The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 November 1964 — Page 4
Page 4 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1964
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THE DAILY BANNER
One Big Break Enables State To Defeat Tiger Squad, 6-0
A scoreless tie would have been a feasible verdict in DePauw’s ICC struggle with Indiana State Saturday, but the S: "lamores seized the one big break they got in the game and turned it into a 6-0 triumph. A defensive gem for both hopped up teams, the game was; an offensive fizzle that left De- : Pauw with its first shutout and i State with its second lowest : score this year. Generally something in a foot- : ball showdown pitting two! prime defensive units, but Sat-! urday’s encounter in Terre Haute was a rib-cracking ex- j ception. The Sycamores held DePauw to 38 yards rushing in 36 carries for slightly more than oneyard per try. DePauw was near-
up three to the State 36. Alcott! The costly miscue nearly prowas zeroed, Mackey lost one | duced a second State touchand DePauw was forced to punt down. Putting together the away its chance to the Syca- day’s long sustained drive, the more seven. | victors held the ball for 17 It was an untimely fumble plays, 16 on the ground, and that set up the game’s only bulldozed to DePauw’s 11 Then score. Frustratingly. too, it was fourth and three on the Tiger the only time State originated four. State was whistled for a play in DePauw territory the i offside and the strategy shifted
]y as obstinant. Averaging 178: entire first three quarters,
yards rushing in four previous games. State was held to 105
yards in 43 carries
DePauw’s quarterback Bruce Mackey probably felt the defensive bite more than anyone. Continually crashed in on by enemy ends, Mackey was tossed for losses nine times in 13 rushes and wound up—28 yards
on the ground.
The pressure on Mackey cooled his passing game too. Forced to wiggle from amid a group of would be tacklers, he still hit a creditable seven of thirteen for sixty five yards, but he never did pull out the long gainer to trigger or sustain any
long drive.
State’s Clarence Reedy has throwing problems likewise. He hit 2 of 6 for 12 yards. What turned out to be DePauw’s deepest penetration of
Forcing State to launch the second of its six punts, DePauw' started up the field from its ow r n 19 midwray in the second period. On the second play at the 21 Mackey started around the corner, saw tacklers coming up fast and pushed a chest lateral off to Jordan. The ball flipped end over end, fell short and bounced into the arms of State’s end John Truitt who married it on the DePauw 17. Fullback John Nesbitt rammed over right tackle on the very next play, going 17 yards for the touchdown in the day’s longest run. The extra point
kick failed.
State couldn’t get past its owm 22 in a pair of third quarter efforts, but DePauw twice moved into Sycamore country. The first Tiger threat died on the 38 on downs. The second was
to a field goal effort. It fail-
ed.
One more frenzied chance came DePauw’s way with 3:30 left in the game. Penalized five yards for too much time after fielding a punt on its own 37, DePauw sent halfback Chuck Byrum in for a yard. Mackey missed on a pass, and then hit Bill Alcott for an acrobatic
four-yarder.
Now on his 37 with fourth and 10, Mackey steamed a 13yard first down aerial to Tom Cooper on the 50. His next one w'ent out of bounds intentinally to stop the clock with 75 seconds left,. Everyone in the stadium knew r Mackey’s next move would be a pass And it almost was. As he stepped back to throw he was hit from the side. He hobbled the ball and joined a mass of white and blue shirts who were now pursuing it down the field. Soccer-like.
Tigers Finish Ninth In Little State Cross Country
squelched when Jordan juggled
the day and. Ironically, their \ a Mackey lateral a moment too
only break was a State fumble long before moving in for what Four players had it momentaridefensive back Bob Gardner fell! would have surely been a first ly before DePauw’s Jeff Lortz on with six minutes gone in the I down on the State 39. Instead, j cornered it finally, 22 yards befirst period the play lost two yards and the j hind scrimmage on the 28. Halfback Rick Jordan picked blue shirts took over. I Without calling a huddle
Browns Profited By Passing Of Tittle Y. A Tittle finally regained one yard for the Steelers’ sechis magic touch— but it was ond touchdown in the fourth pe-
the Cleveland Browns instead riod. of the New York Giants who
DePauw University's cross J country runners whipped Butler, I Rose Poly and St. Joseph’s but i dropped behind eight other Hoosier schools to place ninth in the annual Little State run at Indi- j
anapolis Saturday.
Teams scoring in the meet Floyd Patterson today quickly won by Indiana State s Frank accepted heavyweight champion
Clay's invitation to
Patterson Will Spar With Clay MARLBORO. N. Y. UPI —
Bonebreak in a time of 20:28 c ass j us
was Valparaiso 80. Earlham 83, Ball State 87. Taylor 88. Indiana State 103, Indiana Central 117, Wabash 193. Anderson 223.
serve as his sparring partner in Boston. Clay, training at Boston for
DePauw 253. Butler 259, Rose his return title fight there with Poly 323, and St. Joseph’s 364., Sonny Liston on Nov. 16, offered
during Sunday’s workout to use ex-champ Patterson as a spar-
Scoring for DePauw and their places were Steve Norris (36), Jay Walker (45), Don Kellogg (541, Dan Blaney (56), and Ter-
ry Chappell (62).
The Tigers wind up their sea- the Boston Arena annex gymnason this Saturday with the Indi- sium. “I will not even floor him ana Collegiate Conference meC4 * once. I just want a fast fightat Indiana State. l e for a week’s training.”
mate. ‘T will n o t hurt him.” Clay derisively told 650 fans in
The Greencastle Pee Wee Football Team hosted a much larger and heavier Carmel Pee Wee team Sunday at the high school gridiron. In the above picture, a Carmel carrier runs into two determined Greencastle players. The size of the two teams can be compaied in the photo. Despite the efforts of a determined Greencastle squad, the Carmel team walked off with the 14-0 win. This was a bit different from Greencastle's efforts with the New Market Pee Wee squad. Gx - eencastle beat New Market last Sunday 23-7. Photo by Martin Kruse
Mackey quickly hit Mike Burns on the 37 on the next play, then sailed a final fourth down bomb to Burns again that was broken
up by two defenders on th Sycamore 30. DPU 0000—0 IS 0600—6
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The Baltimore Colts continued their drive toward the i Western Division title when I they walloped the San Francisco Forty-Niners 37-7 to set a club record of seven straight victories. They hold a Uo-game
. „ „ i D id over the Detroit Lions, ball League to the Browns Sun- . , . . , I who took over sole possession dav when he passed the Giants „ j ,
J r . of second place with 37-17 to a 34-17 upset victory over . . ,
. ^ i victory over thn Los Angeles
profited most.
In the supreme irony of the j 88-year-old Tittle’s most frustrating season, the New York hero of 1963 virtually made a gift of the 1964 Eastern Division titleof the National Foot-
Rams.
The Washington Redskins de-
Steelers, senti feated the Philadelphia Eagles
21-10, the Green Bay Packers
the St. Louis Cardinals. That triumph, coupled with
the Browns’ 30-17 decision over
the Pittsburgh
Cleveland into a two-game lead
in the Eastern race. With six downed the Minnesota Vikings games left to play, the Browns 42 - 13 - and the Da,las Cowboys have a 6-1-1 record while the beat the Chica ^° Bears 24 - 10 in
Cardinals are second
4-3-1 mark
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SALE ENDS SATURDAY NOV. 7TH
with a ot her games. Crowds were 47.
527 at Chicago, 52.064 at Detroit. 50.213 at Balitimore. 44,-
It was a day on which Jim- 27g at Minnesota 60 671 at my Brown gained 149 yards to Philadelphia and 49 56g at Pitts .
Sonny Liston Is Confident
burgh.
p "in Delays Golf Tourney
raised his career total to a remarkable 10,135 yards but it was Tittle who did the most for the Browns by engineering the upset of the Care"-■’Is. He threw four touchdown passestwice as many as he had thrown in seven previo- games )
this season — and wound up SAN JOSE. Calif. UPI — with 19 completions in 33 tries If the weatherman approves, fc* 285 yards. I they’ll play the final round of A crowd of 53.012 at Yankee . the rain-pluaged $25,000 AlamaStadium- one of six capacity j den °P en & olf tournament here
crowds that enabled the NFL to today.
set a new one-day attendance i P u t even if the sun comes record of 377.333—saw Tittle out . the boys will have to slog
PLYMOUTH. Mass. UPI — Sonny Liston angrily denied today that the comparative size € weekend crowds at their workouts indicated heavyweight champion Cassius Clay would | v m over him if a popularity i election were to be held tomor
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throw two touchdown passes to Ernie Wheelwright and one each to Joe Morrison and Steve T' urlow. St. Louis star Charlie Johnson, mean—hile, was held to 15-for-29 ar ' ne touchdown. Brown hammered away at the Pittsburgh line 23 times to become the first 10.000-yard rusher in pro football history b”t the payoff plays for the Browns were touchdown runs of seven and 13 yards by Ernie Green, a 25-yard pass by Frank T ' nn to Clifton McNeil and field goals ** 36, 22 and 16 : -rds by Lou Groza. Green’s seven-yard touchdown run snapped a 10-10 tie in the third period and a 22-yard field goal by Groza booted the score to 20-10 Groza’s third field goal made it 23-10 before John Henery Johnson plunged
through the mud and water in their efforts to catch young Chuck Courtney, the third-round leader. Courtney, making a strong bid for ‘‘rookie of the year” honors, three-putted the final green, but still shot a two-un-der-par 70 Sunday for a 208and a slightly uncomfortable lead.
Clay drew 650 fans on Sunday at the gymnasium in BosI ton where he is training for i his return title fight with exI champion Liston, Nov 16. j Liston drew 450 at his work- , out Sunday in the White Cliffs Hotel here in Plymouth. But ! Sonny declared: ‘‘That don't mean nothin” There's a lot more people in Boston than in Plymouth. So why shouldn’t there be more of ‘em at his Boston Gym ? But don't forget, I understand we turned away at least 250. Now —let's wait and see who gets the most cheers in the ring on the 16th, just before I flatten him.”
Injuries Double LOS ANGELES UPI—Deaths from football injuries for the first half of the 1964 season are more than double the number j sported at the same time last year, Dr. Floyd R. Eastwood announced today for committee or. injuries and fatalities of the American Football Coaches Association.
Enjoys Workout LAUREL. Md. UPI — Anilin, the champion 3-year-old from the Soviet Union, enjoyed a good workout Sunday after apparently wrenching his left front ankle on Friday. Anilin is entered in the Washington D. C. International at Laurel, Nov. 11,
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