Oakville Images

Oakville Beaver, 13 Feb 1994, p. 20

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

MACKENZIE (8 to 13 years of age) GOLD 5): Oakville skiers were prominent in the race. On the girls‘ side, Susie Davis and Stephanie Grell placed second and third both for their own team and overall while John Henry was the top finisher for his team and second overall for the boys. Susie Davis also managed to post the fastest run of the day for the girls. Allâ€"star results: the Mackenzie allâ€"star race was held at the Alpine Ski Club in Collingwood with 120 skiers in attendance from throughout southern Ontario. Milion Heights sent two boys and two girls, including Oakville‘s Susan Davis who finâ€" Milton Heights 116, Cedar Highlands 76 (Feb Fieldfresh 4 (goals to Scott Granlund 2, David Kennedy and Anthony Lograno; assists to Kennedy, Alex Smethurst, Darko Kunovic and Andrew Kreston), Granville Const 3 (goals to Eric Goodman, Kuljit Roopra and Bryan Pozzobon; assists to Scott Townsend 2, Goodman and Matt McAdam}). Reliable Life 4 (goals to Matt Card, Matt Carley, Stephen Blackler and Adam Mahamed; assists to Card, Adam Smolensky, Rob Thompson and Jeanâ€"Paul Cadeau), Mail Boxes Ete 1 (Mait Modestino from Rocco Albanese). Boots Pharm 5 (goals to Luke Robinson 2, Aaron Beeton, Mathew Strong and Jeremy Fiorino); assists to Robinson 2, Becton, Gerrick Gaudet, Philip Niles and Tim Fabey), Trafalger Village 2 (goals to Mike Burns and Jamie McMahon; assists to Eric Goulart, Chris Taylor and Adam Shipp). (Jan. 24) Mail Boxes Ete 3 (goals to Dan Partington 2 and Patrick LeBlanc; assists to Adam Craig 3, Adam Burella and Chris Henderson), Boots Pharm 3 (goals to Luke Robinson, Jeremy Fiorino and Philip Niles; assists to Robinson, Jason Priest, Aaron Beeton and Dan Valley). Granville Const 3 (goals to Eric Goodman, Ben Nease and Kuljit Roopra; assists to Scott Townsend 2, Goodman and Jesse Herdman), Trafaiger Village 3 (goals to Mike Burns, Mike Romano and Chris McEvoy; assists to Marc Medciros 2 and Adam Shipp). Reliable LIfe 2 (goals to Adam Mahamed and Jeanâ€"Paul Cadeau; assists to Cadeau, Adam Smolensky, Rob Thompson, Justin Brown and Ryan Godin}, Fieldfresh 2 (Scott Granlund with both goals; assists to Kyle Jollymore and Dan Clark). (The following are games played Jan. 17) ‘Reliable Life 3 (goals to Ryan Godin 2 and Adam Mahamed; assists to Mahmed 2 and Godin), Granville Const 1 (Scott Townsend from Mark Cardeal and Adam Chantaj). Boots Pharm 4 (goals to Luke Robinson, Mathew Strong and Rodrigo Amaral; assists to David Green 2, Strong, Amaral, Tim Fahey, Mark Digulio and Dan Valley), Fieldfresh 3 (goals to Scott Granlund 2 and Ian Mitchell; assists to Terry Koufidis 2, Kyle Jollymore and Matt Goodwin). Mail Boxes Ete 2 (goals to Rocco Albanese and Dan Partington; assists to Albanese and Raymond Roland), Trafaiger Village 1 (Jamie McMahon from Marc Medeiros and Dan Peixoto). BANTAM WHITE (Jan. 31) Optimists 2 (goals to Shane Pepin and Wes Chen; shutout to Trevor Dykstra and Jamie Ringler), Kiwanis 0. Young Drivers 1 (Shane Lawrence), Teasers 1 (Aiman Younis). FPID 4 (goals to Hassan Kocsis 2, Greg Bell and Andrew Reston), Country Squire 3 (goals to John Samcoe 2 and Marcoantonio Dodaro). (Jan. 17 results) FPID 3 (goals to Hassan Kocsis 2 and Michael Lau), Teasers 2 (goals to Michael Foley and Aiman Younis). Kiwanis 1 (goal to Sean Killen; shutout to Rob Cuss), Young Drivers 0. Country Squire 7 (goals to Marcoantonio Dodaro 3, Scott Everingham, Alex Clafton, Danny Purcell and Mark Ledinski), Optimists 4 (Richard Santa 3 and Ryan Turcotte). (Jan. 10 results) Country Squire 5 (goals to Mark Lepinski 2, John Samcoe, Kenny Clark and Marcoantonio Dadaro), Kiwanis 2 (goals to Kevin Shao and Matt Brayman). Optimists 7 (goals to Ryan Turcotte 2, Shane MINOR ATOM WHITE (Jan. 31) Milton Heights Ski Club (Glen Eden) Minor Oaks Hockey Association Oakville Sports Scoreboard Milton Heights 121, Oshawa 65 (Feb. 6): Oakville‘s Leslie Grell was second best for the girl‘s