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Show D, Scoreboard D4 the Sunday, September 27, 1992 Daily Herald irae Utah NOTABLE QUOTES: "Kordell (Stewart) just wasn't sharp. He wasn't 100 percent. Under the circumstances, I wanted to back off and give (Koy) Detmer a chance. I was real pleased with the job Detmer did, but I'm not at all disappointed in Kordell." Colorado coach Bill McCartney after freshman Koy Detmer rallied Colorado in the second half for the second straight week. The Buffs beat Iowa 2 with Detmer throwing three TD passes. 28-1- NOTABLE QUOTES II: "I'm the No. 2 quarterback and Kordell is No. 1. I'm happy with this role." Detmer when asked if there is a quarterback controversy. "I couldn't do what I wanted to do. At the half, I said, 'Go ahead and throw in Koy.'" Stewart, who was hampered by a sprained foot. By DREW DANIELS Herald Correspondent easy win over Oregon fl yard touchdown pass from Frank 36-ya- rd incom-pletio- ki 3. Gar-rett- ce 34-ya- sessions. The first TD came on a Both teams exchanged punts Wilthe end of the first quarter to Dolce from through pass liams with less than five minutes .and most of the second until the Utes put together another three-pla- y gone in the game. The Utes' second possession came as a result of touchdown drive. Pierre an Oregon State fumble on their Jones carried for four yards. Dolce own line. completed a pass to Henry Lusk, TD pass Dolce completed a pass to Wil- and then tossed a liams for four yards, then handed to Williams to put the Utes up 2 1 0 off to Keith Williams for 10 yards, with 3:47 in the half. and finally passed to Greg Hooks The Ute defense held the Beafor 22 yards and the touchdown. vers to 126 yards total offense inThe Utes were up 14-- 0 mid-wa- y cluding a negative four yards passing. through the first quarter. first eight passes for 127 yards and n two touchdowns. His first came with 13:06 remaining in the second quarter. Dolce finfor 257 yards. ished the half 45-1- 9 Nice stats for a game, let alone a half. Dolce's main target was Sean Williams who caught the first pass of the game for 20 yards and two touchdown passes after that. Williams finished the half with seven receptions for 127 yards. Utah scored on its first two po- - Dolce to freshman David to push the score to 28-Utah SALT LAKE CITY The Ute defense scored in the turned in an explosive offensive fourth e quarter when Edwin effort and a solid defensive perand OSU an blocked punt formance in a 42-- 9 Derrick Odum recovered the ball win over Oregon State Saturday. in the end zone. Utah led 21-- 0 at the half and In the first half, the Utes were didn't allow the Beavers to score practically flawless except for one until when Jamie Burke kicked a harmless interception thrown by field goal in the third Dolce with less than one minute quarter. remaining in the first half. The The Utes answered with an 18- - Utah quarterback completed his rd 46-ya- rd 28-ya- rd -- Air Force , ..K f by New Mexico, TEEING IT UP: April Smith of 1991 Lobo upset AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. Air Force overcame a fourth quarter deficit behind two touchdowns from Obasi Onuo-h- a and one from Wayne Young to beat New Mexico 2 in a Western Athletic Conference thriller 20-poi- nt 33-3- Saturday. In winning. Air Force (3-- 1 overall, 1 WAC) avoided a second consecutive upset by the Lobos, who knocked the Falcons out of the last year's WAC race with a 34-3- 2 victory. It seemed New Mexico freshman sensation Winslow Oliver had put the game away less than two last-minu- te minutes into the fourth quarter when he ran 80 yards for his first collegiate touchdown, making the 0. score WEBER WINS: Jamie Martin threw for 547 yards and five touchdowns, four of them in the second half, as Weber State rallied from a halftime deficit to rout Montana State 9 Saturday night. Martin, the 1991 Walter Payton Trophy winner, completed 40 of 58 pass attempts as he fell just 77 yards short of his Division single-gam- e passing record of 624 yards. Nate Burchette and Dell Stilson