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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 67

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
67
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

h4- Woldwick 23 Hawthorn 14 Rivr Dell 32 Lodi 7 Ridgewood IS Bcrgenfield 7 Missouri 30 Notre Dame 26 Passaic Vol. 27 Hackensack 17 Ridgefield Pk. 24 East Paterson 21 Ramsey Cliffside Pk. 23 Msgr. Farrell 0 Emerson 36 0 35 28 Colorado 20 Navy 21 Oklahoma 14 Air Force 17 Oregon 15 Nebraska 56 Stanford 13 Kansas 0 Southern Cal.

34 Washington 7 Army Rutgers College Scores, C-2 School scores, C-7 Also In This Section Scores, standings C2 Racing C-2, 14 C-2-4 C-5 College football Golf World Series, boating C-6 Scholastic sports C-7-13 Outdoors, boating C-13 Bowling C-14 Btrgtn County, Net Jwity SUNDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1972 C-l all an unobtrusive hero as Reds win ALL KNOTTED UP OAM i I By Charlie McGill OAKLAND tIKCINNATI hrh hi a ib bl 3 10 0 4 0 0 0 ROSt IT 4 0 0 0 Morgan 2b 4 0 10 Tolan cf 4 0 0 0 Bench 4 12 0 TPerez lb 4 0 2 0 McRae rf 4 0 10 Geronimo rf 2 0 11 Menk 3b 1 0 0 0 Concepcn 1 0 0 0 Nolan 1 0 0 0 Grlrmley 0 0 0 0 Borbon 0 0 0 0 Hall 0 0 0 0 0 0 csmpnrls ss MAlou rf Rudl If Epstein lb Bando 3b Manaual cf Tenace DGreen 2b AAarquz ph Kublak 2b Blue Locker 0 Mlncher oh Duncan oh Hamilton Horlen 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Total 34 1 7 1 Total 32 8 10 I Oakland 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 I Cincinnati 00 0 111 0 I DE Mangual. LOB Oakland 7. Cincinnati 6. 2B Morgan, D.Green, McRae. 3B Concepclon.

HR Bench (1). SB Tolan 2, Conception. SF Concepclon. If fcK bb su I I I Blue (L.0-1) 5 2-3 4 Locker 1-3 1 Hamilton 2-3 3 4 Horlen 1 1-3 2 1 Nolan 4 2-3 3 1 Grimslev .1 1 0 Borbon 1 1 0 By FRED KIRSCH Slatt Writer CINCINNATI Tom Hall stood silently behind the podium ready to answer any questions regarding his great relief pitching during the World Series. There was an uncomfortable silence as the mass of reporters shuffled papers and pretended to look busy.

"Look, I've got Tom HaU up here," said the man acting as the emcee of the postgame Interview following Cincinnati's convincing 8-1 victory yesterday to set the stage for the deciding game today. "Does anyone have anything to say to Tom Hall?" "No, but could I ask Bobby Tolan a question," someone called from back of the room. "Bobby, did you say anything to (Sal) Bando when he made that hard tag on you at third? Did he say anything to you?" Hall quietly slipped behind a curtain and disappeared into the locker room. It was another replay of what has been happening to the lean lefthander during the entire World Series. Hall came in from the bullpen to tack down the Reds' win with 2V3 innings of shutout pitching and then receded into the background.

It was almost as if his pitching had never happened. "I'm naturally a quiet person so I don't mind the lack This time Sparky Anderson's arm-weary relief pitchers got some help as Cincinnati finally played up to its pre-Series billing. The Reds banged out nine hits and stole three bases in breaking loose for the first time. "It was really nice to see those base hits," said Hall "That's the most beautiful sight to a relief pitcher. They took the pressure completely off me." Hall, who came to Cincinnati in a trade which sent Wayne Granger to Minnesota, got the key out.

