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Argus-Leader from Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 51

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Argus-Leaderi
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Sioux Falls, South Dakota
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51
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71 tt rrn ti 1 VSEsiEao Temple 0 MIHl 11 sup UirBime raves lefa MiJl; -f. graves I I Sioux Falls Argus-Leader 196? SECTION First Victory For Local Club By TONY MERRY Argus-Leader Sports Writer Sioux Falls College quarter-back Terry Holland completed eight of 16 Dasses. inelurlinsr nno 111' for a touchdown, as the Braves snatched their first win in eight liMira- in it 11, I -I i rl8" V- 1 I I 1 starts oy tripping Midland 11-7 at Howard Wood Starli um urday afternoon. The Braves of Coach Jim Ricketts rushed for only 57 yards out passed for 179 and came up with crucial defensive plays when necessary. Midland gained 171 yards on the ground but had six passes intercepted, Bob Garry had two of the thefts for the SFC crew and Morris Grudt.

Dennv Cleveland Bob Pawloski and Pat Garrv one each. In a scoreless first quarter, the only scoring threat came on a 43-yard field-goal attempt by i i BOB GARRY intercepted a Midland- The intended pass Saturday as Sioux Falls College post- Coming up at ed its first football victory of the season. the Braves. Jacks Scare Bison STATISTICS SFC Midland 12 57 174 179 49 1 -14 t-22 0 1 15 15 -27 S-34 47 44 Before Falling You Take The High Road -Northwestern's Hudson hugs the ball as he is lifted over the shoulder of Minnesota's Bob Bailey (59) as Minnesota's Walt Bowser (11) looks on during first-half -action of their Big 10 clash at Minneapolis. Hudson picked up four yards on the play.

(AP Wireproto) receiver is Ernie Turner, left is Denny Cleveland of Photo by Terry DeVine. 20-13 The second-period Jack touch- down came with two minutes left after a 57-yard drive. The second SDS touchdown followed a Bison punt and capped a 44-yard drive. Earli- er, Dean Krogman attempted a 47-yard field goal which fell short (on the Bison two-yard line). Following the final touch down, the Jacks were able to move to midfield before Rick Cover intercepted a pass to end final hopes of the hosts.

The loss left the Jackrabbit- Bison series at 31-20-5 in the Jacks favor, but the Bison have now won six straight, Their regular season win string stands at 27 straight. Offensively, the Jacks were led by Tim Keller with 74 yards STATISTICS Bruce Crampton Grabs Lead In Hawaiian Open Golf Meet NDS SDS 11 14 108 141 73 42 10- 24 (-25 1 0 11- 11-3S 1 2 at 54 BROOKINGS Power- ful North Dakota State needed a pair of fourth-quarter touch. downs to stop fired-up South uaKota state 20-13 in the final 1969 North Central Conference clash for both teams. The Bison, top-ranked nation ally in the small-college divi sion, capitalized on a fluttering Jackrabbit punt and a Steve Krumrei pass interception for NCC STANDINGS Final D. State i 4 3 3 3 2 1 Northern.

Iowa S. D. State North Dakota- South Dakota. Morningside Augustana their final tallies after the Jack defense contained them to their own half of the field the entiTe third quarter. Ron Erhardt's Herd moved into Jackrabbit territory for the first time in the sec ond half early in the fourth quarter when an SDS punt died on the hosts 47.

Directed by Bruce Grasamke, the Bison then used 12 plays to score with 8:52 left and moved ahead as Tim Mjos pow ered in from the one-yard line. Jim Twardy kicked the extra point for a 14-13 lead. Then with less than two minutes to play, freshman Larry Armstrong attempted a fourth-and-10 pass that was picked off yard line. On Midland's first play, Bob Garry snared his second inter ception for the Braves. Vossler led the SFC rushing with 36 yards in 22 carries.

Bryan Nitchie carried 25 times for 100 yards for Midland. Patten caught for passes for 53 yards, Baker two for 82. The win gave the Braves a 1-5 record in the Tri-State Con- FINAL TRI-STATE STANDINGS HIOH SCHOOL Rapid City Stevens 35, Watertown 11 Groton 34, Aberdeen Roncalll 11 Fargo Shanley 52, Dickinson Trinity COLLE6I Tri-Stat Sioux Falls College 11, Midland 7 Yankton 37, Concordia, 2t Westmar 24. Wartburg 21 Northwestern. Iowa, 41, Dan I Norm Central N.D.

