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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 61

Location:
Binghamton, New York
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Page:
61
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 i t' epiember Surge Keeps 2 BALTIMORE (AP) -Hot-hitting Carl Yastrzemski drove in two runs with a single and a home run last night, leading the Boston Red Sox to a 3-1 American League victory over the Baltimore Orioles. The triumph kept Boston Hi games ahead of Detroit in the AL East race. Both teams have four games remaining, including three against each other beginning tomorrow at Detroit. Marty Pattin (16-13) earned the victory and Yastrzemski, who has led Boston's September surge, with eight of his 12 homers, keyed the Sox' offense. DETROIT (AP) The Detroit Tigers made a lot of noise on the field yesterday with a 13-4 rout of the Milwaukee Brewers, but their dressing room was quiet after the victory.

"Let's keep it going one at a time and make the best of it, said Manager Billy Mar-tia in a subdued tone after his second-place Tigers kept their American League Eastern Division championship hopes alive. The Tigers' sudden hitting spree now has accounted for 25 runs in two games. "We'll have to do it on a daily basis," said Norm Cash, quietly. 8th Homer of the Month Keys Red Sox Over Birds Tiger Sprees of 12 Head of Steam for X.O Boston "Let's hope I can keep It up for the next four days," said the hot-hitting Al Ka-line, hardly raising his voice above a whisper. The rest of the Tigers were happy with the victory, but sobered by the thought that Boston still had the lead in the tight "I'm hitting the ball as well as I have all year," said shortstop Ed Brinkman, "although my batting average doesn't show it." "I was just happy to reach the No.

19 win plateau," said winning pitcher Joe Coleman. The victory kept the Tigers IVi games back of division-leading Boston as the Red Sox defeated Baltimore in a ciight game. Both Det roit and Boston have games to play including a season-ending three game, series beginning take 3 rip double indent Tigers chased Milwaukee starter Skip Lockwood after eight men came to bat, climaxed by Brinkman's home run. The splurge tagged the (Continued on Page 7E) "If we win Sunday, it means nothing if Detroit also wins," said Manager Eddie Kasko of Boston. "But it would mean a heluva lot if Detroit should lose.

I want to go into Detroit with at least a lV-i-game lead." The game ended on a bizarre play. The Orioles chased Pattin when Brooks Robinson opened the ninth with a single and Bobby Grich walked. Reliever Bob Veale, who now has two victories and two saves in five appearances since being purchased by Boston, then struck out Johnny Oates as the Orioles' cathcer failed on three bunt attempts. Then, with a 1-2 count on Dave Johnson, the game suddenly ended when Johnson took a third called strike and pinch-runner Al Bumbry was tossed out by catcher Carlton Fisk while trying to steal third. Boston aicked loser Pat Dobson (16-18) for a run in the first inning when Tom- Continued on Page 7E) Jets Just Dorts JL The Sunday Press SECTION Binghamton, N.Y., Oct.

1, 1972 DUTCH'S TDs THE BEGINNING AND THE END FOR SCRANTON jinipnijwpii ijimuiuxi! I hit r. (1 PsssWi.at-.iMJMtfai UllJMH W1I" mMUMi k.vnw-wm,.. T-H1 Til II TrTITl I 1 1 Ij f)l lyi r.rpip-quii mj 111 Jl III I ILM 4 i ii ii iffljiiTiiiviiTrft'-l- in-i PRESS PHOTOS BY DON BLACK. bo'ril, playing tailback last night, slips past the run, the Jets' first score in 21-3 win at North. ROZ ON THE RAMPAGE TC Jets back Butch Roz Scranton Eagle secondary on a 57-yard touchdow Chasing two-TD Roz are Paul laco A JET LANDING TC Jets tight end Joe Greco cradles a pass and slides I towards the endzone (lateral stripe) but he is stopped a fraction of art inch shy of touchdown by Scranton safety Lou Costanzo.

The Jets scored I on next play of 21-3 win last night at North High. vazzi (27) and Dave Baker (24). Red Splint ers Wishbone Big JL By JOHN1 W. FOX Press Sports Editor I A A On second thought, maybe Colgate would rather bring back Ed Mari-naro. Cornell's "remains" proved more deadlier yesterday than anything the Colgaters had experienced in All-American Ed's three incredible years of statistics, Big Red squeezing the life out of the Colgate Wishbone ki a 37-7 shocker.

