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The Des Moines Register from Des Moines, Iowa • Page 26

Location:
Des Moines, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

IQ.g PKS MOINES 8UNDAT REGISTER OCT. 27. 1946. An Iowa State Pass by Norman Nets 7 Yards Against Oklahoma Am dorneT1 WHAT TO DO? NORMAN (IS) 5 1 GROUNDED r. 4 SI PITCHES Spr i "aw- -axis -4 be 3 ADVANCES THIS IS 7 YARDS GOLDING (O) TO 3S1 i SHORT ONE ll TO HOWARD (IS) fefvS MACHINE! GUN PHOTOS BT REGISTER STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER GEORQB TATE.

EE! paanna UVI STATISTICS. IOWA STATE O. OKLAHOMA H3. WARRIORS PLAY CHICAGO SQUAD nvie ifti miiX Mil DAVIS (O) Iowa 3 1 .104 Laun L. Morris Bosnyak L.

T. Paine Schneider G. Burrta Riding Rapnci Klootwyk: R. G. A ndros Cole R-T Walker Rolllnger R.

Giese Farnl Q. Mitchell Norman L. Royal Weber R. Golding Howard F. Davis Flt downs Hushing PaxnlnK Penalties Net yardit rushing Yards lost 13 43 ready dispatched to the showers, the reserves banged over three touchdowns in the last five minutes.

The first came when Ed Kreick shot through the middle of the line on a delayed buck and romped 40 yards to score. Thomas missed the conversion. That must have disgusted him, for with 90 seconds to go, Thomas himself needled off tackle for 53 et yards forwards Forwards atlwiptrd 1M GIESE (O) Okla-noma IS 11 4 398 4 a 130 14 i 57 ft I 47 8 3 no 204 133 71 13 1 10 Oklahoma Is A Hit at I.S.C. Homecoming By Ijeighton lloush. 8Uff Writer.) AMES, IA.

Iowa State tried to fight football ability with football fire here Saturday, and found It didn't work. The super charged Cyclones quickly ran out of gas and Oklahoma almost ran them off Clyde wwards rHiileta 4 lnterrntrd by Yards Interceptions rrt urnrd runt 11 Krlumril by 4 KIK-kt-d by Flints, average 3B Kiikuffs 3 Returned by Kirkoffo average Art Vards kicks returned .....2 1 I'unts 28 Klrkoff 18K rumbles 2 Ball lost Penalties A ards lost on penalties 49 ZJF" BIG SIX STANDINGS. 2J I- Pet. l.OOO Score by quarters Iowa State 0 Oklahoma 7 9 20 27 63 Summary Touchdowns. Davis, Dink-Ins, Mitchell, Golding.

Allsup 2. Kreick 2, Thomas. Harp; points after touchdowns. Wallace 5, Thomas, Kreick; sals-ty, Oklahoma. Substitutions Iowa State: Ends.

Wtlt-sle, Paetz, Bennett. Jensen; tackles. Cole, Zlomke, Seibold, Fathauer. Soper; guards, Wright, Anderson, Ethlngton, Myers; centers. Kokjer.

Schoel; backs. Dennis, Ferguson. Friedl. Knack. Sutherland, Kraus.

Dedecker, Laun, Klootwyk, Chaun-cey. Paulson. Oklahoma Ends, Owens, Goad, Dinkins, Heape; tackles, Morris, Hale, Trotter, Hinton. Wright; guards. McNabb, D.

Andros, Husak. West, C. Paine; renters, Tillman. O'Dea: backs. Wallace, Bibb, Brewer, Harratt, Harp.

Neher, Allsup, Thomas, Fischer, Kreick. Officials Referee, Robert Miller of Missouri: umpire. Dwlght Ream of Washburn, head linesman. William Day of Nebraska: field judge, Mike Oberhel-man of Kansas State. w.

