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History of the A's |
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1947 - Junior Athletics Win Minto Cup |
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It
was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of
wisdom, it was the age of foolishness. It was the 1947 season of the St.
Catharines Junior Athletics. That
years’ playoff journey of the A’s would have more twists than a bow
tie. A provincial title was won, simple enough, but then the
double-blue’s 1947 excellent adventure would truly begin. A showdown
against a team that no one had heard of, a road trip to a lit and
abandoned lacrosse bowl, a game where the team scored a decisive blow-out
win while dodging a continual barrage of swinging sticks and flying
tomatoes, an exhibition game against the seniors to raise money for a trip
that never happened, and an all-star game ordered up by the O.L.A. that
was played in 40 degree F. temperatures. All of this before they had even
met the Vancouver Burrards from the west for the title. Maybe
none of this would have even happened had the A’s listened to their
critics before the season started. You see, the rebuilding St. Catharines
Athletics of 1947 weren’t expected to challenge for the Minto Cup. They
were too young. They were too small. And most observers thought they were
not capable enough or gritty enough to last when the going would get
tough. The
double-blue crew from the year before were a good bunch and made it to the
league finals. But eleven from that team were now gone, some going
overage, and others making an early jump to senior ball. Jerry Fitzgerald
made the jump to the senior Athletics along with Don Frick. Tony Capula
headed down the highway to play for the senior Hamilton Tigers. And Ken
“Weiner” Croft and Donald “Nip” O’Hearn were now off playing
lacrosse with “Punch” Imlach and the Quebec City Mounts. Going overage from
the class of ’46 were George Scott, Doug Wignall, Tommy Bye, Jack
Timlock, Les Bell and Jack Gatecliff. But
that would only open the door for some of the kids. Seventeen-year-olds on
that 1947 team included Leo Teatro, Bob Dyke, Andy Baird and future
Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Fame inductees Jim McNulty, Tony D’Amico and
Harry Wipper. The
junior Athletics of 1947 would also need to rely on the goaltending of a
fifteen-year-old named Ralph Speck. Who was Ralph Speck and would he be
ready to handle the competition at this level? Oh sure, he was coming off
a good ’46 season when he led the Kiwanis bantams to the Ontario
championship, but come on now, that was a far cry from junior. Rest
assured, Ralph Speck would be one of the heroes of this story. Coach
Mel Soper looked for leadership from just a handful of veterans that year.
Larry Cunningham along with future St. Catharines mayor Joe McCaffery on
defence, “little” Billy Bradshaw at rover and Leo Cheevers on the
wing, the team’s twenty-year-olds. Yes,
this was a team that seemed destined to be building for the future. And
when they opened the season with a 17- 6 loss to Mimico, the word around
the Garden City was hey, what did you expect? Aren’t they too young and
too small! But
then the A’s would win their next game, and then the next, and the next.
Win after win would pile up and it became evident to everyone except the
admission paying public of St. Catharines that this was truly a team to
watch. The
junior A’s would soon climb into first place and stay there all summer.
All the while they played before crowds of just a few hundred while their
big brothers on the senior Athletics were still drawing crowds of two to
three thousand a game. A championship team in the making, and nobody
seemed to take notice. The
president of the team was Fred Conradi. St. Catharines and the sport of
lacrosse were lucky to have a man like Conradi, who built teams at all
levels, developed character out of boys and supported much of it all with his
own money. In 1947 he would sponsor the bantam and midget team in Port
Dalhousie (as he had for years) and bankroll the money losing junior
Athletics. Fred Conradi’s eventual induction into the Canadian Lacrosse
Hall of Fame in the builders category was a very deserving honour. As
the Ontario finals were about to commence in late August between St.
