Oakville Beaver, 7 Jul 1993, p. 20

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The coach, whose assistant had earlier been ejected, thought the ball went out along the sidelines, as did his defender. Instead, it was ruled inbounds and Oakville‘s Mike Petricca sent it across to Bryan Seguin, who blastâ€" ed the ball in for a 3â€"1 Devils lead. "It doesn‘t take anything away from the win," he explained. "The only thing I‘m disappointed in is that the coaching staff of the other team behaved the way they did. Visitors give tournament a black eye But the local underâ€"15 rep team found itself in unfaâ€" miliar territory after dropping a 2â€"1 decision to Vaughan in its third roundâ€"robin game. So it‘s not hard to understand why the Devils were pumped up in anticiâ€" pation of the tourney final at Shell Park on Sunday. Revenge came but it wasn‘t sweet. Trailing 3â€"1 late in the first half, the Vaughan head coach was ejected after protesting a call made by the linesman. He then pulled five of his players off the field, causing the team to forfeit the match. Oakville coach Phil Iafrati said he couldn‘t believe what happened nextâ€"but figured his team would have won the game anyway. "I thought the other team deserved to play a full game and all the boys on the other team wanted to play a full game. And to get it down to seven players like that is just making a mockery of the game." Entering the 18th annual Oakville Boys International Friendship Soccer Tournament, the Oakville Blue Devils had yet to.lose a game this season. Petricca just wanted to finish the game. This way Vaughan couldn‘t say Oakville didn‘t really beat them. "Yeah, I was pretty disappointed," said the 14â€"yearâ€" old who set up both of Seguin‘s goals (Niki Budalich had the other). "I‘ve never seen anything like that hapâ€" pen before." Tournament chairman Charlie Sciberras said Tuesday he would report the Vaughan team to the Ontario Soccer Association, which is likely to impose further disciplinary action. By GENE PEREIRA Special to the Beaver Oakville had earlier extended its seasonâ€"long winâ€" ning streak to 16 games with routs of Greater Hartford (10â€"2) and Launavdiere, Que. (11â€"2). Oakville advanced to the finals with a 2â€"0 victory over Pickering as Pat Luciani and Sean Preece scored secondâ€"half goals. Goalkeeper Peter Eskit earned the shutout. Sports trivia...Box No. 5239 Sports picks... Box No. 5240 \Sheridan College.... To comte Oakville Blades...... To come Oakville Littla League... To come Hosted by CAROL HAMILTON GOODALE, former National and Olympic Basketball Team Member. HOME COURT BASKETBALL provides experienced staff, qualityinstruction and a highly organized approach to all its programs. | WHERE: TO REGISTER PLEASE CALL HCB at (416)825â€"4 1 17 HOME COURT BASKETBALL CAMPS & LEAGUES offers: SUMMER BASKETBALL CAMPS ‘93 ‘FKEE BASKETBALL® FOR ALL CAMPERS Home cous) \p BASKETBALL C July 5â€"9 17â€"9/9â€"11 yrs. July 19â€"23 7â€"9/9â€"11 yrs. July 12â€"16 12â€"14/14â€"17 yrs, |Aug. 26 _ 12â€"14/14â€"17 yrs. Aug. 9â€"13 _ 7â€"9/9â€"11 yrs. Aug. 16â€"20 12â€"14/14â€"17 yrs. Mondayâ€"Friday 9:00 a.m.â€"4:00 p.m. Sheridan College Athletic Centre, Trafalgar Road, Oakville Campus it}EA} FORMAT: 9â€"12 p.m. Skills/Instruction; 12â€"1 p.m. Supervised Lunch Break; 1â€"4 p.m. Games/Contests 1 wk: $100 r inquire about family rates. 2 wks: $185 inquire about family rates. & Both Oakville A and B squads had a tough time, each winning only one of their four round robin games. Woodbridge took the title with a 5â€"1 victory over St. Catharines in the final. A 2â€"1 win over North Scarborough was the lone win of the tourney for the Oakville A‘s, who lost 4â€"3 to Dixie, 2â€"1 to Unionville and 3â€"0 to Wexford in other The locals advanced to the final four with 41 wins over West Rouge, Gloucester and the York Jets. A 4â€"2 setback to Unionville was their only loss. Oakville MFP Panthers didn‘t fare as well, dropping all four round robin games. The B team fell 4â€"0 to North Scarborough, 5â€"1 to Richmond, 4â€"1 to East York and 8â€"0 to Woodbridge. The