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The Courier from Waterloo, Iowa • 33

Publication:
The Courieri
Location:
Waterloo, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

kQke 1mm Tw Mt6 HS Wnim STORY BELOW Sports Section Classified Ads Pages 40 through 44 Paces 33 through 39 FIRST WITH THE NEWS Section Four WATERLOO, IOWA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1958 Pages 33 to 44 Hawk Defense nololS; Cyclones Strike in First Half TC Wins Opener 21-11 on Long Runs 170 wa Top Habenicht twisted a knee. How-ITom Egan recovered for the TATISTIfS. Arli. la. State Flnt lmr Rathlne yardai 14 Ptuint jirdtia 114 lfl ever, Art Dickinson didn think Nodaks on the 4.

Habenicht's Injury was too North Dakota State picked serious. up three first downs before Hammer praised the defensive Curt Quenette fumbled and Wl 4-1 Puift Intercepted hf I nt 4-X4 1-SI play of Elkader center Chuck'Murphy recovered for Teachers ITATIf TICf TC NOS Flrnl dewna It I Ruibini tardata 11 Paiiinf yardage 1 t.1 Panel 1- t-JS Pane Intercepted kr I 1 tumble! loit 1 I Yarda penaliied 'I Punt t-n l-M By CHUCK BURDICK Courier Sports Writer CEDAR FALLS Iowa State Teachers College, on the NDS 37. Huffman ran Schulte but thought the defensive play of the ends needed to the 23, but the gain was nullified by a clipping penalty and Teachers finally had to punt. I forsaking its vaunted air Ney's Column Hawkeyes Tighten Line, Roll attack, defeated North Dakota State 21-11 here last nieht in the Panthers' North North Dakota State couldn't move and punted to Hahn, who fielded the ball on his own 48 and ran 52 yards to score with 4:42 left in the period. Huffman ran over the improvement.

"We had never seen them run the option series when we acouted them," Hammer added. "They have a good football team." THE PANTHERS started fast with a 79-yard touchdown run by Max Huffman on the first play of the game, but had to settle for only a 13-11 halftime lead when North Dakota State kicked a fieldgoal on the last play of the half. Central Conference opener on conversion for 21-11, TC. the strength of long runs by its halfbacks. Max Huffman ran 79 yards on the Panthers' first play from scrimmage for one touchdown and Bob Hahn went 52 TC BLEW a scoring chance early in the fourth quarter on Huffman broke away and a penalty and a pass intercep-Paul Kellerhals kicked the tion, Hahn rambled 51 yards rumblet loit 1 tarda penaliied NEWS SERVICEl TUCSON, Ariz.

Iowa State's Cyclones rode the wings of two intercepted passes here last night to a 14-0 victory over the University of Arizona Wildcats. Iowa State got its first touchdown after Dwight Nichols intercepted Jim Mason's aerial on the Iowa State 18. Nichols returned the ball to the 22 and two plays later sophomore Don Webb sped 74 yards down the sidelines on a wingback reverse. Cliff Rick's kick was good with 3:22 left in the first quarter and Iowa State led 7-0. Iowa State kicked off but three plays later another Mason pass was intercepted, this time by Rick on the Iowa State 40.

Rick returned the ball to the 50-yard line. Iowa State then began a concentrated ground march culminated by Bob Harden's one-yard vault over center. Rick again converted and Iowa State led 14-0 with 3:10 gone in the second quarter. The Cyclones picked up 115 conversion, all in the first 55 with another punt return after NORTH CENTRAL STANDINGS. Li seconds of the game for a 7-0 1 taking a handoff from Huff' a o.

nk. st. So. Daa. lead, man to get to the NDS 24.

la. Tearhen I Na. Dak. I No. Dak.

M. 1 Auiuatana 1 1 Mornlniide Huffman went 9 on a pitch- li out and quarterback Jim Dam ron passed to end Greg Bice for 7 more to the 8. Two plays later, TC still was on the 8 The Bison got a break later in the first period and took an 8-7 lead. End Jerry King-rey recovered a 'imble by Huffman on the TC 30. Wayne Wall hit for 12 yards to the 18 on the first play.

