The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 September 1967 — Page 5
Monday, September 18, 1967
The Daily Banner. Greeneastle. Indiana
Paga 5
Tigers whip Wheaton in grid opener 24-14 One game does not a season, the half,” Mont said. That kick | Most of the remainder of the make but DePauw's 24-14 job . was about five yards short and second quarter was spent tradon Wheaton College Saturday 10 yards wide. ing punts. It was one of those
sustained Coach Thomas A. Mont motion that his 1967 Tigers may be ready to have their day in court. Beaming after watching 39 of his 40 men play in probably the best season opener his teams have had in nine years, Mont admitted he was a man fulfilled—at least for this week. “Anytime we win we’re always pleased,” Mont offered, “but I was especially happy to see we were in better condition than Wheaton.” His team’s con-
It was another defensive gem trades that helped \\ heaton that set up DePauw’s last catch up. Stymied on his own touchdown. It came with 4:30 Lortz boomed a long punt to left to play and was set up by Wheaton 20. It was nullified a blocked punt by junior middle by what Mont later called someguard Dick Schulte of Indian- one s inattention to detail apolis. “I noticed the man pro- an ule gal procedure infraction, tecting the kicker was getting So Lortz punted again. This one a little lazy,” Schulte grinned, was even longer. It carried to “so I decided to go for the ball.” < the 13. There waiting with unHe did and got a pair of mitts on suspected speed and agility was it. This effort gave DePauw the Detwiler, 1<0-pound ball on the Wheaton 26. Three Wheaton alternate quarterback, plays later action had moved He & ot th e ball, retreated to his but one yard, so Eric Lortz flip- six - then whistled 94-yards for
ditioning has bugged Mont all ped a 21-yard button hook pass a TD - Jim McKean’s soccer-like
week.
The conditioning showed in the last 30 minutes. That’s when DePauw let the Crusaders penetrate only twice across the 50-yard line. Once to the 45 and once to the 32 where junior Bud Glaeser grabbed his second interception. And it was in that half too that the Tigers turned the game’s tide after single touchdown leads vanished in the sultry heat, victims of spectacular 94 and 90-yard punt and kickoff returns. Offensive end and kicker Tom Miller from Whitefish Bay, Wis., pushed DePauw out ahead for good 17-14 with 9:06 left in the game. It was the acrobatic interception of junior Tony Whittlesey that set up Miller’s second field goal of his career. Whittlesey at a defensive wing spot tipped Dave Carlson’s pass on the Wheaton 40. That broke up the play, but for an encore the 193-pound Kinsington, Md., led nursed the tumbling ball to the ground in one handed fashion for the intercept. Six plays later, after Bill Holton had worked the ball to the four-yard line and it was fourth and two, the Tigers elected to go for three. Miller calmly boot•d the flalder from the 10. Miller’s careful kicking—he did miss one from the 32 in the first half—accounted for some of the glee in the ‘eee of Mont. ‘^filler’s kicking was good. He got that crucial field goal and three extra points. He’s got beautiful rhythm. He just got a little too excited on that one he missed with a minute left in
to Miller on the four. John But- j kick tied it 7-7 with 5.14 left in
ler smashed to the two and Bill tbe half.
Holton went in two more for the TD. DePauw picked up the game’s first TD at 6:45 in the first quarter. Under the direction of senior quarterback Dan Breckenridge from Blue Island, HI.,
If the sudden development shook the Tigers, it didn’t show. After the kickoff Sacramento threw to Dick Walker for 21, Holton ate up seven, Brickenridge hit Bill Lehman and sophomore Dwight Woessner,
the Tigers went 60 yards the DaytoIlj 0 ( for u ^ 14( and
second time they got the ball. Breckenridge personally accounted for 37 yards, 36 on passes of 17, 9 and 10 to John Sacramento, W a u k e gan, HI., Dick Walker, Dale, Ind., and Sacramento again. The tally came on a drive by Brecken-
ridge from the one.
An official’s admitted miscue cost DePauw a possible score on the next series after Whittlesey had ended a Wheaton threat with an interception on the DePauw 11. The Tigers took over and sophomore Stu Sharp of LaPorte hot for four to the 15. On the next play Breckenridge had the ball for a sweep to the left. He was up to the 29 where he was converged on by Wheatonites. Cleverly he lateralled to trailing Sharp. Sharp hot footed 46 more yards, all the way to the Wheaton 25. But the play was called back because another official missed the hidden ball trick. He thought Holton, the fullback, had the ball and he was convinced of it when Holton was tackled. That’s when he blew the whistle, voiding Sharps’ run and causing the ball to be brought back to the 15 where Lortz eventually kicked. The official said he was sorry ’bout that Mont said after
the game.
