; y 4 ie) nt ny FO Sa Ts PT PA BS I ga a rs Se Fe LL rE : & oom Ep : i Gels " y 7 5% or 5, ge J i . 7 " gr An % og As Re See a i re 2 . OR EET A2ES na gh Lar oh Tp nd RTL MRIS NEES SI Ae SERA ae Wong Ah Bar SAI NT 3% . a 2 A AREA h ? x as 7 iN. " 3 REN AUS b 1) ¥ '4 3! via Ly Dea cys yoread % Ro Walrnt Paid SACI VARY RASHES a .. TITRE bate ~ "uta A LX an Rt - SN on = ld xe BT aA Xp SH Aw Sy aE 4% i i Sell A \y pies 5 Carian! ERASE De aa "wt Tr, Se af: Hat A +X - NAN dE Pooks Sik wy NR Sy Pe SAL SEN Ta Telesis fos Yo 3 INY WD LER II ROR BT Y, a) Ne Nir We 12 -- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wed., January 16, 1980 Midget Redmen two game winners by Danny Millar The Port Perry Midget Redmen remained the only unbeaten basketball team with two wins last week. The midgets deféated Bowman- ville and O'Neill while both Junior and senior squads beat Bowmanville but lost to O'Neill. Port Perry had to come from behind against - the O'Neill Redmen for a 48-38 victory, on Thursday, January 10, in Oshawa. The first quarter was a quick paced one in which Stan Glass led Port Perry with six points as the teams ended deadlocked at 12 each. The second period was just as fast as Port Perry Red- men held a five point advan- tage before O'Neill conver- ted two fast breaks into baskets. Port still held a 27-26 half time lead. Rob Rocker led the home Redmen team in the third quarter as they threatened to make a clean sweep of the three games by taking a 36-31 lead with one quarter to play. Port nearly added two points when Donnie Young rebounded a shot into the hoop just a split second after the buzzer had gone. Port cracked down and played an airtight defence in the last eight minutes. The quarter was nearly three minutes old before O'Neill scored. Kent Vermeulen fouled out of the game with 15 seconds remaining and the outcome assured. The remarkable point about the last quarter defence employed by the midgets is that they went almost all the way through without fouling anybody. They only had two team fouls in the entire second half. Young led the scoring with 22 points. Patton played his usually solid game as he netted 16. Unfortunately for Port Perry basketball enthu- siasts Patton donned the white and red uniform for the final time on Thursday. The day after the game he returned to the state of Iowa with his parents. Against Bowmanville two days earlier, Port Perry started quickly and never trailed, en route to grabbing a 67-44 win. As they had in all three league games, Patton and Young led the scoring with 30 and 18 points respectively. Glass, the probable heir to the starting role that Patton vacates, was next with seven, along with Brad Bigglestone. Port Perry led only by six at half time as they obvious- ly had things their own way in the second half. SENIORS The Port Perry senior: Redmen defeated the third team with the nickname Redmen when they beat Bowmanville 74-63. The first half was quick paced as guard Dennis Franssen hit on several good lay ups early in the game as VAAAAA Come One and All | to the SKATING PARTY & DANCE $ plus BABY LOBSTER PLATE ; Saturday, February 9th LATCHAM CENTRE Skating 8:00 P.M. Dance 9:00 P.M. t01:00 A.M. $15.00 per couple $ : Tickets available at: Pattersons of Port, Richard's Beauty Studio Sponsored by Scugog Public Library Finance Committee b AAA .near perfection. Port jumped into a 23-15 advantage after the first eight minute quarter. In the first segment both teanis got into foul trouble and found themselves in bonus before the second quarter started. Port Perry was a little sloppy in the game but its full court press worked to Twice during the match Bowman- ville was caught on ten - second violations. A minor scuffle broke out with 2:53 left in the game in which three players were ejected from the game. It all started when Port Perry captain George Cope went up for a shot and was knocked down by Todd Hooper. Cope retaliated by throwing a punch. As a handful of players surrounded the melee, Mike Patton took a swing at Ron King. Hooper was given the gate for his actions, plus a technical foul, as he had picked up two earlier. each earned a technical, for Patton his second, and were thrown out. Patton and Cope missed the game against O'Neill. Despite his early exit Hooper led the Bowmanville Redmen with 24 points, followed by Wayne Preston with 11. Franssen played