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VALE ® CASTLEGAR ® SALMO ® SOUTH SLOCAN \KUSP ¢ NEW DENVER © WANETA PLAZA Vancouver leads series By GRANT KERE VANCOUVER (CP( — Vancouver wingers Curt Fra- ser and Stan Smyl came out "of the penalty box to score goals as the Canucks edged Chicago Black Hawks 43 Saturday night to take a 2-1 , lead in the National Hockey # League Clarence Campbell Conference final. Fraser scored midway through the second period, 20 seconds after serving his penalty, to give Vancouver a 4 8-2 lead. Smyl then scored the eventual winner early in the third on a breakaway, ‘just seven seconds after his # penalty expired. Smyl's goal gave the Can- ucks a 42 lead, but the Hawks closed to within one goal on Rick Paterson's mar- ker at 8:14. Chicago didn’t get any further good scoring chances, however, when the Vancouver defence tightened in front of goalkeeper Rich- ard Brodeur. Centre Thomas Gradin and rookie defenceman Neil Bell- and scored the other Canuck goals on first-period power play. Chicago also got goals from Glen Sharpley and defenceman Doug Wilson in the opening period. The teams now have two days off before the fourth game here Tuesday in the best-of-seven series, with the fifth back in Chicago on May 6, The Canucks were greeted by a sellout crowd of 16,413 after splitting the first two games in Chicago. Many were waving white towels after an incident in game two in which associate coach Roger Neilson was ejected late in the game for waving _ towels at the officials. Neilson was fined $1,000 by the league Saturday and the Vancouver team another $10,000. The Hawks had 27 shots on Brodeur while the Canucks fired 80 shots at Chicago netminder Murray Banner- man, Referee Andy van Helle- mond kept the, game well under control, calling just 52 minutes in penalties, inclu- ding a gross misconduct to Chicago's peppery Denis Sav- ard at the end of the game. There were 188 minutes in the second game in Chicago. Both teams had numerous scoring chances early in the game, with Chicago's Tom Lysiak and Fraser both shoo- ting high on excellent oppor- tunities from 80 feet. STOPPED BOLDIREV’ Bannerman got his arm on arising shot by Ivan Boldirev off a rebound and then blocked Gerry Minor cutting in from the corner. Ted Bulley of the Hawks _ hit the post after stealing the puck from Belland and Sav- ard also shot high cutting in from the right wing. Sharpley scored his fifth playoff goal midway through the period, finishing off a two-on-one break with Ly- siak at 10:18 when Van- couver defenceman Lars Lin- dgren was caught up the ice. Gradin scored on the power play at 11:81 when he cut in from the point to take a pass from Ivan Hlinka. Dave Hutchinson of the Hawks had been given an extra minor penalty in a fight with Vancouver's Jim Nill. Belland scored his first playoff goal at 14:64 on another Canuck power play. His high shot from the point beat the screened Banner- man. The Hawks tied the score just 68 seconds later when Wilson blew a 60-shot past Brodeur off the goaltender's stick, one of the few soft goals Brodeur has allowed in 11 playoff games. | CAUGHT NILL Rookie defenceman Dave Feamater of the Hawks made a brilliant defensive play early in the second period when he checked Nill from behind after the Vancouver winger had worked his way into the clear after a poor pass by Chicago centre Terry Ruskowski. Bannerman made another solid save when he slid across the net to get his pad on a shot by Boldirev after a pass from Vancouver's Anders Eldebrink from along the boards. Islanders win 5-4 in overtime QUEBEC (CP) — Wayne Merrick scored 16:52 into sudden-death overtime to 5 give New York Islanders a CALCUTTA . . . Castlegar and District tournament of the season. The low 16 Golf Club was the site of a men’s calcut- ,:ta tournament Saturday. Thirty-one f ‘““trian tedms were entered in ‘t teams will pla ‘ flight this Saturday. in the championship —CatNews Photo American League action A'S SINDIANS 2 CLEVELAND (AP) — Wayne Gross homered and Mike Heath and Dave McKay also drove in two runs apiece as Oakland A’s downed Clev- eland Indians 8&2 in an American League baseball ie. Jeff Jones, making his first major league start after 75 relief appearances, improved his record to 