DePauw's soccer team has only one way to go: up
Greeneastle, Ind. (Spl.) — DePauw University’s varsity soccer team can only go up this season after finishing its first year of intercollegiate competition last year with an 0-8 record. Coach Charlie Erdmann has at least nine letter winners to throw into the breach when the Tiger kickers open their
Probable starters outside the letter winners and Tasha are Robert Walker, Jerry Shepherd, Rod Kyriakides, Rich Boyce, John Selby, John Erdmann and Charles Hershey. DePauw will play a 12-game schedule this season, its most ambitious in the history of the
the Tigers were at the Crusader 12. Holton, Indianapolis, and Sacramento lugged the ball to the two and Holton carried it in from there with 2:37 left in the half. Miller’s kick was good and DePauw was back out front 14-7—for IS seconds. That’s how long it took for Mr. Detwiler to receive the ensuing kickoff and race 90 yards for another TD. McKean knotted it again, 14-14, for halftime. Neither team threatened seriously in the third stanza though Lortz, who relieved Breckenridge as the second half started, scrambled for a first down on the Wheaton 25 then fumbled. Creditable performances by both of his quarterbacks left Mont still with a double blessing at that position. "The quarterback battle is still nip and tuck. They both did well. We’ll just see what happens from game to game,” Mont said. The situation may have been even further complicated by the brief but dashing show of Indianapolis sophomore Ron McBride. He took over in the last 62 seconds after Glaeser had stopped Wheaton’s longest drive of the day—33 yards—wtih an interception on the DPU 40. McBridge handed off to Holton for 13, to Lehman for one, then fooled everyone with his chicanery and scooted around the right side for 16 yards, down to the Wheaton 30 where the game ended. If anything really displeased Mont it was that the Tigers failed to capitalize on a couple of scoring opportunities that went haywire. "And we should have hit Sacramento better over the middle on our passes,” he
added.
Mont said he was surprised Wheaton, which was loaded with vets and touted itself as
sport here. Home encounters
are set with Wheaton (Sept. 1 better than Iast y ear ’ s 5 -* dub, 30), Indiana State (Oct. 14),' didn t move the ball better on
Ball
Among them are right and left wingmen Jan Hoey and
season Sept. 27 at MacMurray
College in Illinois. Ball State Cedandlle College offense - M uch of the credit for
(Oct. 25), and Wabash (Nov. sto PP in £ the attack he natur11). ally gave to his defensive unit
Paul Mitchell, two juniors who Road games will be played that held the Crusaders to 121 were around when soccer was at Indiana, Wabash, Goshen, ^ ards rushing and 110 in the inaugurated here on a club bas- Kentucky Southern and East- air ’ half of the lat ter in the last
is in 1965.
With this twosome Erdmann also will count on lettermen Doug Smith, center half; Rick Fanyo, left half; fullback Tim Coursen; linemaen Bill Doepke and John Cogar, and goalie
Price Ivins.
One of the brightest pro-
em Illinois.
Knicks get Bowman
four minutes of play. He singled | out Jerry Hoffman, Indianapolis: Glaeser, Canfield, O.; Don Schulte, Blue Island, HI., and Woessner for good work among
the team’s newcomers.
“The offensive line blocked well too, and we got a good
DEPAUW FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF—DePauw University’s football coaching staff for the coming year pictured above includes (left to right) grad-
uate assistant Tod Eberle, trainer Russell Miller, graduate assistant John Kellogg, head coach Tom Mont, assistant coach Ted Katula, graduate assistant A1 Ferguson, and assistant coach Ed Meyer.
Stanleys "zombies' at it again; AL contenders take it to the wire
WHO WAS THE LAST PlTCH&R TV START BOTH GWES OFA DOUBLEHGADEZ?
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Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow — it seems like there’ll always be a tomorrow for the four American League contenders who seem to be
earlier in the race but now the i Ken Berry hit a homer and a j a two-run blast in the first pitching staff is in somewhat of i run-scoring single as the White while Etchebarron added his in a shambles since both Dean Sox pinned the loss on Jim Mer- the second and Powell connect-
ed in the fourth. Gary Bell went 2% innings and took the loss for Boston while Gene Brabender went the first seven for
Chance and Jim Kaat were used in relief last week and that
finding all kinds of ways not to could prove fatal in the last two
win the pennant. I weeks.
