Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 19

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Bears Found Themselves: Ingram Everything Went Wrong: Madigan Z71 mm BUI Ingram says: ''California found Itself against St Mary's. The. boys went out there not to beat St. Mary's, but to beat themselves by displaying fig-ht and the, tie came with the Gaels was natural consequence. The bovs foug'it and made many breaks that came, their way.

From now on California will Improve greatly. And I'm glad we don't have to meet St. Mary's again. Offhand. I don't know who Is go-.

Ing to bent them. If anybody." SLIP MADIGAN SAYS: "Everything went wrong with St. Mary's today. It km all fumbles and I fumbled with the rest on the illegal substitution. The Gaels started off on the wrong foot and never got off.

However, we've got that out of our svstnis and it will do a lot of good. But CaH-fornia played a great game jtitt as I espected and predicted. The Bears are coming and coming fast, and they'll be stronger from now on. As for ourselves, we feet thojt we likewise are going to make up for that tie game." -r- .1.. uw CO.u sator.

cc SUNDAY SAN FRANCISCO. OCTOBER 9. 1932 SECTION I PAGE 19 Baird Circles Left End-Gap. Tniirhilnwn Nn 1 A Castro Dashes 75 Yards-U. C.

Touchdown No. 1 1lB Nichelini Flanks End-Gael Touchdown No. 2 Williams Fakes Reverse -And It's All Tied Up! a iford Indians Lasso, Tame Fretfi StoeaMsnf ITovaccH Heap (SoaH IIDoallGoim Huaims AShh1 2 SpapHIimg W0-O-r 5 1 I'M sv, H- 4 ft---, v. 4 "i e-w I i a -j- 1 '1 St I 1 3 4 i If i 1 ON LEFT of photo Mike Steponovich (No. 21) of Gaels reclines ori turf, with Angel Brovelli (No.

38) racing up to assist Dodson. No. SO is Jorgensen, St. Mary's tackle. DIRECTLY IN FRONT of Jorgensen is McArthur, U.

C. guard, and back of Dodson is Rubel (No. 43), center of the Gaels' line. This hole proved good enough for a slight gain. FRED CANRINUS No.

29) attempts to block out Dick Tozer, plunging in ahead of Dodson. That big fellow on right, in background, is Keefer (No. 56), California fullback. THERE'S George Dodson (No. IS, wtth white shoulders on uniform), streaking toward Bear's goal, and Sparling, California end, tackling him.

This happened in 'first quarter yesterday at Berkeley. Hillman and Lambert Yesterday's Grid Results Joe Cronin To Manage Senators OREGON, HUSKY GRIDDERS TIE Northern Colleges Battle to Scoreless Tie in Hard Contest; Mikulak Proves Big Star TROJANS HELD TO lOiSCORE Mohlcr Heaves Forward Pass for Initial Tally Smith Boots Field Goal for Final Digits PACIFIC COAST U. C. Gridders Come From Behind to Tie Roaring Gaels Tamed to Merest Zephyr as Ingram Men Register Biggest Upset of Early Season California, IS, St. Mary's 12.

Stanford H. Santa, Clara 0. Washington 0, Oregon 0. U. S.

C. 10. Oregon State 0. Montana 14, Carroll College 6. Gonzaga SO, Idaho 7.

Washington State 30, Willamette 0. Montana State 0, Idaho (South Branch) 0. Score for Cardinals iBates Blocks Kick to Pave the Way for the ,7 Initial Score; Fumbles Mar Santa Clara Play By William Lelser The storm that blew in with the kickoff left Santa Clara Iiigh on the rocks yesterday at the Stanford Bowl. An 85-seeond storm it was, and it lasted through only five plays, but the wreckage strewn in its wake was more the Broncos could repair in 58 minutes of football. Signs of the coming calamity were hoisted with the kick i'thiM, George Grey sent high and a- S.

