The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 January 1966 — Page 6
Monday, January 3, 1966
Tho Dally Bannor, Grooncaatlo, Indiana
Greencastle Tiger Cub B-Team Wins Basketball Tournament
Oreencastle’s Tiger Cub B-team racked up Cloverdale in the tourney final last Friday afternoon. The Cubs are shown above with coach Hal Sampson, ■wlatant coach Ash, and student managers. Banner Photo—Frank Puckett, Jr. t \
Greencastle’s Kevin See goes high into the air against Clover forward Glen Furr and comes off with the rebound in Friday afternoon’s action. Banner Photo —Frank Puckett, Jr.
LSU COTTON BOWL VICTOR—Louisiana State’s Joe Labruzzo (22), aided by BUly Master’s (25) block of the Razorback’s Mike Jordan (32), scores the winning TD in LSU’s upset victory over Arkansas before 67,000 fans in the Cotton Bowl Classic on New Year’s Day at Dallas, Texas: In the background is LSU’s quarterback Pat Screen.
Greencastle’s Tiger Cub Reserve team kept the tradition of the holiday season going at home last Friday as they crept by foe Roachdale 56-54 in the first session of the day long Greencastle B-team Invitational Tournament, then clobbered runnerup Cloverdale in the final game 53-38 to capture the championship. TIm four game tourney caught the Cubs battling it out with the Roachdale Hawks at 9 o’clock and the Bainbridge Pointers dropping the second game of the tourney to Cloverdale 52-48 to claim their berths in the finals of the tournament. Exchanging buckets in the early minutes of the contest, the Cubs managed a two point leading margin at the first quarter gun as John New popped in a ten footer with fourteen seconds remaining, 97. A barrage of baskets and the hard hitting impact of the Tiger Cub press cut the Clovers to two points in the four minutes of the second quarter. Cloverdale’s tall Rick Ford dropped in two buckets but before the hustler could get his team going the Cubs rolled up 18 points to close the quarter with a 27-18 lead. Slowing down in the third period, the Cubs could only find range for 3 field goals and five free throws while the Clovers hit for seven points. The score stood at 38-25 in favor of the determined Cubs at the close of the third period. Trying to make good a rally in the final fourth quarter period the Clovers eluded the Cub defensive for a couple of quick shots in the early minutes, but the hot-handed Cubs layed it on and claimed their B-team Tourney Championship with a 53-38 victory.
in the later session of the tourney also by defeating Roachdale in a real hot contest
41-33.
The Pointers dominated the game in the early quarters, but the Hawks came through in a hot third quarter scoring spree that out-paced the Pointers 144. Dumping in 17 points to the 7 scored by the Hawks the Pointers hung on in the fourth period to claim their consolation honors 41-33. High men in the scoring column in the final game were Cubs R. New with 17 points and Dunn and J. New with 12 and 11 points respectively. Nees dropped in 11 and Ford 9 for the Clover cause. Consolation honors went to Coffman with 15 and Hanks with 12 for the Pointers and to R.Simpson who tossed in 14 for
the Hawks.
Game Summaries—1st Game Game Summeries —Champion-
ship Game:
Greencastle (53) FG FT PF J. New 4 3 1 See Ill Fry 4 0 2 Monnett 0 0 0 R. New 6 5 4 Cook 10 0 Allan 0 0 0 Conyers 0 0 1 Dunn 3 6 2 Dowty 0 0 0 Lyon 0 0 0 Clark 0 0 0 Cloverdale (38) FG FT PF Denny 2 15 Nees 5 11 Furr 2 0 4 Hoffa 2 0 4 Ford 4 13 Berry 0 0 0 Nickererson 0 3 2
0 0 0 0 0 2
Barker Collier
Bainbridge claimed a victory Goss 0 0 0
Bowling News
Home Laundry League
W
Books Plus 97 55
Home Laundry
90
62
Pepsi Cola
88
64
Coca Cola
86
66
Partin Builders
84
68
Whitakers
77
75
Bob’s Body Shop
76
76
Torrs
70
82
Burger Chef
70
82
Starrs
64
88
King Morrison Foster
62
90
MrMnianw
48
104
High Team Series Act: King Morrison Foster 1574 High Team Series Hdcp. Coca
Cola—2072
High Team Game Act: Books Pluss & King Morrison Foster
—556
High Team Game Hdcp: Books Plus—733 High Indiv. Series Act; L.
Dowty—459
High Indv. Series Hdcp. L.
L Dowty—576
| High Indv. Game Act.; F.
Nelson—184
High Indv. Game Hdcp.; F.
Nelson—223
350 & Over: L. Dowty 459, M. Wood 457, B. Nelson 357, M. Underwood 427, F. Nelson 424, L. Rainville 422, B. Alexander 422, C. Jackson 420, R. Hampton 418, G. Cassell 412, R. Brewster 407, J. Brewster 397, M. Allegree 396, A. May 393, H. Samuels 393, C. Lear 389, A. Atkins 383, S. Kerr 381, S. Langdon 380, D. Huber 380, F. Schroer 379, J. Eilar 378, S. Alexander 377, M. Shaw 375, G. Ziegelman 375, C. Cofer 374, M. O’Neal 369, P. Lambert 361, B. Nees 358, B. Clark 356, I Floyd
354.
Game Summaries—Consolation game: Bainbridge (41) FG FT PF Judy 0 10 Hanks 0 0 0 Coffman 5 5 0 Price 3 10 Steele 14 0 Rossok 0 0-0 Anderson 0 0 0 Dozier 0 0 0 Steele 0 0 0 Warren 0 0 0 English 0 0 0 Steele 0 0 0
Roachdale (33) FG FT PF Hutchins 0 0 0 Britton 2 3 0 Smith 0 10 R. Simpson 6 2 0 D. Simpson 10 0 Harvey 3 10 Clampitt 10 0 Hostetter 0 0 0 McCollough 0 0 0 McGaughey 0 0 0
Kemp Named Player of Year
NEW YORK UPI — Jackie Kemp, the Buffalo Bills’ bargain basement quarterback, today was being hailed as the American Football League’s Player of the Year. The 30-year-old signal-caller from Occidental College received nine first place votes from a special panel of 24 writers — three from each ; league city — in a poll conducted by United Press International. i Tom Lowe and Lance Al- : worth, both of the San Diego Chargers, tied for second in the balloting with four votes each. Tom Sestak and Pete Gogolak, Kemp’s teammates on the AFL champion Buffalo squad, Kansas City’s Bobby Bell and Boston’s Nick Buoniconti each garnered one vote. Kemp cost Buffalo owner Ralph Wilson 3100. That was the price tag on him when Sid Gillman, coach of the Chargers, placed Kemp on waivers early in the 1962 season. Kemp had broken his middle finger and Gillman figured no one would claim him and he could relegate his star quarterback to the taxi
squad.
When Kemp’s name popped up on the waiver list, Wilson snapped him up and brought him to Buffalo, where he sat on the bench until the 11th game of the season. Kemp had been the starting quarterback for two years at San Diego and in 1960, the AFL’s first year of operation, he’d led the league in passing. In 1964, Kemp took the Bills all the way to a 12-2 record and a 20-7 victory over his former teammates, the Chargers, in the championship game. In the 1965 championship game against the Chargers, Kemp came back once again to haunt his old teammates. He hit on 8 of 19 passes for 155 yards and one touchdown and ; was named the game’s most- valuable player.
SCORES COLLEGE Butler 75 Yale 67 Taylor 103 Detroit Tech 87 Kentucky Wesleyan 80 Evansville 74 Duke 95 Notre Dame 73 Kalamazoo 94 Franklin 83 HIGH SCHOOL Connersville Tourney Greensburg 77 Connersville 55 Shelbyville 66 Rushville 43 Connersville 79 Rushville 72 Shelbyville 78 Greensburg 66 Final Huntingburg Tourney Tell City 68 Bloomfield 57 Huntingburg 82 Seymour 60 Seymour 88 Bloomfield 57 Huntingburg 74 Tell City 46 Final Columbia City Tourney Columbia City 69 Fort Wayne Elmhurst 58 Fort Wayne North 84 Lakeland LaGrange County 56 Lakeland 61 Fort Wayne Elmhurst 59 Columbia .City 71 Fort Wayne North 61 Final
TABLE TENNIS CHAMP INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI) — Erwin Klein of Los Angeles defeated Bob Fields of Pasadena, Calif., 21-15, 21-10, 21-11 to win the 1964 National men’s table tennis singles championship.
