a _ 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, Janucry 20, 1965 SPORTS MENU 'Everything From Soup To Nuts' By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR BLACKS am ee er FINE CLOTHIER JANUARY CLEARANCE ak y) BS) . Bi, HAMILTON RED WINGS gave the Generals all they could handle, here at the Civic Auditorium last night. The visitors scored the first goal of the game and then after the period had ended 1-1, they broke in front again, early in the second stanza, made it 3-1, still early -- and Generals had to fight back all the harder, to gain a tie. Neither club scored in the hard-checking play that featured the third period. This third-straight tie for the Red Wings moved them up alongside St. Catharines in seventh spot, in the Junior "A" standing. Generals, outplayed for most of the initial frame, earned their split in the points with their good comeback effort, after trailing 3-1. They cashed in them- selves twice on powerplay goals and at the same time, man- aged to hold off Hamilton, when Oshawa players were "do- ing time". 4 Bobby Orr notched his 25th of the season, easily tops for defensemen in the Junior cir- cuit and now only five off his own league record, while Ron Buchanan potted his 36th goal -- maintaining his fine goal-a-game pace -- he's played in 36 of the 40 games Generals have played in the schedule. Buchanan has.also managed at least one point, for a 20-game string and his pace has him now third in the league's scoring race. Wayne Cashman"was jarred hard early in the game, got back into action in the third period, but was not quite right. Chris Hayes missed last night's game, due to the flu bug. Generals are not in action again until Tuesday night, when the "Petes" are back again and a wéek's schedule rest, with tune-up workouts, should find the club in healthy shape to take on the Liftlock City speedsters. Powerplay Goals a ee Give Generals Tie will be of increasing interest to Canadian sports fans, as the | renner emmanuel BEGINS THURSDAY, JAN. 21st We invite you to select season-end items from our quality brand name merchandise at reduced the OHA Junior 'A' contest. Little backhanded the puck past Jean Guy Ruest (21) on a pass from Bill White. --(Oshawa Times Photo) winger scored Generals' first goal in the first period at the Civic Auditorium last night, Generals and Red Wings battled to a 3-3 tie in LITTLE SCORES GOAL-- . It looks like Jim Young (3) of Hamilton is congratulat- ing Billy Little of Oshawa after the 18-year-old left- | | | | | | prices. 4 ' By GERRY SUTTON The teams traded two goals!!ar schedule at the auditorium. years move along, a oe Canadian sport fans have a | Effective penalty-killing byjeach in the second period. Peter/The week's rest gives Osh-| more knowledgeable version of who's who in U.S. pro grid |oQshawa Generals preserved ajMahovlich and Brian Watts putlawa's walking wounded a| ranks, thanks to the wealth of TV broadcasts of major sche- |3-3 tie against Hamilton Red|the Wings ahead 3-1 before the|chance to get in top shape... . dule attractions, Saturday and Sunday throughout the aut- |Wings at the Civic Auditorium|frame was five minutes old. |Bill Bannerman, White, Orr umn campaign. But the list of seven NFL greats, names last night. : However, Ron Buchanan nar-|and Buchanan were the eral released yesterday, to be added to the Hall of Fame list, |, Generals rallied from a 3-lirowed the margin on a beauti-jout players in penalty-killing Expertly tailored Top Coats to suit the most discriminating taste, Regular, talls and shorts, in all sizes . . . an excellent selection to choose from, Both Laminates and Pure Wools, by the most popular manufacturers. should still stir memories among the football fanatics this {deficit midway through the sec-/fyl solo effort, which extended side of the border. They incl Cleveland quarterback, 1946-55; Guy Chamberlain, player- on a coach with various clubs from 1919-28; Bob Waterfield, quar- terback with the Browns and "Paddy" Driscoll, Chicago Cardinals and Bears, cago Bears quarterback, 1939-50; Steve Van Buren, Philly Eagles, 1944-51 and Dr. Dan 1936-46. Most of them are still a@ coaching capacity. x x 'PUNCH' IMLACH, manager-coach of Toronto Leafs, has got himself in a series of side-step. The Mapleo mentor ing team practice sessions, at almost any hour he gets the urge. This time, he's on the receiving end of the orders -- a bit of a switch. He got excused from jury duty last week but since has been ordered by tario Supreme Court, that he m weeks. player-coach 1919-31 and coach with And they do mean "must" ! ude Otto Graham, the great [py Orr