They came close but lost RICHMOND HILLâ€"â€" It within two games of the "The boys went furthef ShOWingS came 3 couple shortstop. pitcher, seven Tournaments wallop Oshawa by 9-0 score Richmond Hill Midget Manager Sid Moreland and coach Glen Burling made it all the way to the finals before bowing out to Owen Sound in the Softball wars. All in all. a great year. RICHMOND HILL â€" The Richmond Hill Tournaments Inc. Minor Bantams rounded out their exhibition schedule with a 9â€"0 trouncing of an Oshawa AA team Sunday. The home team scored once in the opening stanza but added four goals in each of the latter periods to coast to victory. Adam Cox, David Banton and Andrew Don scored. Greg Anderson and Doug Macklin will share netminding duties. Bounce back Tournaments Inc., bounced back from their initial exhibition loss to Keswick to defeat Newmarket 5-2. Richvale Bantams Since finalizing his squad, Jim Cade has witnessed but one defeat of his club, a 5-3 loss to Keswick Bantams in the team's first outing after final cuts had been made. Team Captain Warren Nye anchors the rearguard with Mike Smith, converted forward Lorne Baxter, Bryan Cox and Glenn Apps staffing the defence. Apps is expected back in the line- up shortly after recovering from a broken collar bone. Paul Harrietha, John- Paul Farrell and Rick Scragg, Paul Beckwith, Cleve Jones, Pat Lawlor, AURORA â€" The third annual Big Brothers of York hockey night will be held at the Aurora Community Centre Nov. 2 at 7:30 pm. Big Brother hockey It will feature the Toronto Major A Marlies against the Provincial A THE LIBERAL. Wednesday, October 27. 1976 Richvale Bantams found themselves on the short end of a 4-1 score as well. Then, in the surprise of the exhibition season, the Richmond Hill brigade startled Barrie by beating them 5-3 right in the blueshirts home arena. The following afternoon the team completed its weekend sweep by dumping Aurora 8-4 in a home game. Coach Cade and assistant Bill Neville are hopeful that their team’s success to date angers well for the upcoming season which opens in Barrie tomorrow (Thursday) night. Aurora Tigers; and the NHL Old-Timers against the York Regional Police. Proceeds from the events will go toward the Big Brother cause who provide services to fatherless boys. Ida-“BM 1 all! 9v: 22% a! RICHMOND HILL â€" It wouldn't be quite ac- curate to describe a ballplayer as being a “grizzled veteran" just because he‘s an eight-year veteran. Especially when he and some of his teammates started their “career†together at the blushineg tender age of nine years. That was the situation with several of the members of the Rich- mond Hill Midget softball team this past season who scrambled their way to Oktoberfest laure/s to Hamilton keg/er RICHMOND HILL â€" Lloyd Omerod of Hamilton won the Master Bowlers Oktoberfest Classic, held on the 9th and 10th of this month in Kitchener. Lloyd defeated Nick Pagniello of Scarboro in the final match by six pins to win the $1,100 first prize with $550 going to second place. In the womens section‘ Sue Wise of Scarboro won her first Masters tour- nament when she defeated Charlene MacCormack of George- town by 37 pins. First place money of $600 went i0 Sue wi'th Charlene picking up $300 for her second place finish. Next tournament for the Masters will be the Master-Junior Regional Finals to be held at Kempview Bowl in Barrie. A.B.C. Bowl will have eleven represen- tatives at these regional finals. The date for this event is October 31, the teams will be announced in a later column. WEDNESDAY MIXED The high average holders for the Wedâ€" nesday Mixed league are Betty Wolfreys with 247 and Jack Hill with 223. Some of last week’s high-lights were Frank Bond Steel midgets open with 5-2 loss RICHMOND HILL â€" The Richmond Hill Bond Steel Minor Midgets opened their season with a 5-2 loss to Thornhill Sunday here. Thornhill opened the scoring after three or four good saves by Hill goalie Terry Greenfield. Richmond Hill tied the game four minutes later with Pat Mulcahy pulling the trigger assisted by By [an Cameron Wuï¬vfivï¬upfl Omarioata Available in LS oz. and 40 01. A product of Canadian Gibson Distillery Ltd.. Montreal, and soon 5!. Thomas, Ontario. within two games of the “champagne glow†that comes with winning a provincial championship. Pitcher Glen Moreland and those teammates â€" a number of whom started out as squirts years ago and stayed together â€" dropped 1-0 and 7-3 games to Owen Sound to douse their hopes. Elated Glen’s father and manager Sid Moreland and coach Glen Burling were elated with their showing in any case. Price with 797, Ross Myles 777 with a 354 single his average is 168 and Owen Moreau with 701. For the women Jo Morden bowled a 753, with a 291. Some high scores were bowled by Edith Harrison 294, Don Binnee 282, Betty McWirter 280, Rose Am] 265, Liz Moriarty a 168 average bowler had 262, Heather Porter 260 and Rose Silz who has a 163 average bowled 242. The Daydreamers lead the league with 147 points and the Dum Dums bowled an 1149 flat score high for the league. BOWLING TIP Concentration is the biggest part of your bowling game. Without concentration you have no co-ordination and without coâ€"ordination you have no accuracy. These are the three basic fundamentals towards good bowling, of course there are other points like approach, follow-through and the type of ball that you throw that are necessary for better bowling, but concentration tops the list. Jason Maxey and Jimmy Lawlor. Thornhill went ahead before the period ended and added two more in the second. They added another one in the third before Jamie Hill rounded out the local scoring unassisted. Defenseman Mike Rae and winger B. Wintjes played good games. bowling results / “The boys went further this year than any local midget club has gone in years.“ said Moreland “And it was the best showing of a minor ball club here since the Wilson Niblett squirts won an All Ontario title in 1966. “We were happy even though we lost." Fine hurling Pitcher Moreland continued his fine hurling averaging some 300 in- nings despite a sore arm for a time and that‘s the type of pitching he‘s been doing for eight years. One of MASTER KIM EDWARD i.c. m «won-nu 519. mu BLACK am TAE KWON-DO KIM'S INSTITUTE OF Open 70 a. m. to 70 p. m. 6 days a week (COUPON PRESENTATION OF THIS AD) DEMONSTRATlON 2 pm. Sat Oct. 30th SPECIAL! FREE UNIFORM KOREAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY CHAMPION AND GRAND CHAMPION MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN JUDO CLUB REGISTER NOW†Totomo Branch: 625 Yonue St. at Isabella 9646173 8159 YONGE ST. THORNHILL (Bayhill Mews) 889-4597 his better 'SELF-DISCIPLINE 'SELFADEFENCE ‘PHYSICAL FITNESS AND MOON'S showings came a couple seasons ago in a' game against Glenfield when he struck out 26 batters in a row before walking the 27th on a 3-2 count. Glen and goodly number of his teammates will probably be prime candidates for a proposed junior softball team in Richmond Hill next season. But that’s in the future. Line-up Comprising the line-up this season were the following players: h ‘ _ “(glen M’o'relénd, pitcher, nine years with town rep teams; Paul Philip, MASTER MOON BVUNG Kl. .quo m mm BLACK am VALUE $2500 shortstop, pitcher, seven years with town rep teams; Dale Strang, second base, seven years; Greg MacMillan, out- fielder, catcher, seven years; Greg Walton, centre-fielder, three years; Phil Wood, first base, five years. 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