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Richmond Times-Dispatch from Richmond, Virginia • 118

Location:
Richmond, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
118
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

K-2 Rxlimoiirt Sunday Oct 1 1967 SC Defeats Duke 21-1 7 SPORTV1EW Wallace Wade: Duty Dictates By Chauncey Durden Times-Dispatch Sports Editor score but Muir made it on the third down With just 32 seconds remaining foe South Carolinians lived long hours before linebacker pass on foe game's final play Bob Cole intercepted a Woodall Calabrese took foe short kickoff following the winning touchdown and returned to foe Duke 41 South Carolina drew a 15-yard penalty on foe runback and the ball was on foe Gamecock 44 Woodall hit tight end Henley Carter with a 19-yard pass to the South Carolina 25 and Duke immediately called time out stopping the clock with 0:23 left Woodall passed again to Carter this time for eight yards and foe Blue Devils called time with 0:17 remaining A third Woodall-to-Carter pass was completed on foe five-yard line but a penalty nullified foe play The ball was the 22 with just 10 seconds remaining when Cole came up with his interception of still another Woodall pass South Carolina 7 0 7 Duka 0 10 0 7-17 SC Lucai recovered tumble end zone (Poole kick) Calabrese 1 run (Rleienfeld kick) FG Rleeentald 37 Fair I run Poole kick) Calabrese 1 run (Rlesenldd kick) Muir 1 run (Poole kick) 2SMO STATISTICS may not have to call me A little more than two months later Wade nearing his 50th birthday became an artillery officer Men a captain in World War I He could have remained at Duke coached football throughout the duration and coordinated athletics for the Marine trainees at Duke But for Wade there was but one course: He believed he would prove a good officer therefore it was his duty to be that officer Over his protest he was ordered to coach an Army all-star football squad for five games That unhappy duty over he carried his battalion overseas It must have been one of the crack artillery battalions for it was shifted from Army to Army (Third First and Ninth Armies) wherever the going was the toughest At end Wade's battalion was one of the farthest advanced units pressing on Berlin The records show that Colonel Wade went through the entire European campaign without a single leave that he was within range of German light artillery fire constantly for nine months Yes Wallace Wade was tough and hard but only according to the dictates of duty which he held and holds above all things Giants Clinch 2nd Cubs Secure 3rd AP Wirephota Backward Landing Illinois halfback Bill Huston twists over tacklers and heads for a backward landing in the first period against Pittsburgh yesteitiay at Champaign 111 Illinois won 34-6 First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Return yardage Passes Punts Fumbles lest Yards penalized Cubs 94 CINCINNATI IB Randy three-run homer keyed an eight-run uprising in the first inning that carried the Chicago Cubs to a 9-4 victory over Cincinnati Saturday The victory clinched third place in the National League for the Cubs SAN FRANCISCO LPI Dick run-scoring double and the combined four-hit pitching of Bill Henry Nestor Chavez and Lindy McDaniel carried the San Francisco Giants to a 1-0 victory and a sweep of their doubleheader with Philadelphia Saturday Left-hander Ray Sadecki scattered five hits for his sixth straight victory as the Giants took the first game 3-2 to clinch their third consecutive second-place finish in the National League CHOICE S55HH3 CHICAGO CINCINNATI ob ab bl Kesslngar ss 5 3 3 1 Harper rf 5 13 3 Pinson cf 4 113 Rosa If 40 0 0 LMay lb 5 14 1 Prez 3b 31 0 0 Helms 3b 5 113 PavOetlch 3 110 Pappas 1 0 0 0 Nottabarf Rule pb McCool DJohnson ph 1 0 0 0 Lee 0 0 0 0 Simpson pb 0 0 0 0 Arrigo 0 0 0 0 Shamsky pti 10 11 Davidson 0 0 0 0 Kesslngar si Becker) 3b (Williams If Santa 3b Banks lb nunaieync Holtzmnn Hands FIRST PHILADELPHIA ab rh bi GAME SAN FRANCISCO abrhbl Rain lb TTaylor 3b Lock rl Hall GOlIvcr Joseph lb Sutherlnd If Briggs Cf Win ss ock ion Gonzalez