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The Seaforth News, 1953-06-25, Page 7HIECa Vert SPORTS COLUMN e' When a teats loses, whether it's in base- ball, football, or hockey, you know who is first in line to get the blame, The (teach, That's axiomatic of sport, And though Canada is reasonably tolerant in spurts matters, we've known of conches chased out of jobs beeanse they didn't have a team • that was good enough to win. And that occurred in all three tf the sports named. But when a team wins, who lets the credit, The poetize Don't be silly. The players are heroes, wonderful guys, The coach is some unknown figure in the background who opened and shut the gate. Well, I'd like to pull a switch on that. For everything Canacliens accomplished in winning the Stanley Cup, I want to give a measure of credit to coach Dick Irvin, whose teams in Chicago, Toronto and Montreal have missed the playoffs only once in many years of leadership I'm giving Irvin credit because of his skill, and his daring, in benching regulars who weren't producing in the early part of the Chicago series and gambling on four minor leaguers and a veteran who was considered "washed up," This was the gamble that placed the Canadians in the Stanley Cup finals, which they %von. Canadians' "Unwanted Players" as Irvin called them after his team had whipped the Bruins, 74, at the Boston Gardens to sweep both games there, were Eddie Mazur, who wintered in Victoria in the Western League; Lorne Davis and Cahlm Mackay from Buffalo in the American League; and veteran Ken Mosdell. The fourth minor leaguer was goaler Jacques eslante who served. the coach's purpose by helping to win 2 games, one a shutout. "Nobody wanted these players in Montreal," Irvin de- clared. "The press and the tans were against them, But my regulars weren't producing. Besides, they were small, So I put in that quartet, adding 574 pounds of beef to my team, and it turned the tide," Irvin is not a fellow to stand pat, If things aren't going right he's quick to make changes. He benched his three regular left-wingers, Paul Meger, Dick Gamble and Bert Olmstead. In their places he put Mazur, Mackay and Dickie Moore, a promising youngster who missed most of the season with a knee injury, There was a little more to it than that. Irvin watched everything. He juggled the team. When a player looked hot, he shot the player into action. He made up lines as he went along. He gambled on freezing Gerry htcNeil's injured ankle in the first game of the final series at Boston. Irvin proved a master strategist, and I'm very happy, in the midst of all the bouquets being tossed at the players, to hang one on the lapel of the forgotten man, the Coach, Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c.'o Culvert House, 451 Ycnge St., Toronto. Catvni DISTILLERS LIMITED MIHER$7eURG, ONTARIO Criminals Blame Influence of the Moon Be seems to go off the rails when the moon is full," a bar- rister said recently, defending a man in court on a charge of housebreaking. "He gets this moon trouble," his wife told the court, "He acts very strangely and goes off for a week at a time, It always happens at moon time." Life Giver—Afflicted since birth with an incurable stomach dis- order, Jewel Penley, 9, lives on milk. When her cow died re- cently, her father was unable to buy another. The cow, seen above, is a prize Jersey which was awarded the little girl when she wrote lo a national radio program. The man concerned had been to prison nine times and served a period of corrective training. But the Bench was obviously impressed by the possibility that under the influence of the moon he acted against his better nature, for they put him on pro- bation. Is it possible for the full moon to have some strange unexplain- ed effect on some people, making them commit irresponsible acts? Bloodlust Scientists and most doctors laugh at the idea as mere super- stition. Yet the word "lunatic," originating thousands of years ago and meaning "moon -struck", suggests men long ago noticed a connection between the moon and mental instability. The belief has persisted through the cen- turies. And if the scientists pooh-pooh the idea, the police know better. Whenever there is senseless and motiveless, you will find them particularly alert at the time of the full moon. Again and again it has been found that attacks on girls in certain areas have taken place in "waves," coinciding with the phases of the moon. At one period before the war, one area of Surrey was alarmed by a series of such attacks. In every case the police noted that the attack took place at the time of the full moon. "This is because the attacker can see his victim better and escape more easily," said the scientists. But the police authori- ties expressed the view that the man had fits of bloodlust coin- ciding with different phases of the moon. Maybe He's Part Monkey—This Puerto Rican horse likes to eat bananas, which, according to the book, horses do not do, but maybe he didn't read the book, The horse, named "Coco," will go to almost any extreme to get his favorite fruit, as shown In the picture, His owner is Victor Ortiz Perez, shown astride his pet. Sweet Sailing—Flying through the air with graceful gestures is pretty Shirley Cawey of London, England. Seen above, competing in a broad jump, she was one of the many contestants at the Sward Trophy meet in London's Polytechnic Stadium, ITC l' iC Evidently it isn't only on this side of the Atlantic that the sport of hockey—or "duck -on -the -rock - on -ice" as some prefer to call the modern variety—is taking a bit of a kicking around. From dear on' Lunnon comes a dispatch by Sydney Skilton which goes to show that all is not so hot in the Old Country for Conn Smythe's favorite pastime. And as any news from over there that is not embellished with upper -bracket portraits is something of a change, here is the dirt as dish- ed out by Brother Skilton. . Ice hockey that has flowered so colorfully as a spectacle in the English sporting scene now has a withered look. This has happened because, in spite of the gay bloom, it has no real roots in English soil. And even less likelihood of establishing them as