HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1990-02-14, Page 11T°
THh FIi1RON EXPOSITOR,r ,t BRUARY l+i, 1990 — i.l�
na*rat International' Gold Pelt'...contest; asdefense took• -a back Seat m a
Hockey " Tortrrtament in Flesherton on wild ,61 be , The scoring started just 41:
danttory 26 and 27 pervert to be iust what' seconds after ,tile stuck' fell: -out of 'the
director's intend' thio Gold Putak was' referee's sand Slidd �tstop w411 r�
organized so that sntat'town and blur one minute r
area bow eeuld' tare the. ehastce to stru ,; old Seafc
their stuff just like the `boys from larger Stolle }}h foundfi e
muniei,pali es ..: Anti -7
finls,ted ord e�t4,
So spot their .stuff they ,did.. d w = #' y wereeto rte outdone and f1rs;.
it`was alltsdid a>itd One the Senforth sq ` ended 2r,2 Clifford kept,th. hydro es to:
]ng at 8:30 and 14iicheu ling ,a' J•U testi
before Seaforth had the' sleep put of titer.
seeodds before: file t` periuu euueu.
ay *'ender-
su °Hied
eyes. IVIV,tiitehell's thud goal came just
this .point in time C
nx;;Iwent to his be
Yew, ,to Jikeoisita
Shit
had left th is*ark. Butthe-tank.ran:dryt • the seoreboard.warm earl 'tltt the second
with less ;fivo nninutes to, plain.the as welt;, as they iulstped'tto , 4-2 lead Late
asarch
final, civ Mitchell lburied what Ali the SV,cott form the swlteh and
proved to lie the lyinener and a '2-0 final ht up the otherlside only .to have Clifford
count. But ;Seaforth stood tall as finalists
and was proudto be involved in the first
International Geld Puck tournament that is
only going to get bigger; and better thanks
to the many organizers.
Seaforth opened the Novice division of
the tourney against host-Flesherton with a
big 5-1 victory. After a scoreless first
peirod and nothing early in the second,
J.D. Nolan finally put the scorekeeper to
work when he took a rebound off the goal
post from a Scott Henderson shot and.
twisted the twine with an eight foot wrist
shot. Just two minutes later Flesherton's
lone lady, Alicia Kinsman, knotted the con-
test to get the hometown fans pumped up.
Scott Van Dooren bushed the fans ,with
a coast-to-coast rush that resulted in what
proved to be the winning goal.
In the third period Seaforth flashed.their
offensive weapons with a three .goal out-
burst. Nolan started it by banging home a
rebound after initial shots by Jason Halley
and Scott H. had failed. Then `Derek
Nesbitt sent Scott V. in alone from centre
ice to make it 4-1. Scott H. finished the
cut the'pewe 'pine mislite'I ter to restore
the ,.two 'goal lead. ;1
Nineteen seconds into the final period.
Clifford put up what,seeiPed lithe an insur-
mountable lead. $colt V, breethed a little
bit" of life into the troops at 8:06 *Wen.
.
-unassisted,1t forE jut file c�loplj li d"
past the two .minute mark withoSeaforth
squandering a two -nisi ;advantage and
another power play situation.
With the exit doors looking like the nest
move was the flooderatout to enter the
ice, Scott V. decided to put some fire into
the Seaforth faithftd when he got his fourth
of the night and lifted the hopes of an
eager bunch. Just 20 seconds later Scott V.
once again made his 'tres'ence felt as he
returned J.D. Nolan's earlier favor as they
traded •columns on the scoresheet and
Seaforth stood even once, again on the
scoreboard. Just then, seconds after J.D.'s
goal, a hush hit the Seaforth cheering sec-
tion when Ben Murray wa_s, sent to the sin
bin for a body contact penalty.
11
The defence held steadfast and after a
scoring with Hulley supplying the help. couple of clearing shots the length of the
Sean Ludwig guarded the goal to pick up ice, the tie was tucked safely away.
the win. The next game of the round robin series
The second game saw Clifford and matched Mitchell against the local
Seaforth hook up in a Mario Lemieux -style favorites. Game time was Saturday morn -
Playoff race couldn't be closer
In Thursday Nite bowling' after two
weeks of playoffs, three teams/ are tied for
the lead at five paints. Two teams are tied
at foul points and then, seendngly out of
contention, are the Guttercats with only
one point.
