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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 66

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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66
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THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Sunday, Oct. 8, 1961 Xavier Cincinnati .17 Ohio State .....13 Miami 21 ,12 UCLA 3 Kent State 0 Kentucky Auburn ,14 Notre Dame ....22 Iowa 35 ,12 Purdue 20 Southern Calif. ..34 Wisconsin Indiana 6 Missouri 14 Maryland ....,,22 3 California 14 Syracuse 21 fi XU Scares Early, Holds Off UC Page MI 1742 1 Buckeyes Bop UCLA to Muskies Lead By 17-0, Then Bearcats Rally BY DICK FORBES Of The Enquirer Staff 1 iVr5 i 'h "vJo- mmmmmsmmmmmm Enoulrar (Straub) photos UC players are, left to right," (No, 70), Tom Relnstatler (No. Conatser (No. 61).

MUSKIE SURROUNDED Xavier halfback Larry Cox, white uniform, picked up seven yards before being stopped by this trio of Cincinnati Bearcats in first period of last OSU Explodes Late In Game To Win, 13-3 BY DON BEATTIE Of The Enquirer Staff COLUMBUS, Ohio, Oct. 7 Two teams playing possession football can become trying to the fans. Ohio won the "we've got the ball" tussle with UCLA and -the game by a 13-3 score as another full house 82,992 looked on in Ohio's capital city Saturday. By comparison Ohio was the more liberal of the two teams, for a change. UCLA, Statistics ucu first 4mm I Sushinp yerrfaee 113 Passimj verdeee S3 raises Penes Interceptee tr Puntf 7-4J Fumbles lilt Tare's peneliieel 0 to meeting the Buckeyes for the first time, played it straight and adopted Ohio's grunt and groan offense to grind out its 113 yards.

Ohio ran 86 plays, UCLA 45. A beautiful field ffoal by Bobby Smith from 32 yards out gave I'CLA a second quarter 3-0 lead that Iookftd mighty good until the Bucks managed their first score In the early minutes of the fourth quarter. Ohio's first venture Into UCLA territory late in the third period proved to be worthwhile. They scored on Paul Warfleld's 13 yard scamper off right tackle after driving from the Ohio 35 in eight plays. A 15-yard penalty on UCLA for unsportsmanlike conduct aided the cause and set ud the TD play.

The second Ohio score came quickly. After the Hickoff UCLA couldn't move and was forced to kick from Its own six yard line. A clipping penalty set the Bucks back to the UCLA 40 after the return, but It didn't take long to get In. Matt Snell, a 203-pound right half, cut up through tackle two plays later and went 32 yards for the tally. Van Raaphorst's kick was not good and Ohio led 13-3.

"t(Tr JT or At. i vf. the Buckeye 19-yard line in first period of yesterday's game at AP Wirephoto OUT OF BOUNDS Ohio State halfback Paul Warfield (No. 42) Is slammed out of bounds by UCLA halfback Rob Smith on The 'Cats punched to tlua. 19 but here Goldner fumbled and saved the day for Xavier by recovering on the 16.

The Muskies were smothered and Cincinnati had one last opportunity, running 4s with four minutes left. Harp hit Paris with- a' pass down the middle for 34 yards to the 17. Byfar this point the 'Cats ran three plays for eight yards; and on fourth down Grad hammered at left tackle for no gain, Xavier took over and that was it. XAVIER 3 14 0 0-17 CINCINNATI 0 0 9 3-12 Xvir-Pots 27 yard field Xaviar Rupkey 13 mss from Etler (Potts kick). Xavier-O'Donnell 46 cuss from Donarskf (Potts kick).

Cincinnati Phillips 19 run (pass failedl. Cincinnati Hertomj 32 vard field ooal. Cipcinneti-Currv 47 vard field peel. Officials Referee. Pete Laniaan (Condon, 0 Uoire loir Bendef IFosfor't, Ohio); Head linesman, Jim Beiersdorfer (Cincinnati); Field Judv.

Norm Nipv (Toledo. Onio': Timei. 8oO Colwell SPORTS' HANDBOOK Only book that Qives vou EVfPY MAJOR RECORD OF EVERY MAJOR SPORT completely uo-to-date. You have every maior reccd at your finger tips. Most valuable book vou can own.

