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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 83

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
83
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE OCTOBER 24., 1 982 83 I Harvard breaks hex HC errs less, wins fit-cr Knt utqc tiQlfp1 whm fsfpvA RrntttfC picked off a Muldoon pass that was from the Brown lz. HP's tfrnnnH rJami orae eharn In th evnrifT quarter, and the Crusaders rambled 59 yards tnl; O.IO Kolilnrl tfriA ntnnlnit nf Plfirtst' Pmrlnrtlnn' and Muldoon. Doug Pietrick took it In from the 2 Brown fumbled again on the next series, ancf the ball was recovered by Porter on the Bruins OA xuhlrh lfH tn MpHnlr'c flplH Onal The third quarter was a lesson on how not play football, as both teams coughed the ball up' time and again. I IVY LEAGUE Conf. All W-L-T W-L-T Penn 4-0-0 5-1-0 Harvard 3-1-0 4-2-0 Dartmouth 2-1-0 2-4-0 Brown 2-2-0 3-3-0 Princeton 2-2-0 2-4-0 Yale 1-2-0 2-4-0 Columbia 1-3-0 1-5-0 Cornell 0-4-0 0-6-0 Harvard, 27-15 Harvard 4-2 10 14 3 0- 27 Princeton (2-4) 0 7 6 2- 15 Jim Villanueva 21 FG Jim Garvey 37 pats from Don Allard (Villanueva kick) Roland Warren 1 run (Cnra Price kick I Mike Granger pasa Irom Hard (Villanueva kick) Allard 10 run (VManueva kick) Brent Woods 1 run (pasa failed) Villanueva 35 FG Satety.

oal snapped out of end tone Attendance HARVARD PfUNC First downs 21 22 Pushes-yards 59-184 2318) Passing yards 231 322 Return yards 56 0 Passes 17-30-1 21-56- Punts Fumbles-lost 3 3-0 Penalues-yards 11-78 7-65 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rvshlnf Att. Yds. Avg. LG Granger. 20 90 4.5 13 Sieve Ernst.

16 60 3.3 7 Woods. 15 24 1.6 6 Mike Ernst. 7 20 2.9 9 Peeetno, Com. Att. Yds.

TO kit. Allard. 17 30 231 2 1 Woods, 21 56 322 0 6 Receiving No. Yds. TO Kevin Guthrie, 12 166 0 Garvey.

4 89 1 John O'Brien, 4 38 0 By Jo; Concannon Globe Staff PRINCETON. N.J. There was no nightmarish ending, no season interred In the Palmer Stadium mud. In a recent history in which Princeton has either beaten or tied Harvard In nearly every imaginable way and in nearly every kind of weather, everything evened out yesterday on a crisp, bright afternoon at Old Nassau. Intercepting quarterback Brent Woods six times, limiting Princeton to minus 18 yards rushing and utilizing fullback Mike Granger to get a stagnant ground game untracked and open up the play-action passing game, the Crimson left for the bus trip to Cambridge with a 27-15 victory and designs on a run at the Ivy League title.

Woods, who operates this pass-crazy Princeton offense, put the ball in the air an Ivy record 56 times, completing 21 to his own receivers. "They send everyone out." said Harvard linebacker Joe Azelby. who had two of the interceptions. "We played a lot of man coverage. That's all we did all week.

Pass, defense. You touch on the other stuff, but that was where the emphasis was." With quarterback Don Allard 1 7 of 30 passing for 231 yards and two touchdowns) starting for the first time since Incurring a shoulder in-Jury late in the first half of the Cornell game Oct. 9, the Crimson's offensive plan was to send Granger (20 carries. 90 yards) up the middle and throw off it. They did.

The flex is back in the Multiflex. The first Harvard series was the tipoff. Granger carried the first five times the Crimson had the ball. Then Allard faked him into the line and threw 36 yards to tight end Pete Ceko for a first down at the 22. The Crimson settled for a 21 -yard field goal from Jim Villanueva and a 3-0 lead at 5:29 of the first quarter.

Play it again. Don. He did. After working the inside, he sent Granger into the line, kept It and- lofted a 37-yard scoring heave to wingback Jim Garvey. Harvard 10.

