Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 May 1965, p. 17

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MEMORIAL CUP PLAY By JOHN SHORT EDMONTON (CP) -- A war of strategy went on in the dress- ing rooms Tuesday night as rival coaches expressed dis- pleasure wifh their clubs after Niagara Falls Flyers tripped Edmonton Oil Kings 3-2 in the first game of the best-of-seven 1965 Memorial Cup final. Niagara Falls coach Bill Long said his club would have finished in the basement of the Ontario Hockey Association Ju- nior A League it if had played as badly all season as it did Tuesday. But he added he does not plan any lineup changes, Edmonton coach Harry Allen aid he figured Long was put- ting up a smokescreen and then added that Oil Kings also played far below their ability. Allen said he doesn't plan any lineup changes either. TORONTO BOXER REGAINS WELTER TITLE Peter Schmidt, of Toronto, dian Welterweight boxing split decision over the Mon- lands a solid left hook to championship bout, in Mon- treal fighter. the head of Armand Savoie, treal, last night. Schmidt during their 12-round Cana- regained the title with a Frank Boucher Has Olympic Hockey Idea TORONTO (CP) -- Frank|oslovakia and Sweden, In thelinto the minor professional Boucher says Canada should|1964 winter Olympics at Inns-|leagues, Many will go to U.S. scrap its system of building)bruck, Austria, also|colleges on hockey scholarships, world and Olympic hockey/jended fourth. and still others will take jobs teams on college players. He} Boucher says: in U.S. towns i play on sen- inks will pro-| ior amateur clubs. ae tan Wcecaelecs. "prov ei TWO WRONGS 'I say that none of them ably champions, every year. ". ., Our 8-0 defeat by|should go anywhere until they! The Boucher plan is to re-|Czechoslovakia (is) proof posi-|naye been considered for our! eruit players who are set to|tive that our system is wrong; national team. I say that the| graduate from junior ranks, second, the suggestion by Fa-\canadian Amateur Hockey As- The 61-year-old commissioner|ther Bauer, the man _ be-|<ocijation and the NHL should of the Saskatchewan Juniorjhind Canada's last two interna-\co.operate in the appointment Hockey League, member of the|tional teams, that perhaps we/of a permanent manager and a Hockey Hall of Fame and ajshould withdraw from the/nermanent coach of our na-| great centre with the old Ot-|(world) tournament in 1966 tOjtional team, two men com: tawa Senators and later withiprepare for 1967--is ample evi-|njetely compatible and carry- New York Rangers of the Na-|dence to me that our philosophy|ing the confidence of both! tional League, says he is "irri-|is wrong. organizations , tated by Canada's repeated) Boucher says he admires Fa-| -- failures in internationa||ther Bauer but believes the two SHOULD CO-OPERATE (hockey) competition." years he has spent on his plan) He says the six NHL clubs} Writing in the May 15 issue/have been wasted and "I fore-|would know the players were| of Maclean's magazine, the out-\sée the prospect of another/heing groomed for potential big! spoken Boucher says Canada's|wasted two years if we are tOleague careers and that the| "abject failure" at this year's|go along with him." players were "being developed) world tournament in Tampere, Boucher says there are 46)just as expertly as if they were| Finland, "marked the. end of|Junior A hockey teams in Can-/farmed out to a minor - pro my personal patience with what/ada and roughly 200 players oniclub. . . ." has become known as Father|these clubs are in their final the manager would. ask| David Bauer's four-year plan to!junior year. coaches and managers of the restore our international pres-| 'Two or three will make the|. untry's Junior A teams for tige." jbig jump directly to the Na-jeuidance in compiling a list of Canada finished fourth at|tional Hockey League next sea-|..,. ah' Tam kehind 'Resit h h 30 will jeach club's best graduates. He pere behind Russia, Czech-ison, Another 25 or 30 will move| would also tap them for their --CP Wirephoto Canada | WON'T USE HUCK Oil Kings manager Leo Le- clerc said at the end of the 4 centre Frank Huck, picked up for the junior final from Regina Pats, or defenceman