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The News and Observer du lieu suivant : Raleigh, North Carolina • 17

Lieu:
Raleigh, North Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
17
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Section II Vol. Want Ads Sports The CCI, No. 123 News and Observer Want Sports Ads II Section Raleigh, N. Sunday Morning, October 31, 1965 Daily 10c, Sunday Georgia Stuns Carolina, 47-35 Carolina Georgia First downs 19 25 Rushing yardage 232 285 Passing yardage 216 151 Passes 12-24 11-14 Passes Intercepted by 2 Punts Fumbles lost 0 3 Yards penalized 60 50 28 Cooper Talbolt C. (AP photo by Perry Aycock) Talbott gets to one be fore Cooper nails him.

Wolfpack Wins, 13-0 State Defense Shines Virginia State First downs 12 22 Rushing yardage 60 271 Passing yardage 135 44 Passes 12-30 5-15 Passes intercepted by Punts Fumbles Yards penalized 55 By GEORGE KOLB CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.State could little wrong, Virginia little right and it all left the Wolfpack glad and a lot of old Cavalier grads sad here Saturday, 13-0. Wolfpack, whose detense ranks last in the Atlantic Coast Conference, had a first-rate one on this occasion which saw many of the 25,000 homecoming turnouts leave straight-faced and early. State jumped ahead in the first quarter on a 22-yard field goal by Harold Deters, barged 64 yards for a Shelby Mansfield touchdown in the third period, then added salt to the the wound when Deters kicked a second three-pointer in the final minutes. The two field goals by Deters. a native of Kinston, establishes a new State record of six in one season.

It was also the third time he has kicked two in a single game this season. Seventh Straight Virginia was never in this game, the seventh, straight Wolfpack conquest the Cavaliers in football. The Cavaliers went in as favorite behind a most feared performer in quarterback Tom Hodges, who simply never got going. State, minus its top defensive hack in safety Tony Golmont, still managed four in- Pirates Post 4th Straight Victory First-downs ECC 24 NL 8 Yards rushing 221 36 Yards passing 231 108 Passes 18-31 8-27 Passes Inct. by 5 Punts Fumbles 2 Yards penalized 118 70 MONROE, La.

East Carolina's Pirates were a little slow warming up their potent singlewing machine, but once in gear it powered to a 45-0 victory over Northeast Louisiana here Saturday night. The North Carolina team took a 31-0 lead at halftime and coasted in to its fourth straight victory. tailback Richardson fullback Dave Alexander each scored three touchdowns. Pete Kriz kicked six extra points in as many tries and added a field goal. The East Carolina attack CHAPEL HILL Carolina led Georgia, 35-21, going into the last period here Saturday and got beat, 47-35.

The 42,000 people who watched it all in beautiful football weather hardly believe it, either But it happened. It did because the Bulldogs scored a touchdown on each of the four times By DICK HERBERT they came into possession in the last 15 minutes of the highest scoring game in the history of Carolina football. The Tar Heels started with a 14-0 lead in the first seven and a half minutes. It was tied, 21- 21, at halftime. In Georgia's first four possessions in the second half it turned the ball over to Tar Heels on three lost fumbles and a pass interception.

Carolina took advantage of the errors to go ahead, 35-21. The Bulldogs started the last quarter with that score facing 42, 67 them and with the goal line 61 yards away. They got two touchdowns that would have tied the score at 35- 35, but after the second they went for a two-point conversion and missed. Trailing by 35-34, they covered an onside kickoff, moved in for the winning touchdown, and then added another when the Tar Heels lost the ball on downs on their 24-yard line. On the final play of the game a Carolina try for a touchdown was stopped by an interception in the Georgia end zone.

NOGGLE GAINS--State quarterback Charlie Noggle (19) breaks through Virginia center despite efforts by Cavalier defenders, who include Len Hrica (67) and Bob Kowalkowski (72). State won, 13-0. King Passes Dip Duke First downs Duke 25. Ga. Tech Rushing yardage 193 141 Passing yardage 237 144 Passes 17-27 12-15 Passes Intercepted by 3 2-53 3-37 Fumbles, lost penalized 0 49 37 By JOE TIEDE -Quarterback Kim King outshone a host of spectacular offensive performers here Saturday as he led Georgia Tech to a 35-23 victory over Duke.

This was a game that offered just about everything in the way of offensive fireworks for a Grant Field homecoming crowd of 47,000, plus a regional television audience. Todd Orvald passed brilliantly for Duke. Runners Jay Calabrese, Ken Chatham and Sonny Odom of the Blue Devils and Lenny Snow of Tech were difficult to bring down. Receivers on both sides made dazzling catches. But King, helped by some key plays by Tech's hard-pressed defense and breaks at crucial times, tipped the scales in the Yellow Jackets' favor.

