T. V. "TERRY" KELLY (right), of Oshawa, Presi- dent of the Ontario Soccer DOMINION TROPHY Association congratulates Vancouver Firefighters on their Dominion Cup victory. Italia Is Outclassed By Western Champions «| Four Goals In 2nd Win By FRANK RATCLIFFE The big inside left scored the Art "Cowboy" Hughes rodejfirst two goals for Vancouver into town from the west last|Firefighters as they outclassed week with a reputation for gun-|Oshawa Italia 5-0 to capture the ning down soccer goaltenders.|Dominion Challenge Trophy. Saturday night he took to the/The Cup is emblematic of Cana- field at Kinsmen Civic Memo-jdian amateur soccer suprem-| rial Stadium and proved him-|acy. eelf worthy of the distinction. Hughes, 34, nick-named "cow-} boy" by the fans because of| s Jay Cees Nip more than a dozen times. He struck early in the open- ing half off a Vancouver cor- his rangy style and appear- ance, has been a B.C. all-star Genosha Aces s In 18 Innings Jay Cee Juveniles and Gen- a osha Aces battled for over three ner kick. Italia goaltender Freddy Rohr made the stop but the ball deflected onto the crossbar. Hughes headed in the rebound and the westerners led QUICK TALLIES He scored the first of three hours Saturday night, before) ick goals late in the half i quick goals late in the half on Jay ong Mongar gas hay OF fe n almost identical play. Be- ory. <tr Pgh gl tof.(tWeen tallies he sent left full- Fern e, with the third|>ack Eddie Bak and outside ive final series, w left Louis Trischuk in alone. " At left is Art "Cowboy" Hughes, who scored the first two goals in a 5-0 win, Rohr made a brilliant leaping save on Bak and Trischuk shot over the net. Inside right James Blundell and Trischuk scored late in the first half to leave the score 4-0 after 30 minutes. Blundell's goal came on a long bullet drive that saw Rohr unable to make a move. Trischuk, the fastest man on the field for either club, hooked a corner kick in toward the net, and when Rohr leaped back to make the save he batted it over the line. Italia's best scoring opportun- ity in the first half came on a pretty three-way pass play. Mario Pedretti took a pass from Adriano Di Danieli and relayed it to Johnny Lopez. Lopez, who scored both goals in Italia's sec- ond game 2-0 upset over Lon- don. Marconi in the Ontario Cup, went in alone. He hurried the boot and kicked it directly at goaltender Ken Pears. Like Hughes, Pears is a per- | By CLIFF GORDON Oshawa Generals and the Tor- onto Marlies hooked up in a sparkling exhibition Jr. hockey game at the Whitby Arena on Saturday night, to get the local hockey fans warmed up for things to come. The out- come of the scrappy but well- played contest was 4-2 verdict for coach Gus Bodnar and his Toronto team. Generals, making their first start of the season, played ex- ceptionally well and held Mar- lies off the score sheet for the first 27.30 minutes of play and then it was just a deflected shot at that which beat Ian Young, in the Generals cage. The better condition of the Marlies started to pay off in the final period, as they slid three more goals home, this time past Dunc Wilson, who had _ replaced Young, at the 11.33 mark of the second period, Jim Cassidy, Cam Crosby, Brian Glennie and Gerry Mee- han each scored once for the Marlies, who were using the Whitby Arena for their home contest. O'SHEA GETS OPENER Danny O'Shea, the big fellow from Ajax, sparked the Generals with one goal and one assist as he got the helper on the tally by Geo. Babcock. The game was fast and keenly played, as many of the fellows realized it could be their big Doug . Greig Vaticouver chance to break in with an coach, is in centre. --Oshawa Times Photo |'0 impress their coach and manager. There was a total of 80 minutes in penalties handed out, to keep the players under control. Marlies picked up 44 minutes as against 36 by the Generals. O'Shea scored the only goal of the period when he worked in close and fired a hard shot, knee-high to the left of goalie Al Smith. Both teams were playing short-handed at the time. Young made big saves on Cassidy and Glennie in the final minute of play but other Generals Lose First Ex. To Marlies, In Whitby \*A" club and they were trying} than that, was not overworked as Marlies managed only five shots on goal while Oshawa peppered Smith with 13. Marlies came out strong in the second and gave Oshawa some anxious moments, Young made good saves on Corrigan at the .13 mark, Crosby at the .24 and a tremendous diving save on a low drive by Laurent, at the .29 mark as the Marlies stormed all around the Generals' net. Davidson had a clear break in at 3.47 but failed to dee Young. Cassidy got the first goal of the game for the wfners at 7.30 and it came with Oshawa playing five men to four. Little missed a good chance at 9.48 as Orr set him in the clear with only goalie Edwards to beat. The period ended at 1-1 and the 750 fans were cheering loudly at the repeated fine moves by both clubs. | The third and final period) caught up with the Generals as) they were outscored 3-1 by the! more conditionoed Marlies team.