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The State from Columbia, South Carolina • 62

Publication:
The Statei
Location:
Columbia, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
62
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3. Lei 2-Dee The S.C., Sunday, October 3, 1982 College Scores Clemson 24, Kentucky 6 S. Carolina 37, Cincinnati 10 S. C. State 20, Alcorn St.

0 St. 48, Citadel 22 Furman 38, VMI 3 Woford 24, Presbyterian 16 N. Carolina 41, Ga. Tech 0 Navy 27, Duke 21 N. C.

State 16, Virginia 13 W. Forest 13, Va. Tech 10 Maryland 23, Syracuse 3 EAST STATE ACC Pitt 16, W. Virginia 13 Rutgers 27, 17 Colgate 38, Dartmouth 21 Army 17, Harvard 13 Lafayette 37, Bucknell 6 Boston 17, Cornell 6 Delaware 20, Lehigh 19 Connecticut 20, N. Hampshire 17 Penn 51, Columbia 31 -Princeton 28, Brown 23 Massachusetts 17, R.

Island 7 Holy Cross 10, Yale 6 Springfield 21, Northeastern 14 Boston College 17, Temple 7 Towson St. 35, Maine 32 Bethune-Cookman 27, Delaware St. 24 Albany, N.Y. 17, Union, N.Y. 7 Albright Lebanon Val.

0 Alfred 20, Ithaca Amherst 43, Bowdoln 0 Bates 19, Middlebury 15 Bethany, W.Va. 24, Allegheny 7 Bridgewater, Mass. 13, Mass. Maritime 13 Buffalo 44, Buffalo St. 3 Canisius 31, RPI 7 Carnegie-Melion 49, Thiel 7 Case Reserve 14, Washington Jefferson Coast Guard 16, Norwich 13 C.W.

Post 37, C. Connecticut 2 Duquesne 27, Georgetown 17 Edinboro 58, California, Pa. 20 E. Stroudsburg 24, Kutztown St. 0 Fairmont St.

53,1 W. Va. Wesleyan 21 Framingham St. 21, Curry 3 Franklin Marshall 24, Moravian 6 Frostburg St. 10, Mercyhurst 7 Gettysburg 34, W.

Maryland 3 Hofstra 34, Cortland St. 21 Juniata 12, Delaware Val. 10 Kings Point 9, N.Y. Tech 6 Lock Haven St. 24, New Haven 0 Lowell 6, Brockport St.

0 Lycoming 7, Waynesburg St. 0 Maine Maritime 13, Bridgewater, Conn. 13 Mass. Maritime 21, Nichols 12 Manhattan 20, St. Peter's 18 Mansfield St.

21, Cheyney St. 12 N. Y. Maritime 17, Brooklyn Col. 0 N.

Y. Merchant Marine N. Y. Tech 6 Pace 17, Fordham 0 St. John's, NY 17, Catholic U.

14 St. Lawrence 31, Hobart 16 Shippensburg St. 16, Clarion St. 8 Slippery Rock 14, Indiana, Pa. 13 S.

Connecticut 13, American International 10 Susquehanna 42, Wilkes 8 Stonybrook 35, Ruters-Newark 0 Swarthmore 28, Johns Hopkins 10 Trenton St. 21, Glassboro St. 20 Trinity, Conn. 7, Hamilton 3 Tufts 28, Wesleyan 21 Ursinus 33, Dickinson 0 Wagner 35, Dist. Of Columbia 17 W.

Chester St. 40, Millersville St. 17 West Liberty 10, Glenville St. 7 W. New England 14, W.

Connecticut 0 Widener 31, Muhlenberg 12 Wm. Paterson 35, Kean 17 Williams 17, Rochester 12 Worcester Tech 26, Colby 3 SOUTH Alabama 34, Arkansas St. 7 LSU 24, Florida 13 James Madison 35, Davidson 7 Akron 19, M. Tennessee St. 16 14, Catawba 10 Nebraska 41, Auburn 7 Georgia 29, Miss.

