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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 68

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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68
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4D- SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR- Maryland routs Indiana Classy By DAVID BENNER Star Sportswriter College Park. Md. As it turned out. maybe the price wasn't right. Indiana State's football team came here Saturday afternoon to play a football game and make a little money.

The Sycamores got their cash, but lost a little pride and possibly two fine football players as Maryland dismantled them. 38 0. This was what is known as a "money" game. For Division I AA Indiana State it offers the chance to play a top notch football team in I A and it gives the athletic program a guaranteed cut of the gate. The cash flow generated in a trip like this is greater than any home game the Sycamores may play.

But aside from the pocketbook, it turned out to be a painful trip. The 3 2 Terrapins, who earlier this season extended West Virginia and Penn State before losing, made the most of the meat thrown into whose last name is Esiason and whose middle name ought to be Easy because that's how he made it look. The junior from New York completed 13 of 15 passes for 203 yards and two touchdowns, in less than half a game. He wasn't the only one doing damage. Running back Willie Joyner had 76 yards in 13 carries and one touchdown.

John Nash had 51 yards in eight carries and Rick Badanjek 36 in two. "I WAS CONCERNED coming in," said Ross. "We really didn't know what to expect from them. We had to come out strong and we did. We came out and played very good football, both offensively and defensively." The Terps won the opening toss and less than five minutes after that flip, Joyner skipped into the end zone on a 15 yard run.

Jess Atkinson, who booted a 43 yard field goal in the third quarter, converted the first of his five extra points. It was a disheartening defeat for the game, but undermanned. Sycamores. They dropped to 4 2 on the season, but still remain in the chase for the Missouri Valley Conference, championship. However, two key players were hurt Saturday and their availablity for the season is unsure.

QUARTERBACK Jeff Miller, who last week engineered a last gasp drive to lead ISU to victory, took a shot to the ribs in the second quarter on an option play. He was taken to a local hospital and released, but was ordered to visit the Indiana State Health Center Saturday night Linebacker Dan Maher, one of the Sycamores' top defensive players, limped off in the second half with a possible dislocated knee. His status depends on if there was any internal damage. On the field and on the scoreboard, a painful day. It was a case of Maryland coming out and lowering the Boomer.

He's the Terrapin quarterback. It took just more than three minutes for Maryland to score again. Esiason hitting Greg Hill on an 8 yard touchdown toss. Fourteen zero. Then the Sycamores got something going, strangely enough, while punting as they picked up their first first down on a roughing the kicker penalty.

Two plays later they had another first down on Jeff Miller's 13 yard pass to Terry Bell. Two plays later. Miller hit Eric Robinson out of the backfield for first and 10 at the Maryland 37. But after that success. Miller missed two straight passes on overthrows and was forced to run for 4 yards on third down.

Mike Johannes missing the only one of his 11 punts compounded the misery by shanking one off the side of his foot for 7 yards. An exchange of punts followed, then Maryland capped an 84yard, eight play drive with Esiason hitting Darryl Emerson with a 38 yard scoring toss. After the next ISU punt, Esiason drove the Terps 67 yards in 96 passes rain on Butler Bowl takes air 'raicE- iil LiMi'-iM mum i '5 v.V I I I k. i f. yT State nine plays and sneaked in a yard for the score.

Indiana State punted again, and Maryland scored again, Badanjek go ing 40 yards on a reverse. It was 35 0 and Ross summoned the subs just before halftime. Indian Statt 0- 0 Mrylnd 14 Jl 0-M Mary Joyner IS run (Alklnwn kick) Mary Hill I pau (rem Euaton (Atkinson kick Mary Emercon pau from Eslaton (Atkinson kick) Mry Esiason I run (Atkinson kick) Miry Badanitk 34 run (Atkinson kick) Mary Atkinson FG 43 A STATISTICS ISU Mary 1 3M4 54-257 it 213 31 klH It-JI) II 13 136 l-l 1-0 lit 14 24 01 X) First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts Fumbles lost Penalties-yards Time of possession INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Maryland. Joyner 13-74, Nash 1-51, Island 1-30, Indiana State, -50 PASSING Maryland, Esiason 13-15-0-203, Indiana State, Miller 4-10-0 30, Bartel SO-J. RECEIVING Maryland.