He protected a 3-1 when he came in to fan Dave Duncan with two men on in the seventh. Then, he sat down and watched the Reds score five times. "I'm beginning to know Oakland pretty well." he said in a quiet corner of the locker-room. "I'm fairly sure what I can throw and get away with. By now, I have the feeling I've been pitching against them for a long time.

I remember some of these guys from when I was in the National League." Johnny Bench got the winners started when he crashed a long homer against Vida Blue in the fourth. Oakland got even in the fifth on Bando's See HALL, Page C-6 Hall 1 1-3 i Save-Hall (1). WP-Horlen. 2:21. of attention," said Hall after making his fourth scoreless appearance.

"People want to read what their favorite players have to say about the game. It's more important to hear it from a Johnny Bench or a Bobby Tolan. They did it today anyway. I had an easy time." Up until yesterday, it had been Hall and his colleagues, Pedro Brobon, Clay Carroll and Ross Grimsley, who had kept Cincinnati alive in the series while waiting for the Big Red Machine to refuel. Jets first test utgers scares Army For the Record Fred Kirsch for new' Colts before bowing, 35-28 It was a big day for upsets among the college football powers.

Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Air Force and Stanford all took it on the chin. Stories on Page C-4. Tenace a marked man CINCINNATI Not even Babe Ruth received the same notoriety. Nor did anyone threaten to assassinate Lou Gehrig after he flogged the Philadelphia A's for four homers in the 1932 Series. Gene Tenace's name has been mentioned in the company of Ruth, Gehrig, Duke Snider and Hank Bauer after ripping Cincinnati for a record-tying By VINNY DI TRANI Staff Writer NEW BRUNSWICK Tom Cahill almost celebrated prematurely.

The Army coach put in his second offensive unit with five minutes to go yesterday as his Cadets were enjoy-ing a 15-point lead over Rutgers. "It's the last time I'll ever put them in together," said Cahill, after sweating out the final minutes of the eventual 35-28 Army triumph. After inserting his second team with the game apparently won, Cahill sat back and watched Rutgers recover an onside kick yards for a touchdown with a Willie Thigpen fumble, the Scarlet Knights convert a pass for two extra points, and Rutgers recovers an onside kick guy and I knew I could go all the way," said Simpson, who didn't stop until he reached the end zone 79 yards later. Andy Mazer, the Rutgers "Knight" or monster man, had a shot at Simpson at the Cadet 40, but missed the streaking back. "I didn't even see him," said Simpson.

"Somebody told me a guy had a shot at me, but I didn't realize it while I was running." Army's lead was shortlived, however, when J. J. Jennings powered over for his second four-yard TD burst following a Tony Pawlick interception of a Fink pass. But the Cadets cams back with an 81-yard drive, highlighted by Fink's 15-yard pass to Mike Gaines, Simpson's See ARMY, Page C-2 By VINNY DI TRANI Staff Writer NEW YORK When you give up 34 points to the Baltimore Colts, you figure to be a 27-point loser. Yet the Jets allowed 34 points in Baltimore earlier this season, and came away a 10-point winner.

That was the day, of course, that Joe Namath tested the Colts' zone and found it needed some gerrymandering. He tossed for six touchdowns and 496 yards, but a repeat of that is unlikely today when the two clubs meet at Shea Stadium (1 p.m., WOR radio). The Jets rate an eight-point favorite. The game has added significance, of course, since it marks the debut of John Sandusky as Baltimore coach and Marty Domres as Colt starting quarterback. Both changes have come about after Monday's storniy firing of Don McCafferty as head coach.

Domres, the former Columbia star, has made two token appearances as a late-game replacement for John Unitas. Ironically, his first start comes against the defense Unitas ripped for 376 yards passing in Baltimore. Don McCauley and Don Nottingham will be the Baltimore running backs, although Norm Bulaich (hamstring pull) should see spot duty. Veteran Tom Matte, who had been sidelined with a hip pointer, has been hospitalized by an attack from a bleeding ulcer and will miss the game. Eddie Hinton, the top Colt receiver who has been on the move list with a deep groin pull, may be activated to start at one wide receiver post (vs.

