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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 55

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
55
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ir 'm wiw rwVnrwa)viq in ii i 0J 29-0 AIC belts Northeastern 9 Colgate beats Holy Cross on 2 FGs, 20-14 I AIC, 29-0 AIC Northeastern (2-3) 0 0 0 0-0 AIC (4-0) 7 8 0 16-29 AIC Tim Rehm 10 run (Qreg Bolduc, kick) AIC Harold Anderton 5 pax trom Jim Jagiello (kick failed) Jaclello 2 run (Grea Bolduc kluk) AIC Safety Crowley tackled In end zone AIC Mark Arlazl 10 paw from Jagiello kick) Attendance 550 North. AIC First Downa 14 23 Rushing yards 35-37 66-314 Passing yards 228 107 Return yards 118 62 Passes 15-38-2 9-16-0 Punts Fumbles lost 3-1 4-2 Penalties-yards 6-82 2-10 touchdown pass from Jagiello. Tim Rehm ran 20 times for 140 yards and the one score and caught two passes for 27 yards in having the best afternoon of his collegiate career. Davis ran 19 times for 81 yards while Jagiello hit on 9 of 16 passes for 107 yards, and two touchdowns. He also ran for a third score.

Dan Ross was the big-play man on offense for Northeastern as he had six receptions for 106 yards. It was the second shutout in two weeks for the Yellow Jackets (they blanked Amherst, 14-0, last time out) and their seventh straight win over two years. AIC's record now stands at 4-0 while the Huskies dropped to Crowley but AIC stopped them four times inside the 20. The Yellow Jackets wasted no time in snatching the lead three minutes into the contest, when Rehm scurried in from 10 yards out after the defense (namely Terry Fitzgerald of Newton who recovered a fumble at NU's 41 yard line) set up the play. The lead advanced to 13-0 when Rehm rambled 55 yards to set up a five-yard scoring toss from Jim Jagiello to Harold Anderson.

And that was how it stayed at intermission. Neither squad scored in the third stanza although both threatened and AIC put the game away in the fourth quarter with 16 points as Jagiello scored on a two yard rollout, the defense sacked Crowley for a safety and Mark Ari-azi caught a 10 yard Special to The Globe SPRINGFIELD Western Massachusetts just hasn't been one of the favorite places for the Northeastern football team the past two weeks. American International blanked the Huskies 29-0, yesterday afternoon at AIC Park before 550 rain-soaked fans after UMass. beat them, 34-14, the previous Saturday. For the Yellow Jackets, it was the end of a long famine against NU teams.

Northeastern had won the last five encounters and 13 of the last 14, but such was not the case this time. Milt Piepul's troops amassed 421 total yards against 265 for Bo Lyon's club and the difference in the ground attack told the story. Seniors Tim Rehm and Greg Davis boosted a ground game that gathered 314 yards while Northeastern netted but 37 yards by The visitors thus had to pass and they did so 38 times, hitting 15 of them and suffering two interceptions. They sustained some well-engineered drives by quarterbacks Rhett Lewis and Clark EQUITY LEASER '-'4 W'i 4 'ate- fa f-p" I 1976 Buick Regal (or other comparable Q.M. car) Two door, air conditioning, landau vinyl top turbo hydramatic power steering, power disc brakes, tinted windshield, steel-belted radial white wall tires, lull wheel covers, radio, body side mouldings, 231 engine.

$01985 Special to The Globe WORCESTER What it all came, down to, in a driving rainstorm at Holy Cross's Fitton Field, was two field goals by Colgate sophomore Jerry Andrewla- vage. A 22-yarder in the first period and a 27-yarder in the final quarter gave the Red Raiders a 20-14 football victory be- fore 6500. the field held up well, but the game-long heavy ram forced both teams to junk their game plans and it was like an old-fashioned rock-em, sock-em game with Andrewlavage's two field goals the difference. "Half of our game is passing," offered Holy Cross coach Ed Doherty, wiping the water off his glasses in the locker room afterwards. "And that was nullified today.

If you didn't want to pick a winner, it was a great game played under horrible conditions." Senior QB -Bruce Basile of Colgate hurt Holy Cross several times with option sweeps. The Raiders controlled the ball almost at will at times in the heavy rain. "I said before the game," noted Doherty, "that you have to stay ahead of them to win. They controlled the ball a lot, which is what we wanted to do. This was the best team we've played and it was also our best effort to date.

Too bad it wasn't a dry day." Surprisingly, there were only four fumbles and each team lost just one. Both teams went with conservative running plays, but the conditions ended up favoring Colgate and Andrewlavage was the difference. Colgate rushed for 263 just 22 more than Holy Cross, but the rain took away -HC's passing game and Dave Quehl, one of the leading receivers in the nation, could catch only four passes. "We have to be pleased," said Colgate coach Neil Wheelwright. "But it wasn't any fun playing in the rain.

The rain proved one theory you can't run the triple option when it's wet." Thanks to Andrewlavage's first field goal and a 37-yard bolt up the middle for a touchdown by Bill Schick, Colgate had a 10-0 second period lead that looked mighty good in the rain. But HC embarked on a 67-yard MICHELIN iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii BIG HOCKEY SALE Bauer Supreme; 65 Bausr Goalie Skales $49.85 Sale also on CCM super Tacks Langes Jr. Super Tacks House of Hockey 431 Maple Manchester, N.H. Tel. 603-627-2114 PER MONTH SNOW TIRES 26 MONTH LEASE excise taxes title and registration lease includes: unlimited mileage AT WHOLESALE PRICES LINER TIRE 144 BOYLSTON BROOKLINE included CONTACT: PRENTICE BROWN itnnTii nnnnr i riniun nn ml Michigan defender brings Michigan State's Ron Lytle (41) to sudden halt in game at Lansing.

