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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 49

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THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER C17 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Quakers' defense dominates Yale Penn kept the Bulldogs out of the end zone until the final seconds of the soggy contest at Yale Bowl. Last-second kick knocks off 'Nova William and Mary's Brian Shallcross nailed a 47- ') yarder. So the Wildcats lost another close one, 18-15: Sunday, October 29, 1995 oft A I Associated Press BOB CHILD Yale's Renard Craigwell is stopped by Penn cornerback Joe Piela (left) and linebacker Darren MacDonald in the second quarter. By Arthur Mills FOR THE INQUIRER WILLIAMSBURG, Va. Brian Shallcross' 47-yard field goal sailed through the uprights as time expired yesterday, giving William and Mary an 18-15 Yankee Conference win over Villanova.

And for the third time in six losses, the Wildcats found themselves on the losing end of a game-winning play. "We can pretty much play with anybody," Villanova cornerback Deon Jackson said of his team's unnerving knack for coming up short. "For some reason, we haven't figured out how to win these close ones. Week in and week out, we are going to be there at the end. Hopefully, we are going to figure it out." Now 1-4 in the conference and 2-6 overall, the Wildcats have lost by six points or fewer five times.

In three of those defeats a 21-16 loss to Boston University, a 28-27 loss to James Madison in overtime, and yesterday they couldn't figure out a way to win at the end. Jackson made a play that could have helped do just that. After the Tribe (6-3, 4-2), ranked 20th in Division I-AA, took a 12-7 lead with 13 minutes, 57 seconds remaining in the game, they went for a two-point conversion. William and Mary quarterback Matt Byrne tried to hit fullback Jay Hamric in the flat. But Jackson intercepted the pass and took it 100 yards for a defensive two-point conversion.

Instead of 14-7, it was 12-9. After the kickoff, Villanova went 80 yards on five plays. The biggest was a 52-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Clint Park to receiver Josh Dolbin. The play worked beautifully. Park, starting for the first time, rolled out on the option, as he had done all game.

Normally he tucked the ball in and ran, which he did 22 times for 91 yards. But this time, both the corner-back and safety bit hard, and Dolbin By Joe Juliano INQUIRER STAFF WRITER NEW HAVEN, Conn. On a day when a scuba diving suit would have been as appropriate an outfit as a helmet and shoulder pads, the 11 guys on the Penn defense did their best impression of Jaws. Peering through the rain, the Quakers frequently hunted their prey in the Yale backfield. They menaced each of the opponent's three quarterbacks, whether the Bulldogs were passing or running.

And they fiercely defended their goal line for more than 59 minutes, The Penn offense didn't have all that much success attacking on the soggy turf of the Yale Bowl, but three field goals by Jeremiah Greathouse and a 76-yard touchdown bomb from Mark DeRosa to Felix Rouse were enough for a 16-6 Ivy League victory before 3,500 hardy souls, even though 16,929 tickets were sold. The Quakers (5-2 overall, 3-1 Ivy League) dominated with defense. They stopped 11 plays for negative yardage, including five sacks. They shackled Yale quarterbacks Kevin Mayer, Kris Barber and Blake Kendall, holding them to 13 completions in 33 attempts. In the third quarter, they limited the Bulldogs (2-5, 1-4) to minus 14 yards of total offense.

With Princeton coming to Franklin Field next week for the annual Ivy League showdown, this is exactly what coach Al Bagnoli wanted to see. "We've been looking for a good defensive game," Bagnoli said. "We had played very good defense early but had gotten into a midseason lull, not playing the way we were capable of playing. We had to re-establish ourselves. Now, we can come out of this and say, 'Yes, we played a very good 1 "There was a lot of frustration among the defensive people," said linebacker Tim Gage.

"It wasn't just one person messing up. What we wanted today was to come out and play solid defense where everybody did their job, and that's what we did." Granted, the Bulldogs were without starting quarterback Chris Heth- erington, who has a badly bruised rotator cuff in his right (throwing) shoulder. They lost Dan Iwan, their best receiver, with a back injury early in the game. Minus Hethering-ton and Iwan, Yale was pretty much wallowing in the bog all day. Then again, the Quakers weren't exactly dazzling on offense.

