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Show Thursday, August "I have been trying to get that change for 25 years. In all my years in college football I felt like It was an unfair rule. I felt like it was a severe penalty and from mid-fiel- d on was a touchdown penalty. I felt like when tne year was up, if it is a free ball when we - Page any different than we have in the past." studied the penalties, that cut and the guy gets fooled and comes up on a curl and out. "He may grab him then, but it is just a spot foul anyway. I can think of no worse way to lose a game than have a penalty and have the ball put on the line on a judgement call." That says a lot for LaVell Ed yard penalty. I don't think the coaches wiU take advantage of the rule. Itr is like Don says, you've got to catch them to do something to them. That is when you get beat, if you can't catch them. If there is a penalty it will be where a guy will run maybe a 10 or 12 yard cut, bring it out and if there is a flagrant the rule that could make severe or if the high have a flagrant clause, answered: don t have a clause in is no more than the 15- - Asked clause in it more school's Edwards "They there. It wards because BYU, of all teams, rould stand to lose more than gain by the new rule. But when the chips were down. LaVell voted for what he bebeves is the good of the majority instead of personal greed. LaVell Edwards is a coaching legend. 50-ya- jgz: x there ought to be maybe at least 70 or 80 percent against the defense and at least 10 or 20 percent against the offense, and it was more like 98 percent against the defense and two percent against the offense. "All of those severe penalties and judgement calls. I have worked hard personally to try and get coaches to go to the High School Federation Rules. I finally got a great passing coach on the ir rules committee called LaVell Edwards and he supported it. That really helped. We wanted to trv to take the severity out of the call." The press asked if they thought coaches would have their defensive people take advantage of the rule by tackling the receiver if they were beaten or if the pass was in the end zone? James said. "No.. ..I am not going to go out and teach a player to grab someone if he gets beat. Usually when you are beat, you can't grab em. They are too far away trom you." Oklahoma State coach Jimmy Johnson who has since moved to 1 think one Miami, said: thing has to be realized, too. That is 15 yards and the first down is a severe penalty. It is not the and first down like the old rule but it is severe. I don't think wimlc coach defensive players Ml! rrjv , .i (V . II Vf V III. Li I I on- - v. x V VV v , ' Au,-,ran- DODGE $12,995 i i 4X4 '84 34 c Ton Pickup. it i 50 w PLYMOUTH $12,430 $1 4X4 plus much more. Auto-tran- 1 1,435 1,545 '84 DODGE $1 1 514,535 J1 CHRYSLER T 2975 '84 Ton- - P- - DODGE 1,735 trans., s 12 10,435 V8 $Sf95 New Yorker. Front wheel drive. KI 7995 Ton Heavy Duty. 4 sp. trans. - UNDER THE SAMS ' L. J a I'm a Texas guy who had my best days playing against Dallas. I came into the pros as a ball carrier, but ft 1 fHRYSLEK J3UUO) t 1 V F4L si (c) 1984 NEA, Inc. FREEDS IN SALT LAKE CITY nH ntwi wi jo jaqunui aa t J3AWMJ 301 iniia-,- . OKU.' jo Sqi JO J I M I V Mft OWNERSHIP AS v became more famous as a pass receiver. I caught more passes than Don Maynard or Raymond Berry. OJJ W-2- WAS $12,465 Fury. Loaded with extras. '84 KJ DODGE m ANY OTHER NEW UNITS TO CHOOSE FROM ; !' op- - wTs$,2,457 W-3- 50 m K , tfl le Baron Wagon, loaded with many luxury much more. ' v8 engine plus s CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 15,245 s1 1 ft ' WAS '84 : '84 "Vv--,v- flu. i j .V?g J'' : '84 p -- : New Yorker. Loaded with many luxury options. WAS $17,224 $ V V'V 84 CHRYSLER V 5THAV1. I1 li-- S' WHO AM I? 61A Coaching Legend' in His Own Prime LaVELL: A (Continued from Page 59A) THE HERALD, Provo, Utah 30. 1384, til w ' . '. .- - iiV , il.J ! tmeatm tto .--J t fad rURVIFR Vhimnnffi nnrlrwTmrkc Lm 701 South Main I. Spanish Fork 798-354- 1 3 'TPS. tr I 1 |