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

Richmond Times-Dispatch from Richmond, Virginia • 35

Location:
Richmond, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I IT 1 4 i i tf -r-v "r'A i Elias On Duke: They Killed Our Continuity definitely a bright spot" But tha ohvlnu wa Jua too obvious "Our pax defense fall apnrt and those aaxy acorn broke up they killed our continuity" Duka held Intact through tha firxt quarter abandoned In uaually atnic ground attack for a pacing offensive that waa tha main weapon in four touch CVmtinuml on Page 7 Coi 1 By Jrrnr IJndiiiUt What It was wan football- but (hr nsme of tha game atrirtly coincidental Duka ripped through Virginia with a "hmre run" pmdurtlnn that would haa ntaila Roger Maria envious Tha Blue Devils scored a surprisingly lopsided 42-0 decision In tha lTlh Tobacco Festival game at City Stadium with a quirk sinking barrage of bffg-ranca touchdown And afterwaid Virginia much Bill Ella waa try ins to find some allvar lining In a long dark day fur tha "new" Cavalier "I'm Hill a firm lialiavar that we have a pretty good trnm" said Elina In a puNl-nuirtrny session "1 though wa moved ilia hall wall parly In tha game and I think wa had thair ground gam wall in chack Our firfrnive line play waa and FINANCIAL Mq Oct 1 1961 SECTION UicIjmonD fEimcs-Bispatcl) NF1 Nrf tUqueur br Nehnr1 Jr man (20) Arrington turns on a burst of speed breezes pass Five-man and heads for the lar corner of the end zone outrunning Stanford Fischer (12) and Tony Ulchla (4-1) TOUCHDOWN This was the first Duke touchdown in the Tobacco Festival game at City Stadium yesterday and it was the shortest Blue Devil TD strike of the afternoon a four-yard run Halfback Joel Arrington (26) takes a pitch back from quarterback Walt Rappold (17) and turns right behind fullback John Tinnrll (33) Apparently trapped (center photo) by Virginia's Bobby Free- BMe Devils Take to Air SPORTV1EW 1 By Chaunccy Durden Times-Dispatch Sports Editor Paret Wins NEW YORK Sept 30-n Benny "Kid" Paret a determined Cuban flailer won back the world welterweight boxing title from Emile Griffith Saturday night on a split Continued (Hi Page 7 Col 7 i 42-0 Smash Cavaliers Son Juy Aerial Attack Brings 3 Touchdmvns By Shelley Rolfe In the first and fourth quarters yesterday afternoon at City Stadium Virginia looked Duke in the eye and held the Blue Devils scoreless In between the Cavaliers may have had the feeling they were looking down a loaded gun barrel one that was1 i rr going off wilh alarming rrgu-j Dll n(mU Yfl tartly I IS II For Duke singing a ruthless display of passing efficiency Duka pul ils hands on the hall six times In the second and third (run laiicdi and srored six times to: lV' I (-yum rM I run (kirk MM from Camor punt nlurn run I Ntynoldi from Garner ira Festival' WiUunaan rrsuvni fUP1 Aappald 17 Ir I The Blue Devils bagged their Fuirn first TD wilh the second quar- ilsw ter 4:35 old Joel Arrington Statistic scored from the four by sweep-i ing right end -with Ihe aid of aJIhiaVTIr'd a nine-yard aerial near midfield land a pass interference call 41 Pawn yardap Paaara Paaaaa Inlorcaptod fcy a pass Vo Ouko I 17 71 lit I 114 MV 9-11 I Punta t-M4 4-14 1 Fumhlra loot 1 Varda prnallaad 11 94 SOMETIMES THERE IS just no escaping the spotlight Take the case of young Jav Wilkinson a 19-year-old Duke soph' omore quarterback and offensive end Last year Wilkinson had entered Duke to a fanfare of publicity Not only had he been an All-American high school quarterback he was also the son of Oklahoma Coach Bud Wilkinson the wlnningest of all active coaches Young Wilkinson chose Duke as his school because neither he nor his famous father wanted to be under father-son pressure at Oklahoma Young Wilkinson was the No 1 quarterback on 1960 freshman squad but when Duke began practice this fall he was listed as the third- or fourth-unit quarterback Walt Rappold the No 2 quarterback of last ACC championship Duke squad was back as were lettermen quarterbacks Gil Garner and Randy Clark Wilkinson it appeared would be this season so as to give him three years of eligibility after this year Even so when Ihe visiting football writers began invading the Duchy of Durham their stories inevitably made mention of Bud Wilkinson's boy Jay Now it so happens that Jay Wilkinson is an extremely bashful young man who has been embarrassed gridistically speaking by his father's reputation Jay finally worked up the courage to approach Duke's veteran athletic publicist Ted Mann with a request "Mr Mann" he said "by now everybody should know Bud Wilkinson's son so how about referring to me hereafter as 'Jay Wilkinson Before Duke's opening game against South Carolina Wilkinson became a "second-stringer" Duke's No 2 swing (or lonesome) end Ed Chestnutt was injured in practice and Wilkinson became a lonesome end However he did not get in the South Carolina game as the Dukes had to fight for their lives to get out of Columbia the Gem of South Carolina with a 7-6 victory- His First Varsity Run SHORTLY BEORE THE half ended in yesterday's Duke-Virginia Tobacco Festival game at City Stadium Wilkinson was in as Duke's safetyman He'd been the lonesome end on one Duke series of plays but now he'd been sent in with Virginia forced to punt By then the Dukes taking to the air in the second quarter had blown the game wide open and were leading by a 20-0 score There were less than two minutes to go before the half when Tommy Griggs the Virginia fullback punted to Wilkinson Bud's boy took the kick on the Duke 37 circled back slightly to avoid the first Cavalier downfield ran to his left to the sideline and raced 63 yards for a touchdown It was the first time Wilkinson had handled the hail as varsity player Last night in South Bend where yesterday Notre Dame defeated Oklahoma 19-6 Bud Wilkinson's coaching disappointment may have been assuaged by the news of hii boy's varsity debut Those Big Bombs AFTER 42-0 runaway yesterday a Virginia man aid "I thought the days of those topheavy scores against us were over But who would ever expect a Duke team to pass so much?" Actually Duke did not throw a lot of passes The Duke quarterbacks threw only 13 times Of the first nine Duke passes eight were completed and a pass interferrence was called and a roughing penalty which irontrived In move them to the Virginia 10 Exploit Pan Defense After that Ihe Dukes needed! pneriou little lielp in the way of penalties And the larger the score grew the longer the Dukej passes as the Blue Devils found a flaw in the Cavalier pass defense and exploiled it brutally Because the short hook pass ta a lonely end is supposed th(l eHriinK from Mrs he the principal item in the Richard duPonl's Bohemia jDuke air urinal Virginia siabl virtually nailed down its played ils secondary tuc ked in second ennseeutive horsef-the- tight With first quarterbark year title Saturdnv by winning jWalt Rapjiold and understudy the $109fion Woodward Stakes Gil Garner doing the pitching and equalling the Belmont honors the Blue Devils coun- Park track record Divine tered with direct action Duke Comedy was second and Carry simply manuevered its receivers Back champion 3-year-old fin-beyond the Cavalier secondary ished third and went for tiie home-run playl With Eddie Arcaro in the The second time Duke had saddle for his fourth Woodward possession in the second quar-' victory Kelso never felt tha er it scored on a 48-yard air whip as he took the lead head- strike from Garner to halfback mg into the home-stretch with 'Jack Wilson who made the quarter-mile to go The 'catch on the Virginia 30 The 4-yeaMid son of next time it had possession the Mid of Flight by Count Fleet 1 zoomed home in two minutes Continued on Page 7 Col 4 flat for the mile and one- Iqunrter eight lengths ahead of Llangollen Farm's Divine Comedy Kelso's time matched the track mark set by Whisk Broom II in 1913 Divine Comedy wound up half a length ahead of Mrs Katherine Prire's Carry Back who trailed for the hetter part of a mile Fdge Whodunit Carry Back who smashed his '3-year-old rivals In the Ken-tuckey Derby Preakness Fla-'mingo and Florida Derby did manage to get up in the final CHPEL HILL Sppt -Halfback atride to get third money hv a Carson scored three touchdowns as North Caro- n-ck over Eddie Burke' Who Iina stormed from behind to defeat North Carolina dunit winner of Hollywood Atlantic Coast Conference Park's linnooo Sunset Han- istsih T-n c- Torrpion SaS Pholn A kmtt ridMol as Navy's Dick to break up the pass is in the background ARSON SETS PACE challenged for the lead in guard Eric Erdossy Fitzgerald fails in an attempt Greg Mather Navy end AN INDIAN PASS THAT WORKED Roger Hale (25) goes off balance as he pulled in this pass for