The Cornell defensive wringer had, to a degree, been forecast but what astounded 9 NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Lnul Chicago 1, 1 Inningj Thilartflprua 3, MonlrMl 0. It Montreal rhilaOKlphia 4, 2nd PittiBurah 5, New Vork 0 ios Anoelc 4, Cincinnati 10 Innings San Franrisro 3, Atlanta 1 Houston at San Diego, night East Won Lost Pet. .73 .553 .573 a .453 .373 CB Pittsburgh Chicago Kew York H. Levis Montreal Philadelphia 4 57 3 71 73 7 56 67 71 7 1 4 10'j 15 21' 25' 37' i We si Cincinnati .613 ,557 .543 .47 .410 .313 Houston 13 Los Angeles 7 Atlanta 70 San Francisco 65 -San Dieoo 57 10' i 34's -Night game not included Today's Games New York (Koosman 11-12) at Pittsburgh (Blass 19-7) Atlanta (Niekro 16-11) at San FranciKO (McDowell 1 81 Philadelphia (Reynolds 2-14) at Montreal (McAnally 5-15) St.

Louis (Wist 16-16) at Chicago (Pap-pas 16-7) Los Angeles (Strahler 1-2) tl Clncinnqtl (B'lhnflriam 11121 Houston (Reus! M3) at San Diego (Caldwell 7-101 Tomorrow's Garnet Philadelphia at Chicago, 2:30 i New York at Montreal, f.JS p.m. Only games scheduled By SOREN NIELSEN "We've heard enough about that Scranton defense," a TC Jet was heard muttering on the sidelines when last night's Empire Football League battle of Western Division un-beatens was all but over. Except for one sustained scoring march, two spectacular touchdowns by Butch Roz-boril and some gutty offensive line-play, the 21-3 Jets' win at North High before 8,000 pleased fans did indeed belong to the Jets defense. ITEM: The Jets allowed the Eagles no touchdown, something no team has ever accomplished against the two-year-old defending EFL champions. ITEM: With third-stringer Mike Rogan directing the ciub in the first half, the Eagles drove to the Jets' 15 where two plays were crushed.

Linebacker Harry Hoover smeared Frank Survilla for a five-yard loss on a screen pass and on the next play cornerback Harlan Brew dove over black and white shirts to intercept a sideline pass. ITEM: Defensive end Mike Prislupsky who, without previous study or knowledge aforehand of Eagles personnel, ate up both Gene Rader and Pat Casey, neither effective against the former Union-Endicott star's fierce pass rush. "Slupper" reached Mike Rogan once in the first half and when All-EFLer John Rogan hobbled in with his badly bruised foot to the cheers of a sizable Pennsylvania contingent, Prislupsky nailed him on his first play for a nine-yard loss. ITEM: Linebacker Jim Allen spiked an end zone pass on the Eagles penetration that led to the field goal, player-coach John Deuel repeated the gesture two penalties and one snap later and two-way starter Al Klumpp got the idea when, with three seconds showing on the fourth-quarter clock, Mike R. tried to hit super flanker Stan Kucharski deep in pay-dirt area.

Klumpp's leap with 1971's EFL Most Valuable Player choked the last gasp for the Eagles who marched 93 yards in the waning moments trying to prevent the touchdown whitewash. The Jets scored on their (Continued on Page 7E) 0 TP Tme TC SCORINO PLAY First Ouarttr TIME 6 7 13 14 14 30 21 Rozboril, 57 trap play Shear kick Second Quarter Stanton. 1 sneak Shear kick Third Ouarttr Namlick, II field anal 9:17 11:31 10-47 Roiborll, 91 kickofl return 10:10 Shear kick Statistics First downs '4 Rushing, ettyds. 26-95 passes 14 34 1 Pass yards 13 Punts 7-231 Fumbles lest penalties Return vards 10 TC 12 30-164 10-160 76 6-197 1 70 26 Scranton rushing: Keller 6-12. Farrell 4, kucharski 1-mlnus S.

