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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 69

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
69
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THKJpSTONJSUNpAY GIXBE OCTOBER 5. 1986 69 itf LIAGPESL.v3iAL LEAS! Wm. "a a rips JHarvar a zz J.I-'. I i ails)- JL By John Powers Globe Staff WILLIAMSBURG, Va. Looks like the local varsity has improved since the era when former coach Lou Holtz said his problem was having too many Marys and not enough Williams.

Unbeaten William Mary has everything including a Luftwaffe these days. Yesterday, in their quaint and steamy brick playground, the Tribe did a 24-0 number on overmatched Harvard, which had Old Crimsons wincing and remembering the long afternoons of the '50s. "There's not much you can do in that situation," said Harvard coach Joe Restic, after William Mary had scored all of Its points by halftime and freelanced from there. "You get behind early, they get the jump and it's tough to catch up." Taken with the 41-0 non-game with Holy Cross, it marked the first time Harvard had been shut out two weeks in a row since before Pearl Harbor. They've also been the two biggest drubbings the Crimson has taken on consecutive Saturdays since the end of the 1957 season, when president Nathan Pusey left Yale Bowl muttering under his breath.

It was also the first time that William Mary, off to its best start since 1971. had shut out anybody in seven years. Defense has not exactly been a priority around here. Lighting up scoreboards has. "I've been on the other end of William Mary, 24-0 at Wllllwmlwrg, V.

William Mary (4-0) 7 17 0 0 24 Harvard (1-2) 0 0 0 0 0 WM Harry Mehre 30 past from Ken Lanv biotle (Steve Christie kick) WM Michael demons 12 run (Christie kick) WM Christie 48 FG WM Clemons 18 run (Christie kick) Attendance 13,100. HARV WaM First downs 11 24 Rushes-yards 40-127 40-159 Passing yards 99 237 Return yards 66 86 1 Passes 11-20-1 25-35-0 Punts Fumbles-lost 0-0 2-1 Penalties-yards 2-17 5-35 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing i Att. Yds. Avg. LG Erlck Elliott.

WM 11 91 6.3 34 'Clemons, WM 13 63 4 8 20 Dave Bunning, Harv 10 47 4.7 12 Bill Koehler, Harv 16 44 2.8 25 Passing Com. Att. Yds. TO Int. Lamblotte.

WM 24 33 233 1 0 Koehler, Harv 11 20 99 0 1 Receiving No. Yds. TD Mehre, WM 5 79 1 Dave Szydlik, WM 5 52 0 Joe Connolly. Harv 4 38 0 Jim Morris. Harv 2 27 0 these type of games," said William Mary coach Jimmye Laycock.

"It gets discouraging when every time you line up, you see another number going against you." Tribe quarterback Ken Lam-biotte (24 of 33 for 233 yards) completed his first seven passes, the last an easy 30-yard touchdown strike to Harry Mehre. William Mary went on to score on three straight second-quarter possessions', as 5-foot-5-inch mousketeer Michael Clemons dashed for 12- and 18-yard touchdowns and Steve Christie nailed a 48-yard field goal. With quarterback David Landau and fullback Brian O'Neil sidelined by shoulder separations, and no game-breakers in the lineup to begin with, the Crimson had little chance to answer. Backup Bill Koehler performed creditably enough at quarterback, but the Tribe defense had him running for his life, sacking him three times in the first half alone and five times in all. The final numbers were grim.

Harvard was outgained, 396-216, crossed midfield only three times and never got inside the Tribe 20. Meanwhile, William Mary struck quickly and efficiently. The Tribe needed only 58 seconds to score its second touchdown on a 34-yard jaunt by Erick Elliott, a pass-interference call on Harvard and Clemons' I'll-beat-you-to-the-flag scamper. Their third touchdown required only 1:21, as Lambiotte threw for 24 yards to Mehre, 28 to flanker Chris Gessner, then sent Clemons hurdling off left tackle toward the end zone. Seven minutes, 17 points, with a field goal in the middle.

"We have to look at what we got on the positive side," Restic said. "We were able to stop them in the second half. We got good defensive pressure without having to blitz all the time. And we moved the ball." At least the last two weeks won't count against the Crimson in the Ivy standings. But the next four will, and Harvard's inexperienced secondary will be facing three of the league's best passers in Cornell's Marty Stallone.

