Banner Graphic, Volume 21, Number 123, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 January 1991 — Page 9

DePauw pounds Hanover with efficient offense

By BILL WAGNER DePauw University Sports Information Director HANOVER The Tiger basketball squad will likely never forget last Wednesday’s home loss to Taylor, but at least Saturday’s blowout victory at Hanover will help soften the harsh blow delivered in that game. The Tigers did little wrong in gaining the 64-46 win over Hanover’s Panthers. THE WIN LIFTED the Tigers to a 12-5 record overall and 4-2 in the Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference, while Hanover slipped to 13-8 and 2-4 in the ICAC. The win also snapped Hanover’s ninegame homecourt win streak. Hanover’s last loss at Lynn Hall came at the hands of the Tigers on February 17, 1990 by a 73-68 count. The Tigers raced to an early 7-0 lead on baskets by Brett Hecko and Brett Crist, sandwiching a Troy Greenlee three-pointer. Hanover went five minutes without a score and in that time missed four shots and committed a pair of turnovers. Carlos Johnson hit two free throws

Oilers’ Campbell surprised to be in Hall of Fame

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) Dan Pastorini knew Earl Campbell would make the Hall of Fame. He was more certain of it than Campbell himself. On Saturday, the former Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints running back was elected to the Hall in his first year of eligibility. Two others eligible for the first time, John Hannah and Jan Stenerud, also made it, as did Tex Schramm and Stan Jones. “I’VE PLAYED AGAINST a lot of Hall of Fame players," said Pastorini, the quarterback for the Oilers when Campbell was the league’s top runner, ‘‘but Earl is the most deserving. He’s the greatest. He made my iob so much easier. “I was good friends with Isiah Robertson of the Rams and when Earl hit Isiah in the Astrodome in one of his many famous hits, I walked by Isiah and he had this dazed look in his eyes and he just shook his head. “That was Earl, he as the best.” CAMPBELL DESCRIBED making the Hall of Fame as “one of the best things to happen to me. Football has been great to me.” “The first time, this makes it all the better,” said Campbell, who recently spoke about the possibility of making it with Franco Harris, the Steelers’ star runner of the same era. Harris was inducted in 1990. “He said, “there’s nothing like it, it changes your whole life.’ “If you see Franco, tell him he was right.” Campbell ranks 10th in all time rushing yardage with 9,407 yards. A three-time All-Pro, he played in six Pro Bowls. HANNAH, A GUARD for New England for 13 seasons, was one of the best run-blockers the NFL has seen. His pass protection skills weren’t too shabby, either, and Hannah was a seven-time All-Pro. He played in eight Pro Bowls. “It wasn’t easy to switch,” Hannah said of going from the wishbone at Alabama, where he was an All-American, to the NFL. He was selected fourth overall in the 1973 draft. “I never got to be as good a pass blocker as I would have liked,” Hannah said. “One thing that helped was that in the wishbone, you attacked defenses instead of sitting back. That helped.” STENERUD IS THE first pure

Phoenix Open decided by putt

PHOENIX (AP) Nolan Henke was shaking his head in disbelief after his last putt, but not because it was bad. It won the Phoenix Open for him. Henke rolled in an 18-foot birdie putt on the final hole Sunday, stemming a back-nine collapse and beating Curtis Strange, Tom Watson and Gil Morgan by one shot. “I can’t believe it went in,” Henke said. “I tightened up on the back nine. I wanted to stay away from bogeys and it kept happening on every green. I just tried to relax on 18 and think f hat I had to do, and it went ia. 1 can’t believe winning.” It was just the second victory in

ICAC Basketball Indiana Collegiate Athletic Conference Men’a Baiketball at a Glance School ICAC Pct Total Pct Taylor 6-0 1.000 19-2 .905 DePauw* 4-2 .667 12-5 .706 Franklin 4-3 571 11-5 .687 Roae-Huhnan 4-4 .500 14-5 .737 Manchester 3-4 .428 9-12 .429 Hanover 2-4 .333 13-8 .619 Wabash 2-4 .333 6-11 .353 Anderson 1-5 .167 3-17 .150 Saturday’i Results DePauw 65, Hanover 48 Anderson 66, Franklin 65 Manchester 83, Wabash 75 Taylor 73, Rose-Hubnan 50 Tuesday’s Gaines Anderson at Taylor Rose-Hulman at Manchester Wednesday’s Gaines Wabash at DePauw, 7:30 p.m. Rose-Hulman at Manchester Saturday, Feb. 2, Games DePauw at Franklin Anderson at Rose-Hulman Manchester at Hanover Wabash at Taylor * Defending champion with 15:11 left in the half to put the Panthers’ first points on the board. For the next 5:30 the Tiger offense would be spelled M-O-O-S-E. The junior center scored 12 of the Tigers’ next 14 points, including the first seven in that stretch.

