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Show Saturday, September 27, 1939 DESERET NEWS, m X w w " A- I i - i UvaK' t 3 t f ' - i'V 06 WjtJ I I It ' " . , . . , "t ;X V S 4 - , 4 , . M. $ m - rf,4 - ', 1 ' ; ' , 'Tf.V '" -- tLr Mi w i jrdii0t rrWv'u-m - tyji i & i "1 'V -- J . - ' v, . V V ! J ! 't '7 IV '4,. jI f Tx fci ip' t VA iTvC.' 1 l I; t'.W-- : .. fjr!k v VXX JfT!Sri. z ST r? i f V r- - z1 ". '' v ,, ' ' ( . 'I 4! ,! lz h Winless South High Cubs Grab First Victory From East Leopards ,y" OXr . ' l. ' 5 ' A i- - 1 the scoreboard when quarter-- , back Jim Kilgore rolled to his right, faked a handoff, cut back to the middle and rambled 88 yards to a score. Detlef Galke added the PAT, and with 6:45 left in the third quarter, South trailed by Early in the fourth quarter South took the lead when soccer style kicker Galke eased a By BRENT CHECKETTS Deseret News Sports Writer Maybe fickle old fate isnt entirely against Coach Roger Burt South High School Cubs after all. The South crew, loser of three close, exciting ball games so far this season, turned the tables Friday afternoon by nabbing a thrilling 10-victory over the East Leopards. The fart that it was Souths homecoming made the win especially sweet for the Cubs, who have tost to Davis, Skyline and Layton by a total of 'm' 9-- m T y f i far ! I xSSV5' ft,. fT1. I nine points. After those heartbreaking ... After the first half Friday, it didnt look like the Cubs were even going to come close this time let alone win. East used a strong running game to grind out a tot of yardage and time in waltzing to a 0 lead at the rest Phillies Joyous Met fans who followed their team to Philadelphia came home happy when Mets beat 5-- 0, Quarterback Jim Kilgore was instrumental in South's exciting homecoming win Friday over the East Leopards. good with the boot. 9-- t"m period. The Leopards scored the t st first time they had the ball when Paul Taggart booted a field goal after a sustained drive had stalled on the d South Sew york (upiy -a make the Mets the surprise team in baseball this season. The guy who summed it up best was shortstop Bud I dont who said, know how he did it with the crew he had to work with. Hodges had one of the finest 2 pitching combos in baseball in Tom Seaver and Jerry Koosman and two solid hitters in Cleon Jones (injured during much of the stretch run) and Tommie Agee. But the rest of the club didnt seem to be the kind that wins pennants. usual, the spoils went to the victors Friday. And baseballs biggest victor In 1969 has been Gil Hod-ge- s, the manager of the New York Mets who proved this year that nice guys can finish first. Har-relso- n, 1-- day In which two of trie clubs who finished behind the Mets, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia, were making managerial changes, the Mets signed Hodges to a three-ye- 'Qn a ar contract. Ron will receive $70,000 year under the terms of the podges a" after infield, pact year ago Hodges was in a hospital bed after suffering a heart attack but he made a remarkable comeback from file - illness and his patient handling of the club helped Gil Hodges . new Mel contract Santo once cracked looking at the Met I wouldnt i'lay that infield in Tacoma. But that Met infield will be in the playoffs while the Chicago Cub infield will end the Thursday. Through Hodges careful pla-- season next t By JAY LIVINGOOD Deseret Staff Writer v LAYTON Experience bowed the way Friday afternoon as a tough Layton High eleven ran rough shod over a greener Viewmont High 28-The win keeps Layton hot on file heels of division leading Davis High in Division Two. Using their pro type audible signal calling from the line, Layton racked up a pair of scores early in the first period and then coasted to victory. Gordon Eckerlsey crossed the goal line on a sweep for picked up some gooJ. blocking and moved nearly twenty yards for the TD. Laytons Val Hinze had a well oiled leg as he scored four PATs with kicks splitting the uprights. offense. The Lancers continued their domination of the game in the second period as Eckersley plowed over the tackle spot from six yards out. Final score of the game came in the third period as Eckersley took a swing pass from Dik Strong. Strong mount a throughout was unable to threat scoring the ball game, while Layton had several possible scoring passes fall incomplete in the fourth stanza. Line score: Viewmont 0 Layton 14 0 7 0 0 0 7 0 28 Judge Nearing Title . By TOM WHARTON Deseret News Sports Writer UNION One can excuse Judge fans for shouting Here come the Judge Friday afternoon because that is exactly what the Bulldogs were doing. After off the knocking Brighton Bengals, 14-Judge needs one more win to qualify for the state championships in the Gass A Division. 