Davit 2-17, Indianai State, Robinson 3-2. six catches for 66 yards, were Stryzinski's principal aerial companions. Chakos, who handles Butler field goal chores, also had made four out of five attempts on previous Satur days but misfired twice from the 20 both before and after Sehaefer booted the Grizzlies to a lead they never surrendered. Franklin 0370 -10 Butler 0040-4 FG Sehaefer 20. Chester 12 pass from Wray (Sehaefer kick).

Streiff 11 pass from Strynnski (run failed). STATISTICS nrFnkn First downs Rushes-yards 44-111 30-t-tS) Passing yardage 444 174 Return yards 44 47 Passes W-4M 14-52-? Punts 11-15 5 Fumbies-loif 4-1 J.I Penalties-yards US n75 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING-Franklin: Winnefeld 4-11. Knoi 5-10, Lundahl 7-4, Otin 4-S, Abernalhy 2-t Wray 7-minu 44 Butler: Howard 22-44, Chaoman 15-H. itryiinski 4-l, Parks l-l. Naylor 2-minus 5.

PASSING-Franklin: Wray 14-52-174, 1 TO. Butler: Strynnski 19-44-a, I TO. RECEIVING-Frankltn: Chester 441. 2-4, Knoi 3-33, Winnefeld 3-22. Witham 1-4.

Luddaht 1- 7. Ousting 1-1 Olm l-minus Butler Wattace 2-34, Chakos 30. Mmnick 2 24. Chapman V-24. Warne 2- 23, Streiff 111, Clark I -I.

Hoskins 1-7, Naylor 1-5 fk SHINE RIPS SEWN FALCON GLASS BELTED RADIAL WHITEWALL consequence since the Bulldogs still had about 40 yards to travel with the clock coming up zero. Franklin, not particularly interested in running the football unless forced, showed a minus 15 yards on the ground with Wray being decked for losses totaling 45. The object of a determined rush that resulted in four sacks. Wray threw seven incomple-tions before halfback Randy Knox came to the rescue with a 10 yard catch despite losing his footing in the gooey going HALFBACK Doug Winnefeld. 13 yards in four tries, was Franklin's most effective rusher.

Howard and Chapman led the Butler assault with a net of 48 each as they carried on 37 of 46 ground calls. Chester, guilty of dropping a couple of well thrown balls, still set the receiving pace with four grabs for 61 yards and teammate Robin Hammond had two for 46. Tom Wallace and Ted Chakos, combining to make RUBBER HEELS a-uay sq' in mmwn aaWikMlMiaiuaUikHaMaHikiialuiki urn JP i it 10-0 with 8 43 to go in the the third period. Six minutes later Butler nullified the TD after having muffed two close-in field goal chances in the first half that might have turned things in the Blue's favor. Getting a break when Franklin safety Bruce Clifton fumbled one of Stryzinski's six punts, the Bulldogs staged a 44 yard push that returned them to contention.

Andy Howard, who carried on 22 of Butler's 46 rushes, took charge until Franklin stiffened inside its 20. Then Stryzinski fired a 7yarder to wide receiver Jim Hoskins for a first down at the 10 and ran his own left side for 4. A DELAY OF game penalty halted the Bulldogs, but only on a temporary basis as Stryzinski flipped an 11-yarder to flanker Rick Streiff who outfought Franklin's Aaron Stout for possession in the end zone comer. After Butler placekick holder Bill Sylvester failed to surprise the Grizzlies with an attempted two point conversion run. the count went to 10 6 and the scoreboard operator might as well have gone home.