Catharines and Mimico, word was leaking out that the O. L. A. was going to
allow the junior “B” champions to challenge the junior “A” winner
for the Ontario title. This took a great many by surprise. What
was behind this was the Port Dover Lions. The Reverend Wes Hare coached
Lions were loaded with some talent from the Oshweken area such as Al
Martin, goaltender Ted Williams and the great Ross Powless. They also had
a farm boy named Len Kelly who would soon be better known as “Red”
Kelly of the Detroit Red Wings and Toronto Maple Leafs. Reverend Hare
himself was an old St. Catharines Athletic from the early 1900’s and
when he claimed that his team could beat any junior “A” team, many of
the league moguls listened. After
the A’s won their second game in the best-of-five showdown against
Mimico, the official word came from the O. L. A. offices that the series
winner would have to beat the “B” champions before being declared
Ontario champions. The Athletics would win the third and deciding game of
the “finals” by a 19 – 6 score at the Haig Bowl on September 4th
and then begin the wait for the “B” playoffs to wrap up. But
more surprises were now in store for the A’s. On Tuesday September 9th,
Fred Conradi received the word from the O. L. A. office to prepare his team
for a game on the coming Thursday against the Hamilton Tigers. Who
were the Tigers? Well, the word was they hadn’t played any games all
year, and, Russell T. Kelley owned them. The influential Kelley was an
Ontario M. L. A. and long-time financial backer of the Hamilton senior
teams. The Standard’s Clayton Browne would write, “Russell Temple
Kelley of Tigers is not giving up lacrosse without semblance of a tussle,
even if it had to descend from senior to junior mantle to wear. Picking up
a bye all summer, they are the first fruit for the Conradi-Soper junior
A’s to sample here tomorrow night.” Browne’s
lowly assessment of the Tigers wasn’t too far off, the A’s won 28 –
0. After
an unsuccessful plea to O. L. A. Secretary Gene Dopp to end the series, the
A’s trekked to Hamilton’s Cannon Bowl for game two the following
Monday. The Standard would report, “They found a lighted bowl, but no
Tigers team, coach, or anything indicating a game there, so they traveled
back home.” Next
up for the Athletics would be the showdown with the junior “B”
champion Fergus Thistles the very next night. Fergus
Thistles! What happened to the mighty Port Dover Lions? It
seems Rev. Hare’s heavily favoured Lions didn’t make it out of the
“B” semi-finals against Norval. On
September 12th, The Standard would report this story, “Ports
won the opener at Norval 5 – 2, were all set for the return game and it
happened. The game was called for 6:30 as they have no lights in Dover and
seven members of Port Dover (the stars from Oshweken) walked into the bowl
at 7:45. The game was in the bag then and Port out. One could scarcely
blame a parson for emitting strong words, when he is the coach.” So
the A’s met the Fergus Thistles at the Haig Bowl on Tuesday September 16
and they started off the two-game, total goals-to-count series with a
convincing 23 – 2 win. Would
this be the Hamilton Tigers disaster all over again? Well at least the
Thistles would show up for the second game just two days later. But then
again, maybe the A’s wished they stayed home. The
A’s would win game two by 23 – 4 in Fergus, but the Standard would
report that the A’s “received such a physical beating from the bigger
Thistles and both vocal and physical barrages from the Fergus fans.” The
newspaper game report would go on to say that the game was “emphasized
by the indiscriminate throwing of tomatoes, fruit and anything fans could
lay their hands on at the referees and the Athletics players.” The
Athletics limped home with the knowledge that they were now truly the
Ontario junior champions (unless the O. L. A. could find another team for
them to play). Their next challenge would be to defeat the Quebec
champions to become Eastern Canadian champions. A
trip to Quebec would be an expensive endeavour. A serious proposition for
a team so strapped for cash. The fan support was just now slowly coming
around, barely, and Fred Conradi was still reaching into his pocket to keep the
team going. As an example of their financial troubles, they didn’t have
enough gloves to go around and the players had to exchange them as they
made their line changes. A
hastily arranged benefit game was put together that would pit the senior
A’s against the juniors. On Saturday September 20th, the fun
game went off before about 700 fans at the Haig Bowl and the juniors were
augmented by some of the retired local legends such as Billy Wilson, Carl
Madsen, Roy Barnard and even Billy Fitzgerald playing his first game in
four years. Gimpy-kneed “Fitz” scored four goals, Doug Cove played
while smoking a huge cigar and opposing goaltenders Doug Favell and Bill
Whittaker (playing for the juniors on the night) would take turns making
length-of-the-floor rushes in a crowd-pleasing performance. The seniors
won 17 – 13 and the fundraiser earned $200 for the juniors’ trip to
the Eastern Canadian finals in Quebec. The only negative on the evening
was a separated shoulder for poor Frank Madsen of the seniors. But
before the trip to Quebec, the O. L. A. had another game planned for the
Athletics of 1947, the “selection” game. This game, slated for the
Haig Bowl on Monday September 22nd, would have the A’s play
against a junior all-star team to determine four or five players to be
added to the double-blue line-up for the cup run. After a full O. L. A.
