18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 13, 1960 JACQUES PLANTE and Hen- | Stanley C ri Richard reach for the puck in | Tuesday front of the Montreal net during | Johnny Wilson (19) and Billy up play in Toronto night, watched by hd bl anna # SOLE Ea 8 SE FR 3 rs A dod slat 4% ARE EE 3 ERY RCE CYTRON AS RNA X A Ay C8 Ah ; PRR So SE ) Harris (15). Montreal controlled the play and powered to a 52 win and a 340 lead in the best- ) of-seven series. Leafs have a | SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR BASEBALL Opening Day 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' N.L. Re i * Habs Show Class In Third Clash TORONTO (CP) Montreal Canadiens, playing what coach Toe Blake calied their best game of the playoffs, outclassed Tor- onte Maple Leafs 5-2 Tuesday mght for a 3-0 stranglehold on the best - of - seven Stanley Cup final. It left Leafs hanging on the ropes for the fourth game here Thursday night. A scoring explosion by Cana- diens' almost-forgotten third line of Phil Goyette, Andre Prono- vost and Claude Provost and the solid work of goalie Jacques, 2 Talbot, Turner; forwards: Goy- ette, Provost, Pronovost, Beliv- eau, Geoffrion, Bonin, H. Richard M. Richard, Moore, Backstrom, Hicken Marshall. Toronto -- Goal fence just about had the door locked. Leafs began tiring under the strain of trying to get a play clicking over the Montreal blue line and time and again Cana- diens stole the puck in the cor- Bower; de- N So MINOR BASKETBALL Firefighters Oust Jaycees In Y's Men's Semi-Final Saturday morning's action in; FIREFIGHTERS: Mewett 11, the Y's Men's Minor Basketball [Rudy 4, Clarke, Hobbs 11, King League set the stage for the final 10 and Anderson 13. Coach, John playoffs at Simcoe Hall. The Fire-\ Matthews. fighters, who, by their poor show-| JAYCEE WHITES: Reeson 10, ing during the regular schedule,(Goodman 13, Seneco 6, Kurhan, were underdogs to even make|Saramack 8, and Burnett. Coach, the finals, Saturday became the|Bobh Goddard. ners. Wilson made it 3-1 when Carl | Brewer's 35-foot drive bounced off Plante's chest, struck Wilson and {bounded off him into the net. During the play Brewer went in at Plante afd Henri Richard chased him. Richard and Baun collided, began swinging and drew five - minute major pen-| alties. fence: Stanley, Horton, Baun,] : ' Cinderella team of the league) Brewer; forwards: Armstrong, wnon they defeated the Jaycee Duff, Regan, Kelly, Mahovlich, whites in their two game set, 87-| Wilson, Pulford, Olmstead, Har- 7g ris, Edmundson, James, Ehman, These two teams had almost Stewart. ; i opposite records for the season's Referee: Frank Udvari; lines- play with the Jaycees losing only | men: George Hayes, Bill Morri-/two games while the Firefighters| son. had only one win in their 11-game| SUMMARY schedule. First period: 1. Montreal, The Firefighters now take on The second game of the series looked at first as if the Jaycee squad would walk away with this honor when they led at the half- way mark 25-17, and had cut the lead to four points. Apparen.y the Firefighters had not yet begun to fight. After the half- time intermission, they applied the pressure and outscored them vid Plante behind a stone-wall de- Goyette got his second goal in fence stymied Leafs the final period after winning the Goyette, with two goals, was a|qraw in a faceoff with Baun to standout on offence. Don Marsh-\(he right of Bower. He stick- ai! and the dynamic Richard|pandled 10 feet and fired a hard brothers -- Maurice and Henri-- one from directly in front of the Marshall (Hicke) 13:54. Penal- ties: Talbot 7:27, Edmundson, 17:17. Second period: 2. Montreal Goyette (Provost, Pronovost) :20; 3. Montreal, H. Richard FN got the other Montreal goals Johnny Wilson and Bert Olm-| Richard's goal ended any