ig THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, March 29, 1963 SHACK AND ARMSTRONG ATTACK MONTREAL NET JACQUES PLANTE, Mont- real metminder, stops a scor- ing attempt by Eddie Shack (23) of Toronto Maple Leafs during the first period of NHL semi-final playoff action at PORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' mS THE STANLEY CUP semi-final rounds both stand at two ames to nil, following last night's action which saw Toronto afs edge Montreal Canadiens, 3-2, and Chicago Black 'awks win over Detroit Red Wings by a 5-2 score. The game nm Toronto last night, like a lot more key playoff games, w the scoring plays somewhat tainted by luck, with pucks felancing in off sticks and bodies, etc.,--while some truly sparkling, clean-cut plays resulted in dangerous shots on coal -- but failed to produce success, due to the great saves Smade by the rival goalies. We thought Johnny Bower was particularly brilliant for Maple Leafs throughout the third Breriod last night, when Canadiens showed a surge of fire that Pad everybody on the edge of their seats. They did get a ird goal finally but it was called back, properly, because of an obvious offside situation at the blue-line, Plante also pulled off some sparkling stops and the wide-open action hroughout made it a real crowd-pleaser, Now two games up, afs move into Montreal for the third game on Saturday Might and the fourth tilt on Tuesday, also in Montreal, then if they are still at it, the remaining games have alternate x x ~ BLACK HAWKS whipped Detroit, 5-2, last night and here Magain the advantage of home ice, though often considered y proved to be the deciding factor as Hawks broke a 1-1 ; le, went in front 3-1 and then took control in spite of Red @Wings' desperate bid to stave off defeat. Now they go to Detroit for their third clash, this one on Sunday night, with fourth game in Detroit on Tuesday night, after which, if the series is. still going, they alternate their remaining ames. A lot of the experts are calling both Leafs and Chi- Mmawks to win their semi-final rounds within five games, or naybe even in four-straight. If this happens, the Stanley » finals will' get under way on the weekend of April 6. Raving scored five goals in each of their games against the d Wings, it would appear that the Black Hawks are back full stride, as far as their offensive power is concerned, and. if they meet Leafs in the finals we can look for some wexciting, wide-open hockey action, x x x x BRIGHT BITS: -- Oshawa Police Dept. hockey team cap- tured the Ontario Police Assoc, hockey championship last week. Coach John Masiewich's "Blue Bobbies" defeated Pe- terborough, 9-4, and won their final game over Toronto Metro, 7-8. Scoring stars in the tournament were Len Middleton with five goals and Arnie Whitney with three while Bill Gear- ing played brilliantly in goal... . BEACHES LEAGUE '"'fast- ball'? fans are going to see some new faces. Dependable Caterers have dropped out but Randall-Roy will be back and Shopsy's will replace Eddie Black's as sponsors of that club. These two Toronto clubs, along with Oshawa Tony's, will be joined by three top clubs from the Hamilton Big Four senior league, Smart's Cleaners, Quigley Construction and Nusca Tailors. This will make a six-team league and more travelling than ever before but the interest should be much greater, «They plan to open on May 22 -- which is fairly late for this loop.