Banner Graphic, Volume 13, Number 105, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 January 1983 — Page 7
Sports scoreboard
%!• 1, Playoff Schedule By The Associated Press All Times EDT (Seediugs in Parentheses) The top eight teams in each conference are seeded 1 to 8 for the duration of the playoffs by won-lost percentages and tiebreakers : First Hound AFC Saturday’s (.anies Los Angeles Raiders 27. Cleveland 10 m Miami 28. New England 13 Sunday's Games New V ork Jets 44, Cincinnati 17 San Diego3l. Pittsburgh 28 NFC Saturday's Games Washington 31. Detroit 7 Green Bay 41. St. Louis 16 Sunday's Games Dallas 30. Tampa Bay 17 Minnesota 30. Atlanta 24 Second Hound AFC Saturday . Jan. 15 New York Jets (6) at Los Angeles Raiders (1), 4 p m. Sunday, Jan. 16 San Diego (5) at Miami (2), 12:30p m NFC H Saturday, Jan. 15 Minnesota (4) at Washington (1), 12:30 p.m Sunday, Jan. 16 Green Bay (3) at Dallas (2), 4 p.m. CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP GAMESt Winners of Jan. 15-16 games at home of highest remaining seeds) NFC Championship Saturday, Jan. 22 AFC Championship Sunday, Jan. 23 SL'PER BOWI, XVII Sun., Jan. 30, Pasadena Rose Bowl, 6 p.m EST AFC vs. NFC champions, for Vince Lombardi Trophv PRO BOWL Sun . Feb. 6, Honolulu AFC All-Stars vs. NFC All-Stars Indiana And Big Ten College Basketball By The Associated Press Saturday's Games Ball St 77, Miami, 0hi076 Findlay 85, Anderson 82 Franklin 70. Indiana Tech 68, OT Hanover9l. Ind-Pur-Indianapolisß2 Huntington 83, DePauw 77 Illinois 61, Wisconsin 54 Indiana Central 68. lU-PU-Ft. Wavne 54 India na-SE 78, Marion 73 Ind.St-Evansville 85. Oakland City 75 lowa 79. Michigan 72 Kansas 59, Evansville 54 Minnesota 54, Purdue 48 New Mexico St. 103. Indiana St. 100. ot Northwestern 62. Michigan St. 51 Ohio State 70. Indiana 67 Rose-Hulman 85, Sewanee 60 Tri-State 81. St. Francis 53 Valparaiso6l, Wis.-Green Bay 56 Wabash 72, St. Joseph's 61 Wilmington 77. Manchester7s Saturday's College Basketball Scores Bv The Associated Press EAST Boston Coll 90. Seton Hall 73 Canisius 58, New Orleans 49 Delaware 54, Navy 52 Duke 61. La Salle 60 Fairleigh Dickinson 84. Marist76 Harvard 73, Dartmouth 55 Holy Cross 75, Massachusetts 72 lona 115. Pace 73 Lehigh 60. Loyola, Md. 46 Northeastern 79. Maine 57 Penn 91. Brown 67 Penn St. 71, St. Bonaventure 67 Pittsburgh 65, Lafayette 62 Princeton 55. Yale 54 Providence 66. Dayton 63 Robert Morris 73. Cleveland St. 69 Rutgers 70. St. Joseph’s 65 St. John's 76, Georgetown 67 St. Peter's 45. Manhattan 39 Towson St. 55. Bucknell 54 Vermont 67. St. Francis, N.Y. 65 Virginia 83, Maryland 64 West Virginia 73, Temple7l SOUTH Alabama 74, Kentucky 67 Ala.