FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1968 '" ' s ''' '' ' ' 4andy Padwef- ' , .. , s . ! . Joe Proves T rue t® Self • By SANDY MIME Collegian Sports Editor (1959.60, 1960-61) (In the Philadelphia 'inquirer) JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Dec. 30 The locker , 00m was nearly empty now. Joe Paterno finally :iad slipped away from the reporters who had p:nned him mercilessly against the wall outside the dressing room beneath the Gator Bowl. A few seconds before, Paterno patiently ex plained "Ale play" time 'and again. "I blew it," he said. "I should have known better. If I had it to do ,over, I wouldn't." That was not the real Joe Paterno talking. The real Joe (Paterno sat in th e empty coaches' locker room unlacing his football shoes. A soft drink rested on the table. Paterno , <•‘'. - ';',;` , ll: leaned back. He closed IF - 1,,4 his eyes for a moment. L„ They were tired, weary eyes, eyes that `a ..k, had just seen a certain F") ,;!T:. victory turned into a ` - tie game. Pa tern o's Penn State football team had built a 17-0 lead over JOE PATERNO ... Confidence in Self Florida State in the Gator Bowl, and the third quarter was ticking quickly away. Penn State had just stopped Florida State with a goal-line stand on the one-yard line. Three plays later, Penn State had the ball on its own 14 1 / 2 -yard, line with a fourth-down-and inches situation. Penn State broke from the hud dle. Guys in the press box started shouting, "Watch for the shift." Only there was no shift. Tom Sherman, the quarterback, took the snap and plunged straight ahead into a wall of white jerseys. The referee told a shocked Sherman his plunge was short. The clock showed 4:10 remaining in the third period. ' Florida State took over and, in three plays, had its first seven points. Less than two minutes after that, Florida State had another touchdown. Then with 15-seconds left in the game, Grant Guthrie kicked a 26-yard field goal which capped a furious rally and gave Florida State a 17-17 tie. The tie made Joe Paterno a very vulnerable target. As the equipment men began cleaning up the litter in the Penn State locker room, Paterno sat quietly, re-explaining what will be remembered as the most controversial play of his career. "I believe very much in the theory 'to thy own self be true'," Joe Paterno said. "You can go through life playing everything safe and wind up mediocre. If I had ordered a punt on that play instead of a run, I wouldn't have had the courage to be the football coach I want to be. I took the chance. I know it turned the game around. But I took it. "I expect to be criticized. And I'll probably get it. But I've always considered every knock a boost. "I felt field position and control was vital to us at that point of the game. If we get the first down and a few more, we're in control." To understand Joe Paterno a little better, you have to go back to Friday Evening, 8 p.m. Joe Paterno sat in a hotel suite telling of his changes offensively and defensively for the Florida State game. They were radical. Switching Ted Kwalick, the All-American tight end, to wingback. And re aligning the defensive backfield and linebackers. • "Our purpose is to stop their passing game," Paterno explained. "We won't play our customary 4-4-3. We'll also use a 5-5-1. a 3-5-3 and a 6-5 at times. I've moved some of the kids around to give us more speed to help us cur• - off their passing zones. "I don't know. Maybe this won't handle them (Florida State). But the moves give us more flexi bility, both offensively and defensively. I know these things might not work and I'll fall flat on my face. But it's my face. "If you don't have the confidence to make some changes, you're not a good football coach. Besides, the kids are enjoying it (all the switches). "Preparing for bowl games can be a boring thing. I know, because we've been in a few. You have all that extra time, and if you just do the things you've done all year, the kids get bored silly. You're going to see some weird things out there tomorrow. "A bowl game is a one-shot thing. You're here to enjoy it as much as you're here to win. I think the moves we made give us our best chance to win." On the other side of the Gator Bowl, Florida State coach Bill Peterson was having his prob lems, too. Everyone was demanding to know why he had called for a field goal with a fourth-and-five situation on the Penn State eight and only 15 seconds remaining. Down here, they take their football seriously. You don't play for ties, you see. You play to win, especially against a team whose campus is north of the Potomac River Bridge. "The reason we went for the field goal," Peterson said, "Is any time a team is down by 17 points at the half and comes back the way ours did, it doesn't deserve to lose the ball game. It was the right decision. We had been down there three other times and were stopped." " They say first impulses are correct. Joe Pa terno's first impulse was to go for the first down deep in his own territory. Bill Peterson's first im pulse was to go for the tie. Nobody left the Gator Bowl happy. Too bad. It was a magnificent football game between two of the Nation's best teams and two of the Nation's best coaches. - SKI