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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 100

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
100
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

100 The ion Sunday Globe September 23. 1984 WW Harvard brings down the house, 35-21 1 By John Powers Namrfl 1 7 D-M Cmia 1 1 Har Santiago 5 ru (Sternberg Her Abbott pais from Whrte (Stwiterg kick Col Mitchell I pess from Santo (Ftck kick Har FG Steerg 30 Col Upperco pass from Santos (Ftck kick) Har Santiago 4 ru (Stain-berg kk Col Mitcnel 1 ryn (Feck kick) Har FG Steinberg II Har WifcinsoB 4S Interception return (Vignali past from White) A-KWOO Har CM 11 17 First downs Crimson with a 65-yard scoring pass from Santos to tight end Dan Up-perco on their first play of the second half, and parlayed an interception and a 27-yard pass from Santos to Upperco into, a third touchdown, a Mitchell plunge. But the most important touchdown was the one the Lions didn't get. With 18 seconds left in the half and the score 17-7. Columbia had the ball on the Crimson 4.

a first down and time out. "Don't run the ball." coach Bob Naso told Santos. "Throw it away if you have to." But Santos, rolling left, saw daylight and went for it. Wilkinson stopped him at the 1 and the Lions watched the clock run out on them. a score the secosd time he touched the ball and finished with 204 yards and two touchdowns as the Crimson bopped Columbia for the sixth straight year, 35-21.

at sunny Baker Field. New season, new stadium, same old West Side story. Not that it was easy. With eight minutes to play, the Lions were still within three With 3:30 left, they had the ball on their 29 with a decent chance to Not until linebacker Brent Wilkinson picked off a tipped pass and ran 45 yards for the clincher did Harvard breathe deeply. "Hot day, in more ways than one." said coach Joe Restic, who is now 13-1 against these people.

"I'm just happy to get out of here with a Rushes-yaras Passing yards 30 117 Return yards 7 Passes 41 14-J5-J Sacks By Punts- IB win. Columbia will win some games and scramble the league. You wait and see." The Crimson came here as worried nine-point favorites. Eight de-lenders who started last year's Yale game were gone, including both ends and both -linebackers. And the offense had no proven receivers, a new quarterback in Groveland's Brian White and two fullbacks hurt.

So Restic moved Santiago, a junior from San Antonio, over from wingback and set him free behind the Crimson's big front line. "The holes were so huge," Santiago marveled, "that every time I got the ball. 1 was looking at the secondary." Only Vernon Struck, who slipped and spun for 233 yards in 33 carries at Princeton In 1937. had ever had a better day in a Crimson jersey. Santiago carried only 24 times, but picked up 1 1 yards or more on six of them.

"Robert gives you something that big fullbacks don't give you," Restic said. "He breaks the long ball." The first time Santiago turned the corner and looked down the sideline, he was gone. When White hit tight endcaptain Steve Abbott for a 6-yard touchdown on the last play of the quarter. Harvard was up, 14-0. and away cleanly.

Or so it seemed. But with transformed safety Henry Santos directing the attack, the Lions drove 80 yards for one touchdown (an 8-yard pass from Santos to tailback Darryl Mitchell), stung the Globe Staff NEW YORK Ed Koch, who is mayor down here, had promised the faithful that Columbia would "beat the hell out of the visitors. "We did it when the stands were wooden," he crowed, shortly before kickoff yesterday, "imagine what we can do now." The Hons had their biggest football crowd (10.500) in 13 years filling as much of their new concrete stands as were in place. They had their usual high hopes and a team with a bunch of starters back. "We didn't want to give them any reason." said Harvard fullback Robert Santiago, "to stay as excited as they were." So Santiago sprinted 65 yards for INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Harvard.

Santiago 24-200, Vignai 15-69. White 13-53. Columbia, Mitcnel 10-77. PASSING Harvard, White 4-4-1-30. Columbia, Santos 12-1-)-141, Murphy 4-4-1-S6.

RECEIVING Harvard, Santiago 2-11, Sorbara 1-13. Abbott 4. Columbia. Upperco 4-124, Mitch-el 5-43, Francesconi 2-21. Penn pastes Dartmouth Brown flusters Yale Newcomer Bigby a returning hero with.

