•T he IF P• H al to n H ill s •T hu rs da y, N ov em be r 6 , 2 01 4 32 312 GUELPH ST., GEORGETOWN 905-877-2296 www.georgetowntoyota.com 201 5 RAV4 FWD LE 20 15 R AV4 AWD LE *60 month leases, 20,000 low km lease, $0 down payment. Pictures not exactly as shown. See dealer for details. MSRP - ZFREVT-AA $25,830 MSPR-BFREVTA $28,045 ZFREVT-AA BFREVT-A 20 15 WD LE20 LE $309mo.$289mo. $0 DOWN PAYMENT SPORTS Coming up Georgetown Hockey Heritage Council hosts its annual Oldtimers' Tournament this weekend at the Mold-Masters SportsPlex Local resident James Robart-Morgan of the Milton Skating Club had a large cheering contingent in attendance for his Free Program skate Friday evening during the Skate Canada Central Ontario Sectionals held at the Mold-Masters SportsPlex in Georgetown. Photo by Eamonn Maher Some of the top young figure skaters in the province were in Georgetown last weekend for the Skate Canada Central Ontario Sectionals, which for some was a stepping stone to the national championships in January. The four-day event was co- hosted by the Georgetown Skat- ing Club and although none of its members competed, other lo- cal residents skated as represen- tatives of other clubs in the area. Most notably, Georgetown's Helene Carle of the Milton Skat- ing Club was first in the Novice Women's Short & Free Program. Pre-Novice, Novice, Junior and Senior skaters were compet- ing for the top four positions in each category in order to qualify for the Skate Canada Challenge event, which takes place in Mon- treal Dec. 3-7. Winners of that event compete at the Canadian Figure Skating Championships in Kingston Jan. 16-24. Other locals who skated were Catherine Carle, Audrey Carle, James Robart-Morgan and Jack- son Ellis of the Milton club, sis- ters Kristine and Tara Ienciu of the Brampton-Chinguacousy club and Emily Vandenberg rep- resented the Streetsville-Mead- owvale Figure Skating Club. Cameron 16th at OFSAA finals Christ the King's Macken- zie Cameron was the top local finisher at Saturday's Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations Cross-Country Championships at the Univer- sity of Waterloo, placing 16th in a field of 267 entrants in the senior girls' race. The Golden Horseshoe- champion Cameron completed the mud-bogged course in a time of 19 minutes and 36 sec- onds, 1:26 behind the winner. Five CtK runners qualified for OFSAA and the Jaguars placed ninth out of 39 schools in thanks to finishes from Stepha- nie Knowles (72nd), Nicole Waddick (152nd), Mary-Lynne Peel (176th) and Maddie Shiell (257th). In the senior boys' race, Georgetown's Matt Knebel crossed the line 62nd, while CtK's team was 36th, which consisted of Reid Perna (127th), Steven Moore (170th), Claudio Sereno (229th), Alec Meneses (259th), Daniel Basile (266th). GDHS's team placed 11th in the junior girls' standings head- ed up by Meghan Sippel (49th). FIELD HOCKEY: Emma Mandel and Taylor Richard were the goal scorers as the host Georgetown Rebels edged Burl- ington's Robert Bateman 2-1 on Monday in Halton Secondary School Athletic Association se- nior girls' field hockey playoffs at Kiwanis Field. The fourth-seeded Rebels, who lost just once during the regular season to go with five wins and four ties, will now face top-ranked and undefeated T.A. Blakelock in the Tier II semifi- nals in Oakville on Monday. Georgetown's junior girls' field hockey squad has also ad- vanced to the Tier II semis fol- lowing a 3-2 victory over guest Bishop Reding and will take on the second-place Abbey Park Eagles Monday in Oakville. VOLLEYBALL: It'll be an all- Georgetown final in the HSSAA junior boys' AAAA champion- ship match as Christ the King's Jaguars host the GDHS Rebels Thursday at 3:30 p.m. The winner between the 11-0 Jags and 8-3 Rebels advances to the HSSAA Tier I finals Monday at Sheridan College at 3:15 p.m. The Georgetown and CtK seniors were eliminated in the AAAA semifinals Monday. BASKETBALL: The GDHS junior girls will face the unde- feated Nelson Flames Monday at 9:30 a.m. at Sheridan College in Oakville for the HSAAA AAAA championship after the Rebels downed Oakville's Holy Trinity 30-18 at home on Tuesday. Veronica Fong and Mara Caldwell had 10 points apiece for the Rebels, whose lone loss this year came against Nelson. FOOTBALL: Running back Alex Leduc rushed for four touchdowns, including a pair of fourth-quarter majors that broke up a tie game and gave the host Georgetown Rebels a 28-14 victory over Oakville's Iro- quois Ridge last week. With the win, the 6-1 Reb- els clinched first place in the HSSAA Tier II division and received a bye into one of the semifinal games Nov. 13. In Thursday's senior game, the Rebels lost 17-7 to the Ti- gers to drop to 2-5 in the Tier II standings, but Georgetown will host a first-round playoff match- up Thursday at 2 p.m. against White Oaks of Oakville after Burlington's MM Robinson, 4-3, bowed out of the post-season. CtK's seniors were bounced from the Tier I playoffs after a 42-35 triple-overtime loss to Notre Dame in Burlington in the quarter finals last Friday. Georgetown Rebels' goalie Emily Freeman employed some Dominik Hasek-like techniques to fend off a scoring bid by Robert Bateman play- ers during the final seconds of their Halton high school senior girls' Tier II quarterfinal playoff contest Monday at Kiwanis Field. Defenders Zoe But- son (back turned) and Rae Ingram help out with the goal-line stand. The Rebels held on for a 2-1 win. Photo by Eamonn Maher Carle shines at Sectionals