The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 09, 1978, Image 9

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    College Football Roundup
Oklahoma teaches Texas
'By The Associated Press
The Texas Longhorns are convinced
for now that Oklahoma is the nation's
No. 1 college football team, but they're
not sure how they'd feel if they played
the Sooners again next week.
"Oklahoma certainly is the No. 1 team
in the nation ... they were today," Texas
linebacker Lance Taylor said Saturday
after the top-ranked Sooners rolled to a
31-10 victory over the No. 6 Longhorns.
But, he added: "This is a game I'd like
to be able to play again next week. We'd
just like to go back and start this game
over again."
That's because Oklahoma stormed 77
yards in just five plays on its first
possession, with Billy Sims scoring from
18 yards out after a 55-yard dash by
Kenny King. Sims, who carried 25 times
for 131 yards, tallied again on a 1-yard
plunge in the second period and the
outcome never really was in doubt
thereafter.
Uwe von Schamann kicked a 35-yard
field goal on the final play of the first
half, making it 17-3, while Thomas Lott
threw a ,29-yard touchdown pass to
Bobby Kimball in the third quarter and
David Overstreet ran 2 yards for the
Sooners' final score in the closing
minutes.
Kansas City fans give team warm
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) They
were down again but the fans of the
Kansas City Royals appeared to be a
long way from being out.
A crowd of about 2,000 cheering
faithful greeted the Royals Sunday af
ternoon as the American League West
champions returned to Kansas City after
losing the AL playoffs to the New York
Yankees in four games.
The decisive 2-1 defeat Saturday night
to New York marked the third straight
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Meanwhile, the Oklahoma defense,
somewhat overshadowed by the
Sooners' explosive offense, held Texas to
142 yards rushing and 49 in the air as the
Longhorns completed only 5 of 19 passes.
The Sooners intercepted three and
recovered two Texas fumbles.
"I gave all the defensive players a
game ball. They played super," said
Barry Switzer, possessor of an amazing
56-5-2 head coaching record. "We had
challenged them to hold Texas to 10
points, and theydid."
Southerti California, runner-up in The
Associated Press ratings, had the
weekend off but Michigan, Arkansas and
Penn State, the 3-4-5 teams, kept pace
with Oklahoma.
Michigan, however, almost stumbled
just one week after Coach Bo Schem
bechler promised the Wolverines would
be psyched up for every game. They fell
behind Arizona 17-7 in the first half but
rallied to grind out a 21-17 triumph when
Russell Davis plunged across from a
yard out with s', minutes remaining
on fourth down, no less.
'Jerry Eckwood and Micheal Forrest
each scored twice in leading Arkansas to
a 42-3 romp over Southwest Conference
rival Texas Christian while Ron
Calcagni threw a touchdown pass to
season the Royals won their division
only to fall to the Yankees in the
playoffs.
Banners reading, "Royals You Did
One Hell-of-a-Job. Thanks," "We're Still
Loyal to the Royals" and "1978, No. 1 in
Our Hearts; 1979, No. 1 in the World"
expressed the fans' optimism as they
crowded . inside the airport terminal and
around two charter buses outside.
The crowd roared when the first
Royal, catcher Darrell Porter, stepped
Robert Farrell and directed the fourth
ranked Razorbacks to three other
scores.
Fifth-ranked Penn State extended the
nation's longest major college winning
streak to 15 games and avenged last
season's only setback by blasting
Kentucky 30-0.
College Football Scores
EAST
Boston U. 20, Dartmouth 17 •
Brown 44, Princeton 16
Cornell 24, Bucknell 0
Harvard 24, Colgate 21
Penn 31, Columbia 19
Pittsburgh 32, Boston College 15
Rutgers 28, Yale 27
Villanova 17, Richmond 14
SOUTH
Clemson 38, Virginia Tech 7
Duke 20, Virginia 13
Georgia 42, Mississippi 3
Georgia Tech 6, S. Carolina 3
Louisiana St. 34, Florida 21
Maryland 31, N. Carolina St. 7
Miami, Fla. 17, Auburn 15
Miami, Ohio 7, N. Carolina 3
Penn St. 30, Kentucky 0
S. Mississippi 22, Mississippi St. 17
Syracuse 31, W. Virginia 15
Temple 22, William & Mary 22, tie
Tennessee 31, Army 13
through the terminal and cheered
repeatedly with the appearance of each
player.
A few of the Royals including pit
cher Dennis Leonard and outfielder Joe
Zdeb smiled or grinned, but most
were grim -faced as they filed onto the
buses.
There was no dampening the deter
mined enthusiasm of the fans, however.
The site of center fielder Amos Otis
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Tulane 38, Vanderbilt 3
MIDWEST
Arizona St. 56, Northwestern 14
Kansas St. 18, Oklahoma St. 7
Michigan 21, Arizona 17
Missouri 45, Illinois 3
Nebraska 23, lowa St. 0
Notre Dame 29, Michigan St. 25
Ohio St. 35, SouthrnMethodist 35, tie
Oregon St. 17, Minnesota 14
Purdue 14, Wake Forest 7
S. Illinois 26, Illinois St. 0
Tulsa 34, Louisville 7
Utah 13, lowa 9
W. Michigan 14, Kent State 0
Wisconsin 34, Indiana 7
SOUTIIWEST
Arkansas 42, Texas Christian 3
Houston 20, Baylor 18
N. Texas St. 35, W. Texas St. 0
Oklahoma 31, Texas 10
Texas A&M 38, Texas Tech 9
FAR WEST
Alabama 20, Washington 17
California 21, Oregon 18
Colorado 17, Kansas 7
Colorado St. 39, Texas-El Paso 29
Navy 37, Air Force 8
Nev.-Las Vegas 53, Idaho 14
New Mexico 19, Wyoming 15
UCLA 27, Stanford 26
Utah St. 24, Brigham Young 7
welcome
prompted the familar "A. 0.! A. 0.!
A. 0.!" chant.
Then the Royals' playoff hero, George
Brett, appeared and the crowd shrieked
as he quickly vanished into a bus.
Perhaps the Kansas City third
baseman was just exhausted, maybe he
had said all he could in New York,
maybe the disappointment was just too
great.
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Dodgers hope for
a different ending
LOS ANGELES (AP) Baseball's
75th anniversary World Series begips
Tuesday evening in Los Angeles with
the National League champion
Dodgers facing the American League
champion New York Yankees and
hoping for a change from last year's
script.
Both teams advanced im
pressively, winning their league
championship series in four games.
The Dodgers eliminated Philadelphia
and the Yankees knocked off Kansas
City, both repeats of last year's
pennant playoffs.
Because Los Angeles and New
York both advanced on Saturday, the
teams will have two days off before
the start of the Series. The two clubs
scheduled, workouts at Dodger
Stadium for late Monday afternoon.
The opening-game pitchers for the
Series figure to be Ed Figueroa, a 20-
game winner during the regular
season for the Yankees, and Burt
Hooton, who won 19 games for the
Dodgers.
Both right-handers had problems in
their lone starts of the playoffs.
Figueroa was knocked out in the
second inning of Game 2 by Kansas
City and charged with the only loss
the Yankees suffered against the
Royals. .
Hooton, staked to a fat early lead in
Game 1 against the Phillies, didn't
make it past the fifth inning, with the
victory going to rookie reliever Bob
Welch.
A year ago, when the Yankees beat
the Dodgers in six games for the
world championship, Figueroa did
not pitch. He had an injured finger,
but was so upset at being passed over
that he asked permission to go home
to Puerto Rico before the final game.
Early this season, he asked to be
traded because he wasn't pitching as
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The Daily Collegian Monday, Oct. 9, 1978-
often as he wanted. No deal
developed,. and when Bob Lemon
replaced Billy Martin as the Yankee
manager, Figgy became an integral
part of New York's dash to its third
consecutive pennant.
Hooton, who became the ace of the
Dodgers' staff this season, enjoying
the best year of his career, started
twice against the Yankees in the 1977
World Series. He beat them 6-1 in the
second game but was the starter and
loser in the sixth and final game when
Reggie Jackson rewrote the Series
record book with three consecutive
home runs.
Jackson finished last year's Series
with five homers, eight runs batted in
and a .450 batting average and was
named the outstanding player of the
championship showdown. The
Yankee slugger warmed up for this
Series by ripping two home runs and
batting .461 in the four-game playoff
against Kansas City.
Under the system • of alternating
rules, the American League's
designated hitter will be used in the
Series this year. Jackson likely will
occupy that role for the Yankees
while Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda
may alternate the assignment.
Los Angeles has been platooning
center fielders Bill North and Rick
Monday and could use the DH rule to
keep both of them in the Series line
up.
Or, the Dodgers might choose to
use one of the other batters on their
deep bench that includes pinch
hitting specialists like Lee Lacy, who
had five pinch homers during the
regular season, Manny Mota and Vic
Davalillo.
The Dodgers are healthy for the
Series and will present the same set
line-up that charged from behind in
August to overtake San Franciscc
and Cincinnati for the NL West title.