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Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Sep 1965, p. 7

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HALL CROSSES FINISH LINE TO WIN CANADIAN GRAND PRIX '|Hamilton Tiger-Cats Argos Finally Win, Shade Bombers 24-22 By THE CANADIAN PRESS A distinct lack of eastern hos- pitality was encountered by two visiting Western Football Con- ference clubs during the week- end. Edmonton Eskimos called at Ottawa Saturday and were dis- mantled 40-1 by the Rough Ri- aerg--a result that might have been foreseen since the Esks are tajl-tnders in the WFC while the Riders are tied with for the lead in. the east. accounted for the only Edmon- ton point in the second quarter. The Argonauts, who had hit rock bottom a week earlier in a 33-0 loss to Hamilton, sud- denly came to life against the Bombers, who had won both their previous interlocking games. After spotting Winnipeg an early touchdown, they moved ahead 17-7 at the half, dropped behind 22-17 at the end of the third quarter and pulled it out with a converted touchdown But then Toronto Arg ; normally the most charming hosts in Canadian Football, for- got their manners Sunday as they hung a 24-22 defeat on the unsuspecting Winnipeg Blue Bombers. That one had to be the upset of the year. The Bombers are first - place contenders in the West, only two points behind Calgary Stampeders, who whipped B.C. Lions 21-7 Satur- day night. The Argos not only hadn't won in eight starts, they hadn't come within a touchdown of winning in nearly a month. The loss sent Winnipeg home with an even break from a two- Rifles Absorb Shellacking From Rockets By THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Rifles, who might have come out of the weekend with a first-place tie in the Con- tinental League's Eastern divi- sion, ran into their toughest op- shortly after they changed ends. Quarterback Pete Liske, op- erating behind improving block- ing, completed 10 of his 20 passes including two touchdown tosses to Pat Brosnan and scored the third touchdown him- self on a three - yard keeper play. Jackie Parker kicked all three converts and the other points were added on singles by Dave Mann, Jacki Simpson and John Ilunas, the last two on unsuc- cessful field-goal attempts. Dick Thornton, replacing in- jured quarterback Kenny Ploen, threw to Ken Nielsen for the first Winnipeg touchdown and scored the other two himself on short runs. All three were con- verted by Norm Winton and Ed Ulmer kicked a long single for the Bombers' final point, BETTER BOMBERS The Argos held a statistical edge, rolling up 196 yards on the ground to the Bombers' 168 and outpassing them by 249 yards to 107 as- Thornton completed game eastern swing as a result| position of the campaign and only five of his 18 tosses, Both sides intercepted twice and Win- nipeg committed the only three | fumbles of the game, losing the | THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, September 27, 1 Moe Racine Takes: Over Scott, O Lockett, M Dillard, O Watkins, O an H Baker H Thelen, T Brosnan, T rey ee ecoceoe os eescceee eesSoeoon SeesErss he Scoring Lead By THE CANADIAN PRESS Moe Racine, Ottawa Rough Rider's place-kicking specialist, accounted for 14 points as his Eastern Football Conference club drubbed the Western Con- ference Edmonton Eskimos Sat- urday and took over the lead in the EFC scoring race. ' Racine booted four converts, three field goals and a single as the Rough Riders defeated the Eskimos 40-1 in Canadian Football League interlocking game at Ottawa to bring his season's total to 49. His Hamilton counter- part, Don Sutherin, remained in second place with 42, The Tiger- -- were idle during the week- end, INSULATING Racine, 0 Sutherin, H TD FGS Pts 019 9 3 49 01010 2 42 CALL 728-2379 Jim Hall Victorious ee of a 14-8 victory over Montreal! took a 31-0 shellacking instead.| By One-Fifth Second 'By JOHN TRACY MOSPORT, Ont. (CP)--Pro- ponents of the automatic trans)... two hours, 27 minutes, 27.6] Over the 2.5-m mission for sports-racing cars got a boost Saturday when Jim Hall of Midland, Texas, won the 250-mile Canadian Grand his car and the only automatic in the race. The Texan's elapsed time | seconds, an average speed of /101.7 miles an hour and better than the record mark of 2:38.4 City, Canadian Grand Prix winner in 1963 and 1964, Hall also set a lap record ile road circuit of one minute, 24.9 seconds, an |average speed of 104 m.p.h., |clipping 2.3 seconds off the |mark he set a year ago. Prix with a record-shattering) .o+ in @ Ferrari a year ago by| He won the Pepsi-Cola Tro- performance. 