B—The Daily Collegian Monday, Nov. 3, 1980 Beaver Stadium By RICH SCARCELLA Daily Collegian Sports Writer The generals of the Miami military staff probably thought they had charted an offensive and defensive strategy against Penn State as well as any com mander since Bear Bryant. And they may have been right, but it didn’t matter. As the battle wore on Saturday at Beaver Stadium, it became apparent that the disciplined philosophy of the Lion tacticians would carry 13th-ranked Penn State (7-1) to a 27-12 victory over the Hurricanes (4-3). . “We expected them to pass that much,” Miami coach Howard Schnellenberger said. “Their game plan was pretty much what they’ve been do ing. They just did it very well. We were unable to stop them enough times to keep them from winning the game. The difference was that they were able to execute.’’ Even though Schnellenberger wouldn’t admit it, the Lions added an aerial dimension to balance their attack by gaining 176 passing yards and 283 rushing yards against a Hurricane defense that had been ranked 11th in the country. “Penn State played an outstanding game, both offensively and defensive ly,” Schnellenberger said. “I think our football team has improved over the last year. But we haven’t improved as much as Joe Paterno’s Penn State Nittany Lions have improved.” One particular area which has been dramatically upgraded by Penn State has been its defensive secondary. When Miami upset the Lions last season, 26-10, East Brady|s Jim Kelly shredded it for 280 yards and three touchdowns. But this time the Lion secondary was like Allstate Insurance Co., giving blanket coverage to Hurricane wide receivers Larry Brodsky, Jim Joiner and Pat Walker. “They deployed a lot of people in the secondary to take away our passing game,” Schnellenberger said. “They weren’t doing it with four people. They, were doing it with seven and eight. A good running football team should be able to make short work out of.that kind of strategy.” With Miami rushing for only 48 yards on 25 carries, Kelly and backup Mike Rodrigue had no alternative but to throw 35 times on a blustery day that chased many Penn State fans from the stadium. “.They came out with double coverage on our wide receivers,” said Kelly, who completed 14 of 27 passes for 154 yards. “We tried to hit our backs. They improv- PROFESSIONAL 'l I n; -'.mt !TYPESETTING & j) f|. K preparation of: v --1 LiW articles for publication • research 8 Medical papers 9 research proposals 9 | School programs 9 Invitations 9 brochures Four-year fully recogni mmßM—mmmmmmmmmmm-MMmmm—mm zed and established Mexican Medical School, T 1 OEC with several hundred «!*>"■ p n “ American students en- A-ypeseumg & rolled. Use English Vv„,V: OnCH books, with First Semes -1 s jjen>ice £«JO I ,er exams in English. ’ School combines quality education, smallclasses, experienced teachers, modern facilities. .^Oo Homemade Meatball Sandwich,*** and Salad $1.99 »'?«? I«f The Press Box is located at 129 S. Pugh St. across from the Parking Garage ed over last year just like we have. Everybody has matured for them. Last year they weren’t ready for our passing game but this year they were. “I think they’re a better defensive secondary but I think we could have passed on them. We showed that. But they just have a tough team. They were blitzing and everything.” One of those Lion blitzes came in the first quarter with Penn State leading, 3-0. The Hurricanes had a first down at the Lion 1. Kelly dropped back, circled left, then right and slipped at the 9. “They just came and guarded our receivers,” Kelly said. “I had nothing else to do. When I went to turn around, I just slipped. I fell down.” It was Schnellenberger, not Kelly, who decided to pass on that obvious running down. “Penn State doesn’t cover the pass on first down,” Schnellenberger said. “They blitz everybody and they dare you to throw it. All Jim had to do was to lay it up over them and it was a touchdown.” Miami was deep in Penn State ter ritory again early in the fourth quarter, down 17-6, when another drive sputtered out. Kelly fumbled a snap from center John Fenton and then kicked the ball. The officials ruled that Pete Harris recovered at the Lion 4 but the Hur ricanes protested vehemently. “I saw the ball squirt