Dart mouth's Dave Gabianelli anc Brown's Mark Donovan. "We just have to be able to gei it going for next week," said Res tic. whose offense hasn't scored ir its last nine quarters. "The Cor nell game is the Ivy League garni of the year for us." i flattens' Colgate By Barry Cadigan Globe Staff HAMILTON. N.Y.

The Gordie Lockbaum show gets better. The only two-way player In major cok lege football did plenty again, as Holy Cross (4-0) stayed undefeated with a 16-12 victory over Colgate, yesterday. But the junior tailback-corner-i back made it even more dramatic by performing many of his his-trionlcs after being blasted hard trying to catch an end-zone pass that he needed seven stitches to close a gash over his lip. "I figured I had a shot at ball." said Lockbaum of Jeff WI-- ley's heave as the first period was ending. "I don't remember if 1 had my hands on it.

I Just saw stars." a Lockbaum was led from the field with his lip bleeding as Billy Young was kicking his first of three Holy Cross field goals. Lockbaum didn't return until 4:02 re-- mained In the first half. But even at that, he was on the field for 99 plays, 60 at tailback. He gained 83 yards on 19 carries, and caught a pair of passes and i lateral for 38 yards. He had a cou- pie of tackles, including one that stopped a late Colgate drive.

And he also tried a quick kick i in the last period, but It was parr tially blocked. "That was my fault," said Lockbaum. "I just wasn't ready i for the play." r.1 Before leaving, Lockbaum helped set up the first Holy Cross points with a carry for 12 yards and a reception for 19 more. i With Lockbaum out. HC got extra help from its defense, which set up the only Crusader touch- down.

Freshman Dave Murphy, picked off a Damon Phelan pass at -the Colgate 23 and took it to then -is. Four plays later, Tom Kelleher carried in from the 1. i' After the Interception, Colgate i changed quarterbacks. Mark replaced Phelan, but It was a Holy Cross fumble on Its own 36 that gave Colgate Its only first- half points, a 41-yard Mike Pow ers field goal. A Byron Dixon Interception, his first of two, set up Young's ond field goal, a 39-yarder that gave the Crusaders a 10-point I halftime bulge.

13-3. J- Lockbaum was used in spots on defense In the second half. Coach MarkJDuffner said it wa- Gordie's usual stint. "I was a little nervous when he got that cut lip." said DuffnerJ "But I had no trouble using Gordie when he returned. The doctors said he was fine." One of Lockbaum's third-quarter defensive Jobs came when he 1 was inserted on a third-and-5 with Colgate on the Holy Cross 1 1 Lockbaum blitzed and dropped Todd Buchner for a loss of 5.

Col: gate had to settle for a 27-yard field goal, making the score 16-6. Colgate took the momentum in the second half after Young fin ished his finest day and tied a Holy Cross record with his third- field goal. "I missed a couple last Young said. "On Sunday, I sa down and told myself I had to con centrate more." Colgate got a 27-yard field goal" from Powers and then staged a 12 play, 55-yard drive that was cuk minated by a 1-yard plunge by its "Refrigerator," 270-pound guard Brian Smith. A two-point conversion failed, and it was 16-12 Crusaders with 12:55 left.

AM, i ft, Army, 41-24 at Htm Haven Army 14 7 13 7 41 Yale 9 9 0 6- 24 Ted Macauley 2 run (kick failed) A Tory Crawford 1 run (Rambusch kick) John Duryea 21 FG A Crawford 11 run (Rurrbusch kick) Dave Derby 22 FG Macauley 14 run (rush failed) A Crawford 7 run (Rumbusch kick) A Crawlord 2 run (Rumbusch kick) A Clarence Jones 2 run (kick failed) Macauley 2 run (rush failed) A Andy Peterson 1 run (Rumbusch kick) Attendance 25,075. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing Alt. Yds. Avg. LG Jones, Army .11 126 11.5 1 Crawford, Army ..........23 95 4.1 3 Troy Jenkins, Yale 6 63 10 5 0 Macauley, Yale 17 60 3.5 3 Passing Com.

Att. Yds. TD Int. Kelly Ryan. Yale ...29 48 426 0 1 Crawford, Army 3 4 50 0 0 I i ft I UPI photo Harvard quarterback Bill Koehler is at the bottom of this pile after being crushed by a trio of William Mary defenders.