In the first half, when the rain ranged from steady to severe, Penn had a couple of decent drives but only one field goal a 24-yarder by Greathouse. Late in the half, Greathouse apparently was successful on a 32-yard field goal attempt, but the Quakers were penalized for not having seven men on the line of scrimmage, a call that enraged Bagnoli. Greathouse tried again from 37 yards, but his attempt went wide. "It's not like these things are automatic," said Bagnoli, insisting that the Quakers, who run an unbalanced line when snapping from a hash mark on field goals, had the proper seven up front. "Certainly, these weren't the optimum conditions and you know points are going to be at a premium.

It's one thing to take points off because you did something; it's another thing when they don't count the right number of people." In the second half, when the rain stopped and the sun broke out, the Quakers finally clicked on offense, thanks to a pair of deep post passes thrown by DeRosa to Rouse. "We ran a couple of bombs to the wide side in the first half, and both times they left me wide open," Rouse said. "We felt like, in the second half, we could take advantage of that and good things would happen, and it worked out." The first one came midway through the third quarter, with Rouse getting behind the Yale secondary for a 50-yard catch to the Yale 4. Penn could not get into the end zone, and Greathouse kicked a 22-yard field goal to make it 6-0. The second one came in the fourth quarter, after Yale's deepest penetration to that point was snuffed when Gage hit Mayer just as he threw, and linebacker Joey Allen picked off the plan," Allen said.

"It was good execution on our part. We stepped it up a level and, hopefully, we can carry that into the next few weeks." With Princeton on the horizon, the Quakers right now will settle for next week. pressure. Just as he neared the line of scrimmage, he lofted a pass to Terry Hammonds, who was running a deep post pattern. Hammonds raced to the Villanova 18-yard line before Jackson collared him.

Laycock called three runs up the middle, netting 2 yards, and settled for a game-tying 29-yard field goal by Shallcross with 1:40 left. Shallcross also kicked two field goals in the first half. "I was a little conservative when we couldn't pop one," Laycock said. ''I really didn't want to lose it down there. I knew with a field goal we could tie it up and go into overtime.

"That's ideally what you like to do: Tie it up, put the ball in their court. They're in a tough situation, backed up to their own 20 in a tie ball game. They want to win it, but they want to screw it up either." Villanova started on the 20 after Shallcross kicked the ball out of the end zone. Park completed a 3-yard out pass to Brad Finneran. But he was sacked twice after that, and Villanova punted the ball from its 16 to its 48.

--'i Byrne threw twice for 15 yards and an incompletion. On second and 10 from the 33 with eight seconds remaining, Byrne ran out of bounds at the 30 to stop the clock with two seconds showing. That set up the game-winning kick. Villanova tried to ice Shallcross by calling two time-outs. Wildcats coach Andy Talley blamed the loss on his team's youth, but the close losses haven't affected his confidence.

"We can play with the No. 1 team in the country," Talley said. "You put them on the field, we'll play a game just like this one right here." The Wildcats have proved they can play with anybody. They're still working on coming up with a differ-ent ending. Villanova 7 0 0 815 William and Mary 0 6 0 1218 Park 8 run (Kiefer kick) FG Shallcross 25 J'- FG Shallcross 30 Fitzgerald 14 pass from Byrne (pass intercepted) Jackson 100 conversion return Dolbin 52 pass from Park (kick failed) FG Shallcross 29 1 FG Shallcross 47 A 13,925.

VU First downs 13 16 Rushes-yards 44-141 56-193 Passing 161 165 Return Yards 73 128 Comp-Att-Int 13-23-1 11-21-0 Punts 9-34 6-37 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 5-2 Penalties-Yards 6-50 6-29 Time of Possession 28:44 31:16 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing: Villanova, Dennis 2-3, Cowsette 14-46, Park 22-91, Bryant 3-2, Golemi 3-(minus 1). William Mary, Fitzgerald 32-126, Keen 16-59, Byrne 6-(minus 6), Henning 2-14. Passing: Villanova, Park 13-23-1 161. William Mary, 11-21-0 165. Receiving: Villanova, Cowsette 5-31, Finneran 3-25, Dolbin 4-98, Golemi 1-7.