F. State Teachers 32, Humboldt State 6. Stanford Frosh 19, San Mateo I. CO. (Picture on filth sporls page.) WASHINGTON, Oct.

8. AP Joe Cronin, a youngster who was scrapping for a place in the lineup four years ago, today succeeded tha veteran Walter Johnson as manager of the Washington Senators. In naming his flashy shortstop to lead the club in 1933 Clark Griffith, owner of the Senators, chofe the youngest player ever to direct a major league team since the days when baseball stars wore Dy Maxwell Stiles OLYMPIC STADIUM, LOS ANGELES, Oct. 8. (Universal Service.) Southern California's Trojans, with two sensational plays, tripped the Oregon State football eleven, 10 to 0, today before 30,000 MULTNOMAH STADIUM, PORTLAND (Ore), Oct.

(AP) Battling to a breath-taking scoreless tie on neutral grounds in this stadium today the University of Washington and the University of Oregon decided virtually nothing as to either teams' chances of winning the Pacific Coast Conference Football Championship this year. Washington showed the most Frimli 34, Pasadena By Curlcy Grieve The roaring Gael was transformed into a summer zephyr in Memorial Stadium yesterday afternoon when, with 55,000 spectators in a slate of constant jitters. University of California fought St. Mary's to a standstill in the most amazing California .1. C.

14. tin. II SCHOOL fans. Orv older, "Sky Pilot ouart- WMtniinvllU 2.V i'arifir 4irir 7, Mi.nl 11. Mania Clara O.

upset of the current football season. HIICKV MOl'NTAIN llie score, iz to Vi, two touchdowns each, fell like a stick of dynamite Into football ranks. 4. I tuli II. II.

Cnbtrarin Acl- Oilarnrin Mine (nli.i-H.lii an, rtuh Aieira 7. George Grey's opening Jong way down field to open the battle, the ball falling for in the i in with kick. MIIMVKPT St. Marys, overwhelming was regarded as a virtual certainty to chase the Big Bear far power in spite, of the. fact that Coach Jimmy Phrlan elected to us his second and third string back-field men for most of three periods.

The Huskies drove to Oregon's 21-yard line in the first period and battered down to the W'ebfoot's down In the second period when Uhe huge Gilbert blocked a ptint i on the 30-yard line to provide the beards. Cronin. who will be 26 on October 12, was given a onc-ycar contract. "Frisco Joe" came to the Washington club in 1928 to play in sixty-three games and bat a measly .243. However, Johnson, who took over the reins in 1929, liked the way he ranged between third and second, up Strawberry Valley.

It tied the Broncos up cold, this storm that was engineered largely with the opening; defense of little Bill Bates of Stanford. It. left the But the Tli Rear, recalcitrant concerted OIienilVB. wicked of eve and downright or. i anotner in tne tmra pa- riod when George Canrinus made nery.

outfought a superior St. Broncos back en their heels, and Mary' machine that started with one cylinder missing out and they couldn't pet off them. It stripped their free wheeling gears, and erback, uncorked a SIKyard forward pass in the waning minutes of the first half that landed squarely in the hands of Ford Palmer, who raced SO yards for tha initial score. Ernie Smith Wicked goal for the extra point. Again In the third quarter, scarcely after play began, Mohler on a spinner over center, broke through the.

line and ran 45 yards before he was run out of bounds on the 20-yard line. A reverse to Sparling failed to gain, and then Mohler tried twice to puncture the strong line of the Stalors without much success. FIELD GOAL. He then dropped buck to the 2.1-yard line where he held the ball as Ernie Smith sent It scooting through the uprights for a perfect field goal, which added the final three points to one of sit- never quite could remedy the took away the confidence they had in their "floating power." It left the Cardinals in com Indiaea 7. tlhla Mala t.

Wlfhlmn IS, S. Nerala J'J. tie 8. Klapnraln 34. Ina-a 0.

