Show -- - c10-'1"-I- - - f - - - - - - - - - - w r It ' t - i — - -- I - For' Sports Scores Call ELgi7511 or 111 la t 51 o t § t I i giro 00 47 IL Fi nn 111 e : 0 - - Section ft It I (1' f - For Sports' Score - Ccd1 ELg'in ' 1 S'-75-11 I 1 it Salt Lake City Utah — Sunday Morning — October 121958 S Page One I $ Y4A X) 0 )0 5 If ' Ptr anhaa lc aliforni tt t es He ski 11 1 1 s 3ts 21 1111 4 Utes Rally Late to Close Gap 10 41k - -- - ' - tti i T -- t I i''4 It r hf John Mooney '? ''''''ii 4 9:: - 4t's t 1 t 1 - i': '' :4'-'- 'T - i ! z' 4 "You can't let bad breaks or injuries or special considerations sway you from doing what you believe to be basically sound You have to stick to your ideals and coaching philosophy even when you lose "You have to conquer the temptation to 'do something' when things don't work as planned You start scrambling and you're in trouble" The youthful coach added "I hate to lose as bad as anyione It hurts when you lose But you have to stick with what you believe to be sound If you lose your perspective and aims In favor of trying something as an emergency measure you mess up this year and also perhaps your future progress" -' I Future is iI ! t t ' ' '''' l- ' ' f?I - 44 '' 4 ' t 1 1 - - !I '''V Ve 44 Z e t - ' :' 1''''':' ' t IA : : ''' i- ' 4 io ' l'''' : ' ' ' ' Ikk f i--t P$1 'i ' i ialt tO '''' '" '"' t " '''''' r 0' :?: AK ': ' ' - - :cr :'' :' f' ' ' 'I I c J ' ' - 1 ' t- t 44 "In maybe this year we hope to win some football games some good ones before the snow files But basically Alums Lead ' - ) Ft ' 0-- i '!' ' :P For "aims f i - ot 0 il ti - 11 :: - '' ' i i iCaruso ' ' e 4 I- - tv i ''''t '' '' :'" " i i 1 '4 3' ' ' - '- f ''' 0 4 41 - k- ':' ''' -- '" - I'1 ' -- ' - ' ' ' ''''' 4 i :" t li -' ' :''34- - 4! z : ? 4 - 1 r 9P U f ' j: ::f 0 it 1'4'1 - - — !' ): - : ' 33 yards and a Ute touchdown Saturday in the 4th quarter Mickey Caruso Ute center comes in to I H t' ':' -I ( If over-al- l 1 tl 1 ''410 :P - rsVI- ts:-- 414f rt - viapp d t ' - ' -- A - -- 7 4 li N' ' if 1 ' 4- ''''- 'iNQ ) well-know- - - : ''' -- I ': k t lb 1 : J 11 '' — :17 46 i ‘ 'k ' - STATISTICS i g First downs ce Rushing yardage yardage 1 " Passing Passes Passes Intercepted bY Punts Fumbles lost A 1 Yards penalized ----I- - it- - 4' ft- ' w E And when Nagel In contrast to Utah's last Skyline football appearance in Calnot but will too the be far time when Utah distant ipionship fornia when the Utes arrived will be playing the best in the nation and beating a lot of at Los Angeles Coliseum way them early and were On the field ' "We're sticking with our plans that's all despite these warming up before the UCLA Bruins started to arrive Nagel breaks In the long run it will pay off I am sure" Nagel was the epitome of calm as he added led the Utes into the stadium just as he had planned the trip Considering that the starting lineup for Utahagainst fornia included just one man in the forward wall who had weeks ago started a game all last year Nagel's progress has been re- - Nagel also attended an rally with athletic di- rna rkable 'rector Bud Jack Friday night and then returned to catch the Observation Ward last of the UCLA-Floridfoot ball broadcast "I tarted to These rumors about Casey Stentsers retirement must have watch a TV'movie felt sleepy' boast started by sloven American League managers and Fred See pa Col 3 Haney of Milwaukee —Awsoclated Joe Kapp California's fine quarterback goes for a first down deep in the University I brings easily Nagel Lauds Bear Ace After Shelling ' Special to The Tribune sharper and more aggressive EERKELEY- CALIF — "In than last year Joe Wapp is a my opinion "THAT PITCH out is the real AllAmerican" Ray Nagel summed it up after the game hardest play in football to de"He handles the option play fense and Cal executes it well "Our outstdnding 'player as well as any quarterback I've seen I couldn't take my was pick White