14—The Daily Collegian Monday, Dec. 8,.1986 Few surprises: By DICK BRINSTER AP Sports Writer While the three-point goal will be the decid ing factor in many a college basketball game this season, 13th-ranked Kentucky learned the hard way that the most basic of all shots the free throw can’t be taken lightly. And the Wildcats need not look beyond Saturday’s 71-66 loss to third-ranked Indiana for a blatant demonstration. The Hoosiers made six free throws in the final 42 seconds to stave off Kentucky, which canned five of seven three-point attempts in the game. But the Wildcats made just five of 15 free throws, leaving Coach Eddie Sutton perplexed. “I think when you analyze the game .. . that hurts,” Sutton said of the free-throw shooting. But he promised that Kentucky, which fell to 2-1, would continue to bomb from long range. “We don’t have much of an inside game right now, and that’s why we used the three point shot,” Sutton said. Steve Alford, Daryl Thomas and Joe Hill man made two free throws each for unbeaten Indiana, which pulled away in the final min ute to win its third game. In other games involving ranked teams, ss> All This Week! Favored college hoops teams win over the weekend * v o^ s*&> Term State tß°°Kstore No. 1. North Carolina routed Miami (Fla.) 122-77; No. 4. Purdue took Connecticut 88-70; No. 5. lowa crushed Loyola (Calif.) 103-80; No. 6 Kansas was shocked by Arkansas 103- 86; No. 8. Alabama lost to Florida State 72-71; No. 9. Illinois edged No. 12 Pittsburgh 99-97; No. 11. Oklahoma whipped Texas-Arlington 101-76; No. 14. Western Kentucky topped Southern Cal 82-52; No. 16. Georgetown Kentucky got 10 points apiece by Irving trounced St. Leo 126-51; No. 17. Syracuse beat and Derrick Miller. No. 19 Northeastern 94-74; No. 18 North Gar <> No. 1 N. Carolina 122, Miami 77 lina State took Western Carolina 96-75, and Joe Wolf and Ranzino Smith scored 21 points No. 20 Arizona was upset by Utah 68-67. each to lead top-ranked North Carolina to a Idle were No. 2. Nevada-Las Vegas, No. 7 Auburn, No. 10 Navy and No. 15 Georgia Tech. Kentucky, which closed to within a point three times in the final minutes, had chance to tie the game when Rex Chapman tried to set up for a three-pointer with 33 seconds remaining. But Indiana’s Steve Eyl forced Chapman into a double dribble. “I was just supposed to play good team defense and take away the three-point shot,” Eyl said. “We were trying to get set up for a three- lowa, 6-0, won its own Amana-Hawkeye Clas pointer,” said Chapman, who hit three from sic for the fourth time in five on the strength long range and finished with a career-high 26 of 21 points by B.J. Armstrong and 20 by Roy points. “James (Blackmon) handed the ball Marble. off to me, and I didn’t have control of it. So I The Hawkeyes forced on campus batted it to the floor. It looked awkward, but I didn’t think I walked.” Alford, who sat sat out last year’s five-point loss at Kentucky because of an NCAA-or dered suspension for posing for a charity calendar, led Indiana with 26 points. Dean Garrett added 13 points and Thomas finished with 12 for the host Hoosiers. record-setting victory. The Tar Heels, 4-1, set a record for points in a half with 72 in the first period, eclipsing the 70 points the made against Rice in 1972. Miami, 1-2, got 20 points from Dennis Burns. No. 4 Purdue 88, Connecticut 70 A game-high 24 points by Troy Lewis and 21 by Todd Mitchell, who also had 10 rebounds, led unbeaten Purdue to its third victory. Connecticut, 2-2 was led by forward Jeff King, who collected a career-high 22 points. No. 5 lowa 103, Loyola-Marymount 80 C 1966 Art Carved Class Flogs 10am-4pm overs and held Loyola, 3-1,23 points under its season scoring average. Mike Yoest led the Lions with 22 points, and Chris Nikchevich added 19. Tim Scott scored eight of his 34 points in little more than a minute, including two three point goals, as Arkansas, 4-0, handed Kansas its first loss in four games. Freshman Ron Huery added 19 points the Razorbacks, who had 13 offensive rebounds in the first half.' Danny Manning led Karisas with 26 points before fouling out in the final seconds. Florida St. 72, No. 8 Alabama 71 A basket by 6-foot-10 senior Raleigh Choice with two seconds left gave the Seminoles their third victory in as many tries. Pee Wee Barber and Laßae Davis scored 20 points apiece for Florida State. No. 9 Illinois 99, No. 12 Pittsburgh 97 Tony Wysinger and freshman Kendall Gill hit four foul shots each in the final 57 seconds as Illinois held off Pitt. Doug Altenberger scored 26 points and Ken Norman added 24 for the 4-0 Illini. Curtis Aiken scored 13 of his game-high 29 points in the final 1:23 of play as Pitt came back from a 91-81 deficit. 