|
The
second place finish for the 1943 Athletics put them in the best possible
position going into the playoffs. They would meet the fourth place, 4 and
20, Toronto Lakeshores, while the strong Army Bullets and the Brampton-Mimico
Combine teams would hammer it out in the other series.
But
two things happened before the playoffs started that may have affected the
outcome of the Athletics – Lakeshores series. First of all, many of the
A’s received their military call-up notices, and secondly, the
Lakeshores airlifted in some old Owen Sound and Orillia players. Suddenly
the Lakeshores looked more like a 20 and 4 team. Now wait a minute! Piper
Bain, Bucko MacDonald! In Lakeshores uniforms! Now where were the
“solons” of the O.L.A. on that move.
It’s
not fair for me to say why the twin-blues were beat, but beat they were
and quite badly I may add. But in 1943 there were much greater concerns
than any lacrosse game and, after all, better years were ahead for the
Haig Bowlers and for the country.
The
Standard’s sports editor Clayton Browne, in his usual folksy manner,
would address the A’s quick playoff exit and he also would talk of a few
of the old A’s already in the big fight, one being Mann Cupper Roy
Barnard who was wounded in action with the Canadian Army in Sicily.
SPORT
DONE BROWNE
By
CLAYTON BROWNE
The St. Catharines
Standard
Tuesday September 14, 1943
The
faithful of lacrosse are still cating around for reasons of the Athletics
downfall by such an over-whelming score at the hands of Toronto Lakeshores
and as usual, the wiseacres all have the remedy. One irate individual, in
exposing views, forgot (or deleted) his name and that note cannot be
published. The rank and file, however, ascribe it to the fact of A’s
being put off stride by receipt of their military call-ups, but this is
discounted by the more casual followers.
However,
and notwithstanding, several of the double blues got their marching orders
to report to active duty and those in the mood propose to beat it by
enlisting and thereby taking chances on choosing their particular units.
The others must pass medicals and then there are the luckier boys who are
rated as essential to war industry work and engaged in key positions on
munitions, locally.
There
were not many Garden City folk shivering in Mimico Bowl for the final, but
those that were will not hesitate to tell all and sundry where the
differences lay. We hear that one of the A’s supporters “ribbed” the
O.L.A. solons unmercifully for permitting Torontos, winners of but four
games during the season, to import six to eight Orillia-Owen Sound stars
to contest the playoffs—after merely going through the motions all
summer and often barely skimming over a game with enough players to
qualify. That was after the O.L.A. edict of one player to a team for
bolstering.
SPORT
DONE BROWNE
By
CLAYTON BROWNE
The St. Catharines
Standard
Saturday September
18, 1943
By
the way, can you picture Bun Barnard and Bobby Melville, now hospital pals
at the North Africa base, discussing the pros and cons of the Athletics
downfall, when they get the belated news? Melville is a fever patient, but
if he is anywhere in the dark continent, Barnard will look him up and see
that he shares some of the fruit (that’s more plentiful than anything
seen in the Niagara area) for the boys under medical care. Or ponder what
“Spark” Urquhart thinks when he gets back to port from naval patrol
and opens up the family paper for the news? A safe guess is that their
chatter is not confined to gee and gosh, by a long shot.
Frank
(Piper) Bain, who conducts the sports column of the Orillia News Letter
and does not deny that he’s past the 36-year mark, modestly pens the
following reason for Athletics’ ousting: “Take a combination of youth,
experience, willingness to fight to the last ditch and the time-worn epic
of ‘one for all and all for one’ and you have the honest-to-goodness
reason for those sterling upsets. Unfortunately for St. Catharines, they
came up against a gang that not only produce one unknown, but fifteen.”
That last line rather rubs it in to the A’s.
Something for the A’s
moguls to overcome for 1944 (if lacrosse is played) is ball-getters at
centre. No doubt of it, they were woefully amiss in spots where Urquhart
and McMahon cavorted, in short, the legs to control loose rubber. Wandy
McMahon, undoubtedly one of the greatest fielders of the era and also the
most under-estimated rover in the game today, was a tower of strength
A’s sorely missed. Melville had all the makings of another ball-hawk and
Barnard could really bump ‘em for keeps. Strange to relate, Saints
failed to adopt body-checking against Lakeshores as a stop-gap and they
used to be adepts at that artistry. Well, it’s a long winter.

Notice from the St. Catharines Standard
RETURN
|
|