six Grid tiers Do It Again! (17-0) Rados, Moore, Garrity, Grier Star As Lions Romp to Sixth Victory When a team you’re coaching is a decided underdog and convincingly defeats a football eleven which loses to mighty Notre Dame by only one touchdown, ties Oklahoma, and car ries "the team to beat” sign, then you’ve just had a great day. That’s what Coach Rip Engle’s gridders had at Pitt Stadium last Saturday—a great day. Exhibiting its finest performance of the year before 42,277 fans, Penn State adroitly controlled the game. It had the red and green light signals so well synchronized that the Lions were able to make the score, 17-o—the same as last year. The Nittany Lion backfield ran inside and outside of Pitt’s forward wall and Co-captain Tony Rados flooded the air lanes with a great passing exhibition that had the Penn State spectators gleaming with joy. To the Panthers,it was just the same old script. Only the names were changed to ease the pain. Although one may point out individual accomplishments, there’s little doubt that Penn State’s triumph was a team victory. i I It was Bill Straub and Pete- Schoderbek who held the Pan thers to less than ten yards when Pitt drew first blood. • Engle’s quarterback sensation, Rados, led his team near Pitt’s 20-yard stripe twice before Coach Red Dawson’s crew could muster enough strength to hold the Lions on downs. It was like driving a car with the hand brake on. The initial period was score less, but the Lions had all the say. In fact, Pitt spoke only on eleven plays from scrimmage dur ing the entire first period—twice the team was forced to kick. Grier Tops for Piit Dawson’s sleeper in the North Carolina State contest, short, swift Bob Grier, awakened the Pitt enthusiasts with two runs for 23 yards at the start of the second period. With the ball be „ ing placed on the State’s 35, En- '£ 3 gle’s first team came back into o l the game. The chapter was closed 12 for the Panthers failed to dent the Lion forward wall and pass defense. Penalties, which seemed to get Penn State into trouble through out its nine-game schedule came again—the referee took a “for ward march” of 15 steps before halting. A Lion player was caught clipping. Rados, however, nicely put the Lions back on its paydirt drive. Straub took his pass and scooted to the Pitt 20 where, he was finally brought down from behind. - For the third time the Lions ® “ * < were knocking at touchdown door. Engle’s gridders gave it the old college try—“lf at first you, don’t succeed, try again.” Penn] State succeeded in advancing the ball to the 10 yard line, but after three failures to cross the goal line end Jim Garrity split the uprights with his first field goal (15 yards) on State’s final try. Lion Line Holds Dawson’s backfield once again found Engle’s line impenetra ble. The Lions took over. Three plays later, the Pitt observers watched Penn State’s gridders ex ecute its favorite TD trip play. Rados dropped back to pass. Pitt’s secondaries drifted back with Ra dos’ intended receivers, only to be fooled. Moore received a hand off and scampered 79 yards un touched for a TD. Garrity’s auto matic toe made the score 10-0. With a little more than two and one-half minutes remaining Pitt’s Grier fumbled Don Bailey’s kickoff on his own 16. A touch- Lions King! TEAM'S STATISTICS FIRST DOWNS (total) - ily rushing: By passing By penalties RUSHING PLAYS (number of) ; 29 43 Yards grained rushing 117 251 Yards lost rushing 58 20 Net gain rushing 59 231 FORWARD PASSES (number attempted) Number completed Number had intercepted - Net gain passing TOTAL PLAYS RUSHING AND PASSING TOTAL NET YARDS GAINED PUNTS (number) Average yards Had blocked KICK RETURNS Number of punt returns 1 6 Yards of >punt returns 14 86 Number of kickoff returns 3 1 Yards of kickoff returns 14 21 No. of interception returns 3 0 Yds. of interception returns 44 0 FUMBLES (number) 1 3 Bali lost on fumbles - 0 1 Number of penalties - 5 8 Yards penalized 35 72 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS PITT RUSHING Fcrsrusoß Epps Mahsozt MattioH Ford Grier Steratore Neft Michaels 1 McCabe X PASSING Att. Comp. Int. Yds. Ford 10 4 0 29 MatUoK 7 3 0 23 Neft 1 1 0 8 Hoffman 3 0 0 ■ ® PASS RECEIVING Epps Grier . MeQuaitie Diefcrick 3 38 Dillon _ PUNTING No. A vff. 3 42.3 ' 6 36 “p¥nn"state RUSHING Zombek Schmitt ll Garrity Moore 13 132 7 47 Younkers Veslinar Wolfkeil Blockson Bailey PASSING Att.' Comp. Int. Yds. 23 13 2 160 _ 3 «0 2 0 PASS RECEIVING Rados Hoffman No. Yds. 1 48 ’ 3 31 Garrity Younkers Malinak 6 38 Arnelle PUNTING Scribes Win. Football Contest ; Procopio Is Champion Swami Sports Editor Sam Procopio of fically won the Daily Collegian football prediction contest Satur day, leading the Collegian sports sci'ibes to their first victory over the Penn State football coaches. Procopio had mathematically won the contest prior to Satur day’s pickings. He held a six game lead after last week’s selec tions and differed on only four choices this week with his near est contenders. Second place honors went to the coaches, represented Saturday by backfield Coach Joe Faterno, and Assistant Sport? Editor Dick Mc- Dowell who f ;- 'i ' °d in a tie. Staff writer Herm Weiskopf finished in Pitt State . 9 18 . 5 12 . 