Namlick 7-46, Survilla 7-29, Chiavacci 1-4. Jets rushinq. Rozboril 13.102, paoluc-Jet rushinq: Rozboril 13-102, PaoluC-ci 9-37, Conrad 2-1, Stanton 21, Maihis Iminus 3. Jackson t-17, Klumpp 2 Scranton passlnq: Mike Roqan 1329, 130 I John Roqan 1-4, 31 yds.) Keller I. Jets passing: Stanton 10-15, 76 Mathis 0 1.

Scranton receiving: Laron 1-1, Solan 1-31, Kucharski 6-67, Farrell 1-1, Foreman 1 II, Keller 1.20, Survilla I minus fv'amlick 7-74. Jets receivlnqt Greco J-16, Klumpp 551. Rnrboril 3-minus 7. Officials: Releree, Tom Careyi Bark Indaes, Dirk Rommell and Gent Alle-qruccil Umpire, Bill Garrltyi Times man, Joe Vernosky; Lin Judge, Stan Jennings, No. 1 Fun LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lynn Swain's touchdown on a 92-yard punt return sparked the' top-ranked Southern California Trojans to a 51-6 rout over the fumbling Michigan State Spartans in an inter-sectional college football clash r5t night.

Swain's first quarter touchdown was followed by eight Michigan State turnovers five lost fumbles and three interceptions. The Trojans, 4-0, capitalized often, especially in a 27-point fourth quarter. 0 TD Tm Conn. SCORING "PLAY TIMIE First Quarter 0 6 Williams, 10 pass from Allen 4: 0 7 Rosser kick Second Ouarlai i Allen, 1 run i.V Rosser kick Malone, 3 run f)j Rosser kick failed Rosser, 20 field goal 11 Malone, 3 run JJ Rosser kick Third Quarter 6 30 DeBona, 20 run kTt 7 30 Heldrick kick Fourth Quarter i- 7 3 Allen, run 7 37 Rosser kick Colg. IS 46-147 41 0 4 13 2 4-39 5 Corp- I2 34S I IT 4t 10-20-9 220 1 -40 First downs Rushes, yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts Fumbles.

Inst Penalties, yards 54 INDIVIDUAL Xouiuirli Mnrvlniid 12 (Story on Page 2E) (Story on Page 3E) Cily Hi Oklahoma OiKMtnla riomsoH (Story on Page 2E) (Story on Page 3E) Sua. Valley 2i Okla. Stale Oweo It Colorado (Story on Page 2E) (Story on Page 3E) hen. Valley 17 orf. Slate 21 AorwiHi II llhaea Coll.

Itt (Story on Page 2E) (Story on Page 3E) llengals 27 IVoIre Ilame lloelieslei Ii I'urilue II (Story on Page 2E) (Story on Page 5E) lireene III Ohio Slale Windsor 12 X. Carolina 1 1 (Story on Page 5E) (Story on Tagc 9E) Auburn 10 IVmi Slale 1 1 Tennessee 0 Iowa 10 (Story on Page ME) (Story on Page 6E) Bullying Ball Control M-E Success Story Colgate rushing: DeBona 7-46, Basil 9-34, Corrigan 7-23, Folkes 6-21, Van itt-. hen 9-15, Parr 16. Cornell rushing: Malone 30-142, Russlj 11-76, Allen 14-52, Joehl 9-32, Bradshaw 13-23, Balash 310, Costa 1-6, Spelman 1-5, Corriqan 1-minus 1. Colgate passing: Parr 3 for-6, 25 yards.

1 interception; Basile 2 for-7, 23 yards, I interception. Cornell passing: Allen 10-for-ll, 1 yards, 1 TD; Balash p-for-2. Colgatt receiving: Fraser 2-25, ney 2-23. Cornell receiving: Milosevic 4-63, Dault 4-37, Williams MO, Rosser 1-7. the Schoellkopf Field crowd of 15,000 was that the post-Mari-naro offense's debut so upstaged Colgate at its own ball-control tactics that after 21 minutes play the Big Red had run off 50 plays to the visitors' nine.

