Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • Page 42

Location:
Orlando, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
42
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Orlando Sentinel, Sunday, January 17, 1999 C-9" All-Star Gridiron Classic C-8 The Orlando Sentinel, Sunday, January 17, 1999 METRO Oregon State needs to be wary of Erickson NFL taking note of Adderly ongratulations, Oregon State. You have a wonderful new football coach. Bethune-Cookman star NCAA for conspiring to cover up positive drug tests Warren Sapp wasn't supposed to play in Erickson's final game because of one there are those who wonder what really happened. The NCAA did report that Hurricanes players were paid for scoring touchdowns and making other big plays and that someone who will finish what Mike Riley started, someone who will end that awful streak of losing seasons. Hope you're prepared.

Dennis Erickson, introduced last week as the man receiver dames Adderly saw his stock soar with scouts after making three catches for 78 yards. By Bill Buchalter OF THE SENTINEL STAFF to end the Beavers' ignominious string of 28 consecutive losing seasons, will find a way to do the job he was hired to do. That's the problem. Erickson continued the success at the University of Miami started by Howard Schnellenberger and cultivated by Jimmy play to the potential I have, I feel like I can play on any level." Even more important, Team Florida Coach Lindy Infante said, was Adderly's practice work all week and his returning to play in the second half after injuring his toe in the second quarter. "He had a good week, and he has good size and range.

He goes up and catches the ball," Infante said. "He hurt his toe during the game, iced it down and came back. That's good to know. He's a tough guy. A lot of guys don't come back." Infante liked his three receivers and the way they performed for scouts all week, noting McGriff and Burley must always demonstrate more because of their smaller stature.

"All these guys gave a good account of themselves," Infante said. Still, Burley was dejected after being shut out. But he departs for Hawaii today and the Hula Bowl. "Now I'm really looking forward to the trip," Burley said. Culpepper, the game's most valuable offensive player.

"He finds a way to get open, and he will be successful. He got open and I got him the ball." His three catches shared game-high honors with Malcolm Johnson of Notre Dame who played for Team USA, and Team Florida teammate Travis McGriff from the University of Florida, and his game-leading 78 yards included a 35-yard strike from Culpepper, the longest pass play of the game and the second-longest offensive play. Only a 43-yard run by UCLA's Craig Wallendy setting up Team USA's only touchdown was longer. The 35-yard pass play got Team Florida off its own goal line and triggered a 99-yard scoring drive. He also caught a 27-yard pass during the drive, catching one pass in traffic that caught the attention of the scouts gathered among 29,725 sun-baked spectators.

"He showed me something on that one," said veteran scout Hamp Cook of New Orleans. "It was a fluttery pass, and he went up after it and caught it knowing he would take a shot. I had hoped he wouldn't do that because, truthfully, I graded him as a make-it guy during the week. "I felt like he was being overlooked, but that play ended it." Cook said. Adderly, who caught 44 passes for 943 yards for a rejuvenated B-CC offense, trailed McGriff and UCF's Siaha Burley statistically and promotionally, but came away with the bigger game Saturday.

"I came here to have fun," Adderly said. "It was a business trip, but I knew if I had fun, good things could happen." Adderly who played high school football at Fort Lauderdale Dillard, the same school that launched Arizona Cardinal receiver Frankie Sanders, said playing at a Division I-AA school doesn't diminish a player's potential. "What was important was I made it here and I stayed healthy," Adderly said. "When I Miami did not enforce its own drug-test policy. Ultimately, the NCAA hammered UM, an action from which Butch Davis' program is still recovering.

But given the limited time between when Riley left Oregon State for the San Diego Chargers and when Erickson was hired, you wonder just $67 million payoff from losing a lawsuit, about college athletics' continued gambling concerns and about the NCAA continually losing staff members to an impending relocation, said there's only one group that wants a playoff in I-A football the media. (That assumes Dempsey excluded BCS rights-holder ABC when he said media.) "The last couple of weeks before bowl pairings were announced we had as much interest in college football that there has been in a while," he said Three of the country's top football teams, national-champion Tennessee, Kansas State and Ohio State didn't fare so well in The Boston Globe's recent look at graduation rates for African-Americans. K-State graduated only 7 percent of its black players, according to the NCAA, the paper said. Tennessee? 15 percent. Arkansas (11 percent), Texas (20), Ohio State (27) and Florida (28) were in the same ballpark Hank Nichols, who supervises officials for the NCAA, was furious when Indiana Coach Bobby Knight said that game officials were just as susceptible to gamblers as players.