regular season and playoffs, did they really need an exhibition game to
determine who to add? The
game went to the A’s by a 16 – 6 score and was played before a
dreadfully small crowd (mostly relatives of the all-stars) in frigid
40-degree F. temperatures. The plan was to have league officials convene
the next day with coach Soper before announcing the additions, while team
president Fred Conradi still would have been just as happy to go with the
kids that brought them this far. The Standard’s Clayton Browne would
write, “Gene Dopp (O. L. A. Secretary) heaved a long sigh and shed a few
tears—the latter from a cold, north wind that blew straight across Haig
Bowl and into the Doppian face—when he and Past Pres. Ed McDermott sat
huddled in the lee of the press here on Monday night…The $64 quiz is,
whom are they going to drop from the A’s…Mel Soper hasn’t the
easiest task in the world, either, to bench five players. The course is up
to him along with the four OLA-CLA officials who form the selection group.
It will likely be based on size, weight, box ability and experience mostly
and the last named is the major point. A few of junior Athletics’ are
pretty green boys as junior talent was scant here this year. Dopp saw them
go and he is the big noise.” The
selection group settled on just three additions that would play for the
locals; scorer Don Ashby from Weston and from the Brampton juniors,
defenseman Ralph Gowland and centre Gord Steele. Perhaps an interesting
footnote to this game was that a couple of the Port Dover junior “B”
stars were invited to play. Clayton Browne would write, “Martin and
Powless of Port Dover were absentees, recommended by Coach Rev. Wes Hare
to Secy. Dopp. However, they could not travel from Oshweken and Brantford
on the 12-cent mile scale set by the C. L. A. and city fans missed two boys
whom Coach Hare says are shoo-ins as future seniors. He may be correct.” Another
interesting surprise was in store for the locals when it was announced
that there would be “no E. C. finals in Quebec. Secy. Dopp quashed
that…the challenge being tossed out.” The team’s finances may have
had a role in that decision. So
at long last, the 1947 St. Catharines Athletics would play for the
Dominion championship. It
would be the first Minto Cup final since World War II had cancelled the
junior lacrosse showcase after 1940. It would also be the first time St.
Catharines had hosted a national lacrosse championship, as the four Mann
Cups that the seniors had won in the east in recent years were all played
at Maple Leaf Gardens (or the Barton Street Arena in Hamilton in 1944). The
series against the Vancouver jr. Burrards began on Tuesday September 30th
with a 10 – 3 Athletics win at the venerable Haig Bowl. The Burrards
fielded one of the biggest teams that the A’s had seen all year, but the
locals played quick, smart lacrosse for the victory. Sadly, the game was
played before only 500 fans. The
second game was played on the following night and this time the Burrards
seemed a little hungrier. The A’s kid goaltender Ralph Speck earned the
accolades in a very tight 6 – 5 win while the home-side shooters were
criticized in the press for being too content to stay safely out at the
perimeter. A big concern for the A’s was the loss of defenseman Harry
Wipper who crashed head first into the boards after missing his check.
