Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Sep 1965, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

SPORTS MENU By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR verything From Soup To Nuts Oshawa Generals play at home tonight, which means they are making their first appearance of the 1965-66 season before the hometown rooters, at Civic Audi- torium. So far, and they've only been in action about a full week, Generals have played three exhibition games (that's the pre-season camp routine now) and their record ig a good fair -- they lost to Marlboros in Whitby on Satur- y night, 4-2; were well-beaten in Peterborough on Sunday and then held the Memorial Cup champion "Flyers" to a 77 draw, in Niagara Falls on Tuesday night. Tonight, Gen- erals face "Marlies" again, here at home. It should prove ifteresting. Oshawa will be minus two and maybe all three of the players rated as "'their first line" but the fans will get a chance to see such newcomers as George Babcock, rightwinger from Lindsay; Billy Heindl, speedy centre from Winnipeg (his daddy played against Generals in the Memor- ial Cup finals of 1942); Brian Morenz of Brampton; Peter Nevin, the 16-year-old centre from Halifax and defenceman Barry Wilkins, who was with Niagara Falls, last season. There are others too -- but let's face it, they'll not all make it, so more about them, when they do. FIRST GAME! OSHAWA'S "RETURNEES" include Bobby Orr, Nick Beverly, Jim Whittaker, Chris Roberts, Bill Little, Chris Hayes and goalies lan Young and Dunc Wilson, Wayne Cashman will be playing, if his ankle is fit. Danny O'Shea will not play tonight -- he's away at the Montreal Canadiens camp. But, this is the start, and the local fans are keen! TED O'CONNOR is the coach of Oshawa's new Junior "Bp" OHA entry. He held his first workout on Tuesday night and at least a dozen "homebrew" prospects were on hand, bidding for places on the team, Incidentally, if any truly ambitious young hockey player, here in Oshawa, didn't know about the first workout, he's welcome to telephone Ted O'Connor, concerning the next practice. The Junior "B Club's policy this season is to give every Oshawa boy a real chance to "catch on" with the team. Oshawa Junior '"B team will be in the Central Ontario group and can expect stern competition from Trenton, Peterborough, etc., but coach Ted O'Connor feels that he already has the nucleus of a strong contender. DIAMOND DUST -- Last night's Juvenile playoff game had to be cancelled, due to wet grounds, Jay Cees and Genosha Aces will now go in their third game of the finals, on Saturday night, at Alexandra Park, at 7:30 p.m. 5 TONIGHT, it's Gale's Lumber vs Bad Boys, in the second game of their 3-out-of-5 "City Championship" finals and the third game has been scheduled for Sunday afternoon, 2:30 o'clock, at Alexandra Park BROOKLIN "Concretes won the first game of the Southern Ontario finals, at home an Saturday night, nosing out Wingham 1-0. Second game {s in Wingham this Saturday night, and the winner of this series goes "North" for the All-Ontario finals on the Thanks- giving weekend KINGSTON'S Prince George Indians beat out Toronto Plating 3-1, in Cobourg, in their third and | deciding game, after each team has won at home by 1-0 scores. Kingston is now meeting Thorold in the Southern | jity ward. ~ mm Fk 4 * _|Western Coach Still Rapping Eastern Refs NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP) -- "They're making la- crosse a sissy's game in On- tario," says Keith Jackson, coach of the western junior la- crosse champions. 5 "They're trying to take all! the contact out of it," Jackson said in an interview Wednesday on the return of his New West- minster Salmonbellies. They lost the best-of-seven Canadian junior final in six games to Oshawa Green Gaels. Jackson said his club had the same problem in Oshawa as Brooklin, Ont., Merchants had in their national senior final here. The senior New Westmin- ster squad won that seven-game series 4-3. "I understand Brooklin com-|% plained bitterly about the dif- ference in the interpretation of the rules here. I can under- stand the problem. In Ontario they're calling penalties for) breathing heavy." | Jackson said he didn't think) the difference in refereeing beat} his team. "We lost because we) didn't play as well as we could have." | Hardy Females 'Take To Ice © The Shellettes, Ajax's female! |hockey champs, are at it again! | } Last Sunday saw their first }workout and a lot of stiff | muscles began to loosen up. Manager Don Hercia has in-} dicated there are a few vacan-! cies on the roster, which shrunk to 14 members toward the end) All eight horses in the ninth race at Richelieu Raceway, Montreal, yester- IT SEEMS NOBODY WANTS TO BE LEFT OUT