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Argus-Leader from Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 19

Publication:
Argus-Leaderi
Location:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

To) Bowling 3 Argus Leader, Sioux Falls, S.D. Sunday, Nov. 23, 1986 Outdoors 7 JO I Bowl games Hi fcT) ri fl COLLEGE FOOTBALL Dec. 13 California Bowl Miami, Ohio (8-3). vs.

ban jose aiaie (a-zi Dec. 20 Independence Bowl Mississippi (7-3-1) Sooners' maqic vs. lexas lecn Dec. 23 Hall ol Fame Bowl Boston College (8-3) vs. Georgia (-s) Dec.

25 Sun Bowl Louisiana State (8-2) or Ala- Dama vs. Washington (B-Z-l) Dec. 27 Gator Bowl Stanford (7-3) vs. Clemson (7-2-2) Aloha Bowl Arizona (8-2) vs. unnamed opponent Dec.

29 Liberty Bowl Tennessee (5-5) vs. Min- nesoia (o-3) Dec. 30 Freedom Bowl UCLA (6-3-1) vs. un named opponent Holiday Bowl Iowa (8-3) vs. unnamed opponent Dec.

31 Peach Bowl North Carolina State (8-2- l) vs. Virginia lech (8-2-1) Bluebonnet Bowl Colorado (6-5) vs. Bavlor (8-3) a Ul IS) I I if I JT i i All-America Bowl Indiana (6-5) vs. Flor ida state (b-3-ll Jan. 1 Florida Citrus Bowl Southern California (7-2) vs.

Auburn (8-2) Cotton Bowl Texas ASM (8-2) or Arkansas (9-2) vs. Ohio State (9-3) Sugar Bowl Alabama (9-2) or Louisiana State (8-2) vs. Nebraska (9-2) Rose Bowl Arizona State (9-1-1) vs. Michigan (10-1) Orange Bowl Oklahoma (10-1) vs. Texas or Arkansas (9-2) Jan.

2 Sunkist Fiesta Bowl Miami, Fla. (10-0) vs. Penn State (11-0) Note: Some pairings are probable Basketball sinks Nebraska By HERSCHEL NISSENSON The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. Oklahoma has made a speciality of late comebacks against Nebraska, but this one took the cake and it had orange frosting. "You've got to believe.

We've done this so many times before," Coach Barry Switzer said after his Sooners won 20-17 Saturday on two Tim Lashar field goals, the second with six seconds left, and Jamelle Holieway's key 17-yard scoring pass to Keith Jack- son. Oklahoma vs. The victory gave the oh rack a Sooners, 10-1, an outright JJjJjjJJJ Big Eight Conference championship at 7-0 and their third straight trip to the Orange Bowl. "They believed we'd do it, and we did," Switzer said. "There's something about Sooner magic and our luck.

We don't ever worry about not coming from behind." Instead, the opposition has to do the worrying. And the suffering. Nebraska nose guard Danny Noonan said, "We just choked." Marc Munford, standout linebacker for the Corn-huskers, 9-2, said: "I'm still in shock. I can't believe we lost. But I think we gained some respect." Jackson, a 6-foot-3, 242-pound tight end, outfought cor-nerback Brian Davis on his touchdown reception with 1 minute, 22 seconds left.

Then he made a one-handed 41-yard catch to set up Lashar's game-winning 31-yard field goal. "A lot of people don't know we can throw the ball," Jackson said. "We're a wishbone team, so we're not supposed to be able to throw. But we practice the two-minute offense and every time we run it we score." Holieway completed six of 12 passes for 147 yards. Jackson caught three for 87 yards.

"Keith is the greatest tight end in America," Holieway said. "He is a super, superior football player. He's got a lot of magic." The Sooners, who trailed 17-7 entering the final period, began their comeback on Lashar's 22-yard field goal with 10:39 left. Oklahoma committed three turnovers in the final 18 minutes and appeared doomed to defeat when a punt by Nebraska's John Kroeker was downed at the Sooners' 6-yard line with 4:10 to go. Holieway completed three passes for 60 yards as the Sooners stormed the length of the field to tie the score, which was all they needed to snatch the Orange Bowl bid away from Nebraska.