Shut up, Hank, the coach is right. You've got NBA officials being haunted by IRS officials and college officials trying to work every night because they want more money. These guys are human (check out that Cincinnati-North Carolina Charlotte fiasco if you don't think so), and human beings can be tempted. Houston Coach Clyde Drexler once had two sons of former NBA stars playing for him Gee Ger-vin, son of George Gervin, and Moses Malone Jr. Malone, however, has left the building.

A 6-foot-5 guard, the younger Malone was unhappy with his playing time. It was no surprise that former Florida State center Karim Shabazz ended up at Providence. Shabazz, who was very close to former FSU Coach Pat Kennedy and not extremely close to cur- 1 rent FSU Coach Steve Robinson, joined a coach Kennedy adores Tim Welsh, a former FSU assistant under Kennedy. Shabazz will be eligible for the Friars in December. Close observers of top-ranked Connecticut believe Jim Calhoun's latest team has what predecessors lacked chemistry.

Like most teams, the Huskies will go through a spell of difficulty, but Richard Hamilton's leadership could make that spell last only a matter of days, not weeks. 7 IMMPtraiCOUJOCS A fun trip for James Adderly has turned out to be good for business the business of playing football. Adderly, a wide receiver from Bethune-Cookman College, came to the Gridiron All-Star Classic in the shadows of more publicized pass catchers. He left the Florida Citrus Bowl Saturday with three catches for 78 yards and profound respect from National Football League scouts who have been watching and writing and charting all week. "He's a big-play guy," praised Team Florida quarterback Daunte PHELAN M.

EBENHACKTHE ORLANDO SENTINEL Chatting it up. James Adderly (center) talks to his Team Florida teammates after his top performance in the Gridiron All-Star Classic. ASSOCIATED PRESS Checkered past. New Oregon State Coach Dennis Erickson exited Miami just before the Hurricanes got hammered by the NCAA. Johnson.

He guided the Hurricanes to two of their four national championships. Then, after losing a title game to Alabama, after helping Nebraska win its first of three championships in the '90s and after it became apparent that the Hurricanes were on a path of self-destruction one the NCAA was more than able to clear Erickson left for the NFL. No one blamed Erickson for leaving, unless you count his former players. Few coaches turn down a chance to coach in the NFL. And although Erickson, who was dismissed at the end of the season by the Seattle Seahawks, was not fingered officially by the how much investigating Oregon State officials did of their new coach.

Oh, Beavers boosters wanted Erickson hired in 1984, but the school president said no. So certainly there was some background material in the Beavers' files. Some advice: Keep an eye on the new coach. There was talk under Riley, who left Oregon State for the San Diego Chargers, that the Beavers would bring in as many as nine junior-college transfers for immediate help for 1999. They lose 21 seniors and 13 starters from their most successful team (5-6) in 27 seasons.

But the Beavers also return 30 of the 44 players listed on their year- end, two-deep chart (non-including specialists). When Riley began recruiting following the Beavers' stunning, 44-41 overtime triumph over rival Oregon, he started a new motto: "No more Beaver jokes." With Erickson in control, Oregon State officials had better have their fingers crossed. Count NCAA Executive Director Cedric Dempsey among those who was happy with what the Bowl Championship Series delivered for college football. Dempsey, fighting fires about a Championship Coif Summer Rates in Winter 112,00 Vi 15.00 N20.00 7:00 to 8:30 7:00 to 8: JO tUOto 12:00 12:00 to 2:00 9 Hides 18 Holes 18 Holes 18 Holes 18 Holes Alter 2:00 12,00 By Phone: 1-800-435-2668 www.medservices.com Includes cart, greens fees tax Osceola Golf Club Meidiw Woods Golf Club 407-148-49 IS 407-8(1-56011 Ohio State players propel East On the run. West quarterback Michael Bishop of Kansas State, is pressured by East defender Antonio Cochran of Georgia.

