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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 93

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
93
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Spartans Rout Michigan; Purdue, Minnesota Triumph SECTION SECTION A SPORTS Chicago Sribune SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1965 BUSINESS 4 omfPWD 1EB ra I mil I Wi OMo JbZs Illini, 28-14; U. ns Calamity in Chavez MINNESOTA GETS 4 SINGLES, DOUBLE OFF CLAUDE OSTEEN BY EDWARD PRELL Chicago Tribune Press Service Los Angeles, Oct. 9 Claude Osteen saved face for the National league and the Los Angels Dodgers today, succeeding in grand fashion where his two illustrious teammates, Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax, had failed in this 62d world series. The Dodgers, knocked far off course in two decisive defeats in Minnesota, came back magnificently in a return to their favorite acres, scoring a 4 to 0 victory over the American league champion Twins. BUCKS SPOTBeat Oregon State TOUCHDOWN, on Late Dash, 15-7 Ten Standings THEN ROLL INC5 Michigan w.

State. 2 Campbell's Run Sparks Last Period Rally It put the world series back into delayed perspective, be L. T. Pet. Pts.

O.P. 0 0 1.000 46 19 0 0 1.000 20 0 l.ooo i6 13 0 0 1.000 42 18 0 0 1.000 17 14 0 0 1.000 28 14 1 0 .000 7 24 2 0 .000 26 SO 2 0 .000 27 33 2 0 .000 18 62 3 Scores in 2d Northwestern 1 Wisconsin 1 Minnesota 1 Purdue 1 Ohio State 1 Michi9an 0 Illinois 0 Iowa 0 Indiana 0 cause the Dodgers now have Drysdale and Koufax for an f. "-ftw- (Pictures on page 3) BY HOWARD BARRY Northwestern's Wildcats came thru with a touchdown Ik and a field goal in the last Quarter for a hard-wrung 15 to jjt other day, which is tomorrow and Monday. The Twins will have to win both of them to end the series here. If the Dodgers win only one of the two, the series goes back to the Minnesota prairies for a sixth game on Wednesday and a seventh one, if necessary, on Thursday.

The Dodgers, underrated in the National league race and who time and again had come up with renewed vitality when YESTERDAY'S RESULTS CONFERENCE Ohio State, 28; Illinois, 14. Michigan State, 24; Michigan, 7. Minnesota, 42; Indiana, 18. Purdue, 17; Iowa, 14. NONCONFERENCE Nebraska, 37; Wisconsin, 0.

Northwestern, 15; Oregon State, 7. GAMES SATURDAY Indiana at Illinois. Minnesota at Iowa. Purdue at Michigan. Ohio State at Michigan State.

Wisconsin at Northwestern. Beavers yesterday in Dyche t. stadium. The earlier scoring action first minutes of the second A period when Northwestern tf blocked a punt, went over from V-H the one-yard line at the first crack, but missed the kick for extra noint. I 'ti, College Football You Are There Sink Illinois (Picture on page 3) BY MAURICE SHEVLIN Chicago Tribune Press ServiceJ Columbus, Oct.

9 Illinois' defense came unglued in a steady drizzle in the second quarter today and Ohio State scored three quick touchdowns as it embarked on its seven-game Western conference schedule with a 23 to 14 victory before 83,712 huddled under umbrellas. Altho the Buckeyes gave up the lirst score to the Illini in the opening quarter on a 62-yard drive culminating in a 4 yard scoring plunge by Cyril Pinder, they left little doubt about the outcome when they got going in the second period. Five Plays for Score The Buckeyes totaled 191 yards for their first three touchdowns in only 21 plays from scrimmage. Tom Barring-ton, senior fullback and leading ground gainer, scored twice after his understudy, Willard sac 3 it seemed they were thru, gave a classic example of tneir Then Bob Grim of the Beavers ran the ensuing kickoff 89 comeback Qualities Detore 4T sl 55,934, a record, in the beautiful i i i 1 -lrc There i staaium nacKea out oi ruggeu -4 SL "4 Chavez ravine a few years ago. Camilo Pascual, 31-year-old right-hander from Cuba, and once the ace of the Twins' i staff, could not match the bril- ft yards for a touchdown and Mike Haggard made the extra point, for 7 to 6.

