Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 May 1967, p. 16

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6 pr arewes 4 Teer ee PaeR Siti bei -- third place finish in the first race but brought home winners the rest of the day. was also suspend- how many winners he had at Woodbine Raceway at Toronto Tuesday. He start- ed the race card with a He SEVEN WINS - Richard Grubb, 18, an apprentice Jockey from Ridgeway, Ont., holds up fingers to show Seven Straight Wins Prior To Suspension and by a neck in the sixth-on; He won his first race less than Capt'n Roo. a year ago--May 24--but fin- He won by four lengths with|ished 1966 with 37 wins on the [River Party in the second and|Woodbine - Greenwood - Fort had come - from - behind wins|Erie circuit. A jockey remains aboard Vic's Turn and Thunder|an apprentice in Ontario until Jay in the third and eighth|one year after he rides his fifth ibeaoreati ma Ping opie et races. winner or until he wins 40 races American record. -- His most impressive win|!" one season. Grubb, a native of Ridgewa: came in the seventh when he| Grubb rode 11 winners at Ga. whe Soneed oat nig 2y:|brought Hail The King to the|Greenwood this year but caught ia' Grade P geteal cars ago|toP from 12 lengths back at the/fire to win 30 races when the Fe "eg ay rating tinished third head of the stretch. horses moved to Fort Erie. Ave- in the first race Tuesday after-/SUSPENDED 10 DAYS lino Gomez, North America's noon but booted home winners} The youthful jockey will not leading rider in 1966, had 23 the rest of the day. have an opportunity to extend winners at the Fort Erie meet. "tt was my biggest day in|his winning streak until May 27. The nearest anyone has come racing," the five-foot-two, 102/He has been suspended 10 days|to Grubb's performance was pounder said. He shrugged offleffective today for careless rid-|Oct. 1, 1956, at Hawthorne Park the seven 'wins by saying he|ing in a race last Saturday. in Chicago, when John Heck- takes every race as it comes.) Only in his second year of|mann had seven winners in * By NICK FILLMORE TORONTO (CP)--An 18-year- eld high school drop - out knocked the racing world for a loop Tuesday by winning seven consecutive races at Woodbine. hs q ed Tuesday night for 10 days for careless riding in a race Saturday. (CP Wirephoto) Long Rest For Gomez TORONTO (OP) -- Avelino Gomez, the leading jockey in North America last season, has been set down until June 4. Gomez was suspended Tues- day from May 26 to June 4 by stewards at Woodbine Race track, who ruled that his mount interfered with another horse on the final turn of the seventh race Monday. Gomez's mount, Pine Point, was disqualified after finishing first and placed second. Meanwhile, Gomez had been suspended from May 15-25 for interference during a race at Fort Erie race track last Fri- day. The former Cuban rode 318 horses to victory last season in North America, finishing . out the racing season in Mexico. He He-won five of the races by less|racing and still an Apprentice, a length. » »@ nose on Redirect. He won aboard Robby Jr. in a three- horse photo finish in the fourth By GEORGE BOWEN BALTIMORE (AP) -- It's horses like Barbs Delight which lead outsiders to look upon rac- ing. as a get-rich-quick game. The runner-up in the Ken- tucky Derby was auctioned off for $2,000 in 1964. His three own- ers think so highly of him now they are paying $10,000 just to make him eligible to run Sat- urday in the Preakness at Pim- lico. In the family background of Barbs. Delight is a_ striking parallel to another bargain horse named Carry Back. Their mothers passed into the hands of new owners because of un- paid room and board bills. The mothers left a lot to be desired from an_ aristocratic breeding viewpoint. But Carry Back won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and was the best three-year-old of 1961. His dam, Joppy, had never won a race and her only win- ning offspring was Carry Back. Joppy died the same year her colt was being crowned best of his class. RECALLS OWNERSHIP Barbs Delight is out of a mare named Flora MacDonald. Shir- ley Payne, who is_ training horses at Pimlico, recalls how he once owned her. Her original owner "owed me Barbs Delight Bargain For Present Owners asked me if we could call it)times for Payne when a friend, even if he gave me the mare," said Payne. "I agreed." Flora MacDonald wen six Victoria Club Transferred | PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-- Transfer of the Victoria fran- chise to Phoenix. was announced by the Western Hockey League. Al Leader, WHL. president, said Toronto Maple Leafs woul continue to operate the fran- hse. Phoenix has seating for 12,- 000, Leader said. Los Angeles and San Fran- cisco were, given to June 16 to decide whether to enter teams in the WHL, next season. Both cities won franchises starting next season in the National Hockey League. The transfer from Victoria to Phoenix leaves the WHL with teams at Vancouver, Seattle, Portland and San Diego. "We are prepared to operate with five, six or seven teams but I. don't know where. we'll get them," Leader. said. "California is interested in moving its franchise to Fresno but there was. no representative ic} money for several bills and he here at the meeting." Bobby Match, offered to buy her. 4 mare," Payne continued. The sale was made for $1,500. Gruelling Journey Ahead For Centennial Paddlers EDMONTON (CP) -- The in- ifectious enthusiasm