Joe Montgomery rushed for 93 yards and Joe Germaine passed for 207 in 20-10 victory in East-West Shrine Bowl. ASSOCIATED PRESS one week i Only Until 1-23-99. ORSSOT (ffv 78.98 aaJTr Call For Mm Sizes and ASSOCIATED PRESS the nation's top college stars and featured only one first-team All American this year, was 69,111 -but the actual crowd seemed about half that. East 20, West 10 Official Ruta deserves credit jjjWe have come not to burj the officials, but to praise them. In a year where football officials have come under constant criticism.

Ted Ruta of Ti-tusville, a back judge in Saturday's Gridiron All-Star Classic was praised for his vision. This vision didn't determine holding or pass interference. It was Ruta, who also is a Rotar-ian. who came up with the idea to hold an all-star game matching Floridians against the rest of the nation with proceeds benefitting Rotary charities. Ruta pitched the idea to Florida Citrus Sports' No.

1 pitchman. Chuck Rohe, and the idea was turned into reality. Ruta was recognized at half-time along with leaders of Rotary International who were in attendance for the game. "As Rotarians," Ruta said, "We like to take on catastrophic things and make them better. Football has been my whole life so I tried to put the two together; "The Buoniconti Fund Miami Project to cure spinal chord paralysis is football related, and it was a perfect match." he said.

Aaron Hyatt, General Secretary of Rotary International, past district govern Lou Phoebus of Melbourne Beach, Herbert Brown of Clearwater, president of Rotary International, and Robert Menconi of Fort Lauderdale, current area director of Rotary, joined Ruta at halftime for the recognition. The fund received $100,000 from Florida Citrus Sports from game proceeds and then got a stunning halftime surprise. The Dr. Phillips Foundation presented the fund another check for $100,000. Jim Hinson, who is president of Dr.

Phillips, And also serves on Florida Citrus Sports' executive committee, made the presentation. GATORS GALORE THERE WAS a Gathering of Gators on the Team Florida sideline. Lindy Infante, Class of '62, was Florida's coach. Several of his teammates jMio live in Central Florida received a telephone call from Infante: "This is your captain calling. You will be on the sideline for the game." Responding to the calls were running back Bob "The Mover" Hoover ('62) who lives in Maitland, receiver Bruce Starling of Orlando ('61) and Pana ma Jack Katz (sophomore in '62) of Orlando.

GOOD GUYS SEVEN OF the all-star players visited the Florida Children's Hospital on the Florida Hospital campus Friday. The seven Virginia Tech's Loren Johnson, Florida State's Deon Humphrey, Florida's Willie Cohens and Pittsburgh's Phil Clarke of Team Florida plus South Carolina's Kevin Brooks, Washington's Aaron Dalan and Notre Dame's Hunter Smith of Team USA autographed mini-footballs and played games with the children. UCF PLAYERS ONE OF the six former Central Florida players in the game was offensive lineman Ryan Gillis, who has come a long way since needing an operation to remove a cancerous growth from his shoulder two years ago. "The experience was great," Gillis said. "It was kind of a farewell game at the Citrus Bowl for all six of us." Another former Knight participating was offensive tackle Cornell Green, who received favorable comments from scouts this week because of his quick feet and 321-pound body.

Asked to name the NFL team he would wish to play for if the decision was his, Green said: "Any." ETC. TEAM FLORIDA linebacker Olrick Johnson, out of Florida led his team with eight tackles. On the USA side, safety Pierson Prioleau, out of Virginia Tech, had 11 tackles, and linebacker Khari Samuel, out of I-AA Massachusetts, had 10. Both punters had a good day. Brent Bartholomew, out of Ohio State and Apopka, averaged 47.9 yards gross and 35.6 net on seven kicks for Florida, while Hunter Smith, out of Notre Dame, averaged 41.5 gross and 38.2 net on four kicks for the USA.

