Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 1 May 2014, p. 33

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•T h e IF P • H alto n H ills, Thursday, M ay 1, 2014 33 15 MOUNTAINVIEW RD. N., GEORGETOWN 905-877-2296 www.georgetowntoyota.comFor inventory & pricing visit us at www.georgetowntoyota.com 2014 COROLLA CE MSRP $18,300 Finance or Lease From as Low as 0.9% HURRY IN SPORTS "Quote/unquote" 'Thankfully I was able to catch everybody.'-- Snowboarder Audrey Shieh ... see pg. 34 The Halton Hills Sports Museum Hall of Fame will welcome five new inductees at its eighth-annual ceremony on Thurs- day, June 19 at the newly renovated John Elliott Theatre. The 2014 inductees are: Timothy Mur- dock (athlete), Dan Ralph (builder), Bri- an Hayward (athlete/builder), Kaitlyn An- drews (athlete), Dave Kentner (builder). Tickets are $40 each and are available by contacting Glenda Nixdorf at 905-873- 1360. A reception will be held at 6 p.m. with the awards ceremony at 7 p.m. Visit the website hhsm.ca for more in- formation. Below are profiles of each inductee: Kaitlyn Andrews Retirement at age 23 sounds a bit pre- mature for any sport, but star shot put and discus thrower Kaitlyn Andrews was able to achieve all of her major goals dur- ing her relatively short career. Andrews, now 25, was a multi-sport competitor growing up, earning Acton High School's athlete-of-the- year on four occasions. It was at track & field practice, however, one day at Stewarttown Middle School when a shiny silver ball soared through the air that An- drews got hooked on throwing the shot put, and later on, the discus. Seven times Andrews would stride to the OFSAA podium to collect gold medals in either discipline during her four years at AHS. She accepted a full athletic scholar- ship to attend Stephen F. Austin State University in Nacogdoches, Texas and by the time her stay there had finished in 2011, Andrews held the school's outdoor shot put record of 15.76 metres, won two Southland Conference titles and gradu- ated with a degree in kinesiology. Her debut representing Canada at an international meet came in 2006 when she placed 21st at the World Junior Track & Field Championships in Beijing, China. Andrews also wore red and white at two Pan-American Junior Championship meets, placing sixth at the 2005 shot put event in Windsor, Ont. and fifth in the 2007 games in Sao Paolo, Brazil. Her father Bruce, a middle-distance runner, was inducted into the HHSM's Hall of Fame in 2007. Andrews is current- ly a physical education teacher at AHS, just as adoptive mother Anne did. Brian Hayward An undrafted all-star netminder out of Cornell University, Georgetown's Brian Hayward went on to enjoy a decade-long NHL career and remains in the spotlight today as a TV broadcaster for the Ana- heim Ducks. As a youth, Hayward played in the AA Four Town league in Georgetown before moving on to the Don Mills Flyers as a bantam, later suiting up in Jr. A for the Markham Wax- ers and Guelph Platers. By his senior year at Cornell, he was named to the All-Ivy League Team and earned All-Ameri- can honours by making a school record 2,225 saves, re- sulting in a contract offer from the NHL's Winnipeg Jets. Hayward's breakthrough season in the pros came in 1984-85 with the Jets when he posted a 33-17-7 record. He was dealt to Montreal just after the Canadiens won the Stanley Cup in 1986 and subsequently earned three straight Jennings Trophy awards alongside Hall of Famer Patrick Roy, collecting 71 wins in his four-year stay with the Habs, which included a Stanley Cup appearance in 1989 and another as a Minnesota North Star in 1991. Picked up by the San Jose Sharks in the 1991 dispersal draft, Hayward was in goal for the expansion franchise's first regular-season victory before back inju- ries forced him to call it a career at the age of 33. He wasn't out of the sport for long, however, as another new California-based team, the Anaheim Mighty Ducks, began play in 1993 and hired Hayward to serve as colour analysts on its broadcasts. On-air stints with CBC's Hockey Night in Canada, ABC, ESPN and NBC's 2006 Winter Olympics coverage followed, al- though he's continued calling Ducks' games since the club's inception. Dave Kentner The man who scored just once in his minor hockey career has achieved more goals as a builder in the Halton Hills sporting community than he ever could have imagined when he began sell- ing draw tickets for grocery hampers at Georgetown Raiders' intermediate home games in 1972. Now 69, Kentner helped design the team's first program and moved up through the Raider executive ranks until becoming VP of hockey opera- tions and gen- eral manager in 1980. By that time, Georgetown boasted a power- house team that won six OHA ti- tles by the time it captured the Hardy Cup Canadian cham- pionship on home ice in 1982 by sweep- ing the Quesel, B.C. Millionaires in three straight games. Kentner, who operated a catering busi- ness and his Mill St. Dairy Bar while spending countless hours at the rink, was a master volunteer recruiter and fund- raiser, serving as president and GM for the Sr. A Raiders and later the Jr. B Gem- ini, along with overseeing the amalgama- tion of the two Georgetown youth hockey groups. He was also instrumental in founding the Georgetown Hockey Heritage Award in 1977 and received the honour on its 25th anniversary. Kentner also helped es- tablish the Halton Hills Sports Museum and its Hall of Fame, of which he's now an inductee. Tim Murdock Although hockey was his first love as a youngster, Tim Murdock's interest turned to motorcycles as a teenager and it was that need for speed that drove him to a successful racing career. The 47-year-old mechanic with the Brampton Fire Department started out with motorcycles in 1980 and was soon classified as an expert in both motocross and dirt tracks, winning the Borra Fall Series 125cc Canadian Short Track Champion- ship in 1982. Murdock, a Glen Williams native, would earn 20 ma- jor motocross trophies in the 80s at tracks around Ontario, winning the feature race in the 358 Dirt Modified Division at the Ransomville Speedway in N.Y. and the Niagara Tri Track Rookie of the Year award. His attention turned to automobile racing in 1990 and the transition was smooth, with Murdock crossing the fin- ish line first in his very first heat at Ran- somville, where he'd also capture his first feature race in 1996 over 35 laps. With a pit crew consisting of Arm- strong Garage owner Dave Armstrong, Art Bull and Craig Jay, Murdock man- aged to stay competitive with the #58 car against drivers whose full-time job was racing with corporate sponsorships. See MURDOCK, pg. 35 Five new members in Sports Hall of Fame By EAMONN MAHER Staff Writer BRIAN HAYWARD KAITLYN ANDREWS DAVE KENTNER TIM MURDOCK

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