10 The Guardian, Charlottetown. 51011.. not. so. 1964.! SPORT ECHOES By Norman Macdonald Summerside Bureau of The Guardian Borden Appears Tough It begins to look as if those young net guardian looks as If Borden Buckaroo: are going to he can turn in that kind of per- have to be reckoned with in the formance almost every time Prince County Hockey League out. He may turn out as good Their last game with the high- at keeping the red light from Flying Eagles proved this. Sui-c. blinking as his dad Oscar was they were beaten 4-2, but they at turning it on. I were without the services ol Hook Walsh of the Nationals their playing coach. Jim Mac- and Len Christian of the R . and one of their scoring two boys with pretty low boll- Aces. Alan Andrews. it is in: points. came up. Wit sible they may be. reinforced by only exhibition of fistl-cuffs dur- Dale MacWilliams in the near me a rather peaceful evening. future. and by Charlie Sari. Walsh. an expert at. getting .in. when his suspension is lifted. wll those early licks. did it again. ‘ which. they tell lls. will he al'fllllif‘l But his opponent seemed very l the end of tile year. Eagle: may anxious for a return engagement. 1 have been missing a man or two. Being all icc pugilist is a frus- I but all their IlE‘i‘l')’ artillery and tratinl: experience. The real box- ‘ their defensive quartet seemed in: game the referee separates to be there. the combatants only in t n e - Granted the RCAF boys bad clinches. On ice you can get a considerable margin in play. dragged away just when you are Gary Campbell in the. Borden getting in your most satisfying nets. stopped 34 of their drives. clean-cut punches. And one of 9 OS- 1. K 1 . It's not a pass. but fullback a lot of them the stuff of which goals are made. and the RCAF Campbell had only 18 to han- the most popular defensive tac- ' ' . _ tics is pulling your adversary'si Bob Sw1ft of British Columbia Lions takes to the air an Way and hurdles for B.C.'s ' first. THE AERIAL ' cw... , "‘ or" : l | I IToronio, Red Wings Tie; DETROIT (AP) — George Armstrong scored late in the second period Sunday to give the Tomato Maple Leafs a l-l tie with the Detroit Red Wings. who remained in first place in the Nat’onal Hockey League Floyd Smith scored at 8:37 of the first period with Bob Pulford in the penalty box for Detroit's goal. Gordie Howe picked up his 1.3001 NHL point. on the pla 1t was the 24th power play goal against Toronto out of I total of 49 the Leafs have' al- lowed this season. Toronto gave up only 30 power playgoals all last season. Leaf goalie Terry Sawchuck. making his second appearance against his former teammates, went down to stop a Howe point whack at the rebound. But Smith then lifted the puck over Sawchuk for his sixth goal. ONLY BEATEN TWICE That was all the Wings could do with Sawchuk w-ho has been beaten only twice—both times by New York—in 12 games for Toronto. Eddie Shack did all the work shot and blocked Smith’s first‘ York's Vic Hadfield traded scores before the peri INSURANCE GOAL Roberts rapped in the insur- ance goal on a semi-breakaway. shooting through the Ranger de- fence after taking a pass from John Ferguson and firing a low 30 - footer past Ranger goalie Jacques Plante. enguson also assisted on Backstrom’s goal late in the fi- ndcd. perl . Beliveau‘s goal came at 1:11 of the first period. Bobby Rour- seau feeding the big centre from behind the Ranger nets. Cournoyer scored less than Montreal Trims New York lthree minutes later,picking up la bouncing puck and batting it i into the upper right corner from 30 feet away. Hadt'ield was serv- ing an elbowing penalty when Cournoyer connected. Gilbert caged Phil Goyettc's lrebound while Montreal's Ted iHarris was sitting out a per:- {a