'The Bulldogs may not get that berth in the next two weeks, however, because they have to take on giants Granite and Hillerest in consecutive Region Three games. Coach Gil Cordova isnt worried however. He says that Judge would rather play the better teams because they play better when the going gets tough. The Bulldogs showed signs of promise, Friday, as quarterback Mike Vaculin connected for two touchdowns against the Bengals. Vaculin hit Jeff Hansen in the first half for a 16 yard touchdown and then hit sophomore Gary Barber on a screen and Barber raced down the field 76 yards for a second half score. Judges miscues could have hurt them, though. The Bullsix times. dogs fumhled Brighton scored when a center that flipped over punters head was Jim Gonzalez downed in the end zone for a safety. offense was worth a nickle Joe Nichol that is. Nichol, a sophomore Brightons halfback, carried the ball most of the time for Brighton and was able to grind off good gains in doing so. Judge got good defensive and offensive play from halfback Kevin Gully. Gully ran the ball 8 times for 38 yards and made 19 tackles. Brighton coach Dean String-hasaid that his young team is improving with age. We have very little experience on this team and the players just cant take advantage of other teams mistakes, lamented Stringham. The young Bengals have only carried six seniors on this years squad. - m Barry's NBA, ABA 'Football' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The winter of 1969-7may be another long one for basketball star Rick Barry. In all probability, legal court maneuverings will again keep him off the hardwood courts during the next campaign which swings into high gear in a few weeks. -Only two years ago, Barry spent a season on the sidelines in order to comply with a court injunction sought by and granted to the San Francisco 0 Warriors. ' Now in a turnabout, it is the National Basketball Association team which is seeking a ruling "that would permit play this season. The latest salvo in the Barry to world of Rick Barry was fired Friday when U.S. Dist. Judle Gerald S. Levin ruled that Barry cannot play for any team except the Washington Capitols of the rival American Basketba'l Association. The legal war started 'our weeks ago when Barry signed r a rich contract with his old San Francisco team feeling he was free and clear of any obligation to move to the East with the Capitols. Attorney - sportsman M. Foreman purchased the Oakland the team Oaks, g five-yea- Earl Barry had left the Warriors to join two seasons ago, and transferred the franchise to Washington with the understanding that the star would make the journey high-scorin- g east Barrys lawyers, however, argued that his three-yea- r contract with the ABA was an agreement to play in Oakland, not in Washington. The decision Friday by merely extended a temporary injunction granted ear- -' lier to the Caps. Mors court of the legal variety action is likely since the order is in effect only until the issue is determined by a (urt of law. Le.-i- ROBINSON, ILL. Bob Goalby fired a 71 Friday and maintained a one stroke lead in the Robinson Open Golf Gassic. Goalby had a fist day total of 62, a course record, in the $75,000 tournament to give him a 36 hole total of 133. His nearest competition is Richard Martinez, who shot a 69 Friday to go with his Thurs- Goalby had a first day total When By STEVE HALE Deseret News Staff Writer Goalby Shoots 71 (UPI) -- Allen Gehrke blocked the PAT Jdcl: attempt. East had a couple more yo0pys ... ' The By HAL KNIGHT Deseret News Staff Writer Murray, a conn loser in came alive in its first contest Friday and favored Jordan 44-- SANDY sistent games, league bombed . 6. The rout came on the arm of junior quarterback Dave Hansen who fired passes of 13, 7 and 58 four winless games and three quarters of scoreWith behind Highs Dee less football him, Scott Olympus took his frustrations out on the ball Friday, booting a e field goal to down late-gam- West, 34). Scott, whose earlier try for was wide, stood on the 25 at an angle, took a practice kick with 6:02 left in the game, then booted the ball high and long. a three-point- er the officials arms to indicate a score, shot up pandemonium Olympus slue dium. Coach and his Titan broke loose on of the West staWayne Startin crew swarmed the slender kicker and carried him off the field. it was a smashing defensive s. game, featuring several West halfback Ted Crawford swpt around left end, slammed past three would-b- e tacklers, and raced 50 yards before he was pulled down from behind on the nine. West got two shots at field near-misse- CLEARFIELD Gear-field- s Falcons tried everyand including tackle, but were still unable to step the powerful Eagles of Skyline High Friday in a 264) slaughter on the Falcon turf. The Eagles scored early in the first period, but the Fal thing, cons came right back and twice marched to within the d line only to see file drives stopped by the stubborn Eagle line. Late in the first half Eagle Steve Marshall picked up a Falcon fumble on the Skyline line. He ran, without any defenders in his path, until Falcon