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Tyrone Daily Herald from Tyrone, Pennsylvania • Page 5

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District Six Playoffs CLASS AAAA (Chunploiuhlp) Saturday, Nov. 17 Hollldayiburg 21, Somerset 7. CLASS AAA (Semifinals) Frldiy, Nov. 16 Central 33. Pain Cambria Saturday, Nov.

17 Huntingdon 51, Central Cambria 22. (Champloriihlp) Nov. 24 Central vi. Huntingdon at Altoona Manilon Park, 7 p.m. CLASS AA (Semlflnali) Friday, Nov.

16 Purchaie Line It, Bald Eagle-Nltlany 14. Saturday, Nov. 17 United 20, Forest HIIU18. (Champlonihlp)' Nov. 23 Purchaie Line va.

United at Altoona Manilon Park, 7 p.m. CLASS A (SemlflnaU)' Friday, Nov. Laurel Valley 33, Homer- Center 6. Saturday, Nov. 17 Clayiburg-Klmmel 40, Wllllamiburg 32 (2 OT).

(Champloiuhlp) Nov. Valley va. Clayiburg-Klmmel at Altoona Manilon Park, 2 p.m. THE DAILY HERALD, Tyrone, rj Penn State Defuses Rocket. Irish SOUTH BEND, Ind.

(UPI) Notre Dame showed Saturday it is just another football team without the "Rocket." Raghib Ismail, the flanker who sparked the Irish to a No. 1 ranking, was sidelined in the second half with an injury and Notre Dame subsequently failed to move the ball, losing 24-21 to No. 14 Penn State. 1 'I don't think you can lose a player of Ismail's talent and not have it hurt many things," Patemo said. "We were a little tight at the start.

We just tried to do a little better. Notre Dame has a tendency to wear people down. "We played a lot of people. We wanted to control our own destiny in the fourth quarter." Rick Mirer completed l-of-9 second-half passes for 21 yards and threw interceptions to set up two Penn State scores, including the winning field goal by freshman Craig Fayak S. rjTS agalnsl tanail.

Ho worked fir tray- wr S1 fhinrt ho situation years here," Nittany Lion Terry Smith said. "This was our bowl game. We were 100 percent confident we would beat them. Everybody is in awe of them. We don't have that respect.

We know we can play with Penn State's defensive back Darren Perry intercepted a Mirer pass and returned it 20 yards to the Irish 19 three plays before Fayak's kick, Which gave the Nittany Lions their eighth straight victory and only lead of the game. "We tried to force something when THE DAILY HERALD, Tyrone, Monday, November 19, 1990 Page 5 Colorado No. 1 Lions Are Tenth In UPI Poll thing he got. In the first half, Ismail caught four passes for 76 yards, ran five times for 22 yards and returned a punt 11 yards. But he was sidelined the entire second half with a bruised thigh and the Irish offense collapsed.

"We played them a little tighter in the second half, but we didn't change Orange Bowl May Regret Decision mo score was tied at before mmy hfe, Fayak said. "I prob- said. "When you try to win you always ably won't believe it until I'm back run the risk of home and see it on the tape. I've practiced that kick 1,000 times in my backyard. I told the holder it was just like in my backyard." The Irish offense that dominated the first half gained just 76 second-half yards.

"There's no doubt we built a lot of offense around Rocket," Irish By JEFF SHAIN UPI Sports Writer Orange Bowl officials must now be regretting their unconditional invitation to No. 1 Notre Dame. No. 14 Perm State all but knocked the Fighting Irish out of a national-title game 'situation Saturday, as Craig Fayak kicked a 34-yard field goal with four seconds remaining to give the Nittany Lions a 24-21 victory. "You have to live with it, learn from it and Notre Dame Coach Lou Holtz said.

"The question is, where do we go from here?" The answer remains Miami, as Orange Bowl officials last weekend invited the Fighting Irish to face No. 2 Colorado in the New Year's Night game regardless of Notre Dame's final two regular-season results. The bowl was attempting to set up a national-championship game between the two top-ranked teams in this week's UPI Coaches Poll, in the process shunning No. 3 Miami. The Hurricanes wound up making an agreement to play in the Cotton Bowl.