Both pla-cekickers did not have great days. Florida's Todd Latourette of Arkansas was good on a 27-yard field goal but missed from 34 yards, and the USA's Kris Brown of Nebraska was good from 35 yards but missed from 32 and could not try an extra point because of a bad snap. BILL BUCHALTER, JERRY GREENE East 17 43-125 229 13-22-2 72 1-0 5-50 35:53 West 15 24-47 220 15-33-3 13 2-0 4-30 24:07 First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int Return Yards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ol Possession STANFORD, Calif. When two of the East's four running backs were unable to play in the East-West Shrine Bowl because of injuries, the burden fell on Ohio State's Joe Montgomery.

He turned it into an NFL audition. Montgomery had 23 carries for 93 yards, including a 7-yard scoring run, and the East defense had three interceptions and four sacks in a 20-10 win in Saturday's game. Montgomery never got to star during his career at Ohio State. He was ineligible his freshman year, and limited in his sophomore and junior years by a knee injury. This past season, he was overshadowed in the backfield by teammate Michael Wiley.

But when Cecil Martin of Wisconsin (shoulder injury) and Anthony Gray of Western New Mexico (hamstring injury) were held out of Saturday's game, Montgomery got his chance. "We didn't go into the game thinking that Joe was going to carry that much," East Coach John Cooper of Ohio State said. "But we found out right before the game that Cecil and the kid from Western New Mexico couldn't play, so we had only two running backs. East "Obviously I'm proud of Joe Montgomery," Cooper added. "Joe Montgomery wanted to be here, unlike some other guys who' didn't show up.

And he played like it today." Montgomery's teammate at Ohio State, Joe Germaine, threw for 207 yards as the East won for just the third time in the last 10 Shrine games. L.C. Stevens of North Carolina caught six passes for 154 yards for the East squad, including a 22-yard scoring pass from Aaron Brooks of Virginia. Jeff Hall of Tennessee added field goals of 47 and 26 yards for the East. Oregon's Akili Smith had a 53-yard scoring pass to California's Dameane Douglas for the West and Kansas State's Martin Gra-matica added a 31-yard field goal, but Smith was held to 9 of 19 passing for 127 yards and was intercepted once.

The announced attendance for the game, which no longer draws 7 10 0 3 20 3 7 0 0 -10 oi Drjms Install New Crssss. Seals' Cleaning and Repacking PHELAN M. EBENHACKTHE ORLANDO SENTINEL First Quarter: WEST FG Gramatica 31, 8:01. EAST Stevens 22 pass Irom Brooks (Hall kick). 4:32.

Second Quarter: EAST FG Hall 47. 10:40. WEST Douglas 53 pass from Ak, Smith (Gramatica kick), 4:20. EAST Mont- ornery 7 run (Hall kick), ,41, Fourth Quarter: EAST FG all 26, 11:18. A 69,111.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING East. Montgomery 23-93, Gary 10-36. Brooks 5-19, Germaine 4-jminus 6), Brown 1-(minus 17). West, Kimbrough 6-46, Washington 4-19, Thomas 2-6, Paulk 1-0, Ak.Smith 5-(minus 10), Bishop 6-(minus 14). PASSING East, Germaine 12-18-2-207, Brooks 1-4-0-22, West, Ak.Smith 9-19-1-127, Bishop 6-12-1-93, Thomas 0-2-1-0.

RECEIVING East, Stevens 6-154, Foreman 4-35, Brown 1-29, Montgomery 1-6, Booker 1-5. West, McDonald 5-96, Oouglas 4-72, Jackson 2-21. Washington 2-9, Campbell 1-12, Kimbrough 1-10. Inspect Hardware mm P205 70SR1 4 Hydraulic ocoooea 1 luu i uui On his way. Daunte Culpepper outruns Team USA defender Jesse Tarplin en route to a 2nd-half touchdown.