scoring the tying goal powerplay with Bart Crashley in the penalty box. Keeping Wings scoreless on seven powerplay attempts was the main reason Generals were able to obtain .the deadlock. Oshawa also had seven man- advantage chances and con- nected for two goals. L:A. Rams, during 1945-52; 1941-64; Sid Luckman, Chi- Fortmann, Chicago Bears, associated with the game, in tie for Red Wings and moved them into seventh-place with St. Catharines. Both teams have} 24 points. Oshawa remained) fourth, three points Peterborough Petes. Red Wings had the Generals' bottled up in their own zone} for a good part of the first) period. Nick Libett gave Ham-| ilton a 1-0 lead at the 11-min-| x x "workouts" that he can not is known for suddenly call- the Chief Justice of the On- ust serve as a juror for two UAW LEAGUE Tony's Held On Goal By A goal by Jack Sneddon with|Mahon and Norris also picked|the tying marker on a passout two seconds remaining in the|y; game gave Starr Furniture an 8-8 tie with Tony's Refresh-/Roman ments in a UAW League hockey|Myles tallied for Versafood, The tries before game at the Brooklin Arena on|losers staged a mild rally latelthe | jin the third period when they Sneddon's marker was_his|Were trailing 5-2, but could only Sunday. tions. From the press box, it, seem- ed that Peter Loveless was off- side by several feet and when Libett did score, it looked to) most of the 1,849 fans like he| was standing in the goal crease. LITTLE EVENS SCORE : | Five minutes later, Billy White set up Bill Little with To Draw Sneddon ip two assists each. Dan Gray, Wayne Redshaw.|noak was serving an interfer-| Konorowski and Allence penalty. Little had two! knocking it into} ear. \league, jmuscle in the the net for his 25th goal of the} Tuesday jgames. The high-scoring centre \picked up a loose puck near centre ice, outskated the lone defender, and blasted a low shot that caught the bottom irighthand corner. with a separated shoulder -- yf . .|and moved him into sole pos-|S° It was the third and moved| sean of third place in ie scoring race. Orr knotted the score two minutes later when Hamilton's behind| goaltender, Jean-Guy Ruest, handle the wicked drive from |20-feet out. Rookie Jim Booth' '6-56 Buchanan (kneeing) 19.03. and Buchanan picked up assists on the play. Early in the first period, Wayne Cashman took a jarring ute mark on a play that ap-|check and had to be helped off peared marred by two infrac-|the ice. The rugged leftwinger|9.24, Young (charging), Doak spearheaded Generals attack in an attempt to break the dead-| lock. | It was Buchanan's 36th goal) jin 36 games -- he missed four} roles. . . . Phil Solomon, a prod- ond period with aggressive Bob-|his point-scoring string to 20|uct of the Oshawa Minor Hock- ey Association, was impres- sive in his second game with Generals. HAMILTON -- goal, Ruest; defence, Morris, Young, Doak, Crashley, Mair; forwards, Giesebrecht, Ververgaert, Peters, Abel, Lemieux, Watts, Libett, Speck, Loveless and Mahovlich. OSHAWA -- goal, Gibson; defence, Orr, Roberts, Buchar, Beverley, Giroux; forwards, Little, Buchanan, Bannerman, lomon, White, Marshall, Kilger, Booth and Cashman: Referee -- Danny Poland. Linesmen-- Sandy Proctor and Don Lidstone. FIRST PERIOD 1. Hamilton, Libett (Speck) 11,17 2. Oshawa, Little (White) 16.45 Penalties -- White (holding) 7.46, Doak |Ginterference) 15.13. Speck (holding) SECOND PERIOD Hamilton, Mahovlich (Peters) 3.54 | 4. Hamilton, Watts (Ververgaert) 5.09 | 5. Oshawa, Buchanan 8.26 | 6 Oshawa, Orr (Buchanan, Booth) 10.41 Penalties ---Crashiey (holding) 1.35, White (holding) 5.28, Crashley (tripping) (ten-min- fe misconduct) 10.50, Solomon (tripping) jdidn't make an appearance on) {i@, 'mleconduct) 10-50, salomer ar [the ice until the third when helping) tea 05 Young (rip- ping) 19. THIRD PERIOD No scoring Penalties -- Doak (hooking) 9.02, Rob- | erts (tripping) 12.54, Little (hooking) | Cashman, one of the most|18.08 respected forwards around the 1 suffered a pulled left leg. He started the game with a torn muscle in his ankle, which he picked up in Toronto on Sun- from the corner while Garyiday. BLUELINE NOTES -- Gen- erals are now idle until next when. Peterborough makes its last visit of the regu- fourth in the wide-open contest|manage two markers, one with which produced the first dead-|5 lock of the season. The high-| scoring point night. i Lucky Wills also came| through with a__ seven-point assists. Joe Reid added other marker. Top scorer for Tony's was All Dick with three goals and one| assist. Bob Kemp notched st markers while Bob Harman, Bob Delves and Elmer Tran,| who picked up three