State 20, S.O. State 11 South Dakota 2, Augustana 2 Northern Iowa 40, North Dakota II Morningside 50, Kearney IS SDIC Northern State 42, Huron College I Jamestown 3, Southern I Black Hills 32, Dakota Wssleysn 14 Colorado College 33, Dakota State I Dartmouth 17, Columbia 7 surraio -a, Boston College 11 Boston U. 17, Rhode Island It Indiana, 15, C.W. Post Edinboro 16. rtlfnrnia- Db 11 l.

Princeton 51, Harvard 20 Notre Dame 49, Pittsburgh Dayton 27, VHIanova 20 West Chester 28, Lenoir Rhyne 14 nai Po nt n. Untr New Hampshire 14, Springfield wirmeasiern 71. Cortland St. 17 Lafavette Vermmt Colgate 29, Bucknell 7 Cornell 14, Brown 7 Gettysburg 14, Temple 14 Citadel 40, Maine 20 Delaware 42, Lehigh 17 Amherst 35, Trinity, 7 Connecticut 98. Piltnara Vt Syracuse 23.

Arizona A Yale 21, Pennsylvania 1 South. Wake Forest 23, Virginia 11 urorgia IJ, riortaa 13, tie Davidson 42, East Carolina 17 Tuskegee 29, Miles East Tennessee 27 Ky 7 Northwestern La. 29, VlcNeesa 24 WAShinntnn 1 Im 11 i 19 Morgan state 74, Hampton Insrtute I Mississippi 21, Chattanooga 0 Auburn 52, Mississippi State 11 Vanderbllt 42, Kentucky 4 Western Kentucky 18, Middle Tennessee. 14 Sewanee 34, Washington, 10 Tennessee State 48, Morris Brown 14 Western Caroline 47. Kirnfe, it Duke 34, Clemson 27 Miami, Ohio, 34, Maryland 11 North Carolina 41, Virginia MlitarV 11 Tennessee 29, South Carolin 14 Cincinnati 31, Louisville 21 Richmond 37, Furman 0 Florida A4.M 24, Nortti Carolina A4.T Florida State 10, Virginia Tech 10, tM To ane 14.

Georala Tw4t 1 West Virginia 31, William a Mary 1 Midwest Colorado 17, Kansas 14 Nebraska 17, Iowa State 1 Lakeland 35, Lea 20 Luther 43, St. Thomas IS Quantlco Marines 21, Gustanvus Adok phus 4 Tarkio, Mo 14, Buena Vista Western Illinois 55, Illinois State 11 Illinois College Eureka 24 Kansas Wesleyan 7, Ottawa 4 Carthage 49, Carroll 0 Hiram Scott 91, Metro Stafm Akron 50, Youngstown 27 Simpson 30, Wm. Jewell 7 Marshall 31, Kent State 20 West Texas St. 28, Western Midi. 2 St.

Olaf 82, Beloit 7 Wheaton 20, P'llsbury II Rochester J. C. 35, Mesabl Macalester 29, Iowa Central Morris 27, Mankato 24 Chadron 35, Southwest Minn, i Coe 21, Monmouth 14 Hamiine 50, Bethel, Carletnn 91, Knnx 14 Oshkosh 49, Whitewater 11 Eau Claire 29, La Croose 11 Stout 15, River Falls 4 Plattevllle 54, Stevens Point 14 Wisconsin-Milwaukee 17, Bradley 14 Iowa Wesl-van 91, Central Methodist 11 Hillsdale 59, Winona 0 Grinnell 14, Lawrence 11 Cornell. Iowa 49, Rlpon 20 Wm. Penn 21, Culver-Stockton Mi-Missouri 44, Oklahoma 10 Minnesota 28, Northwestern 21 Lincoln, 38, Ky.

state Bowling Green 93, oh0 u. 14. Defiance 43, Anderson 15 Central Michigan 25, Indiana State 24 Evansville 49, St. Joseph's, 24 Franklin 52, Manchester 4 Denison 27, Wabash 4 Hanover 44, Indiana Central Hope 24, Taylor 14 Augustana. 35, Illinois Wesleyan 14 Ashland 17, Wisconsin-Superior 7 John Carroll 14, Findley 9 Muskingum 7, Heidelberg 7, Pnrdu 41.

