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THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN. N. > MC AFTERNOON OCTOBER 27, 197?
Sanford Squeezes Ily Fired - Up €¦ reenwaves 13 To 7a » USBobby GodwinAnd Daley GoffStar In Game
The Dunn High SchoolGreo'uvaves came within aninch of upsetting the unde-feated Sa 'fu'd Yellow Jack-ets and knocking them outof the conference playoffsFriday night a t Sanford.Dunn fought cn even termsthroughout the game.
Sanford scored in the first quar-ter after a fifteen yard penaltycarried the ball down to the Dunnone yard line. Donnie Kelly. San-ford’s highly regarded fullback, car-ried it over from there. Kelly alsoadded the extra point and the scorewas 7 to 0. Dunn got its offense rol-ling in the first quarter makingshort gains on passes and endaround plays. Although the Wavesdidn’t score in the first quarterthey did back the Jackets upagainst their own goal line.
In the second period Sanford’sground attack was pretty well stop-ped so the Yellow Jackets took tothe air. A long pass from quarter-back Caviness to end Fred God-frey transported the ball to theDunn eight yard stripe where full-back Donnie Kelly again did thehonors. Kelly, however, missed heextra point and the score was - an-
ford 13. Dunn 0. Then the Green-waves started rolling.
CARR SHINESThe Greenv\ aves then proceeded
to move the ball from their owntwenty to the Sanford eight onshort passes to Skeet Carr and J.T. Jackson and some nice runningby Daley Goff. From the eight
yard line quarterback Daley Goffpassed to Skeet Carr for the touch-down in the end zone. FullbackDonald Johnson added the extrapoint and the tally stood 13 to 7.
. Sanford. With only a few minutesremaining in the second quarterSanford again took to the air. Cavi-ness' long pass intended for God-frey was intercepted on the Dunn 30by Donald Billy Johnson. Johnson jlateralled the ball to Daley Goff •and Goff went all the way for thescore behind some fine blockingby Walter Byrd and Jimmy Sills.However the play was called backas the officials ruled that the ballwas dead before Johnson lateral-led. The half ended before theWaves had a chance to move theball, *
Dunn came back strong inlast half defensively to stop oneSanford threat. Frcm that time on.the Greenwaves offensive dominat-;ed the game by kerning the ball a jgood part of the last half. E. B. 1Dixon was switched to fullback and 1he looked good on die line plunges.Dunn made two scoring threats inthe last half penetrating the San-ford twenty once. Near the end ofthe game the Waves passing attackstarted rolling and they moved tothe Sanford forty only to have theball intercepted on the next play.Sanford’s only outstanding groundgaining pla\ in the last half came ’at this point on a triple reversewhich netted forty-five yards for;the Jackets. On the next play Dick-ie Surles intercepted a pass on theSanford twenty and the Green- 1waves were on the offensive whenthe game ended. Sanford 13. Dunn7. For a team that was rated a 33point underdog. Dunn gave San-ford quite a scare!
Outstanding on offense for San-ford were Caviness and Donnie Kel-ly. On defense were Jimmy True-love. Jack Lucas and Caviness.
There was no one outstandingplayer on defense for Dunn, the |entire team was outstanding, the jline played a terrific ball game of- !
Dukes Team Rated As Best SinceWallace Wade's Rose Bowl Eleven
FacfbaS! ResultsLILLINGTON It
*
OADVVAY 13
SANFORD Occ. 24—The true toeof Cyrus Steward proved the de-riding facto- here tonight as Ld-lington edged Broadway. 14-13.Steward also scored the tyingtOM'-hdowji when he scooted 20yards late in the game.
Lillington scored first when itmai ed 45 yard Jr k L< npa sing •< Leo McltonlTD. Steward converted.
Broadway scored next when JoePhillips ran 40 yards. Phillipsoassed to James Buchanan fry- thetying point. Broadway soon wentahead when James Buchanan tooka screen pass and crossed the goalto highlight a 45-vard drive.
A break came for Lillington inthe third period when Center C. IIBrock recovered a fumble on theBroadway 20. Steward ran thedistance to tie the game up andthen converted to give Lillingtonthe win.
BENSON 26. COATS 1!
BENSON. Oct. 24—Benson scoredits first victory of the season by de-feating Coats. 26-14. in a six-manfootball game here this afternoon.Coats has not won a came.
Stacy Miller scored all of Ben-son’s touchdowns and RobertSmith scored both tallies for Coats.
