SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1961 Lions Soccermen Will Battle Maryland By CRAIG YERKES Penn State's booters face their third stiff test in three games when they try to knock powerful Maryland from the unbeaten ranks this morning on the Lion turf at 11. The soccer field is located at the end of Pollock Road near the Ice Pavillion. Lion coach Kenny Hosterman has switched his front line for the important contest The change was necessitated by a knee injury to regular right wing, Eddie Hi nojosa. Since Nosterman is strong at center forward, with both Kenny Link and Ted Jones on hand, he has switched Jones to wipg for today's encounter Hov ie Farrer has been moved to inside left, Link will handle center-forward, Tom Flanagan will play inside right, and Glenn Ream will hold down right wing. Hosterman has depth and ver-: satility in his line as he still has, regular Val Djurdjevic in re.- serve. Hosterman ca n insert Djurdjevic and switch the others around since all but Ream have; played more than one positiow this year. The real question for Hoster man this morning is whether State can slow down the high geared Terp offense. Maryland has scored 17 goals in just three games. The Terps, last year's NCAA runners-up, are shooting for win number four. Already they have downed Virginia, 3-0. clob bered North Carolina Stale, 10-0. and nipped Army, 4-3. In the N.C. State game, Juan Carlos Martin set a new school (Continued on page eleven) State-Syracuse Lineups STARTING LINEUP PENN STATE Pos. SYRACUSE Schwab LE Sweeney Monaghan LT Feidler Blasenstein LG Meggyesy Huffman C Stem Rosdahl RG Mazurek Farkas RT Brown Mitinger RE Mackey Hall QB Sofsian Kochman LH Davis Jonas RH Brokaw Hayes FB Meyers No. Wt. 88 200 79 228 62 200 51 205 67 230 76 220 86 215 25 195 46 195 14 195 34 205 TIME: 2 p.m PLACE: Beaver Stadium WEATHER: Cloudy and cold with a chance of light showers STARTING LINE AVERAGES: Penn State (214); Syracuse (217). STARTING BACKFIELD AVERAGES: Penn State (198); Syracuse (205). NEXT WEEK'S OPPONENTS: California at Penn State; Holy Crops at Syracuse. SERIES: Penn State leads, 17-16-5. CAPTAINS: Penn State (Smith); Syracuse (Stem and Bro- kaw). OFFENSE: Penn State (Multiple T); Syracuse (Unbalanced T) EXPECTED CROWD: 45,000. ALTERNATE UNITS PENN STATE: Baker, Anderson, Smith, Sieminski, Galardi, Hart, Saul, Caum, Powell, Gursky and Torris. SYRACUSE: Ericson, Mingo, Spillett, Sokol, Slaby, Franco vitch, Huettner, Raner, Fallon, Humphreys and Charette. Elmira Express Rolls Into Beaver Stadium "Stopping Ernie Davis is like trying to stop a runaway express." That's quite a statement to make, but coming from Syracuse coach Ben Schwartzwalder, it carries quite a hit of authority. For three years now, opposing players have been trying to stop the "Elmira Express," and the results have been any thing but satisfactory. This after noon Penn State faces the task of either stopping Davis or going down to its third defeat and the job might he difficult. So far in his career at Syra cuse, few teams have been able to successfully complete the task. Last week against Nebras ka the powerful 6-2, 210-pound er toppled Syracuse's career touchdown record by scoring two touchdowns. Thai raised his career total to 27 and it bettered the old mark of 25 TD's set by Jimmy Brown, the Cleveland Browns' star. Davis also is closing in on two other Syracuse records held by Brown: career scoring and career yardage. Davis needs only 18 points to outdo the 187 scored by Brown and needs only 195 yards to better Brown's rushing total of 2,091. John Miller "Ernie has to be the best run ning back in college football to day," Schwartzwalder said. "He has the rare combination of size and speed that makes for a great back." When asked to compare Da vis and Brown, the Orange coach neatly sidestepped the question. "Brown and Davis are different types," he said. "Jim my may have been a little big ger and had a little more power, but maybe Ernie can do some things that. Jimmy couldn't." The question is one that soft spoken Davis does not worry about. "Guys like Jim Brown come once in a million years. I'm trying to do the best I can. I just want to play like Ernie Davis." Here's the way Schwartzwalder talks about his All-American. "In our opener with Oregon State, he came up with two sprained ankles and a shoulder so badly bruised that he couldn't lift his arm above (Continued on page ten) THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA H • st By DEAN BILLICK LEADING SCOPES: Halfback Don Jonas, Penn State's leading scorer with 26 points in four games, limbers up his kicking toe as quarterback Don Caum holds the ball. Jonas has con verted three out of four field goal attempts and hasn't missed an extra point in five fries. He has two touchdowns to his credit, a six-yard scoring burst against Navy and a 16-yard TD recep tion against Army. CRACKS STARTING LINEUP: For the first in the starting backfield are (L-R) quarterback time this season, Roger Kochman (R) is start- Galer. Hall, right halfback Don Jonas and full• ing a game. He moved up to the first unit back Dave Hayes. after picking up 54 yards against Army. Others Syracuse State, Syracuse Coaches Juggle Starting Lineups No, Rip Engle and Ben Schwartzwalder aren't getting a cut of today's program receipts—it's just that Syracuse has eight gridders sidelined with injuries and Engle has decided to revamp Penn State's lineup for today's Beaver Stadium battle with the top team in the East. With all the new faces expected to see action today, the fans will literally need a scorecard to tell the players, and visiting scouts will probably think they made a wrong turn at Lewistown. And to make L. strong point even stronger, Engle is prob ably scratching his head this morning trying to come up with a starting eleven. The Ripper said yesterday that he plans to bring 14 players be fore ABC's Tv cameras w h en h e introduces his "starting" lineup during the customary pre-game festivities. A crowd of 45,000 is expected to watch the battle for eastern su premacy under cold, cloudy sty's, w hil e uncoun t e d Tv v i ewers throughout the East will watch the regionally telecast contest from their favorite armchairs. Starting time is 2 p.m. No doubt about it. Engle has his problems today, but Schwartzwalder would prob ably trade places with him in , a minute. The Syracuse coach has Six players sidelined with broken hands, starting quarterback Dave Sarette has a bruised shoulder, and guard Dave Metgyesv just got out of the Syracuse infirmary where he was bedded down with an infected arm. "I honestly can't say right now," Schwartzwalder said yesterday when asked if SW ette would play. Serene himself was a little more emphatic. "As of now I don't expect to he said yesterday as he relaxed in his hotel room at the Penn-Belle in Bellefonte. "I haven't been under center all week and when I tried to limber up today I couldn't do much." Sarette injured his shoulder against Nebraska last week when was tackled near the sidelines and fell over a bench. Meggyesy is expected to start at guard despite his stay in the (Continued on page ten) By JIM KARL PAGE NINE
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