KNOWS HOCKEY SCORE - By Alan Mavtr
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Packers Are New Champs After Upsetting Browns
GREEN BAY, Wis. UPI—The champagne cork popped. But Vince Lombardi, who had just coached his Green Bay Packers to their third National Football League championship in five years would have none of it. “That’s not for me,” he said in the clamorous Packer dressing room Sunday. "It’s for my players. They did it, not me.” “But coach, I’ve had this on ice since we came out here — I
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ment manager “Dad” Braisher answered. “Just one sip?” Lombardi agreed — just one sip, but then the bottle went out to the players and Lombardi turned to talking about the team that had just whipped the Cleveland Browns for the NFL crown. “They said we didn’t have an offense,” he gloated. “I guess we showed ’em.”
Nation's Top Three Rated Teams Lose in Bowl Action
By United Press International Millions of football fans still aren’t sure today whether the morning after wasn’t wilder than the night before. After celebrating into the wee hours of New Year’s Day, countless armchair quarterbacks collapsed before their television sets to watch the traditional bowl games. And, like the night before, the results were staggering. The nation’s top three teams lost, being handed their first defeats after rolling up 10-0 records in 1965. UCLA whipped national champion Michigan State 14-12 in the Rose Bowl, Louisiana State stopped Arkansas (No. 2), 14-7 in the Cotton Bowl and Alabama blasted third-ranked Nebraska 39-28 in the Orange Bowl. “The greatest mismatch of the century,” the UCLA players yelled after avenging an earlyseason loss to Michigan State. The Bruins took advantage of a Michigan State fumble and an intercepted pass to score a pair of first-half touchdowns. The Spartans rallied for two TD’s after interinission, but the Bru-
ins thwarted both attempts by Michigan State for two-point conversions. Little Joe Labruzzo, the smallest man on the field, carried the ball six consecutive times on an LSU touchdown march, scored the TD and added another to help stop Arkansas’ 22game winning streak. Bill Bass anchored the tough LSU defen- | sive unit which held the RazorI backs scoreless after intermisI sion. Alabama quarterback Steve Sloan, called “the greatest” by his predecessor, Joe Namath of the New York Jets, set an Orange Bowl record by completing 20 passes in 29 attempts for 296 yards. Steve Bowman scored twice for the Crimson Tide, who dropped only one game during the regular campaign. In the Sugar Bowl, Missouri shaded Florida 20-18. The Tigers rolled up a 20-0 halftime bulge, but quarterback Steve Spurrier, the game’s most valuable player, passed the Alligators back into contention in the second half and still was throwing the ball with a chance to win with less than a minute left in the game.
“This team has character — they showed it all year. They never counted themselves out. They won it.” Regarding Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor,' “a lot of people counted them out, said they were past their prime,” Lombardi said. “I guess that performance shows there’s a little life left.” Taylor and Hornung gained 201 yards rushing between them and just about scuttled any rumors that two veteran Packer heroes will have to step aside next season to make room for Green Bay’s million dollar rookie runners — halfback Donny Anderson arid fullback Jim Grabowski. “Maybe I’ll be back now," Hornung joked to reporters. Fuzzy Thurston, whose comeback at guard sparked the Packers’ late surge to the Western Division title, looked over at Taylor. ”1 guess we’ll let him keep that No. 31 now,” he said. “For a while we were thinking of giving it to Grabowski.*’' Proud and happy, Lombardi said. “We wanted to control the ball, and we did. You have to control the ball against the Browns if you want to beat them. And besides, we’re a pretty basic team—not relying on flashy patterns and passing. That kind of team could have been hurt.
Little Leaguers To Sponsor Chili Supper
The Cloverdale Little League is sponsoring a Chili Supper and Euchre Party, Saturday, January 8th in the Cloverdale Community Bldg. Serving from 5:30 to 7:30 and Euchre party starts at 8:00.
UCLA’S UPSET CAUSES CHAOS IN CALIFORNIA — UCLA (beaten by Michigam State during the regular season) on New Year’s Day in the Rose Bowl, before over 100,000 frenzied fans, pulled the biggest upset of the year by beating highy-favored MSU, 14-‘12. UCLA's Bob Stiles (voted Player .of the Games)..is stopped (above)-by MSU’s George .Webster <90). on-the-opening kickoff return.