Order several tor friends and TAX IN CI Pitlsbursh relatives. Send to Bo 104 1 "30. Pa. NEW RENAULT DAUPHINES All Models and Colors vK Statistics UC Xaviar first dawns rushint 9 First downt passing 3 4 first downs tenaltitt 2 tannin (lays triad 43 30 Nat yards rushint 122 6 Passas ttttmptaa 19 11 Passaa camalattd 6 Passas intarcaptad ay 1 0 Nat yards panlna 91 176 Total affenip (yards) 114 339 Punt avarapa 32 5 36 5 Numbar tf punts 6 4 Panaltias 1 3 Yards aanallird 50 35 fumolaa 3 1 rumalaa last 1 I mmmmmmmmmmmmmm 17-yard ramble, humped down to the 16. Three Harp passes went astray so on fourth down Hank Hartong.

the Dutch boy from Holland, booted a 32-yard field goal with a soccerball kick to leave Xavier leading, 17-9. I'C continued to dominate the game, and early in the fourth quarter drove down to the Xavier 30. Here, on fourth down, Jim Curry the big sophomore quarterback kicked a 47-yard field goal, believed to be the longest ever kicked in Cincinnati. This narrowed Xavier's lead to 17-12. The Cincinnati side went wild a couple of minutes later when Price fumbled on the Xavier 28 and Gold-ner recovered for UC.

FUtlY EQUIPPED INCLUDING: Deafer-Defroster Turn lifnali Vinyl Interior Whitewall Tires Safety Deer lecka 3 WE NEED USED CARS $100 to $300 MORE night's game. Ken Byers 51) and Ken i 13450 The Bucks nearly scored again, but the attempt fizzled on the one-half yard line after a desperation Bruin pass failed on the UCLA 32. The fourth down effort gave Ohio the ball when end Mel Profit dropped the ball as he went out of oounds. UCLA roved to be more conservative than the Bucks, if that Is possible. The Bruins didn't throw a pass until late In the game.

And they went to passes only when things were desperate. Talented Bobby Smith, the UCLA quarterback, was actually the standout of the game. He thrilled fans consistently with his exceptional ball-handling, faking and poise. He ran well, punted, and did some effective passing. UCLA's score came with right back hammering again on the eight.

On third down Etler passed to Jimp Rupkey in the end zone, but the Muskies were offside. So on the next play, this time from the 13, Etler called the same play and again connected for a touchdown. Potts' kick made it 10-0. The Muskies wound up the half by scoring again, and once more using the easiest of methods. This time Walt Bryniar-ski was on the throwing end and Jim O'Donnell on the catching end.

Eddie Banks, apparently helpless to interfere, watched the ball settle in O'Donnell's arms on the eight, and O'Donnell simply eluded Banks and went in to score. Potts kicked again to make it 17-0 at halftime. There was a considerable change in the tempo of Cincinnati's play when the second half began, and this became evident immediately when Van Buren intercepted Etltr's pass and returned it 15 yards to the Xavier 40. Three plays later a 19-yard Harp to Paris pass carried to the Xavier 19, and from there Hurdie Phillips bust over right guard and ran over three Xavier defenders to a touchdown with only 2:50 gone. Harp tried a two-point pass play but it was incomplete, leaving Xavier in front, 17-7.

UC hit the scoreboard soon again. The 'Cats, aided by Phillips 20-yard burst over right and Van Buren's Joe Garagiola's Best Seller BASEBALL IS A FUNKY GAM THE GREAT BOOK BY -Thbookf JOE GARAGIOLA S2.95 UPP1NC0TT WHEN YOU NEED A MUFFLER CALL PL 1- 2739 LI 2- 0182 MUFFLU shou 2612 Reading Rd. Near Win. H. Taft Rd.

Opea Thura. Ivpi 3719 Spring Grove 2:22 minutes remaining in the second quarter. Smith, the workhorse of the day, did the kicking from the 32 yard line, after a bad pass from center. The Bruins had moved the ball from the Ohio 28 to the Ohio 15, but couldn't cut through the stiff Buckeye defense for the necessary first down. Ezell Singleton held for Smith, who put the ball through from a severe angle.