State 22 Morehead St. 13, Murray St. 10 Tennessee 10, Washington St. 3 Guilford 31, Salisbury St. 0 Morgan St.

44, Bowie St. 6 Norfolk St. 16, Winston-Salem St. 7 Virginia Union 20, St. Paul's 0 Tennessee St.

42, Alabama St. 0 UT-Chattanooga 17, Marshall 7 Miami, Fla. 28, Louisville 6 N. C. Central 20, Fayetteville St.

15 W. Carolina 27, E. Tenn. St. 25 Gardner-Webb 44, Ga.

Southern 6 S. Mississippi 34, Memphis St. 14 Vanderbilt 24, Tulane 21 Lenoir-Rhyne 16, Elon 7 SW Texas St. 34, SE Louisiana 21 Florida 62, Howard 3 NW Louisiana 35, McNeese St. 21 E.

Kentucky 27, Austin Peay 18 Nicholls St. 21, Jackson St. 17 Tenn-Martin 35, Tennessee Tech 21 Southern 31, Miss. Valley 14 SW Louisiana 20, S. Illinois 10 Centre 20, Sewanee 13 Concord 31, W.

Virginia St. 14 Franklin 41, Georgetown, Ky. 6 Hampden-Sydney 15, Bridgewater, Va. 13 Hampton Int. 17, Elizabeth City St.

3 Elon Upset By Bears Associated Press HICKORY, N.C. Glenn Ford rushed for 184 yards and one touchdown, and Jeff Long added three field goals Saturday night as Lenoir-Rhyne upset the NAIA'S top-ranked Elon College 16-7 in South Atlantic Conference football. After Long kicked a 22-yard field goal, Ford raced 45 yards with 4:42 left in the first quarter to give the Bears a 10-0 lead. Elon, defending NAIA national champions, retaliated when John Bangley threw a 37-yard scoring pass to Jesse Jones with 1:28 left in the period. Bangley completed 22 of 35 passes for 278 yards, but was intercepted twice.

Ted Ash had one of the interceptions at Lenoir-Rhyne's five to stop an Elon threat in the fourth quarter. Long added a 24-yard field goal in the second quarter and a 38-yard kick in the third period as the Bears climbed to 3-1-1 and 1-0-1 in the 'SAC-8. The Fighting Christians saw a 10- game winning streak snapped, and fell to 3-1 and 2-1. 1982 Slow-Starting To Pound By TEDDY HEFFNER State Sports Writer GREENVILLE Some people just can't seem to get started until they get that first cup of coffee in the morning. Saturday, once the Furman Paladins got their "coffee" and got going, it was lights out for Virginia Military Institute.

The Paladins blistered the Keydets 38-3 in what was supposed to be a close game, winning for the second time in four starts. And it wasn't as close as the score indicates. "I think it was our second straight outstanding defensive performance," head coach Dick Sheridan said. "Troy Phillips (a middle guard) stood out and the defensive backs made some key plays." Furman, however, started like anything but gangbusters. On their first three possessions, the Paladins went turnover, minus a yard, turnover.

VMI, 2-2, had taken a 3-0 lead on David Tyler's 30-yard field goal. But a surprising fourth-and-five fake field goal at the Furman five backfired Paladins Awaken Liberty Baptist 31, Central Ohio 15 Livingstone 18, Virginia St. 16 Morris Brown 9, Savannah St. 7 Nassau 30, Ferrum 21 Tuskegee 17, Albany St. 7 Washington Lee 20, Randolph-Macon W.

Virginia Tech 16, Salem 16 Valdosta S. 13, C. Florida 7 Fort Valley St. 22, Clark 0 Jacksonville St. 34, Livingston 7 Maryville 12, 7 Mississippi Col.

31, Troy St. 7 N. Alabama 27, Delta St. 19 MIDWEST Michigan 24, Indiana 10 Notre Dame 11, Michigan St. 3 Bowling Green 7, W.

