said earlier that Riders had to stop Montreal's George Dixon and Don Clark to win. Dixon was held to a gain of 38 yards in 10 carries but Clark romped 100 yards in 24, one of them a 10-yard touchdown run. Larry Hickman took up the slack with 105 yards in 15 trips, one of them a_ touchdown smash from the one. Bobby Jack Oliverscored the other Montreal points on two converts, a field goal and a single. THELEN 'TREMENDOUS' Ottawa's fullback Dave The- len was tremendous in defeat. He picked up 188 yards rush- ing, caught two of the. only four completed passes for 38 more and scored both Ottawa touch- downs: i Moe Racine kicked a field goal and a convert while Jim Conroy hoisted a single for the other Ottawa point. The deplorable weather, which kept the crowd to 20,252, seemed to have more effect on Riders in the first quarter. in their own end of the field for the full 15 minutes. Oliver booted a field goal from the 15 after an Ottawa kick was ble on the Ottawa 38, Mont- Hickman scoring. But Riders shook off their bad start in the second quar- ter to-take an 11-10 lead, Ra- cine booted a seven-yard field goal, Thelen broke loose for a 5l-yard touchdown gallop which was converted by Racine and eight points in the final quar- ter and a fine display of bail control, Chapman opened the last blocked, After a Thelen fum- alge) with a 32-yard single. nutes real marched to a touchdown,|ground corps began a 52-yard scoring march that ended with Clark dashing into the end zone from the Ottawa 10, Oliver con- verted for the winning point. later Montreal's Riders had one more threat- ening march downfield. They scrimmaged from their own 13 after the kickoff, got down to the Montreal 41 on six plays but then Stewart was trapped for a seven-yard loss by Ottawa castoff Jim Reynolds, That, forced Riders to punt with just less than five min-' utes to go. They sperit the rest of the game in a desperte, unsuccessful attempt to have Montreal give up the ball- Als ran nine ground plays that produced three first downs. On the last play of the game Chapman booted out of bounds at midfield. Conroy kicked a single from the Montreal 36. Ottawa had the only scoring points of the third quarter. Jackson hit Thelen with a pass and the Ottawa fullback went total of 25 yards for the touch- down. ATTEMPT FAILS The convert attempt was no good when Jackson couldn't control the snap from centre. Then it was Montreal's turn to take over. They did it with i PREDICTS PROPOSAL OUT SPORTS Ottawa fumbld the opening kickoff and then were bogged NHL BIG SEVEN CALENDAR TODAY HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc. times and lost it twice." It was the first time in four games this season that Alou- in Sweden. ettes beat Riders. They open a Generals Suffer Sixth Setback As Dunnies Bow To Oshawa Generals lost their sixth game in seven Metro Jun- jor "'A'"' starts yesterday when they went down to a 41 defeat at the hands of Neil McNeil Maroons in the second game of a hockey double-header at Port) Credit Arena. | In the opener, Whitby remain- ed winless and in fifth spot, one Vail was flat on the ice when he scored. The goal was fired as Ken Bradley served a two- minute roughing sentence. Mike Corbett potted the win- ner at 6.17 when Grennon fann- ed on an easy. shot. Mike Walton finished the per- iod's scoring at 17:37 to give the Maroons and insurmountable 3-1 lead. Oshawa put on their finest display of hockey in the final two frames but the Generals were unable to cap their scoring plays. They missed on several good scoring opportunities when they fired the puck into Smith's pads. Except for the bad start and the inability to score Generals could well have pulled the hockey upset of the Junior "'A'"' season. Over the last two periods of play Oshawa held more than their own, trading rush for rush with the older Maroon crew. In the Oshawa end of the rink ' Maroons were pounced on when they were presented with a scor- ing opportunity. That and their F erratic shooting limited them + One goal in the last two periods, DENNIS CONLIN point shead of the Generals when they were beaten 3-1 on the strength of goals scored on two separate occasions while the Dunlops had a one-man advan- tag because of Knob Hill pen- alties. When Oshawa and Neil Mc- Neil met last, the Generals