A backfield in motion penalty set NDS back to the 23 and ul. lo u.c u.m and Damron bootlegged the ball into the end zone. But Jill ft otu? hhi mmm hi miimhiii ma mil imiiinmum iinimmi mmmtwamMmKi.f ih-nmAX the play was called back and TC penalized for backs in three plays later they were 4 only on the 20. But on the fourth and 12. ouarterback Hahn's pass on the next play Ross Fortier hit Gary Ahlgren was intercepted by Wall on IOWA STADIUM, IOWA CITY Iowa University clipped its own wing spread in the second half to stop red-dogging linemen here yesterday.

With that done, the Iowa football offense got rolling better against Texas Christian. During the first half when Iowa was splitting ends, Texas Christian was red-dogging (shooting linebackers through gaps) and hauling down Iowa backs. In the second half the Hawks didn't split an end, tightened the line and stopped the gap-shooting. Other than thtt, Iowa kept everything basic on both offense and defense as it made its first football mark of the season. ON OFFENSE, Iowa used basic winged plays except when second string quarterback Olen Treadway finished up with split option stuff.

On defense the Hawkeyes stuck to a seven diamond and later moved into an eight-man line. Early in the game the Hawks weren't getting good offensive blocking because of the TC 4 in the end zone for a touch yards with a punt return for the only second half score. Teachers completed only one pass in six attempts for seven yprds, but rolled to 271 yards on the ground against North Dakota State's 206 rushing and 23 passing. 'Huffman was TC's leading runner with 152 yards in 9 carries. Fullback Tom Murphy gained 73 in 16.

COACH BILL Hammer was generally pleased with the Panthers' win but vowed that "we'll be. a better club this Saturday when we face Drake at O. R. Latham Field." "We moved the ball well but we lacked consistency. We hurt ourselves too often with fumbles and penalties.

For some reason TC was on the NDS 22 when down. Wall skirted end for yards rushing in the first half the conversion with 5:06 left 'the game ended in a drive that started on its own 45. The as compared to only 27 by the Wildcats. In the second half, Iowa State longest gain of the march was a 26-yard run by Damron, who took off when he failed to we didn't seem as dangerous as (Photo by Courier Chief Photographer Bruce Palmer) got inside the Arizona 20 on two different occasions. In the third quarter with fourth down, a Nichols" pass play was broken up by Warren Livingston.

This stopped the Cyclone drive on the Arizona 12 yard line. Again in the fourth quarter a pass Interception brought Iowa State within striking distance. Ralph Hunsaker's pass attempt was intercepted by Peter Goes-See IOWA STATE Continued on pace 34, eol. 6 usual," he added. spot a pass receiver.

IOWA TEACHERS LINEl'P. LE Bice. Baity, Nowden. LT Remmert, J. Smith.

LO Stastny, Habenicht. Schulte, Hackney. RG M. Smith, Wohlen. RT Sullivan, Igou.

RE Sabun, Reyerson. QB Damron, Hansen. LH Huffman, Kellerhals. RH Hahn, Koos. FB Murphy, Borland, Bonsall, NORTH DAKOTA STATE LINEUP, LE Kingrey, MacDonaM, Idoff McBride.

LG Remillong, Dougherty. Egan. RG Hinkle, Kovich. They Didn't Get Randy Teachers only injuries were to its first two string left guards, Todd Stastny and Merv Hat in the first quarter. TC marched for two first downs, but Bob Hahn fumbled and Kingrey and Bob Mac-Donald recovered on the Nodaks' 39.

However, TC got the ball back when Dave Koos intercepted a Fortier pass on the TC 20. The Panthers then wept 80 yards to score. Huffman picked up 18 in one run and Hahn 14 in another during the drive. After fullback Tom Murphy gained a first down on the 20, Huffman took a pitchout and ran to the 3. From there Hahn scored, but Huffman's run for the extra point failed.

NORTH DAKOTA State marched back from its own 32 to the TC 9 from where, with time running out, Don Remil-long kicked a fieldgoal on second down. A 21-yard pass interference penalty moved the ball from the 41 to the 20 during the drive. During the half, TC gained 202 yards on the ground and enicht. Stastny reinsured his ribs which first occurred in last week's game at Mankato while Iowa quarterback Randy Duncan, No. 25, didn't spend 'Christian's Joe Reb, 68, to run fullback Marshall Harris, 26, all of his time yesterday afternoon throwing passes and di- pursued by several other Hawkeyes, out of bounds, reefing the Iowa offense.

Here he slides off a block by Texas Duncan Hits on 11 of 19 HT vin)e. RE Barrels, KoepsiL QB Fortier. Larsen. LH Wall, Rosatl. RH Ahlgren, Fitzgerald.

FB Ouenette. Schultz. the red-dogging, but that improved with the tighter offensive line. More noticable to the fans, perhaps, was the upswing on defense as the game wore on. At first the Hawkeyes weren't sharp tackling and there was not much fury.

But late in the first half Iowa on defense be Iowa Teachen 7 9 6 SI among an excellent crop of TCU Coach Abe Martin, ap-iTCU 37 before Martin inter- North Dakota State I 0 Oll TC Huffman 79 run (Kellerhals By AL NEY Courier Sports Editor IOWA STADIUM, IOWA kickl. lowa enas ana iuiiDacx Lon parenuy noi pieasea oy me cepiea again. Horn. failure of his first two units' The teams exchanged punts, NDS Ahlgren JO, pass from Fortier CITY Iowa's self-criti TCU advanced to the Iowa 18 from the TCU 27, but Duncan (Wall run). TC Hahn run (run failed).

NDS FG. Remillong 191. Iowa's offense balked crack the Iowa defense, tween the TCU 30 and 40 the'used tnird and fQurth string- i i pr nftpn nnrp Tnwa fnolr thp cized defense waited pa TC Hahn 52 punt return (Huff intercepted a deflected third i xu si lour nines iuwd iiau uie tiently for the Offense Last week both the first down rjass to halt the drive. man rum. Officials: Frank Clebe, John Sam mon, Ade Nelion, Max Linn.

do its work here yesterdayLnHe n. ih. ttlo second TCU teams took'Nocera's punt went only 17 Hoople Scores HOOPLE WAS RIGHT Iowa 17, Texas Christian 0 Michigan State 32, California 12 Ohio State 23, Southern Methodist 20 Purdue 28, Nebraska 0 Klotre Dame 18, Indiana 0 Penn State 43, Penn 0 Auburn 13, Tennessee 0 Clemson 26, North Carolina 21 Oklahoma 47, West Virginia 14 Oregon State 12, Kansas 0 HOOPLE WAS WRONG Michigan 20, Southern Cat 19 Northwestern 29, Washington State 28 UCLA 18, Illinois 14 Washington 24, Minnesota 21 IT WAS A TIE Slippery Rock 6, Edinboro 6 afternoon and was rewarded fense nad to stop TCU inside turns blasting away at Kansas' yards to the Iowa 32. First with an important 17-0 victory, th two-vard line after a nd Martin couldn't decideistring quarterback Hunter over high-rated Texas Chns-i hhIv nt wpnt nn1v 17 which played better football Enis enjoyed his best moments failed to complete a pass in b-w. two attempts.

The Bison Draves Jere gained 108 rushing and 23 Tickets Gone iL-i I ou. aav. oi ine pame as ne nu mree Ijraius. With a record opening day Rllt Tp(pr ent frpa Hnwn ihJ But yesterday Iowa handled passes in a row to move inside passing in two completions in 10 attempts. football crowd of 54,500 tu everything TCU offered and the Iowa four.