2 TDs Quakers visit Green with a 55-24 decimation Brown, 27-14 at at Providence Brown (1-0) 7 7 013 27 Yale (0-1) 0 0 0 14 14 Steve Hefternan 2 run (Chris Ingerslev kick) Keiron Bigby 91 interception return (Ingerslev kick) Mike Cyr 3 run (Bin Moore Kick) Steve Kettlebergar 8 run (kick railed) Bigby 101 interception return (Ingerslev kick) Tim O'Shea 10 pass from Cyr (Moore kick) Attendance 12,781 YALE BROWN "And I love to play well back here in New Eng 22 First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards 29-146 24-43 200 151 128 222 41-23-4 21-12-1 Punts 4-35 6-31 Fumbles-lost 3-1 2-1 Penalties-yards 5-46 8-61 the ball with 40:27 possession time, more than twice the 19:33 Brown had control. Brown hardly moved the ball until the final period when Yale had narrowed the Bruins' lead to 14-7. It was then Brown put together an 80-yard drive that ate up 6:38 of the clock and ended with Steve Kettelberger taking it in -from the 6 for a 20-7 spread. "That was a critical drive for them," said Cozza. His Elis came right back, only to have Bigby pick off a Mike Cyr pass in the end zone and outrun everyone the length of the field.

It was a crucial interception because Yale scored again with only 15 seconds left to play when Cyr put one past Bigby for a change and into the arms of senior split end Tim O'Shea for a TD play covering 10 yards. Bigby's decisive interception set a Brown record (best before was 99 yards in 1929) and came after he had made a 91-yarder with 12 seconds left to play in the first half. His first runback, although 10 yards shorter, was the more spectacular. Alter grabbing a Mike Curtin pass, he headed up the right sideline to the Yale 45. Curtin made a grab for his arm, and Bigby cut back inside.

But as he did he suddenly dropped the ball. In true basketball fashion, he scooped the ball up again on the run and continued to the end zone. "The coach had told us just not to get beat deep," said Bigby. "That's all I was trying to do, but I guess I was in the right place at the right time." By Ernie Roberts Special To The Globe HANOVER. N.H.

On a calm, bluebird day for football, the Pennsylvania football machine sputtered briefly, then destroyed Dartmouth, 55-24, here yesterday. Not in 100 years or since Yale decimated the Green, 113-0, in 1884 has any visiting eleven scored as many points on Dartmouth. "For two trips in a row (a 2 1-0 Penn victory in 1982 and yesterday), my guys have given me nice homecoming presents," grinned Jerry Berndt, architect of the rebuilt Penn program and a former assistant at Dartmouth. Believe it or not, this game was closer than the score indicates, at least for the first 25 minutes. Medford's Mike Caraviello saw his first two passes intercepted, leading to a 14-0 Penn lead.

But then the spirited son of the former Medford football coach completed eight aerials in succession while bringing the Green back to a 17-14 advantage early in the second Mike Viccora (6 catches for 94 yards) was Caraviello's favorite target on these three drives, which were culminated by captain Rick Weissman's 3-yard plunge, Caraviello's 1-yard sneak and Craig Saltzgaber's 38-yard field goal. But with the momentum apparently in the Green's corner, sub Penn fullback Stan Koss of North Dighton, made a crucial 39-yard gain to the Dartmouth 23 on first down. "It was just a fullback counter against their flowing defense but it got me there," said Koss. By Barry Cadigan Globe Staff PROVIDENCE New Brown coach John Rosenberg held secret practices this week rather than give away his offensive strategy. And although the Bruins beat Yale here yesterday.

27-14. Brown's offense is still pretty much a question mark. That's because Brown could only move the ball on one sustained drive all afternoon, and depended instead upon a former basketball player named Keiron Bigby. a free safety playing his first college football game, for 14 points. Bigby, a sophomore from Central Islip, N.Y., who quarterbacked his high school football team but came to Brown to play basketball, killed the Elis with three interceptions, two of which he returned 91 and a school-record 101 yards for scores.

