an we tooteeeeee ‘ ix ae fr tos in HERR A \. Ch-NEPEVEAL SPORTS ~ Alouettes, Stamps ready The Canadian Football league’s regular season came to a close in fitting fashion on Sunday with a couple af laughers, After all, a lot of folks have stated‘ that the 1979 version af the CFL has been one big joke, Be that as it may, both Montreal Aloweltes and Calgary Stampeders did plenty of muscle flexing on Sunday as both clubs tuned up for the playoffs that open next weekend. In the Western Football Conference, Calgary Stampeders rolled over Saskatchewan Roughriders 41-5. But that was not a new experience to the Roughies who ended their season with a 2-14 record, Montreal Alouettes, top club in the EFC, had an equally easy time breezing by Hamilton Tiger-Cats 41-20 despite a juggied offensive lineup, ; In Saturday’s action, Ottawa Rough Riders came alive in the second half to defeat Toronto Argonauts 23- 6 and Edmonton Eskimos downed British Columbia Lions 25-17. Action now shifts to the coming weekend when the Lions visit Calgary in the WFC'’s. semi-final on Steelers impressive | Saturday while Ottawa plays host tothe Ficats in th EFC’s semi-final on Sunday. Quarterback Ken Johnson had e big day Sunday for the Slamps, completing 14 of 20 passes for 305 yards and four touchdowns, He received 105 yards on one play when he teamed with Willie ‘Arm- stead in the third quarter, The Stampeders, who finished two polnts back of Edmonton with a 12-4 record, led 20-1 at the half and put the game out of reach with two quick touchdowns late in the second quarter. They dominated . throughout, rolling up 523 yards in total offence. One of the few statistics the Roughriders were ahead on was penalty yardage. They were caught 13 times for 173 yards while Calgary was penalized 14 times for . 140 yards. : The Roughies offence, led. by quarterback Danny, Sanders, never got un: tracked and gained just 212 yards, Sanders, harassed all day by the Calgary defence, hit on 15 of 37 passes but also gave up three interceptions: “'He rolled and he took a iot of hits but that kid has alot of . guts,” said Calgary's defensive tineman Ed. "You don't‘de&iin a day sounds from the stands — - like this. You" just’ go ‘out booing; then the shuffling af there and it Rapipeiis? Bradshaw said of Pittsburgh Steelers’ offence. He could have been talking about the Las Angeles Rams’ defence, too. Bradshaw, the Stcelers' quarterback, ripped Washington for 311 yards and four TDs ina 36-7 victory aver the Redskins, The Steelers amassed 545 yards in offence, That must have iis fee. in Seattle. Seahawks, ;ahaking:-their: heads, -They eae at 52 fewer yards, Yes, you read it right, Seattle finished with a minus seven yards in total offence against the Los Angeles defence, surpassing the National Football League futility record previously held by Denver. The Broncos came out of a Sept. 10, 1987, game against and with minus five,’ ” a Ricdigs Oh, yes, thé Ratnb offence woke up, too, with Pat Haden throwing two touchdown passes In Loa Angeles’ 24-0 laugher. In Sunday's other games it was Cleveland 24, Philadelphia 19; Dallas 16, New York Giants 14, New England 26, Buffalo 4; Atlanta-17, Tampa Bay 14; Baltimore 38, Cincinnati 2; St. Louis 37, Minnesota 7; San Diego 20, Kansas City 14; Chicago 35, Detroit 7; Denver 10, New Orleans 3; Oakland 23, San Francisco 10, and New York Jets 27, Green Bay 22. Houston visits tonight, John Stallworth, who caught six passes for 126 yards, had an 11-yard TD catch in the first quarter and nabbed Bradshaw's last pass of the game just five plays into the third quarter with a reception for a TD covering 65 yards, Rams 24 Seahawks 0 For the past few games, the “What's wrong with the Rams?” talk had been ac- centuated by discomforting Miami Pere: feat as people headed toward. the exits long before the final. in. “It was nice to hear the crowd boo somebody else for a change,” guard Dennis Herrah said after the Rams had demolished the Seahawks in the Kingdome. “It's been a miserable three weeks,” Haden said. “Everybody's been