Kick Hit Post Time moved on, with the V4T -J 5 liant pitching of Jim Grant and Jim Kaat which had given the Wildcats' efforts frustrated. It seemed they might be destined LT fn Inco hv tho nf a anal I -U -Xi-s'ul 3. 1 i Pocpiio hao. Anion. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS MIDWEST Augustana, Millikin, 7.

Bowling Green, 21; West Virginia, 17. Carthage, 12; Carroll, 0. Drake, 31; State College of Iowa, 7. Grinnell, 21; Knox, 8. Iowa State, 21; Kansas, 7.

Illinois Weslevan, 21; North Central, 7. Kent State, 24; Miami 10., 13. Lake Forest, 28; Adrian, 14. Missouri, 28; Kansas State, 6. No.

Illinois, 22; Kirksville, 20. Ripon, 17; Monmouth, 6. St. Joseph's llnd 14; Indiana State, 6. Wabash, 46; Wheaton.

20. EAST Notre Dame, 17; Army, 0. Boston 14; Buffalo, 7. Colgate, Holy Cross, 3. Dartmouth, 24; Pennsylvania, 19.

Harvard, 21; Columbia, 6. Navy, 42; Wm. Mary, 14. Princeton, 36; Cornell, 27. Penn State, 17; Boston College, 0.

Rutgers, Lehigh, 0. Yale, Brown, 0. SOUTH Auburn, 30; Chattanooga, 7. Duke, 21; Pittsburgh, 13. Florida, 17; Mississippi, 0.

Georgia, 23; Clemson, 9. Maryland, 10; Wake Forest, 7. North Carolina, 10; N. Caro. State, 7.

Tennessee, 24; South Carolina, 3. Virginia Tech, 17; Geo. Washington, 12. Virginia, 14; Virginia Military, 10. SOUTHWEST Texas, 19; Oklahoma, 0.

FAR WEST Colorado, Oklahoma State, 11, California, 24; Air Force, 7. So. California, 34; Washington, 0. Utah, 42; Wyoming, 3. OTHER SCORES ON PAGE 61 post's upright, which was what Dean Dickie's kick hit after 1 If t't can league's strikeout king for three years previous to 1964, i didn't whiff one Dodger.

Bob McKelvey had plunged You Are There that vnrrf fnr tViA nnints Then came the swift slash of the Wildcats claws. They had Sander, had pierced the Illinois line for 3 yards and the first touchdown with only 6: 46 possession on their own 10-yard sa line. Woody Campbell dashed played. Ohio State needed only frit "Jv. to his right, found temporary clear going and flashed down his right sideline.

i i Jim Smith of the Beaver secondary was angling across to cut him off and Mike Donald- Los Angeles. Battey was forced out of game by injury but is expected to play today. Coming up behind Battey is First Baseman Don Mincher. ap wirephoto Earl Battey, Twins' catcher, hits throat against dugout railing while chasing foul popup off bat of Dodgers' Willie Davis in seventh inning of world series game yesterday in Continued on page 6, col. 5J 103,219 See Spartans Jolt Michigan ss.2a High Level Strategy in the Ivy League Dodgers Zero In Even before he fell behind in a two-run Los Angeles fourth, it was apparent the Dodgers were zeroing in on CamUo's delivery.

He had fanned no one when he left for a pinch batter after five innings with the score, 3 to 0, against him. Pascual later admitted he was completely disorganized because his arm had no command over his famed curve ball and the fast ball simply wasn't adequate. Pascual made only six starts late in the season after an arm operation in early August. Four of the eight hits off the Cuban were doubles. The first one came with one out in the first inning.

