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Austin American-Statesman from Austin, Texas • 25

Location:
Austin, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Yankees Edge Dodgers, 2-1, To Take World Series Lead (Story on Page 14, Col. 1) unriatneritan-fatesman SPORTS NEWS WHEN IT IS NEWS Sports CLASSIFIED Real Estate Austin, Texas, October 5, 1941. Thrott rail to JL A ratm JL 5a Jl JL sk JL page i3 AUSQSirs ciiiyupey(s to viiw Football Results Hapless L.S.U. Collapses Before Steam Roller Bible Uses Every Able Man on Squad To Flog Louisianans, 34-0 (Continued from Page 1) if the water would bother tht Longhorns. It bothered them about as much as it would a duck.

They netted 268 yards running and 113 passing while three sets of rowdy Longhorn linemen rolled Tiger backs in every mud-puddle in L.S.U.'s half of the field. L.S.U. never penetrated Texas' 30-yard line and rarely passed the midficld line. Their net rushing gain was 27 yards, and on parses they advanced 29 yards. The Texas t.

J.ht'r-' JMy kiMltnk -ax rV r. I I fnl if I v-' lv fvV i 1 A r- of A i i'v Rams Defeat Ponies, 16-10 By JACK GUENTHER NEW YORK, Oct. 4. (UP) Fordham turned almost certain defeat into victory Saturday when Slinging Steve Filipowicz rang the bell in the last 38 seconds of play with a touchdown pass that gave the bowl-conscious Rams a 16-10 triumph over a Southern Methodist team that was inferior in everything but M.M.Q.'s GATHER MONDAY TO REPLAY L.S.U. GAME Texas' 34-0 victory over Louisiana State will be replayed in words and pictures, at the Dris-kill Monday noon when Austin's "Monday Morning Quarterbacks" get together for their weekly luncheon and post-mortem.

As usual, Dana X. Bible will be master of ceremonies, first giving off a few remarks anent the game and then showing the motion pictures. Meeting time each week is Monday at 12:15 p. and the membership of the club inclvdes all who wish to buy a lunch. Price is 75 cents.

linemen rushed passers furiously, throwihg them for numerous losses and causing several bad chunks that resulted in interceptions. Lonf rasses IMay On the other hand the Long-horns manufactured two of their touchdowns on passes, on plays of 61 and 37 yards. They scored on their first trip Into L.S.U. territory, rocking th Tigers back on their heels and never allowing them to recover. Bible used every able-bodied man on his squad, played his regulars' only about 18 minutes and showed Oklahoma and Arkansas scouts nothing except some standard trap plays, reverses, a basket pass and about three simple forward pass plays.

Malcolm Kutner, one of the best ends in the country, signalled the march by blocking Gerald High-tower's punt early in the first -uar ter. The ball dribbled out of bounds cn L.S.U.'s 40-yard line. At this time the rain stopped and Layden started. He accepted the center pass, hesitated, faked to' a teammate. His mates cross-blocked dextrously, and Layden fairly shot through the middle for 15 yards.

Doss Doe Holding Next play the Tigers did better and Layden got only 13 yards. With Crain resting him for one play, Layden carried the ball across without delay but was slow settlg the ball down for the extra point and Crain missed. Thereafter Bible sent In Noble Doss, injured iving-back, to hold the ball on conversions. Doss was In the game four dif-' fcrent times without getting a second's credit on his participation record 'extra points are kicked during time out). He did a good holding job and the rest of the points were made good.

Jackie Crain dropped the ball when tackled in midfield and Steve Van Buren recovered for L. U. A punt shoved Texas back to its 23. Layden end his blockers took care of that situation nicely with a 36-yard jaunt A roughing penalty on L.S.U., second in that quarter, gave the Steers a boost goalward and they were knocking at the gates when the teams swapped goals. Quite soon It was first down on the four.

