Sports Waterloo host 28 teams PAGE 20 â€" WATERLOO CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1990 Big weekend of fastball Will the Owen Sound Canadian Tire threeâ€"peat at this weekend‘s Ontario Men‘s Elimination Tourâ€" nament in Waterlo0? Owen Sound, winners of the last two senior men‘s elimination tournaments and the defending Canadian champions, look as strong this year as they have in the past. The tournament, featuring 28 teams from across the province, will be a doubleâ€"knockout series with games played at Hillside Park and Waterloo‘s Centennial Park beginning 6:30 p.m. on Friday and capped off by Monâ€" day‘s championship game at 3 p.m. at Hillside Park. . The tournament winner will advance to the Canadian Champâ€" ionships to be held in Sarnia Aug. 20â€"26. Ontario will be ed by three teams, 1pclm and this weekend‘s elimination team at the Intermediale Level will advance to an Eastern Canaâ€" ward Island. Dutchmen are back in Jr.B hockey league How fast, or slow, is .38 of a second. Think about it, just for a second. A.fl,cm,wmam That‘s about how fast .38 of a is. And, that‘s about how much slower Waterloo‘s Sean McKillop is than World g:flimwo-.mécmuwd i &.uel.&fmx , isn‘t it. Yet, think about the hundreds, or even thousands of runners in the world who are in that However, McKillop has one advantage over many of today‘s worldâ€"class runâ€" ners. He‘s still in his junior years and at the age of 18, still has time of hone his skills Years to shave that oneâ€"hunâ€" dredth of a second off his existing time. â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"SEAN MCKILLOP â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Junior runner taking senior circuit by storm (Continued on page 26) in 4 HEILLERLL d 4 9 CS 4 * f uiL + York Sundance vs. Baden â€" 6:30 p.m Centennial #1 Centennial #2 Waterloo vs. Woodstock â€" 8:30 p.m. Hillside #1 Carp Valley vs. Bradford â€" 8:30 p.m Hillside #2 Burlington vs. Woodstock â€" 8:30 p.m Centennial #1 #1 & s â€" Ingersoll vs. Brantford â€" 6:30 p.m Norwich va. Linwood _ â€" 8:30 a.m. â€" Hillside A1 Centennial #1 East York vs. Osahawa â€" 10:30 a.m Saturday, August 4 Friday, August 3 McKillop, of the highly touted Kitchâ€" enerâ€"Waterlco Track and Field Associaâ€" tion, has run the 100m in 10.3 seconds, while the veteran Lewis, who‘s in his wgahcmaftd,mmn We record time of 9.92 seconds. Bonwwhhhwudw down and was recently m Burrell, 10.05 seconds, at the Games in Seattle, Wash. So much for 9.92 seconds. 6:30 p.m 6:30 p.m. 8:30 a.m. Pete Cudhea â€" * _.=..... _ , . «. . & aought L8 HORd i in rassra ty n o o. Chronicle Staff â€"._._ ’ 3 ‘.wmï¬otheMM'lwlv’lvpdim to turn a financially losing organization into & Peter Snyder, Santarossa Larry $ mmhmhmdm Bnhdymhtheopquï¬mdmmgs‘,_whflelï¬h clnmvleo-prmdentnunml 4 “Ingepd,thinphavebeennlmlempï¬ve.% "We‘re coming into this with no debt. That‘s half the have to start thinking positive." «* . _ . . battle," Logel told the Chronicle yesterday afternoon. .‘ Although the structuring of ‘the exectitive began mmm-mwmm mmmmfluwmm&u Dutchmen Ontario Hockey League‘ midget players a players‘ Kitchewnanmthmintbbnlmtbï¬mndll‘- meeting 7:30 tonight at fll'b%m Club in efriicand on t i Tonight‘s meeting i sepecially important to last The team‘s new is land developer Keith * 18# omumnmugmw.u rwmwhohnm_hm ntacted by Brantford junior B coach is the ‘teams‘ coach and junior B clubs in the area since the i & m:ntmdgheaugc.w .them’lnomtï¬ttthm Actording to Logel, ‘‘Nothing would have happened if . _,; n h Keith (Oldfield) hadn‘t stepped in." m . oflibereneendy hy of thel plavers They still hold Junior B Dutchmen of the Ontario Hockey Association, â€" Heck! dnmvloo-pendentbmml e "In "We‘re coming into this with no debt. That‘s half the: : have battle," Logel told the Chronicle yesterday afternoon. .‘ Alt! Loge!, and a group of areabusinessmen, resurrected about the Dutchmen after the Ontario Hockey League‘s Out t Kitchener Rangers threw in the towel on the financialâ€" . meeti ly striken franchise. _ % The team‘s new is land developer Keith omumwmmmu Mn Brantford junior B coach is the teams‘ coach and" hent wure cydR 0C Hillside Hillside . 2i 8c tsirimmqnllyme in zl &b s Cudhaa / . competed, and sometimes dominated, the" junior division in Ontaric ~and national track, but next week he‘ll get to see just how good he is against the best in({‘:dan‘mt:oNdioulChmpion- .h‘i’FinpiuM' for the experi m " wl tnred hy ap soueh (hrank my my making the finals. So I say, ‘What heck, go for it.‘ If I can do that (make the finals) than I can only get better." _ tnock Semne sosting faries the, Porkes _ less proséitte in the 20ï¬ ... began, this ‘Waterloo Instiâ€" ... .. .»~. «(Continued ¢ nals) than I can only get better." McKillop took a break from the indoor Over the past year McKillop has tute sprinter went into overdrive domiâ€" nating the Waterloo County high school meets and the Central Western Ontario meets. At the allâ€"Ontario meet he finâ€" mmilbedthud' in the 100m and fourth in the At the National Junior championships in early July he finished third in the 200m with a time of 21.65 seconds, while uthejuvmfloi-:dchckudï¬old ampionalis Tlobicoke two weel ago, running as a senior, he finished third with a time of 21.88. _ . While he runs a:worldâ€"class standard time in the 100m, he finds that there is drialy in en ill be holdi ' the Cmagllt:g‘; We Use ‘Recycled Newsprint (Continued on page 31) i mslal on page 31