8-1 while yield- ing both Cleveland runs on six hits over the first five innings. Tom Underwood blanked the Indians on three hits the rest of the way for his second save. Gross led off Qakland’s second inning with a single and went to third when Jim Spencer doubled. After Jeff Burroughs walked to load the bases, Gross scored and Spencer moved to third on Heath's sacrifice fly. McKay singled Spencer home and Fred Stanley walked to re- load the bases. Cleveland starter Bert Bly- leven, 2-2, then was removed from the game with tightness in his elbow after going to a 3-1 count on Rickey Hen- derson. Tom Brennan com- pleted the walk to Hender- son, with Burroughs scoring, and Dwayne Murphy’s sac- rifice fy gave Oakland a 4-0 lead. Cleveland cut the lead to 4-2 in the third when Miguel Dilone singled, Toby Harrah tripled and Mike Hargrove singled. But the A's added three runs in the seventh. Gross clubbed his first home run of the season, Burroughs sin- gled and pinch runner Jimmy Sexton scored when Heath tripled. McKay added a run- scoring single. In the Oakland ninth, Hen- derson singled, stole second and third — giving him 24 steals in 23 games — and scored on a single by Gross. TIGERS 5 WHITE SOX 2 CHICAGO (AP) — Jerry Turner singled home the go- ahead run in the fifth inning and Lance Parrish belted his second home run of the sea- son Saturday to lead Detroit Tigers to a 5-2 victory over Chicago White Sox. Detroit starter Dan Petry, 9-2 was the winner with relief help from Dave Rozema, who posted his first save. Richard Dotson, 1-3, took the loss, Petry struck out the first two Chicago batters . but walked three of the next five as the White Sox scored twice. Steve Kemp singled with two out in the first inning and Greg Luzinski walked before Tom Paciorek doubled to score Kemp. Harold Baines was walked intentionally to load the bases and Mare Hill also walked to force in Luzinski and make it 2-0. Petry then struck out Jim Morrison to end the inning. Detroit scored its first run with two out in the second as Parrish doubled and scored on a single by, Howard John- son. Parrish tied the score in the fourth with his homer, a line drive that just cleared the left-field wall. The Tigers took a 3-2 lead in the fifth when Enos Cabell singled, stole second and scored on Turner's hit. De- troit added a pair of insur- ance runs in the seventh, Kirk Gibson tripled to score Chet ‘Lemon, who had walked, and John Wocken- fuss followed with a single to score Gibson. BREWERS 6 TWINS 5 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Gorman Thomas hit a two- run homer in. the eighth inning Saturday as Milwau- kee Brewers struck for five runs and went on to defeat Minnesota Twins 6-5 in an American League baseball game. The Twins had taken a 4-1 lead into the eighth, but Paul Molitor reached safely on an error by third Gary 6&4 victory Saturday over Quebeck Nordiques in the third game of their National Hockey League semifinal playoff series. ‘The Islanders now lead the- best-of-seven Wales Confer- ence championship series 3-0 and can advance to the Stanley Cup final with an- REDS 10 CARDINALS 1 CINCINNATI (AP) — Dan Driessen cracked his first career grand slam and Mario Soto pitched a _five-hitter Saturday for his first victory of the season, carrying Cin- cinnati Reds to a 10-1 rout of St. Louis Cardinals in a Na- tional League baseball game. " Driessen’s grand slam in the seventh inning off re- liever Jim Kaat completed other victory in the fourth game here Tuesday night. Islanders defenceman Den- is Potvin fired a shot from the point that Quebec goalie Dan Bouchard stopped, but Merrick pounced on the loose puck sitting in the crease behind the Quebec goalie and pushed it into the net. Nordiques Wilf Paiement , had sent the game into over- time with 5:21 remaining in regulation play. the scoring and highlighted the Reds’ 11-hit attack. Soto, 1-2, struck out six batters — giving him 43 in 40 innings — in registering his first complete game of the season. He also singled and doubled to help the Reds capture their second straight game from the Cardinals, who have- dropped five of their last six. The Reds scored six runs in the first five innings, two Vancouver Canucks Appeal beingconsid VANCOUVER Vancouver Canucks