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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 81

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
81
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE NOVEMBER 15. 1981 81 Colgate crushes Holy Cross Drew, BU batter Bucknell GREGG DREW All-time BU rusher thrown for a 2-yard loss by Hnebackejp 1 Dave Wolf. Colgate took over, and in" three plays, the Red Raiders increased their lead to 9-0. Junior quarterback Steve Calabria (13 for 31, 189 yards. I TD.

3 interceptions) and Rogers com bined on two pass plays during ther brief drive. Calabria fired a 19-yard pass up the middle to Rogers to the Cru saders' 24. Two plays later, Calabria rolled to his right and hit Rogers with; another 19-yard pass completion in the end zone. Colgate took the kickoff and marched 61 yards to go ahead, keyed the attack, gaining 33 yards on six carries, including the 10-yard TD run. Holy Cross finally posted a touchdown on its next possession.

The Crusaders traveled 77 yards in five plays, culminated by a 53-yard Boisture-to-' Gary Quinlan flea-flicker. The bottom dropped out for Holy Cross in the final period, which saw Colgate score two more times. Hall plunged over from the 1 and Gil Terenjy raced 28 yards for Colgate's final tallies. The Cross' Dave Muldoon swept yards to cap a freewheeling finish. own school pass reception record for a single season.

He now has 52 catches for the 1981 campaign, including six receptions for 77 yards and a touchdown against HC. Midway through the first period, Colgate went ahead, 2-0, on a safety when Tim Barry's punt from the Holy Cross 30 was blocked by Dan Trunfio. Barry was immediately downed in his own end zone after he recovered the loose ball. The Cross blew a chance to go ahead just before the period ended when Steve Racquet recovered a Colgate fumble at the visitors' 7. Racquet pounced on the ball when Colgate fullback Ken Black-man lost it after being tackled by line-backer Harry Flaherty.

But the Colgate line was equal to the challenge, and four rushes. Including three by Andy Clivio. left HC short of the goal line by a yard. On a slant left on fourth down, Clivio was denied a score when strong safety John Hoff moved over to make a saving tackle. Colgate's second-period touchdown was set up when Holy Cross decided to gamble and lost.

On fourth and inches at the HC 45, Mark Covington was Colgate, 32-13 at Worcester Colgate (7-3) ...2 7 914- 32 Holy Cross (6-4) 0 0 7 6- 13 Safety. Tim Barry tackled end zone Tom Rogers 5 pass from Steve Calabria (Brian Byrne kick) Safety, ball fumbed out of end zone Stacy Hall 10 run (Byrne kick) HC Gary Quintan 53 pass from Dave Boisture (Tony Meknk kick) Hall i run (Byrne kick) HC Pete MukJoon 6 run (rush failed) Gil Terenzl 28 run (Byrne kick) COLGATE HC First downs 24 16 Rushes-yards 53-281 48-188 Passing yards 189 152 Return yards 38 26 Passes 13-32-3 10-28-0 Punts Fumbtes-kW 5-4 3-1 Penalties-yards 4-45 4-25 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Att. Yds. Avg. LG Hall.C 37 211 5 7 21 Boisture.

HC 12 52 4.3 25 McCnesney, 7 37 5.3 14 Dave Orr, HC 5 30 6.0 17 Passing Com. Att. Yds. TD kit. Calabria, 31 13 189 1 3 Boisture, HC 19 7 90 1 0 Receiving No.

Yds. TD Rogers, 6 77 1 Scott OKeefe 3 44 0 Quinlan, HC 2 98 1 McCnesney, 2 42 0 By Neil Singelais Globe Staff WORCESTER Colgate started off slowly but gradually pulled away for a crushing 32-13 victory over Holy Cross before 17,241 fans yesterday at frigid Fitton Field. Freshman Stacey Hall was immense, scoring twice while rolling up 211 yards on 37 carries. He plunged over from the 10 and the 1 while enjoying a memorable afternoon that saw him chalk up the fifth-best single-game rushing performace in school history. In all, Colgate ripped through the Cross defensive line for 281 yards rushing -the most surrendered by the Crusaders this season.

