Pete Peterson (left) of the host team SKB Wreckers presents a. cheque for $600 and an engra Movers captain Glen Thomsen. Icebreaker tournament held ved Cadiliac hub cap to William‘s Williams took first place In the SKB at Riverside Park on the weekend. _ Williams stops Takhar Takhar Oilers were the only undefeated .team going into the final game of the SKB Icebreaker slo- plich tournament on Sunday afternoon but Williams Movers tarnished their record with a 12-2 win to give Willams first place. . ' The two teams had met in ‘their first game Saturday morning with Takhar knocking Williams into'the losers side of the draw with a 7-1 victory. Williams ‘then came through the losers’ side with wing over Terrace Builders 1-0, Kokanee 13-2, and Gus’s Rec Center 2-1. Takhar came through the winner's side with wins over UAB +41 Kokanee 10-0 goronto. "Blizzard olds playing in a smaller Stadium »° with rather than artificial grass this’ season and Roberta Fettega loves surroundings. A'damp, cold day Sun- his new and Wayside 43. In the game for third place, Williame edged Wayside'3-2. The game was: a. tight defensive battle ‘that took nine in- nings ‘to decide. - The two teams were deadlocked 2-2 after the regulation seven innings., In the top of the ninth Williams generated some offense and scored * one run wich proved to be natural . day also was pleasing to ¢ the Italian star, who scored a goal and assisted on one by Ace Ntsgelengoe in Toronto’s 2-0 North American Soccer League season-opening victory over Tulsa Roughnecks, Tulsa beat Toronto by an identical score last Sep- tember in the NASL’s Soccer Bowl championship game in Vancouver. “J was so happy,” said the © 33-year-old — former Juventus striker. ‘In Italy, we play during the winter; so | like the cold. “Soccer was born on grass and it’s the best surface to play on.” The Blizzard played on the artificial surface at Exhibition Stadium on the lakefront for six years before reverting this spring to smaller Varsity thegame winner. Wayside picked up $200 for third place. -In. the final game Williams Movers came on strong and scored five runs in the first inning and five in the second inning and paver looked back as they dumped the Oilers 12-2. Takhar came back to score two runs in the hottans of teete. "Stadium o on 1 the ¢ downtown University of Toronto campus. , _ “It’s going to be great playing on this beautiful turf,” said captain Bruce Wilson. ‘This will be the best field in the league to play and watch soccer.” COSMOS WIN in one . other game Sunday, New York Cosmos defeated ..Tampa Hay Rowdies 1-0 on a breakaway goal by Roberto Cabanas. Results Saturday: Vancouver Whitecaps 2, ‘San Diego Sockers 0; and Minnesota § Strikere 3, _ Chicago Sting 2. Acrowd of 10,710 fans sat through cold, drizzly weather to wateh the Blizzard. Bettega, after surviving several wicked tackles, opened the scoring in the 35th minute with a low shot .into @ corner of the Tulsa net past goalkeeper Winston Dubose. Bettega then set up Ntsoelengoee with tys seconds left in the first the first inning but that was all they would get. Williams let up slightly in the fifth inning allowing three base-runners on & couple of infield errors but managed to keep the Oilers from scoring. Williams took home first place prize money of $600 while Takhar got $300 for second: place. Pete Peterson of the host team SKB Wreckers presented the team cap- tains with engraved hub caps as team trophies ‘along with the prize money, cheques. The regular slo-pitch season gets underway this week.. Tonight at River- side Park Gus’ takes on, Tilden at 7 p.m. and Terrace Builders plays . Hankey Pankey’s at 9:15. hall, “topping & pass through traffic in the penalty area to the veteran South African who booted the ball sharply inside the far post. Blizzard president was . annoyed with Tulsa's rough style of play. “They were animals,” said Toye, “Tulsa chopped (Bettega) down viciously twice, but Roberto spent 14 - years in the tough Italian league and he can take eare of himself on the pitch.” Pau]-Hannon, in his first start in goal for Toronto after playing for now- defunct Team America, earned the shutout, The Whitecaps’. win provided Alan Hinton with a successful coaching debut in front of 15,718 spectators under the B.C, Place dome. David Cross and Fran O'Brien scored the goals and the shutout went to goalkeeper Paul Bradshaw, .who joined Vancouver last week from Wolverhampton of the inglish First Division. Bassett’s blossoming By The Canadian Press