Camilo survived it. The next one came at the start of the second and again Camilo wasn't hurt. He was still, 0 to 0, with Osteen after his pitching opponent had opened the Dodger third with a single. Percentages Catch Up But luck can last only so long and the percentages caught up with Pascual in the fourth when Ron Fairly led off with a double, Jim Lefebvre beat out a single and a walk filled the bases. John Roseboro drove Fairly and Lefebvre home with a single.

This left two Dodgers in scoring position when the side was retired. Pascual was battered for another run in the fifth with the aid of a fourth double by the Continued on page 2, col. 5 24 to 7 Triumph Is Paced by Juday BY WILFRID SMITH Chicago Tribune Press Service Ann Arbor, Oct. 9 Michigan's air attack produced one touchdown this afternoon and briefly the Wolverines led Michigan State in the second period, 7 to 6, in their opening Big Ten conference football game. Michigan's air attack, however, was not consistently effective thereafter and the Spartans, by control of line five plays to go 51 yards.

After Illinois was forced to punt, the next touchdown, scored by Barrington from the 12, was the culmination of a 61 yard drive in 8 plays. Another for Barrington There were only 41 seconds left in the second period for the third touchdown, Barrington going over from the 2 after a drive of 79 yards in 8 plays. Barrington, who gained 179 yards in 32 carries, got his third touchdown with 5:12 left in the third period, this one coming from 2 yards out in a 33 yard drive. Rein Catches, Scores Aiding and abetting Barrington was Quarterback Don Un-verferth, who completed 4 of 10 passes for 92 yards, all of them received by' Bo Rein, junior left halfback. Rein caught two in a row, one for 25 yards, the other for 16 in the Buckeyes' third touchdown drive in the second quarter.

All the Illini could show against this combination was Quarterback Fred Custardo's three completions for 28 yards in 15 tosses, altho he carried 15 times for 100 yards. He had one pass intercepted in the third quarter, but it did no harm. Custardo's understudy, Rich Erickson, a sophomore from Naperville, 111., clicked with 3 out of 8 for 42 yards. Limit Grabowski Big Jim Grabowski, who is after Red Grange's career rushing record and who needed Continued on page 2, col. 2 UPI Telephoto Maury Wills of Los Angeles steals second as ball bounces out of glove of Zoilo Versalles, Minnesota shotstop.

It was first stolen base of series for Dodger speedster. You Are There Series Figures Cornell players (left) stand on the shoulders of tackles Harry Garman and Reeve Vanne-man in attempt to block field goal by Charles Gogolak of Princeton. Strategy failed as Gogolak kicked two goals, one for Ivy league record of 54 yards, in aiding Princeton to a 36 to 27 victory. (Story on page 2) cap wirephoto Irish Rise to Occasion, Beat Inspired Cadets, 17-0 (Picture on page 3) BY COOPER ROLLOW Chicago Tribune Press Service New York' Oct. 9 Notre Dame's superb football men proved their mettle tonight.

Before a wildly cheering capacity crowd of 61,000 in Shea stadium, the Fighting Irish muscled their way to a 17 to 0 victory over an Army team which rose to an incredible plateau of spirit and determination. Army was inspired in this 37th chapter of one of football's greatest classics. But no more inspired than were the young men of Ara Parseghian. A lesser Notre Dame team would not have survived tonight's fierce onslaught by the Black Knights of the Hudson. But Notre Dame battered Army's stanch line relentlessly.

Purdue Sneaks By Hawkey es, 17-14; Los Angeles, Oct. 9 (UPD Facts and figures for the third game of the world series: Attendance 55,934 stadium record, former record Net receipts $511, 800.65. Players' share $241 ,018.33. Commissioner's office share $76,770.10. Cluts and leagues' share $43,503.05.

THREE-GAME TOTALS Attendance 152,431. Net Receipts $1,224,744.11. Commissioner's share Player's share $624,620.61. Minnesota club's share $104,103.41. Los Angeles club's share $104,103,41.