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The Mavericks, 1-3, were led by Guard Danny Wojciak, who scored 16 points. No. 14 W. Kentucky 82, Southern Cal 52 The Hilltoppers, 6-1, got 16 points from Clar ence Martin, and won the game with defense by holding the Trojans to 16 first-half points. Southern Cal, 2-2, didn't score for the first eight eight minutes. Derrick Dowell paced Southern Cal with 18 points. No. 16 Georgetown 126, St. Leo 51 Reggie Williams scored 27 points and Jaren Jackson added 20 as Georgetown, 4-0, record the biggest rout in school history, surpassed a 62-point triumph over Hawaii-Hilo in 1983. The 126 points also exceeded the school scor ing record of 120, set against St. Peter’s in the 1963-64 season. St. Leo, 3-1, got 14 points from Ron Taylor. No. 17 Syracuse 94, No. 19 Northeastern 74 Forward Howard Triche scored a career-best 31 points and Sherman Douglas added 19 as the Orangemen, 4-0, wore down Northeastern to win its own Carrier Classic. 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It’s right next door.” Even then, • some 14 years ago, when he was the cement mason fore man for the building that stands alongside the Downtown Athletic Club, Al Testaverde knew all about the DAC, the place that awards the Heisman Trophy each year to the nation’s outstanding collegiate foot ball player. “I used to eat my lunch on the doorsteps and I used to pray that some day I’m gonna walk in the door and things are gonna be a little differ ent,’\he said. For the 18 months or so it took to build the building next door, Al Testa verde dreamed his 25-year dream up close and personal in the shadow of the DAC. “Except for some cold days. The wind whips around and you can’t stay out here,” he said. It was windy and cold Saturday night when Al Testaverde finally made it inside the Downtown Athletic Club. So did his 23-year-old son, Vin ny, the No. 1-ranked University of Miami’s record-setting quarterback and winner of the 52nd annual Heis man Trophy. “We dreamed it together, we did it together and I’m proud to say we won it together,” Vinny Testaverde said. He was standing at a battery of microphones in a roomful of media, but he was talking to his father. Al Testaverde would have been satisfied with a one-point victory. Instead, he got a runaway, the second largest in Heisman history. Vinny Testaverde, the 6-5 senior who led the nation in passing efficien 1986 Season Stats Passes Completed Comp.% T.D. Passes New Hurricane Records: Career Yards Career T.D. Passes 48 * Holds National Lead cy, won the Heisman by 1,541 points over Temple running back Paul Palmer, the country’s top rusher. The only greater margin was the 1,- 750 points by which Southern Cal tailback O.J. Simpson defeated Pur due halfback Leroy Keyes in 1968. In voting by members of the media across the country, Testaverde re ceived 678 first-place votes 1,050 ballots were sent out and 2,213 points, tabulated on a 3-2-1 point system. Testaverde also received 76 second-place and 27 third-place votes and won each of the six Heisman regions East, Mid-Atlantic, South, Southwest, Midwest and Far West. ANY JOB PROSPECTS? ANY COMPANY INTERVIEWS? ANY JOB OFFERS? Create 10, 100, 1000 Personalized LASER PRINTED COVER LETTERS from one master letter. Your resume and cover letter can stand out from the rest. IT’S FAST . . . IT’S EASY Rent a personal computer for less than a typewriter. PC WORKSHOP $2.95/HOUR 421 E. Beaver Ave. (Next to Domino’s Pizza) 234-4220 L. : Palmer received 28 first-place votes and 672 points. Michigan quar terback Jim Harbaugh finished third with 25 first-place votes and 458 points. The rest of the top 10 finishers were Oklahoma linebacker Brian Bos worth (9 firsts, 395 points), Holy Cross tailback-defensive back Gordie Lockbaum (32-242), Auburn tailback Brent Fullwood (4-129), Alabama linebacker Cornelius Bennett (3-96), Penn State tailback D.J. Dozier (0- 77), Fresno State quarterback Kevin Sweeney (6-73), and Ohio State line backer Chris Spielman (5-60). Testaverde started playing orga nized football at the age of 6'A with the Franklin Square (N.Y.) Warriors in a Long Island peewee league. The family lives in Elmont, just across the New York City line from the borough of Queens. 2.557 “He was always one cut above the next player,” said Al Testaverde, who was never more than an enthu siastic sandlot player himself. “He was very talented as a youngster. “It (the Heisman) was something he wanted. I think he knew that I wanted it real bad, so I think he tried for it even more.” 6.058 Al Testaverde tried a little post natal influence on his only son. He put a football alongside the pillow in the bassinet the day Vinny came home from the hospital. “He was five days old,” Al re called. “The football was a couple of years old. It wasn’t a regulation foot ball. I think I paid a couple of dollars for it, which in those days was a lot of money.” AP/Vince Scol.l Vinny was the third of Al and Josie Testaverde’s five children two girls, Vinny, then two more girls. Since no female has ever won the Heisman Trophy, could Al Testa verde have been just a trifle disap pointed when his first two offspring were girls? “If I said no I’d be lying,” he said. In leading Miami to an 11-0 record he missed one game with bruises suffered when he fell off his motor scooter and a berth in the national championship Fiesta Bowl game against runner-up Penn State. PER S 0 N A L with coupon good for one rental . Expires 1/6/87 c^'an Monda y- cc - *• 1 I T? 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