The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 September 1966 — Page 4
4 The Dally Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Saturday, September S, 1964
CUBS BLAST MOORESYILLE IN OPENER
Churchill Scores On First Play With 86 Yard Ramble
Displaying a bruising defense line by Chick Evans. Churchill
gained 14 yards down to the one, but the gain w r as nullified by a personal foul penalty. Norris then tried the first pass for 1966 to Churchill but it was in-
complete.
Mooresville took possession of
and an exploding offense, the Tiger Cubs whipped a determined Mooresville team, 28 to
7, Friday night.
On the first play from scrimmage, after receiving the opening kick-off on the 14 yard line,
Churchill bounced off right the ball w ith 9:50 to go in the tackle, dodged several tacklers seconc i quarter on their 17 yard and outran the defense for 86 llne bu t were stopped on their yards and the first Greencastle 35 After punting Churchill gaintouchdown of 1966. e d 20 yards on a run but that
Playing football like it should be played. Hammond recovered a Mooresville fumble after a hard tackle had shook the ball loose. With 11 minutes remaining, See carried for a nice gain, fumbled and Jim Allan recovered. Several running plays
too was nullified by a clipping penalty. Then came the first pass completion of 1966, Norris to Jim Allan for 20 yards to the 24 yard line. Norris sneaked for 10, and with 4th and inches, Churchill was stopped and Mooresville took possession
carried the ball to the 3 yard and on their first play. Dee line by Chuck Evens. Churchill Monnett recovered a fumble in
scored again. Norris kicked and Greencastle led at the first
quarter, 14 to 0.
At the start of the second
mid-air and returned the ball to the 18 yard line of Mooresville. An off-side penalty took the ball back to the 23 yard
quarter, Mooresville attempted line and a long pass was ina punt but the punter was complete. With 2:13 remaining, tackled on Mooresville's 15 yard a screen pass gained 10, but
the drive bogged down and, Mooresville took over. With 1:58 remaining in the second quarter, Luzar recovered a fumble on Mooresville’s 18 yard line. Line plunges gained two and a screen pass, Norris to Churchill took the ball to the 8 yard line with 30 seconds left. A delay of game penalty cost 5 yards to the 13 yard line. A Norris pass in the end zone was fumbled and Mooresville recovered for a
touchback.
The second half was all Mooresville's except the scoring. They ran 46 plays to the Tiger Cubs’ 16, and they came out with fire in their eyes. Norris kicked to the Mooresville 10 yard line. After a line play, Dana Green, star halfback of Mooresville, scampered 79 yards to score. The end run for the extra point was good and with 10:54 on the clock, Greencastle’s lead was 14 to 7. Norris returned the kick-off for a sizable gain and the Tiger Cubs started to move. Then a pass caught by a Cub tackle cost 15 yards after the officials decided the tackle was an ineligible receiver.
After an exchange of punts, Greencastle fumbled with 6:13 left in the third quarter and Mooresville recovered on the Cubs' 49 yard line. With 4th and inches, a quarterback sneak put the ball on the 39 yard line, and Green, the Mooresville flash, bounced off of 3 tacklers and rested the ball on the Tiger Cubs’ 12 yard line. After three power plays netted 3 yards, on fourth dowm Mooresville was off-side and Greencastle took possession of the ball with 2:23 to go on their own 7 yard line. Churchill on an end sweep made a first down. Norris with a quarterback sneak made another at the end of the third quarter. Starting the fourth quarter. Greencastle’s drive faltered and they kicked. On the run back, a grabbing the face mask penalty cost the Cubs 15 yards, and Mooresville controlled the ball on their 35 yard line. Moving steadily up field, Mooresville completed a fourth and six situation with 6:36 to go in the game. Then another face mask penalty cost Greencastle half the distance to the goal line and put the ball on
Greencastle’s 10 yard line. But the Tiger Cubs recovered a fumble on their own 14 yard line with 5:30 to go. Churchill then went off right tackle
again for an 86 yard run for a touchdown down the right side line, outrunning the deep defense backs. Norris’ kick was good and the Tiger Cubs
lead was 21 to 7. lline. Churchill carried the pig On the first play following skin over for another touch ., , . . .. , , . dowm. Norris’ kick made it 2i the kick-off, Jay Frye inter-; „ ^
; to 7 and a Tiger Cub victory,
cepted a pass and returned the, Greencastle 14 0 0 14 J 2J baU to Mooresville’* T yard Mooresville 0 0 7 0— '
PETE MORRIS PICKS UP YARDAGE
voi&Vv
Pete Norris on quarterback sneak for valuable yardage.
