Banner Graphic, Volume 16, Number 140, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 January 1986 — Page 7
Sports scoreboard
National Football Leagae Playoffs At A Glance By The Asaocla ted Press Time EBT SUPER BOWL XX Snnday, Jaa. 26 At New Orleans Chicago vs. New England, Sp.m Indiana High School Basketball By The Associated Press Thnrsdsy's Game Muncie South 4S, Muncie Central 42 Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Thursday’s Games Grace <2, lU-S.Bend44 Indiana 71, Purdue 70 (OT) Lewis 08, So. Indiana 50 Marion K, Ind.TechSS St. Joseph’s 75, Ky Wesleyan 72 So.lUinois 65, Indiana St. 62 Thursday’s College Basketball Bcores By The Associated Press EAST BucknellW, Hofstra6B Fairfield 80, lona 65 Marist 72, St. Francis, Pa. 54 Massachusetts 68, Duquesne 60 N. Carolina St. 67, Maryland 55 Niagara 65, New Hampshire 58 Siena 81, Vermont 69 St. Bona venture 88, George Washington 86 Temple 76, Penn St. 36 Trinity 75, Coast Guard 57 West Virginia 58, Rhode Island 57 Yale 54, Army 51 SOUTH Ala .-Birmingham 81, N.C. Charlotte 63 Ark.-Little Rock 82, Georgia St. 78 Citadel 76, Furman 72 E. Tennessee St. 67, Appalachian St. 70 Ga. Southern 71, Houston Baptist 55 Hardin-Simmons 68, Mercer 47 Kentucky 74, Georgia 89 Miami, Fla. 71, Baptist 60 Old Dominion 47, South Florida 43 Richmond 67, Navy 61 Samford 76, Centenary 70 South Carolina 65, Clemson 64 Va. Commonwealth 81, Jacksonville 80,20 T MIDWEST Bradley 67, Illinois St. 63, OT Illinois 67, Ohio St. 65 Indiana 71, Purdue 70, OT lowa 76, Northwestern 43 Kansas 81, Missouri 77 Minnesota 67, Wisconsin 65 S. Illinois 65, Indiana St. 62 Xavier 80, Cincinnati 76 SOUTHWEST Arkansas St. 62, McNeese St 49 Lamar 72, SW Louisiana 66, OT N. Texas St. 56, Louisiana Tech 50 NE Louisiana 67, Texas-Arlington 55 Okla. Christian6s, Oklahoma City 64 Texas-El Paso 65, Colorado St. 57 Tulsa 54, W. Texas St. 37 FAR WEST Arizona 63, Oregon St. 62, OT Arizona St. 78, Oregon 58 Brigham Young 66, Air Force 45 Cal-Irvine 85, Long Beach St. 63 Cal-Santa Barbara 52, Fullerton St. 39 Fresno St. 70, Utah St. 64 Hawaii 83, San Diego St. 80, OT Nev.-Las Vegas 88, New Mexico St. 79 San Diego 74, Gonzaga 50 San Jose St. 64, Pacific 60 St. Mary’s, Calif. 66, Portland 64 Stanford 76, UCLA 70 INDIANA STATE (62) Applewhite 3-5 2-2 8, McComb 1-8 00 2, Bush 6-112-214, Harris 3-5 3-6 9, Williams 11-22 7-8 29, Kegerreis O-l 04) 0. Martin 04) 04) 0. Totals 24-52 14-18 62. SOUTHERN ILLINOIS (65) Novsek 4-14 04) 8, House 4-10 2-210, Dusharm 7-10 4-418, G. Malta 04) 04) 0, Welch 2-4 04) 4, Middleton 3-10 5-6 11, Krueger 0-12-2 2, Ross 3-4 2-2 8, Weiss 2-2 0414. Totals 25-5515-1666. Halftime—Southern Illinois 27, Indiana State 31. Fouled Out—McComb. Rebounds-Indiana State 31 (Williams 8), Southern Illinois 32 (Novsek 9). AssistsIndiana State 6 (McComb, Williams 2), Southern Illinois 15 (G. Matta 6). Total fouls—lndiana State 16, Southern Illinois 17. A—3,750.
national naiketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W. L.Pet.. .GB Boston 31 S .795 Philadelphia 28 14 .887 4* New Jersey 28 18 .591 7* Washington 22 21 .512 11 New York 15 27 .357 17* Central Division Milwaukee 28 15 .651 - Atlanta 23 17 .575 3* Detroit 20 22 .476 7* Cleveland 18 24 .429 9* Chicago 15 28 .349 13 Indiana 11 30 .268 16 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Houston 29 14 .674 Denver 24 16 .571 4* San Antonio 23 20 .535 6 Dallas 19 20 .487 8 Utah 21 24 .467 9 Sacramento 16 27 .372 13 Pacific Division L.A. Lakers 32 8 .800 Portland 27 19 .587 8 Phoenix 15 26 .366 17* L.A. Clippers 16 28 .364 18 Seattle 15 28 .349 18* Golden State 14 32 .304 21 Thursday's Games Washington 114, Phoenix 112 Houston 124, Sacramento 107 New Jersey 106, Utah 105 Portland 117, Seattle 107, 2 OT Friday’s Games Golden State at Boston New York at Atlanta Milwaukee at Indiana Philadelphia at Cleveland Detroit at Dalia San Antonio at Denver L.A. Lakers at L.A. Clippers Saturday's Games Milwaukee at New York Atlanta at Washington Golden State at Indiana Phoenix at Chicago Detroit at Houston Dallas at San Antonio L.A. Clippers at Utah Denver at L.A. Lakers Portland at Sacramento New Jersey at Seattle Sunday’s Games Philadelphia at Boston Sacramento at Portland
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National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W L T PU GF.GA Philadelphia 34 14 0 68 214 147 Washington 28 13 4 60 182 149 Pittsburgh 22 20 5 49 184 173 NY Islanders 20 17 9 49 184 168 NY Rangers 22 23 3 47 165 164 New Jersey 15 29 2 32 172 218 Adams Division Montreal 26 17 5 57 216 168 Quebec 27 18 2 56 195 159 Hartford 25 20 1 51 192 172 Boston 22 18 7 51 184 170 Buffalo 22 19 5 49 175 160 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division Chicago 22 18 6 50 207 204 St. Louis 20 19 6 46 174 181 Minnesota 18 21 8 44 189 182 Toronto 12 29 5 29 178 227 Detroit 10 33 5 25 160 260 Smythe Division Edmonton 32 11 4 68 247 191 Calgary 21 21 4 46 195 183 Los Angeles 15 25 6 36 169 225 Winnipeg 15 30 5 35 179 230 Vancouver 14 27 6 34 169 198 Thursday’s Games Boston 7, Winnipeg 5 Hartford 4, Toronto 1 Quebec 4, N.Y. Rangers 0 Philadelphia 5, Detroit 2 Montreal 5, Minnesota 2 St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 3 Friday's Games Chicago at Buffalo N.Y. Islanders at Washington New Jersey at Edmonton Pittsburgh at Vancouver Saturday’s Games Detroit at Boston Chicago at N.Y. Islanders Winnipeg at Hartford Buffalo at Quebec Toronto at Montreal Pittsburgh at Calgary Los Angeles at Edmonton Washington at Minnesota Philadelphia at St. Louis Sunday's Games No games scheduled Monday's Games Hartford at Boston Buffalo at Montreal N.Y. Rangers at Quebec New Jersey at Minnesota Edmonton at Chicago Los Angeles at Calgary International Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press East Division W . L.. T.. Pts. GF. GA Muskegon 30 15 0 62 209 148 Saginaw 25 19 0 56 180 148 Kalamazoo 21 22 0 46 177 171 Toledo 15 31 0 36 170 223 Flint 11 37 0 26 150 262 West Division Fort Wayne 28 16 0 60 182 143 Salt Lake 26 20 0 52 191 179 Milwaukee 22 18 1 48 171 147 Indianapolis 21 21 1 47 148 162 Peoria 21 21 0 47 161 156 Thursday’s Games Indianpolis 6, Fort Wayne 3 Flints,Saginaw4 Friday’s Games Indianapolis at Muskegon Fort Wayne at Kalamazoo Toledo at Peoria MilwaukeeatSaltLake Saturday’s Games Saginaw at Muskegon Flint at Kalamazoo Toledo at Peoria MilwaukeeatSaltLake Sunday’s Games Nogamesscheduled Monday’s Games Nogamesscheduled Tuesday’s Game Peoria at Muskegon