day ended in this unusual photo finish. Winner was Muddy Hanover (8), on the of last season. The recent loss} ERIC CHIPPER By BOB MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP)--Eric Chipper is one football old-timer who doesn't pine for the days when a 195-pounder might play tackle and players got $5 or $10 a game depending on whether they lost or won. much faster and wide open." "I like the game better the way they play it today. It's Chipper got a first-hand view of football's transition from two bucks and a kick of the 1930s "We used to get $5 or $10 a game--$5 if we lost and $10 if we won. And there was all the milk you could drink at prac- tice." One thing that impresses Chipper today is the improve- ment in equipment. "I remember in the later years with the Riders, about 1949, we had a U.S. lineman named Eddie Michaels who used to play without a helmet. I thing it was a case of not be- ing able to find one big enough rail. Only one-fifth of a sec- | ond separated the eight finishers. of two more players means at least six positions up for grabs. | Four defencewomen (7) have) been forced to leave the club, creating a sizeable gap in the defence. Jill Rennick, now liv- ing in Toronto, has indicated! she may not return this year.) Sandy Fertile is on the mend following a knee operation.} Shellettes lost another player to} motherhood last season, when Jan Moffat foresook the dress- ing room in favor of the matern- Oshawa Generals of the OHA Junior 'A' take to the ice at Oshawa Civic Auditor- ium tonight in search of their first exhibition win. Toronto Marlboros are the visitors, and the opening face-off is at 8:00 p.m. In three previous starts this season, Generals salvaged just one point -- a 7-7 tie with Memorial Cup Champion Niagara Falls Flyers in the Falls on Tuesday. The first exhibition tilt for the local Jan Godfrey, the fourth mem-| ber of the quartet, is recuper- ating from an operation at St. Michael's Hospital. Jan, a past queen and standout on the de- fensive wall, will not be with the club in 1965-66. She has, how-/ Ontario Senior "B" finals... NYLON ACES of Kingston eliminated Toronto Police in their Inter. Industrial semi- | finals and are now playing St. Catharines "Macs" for the | right to enter All-Ontario finals ODESSA "Clippers scored a 1-0 thriller, in 14 innings, at Port Hope, in the Juvenile "A" playoffs. They'll now meet Niagara-On-The- | Lake in the Southern Finals, | third game of their series, to eliminate Scarboro, in OASA Whitby Hockey Brass Happy With Steelers By CLIFF GORDON Ivan Davie, general manager of Whitby Lascoe Steelers Jun- ior 'B' hockey club, and coach 10, they travel to Markham " 5 than|and then play back in Whitby Jim Cherry are more | , happy with the way the local|/o" 'Tuesday night October 12 boys are shaping up in the pre-/48ainst Weston. season warm-ups. The home schedule opens on Some of the fellows to win ap-|October 18 at 8.30 p.m. proval are Pete Vipond, a Brook lin boy, Tom Parker, Pat Brown, Mike Keenan and Greg) MONTREAL (CP)--The Ca- Heffering. nadian Amateur Ski Associa- gegen _-- a ee announced Tuesday that well on defenc ile 2 Yl-iNancy Greene of Rossland, pond is making a strong bid to BC. is the wibier this your of nail down one of the left wing|the John Semmelink Award. spots along with Keenan at right) Miss Greene, who led the na- wing, and Heffering at left. | tional ski team to victories Kevin 0 Shea, who toiled with) early this year against Ameri- Whitby over the past three sea-|can and European competition, on ste nt of ng? -- has been racing since 1959. She ommy Lavender and Mike the fourth wi th Taylor, two holdovers from last ead Beas Hyco pr ho year, have impressed. Lavender) melink who was killed in 1959 and Taylor are the only two ie while racing in Germany, vers yet in camp with) 5% season players yet i Pp MORRIS HURT the Steelers. | VANCOUVER (CP) -- Brit- at home again on Thursday night against the West Clair Stee] team. On Sunday, October WINS AWARD Dunc Wilson, Ricky Thompson i. Columbia Lions of the West- and Danny Sandford of last ern Football. Conference placed year's team play. halfback Ron Morris on the 30- Manager Davie says : roe injured reserve list Wed- have at least a few of those',.-qay and reactivated guard players back to have a contend: wii, Taylor ing team in the strong Metro) ----------__ ever, been re-elected treasurer squad was against Marlies, of the organization, a role which| and they came out on the she will fill upon recovery. | short end of a 4-2 count. In Girls interested. in trying out| the only other game, Peter- for the team should contact Don| borough Petes registered a 6-1 Hercia, 728-9543 in Oshawa or| decision. Nancy Lawson, 942-4033 in Ajax. Workouts - will be conducted twice weekly, Saturday and| Sunday from 6.00 to 7.00 p.m.