Harvard was also on the short end of a 24-0 score. Army's running game grounds Yale, 41-24 the best of two offensive philosophies. No less than 1 ,010 yards in total offense were pounded Into the turf. Each team averaged 13 yards per play. "It was a fun game to watch, I'm sure," said Yale split end Bob Snoop.

Crawford led the Army attack, by rushing 23 times for 95 yards, and pitching to Jones (11 carries, 126 yards), Benny Wright (12-101) and Andy Peterson (20-74). Crawford passed just four times. Three completions accounted for 50 of Army's 453 yards in total offense. "We don't have people who can run with them," said Yale coach Carm Cozza. "The only way we could stop them was when they fumbled.

That's the only way anyone can stop them. Their defense is the reason why their getting beat." And the reason Yale stuck with the Cadets By Kevin Hunt Special to the Globe NEW HAVEN By halftime. Army probably was wondering what was happening. The Cadets were leading Yale by only four points, and only because quarterback Tory Crawford had scored his third touchdown with six seconds left by spinning and twisting from 7 yards. And up next was the Yale Precision Marching Band, which had been banned from West Point last year.

But when the marching stopped, Crawford scored his fourth touchdown, strong safety Bill Horton intercepted a Kelly Ryan pass in the end zone and Clarence Jones finished an 80-yard trip the other way with a 2-yard run. And a close game was no longer close. Army imposed its wishbone on the Elis and 25,075 more at Yale Bowl, winning, 41-24, yesterday on a bright afternoon that brought out so long. Ryan, in his first varsity completed 29 of 48 passes for 426 yards, each stat a single-game Yale record. He also broke Brian Dowling's single-game total-offense record.

"On this day," said Army coach Jim Young, "he was the most effective passer we've seen." After Jones' 2-yard run gave Army a 34-18 lead after three quarters, Ryan brought Yale in for its last touchdown, a 2-yard run by Ted Macauley. Army's wishbone then churned out 16 plays over the next 7:25, and when Peterson scored from 1 yard. Army (2-2) led, 41-24. Yale (0-3) moved almost as easily as Army, getting a 2-yard touchdown by Macauley and a 21 -yard John Duryea field goal on its first two possessions. But where there was a will, Army had an answer Crawford scored touchdowns on Army's first two possessions, too.

knocks off Cornell; Brown wins again Lafayette ROUKDUP From Wire Services Bruce Mclntyre gained 111 yards and scored two touchdowns yesterday to lift Lafayette to a 33-22 victory over Cornell at Easton, Pa. Mclntyre carried 17 times and scored on runs of 7 and 42 yards in the third quarter as Lafayette overcame a 16-10 halftime deficit. Appalachian SL.63-6 Davldsen 4 iM.al.rU 7 2 17 13 -43 aeine i mi ASU Settle run (kick failed) ASU Settle 25 run (run failed) ASU Settle 18 run (Ntrtmo kick) DAV Hughes 2 run (pass failed) ASU Douglas 25 pass from Payton (Nlrtmo kick) ASU Settle 1 run (SSttmo kick ASU Melchor 55 yard run (Nlttmo kick) ASU -FG Nlrtmo 42 i uwH rin fkU-k foiled) ASU Melchor yard run (Mitchell kick) A ASU Plrct rfown 11 33 54-424 172 95 Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards 34-14 145 47 Cornell was held to two first downs in the second half. The Leopards (3-1) also scored on a 35-yard pass from Clayton Evans to Phillip Eng and on a 47-yard interception return by Joe Coffey. Mike Renzi added field goals of 37 and 43 yards.

