De Pol geis B.C. award Peninsula Track and Field Club standout Chad De Pol, 18, was named the province’s top competitor in the Junior Mens’ Roadrunnning Division cate- gory, Saturday. B.C. Athletics presented the prestigious award to De Pol in Vancouver in recognition of his achievements as a distance run-. ner during the 1990 season. Among his accomplishments, was winning his age group in the Island Roadrunning Series, and becoming the B.C. high school cross-country cham- pion, as well as the Greater Victoria high school series title-holder. Sign up now for Little League The Central Saanich Little League will hold its first regis- tration for the upcoming season from 12 noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday at Cen- tennial Park. Subsequent registration ses- sions will be held at the same venue from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. from Feb. 5-7. Aspiring young ball players will also have the chance to sign-up the following weekend, from 12 noon to 4 p.m. on Feb. 9 and Feb. 10. For more information, call Wayne Switzer at 652-4798, Keith Payne at 652-2243 or Bill McCann at 652-4807. Duo to fence at Games in PEI Two Parkland Secondary stu- dents have been selected to represent B.C. in fencing at the Canada Winter Games, to be held in Prince Edward Island from Feb. 17 to Mar. 2. Mary Campbell and Hana DuTemple will take part in the nationals as part of B.C.’s six- person epee fencing team. Both girls honed their fenc- ing skills under the tutelage of UVic Fencing Club coach Nan Sing Ho as part of their training as moder pentathletes. Competing in this five- discipline sport, they have also learned to be proficient in swimming, air pistol shooting, running and horse nding. TheReview Wednesday, January 30,1991 — C3 Flu bug saps the strength from Atom Eagles hockey team Ravaged by a bench-clearing attack of influenza, the Peninsula Atom Rep Eagles hockey team dropped two league games on the weekend. Two back-to-back losses came as a bitter blow to a team that seldom ever loses, coach Murray Kosick said. With a line-up of five healthy players and four youngsters who were too weak to be competitive, the Eagles lost 6-4 to Nanaimo Saturday and 4-2 to Juan de Fuca the next day. Kosick said he was proud by the dedication of his team — with some players insisting on taking to the ice despite being visibly sick. “Tt was like I was running an intensive care ward but the kids wanted to play, rather than to concede the games,” he said. Sunday’s game at the Panorama Leisure Centre saw the Eagles in even worse shape than when they ran out of steam against Nanaimo the day before. Juan de Fuca went full-out on the attack and took an early 3-0 lead as several of the home team players struggled to merely stay on their feet. “Still, even though we weren’t feeling too well, the players made a great effort,” Kosick said. WITH FOILS crossed behind coach Nan Sing Ho, Hana Du Temple def) and Mary Campbell are ready for the Canada Games in P.E.1. Desktop Publishing Newsletters, Resumés, General Typesetting & Layout to Camera-Ready We Work To YOUR Deadlines MAC & IBM Compatible Sea Line Type & Graphics Open Saturdays 655-1900 9764 Fifth St., Sidney ~ McKIMM & LOTT BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS & NOTARIES NICHOLAS W. LOTT R.G. WITT LAPPER TIMOTHY F. LOTT GEORGE F. McKIMM - COUNSEL Personal Injury / Real Estate Criminal Law / Wills & Estates Family Law / Commercial & Co. Law Municipal Law FIRST 1/2 HOUR CONSULTATION FREE 9830 FOURTH ST. SIDNEY, B.C. 656-3961 GANGES CENTRE BLDG. CHRISTOPHER S. LOTT D. MAYLAND MCKIMM GRANT S. WARRINGTON GANGES, B.C. 537-9951 . couple of occasions due to the “We had chances throughout the Nanaimo piled on the pressure spirit. game to close it up but we just and the Eagles soon wilted, with But Kosick said his team’s first didn’t have the energy reserves to Cramps and fatigue robbing them back-to-back losses were victories get to the loose pucks.” of their normal never-say-die in terms of the players’ willpower Despite trailing 4-1 at the outset of the third period, the Eagles made a desperate effort to get back into the game and managed to narrow the score to 6-4 by the end. “We did great considering the shape we were in. And goaltender Trevor Eeg deserved a medal of honor for just staying in the net,” Kosick said. Eeg insisted on playing despite the fact he had to leave the ice ona severity of his sickness. The severe manpower problems that hampered the Eagles on Sun- day were just as evident the day MeMurphy ~NEW DEMOCRAT Saanich North & The Islands Committed to equality, choice, and opportunities for women. It’s time for a change. Telephone 655-4144 or 656-2705 before. A beefed-up Nanaimo squad quickly forced the Eagles on the defensive, but the Peninsula team showed its great talent and spirit by taking a breakaway 2-0 lead. But Nanaimo was soon able to run rings around the Eagles as fatigue set in and the visitors tied it up 2-2 by the end of the second period, Kosick said. “Then we faded later in the game. We didn’t have anything left. The guys who weren’t sick were just pooped,” he said. 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