out from-two of their defensive players,” Fenton said. “I saw the ball go shooting by me. I grabb ed it. I thought clearly I had the ball because no one on their team had posses sion of it.” After Penn State’s offense stalled, Miami safety Fred Marion returned the ensuing punt 53 yards to close the gap to 17-12. The fumble turned out to be signifi cant only because the Hurricanes have had continuous problems scoring this season once inside opposing teams’ 20-yard line. “It’s happened several times,” Joiner said. “It seems like it’s a different mistake each week by a different in dividual. We must do a better job on concentration.” The Miami defense didn’t have any trouble concentrating on Lion tailback Curt Warner, who carried 24 times for 146 yards. Warner'was as slippery as a con artist avoiding a police dragnet. “He’s good. He’s hard to get a hold of,” said Hurricane linebacker Scott Nicolas, who made nine tackles. “He’s shifty, real shifty. He’s one of the better running backs we’ve played against this year.” dnlveraldad Del Hwraiata 120 East 41 SI .NY. NY 1001/ (212) 594-6880 or 232-3784 V A it LJ pm. VCJmii The Original Slate College Sports Bar not a resort for Miami Penn State’s Ed Pryts (61), Chet Parlavecchio (94) and Pete Kuglcr (68) have Miami quarterback Jim Kelly (12) caught in a Lions’ den of defenders as Penn State middle guard Greg Jones (99) makes sure Kelly doesn’t go anywhere in Saturday’s After a 4-0 start, Miami has now lost three in a row to probable No. 1 Notre Dame, Alabama-killer Mississippi State and Penn State. “Notre Dame and Penn State are both The Gentle J Touch of Ear Piercing Tha most laahlonabla aarrlngt and tha wtdaat aalactlon available ara tor plarcad aara. . Have your ears pierced FREE of charge with the purchase of Ear Piercing Earrings at $7.50 • Non-Allergenic • Surgical Stainless Steel • 24 Kt. Gold Overlay • Ears Pierced by Trained Specialist Store Hours Mon-Wed Thurs-Fri Sat. moyer jewelers ONE HUNDRED EAST COLLEGE AVENUE MEMBER AMERICAN .GEM SOCIETY great teams but I think Notre Dame is tougher,” Kelly said. “I’m not taking anything away from Penn State. They came out and beat us. “We just got to pick it up where we left OFFICIAL T-SHIRT TM of TAITO AMER. GORP. ':V;V . 9:00 to 5:30 9:00 to 9:00 9:00 to 5:00 MSSttB Kee WHITE ON BLACK ONLY S-M-L-XL Quality 50/50 Silk Screened by hand Send Check. Cash, Money Order $5.95 + .75 Shipping and Handling TO THE WIZ KIDS 3711 Hillview St, McKeesport, PA 15132 A GREAT XMAS PRESENT PROMPT DELIVERY "DISTRIBUTOR INQUIRIES WELCOME" Soup ONly Sj«i -a 05 O REW(„>, qIASS of OThER bEVERAqE) H 9 mSb JHf A ouick, delicious, ANd AffoßclAblE UlNch which qETS you iN ANd out iN V 2 houß SERVEd From 11 :JO-2 p.M. 210 West CollEqE «J2ju ibistre off. We have to come through and win the rest of our games. Everybody’s thinking positive. This loss does hurt but everybody’s got it in our hearts that we will pull together.” m : . • DATE ’N’ At The Arena WB ; Every Monday and Tuesday .• The Arena’s Specialty I ' SIRLOIN STEAK DINNER I FOR TWO including the fabulous Arena Salad Buffet 130 Heister St., State College (next to the Cinemas) 237-0361 Valley beautiful, ©oij’t litter, asesaa ..Ai. j.i. k \ .... . J.. I a*. .A*. V.iA.*.idhiuHlkxLt Afkx./.Aiin.l/ji _V.uk,/. - • ■ ■ ■ Penn State- Miami Statistics! Miami 3 3 o G —l2 *'** Penn Slate 3 7 7 10 —27 Z •. PSU-FG Menhardt 28 m • MIA-FG Miller 23 MIA-FG Miller 24 PSU-Moore 1 run (Menhardt kick) I ’ - PSU-Jackson 25 pass from Coles (Menhardt kick) • ! k MIA-Marion 53 punt return (pass failed) l • “ PSU-Kab 25 pass from Biackledge (Menhardt J kick) - i-- PSU-FG Menhardt, 25 Score i First Downs Rushes-yardage Passing-yardage Return yardage (kickoffs) Return yardage (punts) Passes Totasl Offense Punts (no.-average) Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards RUSHING MIA-Roan, 7-22: Hobbs, 6-19; Neal, 3-9: Rush, 2-0, PSU-Warner. 