Oakville "A‘ Mustangs galloped their way into the tourney semifinals before bowing to Richmond, Virginia, 4â€"2 in overtime. Shaw said he was pleased with his team‘s overall effort in the tourney, although its concentration wasn‘t up to par and the team has still work to do on its passâ€" "The guys are just starting to play," he said. "They realize this is the provincial soccer league and they have to come with the right attitude to play. "And that‘s what they did in this tournament." Oakville defeated Akron, Ohio, 5â€"0, St. Bernard‘s 3â€" 1, Unionville 4â€"2 and lost 3â€"0 to Malton in roundâ€"robin play. Wesley Winarski totalled four goals, Scott Baker, Justin Tasev and Rob Quaresma two each. Jeff Romao and Andrew Blanchette had the others. Wexford won the tourney with a 2â€"0 victory over Richmond in the title game. The goalkeeper was treated for a concussion and released that night. "The guys are down, but it had nothing to do with the score of the game," said coach Paul Shaw afterâ€" Oakville goalkeeper Chris Santos was taken by ambulance to Oakville Trafalgar Hospital after a mid air collision with a North Scarborough forward. Santos was accidentally kicked in the side of the head and was taken off the field on a stretcher. The mood was a somber one after Oakville dropped a 3â€"0 decision to North Scarborough in the semifinals at Bronte Field, Sunday. SPORTS ]THEOI AKVILLE BEAVER He passed waivers and at press time was working out a contract to remain on the team‘s eight or nineâ€" Meanwhile, Oakville resident Paul Cranmer didn‘t fare as well in his bid to make the Roughriders as an inside receiver. The 23â€"yearâ€"old Cranmer was released, Saturday. Saskatchewan opens the regular season Friday against British Columbia Lions at B.C. Place. The game will be televised by The Sports Network (TSN), Oakville product, Jeff Fairholm, on the club. Fairholm is an established slotback with the green Riders. The 23â€"yearâ€"old White Oaks Secondary School graduate and forâ€" mer placekickerâ€"punter at the University of West Virginia beat out last year‘s starter, Brett Matich, for with a strong right leg, averaging 41.8 yards on 12 punts (503 yards). His longest punt was 56 yards. He also kicked off four times, averaging _ 58.5 yards a bootâ€"including a 72â€"yarderâ€" and was 1â€"ofâ€"3 in field goals. He will backup incumbent Dave Ridgway in those areas. Riders‘ cut is kind to Vanderjagt Oakville native Mike Vanderjagt has been designated the starting punter for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League. Weeknights and Weekends J.C. Hebert, Arena Manager at THE LOOK: Now it can be said. + All you who have been strolling around in Tâ€"shirts, jerseys, jackets and caps with the Toronto Maple Leafs logo proudly emblazoned on them; all you who, drunk with the euphoria of this year‘s playoff perforâ€" mance, took to joyfully wearing said shirt, cap or jacket to all events, formal or informal; all of you, with just a point of fashion‘s fickle finger, have become passe, And mother said fashion and sports were not comâ€" patible. What mother didn‘t know then was that sports attire has become a billion dollar business in North America and there are plenty of people willing to guess why. By IRENE GENTLE Special to the Beavyer That, at least, is the word on the street about repliâ€" ca fever, that which makes normally sane individoals repeatedly fork out exorbitant amounts of dough for, say, a Doug Gilmour jersey. Only bad luck for you if you did, since Maple Leafs jerseys are little more than closet clutter now. Today, those in the know are pegging the Anaheim Might Ducks as the biggest thing on your back. "People love winners," ventures Jim Crusoe, manâ€" ager of National Sports in Oakville. "‘They‘II support their favorite team throughout the year but the biggest sales go wherever the champions are." Not that the fickleness of fans is bad for business, of course. A new champ can bring a whole slew of new business to a market that was hardly lagging in the first place. "Adults buy for kids. grandparents buy