4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, nite: homer 7, 1966 SQUEEZE PLAY! Boston Bruins centre 'Pit' Martin (centre) gets the squeeze play from two former team- mates, Red Wings' Doug Barkley (left) and. defense- man Bert Marshall, as Mar- tin tries to get in the clear, for a shot, in the second period of last night's NHL game at Detroit. Detroit whipped their former team- Murphys Iwo Sparks Detroits Win By THE CANADIAN PRESS Out of action with injuries for 18 of the 32 games Detroit Red) Wings have played so far this season, veteran Ron Murphy) Thursday night powered the) Wings to a 5-3 National Hockey League victory over the lowly! Boston Bruins. The 32 year - old left-| winger hammered home two) -goals to double his morn for the year after scoring goals last season, his first with| the club following seven years| "with Chicago Black Hawks and «five with New York Rangers. * Parker MacDonald, Bruce} «MacGregor and Floyd Smith| "scored the other Detroit goals] 'with replies coming from Pit "Martin, Ron Stewart and Ed - Westfall. | ~ The triumph--Detroit's eighth) over the last-place Bruins in as| *many games this season--lifted| ithe Red Wings to within two| "points of second-place Montreal! Canadiens. i opened the scoring at ° 6:09 of the first period but Mar- ~ tin, playing his first game) "against his former teammates | Scoring Dearly 'Close Affair GALT (CP)--Only two points separate the top six scorers in »the Ontario Hockey Association "Senior scoring race. " Oakville Oaks' left - winger ~Jack Price, and Galt Hornets' "centre Joe Hogan complicated an already tight race by moving "into a tie for the lead with last "week's pace-setter, Bob Robin- «son of Woodstock Athletics. : All three forwards have 33 points. Three more, Galt playing- * coach Earl Balfour, Guelph Re- » gal's coach, Floyd (Butch) Mar- "tin and Oakville right- winger| ~ Moe Galand are tied for fourth place. All have 31 points, only * two off the lead. Price pocketed) a pair of points to move from "a third-place tie into a share of the lead while Hogan added * one in Galt's only start of the week. Robinson was held point- "less in Woodstock's only gama, Balfour, Martin and Doug Hillman of Oakville are in- volved in another close race for goal-scoring honors. Each man has 14 goals, one more than Price, Galand and Walt Brad- . ley of Guelph. The goaltending race re-| mained virtually unchanged! with Woodstock's Wilf Keating) still the leader, He has a 3.08 goals - against average in 12 games. Harold (Boat) Hurley of Guelph and Lynn Zimmer- man of Galt are still running second and third with 3.30 and 3.59 averages respectively. Leading scorers (Legend: 0 Oakville; Ga-Galt; Gue-Guelph; W-Woodstock): x G 13 19 it 14 14 13 12 11 14 13 8 A Pts, 20 33 21 33 22 33 31 31 31 29 25 9 Price, 0 * Hogan, Ga . Robinson, W Balfour, Ga Martin, Gue Galand, O Moore, 0 Robertson, Gue Hillman, O Bradley, Gue » Sullivan, W 7 17 18 17 14 . 9 14 29 19 since being traded to the Bruins for MacDonald, tied the game at 1-1 with an unassisted goal at 16:30. SECOND OF YEAR Martin's goal, his second of the year, came just 11 seconds after he returned to the ice after sitting out a hooking penalty. Bassen substituted for regular netminder Roger Crozier, who had been sidelined by intestinal The Bruins were going looked like they to give the Red Wings a rough time as they led) 3-2 at the end of the second pe-| riod on goals by Stewart ant Westfall, both with their sixth goals of the year. Smith, with his 12th goal of | the season, was | goal-getter in the middle period. But the roof fell in on the Bru- ins in the final period as the Red Wings scored three unanswered! goals. SHOW NO MERCY Detroit, outshot 11-9 in the | first period, showed little mercy) for Boston netminder Bernie Parent in the third frame as | they sent 21 shots at him. Id evened the score me with his eighth goal of ihe 'season aiid | minutes later, MacG | netted his 10th marker iess thas *\the third perioa re€20T| mond got two goals in the clos-|the American Footbal! of the |ing rush: and Guy Dufour and|champion Buffalo Bills. mate Martin and his new Boston buddies 5-3, with a three-goal rally