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

Fort Lauderdale News from Fort Lauderdale, Florida • 60

Location:
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
60
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Fctrt Lauderdale "Sews and Sun-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 6, 1970 In UM Jo Devaney: Fm Not Interests have on the field here," he said. "We'll work out in the Orange Bowl at least once to see how it affects us." While Devaney was talking, lovely brunette Earleen Carey the Orange Bowl queen waited patiently aside, adjusting and re-adjusting her crown. Finally, Orange Bowl publicity director Jack Houghteling interrupted. "We've got to get some shots of you and the queen," he told Devaney.

"I was wondering when we were going to get around to that," Devaney said. Miss Carey planted a kiss on his cheek. "Hey," he said, "maybe we can spend a couple of more days here." Nebraska, give his team some time off, then come to Miami, where they will stay at the Ivanhoe. He plans to work out eight times at Biscayne College. "It all depends on how the Dolphins are by then," he said.

"If they're still in session, we might have to change our plans. The biggest problem will be some place to store our equipment. I've talked to Don Shula and he's been very cooperative." Nebraska has played only one game under the lights since the 196S Orange Bowl, when Alabama beat the Cornhuskers, 39-28. That one game was the 21-21 tie with USC this year. The artifical turf at the Orange Bowl should not give his team any trouble, however.

Nebraska has installed Astroturf in both its indoor and outdoor facilities. "The only problem might come up with the crown they Sentinel Sports Editor chosen to stay here too long." Devaney plans to work his team from the 10th to the 19th in Names Faces Ali Rules 6-1 Choice; TP tP Jackson Hot In Bengals Accept OB Bid (Continued From Page ID) W. Keith Phillips, Orange Bowl Committee president, was at the Mississippi game and extended the bid to the Tigers as soon as the game ended. It was the most points Ole Miss and its first victory since 1964 over the Rebels, winners the last two years behind Archie Manning, who returned in this game for the first time since breaking his left arm Nov. 7.

Manning, apparently having trouble running with the polyester resin protective device on his arm, threw most of the time he was in the MIAMI Scratch Nebraska's Bob Devaney from the list of coaching candidates for the University of Miami. "I haven't been contacted, and I'm not interested," Devaney said. "I can coach as long as I want at Nebraska. Why should I want to leave?" Devaney, in South Florida for Orange Bowl preliminaries, rushed through an hour-long press meeting Saturday at the Columbus Hotel in order to see the Arkansas-Texas game on television. "If I were younger," he said, "I might have considered it, but it was offered to me in 1963 when we were here to play Auburn in the Orange Bowl.

Nothing has changed since then, except I'm seven years older." A story in a Des Moines, Iowa, paper had reported that Devaney was interested in the Miami job. "I have an idea who fed them the information," he said. "It was a Nebraskan now living in Miami. But there's nothing to it." Devaney, 58, is the winningest active coach in the college ranks with 113 victories. His Nebraska team, with only a tie against Southern California to mar its 10-0-1 record, will meet LSU in the Orange Bowl New Year's night.

"This is the best-balanced team I've ever had," Devaney said. "The rushing and passing complement each other well. And we've had good performances from both offense and defense. "I won't say we're the best team in the nation, but I did vote us No. 1 in the last United Press International coaches' poll." Devaney has two important bits of recognition riding on the outcome of the Orange Bowl game.

His team could be voted No. 1 at year's end and he could be Coach of the Year. "We can't depend on how Texas, Arkansas or Ohio State do," he said. "We'll just have to play well. We'll have to do enough to make No.

1. "As far as being Coach of the Year well, Bud Wilkinson of Oklahoma is the only coach from the Big Eight to ever make it. "There just aren't enough votes out where I come from." Devaney's team accepted the Orange Bowl bid with still a game to play and without knowing who its opponent would be. In fact, Devaney still didn't know who he would be playing as he talked. "It really doesn't matter," he said.

"When we got the bid, I met with the team and told them all the possible opponents we might face in the Orange, Sugar and Cotton Bowls, if we got bids from them. "Honestly, we were hoping to play Notre Dame down here. We've had some big games with Notre Dame. But the way things worked out doesn't matter. Whoever it is, we know we'll have a tough team to beat." While the Orange Bowl had been making up its mind about Devaney's opponent, he was using the time to recruit.

"Sometimes you might suffer in recruiting when you are getting ready for a bowl game. But we used the time well and haven't lost a step in lining up prospects." He also did not send scouts to the Texas-Arkansas or LSU-Mississippi games. "We'll have plenty of time to exchange films," he said. "And I didn't think it was right to ask them for scouting privileges when they didn't have the same opportunity." Devaney will bring his team to South Florida on Dec. 24, one day before Christmas.