-. . MAURICE CARTER, one of the country's top car rally drivers, who broadcasts Argo football games in the fall, is giving up his cigar-smoking pleasures for a while. His car partner and navigator for the rally just doesn't like the smell of cigars. The navigator? -- Oshawa's own Don Hambly! . . . ALSAB, one of the truly great U.S, thorough- bred race horses, died Tuesday, at Bonnie Heath Farm, Florida. The 24-year-old stallion had been ailing for several months. Macdonnell Loses But Shows Well In Badminton Test By DENNIS ORCHARD x x Macdonnell to. Europe recently VANCOUVER (CP)--A JOUNEI utiene in major com: Vancouver player proved : Thursday night that Canada is|\CHAMPION WINS Maple Leaf Gardens last edged the Habs 3-2 on Dave night, Leafs took a 2-0 lead in Keon's goal in the the series when they finally period, (CP Wirephoto) first period in last night's NHL semi-final playoff game at Maple Leaf Gardens, Jean GEORGE ARMSTRONG, mot shown, scored this goal, Toronto's first, during the HANG ON FOR 2-0 SERIES LEAD Maple Leafs Edge Canadien By BILL MacDOUGALL TORONTO (OP) -- A gentle, one-handed shove by little Dave Keon did all the damage in a strenuous hockey game Thurs- day night, The 163-pound centre eased the puck through a narrow opening between goalie Jacques Plante and the oo to give Toronto Maple Leafs a 3-2 vic- tory over the Canadiens in their Stanley Cup semi - final sending the teams to Montreal with the Leafs leading the best- of-seven series 2-0, Keon had: Montreal defence- man Terry Harper leaning on him and was holding off Har- per with one hand, The puck, which didn't leave the ice, had 'little more than its own momen- tum to carry it. That was at 16:35 of the sec- ond period, and, try as they would, the Canadiens could not tie the. game, although they played much better than in Tor- onto's 3-1 first-game victory. "Keon was trying to cross in front of the net--sure he was," FOUND OPENING smartest hockey players in the leagued goal, Keon also played a tre- a penalty-killer all season, but onds, so effectively Plante exclaimed after the second |game, 'He was trying to hook/Armstrong at 6:54 of the first in front for a-shot," Gauthier, down on -a knee, keeps his eye on the puck as it passes past goaltender stick into the net after the Leaf captain stole the puck from Montreal's Don Marshall. The second, by defenceman Allan Stanley on a shot from the blue line, bounced in off for- The Leaf player admitted he was trying to do just that, but when he couldn't, he just took advantage of the few inches of open net available to him. Toronto manager - coach Punch Imlach sald of his prize centre: "He's a fantastic skater and e uses this for everything. "He's smart. He uses his brain, He's gotta be one of the of the second period, Jean Beliveau scored for Montreal on a Toronto defen- sive goof and Harper added the other Canadiens' goal. STOLE PUCK defenceman Bob Baun and rif- led a bullet-like shot past Tor- onto goaltender Johnny Bower at 6:07 of the first period, Harper carried the puck into the Toronto zone on the play that resulted in his goal at 6:14 of the second period, The de- Besides scoring the winning mendous defensive game. The centre has been used as the 14,007 fans here will prob- ably be a long time forgetting the way he did it Thursday night. Leafs were two men short for a minute and 47 sec- Two defenceman and Keon were assigned to hold off the Canadiens, and they did it that only one Montreal player got a good chance to score, Plante also had reason to be disgusted at the other two Leaf goals . The first by George Henri Richard, who got the puck back to him from the cor- ner. Harper fired a 15-footer past Bower. Plante, who said after the before Tuesday's game is both- urday. The Montreal left winger his jaw is stiff. Could Handle Rough Stuff In Own Way SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)-- Gilles Dube, playing coach of Sherbrooke Castors, warned Moncton Hawks Thursday night about trying any "rough stuff" in their Allan Cup series open- ing here tonight. "The Maritimes have a repu- tation for producing rough teams,"' Dube sald. "Our strat- egy will depend upon how the referees act toward any rough stuff. If they can't control it-- well, we have guys who can be rough too." The entire best-of-five East- ern Canada Allan Cup semi- finals will be played here. Second game is scheduled for Sunday with the third game Monday, Other games, as nec- essary, will be