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The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 54

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The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
54
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-1) Srpt. i 4 ne limes Angelo trips Northwestern on late field goal. entered on third down and booted the winning three-pointer. Angelo got its fifth interception of the game with five seconds left to secure the victory. Fabrizio, a freshman transfer from Cumberland, R.I., had replaced Demon starter Wayne Van after Van suffered an injury in the third period.

Saterfield's interception was the third off Fabrizio. Van, a senior from Monroe, suffered an injury to his collarbone and it will be x-rayed Sunday to determine the extent of the damage. He was injured on an option run, a play that was productive for the Demons in the second half. After a scoreless first half, Northwestern scored on its second possession of the third quarter. The De mons covered 55 yards in six plays with Van scoring from the 1-yard line with 9:49 left in the period.

The big play was a 27-yard completion from Van to freshman running back John Stephens. Kicker Benny Brouillette added the extra point for a 7-0 lead. The Rams answered that score with their only touchdown of the night and their first of the season, driving 82 yards in 12 plays. The score came on a 12-yard pass from quarterback Ned Cox to Wilbert Jefferson. Drain added, the conversion kick that tied the score with 4:09 left in the third quarter.

The scoring bursts of the third period contrasted a scoreless first half when both teams struggled offensively. The Demons gained just 65 yards in total offense in the half, compared to SAN ANGELO, Texas -Taking advantage of its third pass interception of the fourth quarter, Angelo State got a 20-yard field goal from Paul Drain with 33 seconds to play and beat Northwestern Louisiana University 1 ty 10-7 Saturday night. The Rams, who intercepted four passes in the fourth quarter and five in the game, evened their record at 1-1 i while the Demons fell to 0-2. With the score tied at 7-all, the De-' 'rnons reached the ASU 20-yard line with just more than 1:30 left to play. But on second down.

Ram defensive back Glenn Saterfield intercepted a Rob Fabrizio pass and returned it 58 i yards to the Demon 25. On first down Frank Johnson rambled 20 yards to the 5. After two -jTline plunges netted 2 yards, Drain 76 yards for the Rams. Northwestern in the first half rushed 27 times for just 34 yards while Van completed five of 10 passes for 31 yards. Angelo State had 8 1 yards in the air at intermission, but also had a negative five yards rushing.

For the contest, NSU picked up 132 yards rushing and the Demon defense held Angelo to just 50 yards. But the hosts had a 158-113 edge in passing yardage. Both teams managed 13 first downs. Stephens ground out 51 yards in 16 carries to pace the Demons. While he was in the contest, Van hit seven of 13 throws for 66 yards.

Fabrizio completed three of 13 for 47. Turner grabbed four passes for 33 yards. Attesting to the fact that the two two periods for the Rams came later as they reached the Demon 46. Angelo State had a chance to put NSU in a hole in the second period when a punt was touched dead at the six-yard line and the Ram defense held the Demons on three downs. But the Rams were called for offsides on one punt and then were flagged for a personal foul on the following punt and the Demons got out of that jam.

For the first half both teams had one interception, cornerback Robert Moore doing the honors for the Demons. Northwestern was not penalized in the opening half and had the ball four minutes longer than the Rams. Northwestern will have a week off before returning home to play Abilene Christian. teams sputtered early in the contest was the fact that neither had a first down until nearly seven minutes had elapsed and Van hit Odessa Turner for a seven-yard gain. The deepest threat for the Demons came in the early stages of the second quarter.

Moving against the wind, the Demons ranged to a first down at the Angelo 32 and Frank Graham went eight yards from there. But after a two-yard loss and a three-yard gain, Graham was stopped for no gain on a fourth and one at the Ram 23. Angelo got a 29-yard completion from Cox to Mike Northcutt on first down from there, barging into Demon territory for the first time at the 48. But the Rams were unable to move and had to punt. The deepest penetration in the first AP Laterphoto feG-Men Boston College stuns Alabama to OStOM SEC i i rr rm pip i i Mifr sjro v- tVI-- From Staff, Wire Reports NEW YORK Pat Mancini threw two touchdown passes, including an 83-yarder to Bill Brooks, to lead Boston University to a 16-9 victory over Grambling in the 14th annual Whitney M.

