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HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Advance-Times, 1980-10-22, Page 13The Wingham tronme. +Gowiled the Via ii"ng C 111telj Mustangs 744 before a .good hometown ' crowd ginalay; extendin thiel? .sabeaten string: to xaree .gaaalen. The duo of ?dark Frayne and Tom Reirn11) tong ac- counted for five of the seven goals scared inthe eonteet. Remington, who, ;d a hat trick, was on th, ,ice for all seven goals; F ayne, who had four point d .on two goals and two asts, saw action for. six. of theseven, and line - mate Grant Gnay was in on four of the seven. Together they were an awesome force, .,completely dominating play while they were on the ice. The Ironmen emerged from the first period leading by three on two goals by Frayne and one by Remington. The play started in the corner as Gnay cen- tred to Frayne. Remington took his man down and out of the play as Frayne unloaded from the slot, and the Ironmen led 1-0. At 12:02 Frayne stopped the puck betiveen his own blueline and centre ice, skated in along the boards and •unleashed a deadly shot which beat starting goal - tender Jim Heilman between the pads. Four minutes later the Mustangs were coming out of their zone on a power- play when Remington, fore - checking, Vas able to steal the puck at the Clinton blue - line .and skates in, beating Heilman on the stick side. The Ironmen continued to i• 4, t. • ire# oa►a 1ifith a faeeofl deep mz, 10ton:: territory, Frayne won it .ley and directed the paeJ to Renliington, who guiieklyonverted it for second tally. With- five minutes .rerainiag, Brad Armstrong drilled, one• past Doug Gamble to give the `Stange' a big lift, butwith the more aggressive play came a high sticking penalty to Steve Lobb and the threat died as the Ironmen went on a . powerplay. Frame, standing near the left boards, made a cross -ice pass to Remington at the goal' mouth. He batted the puck out of the air and the home club enjoyed a 5-1 lead after 40 minutes. Clinton staged its biggest threat in the third, but brilliant work by the defence Hockey Continent I?re. p It in eeeond a out.: forte.a i m y A a Noel l ng.rele. Oda the help of his teal lm ... , the Imam were? Of]sur- vive 'a two -m - vantage. After the : am returned to, full streng a1, PeteGroeddll made .goo.4 on his She; from. 30 feet . ut. Two Minutes later .inahan's point 'shot gave i the home club a commanding 7-1 lead. That score held up until the last minute of play, when Paul Stephenson drilled a shot from the point which eluded Gamble's glove. Tom Remington ' earned the first star of the game as he registered the club's PUMP, 1)011 01 dl i al1p 0 1 \and broke upnungeyol attache with his for checking, , Mark Fraylne,' who lea the Ironmen With five goo and five assists in tree. games, was the second star, notching goals.four and,;five ' together with two assists. Re continues to prove dangerous in the,', visitor's. end. Larry Donaldson, who was blanked as far as points concerned, was the fid,.. star. His two-way play complemented the team's .' total effort. The sum of $34.25 was won in the 50-50 draw, however the winner's name was unavailable. Refs need closer supervision By Peter Bauer What was an entertaining contest in the Ironmen game against Hanover Friday night deteriorated into head- hunting fiasco as Referee Rick Williams lost control of the players in the final 10 minutes. It appeared that he would rather be home watching, the Kansas City Royals and Philadelphia Phillies play than earn his WINGHAM IRONMEN JR. "C" STATISTICS UP TO AND INCLUDING OCTOBER 19,1980 INDIVIDUAL. STATISTICS G.P. G. A. PTS. PIM. + 3 5 5 10 2 8 2 3 3 3 6 6 5 1 3 0 5 5 4 5 1 3 4 0 4 4 6 2 3 3 1 4 6 3 1, 3 2 1 3 8 6 1 3. 2 1 3 2 7 2 3 2 1 3 6 4 1 3,- 2 1 3 0 3 1. 