Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-01-12, Page 11lues Contin the Royals a By Bill Johnston The Harriston Blues continued to frustrate the Wingham Royals as they showed little mercy skating to decisive 7-4 win last Friday night in Wingham. Thefirst period belonged to the Blues as they struck early, storming the, Royals end and after a flurry of shots from close range, Brent Reading potted the. .puck at 2:45 for the first goal of the game after the fifth uninterrupted scoring effort. This set the tempo of the period as the Blues bom- barded the Royals net from all angles and before the •••••••. • • • • Pfl • TH period ended, Don Mock, Russ Friesen, Burt Newman and Bob Reid each had singles to give the Blues a 5-0 lead after one. The local Royals certainly were not in the game as the best they could muster was a mere four shots on the Blues net, all smacking of weakness and a lack of sting. In the second, the Blues seemed to let up somewhat with such a commanding lead and the Royals put out a little more desire and effort. Their best chance came in the mid -part of the stanza as a Jay McLaurin pass sent Rick Jacklin in alone, but w••io•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •__ _ . _ SUN. -MON. 4:00 • • • • • :This time he's fighting for his life.* THE SQUARE • 1ODERICH TR 524-7811 WED.-THURS. 8:00 P.M. LAST DAYS FOR linenriGarsivei4 Distributed by Universal Pictures and Associated F,In ITstnbutton ®1982 Universal Crts Studios. Inc®I, i'NNrN rat ! GVIDMNCI � ion STARTS FRIDAY, JAN. 14 FRI.-SAT. 7 * • STALLONE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •l • • - Mvuu ,��MfcoM.p MIMr NI BRUTAL VIOLENCE COARSE LANGUAGE THEATRES BRANCH ONTARIO • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .• •••• SPECIAL SHOWING SAT.. JAN. 15 AT, MIDNIGHT TILT e to dazzle er 7 win Blues goalie Dan McMullen stood his ground to make the save. The Blues raised the tally to 6-0 with Wayne William's goal at 15:20. The odd Royals' fan lacking faith left early, but the true-blue Royals sup- porters who stayed were treated to 20 minutesof exciting hockey as the Royals showed some class as they never gave np and kept working. Hard workopaia off in four goals by Rick Jacklin, Doug Stevenson, Ron Ben- nett and Kevin Carter to make the score 6-4 andput the Royals right back in the game. However, with fear of a loss facing them, the Blues managed to get a big goal at 13:44 by Brent Manderson and skated from the ice at game -end with a 7-4 victory. WHISTLE STOPS—The first period had to be one 'of the worst 20 minutes of effort displayed by the Royals this year or did it just appear that way due to the strong display of excellent hockey with never-ending skating and hard-hitting checks put forth by the Blues. Yes, Harriston seems to have that knack of setting up. those . excellent scoring chances and giving a goalie nightmares with those deceiving screened shots. They certainly have depth at every position which was brought home as their seven goals came from seven different shooters. A, tip of the hat to the Royals who didn't give up, kept working and certainly 'made a game of it ` A word of praise to some of the Royals lighter guys,'Murray Black, Dave Gofley and Carter; although smaller in size, they kept buzzing at the Harriston oaks like roaring chain saws and their courageous efforts seemed to spark the Royals' effort in the third. Nice to see Carter pick up a goal, a just reward for continued pestering and perseverance. The Royals lost the services of Jay McLaurin in the second with a knee injury. In the game draws, a regular Royals supporter, Allen MacDonald, won the big pizza donated by the Pizza Train and one of the Harriston ladies won the "Share the Wealth" draw. The next Royals game will be this Sunday at the local arena at 2:30 p.m. against the Paisley Maroons. Second -period slump leads to lronmen loss By Pete Bauer The Wingham Ironmen journeyed to Walkerton last Friday night where they suffered a 6-3 loss at the hands of the Black Hawks after a bad letdown in the second period. The Hawks capitalized on the Ironmen's lethargic play throughout the second when the local boys surrendered four unanswered goals allowing Walkerton a 5-1 lead. That margin proved too much for the Ironmen to overcome even though they played extremely well through the first and third. The two clubs skated to a 1- 1 draw after the first 20 minutes .with the Hawks taking the lead on a power- play with 6:27 remaining in the period. They enjoyed good movement of the puck while the