Layden had made it on a straight buck into the middle. Crain Craft Down where drives often bog, Crain demonstrated his headiness and made the score look easy. He sent Layden driving into center again. But Pete handed the ball off to Vernon Martin, the blocking back, who flipped it back to Crain, swinging wide and deep to the left Southwest Texas 3t, L.S.U. 0.

T.C.U. 9, Arkansas 0. Oklahoma 46, Oklahoma Frosh 7. Texas Wesleyan 15, South western 6. Fordham 16, S.M.U.

10. Texas A. M. 41, Texas A. I.

0. Rice 42, Sam Houston 0. Howard Payne 7, East Texas Teachers 7. Denton Teachers 7, Hardin-Simmons 3. New Mexico 16, Texas Mines 14.

West Texas State 13, Arizona State Teachers college (Tempe) 7. New Mexico Aggies 0, University of Arizona 47. John Tarleton 14, San An-gelo, (J.C.) 0. McMurry 6, Abilene Christian 20. South Tennessee 0, Duke 19.

Tulane 32, Auburn 0. Mississippi State 14, Alabama 0. Mississippi 27, Southwestern 0. Georgia 34, South Carolina 6. Kentucky 7, Washington and Lee 0.

Vanderbilt 42, Tennessee Tech 0. Eastern (Ky.) Teachers 6, Murray (Ky.) Teachers 0. Georgetown (Ky.) 7, Milligan 6. Clemson 27, North Carolina State 6. Georgia Tech 20.

Chattanooga 0. Georgetown 0, Virginia Tech 3. North Carolina 20, Davidson 0. Louisiana Normal 6. Centenary 6.

Randolph Macon 7, William and Mary 51. Elmhurst 26. Aurora 0. Tampa 6, Florida 46. South Carolina 6, Georgia 14.

Wake Forest 52, Furman- 13. King 15, Appalachian State 2. Thiel 22. Lock Haven 0. Shurtleff 33, McKendree 0.

Glenville 13, Bethany 0. Hartwick 7, Alfred 19. Oglethorpe-Wofford, cancelled. Susquehanna 6, American 0. North Carolina 20, Davidson 0.

Delaware 20. Penn Military 0. Centre 3, Villanova 38. Louisville 31, Evansville 6. Carson Newman 7, East Tenn.

0. Fast Navy 40, West Virginia 0. Syracuse 0, Cornell 6. Williams 7. Princeton 20.

Brown Columbia 13. Army 19, The Citadel 6. Virginia 19, Yale 21. Potomac State 0, Waynesburg 25. Buffalo 6.

City college N. Y. 0. New York university 6, LaFay-ette 0. Harvard 0, Pennsylvania 19.

Springfield 0, Rutgers 26. Northeastern 12. Maine 14. Tufts 20, Middlebury 0. Worcester Tech 0, Coast Guard academy 48.

Trinity 9, Vermont 7. Providence 0, Holy Cross 13. West Virginia 0, Navy 40. Lawrenceville 0, Hampton Institute 52. Fordham Frosh 7, Navy Plebes 7 (tie.

R.P.I. 0, Hamilton 21. Case 33, Lehigh 26. Allegheny 7. Haverford Purdue 6.

Pitt 0. Clarion Teachers 35 Alliance College 0. Potomac Statp 0. Waynesburg 25. Connecticut State 6, Massachusetts 8.

Norwich 21. Colby 7. Oberlin 6, Rochester 13. Wesleyan 7. Bowdoin 13.

Bates 7. New Hampshire 6. U.S. Coast Guard 48, Worcester 0. Clarkson 20, Urstnus 7.

Slippery Rock (Pa.) Teachers 6, Westminster 0. West Virginia State 47. Rio Grande 6. Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 26, Mansfield Teachers 6. Brooklyn college 12, Panzer 6.

Drexel-Juniata, cancelled. Upsala-Franklin Marshall, cancelled. Cortland-Bloomsburg. cancelled. Millersville-Shepherd, postponed to Nov.

