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Daily News du lieu suivant : New York, New York • 344

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Lieu:
New York, New York
Date de parution:
Page:
344
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

SUNDAY NEWS, NOVEMBER 3, 1946 IP THE VTT1 mountaineers, 19-0 WIEf MlpS Irr Jimmy Lowers Dy Jim McCuIley Army, marching through its final paces before taking on an undefeated and revengeful Notre Dame team next Saturday, ran its own undefeated string to 25 games yesterday before 23,000 at West Point's Michie Stadium. The Mountaineers from West Virginia, 33-point underdogs with the bookies, furnished the opposition for Blanchard-Davis-Foldberg Co. and went doggedly down' to "defeat, 19-0. I and sharply accomplished. Four plays from the Army one- yard stripe, where they were backed af-j ter an exchange of kicks, accomplished the second score.

a. Thrusts by Davis helped no end i to set up "both of these touchdowns. Glenn went 20 yards Baltimore, Nov. 2. Frank Leahy doesn't have the wise-cracky, happy-go-lucky personality of some coaches who are great wits and after-dinner speakers.

Frank is believed to be a sour-puss by many who are unaware of his shy, retiring nature and many generous and kindly hidden virtues. We' can't all be clowns and glib cafe society playboys for which, thank goodness. That Freeport cashier charged with embezzling $832,000 had a 32-foot cabin cruiser. Many a boat owner can sympathize with the poor guy. It seems to take almost that much to keep one of those babies running.

They are more expensive than streamlined blondes. Bobby Burton, a welterweight and father of two children, was the tenth boxing fatality of the year. Remember those New York boxing commission doctors who passed John Henry Lewis with his blind eye, and let couiKless other crippled and injured athletes get into our rings? The Harris-Dressen confirmation of our Yankee exclusive comes Tuesday. Nothing tastier than Maryland crab cakes if you patronize a restaurant that does not "stretch" them with mashed potatoes. Isn't anything on the level any more? Frank Markey and II.

L. Menken are ardent Notre Dame rooters. Rip Miller may yet wind up with Baltimore pro franchise. Dan Topping's Yankees face the Miami Seahawks at the Stadium tomorrow. We wonder just how many touchdowns better than around end to the Mountaineer's 11 on llie nisi, piay ui upcimis torinpr attack, and took a surprise pass from Tucker, heaving from behind his own goal line to start While Army's head coach, Earl P.hiik, was at EaHimore watching the Irish whip Navy, General wight 1).

Eisenhower, the U. S. Army's No. 1 man, watched the Cadets win at the Point. Andy Gustafson handled the Cadets and pavo tha general a chance to look jit the lirst team for three-quarters of the contest.

Not exactly to please the -big Loss either, the Mountaineers proved that stubborn. l'lKST STRINGERS SCORE '1 he first-line squad accounted for all three TD's, one in each of the first three periods. West Virginia stood off the 'shock troops in the fmal period. Arnold Tucker, fliiarterback iifArmy's passed for two scores an eight-yarder to lank Fuhlberg in the opening and a six-yarder to Glenn Davis late in the third period. In between, in the second session, Doc Bhmchard galloped 48 yards for a the next chive.

Davis got to his own 49 on this one, Fuson ripped the line for three, and then Blan-chard went all the way to paydirt. i Doc broke through the right side of the visitors' line, scampered to i the outside and then galloped down the sidelines untouched. WEST VIRGINIA ARMY lMole Hilts Rnv ElMtS Ilrvmit COME? TueSoaV I. K. r.

g. T. n. 1. lt.H.

ul ikowki Cori'm t.l.ll: it Chuck 'J Hoeoif DRESSEiJ. 7 Dmyib Fuson 6 0 0 10 0 0 Folilb'Tff (8 yar.l 15 of 10 Ulnucli- Army W. Virginia 0 Army tniHinruwns-pn-s from Tucker at I -IS vai'il run at of Iavis (i; yjinl from Tnrker at 13:14 of 3U Cou Ray placement ARMY W. VA ID 1.) lir-t drtwns J114 Variis gained riihui'-r (net touchdown which sept the gold-lielmeted future generals out for the intermission with a 13-0 advantage. West Virginia threatened only twice, once in the first period after recovering a lilanchard fumble at midlield and si pain late in the second session when George Freeze, a back, intercepted a Tucker aerial on Army's 1 1.