rf 3b 4 1 3 1 4 0 3 0 4000 lb 3 I 1 1 4 0 10 Hart If 4 0 0 1 4 111 Brown rf 4 0 0 0 4 111 Lanltr ss 10 0 0 3111 Gull rrsz si 3 0 10 3010 Fuciftts 3b 3110 1011 Sadtckl 3110 10 10 Total Chicago Cincinnati 30011 0 Total 304114 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0-0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0-4 DP-Chcogo 1 LOB-Chlcago 0 Cincinnati Beckert HarperTHelms Holtzman -H ER 50 (WfO) 4 I Total 31 3 1 Total 3t 3 3 Philadelphia 111 III 1 SenFrancisce III 111 I Hart LJockion Philadelphia 3 Philadelphia 4 San Fcgodsce I 20 Haller Gonzalez McCaPey (31) Fuentesn Relax IP RERBBSO LJockion (L13-15) 7 7 3 3 3 5 Holl 1 1110 Sadeckl (W12-4) 5 3 11 HBP LJocklon (Lanier) 3:14 3 5 3 3 1 0 SSXm Pappas (Savage) McCool By Chauncey Durden Times-Dispatch Sports Editor DURHAM Duke's Blue Devils 10-7 losers last week to the University of Michigan in the last 11 seconds of the game were beaten Saturday by South Carolina in the final minute of a bitterly fought contest With 38 seconds remaining on the Wallace Wade Stadium clock Warren Muir South fullback transfer from United States Military Academy shot into the end zone for the touchdown and victory over the Blue Devils Muir's touchdown scored from only a foot out- completed a 47-yard drive after Duke had gone ahead 17-14 at 9:12 in the fourth quarter South victory the first scored by a Gamecock football team in Durham since 1930 was the third straight of the season for Paul squad that won only one game last year Score on Kickoff The Gamecocks won with scores at the start of the game and at the beginning of the second half and by successfully engineering their late-game long-scoring drive The game was just eight seconds old when the Gamecocks got their first touchdown Many among the crowd of 25-000 failed to see foe score as they were cheering Wallace Wade as the former Duke coach was circling the track in an automobile following foe pre-game ceremonies pro-claiming the renaming of huge football saucer Wade Stadium South Carolina kicked off to Bob Helper and Helper fumbled when hit hard by Tim Brice Gamecock wide linebacker Helper and a South Carolinian scrambled for foe bail which squirted into foe end zone where Dave Lucas South Carolina defensive end fell on it for a touchdown Duel of Fullbacks The game then settled down to a fullback duel between Muir and senior Jay Calabrese with the later having far foe better of it through foe first half After a Duke drive had petered out the Blue Devils failing to make a yard on fourth down on foe South Carolina 15 bi Art Vann intercepted Mike pass to give foe Blue Devils foe ball on the Games' 24 From there Cala- brese and sophomore tailback -Pete Schafer alternated in carrying the ball to foe one from where Calbrese scored at 4:08 in foe second quarter The next time Duke came into possession of the ball the Blue Devils swept downfield on Schafer's running and quarterback Alan short passes (foe Blue Devil quarterback completed his first eight passes) Fifty-two yards foe Blue Devils came to the South Carolina 20 before a penalty stopped the drive On fourth down Duke soccer-style kicker Bob Riesenfeld kicked a 37-yard field goal to give Duke a 10-7 lead at 12:58 in the second quarter The Gamecocks took fob second-half kickoff however and making foe big plays on third-down situations went ahead 14-10 at 2:18 in the period Muir on a third-and-14 play broke away for 44 yards to place the ball on foe Duke 28 Then on foird-and-seven Fair passed to tight end Johnny Gregory for a first down on the 11 Muir gained three yards before Fair running to his left on a pass play and failing to spot a receiver reversed his field swung back to his right and raced into the end zone for South Carolina's second touchdown 88-Yard Drive The fourth quarter began with South Carolina's punting to foe duke 12 Calabrese and tailback Frank Ryan pounding away behind superb blocking by the Duke linemen moved foe stakes for seven downs to foe South Carolina one from where Calabrese scored his 23rd career touchdown a Duke record In covering 88 yards in 17 plays Duke