suf- fered an 8-2 drubbing. Statistically, they improved 100 per cent. Bob Davidson, chief scout for Toronto Maple Leafs backed this up. when he said, "I would say that the improvement of the Oshawa Generals is tremen- dous. With a.year's experience under their belts I would think of them as first place threats,""| he stated. | _Maroons jumped to a quick) lead when John Paul Grennon,| General's goaltender, allowedjhalf of a hockey twin-bill at{bow to cover three fingers. Do-json with Kingston F. Rod Seiling a soft goal 14 sec-/MLG@ Tuesday evening at 9.00/bie injured himself in an acci-|Junior "B'" club- Wynne didn't) Knob Hill stormed over the Yesterday's game was|dent at school. Williams thinks|figure in the scoring but hand- |played at Port Credit Arena due|he will be ready in two to threejed out a "beaut of a bump jto staging of Ice Capades °62) weeks . . onds after the opening bell had} rung. Rice Vail beat Gary Smith four minutes later when he swip-| ed a puck past the goalies} short side and into the net. Rod Seiling scored the goal, his second goal of the after- noon, when he beat Grennon on a screened 20-foot. blast that caught the left-hand corner of the Oshawa net. Grennon had no chance on the play. Footnotes: Grennon steadied in the last two periods to turn in a creditable performance. He made key saves on Maroon marksmen on _ several occa- sions. Once, while flat on the ice, he scooped a puck from mid-air with his gloved hand. The disc had '"'score" marked all over it . . . Dennis Conlin received a tailored shirt as Osh- awa's star of the game from Sid Rodney of the Van Heusen people in Montreal... Coach Doug Williams lauded fine ef- forts from Bill White, John "Roddy" MacDonald and Ken Bradley -.. Apologies to Ron Buchanan for calling him Bill in an earlier report . . . Generals play Knob Hill in the second p.m, issue at the Gardens . . cast} WILLIAMS INFORMS WYNNE John Wynne played his rontencs In . Boston, Mass. import) the third period. Wynne was all) Winterstein tipped in a shot from first)hustle'"' in the limited action he|the point to give Knob Hill the on recent acquisition, Bruce Do-|game for the Generals, He hadjsaw. bie's arm extends from his el-|spent the earlier part of the aea,| NEIL McNELL --goal, | Farmers 3-l Smith; defence: Corbett, Mc- Kenny, Draper, Dineen; for- wards: Dineen, Seiling, MacMil- lan, Conlin, Doran, Walton, Cor- rigan, Keon, McKendry, Mer- chant and Mosdell. Oshawa -- goal: Grennon; de- fence: Orr, Batte, Armstrong, Domm, Bradley; forwards: T. Vail, White, Buchanan, Dubeau, Little, Wearing, Wynne, Rutley, G. Vail, Conlin, Peters, MacDon- ald, Gibbons. FIRST PERIOD 1, Neil McNeil, Seiling . (Dineen, Corbett) .... 14 2. Oshawa: T. Vail .... 4.23 3. Neil McNeil, Corbett (Seiling) ...... eevees 4. Neil McNeil, Walden (Conlin, MacMillan) .. 17.37 Penalties -- Bradley (rough- {ng) 3.10, MacDonald (interfer- org 9.10, McKenny (high stick) 12.19- SECOND PERIOD 5. Neil McNeil, Conlin (Seiling) ..esccsceeee 18.51 Penalties -- MacDonald (hold- ing) 2.30, McKenny (boarding) 11.34, White (tripping) 16.39, Seiling (boarding) 19.03. THIRD PERIOD No scoring. Penalties -- McKenny (hold- ing) .52, Orr (holding) 3.08, Con- lin (roughing) 17.46, DUNLOPS SLEEPING In the opener, Knob Hill capitalized on a sleeping Whitby Dunlops team to score two of their three goals while they were short-handed. Doug Paul put the Farmers into a 1-0 lead when he popped on by goal-tending standout Ray = ag at 15.30 of the first per- Whitby captain, Bill Smith, offset the score when he ou'- guessed Knob Hill's Dave Kelly mid-way through the sec- ond frame. Julian Kowalski and Terry Peters, arrival from Osh- awa Generals, set the play up. Kowalski came within an ace of putting the Dunnies in the lead when he beat Kelly on a Shot that hit the post late in jthe period: jlistless and somewhat lax Whit- |by crew in the third period. Karl eveniital winning goal. Doug Paul added his second marker of the day when he skated past onlooking Dunnies to pop one past a helpless Reeson to com- plete the scoring. WHITBY -- goal: Reeson; de- fence: Tran, Tremblay, - La Roue, McCloskey, Carnegie; forwards: Lepage, Marshall, Henry, Smith, Kowalski, Wel- ler, Fletcher, Gay, Nystedt and Evereit. KNOB HiLL -- goal: Kelly; defence: Phair, Paul, Stroud, Emond, Wallace; forwards: boomer's five. sists to join a group of six players with 14-point totals. Delvecchio, Detroit MacDonald, Detroit 8 7 Geoffrion, Montreal McDonald, Chicago Bucyk, Boston' Howe, Detroit Richard, Montreal Mikita, Chicago Pennington, Boston By THE CANADIAN PRESS Alex Delvecchio . fired two goals--including the winner--as Detroit edged New York 3-2 Sunday night, to move into sole possession of first place in the National Hockey League's in- dividual scoring race. _The two goals, plus an assist picked up in Saturday night's 3-3 tie with Boston, gave the veteran centre and left w a total of five goals and 11 as- sists for 16 points. Right behind Delvecchio with 15 points are linemate Parker MacD.onald and Montreal's Bernie Geoffrion, who picked up two points each in weekend play. MacDonald ranks ahead --Duplate vs. Police Assoc. at 5.00 p.m. Westmount Kiwanis vs. Local 2784 at 5.50 p.m. Coca-Cola vs. Scugog Cleaners 6.40 p.m. Canadian Tire vs. Houdaille Ind. at 7:30 p.m. Local 1500 vs. Canadian Corps 9.00 p.m. B'Naith B'Rith vs. Local 1817 at 9.20 p.m. ¥s THURSDAY HOCKEY Oshawa Minor Hockey Assoc. --B'Nai B'Rith vs. Duplate at 8.15 p.m. OHA Metro Junior "A" Oshawa Generals vs. Knob Hill CALGARY (CP) -- General manager Jim Finks of Calgary Stampeders forecast Sunday that a proposal by British Co- lumbia Lions to: have coaches grade officials after every Western Football 'Conference game will not come into being. Finks, present at a meeting of all WFC general managers and club presidents under Com- missioner G. Sydney Halter, said it was the feeling of the meeting that coaches were not the. proper men to judge the performance of officials. Finks said Halter reiterated his statement that any coach has the right to criticize any official by writing a letter to Halter or his assistant, Andy Currie. WEEKEND FIGHTS Farms in the second game of a hockey double-header at Maple Leaf Gardens at 7.30 p.m. of Geoffrion technically, since he has eight goals to the} The Red Wings' Gordie Howe picked up a goal and two as- The leaders: G A Pts 5 11 16 15 5 10 15 TO ENTER STUD OCALA, Fla. (AP) -- Carry Back, the world's third leading money winner, will return te his birthplace at Ocala to enter the stud in 1963, The announce- ment was made here and at Laurel Race Course, where Carry Back is scheduled to compete in the International Monday, by Jack Price, breeder and trainer of the four- year-old. Carry Back will not be syndicated but will stand for a fee of $6,500, Price said. Carry Back is winner of $1,139,- 7 6 6 6 5 5 965 in 63 races. 159%, Mick Leahy, 155%, Ireland, 10. 147 Phoenix, Ariz., 3 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York -- Joey Archer, New York, outpointed Lyon, France -- Sugar Ray Robinson, New York, stopped Georges Estatoff, France, 6. North Sydney, -- Blair Rich- ardson, 160, South Bar, N.S., stopped Vern Lemar, 157, Jer- sey City, N.J., 4. Mexico City---Fili Nava, 140%, Mexico, outpointed Erique Ca- marena, 138%, Mexico, 10. Manila--Baby Lorona, 113%, The Philippines, stopped Sing- ag Semanchai, 111%, Thailand, Tokyo--Hoshinori Takahashi, 44, Japan, stopped Billy Burk, BILL SMITH Emond, Wallace, Kelcher, Kil- gér, Baylis, R. Winterstein, Job ston, Regis, Pender, Collins, Brigden, K. Winterstein. FIRST PERIOD 1. Knob Hill, Doug Paul (Kilger) 15.30 Penalties -- Kowalski (trip- ping) 4.00, McLocklin (rough- ing) 5.05. Reigs (roughing) (12.41). SECOND PERIOD 2. Whitby: Smith (Kowalski, J.. Peters) 11.09 Penalties -- Regis (hooking, 10-minute misconduct) 14,42. THIRD PERIOD 3. Knob Hill, K. Winterstein (Kelcher, Baylis) .... 8.19 4. Knob Hill, Paul... . 15.14 Penalties -- Paul (cross- checking) 16.09, Carnegie (charging) 16.09, McCloskey (roughing) 17.27, Regis (slash- ing) 17.27, Paul. (hooking) 18.52, ms Winterstein (slashing) 20.00. Longer wearing by far! The sign of the Cat's Paw cat tells you: Here you can have Cat's Paw non-slip, "twin-grip" rubber heels expertly attached on all the family's shoes for longer wear, cushiony comfort, sure-footed safety! Take them in today and say, 'Cat's Paw!" By the makers of famous CAT'S PAW TwPs, CAT'S PAW SOLES, and CAT-TEX SOLES. expert Shoe Repairing done here! CATS resilient ON NEW SHOES, TOO!

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