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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 62

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
62
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

62 THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE OCTOBER 13. 1985 Steinberg Core 2047 1 1 111 1 111 VGW V' A'; ww- t2JL i Bv Joe Concannon Globe Staff ITHACA. N.Y. As the Harvard players huddled around holder Bill Koehler, Rob Steinberg stood off by himself yesterday on the artificial turf of Cornell's Schoellkopf Field contemplating the forthcoming field-goal attempt. "What I was actually thinking about was the top 10 record charts and how could the Bee Gees be a No.

1 IVY LEAGUE Conf. All W-L-T W-L-T 3-0-0 3-1-0 group, said Steinberg. When his mind drifted back to the football game that was hanging in the balance on this frigid afternoon, the relaxed Steinberg kicked a 27-yard field goal with nine seconds remaining in a bizarre but entertaining game to lift Penn Harvard Yale Princeton Brown Cornell Columbia 2-0-0 1-0-0 2-1-0 1-2-0 Dartmouth 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-3-0 r-: hf i is sacked by Brown linebacker Jeff Watts in first half of yesterday's upi photo Gain of 1. White rolled left and went out of bounds. Loss of 3.

Joe Pusateri went over right tackle for a gain of 7 to the 10. The Big Red called time out. Steinberg came on the field and thought of the Bee Gees. "Now I get dubbed a flake," Steinberg suggested. No way.

"You can't win for losing," said Cornell coach Maxie Baughan. who has found the three-year transition from the National Football League to the Ivies a trying one. "We just have to keep from giving up points. I'm tired of losing. I'd like to be able to celebrate a little bit." The Crimson moved to the 3 on their first possession but failed to produce any points.

On possession, three tries from inside the 2 and Steinberg booted a 20-yard field a touchdown to give our offense a Harvard coach Joe Restic. "I always points. Look how big the three the end." into a 10-3 lead on barefooted kicker 28-yard field goal at 6:52 of the third Cecil Cox had come up with the interceptions in the quarter at the fumbled it after running it out to the Red turned it into three points. was 15 of 23 for 179 yards in the 1 1 for 122 in the second half. He directed 72-yard drive and carried It the final create a 10-10 tie at 12:17.

Cox then pass at the 31 and returned it to George Sorbrera's 1-yard run for a 17-10 later. senior from Burlington, who 145 yards, brought the Big Red back the 15,300 fans when he led 400-meter Todd Pressley past the Crimson's a 33-yard pass to tie the game at 17 fourth quarter. Re-enter White, Santiago and say hello to the Bee Gees. the Crimson to a 20-17 win and keep their record unblemished in two Ivy League games. The winless Big Red had pulled out all the stops in this one, but it was not to be.

Punter Erik Bernstein kept a drive alive by faking on fourth and 6 and throwing to tight end Stuart Mitchell for a first down. Fullback John Tagliaferri completed the drive with a throwback to quarterback Shawn Maguire for a-7-3 halftime lead. The Crimson began its drive to the winning field gOal on the Cornell 42 after a punt rush had forced Bernstein to kick out of the end zone with 0:52 to go. The play that set it up was a first-down threaded-needle pass from Brian White to the breaking Rob Santiago and a first down at the 15. "We were in a triple slot right," said White, who was sacked four times by a sturdy Big Red defense.

"We forced them to go man to man with a linebacker on Robert. He's the fastest man in the league. He's going to get by him. They're a great defensive team, but they're searching for wins." The sequence: a Santiago sweep out of bounds. Harvard, 20-17 Princeton, 31-0 Penn quarterback Matt Varava game in Philadelphia.

Colgate By Jack Craig Globe Staff HANOVER, N.H. Overhead and behind Memorial Field yesterday, the red and gold leaves in the trees were beautiful to behold. And at ground level, the 9,434 fans in attendance saw Colgate manhandle Dartmouth in a manner that also was something to behold. The final score, 54-28, is deceiving. Colgate led, 41-0, after the first 32 minutes, gaining 433 yards in the first half.