The hot team for `the night was the
Bears who had high team- total and was
the only team to sweep all four points. The'
Bears were led by Karl Teichert with
282/743 and Deb Bedard with 251/664. Also
contributing were '!'layne Butt 215/620, Dan
Bennewies 264/671 and Dave Deighton with
a 192.
On the losing side of the Bear barrage
was the Guttercat team. The Guttercats
not only lost all four points but had the low
team total for the night and have taken
sole possession of last place in the playoff
race. Bowling noteworthy scores were
Doug Leonhardt 258/668, Dave Moody 224,
Bob Wright '201 and,Michelle Deighton 195.
Moving in for a share of first place was
the Highway 401 team led by Doug Vock's
306/694. night. Also scoring well were Gerry
Armstrong 261/663,°and Jack Ungarian, who
came on strong with a 228 ficial game
which helped the team take three points.
The Ballbangers accepted the 3-1 defeat
but remain in contention tied with the
Bears at four points. Doug Procter record-
ed the team's highest game with 245,
followed by Steve Steep's 213. Shelly
McKellar hit for 189 in the second game to
help the team to its only point for the
night.
The Wildcats took three of four points
from Beatlejuice which locks these two
teams in the first place tie. The Wildcats'
big shooter was Gary Bedard with 255/734.
Don Deighton added a 246/660 count and
John Atkin had a 204 game. Murray Ben-
newies spared for the team and turned in
a 287/745 count.
Beatlejuice was led by the continued hot
bowling of Eric Matzold 278/691. Nell
Beuerman and Brian Dale turned in iden-
tical 254 scores to ensure the team its one
point.
The playoff race continues this week
with Wildcats vs Bears; Highway 401 vs
Guttercats and Beatlejuice vs Ballbangers.
SECOND DRAW WINNERS - Junior curlers wound up their second draw on Fri-
day' night, and when it was all over, the winning rink was that of Brian Dillon.
Presenting the Dillon rink with the Patterson -Ste. Marie trophy, is David Ste. Marie.
On the receiving side are Brian Dillon, Andrew Dyck and Steve Pletsch. Missing
is Marlon Lansink. Robinet photo.
Ringette Juniors
first in league
standings
DU
4004
gamA� euiocteatv e,ebowys t1v
i
ctoa1r 1frr1oo.verotth1e
rer
thney,' wonatt,„s, "toEnatnlhe,e wte, esTeenzg
er
to Tis --scenario; that Ehnvale had-
beaten ,MitchellA' earlier by a 4-2 score. •
Seaforth took,Aer ice knowing that
anything less than,,,,a win meant the long
rota' home empty handed. Steven Phillips
earned the start innet with two scoreless
periods against Mitchell.
Seaforth got a break early as Derek
Nesbitt was tripped early giving the power
play a chance. With the man advantage
the puck found;itslway to the front of: the
net where Nesbitt had been left unguard-
ed.. He fired a wrist shot that a blocker
save thwarted. An ensuing scramble saw
the puck go to thel•corner where some
tenacious work' by Ryan Van Dooren saw
the puck make its,way back to the still
alone and patiently waiting Nesbitt, who
this time slid one. along the ice and into
the net for a 1-0 lead.
Thirty seconds later Elmvale was caught
tripping again and Seaforth wasted little
time taking advantage as Scott H. worked
the puck out of the neutral zone and head-
ed for the net. At the last second he pull-
ed wide and fired a wrist shot. The shot
was stopped by J.D. Nolan who was charg-
ing in off the other wing like a hungry dog
after a bone, and his efforts were reward-
ed as the rebound was coming his way.
Nolan pounced on it and buried it before
the goalie could react, extending his goal
scoring streakat the tournament to four in
the process.
Phillips held the Elmvale shooters at bay
while Scott V. added another tally midway
through period two. Elmvale showed some
signs of comeback when they beat Sean
Ludwig with a shot at 8:22 of the third.
Jason alleyretored the three goal lead at
4:43 off an assist from his red hot partner,
J.D. Nolan.
That proved to be the straw that broke
the camel's back as Elmvale failed to
mount much of an attack the rest of the
way, as Jamie Dick, Mike Murray, Tiro
Sills and Ben Murray stood tall along the
blueline.