King, a sophomore prize who is equally dangerous passing or running, made the big plays all afternoon for a Tech team that was kept on the defensive much of the time by a punishing Duke offense. He threw three touchdown passes, passed to the one-yard line to set up another score, (AP photo by Perry Aycock) Carolina's Lampman stops Georgia's Ridlehuber after 32-yard punt return. That's the way it and the 42,000 who saw it will be talking about it for years to come. Many came here primed for a defensive struggle. The Bulldogs had that reputation.

Instead they witnessed an offensive orgy. They saw Danny Talbott on a great day move the Tar Heels by land for 232 yards and in air for 216 more. They saw the Bulldogs run for 285 and pass for 151. The combined score of 82 points easily established a school record. Talbott ran for 102 yards and passed for 216, but the individual heroics could not overcome the talents of quarterback Preston Ridlehuber, quarterback Lynn.

Hughes, fullback Ronald Jenkins, halfback Randy Wheeler, and an aggressive line that operated in front of them. This was as close as any of seven games played by the Tar Heels but provided the largest winning margin of the season. It was a total implausible ball 5 game. The audience sat in pleasurSee BULLDOGS, Page 2. Deacs Bow by 13; Tigers Boost Lead First downs 18 Wake Firest Clemson Rushing yardage 144 200 Passing yardage 199 119 Passes 16-31 8-17 Passes intercepted by 3 Punts 8-34 7-38 Fumbles lost 2 Yards penalized 92 34 Special to The News and Observer CLEMSON, S.

C. Clemson mixed a bit of trickery with power and passing to score two touchdowns in the last five minutes of the second quarter and went on to defeat stubborn Wake Forest, 26-13, Saturday. A crowd of 24,000 saw the Tigers overcome a brilliant show by Wake Forest's Jon Wilson and win its fourth straight Atlantic Coast Conference game to maintain its leadership in the league. Wake, trailing 26-7, marched 94 yards in the waning minutes of the game for its second touchdown. The Deacons are 1-4 in the ACC and 2-5 for the season.

Clemson, unbeaten in the ACC, is 5-2. Power Running Clemson, showing its old power running attack, from the proset T. took the opening kickoff for the first touchdown. Then things settled down until the last five, minutest of the first half blew off the tight defensive battle. Clemson scored on a tricky 61- yard reverse run by Phil Rogers.

than three minutes later Wake's Butch Henry crossed the goal line after a sensational catch and two minutes later Clemson scored again. All that action, wrapped up in five minutes, gave Clemson its winning margin in a wide-open offensive battle that saw the ACC's two best defensive teams maul each other on the ground and in the air. The score doesn't tell the story. Wake, grinding out 144 yards running and 199 in passing, had 18 first downs to Clemson's 17. Wake's total yardage 343 to Clemson's 319.

But Clemson got the scoring strikes and a break in the penalties. A pass interference penal- See DEACONS, Page 2. terceptions, one shy of Hodges total for the first six games. Hodges completed only 11 or 27 attempts in this one for 129 yards. The Wolfpack, now 3-4 overall and 3-3 in the conference, out-played the Cavaliers from the start, getting to the Cavalier five the first time they got the ball.

There, however, Mansfield, who had great afternoon in gaining 122 yards, fumbled and Virginia's Bob Kowalkowski flopped on it. Brown Intercepts The chance presented itself after senior, corner-back Larry Brown intercepted a Hodges pass at his own 43. The very next time State gained possession, however, it again flirted with the goal stripe before calling on Deters for the first of his field goals. State started at its 45 and, in nine plays, marched to the nine of the lifeless Cavaliers. The big plays were a 11- yard pass from Charlie Noggle to Harry Martell, a sevenyarder from Noggle to Bill Gentry and a 11-yard sprint by Mansfield which provided a first down at the nine.

Noggle ran for two, then threw two incompletions to bring up a fourth and seven, a situation Deters was called on to handle. He made it good and State led, 3-0, with 2:59 left in the first period. Lead Holds Up That lead held up through the half which was all state needed. Both teams had six possessions, but a penalty stopped Virginia once, and the two pass interceptions killed other opportunities. One of these was by Chuck Amato at the State three.