But- now Colorado is expected to ascend to No. 1 and Miami to second, ruining the Orange Bowl's plans. Notre Dame's chances against Penn State seemingly went down at the same time Raghib Ismail did. leading Heisman Trophy candidate, was sidelined the entire second half with a bruised thigh. With its catalyst out, the Notre Dame offense that dominated the first half gained just 76 second-half yards.

"I don't think you can lose a player of Ismail's talent and not have it hurt you," Penn State Coach Joe Patemo said. "I thought we did a good job against Ismail. He worked for everything he got." In the first half, Ismail caught four passes for 76 yards, ran five times for 22 yards and returned a punt 11 yards. Rick Mirer completed 1 of 9 second- half passes for 21 yards and threw interceptions to set up two Perm State scores, including the field goal. "We were a little tight at the start.

We just tried to do a little better," Paterno said. "Notre Dame has a tendency to wear people down. We played a lot of people. We wanted to control our own destiny in the fourth quarter." Darren Perry intercepted a Mirer pass and returned it 20 yards to the Notre Dame 19-yard line three plays before Fayak's deciding kick, which gave the Nittany Lions their eighth straight win. "I've never been in this situation before in my life," Fayak said.

"I probably won't believe it until I'm back home and see it on the tape. I've practiced that kick 1,000 times in my backyard. I told the holder it was just like in my backyard." Penn State's Tony Sacca completed 22 of 34 passes for a career-best 277. yards and three touchdowns. His previous best was 243 yards in losses to Texas and Southern Cal earlier this year.

In other games Saturday featuring Top 10 teams, No. 3.Miami blasted Boston College 42-12, No. 4 Brigham Young shot down Utah 45-22, No. 5 Georgia Tech walloped Wake Forest, No. 6 Texas thumped Texas Christian 38-10, Maryland upended No.

7 Virginia 35-30 and No. 10 Florida State routed Memphis Slate 35-3. Also, No. 13 Tennessee topped No. 11 Mississippi 22-13, No.

12 Iowa ripped Purdue 38-9, No. 15 Clemson beat South Carolina 24-15, No. 16 Michigan hammered Minnesota 35-18, No. 18 Ohio State rolled over Wisconsin 35-10, No. 19 Southern Cal overcame UCLA 45-42, No.

20 Texas nipped Arkansas 20-16, co-No. 21 Michigan State held off Northwestern 29-22, San Jose State dumped No. 23 Fresno State 42-7 and No. 24 Illinois defeated Indiana 24-10. In late games, No.

8 Washington blasted Washington Stale 55-10, co- No. 21 Auburn routed Georgia 33-10 and co-No. 25 California lost to Stanford 27-25. At Boulder, Darian Hagan rushed for 78 yards and two touchdowns and threw for 200 yards and another TD in the first half to lead Colorado. The victory made the Buffaloes the first team other than Oklahoma or Nebraska to win back-to-back Big Eight titles.

At Miami, Craig Erickson threw for 153 yards and three in the third quarter to lead Miami over Boston College. Erickson finished with 13 completions in 26 attempts for 320 yards and four touchdowns. At Salt Lake City, Ty Detmer threw for 451 yards and five touchdowns to lead Brigham Young to the Western Athletic Conference tiile. With his 444 yards in total offense, Detmer set his 17th NCAA record with 10,114 yards of career total offense. At Winston-Salem, N.C., flanker Bobby Rodriguez caught one touchdown pass and ran for another to lead Georgia Tech to its first Atlantic Coast Conference title.

The win extended Georgia Tech's unbeaten streak to 14 games, the longest in the nation. At Fort Worth, Texas, Peter Gardere equaled a Texas record with four touchdown passes, including two in a 53-second span of the fourth quarter. The Longhoms took their 23rd straight win over Texas Christian dating back to 1958. At freshman Mark Mason ran for 116 yards and two touchdowns and Scott Zolak threw for 257 yards and two more scores as Maryland upset Virginia. The Terrapins stopped the Cavaliers on fourth-' and-goal at the 3-yard line with less than two minutes to play to clinch the victory.