24-146; Moore, 13-43; Biackledge, 10-43; Meade, 4-17; Coles, 5-16. PASSING MIA-Kelly, 27-14-1 for 154; Rodrigue, 8-2-1 for 52. PSU-Blackledge, 24-10-1 for 130; Hosteller, 3-2-0 for 21; Coles, 1-1-0 for 25. MIA-Brodsky, 5-72; Rush, 4-20; Joiner, 2-26; Roan, 2-21; Baratta, 1-33; Belk, 1-20; Walker, 1-8. PSU-Scovill, 4-69; Jackson, 4-58; Kab, 1-25; Warner, 2-9;.Urquhart, 1-9; Baugh, 1-6. MIA-Labelle, 8-37. PSU-Giacommarro, 5-48.4; team, 1-29. PUNTRETURNS MIA-Thompson, 2-8; Marion, 1-53. PSU-Jackson, 1-4. KICKOFF RETURNS MIA-Rush, 3-64; Neal, 1-14; Griffin, 1-17. PSU-Williams, 1-23; Warner, 1-21; Coles, 1-8. Boston U. 38, VMI 22 Bucknell 33, Cornell 16 Colgate 44, Lafayette 0 Delaware 17, Villanova 7 Harvard 17, Brown 16 Holy Cross 26, Columbia 0 Lock Haven St. 29, Slippery Rock 7 Notre Dame 33, Navy 0 PENN STATE 27, Miami, Fla. 12 Pittsburgh 43, Syracuse 6 Princeton 28, Penn 21 Rutgers 37, Army 21 Yale 35, Dartmouth 7 ) '''' MIAMI PENN STATE 12 27 14 24 25*48 GO-283 20G 176 • 5& 95 69 4 35-IG-2 ' 29-13*1 254 459 a-37.0 6-45.2 ; 4- 1-0 5- 12-117 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS PASS RECEIVING PUNTING College football STEAK * Jancevski firecracker in Lion win By WILL PAKUTKA Daily Collegian Sports Writer Before the soccer team’s 6-0 defeat of Binghamton State on Friday, the line on Penn State went something like this: # • Has won 14 of 16 games so far this season, including its last six in a row. • Almost assured of a berth in the National Collegiate Athletic Association playoffs. • • Still not happy. The team was doing fine, but there were things missing, the most important of which was a consistent scorer. « Last year, the title unquestionably belonged to Jim Stamatis, who set career records for points and came one away from tying the all-time record for career goals. Many thought Pete Jancevski, the second-leading scorer last year, would be heir to Stamatis’ title. But as of 7:15 p.m. Fri day, he had eight goals and three assists and was not even the leading scorer on the team. Jancevski had even been held without a goal in the the last three games. But before anybody could ask, “What’s the matter, Pete?” Jancevski answered. : > ** AW ; *| •• • i .Boom Just 1:36 into the game, Jancevski scored off a pass from Steve Blumenthal. j Boom One-and-a-half minutes into the second half, Jancevski returned the favor and assisted Blumenthal on a j J The Economy of Centre County .; Rep. Cunningham ... supported cost of living adjustments in jifetirement benefit levels for state and public school retirees. . introduced and secured passage of legislation to amend ♦ •the Constitution to provide for cost of living adjustments in retirement benefit levels for widows and widowers of deceas ed state retirees jto by Jai. jrger Penn State’s leading scorer Duncan Mac Ewan (8) received some much-needed offensive assistance from Peter Jancevski on Friday night when the Lions blanked Binghamton State, 6-0. Jancevski scored three times and added two assists. ... proposed and won the Governor’s approval fora plan to delay a scheduled 12 million dollar cut in University funding until deficiency appropriations could be arranged. ... proposed and secured passage of his legislation ap propriating 8.5 million dollars to equip the University power plant with an air pollution filtration system. ... proposed and secured passage of his legislation in - creasing Penn State’s appropriations by 1.8 million dollars. ... proposed and secured passage of his legislation ap propriating .7 million dollars to modernize main campus -buildings by eliminating barriers to the access of hand ! icapped persons. !... assisted in securing .4.5 million dollars in state funding ' to complete Penn State’s “living filter” sewage effluent ; treatment system. supported legislation ending mandatory retirement age discrimination against university professors. ;Constitutional Spending Limits that the Public Sector (Government) cannot con tinue to spend without regard to the ability of the Private Sec tbr (Tax Payers) to fund this level of spending, Representative Cunningham pushed for, and the House passed, restraints that will limit the annual growth of government spending to nothing in excess of the rate of growth of personal income as averaged over the two previous fiscal years. Unemployment Compensation Reform Rep. Cunningham supported what will be the first in a series of remedies which tackle Pennsylvania’s “most serious economic problem” in an attempt to bring the system out of bankruptcy while balancing the interests of working people and employers alike. Welfare Reform Rep. Cunningham