Wipper was carried off and although he made a valiant attempt to play in
the third game, his lacrosse was really over for the season. After
a night off and the official welcoming dinner for the Burrards by His
Worship, Mayor Dr. W. J. Macdonald and city officials, game three would be
played Friday night and the Burrards momentum swing seemed to be in full
force. The Vancouver Burrards came away with a 12 to 10 win and it could
actually have been a lot worse if not for the play of young Speck in the
A’s net. The Standard would report “only Speck, Bradshaw, D’Amico
and perhaps Cunningham and McCaffery were playing up to par.” The
star-crossed St. Catharines Athletics were now holding on to a tenuous two
games to one lead for the Minto Cup. These kids had their doubters from
the season’s start, never received the same rabid fan support that their
older brothers and fathers on city lacrosse teams had enjoyed, played
through a truly bizarre post-season schedule that kept presenting new and
remarkable plot-twists, gamely scrambled onto the floor in the Minto
finals as shared lacrosse gloves were tossed to them by a team-mate, were
mauled all season long by bigger and older teams that resented their
record, and even now in the national finals, couldn’t escape their nay-sayers. Perhaps
this team couldn’t compare to the great Mann Cup or Globe Shield teams
of the past. Maybe they didn’t stir the local populace as some of the
champion junior teams of the 20’s and 30’s had. But for all that they
went through to even get to the national junior finals, and their ability
to rise above it, the story of the amazing A’s of forty-seven will
always be one of my favourites. And, the rest is history.
JUNIOR
ATHLETICS
BRING
FIRST
MINTO
CUP
TO
CITY
IN
WINNING
NATIONAL
LACROSSE
HONORS
ON 10 – 6
VICTORY
OVER
VANCOUVER
BURRARDS The
St. Catharines Standard Monday October 6, 1947 Mel
Soper, Fred Conradi and their gallant band of boxla artists brought the
first Canadian junior lacrosse championship in history to the Garden City
on Saturday afternoon, defeating their challengers from the west,
Vancouver Burrards, by 10 – 6. By virtue of their well-merited win, the
double-blue St. Catharines outfit win the coveted Lord Minto Trophy the
first time the cup has been up for competition since Orillia Terrier Pups
copped the honors in 1941. Considering the many rival attractions on tap
in baseball, softball and rugby, a fair turnout of fans were in attendance
at the afternoon tilt, the first major lacrosse game played in St.
Catharines in mid-afternoon since 1932. It was real weather too, the
majority of the fans taking full advantage of the brilliant sun, sitting
the full game in their shirt-sleeves, probably their last chance to do so
until next season rolls around. To
get back to the game. It was a completely different outfit that took the
field in the double-blue sweaters than the scrambly looking squad that
performed on Friday evening. Saints fought for every loose ball, running
right with the fast-stepping Burrards and seldom if ever, letting their
bigger, heavier opponents “bull” their way in on top of Ralph Speck,
who played another starry game in Saints’ twine. Mel Soper elected to
give big Harry Wipper a well-deserved rest, the injured boy pretty well
worn out after his seven stitches on Wednesday night and several fairly
“rough rides” on Friday evening. Bill Steele of Brampton replaced
Wipper on defence, while Barney Welsh gave Bobby Dyke a rest as odd man.
