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Ltd. e35-0680 Exeter P,49e, 6 'Times-Advocate, .March 190 Determined, come-from-behind rallies give SHDHS squads two cage titles traded baskets early in the final and the total score remaie- ed at 92-3.'7 with only three minutes left on the clock as the Clintonites missed three con- secutive tries frpM the foul line to, keep the SimilS. boys in contention. With only two minutes and 57 seconds to go the battle really began, Loch canned afoul shot and Wayne Baynham tipped In a Burns' rebound while one successful Clinton foul shot was made to bring the score in the game to 48-39 and the Exeter- rtes three down on the round. Persistent checking by Burns please turn to page 7 5e-e.;efeeeee Glenn Mioitle'e .ellarees Were awl:routed with a scoreboard that read 51.9 when the Monday gape got underway beeetiee pf 4 59,45 less .01 Clinton. Aithetigh they had what apr peered to be a comfortable three-quarter lead, the home team's defeneeS drooped Me- Frienthrily and the total round score was tied with four minutes left en the clock. A, late surge with accurate shopfing in tee lest three minutes put the SH boys on top at the finish by a 58-40 count and a round margin of 103,96, FALL BERND EARLY In the opener of the two-game tetal-pojnt series in Clinton Thursday, the senior Panthers fell behind by sixpoints (18-12) at the first period breather and were never quite able to com- pletely overcome the deficit, although it was narrowed to a scant two points (34-3e) at the three-quarter mark. Steve Kyle and Dennis Mock contributed 14 points each to the 45 point total, with Kyle notching eight in the opening quarter and Mock hitting the hoops for seven in the next session. Basketball boners haye re- returned to •PliPHS. after an absence of severe'. Years- Tee junior and senior boys captured the new Huroe-Perth conference titlee with dramatic coin e -frpm - behind victories Monday, Both clubs returned to the friendly ceefieee pf their home court op the shprt end of their total-point series as the result of losses in Clinton Thursday to Central Huron Secondary School squads, northern group Winners. The juniors, ender the guide ante of Coach George Wright dropped the first game away frbin, home 54-42 and needed at least a 12-paint spread at home to stay in the running. Monday, they kept pecking away at the lead and with less than a minute to go in the game, Wayne I3aynharn hooped a basket and then dropped in a throw from the foul line to put his team in front 53-39 and become new champs by a narrow 95-93mar- gin. NOT AS STEEP The uphill battle by the senior boys wasn't quite as steep as their younger fellows, Why Pay More For A Muffler? OR BUY LOWER QUALITY? were well hendled, by referees Dutch.pecker and Ted Early of .London. JUNIORS: PROP OPENER. On the Clinton court Thurs- day the juniors fell behind quickly as the Clinton boys riot, ched three consecutive field goals to take a lead which held throughout the contest, The closest they were able to come to their opponents was late in the game when a ROn Motz basket brolight the count to 43-42. A last-minute rally netted the Clintenttes 11 straight points to give them a comfortable mar- gin for the second game. Clarence Magee was the top point-getter for the winners With 23, most of them coming from his ability to break away from the man-to-man defence employed by the SH juniors. Richard Shaddick was next in line with ten, seven coming in the first quarter,, Ron Motz with 14 and Larry Idle and John Loch with 11 and nine respectively accounted for a large part of the scoring by Wright's youngsters. The big difference in the scoring shows on the records of the foul shots, with the Clin- ton lads dropping in 15 to only four by the losers. OVERCOME, DEFICIT In a whirlwind, exciting finish that script writers would have trouble dreaming up, Wright's cagers overcame what seemed to be an unsurmountable lead and added an extra two points tp ensure the margin of victory on the round 95-93. Starting slowly, the teams were all tied up at 11 points apiece at the first quarter end. Bob Burns and Ron Motz with a half dozen points each put their team in front 27-20 at the half and cut the margin to five. Play ranged evenly back and forth in period three with the round score difference remain- ing the same 90-85 in favor of the visitors. Barry Doi= and John Loch We'll instal the very best--a Genuine GM Muffler CHEV 54 TO 62 For as low as Margie to one Wet. With the clietpnites petting on. real Pres SUM the situation looked grim, fpr the Nene club when top scorer Steve Kyle was nailed by the officials for a rule infraction and left the game on his fifth foul. Dennis Logan walked tp the free throw line and looped the pall through the netting to put the clubs on