Dan Malone, a 200-pound sophomore from Detroit whom Markiaro helped recruit, by halftime had worn out the tackles for 117 yards on 22 carries, Cornell ahead by 30-0 at that stage and Colgate never outside its own 45-yard-line except when handed the ball on why we're 3-0." The Spartans will probably never control the ball any better than they did in the second quarter when CC had it for four offensive plays, fumbled on two of them and had a pass picked off. And during that 12-minute span, M-E crunched, snapped and cracked the CC defense for four touchdowns to put the game out of reach. The Spartans were slow starting, their lone first period touchdown coming on a 19-yard drive started by Tom Touhey's pass interception. Dave Hasegawa scored four of the five touchdowns and the S-foot-8, 151-pound senior who started the year as a sub, now has scored 40 points and leads the team in rushing with 300 yards! He had 91 yesterday. Bob Eckler, who was hurt and missed last week's 24-14 win over North and also lost his starting spot to Hasegawa, got into the action in the second period.

Ryder feels now his regular running backs will be Hasegawa, Eckler and Dave Card, who also didn't start yesterday because of an injury in workouts, but wound up the second top rusher with 48 yards on 10 carries. After a CC drive in the first quarter reached the M-E 34, the Crusaders didn't make another first down until they got four in the 79-yard touchdown drive in the fourth period, capped by Bill Formanek's nine-yard burst over right guard. The Spartan offense rolled a weak out-of-bounds Cornell punt, which it promptly fumbled away without further penetration. The 30 first downs fell one short of the modern Big Red record set in last year's 38-20 win over the same opponent, but never, in the computer age anyway, had Cornell rammed away for 84 running plays in one ballgame. The old high had been 75 against the.

1957 Columbia team which Cornell barely shaded by 8-0. Throw in 20 passes and the 103 offensive plays broke the old high of 96, up close to 300 yards in the first half before the reserves took over and played most of the second half. The second TD drive was 90 yards, capped by Hasegawa going over from the four. A fumble started the next drive, 37 yards long, with Hasegawa going over from the one. French scored the fourth score on a one-yard sneak when he stepped into the end zone when there was no CC defender over the middle, the quarterback having only his own center to worry about.

The drive came when the M-E kickoff man almost missed the ball. It rolled between a CC player's legs and Jerome Sweezy recovered for the Spartans. Another fumble on the CC 22 set up Hasegawa's final score, a four-yard run over right tackle. The Spartans now have scored 16 touchdowns this year but they have converted only five extra points, one a kick. "This bothers me," Ryder says, "It may cost us later on." Not if the front line opens gaping holes like it did yester.

day. "You can't play ball when you're on defense almost all of the time," CC Coach Brian Smith said. "We just left too many big holes for them to go through we just never got started." also achieved in last year's game. Malone fell short of Mari-naro's maiden effort, a 162-yard day in a 1969 Schoellkopf loss to Colgate, only because of occasional Cornell diversification and definite fourth-quarter mercy by Coach Jack Musick. Dauntless Dan'l loft the game for good midway in the third period, finishing with 142 yards though alternating in the early stages with fellow-soph Horace Bradshaw.

And Rick Russo, running with the fury of an upperclassman spurned, took over the position in the fourth quarter to tack on another 76 in 11 carries. Since Russo had only third-string help alongside him, it's obvious that Cornell wasn't straining for the one more touchdown which would have assured a series high in scoring. The 42-0 mark was set in an 1899 Cornell win. Colgate committed 10 fumbles (sama as Syracuse in last weekend's Wisconsin atrocity) and though losing only five, its misplays on kickoffs left it in a continual first-half hole that was compounded by the jarring manner in which linebacker Bob Lally and his willing imitators shook up the touted Colgate Wishbone 1-2 of Tom Parr and Mark Van Ecg-hcn. Tha Wishbone came out looking more like a wrung-out chicken gizzard.

Hometown Ilhacan Parr had a nightmare second quarter, and was replaced before intermission by freshman Bruce Basile for the rest of the afternoon. Coach Neil Wheelwright later declared he should never have used Parr at all, because of a heretofore undisclosed groin pull suffered in Thursday practice. "He wanted like anything to play this game in Ithaca, but he aggravated the pull on the very first play," Wheelwright said. The extent of Parr's frustration is evident in the succession of his handles after a 16-yard run that was his only breakaway of the day: incomplete pass no gain no gain pitchout jarred loose and recovered by Cornell, pitchout fumbled and barely recovered by Colgate fumble jarred loose and recovered by Cornell, no gain, incomplete, im-complete pass and. after the short completions, the in Baseball Scoreboard By BILL HART Maine-Endwell Coach Nick Ryder says one of the things he has tried to impress on his Spartans this fall is ball control.

