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Daily Times-Gazette, 30 Nov 1953, p. 11

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LLS!/ $ YARDS--3 SECONDS--3 STRIKES Hamilton Tiger-Cats Win The Grey Cup, Hold Off Blue Bom PORONTO (CP)--Hamilton Ti : a Grey Ouwp Li wisn . West meeting since the Canadian final was first played in 1831 The Ti-Cats Went iy front on Jacobs' q 1058 (one yard out. The Bombers tied it = in the third volving about the last play, which culminated a Inagnifioent exhibition by Jacobs. His the Bom od the Tambers long Sus E or against both Tiger-Gats : fo BE sat tl a od nas t army 1 t have happened. It could in the [fr bers' coorded ps as nis Sige oe Salo Jost mo- on J 4 although times James knifed into for good gains. Indian Jack's big flipper set Grey. records. He tried 48 pastes, Claude Amid big completed 38 , owt- of Kei Soiith of Stam- peders in 1 en sever the of Fokuonion Best in Hi Rk Toronto Shoda Sr be Jaco average JACOBS WAS THE BOY More Passes Thrown Than In Previous Classics By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer ' TORONTO {Cp) The 19% hii ame was the "passi football final in hi A Blue Bombers and er-Cats threw more 4 - |ton's | Winnipeg's Keith Pearce, 21.85. Neill Armstrong, Winnipeg's of- fensive end, was the busiest of Jacobs' receivers. He was the tar- t for 14 throws and caught eight or a total yardage of , top- ping both clubs in all three de-- faim gt BN 4 y was top] y < Vito azzo with 28.3 and armed | SONGIN'S PASS LONGEST e of .609 compared with Spaith's 1949 mark of .594 and he gained 326 ign on passes to Ar- nold's 261 1952 Between them, the two clubs tried 69 passes, compared with 53 in the 1952 final. They completed the 1949 Calgary-- ast year's Edmonton-Toronto me. fiissico ONE RECORD Jacobs' 18 unsuccessful throws matched Arnold's 1952 mark. The only individudl record he missed was the average gain of 29.4 yards a pass set 'oronto's Nobby Wirkowski last vear. His ayerage of 11." fell far short. The Indian's pasting display wiped out his dismal showing in the 1950 final against Toronto when he completed only two in 11 tries for 21 yards. In Saturday's first quarter, his poorest of the game, he netted 44 yards on four success- ful. effort; in nine attempts. Hamilton 'quarter Ed Songin's 56- yard touchdown pass to Ragazzo was the longest gain of the day. ame's emphasis oh passing e stati show: up in cs on 9 Jround plays. Not since 1946, when 'oronto defeated Winnipeg 28-6 with a running attack that netted only 82 yards, has a club been held to anything resembling the 96 yards gained by the Bombers on ground play. The total ground yardage of 254 for both clubs is another low since 1946, "hen Winnipeg and Toronto combined for 228. : Saturday's busiest ball-carrier was Winnipeg's Gerry James, whose combined vardage on 23 plunges, passes and runbacks was 167. Next were Hamilton's Bernie Custis with 124 yards and Arm- strong with 123. Tiger-Cat 'ullback Merle Hapes was tops on running plays with 51 yards, a yard more than Custis. James picked up 103 yards on run- backs to 51 for Custis and 45 for Hamilton's Dick Brown. A 21-yard gallop by Custis and a 20-yard run by teammate Royall Bailey were the best gains on the Brommd, James had the longest run- ack of a kickoff, 33 yards, while Brown ran back a Jacobs punt for Hamilton Fans Made Lots Noise HAMILTON (CP) -- Hamilton's happy citizens thronged the down- town area here until the early hours Sunday, celebrating their Tiger-Cats Grey Cup Sctory over Winnipeg Blue Bombers Saturday. Police and firemen were kept busy snont. 