England Blanks Torr s In 4-0 League Trophy Battle
England fired a 3-hit shutout at Torr’s Thursday evening as National Foods defeated Torr’s 4 to 0 to won the 5th game of the play-off series and the tournament trophy. National Foods scored early when Hammond and Jim Jones hit back to back doubles in the first inning, followed by a single and another double by
England. The result was 3 runs. The final run scored in the bottom of the 4th on 3 singles. Torr’s earned the runner-up j and the League Champion trophy by being undefeated in league play. They finished with an 8 won, 0 lost mark while National Foods had a 5 won, 3 lost record. Pitcher Norman Hoffa of
Torr’s was awarded the League’s Most Valuable player and Sportsmanship Award. Charles Long won the league batting title with an average of .381. Torr's 000 000 0—0 3 4 Nt’L Foods ... 300 100 0—4 9 0 Hoffa and Garrett; England and Cleary.
S P U T T E R I N G S
By Walter L Johns, Central Press Sports Editor
THE PRO FOOTBALL COACHING picture underwent a big change over the past year and the new coaches have been hard at it for weeks with practice sessions and exhibition games. The collegiate front is awakening, too, as thousands of players get ready for the Saturday spectaculars, with new coaches sprouting up all over at this level, too. In the Big Ten, the only coaching change came at Iowa, where Jerry Burns, who couldn’t match Forest Evashevski’s great teams, was replaced by Ray Nagel of Utah. Nagel served as Utah coach for eight years and had a winning record. Burns went to the Green Bay Packers as assistant coach and says he’s happier than he’s ever been. One of the surprise coaching shifts came at Maryland, where a professional team coach, Lou Saban, of the champion Buffalo Bills, took over the head coaching job, replacing Tom Nugent. • • • OTHER MAJOR college coaching changes brought Tom Harp to Duke, replacing Bill Murray who became executive chairman of the American Football Coaches Association; and Paul Dietzel, who departed from Army in a surprise move and went to South Carolina. Tom Cahill is the new Army coach. There are new coaches at Pittsburgh where Dave Hart took over the reins; at Cornell, with John Musick in charge; at Penn State, where Joe Patemo guides the Lions. Jim Mackenzie is new at Oklahoma, Jim Pittman at Tulane and Mike Giddings at Utah. • • • THERE are a few changes in the collegiate rules, highlighted by prohibition of players from being equipped with devices of communication, and the prohibiting of defensive players being on the shoulders of a teammate. • * • THE COLLEGIATE season opens early, Saturday, Sept. 10, with Baylor playing host to Syracuse in the first of the ABC-covered TV games. The TV games continue all season with the windup being the Alabama-Auburn game in Birmingham on Dec. 3. • * • THE 1965 season actually ended on Jan. 1 this year when the Bowl games produced some startling upsets. Michigan State, undefeated champ of the Big Ten and rated the national champ, was bowled over by U.C.L.A. and Alabama knocked off Nebraska, also undefeated, in the Orange BowL The two teams, Michigan State and Alabama, actually had to share the national championship, although Alabama was beaten once and tied once.
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Pee Wee Football Meeting To Be Held September 6th
TORR'S WIN THE LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP Back row, left to right: Charlie Alex, Jim Coon, Dave Jones, Gary Hoffa and Rod Hervey. Front row, left to right: Ken Carpenter, Jim Sharp, Dewey Garrett, Norman Hoffa and Rick Ford. Bat boys, left to right: Randy Carpenter, Rickie Carpenter and Gary Carpenter.
Grid Scores
Beech Grove 19, Martinsville 6. Brebeuf 35, Franklin Central 7. Warren Central 18, Greenfield 7. Bloomington 14, Ben Davis 6. Ritter 52, Hamilton Southeastern 6. Lebanon 27, Danville 0. Richmond 40, South Bend Clay 13. Rushville 39, Batesville 20.
North Vernon 46, North Dearborn 0. New Castle 33, Connersville 0. Noblesville 24, Elwood 20. Avon 19, Brownsburg 0. Anderson 73, Anderson Highland 0. Plainfield 18, Dectaur Central 7. LaPorte 38, Kokomo 13. Whiteland 32, Milan 6. DeMotte 40, Wheatfield 6. Western 14, Eastern 7.
Do you understand the above diagram? It is the basic offensive line-up for the straight T formtaion. The numbers in the line are used to teach the backfield players where to run and the linemen which way to block. This is the purpose of Pee Wee Football. To teach young players the basic fundamentals of football. Are you interested in having your child learn and play football? If you are, there will be a meeting of all interested parents and potential players at the City Council Chambers in the City Hall Building Tuesday night, Sept. 6, at 7:30. An organizational meeting was held last Tuesday and Frank DeVylder was elected president and Nina Sanders secretary and treasurer. Frank Bundy and Ann DeVylder are in charge of publicity and Ned Burkhart was appointed equipment manager. Coaches for this year’s Pee League Standings PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE EASTERN DIVISION W L Pet. GB Tulsa 84 58 .592 Phoenix 79 65 .549 6 INDIANAPOLIS 78 66 .542 7 Denver 75 67 .528 9 San Diego 70 73 .490 14‘i Oklahoma City 57 87 .496 28 WESTERN DIVISION W L Pet. GB Seattle 81 63 .563 Vancouver 77 67 .535 4 Spokane 72 72 .500 9 Portland 67 77 .465 14 Hawaii 61 82 .427 19’/a Tacoma 60 84 .417 21
Wee football are Tim Grimes, Alex Warfield and Jim Gaboon, and they announced that the first practice will be held at! Robe-Ann Park Wednesday eve-1 ning. Sept. 7, at 7:00. Uniforms; for the practice will be T-shirts, shorts, and tennis shoes. Remember, if you parents are interested in your child playing Pee Wee football, attend the meeting Tuesday. It is open to everyone.
OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN.
TENIdnEX INWV«S TEN PEOPLE TRAPPED
mmum
NATIONAL LEAGUE Nisht Gaines Not Included
W L Pet.
San Francisco 78 56 Pittsburgh 78 56 Los Angeles 75 57 Philadelphia 72 64 Cincinnati 68 66 St. Louis 68 66
Atlanta 68 69 .477 14
GB .582 .582
.568 2 .529 7 .507 10 .507 10
New York
. . 59
76
.437 19 x £
Chicago
86
.353 30Vk
AMERICAN
LEAGUE
Night Games
Not Included
w
L
Pet. GB
Baltimore
50
.624
Detroit
61
.541 11
Minnesota
63
.533 12
Cleveland
.. . 70
65
.519 14
Chicago
66
.518 14
California
... 67
67
.500 1614
New York
74
.452 23
Washington
...62
76
.449 23'4
Boston
78
.435 25)4
Kansas City
77
.434 25V4
GREENCASTLE DRIVE-IN (Formerly Midway) Jet. 40 t 43 TONIGHT Admission $1.00 HaMmanSsle HIS NEWEST 9KMMEEJGK JAMES SWSEiA MRtt DMOOWWB PLUS Jerry Lewis in "VISIT TO A SMALL PLANET" SUN., MON., TUES. Peter Fonda — Nancy Sinatra 'THE WILD ANGELS" PLUS James Garner — Melina Mercouri Sandra Dee in "A MAN COULD GET KILLED" PLUS INDIANAPOLIS 500 MILE RACE
MEADOWBROOK DRIVE IN THEATRE Inter. U.S. 36 & State Road 43
SATURDAY Fess Parker, Diana Hyland SMOKY (COLOR) Tony Young, Dan Duryea TAGGART (COLOR)
SUNDAY & MONDAY Doris Day, Rod Taylor Arthur Godfrey GLASS BOTTOM BOAT (COLOR) Horst Bucholz, Sylvo Koscino THAT MAN IN ISTANBUL (COLOR)
Maplecroft Theatre
R.R. 1, Clayton
TONIGHT THRU SAT. Frank Sinatra and Verna Lisi ASSAULT ON A QUEEN and RED LINE 7000 SUN. AND MON. Elvis Presley FRANKIE AND JOHNNY And Bridgett Bardot PLUS VIVA MARIA
PUTNAM COUNTY PLAYHOUSE Presents "The Miracle Worker" by William Gibson Speech Hall — DePauw University Aug. 26, 27; Sept. 2, 3 8:00 p.m. Tickets available COAN'S PHARMACY & PREVO'S
NATIONAL FOODS WON TOURNAMENT TROPHY Back row, left to right: Mike Buis, Donny Hopkins, Eddie Hammond, J. Thomas See, and Steve Komgenick. Front row, left to right: Don Brewer, Jim Jones, Joe Jones, Jim Covert, and Bobby England. Bat boys, left to right: Mark Hansen, Johnny Komgenick and Steve Komgenick.
LEAGUE'S BEST Charles Long playing for Old Tooper’s won the league batting title with an average of .381. At the right is Norman Hoffa, a 19 year veteran of the softball wars, who won the league's Most Valuable Player and Sportsttianship trioplvy#
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE INDIANAPOLIS 2. Oklahoma City 1 (10 innings) Tacoma 4. Portland 3 San Diego 4. Phoenix 0 Seattle 5, Hawaii 3 Denver at Tulsa (pod. rain) Vancouver 9 .Spokane 7 NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 6, New York 0 Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 3 Los Angeles 6. Cincinnati 1 San Francisco at St. Louis (night) Atlanta 6, Houston 5 AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Cahfomia (night) Kansas City 5. Boston 1 Minnesota 8. New York 5 Baltimore at Chicago (night) Detroit 4-7, Cleveland 2-5 TODAY’S SCHEDULE PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Oklahoma City at INDIANAPOLIS 7:45 Tacoma at Portland Phoenix at San Diego Hawaii at Seattle Denver at Tulsa Spoluta* at Vancouver
GRAND CHAMPION JAYCEE BARBECUE Fair On The Square SEPT. 8, 9, 10 Thursday- 4 p.m.-10 p.m Friday -10 a.m.-ll p.m. Saturday - 8 a.m. - ? ? ALL PROFITS WILL BE USED FOR THE NEW JAYCEE COMMUNITY PARK