Vancouver stuck with the same line-up that netted them their only victory
in the third start of the series. A’s
Always Led Little
Billy Bradshaw, who always seems to get up faster than he goes down,
started A’s off on their final victory, taking a pass from Cunningham
after but 16 seconds had been ticked off. Once in the lead, Saints never
relinquished it. Ashby on a set-up from Bradshaw making it 2 – 0,
although Fleming made it close before the end of the first session,
drilling a nice bounce shot into the net from 15 yards. Teatro
from Cunningham, then D’Amico after an intercept at centre to outrace
Burrards’ two defenders and make no mistake and A’s were well on the
way. Vancouver fought back on a single, although it was of the disputed
variety. Durante firing a bullet shot that clicked on the cross bar and
was finally declared a tally by Referee Peart. Soon after this play,
Whitey Frick got the oddest play of the afternoon, leaping high in the air
to bounce the ball right off the top of his dome into the stands for a
perfect football “header.” Jim McNulty took an over-shoulder pass from
Steel and dropped the ball over Green’s shoulder, then play began to
roughen up as in the previous encounters, with numerous slashing offences
that failed to bring down a penalty. Jim McNulty and Don Fleming, then
Frick and Cruickshank finally got the eye of the officials, going off in
pairs with minors, with Scott grabbing a loose ball in front of the net to
score just before the half-time gong was sounded and Saints up by a 5
- 3 count. Athletics
opened the third combining superbly, every man on the floor feeling the
ball on its downward trip, but their marksmanship when in close was still
far from deadly. The passing plays finally told, however, Teatro setting
up Bradshaw before Gowland to McCaffery to Steele, and Bradshaw on a
running pass from Cunningham for a five-goal 8 – 3 lead. Vancouver
showed the fighting team they were in the next couple of minutes of play,
turning the tide of defeat, at least temporarily, by snaring a pair of
counters, Durante going through on his own and Burton picking up a rebound
after McCaffery had been kayoed on the first shot. Bradshaw
Tops Joe
McNulty took a pass from Teatro and from a seemingly impossible angle
fired it into the far upper corner to put a damper on Burrards’ hope of
a sustained comeback and leave the period score at 9 – 5. McKay,
who seemed to take a delight at swinging at anybody and everybody on the
floor, was finally nabbed for too strenuous exertion on Bradshaw and Ashby
was quick to take advantage of the odd man, although the actual goal was
of the “fluke” variety. Ashby threw an intended pass to Dennis
Anderson in front of the B.C. net, but at the last minute, Anderson lifted
his cudgel to let the ball drift into the twine with Green on the other
side of the goal. Durante set Hannula up for the final goal of the game
and the series, but from there on Vancouver had the majority of the play
in their last ditch stand for a win to keep their Minto Cup hopes alive.
Once more their biggest stumbling block was Ralph Speck, who kited balls,
blocked shots and in fact thoroughly broke Burrards’ hearts on his
sensational work, to top off a series of outstanding goaltending. As
was fitting, the leading scorer of the championship game was Billy
Bradshaw. Playing his last year of junior lacrosse, “Brad” played his
heart out in every game and came up with three goals and an assist in the
all-important third win. Don Ashby was next best with a pair of counters,
while Teatro, Steele, Joe and Jim McNulty all gained singles. Joe Durante,
with a pair of goals and an assist, was tops for Vancouver, with their
remaining tallies being divided between Scott, Fleming, Hannula, and
Burton. Once more Lawrence Cunningham was ace high in the assist
department, three of his plays resulting in goals. Cham It
wouldn’t be fair to name stars in the final game or even in the series,
every player on both teams giving all they had and after all, that’s
what counts. Special
mention could be made of young Ralph Speck in A’s goal and Bill Bradshaw
on the attack for the winners. Speck, who can play junior for five more
seasons, was a standout in a defensive way, while Bradshaw, the veteran of
the team, was perhaps the leading light on the offence. That doesn’t
take anything away from the efforts of the other double-blue members, each
of whom was a valuable asset in both winning the Ontario championship and
Dominion honors, for the team was not composed of individual stars, but
rather team-work, and that is what brought St. Catharines its only
all-Canadian championship for the 1947 season. As for Vancouver, they put
everything they had into it, but it was just not quite enough. They were
beaten by a better team, but even in defeat showed the style of lacrosse
that has won for the West Coast its full share of championships. Vancouver
Burrards: Goal, Green; defence, Zimmer, Cruickshank; rover, Lee;
centre, Byford; forwards, Scott, McKay; subs, Fleming, Foster, Anderson,
Landess, Durante, Hannula, Burton. St.