assists,| shared singles. | The teams: split four minor penalties, OSHAWA TV WINS Scoring three unanswered goals in the second period, Osh- awa TV went on to edge Versa-, food 5-4 in a hard-fought con | test. ] Butch Dowe, Vic Georgeff,| Neil McMahon, Wayne Norris! and George Samsen were the! marksmen for the winners. Mc- | Holmes Shines For Local 1817 | A three-goal performance by) Bill Holmes paced Local 1817 to! a 6-1 win over Canadian Corps in an Oshawa Minor Hockey As- sociation Bantam League game last night. Larry Lupel notched two goals for the winners, while John' Ovenden added a single. Grove Bennet got the lone marker for Canadian Corps. JUVENILE LEAGUE In Juvenile action, Oshawa Dairy and Auto Workers Credit Union battled to a 2-2 tie, while Tony's Refreshments defeated Hayden Macdonald 6-1. John Sharp and John Baran shared the Auto Workers' goals. Mike Hewer and Darryl Hudgin| « clicked for Oshawa Dairy. Larry Lloyd and Bob Burke tallied two goals apiece for Tony's with singles going to| > Alex Talkachoff and David Kee-| ; man. forward also earned|°f scoring chances and had a three assists for a fine seven-|hard time beating Bill Braiden, they did get an opportunity. effort, on three goals and four Hag meeting Starr Furniture, at the!pattles Tony's, at 11.30. even seconds left to play. The winners missed a number| Nickis Wins n goal for Versafood, when This week's action has Versa- Jerry Reynolds led Nickis to an easy 24-7 win over Beau- marks in the Simcoe Hall Boys' a.m. and Oshawa TV) Industrial jon Saturday. In other games, Atlas downed Saturns 18-10 and Polaris edged Hockey Play ei 24-21. Mil staHi6 ae NICKIS TRIUMPHS Maine _ Maritime efeated 5 § nts and Whitby Corner Store 5-3 in one Ps gy psecbeed yen as of three Whitby Industrial Lea-/RAye® 3 ie atin at gue hockey y rial }@8-\Nickis tightened their grip on Bue hockey games on Sunday. |third-place in the six-team lea- Clarke led the winners with gue. Greg Medinski notched Howetth and Waifon saved suns, wile, Ted, Coulson add gles. For the losers, Bill Stacey vonage adult dialed « xa notched two goals and Mike Mc- es . F P hree Stravick picked up one. George Caronie had three, Five players shared in the|while Wess Paterek and Don eae | . Nita Industries|Sugden shared two points each nippe obson Leather 5-4. Richard Black, Jim Mulligan,|"" Beaumarks. Ron Brown, Sam Thompson and ATLAS TOPS SATURNS Fred Carey were the marks-| Atlas had a tough fight with men for the winners. Junior|the last-place Saturns, but with White fired three goals and Bob Pool Tables Miller added a single for Rob: 8 Models From 139.50 son. In the final contest, three goals by Hank Greenan sparked ECIAL WINTER SALES @ No Down Payment @ No Payments 'til July Ace Electronics to a 5-3 tri- umph over Canadian Tire. Paul MAJOR POOL '*ezress' uta" Canada Ltd. 690 Droke St., Oshawa Krowchuk and Bill Cook were CALL 725-9151 the other scorers for the Ace boys. Rocket Smith tallied twice for the losers, while Don Tran accounted 'for the other marker. : Easily Saves: Ruest 4 Gibson 48 9 12-27 6--20 Over Beaumarks Ed Hanewich leading the way managed to take the win. Hanewich picked up 12 points (this brings his league-leading Club Minor Basketball League|total to a record 124 points).| |/Dane Tutton, Ken: Cunningham jand George Carons got two |points apiece for the winners. Rob Muir led Saturns with six |points, while Brian White got jthree and Andy DeJohn had one, |POLARIS BEATS REDSTONES | Polaris remained tied with At- jlas for the league lead when jthey nipped Redstones. Doug |Peeling led the winners' attack jwith 12 points, followed by Bill Wayling with ten and Bob Krea- sol scored two points. Milford Masters had _ nine |points for the losers, while Gary |Medin got six. Bob Muir picked jup four and Wayne Ormiston had two. EXPORT PLAIN _or FILTER TIP CIGARETTES New FILTER KING 25s | WRESTLING La | Friday 8:30 Jan, 22 P.M. BULLDOG BROWER ANDY ROBIN THE TOLOS BROS. Flanagan & DiMarco FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION OF TROPHIES FOR ALL SPORTING EVENTS AND GIFTS IN EASTERN ONTARIO The G.B, Company 356 Dean Ave., Oshawa TEX McKENZIE FREE PARKING jone George Fuller goal for Hayden Macdonald. Bob Waters fired the lone| Phi Bus, 723-3961 Res. 725-2062 POWERS vs, PARIS! WeKENZE vs. DESTROYER Tickets---Cosino Rest. PAT MILOSH,. Promoter Bus Service Direct To . and From Auditorium FOR 750 CARS Laminated Coats PURE WOOLS Reg. $55.00 to $105.00 9", g* ' Reg. $29.95 to $35.00 19.95 to 24.99 mR § SUBURBAN COATS & WINDBREAKERS Your choice of fabric, style and colors. 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