2 5 2 1 21 28 8 13 0 4 60 160 50 71 ll9 393 9 1 38.1 31 0 0 Tries Gain Net 2 6 6 4 10 10 2 2 2 .2 0-13 7 48 19 No. Yds. ~2 9 „ 1 9 Tries Gain Net 5 11 11 39 38 12 12 1 15 1 ’ 31 third place just one game out of the number two spot. ’ Procopio won the contest with a season re co r d of 94 correct choices and 41 misses. He could muster only six correct selections Saturday as upsets again played havoc with the crystal ball. His final average stands at .697. Paterno and McDowell both se lected eight games correctly Sat urday, missing seven for an over all total of 99 right and 45 wrong, four games less than Procopio. Their final average was .666 Weis kopf, with an 89-46 record had a .659 percentage. Although this type of contest has been in cx ; stence in the Col legian for quite a few years this was only the second season that THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA By SAM PROCOPIO down was in sight for the Lions. However, Ray Ferguson, who dropped Bobby Hoffman’s in tended TD pass, made good on the second attempt, intercepting in the end zone.. Before the half ended the Lions were in posses sion of the ball. Typical of Rivalry The 53rd meeting between the Panthers and Lions at this point marked the intense rivalry which has been shown in the neighbor ing football relations. The second half started in the reverse of the first. This time the Lions received the kickoff. In stead of being held to four downs like the Panthers, Penn State consumed five minutes and forty five seconds before it finally crossed the goal. line. In the meantime, Rados, com pleting five passes, kept the door open for the breezes to blow. Buddy Rowell and Ron Younker contributed to the TD march. Rowell climaxed the 63-yard drive with a half-yard plunge. From here to the final gun pass defense spelled the difference. Pitt went nowhere. Younker ran back . a Panther punt 40 yardd. However, Henry Ford quickly clamped things shut with his fine defensive ability. Rados’ pass in to the end zone saw six hands going into the air with the two belonging to Ford clinching the pigskin. TD Passes Blocked In return, end Don Malinak blocked a short pass, while Wayne Wolfkeil knocked down two “sure” TD passes. Although Penn State received the ball, it only took two plays before the Panthers were back on the offense. The Panthers, seek ing to find some fault in State’s defense, continued to use their deep formation. Still, it failed. With only a few minutes kone in the third period Penn State was forced to punt—the first and only time in the entire game. Ra dos, who kicked for the Lions, also saved the day when he blocked Ford’s pass. The statistics, score, and game were one-sided, but Ford of Pitt was the only one to write his name in the record books. He in tercepted three Penn State passes to tie his school’s record. The day finally ended for the Panthers but not only in defeat. Dawson of Pitt had his first los ing season as a .college head foot ball coach. the coaches have competed against the Collegian staff. Last year the coaches won the contest _ when Rip Engle’s yogi A 1 Michaels picked 14 games correctly in the last week of the contest. His per formance was enough to put the coaches out ahead of Sports Edi tor Jake Highton by one game. The coaches’ top individual this year was Jim O’Hara who select ed 13 games correctly early in the season. McDowell had the top single Saturday record for the scribes with 14 correct. Procopio’s victory earns him the right to the coveted eight-ball award which will be presented to him for use in future football soothsaying. All contestants agree that the famed crystal ball is no longer dependable. * t . . s />f 4 £ i J» w \ *;*•&*■■ 4 HERE'S JIM GARRITY, Lion right end leaping for a Tony Rados pass in the Penn State-Pitt battle Saturday at Pitt Stadium. Gar rily was unsuccessful in this attempt. Looking on is Pitt' defender Bob Grier. The Nittanies won the game, 17-0. ■ Terrapins Move to First; Lions Listed NEW YORK, Nov. 23 (A 9— Maryland, only undefeated and un tied major college team in the country, was voted the No. 1 foot ball team of the land today in the weekly Associated Press poll by a landslide margin. Coach Jim Tatum’s terrific Terrapins moved into the top spot after lowa held Notre Dame to a resounding 14-14 tie Saturday, with the result that the Fighting Irish dropped from the No. 1 place to No. 2 -for the first time this season. Maryland, winner of ten straight Penn State was ranked 281 h in this week's poll. The Associ ated Press did not indicate how many points the Lions received. It said, however, that the Nit tanies had received more than ten points. games and with one of the tightest defenses and flashiest offenses in the nation, ended its season Satur day by blanking Alabama, 21r0. A week earlier the Terps had thumped Mississippi, 38-9. Those were the two teams which upset Maryland at the tail end of the 1952 season. Maryland is expected to be the TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1953 Atlantic Coast Conference’s rep resentative in the Miami Orange Bowl Jan. 1,-against Oklahoma, the Big Seven champions. A total of 254 votes was cast by the nation’s sportswriters and broadcasters in this next-to-last AP poll of the 1953 season. Mary land, which has been edging up oh Notre Dame in recent weeks, got 154 first-place votes, 1 and a smashing total of 2347 points. Notre Dame, which has games with ' Southern California an d Southern Methodist remaining, received 47 first-place votes and 2009 points. ■ The final AP poll will be taken next week when the mythical na tional championship will be de cided. Someone Wants To Give You Your PENN STATE S RING hristmess anksgiving _ . 1 1954 rings in stock Sorry, but orders •istmas but a class sjj*. ;er than many gifts M with name tinltar Co. Store