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Oakville Beaver, 29 Aug 1993, p. 15

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Moss WINS IT Steve Moss’ bases- clearing double in the bottom of the fifth inning propelled Oakville Pic-A- Deli to a 6-3 victory over Jarvis in Tri-Connty Fastball League action Tuesday at Lowville Park. Pic-A-Deli finished the regu- lar season in third spot with a 16- 8 mark. It will play in the league playoff tournament in Hagersville this weekend. Trailing 2;; after four-and-a- half innings, Kelly Pace led off the bottom of the fifth with a ground-rule double. After two fly outs, Paul Teague singled home Pace to tie the game, setting the stage for Moss’ blast. Jarvis got one run in the sev- enth and loaded the bases but starting pitcher Rick Snair recorded a Strikeout to end the contest. He scattered 10 hits and walked none for the win. Teague’s RBI single in the sixth made the score 6-2. Pic-A-Deli dropped a 4-0 decision to Caledonia in a battle for first place last Thursday in Caledonia. Minor Oaks. Hockey Association rep tryouts at Glen Abbey. Minor novice, minor atom, minor peewee, minor bantam and bantam Monday and Wednesday. Novice, atom, peewee, midget (1 and 2), Tuesday and Thursday. 257- ’8992... Halton Men's Recreational Non- Contact Hockey League. 849-9712. TUESDAY: Oakville Novice Swim Meet. 9 am. at Brookdale Pool. Oakville International Soccer Tournamentâ€" Girls Division. Continues through weekend at Shell Park FRIDAY: Ontario Midget AA Baseball Championships. Continuing Saturday and Sunday at Oakville Park and River Oaks Park. 'flE ABM AND RECREATION Phil Mickelson, winner of the International last weekend, heads a list of 14 more golfers to confirm their entry into the year's Canadian Open golf Championship at Glen Abbey. Mickelson is one of six 1992 tournament win- ners and six former champions entered, making tthe Sept.. 9-12 Open one of the most competi- tive fields in recent memory, officials say. Also indicating that they will attend were Rocco Mediate (who won this year's Greater Greensborough Open), Jim McGovern (Houston Open), Jim Gallagher Jr. (Anheuser Busch Classic), Grant Waite (Kemper Open) and Mike Standley (Freeport Open). Canadian stars Dave 14 golfers join Open fieldâ€"-but where's Jack? Collectqllfour Barbie” figurines a Pd fourllot Wheelflttadt Pack” yehkles at MtDonald’s! 1,. / ' .b . . ‘7 r’; 'Iimn'lanhW' McDonald's serves up classic toys! (1mm km my" arr I'II‘ sum 3: Would \ .unlsaubw Mum“ and um Whnh Alml Pad ‘ vvhvtlcs Bum Wm [M ummq mlr mlh mu. rollemhlv Bum hqwmw um m» uylablv m And (mum; a mi sun m um mmnq uox Whevls mm m‘ vvmdrx ram mm mvvmq pans AI Just 19mm Barby: hgmum and Mm whorls Allaik VIII ' «hum All‘ unlv dumb)? WWI? sunvlws 1“ "mu m In: yams mday' Nicklaus, who plays sporadically on the PGA Tour as well the PGA Seniors Tour, has apparent- ly not yet made up his mind. Barr, Richard Zokol and Dan Halldorson also said this week that they will attend. But the Open still has not heard from golf legend and course designer Jack Nicklaus. "I talked to (his management team) this mom- ing (Thursday) and he is still undecided," said Mike Watt, director of player relations for the Oakville-based Royal Canadian Golf Association, which is putting on the $1 million tournament. "We're not speculating one way or another." SUNDAY} AUGUST 29, 1993 PAGE 15 Nicklaus last played in the Open in 1991. Reports indicated he would base this year's deci- sion on how his game appeared in the recent PGA championship. That being the case, he like- ly will not attend. Even without Nicklaus, the Open will possess one of the strongest fields on the tour this sea- son, said Watt. See Wednesday's Beaver for a special 20-page pull-out section on this year's Canadian Open. Defending champion Greg Norman, 1991 champion Nick Price, Fred Couples, Lee Janzen and Paul Azinger earlier announced they would be participating. loommm a: WEEKLY PUBLICAHON 02520 _<_>xmm : m>m< ‘_ 6 22 Oz mm: > <mI_Qm_ By TOM MICHIBATA Oakville Beaver stafir Golf and indoor soccer will be added to the Halton high school sports scene this seasonâ€"but gym- nastics is getting the axe. Halton Secondary Schools Athletic Association sports con- venor Peter Moore confirmed that golf and indoor soccer were pro- posed at the HSSAA annual meet- ing in June and approved unani- mously by school reps. Schools add two sports, ditch another Golf will be a fall sport while indoor soccer will take place from December through March at the Soccer World complex in Ancaster. Golf was proposed by Loyola while indoor soccer was raised by Nelson. Moore said the golf season would be comprised of a series of competitions concluding with a year-end tournament Both will take place on a trial basis. “The athletic committee (of the HSSAA) will look at the number of students competing and how well they are received,” Moore said. Moore said there are concerns golf “could take athletes from exist- ing sports, like volleyball and foot- ball” which means it will be “a casual-type thing, not a full-out ath- letic commitment like the other activities.” As for girls gymnastics, it died a slow death after numbers began dwindling in the late 19803, until only two schools participated last year - Blakelock and Lester B. Pearson. Combined with a lack of coaches and it being a high-risk sport, there was no choice but to disband it, said Moore. “Injuries in gymnastics 'can be See GOLF, Page 16 635-0222

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