at end Peterson his ankle which eyes off him Cal is a - "I thought played well 206 BTU 5 —159 141 14 215 1 0 4 2 105 there were times those last two quar- was magnificent In the first half He raced 48 yards Bass Preu Wireohoto of Utah's secondary as Larry Wilson him down Kapp starred as Bears won cop 17 ters became as suspenseful as a Bardot with a bathtowel despite the large difference in the score tz -- 30-4- Grosseup for a touchdown on a pitchout from Herman quarterback °rend& with 9:35 left in the opening quarter He then split wide around his left end and carried over r to make it a for the Tigers — 8-- ON THE ENSUING kickoff Keith Hubbs fumbled and "He ois as good a passer as Henry Wallace was right there there is in college ball but to recover it for the Tigers on things can go wrong with a the COP 24 Bass immediately passing game I felt we gained rolled for 20 yards but it took a little momentum as the three more plays for Jack game went on but &here's n9 Larscheld to buck it over with team has been hurt since before question in anyone's mind I 8:01 to play in the quarter The third touchdown came that will do real well in the BM Monk Bailey I believe am sure that the better team won" coach Nagel added PCC this year I think Cal Is has a charley horse Col 1 See page S-'well-coache- d hard-hittin- ' 2 Ilere's Who Won and Lost in Saturday's Football Scromble I -- - t e 36 Army 21 BYU Colo State U 6 Notre Dame Utah 28 Texas 3 15 Ohio State New t Mexico 31 Wyoming 1 14 Illinois Utah State 14 Oregon State 0 Oklahoma : 04 East Princeton 20 Pennsylvania 14 Penn State 40 Marquette 8 Maine 14 New Hampshire 0 Columbia 13 Yale 0 Dartmouth 20 Brown 0 Harvard 20 Lehigh 0 Colgate 7 Sucknell 0 Boston U36 Weat Virginia 30 Muhlenberg 21 Temple 18 Villanova 7 Detroit 0 arrtilton 20 Wagner 13 Williams 31 Middlebury 0 Lafayette 7 Delaware Syracuse 55 Cornell 0 Vermont 44 Hobart Tufts 20 Trinity 6 Rutgers 23 Richmond Connecticut 28 42 12 Massachusetts 14 Rhode Island 52 Brandeis 22 Amherst 34 Bowdoin 0 South Texas A&M 14 MarOand 10 Virginia Tech 22 Virginia 13 Georgia Tech 21 Tennessee 7 Witilam and Mary 6 Virginia Military 6 Wake Forest 13 North Car- olina State 7 ø4 Duke 12 Saylor 7 " North Carolina 6 South Carolina 0 Franklin and Marshall 14 Washington and Lee 13 Mississippi State 28 Memphis State 6 Clemson 12 Vanderbilt 7 Auburn X Kentucky 0 Georgia 14 Florida 8tate 13 Louisville 27 Murray State 0 Alabama 29 Furman 6 Missippi 19 Tulane Tampa 20 Ark 4n3as State 14 66 first time since the last games of the 1954 season the Golden Bears had won straight games For Utah the two that two the sive game was the third succesdefeat It also was the sec 11 2 19 13 Midwest Army 14 Notre Dame 2 Ohio State 19 Illinois 13 Navy 20 Michigan 14 Pitts- State 22 Mirhigan burgh 8 Kansas 7 Iowa State 0 Southern Methodist 32 Mis- sour! 19 k'lliconsin 31 Purdue Northwestern 7 Minnesota 3 Cincinnati 14 Xavier 8 Montana State 33 North Dakota State 20 Iowa 34 Indiana 13 Mich State 22 Northwestern 8 Minnesota 14 33 Miami Kent (Ohio) State 0 Kansas State 23 Nebraska 6 Ohio U 27 Dayton 8 Baldwin Wallace 26 Wittenberg 6 Valparaiso 37 Depauw 0 BmAiing Green 40 Western Michigan 6 Southwest Texas 15 Oklahoma 14 Tulsa 24 Oklahoma State 16 Rice 24 Arkansas 0 Arizona State (Flagstaff) 37 Laverne 0 ALAwC04000foAiti-—o- k 7 Wash state 8 4 3 Christian Texas 26 Eastern Omaha New Mexico Texas 74 C Houston 44 Wichita 0 North Texas State 42 Drake 0 Texas Western 29 West Texas State 12 West California 36 Utah 21 Wyoming 28 Oregon State 0 Air Force Academy 36 Colo-fact- o Slate 6 Washington Cate At40goe-o- with Grosscup's passing a 74yard - dr ive the air in the closing of the third period Grosscup quarterback sneaking over after a pass play to Larry Wilson set d the scoring chance Bob Mastelotto th speedy threaded his way 32 yards for a touchdown in the fourth period and Monk Bailey closed out the Utah