The 5-foot-ll, 175-pounder failed to get as" much basketball playing time as he expected last year so decided upon football instead. Bigby's decision made a hero out of the secretive Rosenberg and left verteran Yale coach Carmen Cozza shaking his head in dismay. "We outgained them, out-everythinged them." said Cozza. "But we just kept throwing to the wrong guy. We played hard and deserved a better fate.

Both of our quarterbacks just threw to the wrong-colored jersey. The kid (Bigby) made us look bad." Yale had 329 total yards to 194 for Brown, 22 first downs to Brown's 9, and 200 yards in the air to the Bruins' 151. Yale also controlled land." That set up John McGeehan's 12-yard scoring pass to split end Warren Buehler In the right corner. And the Quakers then proceeded to roll off 34 unanswered points for a 48-17 lead before Dartmouth could regroup. "I wasn't really concerned when Dartmouth went ahead because I knew we could control the game." said McGeehan (14 of 21 for 203 yards and three touchdowns).

"Our offensive line was doing the job and we had only stopped ourselves up to that point." He added another TD pass (5 yards to Lai Heneghan) 56 seconds after Buehler's go-ahead TD and in the second half he orchestrated scoring drives of 62 and 88 yards, plus field goals of 31 and 36 yards by Tom Murphy. Weissman got his second TD midway through the fourth quarter befor -ub Steve Oleksyzyk ended this modern reco.d-setting scoring spree for the Quakers. "The two keys to our victory were that after Darmouth took that lead, we controlled the scrimmage line on offense and our defense began to put some pressure on Caraviello, who is an outstanding athlete," said Berndt. "That's true," added Dartmouth coach Joe Yukica. "We didn't have quite enough running game to keep them off Mike." Penn sophomore tailback Rich Comizo was the game's leading rusher (105 yards in 15 carries) while workhorse Weissman salvaged 44 in 12 carries for the Green.

Penn, 55-24 at Hanover, N.H. Penn (1-0) 14 1417 10 55 Dartmouth (0-1) 7 10 0 7 24 Mike O'Neill 2 run (Tom Murphy kick) Lai Heneghan 7 pass from John McGeehan (Murphy kick) Rick Weissman 2 run (Craig Saitzgaber kick) Mike Caraviello 1 run (Saitzgaber kick) Saitzgaber 38 FG Warren Buehler 12 pass from McGeehan (Murphy kick) Heneghan 5 pass McGeehan (Murphy kick) O'Neill 1 run (Murphy kick) Rich Comizio 37 run (Murphy kick) Murphy 31 FG Murphy 36 FG Weissman 12 run (Saitzgaber kick) Steve Olekszyk 3 run (Murphy kick) Attendance 14,324 DART PENN First downs 19 18 Rushes-yards 36-53 46-335 Passing yards 259 203 Return yards 19 86 Passes 16-28-3 14-22-1 3-38 Fumbles-lost 3-2 1-0 Penalties-yards 4-30 8-73 Princeton, 17-9 OTHER EAST URI dominates Maine NOW! SPEEDY MUFFLER SAVINGS IFOR EVERYBODY. Princeton 7 0 10 0-17 Cornell 0 3 0 4-9 Prlnc Anderson 100 Interception (Minkovsky kick) Corn FG Golby 50 Prlnc Graham 59 pass from Butter (Mlskovsky kick) Princ FG Mlskovsky 22 Corn Maguire 4 run (two-point conversion pass failed) A 16,300 Prln Corn First downs 17 12 Rushes-yards 45-115 32-69 Passing yards 215 195 Return yards t45 87 Passes 29-15-2 45-18-4 Punts 4-225 8-263 Fumbles-lost 5-5 2-0 UConn, 41-14 Morgan St. 0 0 0 14 14 UConn 14 7 14 41 UCon Scott 1 run (Pulek kick) UCon McGillicuddy 28 pass from Riley (Pulek kick) UCon Scott 2 run (Pulek kick) UCon McGillicuddy 11 pass from Riley Caspar ino kick) UCon Latham 64 punt return (Casparino kick) Mor Harris 98 run (Green kick) UCon Morrison 71 run (run failed) Mor Harris 4 run (Green kick) A 12,716 Colgate, 40-35 Colgate 21 7 12 0-4O Lehigh I 7 14 14 35 Col Stenglein 9 pass from Calabria (Powers kick) Leh Benn 33 pass from Horn (Melick kick) Col Stenglein 12 pass from Calabria (Powers kick) Col Gamble 3 run (Powers kick) Leh Schreck 1 run (Melick kick) Col Calabria 1 run (Powers kick) Leh Benn 7 pass from Semler (MeHck kick) Col Stenglein 24 pass from Calabria (kick failed) Col Chubb 11 run (pass failed) Leh Laselva 4 pass from Semler (Melick kick) Leh Jeffries 9 pass from Semler (Melick kick) A 12,500 Anderson's thefts spark Princeton Doug Butler passed for 215 yards and one touchdown and Jim Anderson had a 100-yard interception return as Princeton dumped Cornell, 17-9, yesterday in Ithaca, N.Y. Princeton scored at 8:10 of the first quarter when Anderson intercepted a Shawn Maguire pass at the Cornell goal line, and raced 100 yards for the touchdown.