Ironmen played shorthanded. Then Brian Weber came in from the corner and passed to Jeff Davidson on the lip of the Phone 357-1630 for 24 hour movie information STALLONI This time he's fighting for his life. PLAYING FROM FRI. JAN. 14TH TO THURS. JAN. 20TH. SHOWTIMES: FRI. AND SAT. AT 7 AND 9 PM SUN. TO THURS. AT 8 PM 1AO.Side Ng OS ACCO PAMIMRMT TWO DAYS ONLY - WED. AND THURS., JAN. 12 AND 13 SHOWTIME 8:00 PM Never before in the endue history of human dvlliea$on has there been a motion picture calked.. MONTY PYTHON cmP4,-.., LIVE AT THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL CHILDREN'S MATINEE SAT. JAN. 15TH SHOWTIME 1:30 PM 414 +. tipll Apo se THE 1111IESTOOGES crease and Davidson had an easy tip -in through the legs of Mike Campbell. Wingham's Len Stamper evened the score on a screen shot with 2:53 left on the clock, firing through a screen set-up by Brian Tenpas and two Walkerton defencemen. Walkerton's goalie, Scott Fritz, was beat cleanly through the pads. In the second period, singles by Mark Walters, Kevin Kieffer, Dan Davidson and Jeff Davidson's second goal of the evening gave the Black Hawks a comfortable 5-1 lead as the Ironmen looked completely disor- ganized, standing flat-footed and failing to piek up a man in their own zone. Three of the four goals came on rebound shots as the Hawks were left alone in front of Campbell. The fourth goal was partially blocked by Campbell, but it managed to slip through the arm dropping behind the red line. The Ironmen attempted a comeback, but the margin was too big and they brought themselves to within three goals by the period's end as Ken Cousins and Rick Scrimgeour scored for the lronmen. Wayne Mills replied for the Black Hawks. Recreation Report BY RENNIE ALEXANDER Rec. Director With winter just about here, you will want to pre - register for the "Outdoor session" of the cross-country ski seminar to be held Wednesday from . 7-8 p.m. (registration, that is) at the Lockridge Memorial Arena. The actual seminar will be held Saturday from 1-3 p.m. behind the F. E. Madill Secondary School. For further information, please contact the recreation department at 357-1208. Remeinber, there is parents and tots skating every Tuesday from 9:30- 10:30 a.m. and Thursdays from 1:30-2':30 p.m. There also is adult skating every morning, except Wednesday, from 10:30-11:30 a.m. The hockey games this week at the arena are: Thurs., Jan. 13, 8 p.m., Midgets vs. Hanover; Fri., Jan. 14, 6:30 p.m., Atoms vs. Mitchell and 8 ringette game; Sat., Jan. 15, 9 a.m., Atom game, 3 p.m., Pee Wee B game, and 8 p.m., In- termediate Ladies vs. Teeswater ; Sun., Jan. 16, 2 p.m., Royals vs. Paisley and 8 p.m., Juveniles vs. Milverton ; Mon. Jan. 17, 9:30 p.m., Industrial hockey, Craw- fords vs. Staintons; Tues., Jan. 18, 8 p.m., Bantams vs. Brussels and 9:30 p.m., Industrial hockey, Bridges vs. Advance -Times. \`➢\�\\\ c:.:C 3. 'oS:;,�.x�\�T,a7•. F :�i �` r "`;;:a::4:i;``a•`.:�.;: Y1 X� • r NO ROOM—Wingham Captain Ken Cousins is checked by two Kinuck players as he prepares to shoot during a powerplay in the game between the lronmen and Kincar- dine on Sunday. (David Tiffin Photo) Royals trim Maroons 42 in Paisley arena By Bill Johnston The Wingham Royals returned to their winning ways Sunday at Paisley with a 4-2 win in a penalty -filled contest. Paisley jumped into an early lead as Gord Howard connected at 2:31. Mike Montgomery, with a twinkle in his eye, got that one back as his old sparing mate from Junior days, Steve Smith, watched from the penalty box. Then Wingham's Ian Montgomery shifted his scoring gear into production with a pair of goals with assists on both tallies going to Ron Bennett and Dennis Knox to give the Royals the upper hand at the end of the first with a 3-1 lead. Paisley went on the of - Tykes outgunned 7-0 by Clifford The ,Wingham Optimist Tykes were defeated 7-0 by Clifford in a game last Thursday. Shane Wanless opened the scoring at 2:04 of the first period. During the remain- der of the period, the Wing - ham boys kept Clifford from scoring. Ivan. Skinn and Murray MacLeod dragged the puck out of their end and took it away from Clifford forwards. Marc Poulin, Matthew Hunter and Brad Hunter fought hard to get the puck into Clifford's end, but in their scrambles around the net were not able to get a good shot on goal. In the.second period, Jason Bosomworth and Andrew Ross each got unassisted goals for Clifford. The hard play of Mike Tiffin, Ryan Deyell and Jonathan Lane could not penetrate the strong Clifford defense. During the