"We want that ball as much as we can get it," he said after yesterday's 34-6 rout of previously unbeaten Catholic Central at Spartan Field. "We've done a good job of it so far and that's one reason 0 T.D Tau CC Scoring, play Timt alapsed FIRST QUARTER 0 Hasegawa, 5 run HaseqAwa run failed Second Ouarttr Haseqawa, run Card ran points Hawjawa, I run Cckler run failed French, 1 sneak Card run failed Haseoawa, 4 run APrams, pass from French FOURTH QUARTER Formanek, run H'nnlnger pass failed 12 14 20 2:34 4:33 :26 0 26 32 34 I 34 5:01 StalislirH CC 6 S0 6-131 73 M-E 4-33 4-7 106 9-31 Pint Downs Plays, Yds. ruining Passes Yds. passing Fumbles Lost 1 Punls, av. 3-21 Penalties 1-31 INDIVIDUAL CC rushing: Kofel Formanek 6 11, Nealon 5-11, Connerton 1-7, Mcchalek I minus 1, Goeli 1-minus 1, Henninger 6-minus 5.

rushing: Kasagawa 23-91, Card 10-41, Eckler 7-41, French 6 Ii. Byrnes 7-25, Marr 3-10, Abrans 21, Blillia 5-1, Touhey 3-minus 3, Edwards 3-minus 25. CC passing: Hennlnoer 6 for-10, 73 1 Nealon 0for-3, 2 int. M-C passing; French 6-for-f), 106 yds. CC receiving; Colt 4-40, Kozel 1-17, R.

Nea'on 1-16. receiving: Abrams 2 50, Lucia 2 31, Loveiand 2 35. Officials: Dick Pram, referee; Fd Frani, head linesman; Herb Williams, field judge; Bob Charsky, umpire. i by Jim Theo-dorakos that proved to be the junior's last play of the game. Satisfying as the job by the defense was, even bigger a lift to Cornell's Ivy League prospects was the immediate com-ing-of-age of an offensive interior that includes two snphs and only center Paul Hanly at his 1971 position.

It pushed Colgate all over the place and the once-heralded Bob Artosky (Playboy Magazine rated him No. 3 among the nation's sophomore prospects of 1971) was in on only five tackles of the nearly 100 required. Cornell scored on its first possession, without any clue of Malone'! coming domination, Of the 13 plays In the furies, Malone carried only on two' (Continued on Pagp 4E) Pro Spreads TOOAY Pavorita Pts. Underdo Los Anoelcs aven ATI ANTA Cincinnati 4 CLEVELAND Baltimore I BUFFALO Washington 10 ENC.LANO Jets HOUSTON Detroit )0', CHICAGO Dallas GREEN pay Pittsburgh 4 Jy, LOUH OAKLAND 4 San ri30 MINNESOTA 4 Miami Kamas City Tr PENVFH San Francisco 13 NEW ORLEANS AMERICAN LIAGUI Clevtland at Hm York, postponed Oetreit 13, Mllwauket a Boston Baltlmort 1, night Oakland 10, Kantai City 3 Chicago Tttn 3 Minnesota at California tail Boston Islrolt Vork ftaltimnrt Cleveland Milwaukat 0k land Chlcaoo Minnesota Kna City Calilornia If ft 14 13 7f 7 A 71 73 13 0 J4 .517 .454 .401 ,5 .57 .503 .497 ,4 .344 l1 4't' 22' I Wait I IS 7J 75 73 39 as 74 7 71 14' 17' I Today Camtt Claveiand (Ounning 5 4 and Perry 23-)l at New York (Peterson 17-14 and Gardner 1-4), 2 Milwaukee (Parsons 13-12) It Detroit (Scherman 7-3) Boston (McGiothen l-i) at Baltimore. (McNaMy 13-17) Chicago (Wood 24-16) at Teas (Bos-man 710) Minnesota (Blyleven 15-17) at Cahfor.

nia (Messersmiih 1-10) Oakland (Hnitimm 11-11) at Kansas City (Busby 3-01 Temorrtw'S Carries Chicago at Minnesota, 2 15 9 m. Milwaukee al New York, 7:30 m. Boston al Detroit, is. Only games scheduled TOMORROW 6 PHILADELPHIA Giants b- )At4a i.

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