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Show ryiumjy- -- 2c mi. DESERET dsmma tmmmr I NEWS, Monday, September f - - !$ S f 36, If 69 Utes Race Past Easy San Jose ? yMqp Continued from Page C-- l pass for the second TD, sprang Hunter loose for 29-y-- yards and a third score after San Jse fumbled. Then Norm Thompson stole a Spartan spiral and shimmied up the sideline fcr 62 yards in the 23 best Individual effort Mary Bateman, old automatic himself, toed all four games extra pointers through the sticks. The chills set in and for the next two periods the foo.--' ball wasnt worth the sit-oIt was a pity to waste that kmd of a night on that kind of football. 'tv; i f : BYU .; On the tjtah side, for inthere were two stance, fumbles lost, one pass Intercepted and seven penalties walked off for 44 yards all in the first half. The whistlers blew their imagine 133 yards lungs out lost to penalties for San Jose and 87 against Utah. Thats 220 yards more than many t f linebacker tw ks ' Tim Roberts moves in C- -l 30-State, Oregon proves theyre human. Iowa State coach John wasnt exactly bub-J Majors t blir.g over the Hawkeye offen-siv- e show, either. Like he ponted out, how can you i "flip ovr an offense that - fritters away five drives on Jhree lost fumbles and two J interceptions and scores only on a punt return and a Tony Washington) field goal (Vern Skrip- 1 ! d d sky). ! "An oifense like that wont he win B'g Eight games, t moaned. Then Majors whis- -' pered : Or Big Ten, either like our one next week , with Illinois. But Majors had all kinds of - flowery adjectives for the de- fense. offense let the defense But Majors said. .down, that didnt bother the defense. ;rThey did almost all they promised us they would do. They promised to keep BYU's fine field goal kicker (Joe Lil- jenqulst) out of range and "... ;:Our t on fullback Jock Johnson of Iowa State. bYU lost, 10-- 0. from Page C-- l would have worked had we not blown a blocking assign-- T Continued from Page they promised to run back two punts for touchdowns. behind t le line for 49 yards, forced two poor percentage Well, they kept BYUs offense at bay. And ve re certainly going to forgive the defense for falling one touchdown short in the punt return passes that were intercepted. . . . and allowed four completions for nine yards. Hudspeth and his staff figured BYU could pass short on department." zone . . . just as the Cougars did last year and just as Syracuse had done the week before. We knew we were vulnerable there, Majors said. Syracuse got eight first downs from passing right down the short middle. We worked hard on our pass defense. BYU got no first dqwns from that route. Id say that is proof of All the offensive fireworks took place in the first quarter. From that point, an opening record of 27,000 game saw virtually offenseless football. Our defensive line was almost 20 pounds to the man, Majors said. But they clawed, scrambled and pursued beautifully to keep the heat on BYU quarterbacking all afternoon. They had reason to tire or let down in face of our frustrations on offense. But they never did. We knew we couldnt let quarterback Lyons (Marc) get set. An effective rush was the' heart of our their game plan." Effective it was, too. In 17 passing attempts by Lyons and Eton Griffin, the defense decked them eight times ment. Overall, our kids played a good ball game, but made too many crucial mistakes. First of those was a in punt by John Pezeley early the ball game. Punting from end zone, deep in the Weber out of Pezeley sliced the ball bounds on the Weber 16. From there, Northern Michthe second igan scored on Rich when quarterback play halfwith teamed McCarthy back Lonnie Holton on a pass play another Moments Weber mistake set up the sec ond Northern Michigan touchdown, as Weber fumbled the kickoff and NMU recovered on the Wiber 15. In four plays, Northern score-bosi- d Michigan was on the again. McCarthy went . the final four yards to paydirt - on an end sweep with 8:55 sitll I left in the first period. After Bob Bartkowia.. booted his sec- - ond PAT, NMU led, 14 0. Weber kept its poise and got when on the scoreboard Nunez kicked a school record field goal with 1:55 in first quarter. the left The Weber State eleven added two more touchdowns in the second quarter, to take halftime lead. a One score came on a nine-yar- d buist by tailback Sam Gipson after Weber drove 45 yards in five plays. The score was set up by a poor Northern I later jumped on the ball for the touchdown. Grady added the PAT kick NMU led, and 24-1- begin the Weber earlier-mentione- d final scoring drive after the ensuing kickoff. It covered 80 yards in 14 plays. Bokarae got the score on a quick-count- , progres and defensive Hudspeth back coach D'ck Felt had praise for the BYU pass defense. too. Chris Farasopou-la- s, Paul Suorius and Larry Echohawk excelled in an aerial defense that permitted 3 of 12 completions for 27 yards. Sutorius picked one off, too. It was BYUs best secondary effort in many an outing. Toward end of the third period, BYUs ground defense led by end Jeff Slipp and tackle Gerald Meyer had realquarterly gotten to back Obert Tisdale. After three straight rack jobs, Tisdale slumped on the bench Eke a beaten general. But he was revived by BYUs offensive failures. BYU planned a ground defense to reduce the option, break-awa- threat of speedy y Tisdale. The Cougars brought their linebackers up to where they had virtually a line. Tisdales option gave BYU fits early in the game, but the defense solved that problem. Despite 197 yards rushing, touchdown threat was virtually nil. BYUs Rich Adams exercised his toe 15 times for a punt average. That was mighty good. He was punting for all sorts of angles and trying to keep it away from certain ISU return artists. Tom Elliott, alra in return position, is the lad who ran a punt back 84 yards for a touchdown last year at Provo. fourth-dow- n keeper from the one. NMU coach Rollie