his best game of the season in amassing 15 points. Cope had 21 when he left, ten of them in the first quarter. Patton was the big gun on the Port offence with 23 points. To say Patton and Cope were missed in the game against O'Neill would be an understatement. In their place coach Paul Arculus started Carl Durward and Cam Muir. Both Muir and Durward handed in credit-' able efforts but the scoring punch was missing. Port Perry only scored 24 points, 16 in the first half, while O'Neill finished with 57. Port was outscored 22-3 in the third quarter and 15-3 over the final eight minutes. O'Neill fashioned a sharp shooting, well balanced offence as its high scorer, Paul Reid ended up with only 14 points. JUNIORS Brett Oosterman paved the way for the Port Perry juniors win over Bowman- ville with 11 points and a superb game in getting defensive rebounds. Port Perry grabbed a 62-53 victory. Kevin Harris played a strong game from the guard position as he led the team with 12 points. Harris is an excellent ball handler and playmaking backcourt man. Need A Car Rent A Ford e LOW DAILY RATES j ® RENT BY THE DAY, WEEK OR MONTH \ ® PICK-UP & DELIVERY AVAILABLE COLIN BALL MOTORS LTD. Hwy. 7A West - Port Perry - 985-8411 Cope and Patton _ Brett Oosterman of the Junior Boys team goes high in the air for jump shot during basketball action against Bowmanville at Port Perry High School. The Juniors went on to win the game. This was also a come from behind win for the home team Redmen as Bowman- ville led by the narrowest of margins, 22-21, at half time. O'Neill scored field goals on three of its first four trips down the floor as Port's shooting and rebounding was off. Peter Stone hit a foul shot with one second remain- ing in the opening quarter for Port's fifth point as O'Neill jumped into a 14-5 lead. The second was a carbon copy of the first as O'Neill's Steve Oldfield hit a jump shot at the buzzer to give them a 30-11 lead. Like the senior team, the juniors are a good outside shooting team. This fact coupled with a number of Port Perry turnovers gave O'Neill an insurmountable 51-18 lead after three quar- ters of action. In the final [ Photo by Cam Muir] period Port Perry put in five non-starters in an effort to give them more playing time. O'Neill outscored the substitutes 11-10 to take a convincing 62-28 win. Stone and Scott Sinclair shared the honour of top Port Perry shooter having each hit for six points. Collin Tureski and Oldfield paced the home team Redmen with 15 and 18 points respectively. Stouffville dump Legionaires by Danny Millar A four point night by Bill Hutchinson helped Stouff- ville to a convincing 9-0 win over Port Perry Legion- naires in a Pee Wee A hockey game Friday, January 11. Hutchinson assisted on a trio of goals and scored one himself. His goal was the fifth one to get by starting goalie Willie King. He beat King with a deke at 6:54 of the second period. Early in the first period Stouffville took back to back minor penalties 25 seconds apart, forcing them to play at a two man disadvantage for 1:35. Port Perry might have made a contest of it had they scored. They were trailing by only one goal at the time. Kevin Ferris put a shot in off King's glove and a sharp' passing play ended with Brent Brown scoring gave the visitors a 3-0 lead after 15 minutes. Stouffville got the first of a pair of power play goals at 5:30 of the second period when Ken Burrows put in a shot from the slot after Hutchinson had won a face- off in the Port Perry zone. Lee Wilbur was off at the time. Stouffville switched net- minders with 5:58 to go in the middle period, leading 5-0. Legionnaires pulled the same move at the beginning of the third period when John Moore took King's spot. Dennis Hardy got Stouff- ville's second goal while the Legionnaires were down a man when Darrin Hardy knocked in a loose puck that was lying beside King's skate. King should not be faulted on this effort, the puck should have been cleared by the defence. Mike Johnson was in the penalty box at the time. Stouffville skated off at the end of the second period with a comfortable 7-0 lead. Shawn Leonard and John Parcells scored on Moore to complete the scoring. Moore did make a number of good stops. One player who did show well from the Port Perry point of view was winger Craig Menzies, who played a strong skating and hustling game. » )] oN 4 oi ]