1eous street dances and snake chains tied 'up traffic and small bonfires were set in and around the heart of the city. Trash .cans were set afire and rolled into the street. Cars were rocked and bus trolley poles were unhitched from the overhead wires. Most of the celebrants were teen-agers whom police let burn o"' 'sir energy. No arrests were r ~oried. eral minor fights broke out antamebile drivers jum © car® to graople with young- trying to tip the vehicles. tim=- threatened to u s on the crowds. Police blamed much of the dem- a t d from | ARMY TOPS NAVY PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Slick runni 7 by Pat Uebel, a 19-year- old sophomore, powered Army to a surprisingly easy 20-7 victory over Navy Saturday in' the tra- ditional football battle of the ser- vice academies. It was the first Army victory in four years over Navy. Uebel punched over two of the Cadets' touchdowns and scored the third on a picture-perfect 70-yard kick return in the third quarter. | Navy, out-chargd all day by a magnificent Army line, pushed { across the 50-yard line only three times, finally scoring with 45 sec- onds left in the game. Jack Garrow bulled the final six yards of an 80-yard navy drive for the Middies'. only bright spot on this grey day in VM inicinal Stadi'm where 102,000 fans, includire the King and Queen of Greece, watched Army end Navy's three-year win. nir7 streak. onstration on the part of the Tiger-- {Cat team which failed to sio up {for a planned civic celebration in 'honor of their 12-6 victory. COULD HAVE BEEN getting | Brows more than the previ-|ball only Thrillin for 326 yards he closest to that g Rally raced in to. intercept a pass and |Shi air (Then, with play at the Hamilton . | Keith Pearce, Casey, Bud Grant end the threat. Curtis' 30-yard run-back of a punt started Hamilton on the win- ning touchdown march of 74 yards. After Songin passed to Kusserow, Custis lost two yards when he tripped over one of his blockers. to Batam, ane tot pd agazzo, Ww 0 Bombers' Geoff H for a major. The Bombers' fourth-quarter bid from the Winnipeg sal line. In the drive to the Hamilton four there were only two line plays, a four-yard jain by James a centre smash by Casey from the five-yard arige, {Caney made only one yard on A - Rigg vido ted from Ja- pass the The rest of that the Bomber march mous last play resul cobs' target-finding, and Dick H hs The win marked Hamilton team in series. TORONTO (CP)--Lou Kusserow, Hamilton Tiger-Cats' be 4 Jay in the last p) of 's Grey Cup final, told about it in 8 matter- of-fact way in the noisy Hamilton drgssing room. Winnipeg Blue Bombers, on the short end of a 126 score, were only four yards out. Indian Jack Jacobs, whose bad put Bombers there, went for another pass on second down. Tom Casey was his target. "Neill Armstrong was my man," sald Kusserow. ut somehow I figured Jacobs would to Casey. Then as he ma ady to throw I left and went for Casey. I hit ust as he touched the ball. If Jacobs had switched and thrown to Armstiont, Winnipeg would have had a touch- own." The pass was incomplete, the ball spurting away from Casey. There was a pile-up on the ball short of the go was over. Coach Carl Voyles, smiling broadly, said: "I think we had the gaze all the way. We were never behind. I think we should have had two or three more touchdowns in the first half." BOMBERS DEJECTED The Bombers appeared to have taken the defeat hard as they moyed slowly and wearily into their dressing room. Tackle Buddy Dnsley appeared to be hardest It. THE, GREY CUP STATISTICS 1st Qtr Wpg Ham 3 23 4 9 4 2nd Qtr Wez Ham 54 13 First downs Yds rushing Yds passing Passes Completed Intercepts by Punts Avge punt Fumbles Fumbles lost Penalties 1 Yds penalized 15 Field goals 0 Fld gls tried 0 « 3rd Qtr 4th Qtr Wpg Ham Wpg Ham 8 6 2 59 6 38 51 115 12 9 16 11 1 8 116 12 wr COO = ua D-DD w HOODOO OOD Tb id 0 5 36 1 0 Totals Wpg Ham 21 17 158 158 