were Martin's favorite targets, each pulling down eight catches for 130 and 77 yards, respectively. Weber improved to 2 in the Big Sky overall and Conference, while MSU fell to 2 overall and 1 in league play. 47-1- I-- 2-- 1- -1 9 a.m. College football, Oregon St. at Utah (KUED Channel 7) 10 a.m. College football, BYU at Hawaii I0:40 a.m. Auto racing (ESPN) 1 a.m. NFL, Broncoa at Browne (NBC Channel 2) ill a.m. NFL, Falcons at Bears (CBS a CJMnnel S) 11:30 a.m. Baseball, Cubs at Expos (WGN) ftoon. Sports Cavalcade (TNN) f2 p.m. NFL, Dolphins at Seahawks (NBC) f ftJ p.m. Senior PGA, Nationwide Championship Tournament (ABC Channel 4) p.m. Auto racing (PSN) p.m. Bseball, Braves at Padres (TBS) vs. 1:30 p.m. Davis Cud )ennls,Sweden 'i. i I (ESPN) - p.m. Sports CavaloaoeNN) p.m. NFL, 49ers at Saints (TNT) p.m. norse racing, super Demy xw PN) p.m. Shooting (ESPN) to p.m. college football, N.c. St. at r Carolina (PSN) i: .f Monday f10 a.m. College football, Arizona at kfnl (PSN) 12:10 p.m. Baseball, ft Pirftes at Cubs N) Cclleoa soccer (PSN) p.m. Sportscentral (KSL 1160 AM) 32-1- 2. But the running of Onuoha and Young and a series of mistakes by the Lobos put Air Force back into the game. 1 1 BYU Utah New Mex. 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 3 1 3 0 3 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 Wyoming Colo. St. 0 0 0 0 0 Saturday's games Air Force 33, New Mexico 32 UCLA 35, San Diego State 7 Wyoming 26, Louisville 24 Colorado State 17, LSU 14 Utah 42, Oregon State 9 Wash. State at Fresno State BYU at Hawaii Young fumbled and safety Carlton McDonald recovered on the New Mexico 3 1 . Four plays later Onuoha ran it in from the 1 1 andthe gap was closed to 32-2New Mexico ( l -- 3, 0-- 1 ) was only four plays into the next series when quarterback Stoney Case, about to be trapped, threw an pass that was picked off by Alex line. Armour on the Lobo Nine plays later Young plunged over for the tying score and Matt kick made it Glover's point-aft6. 37-ya- rd er 33-3- Onuoha, a junior run halfback, scored on a with :06 left in the game to close the gap to 175-pou- rd 1 1 32-1- 9. After the Lobos got the ball back on the kickoff, tailback Eric Bob Burns breathes a sigh of relief after barely making a par putt on the back nine Saturday. carded a sizzling 66 and is one shot back after two rounds of the Ben Hogan-Uta- h Classic. He Jeff Woodland withstands sEnootin' gallery at Mogan By ROD COLLETT Associate Sports Editor PROVO Several players took their best shots at Jeff Woodland Saturday in the second round of the $125,000 Ben Hogan-Uta- h Classic. But they couldn't knock the first round leader from atop the leaderboard. Bob Burns bogeyed two last four holes Saturday, of the ena- bling Woodland to retain the top spot at par 1 35 . the par-7over 6,950 Playing 2, yard Riverside Country Club course. Woodland, of Queensland, Australia, has strung to gether rounds of 67 and 68 to lead over Burns hold a 136. and Brian Kamm at Burns shot a second round 66 while Kamm carded a 67 over the slick greens, hardened by overnight temperatures below freezing. Woodland posted six birdies and two bogeys and managed to one-sh- p.m. just outside of Ashton, Idaho on Highway 20 was more than they ever dreamed. In a few shattered moments the lives of seven Lund family mem-- . bers hung on a set of miraculous events. Unconscious and helpless '"in the passenger seat.of their 1979 Suburban, Dave Lund learned hours later his children and wife, ' especially his wife, escaped death by burning after heroic efforts of a tall Eagle Scout, BYU basketball center Gary Trost. The Lunds had just finished fueling the car in Idaho Falls. Dave, a Nevada pharmacist, and son Dan were in his the front seat with Sheryl, who was driving. Daughters Holly, age seven; Jessica, nine; Melissa, 18; and ot 20-und- er withstand Burns' afternoon Kamm is no stranger to the top charge. rung. He was in third place with from Granada Hills, Calif., bird-ie- d nine holes left at the 1990 U.S. eight of the first 14 holes and Open at Hazeltine