In all, the Red Raiders totaled 721 yards, despite using a sprinkling of substitutes in the second half. Colgate scored touchdowns six of the first seven times it touched the ball. The other possession saw a Colgate runner fumble as he was breaking free at the Dartmouth 10. In a game full of offensive stars for Colgate, Holyoke sophomore Ken Gamble shone brightest. He gained 173 yards in the first half before sitting out most of the second half.

"That newspaper article sure inspired Henry," Colgate coach Fred Dunlap said, referring to a quote attributed to Dartmouth coach Joe Yukica that suggested it was premature to compare Gamble with Holy Cross' Gill Fenerty. Gamble ran around and over hapless Dartmouth tacklers, his cruises, finest effort a 91 -yard second-quarter touchdown run that began after he popped out from a sea of green Dartmouth jerseys. It was the longest run from scrimmage in Colgate history, topping a 90-yarder by Marv Hubbard. But it was not the longest play yesterday for Colgate. That honor belonged to Barry Chubb, who returned a kickoff 95 yards for a fourth-quarter touchdown.

"We played extremely well," said Dunlap in a classic understatement. Colgate quarterback Tom Burgess drew the most postgame praise from Yukica. "We just couldn't stop him on passes or the bootleg. Everything he did worked for him," said the Dartmouth coach. Burgess completed 15 of 21 passes, most of them to wide-open receivers, including three for touchdowns.

He also ran for 95 yards and one touchdown. Yukica found a silver lining, however, namely junior quarterback David Gabianeili. Starting his first game in place of the injured Brian Stretch, Gabianeili completed 20 of 36 for 239 yards and two touchdowns. "He kept finding secondary receivers. He showed a lot of poise when we were far behind," Yukica said.

What went wrong for Dart 3-1-0 2-1-0 2-2-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 0-4-0 0-4-0 Columbia 0 0 0 00 Princeton 7 17 7 0-31 Pri Climmons 5 run (Goodwin kick) Pri FG Goodwin 29 Prl Behrman 3 pass from Butler (Goodwin kick) Prl Fitchett 3 run (Goodwin kick) Prl Harvey 10 Interception return (Goodwin kick) A 7,080 Col Prl 16 43-138 180 38 18-30-0 9-35 2-1 11-100 First downs 5 Rushes-yards 35-99 Passing yards 52 Ruturn yards 3 Passes 6-20-3 Punts 7-35 Fumbles-lost 4-2 Penalties-yards 6-65 Possession 25:0134:59 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Columbia, Savlnl 10-53, Chlrlco 11-29, Gonzalez 4-3, Putelo 1-0, Santos 9-minus 25. Princeton, Climmons 10-39, Fitchett 8-33, Santlilo 4-21, Foster 2-13, Butler 1-8, Magoline 1-2, Castro 1-1, Farina 1-1, School 3-0. PASSING Columbia, Santos 5-13-2-38, von Schoenermarck 1-5-1-14, Putelo 0-2-0-0. Princeton, Butler 14-22-0-139, Hammond 4-8-0-41. RECEIVING Columbia, Greene 2-23, Hill 2-19, Leone 1-7, Milam 1-3.

Princeton, Foster 4-48, Behrman 4-40, Climmons 3-44, Urquhart 3-32, Ratliff 1-10, Magoline 1-3, Papa 1-7, Fitchett 1-mlnus 4. 'i i i rornainrn inn win of the game their next came up empty goal. "We went for spurt," said want to get some points were at Cornell moved Tom Aug's quarter. Harvard's first of his two goal line, but he 12 and the Big White, who game, was 8 of a 12-play, yard to picked off a Maguire the 4 to set up lead just 1:31 Maguire, a was 12 of 29 for and warmed up track man Ken Tarczy on 2:01 into the and Steinberg ivy leagui mutmis? at Ithaca, N.Y. Harvard (3-1) 3 0 14 3 20 Cornell (0-4) 0 7 3 7 17 FG Rob Steinberg 20 Shawn Maguire 4 pass from John Tagliaferri (Tom Aug kick) C-FGAug28 Brian White 1 run (Steinberg kick) George Sorbara 1 run Steinberg kick) Pressley 33 pass from Maguire (Aug kick) FG Steinberg 27 Attendance 16.300 Harvard Cornell First downs 21 15 Rushes-yards 55-130 37-92 Passing yards 179 160 Return yards 55 5 Passes 15-23-0 14-31-3 Punts 5-40 Fumbles-lost 2-2 1-0 Penalties-yards 8-68 4-36 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Att.