period, Todd. Harrison and Brendan Magee saw a lot of action as they tried to hold off Clif- ford's attackers. The Wingham defense was backed up by Andrew Gibson, who stopped a flurry of hard shots on net. In the third period, Mat- thew Elmslie stood out, playing an aggressive period, going for the puck and fighting for possession. Barton Cameron and Gavin Hodgins skated Clifford's fast forwards off the'°puck. Jonathan Balzer forced back the Clifford attackers and Andrew Forrest cleared the puck up the boards. However the Wingham boys could not hold off the attacks, as Wanless scored twice more for the hat trick. Jason Hefkey and Mark Bosomworth each scored and Jason Bosomworth and Hefkey drew assists, to make the final score 7-0 for Clifford. Duplicate bridge play The Wingham Duplicate Bridge Club met over the fire hall last. Thursday evening with the following winners: first, Mary Lloyd and Louise Welwia d&! Second, Jean Whitby and Jim Alcorn; third, Margaret Mundell and Inez McGill; and, fourth, Mary Caslick and Kay Forgie. fensive in the second, out- playing the Royals, but despite outshooting the local team, the Maroons were able to put only one behind Ron Smith and that at 16:29 by Captain George Campbell when Paisley enjoyed a two- man advantage. 'There was close checking in the third with the Royals picking up foolish double penalties on two occasions. Only some fine penalty - killing work kept the Ma- roons off the score sheet. Despite picking up the bulk of the penalties, Rick Jacklin left the,,Paisley power play with a little egg on its face when he picked up •a short- handed goal for the only tally of the period sending the Royals home with a big 4-2 victory. WHISTLE STOPS — With- out a doubt, this was Ian Montgomery's best game of the season as he picked up a pair of goals and an assist as well as switching back to de- fence in the last half of the game where he played a steady game at the blueline. Bennett was flying with three big assists. Smith, once again in the Royals' net, came up with some big saves, especially in the second frame to keep the opposition off the score sheet. Mike Montgomery and that old thorn in his side from Junior days, Paisley's Smith, tangled in the second and were sent for early showers by referee Don Freeman. For Paisley, George Campbell played a steady game at the blueline and was in on both of his team's goals, with a goal and an assist. I�a'sley will be in Wingham this Sunday for a return match at 2:30 p.m. and it should be a good close one. Let's hope the Royals can keep those big wins coming asthey strive to regain second spot in the league. Lions Midgets take Brussels team 6. - 2 The Wingham Lions' Midgets spotted Brussels an early first -period goal and then came roaring back to down the visitors 6-2 last Thursday night in the Lockridge Memorial Arena. It took Tim Fritz only 46 seconds to score and put Brussels in the lead 1-0 in the first. Mark Foxton tied the game at 4:31 from Ed. Sweeney and Jeff Cameron. Steve Nicholson put Wingham ahead to stay at 11:08 assisted by Brett Cameron and Doug McFarlan gave Wingham a 3-1 lead at 13:18 assisted by Paul Kenyon. Brett Cameron opened the scoring in the second at 2:35 Atom B team ties Ayton 3-3 The "Wingham Atom Bs with Bill McGrath in goal played to , a three -all tie against Ayton at the Wingham arena Sunday. Following a scoreless first period, Wingham jumped into a 2-0 lead in the second period on goals by Peter Poulin and Michael Elmslie. Poulin's goal was unassisted, while Elmslie's was assisted by Chris Heibein and Donny Hein - miller. Ayton fought back with one goal in the second period, scored by Greg Patterson, and then tied the score with a goal by Mike Hahn in the early stages of the final period. Wingham again took the lead when Elmslie scored his second goal of the game, assisted by Mike Lewis, but was unable to hold on for the win as Hahn 'scored an unassisted goal in the closing rhinutes to force the tie. There was only one penalty in the cleanly -played contest, a tripping penalty to Jason Balzer of Wingham in the third period. Next action for the Atom Bs is Jan. 15 at 9 a.m. against Ripley; all parents are urged to make a special effort to come out and cheer for the boys assisted by Tim Brown. Six minutes later, Jeff Cameron made it 5-1 with assists going to Rob Willis and Foxton. The teams traded goals in the third with Kenyon denting the twine for Wingham at 6:43 from Paul Robinson and McFarlan. Rob Cardiff wrapped up the scoring for Brussels al 13:18 unassisted. The