Princeton 0. But the Tigers came back on an 8-play 73-yard drive (with Woods completing three for 70 yards) and scored on a 1-yard plunge by Roland Warren 0:36 into the second quarter. Before the quarter was over, Allard rolled left and threw right for a 5-yard score to Granger and Allard ran 10 yards (1 1 :40) to lift the Crimson to a 24-7 lead at Intermission. "I've got to string it out until it looks free." said Allard of the off-balance toss to Granger. On his run, he simply cut back against the flow and showed why he's a must if Harvard is to remain a viable Ivy contender.

The second half was the Stop Woods show. He came out throwing, and the Tigers cut the deficit to 24-13 when Woods took it In from 1 yard (Azelby swatted aside a two-point conversion bid). Villanueva kicked a 33-yard field goal after Chris Myers returned his second Interception 23 yards for a 27-13 lead. Villanueva took ar intentional safety on a punting situation from his end zone to account for the final two Princeton points. "We had to take the ball away from them and control it," said Harvard coach Joe Restlc, whose four-year (0-2-2) drought against Princeton ended emphatically.

YOUTH SPORTS CONFERENCE AND ICUMASS FOOTBALL (reserved seat ticket) It. (-7. 1982 fcaeeraL MA Prssentatiem coeetiingadinimtra-avt aspects of youth spora programs. Cd Seam PreMtleei AtietUtet 413IJ56-S6M lookup II FUN KARTS from 39800 By Bob Monahan Globe Staff PROVIDENCE Quarterbacks, mistakes and big defensive plays were the dominant factors yesterday as Holy Cross ran its record to 6-1 by defeating Brown, 17-6. before 15.100 at Brown Stadium in a game that was far from a classic.

Holy Cross quarterback Pete Muldoon returned to the starting lineup- after suffering a hip pointer two weeks ago and performed well. The Crusader standout on offense was Andy Cli-vio, who carried 24 times for 147 yards, his high for the season. Brown's versatile quarterback, Joe Potter, had his bell rung pretty good on a first-quarter sweep and was forced out of action with a head injury. Prior to that. Potter directed a 13-play.

79-yard scoring drive. The Holy Cross defense was razor sharp and took advantage of Brown's mistakes, especially in the first half when: a fumble recovery by Mike Dooley led to a touchdown, defensive end Steve Raquet blocked a Brown extra-point attempt, and Rob Porter's recovery of a fumbled Crusader punt on the Brown 24 led to a 37-yard field goal by Tony Melink. Holy Cross also made its share of mistakes, turning the ball over three times on the Brown 3-. 12- and 7-yard lines. And the Crusaders were stopped on the Bruin 8 in the fourth quarter, which led one onlooker to say, "The highlight of this game was its conclusion." It was a sloppy game indeed.

Brown lost four of five fumbles and was intercepted twice; HC lost three fumbles and was Intercepted once. And don't think Brown coach John Anderson isn't concerned about his offense. Brown, ran the ball 23 times for 26 yards and gained 173 passing. HC ran the ball 69 times for 280 yards and picked up 1 17 passing. In the first quarter, Dooley recovered a Brown fumble of the opening kickoff on the Bruin 33.

Cllvio ripped off runs of 14." 10 and 7 yards before Mark Covington bulled over from the 2 at 1:55. Brown took the kickoff and, behind drove 79 yards in 13 plays. The touchdown was' scored by Bill Barrett, from 1 yard out. Potter was injured on the play before the score. The point after attempt was blocked by Raquet.

HC went from its 20 to the Brown 1 1 late in SOLOMON SKI BOOTS FIT SO WELL THAT WE GUARANTEE THE FIT OR WE WILL EXCHANGE THEM. ONLY THE SKI HAUS OFFERS "NO HASSLE EXPERT BOOT FITTING." COME SEE BOSTON'S BEST SELECTION. OKI HAUS RT. 28, BALE N.H. 603-893-4820 WILMINGTON RT.

129 Off RT. 93 658-9421 "SIX MONTHS OF TRAINING AT COMPUTER LEARNING CENTER CAN GIVE YOU A CAREER WITH A FUTURE." Rubin, Penn trip Yale 1 ivr Penn, 27-U at Philadelphia Yale (2-4) 0 7 0 7- 14 Penn(5-1) 3 01014- 27 Dave Shulman 34 FG Roger Javerw 5 pass from Joe Du fek, (Bill Moore kick) Shulman 46 FG Steve Rubin 5 run (Shulman kick) Rut 7 run (Shulman kick) Paul Andrie 2 run (Moore kick) Sieve Flacco 63 run (Shulman kick) Attendance 32,175. YALE PENN First downs 27 16 Rushes-yards 57-163 37-232 Passing yards 232 131 Return yards 46 28 Passes 20-33-3 7-22-1 Punts Fumbles-lost 2-2 0-0 Penalties-yards 6-55 8-75 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Att. Yds. Avg.

