Banner Graphic, Volume 21, Number 60, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 November 1990 — Page 7
Sports scoreboard
NFL National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EST AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct. PF PA Buffalo 8 1 0 .889 274 150 Miami 8 1 0 .889 192 96 N.Y. Jeu 4 6 0 .400 178 216 Indianapolis 3 6 0 .333 125 196 New England 1 8 0 .111 130 257 Central Cincinnati 5 4 0 .556 212 225 Pittsburgh 5 4 0 .556 171 147 Houston 4 5 0 .444 194 169 Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 128 235 West LA Raiders 6 3 0 .667 170 137 Kansas City 5 4 0 .556 192 138 San Diego 5 5 0 .500 214 163 Seattle 4 5 0 .444 175 182 Denver 3 6 0 .333 197 224 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y.Gianu 9 0 0 1.000 226 110 Washington 5 3 0 .625 185 141 Philadelphia 4 4 0 .500 199 172 Dallas 3 7 0 .300 125 204 Phoenix 2 7 0 .222 117 240 Central Chicago 8 1 0 .889 229 126 Green Bay 4 5 0 .444 176 196 Tampa Bay 4 6 0 .400 170 243 Detroit 3 6 0 .333 213 237 Minnesota 3 6 0 .333 194 188 West San Francisco 9 0 0 1.000 222 144 New Orleans 4 5 0 .444 171 164 Atlanta 3 6 0 .333 232 251 LA Rams 3 6 0 .333 198 258 Sunday’s Games Chicago 30, AtlanU 24 Indianapolis 13, New England 10 Miami 17, New York Jets 3 Minnesota 17, Detroit 7 Buffalo 45, Phoenix 14 Seattle 17, Kansas City 16 New Orleans 35, Tampa Bay 7 San Diego 19, Denver 7 Green Bay 29, Los Angeles Raiders 16 New York Giants 31, Los Angeles Rams 7 San Francisco 24, Dallas 6 OPEN DATES: Cincinnati, Cleveland, Houston, Pittsburgh Monday’s Game Washington at Philadelphia, 9 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18 Detroit at New York GianU, 1 p.m. Houston at Cleveland, 1 p.m. New England at Buffalo, 1 p.m. New Orleans at Washington, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 1 p.m. San Diego at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Chicago at Denver, 4 p.m. Dallas at Los Angeles Rams, 4 p.m. Green Bay at Phoenix, 4 p.m. Minnesota at Seattle, 4 p.m. New York Jets at Indianapolis, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at San Francisco, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 8 p.m. Monday, Nov. 19 Ijos Angeles Raiders at Miami, 9 p.m. Top 25 Top Twenty Five Fared By The Associated Press How the top 25 teams in the Associated Press’ college football poll fared Saturday: 1. Notre Dame (8-1) beat No. 9 Tennessee 3429. Next: vs. No. 21 Penn State, Saturday. 2. Washington (8-2) lost to UCLA 25-22. Next: at Washington State, Saturday. 3. Houston (8-1) lost to No. 14 Texas 45-24. Next: vs. Eastern Washington, Saturday. 4. Colorado (9-1-1) beat Oklahoma State 41-22. Next: vs. Kansas State, Saturday. 5. Miami, Fla. (6-2) did not play. Next: vs. Boston College, Saturday. 6. lowa (7-2) lost to Ohio State 27-26. Next: vs. Purdue, Saturday. 7. Georgia Tech (8-0-1) beat Virginia Tech 6-3. Next: at Wake Forest, Saturday. 8. Brigham Young (8-1) beat No. 25 Wyoming 45-14. Next: at Utah, Saturday. 9. Tennessee (5-2-2) lost to No. 1 Notre Dame 34-29. Next: vs. No. 16 Mississippi at Memphis, Tenn., Saturday. 10. Florida (8-1) beat Georgia 38-7. Next: at Kentucky, Saturday. 11. Virginia (8-1) beat North Carolina 24-10. Next: vs. Maryland, Saturday. 12. Florida State (7-2) beat Cincinnati 70-21. Next: vs. Memphis State at Orlando, Fla., Saturday. 13. Nebraska (9-1) beat Kansas 41-9. Next: at Oklahoma, Nov. 23. 14. Texas (7-1) beat No. 3 Houston 45-24. Next: at Texas Christian, Saturday. 15. Auburn (6-2-1) lost Southern Mississippi 1312. Next: vs. Georgia, Saturday. 16. Mississippi (8-1) did not play. Next: vs. No. 9 Tennessee, Saturday. 17. Illinois (6-3-0) lost to No. 19 Michigan 2217. Next: at Indiana, Saturday. 18. Clemson (8-2) did not play. Next: vs. South Carolina, Saturday. 19. Michigan (6-3) beat No. 17 Illinois 22-17. Next: vs. Minnesota, Saturday. 20. Oregon (7-3) lost to California 28-3. Next: at Oregon State, Saturday. 21. Penn State (7-2) beat Maryland 24-10. Next: at No. 1 Notre Dame, Saturday. 22 Louisville (9-1-1) beat Boston College 1710. Next: TBA. 23. Southern Cal (7-2-1) beat Oregon State 567. Next: at UCLA, Saturday. 24. Michigan State (5-3-1) beat Minnesota 2816. Next: at Northwestern, Saturday. 25. Wyoming (9-2) lost to No. 8 Brigham Young 45-14. Next: at Hawaii, Saturday. State colleges Indiana College Football Records By The Associated Press W L T Pts Opp Notre Dame 8 1 0 319 219 DePauw 8 2 0 311 138 Rose-Hulman 7 3 0 280 232 Indiana 5 3 1 268 173 Hanover 6 4 0 271 196 Ball State 6 4 0 181 115 Taylor 5 5 0 206 242 Butler 5 5 1 167 138 Wabash 4 5 0 271 222 Franklin 4 6 0 311 320 Indianapolis 3 6 1 211 269 Anderson 3 7 0 254 340 Indiana State 4 7 0 263 289 Purdue 2 7 0 160 265 Evansville 2 7 0 188 275 Earlham 2 8 0 138 318 St. Joseph’s 2 8 0 133 282 Valparaiso 1 8 0 97 370 Manchester 1 9 0 113 390