JACKETS & SKI GLOVES HAND KNIT SWEATERS (SMALL FOR THE GIRLS) LAMB'S WOOL SWEATERS lliE ONE ELEVEN 9110 P ig? 111 South Pugh Street w STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16801 `1.4 * * * * * * THREE FORMER Daily Collegian Sports Ediffirs were on hand in the press box to see their alma mater battle, Florida State in the Gator Bowl. Sandy Padwe (foreground), a 1961 graduate of the University is currently a, sports columnist with The Philadelphia Inquirer. John Lott (standing), a 1966 Penn State graduate is completing work on his master's degree and is an assistant in 'the University's Sports Publicity Department. Ira Miller, a 1965 graduate, is a sports writer with The Associated Press. All three were covering the Gator Bowl and their accounts of the game appear elsewhere on this page. State Fit To Be Tied By IRA MILLER Collegian Sports Editor (1963.64) (In the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) TACKSONVILLE, Fla., Dec. 31—Penn State gambled. Florida State didn't. And that was about the story of their .17-17 tie in yesterday's Gator Bowl football game. The Nittany Lions practiced in secrecy for two weeks developing new formations, they worked. But the big gamble , spelled the beginning of the end. Florida State, faced with a win-or-tie choice in the final seconds, chose the tie. And at the end the record crowd of 68,019 was asking two questions. Why did Coach Joe Paterno of Penn State, leading 17-0, risk trying a fourth-and inches play from his own 15-yard line and why, after Quarterback Kim Hammond had completed 37 of 53 passes, wouldn't Florida State Coach Bill Peterson let him try more? Especially since Peterson said just a couple of days before the game that you never should play for a tie in a bowl game. Paterno blamed himself for the fourth down backfire which led to the first of two Seminole touchdowns within 69 seconds. "It was my call," he said. "I blew it— and if I had it to do over again I wouldn't do it." It was a gamble Penn State had made before, during the season, which usually paid off. But this time Tom Sherman couldn't get the six inches. Or at least not after the ball was spotted. "I looked down and I was this far past the line," Sherman said, holding his hands two feet apart, "Then somebody started pulling me by the seat of my pants. The officials grabbed the ball and spotted it where I ended up after they finished pulling me back." Peterson, who is expected to be named San Francisco 'Berg coach this week, defended his strategy. "Our kids had made a great comeback and I didn't want to see them lose," he said. But, said his All-America Flanker Ron Sellers: "I don't like tie games. I'm just glad it wasn't my decision." Said Paterno: rave Our youn jaunty shirt shifts EA. VALUES TO $4.99 Long pointed calla plaid low pocket beaut lightly 'A' silhouette. Moon-shape pockets of minty mini-print with Peter Pan posh collar Striped combed cottoi `cool', iced with whit collar and trim cuffs. •i: - - -. Petites 3-11 -• ' Juniors 7-15 g r . Misses 10.18 • k .* ,-r :. •41: -. (li,k t's\ ( \%,...,. .. .. • ~.. ... ' '' ' .4' :: P' irj• , A ' '''.; .- . '•z? , ,- -,,, ~. ~,,,,......., ..• • .*:,- • B i 1 . ;;;•••• ‘. t l * y 'i N... L • r/4 '., • IS, • . . ,.. ; • :siiya -- •,?,........)4 1 \ , . .. , .. ,‘, ' ) • i 1 i, .. ,: t :;:::. t :,..k:5. 1... S., -•''':;:.: .',.'•„*••• i ' • L '.;::::: ,:;.; '''. i A .. ,;.... , \,./ .. i . . 1 - .- - :::: - : - ::: . .,...,...„ . „,• 1 ;i;i i i , ~ ,„,,,,,, „,,,, ..„,.. ~,„,,,.,,, mr-r c T "THE BIG NEW GRANTS" At the Nittany Mall, Triangle, Ri. 64 & 26(N.) Between State College & Bellefonte Open Mon. thru Sat. 10 a.m.,to 10 p.m. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Sports Editors Return Ira Miller "Nobody likes a tie. My Thoughts in that last minute were that I hoped they'd miss the field goal. I hoped they'd try• for the touchdown, because I didn't think they'd make it." The Seminoles had gone for the touch- . down on the play before Grant Guthrie's . 26-yard tying field goal (with 15 seconds left), but Bob Capretto's last-second leap de flected the Hammond-to-Sellers toss. The shifting-Y formation which Penn State had devised in 'secrecy kept Florida State off balance fbr the first half and helped .' the Lions grab that 17-0 lead. Sherman • threw scoring passes to Jack Curry and Ted * Kwalick and kicked a 27-yard field goal. But after the Lions stopped Florida ~ State at the goal line in the third quarter, the momentum began reversing itself when the big gamble failed. • • "It was the turning point," Paterno said. "That gave them momentum when they had to have it—particularly after our goal-line . stand, • "I felt I shouldn't do it, but the kids wanted to go and 'I got caught up in the enthusiasm." Even though Hammond smashed a bevy of Gator Bowl marks with his passing dis play that netted 362 yards, the only touch downs Florida State scored were made pos sible by the fourth-down misfire and a fumble. One of the reasons was the Penn State defense which, as usual, came up with the big plays. Tim Montgomery made a pair of inter ceptions and saving plays that ruined both a fake field goal and a fake punt. Neal Smith, shifted to roverback, and Pete Johnson each