Cornhusker coach Tom Osborne said: "We told our players to go out and play the best they could for 60 minutes, and they did that. You have to live with results and we have nothing to be ashamed of." The Sooners got the ball back one last time at their 35-yard line with 50 seconds left after Kroeker's 46-yard punt and Derrick White's 5-yard return. SoonersSee 2B AP photo day in college football in Lincoln, Neb. The Sooners beat Nebraska 20-17 in a Big Eight Conference game. Oklahoma quarterback Jamelle Holieway tries to elude defensive end Broderick Thomas during an end sweep Satur- NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION EASTERN CONFERENCE Late Games Not Included Saturday's Games Atlanta 97, Boston 96 Detroit 93, Cleveland 84 Golden State 97, New York 93 Chicago 93, Washington 84 Denver 132, Phoenix 120 Utah 96, New Jersey 78 San Antonio at L.A.

Clippers, (n) Milwaukee at Sacramento, (n) Indiana at Seattle, (n) COLLEGE MEN Area Wolverines win by 2, head to Rose Bowl Augustana 101, Dordt 83 myself so when I came out today, there was no turning back." Ohio State led 14-3 only 12 minutes into the game. Michigan rallied on a stiffening defense, 210 yards rushing by Jamie Morris and Harbaugh's passing. But still the Buckeyes were on the brink of the Rose Bowl with 1:06 left, facing fourth-and-two at the Michigan 28 and Coach Earle Bruce trying to figure out what to do. Go for the first down? Or try the 45-yarder with Frantz, who had missed a 43-yarder earlier in the game and has never made one longer than 43 yards? "It was a tough decision, but you have to take that chance," Bruce said. "I talked to our special teams' coach and he said the young man had been kicking the ball from MichiganSee 2B By MIKE LOPRESTI Gannett News Service COLUMBUS, Ohio Whatever happened to boring Ohio State and cautious Michigan? Well, everything finally changes direction, so sixth-rated Michigan outlasted the No.

7 Buckeyes 26-24 Saturday in Big Ten Conference football. The two share the Big Ten title, but the victory sends the Wolverines, 10-1, to the Rose Bowl for the first time since 1983. Ohio State, 9-3, goes to the Cotton Bowl for the first time ever. It was not decided until Matt Frantz's 45-yard field-goal attempt for Ohio State sailed wide to the left with 1 minute, 1 second left. But this game had swerved off its normal line long before that.

MichiaanvshioState Would you believe 887 yards of offense in a Michigan-Ohio State game? Would you believe 50 total points, the most in this annual brawl since Coach Bo Schembechler came to Michigan in 1969? "That's so unlike this game," Schembechler said. "Those old seesaw defensive struggles probably were more boring, but they were easier to coach." Would you believe quarterback Jim Har-baugh of Michigan, where mum is usually the desired word, guaranteeing a victory? "That was exactly what I needed," said Harbaugh, after putting 261 yards worth of passing where his mouth was. "That loss to Minnesota (last week) was pretty devastating. I was trying to put a lot of pressure on IHIasselciuist keys Vikings By BRUCE CONLEY Argus Leader Staff Augustana, trailing at halftime, defeated Dordt College's Defenders 101-83 Saturday night at the Arena. Keith Hasselquist, who left the court after the DeHaven leads Jacks to 2nd in Division II From staff reports Rod DeHaven's third-place finish helped the South Dakota State University men's cross country team to runner-up honors in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Divi first 20 minutes with College basketball four points and no rebounds, came back in the second half to lead Cross country sion II meet Saturday in Riverside, Calif.

The Jackrabbits finished second with 79 points. Edinboro, Nortnern at. 88, Dakota wesieyan 81 North Dakota 85, Mayville St. 65 Rocky Mountain 77, Black Hills St. 75 Hardee's Tip-off Tournament Championship Northwestern 83, South Dakota 81 Third Place Doane 73, Sioux Falls College 69 COLLEGE WOMEN Area Dakota Wesieyan 67, Dana 64 Doane 87, Sioux Falls 49 Chadron St.

76, National College 70 Rocky Mountain 71, South Dakota Tech 56 Sunshine-Coca Cola Tip-off Tournament Mankato St. 81, Augustana 75 Morningside 89, St. Mary 84 Minnesota-Duluth 78, Northwestern 61 South Dakota 74, Northern St. 61 Jackrabbit Classic Championship South Dakota St. 84, Briar Cliff 66 Third Place Gustavus Adolphus 87, Minnesota-Morris 60 HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS South Dakota Lincoln 70, Rapid City Stevens 43 Rapid City Central 43, Washington 42 Aberdeen Central 49, Brookings 40 Mitchell 49, Watertown 38 Yankton 46, Huron 33 District 1B First Round Rosholt 57, Waubay 32 Wilmot 71, New Effington 38 South Shore 64, Roslyn 29 Summit 51, Veblen 18 District 2B First Round Hosmer 44, Bristol 20 Langford 45.