2 1 2 3 0 4 0 3 1 2 3 13 3 0 3 0 6 3 10 6 0 2 0 2' 2 0 5 1 2 0 1 1 2 3 2 3 0 0 0 20 6 1 3 0 0 0 0 7 2 PLAYER :Mark Frayne Jay MacLaurin Grant Gnay Tom Remington Pete Goodall Brian Tempos Dale Whitfield Gord Kinahan Larry Donaldson Ken Cousins Jerry Hoggarth Mike Montgomery Dennie Knox Ken Higgins Ed Haines Len Stamper n -• . GOAL TENDER M.P. G.P. G A AVG- PIM. S.O. Don Higgins 60:00 1.00 2 2.00 0 0 Doug Gamble 120:00 2.00 5 2.50 0 0 TEAM RECORD Games Played - 3; Wins - 3; Losses - 0; Ties - 0. Goals - For - 25; Against - 7. Hat Tricks (2) Jay Maclaurin and Tom Remington. WINGHAM, ONTARIO PHONE 357d630 FOR 24 HR. MOVIE INFORMATION Ea 111111112111111 ENDS WILLIE NELSON,K, THURSDAY OCT, 23 _ All ® FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCT. 24-25 - PLEASE NOTE SNOWTIMES - ■ 2 Showin s each at 7:00 and 9:00 .m. • ■ • • 1 SUNDAY in TO THURSDAY ,.o0.26to30 Showtime 1111 8:00 p.m A Fantasy. A Musical, A Pace Where Dreams Cone True pay and referee the game he was assigned. His lackadaisical, ap- proach was far from funny. In the last five minutes of the game, and particularly on the shift of a Mr. Pete Jobb, he was content either to ignore or completely over- look venlook the obvious. While on the ice Jobb took cheap shots at every lrgdmen player he skated ' near . either with a cross check with the -stick high, on the upper body or with his elbows and gloves. Having taken a number of cheap shots and gotten away with them, he proceeded to see how far he really could go, and believe me it was indeed too far. The use of face protectors in the form of barred masks that most players have grown accustomed to wearing was supposed to cut down on the number of cuts to the face and the fighting. However it seems that more and more players are getting their sticks up and the little players as well as the more solid individuals are taking advantage of the protection in order to intimidate their opponents. Add ineffectual refereeing to that and you soon face far more,. serious injuries from the " irres- ponsible acts of a minority of players. - _ There were no major penalties in the contest Friday, but there should have been. Placing the futures of these many talented players in the hands of someone who seems to be not really concerned is a serious problem, -and one that someday may prove fatal. There should be a closer review of the pule entrusted with the over- seeing of these games, and it should be done soon. Maybe not enough has been said on this subject, but enough for now. TOM REiNGTON, 14, narrowly missed on a close -In scoring chance In the sec- ond' period'of the Ironmen's 9-2 romp over Hanover Friday night. (David Tiffin Photo) un ors record second win in out of Hanover Barons The.: ,$ham Ironmen travelled, Hanover Friday nightand game away win- ners al; they soundly defeated' the Barons 9-2. What was "'.an entertaining contest deteriorated into a headhunting fiasco in the final 10 *lutes as Referee Rick Williams lost control of the players . (see Hockey Tom Remington opened the scoring on a powerplay with a great individual effort as he made a good move to break betttYeen two defen- ders. His initial shot was blocked 'as he was hauled down dont:. behind, but he was able t „poke in his own 'reboundtplgive the club an early 1-0 l ►;,d. Minutes later the Ironmen found themselves up by two. Dale Whitfield was on the receiving`' end of a lucky break •when his weak shot 4 { ■ IRO Areollygad hi! (-1 O liw Illacomat r_ntsT% tt!aReuwu. L. ,.a...-r-__� __ -_ - - •- I°%"t :�..acaa v,, c, uackelaild shUT from r(iani in ironT of tris net In the game against Hanover Friday night. However the Ironmen made good on many of their scoring opportunities to take a 9-2, win over the Barons. (David Tiffin Photo) ■ WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22 -OCT. 25 SHOWTIMES: WED.-THURS.-8:00 P.M., ' FRI. 8 SAT.: Big Brow! - 7:00 FU MANCHU-8:45 I3R�WL 0 PtetorSQIIQrs h iQ�di#h plot of iltfeh ancliu SUNDAY, OCT. 26 -OCT. 30 Sun.-Thurs. One Showing 8:00 P.M. The Latest Fashion...In Murder. MICHAEL CAINE AHG1E DICKIjNSCGN NANCY ALLEN A Brian De Palma Film DRESSED TO [(ILL nit !Tait t GODOFtiCti 0 H e� PHONE 524 7A11 AIR CONDITIONED PROGRAM SUBJECT T CIWANG WI HI GOING, GOING . . . Defenceman Ken Higgins of Wingham fret -linen takes Clinton's Greg Flowers out of the ploy In the Sunday afternoon game. Wingham ran Its winning streak to three games with a 7-2 victory over Mustangs, (David Tiffin Phot®) from inside the blueline'took a weird bounce in front of Jeff Schutz, eluding his glove hand: Joel Klassen got the Barons back in the game when he broke in with a three -on -two. The Wingham defence was spread out and he skated up the middle between them, beating Don Higgins 'who tad a great game in net. Less than a minute later Mark Frayne restored the two -goal margin with the help of Grant Gnay. Frayne passed to Gnay, who skated deep to the right side pulling the only defenceman with him. After eliminating