Tt wasn't the biggest tennis tournament of the weekend, but Carling Bassett’s triumph in an exhibition tourney in Osaka, Japan, represents an important stepping stone in the blossoming career of the Toronto: teenager. The headline event, the Tournament of Champions in New York, was won by. home-town star John McEnroe, who dispatched Czechoslovkian Ivan Lend) 6-4, 6-2 to earn $100,000... A 62, 64 win. -over Bettina Bunge of ; West Germany was, the.,.first major tournament victory for Bassett, 16,: Canada’s female athlete.of the. year in 1983, who is 168hin,world ~ tennis rankings... ° The $30,000 winner's cheque was her biggest since turning pro lf months ago, Bassett's only other tournament victory was on Feb. 20, 1983, when Shedefeated Texan Sandra Collins to win $7,000 in a minor tournament at Hershey, Pa. The Osaka event also marked the return ‘to competitive tennis of - Swedish veteran Bjorn Borg, who beat Bill Seanlon of the United States 6-2, 6-2 in the men’s final. In New York, McEnroe easily handled Lendl, stamping himself as one of | the favorites to win the French Open, a Grand “Slam tennis title that has eluded ‘Americans since Tony, Trabert, won, it. 29 years ago. Ff “] think there are ‘six guys now who aré capable ‘of winning the French, and T.am definitely one of the © six,’ McEnroe said after winning his. second con- secutive Tournament of Champions title, requiring © only am minutes to win Sunday. McEnroe's domination of Lendl came only one day after Lend] destroyed top- seeded Jimmy Connors, handing the 3i-year-old left-hander the worst defeat of his career, 6-0, 6 0, At Lugano, Switzerland, Manuella Maleeva of Bulgaria whipped Iva Budarova of Czechoslovakia 6-1, 6-1 in the $100,000 Swiss Open. It was the first victory on the professional circuit for Maleeva, 17. Juan Aguilera of Spain downed Henrik Sundstrom of Sweden 6-4, 2-6, 2-6, 6-4, 64 to become the first unseeded player to win the $315,000 German Open. Francesco Cancellott! of Italy defeated | Jimmy Brown of the United States 61, 64 to win a $75,000 Grand Prix tournament at Florence, Italy. GIVE BLOOD. GIVE LIFE! Burn victins and Red Cross a0 are. counting on youl + “e necaumewti mera shanti esas * cme Be “hes w ee “EL BOSTON (AP) — _ If at first you don't succeed, you. can try, try again. But New ‘ York Knicks won't get another chance to beat ‘the Celtics in Boston. “The Celtics. jumped on top quickly and, like the early leader in the other six games of the National Basketball Association playoff series; went on to win Sunday for the fourth straight time at home. By routing ‘the Knicks 121-104 in the seventh and decisive game, the Celtics earned the right to face Memorial cup. tournament Kamloops uptight KITCHENER, Ont. (CP)- — There. are a lot of ner- yous people around the Memorial Cup . junior hockey tournament. - . The young Kamloops Junior Oilers were uptight Sunday, falling behind 8) ~ before rallying in the late stages to lose 9-7 to Kil- chener Rangers. : Laval Voisins, first-time participants in their 13- year existence, were on edge Saturday night when they got bombed 8-2 by the . Rangers, Mario Lem eux and company came out ‘* shooting. Sunday = nigiit against Ottawa 67s but lost again, 6-5. One might think the only calm performers were the host Rangers, who clin- ched a semifinal berth before. 6,494° fans at Memorial Auditorium, But they turned out to he nervous, too. “We were jittery since we didn't know anything about Kamloops,” said Kitchener coach Tom Barrett. “The crowd was, maybe, worth a goal for us, but we were also scared because, “if you don’t. play well, theyll be on their feet. 8 ' Barrett's pre-game jitters had only just begun. After Brian Wilks and Garnet McKechney both got two goals and Wayne Lrestey, David Bruce, Greg Puhalski and Dave Shaw put the Rangers well in front midway through the game, the Junior Oilers started to chip away and things got nerve racking. Rob Brown and Jim Camazzola scored to cut the lead to 9-2 after two periods. Then Tony Vogel, Camazzola again, Ryan Stewart, Ken Danneyko and Dean Evanson had the, Western Hockey League- champions behind by just , 8-7 with 3:31 left. The final frantic minutes Stadier — deserves win DALLAS (AP) ~ Craig Stadler was __ straight- forward about his first galf victory in 21 months. “T felt I deserved to win this week,"’ Stadler said after holding off the challenge of David Edwards for a one-shot victory Sunday in the Byron Nelson Classic. ‘Armed with a four- stroke lead going into