The clubs continued on their The Chicago pitching staff, up-and-down treadmill Sunday which has allowed just six as three of the four contenders : earned runs in 54 innings since lost — two of them at home to the White Sox lost a double-
second division teams, the kind header last Tuesday, again .. ... .. . T . . . ’ . | ’ 6 clinch the triumph. John Hiller of games pennant-winning saved Stankys club Sunday. . . , - - , x started for the Tigers and sufteams aren’t supposed to lose. Gary Peters blanked the Twins; fered the losg
Meanwhile, the pesky Chicago on four hits to boost his record
White Sox — Eddie Stanky’s to 16-9. He survived his only; Homers by Paul Blair, and “zombies” — again came back real jam in the third when Rod Andy Etchebarren and Boog
from a premature burial and Carew led off with a triple and Powell powered the Orioles past geles 6-1, and Pittsburgh nipped
ritt, now 12-6.
Frank Bertaina pitched a 1 seven-hit shutout to give the Senators the victory over De-
troit. Hank Allen hit relief the ° rioles to take the victor ypitcher Pat Dobson’s first pitch Elsewhere in the American into the seats for a three-run Lea ^ ue - Cleveland topped New homer in the fifth inning to York ’ 4 - 2 ’ and California ni PP ed
1 Kansas City, 3-2.
In the National League, St. Louis edged Cincinnati. 3-2, Chicago whipped Atlanta, 5-3 Houston beat New York, 4-8, Philadelphia blasted Los An-
DPU runners lose to Wabash 25-31
DePauw’s varsity cross country team lost to Wabash College here Saturday in a duel
meet, 25-31.
The engagement at Blackstock Stadium was the opener for both teams. Tom Allen of Wabash took the meet’s blue ribbon, turning in a fair time of 22:00 over the four-mile stadium course. De-P-.uw sent Bill Syverson and Charlie Arnold across the finish line, just nine and thirteen 1 seconds behind, but it couldn’t come up with the depth to avoid the defeat. Coach Bob Harvey got a
jumped into the
| race.
The White Sox completed an incredible three-game sweep of the Minnesota Twins with a 4-0 victory while Detroit lost to Washington, 5-0, and the Boston Red Sox lost their third straight to Baltimore, 5-2. That enabled Chicago to move into second, one-half game behind the league-leading Detroit Tigers. Minnesota and Boston, who both could have tied for first with victories, fell to third place but remained one game
back.
Two weeks from today the American League will either have already crowned its 1967 champion — or will be starting Its second playoff in history. Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said, “It’s going to be a hectic two weeks but a lot of fun. If this thing ends up in a three-
thick of the Peters stranded him there.
the Red Sox. Blair’s homer was San Francisco, 5-4.
Gibson pitches to Phillies tonight; Cards hope to get "magic number'' Pitcher Bob Gibson is in the pennant hopes, will try to of-| Julian Javier’s two-run sing-
spotlight again. The St. Louis Cardinals’ ace, who broke his
leg in mid-July, supposedly when he hurls against putting a crimp into the team’s Philadelphia Phillies.
The Cardinals reduced their
ficially clinch the 1967 Nation- le capped a three-nm fourth Inal League title Monday night J ning rally off loser Jim Malon-
the ey after the Reds took a 1-0
lead in the third.
strong finish from sophomore ^ tie we ll be playing longer Dave Barnes of Clinton who than Vince Lo mbardi and h5s
checked in sixth, but had to p ac kers.”
watch as ace runner Scott Sha-1 Chicago now has 11 games fer wound up ni-'h am’ Ron left and the other three clubs Krueger eleventh. Barnes’ time haV e 12. Detroit has the best
1 “magic number” to one Sunday by defeating Cincinnati, 3-2, i w r hile second-place San Fran-1 cisco was losing to Pittsburgh,
; 5-4.
Bowling
Football results
news
Gibson, who has a 12-6 season record, told reporters after, Sunday’s victor}' “You can’t
By United Preis International
HOME LAUNDRY LEAGUE
McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, N. J. UPI — The New York Knickerbockers Sunday
obtained 6 foot 10 inch Nate charge ^ the latte r part of the
. ... ... . T Bowman from Seattle for the game out of our defensive r :cts this season will be Larry j...... ends” Mont <sair?