| This also was Marlies second taste of action having dropped a 5-3 decision in Peterborough earlier last week. | JUST TALKING. . .General manager Wren Blair was welll{ntermediate 'C"' championship |ning, with two out, Bruce Mit- ipleased with his team, and| thought they played well. He/Ontario finals, when they scor-|gle and Vern Ferguson started jreported. they have had only} three days of ice time.. . .The| jinjury to Cashman early in the jgame hampered the Generals as it disrupted their lines.. . |Brian Morenz and Geo Babcock jplayed well, as did Jim Whit- jtaker. . .Generals looked very |sharp in their new gold, white jand black uniforms. . .Coach {Bodnar of the Marlies thought jhis team played very well, des-| |pite the fact that a number of ihis regulars were not dressed. , .The same two teams will meet this Thursday night at jthe Qshawa Civic Auditor- lium. . Jimmy Higgs, starry \lacrosse player with the Osh- lawa Green Gaels, set up the winning goal for the Marlies. ennial all-star, being selected every season since 1954, shutout climaxed a 'lies, WEST COPS MANN CUP Brooklin Trampled In Deciding Game NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)--New Westminster, in a brilliant com back, defeated Brooklin Merchants 11-3 Satur- day night to claim the Mann Cup and the Canadian senior lacrosse championship. New Westminster took the best-of-seven series by winning the last three games--duplicat- ing Vancouver's feat in the 1964 Mann Cup series with Brooklin. Both Vancouver and New West- minster are members of B.C.'s Inter-City Lacrosse League. Rookie coach Doug McRory of New Westminster said the victory came from "a brillianttacular performance in the last comeback effort with a solid team performance." Coach McRory said Brooklin appeared "just too tired to win." Brooklin stars Bobby Allan jand Larry Ferguson were s0 jtired in the final game "they were lucky to get a shot on goal," McRory said. Neither} player scored a point. "I can't understand it. They dressed 16 players but used only '10 in the last two. games," McRory added. New Westminster goalie Les |Norman came up with a spec- 'Concretes' Cop 1-0 Thriller In Series Opener Brooklin "Concretes" took an important step towards the suc- cessful defence of their OASA laurels and a berth in the All- ed an exciting 1-0 victory, on their own diamond, Saturday night, in the first game of the "Southern Ontario' final ser- over Wingham '"Good- years"', Second game of the 2-out-of-3 set will be played in Wingham, this Saturday night, 8.30 o'clock The game in Brooklin proved a hard-fought pitching duel with Ron Jones, of the homesters, having one of his best games of the season, to completely smother the Wingham attack. Jones struck out 16 batters and gave up only two hits and and didn't yield a single walk, to justly earn his shutout. Garry Monahan drew assists on the tally. Then the homesters scored on four of their first six shots in Hodgkinson singled, with two out in the 7th inning, for the first Wingham batter to get on base. Baker opened the 8th with a single and got as far as sec- ond base, on a wild pitch. Backed by excellent support, Coultes, pitching for Wingham, also kept Brooklin Concretes off the score-sheet for eight frames. He gave up only five hits and kept them well-scattered. Bi!l Cornish singled in the first in- /chell opened the third with a sin- joff the fifth frame with a two- bagger, went to third on a choice play and then' was thrown out at the plate, trying to score on Mitchell's grounder. Cornish got his second hit of the game, an- other single, in the sixth. Coultes struck out eight bat- ters and he also didn't give up a single walk, while his mates him errorless support, Lott at second-base, being their defen- sive