Banner Graphic, Volume 17, Number 23, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 September 1986 — Page 9
Niners defeat Dolphins, 31-16
Aerial show different than expected
By Tie Associated Press Anyone who had marked down Sept. 28 as the date to watch two of the best quarterbacks in pro football had every right to expect an aerial display. It was scheduled to be Joe Montana of the San Francisco 49ers against Dan Marino of the Miami Dolphins. But as it turned out, Montana was unable to start because of an injury, and Marino clearly wasn’t himself. At the end, the 49ers had a 31-16 victory Sunday and the troubled Dolphins had their third loss in four games this year their worst start in 17 years. The last time they started this poorly was an 0-3-1 start in the 1969 season, the year before Don Shula took over as coach. “We’ve never been in this position before where you walk off the field embarrassed, upset and disappointed. That’s where we are,” Shula said. Jeff Kemp filled in admirably for Montana, who is out with a back injury. Kemp completed 14 of 29 passes for 168 yards, including twc touchdown passes to Jerry Rice. Meanwhile, the San Francisco defen se frustrated Marino with a career high four interceptions. While Marino completed 27 of 4f
Ball State defeats Toledo behind Richards' 135 yards
By STEVE HERMAN AP Sports Writer Ball State’s Gene Richards, a lit-tle-used sophomore tailback, was ready when Coach Paul Schudel beckoned him off the sideline. He didn’t realize how ready, however. “Coach always tells me to be ready, but I was surprised I saw as much action as I did,” said Richards, who rushed 30 times for 135 yards and two touchdowns in the Cardinals’ 27-10 victory over Toledo. Before Saturday’s game, Richards had carried the ball only 18 times for 67 yards in the three previous games. But he was called into the game late in the first quarter after Schudel became dissatisfied with starting tailback Carlton Campbell. “Gene’s been waiting for the opportunity,” said Schudel, “and he certainly made the most of it.” Richards, who suffered cuts on his chin and forehead and was patched up with seven stitches, admitted the lengthy playing time left him tired. “I need to be in better shape,” he said. The Cardinals, who took the lead in the third quarter on Richards’ first scoring run, evened their record at 22 for the season and at 1-1 in the MidAmerican Conference. “If we are going to make any kind of run at anything this year, we have to play like we did in the second half,” said Schudel. “We have to run the football, we have to control the ball and play good defense.” Ball State also put together two long scoring drives in the fourth period. Earlier, John Diettrich kicked field goals of 42 and 46 yards in the second quarter, making him the 27th player in NCAA Division 1A history to kick 50 field goals in his career. The Ball State senior now has 51 and is three away from the conference mark set by Mike Prindle of Western Michigan from 198184. In other Indiana college games on Saturday, Notre Dame pounded Purdue 41-9; Indiana remained unbeaten with a 41-24 victory at Missouri; St. Joseph’s, the state’s only other undefeated team, won its fourth straight in a 15-14 victory over Evansville; Indiana State fell 20-6 to Kansas; Valparaiso smashed Franklin 41-15, and Ashland beat Indianapolis 17-8. Also, Anderson edged Taylor 25-21, DePauw downed Albion 21-14, Hanover fell to Georgetown 31-18, Wabash lost to Hope 13-3, Manchester nipped Concordia 17-14, Rose-Hulman shut out Principia 330, and Sewanee beat Earlham 36-13. At Evansville, it took an 18-yard touchdown pass and two-point conversion pass both from Pat Leonard to Dennis O’Hara with 2:14 to go to give St. Joe the Heartland Collegiate Conference victory over the Aces and keep the Pumas unbeaten for the season. The 4-0 start is their best since 1979. Evansville’s David Seeley, who missed a 23-yard field goal attempt earlier, missed a 25-yard attempt with three seconds left to play. The Aces, who had sophomore Andy Benes complete 26 of 38 passes for 371 yards and two touchdowns, also hurt themselves by losing the ball on fumbles twice inside the St. Joseph’s 5-yard line. At Lawrence, Kan., Arnold Snell rushed for 167 yards and two touch-
for 301 yards, he was constantly hurried and never got his rhythym. Eagles 34, Rams 20 Ron Jaworski’s three touchdowr passes and a defense that stoppec NFL rushing leader Eric Dickersor carried Philadelphia over the previously unbeaten Rams for Buddy Ryan’s first victory as coach oi the Eagles. The ferocity of the Eagles’ offense was only slightly more surprising than the collapse of the Rams’ defense. Giants 20, Saihts 17 Phil Simms threw a 4-yard touchdown pass to Zeke Mowatt with 8:03 to play as the Giants rallied from a 17-point first-half deficit to beat up-set-minded New Orleans. Redskins 19, Seahawks 14 George Rogers rushed for 115 yards and two touchdowns to lead undefeated Washington over previously unbeaten Seattle. Seattle’s Steve Largent caught three passes to equal Harold Carmichael’s NFL record of catching a pass in 127 consecutive games. Bears 44, Bengals 7 Sore-shouldered quarterback Jim McMahon threw three touchdown passes to inspire a sluggish Chicago offense to its most productive performance of the season.
