Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 30 Nov 1977, p. 13

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The losses leave Water- loo with an 0-2 mark in the Western Division of the , OUAA. They played Wind- sor last night and travel to the Kitchener Auditor- ium to play their cross- town rivals, the Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks. tomorrow night. John Maclntyre did most of the damage for Queen's scoring three times includ- ing the empty net tally, He opened the scoring at 7:09 of the first period when he broke In alone and deked Waterloo goalie Rick Nickelchok with his team one man short due to Gord Rivoire's five minute high- sticking penalty. By Rick Campbell University of Waterloo hockey Warriors played about 10 bad minutes in their first two Ontario Uni- versities Athletic Associa- tion league games last week. And it cost them dearly both times. And Friday, back in Wa- terloo, the Warriors played sloppy hockey for a short stretch in the first period. allowing Queen's Golden Gaels four goals. That proved to be an ample num- ber as Gaels added an in.. surance goal into an empty net to make the final score " Thursday night in Guelph. the Gryphons scored three times in the final minute to cart off a 6-2 victory. "It wasnt even a bad pe- riod. it was six bad min- utes." said a dejected War- rior coach Bob McKillop. referring to the first period against Queen's. "We lost the puck much too often on absolute giveaways. .. Twenty-six seconds later Waterloo capitalized on the powerplay when Randy Swanson stopped John Ver- meer's blueline shot and Waterloo Wemor right Winger Jamie Hodge gets set to shoot during Friday B game against Queen S. Btecing for the shot are Queen's captain Dwight Mick and goalie Barry Ashby while Eric Brubacher of Waterloo looks on. Queen's scoted four first period goals to win 5-3. . Warriors lose Openers “But we're snakebit. We just aren't getting the breaks. We forced the play the way we wanted to, We controlled the second and third periods in my esti- mation. Yet Queen's comes up with the two points. .. It was the sixth straight meeting between the clubs that the decision has gone to the visiting team. a fact that pleased O'Donnell to mend "The way they (Queen'st played kitty bar the door in the third period there was no way we weren't go- ing to score," said McKiI- lop. Dale Sandles of Queens made the margin 2-1 on a powerplay but a bad clear- ing pass by Ashby at 10:46 gave Mike Zettel a gift g0al to tie the score while Warriors were a man shy. The second period was scoreless despite several good opportunities at either end. Both Ashby and Nickel- chok were equal to the task. Ron Davidson picked the corner at 12:16 to put Queen's back into the lead and Macintyre took advan- tage of an errant pass to beat Nickelchok at 18:14 to close out the first. Jamie Hodge of Waterloo set up the last minute dram- atics when he swept in on the right side and fooled Ashby at 15:33 of the third. backhanded the puck past Barry Ashby in the Queen's goal. - "They (Macintyre broth- ers Ned and John) are ex- cellent forechpckers and they create loads of scoring chances," said first year Queen's coach Fred O'Don- nell. Momentary lapses costly "Waterloo for some rea- son was also very flat in the first. We would have been in a lot of trouble with- out that period. .. "Yes, anytime you can win in the opposition's rink, it's a good feeling. But it was a nice clean game too, which is good for' the league." Warriors lost Michael Longpre indefinitely in the first period. He suffered a nose injury and was operat- ed on immediately after the game. "But we have to start scoring more goals." "No. I knew they were good," said McKillop. "We knew about the Macintyre brothers and Ashby played in Guelph last year. They're a good solid club.” "I think the biggest key was the acquisition of Dwight Mick from Con- cordia." said O'Donnell. “He's sparked us, he's a real team leader. . . The win was Queen's first to make their record 1-2-2. Saturday they went even by smoking York Yeomen 5-1 in Toronto. "We had the game tied when we hit the post with less than two minutes to go: then they scored those three." said Mckillop. "We weren't blown out of the rink by any means, Queen's 'showed great improvement over last year, but neither coach was surprised. Thursday in Guelph Dave Cobban scored three goals in the final minute to sink Warriors. Paul Goldup. Mark Schmaltz and Tom Castle also tallied while Zettel and Kenny Greene replied for Waterloo. The Golden Hawks will be out to keep their unde- feated record intact in Thursdays game. 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