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NBA National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L PcL GB Boston 4 1 .800 New York 4 2 .667 54 Miami 2 2 .500 154 Philadelphia 2 3 .400 2 Washington 1 3 .250 254 New Jersey 1 4 .200 3 Central Division Atlanta 4 1 .800 Milwaukee 4 1 .800 Detroit 3 2 .600 Indiana 3 2 .600 1 Chicago 3 3 .500 154 Cleveland 3 3 .500 154 Charlotte 2 4 .333 254 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division W L PcL GB DaUas 4 1 .800 San Antonio 3 1 .750 54 Houston 3 3 .500 154 Minnesota 3 3 .500 154 Utah 2 2 .500 154 Denver 0 6 .000 454 Orlando 0 6 .000 454 Pacific Division Portland 5 0 1.000 Phoenix 3 1 .750 154 Seattle 3 1 .750 154 Golden Sure 4 2 .667 154 LA Clippers 2 4 .333 354 LA Lakers 1 3 .250 354 Sacramento 0 5 .000 5 Saturday’s Games Cleveland 104, Philadelphia 88 Miami 120, Indiana 105 Boston 105, New Jersey 91 Chicago 105, Charlotte 86 San Antonio 111, Houston 110 Phoenix 173, Denver 143 Atlanta 112, LA Clippers 94 New York 93, Sacramento 88 Golden State 117, Seattle 100 Sunday’s Games Minnesota 108, Orlando 81 Houston 110, Uuli 90 Portland 138, LA Clippers 107 New York 109, LA Lakers 103 Monday’s Game Washington at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m. College Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Saturday’s Games Bethel College 125, IU-Kokomo 86 Marian 75, St Francis 73 Kiwanis Invitational Championship Vincennes 100, Allegany, Md., 80 Third Place Glen Oaks, Mich., 80, Cincinnati Tech 78 Exhibition Ball State 74, Simon Fraser 57 NHL National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EST WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division W L T Pts GF GA NY Rangers 13 6 1 27 82 51 Philadelphia 11 8 0 22 71 65 Washington 10 9 0 20 61 60 New Jersey 9 8 1 19 65 60 Pittsburgh 8 7 2 18 75 65 NY Islanders 7 10 0 14 51 68 Adams Division Boston 10 5 3 23 56 5 8 Montreal 10 7 2 22 61 57 Buffalo 7 6 4 18 58 50 Hartford 5 9 3 13 41 56 Quebec 3 13 3 9 49 78 CAMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division W L T Pts GF GA Chicago 12 6 2 26 66 45 St Louis 12 4 1 25 61 43 Detroit 7 8 3 17 63 74 Minnesota 4 10 4 12 47 65 Toronto 2 16 1 5 49 94 Smythe Division Los Angeles 12 4 1 25 78 51 Calgary 12 7 1 25 86 62 Vancouver 9 9 0 18 54 61 Winnipeg 7 9 2 16 58 58 Edmonton 2 11 2 6 39 51 Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh 3, Boston 3, tie N.Y. Islanders 5, Calgary 1 Philadelphia 5, Quebec 2 Buffalo 4, Washington 2 Montreal 3, New Jersey 1 Chicago 5, Toronto 1 Hartford 3, Minnesota 2, OT St Louis 6, Detroit 1 Los Angeles 7, Edmonton 4 Sunday’s Games Montreal 5, Quebec 4, OT Philadelphia 2, Vancouver 0 Boston 5, Washington 3 Calgary 4, N.Y. Rangers 4, tie Winnipeg 3, Chicago 3, tie Monday’s Game Winnipeg at Toronto, 7:35 p.m. Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia, 7:35 p.m. Montreal at New Jersey, 7:45 p.m. Pittsburgh at Minnesota, 8:35 p.m. Quebec at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m. IHL International Hockey League At A Glance Sunday’s Game Peoria 8, Phoenix 0 Monday’s Game Muskegon at Albany Tuesday’s Game Kansas City at Phoenix Transactions Weekend Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASKETBALL National Basketball Association PHILADELPHIA 76ERS—Traded Bob Thornton, forward, to the Minnesota Timberwolves fora 1991 second-round draft pick. Continental Basketball Association CEDAR RAPIDS SILVERHAWKS—Waived Ray Pugh, forward. Signed Pat Durham, forward. FOOTBALL National Football League KANSAS CITY CHlEFS—Waived Rob McGovern, linebacker. Activated Fred Jones, wide receiver, from injured reserve.