After watching his team absorb its fourth loss in 10 games. Holy Cross coach Rick Carter cited the Crusaders' inability to cash In on five Colgate turnovers in the first half. "We couldn't capitalize on the opportunities," said Carter. "We were beaten by a better team. They overpowered us physically.

They deserved to win." Hall wasn't the only weapon that Colgate (7-3) used to subdue the Crusaders. Tom Rogers, a 6-foot-4, 205-pound split end from Palmer, broke his finale next week. BU scored the first time it had the ball, going 47 yards in nine plays, with Drew carrying seven times for 33 of the yards, including an inside plunge of 1 yard for the touchdown. The Terriers made it 14-0. traveling 80 yards in 12 plays, with quarterback Alan Arison going in from the lip of the goal line with 5:28 to play in the first half.

A swing pass from Arison to flanker Marc Palazola gained 18 yards and set up the Terriers at the Bisons' 1. With 1:22 left in the half. BU put the game out of reach by going 52 yards in seven plays. Workhorse Drew carried five times for 19 yards in that drive, and Palazola traveled the final 6 yards untouched on a pitchout to the right. During the first 30 minutes, Drew alone ran for 137 yards, while Bucknell totaled just 81 running and passing.

Things were hardly more competitive in the second half, although the Terriers settled for field goals of 27 and 36 yards by Jeff Pelin. Bucknell's combined offense was 123 yards, and during the entire game, the Bisons passed mid-field only three times. Their deepest penetration was to the BU 40, where the visitors (4-6) fumbled the ball away. They also reached the BU 49 and 47. "We felt we could run the ball at them," Taylor said.

The strategy accomplished two things, enabling Drew to run for a record and BU to maintain possession of the ball for 39:18 of the game. "We're like the ugly duckling," Taylor said. "We get prettier as time goes on. I only wish we had a couple of games we lost back." By Jack Craig Globe Staff There was a redeeming quality for the 3214 fans who witnessed Boston University's one-sided 27-0 victory over Bucknell yesterday at Sickerson Field. It was the performance of the Terriers' Gregg Drew, g'ho became the most productive tinning back In BU history.

Drew ran for 212 mostly tough JJards on 38 carries, giving him 649 for his career, 9 more than Mai Najarian. With one game remaining this season and another (till year ahead of him, the nifty lit-tJe junior from Warwick, R.I., should pile up memorable statistics. a. Entering the game, the 5-foot-fi, 193-pound Drew already was fading the nation's Division 1-AA fjinners with an average of 115.7 yards per game. And his touchdown yesterday gave him 78 points fbr the season, also tops in Division fcAA.

"Drew's ideal for our tailback formation," BU coach Rick Taylor said after Drew's record performance. Drew carried the ball eight tjmes in the final period with the game out of reach, and Taylor conceded that he was record-conscious the time. "He's not a thoroughbred in terms of speed, but he's durable and follows his blocking," said the coach. "He may not give you the 80-yarder, but he'll do it for you the entire game." And so Drew did yesterday while helping lift the Terriers to 5-5 fr the year and giving them an op-pprtunity for another winning season. They can achieve that if they beat Northeatern in both schools' MU almost engineers the big upset By Art Ballou Special to The Globe Lehigh's vaunted Engineers, branded the terrors of college football's Division 1-AA with their 7-2 record and their explosive offense, stormed into Brookline's Parsons Field heavy favorites over Northeastern yesterday afternoon.

They were happy to depart with a bitterly earned 23-20 triumph over the embattled Huskies, who were in the ballgame every minute of the way, finally succumbing to Mike Whalen's 26-yard field goal late in the final quarter. nally settling for Whalen's decisive field goal on fourth down. Genetti's first interception at Lehigh's 33 set up NU's first score, Geoff Hart booting a 27-yard field goal as Lehigh's defense stiffened. MichalsW fired a 32-yard touchdown pass to Ryan to put the visitors up early in the second, and Whalen's 19-yard field goal made it 1 0-3 at the half. The Huskies tied it again in trie third quarter when Rob Uhlman grabbed a pass from Gregg Prebles and went 70 yards.