Illinois Bradlf.v It. I'llrtliie 7, Minnrnnta n. nlr name 73, Haakrtl Vitliinrl it.l. Inrita tm Mt TearHpra RrniHl.il Trarhrra a. Vlrirtnla Jnnmr Mnnmnntb for rt.

Oarr Iowa 2(1. Bnrna Vlata Iowa Mate Trnrhrri 1.1. Cnrnrll (Mt. Yrrmm. la.t 0.

Aurora Collrrc Roearvrlt Mililarr Ai-ariVmy a. AtteiiNlana Kwi a. Oklahoma 71. kansaa It. itrlham I.

Ithitflown Ohio a. lliunii 1'. X'l. Irrl'alll II. Uilhrrlorrr 1(1, Hhirfirld Callritr A.

t'ltiftlitr College 41. John Mtirnliiill a. Uiihiian Male l.rmnrll Nurlh llakoia Mala I Naulh Dakota Slulr H. Duliilh Male Trarkrra T. Xoorhra.1 Slat XrarhrrH at South Dakota It.

MornlnRNidr 0. ra- urmal Taa Hanille Again 7. Ollrrhrin IS. Krnt Cut ml Slut Trarkrra llrflanr a spectacular catch of a forward pass that placed the ball on the 11-yard line. Baird scored the first touch-I down and Nicholini the second, iboth circl.nsf the flanks, i But outside of those two efforts, the Gaels were not once within the California 20-yard line, though they made ample yardage and first downs in the center of the field.

8-yard line early in the third quarter but these two stabs were the extent of the scoring chances of the game. Oregon's only offensive threat came when I-eighton Gee, shifty halfback, reeled off dashes of 18 and 16 yards to carry the Web-foots to Washington's SO-yard line late In the third period. Although stopped cold most of the time on his smashing efforts at the Husky forward line. Mike Mikulak, pile driving Oregon fullback, was credited with halting the only march of the contest that, looked like a possible touchdown for the? Huskies. and gave him a regular place in the lineup.

Cronin raised his average to .282 that year and the next he set the pitchers to pondering ways and means by batting .346. It' wound up with his being voted the most valuable player in the American League. A native of San Francisco, Cronin was the property of Pittsburgh in the National league at 19. He went back to the minors and was with Kansas City in 1928 when Scout Joe Engel persuaded Griffith to "buy him. corner of the end isone and beyond possibility of return.

(Signals were flying frantically us renter Bill Bates drove through the Bronco forward wall to down BIH Denver with a yard lost on -lhe first Santa Clara shot from scrimmage, and the. weatherman rushed for the. cyclone cellar as the same Bates, on the second Bronco hhot, blocked Joe Pag-lia's punt cold. ON TWO-YARD ONE. Bates and Coibus recovered on "the two-yard line, Hillman drove over the goal, and the damage was with the game just five plays old.

From that blow the Broncos -ould never recover. Not until the 'fourth period could the Cards score assin, but they were "in" and they knew it from the fifth play on. BLOW. NOTHING it was in the end, after Tommy Lam- uation. It was a game that was far removed from a perfect football exhibition, but packed with nerve-tingling situations.

COSTLY It was a game of surprises, from the brilliant defensive work of California to the disastrous fumbles of St. Mary's. And those fumbles, to use Coach Slip Madigan 's own words, extended from the athletes on the field to the coach on the bench, who Inadvertantly mado an Illegal substitution that cost his team 2.1 yards on the field and the nte of Full- The Big Bear res'sted thrusts at (Continued on Pae JJ. Col. 4) mand.

The Cards lot Ernie Caddel, perhaps the Coast's greatest right half, with the battle a few minutes old. They lost Gordon Campbell a little later, as Gordon cracked an old kne Injury, and before long they lost Hillman, the driving power at full. They couldn't march steadily. They fumbled. They failed before the Bronco defense.