Young Football Classic here Saturday afternoon. The loss snapped Grambling's 12-game winning streak in the classic, and prevented Grambling Coach Eddie Robinson from tying Amos Alonzo Stagg as the second-winningest coach in college football history. Robinson has a 313-104-15 record in 43 years at Grambling, leaving him 10 victories behind all-time leader Paul "Bear" Bryant. Boston University capitalized on Grambling mistakes to score all of its points in the second quarter. Dan Green's 27-yard field goal early in the period made it 3-0, and Craig Jensen's interception set up Mancini's 19-yard scoring pass to Dennis Gadbois.

Brooks' TD catch increased the lead to 16-0 before Jorge Rosales booted a 32-yard field goal with 17 seconds left in the half for Grambling. The Tigers, in falling to 0-2 for first time since 1973, scored in the third quarter on a 56-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Anthony Anderson to Dwayne Jupiter. Boston University, 1-0, won depsite a subpar performance from senior tailback Paul Lewis, a Divison I-AA Ail-American last season who was held to six yards on 17 carries. The Terriers' defense sacked Grambling quarterbacks eight times for losses of 104 yards. From Wire Reports BIRMINGHAM, Ala.

Troy Strad-ford's 43-yard burst up the middle with 3:26 left to play capped a 24-point Boston College rally in the second half Saturday night and lifted the 18th-ranked Eagles to a 38-31 upset of No. 9 Alabama. Stradford, who also scored the game's first touchdown on a 3-yard run and finished with 106 yards on 24 carries, shared the hero's role with Doug Flutie, BC's scrambling passing wizard, and free safety Tony Thurman, who made three key interceptions, including a game-saver in the end zone with 45 seconds remaining. Flutie completed 19 of 38 passes for 264 yards and two fourth-down touchdowns including a 12-yarder to fullback Jim Browne with 5:58 remaining that tied the score 31-31 in his bid to become major college football's first passer. Thurman's first interception came early in the third period after Alabama Coach Ray Perkins inserted freshman Vince Sutton at quarterback in place of Mike Shula and ignited Boston College's furious comeback.

His second steal came with three minutes left and the third was a diving grab in the end zone on a halfback pass from Paul Ott Carruth after Alabama reached the BC 27. The three interceptions gave him a school-record 18 for his career and he has swiped at least one pass in five straight games. The Eagles' dramatic rally nullified a brilliant performance by Alabama's Kerry Goode who scored on a a 25-yard run late in the first period, caught an 18-yard touchdown pass from fellow sophomore Shula 6 minutes later and returned the second-half kickoff 99 yards for another score. Goode returned four kickoffs for 197 yards, breaking the Southeastern Conference record of 190 by Georgia's Scott Woerner against Kentucky in 1977. MISSISSIPPI 22, MEMPHIS ST.

6 Fullback Arthur Humphrey scored two touchdowns on short runs and Mississippi's defense dominated most of the afternoon as the Rebels stopped Memphis State, 22-6, in a non-conference football game at Oxford, Miss. Before a record crowd of 41,964 in Vaught-Hemmingway Stadium, Mississippi scored on three of its first four possessions and built a 1 5-0 lead late in the second quarter en route to its 13th straight home-opening victory. Memphis State, 1-1, managed only 38 net yards in the first half and then fell victim to its own penalties when it tried to rally in the second half. With a good mix of plays, Ole Miss marched 83 yards in 16 plays to score after the opening kickoff. Quarterback Kent Austin had three crucial completions in the drive and Humphrey capped the march with a six-yard scoring run over right tackle.

I -v, r- 7, Grambling's Reginald Pugh breaks away from Boston's Chris Scerra during Saturday's game. 'Northeast rockets past Floridians By RON LATTIER Carl Long, of Marshall, Texas, addtd 39 yards on eight carries. The Indians used a balanced attack as they rolled up 393 total yards including 223 on the ground. Horn passed for 150 of the 170 yard aerial total in the game. "We had a perfect blend of Vhat we wanted to do," said Indian coach Pat Collins.

"The element of surprise was the key factor because we threw successfully when they didn't expect us to. Our coaches had real good play Ector got the final touchdown of the night on a five-yard pass from Slack. Aaron Sam was the leading ball carrier for the game, with 96 yards on 11 runs. "We're trying to build a football program but with only five upper classmen back it's hard," said Saban, a coach of 31 year with duty with the Denver Broncs, Boston Patriots and Buffalo Bills. "I thought the score didn't indicate how well we played in spots, but still we lost and lost big," he said.