played next Wednesday and Friday. period, bounced off Plante's HOUND IS TOPS To Moslem nomads, who con- sider dogs unclean, their Saluki hunting hounds are not dogs at all but gifts from Allah. Jacques Plante. Also watch- ing is Don Marshall (22). (CP Wirephoto) and healthy Detroit Red Wing club frienly confines of home ice, convinced they got a bum rap! PREDICT FOUR-GAME SERIES By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor CHICAGO (CP) -- A smiling |COULD BE COSTLY a healthy fine from National Hockey League president Clar- ence, Campbell who frowns 0 such verbal blasts at his men in striped shirts. But it could ibe nothing compared with Hawk today headed for the in the second game of the | | {Thursday night; giving up four jtime, | victory Chicago holds a 2-0 edge HERO OR HEAVY... By Alan Maver | making big strides in world badminton ranks. Although 22-year-old Wayne Macdonnell lost his singles match at the Canadian cham- pionships, he did it with a flair. And before Sangob Rattanusorn ot Thailand--one of he 10 top- ranked players in the world-- beat Macdonnell he lost one game and trailed badly in an- er. The score in the quarter-inal match was 7-15, 18-16, 15-7 Macdonnell led Sangot 11-4 in the second game before he lost the sting in his forehand shes and started to scram- a if. resul boosted the stock of Canadian officials who each yéar bring European and Asian players to Canada to set an ex- ample at the Dominion cham- plonshins. It also showed a re- turn fer money spent te send | The other quarter-final matches in men's singles saw world champion Erland Kops of Denmark defeat Bill Berry of San Diego, Calif. 15-12, 15-4; U.S, champion Jim Poole of San Diego defeat Robert Mc- Coig of Scotland 15-9, 15-12; and Chanrong Rattana - Saeng-Su- ang of Thailand--ranked num- ber two in the world to Kops-- beat Torono's Jim Carnwarth /15-6, 15-7 There were few other unex- pected results, with the excep tion of an upset in junior wom en's singles, where unranked lS-year-old Anne McDiarmid of Winnipeg defeaed top-seeded] Judy Humber of Victoria 11-5, | woes if Hull, who went out with a bloody and broken nose, is unfit to continue the series, Abel's remarks were directed at referee Art Skov who called 21 penalties, 13 to the Red steady path to the penalty box Wings--including a five-minute while the Hawks skated and|™aor to Bruce MacGregor, checked in a burst of power| Whose stick felled Hull, and a : ath innin | }10-minute misconduct to Norm fans here haven't seen in @ long Ullman, who sassed the official Stanley Cup semi-finals against the injury-hit Chicago Black Hawks The Red Wings lost it 5-2 powerplay goals as they beat a Following their 5-4 first-game mnutes in the penalty box com- in the best-of-seven series. pared with 16 minutes served Now the series switches to Detroit Olympia for third and|C@lls. fourth games Sunday and Tues- Hull's injury, with 50 seconds day. Before leaving Chicago,/left in the second period, was Red Wing coach Sid Abel got/declared an accident by Abel. in a few parting shots Coach Rudy Pilous and owner "We were playing five to Jim Norris of the Hawks agree, three all night and that referee but Skov apparently didn't see sure looked like a homer," he|it that way, thundered minutes after the} 'Hull deked the kid (Mac. rousing penalty-ridden contest;Gregor) and was on his wa which sent Hawk big gun Bobby/| when he turned into the stick, Hull to hospital, Abel said. 