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Daily Times-Gazette, 26 Jan 1953, p. 11

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i. gi -- bo | It's been so long since we've | heard the fans start that swell- ing 'last - minute*- of play" roar, that when they did it on Saturday night in the General's spine - tingling 6-5 decision pyer the Irish from St. Mike's, t warmed the ol' heart, .. The yelling was pure tribute. It. had nothing to do with the game proper . . . we can well understand the very young fan's comment to his dad . . . "Why are they shouting? . . . nobody scored." Nope. . . he couldn't remem- ber the days not too long ago when you bought a collar every Sunday morning to wear around your "hoarse" throat . . . espe- cially after a duel with the cheering section from the Bay Street College. Those were the days when you shouted as the clock start- ed. and stopped when you got back home! And momma . . . are coming back. The kids will lose the odd SPORT SHORTS FROM BRITAIN * By ARCH MacKENZIE Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP)--Always alert for something new, the British Ice Hockey Association may display shortly a type of face-off that ought to make Canadians blink. Centre players would jockey for the puck with about four feet be- tween them. Bodily contact would be forbidden on pain of a penalty. The plan comes from J. F. (Bunny) Ahearng, secretary of the BIHA. It may adopted when the English National League starts the next phase of its two-part schedule. 1} MAY PLEASE FANS There's a wait-and-see attitude in some quarters but Ahearne figures the pro d move will add a crowd-pleasing touch to the game, which fans here prefer on the cream-puff side. Under the proposed innovation, players would face each other from behind lines four feet apart. Exact distance hasn't been set yet pending dry-land research on the advantages that the string-bean type player has over a smaller nt at the face-off. 8 player moves his feet over his line, he'd draw a penalty. Battling "for the puck would be confined to stick manipulation, Ahearne argues that the English fan, raised on soccer, wants less bodily contact and more short pass- ing, stick-handling and fancy skat- those days seoott "al Boot and the rest of Europe. He felt it speeded play and eliminated rough game from here in, but they are out .here trying. And when a team tries . . . wow! Speaking of trying, the Oril- lia Pontiacs gave it plenty of the old college stuff on Satur- day night, but the powerful Oshawa Smith Truckmen Sen- ior crew bowled them over $4 to stuff another win 4nd a vir- tual stranglehold on first place into the sack. The Smitties play at home against Belleville on Thursday of this week and with the grudge that the Glen Roys are carrying after that "ghost game' business. watch out- Anything' can happen. (7 4 CHECKLETS -- The Old Grads suffered a setback to their two - in - a - row hopes on Saturday night when the Sim- coe Hall Grads pushed them into the discard 63-58 in a rous- ing exhibition basketball game. The teams will now have to play a "rubber" to. decide the waste - paper - basket title of the city. Well, they should have some kind of trophy for this series . . . there's really some great ball being played! + The Simcoe Hall Grads go back into league action on Wed- nesday night at e against the Port Perry Lions, while o Tuesday night the Oshawa T- chants play over in Whitby against the Panthers. All ODBA games are of the very important variety now, with the clubs juggling for play- off spots. That must have been a