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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 86

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
86
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'r'Vf V-y OvJ Dartmouth defense inspired Chasey to keep throwing coach Carmen Cozza, referring to the running sideline pass- Chasey was asked his opinion of the Yale defense which had been ranked fifth nationally before Dartmouth bombarded it for 480 yards. "I think we Jim kept hitting end Bob Brown on curls and either halfback John Short or Brendan O'Neill on the sideline patterns. "We just didn't think Chasey could keep completing the toughest pass in the game," admitted Yale completioni to those Blues." Chasey threw more often 18 completions in 29 passes) than usual because Dartmouth's surprise "triple spread" caught Yale between man to man and zone pass coverage, stop Yale cold time and again. And I became determined I'd get a score before halftime." "Of course," he grinned, "I think the other guys on our offensive unit were even more frustrated when I began to throw those twice in the end zone, to kill off Dartmouth moves. "Our defense inspired me, kept me in there plugging," Chasey admitted later.

"I'd sit on the bench and watch guys like (Murry) Bowden, Barry Brink and (Joe) Jarrett managed a relaxed smile in the dressing room for the first time this season. However, for the first 25 minutes of the just-concluded 10-0 triumph over Yale, Chasey had been a frustrated figure. Three times he was intercepted, By Ernie Roberts Globe Staff NEW HAVEN Stripped to he waist, into a corner by six and his ankle painting, Dartmouth quarterback Ji Chasey finally IVY mil iii II i.nunwwmpw -f "TV (XT ft All Conf. games w-l-t w-l-t Dartmouth 6-0-0 Yale 3-1-0 5-1-0 Harvard 4-2-0 Cornell 4-2-0 Penn 1-3-0 3-3-0 Columbia 3-3-0 Brown 0-4-0 1-5-0 Dartmouth blanks Yale 11 4' i 1 i i 'f 'jt I YALE'S RICH JAURON OF SWAMPSCOTT, IS TACKLED BY DARTMOUTH'S MURRY BOWDEN (10) AND JOE JARRETT (45). Dartmouth squad envisions Lambert Trophy probably had a harder time moving the ball against Harvard," said Chasey, "but I don't mean that In a derogatory aense against Yale.

Yale has great pursuit and quickness but we fooled them with the "triple formation and we slowed them down with some sprint runs and the draw to Stu Simms up the middle." Offensive tackle Joe Leslie, who was head on Yale Capt. To Neville, said, "Yale has basically the sam- guys as last year and we scored on them then. Neville is the best man I've played against. Very quick. But we were up for this game, up in a quiet way than for Princeton earlier." While Dartmouth exploited Yale's defense with its 'triple spread', the Green defense also came up with something new to thwart Yale's attack.

"We're supposed to be a pursuing defense," said Capt. Murry Bowden with a wink, "but we stayed at home today." He was referring to Dartmouth's stacked defense in which the tackles played head on the guards and refused to penetrate as much as usual. The linebackers stacked behind them and watched tht flow before penetrating. "This cut off Yale's basic plays, such as the Jauron trap up the middle," said tackle Barry Brink. "Jauron (the Swampscott sophomore whe was held to 50 yards after averaging 135 in five earlitr games) is a real good runner with a lot of balance.

He's a lot like Princeton's Hank Bjork-land but not'quite as good yet." Linebacker Wayne Young aoMed, "I had good, clear sihot at Jauron early but he just bounced off me and kept running. Excellent balance." "I was surprised that Yale stayed with its gound attacks as loong as it did," said Bowden. "We cut off their off-tackle and trap plays and they should have thrown earlier. Later on they had pretty good success with the short pass when we were playing looser in the secondary." Rutgers beals Bucknell 21-7 NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. Injury plagued Rutgers snapped a five-game losing streak yesterday 21-7 over Bucknell.

Bill Donaldson, filling in for injured Larry Robertson, broke a 7-7 tie late in the third period when he darted one yard for a touchdown. The scoring play climaxed a 41 -yard drive that began with a 24-yard punt return by Sam Chapman. SUMMARY Bucknell 0 7 0 6-7 Rutgers 0 7 7 tZi) 2 run (Boyer kick). Rn'in2ldsn I run (Tesce kick). P0M A-7500.

Colby romps over Maine Maritime, 41-0 United Press International WATERVILLE Maine Colby College nuttinff talking Lambert. But we've got an awful lot of momentum going for us." Dartmouth's undefeated 1965 team which won the Lambert Trophy defeated Yale only 20-17. And Yale's Carmen Cozza, when asked how he rated Dartmouth among the fine Ivy League teams, said, "One of the best in history. Exceptional balance." ERNIE ROBERTS. Quarterback Jim Chasey, asked about the Lambert Trophy, said, "Sure, I think we deserve it if we win them all.