But they won, 14 to 0. and they cleared the hurdle which has worried them ever since the. season's start. ATTACK POOR, Attack didn't work too wall, on either side, yesterday at the Stanford Stadium. Both team were The Unexpected A I.I MUM SI.

llary'a t'ollrr Adrian Catlrre Ikr forrwt IS. rlkwrlrrn 'a a. Iowa Wlr-a I'J. Writrrn wi' J-1. SlottT fatl Cnllrta S.

Hiinhinr Junior Dnlnth J. C. 0, Rirr talltt state Trarhrra Souls fov II' Walter Hanson, substitute half bock, started the. ball rolling for Washington with a 21-yard dash around left end. At least, a half do7.en Webfoots got their hands on him; but he wiggled away each time to reach the Oregon 28-yard line.

Wolcort rammpd right tackle the most stubbornly fought games played here this year. Oregon fought stubbornlv. It fought hard and it fought "clean, but was unable to withstand the hard pounding of the heavy Trojan front and tha foxy signal calling of the Trojan quarterback. No one looked for Mohler to heave the pass that gave the Thundering Herd its opening score. A Tough Fight 1 1 (i Ri; KT KK.

on i sr. n.m lnrrrN Sno- stri'ono IrS a'trlowa Ora.lpT Hllrd Brorllt tnoltnte S. CairoM a. Whrninn Amrrloan feline of rn, KtTtm fill Faatrrn Statp Tra rhrVa S. it IWW earr f'Srr-i.

lAr'lr Tore. Pr R-'l 1UM 1 bert contributed a beautiful four- hack Dodson for three periods. The Big Bear actually foucht for and took the two touchdowns which enabled It to gsm a tie sgainst a team that still looms as one of the most powerful on the coast. Vorilil'atM Collrte H. MlrhlgaB Collrie ot 1 yard touchdown to wind up the for.

three and Hanson added another at center. -t. "ar: scorinp. but the bolt that wrecked the Fronts was the storm that blew for ta'rfl: I'rtrr And on each occasion it came f. llnra a.

Itftr.ll tlly follrar S. Tolrrln S. Manrhralrr Ran'da 4. r. a.

arnrtrlr Trrh 1. Wrotfrn Rrarrro Caor Akron Vnhaah 13. fnt Krliiit Cnllettr 'JA. Northwrotem Collrae lllrkin.nn Trarhrra Suv lloltiaratl lorrat rartre: trlirllol for Brorrll. )rT- lltttlon; for ''arlrl; Ko Hatra: tirrarWia far Mrponovtrh: r.

A Card Trick So. rr II. iVufhrra 1. Jitrorwtown CoUrae a. Hollingbery's Team Scores at Will PULLMAN Oct.

8. (AP) Washington State's Cougars trampled on Willamette Universtty'3 football team, 30 to 0 In a non-conference football game here today. Coach O. E. Hollingberry held his regulars on the bench most of the game.

McGowan to Manage Baltimore Orioles BALTIMORE, Oct. 8. (By Associated Press.) Charles H. Knapp, pi evident of the Baltimore Orioles, announced today that Frank McGowan, center fielder of the International League club for the past, threa years, had been signed as manager. Ha succeeds Kritx Maisel.

whose rnntraet ws renewed at the end of the present season. I Minnl i.anrrtn-o follrfr 7, Carroll Callrie CinrinDali Colleee 1.1, Butlrr 7. Cnlin (C.) 4rr Halm when Gus Caitre, outstanding luminary of the day, snatched a Gael pass and hot-footed 75 yards across the goal line, and again when Arleigh Williams slashed over left end on the fourth down for the tieing score. 1 anriiHin for Viraltfit Vatr for K'li Ahrm (or ltrlrv: for frr4 Cio-ri-ni: Ruorl for Ytr: tiroirlll ft.r ira-rltfii; i C.tartnaa fttr rrunia; RitWt for (Wuld for (ilttrr(: MnMMWotrt for trnrtfiii: 11 iKon for H.tir4; rokaaoo) for S.hjrfrr: Aarru for Hrorlli. (alttorutu: Mrro ftr 1 tf no 'aftaooo fur iilittn: s.

lor rt-nr: Klrill for Hrltro: Mjt rth.tr tar I. til lor tlrt-4: Uc'oriBlk for StiftMC FAST. I nmmarj: Orwnn State. K. Haifa Miller Mmnllflrt Mile Nrbw ammell CnriiH Ilium-one I'iliUIr Mie l.illle r0.

