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Show Utes lose 6 Continued from 18 the Carbon game could very well be for all the marbles. Coach Belcher had praise for his defense picking Brian Fletcher (for the third straight week), Jared McKcachnie, and Earl Tapoof as having good solid performances against Craig. The coach said he is making some adjustments on how the option offense of-fense unfolds, with more emphasis on having the quarterback make the defensive end commit and playing the option from there and on timing the plays. The Utes will mix their standard running plays such as the belly, blast, and dives with the option. op-tion. r t f 4, , r- t UINTAH WENT to the air with little success last weekend near the end of the game as Moffat County continued with an effective effec-tive defensive pressure to hurry this throw which resulted in an incompletion. Local pool set to open Sept. 4 On Sept. 4 the school board dis-ctnvd dis-ctnvd the opening of the swimming jx. Ro;ird members j) lor atul Oaain Snow June Ken wtwing wuh committee member mem-ber ii da uk on an opening day for The khmj NurJ will mmj Rely t..nc ilc jyvil (.jxti on Sept. 17 for tv;!i vhi an.f pit'lic uc. Times have tve n vt fcr tlum an( U) U- t!-.C tx , fVfiinmng at M') irn, tints! 8 am, the jt a(: be rjvn fr iimmit:2 oti In.- , '..r, t an.! M.n.!.iy l!irn:j;h fjuJ.iy ''-:i" at K.ty n ni. any vtionl in I-? :: . J h flKtir,r.J I1 trc if J' l it,:;l 1 1 n m J f.n tt am. w :t;:n;- - ,. J J M hfTf 2 vl r m (he milt tr rri M .!- -J tjw, The t i;n .-.i:n 'I i.v t',f p, f: -1 a',-.,! t H r n i :. s; . J ? U pm. f. r !" ! f lic s ir. i y.v '"'' p I ? 1 I' -n a-r u ' ' ' ( p n - : 1 s'k .( ? m. 1-C pi-' -H 1 tn-:':" tn-:':" 1 ti v . l'-f ps4 lnm ? p n. . Vi p rt rn ! !m ! St ' " l.f .Vr.n n.J ' r 1 iv'T f-.-r. A t.-'i 'v ;- ( f t,; n f vt fit IJ! ! f ! t - 0 to Craig Following the Carbon game the Utes then move to Lehi, are home against Wasatch, travel to Emery, and then close against the Union Cougars the following week. Yes, the team did lose another close one, in a third straight game where the suspect offense hurt, but panic. Don't look for that from Belcher and Greene. Look for the Utes to put it together come crunch time which starts Friday night at 7:30 p.m. in Price. A follow up on the preseason predictions pre-dictions from the Express? Uintah will sUll challenge for the region crown and will make the state playoffs play-offs third in region or higher. This covers everyone's needs and If .... -Ml I.. r. viy ,.u u c it uprn lor changes but basically this suits cv- crynnc " iJ William Murphy a committee member from the Middle S1'1"'' s 1 s I ) t fm. -musM - 1 1 www "i jp hujwi w mm m-im mm iwn i i i mmm g p llsiyffiffilti Inimlfegjl. i ? i I ; '!"? V C i' " I '-.re' f e.y ; , fc t to- ' Q' t ;f c? ft f - t f f J r ' a c; -a ! t ;'f J . rr ! - i ' - ; ; '";!' ; ' " 4 - - t I "c 0 -c -c -. 4 tt it ; i i5 'i J rni t 'ii?'ict '.- -" - a I .:. :c - 'i l 'O - c c f , c : , . - ' l li 1 - ' I : - . ' c -c : .i A - i .1 I-.is,.-, 1 rr.;; f e '.--a.'-r.J o w. - I : ' :' c r J c s : fi BYU weathers 1 Hurricanes in upset To echoes of "We want Detmer to prove to us how good he is," The Ty scratched, scrambled, clawed, and led the then 16th ranked Cougars of BYU to a 28-21 upset victory over the defending national champion and number one ranked University of Miami Hurricanes. In so doing, Detmer proved to the "doubting Thomas" 'Canes just how good he really is with a command (career toping) performance which should give him a commanding position po-sition to vie for the coveted Heismann Trophy. Detmer was vintage BYU in this one as he showed a national audience audi-ence that the Cougars are a team to be reckoned with and that Hurricane quarterback Craig Erickson is at best a distant second in their head to head competition to become recognized recog-nized as the best, college football player this year. Air Detmer finished completing 38 of 52 passes for 406 yards and three touchdowns. Meanwhile, Air Erickson, who at times seemed disoriented dis-oriented and somewhat timid, finished fin-ished with 299 yards by completing 28 of 52 and no touchdowns. After losing four turnovers, the Coug's had posted Miami to a 7-0 lead early in the first quarter, the scoring drive coming after BYU fumbled on the Hurricane 20. Detmer and company wasted no time in evening up the score as Detmer took them 60 yards and then scrambled at the 20 avoiding what appeared to be a sure sack, finally hitting Matt Balini in the corner of the end zone. Earl Kauffman posted the Y to a temporary 10-7 lead on a 32 yard field goal, but the 'Canes quickly put the lid on that with a sustained drive of 80 yards which appeared to give them a 14-10 halftime lead. Not so, the Coug's still had 102 ticks left on the clock. Detmer completed com-pleted seven straight' passes and then hit Steve Boyce in the endzonc to give BYU a 17-14 halftime lead, and shock the nations bookies. Miami made some quick adjustments adjust-ments and quickly opened the second sec-ond half wiih an 80 yard drive to go ahead 21-17. On this one, Erickson seemed in command as he passed his team into the endzone after having hav-ing picked up only 51 yards in the first half. Several seconds later Kauffman cut the lead to 21-20 with his second sec-ond field goal following a collapse of the BYU offense at the 20. The following Miami scries provided pro-vided the pivotal play of the