Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 19

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I B-4 -THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR- SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1989 Butler bounces St. Joe behind Roberts' 4 TDs bounds twice on the ensuing kickoff, giving Taylor (4-0, 4-0) the ball at its own 42-yard line with 2:48 remaining. Indianapolis Cathedral, hauled in TD passes of 56, 11 and 9 yards from Voris, who completed 14 of 23 aerials for 206 yards. Pindell tied the school single-game record shared by three others with his three scoring catches. Hanover (3-0-1) scored on its opening drive on Glesing's 10-yard run.

The drive took four plays covering 69 yards in 44 seconds and the Panthers never looked back, as the visiting Tigers dropped to 1-3 for the season. Senior running back Steve Roberts rushed for four touchdowns and visiting Butler amassed 577 yards of offense en route to 43-28 victory over St. Joseph's in its Heartland Conference season opener Saturday. The Bulldogs (2-2-1) Jumped to a 36-0 lead then held on despite a record-setting passing attack by Pumas quarterback Brian Hassett. Connecting on 34 of 55 attempts, Hassett threw for 479 yards and three touchdowns for St.

Joseph's. After Butler scored twice in the third quarter to increase its lead to 36-0. St. Joe (1-3) put registered scores on a 1 -yard run and a 6-yard pass reception by Indianapolis Cathedral High School grad Jimmy Allen. But Bulldog running back Gene Austin retaliated with a 6-yard TD Jaunt run before the Pumas scored two meaningless touchdowns late in the game.

Roberts scored on runs of 12, 12, 3 and 3 yards with 170 rushing yards on 30 carries. Butler, an alum of Indian Creek High School, passed for 345 yards, the second highest total in school history. Senior Steve Wallace, from Lawrence North, hauled in of the TD passes to tie another Wabash mark. Fellow receiver Mike Funk caught 10 passes for 183 yards to break his own record by 4 yards. FRANKLIN 13, UNION 12 Franklin's high-powered offense was bogged down by the rain and mud at host Union, but the Grizzly defense contributed a strong game to preserve the win at Barbourville, Ky.

Grizzly quarterback Reece Mann completed 16 of 27 passes for 137 yards, including an 8-yard touchdown pass to Bill Brinkman in the first quarter. Joel Taylor capped the scoring for Franklin (2-2) with a 1-yard run. Union drew to within 13-12 on a 7-yard TD from Kevin Jones to T.C. McClish, but the hosts failed on the two-point conversion. DePAUW 31, KENTUCKY WESLEYAN 7 Jeff Voris passed to Joe Pindell for three first-half touchdowns and Rocky Aker raced 47 yards for a fourth-quarter score as the host DePauw Tigers lifted their season record to 2-1-1.

Pindell, a senior wide receiver from GEORGETOWN (KY.) 28, EVANS-VILLE 21 The host Aces held Georgetown scoreless in the second half, but fell a touchdown shy on their comeback attempt. Georgetown, which moved to 2-0 in the Mid-South Conference and 2-1-1 overall, tallied a pair of touchdowns in each of the first two quarters, while holding Evansville (2-2, 2-2) to minus-5 total yards in the first half. The Aces' attack awoke in the second half, thanks in part to a fumble recovery and a recovered onside kick which led to TDs. Todd Pritchett's 1-yard scoring plunge brought the Aces within 28-21, and they later drove to the Georgetown 47-yard line, but quarterback Jamie Holland was intercepted at the 1 by Georgetown's Tim Ritzie with 45 seconds left. HANOVER 36, CAMPBELLSVILLE 0 Quarterback Gary Gabbard passed for three touchdowns and wingback Brian Glesing caught two of those and rushed for another to boost the Panthers to a homecoming victory.