The Cavaliers, who gambled on fourth down repeatedly throughout the day, to See WOLFPACK, Page 2. 12 Ridlehuber ACC Standings Conf. All WL WL Clemson 4 0 5 2 Duke 2 4 3 State 3 3 00 4 Carolina 2 2 3 South Carolina 2 3 Maryland 2 2 3 3 Virginia 3 3 Wake Forest 1 4 2 en Next Week's Schedule: Duke at State, Clemson at Carolina, Wake Forest at Florida State, South Carolina at Virginia, Maryland at Navy. into motion to score three quick touchdowns. The first came on an 80-yard march in nine plays.

A pass from Dave Alexander to tailback George Richardson was good for 10 yards and the touchdown. Pete Kriz kicked the extra point for a 7-0 lead. After the ensuing kickoff, Inky Bullard intercepted a pass and returned it to the Indians' 11-yard line. On the second play, Richardson drove over from the 7-yard line. The extra point made the score 14-0.

Another interception this time by Bob Ellis put the ball on the Northeast 31. Alexander scored the touchdown from the 4-yard line on the second play of the second period. After holding the Indians again, the Pirates took over on See ECC Wins, Page 18 and wound up with 12 completions in 15 attempts. Even with King's brilliant play, Tech needed a costly fourth down interference call against Duke and an intercep-17 tion return for a touchdown by linebacker Randall Edmunds to overcome the Blue Devils. It was 16-14 Duke early in the fourth quarter when the Jackets struck for two touchdowns within one minute completely change the complexion of the game.

The Blue Devils had just driven 57 yards for a touchdown that put them ahead for the second time in the game. Tech, starting from its 23, got out of a second and 19 hole when King hit end Gary Williams for a first down at the Duke 43. On the next series of downs, it in was three limited to Then seven fourth yards plays. on and three at the 36, a King pass was deflected and defensive halfback John Gutekunst picked it off for Duke. But a penalty was called, apparently on safetyman Mike Shasby for interfering with Williams.

That gave Tech a first down at the 23. On second and seven from the 20, King went back to pass. It looked for awhile he wouldn't find anyone. But after several seconds, Williams got loose down the middle and King hit him at the one. Fullback Doc Harvin drove over on second down to put the Yellow Jackets, in front, 20-16, with 12:04 in the game.

Bunky Henry added the point. Duke, which hurt itself by fumbling kickoffs, juggled a another one and only got out to the nine. After fullback Jay Calabrese made four yards, quarterback Todd Orvald, back to pass, was hit from behind by middle guard John Battle just as he released the ball. It traveled only a right into the arms of Edmunds, who nearly had clear sailing into the end zone. A block by end Bill I Ellis wiped out the last defender.

Henry kicked another point to make the score 28-16 with 11:04 left. That just about settled the outcome, but both teams had some offensive energy left. Tech drove 80 yards for another touchdown, and then Duke came back with a 94-yard drive for a touchdown in the final minute. Duke, grinding out yardage on the ground and scoring through the air on the passing of Orvald, piled up a wide margin in statistics. The Blue Devils made 25 first downs to Tech's 17 and picked up 430 yards from scrim.

mage to Tech's 289. But three pass interceptions by the Jackets and a healthy advantage on kickoff returns nullified the difference in yardage. The 35-point total was the highest ever racked up by Tech in the 33-game series. Duke's total was its best since 1950. It hadn't scored more than one touchdown against Tech since 1954.

Orvald, starting his first game since regular Scotty Glacken injured, had a fine day with completions in 27 throws for 237 yards. He threw three touchdown passes. But most of the time, the Blue Devils stayed on the ground. Calabrese and halfbacks Ken Chatham and Sonny Odom belted out consistent yardage against the Yellow Jackets. Duke had the upper hand most of the first quarter, but it wasn't until late in the period when it launched the first scoring drive.

It marched 63 yards in 17 plays, scoring on a beautiful pass from Orvald to tight end Mike Swomlev on third and 15 from the 15. Swomley went down the middle and Orvald put the ball between two defenders for the Mark Caldwell kicked the point for a 7-0 lead early in the second quarter. That touchdown stung Tech into immediate action. Jimmy Brown hauled the kickoff back 34 yards to the 46. Two plays netted just four yards, but King got the first down with an eight-yard toss to end Mike Fortier.

On the next play King showed he can throw long as well as short. Wingback Craig Baynham got beyond defender Jim Barrett and King fired for him into the end zone. Baynham made the catch with Barrett right on top of him to complete a 42-yard scoring play. It was the first of three touchSee DUKE, Page 2. Clemson 26 Wake 13 PP INTERFERENCE Wake Forest's Doug Golightly grabs Fred Kelley, (21), preventing a Clemson completion in their game yesterday.

Interference was ruled. Clemson won, 26-13. Duke's Sonny Odom (41) gains five yards against Tech..

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