Jim Car- diff, picked up from Weyburn Red Wings, in the second game here Thursday. But Kings might be forced into a lineup change by injur- ies. Centre Greg Tomalty and winger Ron Anderson suffered injuries in the second period and operated at reduced ef- ficiency the rest of the way. Both said they would be able to play, but if they're wrong, Huck and Cardiff are available. Despite the narrow winning margin, Flyers were in com- mand throughout. They restrict- ed' Edmonton's free-wheeling forwards and netminder Bernie Parent handled only 18 shots, two fewer than Wayne Stephen- son of Edmonton. Stephenson, conscripted from Winnipeg Braves of the Mani- toba Junior Hockey League, was dressed after regular netminder Gary Simmons decided on his own that his injured knee would Niagara Falls Flyers Win First Of Finals ARE SCORERS Stephenson was beaten by Niagara Falls scorers Rosaire Paiement, Bud Debrody and Derick Sanderson. The clubs ended the first period in a 1-1 tie and Flyers fired two un- answered second-period tallies. Ross Perkins and Red Simp- son, a pair of bustling rookies, scored for Edmonton. The Flyers took nine of 13 penalties, including a major to Sanderson and a 10-minute mis- conduct to defenceman John Arbour, but had little trouble while short-handed. Paiement opened the scoring near the eight - minute mark when he drilled a low forehand shot past Stephenson after. set- ting up Oil King captain Bob Falkenberg as a screen. Flyers dominated the remain- der of the period but Perkins took advantage of a lapse to tie the score in the final minute. The shifty centre picked up a loose puck after Ricky Ley fell game that his club will not use not allow him to play well. | ALLAN CUP FINALS Sherbrooke Beavers Defeat Nelson Again SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP) --| Playing coach Bobby Krommlin the first and second period|second with Buck Crawford tak-| Sherbrooke Beavers, with power-play goals in the first and second periods and two un- answered markers in the third, downed Nelson Maple Leafs 4-1 Tuesday night to take a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven Allan Cup final series, "Winning that second game was the big one for us," said playing coach Georges Roy, fol- lowing Sherbrooke's win. "Now I feel confident we will win the cup and return it to Que- bec." of the British Columbia team|was the highest point-getter forjing an enforced rest. | refused to talk to reporters, | Kromm became involved in a stick-swinging incident with Roy in the third period and as| he moved toward the Nelson bench, took a swipe at a spec-| tator who had _ been_ heckling} him. Referee Dutch Van Dee-| lan stepped in and with police help quieted the situation. } PEPIN STARS Rene Pepin, with a third per- iod goal and assists on goals| igoals with the Nelson squad in front of the net, Perkins shift- ed Parent to the ice and scored) easily. DON'T THREATEN Kings failed to threaten while holding a two-man advantage and fell behind to stay when Debrody batted home a goal- mouth pass. The puck was cleared from the corner by winger Brian Bradley. Sanderson connected on his own rebound about four minutes later after Bill Goldsworthy, a dazzling skater, drilled a pass from the right side. Simpson beat Parent with a THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, May 5, 1965 15 was named Tuesday head coach of Toronto Rifles of the Continental Football League. Cahill, 36, served as assistant coach of Montreal Alouettes of the Eastern Football Confer- ence from 1961 until he re- signed in a surprise move last Sept. 8. He was considered for the head coaching job with the Als iwhen Perry Moss was fired in 1963, but owner Ted Workman lured Jim Trimble from Ham- ilton Tiger-Cats instead. Cahill remained with the club until a personal rift developed) as Trimble took complete con- trol of the team, Cahill plans to name two as- Leo Cahill Heads Toronto Rifles TORONTO (CP) -- Leo Cahill/ sistant coaches for the Rifles within 10 days. He is also nego- tiating with several of last year's Quebec team, which was transferred to Toronto this year. Among them is quarter- back John Henry Jackson, who. had a tryout with Toronto Argo- nauts