Michigan 3 Indiana St. 29, Drake 19 Iowa 45, Northwestern 7 Oklahoma 13, Iowa St. 3 Tulsa 20, Kansas 15 Miami, 0 20, Kent St. 0 Missouri 28, E. Carolina 9 Ohio 17, Toledo 14 Florida St.

34, Ohio St. 17 Wisconsin 35, Purdue 31 UCLA 34, Colorado 6 Ball St. 14, N. Illinois 7 E. Illinois 27, Youngstown St.

23 Illinois 42, Minnesota 24 C. Michigan 13, E. Michigan 8 N. Iowa 21, W. Illinois 9 Adrian 28, St.

Norbert Ashland 17, Indiana Central 0 Augustana, Ill. 34, Ill. Wesleyan 7 Beloit 35, Grinnell 21 Benedictine 49, Peru St. 14 Butler 27, Valparaiso 3 C. Missouri 27, NW Missouri 3 Concordia, Moor.

36, Macalester 0 Dakota St. 20, Black Hill St. 17 Dayton 71, Jersey City St. 0 Defiance 30, Olivet 15 Denison 13, Muskingum 0 DePauw 34, Albion 3 Dickinson 20, Chadron St. 13 Doane 23, Westmar 0 Elmhurst 52, Wheaton 21 Evansville 26, St.

Joseph, Ind. 21 Findlay 41, Earlham 0 Ft. Hays St. 15, Mo. Western 13 Graceland 10, Mid-Am Nazarene 7 Grand Valley St.

32, Wayne, Mich. 15 Hamline 26, Augsburg 16 Hanover 62, Bluffton 17 Harding 15, Evangel 14 Hilisdale 35, Saginaw Val. St. 7 Hope 21, Kenyon 9 Illinois Col. 20, Monmouth, Ill.

14 Jamestown 10, Mayville St. 7 John Carroll 10, Hiram Col. 7 Kearney St. 28, Wayne St. 16 Lake Forest 7, Knox 0 Lakeland 22, Eureka 16 Luther 25, Dubuque 22 Manchester 24, Anderson 19 Moorhead St.

30, 20 Mt. Senario 28, NW Wisconsin 8 Mt. Union 57, Marietta: 3 Neb. Wesleyan 40, Hastings 30 North Central 14, Carthage 10 N. Dakota St.

10, S. Dakota St. 3 North Park 28, Carroll, Wis. 14 N. Michigan 80, Ferris St.

14 Colorado 24, Augustan, S. D. 17 Northwood, Mich. 14, Michigan Tech 13 NW Minnesota 12, Loras 7 NW lowa 55, Dana 0 NE Illinois 23, Concordia, Ill. 3 Ohio Northern 28, Heidelberg 13 Ohio Wesleyan 32, Wooster 7 Olivet Nazarene 37, Benedictine, Ill.

0 Otterbein 30, Capital 26 Principia 22, Rose-Hulman 17 Ripon 33, Coe 7 St. Cloud St. 28, SW Minnesota 27 St. Olaf 21, Bethel, Minn. 8 St.

Thomas 56, Gustav Adolphus 28 Simpson 31, Upper lowa 14 SW Missouri 44, SE Missouri 26 Southwestern 35, Tabor S. Dakokta 6, 3 Wabash 25, Millikin Wilmington 27, Taylor 20 Winona St. 40, St. 28 Claire 7, 0 23, Wis. Stevens Pt.

0 25, 7 -River Falls 29, Mankato St. 14 Yankton 21, Huron 20 SOUTHWEST Houston 21, Baylor 21 Texas Tech 24, Texas 15 Wichita St. 24, W. Texas St. 21 SMU 38, N.

Texas St. 10 E. Texas St. 24, NW Louisiana Arkansas 35, TCU 0 Texas 34, Rice 7 Lamar 28, Texas Southern 17 La. Tech 17, Texas-Arlington 14 S.

Arkansas 17, Bluff 15 Sul Ross St. 23, Austin Col. 21 SW Oklahoma 16, Cameron 9 Sam Houston St. 21, Texas Luteran 17 E. Central, Oka.