Cornell (2-1) scored on a 10-yard pass from Chip Knapp to Chris Hahn and a 44-yard interception return by Mike Raich, and got field goals of 46, 24 and 43 Brown, 24-10 Brown 10 7 Princeton 0 0 3 BU Fielding 55 pass from Donovan (Kos kick) BU FG Kos 38 BU Smith 23 pass from Solomon (Kos kick) Pri FG Goodwin 38 BU Wood 6 run (Kos kick) Prl Struckman 21 pass from Welsh (Goodwin kick) a e-n BU First downs 16 Prl 19 27-89 247 6 20-36-2 4-47 2-1 7-45 28:27 Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Possession 44-149 196 11 10-18-0 5-33 1-0 6-45 31:33 yards from Tom Aug. The Big Red scored 13 points in the second quarter, on Raich's interception of Evans and two Aug field goals, to take the lead, but Mclntyre's two third-quarter TDs gave Lafayette a 24-16 advantage. BROWN 24, PRINCETON 10 Mark Donovan found Dave Fielding on a 55-yard scoring play early In the first quarter as Brown tallied on its first three possessions to down host Princeton, 24- Lafayette, 33-22 Cornell Lafayette .3 11 8 4-22 .7 3 14 -33 Cor FG Aug 46 Laf Ng 35 pass from Evans (Renzi kick) Let FG Renzi 35 Cor -FG Aug 24 Cor Raich 44 pass Interception (Aug kick) Cor FG Aug 43 Laf Mclntyre 7 run (Renzi kick) Laf Mclntyre 42 run (Renzi kick) Laf FG Renzi 43 Cor Hahn 10 pass from Knapp (pass failed) Laf Coffey 47 pass interception (kick failed) a 4U Cor Laf 19 47-225 132 156 10-28-1 7-37 First downs 16 Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Punts 26-86 232 73 24-47-5 7-42 10, and remain undefeated. The victory was the third straight for the Bruins, their best start since 1976, when they won their only Ivy League title. Brown is 2-0 in the league.

Princeton fell to 0-3 overall and. 0-2 in the league, its worst start since 1980. Brown needed only seven plays to score on its opening series, moving 66 yards with Fielding, who came Into the game with a 33.3- Penn, 42-7 Columbia 0 0 0 7-7 Penn 7 71414-42 Pern Miklos 4 pass from Crockchia (Grass kick) Penn Comlzlo 2 run (Grass Kick) Perm Brunl 1 run (Grass kick) Perm Flym 4 run (Grass kick) Penn Flynn 22 run (Grass kick) Col HI 65 pass from Puteio (Walsh kick) Penn Deering 1 run (Grass kick) A 10.878 Col First downs 15 Rushes-yards 31-97 Passing yards 168 Penn 27 57-335 189 35 14-244 1-0 17-154 35:10 Return yards 1 Passes 12-25-1 Punts Fumbles-lost 5-2 Penalties-yards Possession .259 Holy Cross, 16-12 at Hamilton, MY Holy Cross (44) 3 10 3 0 16 Colgate (0-4) 0 3 3 6- 12 HC Billy Young 25 FG HC Torn Kelleher 1 run (Young kick) Col Mike Powers 41 FG HC Young 38 FG HC Young 25 FG Col Powers 27 FG Col Brian Smith 1 run (pass failed) HC COLGATE First downs 19 12 Rushes-yards 186 92 Passing yards 179 169 Return yards 18 43 Passes 15-29-1 15-35-5 Punts Fumbles-lost 2-1 0-0 Penalties-yards 5-30 7-61 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Rushing Att. Yds. Avg.

LG Gordie Lockbaum, Col 19 87 4.6 13 Todd Buchner, Col .....16 75 4.7 16 Tom Kelleher, HC 21 69 3.3 13 Ken Gamble, Col 4 10 2.5 7 Mark Hulbert, Col 5 4 .8 4 Passing Com. Att. Yds. TD Int Jeff Wiley, HC 15 29 179 0 1 Mark Hulbert, Col 11 25 142 0 3 Damon Phelan, Cot .4 10 26 0 2 Receiving No. Yds.

TD Wally Dembowskl, HC 7 82 0 Buddy Brown, Col 6 67 0 Lockbaum, HC 3 39 0 Glen Chaffee, Col 3 37 0 Bryan Fair, Col 3 31 0 Tim Walsh. Col 1 17 0 ir yards-per-catch average, grabbing1 his fifth TD reception of the year. PENN 42, COLUMBIA 7 Chris Flynn ran for 142 yards and two touchdowns to help Penn send Columbia to its 24th straight loss, a 42-7 decision at Philadelphia. Flynn, a Junior tailback forced to carry the brunt of the Quakers' running attack after Rich Comizio was sidelined in the first half with bruised ribs, scored on runs of 4 and 22 yards. APP.

ST. 63, DAVIDSON 6 John Settle rushed for a school-record five touchdowns and Ritchie Melchor ran for three scores to lead Appalachian State to a 63-6 rout over Davidson in Boone. N.C. TOWSON ST. 28, BUCKNELL 7 Quarterback Theron Richards threw touchdown pases of 70 and 10 yards and rushed for a 3-yard score to lead Towson State to a 28-7 victory over Bucknell.

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