Thompson leads Gophers past ISU ROSE-HULMAN 46, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 19 The Engineers' defense held its opponent without a touchdown in the second half for the third straight week, allowing the hosts to come from behind for the victory. Rose-Hulman (2-1) took the lead in the third quarter when Todd Foreman and Brian Bartley connected on a 76-yard touchdown pass. Foreman, a freshman from Greenfield, wound up passing for 354 yards. Kevin Greene, a freshman from Hamilton Southeastern, added a pair of 1-yard TD plunges for the Engineers. TAYLOR 37, ANDERSON 30 Mark Hamm's 1-yard leap over right guard with 12 seconds remaining gave the visiting Trojans the victory in an Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference game.

Anderson (1-3, 1-3) had tied the game on Jason Gillman's 38-yard field goal late in the fourth quarter. But Gillman kicked the ball out of STAR STAFF PHOTO RON IRA STEELE and we ran the ball when they played pass defense. We tried to do what they wouldn't expect." Tigers flanker Lewis nabbed six of Gregory's passes for 104 yards. "The coaches gave us a good game plan and we executed it," Lewis said. "We played well enough to win, but we made some mistakes that will really hurt us in a tougher game.

We need to be more consistent." Ditto for Bethune-Cookman's defense. "The defense did not come to play," said Wildcats safety Kevin Grisby, named the game's defensive MVP. "They ran and passed when they wanted to. We weren't consistent." FROM WIRE AND SPECIAL REPORTS Minneapolis Darrell Thompson ran for a career-high 231 yards, scored three touchdowns and set two school records against Indiana State Saturday night as Minnesota wore down the stubborn NCAA Division I-AA Sycamores for a 34-14 victory. Minnesota (2-1) held a 17-14 halftime lead before taking control of the Sycamores (2-3).

Thompson, the Gophers' all-time leading rusher with 3,761 yards, had touchdown runs of 19, 27 and 8 yards, setting school career records for touchdowns with 38 and rushing touchdowns with 35. Thompson ran 37 times Saturday, also a career high, before leaving the game with about 12 minutes remaining. "We wanted to be able to have some offensive consistency tonight. I think we did that, but we knew that if they just lined it up and ran It right at us, we ATTN: CAR CELLULAR SYSTEMS INC. New PANASONIC TP500 0.

P300 Handheld Cellular Phone BLUFFTON 55, MANCHESTER 7 The host Beavers amassed 620 yards of total offense including 516 on the ground to blow past Manchester in a game played at Bluffton, Ohio, which counted for Manchester in the Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference standings- Led by the running of backs Darryl Gard (17 rushes, 183 yards) and Kris Walter (15-123), Bluffton jumped to a 20-0 lead after one quarter and led 35-0 at the half, before coasting home for its second win in three games. The Spartans dropped to 0-4. OENISON 34, EARLHAM 6 Jason Cooperider rushed for 134 yards and a pair of touchdowns and passed for another to lead the visiting Big Red in North Coast Athletic Conference action. Earlham, now 0-4 overall and 0-2 in conference play got it only score on Scott Salone's three-yard run in the fourth quarter. would have problems," said ISU coach Dennis Raetz.

"They're bigger physically in their offensive line than we are in our defensive line and that was the ballgame." Minnesota took a 10-0 first-quarter lead on Brent Berglund's 47-yard field goal and Thompson's 19-yard run. But three plays after Marcus Wilson Intercepted Scott Schaffner's pass at the Minnesota 36, Ray Wallace. scored on a 2-yard run to make it 10-7. Thompson's 27-yard scoring run made it 17-7, but the Sycamores cut the lead to three at halftime when. John Sahm hit John Story with a 53-yard bomb.