, National Basketball Association om said ’
Tasha who 11 be an offensive price It was two new backfield lineman. Tasha is a sophomore Seattle had chosen the foriner starters who led DePauw statand a four-year student from Wichita ^ center from ^ istically. Juniors Holton and \\ est Cameroon. Philadelphia 76er s in the NBA Sac ramento had 88 and 85 yards According to Erdmann, he expansion draft. The Knicks ashing respectively. Holton expects a turn out of some ' > 0 are the fourth NBA club for carr i ed 14; Sacramento went 18
men for the squad with about Bowman, who has yet to play a fi me s.
was 22:58. Shafer ran it 23:32 and Kruger in 24:05. Wabash’s Art Morelli took fourth in 22:36 and the Cavemen finished up their scoring with Tom Eckhardt, fifth in 22:48; Bemie Emkes, seventh in 23:02; and John Burrell,
eighth in 23:27.
Saturday DePauw will return the Cavemen’s favor when it enters the Wabash Hokum Karem, which the Tigers won last year. The HoTaim Karem pairs teammates and emphasizes combined times to deter-
mine a winner.
in schedule of the four teams but
ing, it’s impossible any predictions.
Twins were the team to Sikes wins Philly Classic
Torr’s
W 20
Lj
4
| Town Beauty Salon
18
6 !
1 Pepsi Cola
16
8 !
Dale McCullough DX ....
14
10!
Romilda Printing
14
10 i
^ Howard TV
14
10
Team 14
14
10
1 McMillan Carpets
12
12
Atkins & Sons
10
14
Culligan
10
14
j Home Laundry
8
16
Coca-Cola
8
16
| Highlander
6
18
Bob’s Body Shop
4
20
write about pressure now. We
have beaten that too.”
The 31-year-old
COLLEGE
Ball State 41 Central Missouri t veteran Indiana State 41 Eastern Illinois
Hi team 3 games: Beauty Salon 2176
Town
right-hander, a 20-game winner the past two seasons, was the hero of the 1964 Cardinal World Series victory o^-er the New York Yankees, winning two games including the final one and setting a series strike-
out record of 31.
The Cardinals showed their all-around team-effort Sunday when Nelson Briles, Ron Willis and Julian Javier, contributed to the win over Cincinnati. Briles, who took Gibson’s place in the starting rotation,
15 with previous experience. | league game.
& Leagues STANDINGS
.567 .563 %
.560 1 .560 1 .520 7
.470 141a
.467 15
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
Detroit 85 65 .. Chicago 85 66
Minnesota 84 Boston 84 California 77 Washington .... 70 Cleveland 71 Baltimore 67 New York 66 Kansas City .... 59 Sunday’s Results
Cleveland 4, New York 2 Washington 5, Detroit 0 Chicago 4, Minnesota 0 Baltimore 5, Boston 2 California 3, Kansas City 2
66 66 71 79 81
81 .453 84 .440 89 .399
17 19 25
DePauw amassed 210 yards rushing in 47 attempts and had 128 through the air on nine of 21. Breckenridge hit six of 14 for 71 yards, Lortz had two for six for 36, and Sacramento had one for 21 yards. The Tigers had 17 first downs to Wheaton's NATIONAL LEAGUE n _
\\ l Pet. <iB DePauw had only one injury.
St. Louis 94 56 .627 * That was lin ebacker Bill Scaife, San Francisco 81 68 .544 12^ Glen E11 >’ n ’ Iu -. sustained Chicago 82 70 .539 13 an in J ured knee in the third Cincinnati 80 70 .533 14 ; 9 uarter - He was on crutches Philadelphia .... 77 71 .520 16 | after the g am e. Trainer Russ Pittsburgh 75 75 .500 19 1 Miller the severity of the Atlanta 74 75 .497 19^ ' injury won’t be known until to-
Los Angeles .... 68 81 .456 251/i ! da y-
Fight results
187
400 series: C. Frazier 485; S.
by winning the
t-.t, . phia Golf Classic Sunday with FRANKFURT UPI — Oscar . o-rc ^ . (u 70 „ a 12-under-par 2<6 for the <2-
Bonavena, 204. Argentina, out- . , ♦ * j i Tt-,^ J hole tournament,
pointed Karl Mildenberger,
202)4, Germany (12).
PHILADELPHIA UPI—Dan Sikes must moan all the way to the bank with his golf earnings. The attorney turned reluctant golfer from Jacksonville, Fla., boosted his yearly earnings over
the $100,000 mark on the pro Langdon 475; L. Puckett 471; tour by winning the Philadel-! s. Cash 465; J. Bean 464; R.