had interceptions. Sellers caught 14 passes and Bill More. man 12, but the pass defense for Penn State played well. "Hammond's awfully tough," Mont gomery said. "He's right on target all the time." Peterson said Penn State did the best job any team had done in rushing liammond. "That Capretto was .one of the best to defense me all year," Sellers said. Winter Sports In Full Swing Next Weekend Although the Nittany Lion basketball team is at home to morrow for a 3:30 p.m. game with Kent State, Penn State's winter sports schedule doesn't get into full swing until next weekend. The wrestling and gymnas tics teams will hold a day-night doubleheader with Springfield College next Saturday, with the wrestlers getting the nod at 2 p.m. in Re Hall, the gymnasts at 8 p.m. The Lion rifle team travels to Cornell next week, while the fencers and swim mers play host to temple. The basketball team will play at Pittsburgh next Saturday. For Good Results Collegian Classifieds ALL HARDCOVER BOOKS 25%0fl MONARCH OUTLINES SCHAUM OUTLINES 20 ° / COLLEGE OUTLINES oOf S't 9 HORNER'S BOOK SHOP 202 South Allen Street Phone 237-1404 SALE SEE US FOR PAPERBOUND TEXTBOOKS • ...• .v. `A Stupid 'Game' By JOHN LOTT Collegian Sports Editor (1964-65) The hotel elevator soared silently from one floor to the next . . . 14-15-16 . . . and with each floor the slightly inebriated Floridian weaved stightly,.near ly oblivious of the four other persons in the ascending cubicle. "Both teams were stupid . . . out there . . . this afternoon," he said to,the wall. One corner of the elevator responded "What?" asked Sue Paterno. She didn't say it sarcastically. She just wanted to make sure. "Stupid . . . both of 'them," the man said. He was surprised to hear a reply. He had been talking to walls and flash ing elevator buttons for several hours. "No offense, ma'am . . . just my per sonal opinion," he said. "No, no, that's OK. We're all en titled to them," Sue Paterno said as the door opened at her: floor. She got off, keeping her opinions - to herself. The man didn't know he had been talking to Mrs. Joe Paterno. It had been a trying day for her, and it was not a nice way for' it to end. First; the ball game. Then a banquet, where all the speakers smiled into the spotlight and said how nice it was that both teams could , win, and Sue* Paterno and many others knew it wasn't true. And now a man with bourbon on the brain said the Whole thing was stupid. Sue Paterno is married to a man whose life is devoted to this stupid` game. • It was nol'a nice way for fhe day fo end. Twenty-four hours before, a small cluster of sportswriters had gathered in a hotel to hear just, how much stupidity had gone into the Penn State game plan for the Gator Bowl. Joe Paterno had Said there were going to be drastic changes, ,and now; after it was too late for the writers to get the story in their Saturday papers, he was going to tell them about his strategy. "If I can help you people write a story . . . a story you're going to have to do in a hurry, then I'm more than will. ing," he said. "Personally, I think the whole thing has gotten a little bit out of hand." He meant that the writers had dis played such concern about Penn State's secret practices that they were starting to lose their perspective about the game itself. They felt deprived because sports writers have an obsession about know ing everything. They're also the worst people around at keeping secrets. Joe Paterno knows this. That's why he waited until Friday night. The Penn State coach Started speak ing, and as his plans unfolded and the writers scribbled furiously, not fully understanding all they wrote. It became obvious that Paterno and his staff had laid the most careful plans since Nor mandy. The 1967 Gator Bowl might have been the most intricately planned foot ball game in history. He talked about defense first. About how Florida State creates five short pass ing zones, and that the Lions had to add another defensive back to combat this, and how Neal Smith was now a rover back (not a corner back), and how Pete Johnson was now a strong side line backer (not a rover back), and how Jim Kates would be a middle guard who would come out of the line to play line backer when the Lions went "to a six arrangement." He went on to say that now the Lions were short of defensive halfbacks, Athletes Aided by Air COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) There have been divergent views over the effects of high altitude and "thin air" on the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City. But geodesists, the scientists who deal with measuring and mapping the earth, seem to agree that gravity will make a JahnLot t so Paul Johnson was moved from wing back to a reserve defensive back. And that All-American Ted Kwalick -would now be a wingback instead of a tight end, and that Gary Williams would be the tight end, and that Jack Curry would be a wingback when Kwalick lined .up at tight end. He called it a "domino . effeat," and like a lot of the people who defend Viet nam policy by citing the domino theory, he met with several protestors. One of the demonstrators said that Kwalick had never been a back in his life, and demanded to know how he would adapt to such a