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Argus-Leader du lieu suivant : Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 17

Publication:
Argus-Leaderi
Lieu:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Date de parution:
Page:
17
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Argus Leader, Sioux Falls, S.D. Sunday, October 11, 1981 3B M(3gQ ae-v Dakota St Law beats NORTH CENTRAL CONFERENCE North Dakota State 4 0 Northern Colorado 3 North Dakota 3 South Dakota 2 injury. Gregory said Law could not lift his knee, but said the extent of his injury would not be known until further tests. South Dakota State 2 Morningside 1 Nebraska-Omaha 1 Augustana 0 4 FARGO, N.D. South Dakota State, playing almost wl e.

fntEe game without star quarterback Mike Law, J0 Dakota state Saturday 48-24 in a North Central Conference contest. North Dakota State, 4-0 in the NCC, unleashed a attack, 403 of those yards coming on the ground. The Bison used 12 different ballcarriers as reserves played much of the final quarter for both Squads. couldn't Set them stopped," said SDSU Coach John Gregory. "They really didn't do anything didn't expect.

Their execution was excellent." m-e. The Jackrabbits, 2-2 in the NCC and 4-2 overall, have Sot won in Fargo since 1962. w'4LLaw' No-2 in total offense in Division II and the NCC Mt'-tDtal Offense leader led off with M-varrl nacc tn Milro On the next series, the Jackrabbits drove to the NDSU 5-yard line, but on third down and 4 yards to go Wayne Schluchter intercepted a Higgins pass in the end zone. NDSU then marched 80 yards, scoring on Jeff Conley's 25-yard reverse to go ahead 17-10. The SDSU offense was shut down from then on.

A 26-yard field goal by Mark Luedtke made it 20-10 for the Bison at halftime. The Bison scored 21 third-quarter points to put the game out of reach. Higgins scored for the Jackrabbits after the Bison fumbled a punt and Rick Wegher recovered on the NDSU 4-yard line. Nellermoe and Jeff Willis scored on short runs in the fourth quarter to put NDSU ahead 48-17. With 1:45 left, Higgins threw a 25-yard pass to Ethier for the final touchdown.

Kevin Peters led Bison rushers with 140 yards on 19 carries. Nellermoe completed five of eight passes for 115 yards. "It was an obvious boost to our team," said NDSU Coach Don Morton. "We really had emphasized Law all week. But you have to give a lot of credit to (backup quarterback Marty) Higgins." "We moved the ball well, although sacks cost us," said Gregory.

Higgins was sacked eight times for a loss of 55 yards. SDSU, which visits Morningside Saturday, rushed for 136 yards on 58 attempts. Higgins completed 17 of 31 passes for 231 yards. Tom Olson and Jarvis DeBerg were each in oh 11 tackles for the Jackrabbits while Dave Fremark and Dave Knowlton had 10 apiece for NDSU. The Jackrabbits scored four minutes into the game on backup quarterback Marty Higgins' 5-yardrun.

A 21 -yard field goal by Russ Meier gave them a 10-3 lead at the end of the quarter. NDSU tied the game in the first three minutes of the second quarter on a short burst up the middle by quarterback Mark Nellermoe. Et.hier. He left the game four plays later with a knee SDICNCC Wf-4f. I jSFC passing duo 0 North edges Lincoln SIOUX CITY.

Iowa Gordie Lui- a. -4. helps stun Tech SOUTH DAKOTA INTERCOLLEGIATE Sioux Falls South Dakota Tech Huron Dakota State USDSpringfield Dakota Wesleyan Black Hills I I kart's diving catch in the end zone in overtime carried Sioux City North past Lincoln 6-0 Saturday afternoon in Sioux Interstate Conference football action. North got the ball first in overtime and after quarterback John Cochrane gained 2 yards on first down, Luikart caught an 8-yard touchdown pass from Cochrane. North's conversion failed, and Lincoln still had a chance to win.

Lincoln Patriots quarterback Jay Hoover was .1 -I SIOUX INTERSTATE -m O'Gorman I North 4 HeeUn -1 East 1 Lincoln 'I Washington fl West sacked for an 8-yard loss on first down and a 3-yard loss on second down. On third down, St 1 By BRIAN BECK Ar9us Leader Sioux Falls College wide receiver Lang was in the right spot at the right time Saturday night twice. Lang gathered in a 31-yard scor-hig pass from Dan Ellingson with ust over four minutes remaining in Cougars' South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference football clash with South Dakota Tech at Howard Wood Field. Lang then collected the two-point conversion pass as Sioux Falls shocked the nationally ranked Hardrockers 15-14, giving the sole possession of first place in SDIC standings. Lang's reception capped a sevens-play, 66-yard drive that began at Cougars 34 with just under seven minutes to play, and brought the hosts back from a 14-7 deficit.