Dotsch was elated with the win. Our squad grew up a great deal with this victory, he said post game. We beat a very good ball dub tonight, and that makes the win even more satisfying. d Weber is a tough, ball dub and compares favorably with North Dakota the No. 1 ranking State small college team we played the week previously. Jack Brown and Sam Gipson are fine runners and that Carter Campbell is one of the best defensive linemen Ive seen in a long time. Weber State will be facing a tough opponent Saturday in Montana. They have to be the Big Sky title favorite after the way they bombed Northern Arizona Saturday, Arslanian said of the Grizzlies. They beat Northern Arizona, 52-hard-nose- and Northern Arizona had an edged West Texas State NCAA Division University team by two points the week before." Montana will bring a record into the game with the Wildcats. The Grizzlies hold a 0 victory over North Dakota and a 0 win over South Dakota in addition to the big win over Northern Arizona. 3-- 0 24-1- 31-2- C--l one reason we elected to kickoff to open the game rather than take the kickoff. We wanted to check their game plan. UOP went with a four-maand four linebackers It seemed we throughout. had to cover but two ends and a flanker back most of the lime. We expected far more receivers in our secondary. We were able to double team them a lot, Mills said. n line USU was able, to complete 18 of 46, but lost five to the alert Tiger defensive secondcandiary led by date safety Jim Eberznik. Scovils confidence in his defense was shown again in the dosing minute of the third period (:53) when he elected to quick kick on first down. The punt signalled the final beginning of the quarter score splurge. Twenty nine seconds later UOP converted Aggie quarterback Craig Smiths fumble on the USU 20 to a TD making it 17-- 3 following conversion. Penalties, overthrown and As for San Jose, there were and this spots of brilliance is being kind. Its football program is on its way up again. Right now it isnt much and only Utah's poor play kept ,the score from reaching the centennial figure. EXCITING NEW TASTE OF SUCCESS Srhoreder with another PAT try. In UOPs final series of plays Ackley hit flanker Bill Cornman with another d pass that carried to the line. Three plays later he handed off to Chuck Camy who tallied. Schoreders conversion made it 36--3 with :06 remainin gin the game. The Tigers ended the game in much the manner Utah State ended its first two quarters. The wind was at Jess Gardas back and :01 showed on first quarter clock when he two-yar- booted And ont of the most exciting franchise Investment opportunities ever offered in the limited menu, extra high profit cless. Exciting new food concept is capturing the Imagination and dollars of tha booming eat-ou- t market all over the country. der Cheea n Wirst serves a delightful variety of domestic and Imported savory cheeses, sausages and related specialty foods madi tha old fashioned way to produce mouth watering flavor! Dining in the Old World Alpine atmosphere, plus terry out service, assures high voluma and simple preparation of low cost food assures high profits. Thorough management training, operations and promotion assistance Included n the low cost package. 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MATURES) e Install ur best 40 Erung on oR Overhaul ad wheel eylndere four wheels 4 fm te all setinemooth Machine drums reh Arc grind Inmg for perfect contact Bleed and flush entire hydrevlc system Clean and in pert master cyinder Adi get brefcet an all 4 wheeb Com plete reed test ef your new brekes- - K no. tvlBursrt Punts (no., avtrage) Fumbles lest Yards penalized TIRE ' Marketing Director 3320 Daiwertii Aflingtia, Texas 78010 TBAM STATISTICS 29-- The other second quarter Weber touchdown came in the form of an pass interception by big tackle Pete Nepote. Nunez added both FAT kicks. Northern Michigan tied it with :56 left m the third quarter when Gere Grady field goal. A booted a pass ir.erception had set up the score. Still another of those Weber situation shot over Pezeleys head early in and NMU ; Jhe final quarter took over on the Weber 20. On 'the second play from there, McCarthy passed to end Mike Boyd in the ei d zone. Boyd . fumbled, but the ulert Holton must have scouts The rubbed their pates on this one. Nothing seemed to be normal. Yes there was some interesting play. Bateman was marvelous with his boots. Craig Smith, the great little Midvale, Utah, guy from kicked the ball over the moon on every punt possibly tne greatest kicking exhibition for two men ever staged in the Ute bowl. missed a short one and then hit halfback Dean Lazzarini for a three yard TD pass. Schoreder missed PAT. Score, 17-1- 7 " . time. Things did pick up a little when the Utes finally freshed their forces with some of the second stringers in the final quaiter, Clint Hardin, the senior quarterback, engineering a couple of interesting touchdown drives. underthrown passes haunted USUs Smith in the following series. These frustrations were capped when Tiger defensive ace Greg Rur.nalls intercepted a Smith pass and tan 42 yards for score. The score stood at 23-- 3 when Schroeder missed his first PAT. ing tempo. He flipped M chigar, punt. 1 a x 17-1- 4 - 10 of them with Aggies Taking Rest Before CSU Battle NMU Coach Elated With Win l Continued fumbles record number of them lost six! And this game was played on their own field, under their own dim lights and with the summers sweetest weather. Twenty-sipenalties! The instant replays were worse than the originals most of the Asiociated Press Photo yWi Continued from Page Thompsons trot up the sidelines was a dandy. Grotb faked for some great plays at first and then Sparta spooked him somehow. Utahs tackling was improved and its blocking was better than a week ago. football teams will gain in three weeks of play. . Utah set a retold for t. 581 or Jmtrittt Xm Ktmf C4b Opn doily 8 a.nt. to 6 p m.. |