of the EFC, The Rifles will play their home es in the 15,000-seat Maple Leaf Stadium, a baseball park adjacent to Lake Ontario, The Rifles also announced addition of Nobby Wirkowski, dismissed as head coach of |Toronto Argonauts after last season, to their board of direc- tors. Wirkowski will handle re- cruit and public relations, but not coach, hot backhand from a sharp angle late in the third period to narrow the margin. Most of the heavy work on the goal was done by Garnett (Ace) Bailey, who did not receive an official assist. The line of Simpson, Bailey and Ted Rogers, all rookies, Quebec Group Puts Blast On NHL President was Oil Kings' best. Parent moved quickly to beat Simpson a few seconds after he potted the second goal. Sherbrooke. Roy scored the Beavers' first goal at 17.39 of the first period| and received an assist on Simon) Nolet's second period goal at) 8.45, | George Guilbeault was the) other Beaver marksman at 3.57/ of the third period. | Roy and Nolet scored their shorthanded. The first came with Bill Steinke off and the Ambitious Plans For Jewish Games By ARYE WALLENSTEIN TEL AVIV, Israel (Reuters)-- the! The Jewish Olympic seventh Maccabia, Games _ this according to the organizers, Jewish athletes from at least 25 countries will participate in the event which has been a lin between Jewish youth the world over and that of Israel. Once every four years this sports meet attracts to Israel the track and the courts. The winners are awarded med- would jals and trophies. But there is|trade schools or jobs and an : : something more to the experi- exhibition schedule set up with vummer, will be the biggest yets/ence--they have the opportunity NHL, AHL, junior and senior other teams thereby getting a down on the abilities of the top 60 to 70 in the whole country." Invite the players to camp-- Boucher suggested Ottawa as jpermament head quarters in- stead of Winnipeg -- and after) their competitions on the field, three weeks' training the best! 25 would be chosen and these universities, jassessment of all grads on the their leagues, "good run- in settle into jto see at first hand the Jewish teams across the country, |republic and establish links with its citizens, ing a contingent from Canada. "T can't ., |drawing The seventh Maccabia Willlevery stop, with their share ( jopen Aug. 23. The organizers eX-/the gate) easily covering their |pect some 1,200 entries, includ-|)eay's ; | ; jcase that's For the first time a group of}! Imagine capacity crowds operating expenses, them not at} of | in} still uppermost inj the minds of some officials." | several hundred young Jewish) 4 at is t | an men and women. They have pad my a ere wr conle Boucher says a player bound Leo Cahill (left) new ---- "Tn additi bia tars {or the pros would miss his| coach of the Toronto Rifles | * von, Olympic "laTs\first season of pro money "but| Club, in_ the Continental from several countries have Football League, who was Montreal Honors Habs In Parade route Tuesday to cheer the! Montreal Canadiens, winners of hockey's Stanley Cup. Canadiens won the cup Satur-| day night, beating Chicago! Black Hawks 4-0 in the final! game of their best - of - seven! playoff The team, driving in 13 open convertibles led by six motor-| cycle policemen and a 30-piece band on a fire truck, were 15 minutes late arriving for a re- ception at city hall before a! city - sponsored buffet Tuesday) night. They had some difficulty leaving the Forum where the cavalcade began because of a pressing throng of fans. | PRAISES CANADIENS Mayor Drapeau praised the Canadiens and expressed the hope they could keep winring the coveted Stanley Cup until 1067 In that year Montreal will stage the world's fair "and we can give you an absolutely tremendous reception right on the fair-site in honor of three straight Stanley Cup wins. Coach Toe Blake praised his club for "giving me more thrills than any other team I've) about ever coached." Blake now has | | | (Tel Aviv. coached a record six Stanley {been invited for demonstration} performances. These may in- clude Russian athletes. |IMPROVING STADIUM The festive opening will be at the Ramat Gan Stadium near Work is under way to renovate the place and pre- pare