Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 26 Sep 2008, SL01

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

GEORGETOWN TOYOTA SALES LEASE FOR 15 MOUNTAINVIEW RD. N., GEORGETOWN 905-877-2296 WEBSITE at www.georgetowntoyota.com $199 2009 COROLLA CE + TAXES PER MONTH FOR 48 MONTHS WITH $3353 DOWN. FREIGHT AND P.D.E. INCLUDED LEASE FOR $199 +TAXES LOWER PRICE starting from $14,835 MSRP LOWER PRICE starting from $15,975 MSRP *Lease payments are plus taxes. All leases are 24,000 km per year with an excess mileage charge of 7 per km. See dealer for full details. 2009 MATRIX PER MONTH FOR 48 MONTHS WITH $2773 DOWN. FREIGHT AND P.D.E. INCLUDED BU42EM-A KU40EM-A Special pullout section Friday, September 26, 2008 16 Pages Circulation 22,500 www.independentfreepress.com Early Bird triumph for peewee AE Raiders Page 5 Sgarbossa shines in Colts debut Page 3, 6 SPORTS AND LEISURE Halton Hills Community Newspaper Braden Leonard of Stewarttown Public School didnt let a little footwear malfunction prevent him from finishing third in the boys 13-year-old race at the annual Optimist Club of Georgetowns cross-country running meet held Wednesday at Cedarvale Park. Leonard crossed the line just ahead of his Stewarttown teammate Alex Roberton (right). The younger age groups were scheduled to run their races on Thursday afternoon. Seven area schools also including Centennial, Georgetown Christian School, Mackenzie-Smith Bennett, Silver Creek, Posts Corner and the new Gardiner entry took part in Wednesdays meet, with Stewarttown winning five of the six overall age group team titles. Alex McKenzie (11-year-old boys), Hayleigh Bell (12-year-old girls) and Bryan Bartle (12-year-old boys) won their respec- tive races. For results from Wednesdays races, see page 5. Photo by Eamonn Maher Scutt sharpens game for World Masters trip Georgetowns Chris Scutt has ruled local-area dart leagues heck, hes even beaten the reigning open world champion but hes about to get a glimpse of the big time in the sport of darts. The 35-year-old roofer qualified for the 2008 Winmau World Masters Finals for the first time in early December at Bridlington, England, thanks to a fifth-place finish at the Canadian championships in Winnipeg and has stepped up his playing sessions in order to hold his own against approximately 300 play- ers from 69 countries. Its my first chance, so its all really new to me, but its great to be involved in the oldest major tourna- ment in the world, and this is the 35th anniversary, said Scutt, whose parents were born in the U.K. He has visited England a number of times and while he admits there might be a bit of sightseeing on the trip this time around, hes expecting a intense atmosphere in The Spa venue when the competition begins, under the glare of BBC-TV cameras. This is a huge event over there and Im interested to see how good the competition is going to be, he said, adding that consuming alcohol is forbidden for participants during the course of play. It can get pretty serious when youre down to the elimination rounds. The nationals in Winnipeg were 10 hours of junior throwing darts and it can get tiring. Scutt, who is president of the Halton Darts League, qualified to compete in the World Masters in both singles and doubles events and will be one of five members of the Canadian team. He has won the overall for the Halton loop eight consecutive years, and has been the top thrower in the Brampton/Bramalea league and the Brampton Summer Pro League. After several trips to the Ontario and Canadian championships, Scutt feels hes ready for the biggest test and has stepped up his playing to every second night, using the down time to spend with sons Ryan, 4, and two-year-old Evan. Scutt also competes in mixed dou- bles at tournaments with his wife Rachael. As part of his preparation for the December competition, Scutt keeps in contact with three-time world open champ John Part of Oshawa, whom he sheepishly admits to have beaten once or twice at tourna- ments. Its great for experience to play against him and we exchange e-mails once in a while, he added. A fund-raiser to help Scutt cover the costs of his trip overseas will take place at Georgetowns Royal Canadian Legion on the evening of Saturday, Nov. 1. Cost is $10 per ticket. EAMONN MAHER Staff Writer Stingers stampede at Optimist meet CHRIS SCUTT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy