Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 211, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1964 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
", <■« _ _ .. * Jackets Squeak Out 7-6 Victory At Auburn
The Statistic Story Decatur 0 0 7 o—7 Auburn 0 0 6 o—6 Decatur TD — Elliott (60, pass from Anspaugh). Decatur PAT — Anspaugh (Kick). Auburn TD — Myers (16, run). D A Ist downs- 13 8 Yds. Rushing 234 145 Yds. Passing 88 8 Pass Att. 6 8 Pass Comp. 4 1 Fumbles Lost 1 2 Intercepted By-— 1 0 Punts 2 1 Yds. Penalized 35 20 Individual Rushing— Elliott, 89 yds. 17 carries; Anspaugh, 23yds., 6 carries; B. Blythe, 66 yds., 11 carries; 8. Bylthe, 56 yds., 20 carries. Passing yardage — Elliott, 2, 60 yds.; Anderson, 1 15 yds.; 8. Blythe, 1, 13 yds. Interception — Elliott.
Elmhurst, Bluffton Post NEIC Victories Elmhumt and Bluffton pulled off big surprises In the Northeastern Indiana Conference Friday night, scoring victories over Garret and Kendallville respectively, while Concordia and Angola played to a scoreless tie. The Trojans, led by veteran fullback Ted Barker, thumped the Railroaders by a 19-14 score at Garrett. Barker scored an 11-yard pass play and on a 58-yard gallop for the victory. Halfback Ted Mahnensmith scored three TD’s as Bluffton romped to a 26-9 pasting of the Comets at Kendallville. Mahnensmi‘h scored on runs of 55, 47 and two yards. In the game at Angola, Concordia once reached the Angola seven yard line, and tne Hornets advanced as far as the Cadet 13, but neither couldscoreThe scpr ing summaries are as follows: Elmhurst 0 6 0 7—19 Garrett 7 0 0 7—14 Garrett TD’s — Hopkins (21. pass from Steward), Steward (3, run). Garett PAT'a — Maurer (kicks) Elmhurst TD’s — Barker (11, paiss from Jackson', Hetrick (1, plunge), Barker (58, run) Elmhurst PAT — Schwartz (kick). Bluffton 6 13 (I 7-26 Kendallville 2 7 0 o—9 Bluffton TD’s — Mahnensmith 3, <55, 47. 2. runs'. Bowman (3, run). Bluffton PAT’s — Romine 2, (kicks). Kendallville TD’s — Meadows (10, run). Kendallville safety (Bowman tackled In end zone). Major Leagues Mnjor I.»«K(ir Mtanillng. Hy I nltrd Pres* Intrrnntlonul Nallonnl l.rnKUe W. 1.. Pct. All Philadelphia SI 62 009 Cincinnati 76 5« 600 «H St. Doula 74 80 .652 7(9 San Fran. 76 81 .551 7(4 VlttshUffTh 7“ 68 65 .511 13 Milwaukee 08 00 507 13(4 Lo* Angele* 05 68 .489 1 6 Chicago 01 73 .453 2014 lloUHtnn 58 78 .426 24(4 New York 46 89 .34 1 36 Friday'* He*nlt* Ix>h Ang. 3 New York 0, let. twl N.Y. 6 L A. ,5. Jnd night Phlla 5 San Fran. 3. night Pltteburgh 10 Hou*. 3. night Mllw. 2 Cincinnati 0, night St. Doula 8 Chicago 5. night Snturdny'a Probable Pitcher* D<w Angelea at New York, (night) — Ortega (6-7) v*. Jackson (9-13). Chicago at St Doula — Jackson (17-10) vs. Sadeckl < 16-9). San Francisco at Philadelphia, (night) — Hendley (10-10) vs. Punning (15-4). Houston at Pittsburgh—Johnson (10-13) vs. Friend (11-16). Milwaukee at Cincinnati, (night) — Sadowski (8-9) V» Purkey (8-8). Sunday'* (lame* lets Angeles at New York Chicago at St Doula San Fran, at Philadelphia Houston at Pittsburgh Milwaukee at Cincinnati
ATTENTION GOLFERS! DECATUR DRIVING RAMGE 1 Mlle North of Decatur on US 27 HOURS: During Wook: 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Sat. & Sun.: 0:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Half Price Clubs for Children to Use.
Grid Twin-Bill At Cleveland By CURT BLOCK UP! Sporta Writer Professional football’s best buy, two games for the price of one, gets its once a year exposure tonight in Cleveland’s Municipal Stadium. A sellout crowd surpassing 83.000 will pack the ball park where it took the baseball Indians the entire rfionth of August to draw the same number. It’s not just the fact that four National Football League teams will be in action, but the games shape up as top drawer. In the opener, Eastern Division fans will turn out to see if the New York Giants are slipping when they meet the Detroit Lions. Tjic . nigfetcap could l» a preview of the December championship affair as the muchimproved Cleveland Browns meet the Green Bay Packers led by reinstated Paul Hornung. Other games on the final preseason weekend find undefeated Minnesota at Hershey, Pa., facing the Philadelphia Eagles: Dallas takes oh Chicago in New Orleans; The San Francisco 49’ers meet the Rams in Izts Angeles; St. Ixiuis tackles Washington in Norfolk, Va.; and* on Sunday Baltimore plays Pittsburgh In the annual Hall of Fame game at Canton, Ohio. In the American League. Denver entertains winless Boston: Buffalo takes on Now York in Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; and Oakland travels to San Diego, for play tonight., Amrrlvnn l.rngnr W. 1.. Pvt. (ill Baltimore 81 61 6»o Chicago 82 65 599 .. New York 77 66 679 3 Detroit " 73 66 .522 10(4 Do* Angelea 71 69 .667 12 >4 MlnneMota 68 68 .500 13(4 Cleveland 67 68 (96 14 Boston 61 76 .445 21 Washington — 53 84 387 29 Knn*ns City 50 86 868 31 (4 Friday'* HeauK* Detroit 1 Wash., 0, night Chi (I t'lev 6, 10 In*., night Minnesota 14 Boston 3, night N.Y. 9 K. C 7.1» In*, night Doh Angeles 7 Balti I, night Saturday'* Probable Pitcher* Baltimore -at Do* Angele*, (night) Barber (9-11) vs. Brunet (1-1). New York at Knnias City, (twilight) — Downing (11-7) vs. Odom (0-0). Boston at Minnesota — Damalic (9-10) vs. Knut (15-7). Cleveland at Chicago Krallek (10-6) vs Horten (10-5). ■ Detroit at Washington — D,ollvh (14-7) vs. X'lrum (9-11). Sunday'* (lame* Baltimore at Do* Angelo* New York nt Kansu* City Boston at Minnesota . , Cleveland nt Chicago 2 Detroit nt Washington If you have aomething to sell « trade — Me the Democrat Wart ads — They get BIG reaulta.
Elliott’s 60-yard TD Run, i| Anspaugh ’s PAT Kick Andi Ike’s Block Are Margin I • .. .w,-. e- ———— — —-r- ; ........
By Bob Shraluka Baseball has often been referrcu” to as a game of inches, meaning victory is gained or lost by a matter of inches on certain plays. Football is no different — as the Decatur Yellow Jackets proved Friday night while opening their 1964 campaign with a 7-6 win in a squeaker at Auburn. Dave Anspaugh didn’t raise his head last night the inch or two he had raised it in Tuesday's jamboree, while missing five of five point-after-touchdown conversions, and John Eichenauer's fingertips were just about two Inches long enough. That was the story in a nutshell! These three or four inches provited the margin of victory Fr'day night, as Eichenauer made Anspaugh’s PAT kick after Decatur's touchdown stand up by blocking Auburn's try for their point-after, leaving the Yellow Jackets with a one- point lead and a successful season opener. The Decaturltes showed glaring weaknesses in several departments, but still came out In the black ink against a rugged Auburn team. Elliott Does It Os course, if it wouldn’t hnva been for a spectacular run by Decatur’s pride and joy, Mighty Max Elliott, Anspaugh and Eichenauer would have had a ghost of a chance at their inch-heroics. With a minute and 55 seconds remaining in the third period, and tho two Northeastern Indiana Conference foes locked in a scoreless deadlock, Elliott broke loose on one of those famous runs of his. and the Red. Devils were npver able to recover, although they came close. Auburn's fine, all-around athletic Terry Habig, had punted to the Decatur 38 yard line, and workhorse Sam Blythe got a pair of yards in a pair of carries, giving Decatur a third and eight situation on their own 40. Then it happened! Anspaugh faded, stopped back anohter step, and then flipped a short screen pass to Elliott, w)io was almost at, full gallop. Pulling guard Tim Magley and Bill Bly-., the were where they were supposed to be, and each tossed a key block to spring Elliott loose. One tackler had a shot at Elliott, and Max nearly ran right over him, and then broke loose with nothing but paydirt 'ahead, as a“ huge contingent of Decatur fans went wild. Boots Point Then came one of the two decisslve plays. Anspaugh, who had been breaking a place-kicker’s law by raising his head too soon in the jamboree, kept his head down and his eyes on the ball and booted the extra point — high above the crossbar and right down the center, to give his club a 7-0 lead. Auburn, however, was far from being down and began a drive that carried to the Decatur 47 yard line before the third stanza ended. The Red Devils picked up ’ ight where they had left off offer the two foes reversed their directions. After moving further downfield halfback Cliff Myers tossed a pass to Hable that carried to the Deca-s tur 25. Bill Bailey and Duane Tuttle moved the ball to the 16, before Myers went off left tackle, shook a pair of tacklers, and scampered into the corner of the end tone Hie Decatur margin was 7-6 and 9:25 was showing on the scoreboard clock as Hablg lined up for the extra-point boot. The kick looked good, but ns it started to sail goalward, Eichenauer came bursting through and got nis fingertips on the ball — just enough to slow it down and cause it to fall short. Get Once More Auburn got the ball on midfield stripe after the Jackets wore unable to gain a first down following the TD. and were forced to punt. Here again, inches made the difference. The Devils drove to near the Decatur 40. and were just inches short of a first down, on a 3rd-down plav. On the ensuing plav, the Auburn backfield was detected as being in motion, to bring about a five-yard penalfv and placing them in a fourth and almost-five situation. Myers tried to pick up the imrortant first down with a doss tn Habig, but all-conference linebark, er Jerry Eglv and halfback Rill Blythe converged on the intended receiver, and E«lv batt«d the pass so the turf, short of Hahig. The jackets took possession of the ball with 4:50 to plav and nearly hekHt the rest of the wav. Anspaugh kept the team on the ground and the Jackets marched 30 yards, picking up three first
THE DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. DIDIARA
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downs, while the clock continued running. Die crafty quarterback carried on five of the last six plays himself, to avoid any fumbled handoffs, before Auburn finally got the ball on their own 14 yard line with three seconds to play. The first play failed, but the Jackets were offside, giving the hosts one more shot, with no time showing on the scoreboard clock. Near Score Elliott, who played a tremendous game on the defensive, as well as offensive, ended any Auburn hopes by picking off a pa«s on his own 30 as the game ended. Mighty Max almost racked up another TD while returning the interception but was finally stopped just short of the goal. Neither team threatened seriously in the opening period, although the Jackets penetrated to the Auburn 39 once before losing the pigskin on a fumble. They recovered a Red Devil fumble as the period ended, however, and began another drive from their own 34. The Blythe boys each picked up a first down before the drive stalled on the Auburn 35. Three plays later, the Jackets recovered a fumble and began once again to move. They advanced once again to the Auburn 31, and EHiott bolted off tackle on a quick-opener, ” a la J'mmle Brown, for a first down on the 20. But Auburn stopped the drive cold, and aided by a 15-yard penalty for Illegal use of hands, shoved the Decaturites to a fourth down and 24 to go on the Auburp 34. Elliott almost pulled them out of the hole, pulling off one of his famous plays. He started around left end. saw no davlight. aid began around the right end. Seeing no daylight there either, he finally went back the other wav, left end again, but was stopped several yards short of a first down. Punch At Line Auburn began punching into a surprisingly weak Decatur defensive line and started its own march, before Myers was halted just inches short of a first down at the 50-vard line by Bill Blythe and Lon Hawkins. The Yellow Jackets once again to make serious scoring threats before time finally ran Indiana Football Bi I'nltrd Pr»« Intrrnn«l<ia*l South Bond St. Joseph's 26 Wlk hart 19 Kokomo 13 Da Porte 6 Fort Wayne Central 12 Goshen 0 Fort Wsvne Duer* 7 South Bend Clay 6 New Carllele 85 Concord 0 Plymouth 12 Knox 7 Valparaiso 27 Dver 7 Havmoml 12 North Manchester 6 Delphi 2« North Jud-on 14 Banco Two. 48 ItolllnK Prairie 14 Bluffton 26 Kendallville 9 Rochester 43 Triton 0 Greenfield 65 Dike 0 Fort Wayne Concordia 0 Angola. 0 Fort Wayne Elmhurst 19 Garrett 14 . . - Decatur 7 Auburn L Nappanee 15 Columbia City 12 Portland 19 Royerton 14 Hobart 25 Portage •) Oak Hill 27 Fairmount o Warsaw , 22 Wabash 19 Bloomington Vnl ve r Gt) Si Mitchell 0 Crawfordsville 7 Lafayette * Morocco 20 Klondike 7 ,' Eastern 35 Western 0 Lafayette Catholic 19 Frankfort 7 Clinton Prairie 21 Sheridan 7 Carmel 20 Tipton 14 Bratll 7 Linton 0 Mooresville 14 Greencastle 13 Westfield 33 Anderson Highland 7 Anderson 30 Lebanon 7 Madison 14 Franklin 13 New Castle 37 Connersville 0. Madison Heights 27 Shelbyville 13 Alexandria 21 Hartford City 0 Marlon 19 Mtaalaalnewa 7 Peru 6 Ixegansport 0 Indianapolis Ripple 33 Indiana roll* Northwest 7 Indianapolis Washington 40 Columbus 6 Laurence Central 19 Indianapolis Arlington 7 Indianapolis Tech 19 Indianapolis Howe 7 Indianapolis Cathedral 25 Indianapolis Attucks 0 Indianapolis Sacred Peart 33 Indianapolis Manual 13 Center Grove 20 Franklin Central 3 Southport 26 Ben Davis 36 (tie) Warren Central 30 Martinsville 0 Indianapolis Shortridge 7 Richmond 7 Indianapolis Chatard 13 Jackson Central 6 Indianapolis Chartrand 26 Beech Grove 6 Elwood 34 Noblesville Ml North Vernon 14 Greensburg 13 Rushville .19 Batesville 0 Jasper 7 Bedford 0 - Tell City 30 Huntingburg 14 Repaeelaer 33 Twin Lakes 7 Aurora 33 Lawrenceburg 0
out on them. The Blythes and Elliott carried to the Auburn 30 before an interference call on a 15-yard pass to end'Dave Anderton gave Decatur a first down on the Red Devil 15 with 18 seconds to play. Bill Blythe picked up five yards and Elliott then shot off tackle but was hauled down just a 'yard short of the goal line, as the first half ended. Decatur again threatened at the outset of the thrid period, marching to the Auburn 15 after the kickoff, with the aid of a 15 yard penalty handed Auburn when someone threw a punch at Elliott in a pileup near the Decatur bench. A 15-yarder charged to the Jackets for clipping ended that drive, and Auburn got the ball once more, for just three plays, before Elliott took off on that TD jaunt to set up the victory. Big Game THE BIG ONE comes up next Friday when the Garrett Railroaders travel to Worthman Field to help the Yellow Jackets open their home portion of the ninegame schedule. Judging from the huge crowd of Decatur fans at last night's game, the home opener might come close to filling the park . 50-Yard Line Flashes By 808 SHRALUKA Cannons boom, Jjells ring, sirens blow — and away we go! One would be foolish to say Decatur’s Yellow Jackets looked like world beaters last night. But a lot of lessons were learned, and a lot of mistakes will be corrected, and the content was still chalked up in the victory column. Decatur fans, and they were there by the hundreds, could well appreciate last night the job Steve Hazelwood, Deane Lehman and, Greg Ladd did last season, because it was at their vacated posts where the Decaturites .were the weakest. The defensive line got pretty pdroue in the* first half of last night’s gams, but there were encouraging signs in the last two periods that this will be the case no longer. Some of Decatur’s inexperienced tackles and ends were taught plenty las' night, and the only way to lean Is to play. Once that front wall is tightened up, and we'd venture to say it will continue to improve as 'he season moves ahead, these Yellow Jackets will be tough to handle. Some fans were probably a bit disappointed, as they were looking for a solid whipping of Auburn. But the Red Devils were a good team, in fact a very good team, especially across the line. The jackets may not run into a tougher — or bigger — line the rest of the season than the one Auburn threw up. They were almost 200 pounds or better across the entire And Auburn was a rough team, in fact, sometimes a bit too rough in the clinches. There is no use saying anything about the pounding some of the Yellow Jacket backs took, especially Mighty Max. because it will more than likely continue throughout the season. Some of the punishment Elliott took, mainly from flying cleats after he was down, was brutal. After Watching Auburn, and seeing other results from around the conference last night, we'd venture to say that Deca’ur’s hopes for a cradc at a conference title could all be wrapped up in the first three games. Garrett and New Haven will be hare the next two Fridays, and with the victory over Auburn,, wins in their next two outings could well sand the Decatur lads on their/way to a conference title, ft’s a tough road to hoe, but this ia 'he team that can handle the Job. The Yellow Jackets showed what they could do last night, and the burden ia squarely on their shoulders. Garrett is first — let’s take GOOD care of them.
— ! t
Max Effiott
Angels Still Whipping Leaders: ‘Lion’ Thon las Leading Phils
By FRED DOWN UPI Sports Writer The City of the Angels is getting a reputation in American League circles this season as a possible graveyard of pennant hopes. The- Los Angeles Angels .have long since disappeared from AL flag contention but they appear to have appointed themselves as the "spoilers” for other contenders. The Angels dealt the defending champion New York Yankees two devastating blows Wednesday and Thursday and they came right ’ back Friday night to beat the Baltimore Orioles 7-1 and shave their firstplace margin to one percentage point over the Chicago White Sox. Heading into the second game of the three-game series in Los Angeles tonight, the Orioles cling precariously to first place with a .600 percentage compared to the .599 mark of the Whit.e Sox who pulled out a 6-5, 10-inning Friday night triumph over (he Cleveland Indians. Elsewhere in the AL, the Yankees snapped out of their batting lethargy with a 9-7, 10inning win over the Kansas City Athletics, the De’roit Tigers beat the Washington Senators 1-0 and the Minnesota Twins blitzed the Boston Red Sox 14-3. Joe Adcock drove in four runs with two homers and a s’nfle and Jim Frevosi and Bobby Knoop had two hits each to lead, an 11-hit Angel attack on Robin Roberts and three successors. Fred Newman stopped the Orioles on six hits to win his 11th game against eight losses. Adcock’s two homers gave him a career total of 302 and put him 20th on the all-time list. The White Sox came from behind four times and finally won out in the 10th inning when Pete Ward and Bill Skowron hit successive homers. Ron Hansen also homered for the White Sox, whose usually solid defense commit'ed five errors: Hoyt Wilhelm, who pitched only one inning, received credit for his seventh victory against eight losses. Yanks Stage Rally — Elston Howard’s run-scoring single and a two-run double by Joe Pepitone were the big blows of the Yankees’ four-run 10th inning but Bill Stafford got out of trouble to preserve Pete Mikkelsen’s fifth win. Mickey Mantle also homered for the Yankees and Ken Harrelson connected for the Athletics. Dave .Wickersham, with ninthinning relief aid from Fred Gladding, scored his 17th victory for the Tigers, who tallied the game’s only run in the second inning when Don Demeter doubled, moved to third on Bill Freehan’s single and scored on Norm Cash's sacrifice fly. The third straight shutout loss moved the Senators to within one of the major league record.
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Dave Anspaugh
Rookie Tony Oliva drove in four runs with his 29th and 30th homers, Harmon Killebrew hit his 45th and Zoilo Versalles his 18th as the Twins pounded out 15 hits behind the nine-hit pitching of Jim Grant. Killebrew’s three-run homer increased his major league leading runs batted in total to 102. Bob Heffner suffered his 10th loss for the Red Sox. N.L. Action Frank Thomas was belittled as “lhe donkey” by the New York Mets but to the World Se-ries-bound Philadelphia Phillies he’s “the lion.” In many Ways, the 35-year-old Thomas was a symbol of the Mets’ frustration. He is a slow runner and an awkward fielder in addition to having earned a reputation as 'he most stubborn man in baseball. General Manager John Quinn of the Phillies knew all this, of course, when he acquired Thomas on Aug. 6 but he was Interested in something else: Thomas’ bat. He knew big Frank still swung a dangerous home run bat and he knew the Phillies might have great need for such a weapon in their bid to win their first National League flag since 1950. It is significant that the Phillies led the NL by 1% games on the diy they acquired Thomas and now hold a 6%-game margin. Thomas has more than lived up to Quinn’s expectations by hammering away at a .312 clip, hitting six homers and driving in 21 runs for the: Phillies. What’s more he's time and again come through with key blows—just as he did Friday night with a game-tving tworun homer in the eighth inning of the Phillies’ 5-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants. Phils Beat O’Dell Held to four hits and one run in six innings by rookie Dick Estelle, making his first big league start, the Phillies drew even at 3-3 on Thomas’ homer and. went on to beat relief pitcher Billy O'Dell on a double by Gus Triandos, singles by Johnny Callison and Ruben Amaro and relief pitcher Jack Baldschun’s squeeze bunt. The loss dropped the Giants into fourth place, games behind the Phillies. Tne Milwaukee Braves knocked the second-place Cincinnati Reds 6% games off the pace by beating them 2-0, the S'. Louis Cardinals defeated the Chicago Cubs 8-5, the Pittsburgh Pirates routdd the Houston Colts 10-2 and the New York Mets beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 6-5 after a 3-0 loss. In the American League, Los
Complete Insurance Service ’.j-i n RMfilfeh' ■ The noise Os Inswance - w ™“ « ** 3 . 3 m
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1964
ci X Xi John Eichenauer
i Angeles beat Baltimore 7-1, Chii cago nipped Cleveland 6-5, New t York topped Kansas City 9-7, ! Detroit blanked Washington 1-0 t and Minnesota drubbed Boston ■ 14-3. Pitches Three Hitter ' Tony Cloninger pitched a tljree - hitter for his 15ih victory and Eddie Mathews belted a two-run homer for the Braves, who tagged Cincinnati’s Joey Jay with his 10th loss despite I 12 strikeouts. It was the second straight shutout suffered by the Reds. Ken Boyer’s three-run ninthinning homer enabled the Cardinals to ease back into third place. The Cardinals had tied the score at 5-5 in the eighth inning when Mike Shannon . scored on the front end of a double steal. Bob Veale pitched a sevenhitter and struck out seven to win his 15th game for the Pirates, who backed him with a 16-hit attack that included three hits and four runs batted in by Bill Mazeroski. Bob Bruce, Houston’s 13-game winner, suffered his eighth defeat. Don Drysdale pitched a threehitter to win his 16th game for the Dodgers but the Mets rallied to take the nightcap when left fielder Tommy Davis’ muff of a fly with the bases filled paved the way for 'them to score four runs in the eighth. BOWLING RURAL LEAGUE W L Pts. Stucky Furniture . 3 0 4 Pioneer Restaurant .... 3 0 4 Duo Marine ~ . 3 0 4 Barkley Construction .213 Baugh’s . — 2 13 Decatur . Kocher 2 13 Aspy Standard ... 2 1 2 Miller-Jones Shoes ... 2 12 Weber’s Bath 12 2 Mcßride & Son 12 2 Adams Builders .1 2 1 Decatur Industries 12 1 Reidenbach Equipment 12 1 Schwartz Ford .. 0 3 0 Sheets Furniture 0 3 0 B & H GriD .... 0 3 0 WOMEN’S MAJOR W L Pts. Adams Trailer 3 3 5 Two Brothers 3 3 5 Three Kings .... 4 2 5 Sheets Furniture 4 2 4 Colonial Salon ..3 3 4 K. & N. Carpet Service 15 1 Trane In a goM town — Decatur If you have something to sell or trade — ne the Democrat Want ada — They get BIG results.