A penalty and an interception stopped the visitors the first time and Jimmy Moran, a f.ub end, drepped a fourth down pass on the goul line to nulify the second opportunity. PLENTY OF AMMUNITION The statistics were much more in favor of Army than the actual 111 Forward pasie attempted l''(rwalt passes lie 14! (NEWS futo by Hoffl Army's Hank Fnldberg outfought Devonshire on goal line to score Cadets' first touchdown on pass from Arnold Tucker. score, the Cadets running up a net rushing totl of 31(3 yards to 80 and a passing mark of 149 yards (eight successes in 20 tries.) Army knocked out 15 first downs to 10 for W. Va. This comparison isn't exactly a true indicator, however, because Army's first two touchdown thrusts w'ere so quickly the Giants Ray Flaherty's great Yrank club is? Well, there is one way to find out.

A match game for charity. -Flaherty and Owen are both great coaches but we think in a showdown our money would be on Flaherty. Max Farrington of George Washington University insists he was misquoted and that Georgetown's oxygen tank is O. K. Farrington is one of the shrewdest and best athletic directors in the country.

He can get a lot of mileage out of a small school. Garry Schumacher of the Giant front office insisting on a 8500,000 budget for new players. Garry wisely insists the money be spent intelligently. You can imagine Chuck Dressen's feelings when he asked Rickey for a restoration of a $15,000 salary cut from the original MacPhail figures, and was handed a 1.300 new automobile instead, plus a pious lecture on ''gratitude." 'inward passes mterefpted by 4 4 Yard rained run-back intercepted passi-s 40 7 rtintuiL'- average Ifntin seriiunmire -7 lntals yam an kicks n-iuinruii. (I 4 Yavd- lost t.v 'HI Referee James Inifly.

Boston Collese. I'mpm Jnme- t'ooan. Linesman- Jame Ailin-er. Hurialo. Field ivuise Cliilord Muni Joinery, t'olllmbia.

pis f'f '-3 53 jL MacPhail won't talk, but Durccher did ask for the Yrank manager job and. in the light of exposures on Rickey's attempt to hammer him down for '47, who can blame Leo? We'd rather work for MacPhail any day. El Cheapo has never given MacPhail credit for the wonderful farm system and rejuvenated park Larry left in Brooklyn. And when MacPhail had the club there were no record lists of Spring1 holdouts. If Landis were alive there'd be a big meeting this very minute among Pcgler, Durocher and all interested parties.

They have guys fighting in the Garden these Friday nights that you not only never heard of before but never will again. We once told Mike Jacobs to put his "heez-down-heez-up" Friday night soap opera scripts into the hands of pro radio players. It would be cheaper in the long run and easier on the fans' nerves. That Summer weather ruined the cluck hunting season. Joe Louis off to Honolulu this week.

Bernie Bierman may get the Chicago Rocket job in '47. New Haven, Nov. 2. Everything Yale touched turned to touchdowns here this afternoon, and the Elis cantered to m1 Dartmouth's backfield and then outfooted all pursuers to run 69 yards to payoff territory. Dartmouth scored only because Montano flipped a wild pass entirely out of the end zone as Ferguson waited expectantly there, hoping to punt out of the hole.

-2 victory over eager but inept Dartmoutn to the delight the Yale portion of the capacity crowd of 65,000 second a Of of the season. full hou Kavos iilifitiSfi! Tab Illinois as the basketball team to watch this season with the "ex-Whiz Kids," Jack Smiley, Gene Vance, Ken Menke and Andy Philip, with either Dwight Eddelman or Fred Green in the center slot. Angela Bertelli would like to remain on the Coast after the grid season with a job in one of the major studios but the Missus (a la Madame Mickey Owen) yearns for the environs of Springfield. Frank Kenny, the society brick- IV. ARTMOI'TH Menihan L.T Vimii; L.ii Alvere.

I Carey ('. S. Ynmu- KT Hanni-'au M--. S1 The victory was Yale's most over Dartmouth since lSOH, in ihe rock-em-and-sock-em era. It have I'cen increased by a or two with more breaks, but it was not cut down by any mercy on the part of the Elis.

It was such a novelty to the Yales to find a Dartmouth team they yat.t: ulen.k Sehuler Urazdau-kas iiudana TTehlik II iHinpsiiead J.vneh yurv Kirk Nadliernv Fitzera'd I ervsro. K.Ii. CulPam Huron, ll.iuvl.is 1 5 ti 7 7 ly t-T 1 nioutk Y1k ttt-: cuif at will that on as heavily as could kick and they poured it Dartmouth worimt: Safety Montaro (will pi-s from Ceiil.T out of end zone ai 1 1 '-T of 4th. Yale Tmicii-dovviw, Furse loot pl ln-e. of l-t Uoder.el; 4ii yaids.

interception of pa. of 'Ml Nadiierny 142 yard lateral pass from i-'llrse, of ad': Jenkins CI yard pa-s from Jackson, of 4lTii: For-li-on idl end run. of 4fn. t.amversion.-. ltooe, 3 i Cambridge, Nov.