"I told them they could have Christmas off and we could come later," he said, "but they all voted to come down on the 24th. You can be at a. bowl site too long. I just hope we haven't GAMBLE KELLY Our Wire Services Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay) is a 6-1 favorite to defeat Oscar Bonavena Monday night at Madison Square Garden, and the former heavyweight champion is so confident of winning, he sparred 11 rounds Friday, defying boxing tradition. The 6-foot-3Vi Clay is down to 210 pounds, while his Argentine foe weighs 208.

Gil Clancy, manager of Emile Griffith and Bon-avena's American trainer, said, "Clay's crazy. He's fighting Monday, but he fought today. It's going to weaken him." Bonavena predicted that "Clay will not fight again after he fights me. Win or lose, he's going to be down and he's going to get hurt." BASEBALL Mike Cuellar of the Baltimore Orioles quit the San Juan Senators of the Puerto Rican Winter League, saying, "I'm disgusted. This is the worst start I have ever had in winter baseball." His manager, Roberto Clemente of the Pirates, "is not satisfied" with Cuellar, who has lost both his starts in the league.

Baseball's annual winter meetings ended in Los Angeles and Cleveland lefthander wHrS till game. LSU Miss 13 62 132 38 First downs Rushing Passing yardage Return yardage Passes Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized 27 214 291 306 14-24-1 3-32 3 42 18-44-5 7-38 0 95 Mississippi 7 1 7 017 LSU .7 1 10 2854 Miss Toole 9 pass from Manning" (Toole kick) LSU LeCoux 20 pass from Jones (Lumpkin kick) Miss FG Toole 22 LSU Hamilton 46 pass from Lee (Lumpkin kick) LSU Casanova 61 punt return (Lumpkin kick) LSU Safety Manning tackled in end zone LSU-FG Lumpkin 24 LSU Burns 61 punt return (Lumpkin kick) Miss Chumbler 3 run (Toole kick) LSU Cantrelle 55 run (Lumpkin kick) LSU Cavanaugh 13 pass from Jones (Lumpkin kick) LSU Casanova 73 punt return (Lumpkin kick) LSU LeDoux 9 run (Lumpkin kick) (Staff photo by Donn Gould) MIAMI'S TOM SULLIVAN HAS NOWHERE TO GO Cougars close in to stop him for yard loss tv" ord and a berth in the Peach Bowl, has received a four-year contract at Chapel Hill. Penn appointed Harry Gamble as head coach to succeed Bob Odell, who quit last week after six seasons. Gamble, for the past four years, has coached at Lafayette. The University of Wyoming named Lloyd Eaton assistant athletic director and will replace him as head coach after a 1-9 season.

SWIMMING John Kinsella of Indiana set an NCAA record for the freestyle as the Hoosiers whipped the University of Cincinnati, 82-31. Kinsella's time was 9:25.5, almost 10 seconds faster than Hans Fassnacht's previous mark. HOCKEY The Stanley Cup was stolen from the hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto and police say they have no suspects. The trophy, stolen once before but recovered, is emblematic of team supremacy in the sport and "has no value to thieves," according to police. Also stolen were the Conn Smythe Trophy and the Masterson Trophy.

AAU Jack B. Kelly, the former Olympic rower and brother of Princess Grace, was elected president of the National Amateur Athletic Union and promised that rules of amateurism would be updated and modernized. HARNESS RACING Laverne Hanover won his third straight divisional title in a nationwide poll by the U.S. Trotting Association. He.

was adjudged the top Four-Year-Old Pacer of the Year, while Dayan was voted best Four-Year-Old Trotter of the Year. Laverne Hanover is trained and driven by Billy Haughton and owned by Thomas W. Murphy of New York. Dayan, owned by Adonis Stable of Fair Lawn, N.J., was trained and driven by Billy Myer this year. JACKSON CUELLAR Houston Hands UM 36-3 Defeat Individual Statistics Tense Texas Romps, 42-7, Over Arkansas Miami Runner Best Sullivan Schmidt Tefll Cochrane Passer Cochrane Teal RUSHING Alt.

6 Net Avg. LG TO 10 49 49 4.9 29 9 23 6 15 1.7 9 0 2 0 14 -14 -5 0 5 16 14 2 .4 13 0 8 10 26 -16 4 PASSING Art. Comp. Int. Yrs.