'Ten seconds behind the leader on the 33rd lap of the 100-lap race, the 30 - year - old Texan overtook New Zealander Bruce McLaren on the 93rd lap and led him across the finish line by one-fifth of a second, There was little difference be- tween the cars except for Hall's automatic transmission, McLaren, seven in world ranking last year, designs and builds his own racing cars. His ear Saturday was powered with an Olds engine. Hall, who also builds the Chaparrals which brought him the 1964 U.S. road- racing championship and the 1965 Grand Prix at Sebring, Fla., had a big Chev engine in Pedro Rodriguez of Mexico phy, a cash award of $2,000 for |" TORONTO (CP)--John Sur- tees, last year's world champ- ion racing driver who was ser- iously injured in a practice lap for the Canadian Grand Prix, is "off the critical list and contin- uing to improve,"' hospital offi- cials said Sunday. "We are satisfied with his condition at the moment," they added. IN FOURTH SPOT B.C. Thumped By Calgary B.C.8 counted by Mack Burton on a two-yard pass from quarterback By THE CANADIAN PRESS Last year British Columbia Lions won the Canadian profes- sional football championship and looked unbeatable. This year they are fourth in the five-team Western Football| Conference. One of their out- standing players is on the side- lines, another is hurt and they played in Calgary during the weekend under conditions that a coach described as "unreal." They may have to play. another tonight under similar con- ditions. The Lions were trounced 21-7 by the Stampeders in Calgary Saturday night. Tonight there may be more énow and cold for their contest only touchdown was Joe Kapp. Neal Beaumont kicked a single for the Lions' jother point. | The game was played in a jdriving snowstorm, with the ltemperature about 20 above and close to four inches of snow on the field. The Lions may face snowflurries and 25-35 degree temperatures tonight. The 19,000 fans saw a score- less duel in the first quarter. Both sides scored seven points each in the second quarter and the Stampeders edded another seven in each of the third and lfourth quarters. John Surtees Reported Off The Critical List The 3i-year-old Briton was pinned under his Lola T70 Fri- day after it lost a wheel and crashed on the track at Mos- port Park, 40 miles east of here. He suffered two fractures and a dislocation of the hips, frac- jtures to the horizontal seg- |ments of four vertebrae in the lower back, kidney and other internal injuries. Dr. Paul F. McGoey, sur- geon-in-chief of Scarboro Gen- eral Hospital, said Sunday that head injuries were not as se- rious as was feared and Sur- tees has regained his memory up to the moment he entered the turn where the accident oc- curred, He may have suffered slight concussion but there is no evi- dence of external skull injury or brain damage, Dr. McGoey said, HAS NO PARALYSIS Dr. McGoey explained Sur- tees spinal injuries have not re- j}sulted in paralysis, the major complication of spinal fracture, mainly because of the location of his breaks. Surtees' frac- tures are to the four vertabrae, below the waist, Dr. McCoey added. He said likelihood of spinal cord damage, with paralysis, is greatest with fractures above the waist. Surtees' injured kidney has stopped bleeding, regained par- tial function and it has a good chance of regaining full func- ition, Dr. McGoey said. his win and $200 for fastest and record lap times. Rodriguez' big, red Ferrari finished third, five laps behind the leaders. Charlie Hayes of Rockville, Md., was fourth in a McLaren-Chev and David Piper of London in a Ferrari was fifth. Top Canadian was John Cordts of North Bay, who fin- ished 12th in a Corvette. | Outcome of the race, in doubt up to the last few seconds, | brought the 21,600 paid fans to their feet. The six - foot - two Texan, who crashed his Chap- arral here a year ago and) broke an arm, is the most pop-| jular driver to come to this} jtrack 40 miles east of Toronto. ; Seventeen of the 28-car field | finished the race. Two drivers, |Herb Swan of Cleveland, Ohio, and Augie Pabst of Milwaukee, saw their cars, worth a total of $30,000, go up in balls of fire al- though neither was seriously hurt. Rangers Have Goalie Problem KINGSTON (CP)--Coach Red Sullivan's goaltending problems were still unsolved after New York Rangers of the National Hockey League played an intra- squad game here Saturday night. Sullivan's problems are goal- tenders--too many of them. Four netminders, including former Toronto Maple Leafs) Cesare Maniago and Don Sim- mons, shared duties during the contest which saw the whites defeat the blues 5-3. Maniago allowed