rm... ’1 AIs Sideline Rough Riders )i 'l . ,3... my In Sudden-Death By STUART LAKE ' Montreal quarterback Sandy (CP) — Montreal Stephens tried only three passes emerged from the and all fell incomplete. Ottawa mud and rain of Lausdowne completed four of five heaves Park Saturday with an 18-17 win for 72 yards. Quarterback Russ over Ottawa Rough Riders and ackson successfully threw thus qualified to meet Hamil. three and half-back Ron Stew- L: ton Tiger-Cats in the Eastern 3" one I Football Conference fin a l 5 Larry HiCkman and Don Clark which open in Montreal nextscored touchdowns for the Als. Saturday. Bobby Jack Oliver kicked a The suddelwleath semi-final lgzlgdlegoal' mo Converts and a watched by 20,252 fans. was played under atrocious condi- tions. Rain which began early in the day fell steadily through- out the galme anti the field was a treacherous patch of mud be- THELEN SCORES TWICE Fullback Dave Thelen, having perhaps his finest day in Ca- nadian football, scored both 0t- tawa touchdowns. Moe Racine tween the 40-yard lines. booted a field goal and a con- Montreal fumbch the wetlvcrt and Jim Conroy kicked a ball five times but recovered it lsingle. all but once. Riders fumblcd‘ Montreal built up a 10-0 lead three times and lost the ball in the first quarter but trailed Canadiens Overpower Hapless Bruins 4-2 BOSTON (CPl—Montreal de- . to r e pla c e during Saturday feated Boston 4-2 by the mar- ‘night's loss to Chicago The gin of Ralph Backstrom’s 40 ,rookie made a spectacular save foot goal in the final period Sun- :on Teddy Green with the Bruins day night, then stood off a furi- l goalie pulled for a sixth skater. ous comeback by the National. The visitors nailed down the Hockey League tail-enders to decision as Don Marshall fired preserve .the decision. nearly the length of the ice into The wmnlng shot from the an 0 left side came at 6:11 at the finale as Bruins goaltender _ SUMMARY Bobby Perreault missed a glove “’5‘ Peri“: N0 Scoring- stab at the puck. Penalty—Beliveau 15:03. Montreal had built up a 2-0‘ Second period: 1. Montreal. G. Tremblay 8 (Geoffrion. Tal- ;bot) 9:23: 2. Montreal. Geof- ‘ rion 5 12:42. Penalties—Fon- .tinato 4:57, Stapleton 8:51. Spencer 11:01, Backstrom 13:07. Beliveau minor. misconduct ' Third period: 3. Boston, Wil- lliams 2 (Godfrey, Burns) 3:06; '4. Montreal. Backstrom 3 (Mar- lshall. Talbot) 6:11: 5. Boston. iPennington 5 (Toppazzini) 12:22 ‘6. Montreal, Marshall 4 19:22. Penalty—Pronovost 4:03. ead on second period power- play goals by Gilles Tremblay and Bernie Geoffrion. Boston’s T o m m y Williams narrowed the gap near the start of the third session, then Back- strom scored and Canadiens’; had a 3-1 bulge. e Bruins waged a furious battle over the final 10 minutes, getting a goal from Cliff Penn- ington and pressing hard for the equalizer. MANIAGO IN GOAL L.- on Cesare Maniago was in the Saves: _Montreal goal for the injured Maniago 7 3 7—17 Jacques Plante whom he hadiPerreault 13 5m—38 Pirates, Airmen Notch Victories The powerful Pirates made a final period they had a 21-17 real shambles of their basket- ledge. ball game with Phalanx Satur- ; DeJana was tops for the win- day night at the YMCA, roll- iners in the scoring parade with log to a lopsided 96-14 score. j17 points. Teammate Urquhart At Summerside air base Sat- ‘counted 11. urday afternoon the airmen ed- For the Welshmen it was Mike ged PWC Welshmen 53-44. ‘Dagg with 9. The Phalanx team had little Action tonightiat SDU sees opportunity