-Birmingham 73, S. Alabama 67 Alcorn St. 78. Jackson St. 64 Austin Peay 72, E. Kentucky 67 Bethune-Cookman63, Md -E Shore6o Centenary 99, NE Louisiana 85 Cent. Florida 80, Fordharh 66 Citadel 68, Campbell 50 Davidson 58, Furman 52 Delaware St. 78, S. Carolina St. 77 East Carolina 43, James Madison 41 Florida 92. Auburn 75 Florida A&M 74, Tennessee St. 70 Furman 70, Wofford 52 Jacksonville St 86. N. Alabama 83 Louisiana St. 60, Georgia 56 Louisiana Tech 59, Pan American 39 Louisville 96. Florida St. 69 Marshall 95, VMI64 Mercer 81. Stetson 80 Milligan 43. Appalachian St. 41.2 0T Mississippi 56. Tennessee 55, OT Mississippi St. 64. Vanderbilt 48 Murray St. 90, Akron 79 North Carolina 87, Syracuse 64 N. Carolina A&T72, Howard U. 60 Old Dominion 99, Rhode Island 81 Samford9l. Hardin-Simmons79 S. Florida 71, Jacksonville 68 SE Louisiana 79, Cameron 49 SW Louisiana 93, E. Texas Baptist 70 Tn.-Chattanooga 76. E. Tennessee St. 73 Tennessee Tech 80, Clinch Valley 67 Va. Commonwealth 65, Richmond 56 Virginia Tech 74, S. Mississippi 69 Wake Forest 60. Georgia Tech 53 Willian\& Mary 47, George Mason 46 Youngstown St. 73, Middle Tenn 66 MIDWEST Ball St. 77, Miami. Ohio 76 Bowling Green 53, E. Michigan 52 Cent. Michigan 64. Toledo 62 DePaul 78, Pepperdine 73 Drake 87. Tulsa 73 Illinois 61, Wisconsin 54 111.-Chicago66, Brooklyn Coll. 64. OT lowa 79, Michigan 72 lowa St. 60, Chicago St. 58 Kansas 59, Evansvilles4 Kent St. 83, W. Michigan 50 Loyola, 111. 82, Cincinnati 78 Marquette 72, Xavier, Ohio 64 Minnesota 54. Purdue 48 Northwestern 62, Michigan St. 51 Ohio St. 70, Indiana 67 Ohio U. 62, N. Illinois 57 S Illinois 87. Bradley 75 Valparaiso 61, Wis.-Green Bay 56 SOUTHWEST Alabama St 86, Prairie View 81 Arkansas 65, Baylor 60 Ark -Little Rock 82. Ga. Southern 75 Houston 105, Southern Methodist 71 Illinois St. 89, W. Texas St. 73 Kansas St. 51, Texas 43 Oklahoma 103, Rider 64 Okla homa St. 90, Texas-Arlington 83 Southern U. 77, Texas Southern 73 SW Missouri 62, Oral Roberts 59 Texas A&M 76, Rice 63 Texas Christian 59, Texas Tech 57 FAR WEST Arizona St. 75, Southern Cal 68 Ca lifornia 59, Oregon St. 52 Colorado St. 56, Air Force 52, OT Fullerton St. 90, Long Beach St. 60 Idaho 54, Gonzaga 51 Montana 87, Lewis-Clark 57 Nev -Las Vegas6B,Cal-Irvine64 Nev -Reno 88, San Diego 76 New Mexico St 103, Indiana St. 100 N. Arizona 67, U S. International 60 Pacific U. 50, Fresno St. 48 Pacific Lutheran 77, Whitman 70 Sonoma St. 64, San Francisco St. 54 Stanford 80, Oregon 74 UCLA 92, Arizona 87 Utah St. 77, San Jose St 68 EXHIBITIONS AIA-Canada 84, St Mary's, Calif 60 W Washington 66, British Columbia 59 TOURNAMENTS Bankers Classic Championship Fairfield 64, Drexel 60, OT Third Place Georgia St 72, Utica 69 Harbor City Classic Championship Baltimore 60, Cabrini 45 Third Place Washington Coll. 84. Mary Washington 73