1. Edinboro (Pa.) Teachers 31, California (Pa.) Teachers 0. Bergen Junior 40, Trenton Teach ers 0. Hobart 13. Union 0.

Blue Ridge 6, LaSalle 26. Shippensburg Teachers 36, Kutztown (Pa.) Teachers 0. Bucknell 12, Muhlenberg 0. Lowell Textile 0, Rhode Island State 39. Marion Institute 13, Livingston State Teachers 6.

Middlewest Missouri 21, Colorado 6. Ohio Northern 0, St. Lawrence 13. Nebraska 14, Iowa State 0. Iowa 0, Michigan 6.

Marquette 28, Wisconsin 7. Washington (St. Louis) 6, Kansas 19. Grove City 11 Hiram 0. Ashland 0, Heidelberg 37.

Kansas State Northwestern 51. Indiana 6, Notre Dame 19. Desales 7, Ohh Wesleyan 19. Albion 12, Adrian 0. Michigan Tech 32, Northland 0.

Kenyon 12. Otterbein 7. Lawrence Tech 2fi Western On tario 7. Toledo 55. Detroit Tech 0.

Dubuque 0, Luther 0 (tie). Indiana State 19. Eastern Illinois Teachers 6. (Continued on Page 18, CoL 1) fe kv Rice Rambles To 42-0 Win Sam Houston Bows Before Owl Power HOUSTON, Oct. 4.

(n Rice's Owls, rated with Texas and Southern Methodist among the big three of the Southwest conference, opened their season Saturday night by flattening little Sam Houston State Teachers' college, 42-0, in a contest which left a crowd of 14,000 puzzled to Rice's potentialities. Owls appeared sluggish in spots, with even Fireman Bob Brumley fumbling the ball away twice with touchdo vns in sight. Possibly five weeks of pre-scason conditioning left the Owls slightly stale. Also, Coach Jess Neely was experimenting to find the best combination of scoring power. Whatever the reason, Rice lacked the verve and snap of most Neely-coached elevens.

Sam Houston had nothing in the way of the Owls and much of its THRILLING MOMENTS in Texas' 34-0 triumph over L.S.U. were caught by the American-Statesman photographers Saturday. The upper photo typifies the manner in which Capt. Pete Photoi by Douglau. It was a brilliant run and the first step in Texas' second scoring drive.

Layden was pulled down by Hightower, L.S.U. player nearest to him. The lower photo shows Jack Crain scoring the second touchdown on a five-yard gallop that caught the Tiger defense flat-footed. Crain called a brilliant game and he worked up to this scoring play spectacularly. Layden bewildered the Tigers with his gun-shot get-away which sent him deep into the L.S.U.

secondary before the Bengals knew what had happened. On this particular play, Layden rambled through for 36 yards and a first down on the L.S.U. 41. ngni. The crowd of 28,500 which braved a sweltering temperature of 84 degrees to watch the Rams open another of their "Rose Hill to Rose Bowl" guests saw the Mustangs outrushed, out-passed and at times out-smarted go down with all-flags flying after driving into a 10-7 lead just five minutes away from the final gun.

The game, first maior contest for either team, was a dull, drab thing until the start of the final period. Then the Mustangs, almost helpless on offense up to this point, strung together a touchdown and a field goal which forced Fordham to come from behind once to tie the score at 10-10 and then call on its famous passer in the final minute. Desperate Pass Connects The second hand on the big electric clock showed the game was almost over when big Filipiowicz who had pitched his mates to their first tally in the second period-went into action. Fordham had kicked off after booting the tying field goal. Harry Miller, S.M.U.

halfback, fumbled away the ball on his own 47. Filipowcicz passed once, incomplete, but the Mustangs were penalized 15 yards for holding. Twice the Rams hit the line without effect and were pushed back five yards on a penalty. Then big Steve faded back far, far back and let go. The ball sailed in a perfect arc and when it came down Jim Blumenstock was waiting on the 10.