MlchlQn State 13 Toledo U. 35, Northern Illinois 11 Michigan 57. Illinois 0 Iowa 28. Indiana 17 Oklahoma Stte 28, Kansas Stat IT Houston 47. Tulsa 14 Ohio Stat 42, Wisconsin 7 Southwest Arkansas 30, Rice 4 Texas 54, Baylor 14 Arkansas State 21, Drake 21, tl Texas Christian 35, Texas Tech 24 North Texas St.

47, Wichita State 0 Abilene Christian 28, 14 Grambling 42, Arkansas 0 Texas 20, Southern Methodist 1 Far West Air Force 34, Utah Stat 11 Arizona State 48, New Mexlcs If Army 17, Oregon 17, tie Stenford 21, Washington 7 Northern Arizona U. 41. Eastern New Mexico 20 Oregon state 35, California 0 Southern California 21, Washington St. 7 Utah 34, Wyoming 10 Whitman 27, Pacific, 7 Puget sound 44, Portland State 34 Willimette 24, Pacific Lutheran 15 Nevada-Las Vegas 35, Idaho State IT Cal Western 49, Cal Lutheran 0 Brigham Young 21, San Jos 1 Azusa Pacific 52, Cal Tech 14 San Francisco Stale 27, Nevada-Reno Hayward Slate 28, Humboldt Stat 13 Rediands 34, Occidental 18 UC-Santa Barbara 28. Las Anoelee State 4 Chico state 20, UC-Davis 10 Colorado St.

Col, 35, Eastern Montana Boise state 23, Western Colorado 20 Southern Colorado 31, Fort Lewis 0 Eastern Michigan 31 Stat Weber State 38, Idaho 7 Montana 14, Cal Poly 0 JIM CHESLEY, sophomor who played eight-man football at Wakonda, turned in a fins defensive job for South Dakota's Coyotes Saturday. score of 207 and led Nicklaus by stroke, eig jacs, wno naa led or shared the lead in his last seven competitive rounds, fell back on a string of three consecutive bogeys and finished with a 74, two over par, on the par 72 Waialae Country Club course. Nicklaus, who started the day with a four-stroke lead. had a 54-hole total of 208. Tall Tom Weiskopf held third place at 209 after a 71.

Just one stroke back: was former club pro" Don Bies, who had a 66 for 210. Doug Sanders and Jack Mc-Gowan were at 211, while the group at 212 included defending champion Lee Trevino, Frank Beard and Billy Casper. Arnold Palmer had a par 72 for 213. Howie Johnson shot 76 Satur day to skid to 217. Joel Gold-strand had 72 for 220, Crampton, 34, and a tour re gular for 13 years, hasn't scored a regular tour victory since 1965 but finished second six times in the last two years.

