Lions upset HAMILTUN (CP) — Hamilton Tiger-Cats kept their Cana dian Football e hopes alive Sunday ben a surprise 31-21 victory over British Colum- bia Lions. °° Fhe Ticats, last in the Eastern Conférence, blew a 21-6 half-time lead but got the goahead score from Jimmy Edwards‘ on the opening play of the fourth quarter and added in- surance points with Nick Jambrosic’s 36-yard field - goal in the final minute, Jambrosic converted earlier touchdowns by Doyle Orange, Mike Harris, Jimmy Jones and Edwards as the Ticats brought their season record to 5-9 and remained two points behind Ottawa Rough Riders and Toronto Argonauts with two games to play. Jim Harrison and Jerry Tagge produced touchdowns for the Lions who had to come out of Hamilton with at least a tie to secure first ce in the Western Con- erence. The loss brought their record to 10-4. Lui Passaglia converted Tapge’s score and kicked field goals of 24 and 18 yards, Terry Bailey caught a Tagge pass following Harrison's touchdown for a two-point conversion to complete the B.C, scoring in front of 19,133 fans who braved near-freezing temperatures. Edwards, easily the oustanding individua performer in the game, carried the ball 24 times for C. couldn't make come back by fierce Ti-Cat offence — 174 yards and increased his leading CF'L rushing total to 1,-311 yards, . The victory may have proved costly for the Ticats who lost Harris after Jones’s touchdown in the firet half. The Ticats running back was apprently kicked in the THE HERALD. Monday, October 24, 1977, PAGE 5 stomach during the Lions’ goal-line stand and went into convulsions on the field, He was helped back to the Hamilton bench before col- lapsing again and then was taken to hospital. Ticats coach Bob Shaw said after the game he ~ Cutler EDMONTON (CP) — Dave Cutler kicked three field goals Sunday afternoon to erase his own one-season record as he scored most of the points In Edmonton Eskimos’ 16-12 victory over Toronto Argonauts in a Ca- aa aking gene League interloc! game. Cutler now has 42 field Beals, two more than he cked in 1975. The victory was vital for the Eskimos who gained sole possession of third place in the western con- erence, but disappointin for the Argos who remain tied with Ottawa Rough Riders in the East. Waddell Smith took a five- yard scoring pass from Bruce Lemmerman for the only Eskimo touchdown. Cutler converted it. QuarterbackChuck Ealey, whose elusiveness against a strong rush made im Toronto's major of- fensive threat, scooted 12 yards early in the third arter for the Argo touch- nh. . Zenon Andrusyshyn converted and kicked a field goal and two singles to complete the scoring. Andrusyshyn's second single, late in the second quarter from hig 27-yard line bounced beyond the end zone and was measured at t08 yards, erasing the Winnipeg keeps hopes up — WINNIPEG (CP) — Winnipeg Blue Bombers scored 12 points in the fourth quarter to defeat Calgary tampeders 19-13 Sunday and maintain their hopes of capturing first place in the Western Football Con- ference. Wade guides Als to Ottawa win MONTREAL (CP) — Sonny Wade threw three touchdown passes and completed 20 of 28 pass attempts in guiding Mon- treal. to a 20-16 victory Saturday over Ottawa Rough Riders that clinched in the Eastern Conference of the Canadian Football League. Peter Dalla Riva caught two of Wade's scoring strikes on plays of five an 10 yards and first-game rookie running back Horace Belton caught the other for an 18-yard pass-and-run touchdown that broke a 10-10 halftime tie in the third. quarter. Don Sweet converted all three TDs and added field goals of 29 and 42- yards while Wade kicked a eb-yard single to complete Mon- PREMIUM BEER BG. STYLE treal's scoring before 62,157 fans Ottawa got a five-yard touchdown run from Robert Holmes and relief quar- terback Condredge Holloway hit Gary Kuzyk -for .a. 21-yard. touchdown first place for the Alouettes . pass late in the game. Gary Organ had a 37-yard field goal in the first quarter and converted Holmes’s touchdown. Holloway threw incomplete in a try for two points after the Kuzyk major. The Alouettes brought their record to 10-5 for twenty _ points, while the Rough Riders fell to 6-8 and have 12 points, The game marked the first time a Montreal club has swept a season series against Ot- tawa, The Alouettes won all four meetings this year. aids Eskimos in vital win former CFL punting record of 102-yards by-retired Argo Dave Mann. Edmonton’s major of- fensive threat was wingback Stu Lang, who caught seven of Lemmerman’s passes for 168 yards. Both teams had their offenses bogged down by gusty winds that reached 85 miles an hour and made things occasionally un- comfortable for a crowd of 25,388. Defeats Calgary Winnipeg’s victory, coupled with British Columbia Lions’ 31-21 loss in Hamilton, moved the Bombers to within two points ‘of the front-running ions. The Lions, however, have two games remaining and Winnipeg has only one— in Vancouver in two weeks’ time. 7 The win did assure Winnipeg of a playoff berth. Mike Holmes, on a 37-yard pass from Ralph Brock, and Tom Walker on a one-yard run, scored Winnipeg touch- downs. Bernie Ruoff con- verted both and added a 41- yard field goal and two singles. . Matthew Reed and Joe Colyey scored touchdowns for Calgary late in the final quarter. Cyril McFall converted one. DEFENSIVE BATTLE The game was a defensive struggle that gave the 23,663 fans little to cheer about through the first three quarters, as Winnipeg led 7- 0 through all three. Jim Heighton intercepted a screen pass and ran 25 yards to the Calgary 19 on. the final play of the third quarter, to set the stage for e fourth-quarter scoring. Brock hit Gord Patterson for 18 yards and