didn't once resort to passing It was Calabrese and Ryan and Ryan and Calabrese as the Blue Devils ate up 9:12 of the clock With Duke leading 17-14 and just 5:48 remaining Ben Gar-: nto South fine halfback took foe kickoff on his seven and came back 52 yards before being tackled from be-1 hind by defensive halfback Don Brannon Fair unable to get off a pass was dropped for a seven-yard loss Fair then threw a long pass intended for Reeves but Duke an Larry Dempsey intercepted interception appeared to have been a big play but Duke could not gain and was forced to punt to the Duke 43 From there South Carolina moved on passes to split end Fred Zeig-ler (three) and Gregory to the Duke two It took the Gamecocks three running plays to on threw a I miss to monitor DURHAM-EDWIN POPE in his "Football's Greatest Coaches" began the chapter on Wallace Wade by relating how in 1933 after Duke had ended a Tennessee three-year winning streak Wade "eyes expressionless thin face frozen walked into the Duke dressing room waved solemn-' ly and said boys you did all right "Two months later Georgia Tech tumbled Duke 64) the Blue -Devils from Rose Bowl contention Wade eyes expressionless thin face frozen walked into the Duke dressing room waved solemnly and said boys you did all right conclusion long shared by some of Wade's coaching brethren countless newspapermen and thousands upon thousands of football fans: Wade was the coolest case among college football Saturday as the 73-year-old still sapling-lean Wade stood at the South goal of the big football arena Duke renajned Wallace Wade Stadium and the he gave the impression of still being the Well Wade was a cool case as he sat on the sidelines watching his great Alabama and Duke teams Neither his ram-rod posture nor his expression changed no matter how the tide of battle flowed But that composure ye've always believed was part of the Iron discipline Wade 'subjected himself to even as he maintained iron discipline 'over his football squads We know for sure from observation that Wade's eyes are not seen sparky glints in those shrewd eyes and warmth and merriment To Wallace Wade football was a tough game of disci-' pline and fundamentals Other things being equal or nearly so he believed that the better disciplined team would win His teams never lost a game for want of discipline Yet one has only to listen to his to know that while they did a lot of talking about the toughness when they were playing and since have added a mite of toughness to the famed coach with the re-telling of every story they looked and look upon him as a wonderful person Tough he was hut ever fair Hewas honest with himself and with his players All in the Book ALWAYS HELD and known Wallace Wade for more than 30 that he was the most misunderstood man of all those who successfully coached in so-called Big Time Mind you misunderstood as a man for there was no mistaking Wallace Wade as a foot- ball coach His coaching record is all there in the book and you can look it as Casey would say But what about Wallace Wade the man? So many persons believed he was the same cool case away from the -practice field and the stadium For years many regarded him as a bowl-crazy coach that winning was the only thing that mattered to him They thought he was coldly indifferent and wholly lacking in sentiment Strangers mistook his Tennessee taciturnity his inherent reserve and shyness for antiseptic aloofness His forthright and honest answers were mistaken for bluntness Wade always did still does carry a seemingly detached and cool manner of appearance with him Yet beneath his "Tennessee ruggedness there is a sentimental streak and a wide streak it is When his 1938 Duke team went to the Rose Bowl Wade rewarded a boy who had not played any of games but who had never missed a practice That boy was included on the traveling squad for the California trip Not only that but Wade put the boy in the game as the clock was running out When questioned about the incident Wade tried to make a little joke of it saying that the boy was jumping up and down on the sidelines and he (Wade) mistook him for another player and mistakenly dispatched him onto the field The belief here has always been that Wade saw another opportunity that New Day to reward the boy for having been so dutiful in his obscure way Voted Against Rose Bowl WADE HAS SAID that he never liked coaching That we believe because as much as any man known Wallace Wade is forthrightly honest And as much as any man known Wallace Wade is devoted to a sense of duty That devotion to Wade holds with Lee that duty is the sublimest word in the English seemed sometimes to border on slavery Coaching was his job Therefore it was his duty to do the best job he could possibly do He drove himself harder than ever he drove his players He was too absorbed in his duty as he saw it to go about back-slapping alumni and players He sought favor of no one He stood on his record and he had no time for correcting mistaken ideas about himself The scoffers laughed one season when Rose Bowl talk centered about unbeaten Duke team and he said he was opposed to post-season games he Bowl Wallace" the coach carried three Alabama teams west of the Rockies to Pasadena and the granddaddy of all the bowl games? He was but he was also the Wallace Wade who as a guard on Brown University's 1915 team cast the only vote against acceptance of Rose Bowl invitation In 1938 Duke played Syracuse in Syracuse The backfield star of the Syracuse team was a Negro-Indian The New York papers early in the week before the game had it that Duke would protest the playing of the Negro star (remember this was before World War II) Duke and Wade took a daily hiding in New York print Finally one New York sports columnist at the behest of sports information director called Wade The New Yorker was informed that Duke had not protested nor would protest the Syracuse playing Before hanging up Wade reminded the New York writer that he had been a Brown teammate of the first Negro All-American back Fritz Pollard He Wait ONE OF THE more vivid memories we carry of Wallace Wade was his introduction of Paul Severin at the time an assistant coach at Florida to a group of veteran coaches during an NCAA convention in New York After introduced the two-time North Carolina All-Ameri- can end around Wade added: beat one of my good Duke teams with one of the greatest plays seen in Adding that something extra to his Introduction of Severin was not only thoughtful and courteous of Wade it was also his way of paying tribute years later to a gallant competitor and rival The most vivid memory we have of Wade was the i night of Jan 1 the night of defeat by Oregon State in the transplanted Rose Bowl game Somehow the conversation got away from the game and to the snafu at Pearl Harbor Wade said something about authorityhaving to shoulder responsibility Which remark prompted Ted Mann athletic publicist who had been called up bv the Navy before Pearl Harbor and who had wangled a leave to take in the Rose Bowl game at Durham to caution Wade iu know coach before this is over they might call you said Mann in a joking manner UtiJes eyes were anything but expressionless as he snapped: Senators 4-0 CHICAGO IB Successive sixth-inning homers by Fred Valentine and Cap Paterson supported Frank five-hit pitching as the Washington Senators blanked Chicago 4-0 Saturday extending the White shutout string to three games SECOND GAME PHILADELPHIA SAN FRANCISCO abrhbl abrhbl Roos 3b 4 0 10 Gutierrez ss 0 0 0 TTaylor 3b 4 0 0 0 Schroder 3b 4 0 0 0 Sutherlnd 4 0 0 0 Hendersn cf 4 0 0 Lock cf 10 10 Hart 10 0 0 Calllsan rf 3 0 0 0 Hiatt lb 10 0 0 Joseph lb 3 0 0 0 FJehnion rf 3 1 1 0 Gonzalez If 3 0 10 Dietz 3 0 11 Cowan rf 1 0 0 0 Etheridge 3b 3 0 1 0 Briggs cf 0 0 0 Henry 10 0 0 Wine ss 1 0 0 0 Chavez 10 0 0 White xb 0 0 0 0 Fucntes ph 10 0 0 Scha Her 3 0 0 0 MDaniel 0 0 0 0 GJockson 1 0 0 0 0 Clemens ph 10 0 0 Ellsworth 00 0 0 Boozer 10 10 Dairmpie 3 0 0 0 Total 30 0 4 0 Total 37 1 4 1 Philadelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 SanFrancisca 101 010 IOz-1 Chaves Philadelphia 1 San Francisco 3 LOB-Philodelphio 5 Son Francisco 5 2 Lock Dietz