the three goals scored by the blues--two by Jim Johnson and one by Vic |Hadfield. Simmons, who alter- |nated with Maniago, had a per- jfect record. | Rookie goaltender Gilles Vil- lemure was beaten three times land Ed Giacomin twice. | "T can't fault any of the goal- itenders," Sullivan said after the igame, | Rod Gilbert did not dress for |the game, but skated briefly Alouettes Friday night. The Es- Losers of only one of their One of the fumbles set up the | GUN REPAIR {his 11 passes for 34 yards while) Wheeling Ironmen defeated kimos will try to pick up the) previous six games, a close 21-| winning touchdown when Simp- pieces Tuesday night when they/ 14 defeat at the hands of Phil-|son pounced on a bobble by| visit Hamilton Tiger-Cats at 8) adelphia Bulldogs, the Rifles| flanker Billy Cooper at the Tor- p.m. EDT in a game to be tele-| were thoroughly outclassed Sa-| onto 54. | vised by the CTV. turday night by the unbeaten| after a nine-yard plunge by| INTERCEPT FIVE Charleston Rockets, runaw&y| pick Shatto and a Winnipeg Quarterback Randy Kerbow, | leaders of the Western Divi- penalty for too many men on the filling in for the injured Bill Re-| sion. \field, Brosnan eluded defensive dell, had a miserable afternoon; A victory would have enabled) hair Norm Rauhaus to grab| at Ottawa as the Riders throt-|the Rifles to catch the Bulldogs,|] jcke's pass from the 36 and tled his ground attack for a net) who lost their first game Sun-|qash the remaining five yards loss of 19 yards and intercepted| day when Norfolk Neptunes/ ¢or the score. | five of the 20 passes thrown by|downed them 42-35. Instead, Nor-| -- ss sia a Kerbow and backup man Don|folk moved within a game of Getty. | Toronto with a 4-3 record. | Kerbow completed four of his) In other games Sunday,}| Oshawa Generals NEW HOCKEY Getty, playing his first game} Hartford Charter Oaks 34-14 for since he came out of a two-year) their first victory of the season, retirement when Redell was| Providence Indians tripped hurt, hit on four of nine for 37| Fort Wayne 14-9 and Richmond yards when he took over in the) whipped Newark Bears 34-22. | jast.10 minutes. | The Rifles, playing to a) Edmonton's total offence of 52) sparse crowd of 5,437, got off to, yards compared with the Ot-\a poor start when Dick Limer- tawa totals of 157 yards on the/ick fumbled the opening kickoff ground and 299 in the air a5/and Jim Moss scored the first Russ Jackson, reserve quarter-|of two touchdowns two plays | 18 BOND ST. WEST, OSHAWA 728-9731 © BOUGHT © SOLD ©@ TRADED © REPAIRED "Buying A New Gun This Season?" Come in and talk GUNS with Art. We have the best prices on all populor makes, and have the largest inventory of Used... New... Guns In South Central Ontario. ALL GUNS GUARANTEED FOR 1 YEAR --ijine, but three of the drives re- in Regina against Saskatche-| Jerry Keeling, usually a de- wan Roughriders. The Lions,|fensive back, played the entire not used to those conditions in)game at quarterback for Cal- balmy Vancouver, have gained|gary. Eagle Day, the regular only nine points in nine games. |quarterback, was still nursing But they are only two points/stretched knee ligaments suf- away from one of the three|fered in the Stampeders' 24-10 playoff berths and still havejloss to the Lions in Vancouver seven games to go in their 16- Sept. 11. game regular schedule. --------- In other weekend games, both interlocking contests in East- ern Canada, Toronio Argonauts scored their first win in nine league starts by defeating Win nipeg Blue Bombers 24-22 and Ottawa Rough Riders whomped Edmonton Mskimog 40-1. FLEMING STILL OUT Halfback Willie Fleming didn't : Play 'or the _Lions 4l suspension on left winger Eddie Calgary and is not dressing to- Shack Sunday after he agreed night because of an injury. Tom|;, sign a 1965-66 contract to play | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Leafs Lift Suspension, | Shack Signs Contract Toronto Maple Leafs lifted a ; | BAD BOY perinitety "Tn racing terms, that means|Saturday after having an old Surtees has got through the|back injury checked in New first lap. The second Jap is to| York. : get the other internal bleeding] 'He skated well," Sullivan stopped," he said. |said. "I think he'll be all right." | The driver now is in traction! under constant observation in |the intensive care unif. } KEY WAS YOUTH TORONTO (CP)--The Cana- dian Amateur Athletic Union's 50-kilometre walk here Sunday indicated that youth is the key jto success in marathon walk- 'ing. Karl Heinz Merschenz, 28, jof Toronto, youngest of the competitors, won the cham pionship in four hours, 56 min back Bill Cline and halfback