OCR Text |
Show i 1 The Salt Lake Tribune, Saturday, October 3j 7, 17! East Shocks Titans , Braves Trip Layton; Skyline Rolls, 22-1- 3 red Kempt' I Skyline grabbed sole possession of the Region Three summit, stunting late Cottonwood rallies and slipping by the in Skyline's homeColts. coming Friday. Cottonwood Coach 11. (1. Linford, who led Skyline to two state championships, did his best to detour the Eagles 1972 state drive. A fourth quarter fumble and a field goal by the Eagles' Daw Ferney closed the door on the Colts By , F 22-1- upset-minde- Skyline struck first after a drive marked by the running of powerful Terry Taylor and phenomena! halfback Jeff Wells Taylor took it dver from the one The attempt failed. roared J Cottonwood back, controlling the ball for eight minutes and tied (he score at the end of the lirst quarter, on a Brent Knight sneak from the one. Taylor led a Eagle defense and Tally Stevens worked his bread and butter option to perfection to control the second quarter. hard-hittin- g Skyline moved the halftime on a store to Wells' draw The elusive halfback bounced off four lacklers and outran the secondary in his paydirt sprint. The Eagles came out seeming unstoppable in the second Half. In nine plays the Eagles 56 yards to Cottont fudged line Stevens wood's rolled and decided to keep on the option. With a tackier on him at the five he flipped the pigskin to Wells who scored unmolested. Ferney converted. Cottonwood got its last real chance after a Skyline score was nullified. Huge Eagle tackle Craig Barr jarred the ball loose and Les England smothered it. With 2:30 left. Dave Ferney field goal, booted his putting the game out oi reach Cottonwoods last drive was stopped on an interception and Mark quarterback Skyline Boryla ran out the clock. Skyin Region line is now Three. , 1 0 Goalie Traded - The PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League Friday sgnt goalie Roy Edwards to the Detroit Red Wings for ; future and cash ft Wrf Tom W harton Tribune Sports Writer By was appropriate that jets from nearby Hill Field flew over the Bountiful-l.aytnfootball game Friday afternoon because defense in this contest was almost as as defense is to the Davis County economy. LAYTON It two-poi- the big story in the game was the strong defense the two clubs put up. Braves Nielson, Levet. Chris Jones and Randy Ogden excelled while Lancers Jesse Aranda. Alan Hatch. Chris Kidd and Mike Thomas played well. Well have to play a lot better ball than we did Friday to heat Yiewmont and Clearfield." said Bountiful coach Rut we've Waite. Paul stressed defense all year and I thought our kids did an outstanding job in that But Companion deluxe KiT SLEEPS 6Fotur e Quolity inside ond out. interiors designed for greatest convenience, plenty of construc- elbow-roo- tion engineered Easy terms. for eosier towing. FT.. FULLY YOUR CHOICE T t East obliterated the and in Titans, heat so Olympus at its doing own game defense. it-- - . XXI '.C: ' x : y iLturt Laytons Joey Benton tries as defense to get by Brave Joe f iott Photo evel evades l fill won B i fc strong block. Friday's battle, a '' ? Hor itnut is Kminti-l!oui.7,7ul- West Rips Granite Sparts Grab In 33 to 0 Romp Battle on By Brian Nutting Tribune Staff Writer West High Schools frustration ended while (Iramle's continued Friday as the Panthers coasted to a victory Farmover the mistake-proners to spoil the Granite home33-- e coming. It was a game you might expect from two teams that came into the game with a combined Region Three recMistakes played a ord of Davis Stops Cyprus in Duel 24-2- 0 By Fred Kempe Cyprus ran everything from a shotgun offense s to a onside kick but could not overcome the conventional Davis