William Mary, Commons 1-16, Hammons 7-120, Fitzgerald 2-21, Roark 1-8. pass at the Penn 24. On first down, DeRosa threw the deep post again to Rouse, who had gotten five yards behind safety Tony Mazurkiewicz. The 6-foot-l, 176-pound senior hauled in the bomb at the 30 and coasted home, putting the Quakers up 16-0 with 7 minutes, 48 seconds to play. "To show you how smart I was on the second bomb, offensive coordinator Chuck Priore had his headset off and I told him, 'Make sure we run the Bagnoli said.

"Chuck said, 'OK, coach, right after this I guess we ran the clock 12 seconds, but we'll take it." Meanwhile, the defense did its job. In addition to his interception, Allen stopped Yale's Kena Heffernan on a fake punt. Nose guard Chris Osen-towski had two sacks. The defensive ends, Tom McGarrity and Doug Zinser, had active games. The Bulldogs did spoil the shutout when Kendall hit Clint Rodriguez with a 16-yard TD pass with 14 seconds remaining.

But Allen got revenge, almost returning an interception of the two-point conversion pass for the defensive extra points. "This was a result of a good game Rutgers wins with an all-around effort coasted 15 yards behind the defenders for the catch and the score. "The coaches saw that on the sprint-out option run, the free safety was trying to come up and make the play," Park said. I hat was the last of the good plays for Villanova. Mark Kiefer watched his extra-point attempt clang off the right upright.

Trailing by 15-12 with 4.26 remaining, William and Mary was in a tough position with the ball at its own 16-yard line. Unable to risk a time-consuming drive running the ball, Tribe coach Jimmye Laycock had to turn to Byrne, who had thrown seven straight incompletions at one point. The homecoming crowd of 13,925 at Walter J. Zable Stadium was quiet. Byrne missed passes on first and second down, and it got quieter.

But on third and 10, Byrne dropped back, then scrambled up the middle under Pennsylvania Yale 3 0 6 716 0 0 0 66 UP FG Greathouse 24 UP FG Greathouse 22 UP FG Greathouse 44 UP Rouse 76 pass from DeRosa (Greathouse kick) Rodriguez 16 pass from Kendall (pass failed) A 16,929. Penn Yale First downs 16. 12 Rushes-yards 49-205 36-97 Passing 223 183 Return Yards 62 126 Comp-Att-Int 11-24-0 13-33-1 Punts 5-31 8-31 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 9-69 6-46 Time of Possession 34:20 25:40 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing: Pennsylvania, Abye 11-35, Scott 15-55, Camp 19-81, DeRosa 4-34. Yale, Hefternan 18-68, Craigwell 6-16, Mayer 7-21, Barber 4-(minus 3), Kendall 1-(minus 5). Passing: Pennsylvania, DeRosa 11-24-0-223.

Yale, Mayer 7-22-1-94, Barber 1-3-0-6, Kendall 5-8-0-83. Receiving: Pennsylvania, Macik 6-59, Rouse 3-139, Thompson 1-19, Tonelli 1-6, Yale, Aram 5-85, Steinfeldt 3-45, Fletcher 1-22, Heffernan 2-2, Rodriguez 2-29. went all the way to give the Knights a 35-16 lead. With 5:31 left in the game, Rutgers' defense struck again, end Charles Woolridge intercepting a pass at the line of scrimmage and taking it back 25 yards for the Knights' last touchdown. "The kids were having fun today," Graber said.

"I saw smiles on the field. I haven't seen that for a while. One victory doesn't make up for the difficulties we've had, but it's a step in the right direction." Pitt Rutgers 0 16 0 824 0 28 7 742 Pit Jells 37 pass from Gonzalez (Ferencik kick) Rut Battaglia 13 pass from Lucas (Mike-Mayer kick) Pit D.Harris 74 run (kick failed) Rut Willis 83 kickoff return (Mike-Mayer kick) Pit FG Ferencik 27 Rut Harper 20 pass from Lucas (Mike-Mayer kick) Rut Battaglia 21 pass from Lucas (Mike-Mayer kick) Rut Rivers 100 fumble return (Mike-Mayer kick) Pit Durham 5 pass from Ryan (Butler pass from Ryan) Rut Woolridge 25 interception return (Mike-Mayer kick) A 18,911. Pit Rut First downs 20 19 Rushes-yards 25-137 43-130 Passing 384 191 Return Yards 20 45 Comp-Att-Int 29-62-3 15-33-0 Punts 7-44 11-37 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 1-1 Penalties-Yards 5-38 4-45 Time of Possession 28:08 31:52 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing: Pitt, D.Harris 17-135, Ryan 1-5, Gonza lez 4-4, Jells 2-4, Lytle 1-(mmus 11). Hutgers, Willis 19-68.