rough decision for the Truckers up in Orillia. We hear that Jack Nay- lor, their great goaler, was struck with a flying puck right on the eyeball. He had retired from the game with Denny Pallister tak- ing over. Jack's eye is badly swollen now, and there is some doubt he'll see action in the next -three weeks. Meanwhile Denny, just recov- ered from his hand injury didn't look too bad in his first chance in the nets. The only other Senior "B" group game played over the weekend was one between Kingston,and Stouffville. This makes the loop stand- ing look lke this: Team Osh. Truckmen Stouff, Clippers - Belle. Glen Roys . Orillia Pontiacs ... Kings. Goodyears . Peterboro TPT .. 0 14 Rather an interesting loop, INTITRED ny ww e-------- YLO ORILLIA Oshawa Smith Truckmen continued their domina- tion of the league play in their OHA Senior "B'" group with a thumping 9-4 win over Orillia Pon- tiacs right in Orillia last Saturday '| night. ' Marching to a 4-1 lead in the first frame after spotting the homesters the first goal, the Truckers - made it 7-2 by the end of the second and then traded two goals each way with the Pontiacs in the last period for the final score of 9-4. Leading the Truckers in this big win was the line of Bill Berwick, Ron Nelson and Bob Holden . . . all ex-Generals. Nelson is the pivot for the line and sets-em-up, Bob and Bill are the trigger men. The trio account- ed for four of the Oshawa markers. Berwick got two and one assist for his best game of the season. Nelson did the same and Bob | Holden had a pair of assists. | with a pair of goals, the first of which he slammed into the nets at the 2.07 mark of the first period. Berwick got that back with the first of his pair. Next time on the ice, Bill scored his second to put the Truckers into 'a lead they never lost. Gerry Scott, the league's leading scorer notched a goal to make it 3-1 and then Ron Nelson got the first of his pair to make it 4-1. The big producticn line of Scott, Wilson and Samolenko were in on four of the winners' goals and "Jedder" picked up three asists. In the second period, Oshawa jumped into a 7-1 lead on three quick goals by Thaler, Boniface and Samolenko. "Rusty" Aikin got on the ice a put the puck behind Naylor to make it 7-2 and ended the second period. * In the third, the Smith club suf- fered what could be a serious set- back when halfway through the ] Truckers Best Orillia Pontiacs In Costly 9-4 Walloping "Red" Favero paced the losers |period with the score 7-4, Jack, Naylor was hit on the eyeball with | a flying puck. He had to leave the game. Denny Pallister took over and with the club playing fine hockey in front of him . . . he held the fort. - : t In fact the process the team scored two goals, one by Samo- lenko, the other by Nelson to wind p the game with a 94 win. Naylor was. told by the medical . {doctor immediately following a hasty examination and bandaging to "see an eye doctor' as soon as possible. No report on his findings are yet available. The Truckers, by virtue of the win move out in front of the league race with 16 wins and five losses for 32 points. Stouffville are second With either 21 or 23 points . . . 