sports » 15% OFF TOTAL FOOD BILL UP TO $30.00 The Detroit ice hockey team needed one more win to make it to the medal round at the Maccabi Games. Expires 9/30/16 #ROOKS 2D .ORTH OF ,ONG ,AKE 2D 4ROY -) s 0QFOEBZTBXFFLGPSMVODIBOEEJOOFS 4BUBOE4VOEJOOFSPOMZtPrivate room available for up to 85 people A Maccabi First Steve Stein | Contributing Writer T 2092400 STAR DELI “…one of America’s finest carryout-only delicatessens! Star’s reputation has never wavered!” — Danny Raskin COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES WITH ANY DELICATESSEN IN TOWN! MEAT TRAY DAIRY TRAY $10.99 per person person $22.99 per SALAD TRAY $12.49 per person SALAD TRAY W/ LOX & CREAM CHEESE $16.99 per person Order Your BREAK-THE-FAST Tray Today Gefilte Fish & Matzo Ball Soup Also Available )0634.0/4"5".1.t46/".1. 24555 W. 12 MILE ROAD +VTUXFTUPG5FMFHSBQI3PBEt4PVUIGJFME 248-352-7377 www.stardeli.net Prices subject to change 50 September 8 • 2016 5 OFF $ On Star’s beautiful already low-priced trays Expires 9/8/16. One Per Order. Not Good Holidays. 10 Person Minimum. With this coupon. DELIVERY AVAILABLE he Detroit ice hockey team didn’t return home with a medal, but it did help make history last month at the JCC Maccabi Games & ArtsFest in Stamford, Conn. Coach Mark Weiss’ team partici- pated in the first Maccabi Games ice hockey competition. The Maccabi Games began in 1983 and have been held almost every year since then. “It was a fantastic hockey tour- nament,” Weiss said. “The talent was amazing. Like many coaches, I thought we had a contending team and when we got there, we found there was great competition. It was a pleasure to see it.” Toronto White beat Fort Lauderdale 3-2 in the gold medal game. Greater Washington defeated Toronto Blue 3-1 in the bronze medal game. “The two best teams played for the championship,” Weiss said. Detroit went 3-3, playing in three days of the four-day tournament. Fort Lauderdale handed Hockeytown two of its three defeats. Each team played four pool games to set up a bracket competition. Detroit lost 4-2 to Philadelphia, beat Sid Jacobson JCC (Long Island) 5-1, lost 3-0 to Fort Lauderdale and beat East Bay JCC (San Francisco) 5-0 in pool play. Detroit defeated Los Angeles Westside JCC 4-0 to open bracket play, but lost 6-2 to Fort Lauderdale and ended up a win short of getting to the medal round. Dylan Resnick was Detroit’s cap- tain. Also on the 18-player roster — the maximum allowed — were Blake Salesin, Cameron Young, Daniel Zalesin, Eric Gal, Gabe Barish, Gabe Schlussel, Henry Schwartz, Isaac Mintz, Jeremy Kahan, Jonah Greenblatt, Marcus Frankel, Matt Segall, Matthew Jasgur, Michael Potocsky, Miles Berlin, Ryan Berke and Spencer Blatt. Nate Resnick, Ira Schlussel and Ethan Weinfield were Detroit’s assis- tant coaches. Weiss said Detroit players and coaches also enjoyed the Maccabi Games experience off the ice. The trip home wasn’t much fun. The Detroit entourage had to endure an 8½-hour delay at LaGuardia Airport in New York City before its flight left Stamford is about 35 miles from New York City. “We made the best of the wait,” Weiss said. There were a dozen teams in the Maccabi Games U16 ice hockey competition. More than 200 players ages 12-16 from the U.S. and Canada participated. Organizers and coaches are thinking there could be as many as 24 teams next year with U16, U14 and girls’ divisions. Ice hockey replaced inline hockey at this year’s Maccabi Games, which also were held in Columbus, Ohio, and St. Louis. It isn’t known if inline hockey, a longtime Maccabi Games sport, will return next year. DOWNTOWN FOX READY TO ROLL B’nai B’rith Downtown Fox-MLZG Bowling League continues to grow, with 24 to 26 teams expected to com- pete this season. “We have almost everyone back from last year and a few new teams,” league president Justin Kaplan said shortly before the league’s season opening night Tuesday, Sept. 13, at Drakeshire Lanes in Farmington Hills. “We’re not a typical league,” Kaplan said. “We don’t require a 40-week commitment. We have two halves of 12 weeks. Also, our handicap system allows a 100 average bowler to be on the same playing field as a 200 aver- age bowler. We want our league to be competitive and fun.” Kaplan said social and career net- working and mentoring among bowl- ers also is a big part of the league experience. Each league team has a minimum of four bowlers; some have five or six. First-half league play will continue Tuesday nights at Drakeshire through Dec. 20. The second half will be from Jan. 3-April 4. * Send sports news to stevestein502004@yahoo.com.