40, Henderson St. 20 Ouachita 17, Ark-Montecello 6 FAR WEST California 26, San Jose St. 6 Montana St. 30, Idaho St. 27 Stanford 45, Oregon St.

5 Southern Cal 38, Oregon 7 Montana 28, 27 New Mex. St. 26, Ill. St. 17 Washington 46, San Diego 25 New Mexico 49, Air Force 37 Idaho 35, Weber St.

34 Carroll, Mont. 37, Rocky Mountain 20 Montana Tech 28, W. Montana 17 St. 31, Redlands 7 Colorado Mines 17, New Mex. Highlands W.

New Mexico 14, Adams St. 14 W. Oregon 40, Clark 17 Puget Sound 16, Humboldt St. 14 C. Washington 24, Whitworth 17 Hayward St.

6, St. Mary's, Calif. 6 Linfield 30, E. Oregon Oregon Tech 45, Pac. Lutherian 27 S.

Oregon 37, Pacific, Ore. 15 S. Utah 17, Fort Lewis 12 La Verne 24, San Francisco 6 Hapless Keydets 38-3 19 into a five-yard loss and that was the final whimper by the Keydet offense. "I'M GLAD it happened," Sheridan said of the ill-advised fake, "but I don't think it had anything to do with the way we played on offense. The whole game looked sluggish to me at the beginning." Quarterback David Charpia awakened Furman.

He led them to a score late in the first quarter with a fine passing touch and a well-timed pitch to Stanford Jennings which resulted in a 25-yard touchdown. Jennings stepped out of the grasp of a pair of defenders to get the score. Charpia's passing and Jennings' running led to a one-yard score by Jennings with 3:42 left in the half. About two minutes later, Charpia tossed a two-yard TD pass to Steve Coppenger for a 21-3 halftime lead and the rout was on. "That was a key series," said Sheridan.

"The first few games we haven't been productive in the first half, so that was what we wanted to do," Charpia added. "We wanted to take some of the pressure off our defense." VMI Fur First downs 29 Rushes-yards 27-102 70 70-295 Passing yards 53 255 Return yards 100 41 Passes 25-7-4 25-16-1 Punts 7-39 3-40 Fumbles-lost 1-1 5-2 Penalties-yards 3-25 4-25 Time of possession 20:02 39:58 VMI 0- 3 Furman 3 13-38 MA 14 8 VMI-FG Tyler 30 Fur -Jennings 25 run (Tanguay kick) Fur- Jennings 1 run (Tanguay kick) Fur -Coppenger 2 pass from Charpia (Tanguay kick) -FG Tanguay 23 Fur -Drye 12 run (Tanguay kick) Fur -Gardner 22 run (Tanguay kick) A -13, 187 The Keydets didn't put much pressure on the Furman defense. Kelly Raber hit just six of 24 passes for 58 yards and the VMI ground game managed 102 net yards, 33 in the second half. Freshman fullback John Drye, who had to come on when Jimmy Beddingfield broke an ankle in the first half, contributed 104 yards rushing and a 12-yard scoring run for Furman. TIM TANGUAY kicked a 23-yard field goal and backup tailback Robbie Gardner scooted 22 yards to score with 2:53 left.

"We finally got some momentum going on offense," said Charpia, whose team had been unable to score in the first half in its first three games. "This was the type game we needed; we needed to score some points." Furman's defense also forced five turnovers with four interceptions, a school-record three of them by John Zemina. Jennings, the Southern Conference Player of the Year last season, was used sparingly in the second half. He ran 16 times for 56 yards, three for one yard in the final two periods. Charpia hit 15 of 24 passes for 231 yards and added 43 yards rushing, incuding a couple of key runs for first down on third-down plays.