ANGIER 37, BONLEE 13
ANGIER. Oct. 24—Aaron McLean;scored three times to lead Angierto an easy. 37-13 victory over Bon-le~ here today in a six-man foot-
I ball game.McLean scored on a threeyard
plunge, then reeled eff a 55-vardtouchdown run. and intercepted apass and ran 35 yards to score. Thepassing combination of Dink Par-tin to Vance Overby resulted in twotouchdowns and the other tally
1 came on a 47-yard punt return by' Jackie Reavis.
Erwin RedskinsLess Close GameTo Mei-n! OSlre
A two touchdown favorte, Mr.Olive 1 to e fn < hind n
’1d " : Lu-
i O e oom: Jim-Brince; Jo e Jord n. Miss
n’s i v. enter;I»oll/ (r in; Mark ne Kt ndall.
YJ:. Foxx’s room: Verlene Mitch-ell. Miss H. Matthew’s room: JohnArnold: Sarah Bio \n; Betty Smith;Patsy Stephens
: By WILLIAM A. SHIRES(lTP Sports Writer)
RALEIGH IP Firmly estab-lished as the best Duke team sinceWallace Wade's Rose Bowl elevens,the 1952 Blue Devils, propelled bymarvelous Worth Lutz, shoot forthe top in national rankings thisweek against mighty Georgia Tech.
) It’s the “game of the week" inthe nation. The outcome will dropthe loser from the unbeaten, un-tied ranks and the winner will re-¦ main as one of only two major un-
i defeated teams in the South.ANOTHER CHOO CHOO
! Following his role in Duke’s 21-7; victory ovrr previously unbeatenVirginia, red-headed sophomoreWorth Arthur Lutz Jr., was beinghailed today as the brightest staron a southern gridiron since Char-lie (Choo Choo) Justice. It will beLutz's magic against Tech’s big.rough line before 50,000 fans atDurham Saturday.
Lutz scored the first touchdownagainst v'iig.iia. passed for the
, second and handed off for a 34-‘ yard touchdown gallon by sprinterPinrv Field for the third.
I Alert and poised. Duke grabbedits advantage in the first half, thenbattled the Cavaliers on even termsin the second half.
Over-eagerness spoiled the Cava-liers’ changes early. Duke snatchedup a Cavalier fumble to start theirfirst drive, then benefited by pen-alties against an over-anxious Vir-ginia line.
By Coach Art Guepe’s own ad-
I mission. Lutz diagnosed the Vir-ginia weakness from the start and“hit us hard there, running up overthe right side of the line.’’
ROACH STARS
j The only consolation for the Cav-| aliers was a relentless 73-yard thirdI period march through Duke’s other-! wise perfect defense. The touch-I down scored by Mel Roach pre-jserved Guene’s record of not hav-
jing been shut out since 1946. Butjthere was little else for Virginia
i followers to be clad about.This shattered their 10-game vic-
tory streak and hopes for Virgin-ia’s first undefeated season, andpossibly a bowl bid.
As per custom. Coach Bill Mur--av refused to single out any in-dividual players for praise. Butno one could overlook Lutz as thebig difference in the teams. Vir-ginia coaches praised the vicioustackling by guard Bobby Burrowsand tackle Ed Meadows. Meadows’
| fenfivelv and d*fen|ively. DaileyI Goff got plentv of protection forhis passes and was only thrown
jfor a loss twice. Skeet Carr and J.jT. Jackson looked good on the re-
jreiving line. Bobby Day Godwin cot: off some beautiful punts for theGreenwaves.
The lineup for Dunn was: LE—J.T. Jackson: LT—Jimmy Sills: LG—Waiter Bvrd: C—Donald Jackson:RG—Sherrill Goodman: RT—Ro-ger Stanley; RE—Skeet Carr; QBDaley Goff; LH—E. B. Dixon: RH— \Bobby Day Godwin; FB —Donald ]Billy Johnson. Substitutions were:Dickie Surles. Ravmon West. MacTurlington. Weldon Jones, andRussell Carter.
A large crowd of students and |local sports fans attended the gameand they really got their money’s Iworth! !
crashing tackle of Bob Tata in thefirst period caused Tata's fumble
- which end Joe Hinds recovered¦ to start Duke to its first score.
TECH BEATS VANDERBILT
Georgia Tech meanwhile romped’ over Vanderbilt 30-0 to r"n the
1 Engineers victory .st’-'’,ik to 20 But1 that streak is married by a 14-141 tie with Duke a year ago in At-
lanta and it was in that gam» thatLutz, then a freshman off thtsandlots of Durham, showed thepromise of the star he has become.
, For Virginia, today was “start allover” day. Guepe said “we’ll be
1 spitting fire" Saturday when theCavaliers clash with South Caro-
; lina in the Oyster Bowl game atNorfolk. Last year Virginia won28-27 over thf Gamecocks, andCoach Rex Enright’s men have
• been pointing for the Virginiagame.