him from the play,.Gnay made a good pass back to Frayne, who converted it for the score. Pete Goodall made it 4-1 on a good- pass from Jerry Hoggart during a powerplay with 8:17 . remaining, rounding out the scoring in the first. The Ironmen kept rolling in the " ' middleii time; chalking up, three more before the Barons replied late in theixeriod. Jay Mac- Laurin netted his first of the night at _ the 6:24 mark. He was positioned in the slot and his initial shot went wide of the,mark, but the rebound off the backboards came right back to him and he made no mistake on his second chance. Just over two minutes later Larry Donaldson stepped into a shot from the blueline, handcuffing Schutz, and the Ironmen led 6-1. MacLaurin added another on a powerplay at 11:58 after Gord Kinahan worked hard in the corners on both sides of the goal. After taking a shot himself, he chased the rebound into the corner and outhustled the Baron defender to centre the puck to MacLaurin, who cashed in. The Barons scored their second and last of the night while the Ironmen were playing two men short. The defence was scrambling as Dan Levis drilled one from 30 feet out to finish off the second period. In the final 20 minutes MacLaurin . added the finishing touch, completing his 'hat . trick with 4:34 remaining. Kinahan fired the last one home after making a neat move through the Baron defence. Don Higgins was the winner in goal for the Ironmen, turning aside 35 of 37 shots. He looked very good in the last few minutes, especiall when he was forced to come up with three -con- secutive, saves front close range in a 10=Seeond span with the Ironmen playing shorthanded. It's refreshing to see the Ironmen winning after being ,outshot for a change. Their first three losses in exhibition play came with the team holding a wide margin of shots in its favor. So far the Ironmen have been outshot in both regular season games and have won both handily. BANTAMS Theresa Kenyon was the top girl bowler as she cap- tured both the high single anddouble with 125 and 226 respectively. Ricky Leach - Irian did the same for the boys, playing a 176 forthe high single and totalling 298 for the double. The Bluejays are in top spot with 14 points while the Eagles sit in second with 12. The Canaries are next with 11 points followed by the Orioles, 10; Falcons, 9; and the Hawks, 5. Games of 100 points or better were managed by Julie Leedham, 101; Theresa Kenyon, 125 and 101; Sheryl Cleghorn, 113; Jennifer Willis, 124; Jeffrey Wall, 118; Mike Fraser, 115 and 131; Terry Deer, 118; Jeremy Cameron, 106; Denton Chambers, 122; Jeremy Schefter, 114 and 125; Ricky Leachman, 176 and 122; Jeff Iollenbeck, 123 ; Robbie Harkness, 102; and Mark Wickhorst, 101. JUNIORS Sandra Moffatt bowled 177 for the girls' high single while capturing the double with 283. Graham Taylor caught the boys' single and triple with 221 and 351 respectively. The Roses and Tulips tied for first place with 15 points each while the Carnations hold down second with 11. The Crocuses and Daisies are fighting for third with 10 points followed by the Poppies, 4. Those bowling 150 -point games or better were: Michelle Cameron, 154; Sandra Moffatt, 177; Janice King, 170; Cheryl Willis, 158; Michael Cameron, 150; Brian Steffler, 150 and 153; Jimmie English, 167; and Graham Taylor, 221. SR. JUNIORS AND SENIORS Debbie Henry was the high junior girl bowler, playing a 233 for the single and 524 for the triple. Brett MacDonald bowled a 182 for the junior boys' single while Jamie Wall managed 474 for the triple. , Kim Rae played a 236 'for the senior girls' top single and Sheri Walden tallied 553 for the triple. David Scott bowled a 256 for the senior boys' top single while Barry Haugh managed the triple with a 670., Lori's Lions have taken the lead in the team standings with 20 points followed by Air Supply,' 17; Hot Stuff, 16; Power Play, 13; Pin Pushers, 11; and the Stingers, 7. Games of 175 or more were played by Sheri Walden, 184 and 216; Mtn Rae, 238; Debbie Scott, 180; Audrey Baxter, 200; Debbie Henry, 233; Lori Gavreluk, 193; Debbie Hoy, 179; Brett MacDonald, 182; Jamie Wall, 179 and 176; David Scott, 256; Barry Haugh, 253, 228 and 1$9; Brian Hoy, 203 and 180; Ricky Edgar, 217; and Billy Gaunt, 181 and 248. WED. NIGHT LADIES Biue Jays lead with 27 points, followed by Hum- mingbirds with 21 end loot Owls with 