At Orlando, Lawrence Dawsey caught two second-quarter touchdown passes and Florida State scored on its last six possessions of the first half to beat Memphis State. The Seminoles posted their fourth straight lopsided triumph after consecutive setbacks at Miami and Auburn. At Memphis, Tony Thompson ran for 106 yards and one touchdown to enable Tennessee to keep alive its Southeastern Conference title hopes. The Volunteers took advantage of four Mississippi turnovers in the second half. At Iowa City, Iowa, Matt Rodgers threw a career-high four touchdown passes to lead Iowa.

The Hawkeyes will clinch a trip to the Rose Bowl if they win at Minnesota next week. our Coach Lou Holtz said. "It was a very difficult loss. We never got good field position in the second half. In the second half, their defensive line controlled our offensive line.

You have to live with it, learn from it and benefit. The question is where do we go from The answer is the Orange Bowl. The Irish received a commitment last week from officials of the New Year's Day game to match the Irish, 8-2, and Colorado, likely to move from No. 2 into the top ranking, no matter how the teams finished in the final games. In any case, Irish national title hopes are all but dead.

"This is the biggest win in my four interception. Penn State's Tony Sacca completed 22 of 34 passes for a career-best 277 yards and three touchdowns. His previous best was 243 yards in losses to Texas and Southern California earlier this year. Sacca 1 14-yard cross-field touchdown toss to Al Golden lied the score at 21-21 with 7:15 left. He threw a 32-yard touchdown pass to Terry Smith in the first quarter and an 11-yard TD pass to Rick Sayles in the third period.

His shortest scoring toss was set up by MarkD'Onofrio's 38-yard interception return. "The defense kept giving us the ball and that gave us confidence," Sacca said. "We wondered if we could play with these guys. Then our defense stuffed them. We felt we had nothing to lose.

We just said let's throw the ball and see what happens." Mirer's 1-yard touchdown dive five minutes before halftime gave the Irish a 21 -7 lead at the break. Notre Dame kept the ball 20:35 of the first half, convert- ing on 12 of 13 third-down situations. The Irish rushed 38 times for 151 first-half yards against a defense that had allowed an average of only 85.6 yards a game. Mirer completed 7 of 12 first-half passes for 140 yards, with four completions, converting third-downs and two others following first-down sacks. Notre Dame took a 14-0 lead on first- quarter touchdown runs of 22 yards by Ricky Waiters and 12 yards by Tony Brooks.

Walters ran for 114 yards on 19 carries. PSU NO Statistics SCORE BY QUARTERS PENN STATE 7 0 7 10 24 NOTRE DAME 14 7 0 0 21 SCORING SUMMARY ND 22 run (Henrlch kick) ND Brooka 12 run (Henrlch kick) PS Smith 32 pau from Sacca (Fayak kick) ND Mirer 1 run (Henrlch kick) PS Sayla 11 pau from Sacca (Fayak kick) PS Golden 14 pan from Sacca (Fayak kick) PS Fayak 34 Field Goal TEAM STATISTICS Category Flnt Downi Ruihlng Attempti NET YDS RUSHING Panel Attempted Pana Completed Panel Int By NET YDS PASSING TOTAL OFFENSE No. of Punti Punting Average Return Yardi Penaltla-Yardi Fumblei Loil Klingler, Ismail Show Worth Two leading Heisman Trophy candidates showed their worth to their teams in markedly different ways on Saturday. Houston's David Klingler added another record to his collection with 11 touchdown passes in guiding the Cougars lo an 84-21 rout of Division I-AA Eastern Washington. Earlier, Notre Dame's Raghib Ismail was forced to sit out the second half with an injury as the Fighting Irish fell from the top spot with a 24-21 loss to Perm State.