Both quarterbacks continued to hit a few targets but missed more often than not and whatever chance Butler had to pull it out vanished in the wake of two last gasp pickoffs. Stryzinski threw his fifth interception from Franklin's 31 eight minutes into the final quarter and that just about sealed the Bulldogs' fate. Hoping to capitalize on a 15-yard Franklin punt which gave them possession at midfield, the Bulldogs gained 19 yards on four smashes by No. 2 tailback Eric Chapman before faltering. Tackled by linebacker Gary Merk in the process of throwing.

Stryzinski missed Chapman on a third down toss in Chapman's direction and had his next one burgled by Stout There was time for one more by free safety Phil Schneider following the last of Grizzly kicker Tony Bran-denstein's 11 punts. But it was of no liutler put pressure on Franklin's Steve Wray Landy Brccdcn t94) heads pass rush for Bulldogs Little Giants roll behind Broecker nwii nn.n.wrwMpr. mm A UNIT OF ALLIED STORES I ftfCv their Byrd Stadium cage. They had 490 yards total offense to Indiana State's 125 and 26 first downs to ISU's seven. -THEY WERE JUST too strong for us physically." Raeti said.

"Maryland's a damn good football team." The Terps proved it in the first half when the outcome was decided. They led 140 after the first 15 min-utes and 35 0 at the half. Maryland could muster only a field goal in the second half, but that was with the substitutes using the playing time. "I want to thank Coach iBobby) Ross." said dejected ISU Coach Dennis Raetz. "He could have made it as bad as he wanted.

He not only could have scored a bunch, but he could have made it tough on uS the rest of the year." Ross admitted it was a time to utilize all of his personnel." "We used five tailbacks, six fullbacks, three quarterbacks, four tight ends and all three of our offensive lines," he said, making it sound like a preseason scrimmage. Star photo by Jerry Clark rout of Georgetown (Ky.) in a Heartland Collegiate Conference game. Maltby started in place of Scecin-a High School grad John Fazio, who sat out because of a kidney infection. Maltby threw two touchdown passes to Russ Dennick. in the first and fourth quarters, and was 24 of 37 for the 3 2 Pumas.

Dennick caught eight passes for 133 yards in the game dominated by St Joseph's, which built a 24-0 lead until Georgetown (15) scored twice in the fourth quarter. Craig Giancola. who kicked a 39-yard field goal for the Pumas in the second quarter, and had four conversions. Tim Callahan and Keith Jones scored the Pumas' other two touchdowns on runs of 3 and 1 yards. TAYLOR 30.

MANCHESTER 20 Quarterback Rollin Ford hit Bryan Herr with two touchdown passes and Troy Silvernale kicked three field goals and three extra points as Taylor beat Manchester, 30-20. in a Hoosier Buckeye Conference game at Upland. Ind. Taylor hit Ford with a 6-yard scoring pass in the first quarter before Manchester countered with a 38-yard, Dave Gilbert pass that tied the score, 7 7. With Taylor ahead.

13 7. on Silvernale field goals of 32 and 13 yards. Ford again found Herr. this time from 20 yards out for a 20-7 advantage. Ford then gave Taylor a 27-7 halftime lead when he ran 5 yards for another touchdown.

Silvernale added a 37 yard field goal in the third quarter. ROSE-HULMAN 28, EARLHAM 23 Rob Schrader carried 29 times for 153 yards and three touchdowns to lead Rose Hulman to a 28 23 victory over host Earlham. Schrader scored on touchdown runs of 1. 5 and 20 yards as the Engineers upped their record to 2 3 on the season. The other Rose-Hul-man touchdown came on a 61 yard run by Jeff Jackson.