to score against the .Saints vs. PWC and RCAF vs. Ross-coached Pirates. scoring 10 iPhalanx. points in the first half while the The lineups are as follows:— wiuners garnered 45. In the fi- Pirates: — D. Hyndman 37. nal half the Pirates outscored .W. MacDonald, D. MacLean 11, their less experienced oppon- .R. McGonnell 2, S. Lavers 18. ents 51-4. ‘R. Atkinson 4, I. MacKinnon, C. Dave Hyndman was the big ‘MacLean 24. Total 96. or the winners. swishing Phalanx: — R. Doiron 3, K. the twines for 37 points. Cleav- Johnson 1, A. MacDougall, R. er MacLean was next with 24. Scantlebury 6, F. Burns, J. Top scorer for Phalanx was Ives 4, Total 14. ROY SCHMIEbUF)‘ With 6 Points. RCAF: —- Urquhart 11. Reese The PWC-RCAF contest was Lloyd, Lingord, Dallimore 6. the airmen holding a slight ed~ thy 4, Hunter. Wilkinson 4. Rum- ge in play in both sessions. In feldt 2. Szwara 9. Total . 53. the first half they outscored the PWC: — Smith 7, Dagg 4. city collegians 32-17 and in the iDagg 9, Webb 2, Ling, R. Dia- ‘mond 6, Gallant 3. Stannish 4. SATURDAY NHll a close game all the way with Hemenway, DeJana 17, McCain, Contest an unconverted touchdown in the third quarter. thus setting the stage for the Montreal come back in the fourth. Als scored eight points to take the lead and protected it with a fine display of ball control. iders were forced to kick to Als with five minutes remain- ing and spent the rest of the game trying to force A15 to give up the ball. But Montreal re.- tained possession by picking up three first downs on nine plays. On the last play of the game, Vic Chapman kicked out of bounds at mid-field. , It was the first win Montreal lscored over Ottawa this sea- ' three regular league meetings Riders beat Als twice and the teams tied once. ' Otttawa coach Frank Clair said prior to the game that Ri- ders had to stop the running of Clark and George Dixon to win. While they held Dixon to 38 yards on 10 carries, Clark trav~ elled 100 yards in 17 tries and Larry Hickman took up the slack with 105 yards in 15 trips. ILEADS RUSHERS Thelen, perhaps the outstand- ing player of the game, was the. leading ground-gainer with 188 yards ' 24 c rr'e He also caught two of the only four passes completed in the game for 39 yards. l Ottawa didn't get out of their own end once in the first quar- ter. They fumbled twice -— the lfirst time on the opening kickoff ,on their 31 and again on the 38. A15 also blocked an Ottawa kick. OTTAWA (CPI—EFC Semi- l final: ‘ SUMMARY Fins! Quarter 1. Montreal. field goal (Oliver) 7: 2. Montreal. touchdown “(Hick- man) 11: 3. Montreal, convert (Oliver) Second Qunrte 4. Ottawa, field goal (Racine) 5. "Ottawa, touchdown (Thelen) '54 4. 6. Ottawa, convert (Racine) 7. Ottawa. single (Conroy) 14:01 Third uarter 8. Ottawa. touchdown (Thelen) 10:05 Fourth Quarter 9. Montreal. single (Chapman) 10. M o n t r e a l, touchdown (Clark) 6:25 11. Montreal convert (Oliver) t 8 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon. Nov. 12, 1962. i FOOTBALL RESULTS Sarnia wins sudden death final. Senior Intercollegiate Queens 29 Toronto 0 McGill 9 Western 8 Muskegon 2 Omaha 5 Atlantic Conference St. F.X. 34 Stadacona 0 ‘ St. Mary's 30 Mount Allison 14 St. Dunstan's 39 Dalhousie 25 By THE CANADIAN PRESS US. College EAST 'Pennn State 34 West Virginia 6 Penn 15 Yale 12 Syracuse 34 Navy 6 Dartmouth 42 Columbia 0 ornell 28 Brown 28 Boston University 13 Connecti- K cu 18 h 18 Harvard 20 Princeton 6 UNB s “mate: Holy Cross 20 VMI 14 S d Oklahoma State 12 Arm Ian Ings y '- Boston College 42 Texas Tech 13 Lafayette 10 Waynesburg 0 National League Eastern Conference W T Massachusetts 19 Villanova 18 F AP Bucknell 32 Colgate 14 New York 7 2 025317714 Delaware 23 Rutgers 6 Washington 5 2 220121312 Buffalo 44 Gettysburg 0 Pittsburgh 5 4 0 203 25910 lToledo 13 Temple 0 Dallas 4 4 1 255226 9 l MIDDLE WEST Cleveland , 4 4 1171157 3 I Ohio State 10 Indiana 7 igngggigm f 2 ; Purdue 17 Michigan State 9 u m Conference NOLI‘C Dame 43 Pittsburgh 22 Green Bay 9 o 18 Michigan 14 Illinois 10 Detroit 7 2 0 214 1171 .Minnesota 10 Iowa 0 - - N b a k 40 K 16 Baltimore 5 4 0190155 to "'e' res a 41 liftsiassme o C I - 5 4 01732“ 10 Wisconsin 37 Northwestern 6 fifinegzfic‘sco g 3 2 Missouri 57 Colorado 0 ‘Los Angeles 1 8 0138195 2 North Dakota 31 South Dakota 0 American League Miami (Ohio) 42 Dayton 20 Eugen, Division Drake 40 North Dakota State 6 w L T F A p SOUTH Boston 6 2 126421313 Vir inia T h 37 Houston 6 3 0223 18212 IDufe m fimandw‘l,“ Fm“ 8 Buffalo 4 5 1246228 9 Kentucky 7 Vanderbilt 0 New York 4 5 0 202290 South Carolina 17 North Caro- WSW“ DWI“ m s z: 322:1: :2 F] -d - nver an a State 14 Georgia Tech San Diego 3 7 0225292 6 F] :d 23 Oakland 0 9 0142 262 0 c.2252“ “6.533;? ATLANTIC CONFERENCE Tennessee 28 Tulane 16 WLT F A P North Carolina 11 Virginia 7 St F- X; 7 0 0 2’4 11 1‘ William and Mary 10 George 51- Mar“ 5 2° 2"“ 81 12 Washington 6 Stadacona 6 2 0 165 w 12 Alabama 36 Miami 3 Mount Allison 5 3 0 176 73 10 Arkansas 23 Rice 14 Shearwater 4 3 1 1% 143 9 Auburn 9 Misssissippi State 3 9L Dumas 2 4 1 39 1 5 Memphis State so The Citadel 13 Mad“ 2 6 0 43 4 Mississippi 52 Chattanooga 7 UNB , 1 5 2 77 196 4 Texas 27 Baylor 12 WOW” 0 8 0 39 239 0 Houston 35 Tulsa 31 Texas A. and M. 12 Southern Methodist 7 Arizona 14 Kansas State 13 Louisiana State 5 Texas Chris- tian 0 North Texas Texas State FARWEST Utah State 20 Wyoming 6 Air Force 17 UCLA 11 Washington 27 California 0 ew Mexico 21 Colorado State MIGHTY MUSCLES Canadian strongman Lou l s Cyr once raised 4,133 pounds in a back lift—the weights resting on trestles. He died in 1912. State 20 West 13 . 8 Southern California 31 Stanford Oregon 28 Washington State 10 ontana 36 Montana State 19 Oregon State 32 Idaho 0 National League Baltimore 14 Los Angeles 2 Mt. A Jayvees Whip SDU 52-7 i SACKVILLE, N. B. (CP) Mount Allison University Jay- vees scored 20 points in each of the first two quarters and coast- ed to a 52-7 victory over St. Dun- stan’s University Juniors in ex- hibition football here Sunday. Ron Charlie and John Airey paced the offensive with two touchdowns each. Jim Miller. Bill Fritz and Dave MacLellan had singles. Quarterback Ric k Doyle punched through for a major and booted four converts. Mulligan scored the visitor’s lone six-pointer and Bob LeClair hoofed a rouge in the third quarter. lNHl STANDINGS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League W L F A Pt , Detroit Chicago Toronto Montreal New York . Boston 41 15 53 8 43 7 _ Pittsburgh 26 St. Louis 11 Cleveland 9 Washington 17 Detroit 38 San Francisco 24 Green Bay 49 Philadelphia 0 Minnesota 30 Chicago 31 New York 41 Dallas 10 / RecIWings Nip Rangers “3-2 In WiIdG NEW YORK (API—A couple of guys named Alex ganged up on New York Rangers Sunday night and led the front-running Detroit Red Wings to a 8-2 vic- tory in a fight-punctuated Na- tional Hockey League game. Alex Delvecchio got two of the Red Wing's goals. The sec- ond, with less than six minutes remaining. broke