Times Correspondent MONROE Northeast Louisiana put the ball game away early Saturday night behind record-setting quarterback Rodney Horn, rolling to a -49-21 win over Central Florida. The Indians rebounded from a punchless offensive show of a week ago to beat the Lou Saban coached visitors. Horn threw four touchdown passes to break a school record of three scoring strikes he shared with nine others. His fourth touchdown pass came at the 7:23 mark of the third quarter. He hit Chris Lott on the strike from 10 yards out.

That climaxed a 37-yard, 7-play drive that started with a fumble by defensive back Terry Jones. "Every time I complete a pass most of the help has to come from the receivers," said Horn modestly. "It's a team this week because we did virtually nothing offensively last week." The Indians rolled to a 35-7 halftime lead as Horn completed nine of 17 passes for three touchdowns. Jimmy Harris, a former Southwood of Shreveport player, started the scoring with a 13-yard burst. On the Indians' next possession, Horn found tight end Joey Evans with a 6-yard scoring strike.

UCF brought the score to 14-7 late in the first quarter as quarterback Dar-rin Slack passed four yards to running back Robert Ector. The Indians made it 21-7 with 28 seconds left in the first quarter when Horn and Evans combined again for a 12-yard touchdown. Horn got his third touchdown pass of the night in the second quarter when he passed 17 yards to Lott. Harris gave NLU a 35-7 lead with a three-yard blast at the Central Florida middle. Harris had 62 yards on 16 runs for the night.

GEORGIA 26, SOUTHERN MISS. 19 Fullback Andre "Pulpwood" Smith burst off tackle and raced 50 yards for a third quarter touchdown in leading the Georgia Bulldogs to a 26-19 victory over Southern Mississippi in Athens, Ga. The Bulldogs, who trailed 13-9 at the half, scored touchdowns the first two times they got the ball after intermission. Reserve tailback Lars Tate capped an eight-play 80-yard drive following the kickoff when he sprinted nine yards to the left corner of the end zone, giving Georgia a 16-13 lead. Later in the quarter, Smith's touchdown was set up by a penalty and a poor punt by the Golden Eagles' Billy Knighten.

Southern Mississippi had driven to the Georgia 43, where Knighten punted to the Georgia 1. But the Golden Eagles were called back for illegal motion, and Knighten shanked his second punt out of bounds at the 35. Four plays later, Smith scored. MISSISSIPPI ST. 14, COLORADO ST.

9 Quarterbacck Don Smith scored one touchdown and set up another as Mississipi State's methodical Bulldogs overpowered the Colorado State Rams, 14-9, in an inter-sectional football game at Starkville, Miss. Smith stepped through the Ram defense on a fourth quarter keeper, then cut and sprinted 19 yards for the winning touchdown. The 195-pound sophomore teamed with tailback Jim Cumberbatch to power the Eulldogs running attack on the 93-yard scoring march. KENTUCKY 42, KENT ST. 0 Senior George Adams ran for three touchdowns and 106 yards and quarterback Bill Ransdell passed for 199 yards in his starting debut as Kentucky routed Kent State, 42-0, in a non-conference college football game at Lexington, Ky.

Adams, a 213-pound tailback from Lexington, scored from 5 and 1 yards in the first half and had another 1-yard TD run early in the second. His longest gain in 21 carries was 13 yards. VANDERBILT 26, KANSAS ST. 14 Vanderbilt sophomore tailback Carl Woods rushed for 116 yards and two touchdowns to lead the Commodores to a 26-14 non-conference victory over Kansas State in the season opener for both teams at Nashville, Tenn. Woods scored from 1 yard out midway through the first quarter and later capped an 82-yard drive by the Southeastern Conference Commodores with a 2-yard run with only 56 seconds remaining in the game.

West Monroe defeats BTW Jim Aulds snared two touchdown passes Saturday night to lead West Monroe to an easy 30-13 win over Booker T. Washington at Caddo Parish Stadium. Aulds started off the Monroe scoring, taking an 8-yard strike from quarterback Ronnie Cook on the Rebels first possession and added a 14-yard touchdown catch with just a minute left in the first half as West Monroe led 16-6 at the break. Charles Shorts and Michael Jenkins were the workers in the opening possession as West Monroe went 72 yards on 12 plays, scoring when Aulds took a bootleg pass from Cook on a fourth and goal and Mike Massey kicked the extra point. Booker T.