200 scouts watch 90 players attempt to impress V.J,. Where Aoplicable 1A OR For Rear Wheel Drive Vehicles r-aus 11 With Coupon Only, Limited Time Only. EXPIRES: 1 -23-99 ORSS04 SPEED Rated WlT'1T'mtil Performance ii 'M Baisnrt Whi firs run I MSsX Performance. BASIC Regiittrty $18.95 0,7 Culpepper keeps scouts talking wai 40,000 Mile Limited Warranty Res $1.00 waste DuraBlend or 18560HR14. 45.95 OH Disposal Charge.

Valvollne SyntftoOc Oil ChanoA 19560HR14. 19560HR15. V'IB 'LEASE CALL FOR APOMMTKIFKT PiWlfJ'ExPIRES: 1-23-9! P18570TR14 37.95 P20570TR14 37.95 P21570TR14 40.95 P22570TR15 53.95 P25570TR15 55.95 P21565TR15 51.95 P23560TR15 51.95 P25560TR15 56.95 P27560TR15 60.95 45.95 45.95 45.95 47.95 45.95 20560HR15. 21560HR15. 20565HR15.

i mv4mm shocks struts Carry The Full Line Products. 5 -mmmmm 1H Light Truck ir Long Trail Tft I nEAiitlKf 40,000 Mile Limited Wananty JU SACK GUARANTEE: 0 DAY RIDE GUARANTEE! Ask For Ofl.nl-: Leigh played most of the game for Team USA, completing just 6-of-22 passes for 56 yards. Quarterback Brian Kuklick, out of Wake Forest, was knocked out of the game early in the third period after a tackle by Brett Tim-mons, out of Tulane. Kuklick was all right later but did not play again. Leading the way for Team USA was fullback Craig Walendy, out of UCLA, who had the day's longest run of 43 yards to set up his own touchdown run of 3 yards in the final period.

All that action was a unique thrill for Walendy. I was stunned," he said. "At UCLA I touched the ball just three times this year and never scored a touchdown." Perhaps the happiest player of all was USA defensive end Chris Hood, out of Alabama. Hood was way out of Alabama as one missing credit hour made him academically ineligible this season. The Gridiron Classic was his first football game since the end of the 1997 season.

"About time," he said after gaining attention with two sacks and steady pursuit all day. "I was ready, I was so ready. "And the best thing now is that there are no credit hours to worry about in the NFL." So these players will move on, while the Gridiron Classic appears to have received a passing grade from everyone involved. And as for the rest of the Unit- ed States, the message to Team Florida was clear: "Wait 'til next year." GRIDIRON from C-1 ida Coach Lindy Infante. The game's concept was a matchup between a team comprised of college seniors who played prep andor college ball in Florida vs.

a team of seniors who played anywhere else. The concept clearly worked. The players seemed to care about the outcome, as did the pro-Florida crowd who constantly cheered Culpepper when he was on the field and chanted his return when he wasn't. "I had mixed emotions about playing my last game in the Citrus Bowl," Culpepper said, "but the entire week was a wonderful experience." Nearly 200 professional scouts watched the 90 players all week. They probably thought they knew what to expect from Culpepper, but he always is surprising especially to the opposing defense.

Culpepper was brilliant on Team Florida's first two drives, leading the "home" team to a 10-0 lead by completing 8-of-10 passes for 134 yards and ignoring would-be tacklers. He came into the game briefly on two more occasions and finished with 8-of-12 completions for the 134 yards, plus a touchdown run of 2 yards. The opportunity for the scoring run came early in the second half after Miranda intercepted a pass throw by Team USA's Graham Leigh, out of New Mexico, and returned the ball 34 yards to the USA 15. Miranda played in the Blue-Gray game earlier and is a perfect example of the value of these ii imm Xj. Shocks Struts Suspension Alignment Team Florida 17, Team USA 9 Brakes Battery Air Pressure Windsheild leering Linkage saucer-eyed and stammered excitedly into their tiny tape recorders.