are ‘con- sidering an appeal following fines assessed Saturday by. the National Hockey League Pes aed ident in Gaetti, advanced to second on a wild pitch and Robin Yount walked. Minnesota starter Brad Havens was lifted in favor of Doug Corbett, 0-2, who gave up a two-run double to Cecil Cooper. One out later, Ted Simmons signted Cooper to tie the game. ‘Thomas then gave Milwaukee .the lead with the two-run homer, his first of the year. Milwaukee designated hit- ter Don Money hit his third homer of the season, a solo shot, in the second to give the Brewers a 1-0 lead. ‘Borg wins tournament CAIRO (AP) — Bjorn Borg of Sweden beat Peter Mc- Namara of Australia 6-1, 6-4 Friday to capture the $75,000 first-place price in a four-man tournament. - After the match, Borg told reporters he hasn't decided whether he'll play in the Player's International in Tor- onto, beginning Aug. 9, Pub- lished reports in Montreal had said the only major ten- nis tournament Borg would play this year would be the Canadian Open event, which alternates every year be- tween Toronto and Montreal: Bob Kain, Borg’s. agent, said Friday in Cleveland, Ohio, that the five-time Wim- beldon champion likely would pass up all Grand Prix tour- naments because he does not think he should have to go through qualifying matches for the events. Borg is forced to qualify for all Grand Prix events, in- cluding the Grand Slam events — Wimbledon and the French and U.S. opens — be- cause he will not play in the required 10 Grand Prix events this year. Kain said Borg finds his having to qualify for every tournament degrading. In the third-place game, Vitas Gerulatitis of New York beat Egyptian cham- pion Ismail el-Shafei 6-1, 6-3. forat "4 the Stanley Cup playoffs. Associate coach Roger Neilson was fined $1,000 and the Vancouver team $10,000 after white towels of sur- render were waved from hockey sticks by Neilson and several Canuck players Thursday in’ Chicago when the Black Hawks beat Van- couver 4-1. “We are considering the fines with the possibility of an appeal,” said Canucks general manager Jake Mil- ford. . Milford, who retires June 1, was in Chicago for the game when Neilson and his players elected to protest the officiating of referee Bob Myers at 16:23 of the third” period after a power-play goal by Denis Savard of the Hawks. Myers handed out 188 minutes in penalties, includ- ing 106 to the Canucks. There were 150 penalty minutes during the final period. The referee gave Neilson a two-minute bench’ penalty and ejected him from the game, along with Vancouver It was 2-2 after one period, with Basil McRae and Peter Stastny, on a power play, scoring for Quebec and Mike Bossy and Bob Bourne, both .on power plays, scoring for New York. . Right winger Anders Kal- lur put the Islanders in front 3-2 with a short-handed breakaway goal at 19:12 of the second period. The Nordiques, realizing a loss would give the Islanders of them on Cardinal throwing errors: Dave Concepcion’s opposite-field double — the first of his three hits — and Cesar Cedeno’s single drove in runs to give the Reds a 2-0 lead in the first inning off Andy Rincon, 1-2. Trevino doubled with one in the second and Soto singled for a 8-0 lead. ~ DODGERS 2 EXP0S 1 LOS ANGELES (AP) — players Dave Williams and Gerry Minor, who received 10-minute misconducts. PREPARING TEAM Several of the Vancouver players, including Williams, conceded Neilson uséd the towel-waving incident to be- gin preparing his team for the, third game of the NHL Clarence Campbell Confer- ence final Saturday in Van- couver, with the series tied 1-1. One of the white towels on the Vancouver bench ended up on the ice during the incident, apparently thrown in the direction of Chicago coach Bob Pulford. a stranglehold on the series, came out flying in the third. Islanders captain Denis Potvin took a tripping pen- alty five. minutes into the: period and the Nordiques tied it 3-3 on a power-play goal by Anton Stastny. Right winger Wilf Paiement got the pass away while being knoc- ked to the ice by New York defenceman Ken Morrow and Stastny, all alone at the front of the crease, flipped the Pinch hitter Jorge Orta hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning Saturday and left fielder Dusty Baker threw out the