Yds. Tagliaferri, 23 81 Robert Santiago, 16 33 Joe Pusateri, 9 26 Avg. 7.5 3.4 29 1.3 LG White, 17 21 Patting Com. Att. Yds.

White, 15 23 179 Maguire, 17 29 145 TD 0 0 Int. 0 3 Receiving No. Yds. Sorbara, 6 63 Rufus Jones. 4 49 Lamont Greer, 3 48 Tagliaferri, 3 26 mL irn i i ii ii ii "i 1 ii mi "Tim i TD 0 0 0 0 TT-TTT-r----irTi fur nnr" Hue--- "I thought we would play tougher on defense," said Yukica.

There was a consistent effort of nine-play drives by the Colgate of-' fense in the first half before every- one stopped paying attention. After receiving the opening kickoff, the Red Raiders went 84 yards in nine plays to score. Next time they traveled 71 yards in nine plays, then 81 yards in nine plays. Gamble's record run occurred on the next possession and Colgate signed off at the half 35-0' after traveling 69 yards in 11 plays. Dartmouth gamely gambled and lost on its first series of the second half with a fourth and 1 from its own 25.

Colgate scored five plays later, Burgess flipping 3 yards to tight end Scott Whyatt in the end zone to make it 41-0. Gabianeili then marched Dartmouth 75 yards in 10 plays for its first touchdown, Tom Stephens going the final 12 yards up the middle 6:50 into the third period. The Big Green would score three more times against Colgate subs. Colgate was on the Darmouth 5 when the game ended, halting a touchdown bid that would have produced the Red Raiders' highest output since a 1941 win over St. Lawrence.

For ease in scoring, though, yesterday must have established a record. winless PENN 17. BROWN 14 Ray Saunders kicked a 27-yard field goal with two seconds remaining to give Penn a dramatic 17-14 victory over Brown in Philadelphia. Penn took the ball at its 23 with 2:06 left and drove to Brown's 10 to set up Saunders' winning kick. In the decisive drive, Chris Flynn ran 13 yards to the Brown 47 on third-and-10, quarterback Jim Crocicchia completed three straight passes to the 18, and Flynn's 8-yard run put the ball at the 10.

Brown took a 7-0 lead early in the second quarter on Jamie Pot-kul's 2-yard run to complete a nine-play, 45-yard drive. Penn evened it when Crocicchia threw a 7-yard TD pass to Ken Saunders in the second quarter. Brown made it 14-7 in the third quarter when Steve Kettel-berger hit 5 of 6 passes for 51 yards, then took it the final yard himself. Flynn's 47-yard kickoff return set up a six-play drive for Penn's second touchdown, a 15-yard pass from Crocicchia to Brian Moyer with 11:44 to play. Saunders' extra point tied the score.

Penn, 17-14 Brown 7 0-14 0 10 17 Pann Brown Potkul 1 run tCn blrb 1 Penn K. Saunders 7 pass from Crocicchia (R. Saunders kick Brown Kettelberger 1 run (Ingersley kick) Penn Moyer 15 pass from Crocicchia (R. Saunders kick Penn PG R. Saunders 27 A 25,285 r-, Br0 Pnn First downs 15 19 Rushes-yards 37-85 52-183 Passing yards 151 )50 Return yards 10 35 Passes 14.21.2 u.24., Punti 7.43 M0 Fumbles-lost 2-0 5-1 Penalties-yards MB 7.42 Possession 24:45 35-15 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING Brown, Potkul 21-47, Kettelberger 11-30, Heffernan 5-8.

