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The Huron Expositor, 1995-11-01, Page 9THE HURON EXPOSITOR, Hovontb.r 1, 1995-9 ♦•N HOT BAT FOR MVP - Kris Gemmell of the Kippen-area helped Conestoga College end Durham's two -season, 30 - game winning streak, and was named most valuable player for her efforts, as the Condors won the Ontario colleges title two weekends ago. Broomball round -up WINTH 2 ROYALS 0 Royals had plenty of players but were a little short on goals. Winthrop had a hot shot goal by Blaine Marks and Mike Thomas with backup from Joe Ryan. KNIGHTS 0 PARRLINE 2 The Knights have definitely had a much better game than this. Parr Line's Grant Greidanus can't believe that the ball went directly into the net! Not far behind came Dennis Dolmage. With smiling eyes, he closed up another night with a quick goal. A great pass came from Claude Poirier. RAIDERS 1 GRADS 10 What would the Raiders do without Mr. D. Hulley as he drills the ball directly into the net on the opposing goalie of course! Keen passing from Jack Holmes and Dave Kramers. Wow!! The Grads flew through this garne as a hat trick of goals was created by Tony VanDen Heuvel. Singles came from Chris Goris, Al Wynja, Steve Wynja, and lots of passes from Martin Wynja, Dana Bean, Mac O'Neill and Ray. Ruston. RUSTLERS 0 DUMPER 1 Dumpers practice and practice this play as their leader, Jerry Wright, takes the pass at centre ice and he tries to give it to someone else. His fellow team-mates know how kind and how very thoughtful Jerry is and they say, `No! Go ahead Jerry. You deserve the honour of scoring!' So, there goes Jerry. He shoots and he scores (on an open net) as the other team forfeited due to not enough fellow team-mates to field a team on the ice. Great goal Jerry!. SOCIALS 3 PERTH 0 Perth ladies couldn't buy a goal as numbers 15, 9, 28, 12 and all the rest of the fellow team-mates took shots but nothing was prosperous. However, those Socialite chicks were passing that ball left and right and into the net it would go. Susan McLachlan had a few 'horse shoes' as she captured two goals and a single went to shy Sandra Hunt. Awesome passes came from Diane Howson, Marion Hunt, Marg Henderson, Liz Coghllin and newcomer Betty Glanville. WINTH 0 PARR LINE 2 Winthrop's `wee' goalie just barely reached the top crossbar but don't get me wrong, she had moves that saved the score from climbing. She kept it a tow margin game! Yes! Mrs. Murray stand up and take a bow. You played superb. Parr Line had their usual squad, a line and a bit, but did manage to pop in a couple of goals scored by Cheryl Kruse and speedy Vicki Carter. Great' passes came from Glenda Chaput and Heidi Elliott. EASY RIDE 1 CYCLON 3 Riders manage to creep on the scoreboard as Jim Buttzi delivers the ball right into the net after a quick wrist pass from Al Wynja. Well! These Cyclones are undefeated as they win three games straight. A hat trick' was achieved from Adam O'Neil with assistance from Mike Dooreleyers, Dave Dixon and Eddy Heessels! NOV. 1 GAMES 9:00 pm - Winthrop Men vs Parr Line Men 9:50 pm - Perth vs Parr Line 10:40 pm - Socialites vs Winthrop NOV. 2 GAMES 8:30 pm - Grads vs Cyclones 9:20 pm Dumpers vs Raiders 10:10 pm - Knights vs Red Rustlers 11:00 pm - Easy Riders vs Royals College sports Gemmell on Ontario champion team Kris Gemmell hasn't done too shabby for someone who only took up fastball at the age of 16. Now 20 -years -old, the Kip - pen -area third -baseman drove to the winning runs in both the final and semi-final games to help the Contestoga Condors end Durham College of Oshawa's two -season, 30 -game winning streak and win the Ontario Colleges Athletic As- sociation championship at Loyalist College in Belleville the weekend before last. Gemmell, a former Seaforth District High School student, was named the most valuable player in the championship tournament, Oct. 20 to 22, and was also named to her league's first all-star team at third base at its concluding banquet. The second -year student at Conestoga hit every third time at the plate this season, finishing with a .333 batting average. At Belleville, Gemmell's winning RBI helped the Con- dors edge Seneca 4-3 in one semi-final. First -place and undefeated Durham crushed Canador 8-3 in the other semi, extending its lengthy winning streak. It ended the following game though when Gemmel! again drove home the winner, giving the Condors a 4-2 win and the championship. She is in her second year of business management at the Doon campus of the school, but still comes home to RR 2 Kippen every weekend. The Condors are coached by Seaforth native Brian Broome, now living in Kitchener and a public school principal in that area. Centenaires lose 2 Visions of easy )1 race vanish The Seaforth Centenaires got a taste of their own medicine Saturday night at Parkhill. The North Middlesex Stars came on strong, scoring five third -period goals as the Cents stumbled to a 6-3 .loss in the Ontario Hockey Association's Junior "D"evelopment