on our backs." He'll be on the bench next . Sunday, -in Chirago,«jead «the: Cardinuls past Alter biting: af 21 passe for 172 yar een Tou Bt downs against Seattle, Haden broke a finger on his passing hand in the second quarter. : Browns 24 Eagles 19 : The Eagles lost despite Wilbert Montgomery’s 197 yards rushing and Harold Carmichael’s record. reception in a 106th: con-.,. secutive game. ; ° The Browns, trailing sto, late in the fourth period, cut the margin to two points on Brian Sipe's five-yard pasa to Ozzie Newsome, then got the winning TD with 55 seconds left on Mike Pruitt’s 24-yard sprint, Cowboys 16 Giants 14 Roger Staubach passed 32 yards to Drew Pearson for a touchdown with 2:24 to play, then guided Dallas into position for Rafael Septien’s third field goal of the game, a. 22-yarder with three seconds remaining thatbeat the Giants, Patriots 26 Bills 6 Steve Grogan passed for 350 yards and three touch- downs -~ including bambs of 63 and 34 yards to Stanley Morgan while New England sacked Joe Ferguson seven times in the. shellacking of the Bills, Falcons 17 Bucs 14 ot Steve Bartkowski pitched a four-yard TD pass to Jim Mitchell early in the fourth quarter and Bubba Bean raced 60 yards for a score with 1:22 to go tobeat Tampa Bay, _Tookie to reach 1,000 yards. Chargers 20 Chiefs 14 McAleney of Sanders’ performance, “They hurt us in the air and they beat us bad in the secondary,” said Saskat- chewan coach Ron Lan- caster, Armstead scored two touchdowns while Kelvin Kirk, James Sykes and Tom Forzani added a touchdown apiece. Joey Walters scored Sas- katchewan's lone major on a fumble recovery, In Montreal, the Alouettes ‘forced two changes in the CFL record manual. Don Sweet's fifth convert, after O'Leary’s TD at 7:41 of the final quarter, was the Montreal kicker's 155th consecutive successful at- tempt, surpassing the CFL mark of 154 by Gerry Organ of Ottawa. Dickie Harris also established a record with his third touchdown on a punt return this season when he galloped 97 yards for a major. The Alouettes were forced to improvise, ‘especially on offence, when several ~playera were loat through ‘injury. None was believed serious, ‘ Running back David Green left with a burn on his left shoulder from the ar- Colts 38 Bengals 28 Bert Jones threw a TD pass, then reinjured his right shoulder, so Greg Landry took over and threw two second half scoring strikes to carry the Colts past Cin- cinnati. “This is a real step for- ward for us, to be able to win the game without Bert,” said coach Ted Marchibroda. Cardinals 37 Vikings 7 Ottis Anderson cushed for 164 yards and .wa TDs to Mindésdta Anderson became the first St. Louis Dan Fouts passed for 229 yards — failing to reach 300 for the fourth straight week ~— and one touchdown in San Diego's victory in Kansas City. The Chargers, 7-3, remained tied with Denver in first place in the AFC est. feark 25 Lions 7 Steve Schubert returned a ff punt 77 yards for one TD and Walter Payton rushed for 113 § yards and two TDs (from one and five yards out) in Chicago's thumping of the Lions. Broncos 10 Salats 3 The game's lone TD came in the fourth quarter, Craig Morton's 12-yard pass to Rick Upchurch capping a 76- yard, 17-play drive highlighted by Morton’s 20- yarder to Haven Moses. Raiders 23 dfers 10 Ken Stabler hooked up with Cliff Branch on scoring passes of eight and nine yards to keep Oakland within one game of the AFC West lead and hand the 48ers their eighth loss in nine games, matched only by the Lions. Jets 27 Packers 22 Richard Todd's TD passes of six yards to Bruce Harper ‘and 32 yarda to Jerome Barkum, Toni Linhart's two field goals and Greg Buitle's interception of a David Whitehurst pass at the Jets’ 24-yard line in the final minute carried New York past Green Bay. Williams, Sonics hot “The better we play de- fence,” says Seattle's Gus Williams, “the easier jt is to play offence.” The SuperSonics played both well enough Sunday night to beat Milwaukee 114- 101 and snap the Bucks’ 10- game National Basketball Association winning streak. Despite being