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Commercial Dec. IS, 1185 STANDINGS W L State Farm Insurance 88 40 American Legion 78 50 Hopkin-Rector 64 64 Butcher Block 58 70 Curt’s Flexer’s 58 70 Kerry Hutcheson Builder 58 70 John Wood Builder 56 72 Phillips Electric 52 76 High Team Game: Butcher Block 1031. High Team Series: Butcher Block 3007. High Ind. Game: Ray Ford 226. High Ind. Series: Jerry Williams 596. Series Over 500 (Male): D. Frost 559; D. Isom 556; R. Ford 551; F. Middleton 547; F. Middleton 547; F. Brewster 538; C. Brewster 535; T. Duggan 529; D. Lewis 522; D. Bassett 520; J. Frost 512; L. Cooper 508; M. Perrineso3; R. Wood 501. Rhines Market Dec. 2,1965 STANDINGS W L Ma Stroud’s 71 41 Sportsmen of Cunot 70 42 K It W Marine 68 44 RMS Painting 65 47 Lone Star 63 49 MlllgroveCafe 58 54 Furr Insurance 52 60 LoneStarPros 43 69 Scaggs Plumbing 38 74 Sportsmen Handicappers 32 80 High Team GAme: MlllgroveCafe 611. High Team Series: KAW Marine 1728. High Ind. Game: Vicky Shillings 206. High Ind. Series: Joyce Sage (sub) 541. Series Over 456 (Female): J. Sage (sub) 541; D. Gardner (sub) 523; V. Shillings 501; M. McManama (sub) 471; D. Painter 456; S. Neese 450.
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McMahon own controversial self
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - It was as if the controversy Jim McMahon had been looking for finally found him. The anti-hero quarterback of the Chicago Bears, who already had stamped his own bizarre imprint on this Super Bowl with his clothes, his comments and one very sore behind, got caught up Thursday in turbulence partly not of his own doing. A local television sportscaster, passing along an unfounded, third-hand rumor as fact, said McMahon had cast some disparaging remarks about the ladies and gentlemen of the Crescent City. By the time the rumor was shot down, death threats and bomb threats had been fielded by the Hilton Hotel where the Bears are staying and a handful of women, unaware that McMahon had denied saying those nasty things, had staged a little protest.
Patriots plan to keep hitting wall
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The problem, Tony Collins said, is that teams abandon their running game too soon after the Chicago Bears shut it down. Although banging your head into a stone wall isn’t the wisest activity, Collins thinks the wall will crack before the head does in Sunday’s Super Bowl. “We believe we’re going to be successful on the run,” said Collins, the New England Patriots’ starting halfback. “We think a lot of teams stopped too early against them on the running game. “We’re going to keep pounding them. We’ve been a second-half team and we wear teams down in the fourth quarter. ” The Patriots had the sixth-best rushing attack in the National Football League, averaging 145.7 yards a game. They have done even better in the playoffs with 170 yards a game, including 255 in the American Football Conference championship contest at Miami. In the Patriots’ second playoff game, against Los Angeles, fullback Craig James became the first rusher to gain more than 100 yards he had 104 against the Raiders this season. “They’ve built a soapbox they can stand on,” said Chicago defensive end Dan Hampton. “The run is something they’re going to go to and stay with throughout the game. “James makes the offense go. He’s their bread and butter. If we can stop him, we’ll be in good shape.” Against 13 of their 16 regular-season opponents, the Patriots ran for more yards in the second half than the first half. One of those opponents was the Bears, who allowed the Patriots 20 rushing yards in the second half after giving up a grand total of seven in the first two periods. Chicago won 20-7 in the season’s second game. The Bears-gave up an average of only 82.4 rushing yards on the ground, fewest in the NFL, and 59 yards per playoff game.