23 11 1 11 40 2 1 5 0 0 1 'End 2nd section 2col tab,e--18 lines pele ~3 Sy eB IW 2 Sh sw COU OOTND mE [X) w oDw DUN pt 80 TID | ode e SOO ht ' \ oD Lou Kusserow, Tiger-Cat Ace, Tells About Last-Second Play the | seemed line and the game | Traft tape his ankles, tg Saeed olhed wnd" "I think we could have won if there had been one more play. That clock seemed to fo awful fast in that last quarter. Several other players also re- marked on how fast the time to go. Neill Armstrong remarked: "I guess the clock wasn't going any faster than usual. It just 350s that way when play is so close." Neill was holding his side as he undressed. He suffered either broken ribs or a torn cartilage early in the second quarter. Coach George Trafton called the injury "the turning point" in the game. "We had to take him (Arm- strong) off defence and that's when they scored the win touchdown over Geoff Crain," said the burly on "It was quite a spot to put a rookie in, but you've got to put them in some time. Let's not take anyhing away from Crain though, he played a great ball game and redeemed himself later by inter- cepting a pass." BLUE BOMBERS GIVEN WELCOME WINNIPEG (CP) -- Winnipeg Blue Bombers came home to a hero's welcome Sunday night as thousands of fans jammed Steven- son field and a six-mile parade route to cheer as if the team had won the Grey Cup. Although Bombers lost 12-2 to Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the final Saturday, a crowd of about 50,000 cheered them home at an airport reception, along the parade through the city and at a wind-up legislature, Another crowd greeted the play- ers when they stopped at a subur- ban night club for dinner. Everyone was jooking for quar-- terback Indian Jack Jacobs, who almost fired the team to victory with brilliant passing. "We want Jacobs," chanted the crowd. "Just a minute," said coach George Trafton. "You don't want the meat before the potatoes, do you?" It was so noisy, the usually talkative Trafton had to keep shouting for quiet. "I can't hear myself think up here." he said. Welcoming officials inclu- ded Lieutenant-Governor J. S. Me- Diarmid of Manitob aand Mayor |Garnet Coulter of Winnipeg. CHAMPIONSHIP TIE LISBON (AP) -- Portugal and Austria played to a scoreless tie on the grounds of the Manitoba | SPORTSMANS DIGEST "#/shme FROG HOOKING a HOOK FRO@ THROUGH LIPS THEN LOOP LEADER END UNDER LEGS (use ONLY WHERE FROGS ARE LEGAL) ALLOW EXTRA LEADER AFTER TYING ON HOOK TO MAKE LOOP BACK AROUND FROG, First Tie Hook ONTO THE LEADER WITH THE KNOT SHOWN JUST ABOVE. SEVERAL HOOKS MAY BE TIED BEFOREHAND FOR LESS BOTHER IN USING. DON'T TRIM OR SKIMP ON THE LEADER END WHEN TYING ON THE HOOK SO A LOOP CAN BE MADE. IT 1S THE SNUG LOOP AROUND THE FRO8 THAT PRE~ VENTS IT FL7ING OFF THE [HOOK WHEN IT IS CAST. BROWNS WIN TITLE NEW YORK (AP)--Just as ex- pected, Cleveland Browns clinched the eastern conference champion- ship of the National Football League Sunday. The Browns defeated Chicago Cardinals 27-16 for their 10th vie- tory of the season without a de- feat. For the Chicago outfit it was the ninth setback in a row and nary a victory--a record in re- verse. The Cards have one tie. With a little more than five Crain and romped (Bert D ihe Hao Wedk [New DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, November 30, 1958 14 LOCAL BOWLING LEAGUES ENJOY PLENTY OF ACTION JEWEL LEAGUE Topaz 3 Over 200: Ina Brown 208 and 235.. NEWSOM RETIRES ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Louis (Bobo) Newsom, big righthander known as the most widely trav- elled man in baseball, announced his retirement Monday after 26 years in the game. He is 46. Newsom said he had asked for and received his voluntary retire- ment from president Connie Mack of Philadelphia