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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 54

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
54
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

.64 BOSTON SUD. GLOBE OCTOBER 19. iyU Ha 1 I. rvarai rips Dartmou rwm, II HI I II mhh v. I i IVY LEAGUE Conf.

AS W-L-T W-L-t Yale 2-0-0 4-1-0 Dartmouth 2-0-0 2-W) Brown 3-1-0 3--0 Harvard 2-1-0 4-1-0 Princeton 1-2-0 2-3-0 Cornell 1-2-0 144) Penn 1-2-0 1-4-0 Columbia 0-4-0 1-44) fey 4V 4 3 iH 1 1 Dartmouth, 30- Hanonr, Harvard 0 3 9 0 12 Dartmouth 3 17 7 3T00 0 Tim Geibel 36 FG Shaun Teevens 27 pass from Jeff Kemp (Geibei kick) 0 Teevens 29 pass from Kemp (Geibel kick) Dave Cody 29 FG i Geibel 21 FG Mark Aker 51 run (Geibel kick) Ron Cuccia 14 run (kick tailed) Cody 35 FG 0 Geibel 40 FG Harvard Dart. First downs 16 48 Rushes-yards 41-148 46-164 Passing yards 111 99 Return yards 94 "158 Passes 10-31-6 14-24-1 Punts 6-40 5 6-34 7 Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards 8-70 BJ60 I INDIVIDUAL LEADERS i. Rushing Player (School) Att. Yds. Mark Akey (D) 13 75 Avg LG 5.JI62 2.7 12 3.07 8 Bv Ernie Roberts Globe Staff HANOVER.

N.H. Maybe the presence of six former undefeated Dartmouth teams among a capacity 20.000 crowd at Memorial Field inspired the 1980 varsity. For suddenly a struggling Dartmouth squad which had lost three straight rose up and romped to a 30-12 triumph over previously unbeaten Harvard yesterday. This was a surprisingly decisive Ivy League victory for the Big Green, which: 1) discovered a receiver other than Dave Shula in sophomore Shaun Teevens (two touchdown catches); 2) received three field goals from junior Tim Geibel; and 3) unleashed senior Mark Akey on a 51-yard scoring run early in the second half to insure the verdict. Harvard just could not contend with the combination of this geared-up Dartmouth squad and continued attrition of its own talent pool.

In truth, the Crimson had barely squeaked by Cornell last week. And when fullback Jim Callinan and halfback Paul Scheper could not dress yesterday. Harvard did not have the running weapons for the wet field. Finally, when quarterback Mike Bucha-man joined Brian Buckley on the injured list in the first half. Harvard was reduced to using flanker Ron Cuccia as tailback in the shotgun formation.

Then this sprightly sophomore went off with a pulled muscle in the third quarter after sparking Harvard to a touchdown (14-yard Cuccia sweep) and Dave Cody's second field goal. "Dartmouth played well and things fell into place for them," said coach Joe Restic later. "We had too many things going wrong. We struggled." The slanting rain and sloppy field were welcomed by Dartmouth's heavy-duty backs, Akey and Jeff Dufresne. The latter had defeated Yale in such going here two years ago.

commenting then that back home in White Bear Lake, this was normal playing weather. Dufresne had 60 yards in 22 carries yesterday. Akey 75 in 13. not astounding totals but much better than the previously anemic Dartmouth running game produced. Still, the Green needed a spark to get started early, and wide receiver Shula (eight catches for 110 yards) provided it with an acrobatic, glue-fingered grab for a midfield first down on Dartmouth's second possession.

Geibel concluded that 71-yard drive with his first field goal, a 36-yarder for a 3-0 lead. Then Teevens, the 5-foot-8 sophomore brother of former Dartmouth star Buddy Teevens, got into the act. On first down from the Harvard 27, he ran a post pattern into the Jeff Dufresne (0) ....22 60 Mike Buchanan (H) 8 52 Ron Cuccia (H) 9 41 Tom Beatrice (H) 7 23 Paul Connors (H) 8 24 Bill Spalding (D) 3 12 Passing Com. Att. Yds.