in the third * period. --AP Wirephoto Goals year to put the Red Wings ahead to stay. Murphy scored his second goal of the night at 15:10 of the third stanza. Petes Are Tied With Generals, In Junior Race By THE CANADIAN London from last place to upset Ham- ilton Red Wings Thursday night and move into eighth spot in the Ontario Hockey Association the Detroit|Junior A standings The 7-3 win snapped Hamil- ton's unbeaten streak at five games and put the Nationals jone point ahead of St. Cathar- ines Black Hawks. Hamilton is tied in fourth place with Mont-| real Junior Canadiens Meanwhile, Peterborough Petes defeated Toronto Mar!l- |boros 5-2 to move into a first place tie with Oshawa Gen erals The slammed four Petes in 'have been PRESS Nationals came up| Need S The Oshawa Generals defen- sive corps heads into perhaps its toughest weekend of the sea- son, tonight. The league-leading Generals are in Niagara Falls for a Fri- day night game with the Fly- ers, and a victory by the defen- ding Memorial Cup champs would move them to within one point of the Oshawans. Saturday night, Generals face just as formidable opposition as they host the rampaging Ham- ilton Red Wings at Civic Aud- itorium at 7:15 p. m. The Wings, recently the hot- test team in the circuit, down- ed the Generals iast Thursday in Hamilton to jump into a fourth-place tie with the Mont- real Junior Canadiens. With the Flyers and Wings together scoring an average of, 4.5 goals per game this sea-| |son, a major factor will be the) lay of two of Oshawa's most |improved performers. TEADY DEFENDERS Barry Wilkins and Nick Bev erley, after mediocre starts, consistently steady |behind the blue line. Wilkins is on loan to the Generals for the season after playing strongly} for Niagara Falls last year. The six-foot Beverley, who was sent to Oshawa two years ago} by Boston. Bruin Chief Scout | Harold Cotton, is in his second) season as a General. 'Bunny' Rhearne Brags Europe Hockey Progress CALGARY (CP) -- J. F.| |(Bunny) Ahearne, president o the International Ice Hockey} |Federation, says hockey inter- jest is at a high level in Europe. | In Sweden, a country with a| population of 7,500,000, some 130,000 youngsters, are regis- tered hockey players, and "since the Second World War the number of arenas in Swe- .jden has increased from one to) 25," Ahearne told a press con- ference Thursday. The IIHF president, in Cal- gary as a guest of the Calgary Olympic Development Associa- tion, now called Olympic '72, earlier said he supported the Banff-Lake Louise areas as site of the 1972 Winter Olympic Games. The Olympic '72 group has put in a bid to get the 1972) Winter Games for Banff. GAMES IN FRANCE "Goodness knows, I tried hard enough during the last vote to get the 1968 games| located in _Canada,' _he- said. | Joel Collier Gets The Job" BUFFALO, Collier had Ny. been {AP)--Joel | a football| goals in the last 11 minutes of| coach for nine years, but never|, plaw afte ling 2-1 going into Mickey "Red- jJohn Vanderburg . added' one HOCKEY SCORES |" _ AND STANDINGS | By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League Sure AM 20 9 3120 76 43 18 9 4110 77 40 1712 4111 88 38 15 11 5 8&7 88 35 719 7 90 123 6 23 3 73 139 Thursday's Result Boston 3 Detroit 5 Saturday's Games Boston at Montreal | Detroit at Toronto Chicago at New York Central Professional Wit ¥ 17 10 4 108 12.11 5 7 1213 5 87 1213 5 89 1314 2 93 1116 3 94 Thursday's Result St. Louis 3 Minnesota 0 OHA Junior A WLT F APt | Oshawa 16 7 5143 9937 | Peterborough 16 8 5 140105 37) Niagara Falls 14 6 6118 83.34 | Montreal 12 9 4111 91 28 Hamilton 1213 4128 141 28 Toronto 1011 7119 131 27 | Kitchener 712 & 81 8820 London 820 3 98159 19 St. Catharines 716 4 99 14018 Thursday's Results | London 7. Hamilton 3 Toronto 2 Peterborough § Chicago Montreal Detroit Toronto New York Boston 15 A Pt 91 38 89 29 89 29 93 29 97 28 91 25 Memphis | Oklahoma Minnesota St. Louis Houston Tulsa Tonight's Games Oshawa at Niagara Falls St. Catharines at Kitchener Western League Victoria 4 Los Angeles 3 Eastern League | Nashville 1 Long Island 7 | Greensboro 3 Charlotte 8 i | International League | Toledo 3 Muskegon 4 Fort Wayne 1 Daytan 