80 the margin is widening. Next home game for the Truckers takes place this Thurs-/ day against the very upsetting Belleville Glen Roys. ' Clippers Edge TOUFFVILLE--Stouffville Clip- pers last night fought from behind in the third period and defeated Kingston Goodyears, 4-3, in an OHA Senior B oyertime game here. The teams played a 1-1 tie in ihe first period but Kingston went ahead, 3-2, in the second. Polly Minton's goal at 6.23 of the third period tied the score and sent the game into overtime. Frank Steph- enson scored the winner at 3.01. One of the largest crowds of the season, more than 1,000 specta- tors, watched one of the most excit- ing games of the season. KINGSTON--Goal, Johnson; de- fense, Watts, Londry, Bendu, Stew- art; forwards, Gerow, Myke, Mur- ray, McKeown, White, Markle, STOUFFVILLE--Goal, Eatough; defense Chard, Mills, Harper, Rose; forwards, N. Bangay, Gib- son, Minton, Watson, B, Bangay, Gibson, Minton, Watson, B. Bangay, Stark, Lewis, Stephenson, Bell. Referee, Jim Crombie, Bowman- ville; linesman, Ken Laushway, Stouffville. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Remember When, . . Howie Morenz was traded by Chi- cago Black Hawks to New York Rangers 17 years ago today for Glen Brydson. The great centre, star of Montreal Canadiens for nine years before going to Chicago, slumped after the trade. He went back to the Habitants in 1936, how- ever, and showed much of his old- eh? « +» . by Bob Rife. career in March, 1937. Hall QGrads...or "New" Grads as the old call 'em claimed a apiece. The Old Grads led 17-14 at the end of the first quarter, through some great shooting up front by the New Grads, they came from behind to hold a 32-30 lead at the half and a 40-33 lead at arter time. That seven-point margin was to five by the oldsters in a spirited finish that really made the game great. : Both clubs had good foul-shoot- ing percentages, the youngsters hitting 70 per cent, and the old boys hitting right on par at 60 #|Simcoe Hall "New" Grads "01d" Boys 63-58 'RADS --Booth (17), Risebrough (16), Gingerich (14), Hill (8); Ross (2), Mroczek (2), Perry (4... Total (63). OLD GRADS -- Salway (13), Reddoch (14), McCartney (10), Wilson (9), Patte (6) and Dell (8)... Total (58), SHORT GAME DETROIT ---Shortest World Ser- ies game on record was played in 1908 between the Chicago Cubs and the Detroit Tigers, according to the records. It required only one hour per cent. and 25 minutes. time dash until death cut short his! By THE CANADIAN PRESS' The trend continued in the On- tario and Quebec #junior hockey loops during the week-end. The leading teams continued to extend their edge, the touring clubs fared badly and the others remained in their, respective league perches. Toronto Marlboros Sunday pulled eight points ahead of the rival Bar- rie Flyers in the Ontario Hotkey Association Junior A series by de- feating the sixth-place Oshawa Generals 8-0. Montreal Canadiens, leading the Quebec Junior Amateur Hockey Association, strengthened their po- sition by blanking the touring St. Catharines Teepees 3-0. The Tee- pees, now in fourth place in the OHA, énded their Quebec tour with one win and three losses. Montreal Royals, the Quebec cel- lar dwellers, lost their second straight game of their Ontario tour, falling 53 to the eighth-place Windsor Spitfires. Saturday's OHA action saw Galt Black Hawks, now in fifth place, defeat the cellar-dwelling Kitch- ener-Waterloo Greenshirts 54. Osh- awa Generals strengthened their sixth-place position with a 6-5 win over the third-place Toronto St. Michael's, : Sunday St. Mike's recouped the loss with a 4-3 victory over the Black Hawks. St. Catharines' only win of its Quebec tour came Saturday night | when the Teepees downed Three Rivers Reds 3-2. The third-place Reds were trimmed 6-1 by Que- bec Citadelles Sunday night. Parker MacDonald scored three goals to-pace the Marlboro attack against Oshawa Generals Sunday. His goals were the first of each . Captain Wally Maxwell, Galt's