Dean Murray ran on the field from the bench Rockwood Triumphs Linn downed Rockwood 4 to Jack Fairclough take the Mens 45 Singles championship in fall tournament action at the Salt Lake Gty Tennis and Swimming Gub. In another final match, C c o 1 1 Matheson defeated successive plays. to take Roger Green 64), A fumble and a pass the Boys 16 and under singles. from Kim filler to Kevin Fitz- Lee Hammel roared into the 35 by tak-igerald put Jordan ahead in finals of the mens 4 over top win a the opening minutes of pla and the Beetdiggers threatn ened to sore a other times in the first half. 6-- hard-chargi- 6-- 6-- 1 d ni 3-- 7-- 6-- seed Gaylen Young. Dan Bleckinger met Per Hedna in the championship match of the Intermountain Mens Championships Saturday morning. Bleckinger beat 1 and Harold Sears Hedna survived an onslaught by Laury Hammel to win his semi-finmatch Bleckinger and Dale Fritz took on F. D. Robbins and Steve Krulevitz in the doubles 6-- 6-- 4, 4-- 6-- 9-- finale. half-doze- 6-- Hansens aerials carried Murray to another score in the third quarter, the final toss going seven yards to Madsen. Later Madsen got behind the Jordan secondary to grab a touchdown throw for a 29-- 6 advantage. On the first play after the ensuing kickoff, Bill Schvich intercepted a Beetdigger pass on the sidelines and raced 30 yards for a score. On the first play after the Steve Neal kickoff, grabbed a Jordan fumble and galloped 40 yards for still another lightning touchdown. Total time for the three Murray scores was one minuute and 15 seconds. next , Bob Marsh booted a field goal to round out the d Spartan scoring against the demoralized Beetdiggers. j gramm and Steve Price were file other defensive stalwarts. For Olympus, it was linebacker Dan Burt, guard Terry Coult and tackle Mark Wim- -, mer who were the defensive standouts. Much of the game was a punting duel between Marrelli and Titan Dave Powell. Powell booted a out of bounds on the West d line, and Marrelli punted two out of bounds inside the two. two-yar- h The victory was Olympus first in five games, and it was Wests second loss in five. U By RON SCOTT Deseret News Sports Writer defenA big, two breaks sive line turned into other scores in a wild one minute at the start of the last quarter in which Murray racked up tochdowns on three But Murray kept holding dash around and a right end by Dale Pehrson After lied the game at severel goal-lin- e stands, the Spartans took over on their own 10 and Hansen promptly threw 77 yards to Ted Madsen and then 13 yards to Darrell Pehrson for the TD. He then passed to Dale Pehrson for two points and a 14--6 lead. goals, but Danny Marrellis high, long kicks went wide both times. Ted Crawford, the Titan who set up the field goal with a punt runback to the West 31, nearly got away on kick returns two other times. He raced 40 yards downfield with another punt, and returned a kickoff 39 yards find only a beautiful tackle by Wests Dave OBaggy saved the Panthers pelt that time. OBaggy, who didnt play much of the game, made several other shattering tackles. Panther tackles Satiki Wolf- - midfield. Skyline Eagles Ground Falcons three-touchdo- yards and tossed a bomb to set up one score. chances to get on the score-boabefore the half ended, but saw drives hindered by an interception and penalties. Whatever Burt said to his Bruins at halftime worked, because they came back from the respite a fired-u- p ball club. After forcing a punt by East, the Southerners got on rd East scored again early in the second quarter when quarterback Homer Warnqr drive by capped a plunging over from the two. In what turned out to be a very important play, Souths five-yar- the first tally when the bal game was only three minutes old. Minutes later Reg Bruce packed the ball into the end zone after Viewmont had to give up the pigskin when they were unable to mount an Viewmont pact. . drive took up more than half the first quarter and only 3:03 was left when Taggart made Hodges originally signed a r pact two years ago but it was torn up for the new three-yea- Murray Alive, Surprises Beetdiggers lLayton Thwarts Vikings In 28-- 0 Grid Runaway - tooning, he managed to gef the best out of each player and the Mets put on a stretch run that won the Eastern Division. line. seven-yar- d the uprights after a tong Cub drive. But the most exciting action was yet to come! East started a drive of its own after receiving the kickoff and drove deep into Cub territory. Key gain was a aerial from Scort Savage to Leigh Wilkinson, Souths Steve Apple stymied the effort by intercepting a pass on the goal line and returning it to the South 14. Three plays later South had a fourth and one situation on its 23 with four minutes remaining in the ball game. Nearly everybody expected a punt, but Burt crossed them up by having Kilgore go fjr it on a quick-couquarterback sneak,' Kilgore made it with ease and, South ran out the clock from there. That sneak