2 2 2 'y Missouri Nebraska Oklahoma Kansas Iowa State Kansas State LOOK 0 l.OOO 1 1 3 3 1 3 1W s- --i NEXT FOES. Fnr Iowa State For Okianom a Kansas State. -Texas Christian. rARNi (IS I fc Vn35Mt Oklahoma 34. That was absolutely all for the Cyclones, who found that It takes more than spirit to match a major league team of Oklahoma's calibre.

Backed up on its own 13 by two consecutive penalties, Oklahoma struck suddenly midway in the opening period for the game's first points. In three plays the Sooners had a touchdown. First, they unveiled a spread formation and Joe Golding sailed through a yawning hole at left tackle for 26 yards. He was shoved out of bounds on the 39. Next, Jack Mitchell took a handoff on the same spread and raced 15 yards througTi the right side to the Iowa State 46.

And finally Fullback Ad Davis steamed between Iowa State's right guard and right tackle, outfoxed the secondary and ran all the way to the end zone. Dave Wallace obliged with the extra point, his first of five. The Sooners' next two points were a gift from the Cyclones' center. He spiraled the ball far over Punter Bob Dennis' head on fourth down early in the second quarter. Dennis raced back frantically, grabbed the ball in the end zone and kicked it into a wall of Sooners.

It rebounded out of the end zone for an automatic safety. The second touchdown, also in the second period, came without warning, too. Wallace Connects. Wallace, on first down on the Iowa State 4X), hurried back from his quarterback post and flung a long pass to End Merle Dinkins, who outran Ronnie Norman to catch the ball for a touchdown. If Iowa State harbored any idea it was still in the ball game The Chicago Torpedoes, giant Negro semipro eleven, will invade Valley stadium today at 2:30 p.

meeting the West De Moines Warriors. Little is known about the Chicago club, but it is said to aver-age more than 195 pounds and to include former college grid stars. The Warriors, beaten, 14-7. in their last start Oct. 16 have added two new players to their roster.

Carl Franson, former East High scat back, and Bud Van Cleve, who also prepped at the Lee township school, are slated for duty in the West Des Moines back-field. Also ready for action after being out for several weeks with three broken ribs will be Ray Vermeulen, former Roosevelt fullback. Del Lucksinger, former Valley High back, will not, however, see service. He is still suffering from a knee injury received in the Warriors victory over Sutherland. The Warrior lineup: John Boaovtch.

left end; Re Fisber. left tackle: Johnny Griffith, left guard; Bob Pritchard. center; Bill 8ander, right guard: Frank right tsejtle: Art Guesaford, right end; Clarence McCui-lough. quartsrback; Omar James, left halfback; Tom A thy, right halfback; and Walt wrens, fullback. GOING 'HOME' Ed Davis, a big and fast Sooner fullback, is heading for Oklahoma's first touchdown against Iowa State as Warren Giese, 'Oklahoma end, takes out Ed Farni, the Cyclone safety man.

Davis traveled 46 yards. Oklahoma won 63-0. MACHINE! GUN PHOTO BY STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER GEORGE YATES. noon lasted the more the white-suited Sooners scored. They got three more in the third period and four in the final, the last after the gun had fired prematurely and fans were flocking across the field.

A thirdstring back, Laddie Harp, took advantage of the confusion to intercept an Iowa State pass on the game's last play. He skipped down the field for 68 yards to score. It was the longest dash of. a day that was filled with sensational sprints 99 per cent of them by big, fast boys representing the new gridiron dynasty now rising under Coach Jim Ta-tum in Oklahoma. Penetrate Only Twice.

So' impotent were the home boys that they made only four first downs and carried the ball into enemy territory just twice. The sole major Iowa State offensive came in the second quarter as a result of Dick Howard's 41-yard gain on a lateral from Ed Parni and the threat ended on the Sooner 31. Jim Sutherland, Don Ferguson and Ray Klootwyk did get together for a brief spurt in the third period but it died on the yards and another touchdown. This time he added the seventh point. Then, of course, came the 68-yard Laddie Harp offering on the game's last gasp.