American league's share $104,103,43. National league's share $104,103.43. Indiana Crushed by Minnesota, 42-18 Griese Field Goal CORNHUSKERS ROMP, 37 TO 0, OVER BADGERS Pitching's the Name of the Game Hanlcinson Fires 3 Aerial Scores (Picture on page 3) BY HARRY WARREN Chicago Tribune Press Service Minneapolis, Oct. 9 Sun broke thru the clouds over Minneapolis and thru the gloom of the University of Minnesota football fans today as the Gold- LOS ANGELES MINNESOTA Is Decisive By ROY DAMER Chicago Tribune Press Servicel Iowa City, Oct. 9 Purdue's Boilermakers, picked to win the Gold medal in the Big Ten football Olympics, cleared their first hurdle in quest of that AB RBI RBI AB Notre Dame passed with precision.

Notre Dame's defense formed an impregnable fortress. Notre Dame survived. The Irish broke open a brutal scoreless duel in the fourth minute of the second quarter 1 1 2 Wills, ss 4 Gilliam, 3b 4 play defensively and with gathering power on attack, moved smoothly to a 24 to 7 victory. The Spartans scored their third touchdown after a time out with only four seconds remaining in the game when Bob Apisa, sophomore fullback, ran 39 yards to the north goal. His spirited dash astounded a foe already thoroly beaten.

It's a Happy Day In his exuberance, Apisa broke free from his teammates who had followed or preceded him cn his run and threw the football high into the stands where Spartan students cheered. Apisa's joyful reaction immediately was matched by Michigan State's veteran quarterback on the try for point. Steve Juday, waiting to place the ball for Dick Kenney's place kick, watched the ball sail over his head. Juday pursued, recovered, and ran back to midfield. Then about to be tackled near the Spartan bench, Juday tossed the ball out of bounds to Ills fellow players.

The unusual conclusion was fitting climax for the Spartans who had been denied victory in this bitter intrastate rivalry for the last two seasons. Wolverines Contained It was seen by 103,219, a number that exceeded the total seats 101,001, as "have all games between these universi- Contuiued on page 6, col. 1. Kennedy, 3b 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 14 2 2 0 2 (Picture on page 3) BY THOMAS RIVERA Chicago Tribune Press Service Lincoln, Oct. 9 A unique species of animal, the Versalles, ss 3 Nossek.cf 4 Oliva, rf 4 Killebrew, 3b 3 Battey, .3 Zimmerman, 1 Allison, rf 3 Mincher, lb 3 Ouilici, 2b 3 Pascual, 1 Merrill, 0 Klippstein, 0 Davis, cf Fairly, rf Johnson, If Lefebvre, 2b Tracewski, 2b Parher, lb Roseboro, Osteen, You Are There You Are There You Are There i red faced Badger, was un-; on a.

scrambling 29-yard touch I Stopped ILLINOIS 114 OHIO STATE 28 John Wright L. Bill Anders Ed Russell L. Mike Current Ron Guenther Ray Prior Kat Andersoa Kim Anderson Bill Allen R. Bill Eaclnts Willis Fields Dou Van Horn Larry Jordan R. Greg Lashutka Fred Cusllrdo Len Fontes Ron Bess L.

Bob Rein Sam Price R. Will Thomas Jim Grabowski Tom Barrington Illinois 7 714 Ohio State 21 7 a2S Scorta Illinois: Pinder, 4-yard ran Csstardo, kickl 74 Ohio Stale: Sander, 3-yard run. Funk, kick 7.7 Ohio State: Barrington, 11-yard ran. Funk, kick 7-14 Ohio Stater Barrinston, 2-yard ran. (Funk, kickl 7-21 Ohio State: Barrington.

l'j-yard ran. (Funk, kick) 7-28 Illinois: Bess, 4-yard ran. ICnstardo, kick 14-28 Substitutions Illinois: Ends, Kmiec, Timko, M. Smith; tackles, Bickman, Stone, Green; wards, T. Smith, Waters, Harms, Petkus, Carbonari; centers, Hansen, Toma-svla, Tate, Davis, Kimbell; backs, Sullivan, Erickson, Acks, Volkman, Jackson, Bess, Miller, Knell, Hansen, Kee, Harper, Harford.