Roscoe 35 Leola 66, Hecla 34 Warner 36, Frederick 35 (OT) District 3B First Round Castlewood 57, Gary 32 Estelline 52, Florence 29 Grant-Deuel 38, Willow Lake 33 Henry 35, Waverly 33 District 4B First Round Arlington 55, Ramona 29 Deubrook 63, Rutland 50 Lake Preston 56, Elkton 52 District 5B First Round Cresbard 58, Conde 48 Doland 39, Hitchcock 33 Northwestern 47, Polo 25 District 6B First Round Highmore 64, James Valley 40 Sunshine Bible 31, Herreid 30 Wolsey 52, Eureka 44 District 7B First Round Baltic 49, Chester 34 Egan 64, Colman 27 Garretson 57, Dell Rapids St. Mary's 40 District 8B First Round Alcester 60, Hurley 56 Centerville 61. Gayville-Volin 52 Viborg 64, Irene 45 District 9B First Round Mt. Vernon 54, Letcher 20 Spencer 50, Alpena 31 Woonsocket 48, Montrose 32 District 10B First Round Emery 71 Freeman Academy 25 Marion 57, Canistota 24 Parker 43, Menno 33 District 1 1 First Round Corsica 48, Dakota Christian 39 Ethan 61. Plankinton 31 Stickney 58, White Lake 31 District 12B First Round Avon 66, Geddes 40 Delmont 48.

Bonesleel-Fairfax 47 Tripp 55, Andes Central 48 District 138 First Round Colome 55, Lower Brule 22 Jones County 39, Burke 25 Midland 44, Wood 28 District 14B First Round New Underwood 45, Crazy Horse 29 Wall 71 Brainerd Indian 34 District 15B First Round Selby 56. Wakpala 31 Timber Lake 61 Herreid 48 District 16B First Round Bison 46. Isabel 34 Newell 48, Faith 26 Vv i i Ui 4di- Mr! Coach Bill Gross' Vik- ings in each department. The 6-foot-7 senior from Center City, paced the hosts in their season opener with 24 points and 10 rebounds. "It just took time to get back in the flow," Hasselquist said.

"I think we were all a little tentative in the first half. It took a half to get things rolling." The Vikings, who entertain Doane at 6 p.m. today at the Arena, took the lead for good on Hasselquist's basket 2 minutes and 52 seconds into the second half. Augustana outscored the visitors 58-37 in the final 20 minutes. "Dordt took it to us in the first half," Gross said.

"They have a good team and you have to give them credit for coming in here and playing well. The guys came in at halftime and decided they had to pick up the defensive intensity and rebounding. They outre-bounded us in the first half." The Vikings were outrebounded 16-8 in the first half but finished with a 44-33 advantage. "We didn't do a very good job of getting the ball inside in the first half," Gross said. "We made a little adjustment in our zone offense, and Keith went to the boards a lot harder." Ten Vikings saw action and four scored iri double figures.

Dan Guebert, whose 3-point basket put the Vikings over the century mark, followed Hasselquist with 17 points. Bill Schiffler added 16 and Darwin Klaassen 14. AugustanaSee 2B University won with 56 points. Mankato State was fifth and North Dakota State seventh. DeHaven was one of five SDSU runners to gain All-America status.

The junior from Huron ran the course in 30 minutes, 59 seconds. The winner, Sampson Obwocha( of East Texas State, finished in 30:52. SDSU's Todd Stevens was ninth in 31:42. Other SDSU All-Americans were Randy Reichel in 25th at Paul Morgan, 29th, and Jeff Massmann, 31st, 32:28. Tim Wilson of SDSU was 60th in 33.09 and the Jackrabbits' Mark Richard of Sioux Falls was 100th in 34:17.

Charlene Hubbard of SDSU was 12th in 17:39 on the women's course. The SDSU women finished 10th with 218 points. Sue Miller was 50th, Joleen Hansen, 67th; Carla Snedecker, 72nd; Susie Oster, 74th; Christy Young, 88th; and Kim Ford-ham, 94th. California-Poly won with 39 points, paced by the individual winner, Gladys Prieur, in 16:43. Argus Leader photo by LLOYD B.