eyee terme, their return up the floor the. Panthers lost possession of the ball and their first game nemi- sis,, Tony Yerhoef, swished in a looper from the side to put his club back in front by two, Dennis Mock on a long pass from Bruce Horton got the equa- lizer back a. few seconds later and the set was again knotted with 3.20 to go. After a time-out, Bruce Hor- ton sparked the Panthers with three successful shots from the floor to make the game score 50-43. In the last minute and 50 seconds, the panthers kept control of the ball with pre- cision passing and the CIES boys only got their hands on the ball twice, Mills,with a field goal, and a foul shot from Cooper brought the losers' total to 46 while Glenn Shipman dropped in the final SHDHS tally to bring the final tabulation to 58-46 and the Huron-Perth trophy to the local school. In addition to Kyle's scor- ing, Dennis Mock was next in line with 1'7 and Bruce Horton turned in his best effort of the year, five field goals, three of them in the last few minutes to help stem the Clinton tide. Don Mills was the top pro- ducer of points for the Clinton senior squad with 19. Tony Verhoef came up with ten and Bruce Cooper contributed nine, Coach Mickle was happy with his team's performance, which brought the school its first senior hoop title in five years. "The boys showed lots of fight and never gave up," he said. Both Monday afternoon play- off contests held at SHDHS gym $7.50 Tony, yerhoef ,and Bruce,cep- Per were .the big guns in the. Clinton,attack, hitting for 20 and 14 respectively, la 91 these coming In the final eight min- utes. As in the junior contest, the outcome was decided at the free throw line with the hemp teen?. hopping 14 of their gratis attempts and Migkee's boys only hitting for Mee. Bob Mickle was injured in the last quarter when he struck his head on the floor after falling in a pile-up, The young, ster was taken to Clinton hos- pital for overnight observation and was later released. Al- though not taking an active part in the final game, he was on the sidelines rooting for his teammates. TAKE EARLY LEAD Steve Kyle whp was the top Panther point 'producer in the Monday contest with 20, scored half of his afternoon's total in the first quarter to help his squad to an 18-9 edge on the game and a four-point spread on the series. The teams battled on even terms through the second per- iod, each tallying 11 points to maintain the SHDHS margin of four at the half-time rest. Clinton's top scorer of the dl.y, Don Mills, notched all but two of his club's second stanza points. Outscoring their opponents 17-12 in quarter three, Mickle's men took what appeared to be a comfortable lead into the last eight minutes. Before three minutes had elapsed in the closing quarter the battle was on in earnest with the visitors notching four quick field goals to bring the game score to 46-40 and cut the round Teachers take title, nip Hustlers 44-40 TOP SCORES George Wright 192 Don O'Brien . 192 Tom Burke 134 Jim Carey 115 Don McCauley 100 Al Wiper . . 89 Harry Schroeder 88 FAST SERVICE Snell Bros Squirts win three reach semi-finals LIMITED Chev-Olds Phone 235-0660 Exeter gearKee'",ea:ekee'' a - 'Ate:ewe eeeeee.,We SHDHS boys' teams win Huron-Perth championships Both'SHigh Panther squads came from behind this week to win the Huron-Perth conference honors in a playoff series with Clinton. SENIORS, top, include: front row, from left, Roger Cann, Gary Ford, Neil Hamilton, Peter McFalls, Coach Glenn Mickle; back row, Bob Mickle, Dennis Mock, Steve Kyle, Wayne Currie, Janis Gulens, David Buchanan, Bruce Horton, Glenn Shipman. Absent: Dale Turvey. JUNIORS, front row, Jim Kinrade, Larry Idle, David Dale, John Loch; back row, Bob Burns, Doug Huntley, Ricky Schroeder, Ron Motz, Wayne Baynham, Jim Coates, Brian Baynham, Coach George Wright. WIN WOAA TITLES Midgets stage comeback Exeter Midgets copped the WOAA Midget B title in Kin- cardine with a four-one vic- tory over the hometown young- sters in the deciding game of a best of three series. Saturday's triumph, which gave the midgets the right to enter the OMHA.playdowns, cul- minated a terrific comeback. After dropping the opening tilt in Kincardine and being two goals down after 40 minutes of play in Exeter Friday, Boom's boys came to life with four scores in the final period to emerge six-four winners and preserve their reputation of being strong finishers, Using a hard shot to advant- age in the rout of Lucknow, Jim Guenther kept the goal judge busy flicking the light ten times in addition to two assists for an even 12 points. Larry Haugh with a duo of scores and five assists and John Guenther with one counter and four assists gave the first line a total of 24 points. Chris Riddell and Don Kir, picked up the credit for single- tons. In