Obi State: Ends, Walden, Hjids, Baas, Mimes; tackles, O. Anderson, G. Miller, Berlin, Dwyer guards. And rick, Bugel, Ridder, J. Kelby; centers, Keller, Snyder, Cochran; backs, Unverferth, Portsmouth, Fill, McCoy, Johnson, Lykes, Addertey, Hamlin, Richley, Sander.

Referee R. E. Meyer. Umpire William Borgmann. Head linesman William Makepiece.

Field judge ThorM Thomsen. Back tudge Leonard Heim. Coaches Pete Elliot, Illinois; Woody Hares, Ohio State. A ItrWance (3,71 2. 0 24 10 1-30 30 4 10 4 27 18 1 covered before 53,810 Corn-husker fans in Memorial stadium here today by the University of Nebraska football team en Gophers ran and passed their way to a 42 to 18 triumph over Indiana university.

Minnesota, after having a tie You Are There and two losses, opened its treasured prize today by beating Iowa, 17 to 14, before a disappointed Hawkeye homecoming crowd of 59,800. Purdue again rode the golden right arm of Quarterback Bob Griese to force Iowa into submission. But it was Griese's toe that provided the margin of victory when he kicked a 19-yard field goal early in the fourth period. Griese was superb. He made the big play when needed most of the time and broke another single-game Purdue record.

His Continued on page col. 1 down pass from Tom Schoen to Don Gmitier, boosted their lead in the rext period when Nick Edc'y arcund end from 5 yard? ard sealed victory with Hn Ivan's 23-yard field goa i- sfanza. This was the first meeting of the two long-time gridirion rivals since 1958, and Army was cheered on by its cadet corps, which massed from end zone to end zone along the east sideline. The cadets kicked up such a Continued on page 6, col. 8 a-Rollins grounded out for Pascual in 6th and Valdespino lined out for Merrit in 8th.

Minnesota 000 000 0000 Los Angeles 000 211 Ox 4 Double plays Tracewski to Parker Oliva; Wills to Parker Zimmerman; Zimmerman to Versalles Tracewski struck out and Johnson was out trying to steal. Left on bases Minnesota, Los Angeles, 6. Two base hits Versalles, Gilliam, Johnson 2, Fairly, Wills. Stolen bases Wills, Parker, Roseboro. Sacrifices Johnson, Osteen.

Pitching summary: IP tTB ER BB SO Pascual 5 8 12 3 3 1 0 Merritt 2 2 3 1 1 Klippstein 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 Osteen 9 5 6 0 0 2 2 Bases on balls Osteen 2 Killebrew, Versalles. Pascual 1 Parker, Merritt, none. Klippstein 1 Johnson. Strikeouts Osteen 2 Oliva, Allison. Pascual, none.

Merritt, none. Klippstein 1 Tracewski. Winning pitcher Osteen. Losing pitcher Pascual. Umpires John Flaherty A.

home plate; Ed Sodol N. L.l, first bast; Bob Stewart (A. L.l, second base; Ed Vargo N. L.l, third base; Ed Hurley (A. L.l, left field foul line; and Tony Vemon N.

L.1, right field foul line. Time 2:06. Attendance 55,934. Net receipts $511,800.65 Total bases. Western conference season with a victory which, based on this performance, must stamp the Gophers as a team to watch over the remainder of the season.

Gopher fans will be glad to learn that John Hankinson has recovered from a shoulder, in- Continued on page 8, col. 2 which walloped the friendless native of Wisconsin, 37 to 0. It was downright embarrassing for the Badger, which sometimes journeyed backward faster than it did forward, trying to ignore the rolling cheers pouring out from under red Continued on page 8, col. 1 i-! rri i-! r1- 'r ri irin ri ri rVj.

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