Whalen kicked a yard field goal, but NU's Brian Snow re- taliated with a 44-yarder. SextoriT capped a 66-yard Lehigh drive with a 3V yard scoring plunge, but NU got it back? on the Mitjans Interception. Whalen's third field goal provided, the thin margin in a game that wasn't' supposed to be close. back Larry Michalski, the nation's Division 1-AA passing leader, completed 21 passes for 236 yards; Dan Ryan caught his 14th career touchdown pass, a division record; Ed Godbolt banged out 113 yards on the ground; and Chris Sexton added 105. But somehow, the tenacious Huskies kept coming up with the big defensive play and.

stayed close. NU sophomore Mike Genetti intercepted a Michalski pass, his 10th of the year, and camped on two fumbles, and Lazaro Mitjans picked off another Michalski shot and ran 55 yards for a touchdown, interrupting the momentum which had been going Lehigh's way. The visitors were able to put together one more telling march, however, driving within the Huskies' 10 and fi Lehigh, 23-20 at Brookllne Lehigh (8-2) 0 713 3- 23 Northeastern (3-6) 3 010 7 20 NU Geoff Hart 27 FG Dan Ryan 32 pass from Larry Ml-chalski (Mike Whalen kick) Whalen 19 FG NU Rob Uhlman 70 pan from Gregg Prebles (Hart kick) Whalen 37 FG NU-Brian Snow 44 FG Chris Sexton 3 run (Whalen kick) NU Lazaro Mltjans 55 Interception return (Hart kick) Whalen 26 FG Attendance 3240. LEHIGH NU First downs 29 '12 Rushes-yards 59-325 30-62 Passing yards 236 195 Return yards 69 240 Passes 21-36-2 14-26-1 Punts 2-70 6-204 Fumbles-tost 5-3 2-2 Penalties-yards 5-30 1-5 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Att. Yds.

Avg. LG Sexton. 14 105 7.5 17 EdGodbott.L 16 113 7.1 37 Clint Mitchell, 12 43 3 6 11 Ed Tulskie. 3 35 11.7 17 Passing Com. Att.

Yds. TD Int. Michalskl. 21 36 236 1 2 Prebles, NU 14 25 195 1 1 Receiving No. Yds.

TD Ryan, 5 68 1 Uhlman, NU 3 83 1 OH, 27-0 The clincher, which came at 1 1 :32. was Whalen's third of the day. as Northeastern repeatedly turned back the visitors' touchdown bids. The Engineers lived up to all of their advance billing statistically. Quarter-" at Ntefcmon Field Blsrt-5) 7 14 3 3- 27 0 0 0 0-0 Bucknell (4-6) John Feeney, BU 10 47 4.7 15 Steve Zenda.

BUCK 8 39 4 9 15 R. Graham, BU 7 27 3.9 6 Passing Com. Att. Yds. TO Int.

Arison, BU 5 11 62 0 0 Ed Hughes, BUCK 5 13 33 0 2 Receiving No. Yds. TD Palazola. BU 4 47 0 Craig Stinson. BU 2 33 0 Jacques Peay.

BUCK 2 21 0 BU BUCK First downs 26 Rushes-yards 69-338 29-67 Passing yards 62 56 Return yards 56 114 Passes 5-11-0 6-18-2 Punts Fumbles-lost 0-0 3-2 Penalties-yards 8-75 4-36 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Alt. Yds. Avg. LG Drew, BU 38 212 5.6 37 fU Gregg Drew 1 run (Jeff Pelin kidl) BP Ed Arison 1 run (Pelin kick) 8U Marc Palazola 6 run (Pelin kick), BU Pelin 27 FG BU Pelin 36 FG Attendance 3214. November 15 "I SA "system (U GEllUllFrl DO F.sy Ks.T.Ksnt tia.

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