y. but Montreal retailated in 'Balcon's tip - in of Henri Rt- chard's centering pass. SUMMARY First period—1. Montreal. Bel- iveau 4 KG Tremblay. ous- seau) 1:11: 2. Montreal. noyer 4 3:48: 3. New York. Gil- bert 6 (Goyette. Selling) 5:35: Rangers Rout St. Du-nstan’s In a game played at the Charlottetown Forum yester- day afternoon, Rogers Rangers outhustled and outscored St. Dunstan’s Junior Varsity by a score of 10-1 in a Charlottetown and District Junior Hockey League game. Jim Cullen was the leading scorer for the Rangers as he picked up four points. all by 16 4. Montreal. Balon 4 (Richard. J. C. Tremblay) 9:56: 5. New York. Hadfield 4 (Ratelle) 17:12. Penalties—Hadfield 2:54. 17:33. Harris 5:01. Duff 10:40. Larose :36. Second period — 6. Montreal, Roberts 1 tBackstrom. Fergu- son) Penalties—Retelle, 3:58. Backstrom 7:55. Balon 11:49. Gilbert 12:58. Third period —- 7. Montreal, Backstrom 6 (Ferguson. Rob- erts) 16:21 Penalties — Harris 7:07. Neilson 12:07. Ferguson :41. l H N sweater over his head whicnl rliins his timing and coordina- tion. die. But a goaler is part of a team. and t h i s sensational Forbie Should Get More Time such as Maxner and Nibbs. will 1 Our Island representative in . provide more competition for 5 the N.H.L. of whom we are all , Kennedy. we. presume. T h e 3 '9” "0"": “b” . “Wm” strange thing about it is that didn‘t get much ice time in that Kennedy.s work 1" co m lime in Montreal Saturday games seemed to rate h i in more time than he. is getting. Leitcr‘s broken arm. sustained in Satiiday night’s game. will mean someone will have to take his place in the regular lines. and it just might be Ken- nedy. night. We gathered from Dan- ny Gallivan‘s remarks that he was out briefly in the first per- iod. We heard his name once in the second period. and he had a brief stint in the final session. Bringing up those. newcomers. lions Fool The Experts Our reputation as a prophet most remarkable football man- went down a couple of nothlIcs "elll‘l'zefirlwé’géfgnfiOUQUET “‘9” we Wk“ “mm” .l' Gary Campbell‘s fine net tend Cats to Will the grey cup. I‘llli ll ‘- Failed '0 inng a happy ending : a consolation that the real ex- To the Nationals though his work i certs in the business also laid an was a sensation. . . egg. The Ti-Cats with the wind Those five goals of Dav1d Martin against. them in the first quar- Almost surely did dishearten ter got off to a bad start. and David’s er mates. the Jun- t'hough they edged the Lions in ior aggregation. ‘he last half. it was not enough. It's a little hard to choose Weaver‘s threading the needle But we'd rather win than lose. ‘ Jetween his Hamilton plirsucrs So we‘ll give the blooms to Dave 1 'or his touchdown was one of the on this occasion. Munsey Is Hero In Grey Cup Win TORONTO 'CPluBIII Munsey. Browns of the National Football flinched as a hundred hands1 League but came to Canada be nded him on the back. He cause it "really lsual land of op- l | mg l t l e \ 9°“ . . preferred to talk about the line- portunity up here. I men who set up his two touch- Head coach Dave Skrien said owns in British Columbia it was B.C.'s best game of the Lions‘ 34-24 victory over Hamil- ' r. ‘ ton Tiger-Cats in the East-West “I didn't think that we were football final] Saturday. going to be defeated under any But Munsey couldn't 51ml his . circumstances after we got into teammates amid the post-game the game and I felt the tempo sweat. and champagne of the of it." he sai dressing room. Bernie Faloncy conceded in The 23 - year - old Minnesota ; the Hamilton dressing room grad never missed a play in IllSl that the pass to Counts wasn't defensive. halfback role and, one of his better ones. ‘Canadian Press Sports Editor AccouniFor3Touchdowns By JACK SULLIVAN