the final round, Stadler needed only a par round of 71 over the last 18 holes to acquire - his eighth career triumph and the first since the 1982 World Series of Golf. The victory, securedona | 72-hole total of 276, eight . under par on the long, tough Las Colinas Sports Club course, was worth $90,000 from the total purse- ‘o£ =$500,000 and boosted Stadler’s earnings for the Season to $204,247, It marked the fifth con- secutive year Stadler has won more than $200,000. While he won by only one stroke, it really wasn’t that close. He led throughout the final) =round = and received a challenge only over the last few holes. “J never felt threatened,” Stadler said. Edwards was severi shots back when the round started but closed with a seven-birdie 65 for a 277 total. Playing well in front of Stadler, Edwards knew he had to make a birdie on the 18th to have a chance. But he missed a 25-foot putt from the fringe. MAKES BOGEY Moments later Stadler, playing the 17th, made a bogey from a difficult lie in a bunker. That cut the margin to one with one hole — the 466-yard, uphill, par-four 18th — to play. Stadler needed a par to win. He made it with a . drive down the middle, a mid-iron to the fat part of the green and two putts. Tom Watson, who. has won four titles here and lost another in a playoff, was third with a closing 63. ended only after Bruce, a 1989" second-round draft pick by the National Hockey League's couver Canucks, scored into the empty with seven seconds left. “T think we quit after we got the big lead,’ " said Barrett. “We got it easier that we should have got it. "We then laid back, didn't close the door, and they took it to us." Kamloops . coach Bill Laforge said: “Once we got our confidence we were on our way.” Laforge drew his players around the bench: hefore heading off the ice at the end of the first period when ‘they trailed 6-0. “I told them to get their heads up,”’ sald Laforge, who also, reminded them in the between period talks, “that we are a proud | hockey team and we would come together.” Pride also cured the Voisins' nervousness. Lemieux, the expected No. 1 pick in the NHL entry draft in June, had been held scoreless by the Rangers for only the third time in 35 games this season, Sunday night, he needed only 1:39 to end the drought. “Everybody has been talking about how I didn't give a good performance last night, so ¥ had play very well tonight,” said Lemieux, who had 334 Quebec Major Hockey League Junior points before Memorial Cup play started. The Voisins led 3-1 10 minutes into the game on. goals by Michel Mongeau and ¥ves Courteau, while Hireee ’ Francois Don McLaren replied’ for the Ontarlo Hockey League playoff-champion Van- 675 Laval ran into penelty trouble and Ottawa drew even at 3-3 on power-play goals by Bruce Cassidy and Bill Bennett. Mongeau, who’s coming off a bout of mononucleosis that caused him to miss the league final, scored his second of the night, but Bennett tied it 44 — again with the Voisins short~ handed. After Ottawa’s Adam. Creighton and Laval’s Sills traded goals, Phil ‘ Patterson scored at 9:07 of the third period to insure the 67s of a semifinal spot by making it impossible for the Voisins to finish ahead of them in the round robin. Ottawa coach Bill Kilrea said his team was caught off-guard by Laval. “Obviously, some of our players thought they were going to pad their totals tonight because they played as individuals and not as a team,” said Kilrea, who replaced all- star goalie Darren Pang at 1:51 of the first period after the Voisins had scored on ‘their first two shots. “T didn't like what I saw from the goaltender out. “T thought | would try to change the momentum.” If the Rangers, 2-0, can beat Ottawa on Wednesday they will get a bye to the final and a chance at their. second national cham- pionship in the last three years. : Ottawa, 10, faces Kamloops, 0-1, tonight. Laval, 0-2, has a day off and then must beat the Junior Oilers to advance: hia htae The Herald, Monday, May 14, 1984, Page 3 ~ Celtics rout New York. Knicks __ Milwaukee *: Bucks on Tuesday night in the opener of the best-of-seven Eastern Conference final. Bernard King, the Knicks’ outstanding for- ward, averaged 35.7 points a game, including six over the 40 mark, in his first 1 playoff contests but was held to seven points in the first half Sunday. By the time he got his first field goal, nearly three minutes into the second period, Boston already had a 44-30 lead. The . edge never dipped below nine points- after