age. teams “opened: ‘their Canadia: "Weekend. B.C: Lions get‘off te, their usual. — .” “eauver. : Ottawa's: Lansdowne _ mind Sunday to: beat He . , 4 md | Page @ The Heratd; ‘Monday. July 12, 1942 “Bdnronton Epkimge.. appeared ft Ina cA tot of 147 points-wete scored as four, “Football League seasons during the’ ‘energized: start’. by.. burying’ Hamilton’: ees 514 Satiirday. hgh. in. Veer . The Eskimos displayed their superiority : ‘at the expense of a team that won the - Eastern Division title.Jast autumn, yet... fumbled the ball seven times and had two ~ passes interc thejg heads in dismay. ° The Eskimos did not tumble or offer up one pass interception. ’ Quarterback Warren Moon passed for four touchdowns and engineered andther two ina little more than three quarters and replacement Cliff Olander directed the Eskimos to another in the fourth quarter. Edmonton got two touchdowns each ’ from running backs Kevin. Cole:and Neil © . Lumsden and one each from rookie wide | yeceiver Mike Levenseller, veteran wide ‘ receiver Tom Scott and defensive back Emilio Fraietta on’ a third-quarter in- terception of a pass from starting Ottawa quarterback Jordan Case. - Ottawa's lone touchdown came in the : second quarter with the game already . over at 29-0 when John Holland scored on a : 60-yard pass play: with Case." The 25-year-old. North Texas State © ’ graduate was buried six times by. Edmonton's beltigerent defensive line. He was.not in a charitable mood afterwards. “I don’t want my job on the line because - someone else is not. doing his: job,” said "Case, after he'd filled head coach George ’ Brancatoin on what he felt was 8 grossly : inadequate. offensive line. Moon completed 16 of 23 passes for 285 yards and Olander was 3-for-é for 43, Eskimos appear fit \ ted as 21,435 locals shook : pupiey TT BRIQGE 0 a ca In Vancouver, backup ‘quarterback Roy Dewalt relieved starter Joe Paopao in the _ second quarter and threw four touchdown passes, including. three in a 23-point third - quarter, as the Lions roared past Hamilton in front of a crowd of 23,389. i It) was the sixth straight season the Lions ‘have won their home opener and. bead coach Vie Rapp praised Dewalt for the poise and maturity he’s gained in his third _ Pro season. The %-year-old second-atring import out of Texas-Arlington was 11-16 for 201 yards without an interception. Paopao was 610 for 137 yards and a touchdown and one — interception before jamming his hand on a snap from centre. Tight end Harry Holt scored on ‘eeand seven-yard passes and- wingback Steve -. * Kearns and reokle wide-receiver Mervyn ' Fernandez caught 15-yard TD throws. A 20-yard Paopao_passto Al Charuk and " geven-yard sprint by running back Larry . Key enhanced B,C.'s-total. : ‘B.C. had a net offence of 466 yards to - Hamilton's 301. Soniehow, the Ticats out- first-downed the Lions 25-21. Hamilton . fumbled four times and lost the ball three times. B.C. lost both of its two fumbles, B.C. took 101 minutes. in Penalties to Hamilton's 62. “top t “all alf, ‘Tooy. Gabriel, “who: 5 a retired after 11 CFL seasons — seven of | “'thern-in Ottawa — after’ helping the Riders . get to the Grey Cup last November, had to . Ait in the stands on Tony Gabriel Day and. ~ Watch the whole-thing _ . team. The fifth set separates the men from the bow. Somehow, John (McEnroe) fame out on top.” ae a - McEriroe outlasted Mats Wilander in a duel lasting ‘ ale bours, 32 minutes’ and 79 games ‘Sunday. night, | giving. defending champion United States a 3a vice 2: . tale Sweden tn their Davis cup usrer-final a e. _ “ a * McEnroe, who lost his Wimnbledsa ttle tat week io ; Jimmy Connors, won 0-7, 62, 15-17, 3-6,.5-6 In the _Hangast mach sineo'the Davis Cup discarded the challenge round format’ in 172. “Tt was the longest match I’ve played and! can tell | you that my horiy'a uot feeling very ood, " McRiroe said. Wilander, 17, leader of the youthful Swedish team, ; also said he was tired, But the winner of the French Open wasn’t satisfied with bis effort. “You should always be disappointed when you lose.” In the first match ‘Sunday, Swede Andres Jarrya” | upset Brian Gottfried 6-2, 6-2; 4, Wing the hent-of- five-matches at 2-2. On Saturday, McEntve teamed with | Peter Fleming to defeat Jarryd and Hans Simonssan 6-4, 6-3, Gina . doubles match. . “By - winning, : the Americans advanced to the. Semifinals against Australia in Ociober, Atistralia . advanced by eliminating Chile 41, clinching the semifinal spot when Peter McNamara and Paul McNamee beat Hans Gildemelster and Bels. . . Prajoux 86, 2-6, 8-4, 6-2 in the doubles match : Saturday for a 3-0 lead. oe . _Also advancing tothe semifinals wire New Zealand LL “and France, who will meet Oct.1-3 in Paris. © New Zealand defeated Italy 3-2 Sunday when Chris Lewis beat Adriano Panatta 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 in the first of the reverse singles matches. Corrado Bararutti beat — Bruce Derlin 6-2, 63 ina meaningless second match. France upset Czechoslovakia 3-2 when Yannick Nosh rallied from a 2-1 set deficit to defeat Ivan Lendl 6-2, 3-6, 7-9, 63, 4 in a ‘match lasting almost four hours. The French then forfeited the last match when - Thierry Tulasn, playing Thomas Smid, withdrew after falling ill because of the heat. . acca ire rat a N Gy showed the deft hands of. 4 surgeon : Sunday when he Janded’a'sott: ‘geven-ipon ‘vehot from - the’ 17th.” falrvay’: within. Centimetres of the cup 'to win a three-hole, midden-death playoff with ‘Dave Barr ‘of . Kelowna; B&., “in the $106,000. Labatt’s rete LOWHE aD : ar) SOR EME a gee jem go . nicHy _ Bat.the 39-year-old ative of: Roxbors ~_“ternational golf, tournament,- “hola at 243 — one stroke under: par.on the 6,736-yard Cherry Hill Club that played as’ ~ tough as any the pros will play on the tour’ -fast greens. Thorpe sald the lengthy delay awaiting a Tuling’ by officials, before be. took his second shot on the third playoff. hole because of: gusting winds and a lghinkig ‘allowed him to. make the proper club : Selection. "Tt was 148. yards (to the pin) ‘and I used @ seven iron,” he said when asked about the drop he got when his tee shot came to rest in a new drainage area. ‘But then the _ officials had te rule on which side of the drain to drop the ball. . “Tt was a good thing they (the officials) — did come out because that allowed me to _ _ Slow down and take some time to think * about the shot.” It was perhaps a “hometown crowd following the new Canadian PGA cham-' - pion alnce he now makes his home across the Niagara River in Buffalo, N.Y: “] gure hada lot of friends out there today,” Thorpe said. “I golf with a Jot of those. guys.” Despite its closeness. to: his home, however, Thorpe said he had played Cherry Hill only ait times before the - ~ tournament. Thorpe started the day three strokes ~~ behind -Barr, who led a group of four players by one stroke and led by a8 ‘much as two before faltering on the back nine to finish with a 72. Thotpe had a 6 which, along with Paul Kennedy of Huntsville, ~ CARRIERS REQUIRED-THORNHILL “the daily herald currently has openings for carriers in the | areas numbered on th 2 RRR yh ote Bei ay iy WOT ¢ e map. shatter AN TRESCENT. ‘CPGA putting ‘title; worth. another #1, 000. a 4 “His finish ‘Sunday was ‘tig closest a _ - 202. Ont ae i beat ri of he and come to winning the. CPGA elub pros for the title. - - The top six ‘players in the tournament’ are regulars on the U. s. PGA tour. . Dan Halidoraon of Shilo, Man., and Ben ~ Crenshaw of Austin, Tex., tied for third with 2858 — one over par —, while New: | Zealand Bob Charles and defending - champion Ray. Floyd of Miami were -another three strokes back at 288. Halldarson had a 73, Crenshaw a ns, Charles a 72 and Floyd a 70. Spaniard Antonio Garrido, who shot 74. Sunday, was alone in seventh place at 200, five over par, while Jerry Anderson of Toronto, who played in Australia-and on the Far East and European tours, was another stroke back with Welsh champion Craig DeFoy. Anderson had a 71 ani DeF oy 8 73. y Norm Jarvis of Delta, B.C., who led the ~ first two days with successive rounds of €8,:-- developed a painful blister on hia right fact - Saturday and his game deteriorated noticeably the last two days. He finished with a 79 and was at 201 with Jim Nelford.of Burnaby, B.C.,whohad 72. ~-Danny Talbot.of Belolel, Que., runner-ip = + to Floya last year, finished with a 73 oe, “Pltch-In -Keep | Canada. - Beautiful a 2 S .$ S pee 1 13400 4 fe "For further information < on the above ~ marked: routes call Maria: Taylor adian’ mpionship- since “the “present - format “adopted: ‘in 1978: ‘allowed a select group of. . US. PGA tour players. and. national” rs champions: to ‘compete aigoinst Canadian "The two: regulars, on’ the: Professional” Golfers’ Association tour were tied after 72° -