standout. | Brooklin ended the struggle, with the only run of the game, in the bottom half of the 9th in- ning, when Garnet Warriner drove a triple to deep centre Sliding into 3rd just ahead of the throw, Warriner got up and scrambled over the plate with the run to end the game, when the throw got past the third baseman and went into the crowd, asin game, stopping 25 of 28 shats.." He was later given the eof Kelly Award as outstanding « player of the series. oes New Westminster got sparkle ing offensive performances By~ defencemen Wayne SI worth and Ed McDonald, a durable duo led the B.C. club= with two goals each, ted Brooklin was limited to a on®., man show as. Elmer Tram= scored two goals. The third Brooklin goal came from Grant Heffernan. an New Westminster jumped to a 2-1 first quarter lead, then wrapped it up in the second for a 7-2 lead at the half and led 8-2 after the third quarter. = NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C, (CP)--Mann Cup lineups: --_ Brooklin -- Goal: Baker; de~- fence: Hinkson, Hanna, Bi "4 Castator; forwards: Dippon, G. Lotton, Ferguson, Riding, Tran, Burrows, Heffernan, K. Lotton, Allan, Crawford. New Westminster--Goal: Nor- man, Ridd; defence: Shuttle- worth, McDonald, Cooks, Risin- ger; forwards: Keretchuk, Par: rent, Tory, Tyler, Loftus, Wall- smith, Wilkes, Flaten, Sepka. Referees: Fred Severson, Vic? toria; Earl McDonald, Vancow ver, ~ HUNTING LICENCES. NOW ON SALE HUNTING STARTS ON THE 25th Check Your Gear Then See Us For Good Hunting Values AUTHORIZED play-off performance by the 31-) year-old goaltender. In previ- the middle period. Grant set up Lacroix with the period 46 sec- Remington, WINGHAM -- Saxton, cf; ous inter-provincial playoff com- F p t 0 0 h W petition this season, he blanked or e es ver S a a Winnipeg Scottish 7-0 and turn-| yiye goals in four ed back Edmonton Rangers 2-0.'sunday night gave FRUSTRATED FANS Close to 1,000 partisan fans sat through a frustrating sec- ond half, that saw Italia unable minutes|day's battle with Marlboros to Peterbor-|join the Montreal Canadiens'! ough Petes a one-sided 6-1 ex- camp, while Wayne Cashman |hibition victory over Oshawa! re Generals : of the OHA Junior| Suffered an ankle injury in the i'A'. The game was played be- Marlie tilt. {fore a small turnout at Peter- The other member of the line, onds old, and using the defence|Bain, 3b; Hodkinson, If; Fry- as a screen Lacroix made no|forle, ss; Baker, c; Coultes, p; mistake. Dan Sharpe also assist. |McDonagh, rf; Storey, Ib; Lott, ed. \20. Don Herriman suffered a slight) | BROOKLIN hes es ef; shoulder separation on the play/Hill, ss; Cornish, 2b; Till, rf; A "| Warriner, lf; V. Ferguson, 3b; when he slammed into the end/p, Ferguson, 1b; Mitchell, c: DEALER OINCE 1010-THE MOST PamOuD mame mm eeOTIES MITH PORT 353 King St. W. 728-7341 boards after netting the goal. It/R. Jones, p. game set for tonight at Alex- andra Park at 8:00 p.m. The 18-inning marathon de- veloped into a brilliant pitching duel between Dave Leaming of) Jay Cees and Ron Wilson of Genosha. Both hurlers went the route. Leaming was particularly sharp giving up just five hits-- four singles and a double--fan ning 20 and walking just one. Wilson scattered 11 hits, struck out 17 and issued a pair of walks. | | Oshawa Vikings Blank Ajax 14-0 Powered by the backfield run- ning of Russ Williams, Dave Nicholishen, Reg Wasilyk, Bill Lockwood and Keith Williams to move into the firsts at the first opportunity. VIKING 'B': Ron Aiken, Bob Calford, Len Bobbie, Greg lOshawa Vikings won their third|Medinski, Bryan Hall, Bob Muir, Leaming won his own game/came in a row Saturday after-/Dange Tutton, Ross Close, Gar- in the 18th inning, when hel noon at Lakeview Parkas they|ney Gunn, Geoffrey Stockwell, doubled in a run with two away-.