8 St. Lawrence Senior | Hawkesbury 4 Hull 4 SCORES TWO Vanderburg's goal second of the game. |Hamill and Wayne scored for Toronto. In the Nationals - Black Hawks game, Moe St. Jacques scored three goals for the win ners. Neil Clark scored twice! was _ his Fran Carleton} mont added one each. | ee Cole' Whip. Beavers BRATISLAVA (AP) -- The /Czech junior hockey team de- feated Sherbrooke (Que.) Beav- ers, Canadian Allan Cup cham- pions in 1965, 4-1 Thursday in an exhibition game The game at Kosica in East- ern Slovakia drew 5,000 .specta- tors The Beavers, who partici- | pated in the Ahearne Cup tour-| | nament in Stockholm, Sweden, | jearlier this month, now have begun a European tour Defenceman Lionel Robidas | scored the Sherbrooke goal just) {past the mid-way mark in the game. The Czech junior scorers were Kordiak, in the second | minute of play, Rys in the fifth | minute, Ketelka in the eighth na Nedved in the second pe- 21" SALES & SERVICE VOLKSWAGEN WERNER'S SERVICE CENTRE MANCHESTER and Highwoy No, 12 985-7162 the hoss. Today "he is. Head toate ir wf eague Collier, 33, defensive coach j}for the Bills for the last four years, was promoted Thursday by owner Ralph C. Wilson. He succeeds Lou Saban, who resigned Sunday night to be-| come head coach at the Univer- sity of Maryland Since 1957, Collier had been Saban's assistant -- at Western Illinois University, with Boston | Patriots of the AFL and the ,/and Stan Allan and Neil Clair-| pins | COACHING HIS DREAM Football coaching always has been his dream, he said after Wilson signed him to a two- year contract. I can't remember when I * plan on a coaching ca- er. As a child, I devoured pcre of a technical foot- ball nature I could get my hands on." Collier will get his first chance to call the shots Jan. 15 when the Bills meet the AFL All-Stars in Houston. | | | | DATSUN '| FOR '66 Going Places? Try The 1200 SEDAN Its @ crisply styled compact with big car choracteristics solidly en gineered dependable economy 80 mile an hour performance -- 40 MPG See H now et... Zoltan: Nick 160 Simeoe 5 728.0051 Oshawa UFIA |Derek Sanderson, \ vost," _| Snell and Don Marcotte. 4lsian and NHL trols young hockey players. i Tn a wn trong BARRY WILKINS NICK BEVERLEY They will be facing such foes| Leaders of the OHA Lakeshore las Peter Mahovlich, Nick Lib-| Junior 'B' League, Crushmen ett, Sandy Snow and Fred Speck) were limited to just three defen-| lof the Wings, and the Flyers'|}cemen last time out, but the | Jean Prono-|play of rearguards Bob Edm- Tediunds, Don Bowen and Leo Ayotte was rated the major factor in their 5-3 win over Cobourg. Cougars in Cobourg. Rosaire Paiement, CRUSHMEN BUSY TOO Oshawa Crushmen, meanwhile wy " a 'are looking for another sturdy Aiso bolstering the crush waked fom Abele dalenitos men' for their matinee game 'euaw: tomorrow, will be the presence of Peter Nevin. This will be) Crushmen are in Belleville his first 'home game". He has tonight and return home for a| played three games on 'the road Saturday matinee contest again- with the club and has made st Trenton Apple Kings at et his presence felt, getting into} ic Auditorium, at 2:00 p. .|the scoring column each time, | | THE CORBY'S TROPHY Men's Bonspiel, one of the most popular annual compe- titions at The Oshawa Curl- ing Club, saw a '"'hometown entry" capture 1 the _top Japan Entre In Grand National _ LIVERPOOL, England (Reu-) ters)--One of the big sueprises among the entries for Dark Horses cr maa es Sel Lead A Oulin f a Japanese horse, Fujino-0, | an eight - year - old owned by), LOS ANGELES (AP)--Dave Kazuo Fujii and foaled in Ragan, a big belter from Flor- "The Soviet Union is building Japan. ida, and young, unheralded for the 1968 Olympics. They, Also on the entry list are Steve Oppermann of San Fran- don't want or need to turn pro-\three British horsés that have|cisco knocked out four-under- fessional. And anyway, the Na-|finished second in the race--the Par 67s. Thursday, to take the tional Hockey League can'tjworld's most gruelling steeple-| lead in the first even look after their own chase--the last three years. fessional golf's $70,000 Los An- league with teams like Boston geles Open. and New York in there. They Leaving the more publicized don't want the Russians." Bill Casper and Arnold Palmer : a a few shots behind, the 30-year- GAMES PROHIBITED old Ragan, from Orlando, fin- He said IfHF rules prohibit ished with 36-31--67. games between amateur Rus- The 23-year-old Oppermann, teams. 