was definitely .the key to the ball game, Burt said. I know I took a big chance, but I felt we had to at least try to keep possession of the ball. There was just too much time left on the. clock to punt it to them near rd tosses, I feel we were especially deserving of a dose win like this, Burt said post game. Im very proud of this ball dub Ill bet those three clubs who edged us are glad they dont have to play us again. vam through three-point- d 9 Kearns Tips Bingham 7-- 0 On TD Fumble By BILL EWER Deseret News Sports Writer COPPERTON - The Kearns High Cougars and the Bingham Miners knocked each other around the Miner gridiron for ever three and one-haquarters Friday night lf before the Cougars fumbled into the games only touchdown to beat the Miners 74). It was the first Region Three game for Kearns and the first league loss for Bingham who now stands at 1-- The two teams were locked in a scoreless defensive battle when, with four minutes left to play, the Cougars took a Miner punt on their own line and six plays later crossed over for the score. Cougar halfback Dennis Weidauer and fullback Dan Hornok carried Kearns to the Miner 15 with powerful runs straight up the middle of the Miners tough defensive line. Then another halfback, Val Pedroza, took the ball to the line where he was hit hard end fumbled into the end zone. three-yar- d Weidauer, five in the midst of Bingham defenders, jumped on the loose ball for the TD. Quarterback Que Husband kicked the PAT and the Cougars had the game in the bag. The Miners missed their only scoring chance early in the first quarter when a bad handoff resulted in a fumble line. on the Kearns four-yar-d The ever alert Weidauer was the one who jumped on the ball that time, too. Both teams played extremely good defensive ball and were impressive, but inconsistent, on offense. Neither team could mount a sustained drive until the Cougars went 51 yards for their score. Steve Schroede, Don Gress-ma-n and Richard Avila were the sparks of the Miner offense while Ron Staley and Ron Forbes headed the Cougar defense that slowed down the Miner express. and tackled Marshall near the line. Falcon The stunned crowd didnt know what happened. Gear-fielcoaches tried to capitalize on the illegal move and d when the Eagle? drove to the d line and MarFalcon shall scooted around right end for the score. Skyline Coach Ken Schmidt used his reserves through most of the third and fourth n one-yar- N pulled a defender off the field 'A so that there would only be quarters. Even against the the legal 11 Falcons playing. subs, the Falcons couldnt It was to no avail, the consistently move the ball ' referees awarded a touchit was just no contest. A down to Skyline and the spirTo make the romp even less its of the Falcons dipped to a interesting, the announcer, new low. who was biased overly From then on in it was all towards Gearfield, gave a Skylines ball game. A Mar- second by second account of shall pass to Scott Pace put the game for fans. Often the Eagles ahead 194) minutes times he would needle Skyline after the second half began. players. Most of his announcThe final Skyline counter ing was unnecessary and very came late in the third quarter ,bush league. - , f n M i Prep Grid Summary, Slate Rudofl On Bomwvill m, Bm Lomond Roy 15, Ooden 1 Box Eider 19, Bear River 14 Region Two South 10, East 9 Davis 21, Highland I Olympus 3, West 0 Skyline 20. Clearfield 0 Layton 20, Viewmont O Region Throo Murray 44, Jordan 0 2 14, Brighton Judge Granite 19, Hillerest 14 Tooele i, Cyprus 0 Kearns 7, Bingham 0 Region Four Spanish Fork 19, American Fork 7 o. Lthl Carbon 0 (tie) Payson 56, Pleasant Grove 0 Orem 13. Provo 0 41, Uintah Sprlngvlll Region Flvo Wasatch 13, Grantsvlllo 4 Union 44, South Summit 6 North Summit 21, Morgen I Dugwey 16, Perk City 12 Region Six Moeb 20, Montkello 6 East Carbon 67, Green River 0 Region Seven Millard 22, North Sanpete S Delta 30, Rlchllild 6 Juab IS, Emery 13 Region Eight Keneb 36, Milford 6 Region Two West at Devlt South at Clearfield , , Viewmont at East ;. . Highland at Bountiful I , Leyton at, Olympus ' Region Three t t Friday, Oct. 1, 1969 Rieion Ono i Ban Lomond ot Roy Logan at Ogden Weber at Beer River Sky View at Box Elder . Y Region Four itah Pleasant Grove at American Payson at Lehl Sprlnovllle at Carbon Spanish Fork at Provo Orem at U! Fork , Region Five North Summit at South Summit Morgan at Wasatch Union at Grantsvlll USD at Park City Duaway at South Rich Region Ilk East Carbon at Sen Juan Notre Dame at Montlcello Green River ot Moeb Reglen Savew Delta at Emery Richfield at North Snnpntg Mlllerd at Juab Raglan Sight (Class A) Hurrlcsne at Dixit (Clktt Kanab It Milford Parowan at Bsever ) Ml 'MB0 SEE SUNDAY'S PAPER! STATE 'a Gr.nlte at Judge Brighton at Murrey Jordan at Hillerest Granger at Kearne Bingham at Cyprus mm 250 SOUTH r r: STORE-SID- E PARKINS v i J s 4 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 9 9 9 9 f |