offense in a Dart victory here Friday night. Alternating running backs Jeff Shaw. Ron Hobey and Jeff Fillin carried the load for the Darts, joining Judge as the Region Five undefeated. The two teams play next Friday. Cyprus opened the scoring on the third play of the game with a pass play out of the shotgun. Quarterback Scott Christensen connected with end Dave Killpaek who weaved 60 yards for the score. MAGNA criss-cros- 24-2- 0 Davis then took over. Shaw, Hobey and Fillin alternated on Davis first scoring drive. The first of two Dart PATs was good. The Darts struck again after John Stathis blocked a Cyprus punt on the Pirate 40. Davis scored on a handoff to Hobey who passed to Fillin, marking the score to The Darts running trio led a scoring drive capped by a Shaw plunge, keeping the Darts on top, Trent Bliss led a rallying Cyprus team with a sprint, setting up a run by Bob Burnside to paydirt. Christensen hit Killpaek for two points, bridging the gap, Cyprus was then thwarted, and otner than a nullified touchdown made no serious Similar low prices on all models ejoiiiHi KM7A41I d ijga. snornt HITCH TV EQUALIZE be- Operating from the Titan 19. Bradley hit Mark Havens on a pass play and three plays later Clark powered in for the score. Dodge: 40 years of Leadership In analyzing the contest one name sticks out prominently, that of Leopard linebacker Brian Thurgood. It almost seemed as if Thurgood was lining up in the Olympus back-fiellie harassed because Titan quarterback Randy Griffin to the limit. and West simply big pari couldn't match Granite when it came to making errors After a scoreless first quarter. which saw only a lew errors and ended with West on the march, the Panthers culminated a drive with a three-yartouchdown run In halfback sophomore Kerry Nielsen early in the second period. Granites mistakes became more apparent minutes later when, after a good Granite drive, Nielsen scooped up a pitch-ou- t by badly thrown Farmer quarterback Craig and raced 75 VanLeeuwen to paydirt. yards fumbles, several After of LibStatue a and penalties went West that erty play by nowhere, the first half cluck ran out on Granite on the West eighty yard line. Scott 5! ark took the second half kickoff for West and sped behind good blocking for K7 yards and the Panthers' third touchdown before the Granite royalty had a homecoming chance to find seats after their halftime ride around the d track. Granite's senior quarterback. who deserved better Frimoved the Farmers day, downfield with short passes, but again the Farmers mistakes haunted them. A Granite receiver dropped a sure touchdown pass with no West defender within five yards and another Granite scoring opportunity was lost. The last 20 minutes of play degenerated into the trading of penalties, interrupted only by a nice touchdown run by Nielsen with a screen his third touchdown of pass the game and a last minute touchdown by reserve running back Larry Earnes. West made some mistakes too a dropped pass in the endzone when two West receivers fought for the ball, for example, but the Panthers just match couldnt Granites mastery of the art of the crucial mistake. Late Surge By George A. Sorensen Tribune Staff Writer MURRAY Cary Cline, a center, grabbed rL'( two Brighton passes and ran a total of 7S yards to two touchdowns Friday as the Murray Spartans exploded in the second half to whip the Bengals, before a happy homecoming crowd. 