Furman finished with 295 yards rushing and 550 total yards. "They really burned us through the air, especially on third-and-long situations," VMI's Bob Thalman said. "We just got beat; there are no alibis or excuses, no other way to look at it. "It was a team loss we broke down as a unit." United Press International Although pinned by VMI's Ray Rushton (56), Furman's Jim Beddingfield stretches for fumble. S.C.

State Rolls Over Alcorn State 20-0 By ROBERT ANDERSON State Sports Writer ORANGEBURG South Carolina State struck for two fourth-quarter touchdowns in less than a minute to break open a close game as the Bulldogs rolled to a 20-0 triumph over Alcorn State Saturday night at Bulldog Stadium. The Bulldogs capitalized on a short punt and an interception by defensive tackle Dwayne Jackson to kill any hopes the Braves had of pulling the game out. A 12-yard punt by Charles Duckworth gave the Bulldogs the ball at the Braves' 15 with 9:45 left. Anthony Reed, the Bulldogs' bullish fullback, smashed over from the five for the score with 8:40 on the clock. Al Gardner added the PAT for a 13-0 advantage.

Reed, who missed two games this year because of injuries, was back at his old form against the Braves rushing for 115 yards on 16 attempts. The Bulldogs' second opportunity came seconds later when reserve Alcorn S.C. State First downs Yards rushing 118 167 Yards passing 77 39. Passes 8-24 5-19 Intercepted by Fumbles-lost 2-0 1-1 Punts Penalties-yards 9-60 8-117 Alcorn 0 0 -0 S.C. State 0 14 -20 SCS FG Gardner 33 -SCS FG Gardner 27 sCS Reed 5 run (Gardner kick) SCS Graves 9 run (Gardner kick) Alcorn quarterback Richard Myles was hit by George Bradley attempting to pass and the ball popped out.

Jackson plucked it out of the air at the 12 and was tackled at the nine. On the next play, Mitchell Graves sealed the Braves' fate with a nineyard burst into the end zone for the score. Gardner kicked the extra point for a 20-0 bulge with 7:43 remaining The victory improved the Bulldogs' record to 3-2 on the year while Alcorn, which knocked off S.C. State 24-20 with a last-second touchdown last year, suffered their third loss in four outings. It was the second time in as many Wofford Survives PC Comeback ack For 24-16 Victory weeks that the Bulldog defense has shut out an opponent.

Last week State thrashed Howard 50-0. The contest was a defensive struggle most of the way. Neither team mounted what could be considered an impressive drive. Led by Jackson, John Courtney, Sidney Fulton and Myles Darling, the Bulldogs held the visitors from Lorman, to 131 yards total offense. The defense set up S.C.

State's first score. Manning Lipsey blocked a Duckworth punt early in the game and it was recovered at the Braves' 16. Gardner's 33-yard field goal with 12:37 left in the first quarter gave the Bulldogs a 3-0 lead. The Bulldogs missed another opportunity after an exchange of possessions, when penalties erased two touchdowns in the same series. S.C.

State extended its lead to 6-0 in the second period, marching 33 yards to the Braves nine-yard line before running out of downs. Gardner game down but both sides agreed to it beforehand and I don't think it was an advantage for either team." Sasser cited Wofford's 80-yard scoring drive following PC's quick Stuart Lifts G- To 44-6 Triumph BOILING SPRINGS, N.C. Chip Stuart threw three touchdown passes and substitute signal-caller Al Bianco added another Saturday to propel Gardner-Webb to a 44-6 thrashing of Georgia Southern. Stuart, who connected on 32 of 57 passes for 391 yards, tossed touchdown strikes of 16 yards to Duane Foster, 29 yards to Cameron Brooks and 28 yards to Wayne Roberts. Bianco's TD toss was for nine yards to Allie Bridges.

The Bulldogs, now 4-1, got their other points on Carlisle Koonts field goals of 43 and 22 yards and on a 36- yard interception return by Darius Davis. came on for a 27-yard field that split the uprights with 12:12 left in the half. The Braves' defense wasn't bad either as attested by a minus four yards rushing for the Bulldogs in the second half, a fact that didn't set to well with Bulldog coach Bill Davis. "We probably had the worst stats in the first half that we've ever had," said Davis after the game. "We thought they had changed their whole defensive philosophy since they went from a six-man front to a five.