on the road, the Sonics were red hot from the start, outscoring Milwaukee 42-24 in the opening quarter. Williams acored 19 of his 27 points in that quarter. In other games, Portland Trail Blazera beat San Antonio Spurs 127-124 in overtime and New Jersey Neta defeated Kanags City Kinga 101-08. In Salurday's action It was Bolton 116 Washington 97; Atlanta 11g New Jersey 107, Cleveland 123 Kansas City 110; Houston 114 Detroit 111, Philadelphia 120 Indiana 114; Milwaukee 136 Chicago 134; Golden State 130 Denver 103 and San Diego 126 Utah 108. Marques Johnson and Junior Bridgeman scored 20 points apiece for Milwaukee while Lonnie Shelton had 17 points and Dennis Johnson and Jack Sikma seored 15 each for the Sonics. Binzers 127 Spurs 124 Portiand overcame an eightpoint deficit witk 48 seconds remaining in regulation play to raine its recard to 11-2, tops in the NBA. Portland trailed 115-107 with 46 seconds remaining, hut Tom f)wena hit two fleld goals and Hon Brewer made a three-point jumper ta cut the Blazers’ disadvantage to 114-114 with 14 seconds left. Nets 101 Kings 98 John Williamson scored 23 points, including two baskets after the score was tied 80-90 and two free throws that clinched the victory in the closing seconds. The Kings had overcome a 20-point third-quarter deficit oniy to sufferthelr third straight logs on the road, despite 26 points from Phil ‘ord, ase | CHRISTMAS tificial surface at Olympic Stadium, and tight end Chuck McMann suffered damage to his ribs, Slotback Larry Smith suffered an ankle injury, and O'Leary was poked in an eye. Guard Ray Watrin injured a knee and a finger. “T was really proud of the guys who came in and played out of position, sometimes for the first time, and played 80 well,” said Alouettes head . coach Joe Scannella. Willie Hampton, Keith Baker, Nick Arakgi and O'Leary scored the other Alouette touchdowns. Running back Rufus Crawford, making his debut with the Tiger-Cats, scored two-tauchdowns, while Leif Pettersen added the other, Scanella was especially pleased with the per- formance of quarterback Joe Barnes who hit on 14 of 20 passes for 203 yards, “Barnes (Joe) played the best game I'veseen him play in two years. He was throwing very well, really moving the club, and did a hell of a jeb,"’ said Scanella, Barnes said it was a make- do situation. ‘'We were playing with a lot of pickup players,” he snid. “It was like a sandlot game,” HL —— Will early success spoil Philadelphia Flyers down the road? Not if coach Pat Quinn can help it. "T like to keep an even keel,” said Quinn after his club raised its record to 9-1-1 with a 3-1 victory aver Buffalo Sabres on Sunday night, “This is nice," Quinn said of the team’s quick start. “But you have to prepare for other games so that the losses are not so traumatic," “You can't help but be happy at whal is going on," said Bobby Clarke, who doubles as a player and an assistant coach. ‘But you can’t get overly excited with 70 games to go. What makes this game so pleasant was that we had four guys not dressed who played regularly for us.” Despite the absence of Reggie Leach, Hob Dailey, Behn Wilson and Andre Dupont, the Flyers were able to beat Buffalo and extend their unbeaten string to nine games with their sixth con- secutive victory. In other games Sunday, Quebec Nordiques beat Detroit Red Wings $1, Los Angeles Kings defeated ‘Chicago Black Hawks 5-3, Boston Bruins edged Ed- monton Oilers 2-1, New York Islanders and Winnipeg Jets battled to a 44 tle and New York Rangera topped Van- couver Canucks 4-2, In Saturday's action, Philadelphia downed Montreal Canadiens 5-3, Colorado Rockies defeated the Rangers 7-2, Minnesota North Stars defeated Washington Capitals 7-1, Detrait blanked Chicago 2-0, Phillie fi Buffalo edged Toronto Maple Leafs 4-3, St. Louis Blues downed Los Angeles 4-1 and Atlanta Flames and Pitt- sburgh Penguins played to a 3-3 tie. Philadelphia took a 1-0 lead at 7:24 of the first period when left winger Bill Barber beat Sabres’ goalie Bob Sauve. Buffalo tied the game at 12:54 on a powerplay goal