the third contest played in the evening Guenther hit the mark another four times to round out a. productive day of sniping. Haugh added the fifth score on a clearing pass from Peter Glover. Johnny Hayter was inthe nets and chalked up three goose- eggs on the scoreboard. Al- though not called upon too often during the day as his team- mates provided a solid defens- ive wall, he came up with sev- eral shots in the last contest that had goal written all over them. With the Lake Huron Zone Minor tourney taking over the Exeter arena Saturday morn- ing at eleven, the squirt house league activities will be can- celled for one week. Pee Wee house league will go on as sch- eduled. Exeter squirts, with three convincing victories on Satur- day, took a big step towards grabbing the honors of the fifth annual Mount Forest Legion squirt tourney. Knocking off Southamp- ton, Lucknow and Walkerton by 4-e, 15-0 and 5-0 respec- tively the kids qualified for the semi-finals, on Saturday when they tackle Mildmay at 3.30. GUENTHER FIRES 15 Jim Guenther, the Dashwood flash, went on a scoring ram- page notching 15 goals in the day's action. Starting out slowly in the opening contest against South- ampton, the squirts were held off the score sheet in the first period. Warming up in the next stanza they fired four goals to advance to the second round. John Guenther sparked the at- tack with a pair and singles were added by Jim Guenther and Larry Haugh. up for the moment. Kincardine regained their two-goal advantage .before the bell to end the second on id- entical plays. Dave Wall and Steve Bell banged in rebounds after Tommy Glavin had made the initial saves. The locals came put in the third and showed quickly they were gunning for a win. Mike Cushman put his team within one of Kincardine before a minute had elapsed when he finished off a play with defence- man Ron Broderick. Continuing to maintain con stant pressure on Mike Riggin in the visitors' net with heady teamwork, the locals got the equalizer at 3,40 after Bob Burns kept banging away at a loose puck in a jamming session around the crease and found the mark. Burns cattle back to score what proved to be the winner at the ten-minute mark on a three- Way effort with John Loch and Larry Stire. An insurance marker was counted by Jack Glover a few moments later as he finished off a passing play with Gary Par- sons and Mike Cushman. eaiy a beautiful OrCal Diamond Insured free for one year Pleasing you pleases us. ° SCORES 15 GOALS . . . Jim Guenther LATE RALLY Facing elimination on home ice Friday, the midgets twice overcame two-goal deficits and fired ibex' unanswered markers in the last period to force a third game in Kincardine. Kincardine took a two-goal edge in the first period on quick scores by Cameron Wil- son and Steve Bell. The first came on a long screened drive from the left side and Bell's was the result of a long clear- ing pass that caught the Exeter defenders out of position. Gary Parsons picked up cre- dit for the first Exeter score near the halfway mark of the second oil a hard shot that Was deflected in by a, defender. Jack Glover was cruising in the right spot near the 18 minute mark to tip in Larry Willert's long shot and tie things honours. Before period one was history Gary Parsons wound up from the blue line and slapped a blazing shot that deflected off a defend- er's stick and was in the net for the equalizer before Riggin knew what happened. The goal that actually decided the outcome of the series was another long shot. This time Larry Willert moved in from the point and whistled a low drive into the far corner during the latter stages of the second stanza. In the final period with a one- goal margin the locals played a cozier brand of hockey, being content to flip the puck to centre and wait for the breaks as the homesters were forced to, open up. Mike Cushman picked up the first insurance marker as he snared a. clearing pass at cen- tre, outsmarted a lone defender and skated in close to deposit a 10 footer in the short side. Goal number four came from the stick of Larry Stire after' the winger broke loose at centre headed over the blue line, faked to go to the corner, then moved straight in front and let a 20 footer go for the top corner. Tommy Glavin again turned in a standout perfertnance in the nets to be a big factor in the Championship win. Jim Inglis of Atwood, presi- dent of the WOAA, presented the Harvey Crawford trophy to team captain Gary Parsons in a centre-nee ceremony, STEADY TEAM. WORK Displaying the same style of aggressive team Work as the night before the midgets carried the large portion of the play, keeping Mike Riggin in the Kid- cardine cage busy all evening. As in most games the oppos- ition came up with the opening score, Jimmy Bell doing the P'wees