Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 11 Dec 2014, p. 40

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

Pa ge 4 0 T hu rs da y, D ec em be r 1 1, 2 01 4 - T he IF P - H al to n H ill s - w w w .th ei fp .c a 2015 OUTDOOR HOUSE LEAGUE SOCCER REGISTRATIONMARK YOUR CALENDAR! Online early bird registration for the 2015 outdoor houseOnline early bird registration for the 2015 outdoor house league season available the last week in January and first week in February on a first-come, first-served basis. Registration begins Saturday, January 24th. Don't miss out! Visit website for details and to register! www.georgetownsoccerclub.com MARKYOUR CALENDAR! 2015 OUTDOOR HOUSE LEAGUE SOCCER REGISTRATION Needed most this m onth • Canned Juice • Past a & Meat • Pampers • Hot Cere al TO DONATE OR FOR SPECIAL EVENTS I NFORMATION visit www.Go ergetownBre adBasket.ca WE NEED YOUR HEL P 55 Sinclair • Unit 12 905-873-3368 Tues. 5-7pm • Wed. 8:30-noon • Sat. 8:30-noon Needed most this m onth • Canned Juice, Pears, Pe aches, Pasta • Shampoo, Conditioner, S oap, Toothpaste visit. www.George townBreadBaske t.ca WE NEED YOUR HELP SPORTS The Stewarttown Stingers captured the Halton District School Board's Tier I boys' volleyball championship last week in Milton with a straight-sets victory over Georgetown's Centennial Char- gers. Stewarttown team members are: Davis Young (forefront). Second row: Patrick Koehler, Cam Coleman, Jack Michie, Eric Bertrand. Back row: Coach Eric Rus, Nic Basilio, John Dunning, Andrew Jawdek, Ryan Harris, coach Brendan Harman. Submitted photo Stingers capture Halton title A couple of Halton Hills teams met up in the final match of the Halton District School Board's Tier I elementary boys' volleyball championship in Milton last Thursday night, with the Stewarttown Stingers prevailing over the Centennial Chargers 25-11, 25-23. Centennial had defeated Stewarttown for the North Division championship the previ- ous week and the Stingers qualified for the Halton semifinals as runner-up. The teams met head-to-head eight times this season and each won four matches. It's the second time in three years that Stewarttown has won the Halton Tier I boys' title after accomplishing the feat in 2012. In Thursday's semifinals, the Chargers defeated Burlington's CH Norton while Stewarttown beat the Burloak-champion West Oak to set up a rematch of the North final. No schools from Halton Hills were in- volved in the HDSB girls' final four play- downs, which were also held in Milton on Thursday. Alexander's of Burlington defeated Oakville's Captain R. Wilson in the final. Raiders blank Red Wings Steve Hladin of the Georgetown Raid- ers scored his 100th career Ontario Junior Hockey League goal Monday night as his squad had little trouble disposing of the host Hamilton Red Wings 6-0. The Raider captain added two assists to take a five-point lead in the OJHL scor- ing race with 26 goals and 32 assists in 29 games. A 19-year-old Mississauga native, Hladin is in his third season in Georgetown following a rookie year with the now-de- funct Vaughan Vipers. Blake Jones, Francois Cote, Anthony Marra, Brendan Jacome and Kyle Allan also tallied for the 20-4-3-4 Raiders, who were backstopped by Marc Williams's 16-save performance in his third shutout of the campaign. Hladin had two goals for the OJHL '94s (1994 birthdates) team that defeated a group of Team Canada East hopefuls 5-3 in a tune-up game Tuesday at the Bucking- ham Arena in Toronto as part of a selection camp for the World Junior A Challenge next week in Kindersley, Sask. The Raiders also skated past the Oran- geville Flyers at home last Saturday to build a 10-point cushion in the West Division standings. They dropped a 3-2 decision in Aurora last Friday to the OJHL's first-place team, the Tigers. Next up for Georgetown is a home date with the last-place Burlington Cougars Sat- urday at the Alcott Arena at 7:30 p.m. Mounsey masters his age group Georgetown long-distance runner Duncan Mounsey broke a 20-year-old Canadian record in a 25-km race earlier this year for his age cat- egory and was recently recognized by Canadian Masters Athletics for the achievement. On May 10, the 76-year-old member of the Georgetown Runners completed the Fifth Third River Bank Run in Grand Rapids, Mich. in a time of two hours, 32 minutes and 26 seconds to im- prove on the previous best clocking in the men's 75-79 age group of 2:39:41 set by George Cheva- lier on July 31, 1994 in Scarborough, Ont. Mounsey, who has been the longtime race director for the Georgetown Runners' Egg Nog Jog, has been running for the past 35 years and entered more than 800 races, including duath- lons. The Georgetown Runners is open to people of all ages and abilities. For more info visit the website www.georgetownrunners.ca DUNCAN MOUNSEY

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy