Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-03-26, Page 12b• GREG RUDER, scoring sensation for the New Hamburg Midgets, was selected as most valuable player in the B division of the Wingham Midget Tournament. The trophy was presented by Jeff Lockridge. AAA CHAMPIONS at the 1984 Wingham Midget Hockey Tournament are the London Sabres, with a 4-2 win over Waterloo Sunday night. Bill Brown presented the winner's trophy to Scott Turner, captain of the Sabres and MVP of the AAA division. AAA RUNNERS-UP—Steve Aebersold, captain of the Waterloo Midgets, was presented with the runners-up trophy in the AAA division following his team's 4-2 loss to the London Sabres Sunday night. Bill Brown made the presentation. N. burg takes B crown B RUNNERS-UP—Bolton Captain John Murray ac- cepted the runners-up trophy in the B division after his team was edged 6-5 in a shoot-out in the championship final against New Hamburg Sunday night. Making the presentation was Jeff Lockridge. The Wingham Advance -Times, March 28, 1984 Page 11 Wingham Midget Tournament Results .from the final weekend Waterloo came away 5-4 winners over Dearborn in the first game of AAA division action Saturday morning. The game was close throughout, Dearborn emerging from the first period with a 1-0 lead. Waterloo rebounded in the second period to take a 3-2 lead into the dressing room, then held on to record a 5-4 victory. William Cartrette scored three goals for Dearborn in a losing cause while Bill Lasky added a -single. Rob Kempel scored twice for Waterloo, with Rod Doucette, Jim Fetter and Mike McMillan each scoring once. McMillan fired the game -winning goal with 5:04 remaining in the final frame. Stratford 6, Milton 4 John Noble and Clarke Singer paced Stratford to a 6- 4 win over Milton with a pair of goals each. Mark James and Jerry Noble added the singles. . Milton led through most of the contest, emerging from the opening period with a 1-0 lead. The teamkivere tied at two after two periods, but Milton led 4-3 with just 5:29 remaining before Stratford struck for three unanswered goals in the last four minutes. Chris Austin, Trevor Riebot, Steve Scanner and Ed Morgan were the Milton scorers. London 9, Hylanders 3 Scott Turner paced London Sabres to a 9-3 win over Michigan Hylanders, scoring four goals. Craig Lyon added three while Fred Wallis and Scott Davis had singles. London was in control from the outset, taking a 3-0 first -period lead and maintaining that margin with a 5-2 lead after two periods. London Sabres win AAA champions The London Sabres, led by a three -goal performance from captain and tour- nament MVP Scott Turner, played a solid game Sunday night to win the AAA division championship at the Wingham Midget Hockey Tournament. The Sabres made the most of their chances to down the perennially strong Waterloo Midgets 4-2 in the title game. London grabbed the lead on a power play just over six minutes into the first period and never trailed throughout the match, although Waterloo kept the score close right to the end. Fred Wallis THE S00UARt PARKT HELD OVER 2ND WEEK TNT PARK ANNOUNCES 1.00 TUESDAY EVERY TUESDAY ADULT i .YOUTH PRICES WILL BE '2.00 ALSO NEW REDUCED CHILDREN S. SENIORS 9.50 NIGHTLY EATRE SHOW TIMES GOOERICH 524-7011 FRI. — SAF. 7 i R,2 SUN.-THURS. S:OO 11 ACADEMY AWARD Nominations WATCH FOR7HE Tfl RE -OPENING OF THE MUSTANG DRIVE-IN got the goal with assists from Turner and Dave 'Mac- Pherson. Waterloo came back to tie the score four and a half minutes later, with Mike Geminari getting the goal from Dean DeSilva. However Turner got his first goal of the night from John Wilson and Craig Lyon on another power play to give London a 2-1 lead going into the second period. London struck quickly in the second to stretch its lead to 3-1, as Turner picked up the puck near centre ice just after the opening faceoff, skated in alone on Waterloo goalie Dave Jensen and fired a hard shot over his shoulder into an upper corner of the net. Waterloo got that one back less than a minute later with an unassisted goal by Rod Doucette to make it 3-2, but Turner's third goal of the night, from Mike Lees and Glenn Brennan, near the midway point of the period gave London its final margin of victory. Both goaltenders played strongly in the game, with London's. Chris Willie displaying an especially aggressive and roaming style. • The referees kept a close eye on the game and, though nothing serious developed, both teams played • short- handed for much of the time. Waterloo lost in the penalty department as well, with 36 minutes in penalties, all minors, to 32 for London. NEW HAMBURG WINS IN A SHOOT-OUT In the B division title game which closed the Midget tournament Sunday night, New Hamburg had to beat back a challenge from a surprising Bolton team to win 6-5 in a shoot-out. New Hamburg, with stick boy Alan McCormick behind the bench after Coach Keith Ferguson had been suspend- ed as the result of a penalty - riddled game against God- erich'earlier in the day, and with pint-sized Bantam goalie Trevor Hunter in the net, held a 2-0 lead after two periods and appeared to have the game under con- trol.' However Bolton, which played come -from -behind hockey all weekend, did it again Sunday night with goals two minutes apart early i41 the third period to tie the game. New Hamburg regained the lead on scoring star Greg Buder's second goal of the game with 2:20 left to play, only to have Bolton battle. back 29 seconds later to knot the score again. When New Hamburg scored again to take a 4-3 lead with 43 seconds left in the third period, - it looked like the game was finally over. But Bolton would not give up and, with one second left on the clock and the net empty, tied the score again during a scramble around the goal when a New Hamburg • player ac- cidentally batted the puck into the net while attempting to clear it. Action slowed during the 10 -minute overtime period, with both teams showing the effects of their second game of the afternoon, and neither was able to score. This resulted in the second shoot- out decision of the tour- nament (the D title also was decided in a shoot-out the previous weekend). Hunter, a first-year Ban- tam who Scarcely reached the crossbar of his own net, gave up a goal t the first Bol- ton shooter, but stopped the Phone 357-1630 for 24 hour movie PLAYING FROM FRI. TO THURS. MARCH 30TH TO APRIL 7TH. SHOWTIMES FRI. AND SAT. AT 7 AND 9 PM. SUN. TO THURS. AT 8 PM ONLY. LAST TWO DAYS FOR THIS OUTSTANDING MOT10N PICTURE WED. AND THURS. MARCH 28TH AND 29TH. NOMINATED FOR 11 ACADEMY AWARDS. SHOWTIME ONE SHOW AT 8 PM ONLY. MR A.WINOfP SHIRLEY Mk.- LAINE - )ACK NR. HOLSON information A beautiful woman is like a symphony. Bt can drive you crazy if you think someone else Is scoring. /j i1 IStollPAl11NOMT sic 41'6;Atik"' DUDLEY MOORE NAST)SJJA KWSKI iY second and poke -checked the puck off the stick of the third. Meanwhile New Hamburg scored on two of its three shots to win the game and the title. Buder, who was selected as most valuable player in the B division, led the way for New Hamburg witlk three goals and two assists, while Sandro Favot had. two goals for Bolton. The Bolton team was undoubtedly the most snappily -dressed of the tournament, with all team members in shirts and ties between games, and the coaches enforcing order and discipline. HYLANDERS CAPTURE AAA CONSOLATION The Michigan Hylanders, one of two U.S. teams playing in the AAA division of the Midget tournament, downed a depleted Milton squad 8-3 to capture the consolation trophy Sunday afternoon. Milton, with only 10 skaters., in its line-up following several injuries, grabbed a 1-0 lead on an early power play in the first period. However the Hylanders came back to tie the score in the first period and then took control in the second and third periods. The Hylanders scored four times in' the second, in- cluding a late goal witheight seconds remaining, to take a commanding 5-2 lead into the final period, when they added three more. Milton replied with one goal in each period. 1 Kevin Alexander and Scott Townsend led the way for the ,Hylanders with two goals each, while Daryl Noren had a goal and four assists. Top player for Milton was goaltender Sean Carnegie, who was tested with almost 50 shots, many of them coming in the third period when Milton ran into,..penalty problems, taking bine of the 10 minors called during that period. Owen Sound 6, Oakville 4 penalty in this game and, as Owen Sound defeated Oak- the referee kept the game ville 6-4 in one of a number of sheet to make his report, no penalty -filled matches in the further information is tournament. Mach team was available. assessed 32 minutes in mirror New Hamburg 10, penalties during the game, Goderieh 7 Oakville picking up ad- Playoffs for the cham- ditional fighting and cross- pionship of the B division checking majors as well as a resumed Sunday afternoon, match penalty. Goderich and New Hamburg Owen Sound took the early facing . off in a goal and lead at 5:49 of the first period penalty -filled marathon. with both teams playing a The teams traded goals in man short, but Oakville came back to tie it a minute and a half later and then took the lead with a goal early in the second period. Owen Sound scored three times in the second period and early in the third to take a 5-2 lead, before Oakville . began to rally with two quick goals just past the midway. point of the third period. However a major penalty for cross-checking and a match penalty to Mark McCormick with four and a half minutes left to play killed the rally and Owen Sound added an empty -net goal to make the final 6-4. Waterloo 8, Stratford 0 Waterloo rolled to an 8-0 win over Stratford in the second round of play, Jim Way leading the way with three goals. Brett Johnson scored twice and Mike Geminari, Jim Fetter and Steve Aebersold connected for one goal each. Scott McDonald registered the shutout. Milton 6, Dearborn 2. Darren Shaw was a one- man wrecking crew, scoring six goals for Milton as they defeated Dearborn 6-2. Trevor Riebot assisted on three of the goals, while Bill Laskey and Dallas Hayley were the scorers for Dear- born. London 4, Owen Sound 1 Trevor Wardell gave Owen Sound a 1-0 lead early in the first period, but London rebounded with four goals to take the win. Wardell's goal was the result of great second effort. His first shot struck the post and as he moved in for the rebound he was knocked against the goal. He warded off the check and one -handed the puck across the red line. Before the period ended, Scott Davis drilled a shot past the Owen Sound goal- keeper to tie the score. HEIGHTEN LUSTRE Wash pearl jewelry often with a