for their grandkids. Sometimes an adult will buy as collector‘s item," expands Crusoe. "It‘s all publicity, it‘s all tied into commercialism. Our market is very much tied into the popularity of the team." Not that there aren‘t a few romantics tossed in the wellâ€"marketed stew, as Bruce Spencer of Corbett‘s wholesale can attest. "It is many people‘s dream to be a major athlete," offers Spencer. ‘"‘The money, the stardom... Vanderjagt joins another Vanderjagt impressed the club Prime Time Ice Available Appleby College‘s J.S. Gairdner Arena July 16 â€" August 27 (416) $45â€"4681 or 8$45â€"8304 Contact: _ TIM BITS #3 Mitchell Duggan, Christopher Elliott Cosimo Commisso, TIM BITS #4 Russell Brownell, HOME COURT BASKETBALL (Men‘s Summer League results) Kâ€"MART 68 (Rob Barac 20, Joseph Hawkins 17). T. LITZEN SPORTS 66 (Joe Yoo 15, Jason Caldwell 14). _ WHITE OAKS 100 (Scott Chisholm 27, Kevin Shand 18). HOME COURT 76 (Jason Burch, Tony Juurink 21). Prvidiy in m w e WEST STAR ATHLETICS 74 (Joseph Longo 12, Mike Goodwin 12). WHITE ROSE 41 (Marc Jeppesen 12, Joe Baric 11). i ppiame * : _ CENTURY 21 DON GOODALE 63 (Glen Hamilton 27, Mike Wilson 12). BADEN 60 (Frank Pascoe 15, Tara Hermanczuk 13) (Top Players Listed) Energizer 18 (Steve Conove, Richard Uren, Mike Sandercock); Levolor 12 (Chris Ide, David Spko, Darren Norto). _ Subway Sandwiches 12 (Kevin Doherty, Kevan McCulloch, Matt McChesney); Meray Leasing 7 (Rickey Brown, Erin Dameill, Kyle Hampson). _ Levolor 12 (Bradley Harden, Zak Choudnary, Dary! Fowler); Sunlife 2 (Louis Godin, Joseph Witts, 0. MINOR MOSQUITO Canadian Metal 6 (Brian Need, Ryan Millâ€"Orchin, Jason Barone); Erin Mills Lodge 3 (Peter Messere, Michael Umpherson, Garrett Powers). MIDGET/AJUVENILE Bosley Real Estate 10 (Tony Bertrand, Dave Hunt, Steve Dyng); Young Drivers 6. BOYS UNDER 7"B" TIM BITS #1 Alexander DaRosa, William Mann, David Chadder, TIM BITS #2 Harrison Small, Billy Hatch, Michael Bull. _ Canadian Metal 4 (Mark Calzonetti, Adam Bianchi, Michael Paffrath); Team Life 2 (Chris Balfour, David Favretto, Scott Farley). Fec.lt 2 Petrie & Childs 12 (Jacob DaSilva, Paul Tuney, Ryan Burkett); Flippance & Carr 1 (Derek Lau, Wilte Speirs, Jeffrey Hauley). _ _ Bosley Real Estate 6 (Owen Chiu, Jeff Fairbaim, Bryan MacMillan); Century Painting 5 (Ryan Cormier). Cranmer played U.S. college ball at Grand Valley State (Div. II) in man practice roster. He got into one preâ€"season game and did not catch a pass in the team‘s 40â€"17 loss to the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Snair twirled a completeâ€"game sevenâ€"hitter against the Caledonia juniors. He walked one and whiffed four. Kelly Pace knocked in Scott with a single in the second inning before Jeff Foster boomed a solo homer in the third. Gord Scott tossed a completeâ€"game fourâ€"hitter against the Caledonia â€" seniors. He didn‘t walk a batter and fanned six.Picâ€"Aâ€"Deli got both of its runs in the bottom of the fifth inning. on Paul Teague‘s twoâ€"run double. .. He followed that with PBs in long jump, shot put, high jump and 400m for a firstâ€"day total of 2,939 pointsâ€"an improvement of 160 from his previous high. Denes carried the momentum over into the second day, recording PBs in 110m hurdles, discus and pole vault. He narrowly _ . missed his best in javelin but finished the day by cutting seven seconds .. from his 1,500m time. y #*44%6% Oakville Picâ€"Aâ€"Deli moved above the .500 mark in the Triâ€"County Men‘s Fastball League with victories of 2â€"0 and 4â€"0 over Caledonia seniors and Caledonia juniors recently at Lowville Park. Joe Denes had personal best perforâ€" mances in eight of the 10 events at the Ontario Multipleâ€"Event Championships at York University, recently. And the 23â€"yearâ€"old member of Oakville Athletiques Track and Field Club just missed tying a ninth by oneâ€" hundredth of a second. The near miss came in his opening event, the 100 Denes takes it personally: MAJOR MOSQUITO Pro sports attire is hot And don‘t think that dreamed of being a pro quarâ€" _ terback dies after university, either. t "From the