LG Flacco, 7 129 18.3 13 Andee. 106 3.7 11 Rubin. 13 68 5.2 12 Reville.Y 10 42 4.2 11 Passing Com. Att. Yds.

TO Int. Oulek. 20 33 232 1 3 Hall.P 8 21 116 0 1 Flacco, 1 1 15 0 0 Receiving No. Yds. TD Hall.

2 71 0 Andrie 4 64 0 Crews. 6 52 0 Javens 3 29 1 But, according to Carmen Cozza, coach of defending league co-champion Yale, "turnovers killed us." Dufek was intercepted three times (twice by Tim Chambers), and two Yale fumbles led to Quaker scores. Dufek's 5-yard TD pass to a diving Roger Javens put Yale up. 7-3, at halftime. but the lead did not last long.

In the third period, Penn's Junior kicker Dave Shulman connected with the second of his two field goals, a career-high 48-yarder, and then Rubin took over. Dufek rallied Yale for another drive, with Andrie bulling over from the 2, but Steve Flac-co's 83-yard Jaunt effectively locked the door on the resurgent Eli. "Our running game has gotten better and better," said Rubin, who scampered for 68 yards to game-leader Flacco's 129. "You could see It today." "If you could have been with us the last few months, you could see how we've grown together," Rubin added. By Mike O'Connell Special to The Globe PHILADELPHIA Steve Rubin of Winthrop.

broke open a tight defensive game with two second-half touchdowns as Pennsylvania escaped with a 27-14 victory over Yale yesterday before an appreciative homecoming crowd at Franklin Field. Rubin, a senior halfback, ran the ball in from 5 and 7 yards out within a five-minute span as Penn Jumped to a 20-7 lead and held on to remain the only unbeaten team in the Ivy League. "Every win's a big win," insisted coach Jerry Berndt, whose Penn team continues to impress critics in this, its renaissance season. Yale tailback Paul Andrie (106 yards) notched his fourth consecutive 100-plus effort, quarterback Joe Dufek (20 for 33. 232 yards) picked apart the Penn secondary.

Yale posted a 27-16 advantage In first downs. INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing 'Alt. Yds. Avg. LQ Clivio, HC 24 147 6.1 15 Muldoon, HC 18 46 2.6 17 Covington, HC 11 35 3.2 10 Pietrick, HC 8 30 3.8 8 Fusing Com.

Att. Yds. TD bit. Muldoon. HC 9 17 117 0 1 Rosso.

10 23 117 0 2 Potter, 4 6 56 0 0 Receiving No. Yds. TD Farnham, 54 0 Redding, HC 5 52 0 Flutie. 36 0 Schroder, HC 1 33 0 HC17-6 at Providence Holy Cross (6-1) 7 10 0 0- 17 Brown (3-3) 8 0 0 0 6 HC Covington 2 run (Melink kick) Barrett 1 run (kick failed) -HC Pietrick 2 rur) (Melink kick) HC Melink 37 FG Attendance HC BROWN First downs 24 9 Rushing yards 280 28 Passing, yards 117 173 Return yards 55 0 Passes 8-17-1 14-28-2 Punts Fumbles-lost 3-3 5-4 Penalties-yards 7-81 6-31 Computer 5 Middlesex Ave. bomervuie, Mass.

02145 fffff (617)776-3500 Dartmouth survives scare mwmwMmmwmmsm mm Dart. 1413 at Ithaca, N.Y. Dartmouth (2-4) .0 0 7 7- 14 Cornell (0-61 7 0 0 6- 13 Marek Miller 1 run (Bid Goldy kick) Richard Weissman 2 run (Geoff Andrews kick) David Brown 9 pass from Michael Caraviello (Goldy kick) Mike Huyghue 10 pass from Jefl Hammond (pass failed) DART. CORN. First downs 21 12 Rushes-yards 52-203 43-181 Passing yards 139 66 Passes 106 55 Punts 5-131 6-216 Fumbles-lost 1-0 1-0 Penallies-yards 6-39 6-67 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Att.

