L RUSTE FY an RCRA I OA oe 2 2 Fe. % AFR ICO TIEN her) , " v. - var. " rh 5 LEAR AR LS TERR SRC AS SR SL EVEN ITA NA RA ANE A SC SFO AOR LW 20-- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wednesday, March 26, 1980 Central East Regional Broomball Say Wo TRS CER ASAT ENR 3 Bo 39 JERRY Te 5 PFUSECSELA IT LAS 34 AN ' LY ae Ree SAG WY TTY ARE PRE RANA EDU TE wa SOAR PERRI USAR i LR EE Innisfil captures tournament crown by Danny Millar Innisfil defeated Port Perry 2-0 for the second time to win the Central East Regional Broomball tour- nament held at Port Perry on March 22-23 weekend. Innisfil went through the tourney without tasting defeat, while Port Perry's only losses were to them. The final matched the two best goalkeepers in the tour- nament, Jim McLeod for Innisfil and Keith Fraser for Port. McLeod was named the best goaltender after- wards while Fraser nailed down the Most Valuable Player award. Both were outstanding in the final . which took place at 3:00 p.m. © Sunday. Don Penfold and Steve Penfold got the goals for Innisfil. Both were assisted by Allan Gow. Don Penfold got the first one with just under six minutes remaining in the first period when he put in a shot from the sides of the net after Gow relayed the ball to him. Innisfil produced one of the best penalty killing units of the meet, particularly against Port. In the first period they were two men short for 1:45 but Port didn't get a really good scoring thrust. They also played the last 58 seconds of the close checking match with a man in the penalty box. At that time Port removed Fraser and replaced him with Don Phinney, who was playing his first shift of the tourna- ment after being shelved with a shattered bone in his thumb. Robert Evans got the best scoring chance when he missed an open side in the fading seconds. Innisfil went ahead 2-0 permanently with 6:02 left in the game when Port's Mark Lee was in the penalty box for butt ending. Steve Pen- fold culminated a triangle passing play when he tipped in the shot from the right side of the net. It started with a pass from the right wing boards to Gow in the slot. Gow relayed it to Pen- fold for the tip in. Late in the game McLeod had to be restrained by teammate Dean Squibb from going after Ron Redman following a scuffle in front of the net. Both players were assessed minors. Fraser stonewalled Gow on a two man breakaway and then did the same to Gord Gow later. There were two women's teams entered. Ivy won both games by 1-0 scores over South Simcoe to take the Regional title. SEMI FINAL In the exciting semi-final Port Perry defeated Ivy Rangers of Simcoe for the second time with a 3-2 over- time cliff hanger. Bill Owen got the winner with 1:29 remaining in the five minute overtime. This game was the first one in the meet that required an extra session to settle the score. Inthe Ontario Broom- ball Association they go five minutes with each team playing four aside with no goaltender. Ivy had several glorious chances to take the lead but Robert Evans, Ron Redman and Owen came up with superb stops. Redman almost put one in his own net in the first few seconds when he made a bad pass back to Owen that came within inches of going into the open goal before Owen cleared it away by inches. Owen got the winner from about 20 feet in front of the Rangers net when he whipped in a shot after Ken Jeffrey passed the ball over to him. Allan Elliott, the top scorer from Simcoe, forced the game into a third period when he put in a rebound after Dave Schandlen hit the post behind stellar goalkeep- er Keith Fraser. It came with 1:45 to go while Port Perry was down two men on a tripping call to Kevin Martens and a controversial delay of game penalty to Jeffrey. Jeffrey knocked the net off its moorings after a shot hit the post. After Port Perry opened up a 2-0 lead Jack Robbins put. the Rangers back into it with 10:49 gone into the second period when he re- directed a shot from the point by Roy Wilson. 1979 © THE CANADIAN COUNCIL ON SMOKING AND HEALTH Women's Education Week on Smoking You Your Baby Your Family March 24-30 ' Cigarette smoking is now the major threat to female health. Smoking contributes to % of all cancer deaths among women, and increases the chance of developing chronic bronchitis or emphysema by 18%. Women taking oral contraceptives increase their poten- tial risk of heart attack 6 times by smoking. Women smokers get more wrinkles, sooner, than their non-smoking sisters. Nicotine and carbon monoxide present in cigarettes can impair the heart rate, blood pressure and oxygen supply of an unborn child. Babies born to smoking mothers tend to be smaller at birth by 6 - 8 ounces, and more susceptible to infections. Nicotine is present in breast milk, and can cause irrita- bility and poor sleeping habits in the infant. Children whose mothers smoked during pregnancy are likely to be smaller in height and weight, and up to four months behind in reading and other skills. Children reared in a tobacco-polluted home have twice as much respiratory illness as children from non-smoking homes. Children whose parents smoke are very likely to become smokers themselves, through their parents' example. PROTECT THEM ALL-QUIT NOW! Call Durham Region Lung Association (the Christmas Seal People) at 723-3151 for your FREE guide to quitting. Co-sponsors: Mrs. J. Achmatowicz: Ajax Beta Sigma Phi Sorority (Theta Eta Chapter): Ajax Kinette Club: Bowmanville Memorial Hospital Auxiliary: Durham Right to Life Association: Easter Rebekah Lodge Pickering: Girl Guides of Canada (Oshawa): Humanitarian Services Club --- Orono Oddfellows and Rebekahs: Maybelle Rebekah Lodge No. 348 Port Perry: Quaker Hill Womens Institute: Royal Canadian Legion Ladies Auxiliary (Bay Ridges): Royal Canadian Legion Ladies Auxiliary (Oshawa): Royal Canadian Legion Ladies Auxiliary (Port Perry). Soroptimist Club of Oshawa and District: Tyrone L.O.B.A. No. 1244. Mark Lee got the first two goals for Port Perry. He got the first one at 16:33 of the initial session when he netted a rebound after netminder Vern Elliott stopped Ken Fraser's shot from the side of the net. His other one crossed the red line when Port Perry enjoyed a power play. Ron Redman started the play at the right wing boards by passing to big Ken Davidson, an added defence- man who played very aggressively in the tour- nament, who fired on net. Lee deflected it into the top of the mesh. Port Perry was more impressive in their second win over Ivy than when they were lucky to come away with a 2-1 win on Saturday, March 22. Port was tho- roughly outplayed for most of the game but a near flaw- less performance by Fraser between the pipes won it for them. The Rangers pressed in the early going. Randy Crawford saved one goal by batting away a ball headed into apen territory between the posts. Ivy had one of the quickest teams in the tourney and they exhibited a strong pass- ing and stick handling game plan. Elliott got their only goal on a floater play when he was left all alone at the center red line, which serves as the off side line in broom- ball, and took a high lob over Owen's head from William McLinden that sent him into the clear. Fraser made key saves on Dwight Bennett and on McLinden on a three on one break. Port Perry had added scoring punch in the form of speedy forward Robert Evans who was returning after a dislocated shoulder. He was not expected back this year. He played only in spots, playing his first shift seven minutes into the first period, but scored the win- ning goal in the second period after a give and go pass from Doug Scott at the 4:47 point of the segment. Earlier Kevin Martens got the tying goal at 2:20 of the second period when his shot from the slot bounced in off Elliott. Port Perry's first win of the tournament was an impressive 4-0 over a team from Lakeshore at 9:00 a.m. Saturday. Doug Scott played a strong game, scoring in the shutout win as Fraser made a few tough stops. Scott's marker was the third of the game. It came in less than a minute after he set up Ken Fraser for the first goal which was at 9:26 of the first period. Scott scored on a blast from in front of Doug Riehle follow- ing a pass from Redman ona two on one. The first goal also came on a hard drive by Scott and a pass from Red- man as Fraser deflected. The final goal was scored by Jeffrey on a third shot. Mike Healey, one of four rugged blueliners Port Perry utilized in the meet, missed the net on a shot from the point on the first one. Bill St. John was stopped on the second attempt, but Jeffrey knocked in the rebound. The first goal of the game, the only one Port needed, came off the broom of St. John early in the first frame. He got it on a rebound after Phil Cochrane was foiled on a scoring chance. Innisfil handed Port Perry its first loss at 8:00 a.m. Sunday March 23 by a 2-0 blanking. Dean Squibb got the first goal and Gord Gow netted the second. Jim McLeod recorded the shut- out. Port Perry was not out- classed in the loss, as Innisfil has one of the strongest teams around. Squibb's goal came while they were playing five aside along with another player from Innisfil at 5:14. Squibb's shot came from directly in front of Fraser who was screened by team- mates Crawford and Red- man. Just over a minute later Innisfil got the second goal when Gow flipped the ball into the top of the net on a breakaway after he carried it down the ice on a solo effort following a faceoff in the Port zone. The remainder of the game was played on fairly even terms. Innisfil came up with a strong defensive effort, especially when they were shorthanded. Their penalty killing system sets up with three men along with up with three men along the red line to force the play at center, and one man back. This made Port Perry lob the ball into the zone and try to track it down. On several occasions they lost posses-. sions at center. They just couldn't penetrate effective- ly. Martens had one good chance late in the game 'while playing on a two man advantage but his shot was stopped in the goal mouth. With 1:11 to go Owen was assessed a ten minute mis- conduct. JOHNSTON's CERAMICS & PRODUCE 650 Scugog Street - Port Perry - 985-8858 Under New Management New Greenware & Supplies Every Day. HANGING & POTTED PLANTS Convenience Foods PRODUCE SPECIALS THIS WEEK: Grapefruit ... 5 for $1.00 Lettuce ... head 59¢ OPEN: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. - Tuesday to Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. - Saturdays