a 2-2 deadlock. Delvecchio's initial goal, in the second period. erased a 1-0 ad- vantage the Rangers had taken a moment earlier. Alex Faulkner. a Newfound- onds of the third period on Earl arfield's goal. A free-for-aii erupted nearly seven minutes gone In the second period. Rangorl’ Dave Baion collided with Faulk- ner. Players from both teams mixed it up in the centre of the ice. Balon. Bruce MacGregor and Billy McNelll of the Red Wings all drew penalties. Balon getting a minor and a major. Four minutes later, officials had to separate New York's Howell and Detroit’s Harry Norm Uiiman, but this flareup was short-lived. At N.Y. * i 4:33; 8. Detroit. Faulkner 3 (Jeffrey, Pronovost) 14:12. Pen. altiel — Gadsby 2:37, McNeil! 6:53, 15:24, Halon minor, major. MacGregor (served by Goegan) SUMMARY 6. . First period: Scoring none. Third period: 4. New York, Penalties—Cohan 2:50. Bath- Ingarfleid 4 (Prentice, Bath- gate 6:41. McNeill 10:34, Young 12:14, Balon 15:Q, Horvath minor. misconduct 18:27. , Second period: 1. New York. Henry 5 (Howell, Bathgate) 3:18; 2. Detroit, Delvecchio 4 gate) 0:59; 5. Detroit. Delvec- chio 5 (Jeffrey. Howe) 14:19. Penalties —— Young 3:34, 18:37. Saves: Sawclluk 13 10 9—32 Worsley 8 10 13—31 land h o c k e y product, sand- wiched his goal between the two Wings out in front 2-1 in the peri . l Detroit still needed some; magnificent goal tending by‘ Terry awchuk, the Wings'u masked marvel, who was cred-’ ited with 32 saves including 13 in the first period when the Rangers were brilliant. RANGERS SCORE FIRST The Rangers scored first. Ca- mille Henry taking Harry How- 8 ell's rebound and ramming it past Sawchuk ‘who was sprawled on the ice. That was early in the second period. After Delvecchio and Faulk- ner put the Red Wings ahead, the Rangers tied it after 59 sec- “ Hockey Meet Is Tonight A meeting of Sunny Isle Farms Hockey League is scheduled for tonight at 8 o’clock at the Sun- y Isle Farms office on Low- er Grafton St. Teams wishing to participate are requested to have a repre- sentative at tonight’s get-toge- ther. AKE A fading moments of the second] CHICAGO (AP) — Toronto's Maple Leafs out - hustled and out - skated Chicago Black Hawks all the way Sunday night in taking a 5-3 National Hockey League decision. The triumph kept the Leafs in a third place tie with Mont- real Canadiens. who beat Bos- ton 4-2 Sunday night. Each team trails second place Chicago by a single point. Ken Wharram gave Hawks a 1-0 lead at 0:46 of the first period when he grabbed a loose puck behind the Toronto defence and swept in alone on Toronto goalie Don Simmons. Dick Duff got the goal back so 5‘ 1D for Toronto in the first minute 0 9 second period when he scored on a rebound of a shot by Dave Keon. Chicago's Len Lunde was in the penalty box midway in the second frame when Toronto's rookie defenceman Kent Doug- las put a 40-foot screened shot behind Denis DeJordy, who was subbing for regular Chicago net- minder Glenn Hail. Hail still is nursing a strained ligament in his back. TIES IT UP Ab McDonald pulled Chicago even at 2-2 on a power play goal a few moments later but George Armstrong put his own rebound into the Chicago cage is bit more than two minutes later to put the Leafs back on top 2 Red Kelly scored while the 9 Hawks were shorthanded early in the second period and again the Hawks pulled to within a goal midway in the period on Ron Murphy's sixth goal of the year. game out of reach for Toronto Frank Mahovlich put t with his