The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Fred MacDonald

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The Hunter’s Corner Mudmen RFC meet arch-rival Halifax Tars today at 2 p.m. for the McCurdy Cup, a trophy Charlottet­ownbased teams have won just twice since 1954.

Sixty or so years ago, rugby dominated the Maritime fall sports scene but with the popularity of Canadian football and the forward pass, the game was gradually pushed onto the back pages of local newspapers. Introduced into the Island high schools about 20 years ago, rugby is back in the spotlight drawing big crowds everywhere in the world. The quality of the graduates from the P.E.I. high school league has enabled clubs like the Mudmen to field championsh­ip-calibre clubs, both men and women, a rarity indeed for this little province.

Island sports fans can get a chance to see rugby at its highest level when the hometown Mudmen tackle the Tars today in the Division 1 championsh­ip game today at 2 p.m. at Co-op Field, off of North River Road.

The Mudmen defeated Halifax last year to win the Nova Scotia crown for the first time since the great Charlottet­own Nomads won the title in 1954. Many of the standouts on that team, guys like Spy and Charlie Ready, Noel Wilson, Art Perry, Aquinas Ryan and more recently Dave Nicholson and this week Clee Gillis have passed away. There are not many from that 1954 Nomads club remaining, but ageless Gord Tweedy, who looks like he could still play, and Johnny Bradley from Peakes are two who come to mind.

Mudmen co-coaches Eddy MacDonald and Mike Lloyd have put together a powerful team anchored by the heart-and-soul guys Mike Deighan and Sean Doyle. Standout forwards like Phil Lamphier, Alex Forrest and Liam Carter plus a backfield that includes Brodie MacDonald, Ryan Lloyd and Adam Fitzpatric­k could give the Mudmen a slightly better than even money chance against Halifax, the class of Maritime rugby for many, many years.

If you want to be entertaine­d, this final will serve the purpose.

Clifford (Clee) Gillis is not a name that’s familiar with today’s Island athletes but his passing this week brought back many fond memories. He was a terrific rugby player in his youth, a top student at Queen Square School, a rugged defenceman in the popular Island senior hockey league in the 1950s and 1960s and always a gentleman.

When he was done playing, he coached the Peerless-sponsored peewees in the 1960s with teams that featured many of the future stars like Bobby MacMillan, Rick Vaive, Bob Stewart among many others. In the summer months, Clee lived at the ball parks and joined forces with Don Fitzpatric­k to form the highly successful Charlottet­own Fawcetts.

Behind the scenes, Clee helped fund minor hockey players out of his own pocket and kept those deeds secret with no fanfare. To all those connected to this gentleman, my condolence­s.

Live harness racing continues tonight at 6 p.m. at the city track with a 14-dash card.

Two $11,000 Lady Slipper gold divisions featuring our top twoyear-old fillies and two divisions of two-year-colts at $9,000 are featured.

There’s also a star-studded Mohawk card tonight with eight Grassroots finals at $50,000 plus Gold Cup and Saucer starter Lincolnjam­es is in to go. He was sixth last week in 1:48:2, a little too fast for the veteran Lincoln.

At Yonkers, New York, tonight Mark MacDonald has been assigned the outside 8 post with Sunfire Blue Chip, the third straight week in this class for the Takter-MacDonald duo, who won last week with Great Vintage returning $47 on the nose.

The big Atlantic Classic Yearling Sale is set for Friday at 2 p.m. in Crapaud where 120 yearlings are slated to go through the ring. This is a quality yearling live auction where brothers and sisters to many of today’s top two- and three-year-olds will be sold live via auction. Brothers and sisters to horses like Woodmere Bolt, Proven Desire, Ashes to Ashes, Woodmere Ideal Art, Red Dirt Boomer, R E’s Shabla, My Mind is Made Up, J J Powerball, Abner the Great, HowmacFies­ty, Dusty Lane Westy, Dare You, Chocolate Terror, Lovinevery­minute, Elm Grove Nellie, Woodmere Dancinart, JJ Tanner and Mighty Cowboy suggest this is a top quality sale.

Trot breds in the sale include siblings to trot standouts like Waiting on a Woman, Windemered­ontuworry, A Pure Heart, Tyne Valley and half-million dollar winner Smexi. All the top sires in this region, like Camystic, Malicious, Western Paradise, Westwardho Hanover, Articulato­r, Stonebridg­e Terror, Varadero Hanover and Image of Dawn, are represente­d as well as trot standouts like Armbro Barrister and Tad the Stud.

Top Ontario sires Sportswrit­er, Shadow Play, Betterthan­cheddar, Thinking Out Loud, Big Jim, Badlands Hanover and Sunshine Beach have babies in the sale as well New York-based trot sire Credit Winner.

Also, highly regarded Rollwithit­harry ($650,000 winner) sends his first crop into the Classic Sale, including seven colts and six fillies. There are also four by the now-departed trot sire Striking Lindsay ($629,000). This is a sampling of the quality yearlings in this sale. There are others including 17 first foals of the dam.

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