32-1- All the action was confined to the second half with only a field goal by Murrays Grant Hockin making it on the score- board in the first 24 minutes. The explosion came quickly after intermission. Jim Romney hit wide receiver Bret Nelson on the first play from scrimmage for the Spartans. Nelson galloped all the way to the four. Three plays later, Hockin hulled his way into paydirt. Romney later passed to tight end Bob Sherwin for a touchdown. Cline then intercepted his first pass on the. Bengal 17 'and ambled 53 yards for the third score of the third stanza with 3:40 remaining. d Power Wagon Aside from his consistently good play, Thurgood intercept- ed two passes, recovered one fumble and pounced on the pigskin after East blocked a punt. Meanwhile someone pulled the plug on the Olympus offense and usually adept Titans like Tony Chlepas. Rick Spjut and Griffin looked disconnect- Guaranteed As Long A ed. They (East) were aggressive and just wanted to win more than we did I guess." Startin muttered following the The things we have game. been doing right all year just went wrong for us today." So. the record is intact. East coach Grant Martin has never lost to the Titans and Olympus failed for the 19th consecutive year to defeat the Leopards in football. Region Marks The defeat left Olympus mark in Region with a Three, the same record as that of East. Skyline, by virtue of its whipping of Cottonwood, leads the division at All the scoring was done in the first half. After a scoreless first quarter which featured awesome defense by both sides, the Leopards tallied at the 8:04 mark of the second stanza. Quarterback John Bradley, faking beautifully in his back-fielalmost stepped to the line of scrimmage before touchdown unloading a bomb to John Cook. Win Thomas successful conversion made il d Complete Selection HINCKLEY TRUCKS INC. Ph. 2309 So. State 484-875- IttTHE PROS DO vxyx 5 IT TIRES MOST SIZES INCH SNOW $1 MORE TRUCK TiRES 1 TRUCK TIRES 23-1- 3 wide-ope- As You Own It For Immediate Delivery TRACTION TREAD NEW OR RETREAD Famou Pennsylvania Truck Tirei. Extra tough for longer wear. Save now at Rayco on either New or Retread Traction Tread Truck Tiros. CHARGE IT!! n All bank cards welcome Gas or Dept. Store too. Thurguod fumble recowry set up Easts second score. Again Bradley peered down-fieland connected with Cook, a split end. on a scoring play. Thomas booted the PAT and it was NEW A N d 6.00x16 d Brightons first tallies came on the first play of the fourth quarter when Guy Eby nailed Romney in the end zone for a safety. Moments later. Brighton appeared to be back in the game when Ralph Fallentine blocked a Murray punt and teammate Kip Barnes added six more points by falling on the loose ball in the end zone. Dan Van Valkenburg hit Jeff Nilsson for two points on the conversion to trim the lead to Coaches Keep Royal Berths KANSAS CITY (AP) -Charley Lau, Harry Dunlop and Galer. Cisco have been retained as coaches for the Kansas City Royals by new manager Jack McKeon. BEAT THE ABOMINABLE 24-1- SNOWMAN! SUPER COUNTRY Too Early For KRGO RADIO Rcadv for Game VANCOUVER. B. C. (LP1) The California Golden Seals are here, getting ready for Saturdays National Hockey League opener at Vancouver. 23.95 25.95 28.95 30.95 32.95 39.95 6.70x15 6 ply 6.50x16 7.00x15 7.00x16 7.00x15 7.50x16 6.50x16 7.00x15 7.00x16 7.50x16 Kill-pac- k s2,497 FREE A- . Cyprus, although not consistently moving the ball, hit on another long score. Christensen connected with this time for 65 yards, keeping it close at halftime, Hamper 11 ,s.' 14-- 3,094 ifj Ci-'s- d with only 47 seconds left fore the intermission. d Bountiful's defense, led by Dallas Nielson and Joe Level, and Layton's defense were about as strong as the United States military defense hut the two clubs offensive power resembled that of Monaco. The drive went 41 yards with Benton going over from the five. Layton gambled and conversion lost oh a and that cost it the game. Defense Strong l-Vf- Xs Team quarter. --V- But the Leopards weren't