The Gophers played well in the second half, taking the kick-off and driving 73 yards in 10 plays, culminating with Thompson's 8-yard touchdown run. Later, they drove 84 yards in 1 1 plays, ending with a 5-yard bootleg by Schaffner. 3 PHONE BUYERS Mobilnet Certified Sales Service "The Cellular Leader in Indiana" $799 While Quantities Last warn Compare Performance, features and price! The best buy is THE EAGLE! Outperforms the Stihl 024! THE EAGLE is light, fast, powerful and FULL OF HEART! THE EAGLE 4600-18" Features: OREGON chain (World's 1 chain!) Adjustable chain oiler Pro-fire electronic ignition Chain Brake 8" bar Martinsville CLEAR CREEK LAWN GARDEN SPINA'S LAWN GARDEN Mooresville E-Z WAY RENTAL HARSHEY IMPLEMENT Shelbvville BILL NEU SONS SM. ENG. SALES SVC.

Sheridan SMALL ENGINES Westfield WESTFIELD POWER EQUIPMENT Zionsville RUST LANDSCAPE EQUIP. SUPPLY 2.75 cubic inch -1 ON SALE Indiana INDIANAPOLIS 38, VALPARAISO 14 Rodney Latham intercepted three passes and returned one 95 yards for a touchdown as the visiting Greyhounds beat Valparaiso In the Heartland Collegiate Conference opener for both teams. Latham's touchdown gave the Greyhounds a 10-0 lead and was one of six passes picked off by Indianapolis (3-1, 1-0 in the HCC). Kenny Helmuth added a 41 -yard interception return for a fourth-quarter touchdown. Valparaiso fell to 0-4 and 0-1.

WABASH 38, HOPE (MICH.) 28 Senior quarterback Brett Butler threw a school-record five touchdowns as host Wabash (3-0) outscored Hope, 38-28, in college football action Saturday afternoon. ftethunt-Cookman 0 0 0 7 -7 JKkwn Stati 13 7 0 7 27 JS Hallowav 2 run (Ayozie kick) JS R. Lewis 16 pass from Gregory (kick failed) JS Robinson 1 run (Ayozie kick) JS Hall 2 run (Ayozie kick) BC Hogan 2 run (McLachlan kick) BC First downs 23 Rushes-yards 38- 58 Passing yards 318 Return yards 148 Passes 18-49-2 Punts-avg Fumbles-lost 2-0 Penalties-yards 10-75 Time of possession 30:05 JS 24 39-206 221 69 14-31-0 2-1 13-116 29:55 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS RUSHING-Bethune-Cookman, Butler 15-66, Hogan 10-37, Thompson 3-11. Jackson State, Hall 9-71, Robinson (-71, Dixon 10-32. PASSING-Bethune-Cookman, Anderson 18-49-318-2.

Jackson State, Gregory 14-31-221-0. RECEIVING-Bethune-Cookman, R. Banks 5-118, E. Williams 4-85, Thomas 6-79, Butler 1-15, E. Banks 1-13.

Jackson State, R. Lewis 6-104, Barnett 2-44, J. Smith 1-35. "Not cashing in our opportunities was the difference. That's the bottom line," Bethune-Cook man coach Larry Little said.

The Tigers cashed in on the opening kickoff by driving 66 yards in 5 plays with Lee Holloway scoring on a 2-yard run the key play being a 30-yard pass from Shawn Gregory to flanker Ron Lewis. Late in the quarter, Gregory hooked up with Lewis on a 16-yard TD pass to make it 13-0. "I think that first touchdown was too easy for us," Gorden said. "We made too many mistakes and relied too much on our passing game after that. I like to run the ball more.

"If you throw the ball a lot and win, the other team feels they were finessed. If you run more, the other team feels like they were really beat." Gorden saw the kind of drive he likes on the Tigers' final score. "The 93-yard drive was the kind of drive Jackson State likes to produce," he said. "That's my kind of football." The final drive was capped by DEBBIE HIPPLE NORTH MERIDIAN OFFICE i ate mu.ii A Bethune-Cookman's Mike Thompson lunges for extra yardage Jackson St. takes despite being grabbed by several Jackson State players.