Juice Bowl Championship Fla Southern 75, Hofstra 74 Third Place George Washington 65. Columbia 60 EAST Boston U. 96, New Hampshire Coll 89 New Hampshire 76, Connecticut 72 SOUTH N C.-Charlotte 74, W Kentuckv6B MIDWEST Missouri 49, North Carolina St. 42 Mo.-St. Louis 75, St Louis 70 Wichita St. 77. Creighton 66 INDIANA (67) Kitchel 7 7-9 21. Wittman 8 2-3 18, Bouchie 3 1-2 7. Brown 3 3-3 9. Thomas 3 0-0 6, Blab 3 0-1 6, Robinson 0 0-0 0, Morgan 0 00 0. Giomi 0 0-0 0 Totals 27 13-18 67. OHIO STATE (70) Campbell 6 3-415, Wesson 0 2-2 2, Waiters 6 0-0 12, Stokes 4 6-6 14, Huggins 3 0-0 8. Taylor 3 5-711, Jones 1 4A 6, Concheck 0 2-2 2. Totals 23 22-25 70. Halftime—Ohio State 34. Indiana 32 Three-point goals—Huggins 2 Fouled out—Morgan. Total Fouls—lndiana 22. Ohio State 22. A-13.591. PURDUE (4XI Bullock 11-2 3, Palombizio 00-0 0, Cross 2 6-7 10, Hall 0 0-0 0, Clawson 6 04) 17, Reid 6 1-2 16. Rowinski 1 0-2 2. Totals—l 6 8-13 48 MINNESOTA (54) Howell 3 3-5 9. Petersen 1 0-0 2, Breuer 4 1-511, Wilson 65-7 17, Davis 6 3-315. Brooks 0 0-0 0, Skanes 0 0-0 0, Wohler 0 04) 0. Totals—2ol4-20 54 Halftime—Minnesota 20, Purdue 19. Three-point goals—Clawson 5, Reid 3. Fouled out—Petersen. Total fouls—Purdue 14, Minnesota 16. A -16.929. INDIANA ST. (100) Cole 9 2-3 22, Fields 4 0-0 10, Golden 7 7-8 22, Williams 91-119, Braun 2 6-610, Smith 6 0-2 12, Bugg 1 1-2 3, McComb 1 04) 2, Christian 0 0-0 0. Totals 39 18-24 100. NEW MEXICO ST. (103) Patterson 11 8-10 30. Colter 8 9-11 25, Sailors 3 2-2 8, McElmell 5 1-2 11. Williams 8 1-2 17, Hairston 6 0-1 12. Febres 0 04) 0, Jones 0 04) 0, Wright 0 04), Rodriguez 0 04) 0. Totals 4121-27 103. Halftime—lndiana State 53, New Mexico St. 49. Fouled Out—Sailors, Hairston, Smith. Total fouls—lndiana St 19, New Mexico St. 21 Three-point goals—Fields 2, Cole 2. A—10.243. Indiana High School Basketball By The Associated Press Saturday's Games Anderson Highland 75. Indpls Broad Ripple 67 Anderson Madison Hts 74, Alexandria 69 Argos 69, Culver Military 43 Attica 70. Tri-County 44 Bates ville 95, Greensburg 61 Bedford-N.Lawrence 58. TH South 55 Bremen 94, J imtown 53 Castle 49, Pike Central 39 Clinton Prairie 76, Frontier 40 Cloverdale 94, Eminence 67 Columbus North 95. Jennings Co 62 Connersville6l. Lawrenceburg3l Delta 63. Wes-Del 56 Delphi 65. Rossville 52 E Chicago Roosevelt 75, SB Riley 52 Elkhart Memorial6s, Goshen63 F ountain Central 75, N. Putnam 52 Franklin 63. Seymour 44 FranktonSl, Cowan4l Ft. Wayne Elmhurst 65, FW South 64, OT Ft. Wayne Snider 74. Indpls Scecina 53 Graceland Christian 77. New Harmonv 51 Greenwood 85. Edinburgh 68 Hanover Central 58, Beecher. 11l 54 Heritage Hill 72. N.Knox 04. OT Indiana Deaf 70, St. Rita Deaf 41 Indpls Ben Davis 77, Center Grove 49 Indpls Brebeuf 63. Whiteland 60 Indpls Lutheran7s, Morton Memorial 66 Indpls Park-Tudor 82, Heritage Christian 49 Indpls Perry Meridan 56. Indpls Manual 48 Indpls Pike 81, Zionsville 35 Jasper 65. Vincennes 51 Kankakee Valley 60. Highland 43 Lafayette Catholic 54. Western 52 Lapel 52, Tri High 50 Laurel 66. Plainfield Charlton 59 Lawrence North 52. Decatur Central 28 Mich. City Rogers 76. SB Washington 50 Mt. Vernon (Hancock) 71, Elwoodss Morgan Twp. 53. N.White 49 Muncie South 54, FW North 49 New Castle 94. Shelby ville 63 Noblesville 68. Seeger 42 N. J udson 53. Twin Lakes 37 N.Montgomery 77, Brownsburg 62 N.Posey 