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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Dan Weaver

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Sports

Favaro’s Move To Portland Helps Rich Get Richer

The best in the West got a little better Tuesday. The Portland Winter Hawks picked up former Spokane Chiefs right wing Randy Favaro from the Edmonton Ice in exchange for Brett Person, a 16-year-old right wing who had been on Portland's protected list. Before he went to Edmonton in the May 23 WHL expansion draft, Favaro scored one of the important goals in Chiefs history - the game-winner in the second overtime of Game 6 of the Chiefs-Winter Hawks playoff in Portland. Spokane went on to win Game 7 in the Arena, completing an unlikely comeback. The Chiefs had lost the first three games of the best-of-seven series but rallied to knock out Portland and then Kamloops to win the West Division championship. Favaro, 20, is expected to make his Winter Hawks debut Saturday against Seattle. It's a fortunate change of scenery for the hard-checking forward from North Delta, British Columbia, who owns one of the hardest slap shots in junior hockey. He goes from a 6-25-1 expansion team to a club that has gone 14 games without a loss.
Sports

Babcock Wears Smile With Pre-Christmas Tie

A college football coach once said playing to a tie was like kissing your sister. Mike Babcock finally met a deadlock with considerably more charm - Sunday night's 4-4 tie in Portland. "That's as happy as I've ever been getting a point in December," said Babcock, coach of the Spokane Chiefs. "We responded well to the awful game we played the night before (a 5-2 home loss to Seattle). I've said it before, but I hope this means we're back."
Sports

Slumping Chiefs Are At Least Scoring Well Off The Ice

Spirited practices and a strong scholastic report highlighted the Spokane Chiefs' week away from Western Hockey League action. But as encouraging as workouts have been, and as good as coach Mike Babcock feels about his team's classroom performance, the fundamental priority remains. "Nobody pays to watch us go to school," Babcock said as the Chiefs prepared for tonight's game in the Arena with the improving Tri-City Americans. "We've got to get it turned around on the ice."
Sports

Playfair Left At Post By Interim Rail State Pulls Track’s Dates, Citing Safety Concerns Two Days Before Opening Day

Citing a unanimous concern for the safety of riders and horses, the Washington Horse Racing Commission rescinded race dates in Spokane on Wednesday, effectively canceling Friday's scheduled season opener at Playfair Race Course. The best-case scenario is that a temporary inside safety rail installed Wednesday - and promptly criticized as flimsy - can be upgraded to meet what industry inspectors called minimum safety standards. If so, horses could be up and running within two weeks. The worst-case scenario is that the scope of the job is too much for now and the season will be canceled, taking with it the jobs and the hopes of what remains of the Eastern Washington horse racing industry.
Sports

Chiefs’ Chill Continues With 5-1 Loss To Ams, Spokane Suffers First Losing Month Under Coach Babcock