"They usually don't throw it to injEi," Lang said, reflecting on the "touchdown pass, "but the coach sent it in because I was open one is.V4ime before. Dan couldn't see me because of the line, but he just let it go." Tech had a chance to win late in the game, but the SFC defense three rushing plays from inside the 2-yard line and Kent Polenz's field goal attempt with 21 seconds clock was wide to the right, defeat handed Tech, ranked sixth nationally in the National sociation of Athletics' Division II, atS' first loss in 12 starts. Lang's touchdown pass cut the Tech lead to 14-13, SFC lined up as if it was going to try a one-point conversion kick. Ellingsen, who 'holds the football on field-goal at- (Nelson) Cumana, but he was covered. I just started scanning and found him (Lang)." The win upped Sioux Falls College's conference record to 3-0, just ahead of Tech's 3-1 mark.

The Cougars are 4-1-1 overall, while Tech stands at 5-1. Sioux Falls College threatened first when Jose Vidal fell on a Har-drocker fumble one of four recovered by the Cougars on the night at the Tech 13. The hosts were unable to move the ball and after a pair of penalties and incomplete passes, Mitch McCue picked off an Ellingson pass to end the threat. Ellingson finished the game with eight completions in 25 attempts for 72 yards. The 6-foot, 185-pound quarterback from Hanley Falls, also threw three interceptions.

Tech tacked the first points on the board when Jeff Zacher plunged into the end zone from 1 yard out with just over a minute remaining in the first quarter. SFC tied the contest on a 32-yard halfback option pass from Cumana to Todd Thorpe on the fourth play of the second half. The score was set up after Cougar defender James Kennedy intercepted a Gary Poland pass at SFC's 30-yard line. It was one of three wayward passes Argus Leader photo by PAUL HORSTED Perry Sweet (17) of South Dakota Tech pulls down a pass as Sioux Falls College's Joel Small moves In for the tackle. SFC won 15-14.

South Dakota Continued from page 1 Hoover pass was intercepted in the end zone by Dave Hummer and North had its fourth conference win in five tries. North is tied with O'Gorman for the SIC lead. Lincoln, 3-3 overall and 1-2 in the conference, was deep in North territory onlv once in the came. Lincoln moved from its 10 to the North 26 in the first quarter but gave the ball up on downs. North, which meets East Friday, was inside the Lincoln 30-yard line three times.

In the first quarter the Stars reached the Lincoln 10 before giving the ball up on downs. Just Before the half North recovered a Lincoln fumble on the Patriots' 27 but fumbled it back to Lincoln three plays later. Early in the third quarter North reached the Lincoln 9 before a Mike Grevlos interception halted that drive. Lincoln, which hosts Washington Friday, outgained North 197-178. Greg Lewis gained 58 yards in 18 carries and Rob Hofer had 55 in 14.

Poeschl recovered a Krai fumble, UNO moved 40 yards on five plays to score. Tim Rogers went the final 2 yards for the touchdown and a 10-0 lead. Seibel kicked a field goal in the second period for USD, but the Mavericks took an apparently commanding 16-3 lead late in the third period when Terry Evans scored from the 2-yard line. That was set up when Daniel had the football stripped loose and recovered by John Mangan. USD played its first home game after four straight road contests, and heads to Northern Colorado Saturday.

penalties later) the Coyotes had the lead. UNO's Chuck Spencer was called for pass interference against Dicus on a play that covered 38 yards and gave the Coyotes the ball on the visitors' 20-yard line. An unsportsmanlike conduct foul moved the ball to the 10. Four plays later, Daniel hit Dicus. The Mavericks, who fell to 1-3 in the NCC and 3-3 for the year, appeared to be ready to make the game a rout in the first period.

Russell Green returned the opening kickoff 74 yards to the USD 19-yard line, where the Mavericks settled for a Jeff Pate field goal. After He almost didn't get a chance to play. Jeff Krai started for USD. Daniel went in to open the second period, but was hit hard on his first play and missed the next series. He came back, however, to throw for 136 yards and two touchdowns.