supported legislation designed to remove from the welfare roles general assistance recipients who are fully able to work and appropriated the savings to the truly needy. THE NEXT BEST THING TO BEING THERE YOURSELF Boom Jancevski went deep into the right corner and dumped a pass off to Blumenthal, who scored the game’s third goal at 56:06. Boom Jancevski got hold of a Nigel Munyati pass in front of the Binghamton net and scored the fourth goal at 61:18. And boom again At 64:31, in one of the prettiest plays of the season, Jancevski. outraced two defenders and put a left footed shot past Binghamton goalie Paul Quinlan for the fifth goal of the game. By the time Bob Waizenegger scored the sixth goal off an assist by Bob Cunningham, Jancevski was on the bench with 16 points five more than he came with. Duncan Mac Ewan still leads the team in scoring with 18 points, but now Jancevski is up there too something that was expected before the season started. What wasn’t expected was Steve Blumenthal being one of the top five scorers with only three games left in the season. The sophomore from State College High School started the first game of his Penn State career and happened to have his biggest game ever as a Nittany (as opposed to Little) Lion. And just think, if it weren’t for one little drill in practice. . . “We had a drill in practice Wednesday where you take quick shots from inside the box and he was just outstanding,” Penn State coach Walt Bahr said. “We did the same drill Thursday and he was still good. When someone practices that way, I think he deserves a shot at starting.” y * JL o. S. Senator Richard Schweiker, Congressman William Clinger, Representative Greqq \ Cunningham and U.S. Senator John Heinz. HHH REPRESENTATIVE GREGG CUNNINGHAM UNPRECEDENTED EFFECTIVENESS Representative Cunningham address a television press conference with Governor Richard Thornburgh, Lt. Governor William Scranton and House Speaker Jack Seltzer. LEADERSHIP IN HARRISBURG Scharsu paces sweep at champ By RON GARDNER Daily Collegian Sports Writer It was another typical meet for the men’s cross country team. Penn State, the nation’s second ranked team, made it look easy as it pushed the first seven runners across the finish line to record its first shutout vic tory of the year at the blustery Coaches Championship Saturday morning on the Blue Golf Course. Paced by individual winner Alan Scharsu, the Lions easily won with 15 points, while Cleveland State (64) was second and Rutgers finished with 71. Scharsu’s winning time of 24:13 for the five-mile event was a new course record and Penn State coach Harry Groves said Scharsu ran very well for the conditions. “I was really pleased with my time,” Scharsu said, “considering the cold weather and the wind and everything. We ran against the wind for the first half mile.” Scharsu’s split for the first mile was an unusually slow 4:47, but one strong surge left the rest of the pack far behind. “I went out a little half-heartedly and I saw that there was a big pack around me so I made one real hard move toward the middle of the race,” Scharsu said. Freshman John Zishka (24:20) finish ed second, Larry Mangan (24:25) was third and freshman Dwight Stephens turned in another strong performance, running 24:45 to grab fourth place. Other top 10 finishers for the Lions were Tom Rapp (24:49) in fifth, Rick Garcia (24:55) in sixth place and Jeff Adkins finished seventh with a time of 25:03. “We went right out as a group and we did well,” Groves said. “Those times show a lot of improvement over what we ran earlier.” Other strong finishers for Penn State were Mike Cook (25:36) in 18th place, Bob Whiteside (25:42) in 21st and Barry Enright was 25th with a time of 25:51. One factor that may have played a part in the results of the meet was the biting cold and 20-mile per hour winds served up by Mother Nature. But that depends on whom you talk to. “I thought the wind was a factor, but I talked to the guys and they said it wasn’t as bad as it seemed just standing there,” Groves said. “The only time they said it bothered them was coming up the hill for the last time.” But Rapp, the Lions’ captain, said that the wind slowed times down quite a bit. 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