Presley 15-43. Lucas 6-12, Bosch 3-7. Passing: Pitt, Gonzalez 18-36-3-258, Ryan 11-22-0-126, Lytle 0-4-0-0. Rutgers, Lucas 15-32-0-191, Presley 0-1-0-0. Receiving: Pitt, Jells 9-152, Anderson 7-98, Durham 5-57, D.Harris 3-20, Joseph 2-30, Bryant 1-16, Butler 1-7, Schneider 1-4.

Rutgers, Battaglia 6-78, Harper 3-49, Funderburk 3-31, Presley 2-11, 1-22. Columbia A 10,917. First downs Rushes-yards Passing Rturn Yards Comp-Att-Int Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession Col Prl 18 22 33-87 53-311 172 192 274 17-44-7 13-22-0 3-123 6-245 0-0 2-0 3-30 6-64 26:48 33:12 Unbeaten Blue Hens destroy Maine, 61-0 Delaware won its 14th game in a row by rolling up a school-record 714 yards. The Black Bears had 108. finger out.

It may have been broken and battered, but at least we have a chance to rehabilitate it." Rutgers refused to panic when Pitt (2-7, 0-5) made some big plays to take and then retake the lead. Three times in a wild 44-point second quarter, Rutgers answered right back when Pitt scored. Each time, the Knights effectively took the momentum away from the Panthers. The first break of the game came when Pitt recovered a fumble by Lucas at the Rutgers 37 early in the second period. Lucas, who was under heavy pressure for most of the first half, tried to scramble out of the pocket and was hit by defensive tackle Tom Tumulty and linebacker David Sumner.

Pitt immediately went up top for a 37-yard touchdown pass from Pete Gonzalez to wide receiver Dietrich Jells, who beat freshman cornerback Mike Sandy on a post pattern to break a scoreless tie. Rutgers was not discouraged. "Today, we were able to pick each other up," linebacker Brian Sheridan said. "When our offense struggled early, we picked them up. When we got hit with a couple of big plays, our offense came right back.

And our punting game picked us up. We had all three phases today, and that's what it takes to win." Lucas was 1 for 8 passing in the first period. Early in the second, he directed the Knights on a 70-yard, eight-play drive that he finished with a 13-yard TD pass to Battaglia, a bullet that the tight end juggled, then clutched before falling into the end zone. Lucas was 3 for 3 on the drive and also scrambled for 21 yards. All of the elements for success were there as the Scarlet Knights whipped Pitt to end a four-game losing streak.

By Kevin Tatum INQUIRER STAFF WRITER PISCATAWAY, N.J. In desperate need of a win yesterday, the Rutgers University football team went out and put together a complete performance against Pitt that included a lit-lle something for everybody. Ray Lucas threw three touchdown passes, two to all-American tight-end candidate Marco Battaglia, who moved into second place on the Scar- let Knights' career receptions list. Tailback Terrell Willis returned a kickoff 83 yards for a touchdown and gained 68 yards to become Rutgers' career rushing leader with 2,960 yards, surpassing Jim Jennings' 2,935. The Knights' defense scored twice, once on a 100-yard fumble return by defensive back Paul Rivers, and punter Jared Slovan kept Pitt in poor field position when the out-come of the game was in doubt.

i It all added up to a 42-24 victory before 18,911 at Rutgers Stadium. The Knights' first Big East Conference win of the season ended a four-game losing streak. At 2-5 overall and with four games remaining, they still have hopes for a winning season. "We answered the call," Rutgers coach Doug Graber said. "It was as if we had our finger caught in a door and the door was shut.