At the beginning of the season I had no idea of a possible Lambert Trophy because I didn't know about teams like Penn State, Syracuse and so forth. But now I think we deserve recogniti' And as Co-captain Murry Bowden pointed out, "Wait till the end of the season before NEW HAVEN Dartmputh football players have visions of the Lambert Trophy after trouncing Yale, 10-0, yesterday. The most frequent question in the locker room was, "How did Pittsburgh and West Virginia do?" (both lost). "Pride is a big word on a football team," said tackle Barry Brink. "There was a lot riding on this game, not just the Ivy League title but a possible Lambert Trophy." Hauck scores 3 TDs as Princeton stomps Brown bunched the middle, looking for the run.

Bjorklund, a junior, raced 67 yards off tackle for a touchdown the next time Princeton got the ball. Brown's only other score came on a four-yard run by Hart in the second quarter, set up by a 32 -yard pass from Zink to Kurt Princeton added three insurance touchdowns in i the final quarter, with scoring two and Willie Williams running five yards for the other. Princeton Brown First downs 20 Rushing yardage 306 127 Passing yardage 200 Return yardage 116 2 Posses 11-18-1 4-21-1 Punts 7.34 t.A Fumbles lost 2 3 Yards penalized 184 71 SCORING SUMMARY Princeton 10 14 0 2145 Brown 7 7 0 014 k.Brwn Bonner 200 run (Chase Prih Wolfe 68 Interception (Barges kick). Prin FG Barges 42. TPrJn Ji001 from Testerman (Baraes kick).

kjPrin Biorklund 67 run (Bartgei 'rwn Hart 4 run (Chase kick). 69 pass from Plummer (Bortges kick). Prin 24 pass from Plummer (Barges kick). Prin Williams run (Baraes kick). Attendance S700.

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(n. your free copy today! JORDAN MARSH ce S7REIT FICO? STORI FOR HOMES D-322 I Boston Store Only LEAGUE abandoned field-goal shots from the Yale 22 and 17 in the first quarter. It wasn't until 11:54 of the second period that the Indians finally overcame a string of strikeouts and cracked the Yale defense. They'd just had a big 70-yard drive spiked by Holahan's second endzone interception of the game, but came on 43 yards from Yale's kick out of the hot zone. The first play probably flipped the game.

Chasey, working from a surprise spread, in which halfback John Short went out with the wide-splitting end Bob Brown, causing vast consternation in the Yale secondary shot a 25-yard pass gain at his tight end, Darrel Gavele. With Yale chmping down at its 14, Chasey made another good call spreading to the right, then slipping the ball off to fullback Stu Simms on a trap up the middle. Sitmms barreled 11 yards and that set up O'Neill on the next play. He it the left tackle hole, veered away from the congestion and went the three yards upright. Pirmann, recall, was still aloft.

So Russ Adams did the specialist's honors, and converted for 7 to 0. Pirmann's field goal came at 9:18 of the third period, and the Indians drove 55 yards in 13 plays to set him up from the 20. Twice in this game they moved the stakes on fourth down-one, and did so the first time in the midst of this assault, and the Yale 45. O'Neill didn't get one, he got 10. They got hunig up at the Yale 13.

On fourth and four, Mr. Blackman sent Pirmann and his caddy, John Pollock, onto the scene. It was a three-pointer all the way. That was the extent of the scoring on the game, in which Dartmouth was bewitched but so clearly the better squad that its lowest offensive effort of the season, 10 points, was as solid as fortress. It played Yale for 32 minutes without punting, punted only twice in the game and was moving its "game control" so well that it converted eight of its 13 third-down and yardage situations.

It's introduction of what was really a triple spread, one side or the other, left Yale vulnerable for the short-pass game which Chasey managed to execute so brilliantly at Harvard Stadium a week earlier. The Indians' QB completed 18 of 29 throws for 237 yards. Although Yale burned him for four interceptions, he burned them with the key plays that gave Dartmouth such a wide ball-control edge. The Dartmouth defense, obviously keyed for the Dick Jauron draw play which has harvested such tremendous yardage for him and for Yale this season, held the gifted Eli sophomore to 51 yards in 17 carries. The big crowd departed from the oF Bowl largely convinced that Dartmouth 1970 is one of Mr.