Bruce had eight birdies and only a single bogey in his sparkling effort. LEADER Bruce Cramoton 71.71jw Jack Nicklaus 63-71-74-208 Tom Weiskopf 70-48-71-209 uon Dies 71-73-46-210 Doug Sanders 7i.7i-6-9ii Jack McGowan 48-72-71 -211 Lee Trevino 74-72-44-212 Wilier Barber 73-71-68-212 Bert Yancey 73-70-49-212 Frank Beard 71-72-49-212 Billy Casper 73-48-71-212 Ken Still 67-71-74212 uay Brewer 72-72-69-213 Mac McClendon 71-72-70213 Dudley Wysong 70-72-71 213 Ohi Chi Rodriguez 71-71-71-213 Arnold Palmer 70-71-72-213: R.H. Sikes 73-71-49-213 Billy Maxwell 72-72-70-214 Al Geiberger 74-69-71-214 lou branam 70-72-72-214 tarry Ziegler 69-73-72-214 lieorge Arcner 71-71-72-214 Kermit Zariey 74-48-72-214 Takaakl Kono 73-49-72-214 Grier Jones 69-72-73-214 Herb Hoooer 70-70-74214 John Schroeder Ken ENsworth 71-75-49-21S Jack Dewing 72-73-70215 Vem Novak 71-75-69-215 Tom Sriaw 72-73-70-15 Rockey Thompson 73-71-71-215 Jack Cuptt 70-74-71-215 Dick Crawford 71-71-73-215 Bill Johnston 69-72-74-215 Rod Funseth 75-73-48-216 Jim Colbert 73-75-68216 Steve Spray 73-73-70-216 Dave Gurmia 7u-6-uzia Lee Elder 75-71-70-216 Lionel Hetoert 72-73-71-216 Dick Rhyan 70-M-7-216 Bobby Mitchetl 74-72-70-216 Randy Wolff 49-72-75-214 mmmmtsm': 1 I I i I I John Moller on the Jackrabbit 36 by Krum rei. who ealloped for the ft. The Jackrabbits, who finished the NCC at 3-3 for a third-place tie with North Dakota, capital ized on defense throughout the game and cut back the NDS steam-roller type offense.

The Bison, who went into the game averaging 381.9 yards per game rushing, were held to just 108 by the SDS defense Passing-wise, the Herd came up with only 73 yards. Paul Hatchett, the Bison top rusher with a 5.9 yard-per- carry average, was shut off completely, being thrown for minus 11 rushing yards and gaining one yard receiving for the contest. Leading the way for Dave Kragthorpe charges were Chuck Kavanaugh with 15 tackles, Jim Langer with 10 and Tony Lorenz with 11. Offensively, sophomore John Moller, Sioux Falls, directed the Rabbit attack, which piled up 141 yards on the ground and 62 through the air. Moller directed a drive in the second quarter to set up the first touchdown as he connect ed on key passes of 19 yards to Clyde Hagen and 11 yards to Frank Nelson to set up Armstrong's five-yard keeper, and then with 4:15 left in the third period, be scampered 15 yards to put the hosts in the lead.

The Bison scored first after picking off a Moller pass on the first series of Jackrabbit plays. Krumrei, a senior quarterback, grabbed the pass near mid-field and returned to the SDS 15, where Grasamke directed the Herd to its first tally by hitting Chuck Wald on a 12-yard pass. ter to Dick Hooks was a big play in the march. Hankins ripped off runs of 12 and 17 yards and got the TD on a four-yard blast. The INDIVIDUAL RUSHINO I it- i 41 of Rutbron Product Earns Army 11 Tie With Oregon EUGENE, Ore.

(AP) Arden Jensen, ex-Ruthton, High athlete, booted a 42-yard field goal with just eight seconds left Saturday, giving Army a 17-17 tie with Oregon an intersec-tional football game. Oregon, unable to score in the first half despite five penetra tions deep into Army territory, had taken the lead at 17-14 on Ken Woody's 21-yard field goal with 6:26 left in the game. But with less than two minutes left in the game. Army quarter back Bernie Wall directed Army on a drive to the Oregon 9. But Oregon's defense stiffened at that point and Jensen booted his field goal from the 32-yard line.

Army's only other scoring drive came in the first period and the scoring play was a 15- yard, pass, from Wall, to Ray Ritacco. That was the only scoring in the first half as Oregon was stopped on the 2-yard line in the deepest penetration. Oregon got on the scoreboard in the third period after Lionel Coleman intercepted an Army pass and returned it 49 yards to the 1. Quarterback Tom Blanch- ard scored. But just 14 seconds later Lynn Moore, who set a new -rmy record for kickoff and punt returns, took the kickoff and raced 95 yards putting Army ahead 14-7.

Blanchard, named back of the game, threw 32 passes, com pleting 22 of them before leav ing the game early in the fourth period-with a knee injury. Before leaving, Blanchard had moved Oregon to the Army 5- yard line. He was injured on a play which lost 11 yards. John Harrington replaced Blanchard and threw a 15-yard scoring pass to sophomore Bob Moore, who has scored 80 points and caught 10 touchdown passes this year. Both are Oregon school records.