Yds. Avg. LG Weissman. 156 4.9 27 Baker. .16 86 5.4 12 Spiegelman, 12 35 2.9 8 Harmon, 10 24 2.4 12 Passing Com.

Att. Yds TD Int. Caraviello, 0 10 19 129 1 2 Hammond. 5 5 45 1 0 Levine. 4 8 21 0 0 Stafford, 0 1 3 10 0 1 Receiving No.

Yds. TD Daly. 5 64 0 Waker.C 5 38 0 llrown. 2 27 1 Weissman, 2 19 0 By Chris Cryan Special to The Globe ITHACA. N.Y.

Dartmouth and Cornell had played 59:48 yesterday, but the game was still one play from being decided. Trailing by a point after scoring a touchdown with 12 seconds left, Cornell set its sights on a game-winning two-point conversion. When a flanker reverse broke down, it left ball carrier Tony Baker 5 yards from the goal line and in the arms of two Dartmouth defenders, who.enthusiastically preserved a 14-13 victory for the Big Green. "We've run that play hundreds of times in practice and I've never seen them miss the han-doff," dejected Cornell coach Bob Blackman said. "But right then, in a critical situation, we blew it." With just 50 seconds left in the game, it looked as if the game was already In the books as a 14-6 Dartmouth victory.

But when Paul Royer broke past Dartmouth defenders to block a Rich Bayless punt, things became more Interesting. Royer made one futile attempt to scoop the ball up and settle things himself, then fell on the ball at the Dartmouth 25-yard line. After moving the-ball to the 10, quarterback Jeff Hammond hit split end Mike Huyghue In the end zone and set the stage for the conversion attempt. Hammond had been alternating with Ron Levine at quarterback for the Red. Levine led Cornell to the Qrst touchdown of the game when he directed a 6-play, 47-yard drive early in the first quarter.

The touchdown pass that broke a 7:7 deadlock midway through the fourth quarter was a precision throw by reserve quarterback Mike Caraviello (10 of 19, 129 yards) between Red defenders that found tight end David Brown cutting across the end zone. Rich Weissman scored the first Green TD from 2 yards out. I You'll never have to change your tires year round. High traction rubber remains flexible at low temperatures while special design combines the best of snow and highway tires. i P15580R12 I Blackwall Plus 1.39 F.E.T.

Bucknell, 42-25 Bucknell 7 7 21 7-42 Columbia 7 10 0 1-25 AAcHale 1 run (Lovric kick) Durkin 8 run (Yuknus kick) fG Lovric 2 Locey 13 run (Yuknus kick) Reggio 39 pass from Witkowski (Lovric kick) Stinson 76 pass from Locey (Yuknus kick) Hall 2 run (Yuknus kick) HaH 12 run (Yuknus kick) Lewis 11 pass from from Witkowski (Reggio pass from Witkowski) Ha 6 run (Yuknus kick) Buck Col First downs 26 25 Rushes-yards 49-264 33-103 Passing yards 207 406 Hall ignites Bucknell Associated Press NEW YORK Fullback Marshall Hall scored three second-half touchdowns, leading Bucknell (3-3) to a 42-25 victory over Columbia yesterday despite a record-setting passing performance by the Lions' John Witkowski. Hall scored twice, on runs of 2 and 12 yards, as Bucknell erupted for 21 third-quarter points. Witkowski completed 35 of 56 passes for 406 yards and threw for two touchdowns, setting Columbia records for completions, attempts and total yardage in a game. WHITEWALL SIZE I REPLACES I NOW II SIZE I REPLACES I NOW" P16580R13 AR78-13 47.95 P20575R15 FR78-15 62.00 P18580R13 CR78-13 52.95 P21575R15 GR78-15 66.90 P19575R14 DER78-14 59.10 P22575R15 HR78-15 68.95 P20575R14 FR78-14 I 61.05 ll P23575R15I LR78-15 73.95 Plus 1.39 to fi.93 F.E.T. 1 BENCHMARK POLY METRIC STEEL RADIAL 1 WINTER WONT WAIT SAVE at Sears Sears All weather tread design keeps you going.

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