Jeff Kemp (O) 14 24 199 Mark Marion (H) 19 61 Ron Cuccia (H) 5 8 50 Receiving NO. Dave Shula (0) 8 Shaun Teevens (D) 3 Tom Beatrice (H) 2 Bill McGlone (H) 1 Paul Connors (H) 3 Jeff Dufresne (D) 2 TO Int. 2-r 1 5 6m 0 21, 0 23 0 12 0 19lj 0 Dartmouth's Dave Shula dives to make catch in first quarter as safety Mike Jacobs watches. ap photo v. 4 i nil N.J..

put the Crimson away. His scoring pte'y started innocently enough on a second-ariEFl situation at his 49. It was a simple dive jusf'fo the left of center to get the first down. Akey cut right at the Harvard 40 to avoid Jacobs and Delgadillo, then just ran away from them down the sideline. Cuccia, a sensational schoolboy QB in Angeles who had been moved to receiver-at Harvard, came on to spark an 80-yard scoring drive with his running and passing.

But wSfn he limped off after helping cut the margirfjo 27-12, Harvard's four-game winning stregk was over. "It was a case of everyone working together for our team's success," said Dartmouth, defensive captain Jerry Pierce (18 tackles). "They could not run up the middle without Callinan, and we picked off six interceptions." left corner and caught Jeff Kemp's perfect pass behind defender Mike Jacobs. On Dartmouth's next possession and from almost the same spot. Teevens split to the opposite side and beat Rocky Delgadillo in the right corner of the end zone.

Actually, Teevens made one of the great catches of the season, launching himself horizontally to catch a ball which appeared destined to go out of bounds. "When you make a catch like that, the receiver can be double- or triple-teamed and it won't make a difference," said Restic. Delgadillo's Interception set up Cody's 29-yard field goal, but Dartmouth got that back before halftime on Geibel's 31-yarder. Even trailing. 20-3 at intermission.

Harvard did not appear out of contention. But less than two minutes into the third quarter, Akey, a 200-pound senior from Metuchen, THERE IT IS Williams' Micah Taylor can see ball, but Tufts' Norm Costin keeps him from getting to it, tackling him just as pass arrives. Tufts won, 14-8. Story, Page 53. GLOBE PHOTO BY FRANK O'BRIEN rown fells Gorne Yale cools Columbia Yale, 30-10 at New Haven Columbia 0 10 0 0 10 Yale 0 7 10 13 30 Joe Cabrera 2 run (Cabrera kick) Miro Lovric 43 FG Curtis Grieve 17 pass from John Rogan (Tony Jones kick) Jones 25 FG John Nitti 2 run (Jones kick) Rogan 11 run (Jones kick) Grieve 3 pass from Rogan (kick failed) Columbia Yale First downs 6 19 Rushes-yards 41-45 53-241 Passing yards 59 116 Return yards 42 30 Passes 5-14-1 5-16-2 Punts Fumbles-lost 2-1 3-1 Penalties-yards 4-33 2-20 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing i Player (School) Att.

Yds. Avg. LG John Nitti (Y) 8 78 10 52 Rich Diana (Y) 20 114 6 29 Phil Manley (Y) 8 17 2 16 Joe Cabrera (C) 14 34 2 9 Greg Gennaro (C) .12 39 3 6 Jim Pritchard (C) 8 22 3 11 Passing Com. Att. Yds.

TD Int. Greg Gennaro (C) 5 14 59 0 1 John Rogan (Y) ...5 8 116 2 0 Phil Manley (Y) 0 6 0 0 1 Receiving No. Yds. TD Curt Grieve (Y) 2 54 2 Dan Stratton (Y) 2 43 2 Steve Wallace (C) 2 18 0 Joe Cabrera (C) 1 15 0 Brown, 32-25 at Ithaca, N.Y. Brown (3-2) 6 20 6 0- 32 Cornell (1-4) 0 7 8- 25 Steve Curtin 1 run (kick failed) Ron Rejda 36 FG Alva Taylor 6 run (Rejda kick) Curtin 1 run (kick failed) Rick Villella 2 run tBud Brooks kick) Sieve Jordan 14 pass from Larry Carbone (Brooks kick) Mitch Metz 6 pass from Carbone (kick tailed) Paul Goodberlet 13 pass from Mike Ryan (Rejda kick) Ben Tenuta 1 run (Mark Turley pass from Ryan) Attendance 7000 Brown Cornell First downs 25 22 Rushes-yards 63-326 42-112 Passing yards 154 245 Return yards 65 93 Passes 11-21-3 17-30-2 Punts 3-30 3-33 Fumbles-lost 1-0 3-1 Penalties-yards 6-80 2-25 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Player (School) Att Yds.