With time run. gan gang tackling and swarming under the Texas Christian ballcarriers. As the game went on the Hawkeyes were going for the ball on almost every play. They were a busy group trying to knock the ball loose from TCU ball carriers. They succeeded, too, more than once.

If Coach Forest Evashevski's strategy was running true to form and apparently it was he had limited his club to basic plays and basic pass patterns. Iowa ran 74 plays to TCU's 61, and even though Iowa did considerable passing, it still had good ball control. TCU WAS a good defensive watching, Iowa scored all 17jjrihhip on thp Trir 12 anri methodically, although not nir short and their timesout MILWAUKEE The Milwaukee Braves announced Friday that all tickets for the four 1958 World Series games Huffman had 119 of TC's rushing yards in five carries. points in the second half to cut down the nation's sixth ran into the end zone afterwitn any show of the IOWA Iowa got the ball following rtacular, served warning that Continued on page 35 col. ifi.varH TrtT mint.

Jptpr was' it has another fine footballi ranked college football team. TC OPENED THE second: at County Stadium have been half with Hahn recovering sold. The sellout covers fumble on the NDS 13. 1 668 seats and 2,500 standing-But Hahn fumbled back and' room tickets for each game. Iowa, ranked 21st in the the clear when he dropped! team STATISTICS.

I Iowa. if'lrsl downi IK CROWD 4,500 more Ruhinr yardaia tOA THE 'Paulni yardaja 1H than the previous opening dayiHa, n-i same Associated tress poll, the ball and picked it up as broke Bob Jeter loose for a it bounced pack to him. He 41-yard touchdown run be-ikept going, stumbling a little, fore the second half was four but he 'didn't miss a step, minutes old, added a touch-l TCU 7 t-ID I l'ar Interc. by 1 top of 50,000 for Michigan State here in 1954 watched a tiiit Tnisnmnvi'V nrno I'unli Fumblri loit Tardi prnaliird Si 1NOIV1DI AL STATISTICS, Bushini. ing during a drive that lh.

TriT nit Thplnrst nau scoreiess ue aunng Iowa All. tialn Loa Ntt Avl 4 7 72 yards and scored a 21-yard i which TCU made that only next one, with Duncan hitting' fieldgoal after a fourth-string serious threats. TCU quarterback fumbled on four out of five key passes for Duncan Jeter Jauih 8 ocrra his own six-yard line halfway ,46 yards, including one of sixIowa Durine the second and Tread way 1 through the final quarter. ca 51 25 14 yards to Don Norton for the tnird quarters, Iowa outgained 'r tnurhrlown. came against a i i 100 Flaming 4 I ft Ih I 3 COACH FOREST Evashev- 7 1kU running aim pdiuK 100 Horn TCU team that included sev-; ds to 72 jn the first half uvm third unit rjlavers.

TCU l.j i. uo Brown 1 iowa Iiau a uw tcd a. c.m lo Nt a ski worried most of the preseason drills about the defense ability of his ball club, revives wt-ic 1.1, iuu, wnt-n, outdownerJ TrU then Enla 14 -14 Iowa eot its fieldcoal bv Bob Harrli .14 but this mild fall afternoon it'Prescott. Iowa went from its own 14 15 I 11 11 81 10 81 2.4 1.0 SO 11 t.1 11 ll. r.t?.ik to the TCU 32 before being 1 a it i iu lilt uiiui nurrnni shutting out a team that in march for another touchdown a vacek i YA of.otoH Vnc.

a. 1 tu-lu Paaiinf. i av-u weiu miii us iu i 1 week ago in its opener. rrr'TT oi iowa jiii. umi.

inic. io. effort on the ILU 1. Tnu.a 37 u-Iipw Pnrt Mprr re. iiunr.n i ii It was a bitter loss for the Aeainst the Iowa defense Vnvfrori a fumhlp hv 1 1 ILL Alt I amB lnle.

ydi. Texans, rated as the cham- that got tougher as the game Marvin Lasater. Iowa got to inh li 1 1 pionship favorite in their moVed along, TCU lost the, the TCU 31 but lost the ball IpQcriip TKpv ramo ftpra trnnjL.n .1 ul- mi i 1 Damon 1 1 oaj! uiifc nines uh luinuies on aowns. ine nawKeyes neia Gtoria ning for a victory similar to and twice on interceptions. 'and TCU Dunted.

zX. ft at A- No. Td. 38 IDT ph los the bal1 Iowa moved again, from lis State last fall. They had hoped bling, but three passes were' ball club despite the 17-0 final score.