stats I‘ve seen, it‘s getting older," affirms Spencer, referring to consumer trends in repliâ€" | ca sportswear. "It‘s becoming a babyâ€"boomer thing." _ These being the kinder, gentler ‘90s, however, the _ boomers still dreaming of sinking the winning basket are willing to share their reflected glory with children, . "When I see kids running around with jackets that retail for $200, I‘ m a little surprised," jokes Spencer "If I had asked my parents for a $200 Chicago Bulls jacket, they‘d have slapped me." VA According to Scott Kitto, manager at Oakville _ Comet Sports, the craze of replicaâ€"wear sprang from _ a source much more violent: L.A. gangs donning the black and silver of the National Football League‘s _ Raiders. V "It was a cult thing, a status symbol with the gangs" down there," he said. "Then the rappers started wear. _ ing it and now rap is in. I think music has really got a hold of this." o Perhaps in memorial, then, the Raiders look is still marginally in, along with other mainstays like the _ Bulls, the Bills, San Jose Sharks and, lately, Florida _ Whoever the consumer is, they are keeping sports _ stores booming. Kitto estimates a general sporting goods store could make up to 50 per cent of its proâ€" _ ceeds on replica items. For stores selling only % licensed goods, an annual tally of $1 million wouldn‘ t be shooting too high. _ _ _ "* So what does this mean for the consumer? _ / It means spending $20â€"35 for a capâ€"inevitably // worn backwardsâ€"$90 to $200 for a crested jersey; _ $20â€"30 for a Tâ€"shirt and anywhere from $150 to 7 $2,000 for a jacket. o And if the critics say that seems a bit steep, just _ ask them this: How much would they spend OBCE Marling. And replica fever is also catching fire with wmu,*j’ often "hung up on Doug Gilmour," Kifto says, . _ _ Mighty Ducks tip. While they‘re thinking about it, remember the WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 199% PAGE20 â€"| _ QUALITY PLASTICS 3 (Steve Marinic 2, Nicho Canteenwalla), ARCADE ROOFING 1 (Matthi Medeiros). BOYS UNDER 8"C" c OSC WINNERS 5 (Greg Westone 4, Justin Becker), CARE 1 (Mike Gatulli). ’ PPG 1 (Daniel Leravalier), OSC ROYALS 1. y CENTRIFUGAL COATERS 4 (B. Heaslip.2, Stephane Bador, Mike Zuchiatti), PL. AUTO 4 (Da Hodgen 2, Mait Baric, Ivan Tonas). ‘f’ BOYS UNDER 9"A" a MICHAEL‘S HAIR DESIGN 4, (Jeremy Thrush Ross Hyndman, Sagal Ushi), NAKED SO SEAFOOD GRILL 0. â€"= MAPLE GROVE MOVIES (Christopher Hopkin®s, Robert Knox, Michael Lamantia), OSC MASTERS (Michae! Chereshneysky, Andrew Drummond, Matthow Friesen). $3 BOYS UNDER 8"A" s SOC WINNERS 9 (Nicholas Dodge 8, Jordy McMillan), MOTOROLA CELLULAR 3 (Justin Maydanski 2, Brent Evans). _ _ ___ ~" ___ THOMAS ABRASIVES 8 (Kevin Silber 2, Blake Wilson 2, Kyle Koivu 2, Patrick Farrer, Kristophe Viahovic), BOBESICH LAW OFFICES 1 (Martin _ OPTIMIST CLUB (Geoffrey Byers, Drew Patterson, Ante Skoko), MAPLE GROVE MOVIES Christopher Hopkins, Michael Lamantia, Simon Vanâ€" _ HOWARD JOHNSON (Alex Hall, Isaac Hall, Christopher Heath), MAMA‘S IN THE KITCHEN (Hank Martyn, Daniel Parmar, Andrew Pyza). _ " J â€"â€" HALTON PHARMACY SPEERS ROAD 6 (Maik Doble 3, Jason Butler, Michael Barrett, Shane Davig), CHAMNEY INSURANCE 1 (Michael Bemaby). . > â€"â€" PEAT MARWICK THORNE 1 (Nie! Murray), AWESLEY PAVING 0. 4 TIM BITS #7 (Vite Fancone, Adam Berniker, Frank Dragone), TIM BITS #8 (Jordan Partridgheâ€"Hill, Richard Campbell, Chris Peebles). & BOYS UNDER 7"C" HOWARD JOHNSON (Daniel Bilof, Kenneth Kalvaitis, Brian Butler), OSC BLUE JAYS (Thomas Kennedy, Jonathan Lee, Anthony Pirrofta). i _ MAMA‘S IN THE KITCHEN (Evan Bawks, Patrick Stoneburgh, Kenii Tanaka), OSC MASTERS (Danial Koutoulakis, Stephen Richards, Jeffrey Sebben). _ > _ OPTIMIST CLUB OAKVILLE (Mark Irish, Mark D‘Amico, Drew Patterson), OSC BLUE JAYS (Jordan Allendale, Mich. Club spokesperâ€" son Barry Taman said Cranmer wis in tough competing with the likes ‘Gf Ray Elgaard, Fairholm and backup Dan Farthing. He was drafted in the. fourth round of the 1992 entry draft, a 6 Y

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