then Walker bulled over for the touch- down at 1:30. That made the score 14-0 and Ruoff ran it to Ps the last play, Ealey at m) a lo se re 5 baugh on the goal ine. Moments earlier, the Eskimos had a chance to put themselves a touchdown ahead on a third down at the Toronto five but startin quarterback Tom Wil- kinson, in to hold on a fake field goal attempt, stumbled 18-0 before Calgary managed to score. , who took over at uarterback for Calgary in e fourth quarter, set the Stampeders on touchdown marches the next two times they had the ball. The first march was high: lighted Reed’s rn for two first downs and a pase to linebacker Jim er that went for 13 yards and 8 first down on a fake punt. The drive ended at 9:30 with Reed running 35 yards for a major on a quar- terback keeper. Ruoff kicked a single at 12:23 and Reed then came back with another 75-yard march which ended with Colvey running five yards for the major at 14:0. Calgary’s short kickoff was unsuccessful and Winnipeg ran out the clock. Before the fourth-quarter scoring, the rival defences had dominated the game. ran only 12 the first quarter anil didnt et a first down until the 90 seconds when Willle - Burden ran for two, one ona fake third-down punt. Brock hit on five straight asses until Holmes opped one the last time Winnipeg had the ball in the first quarter. and threw incomplete on the gamble. : A 62-yard from Lemmerman to Lang—Eric Harris came a long way from behind to catch Lang at the elght~apparently ended Toronto's hopes bu the Eskimos could not score. Ealey threw a fine pass to Kirk for a 25-yard gain before Toronto was forced to ve up possession. But the os got it back when the Eskimo ground attack ineffective as usual, could not generate a first down. ey threw two passes for 39 yards to keep the drive alive before his desperation toes on the last me Wer opened scoring and tied his old field goal record with Be 30 arder i the first . 08 temas out ion but c Pot score wal Andrusyshyn tied the game in the second quarter, three plays after iIkinson lost 13 yards and EALEY FUMBLED An Ealey fumble in the third quarter deep in Ed- monton territor was recovered by Tom Towns of Edmonton but the play was nullified by an onton offside. Three plays later, Ealey scored easily. A good punt runback by roughing penalty started the ro penalty s Edmonton comeback from the Toronto 17, Lemmerman hit Lang and then Smith for the touchdown. ‘who was good on 0 wasn't sure how seriously Harris was injured. The Ticats, who moved the yardsticks 17 times to B.C.'s 12, generated a net off of 302 yards—216 fence rushing and 105 in the alr as . Jones made good on nine of 20 passes, SLOW START The B.C, rbacking was handled in the main by Tagge who, after a slow start, got relief from Gary Keithley in the second - quarter andagain in the late stages of the game, Tagge, nly one of five passes in the first quarter, got the B.C. offence — together enough to produce 8 21-21 tie before Edwards's __ go-abead score. ‘ Tagge was good on 10 of 18 passes for 96 yards, Keithley adding 32 yards on five com- pletions in 10 attempts. The B.C. offence had a net yardage of 250 yards. with | Mike Strickland rushing for 83 of the team’s 132-yard — running total, The largest model selection of small cars in Canada Ranging from the economical Canadian to the all new luxury Celica. At your Toyota dealer today. 1978 CELICA ALL NEW, ALL DYNAMITE. On the GT Liftback includes: 2.2 litre engine, radial ply tires, AM/FM multiplex stereo, full gauge in- strumentation, split-fold down rear seat, quartz electric clock, wall-to-wall cut pile carpeting, {ully re- clining bucket seats with lumbar support and vertical height adjustment in the driver's seat, interior rear hatch and fuel Hd releases, and more. Available at no extracost 1978 CANADIAN ONE OF CANADA'S LOWEST PRICED CARS. Includes: 12 lite engine, power front disc brakes, 4-speed synchromesh transmission, side window defoggers, fully reclining driver's bucket seat, sporty black exterior trim, increased colour selection, colour keyed interiors and more. Available at no extra cost 1978 COROLLA LIFTBACK SPORTY, SEXY AND SENSIBLE. On SR85 includes: power dist brakes, 5 speed overdrive transmission, wide oval radials, inside hatch release, split-fold down rear seat, sport steering wheel and more. Available at no extra cost Deluxe 1.2 litre and Deluxe 16 litre models also available. a 1978 CORONA SEDAN SOLID VALUE AND LUXURY COMBINED. Includes: 2.2 litre engine, 5 speed overdrive transmission, power front disc brakes, whitewall steel- belted radial tires, full fabric upholstery, wall-to-wall cut pile carpeting, tinted glass and more. Available at no extra cost. Power steering is standard with the optional auto- matic transmission. 1978 PICKUPS SPORTY APPEAL WITH PICKUP UTILITY. On SR6 includes: 2.2 lire engine, power front : disc brakes, §-speed overdrive transmission, radial ply tires, high back bucket seats, deluxe whee! discs, AM radio and more. Available at no extra cost Other models available are the Standard and Long Bed pickups and the 1-Ton Cab and Chassis. 1978 4-WHEEL DRIVE LANDCRUISER GO WHERE YOU WANT ANYTIME. Includes: 4-speed transmission, 2-speed transfer case, steel skid plates, power front disc brakes, front towing hook, 4.2 lire engine, front and rear heaters, front bucket seats, and fold-down rear seats, side win- dow defoggers,and more. Available at no extra cost. Land Cruiser Wagon and Pickup models also available. Motor Dealer No. DOO449A 4916 Highway No. 16 West Tel: 695-6558 oe TEST DRIVE A 1978 TOYOTA TODAY! TOYOTA *Gas economy is based on approved Transport Canada test methods and rated in kilometers per gallon. TERRACE MOTORS LTD.