At South Bend, Ismail suffered a thigh bruise right before halftime and was forced to walch as Penn State scored 17 seconds-half points, including Craig Fayak's game-winning 34-yard field goal with four seconds remaining. "There's no doubi we buili a lot of our offense around Rocket," Notre Dame Coach Lou Holtz said. "It was a very difficult loss. We never got good field position in the second half. In the second half, their defensive line controlled our offensive line.

You have to live with it, learn from it and benefit." In the first half, Ismail caught four passes for 76 yards, ran five times for 22 yards and returned a punt 11 yards. But without the Rocket in their backfield, the Fighting Irish could manage only 76 yards in the second half. "I don't think you can lose a player of Ismail's talenl and not have it hurt you," Penn State Coach Joe Paterno said. "I thought we did a good job against Ismail. He worked for everything he got." Penn State's Darren Perry intercepted a Rick Mirer pass and returned it 20 yards to the Notre Dame 19 three plays before Fayak's kick, which gave the Nittany Lions their eighth straight victory.

"I've never been in this situation before in my Fayak said." I probably won't believe it until I'm back home and see it on the lape. I've practiced that kick 1,000 limes in my backyard. I told the holder it was just like in my backyard." At Houston, the Cougars' run-and- shoot offense returned to life after sputtering against Texas a week earlier. Klingler completed 41 of 58 passes for 572 yards with two interceptions. His 11 scoring passes broke the NCAA mark of nine in a game set by San Diego Slate's Dennis Shaw in 1969.

Klingler also tied the NCAA record for mosi touchdown passes in a season 3.30 Per Greeting Payable In Advance Deadline For Christmas Greetings December 14, 1990 Christinas Greeting Express yourself in a unique way this year by placing a Holiday Greeting in the Classified ads. Let classified be your Christmas card this year to all your friends. Just call the number below for assistance in placing your holiday greeting. It's fast and easy, so call today! The Daily Herald Classified Department 1018 Pennsylvania Ave. Tyrone, Pa.

16686 Phone 684-4000 1-800-634-5692 8:00 5:00 P.M. at 47, set by Brigham Young's Jim McMahon in 1980. He can break the record in his final outing of the season, which comes Dec. 1 against Arizona Stale in Tokyo. Eight different receivers caught TD passes as Houston had its first-team offense and defense on the field until midway in the fourth quarter.

"I'm nol going to take Klingler out of the game at halftime when he hasn't played but a few snaps and we're off next week," said Houston Coach John Jenkins. "He has to get his reps in or Arizona Slate would kick our bulls." Eastern Washington had been added to the schedule after Temple, which lost to Houston 65-7 last season, cancelled its game this year. The Eagles were paid $175,000 lo play ihe Cougars. "We couldn't shut them down and we didn't think we really could. It was just a track meet out there," Eastern Washington Coach Dick Zomes said.

"(Keeping starters in the game) is their style and I won't argue with it. We came prepared for that. By taking the game, we knew they wouldn't call the dogs off." Meanwhile, two more conference races became settled Georgia Tech and Brigham Young won their league lilies. At Winston-Salem, N.C., Georgia Tech, at 9-0-1 the lone remaining unbeaten team in Division I-A, won its first Atlantic Coast Conference football lille wilh a 42-7 triumph over Wake Forest. The Yellow Jackets gained 452 yards total offense.

"We're very pleased to win the Atlantic Coast championship," Georgia Tech Coach Bobby Ross said. "Thai's something very special because we have come so far. For two years (1987 and 1988), we did not win an ACC game. To come back and do what we've been doing this season is very special to us." Al Sail Lake City, Ty Delmer ihrew for 451 yards and five touchdowns in leading Brigham Young lo the Western Athletic Conference litle wilh a 45-22 viciory over Utah. With his 444 yards in tolal offense, Detmer sel his 17ih NCAA record.