Bob Berg had an outstanding day for 04 Earlham. He scored touchdowns on runs of 80 and 1 yards, and gained 149 yards on 18 carries. Eart-ham's other touchdown came on Dave Dale's 1 yard carry. FINDLAY 17, ANDERSON 10 Sophomore running back L.C Cole man ran 18 times for 150 yards and a touchdown as unbeaten Findlay knocked off Anderson. 17 10.

in Hoosier Buckeye Conference action. Coleman bolted 63 yards for a score in the first quarter as Findlay. 4-0 overall and 3-0 in the league, ran to a 17-0 lead Anderson, with a 2 2 mark overall and in the conference, was held to a tola! of 175 yards, only 55 on the ground shoe repair special Monday Tuesday Wednesday 18.99 Reg. 24.95. Men's shoes completely rebuilt.

Makes worn shoes look and wear like new! Full leather soles PLUS all the repairs listed above. Shoe Repair, D034. Downtown store only. By MAX STULTZ Only a spectator could believe what he saw in Butler Bowl Saturday afternoon where a couple of college football teams saturated the already moisture-laden air with 96 passes and came away with a mere 16 points. In the end.

Franklin had its way over the Bulldogs, 10 6, with the aid of nine Butler turnovers which included six interceptions that drove a homecoming crowd of 9,235 to distraction. Hanging on after kicker Dave Schaefer's 28 yard field goal halfway through the second quarter gave them a 3 0 edge, the Grizzlies scored their third straight victory in the series and went 20 in Heartland Conference play while the Bulldogs skidded to 11. FLINGERS STEVE Wray of Franklin and Ron Stryzinski of Butler finally authored the game's only two touchdowns both in the third period but were something less than amazing otherwise. Wray. not" completely healthy from a shoulder injury received in the season opener, let fly 52 times for only 16 completions while Stryzinski was good on only 19 of 44 tries and doubled his previous interception total of three.

Wray got away with two interceptions by Tony Sales but provided the difference by hitting ace receiver Joe Chester on a 12 yard flip makine Evansville flurry nips ICU, 10-7 STAR STATE REPORT Evansville. Ind. Evansville scored all 10 of its points within a minute of the second quarter Saturday afternoon, as the Purple Aces beat Indiana Central, 107. in a Heartland Collegiate Conference game. Trailing.

7-0. Evansville got on the scoreboard on a 27-yard field goal by Craig Helfert When Indiana Central fumbled the ensuing kickoff. Neal Tucker recovered for the Aces at ICU's 31. On the first play, quarterback Ralph Pavek hit Troy Staves with an 8-yard pass. Staves then pitched to Don Austin, who went the final 23 yards for the touchdown.

INDIANA CENTRAL, now 14 overall and 02 in the HCC got on the scoreboard after just 3.18. when quarterback Dave Vormohr scored from 1 yard out That touchdown was set up when Central's Curt Hughes intercepted a Pavek pass and returned it 45 yards to the Evansville 3. The Grey hounds had a chance to win the game in the closing moments, when they drove from their own 18 to the Evansville 30. But Evansville 's Ty Chiesa came up with his second interception of the game to save the win for the Aces. Evansville is now 3 2 overall and 2-0 in the HCC.

Hitter wins, 19-7 Ritter broke its six game losing streak with a 19-7 upset victory over Mishawaka Marian Saturday night in the Ritter homecoming football game played on the Northwest field. Robert Pfeifer rifled two touchdown passes to Ballod to pave the way for Ritier's first win. The pair clicked on a 60-yard touchdown play in the first quarter and again for 47 yards in the second period to put the Raiders ahead. 12 7. at half-time' Mike Hogue added the final Ritter tally on an llyard run in the fourth quarter with Pfeifer booUng the PAT.

Ritter totaled 252 yards passing and 150 rushing against Mishawaka's 116 rushing and 120 passing The Marian invaders also scored their lone TD in the first period on a long pass Don Adams was the receiver on a 60-yard TD pass from Ralph Seet and the latter converted Mr 0000; Includes Fokon brond special tires and more! Quantities are purchases, blemishes, discount designs, radial and bias ply, used limited in some sizes. STAR SPECIAL REPORTS Quarterback Dave Broecker set another record as Wabash crushed Washington iMo.l. 39), in college football Saturday afternoon at St. Louis. Behind Broecker's three touchdown passes and a bruising defense, the Little Giants raised their record to SO in NCAA Division III play.