last|Harris) 16:18. Penalties: Back- 12-point lead when they seemed yroii oc stead handled Toronto's scoring. nopes Leafs had. He circled the/strom 10:26, H. Richard, Baun, to completely overwhelm the g oF HAD ONE GOAL PERIOD | The crowd of 13,307 had little to cheer about after Leafs' open-| ing burst of the first period died| out under fierce Montreal fore-| checking and some of the finest| defensive work of the series by Doug Harvey, Albert Tom Johnson and Jean-Guy Tal-| bol Even Punch Imlach, Toronto's optimistic coach, agreed with {Biake. Leafs "have no alibis about that one," he said. Plante--who Imlach said was "marvellous"--got the Montreal |players' vote as the man of the inight but shared the glory with] | Maurice (Rocket) Richard, whose shooting gave Bower trouble last chance to stay in the fight | | with the fourth game in To- | ronto Thursday. --CP Wirephoto Langlois, | ! Leafs goal at 8:57. 115:25; 4. Toronto, Wilson (Brewer net. picked up a rebound of majors, 16:18 brother Henri's shot and sent a| Third period: 5. Montreal. Goy- high drive into the corner. Bower|ette 8:57; 6. Montreal, M. Ri- had no chance. |chard (H. Richard, Moore) 11:07; Olmstead flipped the puck over 7. Toronto, Olmstead (Kelly, Ed- Plante's sprawled body to finish/mundson) 19:47. Penalties: Baun off a goalmouth scramble at(2:4¢, Brewer 6:53, H. Richard 47. 118:33. Lineups Stops: Montreal -- Goal: Plante; de-|Plante fence: Harvey, Langlois, Johnson Bower Hull, Maroons Plan Strategy HULL, Que. (CP)--Hull Legion [games of the eastern semi-final 1011 9-30 810 8-26 d | throughout. The 38-year-old Rocket, defying land Chatham Maroons have one/ Maroons dropped the first two (Fourth and Deciding game) or . i abla PrN a rit 121 to 14 to take the series. Dave |Anderson netted 12 points for the winners while Stan Seneco and Tony Saramack led the losers with 12 and 10 points. FIREFIGHTERS: Mewett 4, Hobbs 9, Rudy 5, Clarke, King 8 and Anderson 12. Coach, John ithe Series A winners, CKLB for the final two-game, total-point series on Monday, April 18 and Friday, April 22. Both games get under way at 7:00 p.m. In the first semi-final game, game, the Firefighters ran up a Jay- . . THQ. " cee squad in the first and third |, JAYCEE HITES: Reeson 4, quarter of the game. The second | "ec. 0 1o0 4 Blac and last quarter were very even- Coach, Bob Goddard ! ly played with each team scor- ~~" 4 - ing regularly. Bill Goodman and Roger Reeson led the Jaycee's in defeat with 13 and 10 points, while Pet Mewett, Murray Hobbs and Benny King led the winners with 11, 11 and 10 points respect- ively | SPORTS | CALENDAR TODAY'S GAMES HOCKEY OHA Intermediate C Final oA ONE TO GO! That's the theme of the Montreal Canadiens' Stanley Cup playoff campaign and after their third-straight victory last night, the most convincing win of the three, we find even Toronto scribes about ready to concede the gonfalon, without much of an alibi Last night the Habs played it just a little bit different --they kept trying for goals all the way through, maybe because they only got one in the first period. They made it 3-1 in the second stanza and outscored Leafs again in the final canto, for a 5-2 final score We thought the Leafs gave this one their best try--certainly the game was played at a high-speed tempo with hard skating and hard checking throughout. The officials---were as len- jent as can be expected in a playoff session. The dispute on Wilson's goal, first for Leafs, as to whether it was deliberately kicked in or was a rebound off his shin- pad, will go on for a day-or-two. It was a real vigorous dispute immediately after the incident, with fists flying and tongues a-wagging But, like the dirty linen, .it all came out in the wash a We thought two nice thing happened last night Bert Olmstead got Toronto's final goal and for the guy who has been playing his heart out against his old mates, this had to be a satisfying feat--even though not satisfying enough. The other, of course, was the fact that "Rocket Richard got himself a goal. He promptly whipped over to the referee to ask for--and receive the puck--and just as quickly took the puck over to the bench, to give to Montreal's trainer, for safe-keeping. We got the impression--as no doubt did dozens of others--that this could be the tip-off that The Mighty Rocket is ready to hang up his skates. He certainly didn't hesitate to lav claim to that puck. Definitely, he'll be a di awing card for other clubs and a real asset to Canadiens, if he de- cides to play one more season--but at the same time, every hockey fan in the world would prefer to see the great Richard "hang-up" while he's still a Stanley Cup star, and one of hockey's finest--rather than hang around until he slips into the downhill slide to being "ordinary". BRIGHT BITS: Almost "hidden" in the wealth of hockey news that has dominated the sports pages this past few days, was a notice out of Toronto this week that a $200,000 motor-racing track, about two-and-a- quarter miles in length, it so be built shortly, starting in July, on property near Orono and it may be operat- ing before the season is finished MAJOR LEAGUE baseball, National League brand, opened its 1960 season yesterday and San Fransisco Giants, Milwaukee Braves and Cincinnati Reds all won their games. "Sad Sam" Jones pitched a three-hitter against the Cardinals and Orlando Cepeda drove in all three runs in the 3-1 win, with a triple and a single JOE ADCOCK hit a two-run homer in the 8th, to give the Braves a 4-3 win over Pittsburgh Pirates and Reds came from behind a 4-0 deficit to beat the Phils 9-4 on solid hitting . . . . . PIRATES tied the game and blasted out Warren Spahn in their 8th but Adcock got his big glow off last year's great relief hurler, Elroy Face. Yep! It's a new season! . HULL LEGION and Chatham Maroons, both of whom had to come from behind to survive their first round of Allan Cup playdowns, open their own Eastern Canada finals tonight in Hull. The winner of this round meets Trail Smoke Eaters in the Allan Cup finals. Trail won 7-1 last night to oust Port Arthur in four-straight. ANDY BELLEMER, well-known to Oshawa fans as a hockey referee here in the days of the Oshawa Generals, died yesterday after a lengthy illnss. He was a former pro player and coach, before taking to the whistle. * Jaycee Rockets Do As Expected "ETTTENTIRS Associated Press Staff Writer The National League's off on another pennant chase with Los Angeles Milwaukee and San ancisco jammed together at top . F the I'he world champion Dodgers, drawing a record crowd at the Coliseum, defeated Chicago Cubs 3-2 in 11 innings Tuesday night The. Braves clipped Pittsburgh Pirates 4-3. And the Giants de- feated St. Louis Cardinals 3-1 for a debut in their $15,000,000 Can- dlestick Park In the other afternoon game, C.ncinnati's Reds whipped Phila- delphia Phillies 9-4 The four games drew 179,782 fans, an opening day record for the NL. The American League, still playing exhibition games, opens Monday. ESSEGIAN WINS IT Chuck Essegian broke i Los Angeles with a two - out, pinch-hit home run in the 1ith off reliever Don Elston. He was {batting for Don Drysdale, who blanked the Cubs on three singles over the last eight innings and | got a jump toward another strike- |out crown. He struck out 14. | The Cubs got four of their seven hits and both runs in the third. Don Zimmer opened it with a home run The Dodgers tied it on a pair walks and a two-out double by Wally Moon in the fifth against. starter Bob Anderson, who fanned . nine in his eight frames. The game drew 67,550, a NL