The first was 36-yard pass to Tom O'Boyle to cap an 80-yard drive in 10 plays. The Coyotes held UNO on the Mavericks' next series after the visitors drove to the USD 28-yard line. A fake field goal try was stopped for a 1-yard loss and USD took over at its own 29. Six plays and two costly UNO from the air by the cougars and extra-points, rolled to P'ucKea fcfiis richt and Dassed to Lane near defense plucked the goal post a place where Lang Tech took the ensuing kickoff and v. wasn't supposed to be.

marched 78 yards in 12 plays and "I was supposed to run a down scored on a 19-yard romp by Doug Beisner to go on top 14-7. ft --and out, but the guy who was over me knocked me down," Lang said. "I just got up and he (Ellingson) found me." The Hardrockers had a chance to increase their lead in the third quarter on an 18-yard field goal, but Kennedy and Co. blocked the attempt and sent a roaring crowd of 910 fans to their feet. "I looked for him, but he wasn't Northern Colorado others Ellingson said.

"Then I to our secondary receiver, Continued from page 1 twiC v. Moorhead 45, Mankato State 0 MANKATO, Minn. AP) Dennis Eastman tossed scoring passes of 60 yards to Mike Howard and 17 vards to Greg Veldman in the opening minutes of the game, leading Moorhead State. Eastman's pass to Howard, came on the second plav of the game and just 16 seconds later Moorhead recovered a Maverick fumble to set up Veldmann's TD and the rout was on. North Dakota 27, Morningside 0 t- GRAND FORKS, N.D.

(AP) Quarterback Mike Moe scored two ''touchdowns on short runs as North Dakota recorded its second straight "-shutout. -SThe Sioux, ranked eighth in NCAA Division II, set up one score with a fake punt, another on a blocked punt and two more on poor punting by Morningside's Bob Larson. v' The Chiefs have not scored a touchdown in 17 quarters. They punted 11 "f-fimes for a 25-yard average. Larson, a sophomore from Sioux City, surrendered his quarterback post to Rhett Kenney in the second half.

Gary Pietruszewski scored on a one-yard run and Pat Juhl on a seven run for the other UND touchdowns. Milson Jones led UND rushing with 90 yards on 14 carries. He a hip injury he suffered earlier this year but didn't tell Sioux coaches 1 about it. He set up one touchdown with a 39-yard run and another with a punt that gave him a 12-yard gain. w'w' UND, which beat South Dakota 27-0 last weekend, outrushed Morning-Side 216-92.

Morningside led in passing 119-98. i The Sioux are 5-1 overall, 3-1 in the NCC. Mornigside is 3-3 for the year, in the league. Northwestern 63, Westmar 6 .110 ORANGE CITY, Iowa (AP) Marty Guthmiller ran 18 times for 119 yards and a touchdown in two-and-a-half quarters as Northwestern walloped Westmar in non-conference action. Guthmiller led both teams in offense, with the Red Raiders playing their second string most of the second half.

Northwestern place kicker Steve Rhode set a school record by booting all nine extra pojnts. Northwestern goes to 3-2-1 for the season, while the Eagles are 2-3 overall. screwed up it would not be too disastrous "You know, we thought Nick was going to be our number one quarterback this fall, but he had a terrible time last spring. That's' when Tommy took over, and I can't take anything away from what he has done for us. I will still be using him in all pressure situations.

"But I want to give Nick every chance. He's more of a straight thrower. He stands tall in there. He sees better. Tommy is running and ducking all the time.

Given time, I think we'll have two good quarterbacks. A good 1-2 punch there. Actually, we haven't been getting those great catches by our receivers this year, and that never helps any quarterback. "If we can't throw, they (opposing defenses) stack us up with our tailbacks. They are hurting some, been running in slow motion lately.

So it has all fallen back to our defense. And it has been awfully consistent." As Augie's total offense of 120 yards, in 61 plays, will attest. to Larry Sage ended the scoring 9 minutes before the finish. Ray Sperger intercepted two passes by Augustana's Tim McCall grabbed one and recovered a fumble. Deacon Nauslar had three quarterback sacks.

For the Vikings, Tim Kellen was involved in 15 tackles, Jerry Norris and Schuver 10 each. John Bergdale of the hosts, 0-4 in the NCC, who play at North Dakota State Saturday while the Bears are entertaining South Dakota, caught five passes. Sage had four catches for UNC. Hernandez was the game's leading rusher with 84 yards in 18 carries. Line threw 20 of the 23 passes tried by Lyle Eidsness' Augustana club.

UNC also used two quarterbacks, Henkowski throwing 13 times in relief of Aiello, who fired 16 passes. Bob Blasi, coach of the Bears, said, "I've been trying to get Henkowski some playing time. This was the first time things haven't been tight and tense for us. Our defense was playing so well that even if he South Dakota-Springfield 14, Black Hills 10 cDrDPicn cn iused two second-period touchdowns to edge Black Hills State 14-10 in Northern 20, Winona 10 Rorfram WINONA, Minn. (AP) Northern State quarterback Rich Bertram threw a 41-yard touchdown pass to Mike Ellis the third quarter, locking up a Northern Intercollegiate Conference win.