downs to lead the Jayhawks over Indiana State’s Sycamores. Snell’s 44-yard scoring run gave the 2-1 Jayhawks a 13-3 lead five minutes into the third period. Kansas had an interception and lost two fumbles in the first half while falling behind the Sycamores 3-0. Matt Schroeder kicked a 22-yard field goal for Indiana State in the first quarter and added a 34-yarder in the third. Schroeder also missed a 36-yard attempt. In other games Saturday: —Greg Thome returned an intercepted pass 68 yards for the first of three Valparaiso touchdowns in the third period as the Crusaders beat winless Franklin in a Heartland Conference game. The other thirdquarter touchdowns were by Bobby Mason on a 19-yard run and Shawn Barker on a 30-yard touchdown pass from Eric Habelt. —Ray Bolin and James George rushed for a combined 229 yards to lead Ashland over Indianapolis in the Heartland Conference. Indianapolis, 1-2, scored its touchdown in the fourth quarter when Tim Annee returned a blocked punt 13 yards. The Eagles’ defense held Indianapolis to 124 total yards. Tailback Ken Gillum rushed 11 times for 41 yards to lead the Greyhounds. —Tim Rauch scored on a 64-yard pass play and a 38-yard punt return, while the Rose-Hulman defense held Principia to 34 yards rushing and came up with five sacks and two pass interceptions. Rose-Hulman, 31, scored its first three touchdowns after Principia turnovers. The first came on a 5-yard run by Tony Broday. Will Sears and John Collett followed with 2-yard scoring runs. —Bobby Morales passed for two touchdowns, rushed six times for 88 yards, kicked a 21-yard field goal, and kicked two extra points to help Sewanee over Earlham in a College Athletic Conference game. Earlham’s Craig Williams caught 8 passes for 60 yards, including a four-th-quarter touchdown from Chris Short. Ed Stigall caught six passes for 49 yards, including a thirdquarter touchdown pass from Todd Crowell. —Don Hutchinson ran for 122 yards, including 54 for a touchdown on the fourth play of the game, to lead Manchester over Concordia. The victory gave Manchester a 2-1 record. —Doug Cooper hit field goals of 22 and 25 yards and Joe Cossey ran 30 yards for a touchdown as Hope defeated Wabash. The only scoring for Wabash, 1-2, came on a 30-yard field goal by Tim Pliske following a Hope fumble. In a scoreless second half, Hope held Wabash to 37 yards total offense. —James Burton passed for one touchdown and ran for another to lead Georgetown over Hanover. Hanover, 2-1, got touchdowns from Mark Kleiman and Jim O’Risk on passes from Jon Pinnick. Mike Luker caught a 20-yard touchdown pass from Bob Burkart for Hanover. —John Garrett scored three touchdowns to lead Anderson over Taylor. The Ravens, 1-2, trailed 21-10 at halftime. Garrett, who rushed for 66 yards on 16 carries, scored on a 1-yard run in the third quarter. Quarterback Robin Hunt then ran the conversion attempt into the end zone. Garrett then caught a 45-yard scoring pass from Hunt with 3:06 left in the game.