TORONTO (CP) -— A third- string fullback who had carried the ball once for no gain in two ears of professional football nd a poetry-writing reserve quarterback p r o v i d e d the knockout punches Saturday tha: .gave British Columbia Lions a rushing 34-24 Grey Cup victory over Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Tile ions earned every pain The usual sources of the 13.0. offensive and defensive fire- y a l , and t Reserve Players Hold Key, ipower backed up the two her-l oes for the decision, hammered out in drizzling rain that made a few damp-slick patches on the Canadian National Exhibition Stadium grounds. It came 11 years after Lions entered the Western Conference and be- came a laughing stock with the optimistic "Lions Roar in '54" slogan. The Lions were soft touches the joke of the West 'or years until they moulded a con- tender that reached the heights iPrentice Gets Winner As Bruins Nip Hawks CHICAGO (AP) Boston Bruins overcame a two-goal deficit in the second period and went on to beat Chicago Black Hawks 4-3 Sunday night. The victory was the third in four games for the National Hockey League tailenders over 9 awks. Dean Prentice‘s eighth goal of the season early in the final period provided Boston's margin of victory. It was a 30-footer on which Chicago goalie Glenn Hall was partially screened by a Hawk defenceman. Goals in the final three min- utes of the second period by Leo Boivin and Johnny Bucyk pulled the Bruins into a 3-3 tle. urray Oliver opened the scoring for Boston midway in the first period but a marker by Chicago's Chico Maki and Bobby Hull‘s first of two put the Hawks on top 2-1. came on with a thundering of fensive game at fullback alteri 3‘3”: GETS LOOSE Bob Swift was hurt. I managed to_ grab the ball Late in the third quarter. as after i dl‘ODPP-d 11. the discon Lions scrimmade the ban nn‘solatc Counts explained. Bill the Hamilton 111. Munsey no-l somebody lumped on my back ticed the Ticat defence shifting and the ball squirted loose. its strength to the. right. He took1 "If there had to be a turning quarerback Kapp's hand-‘ point in the game. that was :t. ' ' off. ran right. then sliced left to said 'I‘icat coach Ralph Sazto open ground anda touchdown 1 "We. couldn‘t adjust during SCORES ANOTHER . the first. half and overcoming a Three minutes later he wasHtl-point deficit was just too ‘ much." .azio gave full credit to the s on . . "We were just out-defenced," line and when the pass came ‘ he said Cotints fumbled it. BC. lineman . " hey play a zone-type. de- Dick Fouts kicked it clear and l fence and hang back. w'aitln Munsey galloped 65 yards for; for the passes. They didnt put his second touchdown. . the same rush on Feloney as we Munsey could have signediput on Kapp but it certame two years ago with Cleveland 1 proved effecuve.’ Hull gave. the Hawks a 3-1 lead at 13:39 of the middle period when he broke in on Bos- ton goalie Ed Johnston while e Hawks were shorthande and ripped his 17th goal of the year into the cage. From that point on. it was all] Boston. Boivin whacked a 15- footer behind Hall on a pass-out by Prentice at 18:38 and Bucyk picked up a pass from Green at the corner of the cage and dumped a three-footer over the shoulder of Hall. who was fall- ing to the ice. Hall was required to make 35 stops for the night. compared h 28 by Johnston. wit- SUMMARY Boston. Olive. 