DePauw
Carlson said. “I don’t think we could do much better than we did today.” Wabash twice tied the game. Receiving the opening kickoff of the second half, the Little Giants marched 67 yards in just six plays, senior Tim Oliver breaking for a 20-yard touchdown run with 12:08 left in the third period. THAT’S WHEN SPECIALTY teams became important. DePauw drove the football 61 yards through the Wabash defense, with the aid of two off-side penalties, and took a 10-7 edge with the first of Giunta’s two 26-yard field goals. Before the Little Giants could retaliate though, they fumbled and Tege Lewis recovered it for the Tigers. An 18-yard pass to Dickey, with a great downfield block from Kostouros, and the Tigers were within Giunta’s range again. Boras snap, Mike Doßosh hold and Giunta kicked DePauw 13, Wabash 7. OBVIOUSLY WABASH HAD a shot at taking the lead with a touchdown and PAT. Padgett went to the air six times to take the Little Giants 72 yards in 15 plays and ate up nearly six minutes of time before Oliver scored on a one-yard run. That six-minutes of time would have been more important if the Little Giants had hit their PAT. Brian Reising’s kick was tumbled
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ICAC Football Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference Football Standings (Final standings) ICAC Total Team W-L-T W-L-T DePauw 7-0-0 8-2-0 Rose-Hulman 6-1-0 7-3-0 Hanover 4-3-0 6-4-0 Wabash 4-3-0 4-5-0 Taylor 2-5-0 5-5-0 Franklin 2-5-0 4-6-0 Anderson 3-4-0 3-7-0 Manchester 0-7-0 1-9-0 wide right, leaving the score tied 13-13 and the stage was set for DePauw’s 66-yard game-winning drive. But with a seven-point margin, Wabash still had time to pull out the victory by scoring a touchdown and two-point conversion. DePauw’s defense made sure it never happened. ON SECOND DOWN, Mike Thomas sacked Padgett for a sevenyard loss. The Little Giants reached their own 44-yard line, then defensive end Al Hackbarth crunched Padgett. Seniors to speak The DePauw University senior football players will be the guest speakers at Tuesday’s noon edtion of Tiger Talk. The informal, bagluncheon, will be held at the Student Union Building. The public is invited to bring questions for the players and coaches-
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Colts
Washington and the New York Giants. THE COLTS HAD lost three in a row, but are 3-6 with their first win in Foxboro after six consecutive losses. They trailed 10-3 at halftime and 10-6 before the winning 26-yard touchdown pass into a strong wind with 2:05 left from rookie Jeff George, who was off target most of the day. Billy Brooks caught the ball in the end zone between defensive backs Ronnie Lippett and Fred Marion. Blame it on the wind and chilly temperatures. Blame it on good defensive plays. Blame it on questionable play calling. Blame it on inept performances. WHATEVER THE reason, the result is obvious. Offensive yardage was as scarce as spectators in the half-empty stadium where Indianapolis went a third straight game with just a single touchdown and lowered its league low rushing average from 57.8 yards per game to 57.4. But this time it managed to win against a team off to its worst start in 20 years. “It’s always important to win,” Colts running back Eric Dickerson said. “It doesn’t matter if you do it ugly or you do it pretty.” “There is only one direction I can see, and that is up,” New England wide receiver Sammy
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November 12,1990 THE BANNERGRAPHIC
Martin said. GEORGE HAD completed 4 of 22 passes until he connected on a 22-yarder to Albert Bentley before Dickerson’s 8-yard run set up the touchdown. George finished with 6 completions in 24 attempts for 106 yards. New England’s Marc Wilson kept pace, hitting on 8 of 23 for 87 yards. “The Patriots probably outplayed us for 58 minutes,” Brooks said. “One touchdown play (and the victory) doesn’t mean we played well.” Neither team did. Indianapolis had a first down on its opening possession, but none on its other five in the first half. The Patriots had two first downs on their first series of the second half, but none on their next six. THE COLTS GAINED yardage on only eight of their 14 series. On four consecutive series in the second half, the Patriots failed to get past their own 18-yard line. New England had 14 first downs and 247 offensive yards, including a season-high 175 rushing yards against a team missing two starting defensive linemen with injuries. The Colts had five first downs and 155 yards. “Under these conditions, you can’t expect teams to have great performances,” Indianapolis linebacker Duane Bickett said.
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