53, Mt. Vernon (Posey > 50 Northwestern 61, Clinton Central 52 Oregon-Davis73, Winamac63 Pendleton Hts 74. Hamilton Southeastern 37 Penn 65, Plymouth 59 Perry Centra 153. Tecumseh 47 Pioneer 64, Rensselaer 61 Plainfield 86. Beech Grove 59 Princeton 69. Evansville Harrison6s Rushviile 57, Union Co. 52 Salem 69, N.Harrison 54 Shenandoah7s. Eastern Hancock 46 S,Ripley 74, N.Decatur 62 Southern Wells 64, FW Luers 54 Southmont 73, McCutcheon 52 Southridge 87, Forest Park 47 Southwood 87, Adams Central 61 Taylor 76, Hamilton Hts 51 Terre Haute North 58, N. Vermillion 41 Vincennes Rivet 54, Barr-Reeve 49 Washington 76, Tell City 42 Washington Catholic 89. EV Christian 51 Wawasee 63, West Noble 52 West Central 68, Culver Community 61 Western Boone 38, W.Lafayette 34 Wood Memorial 49, N.Daviess 35 TOURNAMENTS Clay County Championship N.Central (Sullivan) 66, Van Buren 57 Grant County Championship Oak Hill 66, Eastbrook 49 Third Place Madison-Grant 56, Mississinewa 47 Greene County Championship Linton 43, Eastern 42 Third Place Shakamak 65, Switz City 52 Jefferson County Championship New Washington 51. S.Decatur 46 Randolph County Championship Monroe Central 73, Wichester 55 Shelby County Championship Triton Central 60, Waldron 58 National Basketball Association .... Saturday’s Games Los Angeles 108, New York 90 Philadelphia 125, Kansas City 113 Atlanta 109, Chicago 89 Cleveland 98, Washington 82 Boston 114, Dallas 110 Utah 87, Houston 82 San Diego 122, Denver 120 Golden State 110, Seattle 104 Sunday's Games New Jersey 110, Detroit 102 Milwaukee 106, Phoenix 96 Portland 110, Seattle 101 Monday's Games No games scheduled National Hockey League Sunday's Games Buffalo 7, Los Angeles 2 Philadelphia 8, Hartford 4 NY Rangers 4, New Jersey 3 Detroit 4. Edmonton 3 Chicago 6, Minnesota 3 Winnipeg 4, Pittsburgh 3 Monday's Game Quebec at New Jersey Tucson Golf Scores TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) Final scores and money-winnings Sunday in the $300,000 Joe Garagiola-Tucson Open Golf Tournament on the 6,830-yard, par-70 Randolph Park Municipal course: x-Gil Morgan. $54,000 65-71-68-67—271 Curtis Strange, $26,400 72-67-67-65—271 Lanny Wadkins. $26,400 68-67-68-68—271 Fred Couples, $11,812 66-73-67-66-272 Andy Bean, $11,812 69-69-68-66-272 Fuzzy Zoeller, $11,812 71-65-68-68—272 Calvin Peete, $11,812 68-67-66-71—272 Scott Hoch, $9,300 6763-72-71—273
Super Bowl guaranteed new teams
By MIKE EMBRY AP Sports Writer The New York Jets fired their cannon, the San Diego Chargers attacked by air, the Dallas Cowboys struck from all fronts and the Minnesota Vikings refused to fold in the first weekend of play of the National Football League playoffs. The NFL’s revised and expanded 16-team playoff format, necessitated by the 57-day players’ strike that wiped out seven weeks of the season, also produced a few surprises and guaranteed new finalists for Super Bowl XVII on Jan. 30. The Jets, behind Freeman McNeil’s