a result of recent develop- ments, " At a meeting here 10 London of promoters of teams compris- ing the National League it was agreed that English ice hockey cannot in future be conducted on methods prevailing in season 1952-53. Rising costs and falling attendances wrought a financial crisis. It means that Canadians in large numbers are not likely to be transported across the At- lantic next season. It also means that ice hockey will be relegated even further down the rink owners' scale be- cause the stuff served by English amateurs who are the only ones available to fill the vacancies, lures about as many watchers to the ice stadia as village crick- eters would to Lord's or The Oval. English ice hockey as aur- nished by the aces from Canada who, as "Great Britain," :von the world and Olympic champion- ships in 1936, has been a great success as a spectacle. But in the last couple of years or so it has been out -spectacled by the mam- moth "icecapades" from U.S.A. They have drawn capacity crowds for the ice rinks night - after night and week after week. Summer shows now are increas- ingly fashionable. Thus ice hockey has had to fit in es best it could during intervair be- tween this glacial glamor. (Bor- rowers Note, Just like Madison Square Garden, what?) And that it has not done so with a great deal of success is reflected by the judgment of the . rink owners and the attentions of the public. ' ' For a number of years there has been a gentlemen's agree- ment among the National League rinks not to spend more than in the region of 4250 a week on their imported Canadian play- ers. But in order to retrieve their fortunes and revive public ap- peal some of the rinks want greatly in excess of that Even so, one well known arena with a highly successful playing rec- ord in the season recently ended, reports being well in the red. * H. At their get-together the pro - motors are understood to have discussed future policy In an agenda ranging from giving up the game entirely to a 20 per cent all-round cut in expenses. Claude Langton of London's Em- press Hall rink told one reporter, Canadian Envoy—Arnold D. P. Heeney, 51 -year-old Montreal lawyer, has been named new Canadian Ambassador to the U.S. Heeney has served as Can- adian anadian representative to the North Atlantic Council. "Ice hockey players, drawing 3,000 people, are getting twice what footballers receive for pull- ing 50,000. 1 English professional footballers average £14 per week.) The danger is that three or four rinks may give up the struggle, and that will be the end of ice hockey here. "We have to find," went on Mr. Langdon, "a remedy before the season begins in September. Costs must be cut drastically, ex- pensive Canadians must go, and there must be more encourage- ment for English players" An- other meeting is to be held soon. r r * Eneburaging home talent has been a policy diligently pursued by the British Ice Hockey Asso- ciation ever since fellow mem- bers of the world federation suc- cessfully protested in 1938 against the use in world, Olympic and European championships of play- ers who although Englishborn had learned their game in Can- ada. But the policy although warm- ly approved everywhere in prin- ciple has been subject to the caprices of the rink owners who, not unnaturally, have put their biggest money -earning attrac- tions first. With all the good will in the world they have just been unable.to help amateur talent to the extent they Would like to nor even to the extent they did before rocketing costs and heavy taxation sliced their margine, Thus the young Englishman finds himself very small fry in the ice hockey world and only the utlra-enthusiastic persist. The youngster probably becomes a member of one of the junior teams operated by the local rink and usually he performs on a Sunday afternoon or at' some other time whehn the ice is not required for major play prac- tice or "icecapade" rehearsals and at a time when nobody could care less about watching hockey, * * * In these far from encouraging circumstances the youngsters at- tempt to emulate their heroes from Canada. Usually they fail to stick. Of those who do only a very few make the grade, the vast majority prove deficient, not through inexpert instruction, but through lack of skating ability required to make a high-grade he-man puck chaser. Ate 12 fl L* Of Sugar What docs a champion weight- lifter eat? When the Spanish champion strong man Aguerre, lifted a granite block weighing 350 lb. 78 times in three ten- minute rounds recently, he ate 12 Ib. of eugar while performing. Afterwards he sat down to an enormous five -course lunch, in which figured large quantities of meat, The lunch was paid for by some of the fifteen thousand people who had watched his feat. His nearest rival was a strong man named Garachabal, who lift- ed it 66 times. Aguerre received 163,500 prize money and many of his fans who had backed him to win came away richer by hair,. dreds of dollars. The Spaniard's feats fall far short of that achieved by London - born Thomas Topham, who once lifted three barrels filled with water weighing in all 1,836 lb. They were slung together in the shape of a clover leaf, the end of the sling being passed over Top - ham's head to rest across the back of the neck. Topham once found a watch- man fast aslep in his box, Picking up box and sleeper, the strong man fast asleep in his box. Picking placed the box on the wall of a churchyard and left it there with the watchman still sleeping peacefully inside! Nluckl—Chicago spectators scat- ter in the right -field bleacher section as a home run heads their way. Hit by Ed Matthews of the Milwaukee Braves, the ball tops the woll as Chicago Cubs' player Preston Word watches. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISIM ti.tt Pts 111\h t.5' 011.5, GREASES, TiRES PAI\T8 end tarnishes. electric mntoro eleetri-Ol appliances. HCbbyubop Ma. Witco, Dealers wanted, Writs Wares ;verso and WI Limited, Toronto 100119 OINellb JUNE pallets. r'hoiee of breed* Prices right, Lnmedtnre shipment. Day-ohl sad started, Order August Leollot'a now not Bret' Hatchery, 320 John N. 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