It was a beautiful kick. Ohio didn't penetrate the Californians' territory in the first half. The Buckeyes hud the ball 30 times during the first two quarters. The Bruins, who moved with much the same monotony Ohio utilized a week ago against Texas Christian, had 20 plays. and took a 7-6 lead when Clarkle Mayfield converted.

Auburn, restricted to a net minus 13 yards rushing in the first half, rallied in the third quarter and scored on a 15-yard pass from sophomore quarter-bark Mailon Kent to senior end Dave Edwards. The Tigers then thrust back a Kentucky drive at their one and seemed to have their 31st consecutive home victory in hand until Rawson's fumble. Auburn's fumbling tendencies, which almost cost the Timers their opener Wildcats In First Win, 14-12 Xavier's Musketeers put all their scoring eggs Into a first half basket last night and made two touchdown passes and a field goal up against an aroused Cincinnati for a 17-12 victory. A Nlppert Stadium crowd of nearly 28,000 watched the intraclty rivals in the most startling reversal of form' since Germany Invaded Russia as Xavier held complete command In the first 30 minutes, Cincinnati in the final 30. They also saw Xavier pin.

its second straight defeat on the Bearcats, who last year tumbled by another odd score, 5-. The Muskies thus balanced the 1961 record at 2-2, while handing the Bearcats their third straight loss to make their record 1-3. Both teams had heroes all over the place Xaviers in the first half, Cincinnati's in the second and 11 ever a game proved anything, it was that the foot is really back in college football again. George Potts, Xavier's punter, placekicker and kickoff man supreme who ought to be in the pros, really made the difference although you could point to long runs, great catches and ragged pass defense as also figuring mightily. Xavier's aggressive, fired-up linemen and fast, alert backs decimated Cincinnati, both offensively and defensively throughout the first half.

The Musk'es, aided principally" by a 50-yard pass play from Etler to Dau-meyer, advanced 68 yards on seven plays the first time they gained possession, but failed to score on this thrust when Potts' field goal try from the 18 was blocked. Etler fumbled the pass from center trying to place it down. But shortly after this Xauer didn't fail. Van Buren fumbled on the UC 22 with John Nelson, fully recovered from a knee injury, pouncing on the ball. The Bearcat defense tightened again, so on fourth down Potts tried another field goal and this time made it a 27-yard effort that put Xavier ahead, 3-0.

Early in the second quarter, after Etler hit Stuplca with a pass that sailed 41 yards from the line of scrimmage, Xavier was My Portrait Scores Victory At Garden State CAMDEN, N. Oct. 7 tP) Coming from off the pace, Fred W. Hooper's My Portrait scored a handy victory in today's $28,100 Jersey Belle stakes at Oar-den State Park before an opening day crowd of 29,348. In registering her fourth triumph of the season, My Portrait moved past the pace-setting pair of Rose O'Neal and Times Two, drawing away to win with authority by three and a quarter lengths.

It required a photo for second money, with Rose O'Neill showing a head the best of Times Two. The winner was the favorite and paid $8.20, $3.40 and $2.60. Rose O'Neill returned $3.80 and $3.00 and Times Two paid $5.20. It required 1:43 for the mile and one sixteenth. UC Posts Win In Cross Country RICHMOND, Oct.

7 (Special) University of Cincinnati cross-ctountry team opened its 1961 season on a winning note yesterday by defeating Eastern Kentucky and Villa Madonna. Although the three teams competed together over the three-and-a quarter mile course, the result was scored as a pair of dual meets. The Bearcats beat Eastern, 20-39, and Villa Madonna, 15-50 (low score wins). UC's Harold Schuck finished first In 15.34.5. Teammate Bob Roncker was third.

Bill Klayer fourth and Don Matlock fifth. Other Cincinnati runners were Connie Bibbs, Steve Fountain and Llynn I to Choose From DELIVERED Passes Upset Auburn AND WILL ALLOW ON YOUR TRADE-IN AMERICA'S NO. UK's AUBURN, Oct. 7 (H Aroused Kentucky used Its great passing combination of Jerry Woolum to Tom Hutchinson to upset Auburn 14-12 today and hand the Tigers their first loss at home in 31 football games. Only three minutes and 12 seconds were left to play when quarterback Woolum cooiy connected with end Hutchinson on a six-yard payoff pitch that made Auburn a loser here for the first time since Mississippi State won In 1952.