LP TO 12 3 2 58 51 12 5 1 47 13 0 PASS RECEIVING Long Cant. Yrs. Pass TD Sam McDowell is still with the Indians despite trade rumors'and the Washington Senators were unable to unload reliever Darold Knowles for $500,000. Knowles had a poor won-lost record in 1970, but his earned run average was impressive and the team is in trouble financially. Owner Bob Short expected to receive a big piece of change for Knowles.

Reggie Jackson of the Oakland A's is tearing up the Puerto Rican Winter League because, he says, he's wearing glasses. Jackson has hit nine homers and has driven in 20 runs in 28 games for the Santurce Crabbers. FOOTBALL North Carolina Coach Bill Dooley, who led his Tar Heels to an 8-3 rec 1 51 51 Larry Lancaster fumbled and Benny Fry recovered. Six plays later, Mullins threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to Mike Parrott in the right corner of the end-zone. Lopez' kick, with 28 seconds left in the half, put Houston up, 30-3.

Wright caught five passes for 135 yards to move into second place for total career yardage. Wright, who has 3,347 yards, passed former Tulsa star Howard Twilley's total of 3,340, but fell short of the record of 3,598 held by Florida State's Ron Sellers. Receiver Gaun Best Brennan Golmont 24 19 11 13 11 11 3 3 1 PUNTING Long Punter Barrett No. Yds. Avg.

Punf 7 310 4.3 34 PUNT RETURNS Player Sullivan Lancaster No. Yds. 1 .11 2 15 Long Return 11 9 Long Return 30 19 KICKOFF RETURNS Player Sullivan Schmidt No. Yds. 3 78 1 19 (Continued From Page ID) overthrown, on the Miami 38 and returned to the 21 before Van Golmont, the intended receiver, brought him down.

A three-yard gain by New-house and a seven-yard pickup Steve Smith gave the Cougars a first down on the 11. Newhouse then took a pitchout from Mullins and ran 11 yards around left end for touchdown. Carlos Lopez kicked the extra-point and Houston led, 17-3, with 8:25 left in the half. The Cougars used some razzle-dazzle to score six more points before the half ended. On a third-and-12 from the Miami 47, Mullins handed oft to tight end Earl Thomas on what Miami thought would be an end-around run on the left side.

It wasn't. Thomas stopped and threw long to Wright, who was wide open on the 10. Wright slowed up to wait for the ball before catching it and then went into the end-zone untouched. Lopez' kick was blocked and Houston led, 23-3, with 3:51 remaining in the half. The Cougars scored seven more points shortly before the half ended to give them 28 for the second period.

Houston took over on the Hurricane 20, when Miami's Houston Furnished Apartment For Sale Vi BLOCK TO OCEAN AND TO SHOPPING IN DEERFIELD BEACH. CALL 399-4722 FOR APPOINTMENT. ASK FOR JACKLYN. mcE $11,500 WORSTER HONORED DALLAS. OP) Steve Worster of the University of Texas was selected Saturday as the Southwest Conference football Player of the Year.

Texas Tech's Jim Carlen in his first year on the job was picked SWC Coach of the Year with his fine 8-3 record that put the Red Raiders in the Sun Bowl. It's Dietzel Vs. Warmath fullback in the Wishbone-T offense, bruised his shoulder on the opening kickcff, adding to a hip bruise and torn rib cartilage sustained in earlier games. But he said heat treatment at halftime "finally loosned up everything and I felt great in the second half. "The holes were so big two and three yards wide that my little brother cculd have run through them and he's just 12, a skinny little fellow." Arkansas' All-SWC linebacker Mike Boschetti said, shaking his head, "It's the greatest offense I've ever seen." And Arkansas defensive end Bruce James said Phillips is "as good as James Street." Street was the undefeated quarterback who helped beat Arkansas, 15-14, last year in a similar showdown that was voted the game of the decade in the 1960s.

The stunning margin cf victory was forged from touchdown drives cf 76, 83, 99, 46, 60 and 48 yards as the triple-option Texas attack trampled the Arkansas defenders. Rushing At. Av LG TD 33 172 9 163 4.9 17 2 17 113 2 111 6.5 52 1 19 3.2 8 19 3.2 7 0 16 4.0 19 0 6 21 2 6 21 2 4 26 10 1 0 6 1 0 13 -6 -6 0 -13 0 PASSING Alt Comp I nt Yds LP TD 19 6 0 101 61 1 1 1 0 47 47 1 3 10 15 15 PASS RECEIVING Rtinnr Newlwuss Mozissk Mullins Smith DsSrsain Thomes Feci ft'otlin-, Thomas DcSsain Wright Pirrot Thomas Punter Parrott Player R. Ford Brezina Smith Cght Yds LP TD 1 1 0 61 10 5 135 2 1" 1 9 9 MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) Murray Warmath of Minnesota and Paul Dietzel of South Carolina will be head coaches in the 33rd annual Blue-Gray classic Dec.

