ae Met iP TE lide BASEBALL... The North Shore Men’s Baseball Associition will be nolding its annual Mid-season cash tournament starting Thursday night at Inter-River park. Thursday and Friday nights will feature two games each — one on each field — with games going all day Saturday and Sunday on the upper field. The semi-finals and the finats will be held Monday, also on the upper field. SOCCER... THE PRO- VINCE Cup’s defending champion for the past two consecutive years, Norvan ANAF, lost its bid to retain the provincial championship Sunday when the team was defeated by Westside Rino F.C. in a shootout Sunday at North Vancouver's Kinsman Stadium. The game was tied 0-0 at the end of regulation and moved into overtime. Norvan’s Graeme - Slee scored the go-ahead goal seven minutes into the extra frame (97th min.), but four ‘minutes later Bil! Johnston responded with a goal for Westside. Qvertime ended in the 1-1 draw, and the game was decided in a shootout. With each team taking five penalty shots, Westside prevailed as 4-2 victors. SWIMMING... The North Vancouver Cruisers summer swim club is looking for new members. Anyone from the age of five and up who is able to swim one length of a recreation’ centre pool is wel- come. Enrollment is limited. For more information call Judy at 980-5587, TENNIS... The North Shore Neighbourhood House is of- fering drop-in tennis lessons for adults every Monday evening (except statutory . holidays) throughout the spring and summer. The in- formal lessons run from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Derek Inman tennis courts, behind the Neighborhood House on East Ist Street. Children’s tennis Jessons are also available, For more information contact 987-8138. Slam dunk! SENIOR BASKETBALL players at Carson Graham secondary school next season will be fast- breaking to attend a tournament any student would slam dunk for. Jn December, 15 Grade 11 and Grade !2 students will spend 12 days participating in the annual’ Maui High School Invitational Basketball Tournament. The cost of the trip — travel, | accommodation and meals — will’ be $1,295 per person and will be paid for by the participants. The’ students will be accom- panicd by one teacher-sponsor and two adult supervisors et A ORY Stee Z BAe rr peaches Th ait Wednesday, May 18, 1993 - North Shore News ~ 45 BRIBE fia et 2 PES Treas f NEWS photo Faul McGrath THE L.A. Tavern Dawgers improved their record to five wins and two losses with Saturday’s 16-3 trouncing of the Budget Warriors. The Warriors remain in second place with a record of six wins and three losses. Slowpitching Dawgers, Warriors slug it out and Jack’s falls at the hands of the Pirates in fastball THE L.A. Tavern Dawgers moved to within four points of the first-place North Shore Heaters with an impressive win over second-placed Budget Warriors in North Vancouver Men’s Slowpitch action on Saturday. The Dawgers Ied 4-0 after the first inning and they coasted to a 16-3 final. The win improves their record to five wins and two losses, while the Warriors remain in second place with their record of 6-3. The game’s score does not ac- curately reflect the Warriors’ tal- ent according to Dawgers’ team captain Russ Pengelly. For the Dawgers, (he game was a slugfest, with Tony Wild hitting a home run and Trevor Creaney hitting two. Each player hit one over the left field fence and out of the park. The Warriors’ Jim Mosher replied with a similar homer for two of the team’s three runs. Dawgers pitcher Pengelly was By Kevin Gillies Contributing Writer largely responsible for the win with most of the: Warriors’ hits popped up to the outfield or grounded to the infield. IN NORTH Shore Men’s Baseball action, first-place Jack Lonsdale’s lost their first game of the season, falling 6-4 to the Pirates. The loss dropped Jack’s record to five wins, one loss while the Pirates improved to 2-1. Jack’s remains in first place while the Pirates are 1% games behind. First inning singles by Steve Sokolski, Roger Procopio, Scott Russell, and a double by Collin McCarty gave the Pirates an early 4-0 lead. Jack’s chipped away at the lead by scoring a run in the third and another in .the fourth to make it 4-2, However, the Pirates manufac- tured a couple of runs in the bot- tom of the fourth io restore their four-run lead. Again Jack’s chipped away by scoring a run in their half of the fifth and sixth innings to make it 6-4 heading into the final inning. Jack's pressed in the top of the seventh, but left runners on se- cond and third to end the game. Pirates’ Trevor Anderson pitch- ed the entire game — twice shut- ting down Jack’s with the bases loaded. © In other league action last weekend, The Keg beat Yorkton 2-1 with pitchers Garth Tubman of The Keg aid Sean Miter of Yorkton combining to allow only nine hits and one walk between them. Tubman helped his own cause by driving in a run. @ Jerzees B&G beat Skylights Only 7-6 in a game that saw eight players from each team hit, and the lead change hands four times. Pete Mathews singled for two RBls and threw out two baserun- ners trying to steal bases. @ In a game played a week ago, Mike Scallion of the Queen's Cross threw the league’s first no-hitter of the season to lead his team to a 1-0 defeat of Skylights Only. The game went into extra innings with Junya Ujiie driving in’ the game’s only run with a double in the top of the eight. Scallion struck out 10 and allowed - one walk.