Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 October 1974 — Page 12
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15,1574, THE PUTNAM COUNTY BANNER-GRAPHIC SB
Big-3 set for banner roundball season
By The Associated Press College basketball fans in Indiana won't have many new names to learn this season With the official opening of practice today, the personnel at Indiana. Purdue. Notre Dame and most of the rest of the state's teams will be the same as last year—a banner season for the state. It would probably surprise
few people if Indiana's big three lock up in a battle for the No. 1 ranking. Between the Big Three, there are only three starters missing from last year's lineups. Purdue lost crack forward Frank Kendrick and Irish standouts Gary Brokaw and John Shumate also left for the professional basketball ranks Purdue enters the season as
the defending National Invitation Tournament champion. and Indiana, winner of the last two Big Ten titles, won the Conference Commissioners Association tournament. Only Notre Dame, upset in the NCAA Mideast Regional, failed to gains a post-season championship. The Irish were 26-3. Indiana 23-5 and Purdue’s Boiler-
makers 21-9 and third in the Big Ten race. Indiana has every one of its 1973-74 regulars back, and some talented new freshmen. Coach Bobby Knight will base his game plan principally on senior forward Steve Green, junior guard Quinn Buckner and junior swingman John Laskowsld Notre Dame, ranked No. 1 for
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a time last season in The Associated Press ratings after ending UCLA’s long victory string, still has a lot of talent left for Coach Dick “Digger” Phelps to work with, including junior Dwight “Iceman” day and sophomores Adrian Dan tie y, Ray Martin and Bill Patemo. The biggest problem will be finding a replacement at center for the muscular Shumate. Purdue’s Fred Schaus has wall-to-wall and ceiling-to-floor
talent to choose from this season, including returning 6-foot-11 pivotmen John Garrett and Tom Scheffler, and smooth guard Bruce Parkinson. Schaus also recruited two choice Indiana prep stars in 6-6 guard Walter Jordan of state champion Fort Wayne Northrop and 6-6 forward Wayne Walls of state runnerup Jeffersonville.
45-point spread still not ‘perfect’
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (APIDespite an awesome 45-point victory over Wisconsin, Ohio State did not play a perfect college football game last week. “We’ve never played a perfect game in our life. We never will because we’re human beings,” Ohio State Coach Woody Hayes told sports writers Monday. Hayes, in fact, said his players have run only one perfect play in his 24 seasons at the Big Ten Conference power. “It came on a touchdown run by Archie Griffin this fall,” Hayes revealed. “It’s almost impossible. “Remember,” he explained, “everybody has to grade 100 per cent and everybody on the other team has to grade zero.” Hayes did concede, “We played almost error-proof football for the second week in a row.” After the 52-7 romp over Wisconsin. Hayes sidestepped any
appraisal of the Badgers in the conference race. Earlier, he had said they might be on a par with usual powers Ohio State and Michigan. “I’m not so concerned about their place in the Big Ten,” Hayes said of Wisconsin. “I’m thinking more about Indiana. They are an improving team.” Ohio State risks its 5-0 record Saturday against the visiting Hoosiers, whose lone victory was a 34-3 triumph over Minnesota last week. “They (Indiana) would like to pull an unpset,” Hayes said, “but we won’t let them.” Hayes calls his current offense about as versatile has he’s had at Ohio State. “Archie (Griffin) is our best tailback. Corny (Greene) is in a class with Rex Kern. Brian (Baschnagel) is the most versatile wingback and our fullbacks (Pete Johnson and Harold Henson) are beginning to carry their share of the load,” he said.
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Completion He’s got the ball and these two DePauw defenders have him during first half action at DePauw's 24-20 loss to Butler before a homecoming crowd of over 4,000 fans at Blackstock Stadium Saturday. Starting out strong the Tigers dominated most of the first half, but then faltered before a late Butler barrage. (Banner-Graphic Photo) Wildcats m top ten
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GREENCASTLE. Ind. (AP) — Butler has replaced Indiana Central as golf champion for the Indiana College Conference. The Bulldogs scored a victory Monday in a rainshortened tournament at Windy Hill County Club at greencastle.
Moore
for
led the
Medalist Kent
Butler to a 453 score
fourman team over the par-420, 27 hole event, originally
scheduled for 36 holes.
Indiana Central was far back at 486 while host DePauw fin-
ished at 470.