Steve Tannen). If Hinton isn't ready, rookie Glen Doughty will open. Versatile Sam Hav-rilak is the other wide man (vs. Earlie Thomas), while Tom Mitchell, the rugged tight end who caught eight tosses against Gus Hollomon in Balti- See JETS, Page C-5 at the Army 42 with three minutes to play. But three running plays and a Leo Gasienica pass attempt on fourth down failed to keep the Scarlet Knights alive, and Cahill put back his first offensive unit to run out the clock before a disappointed homecoming crowd of 20,000.

"This probably was our best offensive showing, running and passing combined," said quarterback J. Kingsley Fink, who led the Cadets to 398 yards in total offense. Rutgers had jumped to a 10-0 lead before Bob Hines and Bruce Simpson, Army's running backs, began to bring the club back. A Fink-to-Joe Miller touchdown aerial covering 28 yards made it 10-7 early in the second quarter before Simpson broke what Cahill called "our longest run in many years." "It was a counter-option play, the first time we've ever run it," said Fink, who carried along the line until pitching out to Simpson. "When I turned the corner I saw Bob (Hines) take out one four homers in the first five games of the Series.

Mere kid stuff. The Oakland catcher moved into a class all by himself yesterday. Shortly before yesterday's sixth game, baseball officials learned that a man with a revolver would be looking for Tenace. Ironically, two weeks ago nobody would have bothered threatening him with a punch in the nose. An unidentified informant called Riverfront Stadium and warned that Tenace would be shot if he had the temerity to hit another home run.

The caller also supplied a description of the would-be assassin. Knicks take 76ersby23 Rangers edge Islanders, 2-1 GENE TENACE Cards ready Hart for surging Giants it- 1 BOBBY ROUSSEAU Scores winner By RON DROGO Staff Writer NEW YORK The Knicks were trailing the winless Philadelphia 76ers, 59 56, with 4:49 left in the third quarter last night when Red Holzman made his move. He sent Phil Jackson and Henry Bibby in to replace Dick Barnett and Dave DeBusschere. Holzman looked like a genius by the end of the period. Jackson and Bibby sparked a 21-5 Knick spurt that sent them on their way to a 111-88 victory over the hapless Sixers.

By the time Jackson exited to an ovation with 4:50 left in the game, he had scored 15 points and the Knicks led, 102 73. Bibby stayed in with the reserves until the end and finished with 17. In the final 2:46 of the third period. Jackson and Bibby got help from Bill Bradley as the Knicks ran off 14 points in a row before Hal Greer closed the quarter ith a jump shot. After Walt Frazier hit a pair of free throws to make it Brad'ey.

Jackson and Bibby scored ir points each. They turned it into a three-man game, feeding one another for the scores. Jackson then ad Jed nice poirs and Bibby seven in the UNIONDALE Bobby Rousseau's backhander with 12:55 to play gave the New York Rangers a 2-1 victory over the inspired New York Islanders last night before at the Nassau Coliseum. Rousseau's goal spoiled a brilliant performance by Islander rookie goalie Billy Smith, who shopped 31 shots, many with brilliant saves as the Islanders gave the Rangers fits all night Action and tempers picked up in the second period after a scoreless opening 20 minutes. Hadfield finally broke through against Smith midway through the period when he boomed a 45 foot slap shot through a screen on a Ranger power play.

The Islanders got the goal back a little more than three minutes later when Cameron stole the puck from Brad Park near the blue line and broke in on YUlemure with Brian Lavender on his left. Lavender never got the puck because Cameron took the shot himself, beating MEe-mure with a 23-footer. Oakland owner Charlie Finley, who also was told of flit call, decided it best not to inform Tenace. An unknowing ace never did come close to a record fifth circuit. He managed only a single in the ninth inning.