record for a night game. The old high was 67,037, set at the Coli- {seum last August 8 for a game with the Braves FACE'S DOWNFALL | Joe Adcock's two-run homer in the eighth broke up a 2-2 game |for the Braves before 39,888 at Milwaukee's County Stadium. |The shot followed a single by Hank Aaron and came off Roy {Face, the little right-hander who |ran up a two-season streak of 22 |victories by winning his first 17 {last season Oddly, the Braves were the only club Face didn't beat in that streak, and the club that beat him last before he 'started the run. Fact is, he's dropped seven in a row to Milwaukee, going back to 1956. Warren Spahn up for of hit his 24th DRIVE-IN THEATRES Paid admissions at Canada's 232 drive-in theatres in 1958 to- talled 10,149,000, up from 9,946,000 in 1957 BASEBALL SCORES STANDINGS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League W L Pet. GBL "Cincinnati 1 Los Angeles Milwaukee {San Francisco Chicago Philadelphia Pittsburgh |St. Louis ¥ ! Tuesday's Results Pittsburgh 3 Milwaukee 4 1 1 1 0 0 0 The Simcoe Hall Major Basket- pions for the season of 1959-80 philadelphia 4 Cincinnati 9 ball League continued their play- when they defeated Ontario Steel gi a 1 San Francisco 3 downs Saturday morning as the A's, 47-41. Jaycee Rockets defeated Ontario, The Rockets led throughout th Steel A's, 38-36. game as they had The Rockets led by Lepma took lead at halftime, 27-21. a two-point lead at halftime in| Bil Lepma pumped in 10 point a close checking game. Score 16-|in this half for the Rockets whil 14. Tuscon with nine was best for th In the second bay the teams A's, exchanged baskets time after time, but the A's were unable to| The second half get the tying point. The winners were led by Lepma and Boivin with 17 and 14 points respectively. Clarke] with 11 was the highest for the scoring wa even, 20-20, but the Rockets, wit their six-point lead, were to much to overcome The Rockets were led to thi A's. Boivin again, as they hooped 1 JAYCEE ROCKETS: Boivin 14,/and 10 points, while Tuscon fo Lepma 17, Brady 3, Harrison, Mazurk 4, Dalgleish and Mc- Hugh. Fouls, two out of five. ONTARIO STEEL A's: Clarke 11, Graham 10, O'Reilly 4, Hyranyk 6, Dulny 4 and Rowden 1. Fouls, eight out of 12. WIN CHAMPIONSHIP In the third and deciding game was tops for played Tuesday night, the Jay- points. The A's were defeated by thei own foul shooting during th series as they made only 23-4 they were fortunate enough t 53 points in the series. the A's with 2 a six-point | important victory by Lepma and Milw. the A's with 13 was their highest. possibles. The Rockets, with 23-| 43, were not much better, but |19, Boivin 10, Brady 7, McHugh have big Bill Lepma who scored Harrison Graham | Chicago 2 Los Angeles 3 Today's Games (And Probable Pitchers) {_ St. Louis (Mizell 13-10) at San s [Francisco (McCormick 12-16). e| Chicago (Hobbie 16-13 or Drott e|1-2) at Los Angeles (Sherry 7-2) ~(night) sg, Only games scheduled hi Thursday's Games o Cincinnati at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Los Angeles (N) Chicago at San Francisco (N) aukee at Philadelphia (N) e | Ss 9 r ball League would like to thank Tim Nelson for his guidance; rialso, the Referees' Board who of- e|ficiated throughout the season 5land did a wonderful job. JAYCEE ROCKETS: Lepma 0/2, Dalgleish 4, Mazuck 5 and Fouls, 11 out of 18. ONTARIO STEEL A's Row- 9 den 2, Tuscon 13, Graham 8, O'Reilly 7, Dulny 2 and Clarke 9. cee Rockets were erowned eham-| The Simcoe Hall Major Basket- Fouls, five out of 15. cord a pitchers in the NL, but gave him , way after blanking the Pirates His goal, the first he has scored on four hits for seven frames, |in seven playoff games this year, Don McMahon came on in the drew an appreciative shout from eighth and won it, but needed