team, finishing third overall. Allâ€"star results: the Hershey allâ€"star race was held at Mansfield Ski Club last Saturday (Feb. 5) with Milton Heights represented by four females and four males. The top male finished sixth overall and the top female finished seventh overall. ished 58th overall. The team‘s top local female placed 29th overall while the top boy placed 46th overall. HERSHEY ALPINE (14 to 19 years of age) RED TEAM Milton Heights 96, Skyloft 89 (Feb. 6). WHITE TEAM Somerset 5 (goals to Jean Derosiers 2, Ameet Patel, Adam Walker and Eric Futterman; assists to Vishon Seegobin, Walker, Adam Kerr, Futterman, Desrosiers, Andrew Wood and John Craft) Trafalger Golf 2 (goals to Ken Lay and Jackson Downey; assists to James Shpley, David Marriott and Jamie Butler). Fastfrate 4 (goals to Chris McKenzie 2, Darren Simmon and Dylan Mitobe; assists to Kyle Leonard 3, Ivan Timpa, David Evans, Chris McKenzie, Neil Ltirrat and Dylan Mitobe), Royal Bank 1 (Matthew Robinson from Patrick Leahy and Andrew Bowden). NOVICE RED (Week ending Jan. 29) Sherwood Corp 2 (goals to Mike Swanson and Ryan Hobart; assist to Hobart), Huggins Chiro 1 (Matthew Turner from John Roberts). VWV Enterprises 5 (goals to Luke Harper, David Seguin, Hunter Cape and Ryland MacDonald; assists to Kent Rahman, Anthony De Nino, Daniel Weston, Harper, Seguin and Cape). Blazer for Men 4 (goals to Matthew Dempster, David Modjeski, Joseph Savelson and Kevin Anderson; assists to Ryan Lourenco, Bryan Whitney, Dempster, Karl Wulf, Andrew Kotulak and Modjeski). Altech 5 (goals to Eric Johnson 2, Geoff Miller, Brett Cherney and Christopher Hanson; assists to Christopher Mundy 2, Cherney, Sean Da Costa, Jeffrey Bentley and John Muddiman), Ferrone Fitness 2 (both goals to Craig MacMillan; assists to Kyle Patriquin and Lisa Csima). ATOM GIRLS (Jan. 30, 29) Oakville 2 (goals to Stephanic Pazzi and Merritt Bluhoy; assists to Kyra Nabeta and Amelia Moy), Guelph 1. Oakville 3 (goals to Merritt Bluhoy 2 and Amy Beil; assists to Shanna Cooke 2 and Lauren Schmidt), Mississauga 2 MINOR PEE WEE RED (Jan. 22) Dafco 5 (goals to Chris Bisson 2, Rob Raham 2 and Luke Domski; assists to Miro Majorahn 2, Chris Assaad, Logan Chambers, Kallen Saczowski and Carey Copeling), Mattamy Homes 2 (goals to Chris Gassi and Jeff Wojeicki; assists to Gassi, Andriy Rewilak and Marc Daniels). Bronte Home Hardware 4 (goals to Derek Gow, Harris Vines, Arda Ocal and Mark Lozer; assists to Glyn Manwaringâ€"Jones, Derek Mumford and Rich Carson), Sullivan Hawks 3 (goals to Marc O‘Brien, Dante Costantini and Neil Vidyarthi; assists to O‘Brien, Ed Wishloff and Peter Mazzonetto). Bell Phonecentre 9 (goals to Jordan Ince 4, Jeremy Davidson, Adam Granlund, Brad Guy, Mike Thomson and Richard Stronach; assists to Thomson 2, Stronach, Guy, Ince, Granlund, Davidson, Jeffrey Garrand, Trevor Pritchard, Derek Friesen and Alison Goodman), CanRoss Courgars 6 (goals to Mike Curcio 2, Daniel Rosso, Callen Clancy, Luke Riddell and Kevin Albrecht; assists to Riddell, Clancy, Rosso, Terry Edgdar and Tyler Spraggs). PEE WEE RED (Jan. 29) Pepin 2, Chris Pennycook, Wesley Chen and David Denby), Teasers 2 (both goals from Aiman Younks). Young Drivers 5 (goals to Peter Kolodziej 2, Mike Alviano, Matt White and Mike Spudowski), FPID 3 (goals to Roy Reston 2 and Mike Lau). GIRLS NOVICE C (Jan 23 and 9) Hamilton 3, Oakville Hornets 1 (Abby McMillan from Christina Alexander). Oakville Hornets 4 (Goals to Leanne DaRosa, Rachel Ressner, Lauren Mackonka and Christina Alexander; assists to Lauren Mackonka, Helen Halbert, Torie Moore, Christina Alexander, Leanne DaRosa and Leign Mascherin), Stoney Creek 4. Cap off your meal with a great dea After you‘ve enjoyed the delicious taste of McDonald‘s, check out our Olympic caps. They come in four exciting colour combinations, each with a melton wool top, sturdy suede peak and fully adjustable leather strap. They‘re only $6.99 each plus tax and McDonald‘s will donate 50¢ to the Canadian Olympic Team with every cap purchased. Supplies are