seventh goal of the the penalty box. year at 13:54 of the final period while Chicago’s Bill Hay was in The last Chicago gasp came late in the period while Tor- onto's Bob Baun was serving the lab penalty of the game. Stan Mikita broke in alone but Leafs Cut-Hustle Hawks For A 5-3 Win In Chicago Simmons made a brilliant. kick- ing save at the corner of the net. SUMMARY First period 1. Chicago, Whar- ram 5 0:46: Penalties — Vaska 1:37. Mahovlich 6:39. Balfour 0:33, Duff 11:52. Second period: 2. Toronto, Duff 4 (Keon. Shack) 0:38: 3. Toronto. Douglas 3 (Harris) :15; 4. Chicago. McDonald 7 (Mikita, Hull) 13:32; 5. Tor- onto, Armstrong 7 15;52. Pen- alties — Lunde 8:23, MacNell 10:47, 19:24. Mahovlich 12:45. Balfour, Pulford 15:05. Third period: 8. Toronto, Kelly 3 (Mahovlich. Nevin) 5:16 7. Chicago, Murphy 6 (Nester- enko. MacNell) 10:21; 8. Tor- onto. Mahovlich 7 (Litzenberger Nevin) 13:54. Penalties — Makl 4:06, Brewer 6:29, Hay 12:53, Baun 15:07, Shack 18:15. Saves: Simmons DcJordy 5 5 6—18 7 12 11—30 K AT THE American League Dallas 52 New York 31 Boston 33 Denver 29 Houston 28 Oakland 20 Buffalo 40 San Diego 20 WFC Saskatchewan 0 Calgary 25 (First game two-game. total- point semi-final) estern Canada Junior Edmonton 21 St. James 15 (sudden-death final) Western Intermediate St. Vital 9 Edmonton 7 DODGE STANDS BEHIND ITS REPUTATION OF DEPENDABILITY WITH A HISTORY-MAKING 50.000 MILE- FIVE YEAR I (St. Vital wins sudden-death . i I final. I - 3 Eastern Conference Montreal 18 Ottawa 17 Montreal wins sudden - death semi-fins Eastern Canada Junior l0ttawa 0 Notre Dame de Grace MORE THAN EVER BEFOREJO DRIVE A DODGE IS TO DRIVE WITH CONFIDENCE w 32 (sudden-death semi-final) Ontario Junior Lakeshore 0 Sarnia 19 Ladner 5. Diamond 4. Total- Chicago 3. Montreal 1 .. Y 44. SU. . First p c rio d; 1. Chicago. I Wharram 4 lMil-zita. MacNeil). 11:46. Penalties—MacNell 16:06 Second ' : . Chicago, Murphy 5 (Evans. Lunde) 19:45. Third period: 3. Montreal. 3 .. ~ ‘ 4 cago, Mikita 5 (Hay, Hull) 15:31 ; Penalties—Moore 14:55 i Saves: ‘ De Jordy 10 11 12—33 Plante. ..9 812—29 Maniago , Toronto 5, New York 3 SUMMARY First period: 1. Toronto. Kenn 1 5 (Armstrong. Douglas) 13:37;‘ 2. New York, Henry 4 (Heben- ton, Langlols) 14:37. Penalties —Baun 12:09, Balon 17:42. Second period: 3. Toronto Mahovlich 6 (Nevin, Kelly) 1:06 4. Toronto. Baun 4 (Harris) 2:28 5. New York. Prentice 2 (Heb- onton. Howell) 18.44. Penalties —-1ngarfleld 13:06. Brewer 16:51 Baun 19:20. York. Bath- Harris period: 6 New Hebenton 4 (lngarfield. '1' 7. Torontp, . T or 15:13. Langlois 19:05. Saves: Worsley 8 II 10—29 Simmons 7 5 4—16 Detroit 3. Boston 8 SUMMARY First Period: 1. Boston. Oll- vcr (Bucyk. Green) 6:16. Penalties—Oliver 3:46. Goegan 7: y 9:46. Gendron Second period: 2. Detroit, Goe- gan 1 (Howe, MacDonald) 6:42: 3. Boston. McKenney 3 (Spen- cer. Bucyk) 12:27: 4. Detroit. owe 6 (MacDonald. Delvec- chio) 16:3). Penalties —— Stasiuk i 11:18. Green 11:18. 17:37. Smith 11:49. period: 5. Detroit. Bar 2 (Staaluk. Ullman) 2:41; 6. Boston. Williams 1 (Bu~ ) 14:88. Penalties Young 4235. it 14 612~32 10 9 7—26 mus-camps All uuu @ Ala mu ' for business... for pleasure FLY TCA monorail to BOSTON. O 3hom20minuros 0 Zfliglmdally 0 STSEconomyrorum See Morton Dew Limited 181 Queen St., or ’Call 4-8541 I neerod it gives you the 50,000 mile warranty.‘ do you credit. See it at it. Find out again what a fine car is all about. WWwM-AL. ...... ...r~.« M. 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