R. K.T. I. California. narliit Braai lirnlry 1 awl TattH Nmifh Pnlrorr tlohl.

Mi'NoLh lftlH.lt SANTA I I. AHA I Mama Avhlrr A. Irf Molinurl Kafef lMiillr C) llier JtlftttirN I'aslta I'm. m. I.TR.

i nt 1 MR. IH too strong defensively, and each had the other too well spotted in advance. Caddel, leaving the game with a torn shoulder cartilage, took away what Stanford needed to complete the driving offense. Santa Clara, with smart defense for the air game, completely covered every available Cardinal pass receiver, and the net result was stalled attack all round. A fast start, however, and a fast finish, took the Cardinals to TOWN.

Two mistakes hy the Broncos, two touchdowns for Stanford, and the aoirie-r arfiinienl was over. 'n iinHI last minutes, when I i ortHtfl Ilouh Back went the Oregonians on the next play when Hanson dropped back and whipped a 16-yaid pass to Bill Smith, ball-snatching end, to give Washington a first down on the Webfoots' 8-yard line. Just as the 10,000 Washington fans who had journeyed to the game were yelling themselves hoarse, visualizing the first score against Oregon In five years. Wol-eott tucked the pigskin tinder his arm and started to buck right tackle. The giant Mikulak guessed right and smashed the husky bead on.

St Mary's started the game with tor w.ittaata (or aifrlel Jlilltnan r. rnrr urrtnrirt Vlr 7. Chlraro lordhiim .111, llitrknrtl 8. fulunihia tn. I'rtncrlon 7.

I'rnitMlranis SwaHhaiara t. UarluKinlh IJifajrll U. Armr .17. Cartrton rloatan I. 7.

RboaV lalaa HoIt frnaa Main B. IMIthnnh 33. riiiiiiriir a. Alabama C.rori Haohintlnn Ilarloirk rnllrar 7. "'k Atir Ut.rvr.trr Trrh 7.

Trlnlrr n.u.ir 13. CalKomia Villanoi a 31. r.rfrhMrr It. oia "4. Moorrtatr ool a fumble on their first offensive play, and almost finished it with another fumble.

And in between times, their flashes of power were 1 Sl.ipfivrJ llrenn Stale Nnullifra Ca'tfnrnia. it a i a i -nt -OS a a TnlTUIMUAS nrr i-r; w.r tw rtttttr; Mok lor C. AVtUx lor rr-tm-rl; KrOra for Krrr: illi.ioi. for tattoo: aliaooo ftkr 1 illiana. ntrf trii'r' a 1 Ortifi.l, Vr'f-r Tm, iNtM 1.1.

w-o, r.rfc ti-ttl ruMTttoin 4 trTtl, Sotilhrrn California o.nrlt.c: Toarkdown. r'orri oolnia aftrr tniifhdown e'irrnfrn(. pmlth; fipld So.ik. OffirinU; Rnl.r,, fjoh tr-nir. c.iftt.

n-A I Orrltt.ntsl! ritld iudgc, (rrnm Varnrli, Chlraga. rut short by mistakes that found California re arty convert to their ifwri ndvantare. I But they smished over a tcuch- I' tintr4 H'l'nian K. I rHt I pta L-lr. Imt nnnrter.

mKrl A. C1 1 whei! b-f. 4. C. Cie; I line; man.

M. Ktlltr. (Continued on Page 31, Col. 1) (Continued on Page JO, Col. T) (Continued en.

Page II, Col. S).

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The San Francisco Examiner
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The San Francisco Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
3,027,574
Years Available:
0-2024