only to end up stood atop the scoreboard at in 30th place. Kamm led the before carding two bogeys 1991 Canadian Open after three coming in. rounds but finished eighth. Meanwhile, Kamm, of Tam(See HOGAN, Page D5) pa, Fla., staged his own mini- At one point. Burns, er lYU's Trostt Good guys do make great plays. Dave and Sheryl Lund of Las Vegas were headed for a summer home just miles outside of Yellowstone National Park on Aug. 8, 1992 planning one last late summer fling. What they encountered at 6:09 rally with four birdies the front nine and one on the back to pull within one shot of the lead. "We were making putts from everywhere," said Kamm who played with Woodland and Mike Putnam. "If you include all three of our rounds and Mike's 70, we were as a group. Nobody could beat that today. " h atNew Mexico's range tempt to get into field-gowas thwarted when McDonald intercepted a long pass. Air Force ran out the clock to clinch the victory. last-ditcal By JANE GIBSON Associated Press Writer - Joe LOUISVILLE, Ky. for touchtwo Hughes passed downs and Wyoming's defense shut down a final Louisville drive 4 as the Cowboys rallied for a 26-2- victory Saturday night. Hughes' touchdown 19-ya- pass to Ryan Yarborough at the start of the fourth quarter put Wyoming up 26-1Jeff Brohm awakened a sleeping Louisville offense with a nine-plascoring march culminated by an touchdown pass to Kevin Cook with 7:35 left in the game. Brohm had key runs of 10 and 22 yards on crucial third-dow- n situations during the drive. Trailing by two, Louisville's defense sacked Hughes for the eighth time and forced Wyoming to punt from deep inside its own territory. Ralph Dawkins returned the kick 0 29 yards to set up a at the Wyoming 27 for Louisville. 7. Because of the late start of the game, press deadlines prevented The Daily Herald from presenting coverage of the contest in today's edition. In previous years the change to Daylight Savings Time in Utah has allowed some coverage of this late contest between the Cougars and Rainbows. This year there is a four-hotime difference between Honolulu and Provo. The Daily Herald will have a game story and commentary from sports editor Dick Harmon, the most complete print coverage of the game available in the state in Monday's edition. y, 87-ya- rd 1 first-and-1- Louisville had key runs by Dawkins and Brohm to set up a with two minutes first-and-go- al left. But Wyoming's defense held then tacDawkins for a kled him for losses of two and three yards. Brandon Brookfield's field goal came with 58 seconds left, and Wyoming ran out the clock. 23-ya- rd comes up with a truly great play Dick r 2. Wyoming stops late drive to edge Louisville, 26-2- 4 Herald PhotoJennifer Grigg 2-- 0-- 1 Fresno St. San Diego St. Air Force 2-- 155-pou- fifth-plac- 2 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 3 1 2 1 0 1 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 Hawaii Associated Press Writer 155-pou- BYU's women's golf team, fresh e finish at the off a Oregon invitational, will sign in at the Dick McGuire invitational in Albuquerque Monday morning. Coach Gary Howard has shuffled his lineup for the McGuire to include sophomore Robin Ziola, Richmond, British Columbia, and freshman Doreen Ng of West Malaysia. Playing at the top of his ladder again will be juniors Lisa Christie and Anna Sralla and sophomore Eve Sutter. Conf. AHOamea WIT WLT By WARD MARCHANT colors were different, though. Smith played for Seneca High School of South Carolina, and Price for Chamblee High of Georgia. It was the first time two women played against each other in a varsity high school game in South Carolina. Smith became the first of her sex to play varsity football in the state. Coach Tom Bass recruited Smith for the Friday night game when he learned Chamblee had Price. Smith, a three-spo- rt star at Seneca, would be used only when Price entered the game. On the first play of the second quarter, they met shoulder pad to shoulder pad. Smith, a defensive back, collided with Price, wide receiver. a Moot-9- , Thfcy didn't