|defeated Ajax 14-0 in Ontarf®/Dave Thompson, Don Pringle, He then moved around the bases|tntermediate Rugger play. and scored on catcher Paul an error Parkinson. night for Leaming. to) Vikings are Thelseason and hit was the second double of the|Krause is hopeful that the team undefeated this Manager Chris |will keep up the pace and win Ron Willoughby picked up|the Ontario Championship last three singles for the winners and|won by the club in 1959. Jim Clapp added a pair of one- baggers. Genosha threatened to win the contest in the bottom of the 17th, Parkinson singled with one out, and John Mosier attempted to) r lay down a sacrifice bunt. The that the backs recei ball hit the bat twice, however,|of work and Ron and Mosier was called out. The|Keith Williams struck up a goo third batter took base on anjPartnership at the positions before the side was|scrum half and stand off -- : that the ball moved freely along retired. Parkinson led the losing nine On Saturday, touchdowns were jeollected by Nicholishen, Wasi- lyk, Lockwood and forward Gerry Tymoshik while Terry The sure ved plenty Aiken and) d| of} Kelly kicked a _ convert. Oshawa forwards made the backfield. Erik Doole and Moe Welch. | VIKING NOTES: The Firsts travel to Toronto Saturday to play Nomads while the 'B' team fentertains Balmy Beach at |Lakeview Park. . .Ron Aiken land Garney Gunn dropped \down with the 'B's' Sunday to |give added experiece to the jsquad but they will be in action jagainst Nomads Saturday. . . |Gary Bruce toured Britain with \the University of Toronto last |season . . . Personnel-wise Vik- ings are having their most suc- cessful year with players to fill jalmost three teams but new- *"\comers are invited to the prac- tices at Lakeview Park Wed- nesdays at 6 p.m. to penetrate Vancouver's tough! defensive armour, led by full- back Gary Stevens and half- back Greg Arnett. | Tom Millar rounded out the| scoring late in the game with| the prettiest counter of the} night. He booted one just under} the crossbar and inside the left post on which Rohr was unable to make a move. The polished westerners) adopted quick, short, accurate} passes in the second half after using long passes in the open- ing 30 minutes. The failure of the eastern champions to keep the ball on the ground was one of their downfalls. The taller, more powerful Firefighters consis- tently outjumped the Oshawans on high passes. | Italia's star centre-forward| Adriano Di Danieli suffered aj} slight thigh injury late in the! first half and didn't return until the final stages of the game.| Along with left fullback Mau- rice Laidlaw and inside right! Johnny Lopez he was one of tne bright lights for Oshawa. YOUR SATISFACTION IS OUR AIM All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disney Used Cars Ltd. 1200 Dundes E. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS DROP IN borough's Memorial Centre. Despite the trouncing, Osh- |awa coach "Bep" Guidolin and|through the final frame and it| Just 15 seconds later, an Osh-| General Manager Wren Blair were not: disappointed. "They played it like a league game and we played it like an exhibition game, giving every- ody a turn on the icé,'"' Blair Chris Hayes, pulled a muscle|is feared he may be lost for) lunder the left arm midway|¥UP to two weeks, "it jisn't known whether he will|awa defenceman cleared the} miss any action. puck onto the stick of Glen} The count was tied 1-1 late in|Shirton. Steve Hunt relayed |the opening period when Peter-|Shirton's pass to Dan Grant |borough started their scoring|Who scored his second of the} jexplosion. With only 16 seconds| night. |Danny O'Shea left after Satur-|a man short. Andre Lacroix and pointed out after the game. (left Dan Grant flipped the puck) In addition Generals went|past goaltender Dunc: Wilson into the contest minus two mem-|from just outside the crease) bers of their number one line.| while Generals were playing) | Guy Dufour rounded out the| scoring at 3.44, knocking in Gord Tucker's rebound. Tucker and George Godson were given! assists. Captain Tom Olinyk was back in the forward line and along with Pete Sheperd, Gary Bruce, \Jack Rennie, Harry Boyd, Tym- WEEKEND FIGHTS pshik, Bob Meldrum and eg sec|Chascewski dominate: play gobi -engge ple TRESS ainet an Ajax team that Glace Bay, N.S. Gomeo} ' Brennan, The Bahamas, 159,|"°Ver gave up. knocked out Blair Richardson,|p. Lose 159, South Bar, N.S., 11. Bren-| vikings 'B' team travelled to nan _ retained British Empire/roronto Sunday and after lead- middleweight title. ling 6-0 at halftime were de- Tokyo--Mitsunori Seki, 129%,/feated by Toronto Scottish 30-6. Japan, outpointed Sugar Cane|Oshawa tries were scored by Carreaon, 129%, Philippines, 10.;]Garney Gunn and Bob Calford. Modesto, Calif. Charley} The 'B' team, though lacking Shipes, 146, Oakland, Calif., out-jexperience, continues to show) pointed Gaspar Ortega, 148, Ti-/improvement and already there} juana, Mexico, 10. are players on the squad ready) at the plate with a trio of singles. 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