The junior now has 10,114 yards of career total offense in less than three seasons, breaking the old three-year total offense mark of 9,936 yards by McMahon a decade ago. Heisman Watch Eric Blenlemy, Colorado running back 22 can-In for 115 yardi agalnit Kanui Stale. Tolali: 211 cairia for 1,628 yardi, 17 ND 20 39 21 8 0 161 367 5 42.0 11 1-15 1 0 Ty Detmer, Brigham Young of 50 for 451 2 5 agalnit Utah. Totali: 307 of for yardi, 19 33 Craig Erlckion, Miami quarterback of 26 for 320 1 INTi, 4 TDi agalnit Boiton College. Totali: 185 of313 for yardi, 5 INTs, 19 Ttt.

Raghib If mall, Notre Dame catena for 7i yardi receiving; 5 carrlei for 22 yardi ruining; returned 1 punt for 11 yardi agalnit Penn State. Totali: 61 carries for 498 yardi, 3 TDi ruining; 30 for 629 2 TDi receiving; returned 11 klckoffi for 284 1 TD, and 9 for 123 1 TD. David Klingler, Houiton quarterback 41 of a tor 572 yardi, 2 INTi, NCAA-record 11 TDi agalnit Eaitern Washington. ToULii 333 of 573 for M24 yardi, 19 INTi, 47 Darren Lcwti, Texas running back 24 for 89 1 TD agalnit Arkansas. ToUlK 242 evrtaf for 1,428 13 TDi.

Greg Lewli, Washington running back Did not play agalnit Washington State became at Injury. 229 orrlet for 8 Shawn Moore, Virginia of 22 patting for 2 INTi; 12 carries for 69 yardi ruining agalnit Maryland. Totali: 144 of 241 paulng, 2,232 8 INTi, 21 TDij 94 for 357 8 TDi ruining. Ion Vaughn, Michigan running back 7 for 28 yarda, 1 TD agalnit MlnneMla. 207 carrki for 1,236 9 PSU 27 30 61 34 20 2 277 338 7 3X0 101 2-20 0 0 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS PENN STATE Ruihlng Thompson 18-56; Stcca 7-7; Gain 3-2.

Paulng Sacca 20x34-0-277. Receiving Thompion 7-83; Smith 3-66; Golden 3-41. NOTRE DAME Ruihlng 19-114; 8-46; Culver 13-42; bmall 5-22. Failing Mirer 8x21-2-161. Receiving Iimall 4-76; S.

Davli 2-44; D. Brown 1-23. Football Scores Division PlayoITi (Flnt Round) Indiana (Pa.) 48, Winston-Salon St. 0 Edlnboro 38, Virginia Union 14 MUilulppI Coll. 70, Wofford 19 Jiekunvlllt SL 38, No.

Alabama 14 No. Dakota SL 17, No. Colorado 7 SLO 14, Northrldge SL 7 PllUburg SL 59, NE Mluourl SL 3 E. Texai SL 20, Grand Valley SL 14 Division (Eail Region) Hofitra 35, Cortland SL 9 Trenton SL 24, Ithaca 14 (South Region) Lycomlng 17, Carnegie-Mellon 7 10, Ferrum, Va. 7 (North Region) Diyton, O.

24, Augustana, HI. 14 Allegheny, Pa. 26, Mount Union, O. 15 (Wat Region) SL Thomas, Minn. 24, Wlac-WhItewaler 23 Central, la.

24, Redlands, Calif. 14 Other East Brown 17, Columbia 0 Bucknell 44, Fordham 7 Connecticut 51, Rhode Island 21 Cornell 21, Penn 15 Dartmouth 23, Princeton 6 Delaware SL 28, Howard 14 Holy Cross 35, Colgate 6 Lehlgh 35, Lafayette 14 Navy 31, Delaware 27 New Hampshire 36, Massachusetts 18 Ramapo 20, Froilhurg SL 14 SyracuK 31, W. Virginia 7 Temple 29, Rutgen 22 Towton SL 21, Northeastern 14 Union 33, Plymouth 19 Vlllanova 27, Boiton U. 10 W. New England 43, Assumption 4 Yale 34, Harvard 19 South Alabama 45, Cincinnati 7 Appalachian St.