win on shutouts See these and other Smart plywood ideas at the Exeter t.ralich of BEAVER LUMBER COMPANY LiN,IITED In Thursday's final double- header of the Rec league sche- dule at SHIMS, Peripatetic Ped- agogues downed Zurich Hust- lers 44-40 to emerge as loop champs by a single point over the runner-up Hustlers. In the opener which had no bearing on the play-off situa- tion, third spot Moonshiners polished off the cellar dwelling Flying Farmers 44-23. Final tabulation by league statistician Ron Bogart reveals a tie for scoring supremacy. George Wright and Don O'Brien ending with identical records of 83 field goals and 26 successful tries from the free throw line for 192 points. The semi-final play-offs get underway to-night, Thursday, with the P-Pers meeting the Moonshiners in game number one and the Hustlers tackling the Flying Farmers in the nightcap. Next Thursday's action will wind up these two-game, total- point sets with the survivors meeting in a best of three final. TAKE COMMAND EARLY • Hitting the hoops right after the opening tip-off, the Moon- shiners moved into a 17-4 com- mand at the first rest and al- though held to a 9-9 second quarter were never in serious trouble. In a sparse third period the Fartners could find the range for only one basket to three for the winners. Jerry Cameron and Reg Mc- Cauley with 15 points apiece led the Shiners to their seventh win and a third place finish. Felix Boogemans and Chub McCurdy were the best for the losers with six point efforts. EDGED IN THIRD The P-Pers moved into atwo point 16-14 edge after the first 12 minutes and then lost the ad- vantage to end up on the short end of a 24-22 count to the Hustlers at the half. A productive 16 po int per- formance in the third quarter gave the teachers the margin they needed to edge the previous league leaders and move on top of the standings. George Wright led his squad to the top with an 11 point night, helped ablybyJimCareY, Doug Rickert and Lyle Little with nine, eight and six respect- ively. Dori O'Brien picked tip 20 pcents with half of them coming in his club's first quarter spurt to put him on even terms ith Wright for top scoring honors. Eight point effortS were fur- nished by Keith Lovell and Bill Giifillan to round out the bulk of the Hustler scoring, MOONSHINERS Mc- Cauley, 15; Jerry Cameron, it; Jack Wong, 7; Al Wiper, 5; Reg McCurdy, 2 and Terry McCau- ley: PLYING FARMERS Felix Boogemans,6; Chub McCurdy,61 Charlie Kernick, 4; Harry Sch., roeder, 4; Sill King, 3 and Feed Dobbs. P-PEAS George Wright, 11; Jini Ceeey, DoegRickert, 8; Lyle Little, 6; Rod Begert, '5; Rim Ileimrieh, 5 and Jim Russell. HUSTLERS bon 013 rieni 20; Keith LOVell, 8; Bill dile filleti, 8;,_ Terry McCauley, '2; Dick leoelefeoh,. 2 and Wayne dlatielee. PINAL'STANDING6 ik L T P Pliers )3 4 D15 Hustlers 1 4 1 15 tvinorishhiers I 6 0 14 'Plying Patti-24,s 1 IS 1 s Eketet Pee Wees Wrapped up the WOAA 8 title with tOrie- utive shue-Ott wine over the defending Champs from Walker- toe., The fitet triumph 5-0 was posted in Walkerton Thursday with the return genie on Mine. ice Saturday ending 4-0. Their first taste of 'OMI4A playdown action Will come on Friday night at 6:45 at the t)46-x ter arena With Byron supplying: the opposition, ilEttN NABS PAIR the opener OttiforeigitICe, Graham Bern VaS on the firing end of :a 'Patt i One :coining in each of the first and third pet,,, Initial tally tante as he broke up a .Walkertori attaok as it WAS' 45ineting in their own end and walked in entrioletted in the clear and the youngster broke alone to fire into the top corner, Goal number two came on a sirelat plaY with the colch'S son again counting, this time, Barry BaYnharn getting credit JO the assist late in the second, Persistent checking paid off a few minutes later for Frank DeVriee as he stole the puck from a Walkerton defender and fred a fifteen 'footer at a sur- prised goalie who only got a Part of his pad on the rtibbet as it dribbled aver the line. Midway through the Closing session, a three-Way passing effert Prodtteed the final score of the eight, DeVries again netted thepuck after team-mates Rick Weber and drehare teen had takente- peated drives at the net. to score, Bill Fairbairn salted away goal number two as he found his, own rebound loose in frOnt early in the second. Philip HOWard and John Loa- der added goals a few mortiene CS later to give their brae a comfortable lead. Tee fernier Carrie on a long drive been the POW and the latter on a goal mouth scramble. Closing Mit the Scoring with hiS second Of the trey Wag Here oh a solo effete. LOADER, r5tVttlE8 STAR In the wind-up at home 8at- urday,l'Oratilc beVriee and .lehe Load& ahated equally in the 1Odtil goal productlen 'with two W60. Leader started the 84611ng. early as till Pairhairri set hini