from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Cost is $120 per person for six days of instruction. Equipment is provid ed. Application deadline is May 30. T.A. Blakelock High School‘s coaching staff will be conducting the school‘s first football camp, July 12â€"17. =Open to Oakville boys in Grades 7 and 8, the Tiger Football Development Camp‘s aim is to give incoming students a taste of what high school footâ€" ball is all about, Blakelock coach Ken Ross said. Instruction will be provided by Ross, Ron Larose, George Jeffrey and Ed Stavnitsky â€" all coaches with Blakelock‘s senior and junior programsâ€"plus four exâ€"Tiger players. "There will be limited conâ€" tact," he said. "We‘ll take them through all the positions. We will even have a simulation of a day in the life of a high school playâ€" °L. Funds raised will go towards the school football program. FOOTBALL CAMP SUNDAY: Burlington Chiefs vs. Toronto Beaches. Ontario Lacrosse Association Jr.A game at Oakville Arena. 7 p.m. *MONDAY: COBA senior baseball. Oakville White Sox vs. Streetsville. 7:30 p.m. at Oakville Park. SATURDAY: _ Oakville Longhorns vs. Metro Toronto Eagles. Northern Football Conference exhibition game. 7 p.m. at Nelson Stadium, Appleby College Summer Sports Camp. Soccer, tennis, hockey. 845â€"0072....Oakville Summer Basketball Camp, Aug. 30â€"Sept. 3 at T.A. Blakelock High School 336â€" 6669....Headstart high school football camp, Aug. 30â€"Sept. 2 at Oakville Trafalgar. Deadline for applications is June 7. WEDNESDAY: Halton high school tennis championships at Bronte Provincial Park. camp will run each day ; Squash star is ‘Ryding‘ high rallies more. The final was a dream matchup because Ryding was seeded first and Patrick second among the 31 entries. "We‘re really good friends off the court but there was a bit of a grudge," explained the 5â€"footâ€"6, 125â€"pound Winnipeg native. Ryding felt the biggest differâ€" ence in this year‘s showdown with Patrick was his ability to control the Not that Kelly Patrick â€" the guy he was facing in the final of the Canadian underâ€"19 squash champiâ€" onshipsâ€"â€"is his bitter enemy. "Wo‘p It‘s just that Patrick had beaten Ryding in the semifinals of last year‘s underâ€"19 event, breaking a fiveâ€"year string of national titles (1987â€"91). This time, though, the 17â€"yearâ€"old Blakelock High School student managed to turn the tables, prevailâ€" ing 3â€"9, 9â€"1, 9â€"5, 9â€"1. By TOM MICHIBATA Oakville Beaver staff Graham Ryding figured he had a bit of a score to settle last week in Calgary, Alta. CELEBRATE THE 25"" ANNIVERSARY OF BIG MAC From May 5thâ€"20th, when you purchase a Big Mac® at McDonald‘s Restaurants after 4:00 pm, you get a second Big Mac® for only 25¢! "We‘re really good friends off the court but there was a bit of a grudge" "This one was a lot tougher There was a lot of pressure." I m "Some of them g € have been more antiâ€" climatic than others," said Ryding, who finished seventh at the Canadian senior champiâ€" onships in Kamloops, B.C., the week before. He also helped Canada finish third at last year‘s World Junior Championships."This one is probably the best because underâ€"19 is considered the premier event in junior nationals. "A defensive players is always returning and running around. An ~~â€"OOOO~_â€" player still really has to be fit but doesn‘t have to rely j on running as much. lends You might have to play defensive for a court couple of points." "I was moving the ball around â€" dictating the match," he said. "I was able to get him tired and as soon as he was tired, he wasn‘t as effective. I made him run more." Ryding says he‘s most effective when he‘s on the offensive. En route to the final, Ryding Ryding said that of his six national crowns, this was the most satisfying. defeated Mark Chatterly of Ontario 3â€"1, Jeff Blumberg of B.C., 3â€"0 and Ryan Bell of Ontario 3â€"0. Brother Patrick, 20, is currently ranked 23rd in Canadian open men while both his mother and father play out of the Ontario Racquet Club in Mississauga. Ryding will now turn his attenâ€" tion to playing a sixâ€"city professionâ€" Ryding has been playing squash since he was seven. Growing up in a squashâ€"oriented family helped. SUNDAY, MAY 16, 1993 PAGE 24 Ryding has a world ranking of 154 â€" not high enough to gain direct entry to the tournaments, which means he has to play in qualifying tournaments. Although he would like to make a living on the pro cirâ€" cuit, "I‘d just like to break even" for now and "get some ranking points" al satellite circuit tour from midâ€" July to the end of August. Stops are in Oklahoma City, Albuquerque, Chicago, Rochester, Minneapolis and Boca Raton.