19. Meadowlarks and Arctic Eagles share fourth with 13 points and Jenny Wrens have 12. Jeanette Scott had the 300 high single and Shirley Storey the_ 726 high triple. Other ?AQ. games were recorded by: Shirley Storey, 257, 221, 248; Mary Lee, 293; Janet McAdams, 208; Jean King, 217;'" Florence Thompson, 219; Kim Rae, 258; Jeanette Scott, 200; Janet Storey, 216; Elda Nethery, 201; Joanne Harrison, 203; Christine Foxton, 213; Brenda, 'inley, 236. Spares were Marjorie Cook and Kim Rae. THURSDAY NIGHT Linda Wall captured the ladies' high single with 246 while Diane English totalled 606 for the triple. Keith Mof- fatt was top man bowler, Slaying a 318 for the high ingle and 698 for the triple. In the team standings Diane's Trans Anis are in top spot with 26 points while Marg's Monte Carlos are in second place with 22 points. Coree's Colts are next with 16 followed by Grant's Grand Prix, 15; Sharon's Rabbits, 14-oand-Cathy'&Ehtnkers;12: Those who bowled games' of 200 points or more were: Diane English, 202 and 236; Linda Wall, 246; Helen Daugherty,' 219; Coree Gibbons, 204; Marg Moffatt, 225; Sheila Walker, 201; Agnes . Farrier, 207; Karen Moffatt; 205; Bruce Pew - tress, 258; Grant Wall, 216 and 238; George Skinn, 203, 212 and 236; John Fisher, 217 and 202; Keith Moffatt, 318; Les Fisher, 227; and Art Burrows, 203. Thanks to the evening's spares Karen Moffatt, Bruce. Pewtress, Jack Coultes, Marie Phillips and Len Phil- lips. n.. SENIOR LADIES b^- High singles were bowled by Wilma Kerr, spare, 190; Nora Finnegan, spare, 186 and 183;, and Catherine Campbell, 172. " Wilma Kerr, Nora Fin- negan and Catherine Campbell„ also bowled high • doubles with 338, 369 and 325 respectively, together with Louise Swanson, 310. In the team standings the Diamonds are in top spot with 12 points followed by the Aquamarines, 11; Tur- quoise, 8; Topaz, 5; and Sap- phires, 2. FORDWICH MIXED It seems there's no stop- ping Nellie Allan as again this week she pulled a Miss Piggy and hogged the and 609 triple! Gerald Matheson did it all for the boys, with a 245 'high single and 645 high triple. Other games over 200 were recorded by Gertie Lambkin 204; Nancy Conley 226; Jean Ashley 209; Janice Behrns 203; Bruce Kennedy 228; Scott McLean 202; Gerald Matheson 220. en ileipt . 1 Coffee Klatch Donna Oiiom draw, . Those 200 POWS f Shirley Storey,, Ja Edna Arnnsbron Tolton, Louise Beth Skim cheson. T'EESWA."�A � fl the high single l ,, With 266 and 6.02 lively.. ' other scores of or more were hD Kathleen gotta Brenda Reinhart; and Nary Haughton; Evelyn's C,otiui top spot in the, - dings; with 26 pow foto by Marilyn's Mix+ tiwo Kathleen's CatifsSws, points each; i eopa's Nuts, 22; Alice''s A « . and Nancy's B .a.) i WROXETER Gord Kaster f for the men's hi totalled 646- for tier ' e The ladies' ton: pb was played by Donna , l tt, 220, with the high triple being howled by Siulrll -' Feiie , 512. Games of ._200' points or more were ►anagen McMichael, 252; Bob, Allen, 207; Wes Bali, 200 and 211; Roland Bennett, "202; ._'Ken Pellett, 226:; :. Butch . Stone, 200; Roti :ennett, 210; Shirley Peliett, 203; Gord Koster, 218 and 265; Donna Bennett, 220; Randy Hut- chinson, utchinson, 202 and 233; and John Wheeler, 213, 211 and 202: BLUEVALE 1VIIH, The ladies' high single and triple were bowled by Reta Ross with 292 and 822. respectively. Les Brewer was the top ,man bo$er, capturing the single.and triple .' with 297 and -,:.666 respectively. Other scores of 200 points or -more were managed. by. Wiinnie' Boyd Shaw, 204;,,Sharonn'Day, 201 and 211; Terry Trites, •2112; Les Brewer, 200; "Haney Timm; 285; Bonnie Brewer, 247 and 203; Milt -Boyd, 255 `2nd 219; Harris Campbell, 203; Reta Ross, 260 and 270; Jim Shaw, 202 and 213; Etoile Johnston, 205 and 244; Bill Greig, 202; Harold Johnston, 265 and Dorothy Thompson, 230 and 218. { ,r. Lions Bingo Teeswater Town Hall 'u`4L 117., LJCT. 4g: 8.00 pmt. • All Cash Prizes This is the last Lions Bingo until after Christmas, so plan to attend! ••a•••••0•O tl Choose anything you want from our stock of ports oorments and accessories snowmobile suits, helmets, .gloves boots sweaters, hots, speedometers tachometers, electric starters trrnlnrs snow- mobile covers and so on( ex• eluding Lynx rind Kitty Cot. c.N.D. %,.,p,s ,KM c., nv.n .,Ve, wovn n1R u,, .. , rvv„ 1 . . ,,..n.• , ng4 fOa1... 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