"I'm glad nobody told me," said the catcher who was visibly upset by the incident. "What would I have done if I would have hit a homer and known about the call? I guess I would have had two choices call timeout or stop at third." However, the culprit never got inside the Stadium. The description of the man was handed over to the police who began converging on the waiting lines of spectators waiting to get into the park. The man was apprehended before the game. He was indeed carrying a revolver.

It was not known whether he also had made the call leading to his own arrest "It's a terrible situation." said Tenance, "that someone would really want to do that. We're just trying to make a living the same as everybody else and you find your life theratened. All you can say is that person must have been mentally disturbed." Tenace first learned of the call and the fast work of only a few minutes after the game. "A writer came up and started to ask questions about it. That was the first I knew." he said.

Gene stood with a towel wrapped around and he held his toothbrush in his hand. He looked very disturbed. A nut running loose "That's my idea ef pobBdrv." said Finkv. a short distance away. "Mr.

Elwood Fitzgibbon. bead of baseball security, came down to my boi at the start of the game and told me about it I decided it would be best not to tell Gene. He told me they would do everyihicg to catch this fanatic. You cai See RECORD, Fage C4 Earlier in the period Smith was the center of attraction as he and Rod Gilbert squared off in front of the Islander goal after the pair bad traded stick swipes in front. Never removing his mnik, the goalie was winning the battle when the linesmen moved in.

Gilbert was still serving his time and Dave Hudson Smith's penalty when the Islander goalie again was involved in a scuffle. First it was Glen Sather trading shoves with the masked goalie in front. Then Pete Stem-kowski crosschecked Smith after the action swung behind the net. Before play was resumed. Smith and Billy Fairbairn had words but neither could get close enuugh to start swinging.

Both teams had numerous good scoring chances in period with Jean RateDe and Ab DeMarco hitting the post for the visitors. DeMarco's shot came while Smith was on the ice to the side of the net. Both Fairbairn and De-Marco had cracks at the empty goal before the Islander defense cleared the puck. See RANGERS, Fast C-J NEW YORK The big question all week has been whether Gary Cuozzo or Tim Van Gald-er would be the starting quarterback today when the Cardinals visit Yankee Stadium to meet the Giants (1 p.m., WNEW radio). Card coach Bob Hollway answered the question Friday with two words no one expected to hear: Jim Hart.

The former No. 1 passer, who has been sidelined most of the season with one ailment or another, will get his first start against the red hot Giants, who rate 8 point favorites. Hart had a hot hand last year when the Cards topped the Giants, 24-7, at the Stadium. He threw for two touchdowns in that one. And since neither Cuozzo nor Van Galder has been added to A3 Pro lists with their performances so far, Hollway figured Hart was as good as anyone to try to halt New York's three game winning streak.

St. Louis has scored just SI points in five games as neither the passing nor the running has clicked. Former Packer Donny Anderson and former Charger Leon Burns are the running backs, and they have averaged just 2.8 and 2.6 per carry, respectively. Rookie Bobby Moore (vs. Willie Williams) and former Charger Walker Gillette (vs.

Pete Athas) are the starting receivers, although little Mel Gray will be activated for spot duty. Jackie Smith still is explosive as the tight end (vs. Richmond Flowers). A twisted ankle suffered Thursday by center Wayne Mulligan has forced a shifting of the offensive line. Tom Banks shifts from left guard to center (vs.

John Mendenhall) while rookie Conrad Dobler moves in at left guard. Bob Young is the right guard and he'll be facing rookie Larry Jaccbson, starting in place of Dave Tipton at left tackle. Tipton's shoulder is still sore and the Giant coaching staff wants See GIANTS, Faje CS first six minutes of the final period as the Knicks pulled away to their fifth win in six games. Until the late explosion, it appeared the Knicks might lose to the worst team in the NBA. After taking a 24 11 first-quarter lead, they played poorly until Jackson and Bibby came off the bench to ignite them.

Willis Reed added to the sloppy play in the second quarter. Reed, activated yesterday after five games cm the disabled Est. was far from sharp i his nine minute second-See KNICKS, Page C-2.

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