For five games over two months with the Spokane Chiefs, the Tri-City Americans couldn't hit the back of the net with a howitzer. Saturday night in a critical 4-minute salvo of the second period they had the target saturated and were firing for effect. With four goals in a span of 4 minutes, 10 seconds, the Ams turned a 1-0 Spokane lead into another Spokane November disaster - a 5-1 Chiefs loss in front of 4,767 in Tri-City Coliseum. With it the Chiefs fell to 5-8-1 in November, their first losing month since coach Mike Babcock's inaugural '94-95 season. The Chiefs (15-14-2), who've fallen from from first to third in the Western Hockey League West, are only two points up on the fourth-place Prince George Cougars. Spokane got the late first-period goal and a 20-minute shutout by goaltender Aren Miller that marked their early-season successes. Hugh Hamilton's shot from the blue line just off the wall was redirected in from the high slot by Derek Schutz with 1:08 left in the first. This time the Ams, who'd been outscored 21-5 in games with Spokane, didn't let the lapse carry into the second period. Tri-City defenseman Scott McCallum said, "Before, we'd get into a one-goal game and I'd panic a little bit. We're learning to relax. We knew their first goal was just a flukey tip. We didn't lose confidence. "The message is sinking in," McCallum added. "Our forecheck was strong. They couldn't get out of their own end." The Ams (7-17-4) agreed that it was their best effort. "Let's hope it won't be our best game of the year," Tri-City coach Bob Loucks said, "but to date it certainly was." When they get into the December phase of the schedule tonight at 6 in the Arena with the Swift Current Broncos, the Chiefs will probably send Miller back to work. Marc Magliarditi, Saturday night's scheduled starter in goal, sat out with a pulled hamstring suffered in Friday night's loss in Kelowna. That's how fate has treated the Chiefs lately. Just as they get Trent Whitfield, Joel Boschman and Brad Ference back, they lose Magliarditi. "Mags couldn't go but Milsy's fine - other than the fact that he probably wants to sue for lack of support," Babcock said. Still, Miller didn't seem the same after Tri-City's Craig Stahl was sent crashing through the pipes by Spokane's Joel Boschman at 5:36 of the second period. It gave the Americans a 5-3 power play that was the springboard to the Chiefs' seventh straight loss on the road. Brent Ascroft scored 19 seconds into the two-man advantage. Just 1:07 later Craig Stahl was credited with the game-winner on the 5-4 power play. That was enough for Tri-City veteran netminder Brian Boucher, who rejected 32 of Spokane's 33 shots. After Ascroft, Stahl, Mike Hurley and Shawn Gervais scored at 5:55, 7:02, 9:17 and 10:05 of the second period, Babcock was at a loss to explain how his once-feared special teams could be so vulnerable. The Americans, who came in with the worst power play in the WHL, burned the Chiefs three times in seven tries on the power play. The Chiefs can't seem to kill a key penalty or cash in on the power play. They've scored once in their last 15 power-play chances over their last three games. "We didn't play and they did," said Babcock, who kept the Chiefs in their dressing quarters for 15 minutes after the game. "They wanted the puck, we didn't want it. Work ethic and determination have a lot to do with it. "They won all the battles." Americans 5, Chiefs 1 Spokane 1 0 0 - 1 Tri-City 0 4 1 - 5 First period - 1, Spo, Schutz 12 (Hamilton, Lane), 18:52. Key penalties - Sachl, TC, 7:53; Smith, TC, 12:32. Second period - 2, TC, Ascroft 11 (Komarniski), 5:55 (pp). 2, TC, Stahl 9 (Komarniski, Ascroft), 7:02 (pp). 4, TC, Hurley 13 (Gyori), 9:17. 5, TC, Gervais 4 (Smith), 10:05. Key penalties - Hamilton, Spo, 4:20; Boschman, Spo, 5:36; Ference, Spo, 13:19; Focht, TC, 18:31. Third period - 6, TC, Sachl 5 (Gyori, Ascroft), 12:05 (pp). Key penalties - Magarrell, Spo, 2:26; Ascroft, TC, 7:03; Leeb, Spo, 11:01; McCallum, TC, 13:55; Schutz, Spo, 19:49. Power-play opp. - Spokane 0 of 5; Tri-City 3 of 7. Saves - Spokane, Miller 9-10-11-30. Tri-City, Boucher 12-11-9-32. A - 4,767.
Sports

Martin Says Playfair Still On Track For Dec. 6 Opening

Not even grumpy Mother Nature has derailed Ted Martin's drive to get Playfair Race Course up and running on schedule. Martin, director of racing at the Spokane track, said work is close enough to being on schedule to expect the track to open on Friday, Dec. 6, as planned.
Sports

Chiefs May Spot Pats A Five-Man Advantage

It doesn't get any easier for the short-handed Spokane Chiefs. Swept over the weekend by the Portland Winter Hawks, the Chiefs will be back at it tonight with little encouraging news on the injury front.
Sports

Eagles Take Another Step Toward Respect Of Peers Not Long After 3-23 Season, Eastern Savors 34-Point Victory

As excitement goes, this was the basketball equivalent of the Dole campaign, but coach Steve Aggers and his Eastern Washington Eagles savored their 89-55 victory over the game Western Montana Bulldogs Tuesday night at Reese Court. After all, the Eagles aren't that far removed from 34-point losses themselves. Coming off a 3-23 season any kind of win is worth celebrating. When you've averaged five wins a year for the last five years and are no stranger to losing to NAIA schools, like Western Montana, a 2-1 start at Eastern is news. "We're trying to build a home-court advantage," said Aggers, who watched 10 of the 12 players he used score extensively. "The way to build home-court advantage is to defend and rebound. I thought we played pretty good defense early and handled their zone early."
Sports