28, officials announced Saturday. Warmath, who will be making his fifth appearance as a Blue coach, first coached in the classic in 1952, when he directed the Gray team. At the time, Warmath was coach at Mississippi State. Long BETTER QUALITY COSTS YOU LESS OR YOUR MONEY BACK (Continued From Page ID) "For his size, Collins is as good as anybody we have," Bertelsen added. Defensive end Bill Atessis said the Longhorns were "so scared and excited that they had to hold us back" in the locker room before the game.

"I was afraid we had peaked (emotionally) in the locker room at 1 o'clock" an hour before kickoff. Texas head coach Darrell Royal said he "never dreamed" the victory margin would be so great, and he added that if the two teams played again "I don't think the score would be that way." But Coach Frank Broyles of No. 4 Arkansas said, "They just overpowered us in every phase of the game. They're big and strong and played an inspired game. It was just their day." Royal picked out a single decision in the second quarter as a possible turning point in the lopsided game.

With Texas facing first and 10 on its one-yard line following a great goal line stand against Arkansas, Royal told quarterback Eddie Phillips to open up a bit by handing off to Bertelsen, who ripped for 13 yards and started a 99-yard touchdown drive. Royal, who had considered having Phillips run a quarterback sneak and then punt, said the handoff call "was the only time Phillips flinched he put a little eye on me when I told him what we wanted to do." "That great goal line stand and the 99-yard drive really got us rolling," Royal said. He said the supercharged Longhorns were as emotionally "ready" as one of his teams has ever been. "One time, we were scared to death at the next moment we were confident and determined. My emotions were like a yo-yo all week long." Worster, the powerful senior No.

Yards Av. Punf PUNTING 7 290 41.4 55 PUNT RETURNS No. Yards Long 5 13 10 1 2 2 1 0 0 KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yards Long Complete Player Mm a PAYS. ONLY! special engine uneui including plugs, points, condenser and rotor S29S5 (most cars) For most CheVys" and Foras wun Install heavy-duty brake shoes on all 4 wheels Turn and true all 4 drums Clean and lube backing plates Rebuild all 4 wheel cylinders with H.D.

kits inspect brake return springs Check grease seals Check master cylinders Check brake hoses Repack front wheel bear-Ings Inspecf pini and lip Bleed lines and add brake fluid Inspect exhaust and front end Road test ear type drum brakes. otner- cars American Am a a I Jf Vs I sfi fS 'All fill 1 1 A priced. -Work done by factory trained experts. 2-yr. or 24,000 mtia guarantee on brake lin All ports and labor guaranteed 6,000 miles120 days FORT LAUDERDALE ings.

V.WrtVlViVUuV.V.V.Y.V. Arkansas 13 20 145 2 11-27-3 0 15 Texas 29 464 53 14 3-5-0 2 106 111 E. Sunrise Boulevard 525-8553 (At Sunrise Blvd. and Andrews) POMPANO BEACH 3140 N. Federal Highway, Lighthouse Point, 946-4860.

mile north of Pompano Fashion Square Shopping Center) Houn: Monday Friday 8:00 5:30 Saturday, 8:00 1:00 First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Return yardage Passes Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized ZAYREFt. LAUDERDALE 0 7 0 0-7 14 7 1442 Arkansas Texas ZAYREH0LLYW000 Next to Taft-Hollywood Shopping Plaza Taft Street ZAYREHALLANDALE 1033 W. Hallandale Beach Blvd. at 1-93 2265 West Broward Boulevard ZAYRE0AKLAND PARK 3500 North Andrews Avenue ZAYREPOMPANO 3772 No. Federal Highway LiEhthouss Point TEX Phillips 7 run (Feller kick) TEX Worster 2 run (Feller kick) ARK Richardson 12 run (McClard kick) TEX Bertelsen 6 run (Feller kick) TEX Worster 2 run (Feller kick) TEX Bertelsen 8 run (Feller kick) TEX Bertelsen 5 run (Feller kick) MILEX SERVICES; BATTERIES STARTERS CARBURETORS ALTER NATORS GENERATORS AIR CONDITIONING COOUNQ SYSTEMS WEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10 AM TO 11 PMSUNDAY 10 AM TO 10 PM PARKING FREE EASY.

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 Fort Lauderdale News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Fort Lauderdale News Archive

Pages Available:
1,724,617
Years Available:
1925-1991