that. Celtics’ Larry Bird added 12 rebounds, 10 assists and three steals to his 39 points and outscored King in the series, 213-204. The Knicks were led by King with 24 points and Bill Cartwright with 19. Robert Parish had 22 for ‘Boston and Dennis Johnson, rebounding from a “sore right shoulder ‘that kept him out of the sixth game lossto New York, added 21. But Bird was the key to slopping New York -from becoming only the fifth team to win a seven-game series after tralling 2-0. “He was outstanding,” New York coach Huble Brown said. “He did a fantastic job from the perimeter, He loosens everybody else up.” In the Western Con- ference final, Los Angeles Lakers take a 1-0 series edge over Phoenix -Suns into the second game Tuesday. The Lakers won. the opener 110-94 Saturday. Bob McAdoo had 20 peints and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 19 to spark the Lakers. Sport Shorts ae LOS ANGELES (AP) — Carl Lewis sailed 8.71 metres Sunday at an Invitational track meet, the fourth-beat long jump ever outdoors, and Edwin Mosés extended his 400- metre hurdles win streak to 8% races. : Lewis, who fouled on four attempts, ineluding his first three, hit his winning jump on his next-to-last attempt. Lewis also owns the second-best (6.79) and third-best long jumps. The longest was Bob Beamon’s 9.90 in the high altitude of Mexico City in the 1968 Summer Olympics. “{ still think I can jump 30 feet (9.14 metres) someday and my times will be coming down in both sprints,” Lewis said. BALTIMORE (AP) — The probable starting field for the Preakness increased to nine with the announcement ‘Sunday that Wind Flyer would run in the second leg of racing's Triple Crown on Saturday. Officials at Pimlico Race Course said the Robert Massterson colt, runner-up in the Dlinois Derby on Sunday night. . Saturday, would head to Baltimore from the Chicago area Kentucky Derby winner Swale will also be challenged in the Preakness by Gate Dancer, Pine Circle, Taylor's Special, Fight Over, Raja’s Shark, Play On and S.S. Hot Sauce. . LEEDS, England (CP) — Briton Nick Faldo returned triumphantly to the European golf circuit Sunday with a one-stroke victory in the Leeds tournament over com- patriot Howard Clark. Faldo fired a final round 71 for a 72-hole seore of 276. Clark came in with a 72. Jerry Anderson of Toronto, who had been with the leaders the first two days before ballooning to a 78 on Saturday, finished with a 69 on Sunday. His 289 total was 13 strokes behind the winner. | ALEXANDER GRAHAM’ BELL | invented the telephone so that folks could talk to each other — inexpensively, yet... 6 Deregulation of long distance rates in the United States _ has brought an end to affordable home telephones in that country, and the beginning of much higher phone billst Consumers thought deregulation would bring lower rates. In fact, within six months it has brought metered local rates, dramatically increased costs to shops and businesses and a loss of universal home service. In Canada, the choice is still ours. Deregulation doesn’t have to happen here. In October the CRTC will decide whether to take the U.S. route or keep the Canadian telephone system intact. And that’s when they’ll want to hear how you feel about it. 9? Exercise your right of choice. Act now to tell the CRTC before the deadline of May 22, 1984 that you want your voice heard at the October hearings. Call the TWU and request an information kit on deregulation ...(112) 437-8601 AND, IF YOU: | Want information from the regulatory e authority responsible for this matter, the Want to participate in the actual CRTC j 2 « proceedings, send the coupon below to: a | Mr. J. G. PATENAUDE J SECRETARY GENERAL, C.A.T.C. r C AN ADI AN OTTAWA, ONTARIO KIA GN2 | RE: TELECOM PUBLIC NOTICE 1964-0 INTEREXCHANGE | TE LEPHONE COMPETITION ANG RELATED 1SSUES | Dear Mr. Patenaude: i y 4 . I would Hke to be considered an interssted party In the S STEM | hearings inta the above matters. Please send me the j ease related materials. ft woutd He fo be an int in the hearings into the ‘ LET’S KEEP IT TOGETHER [| | would Hee fo be an inlervener in me hearings In 1 FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL - 497-3601 Yours truly | IN VANCOUVER (signature) _— ] _ telecomnmunications gs (er asin: oy s Aas «workers uition 5 Mien i nn ee o cosveeetes sees 5261 Lane St. Burnaby. B.C V5" 1A5 a (rats COUPON MUST BE INTO THE Cl 'TC BY MAY 22, 1904) § nwa a ee ie oe oe fee oe ies a i ee ee ee ee eee ee oe ay ae eed ee a er ee pn sie