Michigan got the best of State, 16-6. (UPI) I KUnm MUliE IXAdlitU bU Mb. 40 Central Avenue, Lynn, Massachusetts Rte.9 232-4869 599-1200 march after the ensuing kickoff and fullback Steve Hunt, who gained 165 yards on a school record 35 carries on this mis-serable afternoon, bolted in from the three to score with only 28 seconds left. Hunt ended up with the Johnny Turco Memorial Award, given annually to the most outstanding player at Homecoming. A two-yard touchown by Basile and a 10-yard pass from HC's Bob Martin to Quehl for a score in the second half ended up being negated by Andrewlavage's two field goals.

Andrewlavage, a sophomore from Clifton, N.J., has now kicked seven out of eight field goals this year. "I think it's obvious we're improving, but we're not there yet," said Doherty. "Hunt ran exceptionally well under the conditions and considering everything, our defense played well, too." TftMlD $7 if3 CD(17( SQL Zwaan and Delaware obliterate UConn, 29-0 Colgate, 20-14 Credenza Mlg List: 5249.70 at Holy Cross Score by Periods Colgate (3-1) 0 10 7 Holy Cross (0-4) 0 7 0 3-20 7-14 rcrc AnrirowlAvflnfl 22 C-Schlck. 37 run (Andrewlavage kick) HC-Hunt, 3 run (Kelley kick) C- Basile, 2 run (Andrewlavage kick) HC Quehl, 10 pass from Martin (Kelley kick) C-FG Andrewlavage, 27 Attendance oauu. Team Statistics HC First Downs Rushlng-yards 67-230 Passing-yards 4f Passes 5-14-1 Return yards Punting Fumbles lost 1-1 Penalties 14 61-263 94 4-7-0 26 3-1 3-32 United Press International NEWARK, Del.

Quarterback Bill Zwaan passed for 117 yards and one touchdown yesterday and the Blue Hen defense did the rest as Delaware shut out the University of Connecticut, 29-0. The win was Delaware's second consecutive shutout and the Blue Hens continued to display their best defense since 1949, having allowed only 30 tpoints in five games. Zwaan's touchdown pass was a 20-yard lob to wide receiver Butch Sowden to put Delaware ahead, 15-0, at the end of the first half. Sowden, who ended his day with seven receptions for 96 yards, caught four Zwaan passes in the seven-play drive which covered 46 yards to the score. Fullback Nate Beasley opened the Blue Hen scoring early in the second quarter with a one-yard plunge to cap a 41 -yard drive.

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Mi Stacking Chair Mfg. List: $42 S1Q99 Officenter Price: Save $22 01 chance you get. Delaware, 29-0 And then we ve got lateral tiles, tor lener and legal-size papers; both 2-drawer and 3-drawer models. 36" wide with locks. And three sizes of flush door safes on hundreds of other office and home-office items.

Lateral Files Mfg. drawer) 5329 Otficenter Price: 219" Save 6109.01 tt Newark, Del. Connecticut (0-4) 0 0 0 0-0 Delaware (4-1) 0 15 7 7-29 DEL. Beasley, 1 run (Sabol past from Kline). DEL.

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A Steve Crone pass was picked off at the Rhode Island 42 -yard line by Post middle linebacker Bob Michalowski, his first of two interceptions, and four plays later, with the Pioneers facing a fourth-and-seven at the Ram 20, McMenemy kicked his fourth field goal of the season and the 15th of his career. Rhode Island was continually frustrated by pen- alties nine of them for 82 yards. Rhode Island made its C.W. Post, 3-0 deepest penetration in the first period, moving to the sland -J1, o-o Post 3, but the Rams were c. w.

Post h-o 3 0 0-3 C. W. POST-FG Tom McMenemy 37. forced to give up the ball Attendance-2110. on downs.

The Rams suf- SIZZ.Ri "'a fered four turnovers, two sV-iw M-227 Passing yards 50 69 On interceptions and tWO Return yards 62 22 Passes 6-19-2 5-20-2 on fumbles. punts 5-354 6-370 Post, now 4-0, was the EE5ZZ nation's fifth-ranked Division 3 team going into the game, and second in Lambert Bowl voting this past week. Led by fullback Frank Prochilo and halfback Major Finklin, the Pioneers ran up 227 yards rushing. Prochilo gained 96 of his 105 yards in the second half, and Finklin totaled 90 yards. Rhode Island's Little AU-America running back, Rich Remondino, had 135 yards, marking the ninth game in his career he's gained more than 100 yards.

Rhode Island's defense prevented Post from scoring inside the 14-yard line in the third quarter and the five in the final period. Rhody intercepted three Pioneer passes and grabbed a pair of Post fumbles. The Rams, whose record dropped to 1-4, travel to Amherst next Saturday to meet the University of Massachusetts. C.W. Post meets Kings Point at Green-vale, N.Y., on Saturday.

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Pages Available:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024