It was just a scamper over the goal line. Nobody cared that the conversion missed fire. That was the end of a 15-minute period which had kept the crowd in a constant uproar and the famed S.M.U. band wailing away in celebration of a victory anticipated too soon, and it more than made up for the three listless periods during which interceptions, fumbles, spotty play and the heat bored everyone. Mustangs Score Fordham dominated the first period but Presto Johnston's booming punts and a long penalty kept Frogs Defeat Hogs, 9-0, In First Conference Tilt yards in the air despite the click ball, against the Porkers' 13.

Arkansas' showing of only two first downs was their worse in a decade. T.C.U. rang up 11 and would have had several more had it notf been for costly penalties. The lineups: Texss Christian: Alford, le Pslmer, It, Crawford. Ig Biackstone, rz W.

Adam, rt Roach, ce; Gillespie, qb; Sparks. Ih Bond, rh Kring, fb; Arkansas: Pitts, le Rynum, It; Sit-tnn, Itr: Cato (C-C SUsnn, re; Coati IC-CI rt: O. Adams, re; M. Jones, qb; Haynes, in; liamsey, rh Barker, fb. T.C.U a orj T.C'.If.

scoring: Touchdown. Roach field goal, Medanich (for Bond) (piace kick). Substitution T.C.U. ends. Plover, Brumbaugh; tackles, S.

Hampton, foas; guard. Rogers; center. Odell backs, Bagley. Montgomery. Bierman, Ramsey, Medanich.

Arkansas ends. Wynne, Johnson. Tib-bitta tackles, Lawhon, Green: guards, Paladino, Cope; center, Hayrlen backs, Forte, Delmonego, Sailings, Scarborough, Cialone, Ross, Keal, D. P. Jones.

Navy Scores 40-0 Win Over West Virginia ANNAPOLIS, Oct wild in the second half. Navy's gridiron powerhouse late Saturday crushed West Virginia, 40 to 0. Aggies Crush A. 41-0 Farmers Use Passes To Win Second Tilt SAN ANTONIO, Oct. 4, (JP) Combining blinding speed with a sure-fire passing attack, Texas A.

bombarded the Texas A. I. Javelinas into submission, 41 to 0, in a non-conference football game in Alamo stadium Saturday night before 16,955 cash customers. The defending Southwest conference champions registered only seven points the first half but turned loose their aerial might the second half to make the issue a runaway. Rogers and Williams each wound up with two touchdowns and Spivey and Pickett picked up one apiece.

Webster kicked three extra points and Steinke of A. I. contributed the other two points when he stepped out of the end zone far an automatic safety. Cornell Upsets Syracuse, 6-0, in Season Opener ITHACA. N.

Oct 4. (TV-Cornell scored after a second-period drive to upset a favored Syracuse football team 6 to 0 in its first start of the 1941 season. trouble resulted from its habit of passing deep within its own territory. The Owls intercepted nine passes for 199 yards, two of them for scores. The Bcarkats from Hunlsville had a net of minus seven yards rushing, while the Owls rolled up 289.

Despite his butter fingers, Fullback Brumley took up where he left off last year, spearheading the Rice offense along with Stoop Dick son, tailback, and Center Billy Blackburn, who used his six feet four inches to run two interceptions for touchdowns in the last period. East Texas Deadlocks Howard Payne, 7-7 COMMERCE. Oct. 4 (Pyln one of the toughest football games ever seen here the East Texas State Teachers battled the Howard Payne Yellowjackcts to a 7-7 tic on a rain-soaked field Saturday night. Both teams remain undefeated.

In the second period Samuels passed to Warren, who ran to a touchdown. Jones kicked the extra point. Five minutes later Meeks passed to Buck Perine of East Texas on the 15-yard line and on the next play Meeks flipped one to Bogue. who smashed over the score. Meeks' conversion knotted th count.