'You'd think the kid HOWEVER, LNTIL TRE WOLENCE® WICH CosT OEFENSE MAN, MAY 8-11, 11-8, Toronto's Marjorie Shedd jmoved closer to another wom. en's singles title by defeating! Eleanor O'Gorman of Winnipeg) 4, 13, | LOOK MORE LIKE 4 HERO TRAN A HEAVY, SUT NOT iN THE VED OF MMe OFFICIALS. ao CT CALLS. " drawing blood. The kid was) by the Hawks, on eight minor! had done something intentional, The outburst could cost Abel|'rhere's nothing in the book|Wings before -he went out for about a five-minute penalty for more surprised than anyone |when Hull went down," | "It, was a sort of accident," jcommented Pilous, | NORRIS JOINS CHORUS | "Sure, it was an accident,"' chorused Norris who said he had never seen a boxer 'with his nose more splattered over 'his face than Bobby Hull." | Norris is former president 0! line defunct International Box jing Club, | was a tough break for) Red Wing players spent 37|Hujl, already suffering with a|/HOWE GETS ONE |gimpy right shoulder, But he "SPORTS BRIEFS -- CUBS TRADE MURPHY MESA, Ariz. (AP) -- Chicago jCubs traded outfielder Danny Murphy, 20-year-old $125,000 bonus boy, and pitcher Dave |Gerard to Houston Colts Thurs- \day for left-handed pitcher |Dick Lemay, 24, and catcher \Merritt Ranew, 24. The Cubs are to receive a third player, as yet unnamed. SEND 3 TO MINORS MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Bailti- more Orioles sent three former farm team players back to the minors Thursday, cutting their spring training squad roster to |32. Pitchers Billy Short and |Hermenn Starrette were as- |signed to Rochester, N.Y., and shortstop Don Wallace was sent \to the minor league training base at Thomasville, Ga. CHESS MATCH DRAWN MOSCOW (AP) -- The third game in the 24-game_ world chess tournament involving de- fending champien Mikhail Bot- vinnik and Tigran Petrosyan was declared a draw Thursday after 87 moves. Both the play- ers are Russian, The match was adjourned Wednesday after' 41 moves. Botvirnik now has two' points and Petrosyan one, BOXING PROPOSAL KILLED BOSTON (AP)--The Massa- chusetts House of Representa- tives refused Thursday to con- sider legislation to ban profes- sional boxing in Massachusetts. The proposal! was filed by Rep- resentative Gordon D. Boynton, a Boston Republicen, Because the deadline for filing bills is past, he needed a_ two-thirds vote to have it admitted for consideration, The vote was 14 mie against suspension of the rules. PICKET WINDSOR WINDSOR, Engiand (CP) -- Thousands of anti-nuclear dem- onstrators plan to protest out- side Windsor Castle over Easter when the Queen will be in resi- series--and that set the Hawks jon fire after Detroit's Vic Stas- |goal with three minutes remain- jing in the second period. pihis series production to three. jadded the others in the final 20 Trimble, hired last February as coach of the Eastern Football Conference Montreal Alouettes, left Thursday night to complete CUP VETERAN... Hawks Swallow Red Wings 5-2 fenceman passed to centre ward Ralph Backstrom at 3:15 Beliveau stole the puck from 7 DAVE KEON game the asthma he picked up; said his upper lip is split and! JACQUES PLANTE M|Pilote, Chicago s 3-2 44 ering him.no longer, made " saves. Bower stopped 29 Mont. real shots. John MacMillan, out of ; rege for a wich ons a hi with an elbow injury, didn' play Thursday night Bt he expected back for the game of the series--in Mont+ real Saturday and Tuesday nights ; ' Gilles Trembla; a an elbow in the tae J night, but a club official he will be ready to play Sate Stanley Cup | Scores And Standings By THE CANADIAN PRESS Series A es rt 34 WLFA i Pe Montreal 0 2 3 60 (Toronto leads best-of-seven semi-final series 2-0) Series B WLFAPt 20 10 64 Detroit 02 6100 (Chicago leads best-of-seven semi-final series 2-0) ¢ The leaders: x Toronto Chicago 3 3 t] 0 2 GA Pts. Pen. »|Hay, Chicago 2 '|Hull, Chicago Wharram, Chi. |Armstrong, Tor Reds Edge Yanks Over 11 Innings In Citrus League By MIKE RATHET: FORT LAUDERDALE, Fila. (AP)--Not even Allan Worth. ington would deny that for a pitcher whose record shows 3 victories standout major league career. Ten years ago he stood out on the mound, standing the bat- pitching Shutouts in his first two major league games. Two years ago he stood up and strode out of the Chicago White Sox camp by way of protesting sign-steal- ing methods he considered un- ters on their ears, ethical, Now, at 34, Worthington i: back, with Cincinnati Reds, try- had. done enough damage to the fectively shadowed by Eric Nes- terenko through most of the game, steered in a drive by de- feceman Bill Gadsby at 10:51 of the third period, but by that time the damage was done. The crowd of 15,987 had a ball booing Detroit defenceman Howie Young, who squirmed in the penalty box while two of the Hawks goals were scored. Wings were short a man when Howe scored and Mac- Gregor was serving his major when Mikita tallied, Hawks' centre Ron Murphy missed the game because of a foot infection. He probably will ibe out for the next game or Gordie Howe of the Wings, ef.