While Culpepper won the Most Valuable Offensive trophy, the game itself won Most Likely To Dominate Future All-Star Games. The clattering crowd of 29,725 was a nice start for this first game that made giant steps all week with the usual Florida Citrus Sports lavish hospitality and infinite planning, Chamber-of-Com-merce weather, idyllic Disney facilities, Orlando-area entertain ment, strong NFL scouting presence and respected former NFL coaches. The game netted a handsome $200,000 for its charity, the Buoniconti Fund to Cure Paralysis, and $300,000 for its partners, the Florida Rotary Clubs. The scouts and players will doubtless go away heralding the message that this is the game top players and scouts want on their dance cards. They are near unanimous in predicting it will need only two or three more editions to blow past the 53-year-old Senior Bowl as the top college all-star showcase.

And though Culpepper won't be back to excite and dazzle, count on Infante (who magnanimously donated his $6,000 honorarium back to the game's charity) to put his new 1-0 Classic record on the line next year against Team USA. And all the other countries they care to bring alimg. "He would have played every down if I'd let him," mused Infante. When, in the final minute, Daunte broke out of the pocket and daringly bolted into the heart of Team USA's defense, Ashe was blissfully unaware in the press box elevator. Otherwise, he would have been Mason Ashen.

No doubt Virginia Tech safety Pierson Prioleau wishes he had been in that elevator with Ashe. It became Prioleau's duty to risk his 184 pounds in an effort to keep that full-steam locomotive with No. 8 on his jersey from moving the chains. Prioleau made the tackle but not before Culpepper had jarred his way to the first down, sealing the game and knocking Pierson halfway to Lake Lorna Doone. After collecting all of his loose teeth and returning various bones to their original joints, Prioleau chuckled in salute to the 257-pound Culpepper as they patted one another's helmet.

"I gave it all I had," Prioleau told him. "You're a pretty big boy!" The defining play of the day for Culpepper, however, came early on, when a USA linebacker broke free on a blitz for an open shot on Culpepper. Daunte lowered his shoulder, kept his tree-trunk legs churning, and the linebacker fell away in chunks as Culpepper straighten up and fired a laser for a first down. In the press box, 40 NFL scouts went GUEST from C-1 In his first appearance as a pro (each player was paid $1,000) and likely his last in the Florida Citrus Bowl, Culpepper quickly erased lingering questions any scouts might have harbored. He connected on 8 of 10 passes in the first two possessions to engineer an early 10-0 lead.

Would Daunte flinch against pro-caliber talent on national TV in front of a batch of NFL scouts? New Orleans Saints scout Hamp Cook shook his head in wonderment at the poise and ease with which Culpepper executed. "He looks like he's playing pitch and catch in his back yard." In a sense, the Citrus Bowl has become Daunte's back yard over these past four years. "I'm a little sad, a little glad," Culpepper said of his bittersweet final Orlando bow that surely affirmed him as a $50 million NFL commodity. Perhaps that is why his agent, Mason Ashe, happily anticipated that Daunte would watch from the sidelines as the other three Team Florida quarterbacks divvied up the second half. But that's not Daunte's way.

So when Team Florida Coach Lindy Infante offered, Daunte leaped at the chance to go back in to score a third-period touchdown and again in the final two minutes when his team needed one more ifirst down to seal the victory. Prices do not include the Si .00 Ftorlda New Tire Fee or the Tire Bsoosai Monday-Friday: 7:00 8:00 Saturday: 7:00 6:00 USA 17 31-190 103 10-29-2 166 3-1 5-33 28:55 Fla 12 34-115 160 12-24-0 80 1-0 5-36 31:05 Tire IWed PrWwts arrf Seraces Are Optional if 2 First downs Rushes-yards Passing Comp-Att-Int Return Yards Punts-Avg. Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession a I SSI 9,: 3- Sunday: 9:00 4:00 Most Stores ueiiien. aome I ires May Be nmpcwily Ou! 01 Sloe. MM Amiable.