potential tying run at the plate in the ninth, pacing Los Angeles Dodgers to a 2-1 National League baseball vic- tory over Montreal Expos. The homer was the first of the year for Orta and also his first as a Dodger. Obtained in a trade with Cleveland :In- dians during the winter, Orta “I don't know who threw the towel,” said head coach Harry Neale of the Canucks. “Pulford's been trying to coach our bench all through the series. There's going to be a few more stormy nights before this series is over.” Neale has watched the playoffs from the press box, with Neilson handling the bench, after sitting out a 10-game suspension imposed by the league after an inci- dent in the stands March 20 at Quebec. Neale will become general manager of tlie team this summer, with Neilson taking over as head coach. Besides Neale's suspen- sion, league president John puck past Islanders goalie Billy Smith. ‘The Islanders moved back in front, 4-3, when Bossy got his second of the game and 10th of the playoffs at 10:48. Centre Bryan Trottier stole the puck from Quebec for- ward Real Cloutier in the neutral zone and passed to Bossy breaking down the wing. Bossy beat Bouchard with a 80-foot slap shot low to the stick side. National League baseball — had one hit in eight previous at-bats before his towering drive into the right-centre field pavilion at Dodger Sta- dium. Mike Scioscia had walked with one out and, after pinch hitter Jay Johnstone flied out, Orta batted for Dodgers starter Jerry Reuss. He lashed a fash ball from Charlie Lea, 1-1, into the stands to put the Dodgers ahead. ered Ziegler suspended defence-. man Doug Halward for seven games and captain Kevin McCarthy for one. Another $7,500 in fines was set by Ziegler in the Quebec inci- dent. The Canucks returned home Friday and were greeted by several hundred fans at the airport, many waving white towels as a follow-up to the Chicago in- cident. The fines were set by NHL executive vice-president Brian O'Neill after a report filed by officiating supervisor Frank Udvari, who is hand- ling the Vancouver-Chicago series. - Vancouver Marathon today VANCOUVER (CP) — Australian Brian Morgan heads a field of 2,400 runners in the 11th annual Vancouver International Marathon which will be run through city streets and Stanley Park today. Morgan, a 26-year-old Ad- umstown, New South Wales, school teacher, is the first foreign champion to defend his title after covering the 26 miles, 385 yards last year ina time of two hours, 16 minutes and 27 seconds. Race organizers say he isa solid favorite to repeat but he might get stiff competition from Lloyd Walker, 42, an- other school teacher, from Papakura, New Zealand. Walker finished eighth here last year in 2:25:59 but laster ran the Mannings .In- ternational Marathon at Hamilton, N.Z., in 2:16:50 to finish fifth in that event. ~ The top local competitor is expected to be Steve Pom- eroy, 24, a Vancouver plan- ning technician who finished his first marathon in San Diego last year in 2:21:38. He won the Vancouver mara- thon's 20-mile warm-up race _ last March with a pace that would equal a 2:13 marathon. The record for the Vancou- ver course is 2:13.4 set in 1980 by Australian Garry Henry. FAVORITE WITHDRAWS The women’s division be- came wide open with the withdrawal last week of fav- orite Judy Vivian of Redondo Beach, Calif., who suffered a training injury. The women’s race now looks like a duel between Wendy Robertson O'Donnell, a Kelowna, B.C., native now living in Portland, Ore., and Paula Pick, a 92-year-old Vancouver librarian who won the women’s division of the 20-mile time trial. The first Canadian male wins a trip to the Fukuoka, Japan, marathon in Decem- ber and the first Canadian woman earns a trip to the Honolulu marathon, also in December. The course will also de- termine the first world blind marathon champion and sightless runners from Can- ada, the United States, New Zealand, Britain and Norway have entered. The favorite is Harry Cordellos, 40, of San Francisco, who has a best time of 2:57. Seven wheelchair athletes, led by Rick Hansen, 24 of Vancouver, will get a five- minute head start on the field and Hansen is rated a good bet to finish ahead of the able-bodied runners. Last year, 1,605 runners completed the course.