CUNNINGHAM Greg Van Soelen Saturday night in non-conference basketball at the Arena. Augustana College forward Rob Velasco shoots over the defense of Dordt College's Tyson wins title from Berbick on early ECO I ctil! can't hplieva I rot caueht." Berbick said. of the ring." By STEVE SNEDDON Gannett News Service LAS VEGAS, Nev. Mike Tyson became the youngest heavyweight champion in history when the 20-year-old knocked out wona coxing louncu titleholder Trevor Berbick in Boxing the second round Saturday night. Lierz paces Baker past Tribe 49-20 LAWRENCE, Kan.

(AP) -Sophomore tailback Ed Lierz rushed 27 times for 301 yards and two touchdowns to lead Baker, University past Huron College 49-20 in a National Asso- rOOIOail ciation of Inter- i collegiate Athletics Division II football playoff game Saturday. The first-round win improved Baker to 8-1. The Tribe ended its season 9-1-1. Lierz's effort broke the NAIA playoff record for rushing. The previous record was 286 yards by John Overbey of Valley City, N.D., State in 1976.

Baker quarterback Scott Rampy threw for three touchdowns. Huron sophomore Mike Williams rushed for 111 yards and scored on a 62-yard run. Berbick, 33, wore black trunks to taunt Tyson, who also favors that color, at the scheduled 12-round bout. But in the end which came much sooner than anyone expected Berbick was stopped after two knockdowns in the second round left him dazed. Referee Mills Lane stopped the fight 2 minutes, 35 seconds "I guess it happened.

I was trying to prove it to myself that I could catch his best shot." Tyson's victory in the heavyweight unification series advances him to a fight against the winner of the World Boxing Association title bout between champion Tim Witherspoon and Tony Tubbs July 12. Tyson and the WBA champion will meet at the Las Vegas Hilton March 7. Berbick, who was the last fighter to beat Muhammad Ali, aluded to future bouts despite the sctbsck It was Berbick's first defense of the title that he won on a 12-round decision over Pinklon Thomas last March. In the first round, Berbick fought in the middle of the ring as he said he would. Far from the ropes, he was jarred at least a half-dozen times by Tyson.

"I was happy he wasn't moving," Tyson said. "It was a blessing from the sky, but I was surprised how strong he was." Tyson, whose height is listed at 5-foot-ll, but appears to be closer to 5-9, had no trouble getting past the reach advantage of his 6-2'i opponent. Tyson, from Catskill, N.Y., replaces Floyd Patterson as the youngest heavyweight champion. Patterson was 21 when he knocked out Archie Moore in 1956. After Tyson knocked down Berbick with a right and then a left hook, the champion tried to tie up Tyson.

The tactic was short-lived, as the capacity crowd in the Hilton Center sensed the end was near. Tyson stalked Berbick and rocked him with several shots. Berbick went down as Tyson unloaded a short left hook to the jaw. Berbick reeled into the ropes in his own corner, causing photographers to scramble. Berbick got back on his feet, stumbled toward a neutral corner and fell again without another punch being landed.

Once again, Berbick got back on his feet, but he wobbled badly as he tried to prop himself up in the neutral corner. Lane hugged Berbick to keep him from taking further punishment and mercifully stopped the bout. Tyson was paid $1.2 million. Berbick received $2.1 million. Hockey Mike Tyson into the second round.

With the win, Tyson im NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE Saturday's Games Boston 6. St Louis 5 Hartlord 6, Y. Islanders 3 Philadelphia 6, Toronto 1 Pittsburgh 5, Washington 4 Minnesota 6, New Jersey 2 Quebec 3, Buffalo 1 Detroit 4. Montreal 3 Calgary 8. Rangers 5 Edmonton 5, Vancouver 2 Today's Games Los Angeles at Winnipeg, 7:05 p.m.

New Jersey at Chicago, 7:35 p.m. proved to 28-0. Berbick is 31-5-1. "I was so intense. I refused to be beat," Tyson said.

"I always feel confident when my blood and soul is on the line. "My record will never be broken. I refused to get hurt. I would have had to have been carried off.

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Pages Available:
1,255,818
Years Available:
1886-2024