24, Jimea Madison 0 Army 42, Vinderbilt 38 Auburn 33, Georgia 10 Canon Newman 35, SW Minnesota 6 Central Florida 63, Texas Southern 6 Clenuon 24, South Carolina 15 Florida 47, Kentucky 15 Florida SL 35, Memphis SL 3 Furman 30, Citadel 17 Georgia Southern 31, Samford 24 Georgia Tech 42, Wake Forest 7 Louisiana Tech 31, Colorado SL 30 Marshall 42, Western Carolina 14 Maryland 35, Virginia 30 Miami 42, Boston College 12 Middle Tenn. St. 42, Tenn. Tech 0 Mississippi SL 34, LSU 22 Morehead SL 27, E. Kentucky 17 Murray SL Peay 24, (3 OT) Nlcholli SL 23, Southern Unlv 19 N.

Carolina 7, S. Carolina SL 6 North Carolina 24, Duke 22 SW Louisiana 24, N. Illinois 20 Tennessee 22, Mississippi 13 Tenik-Chattanooga 22, W. Kentucky 21 Tennessee SL 45, Valley SL 7 Va, Military 21, East St. 20 Weber SL 27, McNeese SL 7 William Mary 31, Richmond 10 Midwest Baker 55, Bethany 7 Ball SL 23, Ohio 4 Illinois 24, Indiana 10 Iowa 39, Purdue 9 Iowa Woleyan 35, Olivet Naiarene 28 Kent St.

25, E. Michigan 24 Michigan 35, Minnesota 18 Michigan SL 29, Northwestern 22 Missouri 31, Kansas 21 Northern Iowa 36, Northern Arliona 16 Ohio SL 35, Wisconsin 10 Penn SL 24, Notre Dame 21 Plttiburg SL 59, NE Missouri 3 NIT Schedule Flnt Round Wednesday, Nov. 14 Boiton College 82, Memphis SL Duke 87, Marquette 74 Oklahoma 95, New Orleani 65 Arizona 122, Austin Peay 80 East Tennessee SL 83, Brigham Young 80 Arkansas, 107, Vanderbllt 70 Thursday, Nov. 15 Notre Dame 56, Fordham 46 Iowa 73, Temple 71 Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16 Duke 100, Boiton College 76 Arkansas 110, Arkaniai 88 Arizona 88, East Tenneaee SL 79 Saturday, Nov.

17 Notre Dame 77, Iowa 68 WediwuUy, Nov. 21 At Maditon Square Garden, New York Duke vs. Arizona vs. Notre Championship and ComoUUoa Friday, Nov. 23 At New York By JEFF SHAIN UPI Sports Writer NEW YORK in a repeat of its situation a year ago, completed its regular season Sunday by moving to the No.

1 position in the United Press International college football ratings. The Buffaloes took advantage of Notre Dame's last-second loss to Penn State to become the sixth team this season to ascend lo the lop spot in balloting by the UPI Board of Coaches. Colorado received 45 of 55 firsl- place votes cast by the 59-mcmbcr Board of Coaches and finished with 804 of a possible 825 points. No. 2 Miami received three First-place votes and 700 points, while No.

3 Georgia Tech was at the top of four ballots and finished with 658 points. Colorado's move to the top was a near-exact duplication of its ascension to No. 1 last year. In 1989, the Buffaloes completed their regular season before taking advantage of a Notre Dame loss to occupy the top spot. "I feel extremely fortunate to be in this position," Colorado Coach Bill McCartney 'A lot of things had to happen for us to be postured here." However, McCartney would like to see the similarities end in the Orange Bowl on New Year's Night, when the Buffaloes face Notre Dame in a rematch of last year's Orange Bowl won by the Fighting Irish.