Please Call For Availabilfy No Dealeis, Please. www.tirekingdom.com ALTAMONTE SPRINGS 457 West Highway 436 Fran, km smami 407682-6661 APOPKA MVO056S Team USA learn Florida 0 3 0 1 1 3 7 7 0-17 PHELAN M. EBENHACKTHE ORLANDO SENTINEL 840 East Semoran Blvd 880-8600 KISSIMMEE MV09562 Ol CHANGE NOT AVAILABLE 325 West Vine Street U.S. 192 407847-7900 fllfe Say goodbye. Daunte Culpepper waves to Florida Citrus Bowl fans of his UCF career Saturday after the Gridiron All-Star Classic.

805 State Road 434 West 407830-8040 OPLANDOLAKB FREDRICA mwB oil change not available i. 3722 South Semoran Blvd 407282-7434 TUSCAWILLA MV281B4 Road 407695-3040 OVIEDOUNION PARK J651 Atefaya Trail (s.e. or cmu 407823-9275 WINTBR PARK MV09575 221 6 Aloma Avenue 407 629-56S6 TtS MV12110 16200 U.S. Highway 441 352387-1 133 MVI58B6 2479 Citrus BlvdVU.S. Highway 441 352323-0020 OAYTONA BEACH oil change not availableclosed Sunday 948 Mason Avenuo 904255-6300 DELAND MV0957B CLOSED SUNDAY! 261 2 South Woodland Blvd.U.S.

17-92 904943-8608 ORANOE CirYMV23S78 896 Saxon Boulevard 904774-7400 ORMOND BEACH uvoona 20 Yonge Street ru.s Nottn oranadai 904672-8013 PORT ORANGE MV24480 ORLANDOCOLONIAL mvodsss 5240 West Colonial Drive 407208-8877 ORLANDO MV08S61 Flrtt Ouartar: FLA FG Latourette 27. Second Quarter: FLA Hlckson 1 run (Latourette kick), 11:11 USA FG Brown 35. Third Quarter: FLA Culpepper 2 run (Latourette kick), Fourth Quarter: USA Walen-dy 3 run (kick tailed), 7:45. 29.725 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Team USA' Walendy 4-58. Hootkln 10-58, Sleeker 7-36, Hill 7-30, Leigh 2-6, Kuklick 1-2.

Team Florida, Williams 7-30. Feaster 7-23. Hlckson 9-22. Edwards 7-19. Culpepper 2-14, Davenport 2-7, PASSING Team USA, Leigh 6-22-2-56, Kuklick 4-7-0-52 Team Florida, Culpepper 8-1 2-0-134.

Bandhauer 1-4-0-0, Earnhardt 0-4-0-0. Davenport 3-4-0-38, RECEIVING Team USA, Johnson 3-29, Walandy 2-11, Sleeker 1-15, Parker 1-15, Cooeland 1-15, Sanlord 1-12. 7145 Oranoe Blossom Trail 407889-9910 ORLANDODOWNTOWN uvopeer 2001 East Colonial Drive su. PHELAN M. EBENHACKTHE ORLANDO SENTINEL SANFORD MV09683 games to players involved.

Said one scout of the former Golden Knight: "He got better all week at the Blue-Gray game and now he looks better here. He's going to be in somebody's draft." That's all Miranda asks, saying he would "just pray to God" that he gets an NFL opportunity. aL. The game's stars were not all from Central Florida or even all from Florida. Team USA actually had more yardage, 293 to 275, but could not overcome three turnovers by Leigh on two intercepted passes and one lost fumble near the end when his squad had a last chance to tie.

3504 South Orlando Drive (U.S. 17-92) 407322-0016 SOUTH CHASE uvoesso 1 2051 South Orange Blossom Trail 407240-9229 899 Dunlawton Avenue 904786-4189 Local hero. UCF defensive back Paul Miranda heads up field after making interception. Prices are effective in Orange, Oscnola, Seminole and Lake Counties and honored at all other locattorm upon presentation of nils ad. Some products may Hill 1-11.

Team Florida, Adderley 3-78, McGriff 3-34, Hypollte c-a, wimams z-i4, Myers wj, reaster.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Orlando Sentinel
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Orlando Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
4,732,775
Years Available:
1913-2024