'Until a! Fujino-O's appearance is con-| unnoticed until he shot a 31 on jproposal to change that rule is|sidered evidence that the Jap-|the back nine--which he played accepted, there can be nolanese are after the big English] first--also came in with 36-31-- game." prizes this year. Another Jap-| 67. Ahearne said lanese horse, Fuji Onward,, Ragan and Oppermann go owned by Junzo pomp gs oe ey second round over the " a _jand trained in Ireland by|par 36-35--71 Rancho municipal yogte Gea ee an og ed Paddy Prendergast, is entered course with a two-stroke lead lmake the NHL he's "shoved {oF the Derby at Epsom later/over Dave Marr, Chuck Court-| around the minor leagues like|'" the year. ney and Gay Brewer. a bum. This year's entry of 109 is|. C@SPer, the favorite, shot a 38 "The NHL team owns him three short of the mammoth 112 rp ge: SS aot 18 ind wh lock, stock and barrel and the entries last year. And this Ay) ine other pros a boy can't get loose." be the last Grand National, for" poime rh h : : 'liie 'course iuay: Oe adld in the mer, whose hopes all but The Canadian Amateur 4 melted when he took three one- Hockey Association could pre- next few months. ES The 1968 Winter Olympics were awarded to Grenoble, France. A claim that the Russians want to turn their national hockey team professional is "hogwash," the ILHF president said They are Freddie, who was second to Jay Trump last year; Purple Silk, second to Team Sprit in 1964, and Carrickberg, second to Ayala the previous year. the NHL con- round of pro- honors this year. Shown above are the 1965-66 win- ners of the annual event, left - to - right (front row): Don MacMillan, Bob Mat- thews and "Rich" Black; lover pars after missing three | putts of four feet beginning on the third hole, pulled his game together and came on with 38-34--72. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tokyo Katsuyoshi Taka- yama, 111%, Japan, and Speedy Hayase, 111%, Japan, 10, draw. Los Angeles--George (Serap- iron) Johnson, 212, Oklahoma City, Okla., and Chuck Leslie, 17614, New Orleans, La., drew, 10. and under, YOUR SATISFACTION 1S OUR AIM All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disney Used Cars | Ltd. 1200 Dundes E Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS DROP IN eee WINNERS OF ANNUAL CORBY'S BONSPIEL (standing): Gordie MacMil- lan, skip and Don Anderson, Corby's district representa- tive, presenting his com- pany's trophy to the winners, IF YOU ARE THINKING ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE Why Not Call TOM FARQUHARSON SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada RESIDENCE: BUSINESS: 668-4371 725-4863 vent this by not allowing re-| Bookmakers, are apparently, instatement, he said junimpressed with the challenge "If they enforced a rule like|from Japan for one leading is the kids would really think|firm offered 200-to-1 against mil pro hockey. They would Fujino-O winning the National |start &sking for three-year con-|and 5,225-to-1 against Japan tracts and that certainly would |completing the National-Derby get them of 1 the right foot,' ldewthle OSHAWA SHOPPING CENT WEEE RE 0.H.A. JUNIOR "B" HOCKEY SATURDAY 2:00 P.M. OSHAWA CRUSHMEN VS. TRENTON ADULTS--75¢ CHILDREN--25¢ FREE Free Orange Crush For Children Aged 12 and Under 0.H.A. JUNIOR "A" HOCKEY SATURDAY NITE 7:15 P.M. OSHAWA GENERALS HAMILTON RED WINGS Season Ticket Holders Use Series No. 14 For This Geme. PETER NEVINS BRIAN MORING TICKETS AVAILABLE AT @ Bolahood Sportsheven Downtown Oshawa BUS SERVICE Leave Downtown 6:00 ~ 6:34 7:00. Return efter the ganie. NEXT HOME GAME SAT., JAN. 15th Generals vs St. Catherines Black Hawks @ Jim Bishop Sporting Goods Downtown Oshawe @ Auditorium Box Office semi-annual OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE TONIGHT till 9 P.M. SATURDAY till 6 P.M. 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