"To be able to play Noire Dame is the maximum challenge," McCartney "They represent everything lhat is good about college football. They recruit the best players and graduate them. They play the toughest schedule in the country. They are a tremendous credit to college football." The Buffaloes, 10-1-1, routed Kansas State 64-3 on Saturday lo become the first Big Eight team other than Nebraska or Oklahoma to win back-to- back conference lilies outright. Miami, 7-2, which was snubbed by the Orange Bowl and wound up making an agreement wilh ihe Cotton look over the No.

2 position wilh a 42-12 viciory over Boslon College. Georgia Tech, al 9-0-1 the only unbeaten team in Division I-A, improved iwo posiiions lo third with a 42-7 drubbing of Wake Foresi. No. 4 Brigham Young, which received iwo first-place votes, remained unchanged despiic a 45-22 viciory over Utah. No.

5 Texas received the final first-place vote, improving one place after its 38-10 iriumph over Texas Chrisiian. No. 6 Nebraska moved up three spots despiie an idle week heading inio Friday's showdown against Oklahoma and No. 7 Washington improved one place after clobbering Washington State 55-10. Notre Dame fell seven spots to eighth on the heels of its 24-21 loss lo Penn.

Stale, a game decided on Craig Fayak's 34-yard field goal wilh four seconds remaining. In losing, the Fighting Irish became ihe only team this season lo fall oul of first place twice. No. 9 Florida State improved one place after iis 35-3 viciory over Memphis State, and Penn Stale jumped four posiiions to 10th. No.

11 Iowa and No. 12 Tennessee each moved up one spot after wins, while No. 13 Clemson improved two places after beating rival South Carolina. No. 14 Virginia dropped seven positions after its 35-30 loss lo Maryland.

No. 15 Michigan moved up one place after a victory, and No. 16 Southern Cal jumped three positions following its last-minute win over rival UCLA. Mississippi and Ohio State tied for 17th. No.

19 Louisville, which completed its regular season last week, wound up dropping two places. No. 20 Illinois improved four places after beating Indiana and No. 21 Auburn remained unchanged following its win over Georgia. No.

22 Texas slipped two places following a 20-16 viciory over Arkansas. Michigan Slate and newcomer San Jose State tied for 23rd, and Baylor joined the ratings at 25th. Dropping out of the ratings this week were Fresno Slate, California and Southern Mississippi. Grid Ratings NEW YORK (UPI) The United Press International Board of Coaches Top 25 college football with record and first-place In parentheses, total points (based on 15 points for (Int place, 14 for second, and last week's ranking. 1.

Colorado (45) (10-1-1) 804 2. Miami (3) (7-2) 700 3 3. Georgia Tech (4) (9-0-1) 658 5 4. Brigham Young (2) (9-1) 604 4 5. Texas (1) (8-1) 601 6 4.

Nebraska (9-1) 490 9 7. Washington (9-2) 469 8 8. Notre Dame (8-2) 448 1 9. Florida State (8-2) 442 10 10. Penn State (8-2) 304 14 11.

Iowa (8-2) 283 12 12. Tennessee (6-2-2) 263 13 13. Clemson (9-2) 136 15 14. Virginia (8-2) 105 7 15. Michigan (7-3) 97 16 16.

Southern Cal (8-2-1) 38 19 17. (tie) Mississippi (8-2) 31 11 (He) Ohio State (7-2-1) 31 18 19. Louisville (9-1-1) 27 17 20. Dllnols (7-3) 14 24 21. Auburn (7-2-1) 12 21 22.

Texas (7-2-1) 10 20 23. (He) San Jose St. 9 NR (tie) Michigan St (4-3-1) 9 21 25. Baylor (6-3-1) 5 NU NR not ranked Others receiving Alabama, Louisiana Tech, Oregon, Southern MIcslsilppL By agreement with the American Football Coaches Association, teams barred from television or pwtaeejoa play or having lost more Uun20 percent of their football are Ineligible for the Top 25 and national champ-, knihlp coBilderaUon by Ihe UPI Board of Coaches, Thoie ichooli are Florida, Houiton. State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma Stale,.

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About Tyrone Daily Herald Archive

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Years Available:
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