Army 7 0 7 417 Oregon 0 0 7 10-17 Army Ritaooo IS pass from wen (Jen sen KtCKJ Ore Blanchard 1 run (Woody kick) Army L. Moors 95 kickoff return (Jensen kick) Ore B. Moore 16 pass from Harrington (Woody kick) Ore FG Woody 21 Army FG Jensen 42 A 34,200. Jim Egge caught nine of Lee Brandt's passes for 97 yards. In all, Brandt completed 19 of 41 passes for 290 yards and had one intercepted.

For USD, Tom Engleman hit four of 10 passes for 138 ards First dowm Rushing yards Passing yards Passes Intercepted by Penalties Punting Return yard! Midland's--Dave Kucera. The kick was wide and the Braves took control on the 20. Following an exchange of punts, the first quarter ended with the Braves owning the ball on their own 13 yard line. As the second period opened, Holland threw a 37-yard pass to former O'Gorman ace Pat Baker. On the second play fol lowing, Holland hit Mike Bat ten for a 20-yard gain to set up a 45-yard field-goal attempt by Doug Schneider.

The kick was blocked and Midland gained possession on its own 40. With 10:54 remaining in the half, Sioux Falls linebacker Grudt intercepted a Tom Mad- son pass on the Braves' 38. Hoi land promptly threw 45 yards to Baker to put the ball on the Midland 17. After three plays failed to produce a score, a Schneider i 1 d-goal attempt from the 18 was wide. Another Madson-, pass was picked off, this time by Cleve land, who returned it to Midland's 23-yard line.

Three plays later, with 4:02 left in the first half, a 41-yard field goal by Schneider handed the- Braves a 3-0 lead. With only 50 seconds remaining before the intermission Madson, trying desperately to put Midland on the scoreboard, threw short, and the pass was picked off by defensive end Pawloski. Following a 10-yard pass to Larry Patten, Holland connect ed with Batten for a 24-yard TD aerial. The extra-point at tempt by Schneider failed, but Midland was off side, and Hol land hit tight end. Rick Eppard for a two-point conversion.

The first half ended with the Braves in the lead 11-0. In the second half, following a Sioux Falls punt, Midland marched down the field, only to be stopped four yards short of scoring after the Braves held on a fourth-and-goal. Later in the game, Midland again threatened, but SFC's Bob Garry intercepted a pass on- his own five to shut down the Midland drive. Early in the fourth quarter, Pat Garry of the Braves picked off a Midland pass on his own 29. A fourth-down rush was short and Midland gained pos session on the 39 of the Braves.

Midland scored eight plays la ter when Madson carried it in from the five. Kucera added the point-after-touchdown. Sioux Falls gained possession following a Midland punt with 3:20 remaining in the game. On a tturd-and-one situation with 2:19 left in the Gary Vossler plunged across the 20 to get a first down by inches. The Braves stalled, and had to give the ball to the Ne braska ns on the Sioux Fal' 48- came at the end of a 78-yard march with Rapid City sophomore Brian Winter going in from six yards out, on an option-play pitch from Engleman, with 11:47 to play in the first half.

A 27-yard pass to Roger Larson from Engleman, 16 and eight-yard runs by Steve Pelot and a 17-yard ramble by Engleman kept the drive going. The Coyotes soon scored again, taking over on their own 35 following a punt which was partially blocked by Tim Mod-de. They traveled 65 yards in 10 Dlavs. Ron Gnrhardr takins a 23-yard toss from Engleman for tne score, which came witn left in the quarter. Key play in the march was a 23-yard pass from Engleman to Pelot.

Rex Rolling recovered a USD fumble at midfield to put Au gustana in motion on its first Yankton 1 0 Concordia 4,1 1 Northwestern 4 1 0 Westmar 3.1 0 Dana 2 3 1 Sioux Falls College 1-5 0 Midland I 0 HONOLULU (AP) Bruce Crampton rushed up from eight trokes off the, pace, overhauled struggling Jack Nicklaus with a brillant 65 Saturday and ctormed into the third-round lead in. the $125,000 Hawaiian Open Golf Tournament. Crampton, an Australian now living in Dallas, had a 54-hole Play Gives Drake 21-21 Tie JONESBORO, Ark. (AP) Quarterback Mike Grejbowski sprinted seven yards for a touchdown on a play run after the game was over and then fired a. two-point conversion pass Saturday, to earn Drake 21-21 tie with Arkansas State.