Catharines Athletics: Goal, Speck; defence, Anderson, Cunningham;
rover, Bradshaw; centre, Teatro; forwards, Joe McNulty, Ashby; subs,
Frick, Steele, McCaffery, Gowland, D’Amico, Welsh, Jim McNulty. Summary: First
Period St.
C. – Bradshaw (Cunningham)…0:16 St.
C. – Ashby (Bradshaw)…11:14 Van.
– Fleming (Hannula)…12:16 No
penalties Second
Period St.
C. – Teatro (Cunningham)…0:25 St.
C. – D’Amico…4:08 Van.
– Durante (McKay)…6:37 St.
C. – Jim McNulty (Steele)…10:12 Van.
– Scott…14:15 Penalties:
Jim McNulty, Fleming, Frick, Cruickshank Third
Period St.
C. – Bradshaw (Teatro)…2:07 St.
C. – Steele (Gowland and McCaffery)…2:36 St.
C. – Bradshaw (Cunningham)…6:35 Van.
– Durante…8:18 Van.
– Burton…10:08 St.
C. – Joe McNulty (Teatro)…13:15 Penalty:
McKay. Fourth
Period St.
C. – Ashby…2:34 Van.
– Hannula (Durante)…6:53 Penalty:
McKay Goal
Stops Green…11,
4, 9, 7—31 Speck… 8, 6, 4, 3—21 special thanks to Chris McNulty for the original photo (modified by AthLax.Com)
And a look back from forty years later...
A’s STOLE SHOW IN 1947 by Peter Conradi The St. Catharines Standard Tuesday August 25, 1987 They were St. Catharines’ answer to the 1969 New York Mets. In fact, former Standard sports editor Clayton Browne actually called them the miracle team of 1947. Four decades ago, a time when the city was gripped by lacrosse fever, the St. Catharines Athletics fanned the fire by winning the city’s first Canadian junior A lacrosse title in an October series played outdoors at the old Haig Bowl. The A’s had caught everyone off guard. Attention early that season was clearly focused on the beloved senior Athletics, who were coming off their fifth national championship campaign since 1938. No one expected anything like this from the juniors. “I think maybe we even surprised ourselves,” recalled Joe McNulty, a player with the ’47 A’s. “Especially after our first game.” St. Catharines dropped its season opener 17 – 6 to Mimico. Three months later, however, the Athletics were in first place, they eliminated Mimico three straight in the Ontario finals and later disposed of the Vancouver Burrards 3 – 1 in the best of five Minto Cup playoff. It was the first and, until this year, the only Canadian junior or senior championship series played in St. Catharines. Tonight the ’47 Athletics will be honored in a ceremony prior to game 5 of the 1987 Minto Cup tournament at Garden City Arena. The evening will feature prices for admission, programs and some concession items rolled back to their 1947 levels. While records are incomplete, it is possible that the Athletics of 40 years ago were defeated only twice all-season – by Mimico and Vancouver. In any event, they didn’t lose very many. “We had a great bunch of guys,” said goalie Ralph Speck, who was only 15 when he played and, according to teammates, was the best around at his position, “We didn’t really have any stars, everyone just worked well together.” The notion of teamwork and dedication kept coming back as The Standard spoke with each member of the club. That concept must have impressed Browne as well. He once wrote: “They are a smart little team and little is right. They are not big, but they combine well, are tricky and have two or three precise snipers.” And, even though they gave up physical size to many clubs, the Athletics could clearly take care of themselves. “We didn’t get pushed around,” said defensive specialist Harry Wipper. “It was a tough time and a tough game.” The 1947 club included: Speck, Joe and Jim McNulty, Joe McCaffery, Leo Teatro, Bill Bradshaw, Tony D’Amico, Barney Welch, Larry Cunningham, Bob Dyke, Andy Baird, Harry Wipper, Dennis Anderson, Leo Cheevers, Whitey Frick, Gord Steele, Ralph Gowland, Don Ashby, coach Mel Soper and president and general manager Fred Conradi. Conradi, a member of the Canadian Lacrosse Hall of Fame, builders section, Steele and Soper have passed away, but The Standard traced the others to find out what they’re doing these days and what they think of modern lacrosse. Ralph Speck: Speck, 