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Page 47 text:
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PLACE FOURTH IN STATE l lt turned out to be a busy night tor both the Vtlilliams Too close Tor comfort is disclosed in the look of goalie Gordon goalie and the referees as Pat McGuinn 181, follows in Mallory as Bill Wegleitner and Pat MCG-iuinn register the same aaonizerl a rebound. expression after a near miss in the Murray-Williams fray. Fireworks really broke loose at The state tournament. Drawing Saint Louis Park in the opening round, the Mur- rayites won a 2-l overtime struggle. Jack Martin and Tom Wegleitner teamed up to handle the scoring, each having a goal and an assist. In the most dramatic, hard-fought game in the history ot The Tourney, The Pilots were defeated by Williams in The semi-finals atter Two overtimes and 2:35 of a Third sudden death overtime had passed. Jim Theis was the only Pilot able to score in The Tirst two periods, and The Murrayites tell behind 3-l with Three minutes remaining in the game. Putting on one ot The finest rallies in the history ot The tourney, the Murrayites knotted the score. Fred Swensen scored at 9:55 ot the third period. With a minute remaining Coach Al Sandberg pulled Goalie Gordy Mallory out ot the nets, and played six forwards, The result was the tying goal by Tom Wegleitner at ll.O5. A hard, long shot and an unusual one by Chester Lundsten ot Williams gave the Northern team the game, Still tired from the semi-Hnals, Murray gave way to a hne Warroad sextet, 7-5, in the third place championship game. Leading 2-i at the end ot the tirst period, the Pilots played it hot and cold to give Warroad a hard battle. Kyle Peterson and Tom Wegleitner scored tor the losers as did Jack Martin, who got the only hat trick of the tournament in this game, A loose puck in front of the Harding goal becomes the This wild bit of action produced Murray's first goal against Harding center of attention as Jack Martin vainly watches the open in the Region 4 title game. Bill Wegleitner, arrow, has iust scored as net. Pat McGuinn l2t, and Jack Martin look on,
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Page 46 text:
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PUCKSTERS TAKE T. C. TITLE z- Y v-QW . J i R-.. -f K f M .X ,W . - First row, left to right: Richard Hedenstrom, Bill Wegleitner, Tom Wegleitner, Bill McCluskey, Gordon Mallory, Al Thoma, Kyle Peterson Jim Theis, Douglas Malmauist 'Y Owen Eckblorn, mgr., Bob Bastel, Paul Christianson, Pat McGuinri, Pat Flaherty, Jack Martin, Mylan Bor kan, Fred Swensen, Bob Clark, Bob Picha, Coach Al Sandberg. Flashing skates, bruising checks, and clever stick handling were the mainstays of the Pilot i949 hockey aggregation. Led by the line of Tom Wegleitner, Jack Martin, and Bill McCluskey, the Murrayites cap- tured the Region IV laurels, won the Twin City Championship, and gathered fourth place in the State Championship Tournament. Murray won its first Twin City Cham- pionship when the pucksters defeated Min- neapolis Washburn 2-l. Fred Swensen and Tom Wegleitner tallied for the Blue and Gold before Washburn got its lone goal with two minutes left to play. Three Murrayites earned places on the All-City Hockey Team. Wings Jack Martin and Bill McCluskey and defense man Bill Wegleitner were the pucksters so honored. Tom Wegleitner gained recognition in the state tournament for his fine play by being chosen All-State center. Playing the type of hockey indicative of a well-coached team, the Murrayites won the regional tourney. In the hrst game of the regional the Pilots defeated Johnson High 3-2. Jim Theis tallied twice for the winners. Duplicating the score of the pre- vious evening, Murray defeated Harding. Bill Wegleitner, Jack Martin, and Kyle Peterson scored in a fine exhibition of team play and solo dashes. Page forty-two Conference Murray Murray Murray Murray Murray Murray Murray Murray Murray Twin City Murray HOCKEY SEASON'S RECORD Regional Tournament Central 2 Murray 3 .........,..... .Johnson 2 Monroe 0 Murray 3 .,.........,....., Harding 2 Johnson 3 State Tournament Wilson 2 Opening Round Marshall 2 Murray 2 ...,.............. St. Louis Park Harding l Covertimel Washington 2 Semi-Finals Humboldt l Murray 3 .....,..,..,....., Williams 4 Mechanic Arts 2 lthree overtimesl Third Place 2 .....,..... ...... M pls. Washburnl Murray 5 ..,,.,..,.. ...... W arroad 7 Receiving tips from Coach Al Sandberg are Gordon Mallory, Bill McCluskey, and Tom Wegleitner as they ready themselves for a pre-tournament scrimmage.
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Page 48 text:
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1 x W , , Q- Q r 4 .- Christensen Stars Cross country star for The past two years is Bob Chris- tensen, who has chalked up an enviable record in this sport's annals. As the mainstay of Murray's city title team, ,Bob has been a constant first and second place winner. N PlI.0TS iGA'RNERlCROSS COUNTRY TITLE - ll . , ' -7 Murray's 1948 cross country team gathered the city cross county title with The lowest Team score on record and went undefeated in dual meets. Under the able tutelage of Mal Shurtleff, the thin-clads defeated Wash- ington, Humboldt, Duluth Central, Minneapolis South- west, and Monroe. In the first meet of the year the cross country team defeated Washington by the perfect score of 15-48. The Pilots vvon the Hrst five scoring positions. Performing in tvvo meets in two days, the group de- Page forty-four First row: Jim Dean, Evan Currence, Paul Mielke, Charles Grose, Bob Christen- sen, Gordon Tinker, Jerry Holler 'K Coach Mal Shurt- left, Don Hahnen, Douglas Currence, Russell Prickett, and Chuck Michaelson, man- ager. feated Humboldt 21-34, and then traveled to Duluth Central The following day to trounce their foes 19-36. Bob Christensen, Charles Grose, and Gordon Tinker finished first, second, and third respectively. Monroe was the next victim of the thin-clads as the Greenies fell before the Pilots 20-35. The city cross country meet was a climax to a suc- cessful season as the runners set a city record with the best score ever recorded in the four year history of the city meets.
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