Avg. LG Steve Curtin (B) 24 187 7.6 30 Rick Villella (B) 26 92 3.5 9 Larry Carbone (B) 9 43 4.8 27 Steve Vago (C) 10 40 4.0 9 Dick Clasby (C) 6 32 5.3 14 Passing Com. Att. Yds. TD Int.

L. Carbone (B) 1 1 21 154 2 3 Mike Ryan (C) ...13 18 192 1 0 Doug Fusco (C) ...4 12 53 0 2 Receiving No Yds. TD Rick Villella (B) 4 30 0 Mitch Metz (C) 3 45 1 Alver Taylor (C) 4 55 0 Paul Goodberlet (C) 4 43 1 elapsed in the second quarter when Joe Cabrera's 2-yard scoring plunge capped a 52-yard Columbia drive. A 43-yard field goal' by Miro Lovric with 5:02 left in the half gave Columbia a 10-0 advantage. But from then on, it was all Yale.

Eli quai-terback John Rogan connected with split end Curtis Grieve on a 17-yard scoring pass with just 45 seconds left before intermission, yti The right side of the Yale offensive by All-Ivy tackle Bob Regan, opened up huge holes for tailback Rich Diana and fullback John Nitti. A 52-yard burst by Nitti on Yale first possession of the third quarter set up a 25-yard game-tying field goal by Eli platte-kicker Tony Jones. Three subsequent scoring drives ended with touchdown runs by Nffti and Rogan and another Rogan-to-Grfe've touchdown aerial, this one covering 37 yards'. Cozza called the second half "by far the finest half of football we've had this year. In con By Pete Taussig Special to The Globe ITHACA, N.Y.

Cornell had it all figured out. There were two weapons in Brown's offensive arsenal quarterback Larry Carbone and tailback Rick Villella. Stop them and the Bruin offense would be about as dangerous as a bunch of hibernating pandas. One problem. Name is Steve Curtin.

Plays fullback. Stands 6 feet 2 and weighs 220 pounds. Don't ignore him. While the Big Red defense keyed on Car-bone and Villella the pair mainly responsible for a 20-point romp over Pennsylvania "a week ago Curtin took advantage of the lack of attention to run all over the Astro-Turf on Schoellkopf Field. The bruising fullback carried 24 times for 187 yards and a 'pair of first-half touchdowns to spark Brown to its third straight win, a 32-25 conquest of Cornell.

senior, who had accumulated just 147 yards in Brown's first four contests. "They were really keying on Larry and Rick, so we just went with our option and Veer aeries and our line just blew their line out." Curtin's best college performance ever was almost overshadowed by that of Big Red quarterback Mike Ryan. Unfortunate--ly, Ryan missed most of the first half after being knocked silly following a scramble midway through the opening quarter. Big Red third-string quarterback Doug Fusco took over and made two critical mistakes late in the first half. For the fourth straight year, Cornell coach Bob Blackman came up empty against former assistant John Anderson, but his team didn't surrender after 30 minutes.

Ryan's head cleared up, and he finished the day by completing 13 of 18 passes for 192 yards and directing his club to a pair of second-half scores. But it wasn't quite enough as Brown defeated Cornell for the eighth straight year. By Sam Wilkins Special to The Globe JEW HAVEN Heavily favored Yale came to life in the second half to defeat Ivy League rival Columbia, 30-10, in a steady drizzle at the Yale Bowl yesterday afternoon. A crowd of 14.000 looked on as the defending Ivy champ exploded for 23 second-half points while denying Columbia a single first down after half-time. The contest marked the 58th renewal of the league's oldest rivalry.

Since Yale's 3-0 win in 1872 the Elis have won 42 meetings with Columbia, lost 13, and tied 2. The Lions have not defeated Yale since 1971. Columbia played the first half as if it were determined to end its winless streak against the Elis. Yale's Gerry Harrington fumbled the opening kickoff, and John Vota recovered to give Columbia a first and 10 on the Yale 19. Yale's defense held, but Columbia maintained excellent field position throughout the first half.