Foilwing were St. Joseph’s at 474, Evansville 476, Valparaiso 483 and Wabash 491.
TUCSON, Arizona (AP) - Saying simply that “it will be a real challenge to stay there,” head Coach Jim Young and his University of Arizona Wildcats have made their debut in The Associated Press college football Top Ten. The Wildcats’ No. 9 ranking marked the first time in its history Arizona has ever broken into the Top Ten, while Ohio State held down the No. 1 ranking for the fourth week in a row. Undefeateo Ohio State whalloped Wisconsin 52-7 Saturday, its fifth victory of the season, and received 51 first-place votes to open a commanding lead over runner-up Oklahoma. The Buckeyes received 1,160 of a possible 1,180 points from a nationwide - panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Oklahoma had only five firstplace votes and 1,020 points in the balloting. Last week. Ohio State led
over Oklahoma by a mere 20 points and a margin of 33-24 in first-place votes Both teams finished 2-3 respectively behind national champion Notre Dame last season. Michigan climbed from fourth place to third with one first-place ballot following a 217 triumph over Michigan State. The Wolverines supplanted Alabama, which dropped from third to fourth with one No. 1 vote and 814 points in the wake of a last-minute 8-7 decision over winless Florida State. Auburn went from 10th to fifth with an impressive 31-13 trouncing of Kentucky. The Tigers received the other firstplace vote and 636 points. Rounding out the Top Ten are Southern California, Notre Dame, Texas A&M, Arizona and North Carolina State. In a season of upsets, Young and his Wildcats are undefeated in five games and were 41-8 victors Saturday over Utah.
Richmond strengthens lead
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Richmond’s Red Devils strengthened their hold on the lead in this week’s Associated Press Indiana high school football poll, with Indianapolis Washington still waiting for the them to slip. The duel between the Hub Etchison's and Bob Springer's Washington Continentals apparently is taking them to a semifinal meeting in the Class AAA playoffs. Each of the top two is 7-0 and has all but sewed up its playoff berth with only three weeks of regular season play remaining. Richmond grabbed 12 of 16 first place votes and 233 of a possible 240 rating points from the AP’s statewide panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Washington drew no first place votes but came up with 218 points. No. 3 Evansville Reitz added seven points to its slim edge over No. 4 Penn despite the fact that Penn remains unbeaten in seven games while Reitz is 6-1. Evansville Harrison moved up two notches to No. 5, with South Bend Washington remaining No. 6 and 7-0 Lawrence Central leaping from 12th to the No. 7 spot after crunching Carmel 32-7 last Friday. The pounding by Central’s sent Carmel’s previously unbeaten Greyhounds plunging from No. 5 to No. 18. Mishawaka, loser only to Penn in its season opener and now boasting a six-game winning string, climbed two spots to No. 8, with Elkhart Central No. 9 and South Bend LaSalle No. 10. Evansville Central leads off the second 10, followed by No. 12 Martinsville, No. 13 South Bend St. Joseph’s, No. 14 Hammond Noll and No. 15 Blackford. Gary Wallace moved up to No. 16, but close behind were No. 17 Fort Wayne Dwenger, Carmel, No. 19 Portage and No. 20 Clarksville. The newcomers this week were Portage and Garksville, with Fort Wayne Luers and Bloomington South dropping
out of the top 20 after losing to St. Joseph’s and Martinsville, respectively. The unbeaten teams in the poll also include, Martinsville, Blackford and Garksville. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Here is this week’s Associated Press Indiana high school football poll, with first place votes in parenthesis, won-lost records and rating points (240
possible): 1. Richmond (12), 7-0, 233. 2. Indianapolis Washington, 7-0, 218. 3. Evansville Reitz (2), 6-1, 194. 4. Penn (1)., 7-0, 186. 5. Evansville Harrison, 6-1, 151. 6. South Bend Washington, 61. 141. 7. Lawrence Central (1), 7-0.
115. 8. Mishawaka, 6-1, 108. 9. Elkhart Central, 6-1, 78. 10. South Bend LaSalle. 5-1, 76. 11. Evansville Central. 6-1, 72. 12. Martinsville, 7-0, 58. 13. South Bend St. Joseph's 61, 56. 14. Hammond Noll, 6-1, 30. 15. Blackford, 7-0, 28.
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