| at Whitby Arena. A pair of rookie pucksters for local fans to keep an eye on are right-winger George Babcock and centre Bill Heindl. Babcock, a Lindsay product, showed extremely well in the rookie camp in Niagara Falls earlier this month. Coach "Bep" Guidolin and general manager Wren Blair are look- | GEORGE BABCOCK | Major Basketball | Getting Underway, Major League basketball gets | underway in the Motor City this BILL HEINDL GENERALS vs MARLBOROS | John Surtees AT AUDITORIUM TONIGHT | Indicates He's ing for him to provide some much-needed strength on the right side. Right sents one of the club's major problems this season, with Wayne Cashman the only reg- ular back from last season. A similar, situation applies to the centre position, with the loss of Ron Buchanan, a 52- | goal scorer in the 1964-65 campaign. Heindl, a Winnipeg boy, is one of two westerners in camp, and consensus is that he will help the club con- siderably. In the last exhibition game, against Niagara Falls, Bab- cock was the scoring star for Generals with three goals, while Heindl assisted on a pair. REMEMBER WHEN... By THE CANADIAN PRESS Benny Paret took Emile Griffith's world _ welter- weight boxing title four years ago tonight--in 1961-- after 15 rounds at Madison Square Gardens. Griffith came back to beat Paret the following year, then lost to Luis Rodriguez and re- gained his title in the re- match in 1963. wing pre- | to the present passing and wide) running game during a career that spanned 12 years with Ot-) tawa Rough Riders. He broke in with the Big Four club in 1939 as an end ("they called us outside wings in those days") and finished as a tackle in the 1950 season just as the word "import" was becoming common in Canadian football. "The game really changed when they started importing)" 1 linemen. We used to have some|hind the line and Hall, helmet big men here and some of themjand ail, was knocked cold.| were pretty fast. But then they| Michaels just kept going." | started to bring in buys like/KROL ELUSIVE Herb Trawick with Montreal) Chipper played both ways) Alouettes, That guy was terrif-/through most of his career} fic -- tremendously strong, fast|("everyone had to go both ways and agile. He was tough but|then") but he preferred de-| never mean like. some ~ guys|fence. | playing today. When you're that! 'It was a lot more fun tack-| be/ling people than trying to block| Eleni " pe just as difficult, | lespecially when you had to stop) who owns a sheet) vuys like Joe Krol," P; Chtpper rates the Toronto Ar- to fit him but he really didn't! need one. He was tough. "I remember one night at a practice when he was playing guard. We were working on}! plays where he had to pull out and lead blocking around the end. Somebody got their plays| mixed and the other guard, George Hall, pulled at the same time and went in the opposite direction. They met head-on be- Chipper, metal firm in Ottawa, is 50 now and still within a pound or two _ Ex-Rough Rider Star Likes Today's Football gonauts backfielder as the toughest he had to stop. "He was elusive. You could never get a good tackle on him: But I think one of our own boys, Tony Golab, was even tougher. Chipper's thrills included ap- pearances in three Grey Cup games (although all were los- ses) but his biggest moment was in the last game of the 1948 season against Toronto. "We wer. losing 12-11 and on the Argo 35-yard line when I went in to kick a field goal. \That may not seem so far by today's standards but there was a 20-mile-an-hour headwind, and remember I'm not a_ 250- pounder like Moe Racine. YOUR SATISFACTION iS OUR AIM All Cars Carry Our GUARANTEE Kelly Disney Used Cars Ltd. 1200 Dundes €. Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS DROP IN of his 195-pound playing weight. | Although he earned all - star! honors as a tackle and place-| ment kicker in 1945, was) awarded the Jeff Russell Me-| First Pre-Season 'On The Mend TORONTO (CP)--John Sur- tees, the ace British racing |driver seriously injured in a |trial run last Friday, gave doc- jtors his first real indication |Wednesday that he's on the | mend. | He asked for a cup of tea. The 31 - year - old racing driver, hurt at Mosport track 40 miles east of here, blamed a rh Mis fat failure for his | | crash, his father-in-law says. Jack \Burke, a company di- | rector th Winchester, England, |said his son-in-law told him: | "As I came into that down- hill curve, I found I had no \steering. I said to myself, 'This it,' and cw: ip, ready for ie crash. "T think an upright had | snapped on the front suspension jand this caused the wheel to | collapse," WATERLOO WINS WATERLOO (CP) -- Water- loo Lutheran University Golden | Hawks counted a single in the jlast three minutes to edge Mc- | Master University Marauders 11-10 in an Ontario Intercol- legiate Foot ball game Wednesday night. SOCCER CLINIC COACHES, M ANAGERS and INTERESTED PERSONS Te Be Held Sunday, October 3rd, 1965 From 9:00 A.M. -- 5:00 P.M. et The Oshawa Recreation Centre 100 GI BB STREET For further information Phone 725-1111 Saturday. Registration and a} practice will be held Saturday | afternoon for anyone 16 years lof age or over interested | playing |Simcoe Boys' Club, Eulalie ave- nue, between 1.30 and 3.30 p.m. | Junior "'B" loop. There are five goaltenders in camp and this position could be a tough one to fill if both Ian Young and Dunc Wilson stick with the Oshawa Generals. Davie has several promising \5-year-olds in camp and could EXHIBITION N.H.L. KEY wind up with one of the young: est teams in the lcague. The Steelers will have their first taste of exhibition hockey on Saturday at 12.30 p.m. when they invade the Weston arena to tangle with the powerful | Dodgers. On 'Tuesday night Steelers are at home to Mark ham at 8.30 p.m. They will play BOSTON OKLAHOMA PENNANT RACE AT A GLANCE | SATU N.H.L, LEAGUE TEAM E.P.H.L, LEAGUE TEAM October 2nd--7:15 P.M. BRUINS CITY Blazers RDAY e SAILING By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League WL Pct. GBL TP: Los Angeles 94 64 .595 -- San Fran. 92 66 .582 2 HOLDERS MUST PIC 4 } JUNIOR "A" HOCKEY SEASON TICKET BY 9 P.M, FRIDAY NIGHT. K UP THEIR TICKET SCUBA DIVING The Oshawa Underwater Association @ Reds -- 2,50 @ Blues -- 1.50 TICKETS ON SALE AT:-- @ Bolehood's Sportsheven -- Now hes openings for trainees. For further informetion est 725-0255 or 668-4604 i @ Jim Bishop Sporting Goods -- Downtown Oshawe @ Civic Auditorium Box Office © Yellows -- 1.75 ® Children under 14--1.00 Downtown Oshawe =_..--.| ATTENTION BOATERS! ENROLL In Courses Offered by THE OSHAWA POWER SQUADRON e PILOTING and SMALL BOAT HANDLING e@ SEAMANSHIP e ADVANCED PILOTING e ENGINE MAINTENANCE e MARINE ELECTRONICS Attend Registration Night MONDAY, OCT. 4, 8 P.M. OSHAWA YACHT CLUB Details of courses and modest cost of books and instruction moterial will be explained on Registration Night. It is not necessary to be « boat owner to take these courses. Any man or woman in Oshawa and District with an interest in sate boatin Courses will be held at the OSHAWA YACHT CLUB on Monday Evenings During Fall and Winter months, at 8 p.m, 9 is invited to attend, morial Trophy for sportsman- | ship in 1947 and came close to winning the Big Four scoring| title on several occasions, foot- jball was not his favorite sport.! | "{ always preferred basket-| jball. In fact I was playing bas-| |ketball in 1939 when Ted Ed-) wards (then an end with Rid-/ ers) asked me to try out for the) iteam. I hadn't played any foot-/ \ball in high school and the last) football I had played was four) years earlier with a junior team." | | He wasn't tall for a basket-| Oshawa |ball forward--five-foot 1014-- but} |his agility earned him a berth} \with Riders first time out. ; "Things were a little differ-| ent then. Backfielders had te be jin top shape but linemen could jloaf a lot. You didn't have to |pull out and lead blocking like you do today. You made your block on a play and that it was) it until the next play." | Salaries were a far cry from| today's scales. i 0.H.A. JR. "A" HOCKEY TONITE SEPTEMBER 30th Toronto Marlboros vs THORNTON RD. S. OFF KING ST. WEST Exhibition Game P.M, Generals Conference | ? TO NEW '66 VICTOR Ty nase Exciting New Styling and Performance All-range tone contre! free * Statle- "EM Golden Throat sound, Automatic scene con- trol circuits, Retrace line ex- tinguishers. Solid state silicon f t tontrol. ectifiers. 23" deep focus pie~ ure tube. High level contrast Automatic channel equalizer. Push button circuit breaker, 5 Year Guarantee on Nuvistor Tuner Tube and 1? Year Guer- entee on All Other Parts, GET ALL THESE QUALITY TV FEATURES... POWERFUL NEW VISTA TUNER -- pulls In sharp, 'de- toiled pictures, The most sensitive, most dependable tuner from R.C.A TRANSISTORIZED IF CIRCUITRY -- provides extra te- liability. 3. stage signal-boosting performance for max imum picture clarity, minimum distortion, NEW VISTA TX-66 CHASSIS -- transformer powered for added dependability, delivers 20,000 volts of picture power. ILLUMINATED CHANNEL INDICATOR, SHOP THE EASY WAY... ° e : * GUARANTEED tom 92.999 PLUS TOP ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD TV AS LOW AS 3.00 A WEEK. RCA VICTOR QUALITY LIFETIME GUARANTEE ON SOLID COPPER CIRCUITS 5-YEAR GUARANTEE ON NUVISTOR TUNER TUBE B.F GOODRICH 88 KING ST. W. \, BEGoodrich / HOME & AUTO CENTRE 725-4543 Open Friday to 9 p.m.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy