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         Water Polo Olympic History:     more detail
  1. An Olympian's oral history: Reginald Harrison, 1928 Olympic Games, water polo by Reginald Harrison, 1988
  2. History of water polo: Water polo, Water polo at the Summer Olympics, FINA World Aquatics Championships, FINA Water Polo World League, FINA Water Polo World Cup, Water polo ball
  3. An Olympian's oral history: F. Calvert Strong, 1932 Olympic Games, water polo by F. Calvert Strong, 1988
  4. An Olympian's oral history: Frank C. Graham, 1932 & 1936 Olympic Games, water polo by Frank C Graham, 1988
  5. An Olympian's oral history: Charles H. McCallister, 1932 & 1936 Olympic Games, water polo by Charles H McCallister, 1988
  6. An Olympian's oral history: Herbert H. Wildman, 1932 & 1936 Olympic Games, water polo by Herbert H Wildman, 1988
  7. Swimming Against Stereotype: The Story of a Twentieth Century Jewish Athlete by Helen Epstein, 2006-06-23

41. Stanford University Cardinal | Women's Water Polo | The Official Athletic Site
polo team to the silver medal in the 2000 olympic Games in The 2001 Stanford waterpolo season opens up on Feb. final record was the best in the history of the
http://www.fansonly.com/schools/stan/sports/w-wpolo/spec-rel/092700aaa.html
April 12, 2003
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Current Conditions In Stanford, CA: L/RAIN Temp: 55 Wind: 13 SE Choose Sport Baseball Basketball - M Basketball - W Crew Cross Country Fencing Field Hockey Football Golf - M Golf - W Gymnastics - M Gymnastics - W Lacrosse - W Soccer - M Soccer - W Softball Swim/Diving - M Swim/Diving - W Sailing Sync Swimming Tennis - M Tennis - W Volleyball - M Volleyball - W Water Polo - M Water Polo - W Wrestling News Releases Women's Water Polo Players Win Silver With Olympic Team Stanford's Ellen Estes and Brenda Villa help U.S. to medal. Women's Water Polo Home HEADLINES No. 3 Stanford Heads to Cal, Hosts Hawai'i No. 3 Stanford Heads to Cal, Hosts Hawai'i No. 4 Long Beach State Upsets No. 2 Stanford, 8-7 RELATED LINKS FANSonly Newswire Email this story to a friend Sept. 27, 2000 SYDNEY, Australia - Stanford women's water polo players Ellen Estes (Novato, CA) and Brenda Villa (Bell Gardens, CA) helped lead the U.S. women's water polo team to the silver medal in the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia. This is the first ever women's water polo in the Olympics. In the championship game, the U.S. fell just short to Australia 4-3, as the hosting team scored a goal with :01 second remaining to win the gold. Villa had tied the game at 3-3 with :13 seconds remaining with her second goal of the game.

42. Stanford University Cardinal | Men's Water Polo | The Official Athletic Site
three coaches in NCAA water polo history to reach the 500victory barrier. Twelveof his players have played for the United States in the olympic Games, the
http://www.fansonly.com/schools/stan/sports/m-wpolo/spec-rel/030701aaa.html
April 12, 2003
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Current Conditions In Stanford, CA: L/RAIN Temp: 55 Wind: 13 SE Choose Sport Baseball Basketball - M Basketball - W Crew Cross Country Fencing Field Hockey Football Golf - M Golf - W Gymnastics - M Gymnastics - W Lacrosse - W Soccer - M Soccer - W Softball Swim/Diving - M Swim/Diving - W Sailing Sync Swimming Tennis - M Tennis - W Volleyball - M Volleyball - W Water Polo - M Water Polo - W Wrestling News Releases Long time men's water polo coach Dante Dettamanti is calling it a career. Men's Water Polo Home HEADLINES Four Cardinal Athletes Selected For MPSF Academic All-Conference Tony Azevedo Named AWPCA 2002 Player of the Year Stanford Highlighted on CBS Fall Championships Show RELATED LINKS FANSonly Newswire Email this story to a friend Dettamanti Announces Retirement Stanford's longtime water polo head coach decides to leave the game. March 7, 2001 Stanford, Calif. - Dante Dettamanti is considered one of the all-time great collegiate water polo coaches, winning seven NCAA championships, in addition to winning more than 600 games. And now the journey as head coach at Stanford will be coming to an end. Dettamanti and Stanford Athletic Director, Dr. Ted Leland, jointly announced today that Dettamanti will retire as head coach of the Cardinal water polo after his 25th season (2001 campaign).

43. The History Of Water Polo
The history of water polo There is little documentation as By 1900 water polo wasso popular it became the first team sport added to the olympic program.
http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/Loge/4149/history.html
The History of Water Polo
There is little documentation as to the origins of water polo. It is known, however, that the sport originated in the rivers and lakes of mid- 19th century England as an aquatic version of rugby football. Early games used an inflated, vulcanized rubber ball imported from India known as a "Pulu" (The single Indian word for ball). Pronounced "Polo" by the English, both the ball and the game became known as "water polo". To attract more spectators to swimming exhibitions, the London Swimming Association developed a set of water polo rules for indoor swimming pools in 1870. At first, players scored by planting the ball on the end of the pool with both hands. A favorite trick of the players was to place the five-to-nine inch rubber ball inside their swimming suit and dive under the murky water, then appear again as near the goal as possible. If the player came up too near the goal, he was promptly jumped on but the goalie, who was permitted to stand on the pool deck. Games were often nothing more than gang fights in the water as players ignored the ball, preferring underwater wrestling matches that usually ended with one man floating to the surface unconscious. The introduction of the "Trudgeom stroke" byScottish players changed the nature of water polo to a game that emphasized swimming, speed and passing, Scottish rules moved from a rugby variant to a soccer style of play. Goals became a cage of 10X3 feet and a goal could be scored by being thrown. Players could only be "tackled" when they held the ball and the ball could no longer be taken under water. The small rubber ball was replaced by a leather soccer ball.

44. History Of Women
history Of water polo. Although men's water polo has been part of the olympic gamesfor over a century, just recently in 2000 women's water polo was added.
http://www23.homepage.villanova.edu/janine.kusza/water polo.htm
History Of Water Polo The word water polo originated from the Indian term "pulu," meaning ball: the ball game played in water. The sport actually began as a form of rugby football played in rivers and lakes. Before the introduction of a goal, the object of the game was to get the pig skin ball from one side of the pool to the opponents side. By 1869, an Indian rubber ball began replacing the original ball which was made from a pig's stomach. Eventually rules for football were applied to the game in the water. Brute strength was the only tactic before passing and "dribbling" evolved later on and many fights occurred throughout the game. Soon, in Scotland, the game changed from a football style of play to a soccer style as a goal was placed at each end of the pool. Players could be tackled as long as they held onto the ball and the primary rule that players could only touch the ball with one hand at a time also came into effect. In the late 1880s, these Scottish rules were generally adopted throughout Great Britain. In 1888, the United States became the next country to play water polo when John Robinson, an English swimming instructor, organized a team at the Boston Athletic Association. It was one of the most intense and roughest games ever played. The first American championships took place on January 28, 1890 in Providence where the Sydenham Swimming Club defeated the Boston Athletic Association, 2-1. By the turn of the century, the game was one of the more popular spectator sports in America.

45. Some Olympic History
Some olympic history. since then by the 1952 olympic Games every olympic recordhad Also coming under Swimming are diving, water polo which was introduced to
http://verulamasc.tripod.com/vswim/id19.html
Vswim.org Some Olympic History Home Where are we? Stuff you need to know Results ... Downloads The first Olympic Games of the Modern era had just one swimming event, a 100m freestyle for sailors, swum in the sea.
Women's events began in 1912, in Stockholm, with the 100m freestyle, 400m team and plain diving. Swimming events have changed dramatically since then - by the 1952 Olympic Games every Olympic record had been beaten at least once. Also coming under Swimming are diving, water polo which was introduced to the Olympic Games in 1900 for men, women's water polo will be introduced to the Olympic programme at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games.
Other new Swimming disciplines to appear at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games are Synchronised Swimming, duo event and Synchronised Diving.
British Success
Henry Taylor won a total of 8 Olympic medals between 1906 and 1920. He also won a medal in the same event (the freestyle relay) at four successive Games.
Jennie Fletcher winning Bronze for the 100m freestyle in 1912 was Great Britain's first woman Olympic swimming medallist. At the same Games, she was part of the relay team (4 x 100m freestyle) who won Gold.
Great Britain has won a total of 15 Gold medals, 23 Silver medals and 28 Bronze medals, as well as Gold in water polo in 1900, 1908, 1912 and 1920.

46. Olympic Water Polo
9/16 . history of USA water polo in the olympic Games. This document isa history of water polo, with a list of olympic and US national
http://www.tokoimports.com/midway-chicago-airport.htm

47. WashingtonPost.com: The History Water Polo
Go to water polo Section. The history water polo. By 1900, water polo was so popularit became the first team sport added to the olympic program.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/sports/olympics/longterm/waterlo/history.ht
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SOURCE: USWP
Go to Water Polo Section
The History Water Polo
There is little documentation as to the origins of water polo. It is known, however, that the sport originated in the rivers and lakes of mid-19th century England as an aquatic version of rugby football. Early games used an inflated, vulcanized rubber ball imported from India known as a "pulu" (the single Indian word for all "balls"). Pronounced "polo" by the English, both the ball and thegame became known as "water polo." To attract more spectators to swimming exhibitions, the London Swimming Association developed a set of water polo rules for indoor swimming pools in 1870. At first, players scored by planting the ball on the end of the pool with both hands. A favorite trick of the players was to place the five-to-nine inch rubber ball inside their swimming suit and dive under the murky water, then appear again as near the goal as possible. If the player came up too near the goal, he was promptly jumped on by the goalie, who was permitted to stand on the pool deck. Games were often nothing more than gang fights in the water as players ignored the ball, preferring underwater wrestling matches that usually ended with one man floating to the surface unconscious. The introduction of the "Trudgeon stroke" by Scottish players changed the nature of water polo. It became a game that emphasized swimming, speed and passing. Scottish rules moved from a rugby variant to a soccer style of play. Goals became a cage of l0 x 3 feet and a goal could be scored by being thrown. Players could only be tackled when they "held" the ball and the ball could no longer be taken under water. The small rubber ball was replaced by a leather soccer ball.

48. Women's Water Polo
ON THE ROAD with Julie Swail. Greece (March 30 to April 10) A briefstudy of olympic history. Rome (April 10 to April 17) Veni, vidi, vici.
http://www.wwater.uci.edu/Ontheroad-Home.html
Select a Sport Baseball Men's Basketball Women's Basketball Men's Crew / Rowing Women's Crew / Rowing Men's Golf Women's Golf Sailing Men's Soccer Women's Soccer Men's Tennis Women's Tennis Men's Volleyball Women's Volleyball Men's Waterpolo Women's Waterpolo
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with Julie Swail Greece (March 30 to April 10): A brief study of Olympic history Rome (April 10 to April 17): Veni, vidi, vici
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For more information or comments about this webpage, please contact Stacey Shackleford All materials present on this site, including all text, pictures and logos, are the property of UCI Athletics,
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49. Women's Water Polo
GREECE A look at olympic history. Our first day in Greece, we had a morningpractice and then had the afternoon off to do some sightseeing.
http://www.wwater.uci.edu/Ontheroad-Greece.html
Select a Sport Baseball Men's Basketball Women's Basketball Men's Crew / Rowing Women's Crew / Rowing Men's Golf Women's Golf Sailing Men's Soccer Women's Soccer Men's Tennis Women's Tennis Men's Volleyball Women's Volleyball Men's Waterpolo Women's Waterpolo
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with Julie Swail GREECE: A look at Olympic history
Our first day in Greece, we had a morning practice and then had the afternoon off to do some sightseeing. We took a cab to downtown Athens which took about 25 minutes. We went to the Acropolis, to a famous flea market and then on to the Olympic Stadium. Feeling the effects of jet lag, we returned to the hotel for a long evening nap before dinner. Here are some snapshots taken from our day on the town:
The Acropolis!
...from the Acropolis, showing downtown Athens in the background
...back at the bottom of the Acropolis walking through the market downtown Julie finally finds a shoe that's big enough for her size 11 foot!

50. Olympic Preview: Diving
water polo. First olympic Appearance 1900. by John Gettings, Although it looksa lot like a waterlogged version of soccer for your hands, the sport's history
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/ol-waterpolo.html

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Sports Olympics Olympic Events Water Polo First Olympic Appearance: 1900 by John Gettings Although it looks a lot like a waterlogged version of soccer for your hands, the sport's history owes more to the game of rugby. Created by resort owners in England in the mid-1800s, the sport's brutal beginnings in the rivers and lakes of the U.K. were tamed by rule changes by the end of the century, causing its popularity to soar. Did You Know? Water polo players swim up to one and a half miles during the course of a water polo game. Although men's water polo has the distinction of being the first team sport added to the Olympics and has been a part of every Summer Games since , women's water polo will be making its first appearance this year.

51. CSUS Water Polo Club History
The history of water polo. (SOURCE USWP). By 1900, water polo was so popularit became the first team sport added to the olympic program.
http://www.csus.edu/org/waterpolo/history.htm
History Research in progress...
The History of Water Polo
(SOURCE: USWP
There is little documentation as to the origins of water polo. It is known, however, that the sport originated in the rivers and lakes of mid-19th century England as an aquatic version of rugby football. Early games used an inflated, vulcanized rubber ball imported from India known as a "pulu" (the single Indian word for all "balls"). Pronounced "polo" by the English, both the ball and the game became known as "water polo." To attract more spectators to swimming exhibitions, the London Swimming Association developed a set of water polo rules for indoor swimming pools in 1870. At first, players scored by planting the ball on the end of the pool with both hands. A favorite trick of the players was to place the five-to-nine inch rubber ball inside their swimming suit and dive under the murky water, then appear again as near the goal as possible. If the player came up too near the goal, he was promptly jumped on by the goalie, who was permitted to stand on the pool deck. Games were often nothing more than gang fights in the water as players ignored the ball, preferring underwater wrestling matches that usually ended with one man floating to the surface unconscious.

52. Lane 9 News Archive: U.S. Olympic Water Polo News & Notes
USA won, 63. Taking a “Ryde” Into history The first venue to host women’sOlympic water polo will be the Ryde Aquatic Center in Sydney.
http://www.swiminfo.com/lane9/news/1773.asp
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- Lane 9 News - September 10, 2000 By Eric Velazquez
Sydney, Australia—The sands in the quadrennial hourglass have almost finished sifting. In just one week, thousands of athletes from all over the world will take to the fields, courts, pools, ranges, mats, and tracks of Sydney to pursue excellence in sport’s most coveted competition…the Olympic Games. The XXVIIth Olympiad is nearly upon us, and the U.S. is ready to play.
Both the men’s and women’s team will be competing for the Stars and Stripes in the Land Down Under in 2000. Men’s water polo, the oldest team sport in the Olympic Games, last captured gold in 1904, but has since racked up two silver and three bronze. This year, coach John Vargas looks to lead his squad, which he refers to as “the most physically talented team” in recent U.S. history, to the medals ceremonies with the first water polo gold of the new millennium.
For the women, this will be their first dive into the Olympic mix. Prior to July, the U.S. was referred to as a “last ditch qualifier” with little chance of competing with top teams like Australia and Holland. After winning the Holiday Cup with a victory over Canada back on July 9, Team USA eradicated its prior billing and propelled them into the gold medal mentionables file.

53. Stanford University Cardinal | Women's Water Polo | The Official Athletic Site
the Cardinal finished with its best record in school history at 27 the silver medal,marked the first time women's water polo had been in the olympic games
http://gostanford.ocsn.com/sports/w-wpolo/mtt/ortwein_susan00.html
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Current Conditions In Stanford, CA: L/RAIN Temp: 55 Wind: 13 SE Choose Sport Baseball Basketball - M Basketball - W Crew Cross Country Fencing Field Hockey Football Golf - M Golf - W Gymnastics - M Gymnastics - W Lacrosse - W Soccer - M Soccer - W Softball Swim/Diving - M Swim/Diving - W Sailing Sync Swimming Tennis - M Tennis - W Volleyball - M Volleyball - W Water Polo - M Water Polo - W Wrestling News Releases Susan Ortwein Position: Assistant Coach Experience: 6th Season Susan Ortwein is in her sixth year as an assistant coach for the Stanford women's water polo program. In her first year as assistant coach the Cardinal went 29-6 on its way to a No. 2 national ranking and a third-place finish at Collegiate Nationals. In 1999, the squad posted a 25-6 season and ended the season with a second-place finish after falling to USC 7-6 in five overtimes in the National Collegiate Championship game. In 2001, the Cardinal finished with its best record in school history at 27-1 and became the first-ever collegiate team to remain undefeated during the regular season. Last season, the Cardinal posted a 23-2 record en route to its first NCAA Championship. Ortwein has primary responsibility for coaching Cardinal goalkeepers and two-meter players. Last season, goalkeeper Jackie Frank was named NCAA Player of the Year, MPSF Goalie of the Year and NCAA Tournament Most Valuable Player, while Ellen Estes and Julie Gardner, two-meter players, earned NCAA and MPSF honors as well.

54. Welcome To FINA - La Fédération Internationale De Natation
FINA is the international governing body of swimming, diving, water polo, synchronized swimming and Category Sports water Sports Swimming and Diving Organizations...... ATHENS 2004 olympic GAMES AQUATICS. DIVING GO » SWIMING GO » water polo GO » SYNCHRONISEDSWIMMING GO Barcelona 2003 will be a landmark in the history of the
http://www.fina.org/
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in Madrid (ESP) on March
Dobroskok (RUS) shines again in Madrid Lausanne (SUI), March 17, 2003 – After his victory last week in Russia, Alexander Dobroskok (RUS) obtained a second successive win in the men’s 3m springboard in the fifth meet of the FINA Diving Grand Prix 2003, held in Madrid (ESP) from March 13-16. This performance reinforces his leadership of the overall ranking in this event. Olena Zhupina (UKR), second in the women’s 10m platform (she was first in Moscow) is now in the head of the ranking in this event. In Spain, the Chinese divers continued their supremacy, with six victories out of eight events.

55. History
Origins of the sport of water polo history of women's water polo in the UnitedStates. olympic GAMES. history of Team USA in the olympic Games United States
http://66.111.222.20/history.htm

56. Search The Archive
Men's water polo was the first olympic team sport, debuting at the 1900 event. makingit at once the oldest and the newest team sport in olympic history.
http://www.almanacnews.com/morgue/2000/2000_06_28.utsumi.html
Search the Archive: Back to the Table of Contents Page Back to The Almanac Home Page Classifieds
Issue date: June 28, 2000
Menlo School water polo coach wins press post at Olympics
Kyle Utsumi named press room supervisor for water polo events It will be an exciting summer for Kyle Utsumi, the Menlo School water polo coach who led the 1998 girls' varsity team to the Central Coast Section championship. Utsumi, who has been working with the U.S. Men's and Women's Olympic Water Polo teams, was recently hired by the Sydney Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games to serve as a news media specialist for the water polo events. He will head up the press room at the sport's venue, overseeing a staff of writers, supervising the distribution of press releases, and doing previews for every game. There will be 12 men's and 6 women's teams competing. Men's water polo was the first Olympic team sport, debuting at the 1900 event. This year, women will be allowed to enter the competition, making it at once the oldest and the newest team sport in Olympic history. Utsumi's love of the sport and connection to top water polo teams go back many years and has taken him around the world. A varsity team player at Stanford, he later became a member of the press information team at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. He traveled to Athens, Perth and Winnipeg for World Cup matches. This spring he was in Palermo, Italy, watching the women qualify for this summer's Olympics.

57. Sydney 2000 Post Games Report
reality in Sydney, when women’s water polo made its olympic debut on The battlesin the pool attracted the most spectators in Australian water polo history.
http://www.gamesinfo.com.au/postgames/en/pg000559.htm
The Competition : Aquatics : Page 8.
Contents Next Chapter First Page Previous Page ... Last Page
AQUATICS: WATER POLO
Ryde Aquatic Leisure Centre, Ryde
Sydney International Aquatics Centre, Sydney Olympic Park
16 September-1 October 2000
It wasn’t that long ago that a group of fit young women in swimsuits brandished placards at Sydney airport to lobby for the inclusion of women’s water polo in the 2000 Olympic Games. Although water polo was one of the first team events of the modern Olympic Games, introduced in Paris in 1900, at the 1996 Games women were still not eligible to compete. Finally, dedication to their dream saw it become a reality in Sydney, when women’s water polo made its Olympic debut on September 16 with a six-nation field. With seven players per side, the aim of water polo is to throw the ball into the opponent’s goal at the opposite end. But simple it is not, as both male and female players can swim the equivalent of 1500 m in each game, unable to touch the bottom of the pool for a rest. And, in action not always obvious to the referees, underwater cameras in the pool at Sydney gave a perspective of the roughness under the water as players wrestled each other for position and possession. The battles in the pool attracted the most spectators in Australian water polo history. The men played in a 30 m pool and the women in a 25 m pool.

58. History
Meanwhile a new chapter in the history of the sport will open in Sydney,when women's water polo makes it's olympic debut. Russia
http://www.barnsleywp.fsnet.co.uk/background/history.htm
The History of Water Polo
Water polo the skill and tactical approach of football and the aggression and physical contest of rugby. Resort owners in England created the water-based game in the mid-1800s to attract guests, and it quickly became popular. Played in rivers and lakes, water polo then was quite different to today's game. A favourite tactic was for players to hide the ball in their swimming trunks and then dive under the murky water to reappear unnoticed near the goals. The sport was, if anything, even more rugged than rugby, with robust tackling and general roughhousing part and parcel of the game. Players were known to come to the surface barely conscious after long wrestling bouts underwater. Water polo at that time was so brutal, in fact, that universities in the United States banned it from their campuses. The modern game emerged in the 1880s when rule changes introduced in Scotland led to a faster game more dependant on skill than on brute strength. The rule changes increased water polo's popularity and saw it spread to Europe, and throughout the British Empire. In 1900, it made its first appearance at the Olympic Games, and has been contested at every Games since. In that time, Hungary has been the standout water polo nation. From 1932 through to 1956 it won four of a possible five gold medals, adding two more in 1964 and 1976. Notable Hungarian players included five-time medallist Dezso Gyarmati and Oliver Halassy, a three-time Olympian with one leg amputated below the knee from a childhood accident.

59. Water Polo World League Games
RUSSIAN TEAM olympic history. The beginning of international ties ofthe Soviet water polo players goes back to the early twenties.
http://www.waterpolo.ru/russia.asp?l=e

60. Welcome To The Hamilton Aquatic Water Polo Club
Hamilton's water polo history, water polo saw its beginnings in Hamilton as earlyas 1932, when the late was a bronze medal winner in the 1928 olympic Games in
http://www.hamiltonwaterpolo.ca/main/history.html
home events calendar players clu b info history what's new Hamilton's Water Polo History Quick Link to ... HAWPC Calendar Water Polo saw its beginnings in Hamilton as early as 1932, when the late Jimmy Thompson arrived from Toronto to form the Hamilton Aquatic Club. Jimmy Thompson was a bronze medal winner in the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam where he was on Canada's freestyle relay team. Jimmy Thompson coached for over 30 years, and was Hamilton's citizen of the year in 1957. In the 1930's prominent members of the Hamilton intermediate were Harold Whitelock, Dave Dunbar, and Don McCabe. In 1939 the H.A.C. won its first Canadian Junior Championship. Team members included Ted St. Aubin, Len Whitemen, Charlie Larson, Bill DePelham, Russ Forrest, Sid Britton, and Fred Angustini. In the 1940's Hamilton saw several more Junior Championships awarded to its club, and in 1947 the first Senior Championship was won in Montreal. Team members included the junior members of the 1939 team and, in addition, Lloyd Larson, Jack McCormack, and Mike Veidenheimer. The 1950's, similar to the 40's, saw several more Championships won at the Junior and Senior level with such players as George Park, Bob Park, Walt Samek, Don Tedford, Harvey Elms, Pete Saberton, Mike McGloughlin, Jack Famley, Gord Morasco , and Bill VanderPol. ... contact us

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