placekicker to make the Hall. A native of Norway who came to the United Slates to attend Montana State on a skiing scholarship, he wound up on the football team and set an NCAA record with a 59-yard field goal in 1966. He was drafted by the Chiefs in the third round and never missed a game for injury or illness in his 19-season career. “We were playing the Chargers in 1966 and Montana State was at Tulsa,” said Hank Stram, Stenerud’s coach at Kansas City. “I flew to Tulsa on Saturday and watched him in pregame warmups. He started on the 40 and the ball looked like a rocket going off. “Then came the opening kickoff right through the goalposts and seven rows through the bleachers. That was enough.” STENERUD RANKS second to George Blanda in points with 1,699. His 373 career field goals arc a record. He played in four Pro Bowls and two AFL All-Star games and kicked in two Super Bowls. Earlier this week, Stenerud was chosen for the silver anniversary alltime Super Bowl team. Schramm, one of the game’s great innovators, was president and general manager of the Dallas Cowboys for 29 years. In that time, the Cowboys had 20 winning seasons under coach Tom Landry, who was inducted into the Hall last summer. Those Dallas teams won two Super Bowls in five trips. For 23 years, Schramm was chairman of the prestigious NFL competition committee. He also was a key force behind the 1966 merger of the AFL and NFL. Schramm also is credited with developing the wild-card playoff system and was a leading proponent of adopting television replays as an officiating tool. JONES, ELECTED BY the seniors committee, played 12 seasons for the Bears (1954-65), then one with the Redskins. A guard and defensive tackle, he was a three-time All-Pro and played in seven Pro Bowls. Two finalists who did not receive the required 24 votes from the 29 members of the selection committee who were present at the meeting were Raiders owner Al Davis and former Colts tight end John Mackey. The induction ceremonies will be July 27 at Canton, Ohio.

three years on the PGA Tour for Henke, who won the B.C. Open last September. He finished with an even-par 71 for a 16-under total of 268. It marked Henke’s 29th consecutive round of shooting par or under. The victory in this $1 million tournament was worth SIBO,OOO, more than half of what the 26-year-old Henke earned last season. “I hope this is the start of a good year,” Henke said. “I thought my first win would come on the Seniors Tour. The first one was a shock. This one was a bigger shock.”

THE TIGERS’ LEAD was stretched to 26-14 when Crist blistered a three-pointer at the 7:33 mark. The Panthers battled back, however, and trimmed the lead to six on three occasions the last coming at 32-26 with 1:02 left in the half. In that final minute the Old Gold tallied the final five points as Tim Frey scored off of a Brad Brownell assist and Greenlee lit it up with a three-pointer with four seconds left to send the Tigers to the lockerroom with a 37-26 lead. “I WAS VERY pleased with our efficiency on offense in the first half, especially after coming off of Wednesday’s loss,” coach Royce Waltman said. That efficiency came in the form of 61 percent shooting from the field and just one turnover. Hanover was shooting a hot 58 percent and got 14 of their points form big men Hudson Heidbreder and Tim Kessling. Hecko had an outstanding first 20 minutes with 18 points which included a pair of three-point plays. IN THE SECOND half the Tiger defense turn it up a notch in

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Saturday at Hanover DePauw Tigers 64 Hanover Panthers 48 Panthers FG-FGA FT-FTA PF R TP Heidbreder 4-9 0-2 14 8 Kessling 5-8 1-2 2 3 11 Weedin 2-4 0-0 3 4 4 Carter 1-4 0-0 3 2 2 C. Johnson 3-5 5-7 2 1 11 Adams 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 Rutledge 1-1 1-10 0 3 P. Johnson 3-7 2-2 3 1 9 Brough 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Team 0-0 0-0 0 4 0 Totals 19-49 9-14 14 19 48 Tigers FG-FGA FT-FTA PF R TP Hecko 9-14 5-5 0 6 23 Greenlee 4-5 0-0 3 0 12 Ferrell 4-5 0-0 3 6 8 Brownell 0-1 0-0 2 10 Crist 4-8 0-0 119 Bruksch 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Watson 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Rutherford 0-1 0-0 2 10 Frey 5-6 2-2 2 1 12 Thompson 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Burgher 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Seifferlein 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Nelson 0-0 0-0 10 0 Team 0-0 0-0 0 3 0 Totals 26-41 7-7 14 19 64 Halftime score: DePauw 37, Hanover 26. 3-Point FG: Hanover 1-7 (P. Johnson 1-3, Adams 0-1, Carter 0-1, Heidbreder 0-1, Kess ling 0-1), DePauw 5-6 (Greenlee 4-5, Crist 1-1). Turnovers: Hanover 7, DePauw 6 Assists: Hanover 3 (Weedin 2), DePauw 8 (Brownell 5). Steals: Hanover 1 (Heidbreder 1), DePauw 3 (Crist 2). holding the Panthers to just 22 points and eight field goals. The Panthers’ John Carter scored the first basket of the half to cut DePauw’s lead to 37-28.

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But baskets by Dave Ferrell and Crist lifted the Tigers to their biggest lead of the game, 41-28. The Panthers closed to within nine at 51-42 before a pair of Frey baskets and three-pointer from Greenlee which made it 58-42 with 7:36 left Hank Weedin’s tip-in with 7:15 remaining would be the last basket the hosts would score over the next five minutes as the Tigers built the lead to as much as 64-44. “IN THE SECOND half we really did a good job defending Kessling and Heidbreder in the second half,” Waltman said. After totaling 14 points in the first half, the pair scored only five in the second half. The Tigers put together about as efficient of a day as is possible. The Old Gold shot 63 percent from the field, 83 percent from three-point range, made all seven free throws and committed just six turnovers. Arch-rival Wabash provides the opposition for the ICAC’s second place Tigers on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Lilly Center. ****** TIGER TALES: DePauw coach

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MOOSE HECKO 23 points, 6 rebounds

Royce Waltman and members of the team will talk about Wednesday’s 7:30 p.m. home game with Wabash College on Tuesday at “Tiger Talk.” This is an informal, brown-bag style lunch, in Room 221 of the Student Uniion Building and is open to the public.

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