scoring after Jack Settl recovered a fumble on the California 11- halfback stripe yard BAILEY the second the line SLICED oVer in of two carries into It may have been justice that a fumble gave Utah its final chance to make the score more presentable or the rceord books because a Ute fum- the in ble first — quarter-too- k Idaho 0 - Utah the Wilson fumbled 47 on first down-- Bears wasted little the upstart In their place as Hank Olguin took a pitchout from Joe Kapp and raced 33 yards to the three The time Utes putting s Bill Patton boomed over for the tally with 11:20 left in the first period Kapp passed to Jack Hart for the two points and an ': 8-- advantage Utah moved near the mid- field stripe twice more in the first period but bogged Two bad punts also kept the pressure on the Redskins California- drove to the Utah 25 and Utah 36 for two pene- trations braced A to but fell back as Utah hold good punt return by 01- - guin set up the Bears' second score The speedy halfback ran Pete Haun's punt from the California 38 to the Utah 48 and in 11 plays the Bears punched over with Patton going over guard from the three KAPP THE clever running this sparked quarterback drive with his keepers and pitchouts The big gain was 10a pass to Jerry Lundgren for yards 16-- 22 12 Colorado College 7 Colorado Mines 6 Stanford 22 Washington 12 Idaho State 26 Adams State 0 New Mexico UM 27 Western State 24 New Mexico 34 Utah State 14 Oregon 25 Southern California 0 College of Pacific 26 Brigham to Hart on the gave the Bears a midway in the second 14 State (Tempe) 6 Colorado 65 Arizonti lead period Counting two punts the Utes had the ball on offense only 14 plays in the second the Bears dominated period the play However the Utes made-the- ir best scoring effort in the half midway into the second period as Lee Grosscup passed to Monk Bailey on a screen pass which covered 39 yards to the California 11 as Young 8 Hardin-Simmo- after receiving before 0 conversion Washina ton Tennessee Tech 0 Lee sparked through minutes Kapp's pass Idaho 20 Georgia Tech 21 Stanford Pittsburgh Navy Michigan thusly: quarters 40-50- ? Air Force 34 For California It was the second victory in a row and and constantly were being nalized Their defense was ratie and incohesive College of Pacific even with tempts Its first unit back in the game kickoff couldn't score in the last two on the 1 - 26 8 2 Utah right out of the contest pe Utah underdogs The fired-uershredded the Bear forward wall for 17 yards in three at- : 0- yards during the game Every one of BYtra penalties hurt the Cats and often served as a demoralizing factor COP amassed 206 yards on the ground and a game total of 347 BYU had a net total of 173 during the fray ALTHOUGII IT was too 4I: late by that time the Cougars Ad '' clearly outplayed COP in the final two periods Their de tense suddenly became solid A a and their offense sparkled But the Cats played a give- 'Vb 4 away kind of game in the first half They fumbled stumbled i' i 1 1 " - : - 1P": 0 4- i I r sk it ib : COP penalized 1 2 the 235 -- : itl' pit " '"' ''' 36 lost 43 - 1 11 44 7 ir i w - ' " California bY 135-yar- i1 I 20 200 72 104 f try to assist as Charlie Johnson and Roland Is& ker of Cal try to stop the speedy Utes' haLfback I fah Calliornia Iti 153 touch to shove vet- - three quick touchdown i lit a frantic drive that saw Coach Pete Elliott rush his regulars back in to stern tide —Associated Press Wirenhoes I 1' Yards :f'd 9 - first three the First downs Rushing vardass Peastng wartlase Passes Passes intercepted Punts nimble' - inter- - STATISTICS ' I over i e i i lima ill - - ' ks 4 i ''' J k I 1 '11 F-- S1 Lasket 4 1 9 ''' - ?: r' 77 "1: tie :4ii 1:ittiiJ it - 1 fn I' 1 - " 'n 1:: A 4 4t V 1 - 'k- 36-2- 1 quarters THEN THE Redskins hope lessly out of the ball game suddenly round their scoring : ' four-quart- onslaught for a football victory here Saturday afternoon