mild soap solution to remove harmful chemical deposits from perfumes and hair sprays. Oils from the skin on the other hand, are not harmful, but heighten the lustre of pearls. the early going and the game was tied 2-2 until New Hamburg scored three goals in the last 10 minutes of the second period to grab a 5-2 lead. Goderich came back with three goals of its own in the first two minutes of the third to tie the score again at 5-5. New Hamburg scored two more to take a 7-5 lead, but once again Goderich came back to tie. However, with just under three minutes ' remaining New Hamburg got two quick goals to lead 9-7 and added its last marker in the final minute. Greg Buder sparked the New Hamburg attack with four goals and five assists, while Trevor Jutzi added four goals and two assists. For Goderich, seven dif- - ferent players scored goals. New Hamburg also drew 41 minutes in penalties in the game, resulting in the suspension of the coach for the final match, while Goderich was assessed 33 minutes. Bolton 7, Meaford 6 Bolton played come -from - behind hockey, scoring three third -period goals while holding Meaford scoreless to pull off a 7-6 victory. The victory was aided by a match penalty to Shawn Hill of Meaford for kicking a Bolton player, as Bolton took advantage of the power play to score the winning goal. Aside from the match penalty, this was one of the more penalty -free contests of the weekend, Meaford drawing 19 minutes in the box while Bolton took 12. Meaford jumped into a 3-0 lead in the first period before Bolton came hack to make it John Wilson put London ahead in the second, working hard in the corners. He passed to Craig Larmer, moved to the slot and took a return pass and rifled a shot past the helpless netminder. Jay Melville made it 3-1, drilling a shot from the slot. Scott Turner rounded out the scoring with a goal late in the game as he warded off a defender and jammed the puck beneath a sprawled netminder. Hylanders 8, Oakville 2 In the.,P,?f-final game of Saturday's AAA action, Michigan Hylanders dumped Oakville 8-2 in another penalty -marred contest. There was another match Duplicate bridge club Wilfred French and George Chaulk took top honors at the duplicate bridge play last Thursday evening. Harley Crawford and Jim Alcorn were second, Norma Parker and Pat Hay third and Bert and Mary Mathers fourth. Brownie comer; 3-1 after 15. minutes. •The teams exchanged goals in. the second period, which ended with Meaford holding a 6-4 lead. Bolton thenrallied for three unanswered ;goals In the third period to win the game 7-6 and advance to the B championship game against New Hamburg. Michael Norris paced Bolton with, three goals and one assist, while' Steve Cramp had three goals and one assist for Meaford. AAA CONSOLA TION—Tom Michigan Hylanders, trophy following afternoon. Making of the Wingham Kinsmen his Davis, captain of the the AAA consolation over Milton Sunday presentation was Bob Hewines Club. accepted 8-3 •team's the win By Tammy Thynne We went into our Six corner. I am a Sprite. We have six Brownies in my Six. I mark the dues and who is here. Now we get the Six quiet and form a circle. Then we sing our song. We say our promise, motto and law. Group A went into the kitchen and learned how to make tea and toast. We are going to make tea and toast for different people. Groups B and C are working on the Dancer's Badge and Snowy Owl (Dilys Chapman) taught, them. Danielle Heibein and Kara Neil put on a puppet play. Lori Angus got her Thrift Badge. Danielle Heibein received her Toymaker's Badge. Tharen Keil worked on her Weaver's Badge and Knitter's Badge. Anita Massey received her Pet Keeper's Badge and Weaver's Badge. Erin Skinn got her Baton Badge and Tammy Thynne received the Writer's Badge. Most of the Brownies are going to a swim party and Group A is going on a hike. Howick Atoms led by Hensall in playoff series FORDWICH — The final WOAA playoffs for the Howick Atoms started last Monday against Hensall. The two teams battled to a 5- 5 overtime tie. Philip Livermore led the Howick team with three goals. Andrew Weber picked up two goals, while Jason Douglas had three assists. Last Wednesday evening Hensall edged Howick 2-1. Kyle Wheeler scored the' lone Howick' goal, assisted by Weber. Hensall edged the local team again Last Saturday by one goal, winning 4-3. Howick goal scorers were Livermore, Douglas and Wheeler . Hensall now leads the siX- point series five points to one. B DIVISION CHAMPS—Phil McCormick, captain of the New Hamburg Midgets, was presented with the B divi- sion championship trophy following a 6-5 shoot-out win over Bolton in the concluding game of the Wingham Midget Hockey Tournament Sunday night. Making the presentation was Jeff Lockridge, grandson of Walter Lockridge in whose memory the tournament was originally started. A HAPPY JEFF STRICKLER, captain of the Ayr Midgets, accepted the consolation trophy in the C divi- sion from Mary Houghton. Ayr staged -a dramatic come - from -behind win to score a 5-4 victory over Elmira in the consolation final during the first weekend's action at the Wingham Midget Tournament. B CONSOLATION—Coach Andre Caouette and Captain accept the 8 consolation trophy from Harvey Heinmiller Listov.el 6'5 in the consolation final last weekend. Dave Robinson of Tilbury after their team defeated 1