for seating the 50,000 spec- An air force display is also planned. A smart Olympic-style village} has been enlarged. to. accommo- Aviv since the last Maccabia. It has been enlarged to acommo- date about 700 athletes. A buil ing has been rented nearby to} accommodate some 400 women athletes. The Canadian Maccabia or- ganization has undertaken to build an indoor sports hall at the Maccabia- village to be named in honor of the Duke of Edinburgh. Plans also provide jfor the building of a synagogue! & within the "village."" The competitions will cover 20 branches of sports with the larg- est number of entries so far go- ing to tennis, table-tennis, swim- ming, track and field, judo and FRobE ILLUSTRATED HANDBOOK ON SWIMMING POOLS 12 pages with fom gente dia. an in-the-ground swim. fring pool Sust phone or we for ry 4 do-it-yourself pool kit coast-to-coast A British instrument - has produced a drili that can tators expected to attend the bore a hole 0.004 of an 'inch MONTREAL (CP) -- Crowds|ceremonies in which the Israeli|wide in lined an eight - mile downtown|Army will play a central role,|~---- he'd be exchanging this for a) tour of Canada! and an extensive all - expense) visit to Europe while polishing his trade." BRITISH DRILL SMALL one-inch steel. named head coach yester- day, is shown admiring the NEW COACH ADMIRES TEAM'S NEW EMBLEM | new crest for "The Rifles", along with 'Happy'? Chand- ler (centre) Commissioner on the Continental League and Harry Sussman, presi- dent of the Rifles Club, Ca- t hill, 36, served as assist- ant coach of the Montreal Alouettes from 1961 until /f September of Ist year. --CP Wirephoto SIGNS LACROSSE PLAYERS players with the team, George/hands of obscure Gaetano di : . Gregg of Trail and Ken Street,/Maso of Italy 4-6, 6-8, 4-6, 7-5 MONTREAL (CP) -- Verdun 2 RP aN: jof New Westminster. |6-2 in the major upset of Tues- |day's play in the Italian tennis}, championships. Lions of the Quebec National! maker Lacrosse League announced the| signing Tuesday of Alex Mc- Lean, 20, and Johnny Allen, 21,) ROME (AP)--Mike Sangster, SANGSTER UPSET Teer and Doug Kilburn on a three-way passing effort at the period on the attack and kept up the pressure until Larry Drouin beault stationed behind the Nel- son defence, Guilbeault hit the lower left hand corner, STICKS ARE HIGH Play became rough and sticks NICKLAUS SHUNS COLONIAL were carried high following Builbealt's goal. upper lip. They carried on their feud at every opportunity after Kromm became involved with the crowd. and Nelson's Nelson received a bench pen- alty in the third. Nine other minors were called by referee Van Deelan, five to Nelson and four against Sherbrooke. for Thursday night fourth Saturday night at the | Walt Peacosh scored Nelson's| goal at 10,20 of the second per-| wee. Jim Letcher in the western club's nets made 45 saves -- 17 of them in the second period. Serge Aubry at the other end made 23. KEEPS LEAFS ALIVE It was the outstanding work of Letcher that kept the Leafs in the game during the first period. Letcher, who ended the period with 15 saves to six by Aubry, was called on to stop Pepin, Guilbeault, Rejean Rich- er and Larry Drouin on efforts that looked like sure goals. However, he had no chance on Roy's goal as the Sherbrooke playing coach picked up a re- bound of Pepin's shot and sank it for the first goal. In the second period, Nolet was put in the clear by Pepin and lifted the puck over the fallen Letcher after dodging two Nelson defenders. The Sherbrooke defence later had a momentary lapse and were caught out of position when Peacosh teamed with Ken Mc- 10.20 mark of the second. Sherbrooke opened the third made a rink-wide pass to Guil- Frank Carlson hat and it was at this point In addition to majors to Roy Murray Owens ball Conference club. There jwas no estimate on the terms of Parker's contract. |Masters champion Jack Nick- received ajlaus will not charging penalty at 11.35 and/$100,000 Colonial national invi- Kromm slashed Roy across the/tation golf tournament, officials announced Tuesday. A spokes- man for the tournament, begin- ning Thursday, said Nicklaus|, reported by telephone that he will remain in Columbus, Ohio, with his wife, who