Our job was to get the door open and get our Turnovers Pitt used its ensuing possession to launch speed-demon tailback Demetrius Harris on a 74-yard TD run. Harris took off around right end on a sweep, beat three Knights to the sideline and then turned upfield. The last man to have a shot at him was Sandy, who missed a tackle at the Rutgers 20. After Pitt missed its point-after kick, Rutgers wasted no time regaining the lead. Willis returned the Panthers' kickoff 83 yards for a touchdown.

Willis, who leads the Big East in all-purpose yards, headed straight up the middle of the field, shook kicker Chris Ferencik at midfield, and ran away from the pack as the stadium rocked. With 4:24 left in the half, the Panthers bounced back to take a 16-14 lead on Ferencik's 27-yard field goal, but Rutgers was anything but finished. A 20-yard Lucas-to-Steve Harper TD pass gave the Knights a 21-16 advantage with 3:52 remaining in the half. And when safety Chris Anzidei recovered a Pitt fumble at the Panthers' 28 moments later, it took Lucas three plays to cash in by hitting Battaglia for a 21-yard score that put Rutgers up by 28-16 at intermission. Battaglia, who made six catches, leads the Big East with 47 for the season and is 13 away from Rutgers' career record.

For Pitt, Harris finished with 135 yards on 17 carries, and Jells caught nine passes for 152 yards. Rivers' 100-yard journey came early in the second half. He scooped up a fumble by Curtis Anderson, who had been hit at the 2-yard line after making a 14-yard pass reception, and Dave Patterson returned the game's first interception 22 yards to the Columbia 18, and it took one play for quarterback Brock Harvey to tion in the next series set up Alex Sierk's 33-yard field goal to make it 10-0. Princeton could not capitalize on its next two interceptions by Hill and Ryan Moore. But Patterson's fumble recovery set up a 4-yard touchdown pass from Harvey to Ben Gill.

Columbia Princeton 0 0 0 1414 10 14 14 644 PRI Harvey 18 run (Sierk kick) PRI FG Sierk 33 PRI Gill 4 pass from Harvey (Sierk kick) PRI Clifford 1 run (Sierk kick) PRI Washington 1 run (Sierk kick) PRI Godek 3 pass from Nakielny (Sierk kick) COL Valvo 10 pass from Lenzen (run failed) PRI Farkas 1 run (kick failed) COL Bivens 1 run (Bivens run) fuel Princeton's rout of Redshirt freshman Andre Thompson played only the fourth quarter but rushed for 85 yards on five carries, including a 37-yard touchdown run. The Hens entered the game ranked first in Division I-AA in rushing with 319 yards per game. They surpassed their average with 443 yards. Maine's four first downs were the fewest by a Delaware opponent since 1978, and the 108 total yards were the lowest since 1982. The Hens have not 1 allowed a rushing touchdown in their last 20 quarters.

Delaware is 8-0 for only the second time in Raymond's 30-year tenure. The last time was 1972, when the Blue Hens finished 10-0 and won the Division II national title. Maine Delaware 0 0 0 0 0 12 22 13 14 61 Del Williams 5 run (Leach kick failed) Del Batts 13 pass from Hamlett (Hamlett run failed) Del Williams 2 run (Batts run) Del Hamlett 1 run (Williams run) Del Conti 26 pass from Hamlett (Leach kick failed) Del Williams 9 run (Leach kick failed) Del Hebron 1 run (Leach kick) Del Langan 8 run (Leach kick) Del Thompson 37 run (Leach kick) A 22,293 Main Del First downs 4 34 Rushes-yards 27-65 69-443 Passing 43 271 Return Yards 190 27 Comp-Att-Int 5-12-1 18-25-0 Punts 8-309 1-45 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 3-1 Penalties-Yards 6-41 6-63 Time of Possession 21:55 38:05 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing: Maine, Jameson 12-37, Pam 10-25, Johnson 1-7, 4-minus 4. Delaware, Thompson 5-85, Hebron 14-83, Williams 9-77, Haitilett 14-74, Coleman 11-65, Key 3-15, DiMartilel 4-14, Langan 2-14, Henderson 1-8, Aramany 2-7, McGraw 1-3, Myers 1-0, Grove 2-minus 2. Passing: Maine, Fein 5-12-1-43.