Circle City Classic New customer activation and 1 Cal' Today for Details CSI North 844-3866 year GTE Mobilnet Service Castleton Square Mall CSI South 787-8229 agreement required. 841-1006 (10 Minutes from Downtown) By MARK AMBROGI STAR STAFF WRITER For W.C. Gorden's Jackson State's Tigers, Saturday's Circle City Classic victory wasn't pretty but it was sweet. "To come up here and win this year Is redemption for last year when we should have won," said Gorden, whose team tied Florida 10-10, In the '88 Classic. This time Jackson State blasted Bethune-Cookman.

27-7, before a record Circle City crowd of 53,822 at the Hoosier Dome. This was the sixth annual game between two predominantly black schools. The Tigers won their fourth straight game to improve to 4-1 while the Wildcats fell to 3-2. Both teams are in Division l-AA. "I'm gratified with the win, but I felt we had too many mistakes," Gorden said.

"It was not a quality game." Jackson State allowed 376 total yards. But close to the goal line, the Jackson State defense stiffened. "Our defense did not concentrate very well in the open field," Gorden said. "Once inside the 20. pride and intensity took over and we toughened up." Tigers star linebacker Darion Conner agreed: "We had problems with our secondary.

But once we got close, we didn't give up anything." Conner, considered by many to be a first-round NFL pick, contributed five tackles, two sacks and blocked a 36-yard field goal attempt. Tigers cornerback Michael Wallace also blocked a field goal (a 30-yard attempt) and Intercepted a pass to kill another Wildcats drive. OR. BODY FENDER REPAIRS WITH EVERY PAINT JOB! a two-yard run by Jimmy Hall. That TD boosted Jackson State's lead to 27-0.

After being frustrated all day, Bethune-Cookman finally got into the end zone on a 2-yard run by Donnie Hogan with 6:53 left in the game. Jackson State's other score came on a 2-yard run by Alex Robinson in the second quarter. Gregory, who was named the game's offensive Most Valuable Player, completed 14 of 31 passes for 221 yards. "We knew Bethune-Cookman had a strong rushing defense (No. 1 in Division l-AA) so we came out ready to pass," Gregory said.

"We tried to keep them off balance. We threw the ball when they played run defense DYE YOUR VINYL TOP BEAUTIFUL COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM OPEN SATURDAY. HOURS? 1350 WEST 16th ST. 636-5304 4502 KEYSTONE AVE. 545-9995 19 FOR ONLY MZ KZ I easy starts welectronic tlOHQO 1 --cycleena.

139 opt. vac. attachment wvac attachment J1 69.99 -r SAVE Anderson BENOLE LAWN EQUIPMENT Carmel LAWN EQUIPMENT Franklin RHOADES TRUE VALUE Greenfield CORNER HARDWARE RANDY'S LAWNMOWER REPAIR Greenwood I lJKSV JiLd6 Blower PB1000 JPJtlA PAINT JOB ELSON'S LAWN GARDEN 7675 N. Michigan Road HEDLUND ACE HARDWARE 2369 E. 62nd Street HENTHORN'S MOWER ENGINE SERVICE 2220 Lafayette Road LYNDHURST LAWNMOWER 4220 N.

Michigan SOUTHPORT LAWN EQUIPMENT 510 E. Southport Rd. WATERMAN'S OUTDOOR POWER EQUIP. 7086 Southeastern Ave. lebanon HOWARD'S LAWN GARDEN Debbie Hipple $4,000,000 A commitment to servica separates the best REALTORS from the rest.

Join us in recognizing Debbie's $4,000,000 sales achievenjwnt. For real estate assisfance' caU "one of the best!" BUS. 844-4663 Res. 873-5264 ACE HOME CENTER Indianapolis ACE HARDWARE 7840 N. Michigan Road ARLINGTON POWER MOWER 6021 E.

36th Street 8 AM TO NOON 7:30 AM TO 6 PM 2730 MADISON AVE 787-1385 3215 E. WASHINGTON ST. 636-6501.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Indianapolis Star
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Indianapolis Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,552,850
Years Available:
1862-2024