record-breaking 211 rushing yards, crushed Cincinnati 44-17 Sunday afternoon, eliminating the defending American Conference champion Bengals from a return trip to the championship game. Last year’s Super Bowl winners, the San Francisco 49ers, didn’t reach the playoffs. In Sunday’s other playoff games, San Diego edged Pittsburgh 31-28 in the AFC and Dallas trimmed Tampa Bay 30-17 and Minnesota eliminated Atlanta 30-24 in the National Conference. In Saturday’s first-round matchups, the Los Angeles Raiders ousted Cleveland 27-10 and Miami eliminated New England 28-13 in the AFC and Washington blasted Detroit 30-7 and Green Bay whipped St. Louis 41-16 in the NFC. Next weekend’s games will have New York at Los Angeles and Minnesota at Washington on Saturday and San Diego at Miami and Green Bay at Dallas on Sunday. One of the surprises was the fans, who nearly filled the stadiums after staying away from the games following the strike. In the playoffs, there were a total of 6,183 no-shows, an average of 773 per game, compared with an average of 8,169 in post-strike games, jets 44, Bengals 17 “When you’ve got a cannon, you’re supposed to shoot it,” New York Coach Walt Michaels said. “Today, he (McNeil) was our cannon.” McNeil, who also rushed and passed for two touchdowns, gave the Jets their first playoff victory since Joe Namath led New York to victory in Super Bowl 111. “I was blessed,” McNeil said of his performance. “I was in the right time place at the right time.” New York, now 7-3. also got a playoff-record interception return from Darrol Ray. He sparked a three-touchdown outburst in the last period by picking off a Ken Anderson pass and streaking 98 yards for the touchdown. The Jets also got three field goals from Pat Leahy. “We turned the ball over too many times, but I think the final blow was the interception that went for a touchdown," said Cin-
BMOC stumble; Memphis State should replace 111 as No. 1
By DICK JOYCE AP Sports Writer Ralph Sampson and Pat Ewing, the nation’s premier big men, blew their cool. Indiana blew the ball game and likely its No. 1 ranking in college basketball. “I could have composed myself a little better,,” the 7-foot-4 Sampson conceded after drawing two technical fouls in fourth-ranked Virginia’s 83-64 victory Saturday night over Maryland at College Park, Md. He argued vociferously with a referee, then bounced the ball some 40 feet into the air. Virginia Coach Terry Holland was so angry at the officiating that he had threatened to pull his team off the court. At New York's Madison Square Garden, Georgetown Coach John Thompson didn't like how his center, the 7-foot Ewing, was treated by the officials and said he would tell his sophomore center to turn pro if officiating didn't improve. Ewing drew a technical foul for fighting with 6-3 Kevin Williams of St. Joh’s one of the two scuffles they had before seventh-ranked St. John’s made it record 13-0 with a 76-67 Big East Conference win.