55, lives in Brantford where he sells plumbing supplies. “I don’t see a lot of lacrosse these days, but I know the game is a lot faster and it isn’t as rugged as it used to be.” At 15, Speck was the youngest member of the A’s. Larry Cunningham: He works at Cunningham Foundry and Machine Co. in St. Catharines, but was on vacation and couldn’t be reached. Cunningham is credited for saving the A’s in a playoff game against Brampton. With Speck caught out of the net late in the last period, Cunningham dove across the crease and took a shot in the chest. St. Catharines held on to win 10 – 9. Andy Baird: Baird is 56 and runs a travel agency in Simcoe. He stopped playing lacrosse in 1948 and took up middle-distance racing. Barney Welch: Welch, 60, lives in St. Catharines where he still coaches minor lacrosse teams. He is retired from General Motors. “There is no comparison between the game today and how we played it,” he said. “The skill level back then was much higher.” Whitey Frick: Frick, born in Peterborough, is also 60 and retired from General Motors. The St. Catharines resident said: “They don’t let them play the game anymore. It seems whenever two guys go for a loose ball, they blow the whistle instead of letting them work for it.” Bill Bradshaw: Bradshaw, 60, misses the aggressive, physical style of his era. Born is St. Catharines, he works for Tri-Sure in Etobicoke. Joe McNulty: McNulty, 59, has worked at Lee Printing in St. Catharines since 1949. He noted: “Very few of the players spend as much time working on their stick skills as we did. We were always out practicing. But the game today is faster, the players are bigger, stronger and in better condition.” Ralph Gowland and Don Ashby: Both were out-of-town additions to the A’s along with Steele. Gowland, picked up from Brampton, lives in semi-retirement in Vancouver while Ashby, now a Hall-of-Famer who was brought up by the A’s from Weston, runs a charter fishing boat in British Columbia. Steele was picked up by the A’s from Brampton. Tony D’Amico: One of the youngest players on the club, D’Amico, 58, lives in St. Catharines and works at Hayes-Dana. His name was mentioned frequently when players were asked to name top offensive performers. Joe McCaffery: The 60-year-old former alderman was elected mayor of St. Catharines in 1985. He is an employee of the St. Lawrence Seaway Authority. Leo Teatro: A St. Catharines native who worked for many years at Massey-Ferguson in Toronto. Teatro, 58, lives in Egmondville, Ont. He said he has lost interest in the game because of rule changes that have tried to speed it up. “All the individual skills are gone now,” he said. “And there is too much high sticking that started when the players put on the helmets and masks.” Dennis Anderson: The 59-year-old retired industrial engineer was an alderman in St. Catharines during the 1950s. Unlike many of his teammates, the Oshawa resident enjoys today’s lacrosse. “I think it’s great,” he said. “I’m very, very impressed with the quality of play and I’m in favor of the rule changes to speed up the game.” Jim McNulty: Perhaps the best athlete on the club, McNulty, 57, is now a golf pro in Charlotte, North Carolina, where he has been since 1956 when he went south to play hockey. He is a member of the Hall of Fame. Many said he was the best goal scorer on the club. Harry Wipper: Wipper, 57, is the director of the parks and recreation department in Nanaimo, B. C. Another member of the Hall of Fame, Wipper said the game is too fast for his liking. “There is no way you can get the ball down the floor and run a decent offence in 30 seconds,” he said. “A lot of the individual talent has been taken out and I think that’s too bad.” Leo Cheevers: Cheevers, 60, lives in Grimsby and is the office manager at a company called Canadian Panels in Hamilton. Bob Dyke: Dyke, 57, is in the security business after spending 33˝ years in the Canadian Air Force, retiring as a captain. He lives in North Bay.
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