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Each Super Bowl has found its own niche in history one way or another. Usually it has come from the game itself Garo Yepremian’s laughable pass for Miami, Lynn Swann’s acrobatics, Jim O’Brien’s game-winning field goal. Sometimes it has come from one character or another—brash Joe Namath and his “guaranteed” prediction, boisterous John Matuszak and his predawn prowling of the French Quarter, outspoken John Riggins and his costumes. McMahon is this year’s Riggins. In his outrageous adidas ensembles, his sunglasses, his headband episodes and his to-hell-with-everything attitude, he was the focal point even before the notorious Bears and the anonymous New England Patriots arrived here. At first it seemed he would have to share center stage with William “Refrigerator”
One reason teams didn’t run well against the Bears is because they didn’t run often. Opponents, frequently behind, decided to pass. The 359 regular-season rushing plays against Chicago were 60 fewer than against any other team. “The key is for us to be patient and not lose what other teams have lost,” Collins said. “That’s the confidence in the running game.” Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael said he hoped the Patriots would do exactly what Collins said. “We’ve got eight men on the line of scrimmage. Come on at us,” he said. Collins’ running mates weren’t as eager to pound their skulls into Chicago’s solid wall and said the Patriots’ offensive strategy would depend on the game’s circumstances. “When they put eight men on the line of scrimmage, they’re basically saying, ‘We’re going to stop your running game,’ ” said James, the AFC’s third-leading rusher with 1,227 yards. “If we see that, we’ll have to recognize that and change.” “You just don’t keep running into a stone wall,” Robert Weathers, Collins’ backup, said. “You’ve got to find some other mode of travel.” Traveling too much by air, however, has proved disastrous. The Patriots lost just five regular-season games. In four of them, they threw more than 30 passes. In the playoffs, the Bears limited Joe Morris of the New York Giants to 32 rushirig yards and Eric Dickerson of the Los Angeles Rams to 46. “We do things a little differently than the Giants do, as well as the Rams,” James said. “The Rams just kept trying to pound away at the eight- and nine-man front. It’s hard to do. Eric was cutting into that extra man at the line of scrimmage.” Some teams have rushed well against the Bears. Tampa Bay gained 166 yards, Washington 192 and Atlanta 141 on the ground.
Perry, Walter “Sweetness” Payton, Dan “Danimal” Hampton, Otis “Mad Dog” Wilson and the rest of the Bears. But McMahon will never be mistaken for Roger Staubach, for Bob Griese, for any of the clean-cut quarterbacks adored by American motherhood as role models for their children. He is more in the mold of Ken Stabler, Bobby Layne or Sonny Jurgensen, a player about whom almost anything will be believed, true or not. It is called having a reputation. Within hours of his arrival, McMahon grabbed the Super Bowl by the throat with his comments that his rump was sore and his complaints that the Bears’ management wouldn’t allow his acupuncturist to accompany him on the team plane. The saga continued Tuesday and Wednesday with updates on his highness’
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January 24,1986, The Putnam County Banner Graphic
soreness, the arrival of Hiroshi Shiraishi, acupuncture treatments, McMahon’s rapid improvement and his mooning a helicopter during a workout. “That’s no big deal,” he said by way of admission. “Just letting ’em know where it hurts.” Where it hurts, he’s been receiving three acupuncture treatments a day. “I’m 100 percent better than I was yesterday (Wednesday),” he said. “If it keeps healing the way it’s been healing, I won’t have to have treatments on Saturday or Sunday. ” McMahon also said he will be wearing a protective pad on his sore spot during the game. He went through a full practice Thursday, taking most of the snaps from center as the Bears worked out for two hours. Two helicopters passed by during the session.
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