is expecting her third child momentarily. DRUMMOND VILLE, Que. (CP) -- The St, Jean Baptiste Society of the area of Nicolet, Que., has protested the exclus- ive use of English by Clarence Campbell, National Hockey League president, in his pres- entation of the Stanley Cup to Montreal Canadiens. In a telegram sent Monday to NHL governors, the society ob- jected to what it called Camp- bell's "ignorance" of the French language. Commenting on the protest, Campbell said in Montreal Tuesday he regrets he cannot speak French because "there's nothing I would like to be more able to do, . "TI am not sufficiently fluent to speak French in public, but all my sympathies are towa every cordial relation possible with my French friends." Campbell presented the cup to Montreal team captain Jean Beliveau Saturday night after the Canadiens defeated Chicago Black Hawks 4-0 in the seventh game of their best - of - seven final playoff series. Campbell's brief remarks in English were interrupted by boos and shouts as he stood at centre ice in the Montreal Forum to present the cup. Mo- ments later, Beliveau's accept- ance speech in French and Eng- lish was received in complete quiet. The uproar during Mr. Camp- bell's remarks apparently re- sulted from his suspension of Montreal's star right winger Maurice Richard in 1955 for the last three games and the play- offs of that season. Toronto Argos Hire Bob Agler TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Argonauts Tuesday announced two changes for the 1965 East- ern Football Conference season. Bob Moir, a western radio- television commentator, has been hired to handle publicity and promotion. He replaces John Walsh, who resigned ear- lier this season. Argo coach Bob Shaw also announced that he has acquired Bob Agler, a former player with Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League and now coach at Otterbein College in Ohio, to assist him during training camp. Agler assisted at the last two Saskatchewan Roughrider training camps under Shaw, who joined Argos after the 1964 season. | Liverpool Tops Milan, Italy LIVERPOOL (AP) -- Liver- pool of England took a 3-1 lead over Inter-Milan of Italy in the first leg of a European Soccer Cup of Champions semi - final Tuesday night. The second leg is scheduled for Milan May 12. Matches are decided on aggregate goals after home and away matches, Inter - Milan, holder of the trophy, will have to win rf three goals to get into the final, The winner of this match will play the winner of the Benfica of Portugal and Vasas of Hun- gary semi-final. Last Saturday, Liverpool de- feated Leeds United 2-1 in extra time at London's Wembley Sta- dium to win the Football Asso- ciation Cup. SPORTS IN BRIEF ARGOS SIGN PARKER | TORONTO (CP)--Jackie Parker, the celebrated quarter- back Toronto Argonauts signed REDS TRADE HENRY CINCINNATI (AP) -- Cincin- nati Reds traded veteran relief pitcher Bill Henry to San Fran- two years ago for an estimated/cisco Giants Tuesday for ree $27,500 annually in salary andjjiever Jim Duffalo. Henry, 37, bonuses, has signed his 1965 contract with the Eastern Foot- FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)-- compete in the is a left-hander and Duffat, 29, a right-hander. 'straight player transaction. It was a BOXER NOT POOR LONDON (AP)--Joe Beckett, former British heavyweight boxing champion who died a month ago.in apparent poverty, actually left an estate of $90,« 566, his will disclosed Tuesday, For years other residents of Southampton, where Beckett died at 72, had been giving him food and other supplies in the belief that 1919-23 British Em- pire champion was too poor te buy his own. ' or fighting in the second period, The third game is scheduled with the played in Sherbrooke. ame time. All games are being both of Vancouver. They join) Britain's No, 1 Davis Cup ace, two other British Columbia went down DOMINION TIRE STORES to defeat at the TAKE - OFF TIRE SALE ANNUAL UP TO 30% OFF EXAMPLE: 700x14 Tubeless Blackwall @ Ist LINE ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT @ NO OUTSIDE FINANCING @ TERMS-- 1.00 DOWN-- 1.00 WEEK. 48 BOND ST. " OSHAWA Cup winners. 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