final score read Wingham, six, and Brussels, two. ICE CHIPS—Coach Bob' Sangster informed us that Byron Thompson has been released by the Wingham Ironmen Junior C club after breaking a finger. Byron should join the team in four weeks. The Wingham Advance -Times, Jan. 12, 1983—Page 11 Kincardine Kinucks thrash lronmen 9-2 By Peter Bauer The Kincardine Kinucks traveled to Wingham Sunday afternoon and skated to a 9-2 thrashing over the host Wingham Ironmen. The local team was unable to contain the fast -skating Kinucks and again failed to clear the front of their own goal allowing their op- ponents to converge on numerous rebounds to convert their opportunities into goats. At the same time, • the Ironmen attackers were held at bay in the last five minutes of the second period as they were stopped cold by Ken Weise who made some exceptional saves on. dangerous scoring chances. The Kinucks came out of the first s period with a 3-1 lead on goals by Dave Petteplace, Dave Fair and Craig Weise. The lone Ironmen goal was scored by Steve Lorenz while the Wingham team played shorthanded. In the middle frame, Dan Gossell and Larry Mac- Pherson added to the Kinuck total with Dave Montgomery replying for the Ironmen making it a 5-2 spread. In the final stanza, the Kinucks continued to roll over the Ironmen scoring four unanswered goals with Steve MacPherson potting two with singles going to Dan Wilken and Jeff MacTavish. The Ironmen will travel to Kincardine this Friday night to take on the Kinucks in the only game to be played this weekend. Ken Thompson was the winner of $30 in the 50-50 draw. Monique Cameron was the winner of a large express special pizza courtesy of the Pizza Train. The Ironmen will be holding a dance this Saturday night in the Wingham Armouries with dancing from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music by Pete Bauer and a hot lunch will be included. Clinton edged 4-3 by Lions Midgets The Wingham, .ions' Mid- gets traveled to Clinton last Saturday night and returned home with a 4-3 victory. It was a chippy game right from the start with Wing - ham's Doug McFarlan drawing a major penalty for fighting and a game misconduct at the halfway mark of the first period. Steve Nicholson also was given a game misconduct in the third. Nicholson did some damage before he left the game though, as he opened the scoring at 1:23 of the first, assisted by Brett Cameron and Tim Brown. One minute later, Wingham hada two -goal lead on a goal by McFarlan, assisted by Doug Wood and Jim Dennis. Clinton scored later in the period to draw with one goal. Nicholson picked up his second marker at the 8:40 mark of the middle period, assisted by Brett Cameron and Dennis. Cameron widened Wingham's lead to 4-1, on a goal from Bill Haines and Brown at the end of the second. Clinton added two unan- swered goals in the third to make the final score, Wingham, four and Clinton, three. ICE CHIPS—Blueliner Dennis came up with another solid performance for Wingham. He is developing into the epitome of a defensive defenceman. Snowarama is set for January 30 The largest annual snowmobile event in the world, Timmy's Snowarama for Easter Seals (formerly the Whipper Watson Snowarama for `Timmy), will be held in 27 locations across Ontario between Jan. 22 and Mar. 5. Locally, .the date for the ride has been set on Jan. 30, with Feb. 6 as a rain date. Snowmobile riders will carry pledges on courses of 100 km. or miles, with proceeds going to The Easter Seal Society's services for physically disabled children. Last year, thousands of Ontario snowmobile club members, volunteers, the snowmobile industry association, Molson's Brewery and a "who's who" of Canadian personalities combined to break the million -dollar target for the first time. This year the corporate ride is set for Feb. 6 at Bradford. In 1982, celebrities and leaders in business, industry and government managed to raise more than $500,000 in just one day. The Easter Seal Society, formerly the Ontario Society for Crippled Children, was established in 1922 to coordinate voluntary ser- vices for physically disabled children in Ontario which were provided by _service clubs. The society now includes 234 service clubs and maintains 23 district nursing offices province -wide. It runs five summer camps and provides substantial funding for the Ontario Crippled Children's Centre in Toronto, the Conn Smythe Research Foundation and the Blissymbolics Com- munications Institute. Also Available: Salad Bar, Daily Specials Monday to Saturday 7 a.m. - 1 a.m.