T.c.ir. 11 First Arkannai 12S Yrds Rained Rushing. Nt 6 20 Forward Passes Attempt-) 11 14 Forward Passes Completed 1 102 Yards by Forward Passinar IS 14 Yds. Lost Attempted Passes 7 3 Fwd. Passes Intercepted By 1 4f Yds.

Gained Kunbark Int. Passes. 42 Puntinir Ay. From Srrimmafre 40 6 Total Yds. All Kicks Returned fl 0 Opponent Fumbles Recovered 0 '5 Yards Lost by Penalties 11 FAYETTEVILLE, Oct.

4. (JP) Texas Christian had everything, especially defense in Razor-back stadium Saturday as the Horned Frogs gained a well-earned 9 to 0 victory over the University of Arkansas Razorbacks in the opening Southwest conference football game before 6,000 rain-drenched fans. The Frogs took advantage of the wind to score twice, once in the second period when Frog End Phil Roach leaped above the Porkers' small back. Max Sailing, to grab a 31-yard touchdown pass from Kyle Gillespie, who looked like shades of Sammy O'Brien, T.C.U. greats of other years The aerial climaxed a 45-yard drive.

In the third quarter, the Porker line momentarily held the Frogs on the Arkansas 11 and Substitute Back Frank Medanich place-kicked directly between the uprights with Substitute Dean Baglcy holding the ball, which was placed down on the 23. The Frogs threatened the Porkers' goal on several other occasions and had what looked like a 15-yard touchdown run by Back Nolan Sparks called back in the third period when a teammate was offside. Later in the same quarter, Bagley rifled an aerial to reach for a 14-yard gain to Arkansas' three but another offside set the Frogs back to the 19. Arkansas failed to cash in on their only scoring opportunity early in the first quarter, when the Porkers got the ball on the T.C.U. 32 after a Frog fumble and a short punt against a stiff wind.

Gillespie intercepted a Porker aerial by Robert (Chick) Forte at this point. The Razorbacks seemed to lose their spirit when they faltered so close to the T.C.U. goal line and never again got into Frog territory in possession of the ball. The Porkers didn't present a good pass defense, especially on the frequent short tosses by Gillespie and Back Dean Bagley, who was more efficient in the pass completion department. The Frogs piled up 102 Crain raced around the perplexed Tigers for the second touchdown and kicked goal.

In came the Texas second string. Spec Sanders' 35-yard punt return put his outfit in the scoring region but a fumbled lateral stopped the drive. Tackle Francis Zick of L.S.U. got It on his 21. The sun came out, as If making sport of the drab, drenched customers scattered around the huge horseshoe.

Two Straight Cver Along abcut this time Texas made two touchdowns on consecutive plays from scrimmage. Here's how it happened: The Steers were back on their 39, with time for one play in the half. Max Minor, the fast sophomore from Tahoka, was in at wingback. Minor went out wide and cut down the sideline. Layden Surges Through R.

L. Harkins drifted back, picked up Minor, let it fly. Maxie was behind the defensive left halfback, and it was too bad. He caught the ball on the run, and he kept running, flirting with the east boundary all the about 35 yards. The Tigers hardly got close enough Continued on Page 16.

CoL I) the Rams scoreless. In the second, they went out in front on one perfect play a pass from Filipowicz to young Steve Andrejco which was Rood for 70 yards and a touchdown. Ososki converted for a 7-0 lead and the game bogged down to a kicking duel. The Rams missed several scoring chances when two field goal attempts were low and wide and one touchdown was called back. Then, three minutes after the start of the final quarter, S.M.U.

went to town. Johnston it- five plunges ripped from his own 20 to the Fordham 49, and on the sixth play of the series (Continued on Page 14, Col. 7).

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Pages Available:
2,714,819
Years Available:
1871-2018