The Lions; took the lead with 3:59 trast to the first half, we just couldn't do anything wrong." 'I'm a. little surprised, admitted the ImiYli EAST GAMES still beatsMli AIC loses Bramble, but IJJNH marches Northeastern, now 1-5, had a neat drive in3ES fto 3d straight By Bob Monahan Globe Staff American International College, playing 2'2 quarters without star halfback Bob Bramble, who suffered a bruised knee, won its 10th straight game and sixth this season by defeating Northeastern, 21-15, yesterday at Parsons Field in Brookline. It spoiled the Huskies' homecoming and marked the first time AIC had won at NU since 1960. The victory was especially important for AIC because it is ranked fifth in the country among Division 2 colleges and the win over a Division 1-AA rival could boost it in the ratings. "I couldn't relax until time ran out," AIC coach Bob Burke said.

"When Northeastern had that last shot with 90 seconds to play, I expected anything to happen. Hey, Northeastern has some good people. "Us? Well, we didn't play our best game of the year. This was our fourth road game in a row, and we're missing some people because of injuries. And naturally we're a different club without Bramble." The senior from Brooklyn leads AIC In rushing, pass receiving and kick returns.

"When Bramble was hurt, the other guys picked up the slack," Burke said. "Our defense played very well, but we weren't at our best on offense. We fumbled five times. Bill Burke and Kevin Johnson ran very well, though." first quarter when It moved to the AIC 7. NU qiSSd! jerback Allen Deary faded to pass, was pressijgjS and tried to throw the ball away.

But it was lrjter icepted by cornerback Bob Poirier. AIC then put together! an 18-play. 94-yard dfiGfj capped early In the second quarter by a 17-yan scoring pass from Brian McLean to Bramble. Jin Raymond kicked his first of three extra points making him 20 for 20 on the season. The crowd of 5100 saw NU get back in the gam on a spectacular play.

Deary spotted a flaw In th AIC defense, called for a keeper and raced 67 yard: for a TD. Brian Snow kicked the point to tie th score at 7-7. AIC answered with a 12-play. 80-yard scoring drive highlighted by a 28-yard pass fromaMcLean John Vernon to the NU 4. Three plays later, McLear scored on a sneak from the 1.

After a scoreless third period, AIC scored at of the fourth quarter when Johnson climaxed a 57 'oP 1 i. UNH, 10-6 at Baltimore UNH 7 0 3 0- 10 Towson St 0 6 0 06 UNH Curt COIIins 9 run (Rusty Foster kick) TS Sean Landetta 26 FG TS Landetta 51 FG UNH Foster 23 FG UNH TS First downs 12 10 Rushes-yards 49-182 28-57 Passing vards 88 174 Return yards 75 29 Passes 5-13-2 19-37-6 Punts Fumbles-lost 5-3 1-0 Penalties-yards 14-122 8-72 Lafayette, 3-0 Penn OOJO-0 Lafayette 0030-3 Lat-FG Bartnett 21 Pen Laf First downs 10 Rushes-yards 49-20? 44-I2S Passing yards 42 80 Return yards 4 12 Passes 0-18-2 7-16-0 Punts 9-347 10 35 Fumbles-lost 2-1 l-l Penalties-yards 7-S5 5-34 Lehigh, 19-14 Lehigh 14 14 1 14-49 Davidson 0 0 1 0-14, Leh-Yeager 11 pass from Michalski (lobst kick) Leh-Yeager 68 pass from Michalski (lobst kick) Leh-Yeager 59 pass from Michalski (lobst kick) Dav-MiHer 34 run (kick failed) Leh-Evanko 3 run (lobst kick) Dav-Piercy 34 pass from Whitmire (Jones pass from whitmire) Leh-AAarck 34 mtercept'on return (lobst kick) ieh-Anastasio 6 pass from Michalski iPenske kick) Leh-Ashler 5 run (Penske kick) Leh Dav First downs 24 14 Rushes-yards 53-226 40-106 Passing yards 288 163 Return yards 65 40 Passes 15-26-3 11-25-4 Punts Fumbles-lost 5-1 2-1 Penalties-yards 9-129 5-65 Princeton, 11-10 Colgate 0073-10 Princeton 00014-14 Coi-McGiesney 1 run (Byrne kick) Pri-Neary 2 run (Wise kick) CoWi Byrne 27 Pri-Neary 5 pass from Locnenmever IrVise k'Ck) Col Prn First downs 24 is Rushes-yards 54270 3897 Passing yards 10! 199 Return yards 65 21 Passes 8-17-3 14 170 Punts 2-38 j-33 Fumbles-kist 2-! 1-0 Penalties-yards 6-40 10-102 yard drive by speeding 13 yards around right end. Trailing, 21-7. NU got back in the game wheri i Deary tossed a 21 -yard scoring pass to Bill LaFren iere. The Huskies elected to go for a two-point con version.