CAROLINA MEETS TENNESSEE
North Carolina, loser 14-34 to¦ : Notre Dame, begins getting ready
for its annual battle with Tennes-see at Knoxville. Wake Forest, idlelast week, goes after its third j
i straight conference win against Big jFour rival State at Wake Forest.N. C. State defeated Florida State !
;13-7 Saturday on a 76-yard touch-. down run by freshman safetyman
Ted Kilvk.West Virginia, which pulled a
big 16-0 upset of Pitt last week,plays George Washington. GWfought VRI to a 20-20 standstill.VMI plays Army at West Point
i in a resumption of a colorful mili-tary rivalry.
Clemson plays Boston Collegei and Maryland, conqueror of LSU: 34-6 will be a heavy favorite overBoston University. Washington andLee. winner 34 to 27 over Vir- jginia Tech, plays Vanderbilt: Vir-ginia Tech plays Richmond. Wil-iliam and Mary, which beat Rich-mond 42-13. and The Citadel are
1 idle.I Furman meets Wofford and
: Davidson plays Harvard in otherf games this week. Furham edgedI Davidson Saturday 14 to 13 ati Davidson.
Senior TourneyPlay Begins AtPinehurst Today
i PINEHURST (IP) QUALIFY-•’ ING PLAY BEGAN TODAY IN A
NEW “old men’s" golf tournament- The first North and South Invi-tation Seniors Tourney - over the
! famous No. 2 Pinehurst course here.
I The tournament was arranged in,| response to requests from winter! visitors and is restricted to golfers
over 55 years of age. Tournamentj chairman Richard S. Tufts saidj more than 250 entries have been| received with 50 players from NewJ York State topping the list,j Match play begins tomorrow with
! the championship flight to be lim-ited to 16 players competing ofr
j the title.| U. S. Seniors Champion Tom Rob-bins of New York is top favorite,
j He is expected to get tough coin-j petition, however, from such stars ;j as Paul Hyde, Buffalo, N. Y. run- jj nerup in the U. S. Seniors; For-
I mer Seniors Champion J. N. WellsI of Newell. W. Va.: Col M. S. Lind-
grove. Morristown, N. J. Alfred jUlmer, Jacksonville, Fla.; HarrisonSmith, Oklahoma City, former Na-
j tional and Open champion; Charles: Chick Evans. Chicago; C. W.
j Braughton. Indianapolis, Ind., 1949| Western Seniors titleholder, andI Parren Pete Jarboe, Cochituate, ]
Mass., New England Seniors chain- jpion. i
Browns StillLead After WinOver Fedskins
BY EARL WRIGHT(UP Sports Writer)
NEW YORK MP» The Cleve-land Browns, who once were offer-ed jobs driving GeorV P.V*»stonMarshall’s laundry trucks, sent theWashington Redskins to the clean-ers today and took their us a!place as undisputed leaders of theNational Football League’s Ameri-
jcan Conference.Cleveland rallied to bent thu Red-
skins. 19-15. Sunday while the un-beaten San Francisco Forty-Minersboosted their front-running Nali«.:i-nl Conference record to 5-0 with an
I easy 48-21 triumph over the Dal-las Texans.
It was Cleveland’s fourth victoryover Washington since entering theNFL from the now-defunct All-American Conference in 1950. Mar-shall made his Redskins a specialCleveland target a few years agowhen he predicted at a GridironClub dinner in Washington thatthe All-American Conference play-ers would soon be glad to drivehis laundry trucks.
Otto Graham, the Clevelandquarterback who also can pass outof a tuxedo,- was at the winner.Graham threw the conversationalball right back at Marshall andsaid the Browns would unstarchthe Redskins anytime.
Graham sank the needle in Mar-shall again Sunday by scoring thewinning touchdown on a two-yardquarterback sneak in the fourthperior after Lou Groza had keptthe Browns in the game with fourfield goals. Graham put the ball jon the two with a 56-yard passto Sherman Howard.
The Browns, bidding for their 1seventh division title in as manyseasons, got big assists from thePhiladelphia Eagles and PittsburghSteelers as they broke a three-wa vfirst place tie with the New YorkGiants and Chicago Cardinals.
The Eagles upset the Giants. 14-10. and the Steelers surprised the
Cardinals, 34-28. The Brownsnow have a one-game lead over theGiants. Cardinals and Eagles (each3-2). Pittsburgh has a 1-4, mark.
In other National Conference! gcUnes. the Detroit Lions whippedthe Green Bay Packers, 52-17. andt-lie los Anueles Rams rallied todefeat the Chigao Bears. 31-7. De-troit
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