Seaforth headed for the finals where Mit-
chell awaited their arrival. A tense group
of young hockey players readied
themselves for the first ever final of the
Gold Puck. '
Philips earned thei Start in net with four
periods of shutout'Wo k prior to the final.
The' abooter 'adju 'itheiryshootmg-eyes
iYi' ho es" b `hetrig Yeady for° that one
glorious chance. The two teams battled
tooth and nail, end-to-end, with nobody be-
ing able to get a clear cut shot or a decid-
ed edge in play.
The two teams headed for the second
period deadlocked at 0-0. Mitchell showed,
signs of being a little stronger as they held
a territorial edge only to be denied at the
last line of defence by Steven Phillips.
But with 1:13 remaining in the second,
disaster struck and Phillips' string of
shutout work was stopped. The sad part
about Mitchell's goal, which also proved to
be the winner, was that it took one of
Phillip's teammates to break his string.
Scott Henderson had the misfortune of tip-
ping a Mitchell shot that was meant to be
dump -in -play and when Steven moved to
play it he couldn't get back in time after
the puck was deflected.
Mitchell finally pumped home a
legitimate goal and when the buzzer went
had themselves the Gold Puck for their 240
win.
LEAGUE PLAY
The Novice team returned to league play
when they hosted Goderich on Saturday,
February 3.
It didn't take Seaforth long to get going
as Derek Nesbitt tipped home a Scott V.
shot with Ryan Van Dooren also assisting.
4044,,
ie
..hb task
ort '� ,�, who were
tflrttanient, combined .to
and a half;neit`h�er�
pith had suffered
e`tavor as he 'set;
two, with Ti n
it to 3°o as,
Benn Murray
ements Scott
before poi iod
a,T1) Nolan
oder t got stingy
rat Ahtatani eaves 'in
.to lie' re at 4.0
early to.
8111
goalleadat 819, mating
1 , ey
Ne et-,7/0"<ga.
The-
as fie
the scion
entering
3lmove t
Cott y Y
it441,-
-iriislied
The,No Ido, are now waiting `confirma-
tion'on playoff dates, as they'prepare-to
square off with Clinton. „.,in a best Of . five
series
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Industrial Growth 1'rind's Record —
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since inception: (22yecirs) 17.06.
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The Ringette Juniors ended their last
two regular season games on a high note
by winning 18-2 against Forest and 8-5
against Stratford.
In Forest on February 6 the Juniors cer-
tainly over -powered the Forest team. '
Scoring for Seaforth were: Melody
Turner - 6 goals - 3 assists, Kris Gemmell
- 3 goals - 4 assists, Cheryl McLlwain - 3
goals, Kim Rau - 3 goals, Robyn Car-
nochan — 2 goals - 2 assists, Janice
Rodney - 1 goal - 4 assists. Jodie Hugill
had 4 assists and Julie Carter 3 assists.
Kerry McMillan also played an excellent
game although she picked up no points.
Andrea Gingerich had no trouble playing
net.
On Febuary 9 in Seaforth the Juniors
played Stratford and showed their stuff
again by winning.
The girls had to play tough to hold on to
their three goal lead.
Cheryl McLlwain lead the way for
Seaforth with five goals: Melody Turner
picked up two and Kim Rau scored one.
Getting assists were Jodie liugill - 2;
Melody' Tuirater - 2; Kim Rau - 2; Kris '
Gemmell - 2; Kerry McMillan - 1; Robyn
Carnochart 1 1.
The Juniors placed first in their league
standings and meet up with Mitchell in the
first round of play-offs.
Is Evolution
just a theory?
Is Creation
the only truth?
Is the Biblical
story credible?
Be at Central Huron Secondary
School in Clinton
February 16-18
Hear Creation Lecturer
DENNIS BURROWES
Friday February 16 - 7:30 p.m.
Saturday February 17 - 9:00 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
6:15 p.m.
Sunday February 18 - 11:90 a.m.
(at Fellowship Bible Chapel)
2:00 p.m. at C.H.S.S.
*Participate in question
periods and discussions
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Dennis Burrowes
VICTORIA, B.C.
Conference
sponsored
by
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P.O. Box 1410, Clinton, Ontario, Canada, NOM 11.0
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