They succeeded as a Deary-to-LaFrenierei From Wire Services Sophomore linebacker Dom Lammara intercepted two passes yesterday, leading the University of New Hampshire to a 106 victory over Towson State in Towson. Md. The Wildcats, now 3-3 after an 0-3 start, intercepted six of Ron Meehan's passes and held the Tigers (2-5) to 196 yards in total offense, including only 22 yards rushing. Meehan completed 19 of 37 passes for 174 yards. New Hampshire grabbed a 7-0 lead on the final play of the first quarter when tailback Curt Collins scored on a 9-yard run.

An interception by Dean Gil-lis at the Towson 27 set up the score. PRINCETON 14, COLGATE 10 Princeton's Mark Lockenmeyer connected with junior Mike Neary on a 5-yard touchdown pass with 16 seconds left in the game to lift the Tigers to a 14-10 upset of Colgate in Princeton, N.J. LAFAYETTE 3, PENN 0 Senior Bob Bartnett kicked a 22-yard field goal at 8:31 of the third period to give Lafayette a 3-0 victory over Pennsylvania in Easton, Pa. BUCKNELL 31, WEST CHESTER 21 Ken Jenkins caught three touchdown passes from quarterback Al Locey to lead Bucknell to a 31-21 victory over West Chester State in Lewisburg. Pa.

LEHIGH 49, DAVIDSON 14 Larry Michalski passed for four touchdowns and connected on 14 of 23 passes for 276 yards, pacing unbeaten Lehigh to a 49-14 rout of Davidson. Lehigh is 4-0-2. NO. MICH. 22, DELAWARE 7 Phil Kessel completed 25 of 47 passes for 223 yards and a touchdown, sparking Northern Michi- pass pulled NU to within 21-15.

But the Huskies could score no more, although i s' couple ot Deary bombs came close. INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Player (School) Att. Yds. Avg. LG Bob Bramble (A) 8 44 5 5 10 BillBurne(A) 24 107 4 5 17 Allen Deary (NU) 12 54 4 5 67 Clmt Mitchell (NU) .11 25 2.3 8 Patting Com.

Att Yds TD fnt Brian McLean (A) 7 18 153 1 1 Allen Deary (NUI 14 28 161 1 2 AIC, 21-15 at Paraons Field, Brookline AIC (6-0) 0 14 0 7- 21 Northeastern (1-5) 0 7-0 15 A Bob Bramble 17 pass from Brian McLean (Jim Raymond kick Allen Deary 67 run (Brian Snow kick) A McLean 1 run (Raymond kick) A Kevin Johnson 13 run (Raymond kick) Bill LaFreniere 21 pa from Deary (Deary pass from LaFrenkre) AIC NU First downs 25 15 Rushes-yards 65-299 36-119 Passing yards 153 161 Return yards 25 67 Passes 7-18-1 14-28-2 Punts 3-376 6-37 3 Fumbles-lost 5-2 io Penalties-yards 3-25 2-10 rw -v i fk 1 3 Receiving No Yds TD John Vernon (A) 3 89 -gan to a 22-7 triumph over Delaware in Newark. Bramble a Shawn Brickman (NU) 5 4 "tr Julius Thompson punches ball from AIC's Bob Bramble, but AIC teammate Ed Gebula recovered. GtOBE PHOTO BY FRANK O'BRIEN Bill Latreniere (NU) 2 45 1 Del..

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