foreign position. "I've seen Kwalick enough to -know that he'd be a great college tailback if we put him there," Paterno said, probably wondering if the writer remembered that Kwalick had carried the ball before on the end-around play. , The writers' questions came like anti aircraft fire, and they were designed for the same purpose. Once, one writer screamed at another for interrupting a question. You would have thought it was a meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and that Joe Paterno was William West moreland. But then, in his own inimitable way, Joe Paterno calmed the writers by ex• plaining his rationale. The antidOte worked faster than Excedrin. The writers stooned shouting. Some even , stopped writing. "One thing I know about a bowl game," Paterno said. "It can be the most foreign thine in the world to practice gar if you do the same things you've been doing all year. The players simply• get bored. "Now," he went on, "tomorrow you're going to see some things you haven't seen all year in a college football game. A bow! game is a one-shot affair. And we're going to play like we've played all year. We're down here to have To have fun, or to win? someone asked. "To do both," Paterno said. "But the kids are loving it. They've cooperated right to the hilt. I'm not naive enough to think we're Going to win by changing $. the O's and X's. The big thing is exe- • cution. But I do think we need better O's." Better O's? someone asked. "Yeah, you know, X's and O's," Pa terno answered with a grin. The writer smiled blankly. Maybe he thought Paterno and his staff were playing tic-tac-toe. "If you don't have enough confidence in yourself to make some changes when you think it's necessary, then you're not a good football coach," the Lions' coach ‘. 'said. "I honestly believe that I'd be a coward if I didn't change the character of our defense. I'll say this: we couldn't have beaten them the other way. • "Look, we may stink out' the place tomorrow. People will say Paterno's stu pid. That's part of football." Twenty-four hours later, people were saying Paterno was stupid. They were saying it in hotel lobbies; and on the - - streets of Jacksonville. A drunk- who wouldn't know a rover back from - a shirt • splint was saying it to Paterno's wife in • a hotel elevator. The X's and O's didn't matter. The complex planning was irrelevant. All that mattered was that Penn State landed inches short of a first down try at its own 15-yard line. That's what sportswriters like to write about. That gives television fans in bar rooms a good conversation piece. After all, it's just a game. A stupid game. Ask Joe Paterno. Better yet, ask Sue Paterno. difference. It will make it easier to break records. As gravity on its surface varies from point to point, geo desists feel this should affect the distance a person can throw or jump. Dr. Richard H. Rapp, asso ciate professor of geodetic science at Ohio State Univer sity, believes many of these differences are significant. "If the distance person can throw an object depends on where he is located, we would expect all competition to be based on the same location in order to establish world records correctly," Dr. Rapp said. "This is not being done, and this fact becomes important in considering world, records that are being set at many different locations for .onger and longer throws." Dr. Rapp rioted- that avity variation has many causes but the dominant one is that the earth is somewhat flattened to- CASTINGS ENGINEERS Planned expansion of our structural castings product line has created several opportunities in our Product Engineering Department. If you are a graduate in mechanical or metallurgical engineering and you would like an interesting and chal lenging job in a company with outstanding growth plans and potential, we would like to talk to you. You will be given necessary training and orientation in invest ment casting technology and you would have many opportunities for advancement dependent on your abil ity and personal contribution. Extellent benefit program and working conditions. Sal ary will depend on your experience and qualifications. DON'T PASS UP THIS OPFORTUNITY TO FURTHER YOUR ENGINEERING CAREER. Send your resume, or letter will do, giving your educa tion, experience and your ultimate 'professional objec tives to: • Metals Division Minerva, Ohio 44657 An equal opportunity employer ward the poles. "Thus at the equator a per son, is at sea level, the farthest from the center of the earth and at a point where centrifu gal force is strongest," Dr. Rapp said. "Here gravity is much less than at the pole where a per son would be closer to the cen ter of the earth and also where there is no centrifugal force." What effect does this gravity difference have on athletic per formance? Dr. Rapp said the 1968 Olym pics next will be held at a lati tude of 19.405 degrees. As this is closer to the equator than the 1964 Tokyo site at 35.71 degrees latitude, the gravity is less, and therefore it will take less effort to set the same marks achieved in Tokyo. In fact, Dr. Rapp noted, each Olypmics since 1960 has made new records easier because each successive site has been closer to the equator. C. W. Russell TRW PAGE ELEVEN