CURLING... Skip Joan Fowler led her North Shore Winter Club team to victory in the final of the District 1 Senior Ladies’ playdowns at) Hollyburn Country Club last Sundity. Fowler's foursome edged Lou Logan's New Westminster team 10-9, winning the right to repre- sent District fat the B.C. Senior Ladies Championships. It will be Fowler's lirst appearance as a skip in the provineials. The Winter Club team consists of Fowler, Betty Eng (lead), Doreen Matkovieh (third) and Marquerite Strong (sec- ond). SOCCER... The following high school soccer all- stats have been selected by the 11 coaches of the North Shore senior boys’ sovcer teams. Selection is based on ability and consistency in Skil. teamwork, sports- manship and teadership. Players are listed in alpha- betical order. FIRST ALL-STARS Kevin Backie, Grade 11 Argyle centreback; Adam Begley, Grade 11 Sutherland sweeper; Bave Boehmer, Grade 11 Sentinel goalkeeper; Mike D’Addabbo, Grade 9 St. Thomas Aquinas mid- fielder/striker: Abeed Hirji, Grade 10 Argyle midfielder; Struan Howes, Grade 10 West Vancouver centre- back; Chung-Ming Ip, Grade 11 Sentinel striker; ° Keith Jerczynski, Grade 11 Windsor midfielder; Ryan McKenzie, Grade 11 Sentinel midfielder; Steve Nairn, Grade 12 Carson Graham midfielder; Joel Perkins, Grade 11 Seycove midfielder; Daisuke Tajiri, Grade 10 West Vancouver forward; Jon Vondargon, Grade 11 St. Thomas Aquinas cen- treback/midfielder. SECOND ALL-STARS Kevin Antonini, Grade 12 Sentinel defender; Mike Bartos, Grade 12 St. Thomas Aquinas goalkeep- er; Jake Daly, Grade 11 Sentinel midfielder; Jordan Edmonds, Grade 12 West Vancouver mid- fielder; Jason Eltigott, Grade 11 Sutherland midfielder; David Ellis, Grade Collingweod centreback; Chris Rinfrot, Grade 12 Carson Graham centre- back/midfielder; Nick Seddon, Grade 10 Sutherland midfielder; Peter Stringer, Grade 12 Argyle midfielder; Gary Tattrie, Grade t! Seycove forward/midfield- er: Brett Theunissen, Grade 11 St. Thomas Aquinas defender; Chris Thompson, Grade 1) Windsor midfietder, the Saran WHO TO CALL: Sports Editor A.P, McCredie 985-2131 (113) af NEWS photo Mike Wakefield NORTH DELTA Huskies’ halfback lan Petrov rumbles for a first down during last Friday night's B.C. singte-A final at B.C. Place. Windsor's Randy Reitan (No. 73), Phil Harwood (No. 11), and lan Fielden (No. 78) were chasing Petrav all night during the Huskies’ 41-6 win. | North Delta downs Windsor 41-6 in B.C. final FORTY-E!IGHT HOURS before the B.C. Lions retained Canada’s football prize at BC Place, the Windsor Dukes were playing under the dome for the provincial single-A title against the North Delta Huskies. By A.P. McCredie Sports Reporter And while the B.C.-Baltimore Grey Cup was a nail-biter through- out, the Dukes saw their provincial title hopes slip away after just the first quarter of play against the Huskies. Jay Prepchuk's squad was down 13-0 after 12 minutes of play. The Huskies proved too strong through the middle for the Dukes, as running backs Ian Petrov and Mike Lavallee tore through the Duke defence at will. “When you go into a champi- onship game and make mistakes, you're not going to be successful? said Duke head coach Prepehuk after the game. “We got behind early, and against a team like North Delta, its pretty hard to get back in it” The Dukes sole score carne in the Lavallee the winner. third quarter when pivot Jeff Smith connected with receiver Paulo Lammoglia on a 57-yard touchdown play. The Dukes failed to convert the major. Going into the game, Prepchuk hoped a roving secondary that pro- pelled the Dukes into the final (with a 3-0 victory over Port Moody) would slow down the Huskies’ high- Huskies’ strong-armed quarterback Mike Hofbauer heoked-up with his big tight end, the aptly-named Mandeep Atwal, for three touch- downs, including a back-breaking Hail Mary pass at the end of the first half. Atwa! was awarded for his perfor- mance with Lineman of The Game honors, while Hofbauer and Petrov And even though the outcome was not the way Prepchuk envi- sioned last Friday night’s game, he was proud of the way his team played. “It was an exciting season and I’m really happy with the way the coaching staff and the players pulled together as a team,” Prepchuk said, adding, “We're returning quite a powered offence. But it was the North Delta receivers who won the day, as the split the Outstanding Back title. The Most Valuable Player award was a no-brainer, with Huskies’ halfback few key players (next year) and we've got some really good juniors coming up.” GSL honors best of 1994 THE GORDON Strutridge Football League (GSL) held its annual end-of-season awards banquet last Friday night, honoring the 1994 season's outstanding players. Leading the way was Falcons’ quarterback Jamie Houssian, named GSL Most Vahuible Player. The strong passing pivot has led the Falcons into the past two championship games, and is as adept on defence as on offence. The Best Offensive Player award went to Houssian's counterpart on the Bears, David Green, Green helped Jed the Bears over the Falcons [9-13 in overtime in this year’s final, His 10 TDs put him in second place in league scoring. Five-year GSL veteran Tarek Elneweihi, an aggres- sive linebacker with the Falcons, got the nod as the league's Best Defensive Player. No slouch on offence, Elneweihi also scored eight majors for the Falcons. Chris Singer, noted for strong play on both sides of the ball for the Razorbacks, was awarded Best Lineman honors. New to both the Lower Mainland and the game of football, Bear lineman Arash Safarpour was named luague Rookie of the Year. Most Sportsmantike honors weat to Huskies* quar- terback Andrew Argento, a two-year GSL, player. A Special Mention went to Bears’ quarterback Craig MeLaren, last: year’s league MVP and the league scoring champ over the past two seasons.