by Danny Gare, but Ken Linseman put Philadelphia back in front at 14:31 of the second period. Nordiques 5 Red Wings 1 Serge Bernier scored the Hiebreaking goal at 1:46 of the second period and the Nordiques went an ta defeat The Herald, Monday, November 5, 1979, Page 5 Detroit, whieh had taken an early lead on a power-play goal by Dale McCourt. Rogie Vachon, who had a shutout against Chicago on Satur- day, had a rough night in goal for Detrait,. stopping just 22 of 27 shots. John Smrke, Dale Hoganson, Wally Weir and Richard Ledue also scored for Quebec. Kings § Black Hawks 3 Marcel Dionne scored three goals and had two assists, raising his NHL- leading point-total to 33, in Los Angeles’ victory, Dionne scored a goal in each period and assisted on Charlie Simmer's lie-breaking goal NHL STATS WALES CONFERENCE Norris Bivision We Tt Montreal 793 2 49 38 Ih Los Ang 7 4 2 60 55 16 Piitsburah = 4 42 8 38 10 Harliord 34479 FO Detroit +3 6 2 92 36 B Adams Olvision Buttalo 7 4 2 42 37 16 Minnesota 7 307 48 3315 Boston 623 36 29 15 Quebec 4§5233 350 Toranto 47137 463 9 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Patrick Division Phila 911 51 3619 Atlanta § 43 4 97°13 islanders 443399 361n Rangers § 6 1 49 4611 Washington 2 7 2 36 54 8% Smythe Division Vancouver 4.4 4°97 35 12 St. Louis 463yny VN Winnipeg 4.5 3 a6 Jé6 ll Chicago 3°94 3°35 34 % Eomeonton 205 $ 41 Sd 8 Colorado 272 40 37 6 Saturday Results Colorado ? NY Rangers 2 Philadelphia 5 Montreal 3 Aflania 9 Pittsburgh 3 AAinnesota 7 Washinglan 1 Detrait 2 Chicago 0 St. Louis 4 Los Angeles } Butfala 4 Toronto 3 Monday's Game Washington at Montreal National Hockey League scor- im leaders after Sunday games: GAP Dlenne, LA uw Simmer, LA wn oe Lafleur, Mtl 2 WW 2 Taylor, LA 913 2 Gorlng, LA 4617 21 Trottler, NYI 712 Nilsson, Ati 9 81 Perreault, But ageenv Propp, Pha 7°10 W B. Smith, Minn 517 Leach, Pra 0 6 1 Federko, SL sn Halward, LA 41% ying late in the third period. Doug Halward added Kings other goal while Reggie Kerr, Bob Murray, Grant Mulvey and Alain Daigie scored for the Hawks, Bruins 2 Oilers 1 Boston outshot Edmonton 31-16, but strong goaltending by Ed Mio kept the Oilers in contention. Both Boston goals, by Brad McCrimmon and Bob Miller, came on rebounds, Blair MacDonald scored his 10th goal of the season for Edmonton. Islanders 4 Jets 4 Centre Peter Sullivan's goal with 4:01 to play gave the Jets a tie with the Islanders, who had gone in front on third-period goals by Yvon Vautour and Bryan Trottier, Vautour scored twice, as did Winnipeg's Ron Wilson. Mike Bossy scored the Islanders other goal while Craig Norwich replied for the Jets. Rangers 4 Canucks 2 New York scored three goals in the final 4:16 to snap its fivegame winless streak and Vancouver's five-game unbeaten string. Anders Hedberg tied the score ona power-play goal at 1:44 of the third period, Phil Esposito put the Rangers ahead 69 seconds later and Don Maloney clinched the victory with an open-net goal with nine seconds to play while the Rangers were killing a penalty. More sports page 10 thing as perfect, that Front Wheel engine, 4-wheel they will hever stop trying to perfect to improve the autgmabilé. ys, 16, se. Introducing Tercel, the Phases? EconomyCart for the ePiciatyearstdtome. Tn oe fore-and-aft (longitudinal) ) rs s gngine, Toyotahas created Thus shock transmitted rel Toyota's Tercereambinies: front wheel drive: 1.5 litre Sc Hao k inde- minimum the tendency of some front wheel drive vehicles to veer with ac- celeration or deceleration. Total Economy Project. Longitudinal Engine. Toyota will be the first to tell you, that there's no such powerplant which is ex- eptionally easy to service. a : a ae - SEALS 2-DOOR SEDAN |___ Test drive the amazing Tercel at your Toyota dealer, For years racing cars have used a 4-wheel independent suspension. Naturally, Tercel has efficiency, 4-wheel independent suspension with MacPher- son front strut and pure trailing rear arms. There are stabilizer bars both front and rear. 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