High school ‘scoreboard ith th: tauty {east 10 ties or r bent . Prince'of Wales who + 1 B.C. Zone Play-ofts: : Worl, St. Thomas More 0; Suth.3; Alpi: (Suth. ‘advances to the B.C. Chaniptonships): ° : 4. Alpha: 1, Wsr' 1 (Alpha won on penalty kick shootout), : ve wes “RUGBY : Junior Boys : : North Shore Play-offs: Seent-final: Arg 9, Sent -t2. Final: Bul 8, Arg 0.” Juvealle Boys | Wsr 16, Suth 10,0 ie North Shore Play-offs”... Tiebrexker::for. play-of spot: Suth 16, Wsr 9.- : ; Semi-final: Arg 14, Suth 4. ‘Bantam Boys... ! North Shose Play-offs Sernl finals: Bal 14, Ate’ 12: eg. 43 “ai Final CG 24, Bal 4.: FINAL STANDINGS... Senior Girts' Volleyball West Section 7 Sentinel” 42 West Vancouver . Handsworth *Hitiside St. ‘Thomas: Aquinas East Section Sutherland Windsor Casson Graham ° Seycove eI cl PEO BS IE ORE SAL SOE Reson aeeee | 15 - Wednesday, November More 19, 1986 - North Shore News local Sports action TI UE EMIT Ce poplar cont la ae att ee woe APIDOS ET Te Canadian college finais THE CAPILANO College Blues soccer team returned to North Vancouver Nov. 12 with a silver medal from the Ca- nadian College Athletic Association (CCAA) champion- ships. Held in Edmonton Nov. 8 to 11, the national competition involved Canada’s eight best college soccer teams. The Blues, who advanced to the national championship after winn- ing their second consecutive pro- vincial Totem College Athletic Association title on Nov. 2, went undefeated in the national cham- pionship’s opening rounds only to lose the championship game in a penalty shot shoot-out. In its first two tournament games, the Capilano College team blanked Montreal’s Dawson Col- lege and Alberta’s Northern Alber- ta Institute of Technology by iden- tical 1-0 scores, Centre forward Fernando Torres By TIMOTHY RENSHAW News Reporter scored for the Blues in the first game and Dino Centanni, another Blues centre forward, scored the team’s goal in the second game. Goalkeeper Wayne McIntosh recorded both shut-outs for the Blues. On Nov. 10, the Blues rounded oul Opening round action with a 3-0 victory over Nova Scotia’s University College of Cape Breton. Centanni opened scoring for the Blues. Centre back Rick Celebrini and midfielder Joe Abbinante also scored for the Blues. Goalkeeper Karim Tejani backstopped the local team to the shut-out. With the three consecutive vic- tories, the Capilano College team finished first in their pool and squared off against Edmonton’s Grant MacEwan College on Nov. 11 in the tournament's semi-final match. The Blues knocked off the Ed- monton squad 3-1. Centanni led the way for the Blues with two goals. Celebrini rounded out the Blues scoring. In the championship match, which was played in Edmonton's Butter Dome, the Blues battled back from a 2-0 half-time deficit to tie defending champion Seneca College 2-2 at the end of regulation play. Torres opened the Blues scoring with a brilliant blast and centre back Ian Hay tied the game up NEWS photo Mike Wakeliatd A CARSON GRAHAM player tackles a South Delta Sun Devil in senior boys provincial quarter finals Fri- day at Empire Stadium. The North Shore high school teams played hard but not hard enough. Delta beat Graham 38-7; Kamloops heat West Van 16-12, QUEENS Cross Rangers battled back three times to earn a 3-3 draw with Germania Old-Timers in a see- saw Coaches Soccer League contest on Nov. 9. Wolfgang Bludau opened the scoring for the Old- Timers when he headed in a corner-kich, but Rangers sweeper Steve Pii replied before the half. Bludau again put his team ahead by scoring on a breakaway, only ta have Terry MeQueen equalize from close range. Germania winger Michael Bureh got into the act by sloting home a breakaway of his own, but minutes later John Rice took a through pass from Dave SOB NTED as ASLAN NYE ESO gn abragd SSeS PE ABE SEL Sth CRE cS aa Pe ais A oi COUN Ala Frewin, split the defence, and netted the equalizer for the Crass. In other action. Lynnwood Nordic continued unbeaten atop the league's east division with a 3-1 win over Characters Restaurant, while Norvan, with a narrow 1-0 victory over Coach House Hotspurs, held on to their one-point lead over Mt, Seymour Ravens in the west. The Ravens edged Lynn Valley 2-1. Elsewhere, it) was Olympia Goldeaps 5, Ray Johnson Plumbing 0; Park Royal Hotel 1, Millers: 1: and Lynawood Brewers 3, Totemcolor Allstars 2. when he converted a Blues’ corner kick. The Blues ripped a shot off Seneca’s cross-bar in the final minute of the game, but lost the game when the Toronto team outscored them 4-3 in-a penalty shot shoot-out. Blues’ coach Joe lacobellis said he was proud of his team's per- formance throughout the tourna- ment and especially in the final match, “We have a young team and to do what they (the players) did, to come back and almost win, [ think was excellent. I’m proud of these guys. It’s the best any team has done against Seneca in three years.” The Blues took bronze medal in 1985. Senaca has now! won tHe na- tional college title for the past the CCAA three years. GOALTENDER KEITH MAJOR earned his first shutout of the season, as the Old Buzzards whitewashed the Rusty Gulls 4-0 in recent North Shore Senior Hockey League action. The Buzzards got first-period goals from Brian Shannon, Gary Little and Doug Ireland. Aimie Lehouillier completed the Buzzards’ scoring early in the se- cond period. In other action, the Drillers outlasted the Warriors 5-2. Brian Wallace opened the scor- ing for the Drillers midway through the first period, Luther Fairbairn evened the score later in the period. The tight-checking game broke open in the second period as three goals were scored in just over 60 seconds. Bruce Murray's goal for the Warriors was sandwiched between Driller markers by Wallace and Rick Walton. Larry Watts increased the Drillers’ lead to two later in the period, and Walton iced the cake with a goal with only two seconds remaining in the game. A third league game had, the Canadians skaling to an 8-4 triumph over the Old Crows, Mel Meinechenko opened scor- ing for the Canadians midway See Puck Page 16 CREE LEE ENS Nese es ER SD