It contained Iowa runners at times. TCU seemed to have Iowa's receivers fairly well covered with the exception of about three plays, but Randy Duncan was threading a needle to fine receivers, and time after time he pin-pointed shots between defenders. TC used a seven box defense most of the afternoon. Sophomore halfback Willie Fleming, a kid with real fine future, didn't get rolling on offense, but some of the other halfbacks looked good from time to time. Bob Jeter, can run and play defense.

Bill Gravel got in for a few playi and at least on one of them showed he may regain his ability after fighting against scholasti: trouble last spring and this fall. Ray Jauch and Kevin Furlong moved well from the other halfback slot. Don Horn did a fine job at fullback, but like the halfbacks, Horn should have even better days against teams that aren't as good as TCU. Iowa wasn't fully polished perhaps, but if you saw room for Iowa improvement, don't overlook the fact that the Hawkeyes were up against one fine football team. SO WAS TEXAS Christian.

Any club will have trouble holding Iowa to two touchdowns. Any club will have trouble holding Iowa score-See NEY i Continued on page 35, eol. to give another Big Ten team intercepted, including one lu iV-u Ml Pa Receiving Ka. Yd. Tt'U 44 Gilmor I Harm SV Moreland 1 11 Rowland 13 Meyer i Lasater Punllnt.

Na. Avi. TCU il Gilmor 1 Terrell another spanking. thrown by second string quar-l Arvie Martin intercepted a'Miiitr II Iowa made 206 yards on the terback Olen Tread way late pass by Duncan. TCU punted, No.

Ave. ground against a good gap- in the game. jand Iowa got 19 yards to the owa I Norr ra shooting TCU defense and! Miller Les Johnson Enters Cedar Rapids Race added 146 yards passing, again against good defensive play, for 352 yards net. TCU made only 87 yards on the ground and 128 passing for a total of 215. If Vinton's Les Johnson, who finished fourth in the Tunis Speedway 75-lap championship stock car race here, has entered the modified division Inside Today's Sport Pages Outdoor Page Features Page 38 TC HIGH Nips Ackley 14-13 Page 38 American League Baseball Page 38 West Stops East Des Moines 20-13 Page 37 Late Passes Stop East 26-14 Page 37 Cedar Falls Romps G6-6 Page 37 NE Iowa Prep Foqtball Roundup Page 37 Fayette Ends Sumner String Page 36 National League Baseball Page 36 Wisconsin Opens With 20-0 Win Page 36 Minnesota, Illinois Lose to Coast Page 35 Ohio, Michigan, Northwestern Win Page 33 Notre Dame Nips Indiana 18-0 Page 34 of the International Motor Con v.

test triple header in Cedar IOWA HELD TCU to 29 yards on the ground in the second half. Duncan personally completed 11 of 19 passes for 140 yards. The completion number was one under the one-game Iowa record of 12 (out of 24) set in 1949 by Glenn Rapids this afternoon. (Photo by Mogena Christenacn) Johnson drives a modified Ford coupe owned by Paul Three TC Hands on Wall Miller of Oelwein and his brother Leo of Waterloo. Two Iowa State Teachers College tacklers get three rush up to help.

The spare foot, lower left, was attached to hands on North Dakota State's fullback Wayne Wall, No. 20, another player, while center Charles Schulte, 52, and tackle John Sullivan, 77, Time trials were set for 10 Drahn against UCLA. i. m. with races at 2:30 p.

rru Duncan found five receivers! Purdue Thumps Nebraska 28-0 Page 31.

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