through yet. Dan Clark, who inspired East all afternoon with his spirited play, envoi-opeanother Olympus fumble highly-regarde- d i The braves, kicked around Hie Davis County football circuit for many a ye.tr, are Utah's Cinderella team and. with a win over Clearfield next week, could find a silver slipper on the other side of the rainbow. Tiny Dan Weatherbie. a defensive hack, provided all the offense the Braves needed when he picked off a Bookwoldt pass and raced 60 yards for the score. Floyd Steed's extra point kick proved to be the margin of difference in the game Boekwoldt. an occasional starter last season and the only remnant of last season's fine team remaining, combined with Joey Benton to mount the only offensive drive of the game in the fourth . im4r with 1:45 to go in the first 14-- 0 half. 20-- k Cinderella - nt-- p- 'X' But. when Layton quarter-hacRod Bockwoldts last bomb of the day had fi.zled, Bountiful had takn home a victory and a piece of tne Region Two lead. BUY NOW AND SAVE KAMPtR, JPWt 5 .A n mm KIT rt! ti By Sieve Wilson Tribune Sports Writer The thinking after Eat shot down Olympus Friday afterwas that trie Titans noon should have brought an armored car. It's doubtful if the Secret Service could have helped Coach Wayne Startins team. In fact, not even Startin could. 20-- 0 SNOW TIRES? 1550 IS GIVING AWAY A TV EVERY DAY NOT AT THESE PRICES! MUD & SNOW DESIGN IN OCTOBER $ 600x13 EXCLUSIVE 90 21 Exchange with recappcible casing PER PAIR Blk. d JUST FOR BUYING NOW! SAVEWAY threat. TRAILER SALES 4125 S. STATE A 262-546- Davis field goal late in the fourth quarter finished the scoring. 1 v' BA 'Ef.l tJITSl A or - vv- A a.' ' y - f&.'i 18 ''Jp people who hate picking themselves. after up For SnapM, nwy-- f li, y ($ ,'Y- bull, kMtw Hfc m IwW w to dvooM 'Vacuum H ma4i uW Pair for 650x13 700x13 695x14 D 685x15 C 78-1- 3 C 78--1 4 $ne90 PLUS F.E.T. 78-1- 5 hum VniMt !( m in II BLACK irnWh, wrtS 1. oil the Snappor V mown soon. doom your lewro gross, loevo fmo eono. Ahe. Oregon Ssrodiet $ " H 885x14 825x15 855x15 J 78-1- 78-1- 78-1- 5 H 78-- 1 27 78-1- 5 Pair for $rm90 PLUS F.E.T. 5 PLUS F.E.T. BLACK Pair for 4 4 G 78-1- BLACK 885x15 J 78-- 1 900x15 L 78-1- 5 5 $ F.E.T. 45t to 80 31 90 PLUS F.E.T. BLACK per tire Heavy Duty Traction WHITEWALLS Truck Tire Abrasive or Cold Rubber Available Recaps Available 2 More Per Pair ORBITREADS COST NO MORE Povrermate Bar And II m tuHin im llwm eiwt. m 855x14 Pair for 90 $ 735x14 E 4 775x14 F 4 825x14 G 78-- 1 4 735x15 E 78-- 1 5 775x15 F 78-1- d tp mam leavesi 21 SNOW TIRE RECAPS W1DE-TRA- K UldlK MUCH MORE THAN A RETREAD - WE CAN PROVE IT! ORRITREAO electronically controls and applies a continuous stripof rubber to ttie tire ALL of the trouble spots found in the usual . . eliminates retreading process. There are no liquid cements necessary. ORBITREAD welds rubber to rubber, doubles adhesion, stops tread separation. There are no weld joints where the rubber butts together as with cold retreads. No balance problems. ORBITREAD applies a continuous strip, scientifically guaged to insure absolute uniformity. ONE-DA- SERVICE ON CUSTOM RECAPPING in at 8 a.m. OuTatS p.m. CHAINS TO FIT ALL MAKES OF POWEk SAW Dealer inquiries invited. -- See it Today! V SncjiHC )Mowi Dial STOSI 417 la Wltara Tan Oat tarf Carpat Traalmaaf A.M. TO SiSC 9.M. DAILY 34-33- 1 HOritli h Co. Arl SfipekMttver & Dial 34-161- 3 Whr STOSI Yo H0Ui 37 fait tfi Sautti tad Carpal Trawtmwif S AM. TO 5:39 P.M, DAILY 8r ALL RANK AND MAJOR OIL CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED Wi vji fins co. 1 49 East 9th South 3 thru Sat. f a.m. to 6 p.m. 521-612- Open Mon. wamMr- - .fi.i'- - Betwe.n Main A Slat America's Premier Radial lire Maker n |