the Toronto fans. i help from Lew Burdette in the pi: T GAME pinth. | "That was the Rocket's best Sad Sam Jones gave up only game in the two series," Blake three hits--all by ex while beating the Cards for thelhim get one." fifth straight time since they| Marshall got the only goal of| traded him the Giants 13}ipe first period. The fourth - line| months ago. Bill White singled centre took a pass from Billy twice, in the first antl the ninth. Hicke at the Toronto blue line and Leon Wagner junked the and roared in on goaltender shutout with a home run in the johnny Bower with only defence- fifth. man Bob Baun to beat. Bower Orlando Cepeda drove in the went after the shot, screened by Giants' runs, tripling home a pair | Baun, too late ol unearned markers in the first, Provost's fine pass put Goyette --after an error by ex - Giant|right on top of Bower and a Daryl Spencer at short and | quick flip lifted the puck over the singling home Willie Mays in the netminder's stick at 20 seconds |third. Larry Jackson lost it be- of the second period fore a full house of 42,269. Leafs lost an opportunity when The Phillies and Robin Roberts Plante came through with a sen. hlew a 4-0 lead at Cincinnati, sational stop on Ron Stewart where 30,075 saw Roy McMillan's (When the Toronto forward ap- two-on homer cap a five-run sec- peared to have him caught cold. ond. Rookie Tony Gonzalez hit a| Henri Richard took the wind two-run homer for the Reds, also|2ut of Leafs' pressure drive late off Roberts, while lefty Jim in the second period. He stole the O'Toole won it with six innings Puck from defenceman Tim Hor-| of two-hit, shutout relief. ton on thé side boards, tore The American League, playing exhibition games, next Monday with Washington in the ditional first game, to _...,|across the blueline fending off| still |yyo other Leafs and fired a siz- OPENS | zier into the corner. Boston at league's tra- REARGUARDS TAKE OVER From then on Montreal's de- Giants--|heamed. "I was tickled to see| Cup hockey final opening here next three tonight--both are come-from-be-, The second game of the besi- lind teams of-five final will be played here The Ottawa district champions Friday night with the series came back from the brink of| ; : elimination in the Interprovincial fourth and fifth games, if neces- Senior A League playoffs and [sary will be played in Chatham squeezed past Amherst Ramblers Thursday and Friday. dropping the first two/HAVE WEAKNESS '"We haven't the slightest idea how we'll fare," said Legion coach Marcel Legris. "Maroons {lost 10-2 to Rouyn-Noranda and this indicates they have some weakness," he said "We're going to have to find out and capitalize on it." Legion's top line is made up of after STANLEY CUP STATISTICS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Best-of-seven final shifting to Chatham Monday. The -- down, skated like a rookie. | for the Eastern Canada Allan|with Rouyn-Noranda but took the Orphans at 9.00 p.m. in the Bow- manville Arena THURSDAY'S GAMES Annual Marble Tournament: Simcoe Hall gymnasium. Guy Beauregard, Gilles Cham- pagne and Leo Gravelle. Gra-| velle, 35, has played with Mont | real Canadiens and the old Ot-| tawa Senators and has been the team sparkplug in the playoffs Hull will use five defencemen, four regulars and Don Thomson, picked up from Smiths Falls of lie Senior Interprovimcial League Roger Fortin is the netminder. | Average age of the team is 26. SUPERIOR FINANCE 17 Simcoe St. N., Oshawe RA 5-6541 Open Friday 'til 8:00 p.m. Saturday 'til 12 Noon WLFA 3s 011 5 0 3511 Tuesday's Result Montreal 5 Toronto 2 Thursday's Game Toronto at Montreal G Montreal Toronto Pts. PiM 12 11 Kelly, Toronto H. Richard, Mtl Moore, Montreal Geoffrion, Mtl Olmstead, Tor. 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