Youthful Eastern Washington Women Bounce Gu

Their best lies ahead - the stars were two sophomores and a freshman - but Eastern Washington's 83-69 women's basketball win over Gonzaga Tuesday night was an impressive reminder that in spite of the youth, the future is now. With sophomores Shana Ray and Tanya Kirk combining for 50 points, with a well-rounded assist from St. John-Endicott freshman Andee Schmick down the stretch, the Eagles broke open a tight game in the final 5:47 and rolled to their second consecutive victory. A 5-foot-9 do-everything guard from Lynnwood, Wash., Ray shook off the effects of a bothersome Achilles' tendon and tough defense by Gonzaga's Staci Andrews to score 26 points. It wasn't as if Ray had the run of EWU's Reese Court. Three inches shorter, Andrews made Ray earn her points, which have come in bundles. She had 29 in Sunday's 70-67 comeback win over Colorado State. "I was gettin' punched a little bit and held," Ray said. "It was frustrating, but that's what they're supposed to do. They did a good job."
Sports

Weak, Weary Chiefs Drop Into Third Place

The Spokane Chiefs came up short before and after the game. Depleted by injury and an illness and down to 18 skaters, the Chiefs took the Portland Winter Hawks deep into the third period Saturday night only to lose the important Western Hockey League game 4-3 in front of 10,079 in the Arena. The Chiefs (14-12-2) fell to third place in the West behind Portland (17-8-1) and the Seattle Thunderbirds (14-12-3), who salvaged a 5-5 tie at Red Deer.
News >  Spokane

Applemania Fans Celebrate On Eve Of Annual Apple Cup Game

1. University of Washington cheerleaders whip up the crowd Friday night at the Crescent Court Ballroom. The rally was a prelude to today's Apple Cup game in Pullman. Photo by Sandra Bancroft-Billings/The Spokesman-Review 2. Cougar alumni watched a WSU-UW volleyball game Friday night during an Apple Cup rally at the Ridpath Hotel.
Sports

Chiefs Take Aim At West Division-Leading Winter Hawks

Mike Babcock calls these the biggest two games of the season but not because first place is at stake in the Western Hockey League West. The second-place Spokane Chiefs play the division-leading Winter Hawks tonight at 7:30 in Memorial Coliseum in Portland, where the Hawks are 7-0.
Sports

Whitfield Pours In Three Goals As Chiefs Defeat Ams Again

Bob Loucks must be sick of it by now - sick of the streak, sick of the sameness, sick of the name. Trent Whitfield. Twenty-four hours after his off-night against Seattle, Whitfield validated his selection as Western Hockey League player of the month with three goals in the Spokane Chiefs' 6-1 spanking of the Loucks-coached TriCity Americans.
Sports

Playfair Receives New Life December Racing Plan Brings More Questions Than Answers

The Washington State Horse Racing Commission looked beyond the interests of one single racing association Friday and outlined a startling plan whereby the state's thoroughbred industry might get through the winter. With a visionary and complicated order, the commission laid out a temporary plan under which racing would be conducted at Emerald Downs and Playfair Race Course in Spokane starting Dec. 6.
Sports

Chiefs Deal Winger Milne; Miller On Record Pace

The next time Andrew Milne is in Spokane he'll be looking up old friends as the opposition's tough guy. Milne, an 18-year-old left winger, was traded Monday by the Spokane Chiefs to the Swift Current Broncos for a third-round pick in the next bantam draft.
Sports

Cardarelli, Chiefs Stop Brandon

The Spokane Chiefs answered their worst game of the season with their best Saturday night in the Arena, surrendering the game's first goal then storming back in the second period to thrash the defending Western Hockey League-champion Brandon Wheat Kings 6-1. Joe Cardarelli's five assists led an offense that exploded after a critical call by referee Mike Hasenfratz. Hasenfratz sent Spokane's Trent Whitfield off for the night for a first-period checking from behind major and an accompanying game misconduct. The call at 14:53 of the first period - booed for the remaining 5:07 by the Arena crowd of 9,052 - put the Wheat Kings on a score-at-will power play for 5 minutes with the game tied at 1. Spokane's penalty killers, led by Joel Boschman, snuffed the extended power play and the Chiefs escaped with a tie at intermission. The Chiefs took advantage of a series of bewildering penalties by Brandon defenseman Johnathan Aitken. Aitken picked up four minors in the second period. Three times he watched from the box as the Chiefs scored power-play goals in rapid succession. The first, the game-winner, came just 1:14 into the second period off the tape off Derek Schutz. Forty-two seconds later, with Aitken off for unsportsmanlike conduct, Greg Leeb scored on the power play to make it 2-1. John Cirjak's second goal of the night - with Aitken off for high-sticking - came 4:18 into the period. At that point the Chiefs had scored on 4 of 6 power-play opportunities and the rout was on. Out-shooting the Wheat Kings 42-22, the Chiefs retained first place in the WHL West at 11-5-1. Brandon fell to 11-8.