of two |Prairie boating buffs will start) 60 paddlers on a 3,283-mile trip) The stakes are $22,500 for the winning 10-man team, $18,000 for second and $13,500 for third. Other teams completing the (tp to fame and upward of $100,000|receive $9,000. "He wanted her as a brood-|in prize money a week from to-) Entries from eight provinces, |day. : The persuasiveness of John plus the Yukon and Northwest Territories, leave out only New- "Now, I'm kicking myself," |Nikel of Edmonton and Jim|foundland and Prince Edward he admits. Match bred Flora MacDonald to Bagdad and Barbs Delight was born in 1964 at a farm in nearby Baltimore County. SOLD FOR $2,000 Match died the same year and his horses were sold at an auc- tion in Kentucky. The weanling later to be named Barbs Delight brought $2,000. His mother went for' $1,600. Guy Huguelet paid $5,000 for Barbs. Delight at the Keeneland sales and quickly got his money back while keeping half a share. He sold quarters to Gene Spald- ing and Hal Steele Jr. The lat- ter also is trainer. Barbs Delight had earned $40,- 000 before picking up $25,000 for second in the Derby behind John Galbreath's Proud Clarion. They are expected to be joined in their return match in the 1 °3-6-miile Preakness by half a <dozen other three-year-old colts, Damascus, Reason To Hail, Ask the Fare, In Reality, Favorable. Turn and Great Power. |Rheaume of Winnipeg at a} jmeeting two years ago with) Island. Each team consists of a six- Canadian centennial officials| van Crew in the canoes, plis \laid the groundwork for the cen- tennial canoe pageant, which jstarts at Rocky Mountain |House, Alta., and is scheduled lto finish at Expo 67 Sept. 4. federal and provincial govern- ments have donated up to $120,- 000 in official prize money, with unofficial additions from muni- cipalities along the route for sprints and special events. The unofficial money is estimated to total as much as $40,000. Ten crews will push their 260- pound canoes into the North \Saskatchewan River next Wed- inesday at the site 50 miles west of Red Deer where explorer Da- vid Thompson built the first fort in Alberta's Rocky Mountain foothills in 1800. |FOLLOW OLD ROUTES | The Centennial voyageurs will |travel down 11 rivers and across \24 lakes as they journey on waterways first used more than a century ago by the explorers, traders and voyageurs whom the pageant commemorates. Expo and the co - sponsoring} three spare crew members and their commodore - leader who' backstop the paddling crew and arrange caches of provisions en route. Before the pageant reaches Expo, 104 days after starting, crews will make 90 stops at communities where celebrations and short-distant sprints are planned, Each sprint will offer prize money. First of the larger ones is for $4,000 at Edmonton--$800 to the winning team. Other ma- jor stops are July 1 at Wiont- peg and Aug. 29 at Ottawa. USE SAFETY PRECAUTIONS Pageant safety boats will ac- company the crews. These will be augmented by RCMP and provincial police, the Canadian and U.S. coast guards, Cana- dian navy, and other govern- ment agencies and individuals. Helicopters and other aircraft will be used in remote 'sections and a trained first-aid team will accompany the canoes. eight mounts, but didn't do it in| son: im-|consecutive races. The two suspensions mean horse-| Fred Hill of Brantford, Ont.,|Gomez will miss half of the 41- first on alday summer ~°ting at Woo ile, Ont., in| bine. Gomez' was reported to have left for Montreal and Expo 67. antics, Some say he's the best|fair card at Beam: apprentice rider they have ever |June, 1961. by driving eight win- seen, Sensational Diamond Value... a V4 Carat Diamond Rings self, give a diamond that speaks for ian enjoyed by women throughout the ages! has ridden 20 winners this mi Cold, Brisk. Icy, Crisp. Frosty Fresca. It tastes like 'a blizzard. Fresca is the new cold drink with the frosty cold taste. And of course, it's sugar-free. Just how refreshing is Fresca? This refreshing: Icy, biting, bold, cold, frosty, wintry, breezy, shimmering, shuddering, stinging, springy, sparkling, splashing, nipping, chilling, lively, light, bright, brisk, bouncing, bubbling, piercing, nearly freezing, and almost shocking. There's never been a taste so refreshing, Fresca tastes like a blizzard. Fresca is a registered trade mark of Coca-Cola Ltd. Authorized bottler of Fresca under contract with Coca-Cola Ltd. HAMBLY'S BEVERAGES LIMITED PIC' BILLY TAYL idol of Oshaw: hockey fans, ir days of their lo @ special greetir cial rooter, at Scri Can By GEO. H. C. The program w: ning to drag, jus' when Ted Reeve, ronto's sports cc hand at Oshawa ' jum, last night "What about Matt Ted Reeve took to write for The | gram, in 1928, th that he came to 0: senior lacrosse fo. General Motors § Matt Leyden as th ager. Actually, his w overtook his care crosse star but thi to become estal later. Just as the pro the end of the Reeve became a | "I came here to h tribute to Matt L Teddy Reeve, as progressed. Then all at \ Greene had finishe and Matt Leyde: "Centennial Sport introduced by cha Kelly. Matt Leyden. wi how Ted Reeve c: awa in 1928 to pla ior ranks with | otors team, took job at the local G then commenced h a@ sports writer. , We were standin, Reeve, as he liste Leyden and more ' ter-century of top association rolled matter of seconds. LOOK COACH Orr, centre, o rookie in the Natic ey League last se "

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