|two. Would Make Deal For Argo's Brewer MONTREAL (CP) the 10-stith job on his nose, He scored the goal that tied he game 1-1 miway through the first period--his third of the iuk had opened the scoring. Be- fore Hull departed, he set up linemate Red Hay for a nifty Hay got another one earlier in the middle session to bring Stan Mikita and Ab McDonald minutes. negotiations with Toronto Argo- nauts and Hamilton Tiger-Cats for a trade involving defensive corner linebacker Ron Brewer, Brewer, sidelined with a broken leg most of last season, has indicated he wants to play with the Argonauts because he has a sales job in Toronto. Jim By Alan Maver THE TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS" ; Pyyy MAY BEA NOVICE iN POLITICS - HE WAS ELECTED A LIBERAL MP CAST YEAR ar HELL HOLD &LDER OP 70 THIS YEARS POST- SEASON PLAY RED HAD LOGGEP WB STANLEY COP GAMES, MOST OF ANY 1963 PLAVOFF PIRTICIPANT, AND HES BEEN ON S WINNERS. AV ALL-STAR CHOICE 6 TUNES AS A DEFENGE MAN & WITH DETROIT, RED REVERSED TRE ing to resume where he started. He made a strong pitch for job Thursday, York Yankees to one hit i seven innings as the Reds wo! the exhibition game here 3-2 i 11 innings. Worthington broke in wit! ing a two-hit shutout against Brooklyn Dodgers, H SHINES IN MINORS In August, 1960, he took hi in the minors. After he. com rage, in seven seasons, Allan Worthington has had a limiting New New York Giants in 1953, pitch- } against Philadelphia Phillies and fol- lowing with a four-hit shutout never again was that effective, posting a winning record only in 1958 when he was 11-7 for ithe Giants. celebrated walk, then wound up piled a 15-4 record at Indianap- olis with a 2.94 earned run ave- the Reds decided on a $25,000 look-see that so far hae been rewarding. The defeat was the 12th in 19 ames for the world champion ankees, The National League champion San Francisco Giants meanwhile, fell into the NL cel- lar with a 6-18 record after a 4-1 defeat by Chicago Cubs. Two shutouts were posted in other games, Ernie Broglio and Diomedes Olivo each allowed Milwaukee Braves one hit in a 3-0 triumph for St. Louis Car- dinals. Harvey Haddix and 'Tommy Sisk combined for a four- hitter as Pittsburgh Pi- gg blanked Baltimore Orioles 3 Minnesota Twins edged Kan- Sas City Athletics 3-2, Los An- geles Angels nipped Cleveland Indians 4-3, Washington Sena- tors defeated Detroit Tigers 5-4, Houston Colts blasted Boston Red Sox 12-4, and the Dodgers whipped New York Mets 4-2 in 14 innings. a n n n h LEAVES SERVICE GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) Lt.-Col, John Eisenhower be- came civilian John Eisenhower Wednesday, he disclosed Thurs- day. The son of the former president said he recrive 3 discharge papers at the Army War College in Carlisle, 'a. After 19 years of active duty, he decided to leave the service -|and take a position with Double- day, Inc., a New York publish- tng firm, He will serve as @ non-fiction editor. e $ tells the truth about whisky Water (plain or sparkling) is your most reliable guide to the whole truth about any whisky. Water adds nothing, detracts nothing, but reveals a whisky's true natural flavour and bouquet. Put Seagram's "83" to the water test and you'll agree--to be that good with water, it must be a superb whisky and a more satis- fying drink with any man's favourite mixer. ty o ye