Athletics. Newsom's lifetime record in the 79g majors is 211 victories and 227 defeats. Up to the 1953 season, he had walked 1,708 batters, an all- time major league record. UAW-CIO MOTOR CITY LEAGUE MAJOR GROUP Rotish Men's Wear a Victor's Sports and Cycle Wilson Batteries Burns Credit Jewellers Ernie Cay Lumber Jubilee Pavilion Stroud's.. ............. Frank Zak Painter Warner Williams Radio *.... Garrard Plumbing GROUP 2 Export ... Cornish Jewellers Howard's Drive-In Grille Assembly Chevies 31 26 15 16 9 24 oS vers Lead Slingers Final Hardware Trim Line ; Black's Men's Wear Oshawa Railway Enamel Plant GROUP 4 SENSRBRE REI RNERER Harry . Gillard 748; Jack McDon- ald 725; Sam Catalano 728; Jack Cook 719; Lefty Wills 710; Ray ton 709; "Oily" Jordan 708; y 705; Pete Dobbi | 705; Racky McFarlane 705; chie Bruce 702; Ed Brown 702. Group 2 -- K. Cameron 746; Vie rel 723; Tony Luple 710; Bob Tippett 710. Group 3 -- Ford (Drivers) 709; J. Woodcock 699; "Weiner" Mae- son 690; J. Coles 682. Group 4 -- Maddock 714. LOCAL 222 CLUB ON TOP IN TORONTO LEAGUE The Local 222 entry in the To- ronto union league, finished in ood fi3le, by trimming the Local £5 club for three points, to win the first section of the schedule. Jim Thomson led the Oshawa trundlers with a nice 808 triple score, Pete Dobbins was next with for his three game string, and Jack McDonald was just two points short of the 700 mark. Local 222 leads the way in the following divisions -- High 3 games 3930; High single game 1459; High average Pete Dobbins 240. With the second section of the schedule, slated to get underway this week, it is expected that the Toronto 'clubs will be strengthened considerably and .the competition should be much keener. LOCAL 222 OSHAWA A. Donaldson 205 222 169 656 573 | 35 | Team total 29 | Team hdep. 18 Grand total 1 20 | LOCAL 439 TORONTO 19 (J. 308 182 19|B- 23 | E. ins 226 V. McCabe J. McDonald 218 J. Thomson 294 L. Sabins 218 P. Dobbins 231 he 1185 285 310 182 259 1241 698 808 646 728 Welch Bazan Morgan V. McVicar .. Daniels J. Kerr Team total 155 211 254 167 136 193 235 223 137 242 258 63 1046 1094 1005 3154 Team hdcp. 60 55 55 170 Grand total 1106 1149 1060 3324 OPUC LEAGUE There is a slight correction to be made from last week's news, Kaye Hutton took ladies' high single with 284. Molly Hartshorn took both high single and. triple this week, 176, 167, 836 -- 679, and Bud Moore took both high single and triple for the men with 256, 244, 201--701. The Short-bottoms took 4 pojnts from the Nitwit's, and the Hopefuls and Esopz each took $8 points from the Four B's and Jets respectively. TEAM STANDINGS Over 200: A. Lazar 276 and 201, E. White 258, C. Ferguson 2438, G. Bull 239, K. Hutton 231, J. Moore and 202, H. Hutton 225, H. HOCKEY RESULTS AND STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League WLT A Pts. 2 3a 30 n 24 17 Detroit Montreal Toronto on New York Chicago Saturday's Results Montreal 1 ing? 3 Chicago 0 Detroit Sunday's Results Boston 3 Montreal 1 New York 8 Detroit 9 Chicago 4 Future Games Dee. 3--Chicago at New York. waSERS ERawecas Wes W 2{B{/ZE" © 11 10 910 10 13 94 Saturday's Rei) Hershey ovidence acuse 3 Pittsburgh 2 eveland 6 Buffalo 4 Sunday's Results Cleveland 5 Buffalo 3 Hershey 6 Providence 8 TTT Ld Future Games Dee. 1--Providence at Cleveland' OHA Jr. A WLT St. Catharines 145 0 St. Michael's 11 7 Kitchener 10 8 F A Pts. 28 24 2 21 20 19 18 10 J338338 sExgNee 38 28 St. Catharines 3 Marlboros 0 Kitchener 6 Hamilton 6 Sunday's Results Guelph 2 St. Michael's 7 Kitchener 1 Marlboros 3 Future Games Dec. 1--Guelph at St. Cathar- ines; Marlboros at Kitchener; Galt at Quebec. OHA Sr. A WLT i Kitchener Windsor Hamilton Owen Sound Chatham . Stratford Sarnia Niagara Falls 414 1 50 Saturday's Results