The Bears who astonished — the West Coast by manhan- cluing Washington State a week ago took advantage of Utah mistakes- - fumbles and intercepted passes to pile up a 36-- i 1 desperation first three fought off sectional ' ' ' '!!' Utah's the then and quarters f A A i r points in 36 't i 0 to 11 :' 1- Mooney Sports Editor BERKELEY CALIF — Re- Tribune bounding California struck for 44 ' John 13y 411 1- ' 1 V ' : 4 S-- 41 t'4' ''- k ' v 5 - 0 I -- 'L i f 4 It ' e' ' -- I - : '''s '' : ' : i t ‘ -- ' 1 1 g we are trying to get our system with its blocking and tackling instilled in the players who will be helping 'us next Special to The Tribune year and the next year -' ' MEMORIAL STADIUM ArrstN51 "If we were to start scrambling If we were to junk our t:::::::!':''''' 41): )r4tose::7745 '4'' BERKELEY ''t'oe4Iti CALIF—Three 4i: I of offense in another of favor tilAstv'' the of 11011 i theory game I '''' t' philosophy !21 lc ) 41 I we might salvage a little something from this yeai but we teammates of one of Utah's ' t t exi ih rt g i 'st 5 te 0 kikpic be honest in trying to accomplish something for the brightest football eras led the go 0 ''44':frel"e01(' '"- - '''''''' 0 IP 1 $41 'Utah cheering section against 't - w t A 4!:4w'l ' "s "You can't build up a football power on makeshift measithe Bears '1g A:"--rN'"ter t tlk N: lotv t tires you have to go all out and start from the beginning T D (Spid0 Morris the be nature would of another defeating your Blackie Williams end the Anything tackle and Cal Boberg the hirta purpose and wasteful of a yex of time and manpower" t:- 414 t t quarterback for Ike Armstrong r 90“ I t i Had to Change Ideas Too it( i ft1t ' quite a few years ago were at I i)st t: 14 T ''101AL:0 loofsit 4 r the game Boberg lives in San 4 1 Nt'' ir '''''''' A Nagel has been tabbed as a "running coach" but he adds Francisco ti 4 i :4 tk i Williams and in 1 14 common had t a 'A lot in 'Remember I Was a college passer I ' bell'''e''''''pl t 4! t- Another Creek Utah Walnut : '' ii' 0 7 4: ''' ell It'lf with Grosscup in that I had been a passer who was inherited athlete Ernie Fallentine had 1 rt 13 71 t UCLA t he I came to L4 coach Red Sanderswhen a ci0044 i 4 4t) 1 JIS'IC by running 4 1 for the Stanford game ' t 7i t a had to change my thinking of the game and become a runner tickets 4 1 t ' 4 OiCartiSO had to miss the Utah inand '"' '' 5 ' ' ' Ipii A It r 1 l''ak I'M as well as a passer vasion N 4471414'117:1 th The only way I could make the UCLA team even though Williams youngest son is the 11!I 'lit z ket : '1 I supposedly was a veteran star was to come back as a de- top end on the USC frosh i ' ' : S e '7 "2: :Z '" ir::t 11 '1 ''''' fensive safety man i 47i squad Russ Morris Spide's i ':''''' 7 't) ' : az i ' '2 brother and a Salt 1 cl n wits° I we could but must remember that good Lake visitor has lost 53 'i 1' "I still ‘'' - "'41'"(1 pass 1 pounds t tN :II 03 receivers make a passer good' too and is checking everyone's 2 4 - — i— ' f ' — i—s calories 'e I was a lot better passer When I had Tom Fears Baldwin ti :ifk and Bob Wilkinson catching me you know A good receiver LOIS (Mrs! Sverre) Engen t1 f ' I 't I i now and then and attended the game as the uni- - i: will come up with the exceptional catch 1r t 1 the passer knows it That gives him confidence and makes versity's guest She's on- hand V ) I ' ‘ 4 him throw better to publicize the opening of : i 400' "Ski Fever" which : t "I CAN'T IMAGINE Grosscup throwing better last year their film in Francisco San this opens t: has this He a thus far is great passer the best than he year week — I have seen in the college ranks Also working In the press "But I can't see where we haven't been using Crosscut) box was Keith Ellis a tackle in After all we are leading the conference in passing What 1946-4- who is in the steel busimore can you ask?" ness He volunteered to help -' ''''1ge1 4 "We know