2 (Fleming. Green) 10:37: hicago. Maki 6 (Wharram. Mikita) 11:17: 3. Chicago. B. —1 ties—Fleming 4:09. D. Hull 7:23 Miki a 9:46. illman. Mohns 14:24. Fleming. Mohns 18:29. Hoop Practice i There will be a practice fort all those interested in a Char- lottetown Basketball League at Birchwood High this Monday. November 30 at 7.00. This will the last call for players be- fore Christmas. There h been hree teams completed and it is hoped that the players that will Second period—4. Chicago. B Hull 17 thsterenko) 13:36; 5. Boston. Boivin 2 (Maxner) and Prentice 18:38: 6. Boston. Bucyk 7 (Green) 19:57. Penalties-— Maki 2:28. McKenzie 11:55. Third per od — 7. Boston Prentice 8 Boivin 3:43. Pen- a7lti4e5s ~ Johnson 1:11. Mikita Saves Johnston H 912 8—29 all 8 17 10—35 Hull 16 tRavlich) 19:38. Penal-; on the Leafs goa!_ break,“ th; way of assists. Saves r :1 node 7 4 9-” touchdown in Saturday's Grey Tiger-Cats. I alone on goalie Roger Crozier, Kennedy scored. The Rangers m__w Cup action against Hamilton (CP Wircphoto) [Ci-(me;- smpped the puck but it added agither markerd bifogg ———_ aid at the corner and Arm- 9 Perl was Over an s a strong poked it across the line. “I the ice: 3} the .end 0‘ twenty . that both memorials: stir: rn muaking 1510 55:32:. games‘ each be the turning point of the game of the Detroit outshot Toronto 16-11 3‘ “‘9 Range" PM“ “P “"9" in the opening period 'nks a; goals without an answer from m l the Junior Varsity squad. Ken- ur powerpay chances' but by nedy added his second goal of F o R U M "I? end‘ the [leafs penalty “11' the game in the middle frame 6” wgre gettmg 8? many "9' while Vince MacDougall and portunities as the Wings. MacDougau also potted MONDAY was the same way I“ "1" markers for the Rangers. This 11:00-12:00 a-m- Pa’kdale 3' in '64 and gaVe the West its 121111 last-quarter rally netted them :victory in 37 East-West clashes ‘ 16 points two converted ! since the Cup became a na- ‘ touchdowns and a conceded tional affair in 1921. safety touch. Time simply ‘an The names that will be re- out on them. imemhered rom this one are Ohler's contribution came on .Bill Munsey and Pete 0111121‘ 3 broken play at 2:24 of the second quarter with Lions in front 7-0. The westerners had lined up for a field-goal attempt from the Hamilton 15. Ohler funi- iBetween them. they were di- irectly resonsible for three of ‘the Lions‘ five touchdowns. Tiger - Cats, and just. about everybody else. didn't figure that these comparative unknowns would take a big part in knocking over the power- house of the East. the team fthall went ' o the ame ivored to win by eight points .But 32.655 fans at the stadium jand television viewers across the country were witnesses. SCORES 2 TDs Munsey. who got no farther than the line of scrimmage in ‘ his one ball-carrying effort in a iwrc game last year. scored empl‘s place-kicking and who two touchdowns in three min- does freelance writing an s and four seconds in the writes poetry, said he had been third quarter. And they couldn't l practising the pass to Carnhin have come at a more oppor- l for just such an eventuality time time. The other Lions' touchdowns , The Tiger-Cats. sniffing blood i came from Swift on 8' one-yard .and on the prowl, had cut the hurdle over the Hamilton lino .Lions' lead to.20-8 when Mun- t filld a DRIP-and Misting. swerv- ‘ sey went to work. Playing in 1 mg 46-yard dash around the end 'the fullback spot left vacant by 1 by the incomparable Willie a knee injury to first-string Bob Fleming who was a hall-carry- Swift and a leg ailment to sec- I lng terror all afternoon. Kemrf ball and pitched an end-zone pass to Jim Carphin. a second- string end who had been de- tailed to act as an emergency receiver in the event of any miscues on the snap. WAS READY FOR IT Coach Skrien of the ‘Lionssaid "definitely" it was a lbroken play. The 23-year-old Olller. who spends most of his time holding the ball for Peter l 1 l D- bled the snapout, retrieved the H and-string . eal Beaumont, he i clicked on four of five converts bulldozed 18 yards off left guard and Beaumont conceded the {or his first touchdown arsafety touch with five minutes tremaininlg in the game 11:54. t On the last p}ay of the quanj Hamilton. held to a' second- ,ter and with Tiger-Cats on rhulquarler single by punter .Ioe ' . 