Hutchinson, making a tremendous bid for all-America recognition, got underdog Kentucky in position for its surprise victory by recovering Auburn fullback Larry Rawson's fumble at the Tiger 21. Seven plays later Kentucky scored, shrugging off a 15-yard penalty on the way. The triumph was Kentucky's first of the season. A TRUE 40-45 MILES PER GALLON llnnk Flnnne-lnsJ I YkS.Ut OR 12.000..MII.K IF rOU WANT A TRUE ECONOMY CAR You Can't Afford Not To Buy A Renault MADISON MOTORS, INC. Factory Athrui fttflouff-Ptpgeof farts Safes end Service 1616 MADISON KY.

HE 1-4704 In all It was a sleepy, dull first half. Ohio rolled up only 65 yards on the ground and an amazing (For Ohio) 51 through the air. A highlight of the first half was the punting of Smith, who averaged 43 yards in four tries. It was an effective weapon and kept Ohio well cornered. Ohio's offensive show this was altered considerably from last week's duller than dull battle with TCU.

Bob Ferguson was used much less today, the major portion of the offensive chores falling to quarterback Bill Mrukowskl, halfback Paul Warfield and Matt Snell. OHIO 0 0 0 13-13 UCLA 0 3 0 0-3 UCU-Bobbv Smith, field soil 32 yirds. 0hio-Wrfild. rlaht tnd, 13 virdsi Vnraohoraf, (tick for tKt'a point, Ohio-Snell. 32 yards off-tcklt.

against Tennessee, kept them in trouble throughout and eventually turned the course of the bruising gp.me. Kentucky's hard-charging line, led by tackles Junior Hawthorne, and Bob Butler and linebackers Irvin Goode and John Mutchler, bhuiten every effort at offense by Auburn. KENTUCKY 0 7 0 7-14 AUBURN 0 6 0-12 Auburn-McGMvtr 82 run aftar block (laid goal atfampt (kick falledi. Kantuckv-Bruant 1 run (Mavfiald kick). Auburn-Edwards 15 past from Ktnr (kick failed).

Kanfuckv-Hutchinson past from Woo, lum (Mavfiald kick). REDS T8 RBI SO 68 SI PCT .000 .000 .284 .308 J377 .100 .273 .000 .333 .000 .500 .000 .429 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 PO A PCT. 1.000 .000 1.000 .000 1.000 1.000 1.0CO 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 1.000' .000 5 3 1 I 0 28 6 21 0 .188 78 24 0 1.000 BB SB PCT. PO .417 5 .143 3 .091 5 .000 1 .143 24 PCT. 1.000 i.ooo l.ooo i.ooo 1.000 1.000 .875 .000 1.000 .000 .923 1.000 1.000 .000 .500 .000 5 0 0 2 4 0 6 4 6 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 167 30 .333 .000 .000 ,000 .200 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 32 7 12 12 I .176 81 30 4 .968 SY INNINGS 001 211 120-8 000 301 111-7 SS 10 HS WP 2 4 2 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 0 2 6 6 0 0 1 3 1)000 ERA 2.57 0,00 200 2.00 YANKEES BB SO H8 WP 0 2 1 2 0 ERA ooc 2 57 2 25 2.70 0.00 Statistics KENTUCKY Firit dtwm 11 Ruthini 115 failini yarriatt 74 Fill.

I 1-11 Paiitt Intarcitttrf 3 Punit 742 Fumblai last Yardi panaliiad 3S AUBURN 4 minul 1 1 1 4-11 I 4-310 4 IS i-mmmm It came after successive losses to Miami and Mississippi. Auburn, a 24-21 conque ror of Tennessee last week, is now 1-1 for th year. Auburn took a 6-0 lead in the first quarter when halfback John McGeever blocked a Kentucky field goal attempt, grabbed the ball out of the air and raced 82 yards for a touchdown. Kentucky struck back in the second quarter after end Dave Gash recovered a fumble by Auburn quarterback Bobby Hunt. Starting from the Auburn 26, the Wildcats surged for a touchdown In nine plays Composite Box Score By United Press International Composite box after the first three games of the 1961 World Series: the ability to wm CINCINNATI lasingama.

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Pages Available:
4,582,266
Years Available:
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