Kitchener 4 Chatham 1 Owen Sound 6 Sarnia 5 2 1 0 1 1 1 3 [II 3zr> 71 Hamilton § Stratford 3 Sunday's Results Kitchener 8 Windsor 8 Future Games Dee. 1--Sarnia at Windsor; Mam- ilton at Owen Sound. Wig = A uel Montreal 4 Ottawa 3 ; Sherbrooke 8 Valleyfield 4 Quebec 8 Springfield 4 "Western League Vancouver $8 Seattle 1 New Westminster 4 Edmonton 1 Calgary 8 Saskatoon 1 Ar | Maritime Major Charlottetown 1 Halifax 8 Sydney 4 Glace Bay 1 Northern Ontario Senior A Sault, Mich. 2 Sault, Ont. 4 Okanagan Senior Kelowna 2 Vernon 8 Penticton 2 Kamloops 4 Thunder Bay Junior Ft. Wm. Cdns 9 Pt. A Bruins 4 Western International Nelson 1 Kimberley 7 Trail 3 Spokane 2 Western Junior Medicine Hat 2 Lethbridge 7 Edmonton 4 Moose Jaw 7 Manitoba Junior Winnipeg Barons 4 Brandon § Saskatchewan Junior Flin Flon 38 Saskatoon 4 Humboldt 5 Prince Albert 6 International League Louisville 3 Grand Rapids 2 Milwaukee 4 Fort Wayne 1 Johnstown 8 Cincinnati 1 Provincial League Ste. Therese 3 Lachine 2 Ontario Senior B Toronto 3 Aurora 2 Ontario Junior B Waterloo 7 Woodstock 8 Sunday . International League Troy 8 Cincinnati 1 Fort Wayne 83 Marion 2 Provincial League Lachine 4 Cornwall 5 St. Jerome 5 Ste. Therese $ Western League Edmonton 1 Seattle 4 Quebec Senior Valleyfield 0 Chicoutimi 4 Springfield 1 Quebec 4 Quebec Junior Mtl. Royals 3 Mtl. Canadiens 2 Jonquiere 1 Trois-Rivieres 2 Thunder Bay Junior Pt. A. North Stars 4 Ft. Wm. Hur- ricanes 5 « Porcupine Mines Senior Kirkland Lake 5 Dome Porkies 2 Western League Edmonton 2 Vancouver 3 Seattle 1 Victoria 7 Maritime Major Glace Bay 5 Halifax 5 Ontario Senior B Simcoe 5 Port Colborne 3 Kingston 3 Belleville 2 |in their world soccer cup elimina-- tion before 60,000 fans Sunday, Longbottom 220, T. Colvin 219, and 202, B. Bennett 219, J. Alexan- 215, J. Fowler 213, B. White J. Power 210, B. Hollyhead 208, H. Hartshorn 207, A. 205, N. Turner 203, D. Sager . WHAT! NO LEMONS! der 212, DUPLATE SPORTS AND SOCIAL CLUB Hot-Rods, Morgans, Redheads, Misfits and Pushovers took four Points from Try-Hards, Jitters, plinters, Rejects and Bull Gang. Do or Die and Bradings took three points from Dim Bulbs and Sink- ers. Rum Soakes and Gutter Snipes took two each. There are four more weeks to end the first section, and it is still running very close. We had better watch those Rum Soakes as they are still in second place, however, if Dick would stay out of the Lemon League, it might help the team, no excuses now. Bill Bentley finally decided to hit the pins, and rolled a lovely 313 also Bob Sennott with a 317. Seven must be Lawrence McConkey's lucky number, as he came up with three of them. The Chicken Roll will be held on Dec. 17, 195°. There were five bowlers absent this week. We are sorry to hear that Fred Waite is sick. Let's hope he will soon be well again, Ladies over 20: Winsome Tutin 214, Jean Sabins 27 and 25, Maisie Yourth 21. Ladies triple: Jean Sabins 08, Men over 250: Bob. Sennott 317, Bill Bentley 313, Stan Manila 284, Lawrence McConkey 283 and 258, Sid Daley 280, Mike Yourkevich 276, Wilf. Anthony 265, Bill Carter 264, Red Rose 258, Jack Bent 238, Chris. Mason 256, Gar. McAnerin 253, Leo Nichols 252, Gil. Wriggett 252, Men over 600: Lawrence McCon- key 777, Bill Bentley 703, Mike Yourkevich 688, Steve Melnichuck 688, Bob Sennott 662, Jack Bent 642, Leo Nichols 637, Stan Rame 632, Bill Carter 632, Gord Stacey 617, Lorne Mitchell 614, Jack Di- onne 611, Walter Harmer 611, Joe Spencer 609, Glen Delong 604. Lemon League: Lillian Pritchard 74, Bert Meraw 77, Frank McKen- zie 78, Ellen Christie 86 and 86, Dick Hamilton 82, Aleta Steele 89, 90 and 95, Jack McMaster 91, Hugh Duffin 93, Olive Cain 94, Isabel Hus- band 96, Eileen Rowden 99. 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