2 (JP). After waiting 77 years to gain some first-hand information about Rutgers' football, Harvard did so at a heart-breaking price today before a stunned crowd of 25,000 at the Stadium. The hard-hitting Scarlet, with a terrific second half lift, belted the Crimson out of the nation's slim undefeated ranks with a 13-0 triumph. Those two teams, which go back KICKED FSOM HIS OvJfvl GOAL LIME To Ti-IE GIAWT.S i to intercollegiate football ound-i ling days, battled in fairly even I fashion during the scoreless open layer, just barged into town with the suggestion that we keep an eye on a future All-America in Notre Dame's Leon Hart, 223, 6 feet 4 inches, who snagged four important passes against Iowa. Hart is only 18.

There's that Leahy using students again. Mayor Otis Masscy of Houston writes: "Dear Mr. Powers: Houston has declared Nov. 7 as Eddie Dyer day. Eddie has requested that you especially be asked to be present at a dinner to be held in the Houston club that evening." And after we picked Edward to lose in four straight.

they could. SNAKK SIX TOSSES The alertness of Yale's defenders ajrainst the forward pass chan'-ted the game from an ordinary Yale victory into a rout. The Elis snatched six Dartmouth tosses out of the air. Two of these were converted into the first two of Yale's five touchdowns, and two others cut olY promising Dartmouth drives deep in Y'ale territory. ('apt.

Dick Ilollinp-shead deflected Sayers' pass into Al Mon-tano's hands early in the first period, p-iving Yale the ball on the Green 17. The Elis scored in four plays. Bub Furse groing over from the one-foot line on a quarterback sneak. The next interception was by Jack Roderick, who stole the ball on the Dartmouth 4G in the scfond hrrit and went all the way. Fritz Barzilauskas intercepted another Green toss on the Dartmouth a few minutes later, but Yale fell four yards short of a touchdown on the ensuinsr march the half drew toward its close.

t'LIS SLAM GATE hole on its 15, but the Eli ball-stealers saved the day. Furse picked the leather out of the clutches of a Dartmouth hopeful on the Yale eight and the door was closed. A few minutes later, Furse intercepted another Dartmouth toss on the Yale 32 and the Elis were off to the races aprain. They scored in seven plays, the a spectacular lateral from Furse to Ferdinand (The Bull) Nadherny. The Bull lurked far out toward the sideline, gathered in Furse's toss and raced 42 yards for the score.

The drive started late in the third period and carried to the Green 5 on fine passes by Furse and Jackson. Following the change of goals, Kirk hit left tackle for two and Jackson passed to Dick ing half of their first gridiron clash in history. But once the third period got underway, Rutgers took over in most emphatic fashion when fleet Al Malekof, its alternate fullback, intercepted a Harvard pass on his own 17 yard line and raced back 72 yards to Harvard's 11. Frank Burns completed a 10-yard aerial to Fred Sowick, his right end, and the shifty Harvey Grimsley covered the remaining few inches for the first Rutgers' touchdown. There were eight minutes left in the final period when the Crimson tried to launch a drive from its own 20, but Makeof stepped in with another inception and carried 27 yards to the 18.

Then he ran and plunged four times to Harvard's one, from where the irrepressible Grimsley scored again. The forgotten man: Ted Williams. Much to our surprise we have been swamped with candidates for the local chapter of S.P.M.T.S. (Society for the Prevention of Mention of Toots Shor). Our composing room friend, Ramon Joseph Lopez, writes from the Union Printers Home, Colorado Springs, that he cleaned up in the Series against our pick and he is now busy going to town betting Notre Dame, because Army has been our triple-plated, waterproof, nonsinhable, sure-fire selection since mid-August.

Can't understand why brainy Dave Bancroft doesn't land a big time coaching job. Banny was McGraw's best field captain. All those fans who can't buy Army-Notre Dame tickets can give our new Municipal Stadium suggestion a gentle shove in the right direction. Speeding of great punters, as we were the other day, we overlooked Verne Llewlyn of Nebraska and Green Bay. Once he kicked from his own goal line and the ball was downed on the Giant two-yard stripe.

Verne wore a shoe sized 14. Jenkins for three and touchdown. The final Y'ale score was racked tin Connie Pensavalle tore off 53 yards from scrimmage early in trie by Jack Ferguson, who slanted off third period to put Yale in a deep I right tackle, cut back through.

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