Don Gilbert completed 11 of their 18 attempts. The Edmonton defence had its moments, stalling the Riders four times inside, the 10-yard) sulted in field goals by-Moe_Ra- cine, who also'booted four con- verts and a single to take over the EFC scoring leadership with 49 points, seven more than Don Sutherin of Hamilton. Jackson, Ted Watkins, Jim Dillard and linebacker Ken Leh- man scored the Ottawa touch- downs, Lehman galloping over from midfield late in the fourth quarter after he intercepted a Getty pass to snuff out the only promising Edmonton drive of the game. The other two Ottawa oints came on a safety touch. Kerbow's 80-yard quick kick NOHA vs OHA Will Continue ° NORTH BAY (CP)--Charles Camsell, newly. - elected. presi- dent of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association, said Sun- day his group will continue to compete in the p'ayoffs against the OHA Junior A champion because "'it's good for the pres- tige."" Since the NOHA junior cham- pion began competing three years ago against the OHA jun ior winners in the Ontario fi nal, they have been soundly trounced. In the playoffs last spring, Niagara Falls Flyers rolled over NOHA champion Garson - Falconbridge in straight games, racking up lop- sided scores in every game. "Sure, we get beat pretty good,' Camsell chuckled in an interview after the convention. "But it's good for the prestige of our association. And, hey, don't forget the series with the OWA junior winner provides us wilh our biggest revenue of the utes and 18 seconds, year," Brown, the most valuable line- man in Canada last year, is hurt- but will play. Saskatchewan coach Eagle Keys says Nat Dye will be back in action tonizht as defensive tackle after being out of action with back trouble since the sec- with Rochester, the Leafs' farm team in the American Hockey League. The rambunctious Shack was suspended by Leaf coach Punch \Impach for refusing to play for |Rochester in a game against the parent National Hockey League ond game of the season. Ed Hoerster, a versatile im- port acquired from Hamilton, will move in at linebacker for|Poroush, rookie Wally Dempsey. training. Bill Gray will be back at half-/ "Shack's back in our good back after missing one game graces, and he'll practise with with a scratched eyeball. |\the Rochester team today," Im- At. Calgary Larry Robinson's !ach announced late Sunday nine points did three things--|night. 'I'm glad to see him put the Stampeders in sole pos-|signed and straightened out." session of first place, put Rob:| There were bitter words be- inson first in the WFC's individ-|tween the two men about the uak---scoring race and enabled suspension before Shack appar- him to gain the title as Cal-jently had a change of heart and gary's all-time high scorer with! went to see Imlach, 343. AS A DRAW? lto Rochester because he scored The points from a touchdown,) Shack had charged that theionly five goals last season two.converts and a single put)Leafs were using him as box--| Shack claimed that Imlach Robinson, one point ahead ofjoffice draw for the 10 league|could have traded him to De- Jack Abendschan of Saskatche-|games the Americans must play|troit or Boston but didn't. Im- wan. in the individual scoring|in Toronto this season because|lach denied it. 'I couldn't get race. : |their rink will be taken up with|what I wanted for him in a Robinson's 343 is seven points|a bowling tournament. lcouple of deals, so it's evident higher than the former Calgary! Shack's unorthodox style ofjwhat other people think of mark set by "arl Lunsford helter-skelter play has won him/him." Caigary's two other touch-|a large coterie of fans in Maple} Imlach suspended Bob Pul downs were scored by halfback|Leaf Gardens, even when his|ford last fall in a contract dis- Ted Woods and tackle Goerge| goal production was down. Im-|pute, but they came to terms Hansen. lach said Shack was demoted within 24 hours. team Saturday night. Leafs won 5-1 in the game played at Peter- where the team is in SIGNS CONTRACT ' SELLS FOR LESS! FREEZERS - 21 CU. FT. food plan, Free delivery, PRI 5 Year Guarantee made by Beotty. Free later. Millard Fleming and Ron| Quillen scored the other Charl- eston touchdowns and Ed Mit- chamore added four converts and a field goal. The Rockets nullified Tor- onto's best scoring opportuni- ties by stopping them three times inside their seven-yard line. PLAYERS Room and Boerd Boys stay two to @ good sized room but must hove Individual beds. Coll 723-5881 or 723-4383 WHY NO T BUY IT ON TIME? Avoilable for es little os $5.00 per month Shotguns... Rifles... 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