a five-yard gain in game against Navy at Annapolis Hale is falling over Continued on Page 7 Col 7 ROLL AFTER INTERMISSION SCORES I it iddies Rout Indians 44-6 College Football STATS Dune 41 Virginia A-MC GuilfcrC 4 Navy 44 WAM 4 Jafmaon Smith 14 Va Union H-SC SI 7 Middies delighting a homecom-i Still the stubborn Indians Nvfoik 7 ing crowd of 17803 squared held their own until fullback their record at 1-1 Nick Markoff stepped Jfl tO'Emiry A Henry II Careon-Newman 7i around off a Henning pass on the rrrk i Although pushed AABA By Roacoe Puckett T-D Sports Writer ANNAPOLIS Sept 30-The Inevitable mistakes atarted catching up with inexperienced d1r0Jped ga51 ln 'J? Wiliam and Mary in the sec- th thl nnd quarter here Saturday and The 20 on a play Wllicn Syracuaa 1 Wait Virginia 14 North Carolina 27 Stata SI Maryland 24 Ckmuii II I South Carolina It Wako Forest 7 urman I) I Cittadel It Dlvitfiw II Continued on Page 7 Col 1 Lineups NAW -Gill KdMcr SiunaraA Tooll Flam In Schaefer Van iyaaw Optofcar Stern from the outset the Indians with the help of linebacker Dick Korns' alert defensive work held Navy scoreless fonwiHiam nearly 19 minutes Korns in-tercepted a pass to end on Navy threat and recovered a fumble to stop another But the Middies unable to keep their early drives going broke the lee on an explosive pass play with the second stanza 3:52 old Quarterback Ron Navy Navy (Mather (pw '21' i i Klffn CK 1 rdurn who the early part of the run down 4km the hacks retch finished fifth WwT and last six lengths behind i Clark kickoff largest here since 1948 saw i (than kwki BhaWar 41 the impressive Tar Heels spot lnc crw i State a 10-0 flrst-perind 4'fW l-al IE iitott Fiona CiMc KmucA Lynch HhfiW Orakam Limipt letter Kilpatrick CempMI Mary 4 II I 14 14 --44 North Carolina AST Iran I Btcwart 94 paaa from Klomlck1 EAST Matharkick I Vitlanova Holy Crooa 4 Markoff SB paaa httrcaptlcn Armyi Boatpn 7 ta rMnaoan4 a am rkk1 5yr Baylor II fcieyL mlummm It Boom Maritt 1 plunoo (Mathar Dartmouth Nm- Hamhohiro I Icon 4 paaa from Manning BomanCoimoa' aiiroi 'Trinity i wiiiiamV 4 and then roar back behind the Agfary Hannln UcklaS In MofHra Lycommc 7 rns a mm- Ampgra i4 ermcatpn running or fullback Bob Elliott FlunH (MiOiar Amnaral S4 Sa-mgr aiB I and CarVWl i Weatminutcr If itaa 7 a kioilif I Cornel J4 Cciata It was North Carolina first Ive standout hit half- Statistic lIVJT'b victory since had a wr 1951 raced behind the sec- ita-v 11 Auahm ya-Oiao 11 1M Clarion St Bravo r-lv LirSOn ondary with inot that Faaant yirdm -itf Greg f-i! 'IS Hamiton State 27-22 Saturday in an oo bail game A capacity crowd of ttQOO- Clarion Grava ciy arson 192-ptHind Sntar II from Freeport Pa dived over ered 54 yards and end ung sn from the in tfie second the Indians crumbled in their usual fashion to Navy 44-6 Breaking down the door to the goal on two explosive plays one a 54-yard past and the iwky other an 80-yard return of a pass interception the Middies padded a modest 14-0 halftime advantage with four touchdowns and a safety in the final two quarters to record their 23d victory over the Tribe Only a home-run pan play from soph quarterback Dan Henning to halfback Walt Scott covering $6 yards in the fourth quarter prevented thej Indians from absorbing theirl LT LO FT Dam QS LH HA Ell Ml 1 ran ikirk Whodunit The crowd of 40212 which Tar 7 fm fram cawHi turned out on a perfect Indian urn 'summer day backed Kelo Statistic jheaviiy He reurnd S3 S2V7 ncs lnc and $210 ax hecame the cn a first odd-on favorite to win I la Klomkk lutten AS Colomilt Fink Sal taypa Berger Bull tee Inca Teen Market! BaH MerrOt WILLIAM AND MAAV WnlNci Corley Irky Scpmtky WktiAan Lotniak Jannacn Craoc1 Kama ErScaay Samar AHtv Maaaiwh O'TMk Wokor Barton Cm OrioeaA Manmns 00 a larky Vimah LFIpa Hale SecH Tkaatan Ftnkunaa nu yirCai wm n-v'ne Comedv ZlZiy'" 'i Firct 77 'off St 1V1 wa SW40 and $2 SO iM4whi Carry Back wa second choice and paid $2 to show Mather booted the first of six im irtiiiii Fuwiac Met 1 extra points Varca pnaiind I 1 itsaca if Habcn one i Coeitinued on Page 4 Col 5 i Continued on Page 4 Col 1 aim IntircaFiaB 9 eynta 10 4 ha loot Va-aa amuik i.

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 Richmond Times-Dispatch
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Richmond Times-Dispatch Archive

Pages Available:
2,668,277
Years Available:
1828-2024