Washington drew to within a point thanks to a Richard Rose interception and a roughing the kicker penalty on the Rebs. Rose gave the Lions possession at the Rebel 21. Saddled with a fourth and six at the 17, BTW field goal kicker Grundy Johnson nailed a 34-yarder but was roughed on the play to give the Lions new life at the 8. Christopher Williams went over from the 1 on third down but Johnson's point-after try was blocked by Robert Williams with just 46 seconds left in the first stanza. Trailing 30-6, BTW got the last Eoints of the game after it held the Reels at the 1, driving the length of the field through the air.

Andre Johnson got BTW out of the hole with a pair of nine-yard completions and a pass interference penalty also aided the Lions. Johnson latched onto a 34-yard completion and Williams took a screen pass 17 yards to the WM 16. On a third and goal from the 8, Powell found Roosevelt Collins for the score. Southern blanks Alabama St. Alabama St.

in check with five interceptions, three deep in Southern territory. On the third play from scrimmage, Scott took a pitch around right end, then outraced everyone to the end zone. Roger Serrano's kick gave Southern a 7-0 lead. BATON ROUGE (AP) Ronald Scott ran 66 yards for a touchdown and Marcus Moore returned an interception 68 yards for another score to lead Southern to a 20-0 victory over Alabama St. here Saturday night.

Southern's swarming defense held combination. I was pleased with the BYU bounces Baylor 4 as Bosco throws six Wittenberg 57, Olivet I Yankton II Midland 7 SOUTHWEST E. Central U. 34, Howard Pavnt It McMurry 12, W. New Meiico 7 NE Oklahoma 30, Langston I SW Texas St.

21. Texas Ail I Stephen Austin 43. Prairie View Texos-EI Paso 14. Idaho St. 14 Texas Luther on 24, Austin Col.

FAR WEST Air Force 7S, N. Colorado 7 Arizona 13. California 13 Col Lutheran 34. Son Francisco St. 71 Fresno SI.

37, Boise SI. II Michigan St. 14, Colorado 11 Montana 42, Abiien Chrlstlon 2t Montana St. 30. Mesa, Colo.

14 New Mexico 41, New Mexico St. 11 NW Okiohomo 32, Adams St. 17 Oregon 34. Long Beach St. 17 Southern Col 42, Utah SI.

I Utah 24, W. Montono 7 Washington SI 42, Utah 41 Weber St 44, Ft. Lewis I Western Colo. 20, Colorooo Mines 1 N. Dokoto 4t N.

Dokoto St. 31. N. Michigan 71 N. Iowa 33, Drake 7t NW Missouri St.

47, Washburn I NW Iowa 20, Morningside It Northwd, Mich. 10, Ashland 7 Ohio Northern 14. Mount Union Orterbem 10, Marlerlo 4 Panhandle St. 24, Friends! Peru SI. 14, Evongel 7 Pittsburg SI.

20, Arkansas Tech I St. Ambrose 54. Upoer lowo 20 St. Cloud St. 31, SW Minnesota I St.

Olaf 24. Luther 13 Siaui Falls 25, Nebrasko Weshn 24 Dokoto 27, NE Missouri 14 S. Dokoto St. 27, Wis -Stout 1 S. Dakota Tech 18, Montana Tech 11 SW Missouri 11 Illinois 11 tig Torleton St.

34. Tabor Toledo 70, Ball St I Valparaiso 30, 11 Wobosh 10. Earlham 0 Wovne, Neb. 34, hoar on St. 7 W.

Michigan 17, Miami. Ohio II Wisconsin 77, Illinois 14 Pt. It, SI. Thomas 1 Alobomo 4. Jacksonville St.

4, tkt Albany, Go. Morehouse 3 Appalachian St. 17, W. Kentucky 14 Arkansas St. 14, 0 Austin Peav 13, 10 Catawba 37, J.C.

Smith 0 Delta St. 34, Ouachita 24 Duke 31, Indiana 24 E. Tennessee St. 10, Tennessee Tech 1 Kentucky 22, Youngstown SI. 17 Eliiobeth City St.

13. Livingstone 11 Emory Henry It, Centre 14 Fayetleville St. 12, Virgin Union 22, tkt Fl. Valley St. It, Florloa 14 Fur man 49, Newberry 7 Gordner Webb 14.

Georgia Georgia Southern 41, Presbyterian 4 Guilford 31, Lenoir-Rhvnt IS Mors Hill 13, Concardt Morshall 44. Moreheod St. 4 Miilsops 17, Cent Methodist 4 Mississippi Col. 14, N. Aioboma 24, tkt Nortolk St.