Golding, called the greatest back ever to come out of Norman, stood out with his fast, deceptive dashes, but he had lots of help as the Sooners piled up 398 yards on the ground and 130 in the air. Neither were there any weaknesses apparent in an Oklahoma line which handled the Cyclone opponents witn apparent ease. For Iowa State, Dean Laun at end looked good, as did Klootwyk, both at guard and fullback. The Cyclone line, in the first half, played well enough defensively, frequently piling up the darting Oklahoma backs. Line Backer Jim Riding was injured on the kickoff following Oklahoma's first touchdown and his loss hurt severely.

It was Oklahoma's second Big Six victory in as many games, Iowa State's third straight loop loss as well as fifth defeat in six games. Williams Field to win their Big Six game, 63-0. It all adds up to a major Iowa State disaster. The worst defeat in the memory of the oldest local inhabitant, it was also the first time an Iowa State football team had been shut out in the 35 games they've played under Coach Mike Michal-ske. Nebraska last turned the trick, 26-0, In 1942, one game before Alike took over.

A 55-0 defeat in 1941 by these same Sooners previously was the most punishing setback for Iowa State since they started playing the game here in 1891. Some 16,000 homecomers saw their "coked-up" favorites yield a touchdown in the first period, then another plus a safety in the second, trailing by 16-0 at the half. Then the rout began and the longer the very long after Lonborg to Coach Cage All-Stars CHICAGO, ILL. VP) Arthur (Dutch) Lonborg, Northwestern's basketball coach, will handle the 1946 college all-stars for the seventh successive year in their annual game with the professional champions the Fort Wayne Zoll-ners, Nov. 29, In Chicago Stadium, it was announced Saturday.

Lonborg's associate coach will be chosen from a list which includes Henry Iba of Oklahoma Aggies, Ben Carnevale of North Carolina, Adolh Rupp of Kentucky, Phog Allen of Kansas, Howard Cann of New York university, Nibs Price of California, Ray Meyer of DePaul, Elmer Ripley, formerly of Notre Dame, Ev Shelton of Wyoming and Harold Olson, formerly of Ohio State. on a fumble recovered by Wade Walker to set up that one and it was 29-0. Oklahoma ground 60 yards for the third tally of the quarter, with John Allsup crashing four yards off right tackle to score and Wallace converting. The Sooner3 were poised for another as the period ended. On the first play of the final "quarter, Allsup again went five yards for a tally.

Wallace again converted and It was 43-0. That's the way it stood until the game was almost over. Then, with the Sooner first stringers al after the half ended at 16-0, what happened when play resumed quickly squelched sucn thoughts. Three minutes after they started, Jack Mitchell fielded one of Ronnie Norman's punts and whisked 65 yards to score. The gridiron was littered with Cyclone tacklers deposited there by an efficient display of Sooner down-field blocking.

Wallace missed the conversion and it was 22-0. Two minutes later he didn't miss one following an 11-yard touchdown sprint by Golding. The Sooners cashed in UTAH STATE WINS. MISSOULA, MONT. (U.P.) Utah State, sparked by two lone touchdown gallops by Right End Norvel Hansen, smothered Montana, 27-7, Saturday before 8,000 homecoming fans.

Oklahoma's Joe Golding Dashes 25 Yards at Iowa State's Homecoming se I I aj, II 1 Ll OKLAHOMA PLAY 0 i AROUND END THERE'S A HOLE jH TROUBLE LOOMS H7 ll 01 IPoFAINli i3 4 i rT 'sy GOLDING (O) HAS BALL "1 5 4S fi 4 i -ev fc. a. i Vf'o IT s. AY'S wi 'Zr- lTs ARMS PAST "9 1 FATHAUER (IS) FARNI (IS) CLOCKED OUT rvtrTrJSt ff ii a. i K'a -ic t-rw cm i0 I rmiini i 7 ii Mi aaateaaasaBBa Vj CAUGHT FROM DEHIND t7 ilMORE HEXil STILL UPRIGHT jrtifA LITTLE FARTHER ia- ft.

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