Broecker. from Carmel High School, now has thrown 35 career touchdown passes, eclipsing Dave Harvey's school record of 32 set in 1978 Broecker also holds records at Wabash for total yardage and com pletions. He was nine of 17 for 111 yards against Washington, which dropped to 2 3 Wabash led 32-0 at halftime. Broecker threw touchdown passes to Tim Granson. Greg Mauch and Nick Crnkovich.

and the Little Giants' defense tallied two safeties, tackling quarterback Dick Ward in the end zone both times. Wabash sacked Ward eight times the game and also sacked the Bears' punter. Mauch. a senior fullback who missed last season and the first two games of this season with a knee injury, rushed for 51 yards in five carries and caught four passes. Eugene Anderson, from Indianapolis Broad wrapped up the scoring on a 2-yard run in the third quarter.

Joe Bevelhirner kicked five extra points. Broecker played only the first half, and Wabash used every player on its roster. Wabash was ranked 11th in the Division III poll last week. DePALW 42. ILL.

BENEDICTINE 0 DePauw scored 35 first half points and the Tiger defense held Illinois Benedictine to only 27 rushing yards to take a 42-0 victory at Lisle. III. The Tigers' Rich Bonaccorsi scored two touchdowns on 1-yard runs and Fran Lolli caught a pair of TD passes from quarterback Tracy Gifford to highlight the DePauw assault Lolli made three receptions for 57 total yards, the TD catches com mg from 28 and 17 yards. Punt returner Tim Weaver scored a TD in the first quarter on a 46-yard return. The freshman returned two pur.is for 80 yards and set a school record for most punt return yardage in a season.

The other Tiger TD was scored by Rick Lindlow on a 58 yard run in the game's first quarter. Plaeekicker Br.an Begley was credited with six PAT kjeks. The Tigers are 41 for the season; Illinois Benedictine dropped to 2 3. ST. JOSEPH'S Jl.

GEORGETOWN (KY.I 14 Reserve quarter back Mike Maltby passed for 298 yards and two touchdowns at Rensselaer, leading St Joseph's to a 14 STEEL BELTED RADIAL WHITEWALL SIZE P185.75R13 P195 75R14 P2C5 75RU P215 75RU P2C5 75R15 P215 75R15 P225 75R15 P235 75R15 T. 1 6 3 01 7-'" $49 L2 I "I ill I $65 I I Lss i ii SIZE -v PRICE BR78 13 $39 DR78 14 $44 A ER78-U $40 FR78 14 $48 GR78 14 $50 i GR78 15 $50 HR78 15 $52 j' IR78 15 $54 I 1 44 2 8 iL POLYESTER CORD BLEMISHED SIZE PRICE A78I3 $30 E7814 $56 F7814 $28 G78 14 $30 G78 15 $30 H7815 $32 Plus 1 42 2 3 FET Add S3 for wfutewoOs limited slock ooilobie. ELECTRONIC IGNITION TUNE-UP We do all mis Install new plugs Adjust Kile speed fan belts Set timing Inspect rotor ond tnbutor cop and d.s 4y) 59.88 6-cyf 34.88 8-cyl 39.88 Most American tors jjjj We reor Turn -Tapifm DISC, DRUM BRAKE SERVICE 79.88 WINTERIZATION SERVICE A We do all this. Dram ond Hush cooling system Adii tip to 2 gollons nnti ltfft fhetk hoses I herk ond odUSt oil dtive belts Pressure test system v- 15.88 I Mosl AmcrKon CO'J do oil this Install front pads ond snoes ond true rotors ond drums Inspect calipers ond wneei cylinder Pepock front bearing Inspect hoses CKeck master cylinder Bleed ond odrcst Most American cars, some foreign cars I 1 I II III i i 4.

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