game. Miami had the ball fourth and one at their own 44 yard line. Electing to go for the first down, defensive tackle Rich Kaufusi surged into the Miami backficld and stuck the running run-ning back for a loss which gave BYU great field position. On the subsequent scries, Detmer completed five straight passes to move the ball inside the ten, before hitting his third touchdown on ycl another scramble when he connect- fll Willi Mill -lJM,! A ln r;.i " " " " I-"'"' conversion passing to Bovcc staked the Cong's to a 2S-2I lead which turned out to Ix: the game winner, llic drive was highlighted by a one yard scramble on fourth and one by Don't Become A Burglary Statistic. It's not worth risking your guns. Detmer to keep the drive alive. As good as Detmer was in this one, the great win was a team win. The offensive line picked up the blitz all night, at time with 10 and 11 men coming and got only one holding call. The Defense was pure great as the Hurricane stormed inside in-side the BYU 20 three times in the final stanza only to be turned back on a sack, an interception, and a broken up pass on the final Miami offensive play of the game at the 'goal line. A great win which makes BYU number one? The coaches said 6th on Monday, while the AP says 7th. Miami? 10th in both polls. The new number one team is Notre Dame, who is scheduled to play BYU for the first time in regular season action ac-tion next year. The Ty meanwhile made a great case for himself before a national TV audience and should be the frontrunner after this one. BYU showed signs of the championship form they haven't produced since the 1984 National Champion team. Detmer? Move over McMaugn, Young, Wilson, Carter, Shicde, and Nielsen this one promises to be the best yet Sport Shorts , Duchesne Continued from 18 The 2A rankings remained unchanged un-changed with Hurricane on top followed fol-lowed by San Juan, Park City, North Sanpete and Beaver. the NICE GUYS at JONES PAINT & GLASS Will give a FREE case of pop with every windshield installed! LieLJrST.NTr " '"'fi- BASIN SPORTS " Your 1 Sports Store ana so mucn moro Vernal Express BYU ranked 7th UPI, 5th with win over 'Canes It is 1984 revisited as the Cougars of BYU jumped into the top 10 following fol-lowing a major victory over last week's number one ranked (1989 defending national champion) Miami Hurricanes. In 1984, the Y was given top ten attention after they had opened with a win over then third ranked Pittsburgh. In various var-ious nau'onal polls, the Cougar's are ranked from 5 th to 7th. BYU received re-ceived three first place votes this week. Miami fell to 10th their lowest regular season ranking since 1985.Notre dame took over the top slot this week. The 'Canes still have a chance to get back in it, as they play both the top ranked Irish and the second ranked Auburn Tigres in the next four weeks. The top 10 AP list is: 1. Notre Dame; 2. Auburn; 3. Florida Suite; 4. Michigan; 5. Brigham Young; 6. Southern California; 7. Tennessee; 8. Nebraska; 9. Colorado and 10. Miami. The UPI coaches poll rankings released re-leased Monday include: 1. Notre Dame; 2. Florida Stale; 3. Auburn; 4. Southern California; 5. Michigan; 6. Tennessee; 7. Brigham Young; 8. Nebraska; 9. Colorado and 10. Miami. utan bi& three all win in second week In addition to the great win by BYU over Miami, the University of Utah provided perhaps the biggest thrill in college pigskin action as they snatched victory from the jaws of defeat. Tied at 29 with Minnesota and just seconds on the clock, the 10.5 point underdog Utes dialed a prayer which was apparently an- In addition to I GUN SAFE .vf Jul I ' M fll mi 243G 14 Gun Sportsman Plus Sco This Snfo On Out Floor rincn Your Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1930 21 swered when first senior tackle Greg Reynolds blocked the winning field goals try by the Gophers and then corner LaVon Edwards picked it up and ran the winning score to paydirt. Coach Ron McBride, who has turned the Utah gridiron fortunes for-tunes around in short order made every highlight film in the country w hen he raced into the endzone and participated in the pile up in celebration cele-bration of th win. In the final big three game, Utah State got their first win of the year against Long beach State in a convincing con-vincing 27-13 win. The big three now line up against three tough teams as BYU hosts the Cougar's from the Northwest, Washington State in an attempt to keep the magic mag-ic alive after beating Miami last weekend . The Cougs of Utah Valley arc rated as 13.5 favorites over Washington State. Utah must now put their great win aside and get ready for a Fresno State team which narrowly missed the top 20 this week in the polls. The game should provide the sliffest competition competi-tion to date for the Utes. The Aggies travel to Big 8 Missouri in an attempt to break over the .500 mark on the season. Sampras sweeps Agassi for U.S. Open tennis title A day after the two young tennis greats knocked off the favorites," teenager Pete Sampras proved his : win over Lcndcl was no fluke when he defeated Andre Agassi in straight sets 6-4, 6-3, 6-2 to win the nation's top tennis prize and his first grand slam event. In so doing, he became the first American to win the open since John McEnroe last did it in 1984. A day earlier, Sampras met the giant gi-ant Ivan Lcndel (who had not failed Continued on 22 T 1 - :: l-r . re t r - -f SHOW SPECIAL ML : ' Jk, Ofckr Non? rf |