Drake gained new life when Arkansas State called for pass interference- as the clock ran; out. Because the game can't end on a penalty against the Drake got another play. Grejbowski's pass to Duane Miller for the two-point conver sion sealed the tie. Missouri Bombs Sooners 44-10 Behind McMillan COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) Mis souri clamped Oklahoma's Steve Owens in a tight defensive vise in the early going, then rode the deft passing of Terry McMu lan to a record 44-10 smashing of the Sooners before 61,000 fans and a regional television audience Saturday.

It was the most points and biggest victory margin the Tigers ever posted against Okla homa 60 games. Previous record came in a 41- 19 victory in 1960. The triumph gave Missouri a 4-1 Big Eight record, a 7-1 sea son mark and thrust the Tigers into the drivers' seat in the con ference race. Missouri has only Iowa State and Kansas left to play. Owens, held to 42 yards on 12 carries in the first half, final, ly broke the 100-yard mark in tiie waning minutes with 109 yards on 29 carries.

McMillan hit 17 of 37 for 312 yards and 3 Oklahoma Missouri 3 7 9 0-10 0 17 20 744 Okla FG Derr 34 Okla Owens run (Derr kick) Mo FG Brown 21 Mo Gray 24 pass from McMillan CBrown kick) Mo Moons 21 run (Brown kick) Mo Henley I pass from McMillan fBrown Icickl Mo Gray 17 past from McMillan (Brown kick) Mo Borgard recovered fumble In ejnd zone (kick failed) Mo McKee 1 run (Stottle kick) Pro Hockey. National League Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 1 Detroit 3, Boston 2 New York 4, Los Angeles 1 Montreal 6, Toronto 3 Minnesota 5, St. Louis 2 Saturdays Pre Basketball Results NBA Cincinnati 130, Baltimore 121 Seattle 125, Philadelphia 117 Milwaukee 100, Detroit 94 Chicago 103, Boston 87 Atlanta 104, san Francisco 93 Cincinnati 130, Baltimore 121 ABA Indiana 99. Denver 94 Washington Caps 120, Miami Florid la First downs Rushing yards Passing yaras passes Intercepted by Punting -Fumbles lost wt(--Penalties in 23 carries, and Ron Vander- heiden with 32 yards in five carries. Joe Roller led Bison rushing with 64 yards in 12 carries, i Hatchett.

who went into Brookings tied for the nation al lead in scoring, saw his hopes fnr the individual title vanisn in front of the Jackrabbit wall He also needed just 38 yards rushing to overtake conference leader Dave Bigler of Morningside, but he saw this attempt stopped. Wald needed 97 yarns on pass receptions to set a new i record but came up with just for the afternoon. Grasamke was another who had his chances broken. He had to get 187 yards total offense to snag the NCC lead but managed lza In team statistics, the Bison took conference honors in rush ing, scoring, total offense, total defense, and rushing defense The Bison set a new record in total offense and cracked the NCC rushing mark with' 108 against the Jackrabbits. How ever, they fell two points shy a new scoring marK.

Kragthorpe charges now have a 3-6 over-all mark and face Montana (second-ranked nationally) on the road Satur day to close the season. The Bison bavo ended regular-sea son play. NDS 7 0 1120 SDS 0 7 4 013 NDS Chuck wald pass from Bruce Grasamke. Jim Twardy kick. SDS Larry Armstrong run.

Rav spenman kick. SOS John Moller IS run. Kick failed. NDS Tim Mios 1 run. Twardy kick.

