Terrace Review — Wednesday, March 20, 1991 B3 Second for Skeena in own tournament Kitimat’s T.L.T. put together a record of three wins and a shootout victory to win the Skeena Hotel’s six- team, double-knockout non-contact hockey tournament on the weekend. T.L.T. won their opener on a shootout to see who would advance on ‘A’ side and who would drop to ‘B’ side. Two more wins by Kitimat (8-3 over Prince Rupert and 12-4 over Burns Lake) gave them the ‘A’ side berth in the final. Meanwhile, the host team — Skeena Hotel — had to earn their final spot the hard way as they lost their opener 5-4 to Terrace. Skeena wound up Saturday playing and winning four out of five games. At the end they played three in a row. They downed Hazelton 3-2, beat Prince Rupert 9-5, won a 5-5 shootout over Ter- race, and edged Burns Lake 7-6 before getting into the final against T.L.T. ; T.L.T. won the game 6-1 and took home top prize money of $1,400, Skeena pocketed $800 for second, while $450 went to Burns seen stp spent Sareetinage me a ona _— apecamearawagne ot ee tes ep age pe a wg tng ome alee wets ee 6 ne enc Se pane ea sae Nn en a, ne ae With the traditional handshake, Skeena Hotel concluded its non-contact hockey tournament last weekend in Terrace by congratulating the winning Kitimat T.L.T. team. The Skeena gang put in a strong effort to finish second, coming up through the ’8' side with four wins. Kitimat T.L.T. tooks home the marbles and $1,400 for winning the Skeena Hotel non-contract hockey tournament held in the Terrace Arena March 16 and 17, B.C. SENIORS GAMES COQUITLAM, B.C. SEPTEMBER 4, 5, 6, 7, 1991 The B.C. Seniors Games are open to all residents of British Columbia who are 55 years of age, or older. If you are interested in participating in the Seniors Games, please fill out the form below and return It to the B.C. Seniors Games Society at the address shown. Our Sports Coordinator will contact you with further information regarding the event of your choice. The games events are as follows: Badminton Chess Golf Snooker Bagpiping Cribbage Horseshoes Swimming Bicycling Darts Lawn Bowling Table Tennis Bridge Five Pin Bowling One Act Play Tennis Carpet Bowling Floor Curling Slo Pitch Track & Field All participants In the games events are required to pay a $5.00 membership fee in the B.C. Seniors Games Society at the time of registering for competition in their Zone. The ! persons qualifying to attend the games are required to pay a $25.00 registration fee. TO: B.C. Seniors Games Soctety (Zone 10), Box 208, — Terrace, B.C. V8G 4A6 Yes, | am interested In participating In (name of games event) | NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE NO.: Lake for third. Kermodes dumped by Centennial to — finish season It looked bright for Caledonia Kermodes as they gained entry in the B.C. Senior Boys’ triple ‘AAA’ basketball champion- ships by knocking off the number two Central zone in a special pre-tournament playoff. But bright turned to dark as they were badly beaten in two straight tournament games and wound up as spectators. Fans here expected great things from Kermodes after they bounced out the Prince Rupert Rainmakers in a_ best-of-three for the zone title. Changes in the structure of B.C. High School Boys’ Basket- ball meant we had to play off against the number two North central squad to gain a spot at Vancouver. In past years it was an automatic berth for our zone, but Lower Mainland teams pres- sured others into making this and a similar change with the in- - terior. So, it was off to Vancouver one day early to face Quesnel’s Corrilieu in a sudden death match for one of the two final places in the top 16. Despite Kermodes’ 85-73 win over Quesnel, coach Cam McKay felt the team played poorly, ‘‘We failed to connect on foul shots, and believe me, we had plenty,’’ he told us. Corrilieu had five players ben- ched by the five-foul rule. Ker- modes had only one. Four Cal players hit double. figures —. Paul Manhas (25), Geoff McKay (16), Steve Dhansaw (13), and Kannin Osei-Tutu (12). , The game was played at Killarney High. Next day (Wednesday) was the tournament beginning. It was also the halfway ending- for Kermodes as they took on’ Centennial Centaurs, a team they dropped a pair to early in the season. Centaurs were ranked in the top 10 and showed our boys why by cracking out a 76-42 win over the Northwest Zone champs. Kermodes, in fact, managed on- ly three points in the third- quarter. Mike Parker was our ace with. 16 points. The loss dropped Ker- modes to ‘B’ side of the twin-kill series. One more loss and they were viewers from the bleachers. The loss came next day when St. Michaels College from Van- couver Island ripped us 80-48. Steve Dhansaw was the only player finding the range (16 points). That finished up Caledonia’s in-and-out season. Double win for Totem midgets Terrace Totem Ford midgets, playing double ’AA’ minor hockey this season, travelled to Prince George to take on that city’s triple *AAA’ entry on the weekend and came home with a pair of wins. Terrace beat the hosts 6-4 Saturday night, then came back from a 5-1 deficit Sunday morning to defeat Prince George again 8-5. The Totem Ford gang are expected to play at least one game at home this coming weekend. ATTENTION Anyone interested in participating in a 8 team Pacific Northwest Fastball League, coaches and players. Juniors (16-21 years); Mens (21-39 years); Masters (39 years & up). For futher information contact Norm 635-2249