Penn, Comiilo 22-79, Flynn 12-90, O'Neill 8-27, Crocicchia 10-I-13). PASSING Brown, Kettelberger I4-21-2-151 Penn, Crocicchia 14-24-1-150. RECEIVING Brown, Btaby 4-55, Roth 3-34, Tur-, chick 2-28, Fielding 2-24, nllernan 1-9, Potkul 2-4 Penn, Moyer 5-54, NovoselS 3-56, K. Saundnrs 2-' 11, Scungio 1-13, Rutherford 1-7, Flynn 1-5, O'Neal, 1- ii keeps 0SV It Hanovar, N.H. Colgate (4-1) 14 21 12 Dartmouth (0-4) 0 0 14 7 -14 Gamble 16 run (Powers kick) Burgess 3 run (Powers kick) Stenglein 4 pass from Burgess (Powers kick) Gamble 91 run (Powers kick) Crowell 13 run (Powere kick) Whyatt 3 pass from Burgess (pass failed) Stephens 12 run (Saltzgaber kick) Brown 12 pass from Burgess (kick failed) Daly 7 pass from Gabianeili (Slatzgaber kick) Keare 4 pass from Gabianeili (Powers kick) Chubb 95 kickoff return (Powers kick) Duax 1 run (Saltzgaber kick) Colgate First downs 31 Rushes-yards 45-446 Passing yards 187 Return yards 180 Passes 15-21-0 Punts 1-36 Fumbles-lost 1-1 Penalties-yards 7-50 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rushing Dartmouth 30 48-188 265 123 21-37-1 0-0 3-15 Att.

Yds. Avg. LG Avg. 12.3 11.9 4.8 9.4 Gamble, 15 184 Burgess. 8 95 Torain, 17 81 Dolhon, 7 68 Patting Com.

Att. Yds. Burgess. 15 21 187 Gabianeili, 20 36 239 TD 3 3 Int. 0 0 Receiving No.

Yds. Truitt, 7 73 Brown, 4 65 Whyatt, 4 33 Michel, 3 64 TD 0 1 1 0 Worcester Area Millbury CHABOT MOTORS, INC. Route 146 N. Main Street (617) 791-6231 tionary refined security mile limited information at your We take a test minutes that the best ENJOY A Princeto Colum From Wire Services Princeton extended Columbia's winless streak to 18 games yesterday at Princeton, N.J., and the difference was a record-setting performance by Doug Butler and an unyielding Tigers defense. Butler threw his 36th career touchdown pass to break a Princeton record set 34 years ago by Heisman Trophy winner Dick Kazmaier, and the Tigers' defense held Columbia's offense without a first down for three quarters en route to a 31-0 victory over the Lions.

It was the Lions' 15th consecutive loss, and they are now 0-17-1 in their last 18 games. "Our defense stopped the true version of the running game of the Wing-T, but Butler was the difference," said Columbia coach Jim Garrett. "What a great football player. I've been in the NFL. and that guy is a pro prospect." Butler's record-setting toss came late in the opening half on a 3-yard toss to tight end Mike Behrman that gave the Tigers a 17-0 lead.

It was the first touchdown pass of the season for the senior quarterback, whose passing has been cut down this season with the new Wing-T offense put in by new coach Ron Rogerson. Princeton (2-2) did not need much offense against Columbia (0-4). The Tigers' defense picked off three passes, recovered two fumbles and on nine occasions forced the Lions to punt after Just three plays. The Tigers, who had scored Just 23 points in their first three games this season, stretched their lead to 24-0 Just 11 seconds before halftime with Craig Fitchett sweeping right end on a 3-yard touchdown run. The final Princeton score came in the third quarter on a 10-yard Interception return by safety Joe Harvey, i Universally acclaimed as one of the most beautiful automobiles ever created, the Jaguar XJ6 is a sculpture in steel.

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