that passing is an Integral part of the offense photographer Dick Thirlott 1 ' ' : ' We also feel that running and kicking game phases are just film the game ':1as important same as we believe the best offense in the rti: : The most relaxed person v?orld is no better than the defense going with it What good in Utah the football does it do you to score 4 a z444A points if you can't keep the oppo- - must have been coach party vtkiv Ray nent from scoring come 'I KNOW MY THINKING Is sound that the time willchamwhen Utah not only can beat BYU can win the -' 4 ''i ' ' ": - (" 1 and straight loss to California the Bears having whipped By Jack Schroeder' lege of Pacific to a 26-- vie- at halftime and then hung on course 52 of those yards came Utah 63-- 0 in 1920 in their only on the one big run early in other Tribune Sports Writer -tory over game MU here Sat- as the Cats came alive in the meeting the game STOCKTON CALIF — The urday night before 25473 fans second half scored once in California Bass lugged the ball 12 times The COP Tigers rolled up a IT WAS A weird game at the great Dick Bass every ounce first period and twice in total and en times with incessant 'penalties of his 189 pounds a constant gigantic 20-- first quarter lead for a the second and third in rollthreat carried powerful Col managed to stretch it to 26-average of 113 per carry Of some times becoming ridicu- Ing away to victory lously monotonous College of Utah's three touchdowns in Pacific was penalized 130 yards and BYU 105 for a total of the last 20 minutes came Rah-Rah- s ' g ' ) P Coasts toVictory Over BY11 C r k - tl - - e Ira ‘ y i 't 4A F i Itt - i 1 i 'i A " 1 ' '' ' t t margin ' - ' ' ' t 1 't 4: eV11 k t ! 41 1 i''' ::1 cill 1 "' i 2: 11 ' N ''0 1 ' 44 i :':: ' t 1'"''' 4 ' Johnson' — !t '4'''": i ' ' '?e-- - '4 i ir - ' 1 "ii ' - '''- T ' " - - ' 110 ' t I ' i i ' '14 I44 tNi ' ': ) 4: ' ' :Pt '4''1v- t '7 i'' - 4 ' o'''- A f- '' t't '''i t -- f 4 $ rt- 1 : '''tv' :i - ! t V' asteiotto - '- 1 - : '' t '' :'4'''' :1 ‘ 7 B ob M 1 t f ' e'l ' - - ?'' A V: t l'' ri' 4 tt r' 1: ' ‘ 4 The conversation swung along these lines when someone ' Mentioned that another coach plagued by a losing season switched his midseason ' and in offense his personnel' junked around in an effort to "get something started" Utah's halfback Bob Mastelotto eluded all of these California Golden Bears and sprinted for "COACHING IS A BUILDING proposition" Nagel said ntaterial hand that to at to the "You try adapt your thinking which you inherited while you try to instill your thinking pro- At Berkeley theories and manpower into the picture over a three-yea"No coach unless he is lucky In having a good backlog of returning material can be expected to accomplish much in his first year or two This is true espeeially if the recruiting system has broken down and the manpower reservoir is low or drained A '' - - 4 I 4 - - l '' - 4 Important gram - ' ' ei e I I ‘ ' N - ! : -- it: (ii 4 i ' ":- d thusly: ' t- I' 114 1 t 0:4: - 1" 1 7 '7 16 4- - k k ' 4 it "- ' t i k ::- t 4 4 t 4t ir Tribune Sports Editor Wilkinson school of ISAGEL OF THE RED Sanders-Buthe believes he but will throw ground game is the thinking safest most sure way to get yourself touchdowns and keep the enemy from scoring touchdowns Nagel answers the question about modifying his offense - i I i BERKELEY CALIF—There are those who have voiced the question as to why Coach Ray Nagel didn't forget his offensive system and pattern his offense after Jack Curtice's passing attack just for this year to take advantage of Lee Grosscups throwing Curtice of course built his offense around Grosscup and when Lee was having a good day and the receivers were catching him the Utes gave some impressive offensive shows e L c ' 1 Sports Mirror ( ' !Tilt 1:2 - I i t i smeared for yards attempting to pass Grosscup Arizona 15 was See rage 12 4 O 10-01- S-- Col e - ' I |