Rotas IP RERBBSO Boozer (U54) 53 GJockson 1 Ellsworth 3 0 Henry 3 3 Chavez (W1-0) 4 3 McDaniel 3 0 3:13 11447 2 5 2 i WASHINGTON ab bl HAIIen cf 5 0 0 0 Buford 2b McMulln lb 4 0 3 1 Berry If Howard 1b 1 1 3 0 Wilhelm Nan lb 1000 Carlos Valentine rf 4 1 1 3 Bradford ph CPetersn If 1111 Ago cf Casanova 4 1 1 0 Cofavlto rf 3b 4 0 0 0 Boyer 3b Brnkman ss I 0 0 0 Joseptwi Cullen ss 1111 Hansen ss Bertalna 410 0 McCraw lb Peters Williams If ab bl 4 0 0 0 310 0 0110 0100 10 10 4 0 0 0 4 0 3 0 3 00 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 10 10 10 3001 Astros 4-3 Guardian Premium Nylon Total 33 4 7 4 Total 11 0 0 Washington 000 003 10 Chic! MO ggi 1 1 1- nP-Chlcago 1 Washington 4 Bertalna IW7-4 Peters (L 14-11) 4 4 3 1 Wilhelm 2 I I I Cartas I vl Greda liao level or guellty representation relates la private standard of marketer Ne Industry standard exists mm LISTED PITTSBURGH B-Bob first major league homer two-run shot in the sixth inning sparked a Houston comeback that brought the Astros a 4-3 victoiy over Pittsburgh Saturday HOUSTON PITTSBURGH abrhbl abrhbl Davis cf 5 0 3 0 Wills 3b 1101 RJackson ss 5 1 1 0 MAlou cf 4 111 Staub rf 110 0 Clemente rf 1 0 1 0 Asprmnte lb 4 0 2 0 Stargell If 4 0 11 Morgan 3b 3011 Rob rtsn 1b 1110 Pointer It 3 10 0 Mazroskl 2b 4 1 0 1 Watson lb 4 113 Pagan ss 3 0 0 0 Adlesh 4 0 3 1 JMay 3 0 0 0 Wilson 2110 Clndenon ph 1 1 0 0 Coombs 2 0 0 0 Shellnbch 2 1 1 0 Blass 0 0 10 Rodgers ph 10 0 0 Fryman 1 1 0 0 Frymo Casanova 2:31 Orioles 5-2 CLEVELAND IB-The Baltimore Orioles struck for four runs off Sam McDowell in the eighth inning Saturday and whipped the Cleveland Indians 5-2 BALTIMORE CLEVELAND abrhbl abrhbl Alley 1 0 0 0 Belanger ss 4 1 1 1 Davalillo cf Blefary lb 4 011 WSmlth 35 4 1 Total II 1 4 2 gto'r cf 4 0 0 0 Alvis 3b Ill hi in-4 FRoblnsn rf 4 0 0 0 THorton lb 100010110-3 Mtrttan If 4 0 10 SchnMum rf plus Fed Ex Tax as noted and 2 tirea off your car Total Houston Pittsburgh 0 110 williams 1 0 0 0 Mayo ph Bailey ER B8 SO 1 5 Total WHITEWALLS Add $3 each 33 1 731 Wilson 41-3 4 bombs IWJ-0) 41-3 0 Shcllonbnch (U-1) 41-1 1 Blass 21 1 Fryman 3 0 1 0 0 3 HBP-Shellenbgch (Staub) WP-SheMenbaeh PB-Adlesh ZllOre 3 2 3 0 0 2 51 4 13 2 1 i Baltimore 31 5 7 3 Total 0 0 1 000 040-5 Cleveland 000 000 Lund (2) McDowell Smith Cleavland 1 Baltimore 4 Cleveland 4 2B-WSml1h IB- Scr helnblum (1) Haney Salmon ER BB SOI I 8 4 1 7 0 0 2 0 0 1 WP- MASTER MUFFLERS IP 7 1 7 1 1 Brobender WaH McDowell (L13-15) Williams Bailey McDowell McDowell 1:40 (Bowens) 2323 Yankees 54 NEW YORK Roy squeeze bunt and Dooley Womack's bases-loaded single drove in three runs in the eighth inning and gave the New York Yankees a 5-4 victory over Kansas City Saturday KANSAS CITY NEW YORK ob bl Reg 1588 Sale Canls 3-1 ATLANTA The St Louis Cardinals scored two runs in the sixth inning on two scratch singles two stolen bases and a pair of infield outs to trim Atlanta 3-1 Saturday night 4 0 10 Clark 2b 4 10 0 Kenney ss 4 110 Mantle lb 3 111 Hegan lb 4 0 10 Whitaker cf 4 111 Frnandez 3 112 White rf 4 0 10 Shopay If 2 0(0 CSrnlth lb 1010 Downing 0111 Bouton II I Kublak ss Donaldsn 3b Hsrihbgr rf Rudi lb cl lb If Duncan Pierce Webster ph Krausst Odom Tallon ph 5 1 1 3 0 00 1011 0 110 4 110 4 0 0 0 112 1 4 111 40 10 1000 ATLANTA ST LOUIS 3(30 Chevrolet Ford Plymouth Usually you can hear when your muffler is shot BUT sometimes you can't! WE'LL CHECK YOUR MUFFLER FREE abrhbl 4 13 0 Hermoso 1110 Mlllan 3b 4 0 1 1 Lum cf 10 13 Torre 1 000 Boyer lb 4 0 0 0 Carty 1b 3 0 0 0 Nicholson If 1 0 0 0 Gaston rf 1 4 0 0 0 Britton 1 0 0 0 Aaron pn 3 0 0 0 Carroll 31 373 Total Brock If Talon cf Marls rf Cepeda 1b Splezta rf Carver Shannon 3b AJehnson cf Gapllano 3b Maxvlll ss Hughes Total 3000 88? 1000 1000 0000 Total 31 4 74 Total 3151 Kansas City III I 1 I 0 0 3-4 New York no 0 0 0 0 3 x-4 Gosger Kenney Kansas City 5 Nw York I Hershberger Banda Shopay (3) Gosger (5) Clarke Kenney Hegan White Gosger XI 3 UNIROYAL 3121 BROAD STREET 359-5737 IL7-17) Pierce Krausse Odom Downing Bouton Womack (WS-4) A- 51 UNIRQYAL 1.

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