Northern State, 2-1 in the NIC and 4-2 in all games, led 1 13-3 a ftime and padded their lead to 20-3 on the pass by Bertram, the Wolves third in the first half on a 2-yard pass from Dave Abens to Tom Wensman and a 1-yard run by Chuck Gallon. 1 soutn uaKota iniercoaegiaie vomerciitc iuuiui amvu Sophomore quarterback Jerry Carda passed 26 yards to Dan Enstrom 4 yiot the Pointers' first touchdown and Matt Dudley scored on a 5-yard run for the second touchdown. For Black Hills, Mike Newberg caught a 31-yard pass from Craig Strain, for a touchdown and Dennis Rate kicked a 34-yard field goal. Yankton 37, Dakota Wesleyan 13 MITCHELL, S.D. (AP) Yankton College used quarterback Craig Hilgendorf's passing and rushing to beat winless Dakota Wesleyan in a non-conference football game Saturday.

Hilgendorf passed 54 yards to Dave Mitchell and had touchdown runs of 2 and 13 yards. Other Yankton scores came from an 18-yard run by Ray Santiago and a 2-yard run by Dominic Livoto, who had 114 yards 27 ''i'r DWU's Steve Gleisner, who had 139 yards on the ground, scored the touchdown of the day with an 82-yard run. Rob Dawkins had the vXigers' other score on an 8-yard carry. Yankton, 4-1, had 374 total yards and DWU, 0-5-1, piled up 366 total Huron College 10, Dakota State 6 HURON, S.D. Mike Dammann connected with Steve Solem on an 11-yard scoring play in the third quarter and Dave Underhill added a sr-i-yard field goal in the fourth to pace the Tribe over Dakota State in a 'K South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference contest.

Jim Anderson sparked Huron's defense with 11 unassisted tackles, -jj'jricluding three quarterback sacks, nine assists and a fumble recov- frakota State's scoring came as Huron's punter downed a bad snap on "the three yard line and the following play saw Brian Jacobsen covering that distance for the score. t. u'i-c Huron 4-2 overall and 2-1 in the SDIC, hosts Black Hills Saturday. ''Dakota State, 2-4 overall and 2-2 in the conference, plays St. Cloud State Saturday.

Top 20 Five ranked By The Associated Press It was a rough day at many of the nation's college football factories as underdogs stole the spotlight and the glory. The biggest losers Saturday were top-ranked Southern California, No. 8 Brigham Young, No. 10 Oklahoma, No. 17 UCLA, No.

18 Ohio State and unranked Notre Dame. And No. 7 Alabama didn't escape unscathed, as unbeaten and unheralded Southern Mississippi tied the Crimson Tide 13-13. Oklahoma was bombed by No. 3 Texas 34-14 in the annual Red River Rumble.

Brigham Young, playing without star quarterback Jim McMahon, fell victim to the aerial assault of Nevada-Las Vegas' Sam King, who threw for 473 yards in the Rebels' 45-41 shocker. UCLA was downed by previously winless Stanford 26-23; Ohio State lost to Wisconsin, which already has beaten Michigan and Purdue in the Big Ten, 24-11, and Notre Dame was surprised by No. 20 Florida State 19-13. Southern Mississippi, which last managed to avoid losing to Alabama when it tied the Tide 13-13 in 1956, got a 40-yard field goal from Clark with eight seconds left. teams beaten Not every ranked team had such difficulties Saturday.

No. 2 Penn State demolished Boston College 38-7. No. 4 Pittsburgh now owns the longest winning streak in the country a modest 11 games after blanking West Virginia 17-0. Fifth-ranked North Carolina didn't miss first-string tailback Kelvin Bryant as his replacements combined for 382 rushing yards in the Tar Heels' 48-10 romp over Wake Forest.

No. 6 Michigan rallied to defeat Michigan State 38-20, and No. 9 Clemson walloped Virginia 27-0. Defending national champion Georgia, ranked 11th, belted Mississippi 37-7 as All-American running back Herschel Walker rushed for 265 yards; No. 13 Missouri had little trouble with Kansas State in a 58-13 rout; 15th-rated Iowa took Indiana 42-28, and No.

19 Mississippi State outlasted Colorado State 37-27. No. 12 Iowa State played at San Diego State and No. 14 Southern Methodist entertained Baylor at night, while 16th-ranked Miami, had the weekend off. Mississippi State rushed for 490 yards Michael Haddix had 181 of them to survive Tom Thenell's four TD passes in his first start for Colorado State..

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