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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Oct 1964, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, October 24, 1964 PENALTIES SAME, BUT -- Power-Play Success Greater This Season while shorthanded 18 times. The Leafs have not been known for a destructive power play in re- cent seasons. New York Rangers, led by Lou Angotti who scored three of their six power-play goals, had a scoring percentage of 25 with the extra man, and killed off 75 per cent of their penal- ties successfully. Next was Detroit Red Wings, with four power-play goals in 17 opportunities, for a 23,5 per- MONTARAL. (CE) peek The er-play g' en on at early season significance in the National Hockey League. Of 56 goals scored by the six teams 'in the NHL's first 10 games, 23 came with a team holding a man advantage. In the first 10 games last season, power plays accounted for only 18 of 59. goals. The information is contained in figures released by the league. The figures may indicate a weakness in a team's penalty- killing unit, But they appear to have nothing to do with stricter officiating, rigid, new rules on face-offs and interference in- fractions. For the first 10 games, at least, there has not been an ap- preciable gain in the over-all number of penalties called. CALL 121 MINORS Referees called 121 minor penalties, the same as in the first 10 games last season. This year there has been one more major and three more miscon- ducts than in the similar 10- game period last season. Toronto Maple Leafs were the best power-play team in the first 10 games, scoring at bet- ter than 50-ner-cent clip--five times on nine instances when they had a man advantage. But the Leaf penalty - killing team, best in the league last season, was the least effective during that period, giving up six goals NHL PENALTIES AT SAME PACE MONTREAL (CP) -- Here is a breakdown of the num- ber of penalties called in the first 12 games of the current National Hockey League sea- gon, with the number for the first 12 games last season bracketed: Interference, 27 (12); hook- ing, 19 (19); holding, 19 (21); tripping 18 (21); highsticking, 16 (18); elbowing, 13 (11); interference at faceoff (new tule), 7 (0); roughing, 4 (10); boarding, 5 (9); charging, 5 (6); cross-checking, 3 (3); slashing, 5 (6); holding puck by goalie, 2 (0); kneeing, 1 (i); spearing, 1 (0); throwing puck ahead by goalie, 1 (0); fighting, 0 (6); bench minor, @ (1); falling on puck, other than goalie, 0 (1), Total mi- nor penalties, 146 (145). Major penalties: Fighting, Total major penalties, 3 (8). Misconduct penalties: 8 (3). Total penalties, 157 (156). 2 (6); hooking, 1 (0) charg- ing, 0 (1); icking, 0 (1). centage. They had a 69.2 per- centage in penalty - killing, giv- ing up three goals during the 12 times they were shorthanded. KILL PENALTIES Montreal Canadiens were bet- ter penalty killers than power play opportunists. They scored only three goals in 16 power- play situations, but permitted only two goals in the 13 times they were shorthanded, a com- mendable 84.6 per cent aver- e. _on Bruins, with three goals on 19 extra-man chances, had a 15.8 percentage, and their penalty - killing average was \77.8. Worst power-play team in the 10 games was Chicago Black Hawks, a miserly 18.3 percent- age, scoring only two goals dur- ing the 17 times the opposition was shorthanded. But the Hawks made up for it with their penalty - killing team, the best in the league's opening games, which conceded only two goals when short- handed, for an 88.2 per cent av- erage. GREY CUP GAME By, STEPHEN SCOTT VANCOUVER (CP) -- Dr. Doug Clement concedes that a dual track and field meet be- tween Canada and West Ger- many would probably be a mas- sacre, with Canada on the re- ceiving end. But he also thinks it would be a good thing--as a sports at- traction and for what it could do for Canadian track and field. The former Canadian Olym- pic middle-distance runner says such a meet may be the next venture of Achilles Interna- tional Athletics Ltd., which pro- moted the recent Olympic pre- view meet here. Clement, who participated in the 1952 and 1956 Olympic Games and the 1958 British Empire Games, joined 10 oth- ers to form Achilles which pro- moted the Olympic preview along with the Vancouver Prov- ince. . The meet drew the Canadian, Jamaican, Trinidad and part of the U.S. teams. West Germany was going to come but backed out because its leaders said the athletes were burned out after their own Olympic trials Despite terrible conditions that followed 1 hours of rain, the event drew 7,000 fans and was a success, Clement says. Financial losses were covered by rain insurance. No final decision has been made yet on the next move, but Clement says West Germany, in announcing it would not at- tend this meet, expressed inter- Montreal Group Plans A Memorable Festival POISED ON BAR -- Rus- sia's Boris Shakhlin appears to be poised above the bar = Leone cavorted merrily around | # three times while the athletes | during competition yesterday Games in Tokyo. He 'won a in the gymnastic horizontal gold medal in the event. bar event of the Olympic (AP. Wirephoto) SAYONARA AND ALL THAT Olympic Games Winds Up As Emperor Waves Hat By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor TOKYO (CP) -- Japan bid sayonara--goodbye -- and Em- peror Hirohito gently waved his grey felt hat at thousands of departing athletes as the 18th Olympic Games ended tonight 4n an hour-long ceremony that had its moments of hi-jinks. The first Olympics ever held fm Asia lasted two weeks. It was the biggest of modern times and probably the most successful. The climax of the 20-sport carnival that began here in solemn pomp Oct. 10 was al- LIGHT TORCHES ese girls in black smocks circled the track and swayed, lighted torches in their. hands, Syne. Then the flag bearers marched out, the athletes straggledy behind them, crowd waved, the contestants i Tokyo games were over. Only one event, the eques- trian Grand Prix jumping, was on the final program. Germany A couple of hundred Japan- to the sounds of Auld Lang the waved, the emperor waved and won the team title and @ Frenchman took- the individual crown, leaving the standing of Russia and the United States, leaders, undisturbed. The Games were won by Rus- sia on a basis of total medals, but the U.S. won the most gold. The U.S. team won 36 gold medals--up two from the Rome games in 1960--to 30 for the Russians, who were off 13 golds from their Rome showing, In total medals the Russians had 96 to 90 for the U.S., down seven for the Russians and up 19 for the Americans. most slip-shod by comparison with the rigid organization of these games The 80,000-plus who jammed the National Stadium waved white handkerchiefs as the rem- nants of the 6,000 athletes that competed for 163 gold medals marched out. There were about $ 4,000 athletes on hand. ; <A spectator from Sierre NOW AVAILABLE 'a fantastic new concept in HOME POOL TABLES the track in his underwear) were marching in and later led) the band for a while. He was tossed out. |BOW TO EMPEROR | IOC President Against Games' cas tua! meet mere are tno! Win Ceremony jcountry, in each event. The|~ | : ' By WILL GRIMSLEY track and field committee of} poxyo (AP) --Avery Bran- the Amateur Athletic Union dave d would be asked to choose Can-|948°, President of the Intema- tional Olympic Committee, honed first complete national wants to get rid of one of th eam, a considerable expansion) ¢ mes' most auldly entrench e over the present 15-man Olym-|"@™es st solidly entrenched |pic squad. rituals--the victory ceremony Clement acknowledges that; He doesn't want national flags| the meet with the "extremely|raised and anthems played| powerful" West Germans would|after medal performances 'in| be a slaughter, But he figures|the various sports because they| |such athletes as sprinter Harry | only help to generate extreme Jerome, 800 - metre specialistinationalism, he told a' press Bill Crothers ani distance run-|conference today. ner Bruce Kidd would give Can-| 'In the first-place, the na- ada its share of the events. tional anthems are badly! And he emphasizes that it|played," the Chicago hotel| st on righ stimulate interest | owner said in track and field while earning) «"phey oss | ey are also monotonous ke we cgi oes for! and I think it would be better eovemsiet ' eet some sort of Olympic "begging." : | 9 1 In a press conference shortly | Clement's point is that if the|petore closing ceremonies of the upper level of track and field/igth Games, Brundage al {geenpettions can be developed, | .aiq- 2% ibe |"it will feed back into the); ~ -- lower level."' But he contends it cy poaeg Goa "- hare fear ---- MONEY| combined team davis be eee are eae ieee tion this week of the Interna. here bechues there are between tional Amateur Athletic Feder- 50,000 and 100,000 persons of ation to split the country into German extraction living in the hs ge poco A East,Ger- 3 G y. Vancouver area. : 2. South Africa presents tional competition with Can- ada." The West German na- tional team goes to the U.S. next year for a dual meet and te might come here as well, contributions and bal 'OLYMPIC STYLE BOXING HAS OWN PECULIAR RULES By JIM BECKER TOKYO (AP)--It was Jack Dempsey who explained his first fight with Gene Tunney by saying: "I just forgot to duck." At the Olympics, it doesn't even matter if you remem- ber. Ducking is iliegal. So is tying up an opponent inside. Hooking is frowned upon. And when the fellows in the corner get all excited and start yelling at their tiger 'murder the bum," the ref- eree stops the fight and tells them to shut up. That's boxing at the Olym- pic Games, where the ama- teur spirit is in style, but you ean still get your head knocked off if you aren't care- ful The leather . throwers have been at it since the Games started, and by the time the gold medals are hung