NDS Steve Krumrei 34 pass intercep tion, kick faiieo. the clear, but was dumped at the Coyote 31. Paul Nelson and Chuck Stuemke turned in top defensive efforts for the hosts and Jon Gapa and Gerry Tietje led the Viking defenders." Gapa had one interception for Augie and Nelson swiped one for USD on the Coyote one-yard line early in the game. Comstock's two receptions were good for 89 yards while Kruse caught five for 77 yards, Olson three for 35, Larson two for 92 and Pelot two for 36. The Coyotes travel to Nebraska-Omaha Saturday.

Augustana 0 14 22 USD 14 7 7 28 USD Brian Winter 4 run. Chuck Coghlan kick. USD Ron Gerhardt 23 pass from Tom Engleman. Coghlan kick. A Duane Kruse 2 pass from Lee Brandt.

Kruse pass from Brandt. USD Roger Larson 45 pass from Engleman. Cognlan kick. A Dennis Comstock 48 pass from Brandt. Kick blocked.

USD Dan Hankins 4 run. Coghlan kick. A Jim Johnson 30 blocked punt. Comstock pass from Brandt. Miking Engleman Guides Coy of ference! identical to that of Midland.

The two schools fin ished the league season in a deadlock for sixth place. Ricketts' Braves close out the 1969 campaign against Dakota Wesleyan Saturday. The game, at Mitchell, will start at 1:30 p.m. Midland 0 0 0 7-7 Sioux Falls 0 11 0 011 SF Doug Schneider 41 FG SF Mike Batten 24 pass from Terry Holland Rick Eppard pass from Holland. Tom Madson 5 run.

Dave Kucera kick. TD parade. Three Olson runs gained 34 yards and Brandt hit Egge for seven more. The tally came on second and goal from the two when Brandt dropped back, was hit solidly by Modde but threw to Duane Kruse in the end zone while falling to the ground. A Brandt-to-Kruse pass got two conversion points and Augie trailed 14-8 with 7:21 to play in the third quarter.

Just Wi minutes later, Engleman and Larson combined- on a 65-yard TD pass play, Larson outrunning two Viking defenders, and it was 21-8. A 68-yard scoring pass from Brandt to Denny Com stock, Com stock eluding two would-be tacklerg en route, made it 21-14 with 10:50 left in the game. The extra-point kkk was blocked by Mike Modde. USD overcame a 15-yard' penalty to drive 79 yards for Its final score. A third-down pass from Fos es Past Augustana Carries Yards 24 132 13 42 5 50 USO 24 109 14 44 37 3 19 STATISTICS Aug.

USD First downs 25 13 Yards rushing 191 243 Passing yards 299 144 Passes 20-42-1 4-18-1 Fumbles lost 2 1 Punting Penalties 25 88 Return yards 129 91 VERMILLION South Dakota's Coyotes escaped the basement of the North Central Conference by posting a 28-22 football victory over Augustana here Saturday afternoon. The win gave Joe Salem's Redshirts a 2-4 chart in the league, and 3-6 over-all. Augustana, under Ralph Sta-renko, wound up the season 3-6 for all games and 1-5 in the circuit. The host Coyotes led comfortably throughout but almost fell to a closing Viking spurt. The Vikings, who had 25 first downs to 13 for the hosts, wound up with a total-yardage figure of 409 to 407 for the USD crew.

Roger Olson rushed for 132 of the Viking yards, in 26 carries, while Dan Hankins had 109 ground yards for USD, also in 26 trips. The series between the schools now stands 16-9, in fa vor of the Coyotes. Roger Olson Lee Brandt Clayton Coppl Dan Hankins Steve Pelot Tom Engleman Dick Hooks extra-point boot by Chuck Coghlan made it 28-14 with 3:44 on the clock. With VA minutes to play, USD was punting from its own 48. Dick Brownell's boot was blocked by Corey Johnson and Jim Johnson picked up the loose ball and rambled 30 yards to score.

Comstock grabbed a two-point pass from Brandt. On the last play of the game, Egge caught a 34-yard pass from Brandt, almost broke into and had one toss stolen. Jim Foster was two-for-eight for 26 yards. There was no scoring in the first period as Chuck Haskell of the hosts recovered two fum bles. Augustana moved to the USD 16 on a fake-field-goal pass from Tim Daly to Egge but fell one yard short of a first down.

The first Coyote touchdown 1W.

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