"But we made some adjustments at halftime and coach Johnson (Robert, offensive coordinator) did a good job of getting things together. "The defense played a super ball game, holding them off until our offense could get it together. (James) McFarland threw for four touchdowns against us last year, but this year Dwayne Jackson and Courtney did a hell of job of keeping the pressure on him and didn't allow him to do the things he wanted to do. "Our linebackers and our deep secondary just played super." By ERNIE TRUBIANO State Sports Writer SPARTANBURG Wofford, surviving what Terriers coach Buddy Sasser called the most amazing play he's "never seen," outlasted Presbyterian 24-16 Saturday night at Snyder Field. In a televised thriller which lasted more than three hours, the Blue Hose, down 21-0, struck for a pair of touchdowns in less than a one-minute span of the fourth quarter to put a few gray hairs on Sasser's head.

PC began its comeback bid when Wofford's Glenn Manning intercepted a pass by David Waldkirch at the Wofford nine-yard line and churned out a tackle-busting 15-yard return only to have the ball stripped from his hands by Gordon Glaspey who took it back the opposite direction the way the football was traveling when the play began. Got all that? Even television viewers benefitting from the first live telecast of a small-college game in South Carolina PC WOFFORD First downs 17 16 Rushing 41-134 50-238 Passing 9-25-129 6-9-62 intercepted by Fumbles lost 0 0 Punts 5-164 4-165 Penalties 6-61 14-148 Wofford 0 10 24 NO ON 0 16 16 W-Lang 4 run (Hairston kick) W- 4 run (Hairston kick) W- 7 run (Hairston kick) PC -Rippy 4 run (Culler kick) PC-Rippy 8 run (Culler kick) W-FG Hairston 27. PC-Wofford punter runs out of end zone had trouble following it on instant replay. Anyway, Glaspey returned the football to the Wofford five-yard line and two plays later Philip Rippy cracked over left guard for a fouryard touchdown. Doug Culler's PAT at the 11:18 mark cut the score to 21-7.

But, alas. A double penalty after the kick allowed PC to kick off from the Terriers' 30. Blue Hose coach Cally Gault really had no choice but to try an onsides kick and Charles Huff made the strategy work by recovering on the Wofford 16. Rippy again raced in for the TD this time from nine yards out and Culler's kick with 10:27 left in the game whittled a seemingly safe Wofford lead to 21-14. "I saw Gardner all over again," said Sasser, referring to a game earlier this season which the Terriers almost blew in the fourth period.

"We were up 21-0 and all of a sudden, less than a minute later, we're fighting for our lives. That (the thisaway-thataway interception) was the most amazing play. I didn't see it because it was over on the other corner of the field but my kids told me about it," he said with a grin. "What could I say to our kid a 155-pounder fighting for yardage like that. If he had just gone down the ball would have been dead.

But that's the great thing about small-college football." Responding to questions about the seemingly endless parade of local TV timeouts, Sasser added, "It slowed the pair of touchdowns as a key factor in the victory which left his team at 3-1 and sent the Blue Hose to 1-2-1. "Give PC a lot of credit," he said. "They were down 21-0 and came back and played well and almost pulled it out. That was a key drive for us after they scored." The march ended in Don Hairston's 27-yard field goal for a 24-14 lead. The Terriers took an intentional safety later to preserve the win.

Wofford built its lead on a fouryard run by Wade Lang, set up by Tim Renfrow's 35-yard kickoff return on the Terriers' first possession of the game. Then, just 28 seconds before the half ended, Wofford quarterback Charlie Bradshaw rifled a 40-yard clothesline pass to Rolf Hays at the PC four. Bernard Wilson carried the final four yards for the score and a 14-0 intermission lead. The Terriers padded their margin to 21-0 early in the final stanza on Wilson's seven-yard run..

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