The 4-0 Bears routed the 2-2 Bengals in style reminiscent of their 1985 Super Bowl season, using McMahon’s leadership to cash in on five interceptions by their hard-hitting linebackers and defensive secondary. McMahon was making his first start since separating his shoulder three weeks ago. Broncos 27, Patriots 20 Sammy Winder and Gerald Willhite scored second-half touchdowns and the Denver defense smothered New England after intermission, rallying the unbeaten Broncos past the Patriots. Trailing 13-3 at halftime, the Broncos scored on four of their five possessions in the second half. Raiders 17, Chargers 13 Marc Wilson threw two touchdown passes in a span of 41 seconds to spark the Raiders to their first victory of the NFL season. The Raiders, playing without star tailback Marcus Allen, who was sidelined because of a sprained ankle, had opened the year by losing their first three games for the first time in 22 years. Falcons 23, Bucs 20, OT Mick Luckhurst’s third field goal of the game, a 34-yarder 12:35 into overtime, lifted Atlanta over Tampa Bay. The game-winning kick came at the end of a 10-play, 52-yard drive
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that consumed six minutes, 29 seconds and completed the Falcons’ comeback from a 20-7 halftime deficit. The Falcons’ 4-0 start is the best in the franchise’s 21-year history. Vikings 42, Packers 7 Tommy Kramer threw six touchdown passes and surpassed the 20,000-yard career passing mark as Minnesota beat Green Bay. For only the second time in their storied 66-year history, the Packers have started a season 0-4; the other was in 1975. Browns 24, Lions 21 Gerald McNeil returned a punt 84 yards for a touchdown and ignited the tie-breaking drive for Cleveland with a 36-yard kickoff return. Chiefs 20, Bills 17 Nick Lowery kicked a 46-yard field goal with 1:07 left to boost Kansas City over Buffalo. The Chiefs scored twice in the game’s final five minutes and were helped when Buffalo quarterback Jim Kelly threw an interception to Deron Cherry late in the fourth quarter after the Chiefs had scored the tying touchdown. The win broke an eight-game road losing streak for Kansas City. Steelers 22, Oilers 16, OT Pittsburgh’s Rick Woods returned a punt 41 yards in overtime to set up Walter Abercrombie’s 3-yard touchdown run that gave the Steelers their victory over Houston.
Lady Tiger Cubs run into stiff competition
BLOOMINGTON - Running into stiff competition and larger schools, the Greencastle High School girls’ golf team ended its season by placing next-to-last at the sectional tournament played Saturday at Cascades Golf Club in Bloomington. THE LADY TIGER Cubs finished the season with a dual mark of 2-8 and overall record of 3-14. The only school they defeated Saturday was Owen Valley, a team GHS had beaten for one of its two dual wins during the regular season. “The schools we lost to (in the sectional) are large, triple A schools,” said Greencastle coach Bill Ross. “Unfortunately, GHS is a small fish in an ocean of large predators.” The Tiger Cubs needed 467 shots to cover the 18-hole course. Jill Gossard, like she did in every meet this fall, led the way as she fired a 96. However, she was the only local girl that did not improve her score from the front nine to the back. “EACH GIRL besides Jill made an improvement on the backside against the frontside,” Ross said. “This is to their credit. Pam (Mourouzis) improved by 11 shots, Kathv (Schwartz) by
September29,l9B6THE BANNERGRAPHIC.
three, (Kristy) Mays by 10 and (Kristie) Ward by two. “Golf is indeed a game of concentration. I’m real proud of all these girls.” Mourouzis fired a 69-58 - 127, Schwartz a 70-67 --137, Mays a 6656 -122 and Ward a 62-60 -122. TERRE HAUTE South won the meet, edging Martinsville by one stroke and Bedford-North Lawrence by two. All three of those schools advanced to the regional next Saturday. Bloomington North was fourth, Bloomington South fifth, Terre Haute North sixth, GHS seventh and Owen Valley eighth. The three individuals that advanced to the regional competition were Springs Valley’s Angie Mills (78), and Kelli Akers (77), and medalist Amy McDonald of Bloomington South, who also fired a 77 but won on the first hole of sudden death. Bloomington Sectional Team scores 1. Terre Haute South 397, 2. Martinsville 398, 3. Bedford-North Lawrence 399, 4. Bloomington North 498, 5. Bloomington South 409,6. Terre Haute North 437,7. Greencastle 467,8. Owen Valley 476. Individual regional qualifiers 1. McDonald (Bloomington South) 77, 2. Akers (Springs Valley) 77, 3. Mills (Springs Valley) 78. Greencastle scores Gossard 47-49 --96; Mays 66-56 - 122; Ward 62-60 - 122; Mourouzis 69-58 - 127; Schwartz 70-67-137.
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