Black-man's vintage teams. They have Columbia, Cornell and Penn, in that order, ahead of them. It doesn't really look like Murderers' Ejow now, does it? down passes of 69, 24, and 22 yards, as the Tigers racked up their fifth victory in six starts. Princeton held Brown scoreless in the second half as it raised its Ivy League record to 3-1. Brown, 1-5 over-all is without a victory in four league contests.

The Bruins jumped to a 7-0 lead early in the first period on a 20-yard run by Gary Bonner, set up by a 52-yard scamper one play earlier by Gerry Hart. But the Tigers came right back and tied the game later in the period when defensive back Bob Wolfe intercepted a Bob Zink pass and returned it 68 yards for a score. Marinaro rush by Columbia DARTMOUTH Continued from Page 81 zone they finally put over "O'Neill's touchdown. What "yas hurting them some Jwas the fact their soccer- playing placement special-fist, Wayne Pirmann, was still being air borne from Hanover, N.H., where he'd been on duty for the soccer iteam in the morning. Pirmann didn't make the scene and appear before the 60,820 witnesses, until halftime, when he ftook a quick warmup.

Meantime, Dartmouth had Dartmouth Yale RST DOWNS-Totoll 25 II RUSHING Attempts Yords goined PASSING Yards gained I Passes attempted Completed Had Intercepted TOTAL OFFENSE Yards rUNTING No. of punts Punting average Yords penalized Own fumbles lost 5 243 237 ie i 480 3 38.3 89 I 103 87 20 9 4 190 9 44.3 60 I I SCORING iartmouth 0 7 3 T10 yale 0 0 0 00 FIRST No scoring. SECOND JDortmouth 7, Yale 0 d. Halfback O'Neill veered awov from congestion ot left tockle.for three Sards and the score. (Adams kicked).

43 Vards in five plays. Key plays: A first-Mown pass from Chasey to Gavle, the Jtightend, for 25 yards to the Yole 1. On Shird down, six, fullback Simms drove yards on a trap play to the Yale Jhree fot a first down. i't THIRD QUARTER artmouth 10. Yole 0.

I Pirmann 30-yard field aocl. Dartmouth Wrove from their 25 to the Yole 13. Yale held. Pirmann, who hadn't trvived in New Haven from his soccer ame Hanover until nainime, pema hown down tne valley, wun oniy inree fcegon, he wos right on the money from slight right angle. nutes of warmup oerore me nan FOURTH QUARTER wWo scoring.

i SBowdoin tops Bales lo win 3d State title Associated Prens LEWISTON, Maine Bowdoin quarterback John Benson tossed a pair of touchdown passes while tne Polar Bear defense held Bates to a single field goal yesterday as Bowdoin djtmped the Bobcats 21-3 to capture its third state football title in a row. Although the Bates defense held the hard-running Bowdoin halfback Joe Bonasera to less than 50 yardn, Benson picked apart the losers' secondary with key passes. win left Bowdoin 5rl for the season and Bates winless in seven starts. The lone Bates score came in the necond period when Andy Moul booted a 27-yard field goal. SCORING SUMMARY Bowttoin 7 7 0 7-21 Botes 0 3 0 03 Bow Webster 57 pass from Benson.

(Burnett kick). Bate-Mout 27 FG. Bow Wyley 23 pass from Benson (Burnett kick). Bow Begin run (Burnett kick). 1 Trinity thumps Coast Guard 7 Associated Press HARTFORD, Conn.

Halfback Dave Kiarsis scored one touchdown, passed for another and piled up 259 yards rushing in 36 carries yesterday as Trinity thumped the Coast Guard Academy, 31-21. Kiarsis broke his won school single game rushing record, which he set in the first game of the year, when he gained 253 yards against Williams. The senior from Dartmouth, also became the first Bantam to gain more than 1000 yards rushing in one year. Kiarsis has a total of 1,056 yards on the ground in six games with two contests remaining. The victory was.

Cornell's fourth in six starts this season while Columbia's loss evened the Fions' record at 3-3. Cornell achieved its victory despite being solidly overshadowed offensively by Columbia which rolled Wagner stops Springfield Associated Press PROVIDENCE Pete Hauck caught three touchdown passes and halfback Hank Bjorklund rushed for 217 yards, including 67 in one touchdown jaunt yesterday as Princeton rolled to a 45-14 victory voer Brown. Hauck caught touch Cornell, Associated Pess NEW YORK Ed Mari naro, the ation's second leading rsher scored three touchdowns in the second quarter, including two on passes, and sparked Cornell to a 31-20 Ivy League victory over Columbia yesterday. Rensselaer tips WPI, 15-14 United Press International TROY, N.Y. Senior halfback Rich Tesmer plunged for two touchdowns yesterday and halfback Ken Morris added a two-point conversion as Rensselaer edged Worcester Tech, 15-14, for its first win of the season.