12, St. Pout's 7 Central 20, Virginia St. 4 Carolina St. 43, Ohio U.4 S. Carolina 31.

Citadel 24 Syracuse 23, Moryiond 7 Temple 17, E. Carolina Tennessee St. 34, Jackson St. 14 Towson St. 3S, Liberty Boptlsl Troy SI.

24, Nicholls SI. 7 Tuskege 22, Savormoh St. 24 Voidosta St. 47, Clark Col. Virginia Tech 11, Woke Forest It Wash, Lee it.

Dickinson 7 W. Virginia Tech Georgetown. Ky 15 Coroi.no 4S, Dovidson 11 William 4, Mary 24, VMI 13 Winston-Salem 33, Carolina AAT 21 MIDWEST Albion It. Wovne. Mich.

24 Beloit 44. Knoit Bemidii St. 30, Bethel, Minn. 11 Blultton 17, St. Franclv Pa Bowling Green 5S.

Richmond 8 Bum Vislo 42, westmor 7 Cooitol 23. Betnany.w Vo 1 Corttton 45. Concordia, St Cent. Arkansas 31, SE Missouri It Cent. Missouri 24.

Auoustona.S.D. fl) Cincinnotl 21 Akron 27 Concordia, Moor. 17. Moortwad St. Concorda, Neb.

17. Torkio 7 Cornell, Iowa 34. Culver Slock ten It Dona M. Dakota Westvn 11 Dei one 2t, Heidfhert fl) Dubuau 23. Loras It Ferris St.

4, Kakjmoie I Ft Hoys St II, Lincoln Nilisdal It. Wit I Illinois 34, Missouri 24 Illinois St 35. Illinois Indiono Central 35, Soolnow Vot. St. 4 Indiano St 24.

Illinois 17 Jamestown 27, Rocky Mountain Tt John Carroll 24, Conisius 21 Konsas 31. Wichita SI 7 Kentucky St. 7. Butler 4 Kenyan 30. Adrian 73 Lakeland IS.

Mount St norm 1 More oio St Minn Duluth I Morontne Booiist It. Piiisbury I Michigan 22. Miami. Flo V4 Mo-Am Norarene Tt, Ottawa. Kan 4 Minnesota 31, Rice 74 MissevrRoiw 74.

Missouri Vat II Mo western 22, WHiom Jewell 22. tkt tMOrnte-Omonl I), Kearney St. II pret Footboil Wnt Monro M. Booker T. WoiMnotaa 1 College Football State Area SchooK LSU II, Flonrto II Angelo Stote 10.

Nortfiwtr 7 McNeese 28, Southeastern 7 Southern 20. Alobomo State Northeast Louisiana 49, Central FtorMo 11 Boston University li, Grombllng Southannterit Loulstano 12, Loulstona Tech Southern Arkansas 31, SF. OKtohoma Stephen F. Austin 43, Prokie View 14 SEC GeoroW 24. Southern Mississippi It KenttKkv42.

Kent State Mississippi 22, Memphis Star 4 Mississippi State IS, Colorooo Stout Boston College 3S. Aioboma 31 Vanderbilt 2. Kansas State SWC Brieham Young 42, Baylor 11 Minnesota 31, Rice 24 SIC Arkansas State Tenmssea Choi-tonoogo Teios-Artlngton 27, West Tnot Stole It Top Twenty Michigan 14) 22, Miami (DM Nebroska(2) 4J, Wyoming? CKmsonO) S3. Virginia Ohio Stole (61 22, Oregon State 14 Purdue 23. Notre Dam (7) 21 towa (Ml St.

Iowa State 21 Pnn Stat (11) IS. Rutgers 11 Brighom Young 47, Baylor 1) Oklahoma It, Stanford 7 Washington It) 24. Northwestern I National Scores EAST Albany, Y. Ittwco 4 Bucknell It. Indiona.

Pa IT California. Pa 27, vVestmnstr, Pa. It Cornegie-Mellon It. Dvouesn Cheyney 21, Virginia St. II ChKion 21, Fairmont St.

1 Coigott Connecticut 1 Post 20, Solisbury SI. 1 Oeiawor 32, Jomes Modisan 1 OeUwor St. SC. S. Corolino St 34 Strouostwrg IS, S.

Connecticut It) Edinttor 42, W. Vo WUyn Frostburg SI 11. Geneva 7 Gettysburg 21, Lebanon Vol. GlenvilW St. 13.