Jim McBurney, the lea- gue's top scorer this season, scored two goals but his efforts didn't give the Hawks a win. The St. Mi- chael's goals went to Dick Duff, Bill Dineen, Ed Plata and Jack Caffery. Neil McDonald scored the other Black Hawk goal. Fifteen penalties, including eight majors and one 10-minute miscon- duct, were handed out in the Galt- Kitchener bruiser Saturday night, McBurney paced his team with an- other pair of goals. Hillary Men- ard, Neil McDonald and Wharram notched the others. Ken Collins, Marc Boileau, Graham Joyce and Buddy Horne counted for the Greenshirts. Stan Parker and Bob Aftersley each fired two goals for Oshawa Generals in their win over St. Mike's. Bill Stewart and Floyd ay BERTIE'MEANWELL N T OSSING WEIGHTS ARO! DOESN'T KNOW IT. UND USED TO BE A PIECE OF | ICAKE FOR 600D OLD'MUSCLES MEANWELL , THOSE "DAYS ARE FAR BEHIND HIM BUT HE'S ONE GUY WHO JUST LET ME HANDLE THIS, FELLOWS .USED TO BE GROSSWEIGHT LIFTING = CHAMP AT FOOTLE U, YOU KNOW _A 9 3 TEN TO ONE WE'LL HAVE TO CARRY THEM BOTH NOW. ¢ & 'strength. DON'T TAKE CHANCES WITH HEAVY WEIGHTS. There's a certain knack to lifting heavy articles properly -- a knack that comes from experience and ""know- thow". Don't risk serious strains by attempting to: lift weights that are awkward or beyond your ' 0 "MUSCLES "GIVES A MIGHTY HEAVE AND WHAT GIVES = YOU GUESSED IT= "MUSCLES" WON'T BE ABLE TO LIFT EVEN HIS HAT FOR SOME TIME T0 COME. " BREWERY LIMITED Top Junior Teams Kingston 4-3 Widen Their Leads Hillman notched the others. Mike Ratchford and Bill Dineen clicked for a pair each for the collegians and Jack Caffery added the other. Windsor's victory over Montreal Royals Sunday ended a four-game losing streak. Joe Zorica scored twice for the Spitfires and Ted Reid, Elmer Skov and Lou Die- trich added singles. Roger Landry, John MacGillivray and Stan deck counted for the Royals. Brian Cullen's third-period goal gave St. Catharines Teepees their only win in Quebec. Chuck Mar- shall and Hank Clesla scored the others. Scoring for Three Rivers were Harve Lalonde and Paul Michelin, The Teepees' defeat Sunday went off without a penalty. Montreal Canadiens' three goals went to Henri Richard, Denis Boucher and Guy Rousseau, There is no action in either league tonight. Tuesday Oshawa is at St. Catharines, Montreal Royals play Galt and Guelph faces Wind- sor. Queen's University Team Wins Ottawa Ski Title OTTAWA (CP)--A ski team from Queen's University at Kingston won first prize Saturday in the Carle- ton College invitation ski meet. Al Poutanen of Queen's was the individual star with two firsts and two seconds in the four-event meet. He took the downhill race in 'pour- ing rain in 58.2 seconds and the jumping contest through fog with 66.4 points. | | JACK NAYLOR ORILLIA PONTIACS -- Goal, Reading; defence, Davidson, Pear- sall, Payne, Kelly; forwards, Bow- en, Richardson, MacDonald, Stod- dard, McRone Favero, Alkin, Whit- ney. OSHAWA SMITH TRUCKMEN--- Goal Naylor, Pallister; defence, Dickens, McBeth, Nichols, Peters; forwards, Scott, Wilson, Samolen- ko, Hooper Nelson Thaler Boni- face Berwick, Holden. ° 1st PERIOD 1. Orillia Favero (Alkin, McRone) .,........ 2:07 2. Oshawa, Berwick (Holden, Nelson) ........ 8:55 3, Oshawa, Berwick (Nichols, Holden) ........12:57 4. Oshawa, Scott (Nichols, McBeth) .......18:17 5. Oshawa, Nelson (Berwick) : Penalties -- MacDonald (high- sticking) 13:41; Boniface (tripping) 17:46; Bowen (high-sticking) 18:24. 2nd PERIOD 6. Oshawa, Thaler (Hooper, Peters) ........ 