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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 35

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. 1980 7C No respect for Hubbard, FAMU? Aiaociald Praai the colleges Ohio State No. 1 in UPI; FSU now 11th Complete poll, 2-C CompitMrom APL UPI wif want to play the Rattlers any more, he said. "Miami was the big shot," Hubbard said.

"After we beat 'em it just hasn't changed people's minds." The Rattlers are regarded as underdogs for the 1:50 p.m. EDT encounter changed from an originally 4 p.m. start in Miami's Orange Bowl. It will be the second and last meeting of the two teams in the foreseeable future. Hubbard expects Miami to stick to its air game against the Rattlers and that it will have some success, although FAMU boasts a veteran defensive backfield.

The hard-hitting backs are led by Division I-AA Ail-American senior Gifford "Spanky" Ramsey. Joining him will be juniors Lewis Wilkerson and Dorsey Hutchinson, who intercepted four passes against Grambling two years ago. The only newcomer is Wellington Williams, an All-Stater at Lakes High School in Miami. TALLAHASSEE Florida coach Rudy Hubbard said Tuesday he has given up being the Rodney Dangerfield of football. "I don't know if it's worth it any more," he said.

Hubbard plans to quit trying to convince people his Rattlers, who play the University of Miami on regional television Saturday, deserve to get some respect as a major college football team. "I think what we have to do is go out and play good football and maybe some day everybody will be convinced," he said at a press conference, Hubbard thought last year's 16-13 win over the Hurricanes in Florida State's Doak Campbell Stadium should have been the clincher, but all it did was make Miami not VriU fir i ifeflAj Let's stare the mews toetheiro Herrmann may sit out game against Wisconsin. Share the day's events with Don Harrison, Dick Fletcher, and Dick Crippen as they bring you up-to-the-minute news, weather and sports in a style that's down-to-earth. Followed by the distinguished ABC World News Tonight with Frank Reynolds, Max Robinson, and Peter Jennings at 6:30. NEW YORK The Florida State Seminoles, fresh off a sluggish but impressive 16-0 triumph over Louisiana State, jumped from the 16th position to No.

11 after Monday's balloting by UPI'b Board of Coaches released Tuesday. Meanwhile, out in Columbus, where Ohio State is poised to open its 1980 season Saturday against Syracuse, one thing remains constant the pressure to stay on top. The Buckeyes, for the second consecutive week, held down the No. 1 rating in the UPI ratings, but last year's defending champion, Alabama, has closed the gap. Ohio State, with coach Earle Bruce entering his second campaign as Woody Hayes' replacement, received 21 first-place votes from the 42-member panel of coaches, six from each section of the country, and totaled 596 points.

Alabama, which handily disposed of Georgia Tech 26-3 last Saturday, totaled 16 first-place votes for 587 points. In preseason balloting, Ohio Slate held a 14-point advantage 586-572. "Young men do not come to Ohio State to lose," says Bruce. "They do not come to Ohio State to be ranked low. They know the challenges that are forthcoming.

"The pressures are the same at Ohio State as they've always been. It doesn't matter where you're picked preseason. It's a matter of where you finish up in the end." Because nine of the Top-20 teams open their season this Saturday, just two teams dropped out of the ratings as there was a bit of shuffling of positions among ranked schools. Purdue, No. 10 before its 31-10 loss to Notre Dame, and Brigham Young, No.

19 prior to being upset 25-21 by New Mexico, were replaced by No. 19 Texas a 23-20 winner over Mississippi and No. 20 South Carolina, which walloped Pacific 37-0. Rounding out the first 10 teams are No. 3 Oklahoma (465 points and one first-place vote); No.

4 Pittsburgh (454 points and three first-place votes), and No. 5 Southern California (421 points). Alabama was the only team among the top five to see action last Saturday. Texas, which received the remaining first-place vote, moved up three notches to No. 6 on the basis of its 23-17 victory over Arkansas Sept.

1 remained at No. 7 and Notre Dame, a 31-10 winner over Purdue, jumped four spots to No. 8. Houston, which did not play, dropped three spots to ninth and Michigan moved up a notch to No. 10.

Rounding out the Top 20 are the No. 11 Seminoles; No. 12 Penn State, which demolished Colgate 54-10; No. 13 North Carolina, a 35-13 winner over Furman; No. 14 Stanford, which beat Oregon 35-25; and No.

15 Georgia, up five notches after a 16-15 victory at Tennessee. Even with its loss, Arkansas remained 16th, followed by No. 17 Missouri, 18th-ranked Washington, Texas and South Carolina. WTSPTJZ TAMRA. ST.

PETERSBURG ACTION NEWS 6:00 PM ABC WORLD NEWS TONIGHT 6:30 PM BOILERMAKERS' HERRMANN: Mark Herrmann did not practice Monday or Tuesday, said Purdue coach Jim Young: "I don't know if he can play Saturday (vs. Wisconsin); I hope he can." Young made his comments in a telephone interview at the weekly meeting of the Chicago Football Writers while answering questions about the thumb injury suffered last week which kept Herrmann from playing in the 31-10 loss to Notre D.ime. Young kept repeating, "I don't know," concerning Herrmann's sprained thumb, but emphatically stated, "not the way we played" when asked if Purdue might have defeated Notre Dame with Herrmann. "We played poorly in all phases of the game," said Young. "We didn't play with emotion.

I don't know how much Mark's being out of there had to do with that, but we didn't block anybody and they stuffed our offensive line." rnwMriil iViiiitm t' Tl riiiw I I vL' 1 111 I Peter Jennings, Frank Reynolds, Max Robinson. VIKINGS' GAUSSOIN: Portland State University's Stuart Gaussoin, the nation's leading pass receiver in 1979, will probably undergo knee surgery today and miss the remainder of the 1980 football season, school officials said Tuesday. Gaussoin, who caught 90 passes for 1,132 yards last season, suffered major ligament damage to his right knee in the first half of the Vikings' 28-14 victory Saturday over North Dakota. PSU spokesman Larry Sellers said it was "90-percent" certain doctors would operate following an examination Dick Crippen, Don Harrison, Dick Fletcher. today.

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