Brewster 432; P. Lambert 431; L. Smiley 414; J. Holler 412; L. Dowty 411; M. Wood 408; M. Shaw 406: C. Penturf 405;
M. O'Neal 402.
Hi team 1 game: Romilda departed after five innings Printing 783 with the Cards leading 3-1
Hi ind. 3 games: B. Nelson when his arm stiffened. He was Centerville, Mich., 508 struck on the right shoulder Military 13 Hi indi. 1 game: C. Frazier , by Deron Johnson’s line drive Concord 19 Bremen 14
Valparaiso 27 Wabash 6 DePauw 24 Wheaton 14 Taylor 10 Wilmington 7 Northwestern Louisiana 49 Han-
over 0
Olivet 27 Franklin 14 Otterbein 26 Indiana Central 19 Western Kentucky 47 St. Joseph’s 7 Southeast Missouri 14 Evans-
ville 7
Northern Illinois 24 Butler 7 HIGH SCHOOL Madison Heights 35 Anderson
Highland 7
Bloomington 42 Rushville 0
18 Howe
SAN JUAN, P. R.
In at least two tourneys in ( which he has won $52,000 in , prize money, he moaned, ‘T really didn’t want to play.’
Barber leads
(10).
Houston 61 88 .409 32 )£ New York 55 93 .372 38 Sunday’s Results Chicago 5, Atlanta 3 St. Louis 3, Cincinnati 2 Houston 4, New York 3 Philadelphia 6. Los Angeles 1
This Saturday DePauw goes to Rensselaer to face St. Joseph’s in its ICC opener. The Pumas lost to powerful Western
Kentucky, 47-7. Score by quarters:
DePauw 7 7 0 10—24
Wins championship BATAVIA, N. Y. UPI—Billy Lockward, a member of the U.S. Army Golden Knights parachute team from Ft. Bragg,
N.C., won the over-all competi-1 his ball after nine holes and said under par 68 in the Philadelphia Hawk
in the second inning. Evansville Bosse 33 Evansville Willis, who replaced Jack Rex Mundi 20 Lamabe after he yielded a Fort Wayne Catholic 26 South home run to Vada Pinson in Bend Clay 6 the sixth inning, blanked the Fort Wayne Concordia 19 Fort Reds on two hits over the fin- Wayne Elmhurst 7 al 3 1-3 innings to preserve Gary Tolleston 13 Gary RooseBriles’ 13th triumph against velt 9 five losses. LaPorte LaLumiere 33 Waka-
rusa 13
* Mishawaka Marian 20 Gary An-
drean 13
New Albany 34 Evansville Cen-
tral 0
QUEBEC CITY UPI — The Owensboro, Ky., Catholic 21
Mount Vernon 0
Aces win
Pittsburgh 5, San Francisco 4 j Wheaton 0 14 0 0—14 I 2,550 points.
tourney ended he said he didn’t
want to play but stayed and PHILADELPHIA UPI — Milpicked up $22,000 in prize ler Barber, a former Air Force
money. lieutenant and one-time Arkan- Quebec Aces overwhelmed the i
It was his second victory of sas football player, Sunday led Philadelphia Flyers, newcomers South Bend Adams 20 Michigan
the year, boosting his total earn- a field of 14 qualifiers for the to the National Hockey League City 13
ings to $111,277. He also won Alcan Golfer of the Year cham- this season. 6-1, in a Sunday Triton 14 North Liberty 0 the Jacksonville Open. pionship scheduled for St. An- exhibition game. Winchester 0 South Adams 0
In last month’s $250,000 West- drew’s, Scotland, Oct. 5-8. The two Flyer holdouts, Ed (tie)
Chester Classic, Sikes picked up 1 Barber closed with a four- Van Impre. ex-Chicago Black Indianapolis Chatard 39 Indian-
standout and former apolis Wood 7
tion Sunday in the first annual he was headed home. Rain Classic for a 282. That gave him Boston Bruin defenseman Joe Indianapolis Attucks 20 ClarksNorth American parachuting washed out the round and Sikes a best three-out-of-four tourna- Watson were suited up for the ville Providence 7 championship with 2,765 points, had second thoughts. He stayed ment total of 835 and led the game but did not play. The Indianapolis Scecina 13 IndianHe edged Floyd Glover of around to pocket $30,000 for U.S. pros who will battle seven players were fined $500 each apolis Arlington 13 (tie) Phoenix, Ariz., who picked up his second place finish behind British professionals for a $60,- Saturday when they failed to _ Indiana Deaf School 33 Cincin-
I Jack Nicklaus.
J 000 first prize.
| report to training camp.
I
nati St. Rita 0