35‘ Johnny Counts fum. Zuger in the first half when ibled a long lateral from quar- they trailed 20-1. came to life ;terback Bernie Faloney Dick after the interval. Counts ram- .j Fours e n 5 iv e elm, bled 58 yards down the sidelines booted the loose ball. Munsey after taking a lateral from F1:- was lhcredo grab it on the dead 1000.7 in the third quarter and run and he streaked 65 yards the Ticat leader tossed touch- for the touchdown that ende’LdO‘Vn strikes to Tommy Gram ‘Linns' scoring. land Stan Crisson in the final 1 The scoreboard showed Lions! quarter When the game-was out :in front 34-8. Tiger-Cats wcrelof reac . l dead and every fan wearing the Sutherin converted two touch- ‘ .l Hamilton black and gold com. downs and Zuger added another the 5% - minute mark. Dave I knew it. although a desperation Single- l attend this practice will com- plete a fourth team. Minor Hockey Schedule The following Is this week‘s Midget schedule: Monday. Nov. 30 —- 5 p.m. —- Bruins vs Rangers: 8 p.m. —— This Week AT lCivic Stadium 'l Ist. on 2nd on 3rthr 4th on Totals " «ileum B.C.Ham no. Ham n.C.iinm B.C.Ham B.C.Ham D First downs 4 n 7 2 s 7 0 12 18 24 " Yds rushing '19 57 88 3 37 88 11 55 1511 203 °' Yds passing so 11 67 64 34 59 0 90 159 m " Passes tried 5 :l 7 11 a s 2 14 22 34 " Completed 2 1 s 3 3 5 0 9 in m It Int‘cept 0 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 .1 Pants 2 3 :l 3 2 2 2 1 9 11 ,g Avge 37 . 31: 1:3 :13 :12 31 on 36 42 1 Fumbles 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 4 A Fumbles lost 0 0 0 1 1 1 o o 1 2 . Penaltie 1 o :1 1 1 1 2 1 ll 3 ‘5 ya.“ 1nd 5 ,0 20 15 1o 15 5 s 40 35 a. Field goals 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o .9 Fld goals in! 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o M probably be best remembered v0 Johnny COUI'II'S in the 1964 Grey Cup final for It Y d leader thmnecpliytsthat 12:31“. Wl‘gfée In on pic up M ar age over-all yardage than any other to 3, ED snuo player on the field "i TORONTO 1 CP 1 _. When He netted 66 yards on six run- “ 30h“? 09'1"“ thinks Me“ '" ning plays. including a 58-yard his first Grey Gun game he is likely to dwell unhappiiy on one. ‘0? the first sideline gallop l . o 91%“ was the wild lateral pass Rom . game. It got away from speedy hnlfba 06 YONG by 3*” Mlm‘ that was tops for the afternoon clinching touchdown a Lions TOPS MUNSEY That gave Counts a total of 144 yards, 25 more than Munsey who gained 54 in seven carries after taking over from the In- hred Bob Swift as B.C.'I tuli- l‘zck early in the second mar- 'm hock striuua. Canadiens vs Red Wings. .MONDAY_ uesday. Dec. 1 — .m. - Black Hawks vs Citizens; 6 1—2 p.m.-Pre-school Skate p.m. ~ Maple Leafs vs Coun- 4:00-10:00 p.m.—Hockey cillortl. practices I l - NHL STANDINGS(TUFISDAY- I By CANADIAN PRESS ‘ 7—5 p.m.—Rock N Roll Skate . National Rogue ‘ L 'r r APt WEDNESDAY 1 u nghjt'o 1: 9 2:23 1—2 p.m.—Pro. school Skate ontreal 8 ti 5 51 4321 : _ '_ d N :1 New York 8 ll 4 47 5120 s Titling? Chicago 8 9 ; i0 5 12 i tmt‘“ THURSDAY— ! B a. 8—10 p.m.—Skate For 3 Months FRIDAY— BOSTON (AP) —Centre Bobby Hamilton touchdown just after Lei-fer of Boston Bruins Wm be a half-time that stood up as the sidelined for day. a broken arm suffered in a N three months wiw n. Sat- in Montreal. Ha mllton quarterbacx longest single rush of the . mp palm on the last play In ' n, g c u two honal Hockey league game of the thin! welder in Satur- passes for a total of 18 yards "May night if!" and ran back three kickoffs for BIN" “melt” 3‘” Sunday 62. including a 25-yard runback NEIL Leiter was injured when he was slammed into the boards. Both bones of his forearm were fractured. He underwent surgery in Montreal to have red: through the splintered The Bruins slid letter in hospital I‘m a w.