around the necks of the winners Fri- day night there will have been more than 300 three-round bouts. Oddiy enough, the fighters haven't drawn too weil, even though the pro version of the sport still is thriving in Japan Under international amateur rules, it is against the law to duck a punch because it is too easy to butt the other buy when your head is down The proper way to get under a punch is to bend your knees. The referees don't like hold- ing on the inside, either, and they will yell '"'stop" for that. You're supposed to punch the flat part of the glove. But most of the warnings are to the men in the corners to shut up. No advice is al- lowed Some teams seem to get around this restriction by placing their most vocal sec- onds in the press section. You can hardly hear the typewriters there for ail the screams in several languages. One funny: thing, though-- all those warnings in the ring don't seem to: mean anything. Tony Barber, the Australian light - middleweight, was in there with a tough French- man. Mid-way through the first round the two men clinched "Stop," the meferee said. Tony did. The Frenchman knocked him stiff with the knuckles, and many | a hooker is warned to hit with | Then at the end, a group of} |New Zealand athletes took an jextra turn around the track land finished up in front of the| | royal box where Emperor Hiro- | |hito and Empress Nagata were) seated. The New Zealanders | bowed to the emperor long and| deep. | The huge scoreboard said} sayonara as the Olympic flame was slowly snuffed out atop the concrete bowl. Then while fire- works burst over the stadium, | Avery Brundage of the United |States, president of the Inter- national Olympics Committee, formally proclaimed the Games closed. Brundage said "I declare the Games of the 18th. Olympiad closed, and in accordance with tradition, I call upon the youth of all coun- tries to assemble four years from now at Mexico City, there | to celebrate with us the Games: of the 19th Olympiad, "May they display cheerful- ness and concord so that the} ; Olympic torch will be carried) jon with ever greater eagerness, | | courage andhonor, for the good| jof humanity throughout the} | ages." The Olympic flag was hauled} |down and carried out by six} Japanese sailors. At this point | the organization began to fall apart. Athletes broke ranks to| snup pictures with their new | ) } 1 new features @ new styling MAJOR POOL EQUIPMENT CORP. 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I live there now and I'll die there. I would 'have played this season. for nothing." tt was a black day for the colorful left winger when he was traded to Chicago Black Hawks seven years ago. "Not) that I wasn't treated well in Chicago," he emphasized, "but my heart was still with the Wings." " Lindsay, a native of Renfrew, Ont., who has scored 365 goals and accumulated 1,149 penalty minutes in the NHL, insists he's well fixed financially. He) has interests in four compan- ies manufacturing automotive parts. "We tried to sign him to a a) four-year. retirement and re-| game." | FORMED LINE Sid Abel, the Wings' general manager-coach, "but Clarence Campbell, the league president, wouldn't. give us permission. So," we're paying him by the Lindsay, Abel and Gordie Howe, still a super-star at 36, formed the Wings' famed pro- duction line for many years. "My. arrangement with Sid is | that I only play home games," | Lindsay pointed out. "I'm play- | ing some road games now be- cause we've been away from home for a while and I don't want to go stale." "He won't make all the same moves he did in the old days," Abel said. "But he's helped us already and gives us one more solid player to call on when| we're in trouble." 'T said all along that Ted retired too darned early," said Howe, the NHL's all-time goal scoring leader. "His legs were in good shape when he quit and they're all right now, too. It's just like old times having him dollar a year contract," said| back." | 3. There was no way to unite Keane, new manager of New York Yankees, named Vern Benson and Cot Deal as coaches and coach, while sons with the Yankees as player Hegan has been in charge of the bullpen who attributes his current stel-| lar play to control of his tem- per, posted a three-under-par 32-36--68 Friday and enjoyed a | two-stroke lead at the halfway point of the $40,000 Mountain View Open golf tournament. | His 36-hole total is 66-68--134, jeight under par Jacky Cupit of the host -club carded his second straight 68 for 136 and the runner-up spot | Al Balding of Toronto came jin with a 71 to add. to Thurs- |day's 72 for a 143 total. Two strokes back was Jerry Magee of Toronto who added a 73 to his earlier 72. the Korean team because South Korea and North Korea are in| virtual state of war | 4. The Olympics were founded as a contest of individuals and team sports, such as basketball and soccer, have no place on the program. 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