After Tesmer punched two yards for his second touchdown with 3:26 remaining to play, Morris, a sophomore from Montgomery, W. sprinted across for the winning two points on a pitchout from quart-erack Bob Baron. Worcester 7 0 7 0-U Wor-Deschenes 38 run (Duouis kick). RPi Tesmer 7 run (Foirchild kick). Wor S'aehr 4 pass from Joseph (Cudis RPI Tesmer 2 run (Yorri run) A e50.

W7Y77T mm. WORLD jrik 1 1 1 MlHl-BI Hauck, a lanky sen pass and returned it 68 yards for a score. Hauck, a lanky senior, scored his first touchdown in the decond period on a fourth-and-one situation from Brown's 22, when quarterback Tim Tester-man crossed up the zBrown defense, which had up 409 yards total offense against the Big Red defense. Columbia quarterback Don Jackson completed 20 of 34 passes for 180 yards, but was unable to convert decisive third down plays. Springfield, now 6-1, saw a two year seven game win streak halted.

The Shaped Double-breasted Eagle Today's Look. All National Credit Cards Honored Soyfstoo it Arlington Bests Fret Parkinf Bostoa Cemnioi Car. Opea Wei Eves. I EAE 1 1 I I Marinaro, who ained 127 yards in 32 rushes, scored Cornel's first touchdown on a one-yard run at 4:38 of the second period after Columbia had moved to a 13- 0 lead in the opening quarter. Columbia failed to play the kickoff following Mari-naro's run and the Cornell recovery was followed by a 20-yard TD pass from Rick Furbush to Marinaro for a 14- 13 Cornell lead.

Marinaro's thies score of the quarter came on a 23-yard pass from Furbush at 12:32, putting Cornell in front for good 21-20. Battrick upsets Zednik for title PORT TALBOT, Wales briton Gerald Battrick upset Czechoslovakia's Vladimir Zednik yesterday to take the men's singles title in the Wewar Cup indoor tennis tounament Battrick, who will captain Britain's King's Cup team against Hungay in Budapest next week, beat the Giant Czech 6-1, 3-6, 6-1. The women's title wentc to Virginia Wade, who overcame her biggest rival, Ann Jones, 6-3, 1-6, 7-5. SUPER BOWL Weekend JA. 14 to J.Vi.

17 From BOSTON 3 Jet Northeast Cir Tith Air-Conditioning 3 Nights Deluxe Motel Came Ticket Reserved Seat Escorted TR 41 EL. ISC. t537 Ihftrcrl, Irani. I.T. 10412 Telephone (212 792-7000 United Press International SPRINGFIELD, Mass.

Wagner came from behind with a pair of fourth quarter touchdowns yesterday to hand Springfield its first loss of the season, 26-17. The Seahawks now 4-2, recovered a Springfield fumble at the Chiefs' 3 5 -yard line in the final period and drove to one-foot line. Halfback Jack Kachadurian plunged in for the score. Linebacker Tom Lintner later went 30-yards with an intercepted pass for the final Wagner score. UN0l TURN OH TO SUNOCO Do your thine in a Sunoco Service Station.

Let Sunoco 260 work for tflll It vrti I fa a sire to be known in Maiden as the friendliest and most dependable Service Station for you. Small Sen-ice Station on Highland ave. Call 284-4500 Vernon R. Jch 734-6521 on its best scoring show-since 1961 buried Maine Maritime Academy yesterday 41-0. Senior halfback Ron Lupton and freshman fullback Don Joseph each scored two touchdowns for Colby.

Two other touchdowns came through the air a 47-yard pass from quarterback Brian Cone to David Lane and a seven-yard pass from substitute quarterback Don Sheehy to Mark Titus. Colby picked up 216 yards rushing and 228 yards passing while the defense limited Moritime to only 88 yards on the ground an! held MMA quarterback David Keene to only one pass completion for 12 yards. MMA 0 0 0 00 CciCv 0 20 7 I44 Coifrv Luefen t7 run (kick foiled) Colby Lone 47 poss from Cone (Lone kicll CoiPv Joseoh I run (Ice kick) Colpy Lueton I run (Lone kick I Color Joseph 2 run (Lone kick) Coiby Titus. I pas Sheeny (Lone kick) I I i.

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