“ I. will» 9:15 p.m. Hockey S'slde .Ir Legionnalres vs. Enmon D Combines 1 l . a ‘ SATURDAY-— 2—4 p.m.—strafing 8:00 p.m.—Official minor approximately from 10:" p.m. SUNDAY— l 3:20—10:30 p.m.—Skating Club. In Montreal for at I creator of hockey with skating uckingham PIN“ lollll I to. “Hill. k l second period when Detroit drew the only two penalties. Sawchuk stopping Bruce Mac- Gregor, Norm Ullman and Pit Martin on break-ins. First period—l. Detroit. Smith 6 (Howe. Ullman) 8:37. Penal- ties—Pulford 6:53. Sun 11:36. 17:42. P. MacDonald 12:02. Brewer 15:10. Second period -— 2. Toronto, Armstrong 4 (Shack. Brewer) 17:12. Penalties—Murphy 3:47, owe 9'43 Third period — No scoring. Penalty—Baun 9:05. Saves: SaWchuk :5 10 5—30 Crozier 1110 9—30 Montreal 5 New York 2 NEW YORK (AP)—Jim Rob- erts scored his first National Hockey League goal and set up another as Montreal Canadiens whipped New York 5-2 Sunday night and climbed past the Rangers into third place in the ce 2 a The loss dropped New York to fourth place. a point behind Montreal and four points behind league - leading Detroit Red ngs. Roberts. a 24-year-old forward who appear in 15 games for the Canadiens last year. pri- marily as a penalty-killer. tal lied late in the second peri This goal pushed the Canadiens in front 4-2. They had raced to a 3-2 lead in the opening 20 min- § u . Roberts set up Ralph Back- strom's third - period goal for a two - point. night after being blanked in Montreal‘s first In. games. dean Beliveau and young Yves Cournoyer gave the Cann- diens a quick two-goal lead in the.opening minutes of the first period and they were never headed After Rod Gil-bert put me Rangers on the scoreboard at made the score read 5-1 for the Rangers. The tried period turned out to be a complete route of St. Dunstan‘s as the Rangers scor- ed five more goals. with Arsen- on' lStudents 25c. Balon of Montreal and New suit, and MaeEachern each scoring two and Mike MacKin- non adding the final score of the 3 me. All though the game was never in dought from the end of the first period on the game was very roug wit both teams being heavily penalized as the Rangers picked up six- penalties St. Dun- stan's getting eleven. - l Monday, Nov. 30 JUNIOR HOCKEY 8:30 PM. P.W.C. "Welshmen" VS. North River "Juniors" Adults 50ci TUESDAY, DEC. 1 8:30 p.m. l JUNIOR HOCKEY 5.0.". "Juniors" V8. Rogers' "Rangers" Students 25c; Adults 50c 1 GET THE REAL 74.975 0H1 35/11 GIG/l 35775 uckingham $22212: .illl. HUI-II . CC. ltll'l. K/NGS OF? REGULAR SIZE High School 3:45 4:45 Prince Street Schoo 5:00-7:00 Minor Hockey 8:30 p.m. Junior Hockey P. W. C. vs. North River Students 25c; Adults 50c TUESDAY 7:00-8:00 am. Queen Charlott 3:30-4:30 p.m. Spring Part School 5:00-7:00 p.m. Minor Hockey 8:30 p.m. Junior Hockey: S.D.U. “Juniors” vs. Rogers Hardware “Rangers” Students .250 Adults .50c WEDNESDAY 7:00-8:00 am. Vocational Sch oo 1:30-3:00 p.m. Pre-School C11 dren Skating (.25c Per 1: ll ) m 3' 4:00-5:30 p.m. Skating Children .15c Adults .25c 6:00-8:00 p.m. Minor Hockey Practice 9:00-12:00 TH URSDA Y 7:00-8:00 am. Queen Charlotte 11:00-12:00 am. Parkdale Elementary School :00-7:00 p Figure Skating Cl 1) Hockey North River Students .25c 0c u 8:30 p.m. Junior P. . vs. Juniors; Adults .5 FRIDAY 1:45-3:45 p.m. Ch'town Rur- High School 3:45-4:45 St. Jeans School 5:00-7:00 p.m. Minor Hockey 8:30-10:30 p.m. Senior Teens (15 and over) .55c an. Adults .50c Skating SATU RDA Y 7:00-1:15 Minor Hockey 2:00-4:00 pm kating: Children .15c: Adults .251 4:45-9:45 pm. Minor Hockey