Anderson also squelched a Cornell threat with 2:38 remaining in the game when he intercepted another Maguire pass in the end zone. CONNECTICUT 41, MORGAN STATE 14 Sophomore Chris Riley threw two scoring strikes to Brian McGillicuddy, and fullback David Scott bulled over for two more scores to lead Connecticut to a 41-14 victory over Morgan State in Storrs, Conn. UConn, which had scored Just 10 points in two previous losses, broke out of an offensive slump, but it was the Huskies' defense that set up three first-half touchdowns. COLGATE 40, LEHIGH 35 Steve Calabria passed for 349 yards and three touchdowns to spark a record-breaking offensive performance that gave Colgate a 40-35 victory over Lehigh in Bethlehem, Pa. Calabria, who completed 23 of 33 passes and also ran for a touchdown, fired TD passes of 9, 12 and 24 yards to flanker Tom Stenglein.

Colgate rolled up a school-record 575 yards in total offense. for the game. But he had already demonstrated his poise under fire. Faced with fourth and 3 on the Maine 21 during the Rams' first offensive series, Ehrhardt stood his ground behind aggressive offensive linemen and completed an 11-yarder to Bob Donfield for a first down. Although the Rams fumbled away the ball before scoring on that series, it was apparent they would not be denied.

A holding penalty against Maine gave the Rams the ball at the Maine 32 after Rhode Island had punted. Eight plays later, Mike Sanders scored on a 4-yard sweep to the right for a 7-0 lead. A 1-yard run by Donfield in the second period after Reilly had gathered in a 40-yard pass while flying down the right sideline accounted for Rhode Island's second TD, and Ben Warner scored on a 3-yard dash through left tackle in the third period. Rhode Island, 27-0 at Orono, Maine URI (3-1) 7 14 0 6 27 Maine (0-3) 0 0. 0 0 0 URI Mike Sanders 4 run (Paul Stringfeltow kick) URI Dameon Reilly 47 pass from Tom Ehrhardt (Strlngfellow kick) URI Bob Donfield 1 pass from Ehrhardt (Strlngfellow kick) URI Ben Warner 3 run (kick failed) Attendance 8000 URI MAINE First downs 15 15 Rushes-yards 49-161 35-182 Passing yards 273 83 Return yards 11 4 Passes 14-28-0 8-29-1 Punts Fumbles-lost 2-1 3-3 Penalties-yards 8-S5 2-20 By Bob Haskell -Bangor Daily News ORONO, Maine "It was too good a day to get whitewashed," remarked a discouraged University of Maine football fan following yesterday's Yankee Conference encounter with Rhode Island.

But it was the only way to describe the effort turned in by Rhode Island quarterback Tom Ehrhardt and the rest of the Rams, who shut out the Black Bears. 27-0. Ehrhardt dazzled some 8000 fans with two touchdown passes In the first half while completing 14 of 25 attempts for 273 yards overall. URI (3-1) thus won its first conference contest the season and recorded its first shutout in 14 games (since beating Springfield, 24-0, In the final game of 1982). A Maine team that coach Ron Rogerson acknowledged "did not understand the importance of squeezing ourselves" fell to 0-3 and has now played In seven straight conference games without a win.

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