League. But the night before in another Morenz Division match in front of a healthy crowd of more than 300 fans at Exeter it was Seaforth administering a bitter pill to the hometown Hawks. The Centenaires rallied from a 5-1 deficit late in the second period, to steal a point by equalizing in the dying seconds of regulation time td make it a 5 -ail tie. Still, Seaforth lost in sudden - death overtime and those hot Hawks remain undefeated and on top of the division, with games in hand on all the teams chasing them, except Mitchell in the basement. With a smidgin more than a quarter of their schedule now complete the Cents arc two points back all alone in second place, playing .700 hockey, three points up on third-place Lucan. But any visions Seaforth may have had about the Morenz being only a two or three -team race should have danced right out of their collective heads in the third period at Parkhill. The fourth -place Stars were full measure for the win and the better team on this night. And cellar -dwelling Mitchell remains a sleeper in fifth, with five games in hand on everybody but Exeter and with, as usual, a defensive record Ringette SEAFORTH & DISTRICT RINGETTE ASSOCIATION ( Oct. 28 ) Novice Mitchell 1 at SEAFORTH 2 SEAFORTH SCORERS: Randi Wilson 2. HIGHLIGHT: Wilson nets winner with 1:41 left in game. Tween A ( Oct. 28 ) Stratford 3 at SEAFORTH 6 SEAFORTH SCORERS: Kim Devereaux 2, Allison Devereaux, Marsha Denys, Jessica Finlayson, Jenny I)elVecchio. Tween ( Oct. 29 ) Mitchell 3 at SEAFORTH 3 SEAFORTH SCORERS: Jenny Ihuharme, Julie I'hillips, Stephanie Chalmers. HIGHLIGHT: Chalmers evens the score with 25 seconds left on the clock, Belle ( Oct. 29 ) Stratford 11 at SEAFORTH 2 SEAFORTH SCORERS: Marsha Miller 2. unior ( Oct. 29 ) Exeter 9 at SEAFORTH 12 SEAFORTH SCORERS: Abby Dietz 4, Danielle Kistner 3, Kendall Schenk 2, Michelle Gallagher 2, I leather Dale. Hawks resign Crowley The Mitchell Hawks have re- signed defenceman Jim Crowley of RR 5 Seaforth, a rookie with that junior club last season. Those Hawks have also released sophomore goaltender Adam Agar of RR 2 Seaforth, and replaced him with Scott Vosper who was with the Mitchell midgets last year. MOOR CAMPIIPJ.I. PHOTO SOCCER CHAMPS - This team from St. James School in Seaforth, coached by Teresa Finlayson, did not allow a goal while winning the recent elementary separate school title in convincing fashion. Back row from left: Jennifer Grobbink, Tanya Altman, Candice Fink, Barbara Hundt, Robyn Arts, Robyn Nash. Front row: Sarah Agar, Marsha Denys, Kim Janmaat, Jessica Finlayson, Kim Devereaux. Underneath: Melissa Van Bakal. hard to ignore with only 18 goals scored against thein in five games. The next two weeks should prove interesting. The Centenaires host ' the Lucan Irish this Friday and have a rematch with Exeter, only this time at the Seaforth and District Community Centres, the following Friday on "Meet THe Players Night". This Saturday they are in Bel- mont, and a week Sunday afternoon they host Mt. Brydges, near the top of the table in the other division but same tough Western Con- ference of the JDL. Saturday night at Parkhill veteran Aaron Lucas was superb in the Stars' net facing 48 shots, and the Centenaires' usually potent powerplay fired blanks twice when they had a two-man advantage, once for a full two minutes and on the other occasion for more than a minute, with Seaforth already sitting on an early 2-0 lead. Veteran Jamie Vowles spear- headed the Stars' comeback with a hat trick and two assists, and captain Chris Downie had two third -period goals, while the Centenaires were making numerous miscues in their own end of the rink. North .Mid- dleseg also fired 48 shots, first at Chris Lyndon then at Mike Stephenson, who related him in the Seaforth net about seven minutes into the third period. Dylan Wick, Steve Mclnally and Jason Henderson had the Seaforth goals. The Cents couldn't credibly use the excuse they were tired, as they were no more so than the Stars who were coining off a 7-4 loss on the road at Wel- lesley the night before. The Hawks looked like they were going to blow Seaforth away big time Friday, not missing a trick and jumping to a 3-0 lead with slightly more than six minutes gone in the -game. They led 5-1 with a little more than three minutes left in the second period. The Centenaires dominated the remainder of the game. Tim Barton's goal with 39 seconds left in regulation snatched the important point, and resulted in a mob scene in green of wild jubilation. Scan McCann's unassisted winner for the Hawks from a goal -mouth scramble midway through the five-minute over- time calmed things down a mite, but couldn't take away the moral victory. The many fans got their money's worth. Nate Burns of Clinton had a couple of nice gcx 1s for the eventual winners. Don Rivers, Kalen Carroll, Menially and Henderson also scored for the Centenaires, with Scott Wood tending the Seaforth net. 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