Waynrsburl Hampton Inst 13. Howard U. Jersey City St. 23. St.

John's, NY Kmos Point 14. FrnkM 4 ManM 1 Kutitown 17. Glossbore St 4 Lehigh 21. Massachusetts Momiieid 34. Brockport SI.

Mercyhurst 3S, Sina 4 Monte loir St Wagner 4 New Hampshire 21. Mom 11 New Haven 31. Lowell 14 Poc It, Wis Petersen 7 Rhode Island 31. Lotaveflt Shepherd 24. MiiMrsvHi Shippensburg 17 Bloomsburf 11 Teot Southern 31, Mereo St.

Thiol H. Allegheny 7 Wash 4 Jell 21 Jwnie tt Connecticut 13, Coast Gotri 1 Virginia Leuisviiie 4 WiOtner in Moravian 31 SOUTH From Wire Reports PROVO, Utah Quarterback Robbie Bosco threw six touchdown passes as No. 13 Brigham Young won its 13th straight game the longest streak in the nation Saturday by dispatching Baylor, 47-13, and avenging its only loss of 1983. Bosco, a junior from Roseville, connected twice with Glen Kozlowski and Kelly Smith and once; with tight end David Mills to stake the Cougars to a 34-7 halftime lead. Baylor's linebackers blitzed Bosco i frequently in the second half and curtailed his effectiveness.

Still, he got his sixth TD pass of the game one shy of the school record with a 15-yard strike to Mills in the third quarter that gave BYU a 41-7 advantage. Bosco, who seldom played last year as a backup to AU-American Steve Young, completed 26 of 41 passes for 311 yards and went to the bench midway through the fourth quarter. The win was BYU's second of the season after an opening weekend upset of Pittsburgh. Conversely, the loss was Baylor's worst in its first game of the season since 1925, when Notre Dame blanked the Bears, 41-0. It also reversed the outcome of the 1983 game between the two schools, when Baylor, of the Southwest Conference, won 40-38.

BYU, the eight-time champion of the Western Athletic Conference, had entered the game with the nation's second-longest victory streak at 12 games, but ended it with the country's longest after Michigan beat Miami, 22-14. MINNESOTA 31, RICE 24 Freshman quarterback Rickey Foggie threw a touchdown pass for Minnesota and David Puk nudged in for another score within a three-minute span during the fourth quarter to give new Coach Lou Holtz a season-opening 31-24 victory over Rice at Minneapolis. The victory was only the second for Minnesota in its last 20 games. Both triumphs were season-openers against Rice. Rice has dropped 23 of its last 24 games and the defeat spoiled Coach Watson Brown's debut.

Holtz used two quarterbacks sophomore Brett Sadek and Foggie and both- led the Gophers on long touchdown marches in the second quarter to put Minnesota ahead 14-0. But Rice, sparked by sophomore quarterback Kerry Overton, scored three consecutive touchdowns to grab a 21-14 edge after three quarters. Overton drove the Owls 63 yards in 1:47 and threw a 4-yard TD pass to Tony Burnett with 26 seconds left in the half to make it 14-7 at intermission. On the opening drive of the second half, Overton engineered a nine-play, 87-yard drive, capped with his own 13-yard touchdown dash to tie it 14-14. McNeese downs Southeastern LAKE CHARLES (AP) Fullback Ricky Stewart ran for three touchdowns en route to his first 100-yard game two of them after fumble recoveries by McNeese State and the Cowboys tromped Southeastern Louisiana, 28-7, in college football Saturday night.

Stewart ran 3 and 64 yards for touchdowns in the first quarter. And, after backup tailback Tony Hunt ran 2 yards for another Cowboy score in the fourth quarter, Stewart got another 3-yard touchdown run in a 14-point final period. Stewart's first touchdown came just seven plays after McNeese 's defense recovered a fumble at the Southeastern 25 and his last followed the second of two Lion fumbles at the SLU 32. He finished with 100 yards on 15 carries and, with Simon Jordan adding 75 yards, that twosome accounted for all but 93 of McNeese's 268 net yards rushing. Arkansas St.

triumphs, 16-0 CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) Fullback Rickey Jemison plunged 2 yards for a touchdown and Arkansas State used an opportunistic defense to defeat Tennessee-Chattanooga 16-0 Saturday night in non-conference college football. The Indians, 1-1, converted three second-half UTC turnovers into scores en route to their third consecutive victory over the Moccasins, also 1-i 1.

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