5:51 7. Oshawa, Boniface (Hooper) arsivnsse 0:50 8. Oshawa, Samolenko (Scott, Wilson) 9. Orillia, Aikin (McRone) 9:20 Penalties--McBeth (cross-check- ing) 2:17; MacDonald (charging) 8:11. 3rd PERIOD 10. Orillia, Bowen" (Pearsall) 11. Orfllia, Favero (McRone) 12, Oshawa, Samolenko (Scott, Wilson) 13, Oshawa, Nelson (Wilson) Penalties Pearsall (cross- Shocking) 3:40; Nichols (hooking) )| Detroit 0 Toronto 2° _ THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, January 96, 1083 1] HOCKEY RESULTS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Saturday National Leugue Chieago 5 Montreal 1 New York 0 Boston 9 American League Buffalo 3 Syracuse 1 Providence 6 Hershey 4 Cleveland 1 Pittsburgh 3 International League Milwaukee 6 Grand Rapids 8 Cincinnati 5 Toledo 3 Troy 3 Fort Wayne 2 Eastern League Johnstown 4 Washington 6 Troy 6 Springfield 2 ' : Western League Seattle 1 Tacoma 2 - Victoria 2 New Westminster 4 Edmonton 2 Calgary 8 Vancouver 5 Saskatoon 3 Maritime Major Sydney 1 Glace Bay 2 | Charlottetown 6 Halifax 3 New Brunswick Senior Saint John 5 Moncton 3 Quebec Senior | Valleyfield 5 Ottawa 3 | Montreal 1 Sherbrooke 4 | Ontario-Quebec Junior . St. Catharines 3 Three Rivers 2 New York-Ontario Cornwall 3 Brockville 10 Gananoque 7 Clinton 8 ° Eastern Canada Cornwall 1 Pembroke 9 Thurso 2 Smiths Falls § Ontario Senior A Hamilton 4 Owen Sound 8 . Chatham 1 Kitchener 3 Stratford 5 Sarnia 4 ._ Ontario Senior B Stouffville 4 Kingston 3 London 9 Woodstock 7 Dunnville 4 Stamford 3 Ontario Junior A St. Michael's 5 Oshawa 6 Kitchener 4 Galt § Ontario Junior B Thorold 9 Port Colborne 3 Waterloo 9 Woodstock 3 Sunday National League New York 2 Boston 1 Montreal 3 Detroit 3 Toronto 4 Chicago 3 American League St. Louis 1 Buffalo 3 International League Cincinnati 2 Troy 1 Eastern League New Haven 6 Troy 1 . Western League Tacoma 4 Seattle 8 Quebec Senior Chicoutimi 3 Valleyfield 1 Quebec 5 Shawinigan Falls 3 Sherbrooke 5 Montreal 1 Quebe cJunior Three Rivers 1 Quebec 6 Ontario-Quebec Junior Montreal Royals 3 Windsor 5 Eastern Canada Pembroke 4 Cornwall 3 Smiths Falls 7 Thurso 2 New York-Ontarle Gananoque 4 Clinton 8 Ontario Junior A Oshawa 0 Toronto Marlboros 8 Galt 3 Toronto St. Michael's 4 Northern Ontario Senior A North Bay 6 Sault, Mich, 1 Thunder Bay Junior St. Catharines 0 Mtl Canadiens 3| Port Arthur Flyers 3 Fort William Canadiens 6 SOCCER RESULTS "OLD COUNTRY EN GLISH LEAGUE Aston Villa 1 Chelsea 1 Bolton W 2 Manchester U 1 Charlton A 2 Arsenal 2 Manchester C 5 Middlesbrough 1 Portsmouth 3 Liverpool i Preston N E 2 Newcastle U 1 Stoke C 5 W Bromwich 1 Sunderland 1 Blackpool! 1 Tottenham H 2 Sheffield W 1 Wolverhampton 3 Derby € 1 Division IX Brentford 1 Nottingham F 1 Doncaster R 3 Blackburn R 3 Everton 2 Southampton 2 Leeds U 1 '| Huddersfield T 5 Lincoln C 0 Leicestér C. 3, Birmingham C 4 Notts C 2 Bury 1 Rotherham U 2 Plymouth A 3 Sheffield U 3 Barnsley 0 Swansea T 3 Hull C 0 West Ham U 0 Luton T 1 SCOTTISH LEAGUE : Division A Clyde 3 Aberdeen 0 Motherwell 1 Hearts 3 Division B Albion R 5 Ayr U 8 Alloa A 2 St. Johnstone @ Forfar A 1 Stirling A 3 SCOTTISH CUP First Round Berwick 3 Dundee U 3 Dumbarton 1 Cowdenbeath 3 East Fife 7 Vale of Leithen.1 Elgin C 2 Third Lanark 3 Exmouth U 0 Celtic 4 Hibernian 8 Stenhousemuir 1 Leith A 1 Airdrieonians 8 Morton 3 Dunfermline 1 Newton Stewart 2 Falkirk 2 Queen of 8 2 Huntley 1 Raith R 5 Clachnacuddin 0 Rangers 4 .Arbroath 0 St. Mirren 1 Brechin C 1 Stranraer 0' Kilmarnock 4 Stony 2 Portadown 1 Glenavon 3 Bengor 0 Glentoran 2 Derry C 0 Watch your weight and live longer FIREPOWER V-8, 180 H.P. 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