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“I will tell him to go hardship (turn pro) if he’s continued to be grabbed,” said Thompson. "I’m sick of the double standards on defense.” Indiana, 10-1, fell from ranks of the unbeaten in a Big Ten contest at Columbus, Ohio when Ohio State upset the Hoosiers 70-67 behind Ron Stokes’ two clinching free throws. The Buckeyes is 9-2 and winner of their last seven games. Indiana Coach Bobby Knight’s only complaints were for his team. “I thought there was no point in the game where we played for any length of time,” said Knight, whose Hoosiers outrebounded the Buckeyes 3518. "The team that did what it was trying to do most won the game.” No. 9 Syracuse, 11-1 also suffered its first setback, 87-64 to No. 18 North Carolina at Charlotte. Michael Jordan scored 18 points as the Tar Heels, 10-3, won its seventh straight, while Erich Santifer scored 24 for the Orangemen. In other games involving the Top Twenty Saturday, No. 5 Alabama snapped a two-game losing streak by winning at home, 74-67 over No. 3 Ken-
cinnati Coach Forrest Gregg, whose club finished 7-3. The Jets’ Richard Todd completed 20 of 28 passes for 269 yards, which included eight receptions by Wesley Walker for a career-high 145 yards. Anderson, who had two first-quarter touchdown passes to stake the Bengals to a 14-3 lead, finished with 26 completions in 35 attempts for 354 yards. Chargers 31, Steelers 28 Dan Fouts’ third touchdown toss didn’t come a minute too late in leading San Diego over Pittsburgh. He hit Kellen Winslow on a 12-yard flare pass with one minute to play to rally the Chargers. “I watched him before on TV,” said Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw of Fouts. “I just watched him go up and down the field. I saw them do it on TV, then I saw them do it to us today.” Fouts, who completed 27 of 42 passes for 333 yards, also hit reserve tight end Eric Sievers on a 10-yard strike and Winslow with an 8-yarder to overshadow Bradshaw’s 28 of 39 for 325 yards. Chuck Muncie rushed for 126 yards as San Diego improved its record to 7-3. The Steelers finished 6-4. Cowboys 30, Buccaneers 17 Danny White overcame physical ailments an infected tooth and swollen thumb to lead Dallas over Tampa Bay. He completed 27 of 45 passes for 312 yards and two touchdowns. “I think White did great considering his thumb was hurt,” said Dallas wide receiver Drew Pearson. “It’s a good thing you don’t pass with your teeth.” Rookie reserve safety Monty Hunter returned an interception 19 yards to give the Cowboys the go-ahead touchdown in the fourth quarter. Tampa Bay quarterback Doug Williams completed only eight of 28 passes for 113 yards as the Bucs finished 5-5. Vikings 30, Falcons 24 Trailing 24-23 with 6:45 to go, Minnesota drove 72 yards with Ted Brown following a Rickey Young block to go in from the 5 with 1:44 left for the winning points. “Rickey made a dynamic block,” said Brown, who rushed for 82 yards despite being knocked out of the game in the first half with a shoulder injury. The Vikings’ defense yielded only 115 yards passing and did not allow the Atlanta offense a touchdown. Cornerback John Turner intercepted two of Steve Bartkowski passes. Minnesota improved to 6-4 while Atlanta finished 5-5. Raiders 27, Browns 10 Jim Plunkett had one of his finest games, conmleting 24 of 37
tucky; No. 6 UCLA won on the road, 92-87 over Arizona; No. 8 lowa tripped visiting Michigan 79-72, and unbeaten Arkansas, No. 10, scored a 65-60 home victory over Baylor. No. 11 Nevada-Las Vegas won at California-Irvine 68-63; host Mississippi upset No. 12 Tennessee 56-55 in overtime; No 13 Louisville won on the road, 96-69 over Florida State, No. 19 Houston routed visiting Southern Methodist 105-71, and host Minnesota beat No. 20 Purdue 54-48. No. 2 Memphis State and No. 14 Villanova were idle. In a Sunday game, Jon Sundvold scored 17 points as No. 15 Missouri scored a 49-42 home triumph over No. 16 North Carolina State. Sampson scored eight of his 14 points down the stretch as Virginia boosted its record to 11-1 against Maryland in the Atlantic Coast Conference game. Maryland Coach Lefty Driesell charged that Sampson actually was called for three technicals, meaning automatic ejection, and that Holland swayed the officials into making it two technicals. Only two technicals were signaled by
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the officials. “Terry Holland told officials he'd take his team off the court and go home, and forfeit the game. Then they (officials) said let Sampson stay in the game.” Holland said. “What I told the officals was to clean it (the game) up or I would be willing to take my team off the floor. I did not want it to continue as it was, but my remarks had nothing to do with Sampson.” St. John’s, behind the scoring of Chris Mullin (24 points) and Billy Goodwin (20), double and triple teamed Ewing, who finished with 13 points and 14 rebounds as the Hoyas fell to 94. “Every dog has his day,” said Ewing, whose team whipped the Redmen three times last'' season. Michael Jackson’s 20 points paced Georgetown. Mike Davis and Ennis Whatley each scored 19 points in Alabama’s Southeastern Conference victory over Kentucky. The Crimson Tide is 9-2. Kentucky 10-2. In another SEC game, Tennessee’s Dale Ellis was held to 14 points in the Volunteers’ loss to Mississippi. Carlos Clark's 18 points paced Ole Miss, 9-3, which made Tennesee 9-2.
