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| A
Place In Sport History |
by
Stan Shillington |
All sports are steeped in tradition. New teams come and go, but there
are certain clubs that remain intricately entangled in the very history
of the game.
For example, merely mention the name Yankees and you know the conversation
revolves around baseball; or the Green Bay Packers and football; Maple
Leafs and hockey.
Similarly, lacrosse has the Adanacs.
It’s odd, then, that the name Adanac – CANADA, spelled
backwards – is synonymous with lacrosse when it actually had
its origin on a basketball court.
The Adanac Basketball Club was formed in New Westminster in the 1920s
and soon became a major force on the Canadian hoopla scene. The team
captured the national Senior “A” championship in 1928-29
and 1929-30. At the same time, the club sponsored Senior “B”
and Intermediate “A” teams.
The question soon cropped up: What could all these young athletes
do during the summer months to stay in shape? The answer, of course,
was lacrosse.
It was early in the Depression; times were tough but a top notch lacrosse
stick cost only one dollar. It was also a time of change – the
12-man field game made way in 1933 for the seven man box version (remember
the rover!). The boys of basketball held an organizational meeting
on April 26, 1933 with Fred Wolstenholme being named president and
Jim Gifford coach. Two days later, the newly formed Adanac Lacrosse
Club entered a team in the senior loop.
The first unit boasted a number of the all-time greats in lacrosse
on its roster – names such as goalie Earl Leroy, Stu Gifford,
Mac MacDonald, Les Davy, Sid Henry, Bernie Feeney and Orville Douglas.
But the emphasis was on the development of young blood and five years
later, the dividends were realized.
In 1938, the Adanacs captured the Western Canadian title, but still
building to a peak, could not wrest the Mann Cup from powerful St
Catherines. When St Kitts travelled west the following season to defend
the national title, the Adanacs reversed the previous year’s
loss by capturing the Mann Cup – a Canadian championship just
half a dozen seasons after organization.
The Adanacs soon became a casualty of the Second World War when, with
almost all of the team’s players in the armed forces, the club
disbanded. But back it came to win the Western title in 1947, 1948
and 1950; and a Mann Cup title in 1947.
Lacrosse hit a low point in 1951, forcing an amalgamation of the Adanacs
and Salmonbellies – the Adanac name once again was placed in
mothballs.
Then, in 1965, a group of old Adanac players and executives –
led by Ralph Douglas – resurected the name and set up shop in
Coquitlam.
Stocking that first Coquitlam club became a project for the entire
league. Gordie Gimple came over from Vancouver as playing-coach and
brought with him, Alex Carey, Merv Schweitzer, John Surinak and Ron
Bodner; Jack Barclay, Ivan Stewart, Mike Gates and Charlie Saunders
came from New Westminster; and Bill Bradley, Rod Kilduff and Dick
Crompton from Victoria. Soon after, others like Kevin Parsons, John
Allen, Fred Usselman and Doug Wallsmith joined the fold.
In the short-lived professional lacrosse experiment in 1968, the Adanacs
moved their home base to Portland, Oregon, but returned to Coquitlam
to
stay the following year.
Always an exciting, high-scoring club, the Adanacs hit a peak in 1980
when the team captured the Nations ’80 World Box Lacrosse Title,
and the WLA league championship. A Mann Cup challenge, however, was
tharted by New Westminster.
After three trips to “the show”, the COQUITLAM ADANACS
won their first Mann Cup title in 2001 ~ an exciting seven game series,
that saw the Adanacs claw their way back from a four goal deficit
heading into the final period of game seven. Dan Stroup and Colin
Doyle were the heroes …. Stroup knotted the score with just
under a minute to go, while Doyle bulged the twine with the game winner
with 35 seconds to go. Andy Ogilvie was named Mann Cup MVP.
Needless to say, Game Seven of the 2001 Mann Cup will go down as one
of the greatest moments in Adanac history.
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