Delaware, Hamlett 14-17-0-216, Langan 3-6-0-51, DiMartile 1-2-0-4. Receiving: Maine, O'Connor 2-16, Rice 1-13, Pam 1-10, Maury 1-4. Delaware, Batts 4-78, Conti 4-64, Hebron 3-27, Williams 2-37, Brady 1-24, McGraw 1-18, Coleman 1-10, Phillips 1-9, Hector 1-4. NEWARK, Del. Delaware held Maine to four first downs yesterday as the No.

5 Blue Hens overwhelmed the Black Bears, 61-0, in a Yankee Conference game at Delaware Stadium. The Hens extended the longest unbeaten streak in Division I-AA football to 14 games and stayed unbeaten at 8-0 (6-0 in the conference) as they piled up a school and conference record of 714 yards on offense. The yardage broke the school rec ord of 682 set against Princeton in 1981 and broke the Yankee Conference record of 708 yards by Connecticut against Villanova in 1988. Maine, 0-6 in the conference and 2-6 overall, was held to just 108 yards. "We had a perfect defensive effort," said Delaware coach Tubby Raymond.

The offense was equally impressive Delaware earned first downs on 10 of 13 third-down attempts. "We got our fannies kicked," said Maine coach Jack Cosgrove. "They scared me coming in, so I'm not in shock. Call Guinness; that might be a world record for third-down percentage." The Hens jumped to a 34-0 halftime lead. Maine, which defeated Delaware, the Blue Hens' 42-yard line and had no play longer than 13 yards.

The Black Bears lost their 10th straight conference game. Delaware quarterback Leo Hamlett hit 14 of 17 passes for 216 yards and two touchdowns. Hamlett rushed for 74 yards and another score before retiring midway through the third period. The graduate of Holy Spirit High in Absecon, N.J., surpassed 1,000 career yards rushing and 2,000 career yards passing during the game. Pat Williams added 77 yards rushing and three touchdowns and Kai Hebron ran for 83 yards and a score.

The Tigers won, 44-14, to take sole leadership in the Ivy League. Seven interceptions tied an Ivy record. two years. It's the Tigers' longest victory string since winning 17 straight in 1964-65. Columbia (3-3-1, 3-1) lost quarterback Mike Cavanaugh, who broke his right leg in the second quarter.

Princeton intercepted Cavan-augh's passes on Columbia's first three possessions, and forced five first-quarter turnovers. Cavanaugh left the game with four minutes remaining in the half after going 2 for 12 with five interceptions. The senior, who is Columbia's leading rusher, was taken off on a stretcher after being tackled for a 5-yard loss by Mark Whaling. ASSOCIATED PRESS PRINCETON Damani Leech and Rich Hill each had two of Princeton's record-tying seven interceptions and the Tigers moved into first place in the Ivy League with a 44-14 victory over Columbia yesterday. The Tigers equaled the Ivy League interception mark they set against Cornell in 1987.

Their nine take-' a ways were three short of the Division I-AA record shared by Gram-bling State and Montana. Princeton (7-0 overall, 4-0 Ivy) converted seven turnovers into a 24-0 halftime lead and wasn't threatened in winning its ninth straight over INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing: Columbia, Harper 9-33, Bivens 8-22, Cavanaugh 9-12, Lenzen 3-9, Atkins 1-7, Thomas 3-4. Princeton, Washington 14-85, Clifford 9-55, Farkas 3-40, McGlothlin 1-25, Harvey 3-23, Godek 3-18, Dempsey 2-15, Malizia 3-13, Taylor 5- 13, McNichol 4-11, Duffy 1-6, Davis 2-6, Nakielny 1-2, Adams 1-(minus 1). Passing: Columbia, Cavanaugh 2-12-5-29, Lenzen 9-22-2-87, Thomason 6-10-0-56. Princeton, Harvey 5-9-0-70, Nakielny 8-12-0-122, Dempsey 0- 1-0-0.

Receiving: Columbia, Valvo 5-54, Tillotson 3-27, Ramirez 3-26, Ornellas 2-20, Lee 1-21, Guerrant 1- 13, Harper 1-6, Miller 1-5. Princeton, Washington 4-102, Duffy 4-80, Gill 2-(minus 1), Budzinski 1-9, Godek 1-3, Hosty 1-(minus 1)..

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