want to hit each other. They wanted a shot at the boys. Seneca won 48-- GOLFERS AT MEET: 33-3- 2 Falcons avoid repeat met Sara Price at a football game and both were wearing helmets and football pads. Their uniform ACCOMPLISHMENT: Don Davey got something accomplished before he was released by the Green Bay Packers. His nominee was named the NFL's Teacher of the Month for September. Gary Drohman of Lincoln High in Manitowac, Wis., learned he had received the honor the day before Davey, a defensive end, got his bad news. "I'm glad I got a good education so I have something to fall back on," Davey said. "That's the. message the NFL is trying to send out with this program." Davey had a 3.45 grade point average at Wisconsin where he earned bachelor and masters degrees in mechanical engineering. Drohman gets a $2,500 grant, and Lincoln High gets $5,000. squeezes Harmon Sports Editor Heather, 14, were in the back seats. All but Sheryl and one.Of the girls were asieep. "Sheryl just finished answering a question from one of her daughters when she noticed a three-to- n potato truck approaching. Within seconds, the driver of the truck turned in front of the Lund vehicle, apparently making a left turn toward a side road. Sheryl was going approximately 50 miles an hour and was standing on the brake pad. She yelled "Oh, no!" And she turned her head as the Suburban collided head-o- n with the truck hauling a load of potatoes. The Lund vehicle, its front end buckled like an accordion, ca- reened off the roftd and into a barrow pit, smashing into a block of lava rock. Flames danced from the engine, which was exposed under a gaping, jagged hood. The impact shoved the shock absorbers near the frQnj axle back to. the firewall as the engine nearly came through into the front seat. was trapped. The steering . Sheryl ' wheel was jammed 10 inches from the front seat, pinning her inside, breaking her ribs and pelvis, shattering her right heel and fracturing bones in her upper and lower left . leg. She was fully conscious, but headed for intensive care. Dave, who was not wearing his seat, belt, was thrown against the dashboard, rendering him uncon- scious, breaking four ribs and fracturing his hip. His injuries later required a plate and 14 screws in surgery. . Holly, who was asleep with pillows and blankets, was unhurt. Jessica had a lacerated head and eye. Blood was gushing from the wound. Melissa was thrown so hard against the front seat she broke her leg just above the ankle. Later the fracture required three screws. Heather had a serious puncture wound above her eye brow. It penetrated her cranium. She was bleeding profusely. The injury would render her comatose for four days. Daniel was thrown against the dash, his legs ramming against the floorboard. His foot became entangled on the gas pedal, dislocating his hip. A radio cassette hit him in the buck of the head, cutting him. A quarter-inc- h deeper and the wound would have killed him, doctors said later. The engine was on fire. Daniel cried out about the increasing heat as flames continued to bound in front of him. Just 10 seconds behind the Lunds, Trost did not see the impact free-saili- of the two vehicles. He and his wife. Sheri, were passengers in a vehicle driven by Sheri's brother, David Clark. The Trosts had just finished riding horses and David was taking them to see a bull. David did not take his regular route, but for an unexplained reason went the long way, adding about a quarter of a mile to the trip. d They ran smack into the accident scene . d Trost saw the Suburban off the road. Dave pulled over. Sheri, a registered nurse, joined the trio and they approached the Lund car. Merlin Hansen, operating a combine nearby, also ran to the scene. Motorist Brian Loosli also appeared. ' "I approached the vehicle and it was eerie and quiet," remembers Trost. "Then I heard a sickening of the girls moan. I saw in the back seat and my heart sank through my stomach." David, a volunteer fireman in terror-wracke- c'ream-colore- the-head- s . l (See HARMON, Page D5) V |