January 10,1983, The Putnam County Banner-Graphic
passes for 386 yards in leading Los Angeles to its ninth victory in 10 games. The Browns finished 4-6. Rookie Marcus Allen, who rushed for 72 yards on 17 carries and caught six passes for 75 yards, had touchdown runs of 2 and 3 yards and Frank Hawkins scored on a 1-yard run for the Raiders. Meanwhile, the Raiders’ defense smothered Cleveland quarterback Paul McDonald, sacking him six times for 53 yards. “Boy, they were blitzing me,” said McDonald, who connected on 18 of 37 passes for 281 yards, including a 43-yard strike to Ricky Feacher. “I lost count on the sacks. They were coming at me from all sides pretty good.” Cleveland’s Matt Bahr kicked a 52-yard field goal to equal an NFL playoff record for distance set by the Browns' Lou “The Toe” Groza in 1951. Dolphins 28, Patriots 13 Third-year pro David Woodley completed 16 of 29 passes for 246 yards and two touchdowns in helping Miami snap a fourgame losing streak in playoff competition. The team s last victory came in the Super Bowl VIII in 1974. Woodley, had a pair of 2-yard scoring tosses to tight end Bruce Hardy and his passing set up touchdown runs by Andra Franklin and Woody Bennett. Franklin led the rushing attack with 112 yards and Tony Nathan added 71 for the Dolphins, 8-2. Although disappointed with the loss, being in the playoffs represented a complete turnaround for the Patriots, a dismal 214 squad a year ago. “I think this is the start of something good ..." said Pats' Coach Ron Meyer, whose team finished 5-5. New England’s Steve Grogan connected on 16 of 30 passes for 189 yards and was intercepted twice. He also was sacked four times by the aggressive Dolphin defense. Redskins 31, Lions 7 Alvin Garrett caught three Joe Theismann touchdown passes and Jeris White returned an interception 77 yards for a touchdown to key Washington's triumph. “We’re on a roll, no question about it,” said safety Tony Peters of the 9-1 Redskins. - Packers 41, Cardinals 16 John Jefferson, who went through the regular season without a touchdown reception, made up for it against the Cardinals with six catches for 148 yards and two touchdowns. Lynn Dickey passed for 260 yards and four touchdowns, including strikes to James Lofton and Eddie Lee Ivery as Green Bay improved its record to 6-3-1. Ivery also had a 1-yard TD run and Jan Stenerud kicked two field goals.
WISH banned from Indiana basketball BLOOMINGTON. Ind. (AP) ball coach Bob Knight has declared an Indianapolis television station and its sportscaster off limits to Hoosier, playeres and coaches. Knight has banished sportscaster Ed Harding of WISH-TV and his cameramen from top-ranked Indiana's locker room. He also is refusing to grant interviews with the station or to have his players interviewed. Harding said the ban was issued last spring because WISH showed Knight saying he did not want to be interviewed about a rumor that he was taking a coaching job at Stanford University. “He said that we ambushed him," Harding said. “I think he has a legitimate complaint against us.” Harding said he has been unsuccessfully trying to reach Knight to end the ban. “I have waved the white peace flag,” Harding said.
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