limited, so collect all four before they‘re gone Members of the Oakville precision skating club‘s senior team are seen in action during a recent workout. The club also fields teams in three other age categories. (Photo by Riziero Vertolli) Making their mark _ with grace and style "It‘s exciting," says 10â€"yearâ€"old rookie team member Jacqueline Fisher. "I like being part of a group." But thereâ€" are really no superlatives available to describe the seemingly effortless grace displayed by the members of the Oakville Precision Figure Skating Team â€" they just have to be seen. As for the work â€" which includes one weekly fourâ€"hour session as well as five workouts on her own time â€" she likes the challenge. "It‘s not easy to do." The team trains four levels of skaters â€" juvenile, aged 12 and under; novice, aged 15 and under; By GORD KOLLE Special to the Beaver * they glide gracefully over the _ ice, occasionally darting _ around i unacmary obstacles like a school of minnows or a flight of swallows. Each team member gets up to five hours practice a week. The typical training day involves an hour of offâ€" ice stretching and calisthenics to _ warm up muscles, followed by a few hours ice work to fine tune various parts of the program the team will perform. When melded as a team the skaters have to rely on each other to perform the program. So a selfless work ethic is promoted â€" there is no room for prima donnas or supersensiâ€" tive egos. "If a skater has a problem with this, we usually take them aside and point out the trouble," says head coach Brenda Bradica. During September‘s tryouts, the coaches set up a pattern of basic skills that they want the skaters to become proficient in. senior, aged 12 to 24; and adult aged 12 to 32. The goal is to win the Canadian Challenge. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1994 Page 20 The Oakville precision skati club is hosting its annual open \$ house at Oakville Arena on Thursday, February 24. All four teams will run throwg their routines beginning at 7 and the evening will conclude w’ a reception in the Kinsmen Pine Room. j "It‘s expensive but it‘s worth it," says executive board member Kmf Warren, who has a daughter on the" team. ~ "The sport stresses competitiveâ€" ness, responsibility and discipline. 1 think it rounds them out and makes them better people." 4 Operating the team is not cheap. Costs run from $125,000 to $150,00 a year. And it‘s funded solely throug J contributions. Most of the money « comes from parents, raffles, draws and corporate sponsors. n 1 "It‘s good discipline. You learn to work with a team and you‘re always practicing." 4 Assistant coach Heather Rapson > enjoys her double role with the team Besides coaching some of the 4 younger skaters, Rapson skates on th team herself. § "I like the fact I can stay competi= tive skating and at the same time _ . improve my coaching skills." 4 The enthusiasm generated by the skaters carries off ice too. Winning* through team effort has always appealed to 19â€"yearâ€"old Lisa Jamieson. Jamieson,19, who has bee skating with the team for eight years: She says skating skills and a posiâ€" tive attitude are the benchmarks used to select team members. "They can have all the talent in the world but if their attitude is negaâ€" tive we can‘t use them." The coaches put each skater through an individual program which mimics the working facets of the _,~ team program. : Rules allow the use of up to six alternates per team. The role of alterâ€" nates is important because they fill in when regular team members are sick. It‘s tough to relegate skaters to the ~ backâ€"up role but every understudy will always have the chance to make the regular team, says Bradica. _ Open house on Feb. 24 Bradica,38, has been coaching figâ€" ure skating for 18 years. She‘s a pleasant, friendly person but a persisâ€" tent and demanding taskmaster when it comes to coaching. 1994 McDonald‘s Restaurants of Canada Limited

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy