EDINBORO UNIVERSITY vs. FAIRMONT STATE Saturday, November 16,1991 1:00 p.m. Sox Harrison Stadium November 16,1991 The Scot Scoreboard Edinboro’s University Official Football Program The Fighting Scot football program is the official magazine for all Edinboro University home football games. The Scot Scoreboard is published by the Sports Information Office and printed by Printing Concepts, Erie, Pa. National advertising in the publication is represented by Touchdown Publications of San Francisco, California. Local advertising in The Scot Scoreboard is solicited by the Sports Information Office and supports football at Edinboro University. Please give our advertisers your patronage whenever possible. Questions? Contact Todd V. Jay, sports information director. McComb Fieldhouse, Room 114, Edinboro University, Edinboro, PA 16444 or call 814-732-2811. Fairmont State College Lineup and Numerical................. Center Fairmont State College Alphabetical Roster.............................. 21 Assistant Coaches..................................................................... 23-24 Scouting the Scots.......................................................................... 24 Player Profiles ............................................................. 25,27,29,31 Scots Ready for Challenge in 1991-92......................................... 33 Letter from the Chancellor........................................................... 34 Ten-Game Individual and Team Stats.........................................38 Battle of Edinboro.................................................................... 40 Football Cheerleaders ................................................................... 40 Touchdown Insert Better to Give Than Receive "Oh Yeah?" 'Yeeeeah!" Winning 'em Over Follow the Bouncing Ball Divisions II & III Hoop Preview Program Features Scots Host Fairmont State..............................................................3 Edinboro University....................................................................... 5 President Foster F. Diebold............................................................ 7 Pizza Hut Day................................................................................. 8 Athletic Director Jim McDonald...................................................9 Can the Scots Make it Three in a Row?.................................... 11 Head Coach Tom Hollman..........................................................14 Ernest Priester -1990 Harlon Hill Runner Up..........................16 1990 Honors and Accomplishments..........................................17 Edinboro University Alphabetical Roster.................................20 Edinboro University Lineup and Numerical....................Center Officials for Today’s Game REFEREE.............................................................Paul Tomasovich LINE JUDGE............................................................. Rich Jaworski UMPIRE.....................................................................D. L. Grover HELD JUDGE..................................................................Bob Kelly LINESMAN ......................................................... Dave Papariello BACK JUDGE.............................................................Rick Locaitis CLOCK OPERATOR................................................. Don Kovach 1991 Schedule (6-4,3-3 PSAC) EUP “Twoallbeefpattiesspecialsaucelettucecheesepickles onionsonasesameseedbun® Seven great ingredients, one great taste. McDonald’s® Big Mac® sandwich. Stop in for one. You’ll get everything in it except dessert. 120 Plum Street Edinboro 1991 Edinboro University Football Captains: Kneeling L-R: Curtis Rose, Wally Spisak. Standing L-R: John Messura, Wade Smith. 7 0 14 25 at Youngstown State 24 at Northwood Institute 14 Sept. 21 35 S. CONNECTICUT 16 Sept. 28 23 BLOOMSBURG 21 Oct. 5 17 at Clarion Oct. 12 28 at Lock Haven 12 Oct. 19 7 at Shippensburg 45 Oct. 26 45 CALIFORNIA 10 Nov. 2 0 Nov. 9 17 Nov. 16 at Slippery Rock lUP FAIRMONT STATE A member of the State System of Higher Education 1 SAM-BM-401 Sept. Sept. OPP 9 7 20 Scots Host Fairmont State THE GAME: THE OFFENSES: The Scots host Fairmont State College with Pizza Hut serving as the game sponsor. At half time Pizza Hut will hold an "All You Can Eat Pizza Contest" for the fraternities and sororities. Jody Dickerson (98-182-1,313-7 td-13 int) directs the offense and looks for Wrentie Martin (39-607-3 td), Lateef Walters (21-434-1 td), Paul Stone (8-107) and tight end Brian Heebsh (12-141-2 td). Derrick Russell (58-300-3 td) got the call against lUP and responded with 102 yards and a pair of scores. The status of Lester Frye (128-637-11 td) and Derrick Lewis (57-282-2 td) is questionable following a game suspension. Freshman Larry Jackson (24-156-1 td) is another threat. Blocking up front continues to be Gordy Hitchcock, Wally Spisak, Curtis Rose, Mike Kegarise and Scott Nickel. The Falcons counter with the running of tailback Irwin Hastings (222-1,080-8 td), a transfer from Kent State. He averages over 120 yards per game. FSC is expect^ to start Aramis Rgueora (40-92-496-2 td-6 int) over center. Hastings (12-92-1 td) can also catch the ball out of the backfield while Bryan Wilson (12-141-2 td) and Eric Ritz (11-196) are solid wideouts. Ritz is questionable after missing the Shepherd game with injury. The Falcons love to run the ball evidence of their 201 yards per game average on the ground. THE RECORDS: The Boro looks to recover from 20-17 setback from lUP. This was the first time that the Plaid lost at home to a Division II school under Tom Hollman. Edinboro has dropped three of their last four games. Edinboro opened with a loss at I-AA YSU 24-0 then rebounded with wins over Northwood (25-14), Southern Connecticut (35-16), Bloomsburg (23-21), Clarion (17-9), and Lock Haven (28-12). The Plaid fell at Shippensburg (45-7) then drilled California (45-10) before suffering their second shutout of the season at the Rock (7-0). Fairmont owns a forfeit win over West Virginia Tech and a tie with West Liberty (10-10) and stand at 1-7-1. They have fallen to Clarion (24-21), Slippery Rock (32-7), WV Wesleyan (3-0), Concord (21-16), Glenville (44-34), WV State (27-25) and most recently Shepherd (33-16). THE DEFENSES: THE SERIES: The Boro looks to contain the ground game with the play of All-American tackle John Messura (62 tackles-14 for loss-6 sacks), linemate Russell Cray (39) and ends Delvin Pickett (619 for loss-6 sacks) and Anthony Mariani (38). The linebacking crew has been strong as of late with Jason Perkins (122-7 for loss-4 sacks-2 int), Joel Marratta (81-4 for loss-4 sacks), Mike Barnes (77) and Steve Russell (41-2 sacks-2 int). The secondary has improved spearheaded by Georj Lewis (45-2 rec) who will start his 34th consecutive game at the corner. Wade Smith (67) is at free safety while Mario Houston (68-1 int) is at the other back spot. FSC has picked 18 enemy passes and is a threat to Dickerson. SS Derek Judd (54 stops) owns 5 interceptions while CB Vashon Page (75) has 3 and 12 deflections. MLB Matt Joseph (128-2 int-2 rec-3 sacks-2 blk kicks) is outstanding. Up front, end Deion Frazier (68-3 rec-8 blk passes) and Allon Sansom (60) are both active. This will be the second time that both teams have ended the regular season against one another. Fairmont holds a 6-3-2 record over the Scots. The series started with a 0-0 tie back in 73. In 7 of the 11 battles, games have been decided by 9 points or less. In the series, the Scots have tallied 160 points to the Falcons 169. THE COACHES: Hollman stands at 28-14-1 including an impressive 18-5-1 slate against western foes. Hollman's overall head coaching slate of 52-25-2 (.658%) ranks high among active Division II coaches. The Scots have been 5-4-1, 8-3, 9-3 and currently 6-4 under Hollman. Veteran coach Wally Hood directs the Falcons. His eightyear slate with FSU is 41-35-4. Hood's overall slate in 17 years of collegiate coach is 90-74-7. SPECIAL TEAMS/KICKING GAME: LOOK AT THE NUMBERS: 2 Scoring Total Offense Rushing Offense Passing Offense Edinboro 19.7 ppg 323.3 ypg 175.6 147.7 Fairmont 16.2 ppg 280.6 ypg 201.9 78.7 Scoring Defense Total Defense Rushing Defense Passing Defense 17.8 ppg 337.9 ypg 153.8 184.1 23.7ppg 391.7 ypg 146.6 245.1 The Scots look to punter Gary Lhotsky (38.0-46 punts) and freshman placekicker Scott Rupert (4-6 field goals-19-23 PAT). Kick return specialist Larry Jackson (18-446-24.8 ypr) is one of the nation's best while Mike Barnes (7.5) handles punt return duties. Punter Heath Flickinger (32.3) and Scott Lewis (4-10 fg-1617 PAT) handle specialty chores. Charles Washington (22.7 ypr) and Hastings (18.5) return kickoffs while James France (7.1) will be back on punts. 3 Edinboro University of Pennsylvania ❖ Reading clinic, speech and hearing clinic, math clinic, parent-child development center, and computer lab for children ❖ Six powerful, mini-computer systems with more than 300 micro computers and 200 computer terminals. ❖ Recreational facilities, life skills cen­ ter, and nurse's station for disabled students ❖ Campus is nearly 100% wheelchair accessible ❖ Tennis courts, football stadium, weight rooms, indoor rifle range, allweather track, and olympic-size pool with diving tank ATHLETICS HISTORY ❖ ❖ •J Founded in 1857 as a private acade­ my Previously named Edinboro Acade­ my, Edinboro Normal School, Edin­ boro State Teachers College, and Edinboro State College ❖ The 2nd normal school established in Pennsylvania and the 12th in the U.S. ❖ Became Edinboro University of Pennsylvania on July 1,1983 with the formation of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education / impaired, the visually impaired, and the learning disabled ❖ International education program for the exchange of faculty and students ❖ Honors program for academically gifted students ❖ Internships and field experiences which integrate academic pursuits with on-site "real world" work situa­ tions and personal relationships. FACILITIES ❖ 40 buildings on a 585-acre wooded campus with a 5-acre lake ❖ Newly renovated 27-acre Porreco Extension Center in nearby Erie, Pa. ❖ Modern library with 400,000 bound volumes and 1.3 million microform units ❖ Seven on-campus residence halls ❖ Planetarium, modern science and robotics laboratories, solar observato­ ry, biology museum, and center for the performing arts ❖ TV studio and radio station which reaches one-half million listeners LOCATION BOOKSTORE ❖ Located in the resort town of Edin­ boro, Pennsylvania ❖ Just 15 miles south of Erie and 100 miles from Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Buffalo ❖ Easily accessible from interstates 90 and 79 UNIVERSITY CENTER 814-732-2456 Monday - Friday 8:30 a.m. - 4:15 p.m. 4 SPECIAL PROGRAMS ❖ The nation's third largest educational program for the physically disabled including services for the hearing 5 ❖ Men's baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, swimming, tennis, track, and wrestling ❖ Women's basketball, cross country, softball, swimming, tennis, track, and volleyball ❖ The Fighting Scots compete in the Pennsylvania Conference and the National Collegiate Athletic Associa­ tion, Divisions I and II The Alumni Association of Edinboro University of Pennsylvania is proud of the University's continued excellence in academics, athletics, and special programs, and proud to support the 1991-92 football season. President Foster F. Diebold Since his appointment as president of Edinboro University of Pennsylvania on August 1, 1979, Foster R Diebold has initiated a wide variety of policies and programs designed to complement his desire for an increased level of excel­ lence and quality in higher education. The Orange, New Jersey, native is a graduate of Monmouth College and also holds a master of arts in educational administration from Seton Hall Uni­ versity. He has met coursework requirements for a doctorate in education at Rutgers University and is currently completing the dissertation requirement for the Ph.D. program in higher education at the University of Pittsburgh. Prior to his presidency of Edinboro University, President Diebold was pres­ ident of the University of Alaska and the director of development and planning at Kean College in New Jersey. He has also served as an assistant superinten­ dent of the Neptune Township (New Jersey) Public Schools. Recognized for his extensive experience in the field of educational manage­ ment, President Diebold's principal professional interests include ethics in high­ er education, budget development and fiscal control, legislative affairs, international education, personnel management and collective bargaining, and institutional advancement. Foster F. Diebold His scholarly achievements in the discipline of applied ethics in higher edu­ cation deserves special mention. The model statement he authored for the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, "Ethical Practices for College Presidents," was unanimously adopted by that professional organiza­ tion and published as policy for the chief executives of its nearly 400 member institutions nationwide. It has also been adopted by the Pennsylvania State Sys­ tem of Higher Education Board of Governors as a guiding statement for presi­ dents of those institutions. A staunch advocate of a statewide system of public universities in Pennsyl­ vania, President Diebold supported the enabling legislation for the State System of Higher Education (Act 188 of 1982) and saw the State System come to exis­ tence in 1983 as a member of the transition team. He currently serves on the System's Executive Council of Presidents and on the boards of the Pennsylvania Academy for the Profession of Teaching, the Pennsylvania State Athletic Con­ ference, and the University Center at Harrisburg. For his leadership and scholarly achievement on an international scale and for his many contributions to advancements of higher education and enrich­ ment of an emerging culture in Pakistan, President Diebold was decorated with prestigious gold medals from three Pakistani universities. The awards for edu­ cational eminence were presented during visits to the Edinboro campus by offi­ cial Pakistani delegations. Active in the community, he serves on the Board of Directors of the Erie Conference on Community Development, the United Way of Erie County, the Board of Corporators of both St. Vincent Health Center and Hamot Medical Center, and on the Executive Committee of the French Creek Council of the Boy Scouts of America. He is also a member of the Marine Bank Advisory Board, the Advisory Board of the McMannis Educational Trust Fund, and the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Corporation Scholarship Review Committee. President Diebold resides in Edinboro with his wife, Patricia, and daugh­ ters, Jessica and Stacey. 6 7 President Diebold's princi­ pal professional interests include ethics in higher education ... BEGINNING DECEMBER 1ST! I Athletic Director James K. McDonald Edinboro University's athletic program was placed under the talented and aggressive leadership of Jim McDonald in July of 1981. Increased emphasis on fund raising to provide a sound scholarship foundation has become his top priority while numerous changes and innovations have also keyed the Scots' athletic program under his direction. Through his efforts more than $4 million has been raised during the past ten years. The funds generated by the energetic athletic director's efforts will be used to assist Edinboro's men and women athletes who compete in the Scots sixteen intercollegiate sports. In addition to maintaining Edinboro's respected winning tradition in intercollegiate athletics, the former health and physical education professor has vastly expanded the University's summer activities. Jim McDonald Fifty-six camps were sponsored by the Fighting Scots Booster Club this past summer on the University's campus. Sox Harrison Stadium is the site of the Cleveland Browns vs. the Buffalo Bills annual rookie scrimmage, which has been a nrdd-summer highlight. The personable athletic director also introduced Edinboro's Hall of Fame program which has evolved into an annual year-ending event to honor present and past athletes. McDonald has been at Edinboro since 1962 and for 12 years served as the Fighting Scot basketball coach (1962-1975) and never experienced a losing season while his teams compiled an impressive 181 wins against only 89 losses. During that span, his cagers won four Western Division Pennsylvania Confer­ ence crowns, the PC state championship and two District 18 titles that netted trips to the NAIA National Tournament. His teams set 27 University records and made 19 post-season appearances while four of his players were named All-Americans. MAYBE NOT. But every time you eat at Pizza Hut*, they will donate 10% of your guest check* total to your Fraternity or Sorority ^ Monthly! A Deal that can*t be beat when you eat at.. Offer good on Dine-in, Carryout or Delivery Fraternities and scnorities must register at the Edinboro Pizza Hut* beginning Dumber 1, 1991 to be eligible! Details at Pizza Hut*. AE-1054 *Exdudes Alcoholic Beverages. Offer applies ONLY to regular menu prices. Specials, Coupons and the Buffet do rxjt apply towards donations. The funds generated by the energetic athletic director's efforts will be used to assist Edinboro's men and women athletes. Prior to accepting his position at Edinboro, McDonald served as assis­ tant basketball coach in Erie, Pa. He is a 1956 graduate of Bridgeport High School in his home town of Bridgeport, West Virginia. In 1960 he received a degree in chemistry and physical education from West Virginia Wesleyan College and he also holds a master's degree in health from the University of Buffalo. As an undergraduate, he set nine school records at Wesleyan and was twice voted both AP and UPI basketball All-American. In 1960, he was the sec­ ond leading scorer in the United States, averaging slightly over 33 points a game, and led his team to the national basketball tournament in Kansas City, Missouri. He was named to the NAIA's All-Tournament Team in 1959 and 1960. In 1966, McDonald was selected Area Eight Coach of the Year by the eastern seaboard coaches and that same year was honored as one of the top ten finalists in the Coach of the Year national poll. McDonald's honors also include selection to the West Virginia All-Ume College Basketball Team and member­ ship in the West Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. As a resident of Edinboro, McDonald has a record of extensive commu­ nity involvement. He was Little League Baseball director for four years and also held a four-year post as a member of the General McLane School Board. He and his wife, Mary Lou, have three sons - Mark, Mike and Matthew. 9 Can the Scots Make it Three in a Row? french Silk Pie RicK t>eyo»\d your wildest dr*eamsl The Chocolate ChipperpTM Sundae C^ill out. Cool ice crexxm & cooUies smotKer'ed i»i ckocolote soucey wkipped c»*eoi»» & ckocolote ckips. 75 Hot Fudge Brownie Sundae Or\e scoop pet^cked atop a moist ckewy br^awt^ie lade>i witk kot fudge. Hot Fudge Croissant Sundae C**eamy ice c»*eam nestled in a butte»*yf cr^aissant dropping wHk kot fudge. Chocolate Milkshake jA tkicU and ci*eamy t»*eatl The Edinboro University Fighting Scot football team, under the direction of four-year coach Tom Hollman, will look to remain among the NCAA Division II elite in 1991 as they set their sights on a third consecutive trip to the national playoffs. Hollman, a 1968 graduate of Ohio Northern University, has earned high marks as the Scot mentor, leading Edin­ boro to a 22-10-1 overall mark and con­ secutive appearances in the NCAA playoffs. Even more impressive is his 152-1 slate in the Pennsylvania State Athlet­ ic Conference Western Division. Hollman's overall coaching mark of 4621-2 (.681%) ranks 11th among active Division II coaches. The 1991 Scots return 14 starters and 40 lettermen from their 9-3 squad and will once again battle for PSAC West supremacy. The Scots captured the west­ ern crown two years ago and took second in 1990. Edinboro won their first ever Division II playoff game last November with a 38-14 win over Virginia Union then fell to arch-rival lUP 14-7 in the NCAA quarterfinals. The Scots will once again face a rugged schedule in 1991 as they open at Division I-AA power Youngstown State on September 7. It is on the road again in week two at North wood Institute (MI) - a squad that downed NAIA power West­ minster in 1990. Edinboro returns home for weeks three and four hosting South­ ern Connecticut and Bloomsburg (Home­ coming) on September 21 and 28. Edinboro then faces consecutive western division tests at Clarion, Lock Haven and Shippensburg before return­ ing home for a battle with California in late October. Playing five of their first seven games on the road will pose a great challenge for Hollman and the Scots. After a trip to Slippery Rock in week nine, Edinboro hosts the showdown with lUP on November 9. Rugged Fairmont State follows at home to conclude the reg­ ular season. Hot Fudge or Chocolate Sundae Xwo all-time favorites to satisfy your cKavingsl A Look at the Scots Offer good for a limited time only at participating Perkins Family Restaurants. HOURS 290 Plum Street Sunday thru Thursday Edinboro, PA 6:00 a.m. - Midnight Phone 734-4600 10 Friday & Saturday OPEN 24 HOURS Skill Positions The Scots will have to somehow find a way to replace the record setting pass­ ing combination of quarterback Hal Galupi and All-American Ernest Priester. All-American tailback Lester Frye returns and once again carries a huge offensive load. With his record 317 carries last fall, Frye broke the all-time PSAC mark with 1,630 yards rushing. Frye rushed for 234 yards, including 203 in the first half, in the Scots' playoff win against Virginia Union. Joining Frye will be returnees Der­ rick Russell (656 yards, 6.8 YPC avg., 6 TDs) and fullbacks Tom Tedder (192 yards, 1 TD) and Matt Koehle. At receiv­ er, replacing Priester is impossible but the Plaid does boast Wrentie Martin (26 catches, 285 yards, 1 TD), Paul Stone (21, 270, 1 TD) and tight end Brian Heebsh (13, 238) to make up a strong receiving trio. The quarterback spot is wide open with freshman red shirt Eric Kuhn and returnee Sean Seibert, who led the Scots to their playoff win, expected to battle for the #1 spot. Kuhn has never taken a snap for the Plaid while Seibert is nursing a wrist injury suffered in the spring. Offensive Line First team All-American Curtis Rose (OG) anchors the line at 6-3, 278 pounds. Named to numerous 1991 pre-season AllAmerica teams. Rose has spearheaded the ground attack over the past three years. AU-PSAC second team pick Wally Spisak returns at tackle while starters Scott Nick­ el and Mike Kegarise give the squad great strength up front. The latter two perform­ ers were first-year players in 1990 and also had great years for the Scots. Frank Gibson is expected to fill the void left by All-Conference pick Brad Powell. Defensive Line Here again, some holes to fill with the graduation of All-American Jeff Jacobs and Matt Miller. All-Conference choice John Messura (80 tackles, 10 for loss) can also rush the quarterback from his tackle spot. His nine sacks were sec­ ond only to Miller in 1990. End Delvin Pickett (67 stops, 2 fumble recoveries including a score) is quietly effective on the outside. The Scots could get help as linebacker Anthony Ross (team high 115 tackles) is expected to move to the down position. 11 Linebackers With Ross moving to the defensive end spot, returnee Jason Perkins (83 tack­ les) will carry a heavy load of responsibil­ ity on the inside. His 55 solo stops were second best for the Scots last fall. Also returning on the inside will be Joel Marratta (72 tackles) who was a key man in the defensive success a year ago. Marratta was also the Boro's top special teams performer for 1990 as voted on by the players. Mike Gentile, Anthony Mari­ an! and Steve Nagy have also seen game action in the past. This is a key position for the defense and the Scots will also look for someone to replace veteran AllPSAC performer A1 Donahue. Secondary Possibly the strength of the 1990 squad, the defensive backfield will return in full. Pre-season All-American Wade Smith, a first-team PSAC pick last fall, will call the shots from his free safety spot. His 81 stops and four interceptions were among the team leaders in 1990. Smith's 12 interceptions is tied for second on the all-time Edinboro list. Cornerbacks Mario Houston and Georj Lewis will be in the starting lineup while strong safety/outside linebacker Mike Barnes also returns. Houston was the PSAC West "Rookie of the Year" for 1990 and led the Scots with five intercep­ tions. He was also in on 63 tackles. Lewis begins his third season in the secondary and has started every game since his freshman year. Lewis totaled 68 tackles with a pair of interceptions last year. Barnes was in on 63 stops and was tied with Smith for the team-lead in fumble recoveries with three. Kicking Game The place-kicking duties will be up for grabs during the fall season as the Scots must fill a void here. The punting chores will be secured by sophomore Gary Lhotsky who did a very solid job for the Plaid last fall. His 34.6 yards per punt mark on 40 tries was excellent for a firstyear player. THEnnsT The Rrst National Bank of Pennsylvania Member FDC ^J FindYdur PersonalBest Finding your Personal Best is what sport any sport — is all about. Personal Best is about ordinary people rising to the occasion. For their team, for them­ selves. At Pennbank, as in sport, it’s a goal we strive for every day. Pennbank an mtegmbank 12 Edinboro Beverage Distributor EUP Sweats, Shirts, T's, Tanks, Shorts, Pants, Caps, Jackets Soft Drinks MALEC'S CLOTHING & Edinboro FOOTWEAR Mall Legal Beverages Ice - Party Snacks Saturday 9:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sunday 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 301 Erie Street Phone: 734-3621 13 Head Coach Tom Hollman In January 1988, Edinboro University hired Tom Hollman, Athens, Ohio, as its eleventh head football coach in the school's history Hollman came to Edin­ boro from Ohio University, where he was the defensive coordinator, Hollman, beginning his fourth year, has turned the Scot program around. With the Scots he has earned 22 wins against just ten losses and one tie and owns an impressive 15-2-1 slate against the PSAC West. In 1989, he was named the top coach in the East Region by the National Football Coaches Association and also tabbed the top coach in the PSAC West. Last season, he guided the Scots to their first-ever NCAA II playoff win as Edinboro routed Virginia Union and advanced to the national quarterfinals. "Edinboro has been a great experience, and I like the direction of the pro­ gram," Hollman said. "As a coach, I have been fortunate to coach at many different levels, from high school to Division I. The Division II level here at Edinboro is very appeal­ ing to me in relation to my career goals. It is a great feeling to be a head coach at this level." "I still feel one of the most important things about football on the Division II level is to make it fun for the players involved. My initial goal for this team when I got here was to make football an enjoyable environment for the team and coaching staff," Hollman added. Hollman's educational background begins with a high school diploma from Memorial High School in St. Mary’s, Ohio, followed by his undergraduate degree in education from Ohio Northern University in 1968. Three years later Hollman received his master of science degree in education from Xavier Uni­ versity in Cincinnati, Ohio. While at Ohio Northern, Hollman was a three-year starter for the football team and a two-way performer as a defensive back and offensive end during his junior and senior years. He holds the school record with 13 career intercep­ tions and earned All-American and All-District honors during the 1966 and 1967 seasons. Hollman also lettered in baseball for three years during his stay at Ohio Northern. A chronological look at Hollman's coaching career begins in 1968 as an assistant coach at Sidney High School in Sidney, Ohio. From there, Hollman moved on to Greenville High School in Ohio where he became head coach from 1971-73. His Greenville squads posted an impressive 26-2-2 mark during his three-year stay, Hollman then moved on to Fremont Ross High School as head coach for the 1974 and 1975 seasons, where his squad recorded 15 wins against three setbacks and two ties. Fremont was the Buckeye Conference champ in '74, unbeaten at 90-1. In '76, Hollman moved on to the collegiate ranks where he was the defen­ sive coordinator for his alma mater at Ohio Northern University. The following year, Hollman accepted the head coach position at Wooster College (OH) and guided his squad to the best four-year record in the school's history (24-11-1). In 1981, Hollman took an assistant coaching spot with Ball State University which he held through the '84 campaign. Then, beginning in 1985 Hollman held the defensive coordinator position at Ohio University. "It has been a very comfortable transition for me," Hollman added. "I have found the community to be supportive arid the administration is giving me every opportunity to be successful here at Edinboro," he concluded. 'Tom resides in Edinboro with his wife, Kandi, and four children, Mari, Jon, Hm and Denise. VCR & VIDEO RENTALS Tapes GIANT EAGLE $1.49+tax Per Day Free Membership Tom Hollman FULL SERVICE SUPERMARKET A lot yoxx can feel good about. Groceries Meat Dept. Produce Dept. Deli Dept. Especially ^priC6. "Want to Try Some - Just Ask" "Edinboro has been a great experience, and I like the direction of the program." • EDINBORO 606 Erie Street Locally Owned and Operated by Art Smaltz Party Trays Bakery Specialty Cakes & Pastries Open 24 Hours Monday 7 a.m.-Saturday Midnight Open Sunday 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. The new 10,000 ft. expansion is here!! Benefits Senior Citizens 14 15 Ernest Priester -1990 Harlon Hill Runner Up Wide Receiver Division II Top Player (2nd place) Free Agent Signee of the Denver Broncos PSAC All-Time Leader in Touchdown Receptions (35) PSAC All-Time Leader in Yards Receiving (3,053) Led Division II in Scoring and Yards Per Game Receiving in 1990 1990 First Team All-American by the Associated„Press First Team All-American - Football Gazette First Team All-American - Kodak - Coaches Association 1990 Co-Player of the Year - PSAC West Photo credit: Rich Forsgren, Erie Times News Career Stats and Records: Receptions: 147 Yards: 3,053 TD Receptions: 35 Yards Per Catch: 20.8 1990 Honors and Accomplishments 9-3 overall - 5-1 PSAC West - second place NCAA Division II rankings - 11th final ranking Second consecutive national playoff appearance Lambert-Meadowlands voting top team East Region - second place First ever NCAA II playoff victory - 38-14 win at Virginia Union NCAA Division II quarterfinalist Individual Honors and Awards Ernest Priester, WR Harlon Hill Award runnerup - Division II's top player for 1990 All-American - 1st team Kodak - Football Coaches Association All-American - 1st team - Associated Press All-American - 1st team - Football Gazette Magazine Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Western Division - Co-player of the Year PSAC West - 1st team All-Star - imanimous selection Team Statistics (regular season) National Stats NCAA Division II Curtis Rose, OG All-American - 1st team - Associated Press All-American - 1st team - Football Gazette Magazine 1991 Pre-Season 1st team All-American - Sporting News PSAC West - 1st team Rushing defense - 8th -100.7 yards per game yield Total offense - 11th - 442.6 ypg Total defense - 12th - 255.6 ypg Scoring offense - 20th - 29.1 points per game Rushing offense - 21st - 227.1 ypg Scoring defense - 23rd -16.2 ppg yield Pass defense efficiency - 23rd -14 interceptions Lester Fiye, RB All-American Honorable Mention - Football Gazette Magazine PSAC West - 1st team Jeff Jacobs, DE All-American Honorable Mention - Football Gazette Magazine PSAC West - 1st team Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Mario Houston, DB Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Western Division - Rookie of the Year PSAC West - 2nd team Career Touchdown Receptions (yards): 80,77, 73, 71,66,65,64,63,61,56,50 (3), 43,38,37,36, 32,30,25 (2), 22,20 (3), 13,12,11,9 (2), 8,6,4 (2), 3 Career Single Game Receiving Yardage - Top Games Career: 206,193,185,180,171,155,132,125,119,117,108,102, ipO Total defense - 1st - 255.6 ypg Pass defense - 1st -155.2 ypg Rushing defense - 2nd -100.7 ypg Rushing offense - 2nd - 227.1 ypg Total offense - 3rd - 442.6 ypg Pass offense - 6th - 215.5 ypg Wade Smith, FS Pre-season All-American - Football Gazette and College Football Preview '90 PSAC West - 1st team Matt Miller, DT Pre-season All-American - College Football Preview PSAC West - 2nd team The 1990 Fighting Scots ranked 3rd or higher in every category in the PSAC Western Division for 1990. Edinboro Records: Individual and Team Records Touchdown Receptions: 35 Edinboro set or tied 18 individual and team records in 1990 (the team has set 34 records over the past two seasons) Al Donahue, LB Pre-season All-American - Football Gazette and College Football Preview '90 PSAC West - 2nd team Other PSAC West Honors Wally Spisak, OT Brad Powell, OG John Messura, DT John Baumann, PK (All made the PSAC West 2nd team all-star squad) Single Season Receiving Yards: 1,128 Single Season TD Receptions: 16 PSAC Single-Season Records Single Season Receptions: 49 Lester Frye - running back Rushing yards -1,630 Rushing attempts - 317 Most Catches in One Game: 10 Edinboro Team Awards Special Teams - Joel Marratta Defensive Most Valuable Player - Jeff Jacobs Offensive MVP - Ernest Priester Demonstration Team MVP Offense - Philip Knight Demonstration Team MVP Defense - Mike Gentile Marine Bank Award - Matt Miller William Engh Award - Jeff Jacobs Freshman of the Year - Mario Houston Best Conditioned Athlete - Al Donahue Darren Shields Award - Dave Glauner Most TD Receptions in one Game: 3 (five times) Career Receiving Yards: 3,053 PSAC Career Records Career Receptions: 147 Ernest Priester - wide receiver -1986-90 Receiving yards - 3,053 Touchdown receptions - 35 16 17 rihi/tfdlod In This Issue President Jarred Metze Publisher Pamela L. Blawie V.P. Operations Robert L. Fulton Associate Publisher Peggy Kearney Managing Editor Arlys Warfield TDI Editors Scott Van Camp, Charles Sabatino Copy Editors Jon Cooper, Diane Finger BETTER TO GIVE THAN RECEIVE - Magazine Purveyors of Fine Food and Spirits .7 Rt 6N & 98 4 miles west of Edinboro Director, Production and Manufacturing Gloria Yoshida Production Managers Claudette Keane, Aetna Brennan Traffic Coordinators Mary Powell, Navi Leon Art Director Pat Voehl V.P. Director Local Sales Barry N. Gottlieb V.P. Director National Sales Joel Fisher V.P. Marketing Craig A. Simon Director of Marketing Michael D. Ritz Sales Offices: Atlanta: Dave Thomas, (404) 594-0482 Chicago: Dawn Mikoola, Ray O’Connor, (312) 951-5593 Dallas: John Daniel, (214) 351-3471; Bob Jameson, (214) 361-3232 Detroit: Joseph J. Colucci, (313) 626-9918 Los Angeles: Barbara Nelson, (213) 578-7656; Dan Parker, (213) 557-1520 New York: Cecil D. Lear, Vice President; Neil Farber, Vice President; Thom Hering, Vice President; Paul Abramson, George Payne (212) 697-1460 Sometimes a wide receiver doesn’t have to catch the ball to be a big play threat. «'“OH YEAH?” ‘‘YEEEEAHr Meet a couple of feuds, outside of Division 1 no less, that would make the Hatfields and McCoys proud. •■•WINNING ’EM OVER Mike Nguyen has overcome tremendous odds to be the first Vietnamese-born college football player. FOLLOW THE BOUNCING BALL Think today’s ball never has and never will change? Don’t be so sure. DIVISIONS II & III HOOP PREVIEW Here are the eight teams to beat in the race to join the “Elite Eight TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED is published six times between September 1 and December 1 each year by PSP Inc., 355 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y 10017. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Next f f I Proud to support the Fighting Scots! Issue: A CELEBRATION OF HOPE For the kids, players and coaches, the East-West Shrine Game may be the most special postseason contest of them all. «K»GAME OF THE CENTURY? The much-anticipated 1966 Notre DameMichigan State showdown left fans of college football unfulfilled. «>'THE TDUNQUIRER Touchdown Illustrated gets down and dirty to reveal college football’s juiciest secrets. DIVISION I HOOP PREVIEW The door to the NCAA Division I basketball championship is wide open to a host of qualified comers. 18 In college, a receiver learns that throwing a downfield block can be a positive career move. TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED SUPPORT AMERICA'S TEAM WITH BY BILLY WATKINS OFFICIAL U.S. OLYMPIC TRAINING CENTER MERCHANDISE Join the Team! Your purchase supports America's Olympic athletes and proudly shows everyone that you stand behind America's Team. 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USOTC logo embroidered on front. #80700; One size fits all. 00.05 & T-SHIRT - Comfortable, breathable 100% cotton crew neck t-shirt in heather gray with a 2-color USOTC emblem on the front. #710; Sizes S/M/L/XL/XXL. 012.05 WORKOUT SHORTS - Ideal for training or '>7 lounging, these 100% heavyweight cotton shorts have an elastic waistband with drawstring, a back pocket with button closure and 2-color USOTC emblem on the front. Iced heather gray. #730; Sizes S/M/L/XL. 018.05 “Nowhere in the rule book does it say that wide receivers can’t be physical.” Colorado Springs, CO 80977 - 1992 3-color cloisonne emblem with a brass closure. #79700; 11.85 SATIN JACKETS - In white or navy, these mr snap-front jackets feature a 200-denier Dupont nylon Oxford shell, soft flannel lining and raglan sleeves and trim with the USOTC logo on the front and USA proudly emblazoned across the back. N»y#810,lin«i#020; Sizes XS/S/M/L/XL/XXL. 04SJI5 Coaches will tell you that big plays— long gainers that earn momentum, field position and sometimes even points—are the keys to football games. Coaches also will tell you that downfield blocking is the key to big plays. “Good downfield blocking is the difference in a 10- or 12yard run and a 60- or 80-yard run,” says Phillip Fulmer, offen­ sive coordinator at Tennessee. On just about every long run or a short pass that turns into a long gainer, there is a minimum of at least one downfield block,” says Pete Cordelli, receivers coach at Notre Dame. “We shoot for four downfield !UU1_______________________ ayUllllL Please allow 4 weeks for delivery. RETURN POLICY - If not satisfied, you may return the purchase for exchange or refund within 30 days of receipt. BETTER TO GIVE THAN RECEIVE Sometimes a wide receiver doesn’t have to catch the ball to be a big play threat. TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED —Pete Cordelli knockdowns per half. We tell our players that if they give us four a half, then big plays will come. Stay with it. Stay with it. Persistence will pay off. And quite often that can mean the difference in the game.” “I remember a game a few years ago when we beat Alabama on a long run in the last few minutes,” Fulmer says. “We knocked four Alabama guys on the ground downfield. It was exciting to show our guys the film of that because they saw for themselves what happens when you get downfield and throw good blocks. We make as big a deal over a good block as we do a touchdown. like: blocks thrown in the defensive sec­ ondary, past the line of scrimmage. They might be five yards past the line of scrim­ mage, they might be 55. It depends on how the play develops. In modern-day football, backs and wide receivers do a majority of the downfield blocking. “We have certain plays where linemen are called on to block downfield,” Fulmer says. “But we’re basically an I-formation BILLY WATKINS is a sportswriter for The Jackson (Miss.) Clarion Ledger, and knows the importance of the unheralded aspects offootball. BETTER TO GIVE THAN RECEIVE MINOLTA JUST TAUGHT CAMERAS A WHOLE NEW WAY TO THINK. Introducing the Maxxum® 7xi. Proper technique is important when blocking downfield, because the blocker can’t grab or hold. team, and our plays develop slowly. That forces us to keep our backside linernen in to block on the line of scrimmage.” Wide receivers hardly have the image of devastating blockers. Selling them on the job is a coach’s top priority. “Ninety-five percent of downfield block­ ing is simply wanting to,” Fulmer says. “We tell a guy that he can play (at wide receiver) here if he’ll go out and throw his body around. He may not play on thirdand-long, but he’ll play on other downs.” “Nowhere in the rule book does it say that wide receivers can’t be physical,” says Cordelli. “They’re supposed to be pretty boys who never get knocked down...well, we don’t look at it like that around here. “The more things a receiver can do, the more valuable he is. There are pride fac­ tors involved. One guy will say, T got four knockdowns last game.’ Another will say. ‘Yeah, I got five.’ We have a board set up that we call our winner’s chart. Among other things, we keep up with how many knockdowns each receiver gets in a game. “If a guy stays here three years and doesn’t understand the importance of downfield blocking, I guarantee you he won’t be playing. But it takes awhile for them to understand the importance of it. “Downfield blocking is a mindset, a mental state of mind. They have to realize that an offense is 11 guys working in uni­ son, not 9 or 10. They have to know that if they’re not catching the football on a par­ ticular play, then they’d better be blocking for the guy who has the ball. “And what really sells them on it is when they make a big block and the guy breaks it for a touchdown. They say, ‘Hey, my block did that.’” “We always make as big a deal as we can about a great downfield block,” Fulmer says. “We want them to know how impor­ tant (the coaches) think it is.” The importance is obvious at practice. “We usually work on it every day,” Fulmer says. “If not every day, then cer­ tainly every other day.” “We work on it 15 minutes every day,” Cordelli says. “Crossfield, downfield...we stress it all.” If desire to get the Job done is the key, then proper technique is key 1-A. And blocking downfield correctly is much tougher than it may appear. “Everybody says the toughest thing in football is making an open-field tackle,” Cordelli says. “Wrong. The toughest thing is an open field block because the offensive guy can’t grab, can’t hold. You’re on an island out there. It’s just you and the defen­ sive back one-on-one. And since you can’t If only lighting never changed, your subjects never moved, and backgrounds were always constant, picture-taking would be a snap. But they do. And that's the chal­ lenge and the fun of photography. It's also why you need the first camera that thinks for itself Suppose you're watching cyclists race from light through shadow and back. The Maxxum 7xi will break from the pack with its abil­ ity to adjust for the most minute lighting changes. If the cyclists speed up, slow down or take off in any direction, Maxxum's unique Predictive Autofocus will freeze them in perfect clarity. Only the 7xi can do it four times a second. And because things happen fast, the 7xi has all systems working before your eye meets the viewfinder. You see, the new Maxxum 7xi can make your Creative Expansion Cards let you really exercise your ingenuity. Yes, the Maxxum 7xi has a new way of thinking. But it's the results that will amaze you when you take it fora ride. Because Maxxum analyzes images a whole new way, photos are sharper and more precise than ever. life easy because it thinks with the most powerful computer ever put behind a lens. It's the first computer which applies "fuzzy logic" to draw on the pre-programmed expertise of professional photographers. Look for valuable Minolta USA 2-year camera/5-year lens limited warranty cards with your products. For more information, see your selected Minolta dealer or write: Minolta Corp., 101 Williams Drive, Ramsey, NJ 07446. In Canada: Minolta Canada, Inc., Ontario. © 1991 Minolta Corporation. NEW MAXXUM~Fxl ONLY FROM THE MIND OF MINOLTA TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED Soyou'II be guided to the perfect, subtle decision — even in the most complicated situation. What more can an SLR do? Well, in this case, its 4-mode flash reduces ^ red-eye, its compact lenses zoom automatically and its MINOLTA BETTER TO GIVE THAN RECEIVE grab, you’ve got to be agile enough, tough enough, and keep your eyes open so that you can react to what the defensive back does. “A defensive back should never miss a tackle in the open field because he can grab the blocker and throw him out of the way. And it’s hard for the offensive guy not to grab, especially if the defensive guy gets around him. We emphasize in practice not grabbing the guy. If it happens, the player runs extra. There’s nothing worse than having a long run, then seeing a yel­ low flag on the ground because a receiver reached out and grabbed somebody.” A recent rule change has allowed downfield blockers to extend their hands but not grab. “It’s made a big difference,” Fulmer says. “It’s helped in shielding the guy, but you have to be careful that it doesn’t take away from the aggressiveness of the blocker.” Still, the downfield blocking technique is a tough one to master. “...We make as big a deal over a good block as we do a touchdown.” The truth about the National Guard will blow you away: Pete Cordelli “The key, of course, is intensity,” Cordelli says. “But another big key is knowing the proper angle to take to the defender so that you don’t clip. It doesn’t matter how hard or fast you go if you don’t take the proper angle. “Let’s say a play is going away from you, the receiver. You should step first with your inside foot, the one towards the football, at a 45-degree angle, and work up the field. What you want to do is put your body between the defender and the ball. It’s just like playing defense in basketball. You’re not asking somebody to go out and kill the defender. It’s a shield sort of block. “And you must work on the upfield shoulder. What do I mean? Let’s say you’re the receiver and your right hand is to the ball. The shoulder you have to work with is your right shoulder, the one to the ball. If you blocked him with your left shoulder, you’d be knocking him into the play. ■ “One thing Coach (Lou) Holtz always emphasizes is that the hole runs from the line to the goal line. Whether the goal line is 99 yards or 12 yards away, as soon as the back breaks the line, he heads straight to the goal line. That allows the receiver to know the proper blocking angle to take. “Now there comes a point where a cut by the running back is involved. The advan­ tage the defender has is that he can see where the runner is going. If they’re in zone coverage—if they’re in man coverage it’s no problem because you simply run him off—you teach the blocker to react to the defender’s eyes. The defender will look right through the blocker to the runner, and those eyes will tell you where he’s headed.” Practicing downfield blocking is difficult and risky. When asked how Tennessee goes about it, Fulmer answered: “Carefully. Too many times you get a guy’s shoulder hurt if you’re not careful. “We used to do the old Burma Road cut drill, hash mark to hash mark. But we’re more careful now. How? Well, I don’t TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED want to give away any secrets.” Says Cordelli: “We work from a frame of mind that if you’re in a proper football position—staying low, under pads, have a good base—you cannot be injured. Sure, we used dummies for a lot of our practices, but there are days when we go live.” Cordelli says past success has helped build a pride factor about blocking among his receivers. “Remember Tim Brown?” Cordelli says. “He was a great, great blocker. I can’t tell you how many big plays he sprung for us. Another guy we have right now. Rocket Ismail, is a great blocker. He hit a guy last year right under the chin, and our entire sideline heard it. “That sort of thing disrupts a defensive back’s concentration. And anything we can do to take away from his concentration, we want to do it. Be in his face. Knock that sucker down.” We live next door to you. We work with you. We teach your children. Build your homes. Pilot and maintain commercial airlines. Even repair your automobiles. We’re from all walks of life. And while we’re really no different from you, something very important sets us apart. We’re America’s citizen-soldiers. Dedicated to coming to your aid at a moment’s notice. To protect your home. And defend our homeland. Yet, most Americans are unaware of just how many ways they depend on us. On the frontline in Operation Desert Storm. On the frontline in the War on Drugs. On the frontline in local and state emergen­ cies. On the frontline in nation-building efforts around the world. The Guard is there, defending the National interest, protecting our citizens and adding value to our states and nation. The truth is that almost half the Army’s combat units belong to the Army National Guard. You’ll find us using the latest technology and equipment. From state of the art artillery units in Desert Storm to engineering and medical units helping our international neighbors. And the Air National Guard? Today, we’re a major contributor in all Air Force missions. From frontline fighter aircraft, medical evacuation and engineering units, to tactical and strategic airlift, and aerial refueling aircraft. We were airborne in the first hours of Desert Shield and Desert Storm. We face other enemies, too. Fighting alongside the U.S. Border Patrol and U.S. Customs Service, we help keep millions of dollars worth of illegal drugs from ever reaching our children. The National Guard was formed to protect our colonies over 350 years ago. Close to 186,000 Guardsmen were killed or wounded overseas during World War n. Almost the same number were called to action during the Korean War. In Vietnam, Guardsmen received over 1,700 medals for bravery. In Operation Desert Storm, 72,000 Guardsmen were called to duty with over 40,000 serving in the Gulf. Unlike other branches of the Armed Forces, the National Guard’s charge is two-fold. Times of disaster, strife and need find the National Guard always ready to lend a hand—whether it’s halfway around the world or right in our own backyard. The National Guard is the finest men and women of your hometovm. We’re skilled. Capable. Intelli­ gent. We’re Americans at their best. And that’s the truth. Americans At Their Best. THE NATIONAL GUARD The answers to your insurance questions can be complicated. Insurance terminology can often be confusing. Which is why a Prudential agent will answer as many you can understand. Because in life, just like football, you need the right coverage. © 1991 The PfuOential Insurance Company ol America questions as you have, as many times as you want, in everyday words Your piece of The Rock! We won’t let you get it, until you’ve got itr ThePrudential Mr MONMOUTH COLLEGE SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICE BY MICHAEL BRADLEY “YEEEEAHF’ Meet a couple of feuds, outside of Division I no less, that would make the Hatfields and McCoys proud. TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED Knox College hadn’t defeated Monmouth in 10 years when the two renewed their battle for the comically-named, yet highlycoveted, Bronze Turkey Trophy in November, 1976. In a rivalry as intense as this central Illinois classic, a decade-long victory drought can lead to some pretty heavy abuse. The two schools are 15 miles apart, so staying clear of enemy slings and arrows during the off-season is nearly impossible. \^en Monmouth recovered a Knox fum­ ble on the opening kickoff, Knox faithful probably started plotting ways to lay low for another year. But senior free safety Rodney Swan averted tragedy when he made a spectacular leaping interception to thwart the Monmouth drive. There was still hope for happiness during the next year. Swan’s play revived the Siwash, who ended their frustration with a '31-28 win. But when he tried to join in the wild cele­ bration, Swan found that hi^' leg wouldn’t allow it. He had landed hard after that early interception, and exulting—not to mention walking—had become difficult. “He came up to me and said, ‘Coach, I think I’m going to need some help,”’ said Knox Athletic Director Harley Knosher, then the school’s defensive backfield coach. “I couldn’t understand what he meant, because he had played so well. “But after we got him off the field, we found that he had played the whole game with a broken leg suffered on the intercep­ tion.” For small colleges throughout the coun­ try, the heroics of Rodney Swan and the like comprise the fabric of spirited rivalries with colorful histories and valiant efforts of every kind. The whole country may tune in to see Michigan Ohio State play for a bowl berth and national ranking, but only the residents of Galesburg and Monmouth get worked into a froth about the annual Bronze Turkey game. Ditto for other sto­ ried rivalries like Wabash-DePauw or Lehigh-Lafayette. The annual blue blood­ letting between Yale and Harvard attracts a somewhat wider audience, due mostly to large alumni bases and the schools’ roles in the history of college football. All four rivalries have the components of their more fabled Division I-A counter­ parts—tradition, anecdotes, campus hijinks, heroes, goats, brags and boasts, winners and losers—without the hype or dollar signs. The games are played by non­ scholarship student-athletes for pride and accomplishment, not bowl revenues and professional contracts. And while no national networks vie for the broadcast rights to these annual battles, their spirit and intensity are equal to that of rivalries Michael Bradley is a freelance writer living in Drexel Hill, Pa. OH YEAH? on any other level. “The intensity of the game between Wabash and DePauw caught me by sur­ prise,” admitted Tommy Mont, former coach and athletic director at DePauw and a former head coach at the University of Maryland. “As the game progressed, I began to realize that this is what college football is meant to be. “The people playing love the game. There is no incentive for them other than desire.” THE BRONZE TURKEY For two consecutive seasons during the 1960s, Knox and Monmouth both appeared on Look magazine’s weekly college foot­ ball “Bottom Ten” ranking of the nation’s worst teams. The first year, Knox whipped Monmouth. The next, Monmouth defeated Knox. “It was bad enough being on the list,” Knosher said. “But if you could beat Monmouth, everything was okay. If you lost, it was unbearable.” Throughout the 101 years of the battle for the Bronze Turkey, the Division 111 teams have experienced the unbearable and the unbelievable. Monmouth’s 19-14 win in 1990 gave it a 46-45-10 advantage, its first-ever lead in the series. Knox won the inaugural game in 1884, 22-4. The game used to be played on Thanksgiving (it is now played in early November)—thus the genesis of the Bronze Turkey prize. In 1928, a Knox player named Bill Collins decided the game should be played for some award—a la Big Ten prizes like the Old Oaken Bucket or Little Brown Jug. He persuaded two local newspapers to contribute $40 apiece and bought the trophy from a local jeweler. That year, Monmouth won the ini­ tial battle for the bird, 2-0. Since that time, the Bronze Turkey has been the target of several pranks and thefts. In late 1942, the gobbler disappeared from the Monmouth trophy case and wasn’t returned until 1947. Legend has it that the bird had been buried in the basement of the school’s gymnasium. In 1965, two Knox students, posing as journalists from a Peoria paper, asked that the trophy be removed from its case at Monmouth so that they could photograph it without glare. When no one was looking, the “reporters” dashed off with the prize. “I don’t think the rivalry is as bitter as it was in my day,” said Bobby Woll, who played at Monmouth from 1931-33 and was the school’s athletic director for 25 years. “When I was A.D., we had to stand guard to make sure they wouldn’t burn a ‘K’ into our field.” 127 GAMES AND COUNTING: Lehigh and Lafayette have been battling it out since 1884. Monmouth named its football field after Woll, the school’s famous “Mighty Mite” who helped the Scots to a 30-6 win in 1933 with an 87-yard touchdown run. The 129-pound Woll would not have been able to run wild had he played in 1972. That year, Knox came to Monmouth with a fleet team but found the Scots’ field a quagmire, despite no rain having fallen in days. The larger Scots prevailed, 7-6, and Knox supporters were irate. “Their coach told us that the guy in charge of watering the field fell asleep,” Knosher recalled with a chuckle. You can tell Knosher respects Monmouth for its “strategy” in that game. He realizes incidents like that preserve the tradition of such a storied rivalry. “We get kids pretty fired up around here for a Knox-Monmouth golf match,” he said. And they’re not even playing for a turkey. FAMILIARITY BREEDS RESPECT During the usual, pre-Super Bowl massmedia circus in 1982, a reporter stuck a microphone in the face of Cincinnati Bengals’ wide receiver Steve Kreider and asked his opinion of the world’s biggest football game. “It’s not Lehigh-Lafayette, but it will do,” Kreider said. There are older and even more-storied rivalries, but no two teams have played as often as Lehigh University and Lafayette College. The two schools, located in the neighboring northeast Pennsylvania towns of Bethlehem (Lehigh) and Easton, have played 126jtfiries since their initial contest in 1884, tHfanks in part to multiple meet­ ings during the game’s early years. Lafayette won the opener, 50-0, while Lehigh took last season’s contest, 35-14, closing Lafayette’s series lead to 69-52-5. The two schools share similar education­ al missions and joined the Patriot League because of its commitment to the Ivy ideal of academics first. Yet even the stodgiest bookworms find it easy to get excited about the big game. “Everything builds toward the game,” said Joe Whritenour, who served as sports information director at Lehigh from 196584. “The coaches are judged by their per­ formance in that game. It’s a second, one-game season, and it’s a long time until next year, especially if you have to keep explaining why you got licked.” Like any spirited rivalry, LehighLafayette has had its share of pranks and practical jokes. In the early 1980s, some students from Lafayette sneaked into Lehigh’s Taylor Stadium three weeks prior to the game and © 1991 lever Brothers Company TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED used a weed killer to spell out a vulgar phrase on the field. The grass died two days before kickoff, revealing the message. “That called for some quick mowing and coloring,” Whritenour said. In the 1930s and ’40s, Lafayette had a live leopard on campus as a mascot that was a frequent target of would-be Lehigh thieves. Another time, two Lafayette stu­ dents slept in a van outside the field where Lehigh’s pre-game bonfire was to be held and lit the blaze a day ahead of schedule. These days, guards are posted on both campuses during game week to protect against pranksters. Those unfortunate enough to be caught in the act generally get an impromptu trip to the barber. The off-field shenanigans are generally overshadowed by the games themselves. The 1940 Lafayette team entered the sea­ son-ending matchup with the Engineers undefeated, and Leopard coach Hook Mylin was afraid his team may be overcon­ fident. It took one half of play to allay his fears. “We got out to a 33-0 halftime lead, and Hook came in and said, ‘What can I say?”’ said James T. Farrell, a halfback on that team. “We ended up winning 46-0.” The 1977 Lehigh team won the Division II national title and got some unexpected support. “Lafayette was rooting for us throughout the playoffs,” Whritenour said. “It’s an intense rivalry, but both teams respect each other.” “It’s not LehighLafayette, but it —Steve Kreider, on the Super Bowl Greencastle campus. DePauw students refer to their Wabash rivals as “Cavemen,” while Wabash men respond with cries of “Sissies” to the Dannies, as DePauw stu­ dents are known. “Wabash likes to play up its image as cavemen,” said former DePauw coach and A.D. Tommy Mont. “But the truth is that some of the co-eds from DePauw date Wabash men.” Mont’s role in the history of the DePauwWabash clash is clearly defined. He is as revered for his decision to leave Division I Maryland for the serenity and charm of Division III life as he is for his 13-5 record against Wabash. His legend is enhanced by his actions in 1960, his second year at DePauw and the first year the two-point con­ version was instituted in NCAA football. The Dannies scored a last-minute touch­ down to pull within 13-12 of their archri­ vals, and Mont had to decide whether to try for two points and the win or one and a tie. He chose to accept the consensus. He asked the DePauw crowd. They screamed “Go!” He did, and DePauw won, 14-13. “We tried to downplay the rivalry when I was coaching and try to make it as relaxed as possible for the kids the week before the game,” Mont said. “One of the things we did in the summer was get ready for Wabash, so when the week of the game came, we had our basic game plan in already.” It’s never too early to start planning for the big game. THE GAME Yale Coach T.A.D. Davis stood before his players in mid-1920s and told them, “Gentlemen, you are about to play football for Yale against Harvard. Never in your lives will you do something so important.” To some Yalies, that is not hyperbole. Among football rivalries on any level, none can match the history and legacy of Harvard-Yale. Harvard is not even Yale’s longest-stand­ ing opponent. That distinction goes to Princeton, which has played the Bulldogs since 1873, the NCAA’s oldest current rivalry. Together, those three schools domi- It's true that in a Volkswagen, form follows function. But with our versatile Volkswagen Golf, form follows function, after function, after function. Settle down into infinitely adjustable front bucket seats. Stretch out. Load in the kids and fill THE MONON BELL Wabash College Athletic Director Max Servies cranked up his calculator last win­ ter and came up with a remarkable statistic. In the 124 years Wabash has played DePauw University in athletic events of every kind, a scant one game separated the two teams. Heading into the spring 1991 season, Wabash led its heated rival 325-324-14. “This is the greatest rivalry in Division III,” said Servies, who’s not at all biased by his 31 years as a coach and A.D. at Wabash. “The intensity in the general rivalry in academics and athletics is tremendous.” DePauw leads on the football field, 4544-8, thanks to a 20-13 win last season, its fourth straight over Wabash. The win meant DePauw maintained custody of the coveted Monon Bell trophy, a 350-pound railroad bell donated by the Monon Railroad Company to the schools in 1932. Even without athletics, the two schools would be rivals. Wabash, located in Crawfordsville, Ind., is an all-male school just 27 miles from DePauw’s co-ed .COME To The Great Indoors the trunk with luggage. Whether you're going the distance or just down to the corner. Golf makes any drive more enjoyable. Need even more room? Simply fold down the back seat and Golf gives you nearly 40 cubic feet for whatever you need to carry. Yet as sensible as it seems. Golf is still every bit a driver's car. With performance features like fuel -injection, four-wheel independent suspension, rack and pinion steering and power front disc brakes that might make you forget its practicality next time you're heading down a twisting back road, It all adds up to the exhilarating driving experience we call Fahrvergnugen™ And all for only $9270f A price that makes getting into a new Golf an even more welcome experience. Wti FahrvergnOgen. It'S What Makes A Car A Volkswagen. Seatkselfs save lives. Don't drink and drive. RING MY BELL: The winner of the annual DePauw-Wabash match has the honor of retaining custody over the Monon Bell, responsible for many a hernia in its day. ©1991 Volkswagen. *Base M.S.R.P. excludes taxes, license, transportation and dealer charges. For details, call 1-800-444-VWUS. OH YEAH? nated college football during its formidable years. And though today’s Harvard-Yale games have little significance in the tem­ poral gridiron world—thanks to the schools’ move to Division I-AA—each time the game is renewed, football is a lit­ tle richer. “The nature of the game hasn’t really changed,’’ said Vic Gatto, a Harvard half­ back from 1966-68 and now the finance director of the Massachusetts Republican Party. “It was then and continues to be a really good barometer of what it means to play amateur football.” In Gatto’s senior season, 1968, the two teams entered the game undefeated and played what is possibly the most exciting game in the entire, 115-year series (Yale leads, 58-41-8). Gatto helped lift the Crimson from a 29-13 deficit to a 29-29 tie in the game’s final 42 seconds, prompting the Harvard Crimson to run a headline reading, “Harvard beats Yale, 29-29.” “About 50,000 people filled Harvard Stadium for that game, but because things were so discouraging after three-and-a-half “Gentlemen, you are about to play football for Yale against Harvard. Never in your lives will you do something so important.” — TA,D. Davis quarters, most of them had left to beat the Boston traffic,” Gatto said. “Of course, about 250,000 now say they were there at the end.” Yale’s quarterback that day was Brian Dowling, since immortalized in the comic strip “Doonesbury” as the helmeted “B.D.” He remembers the frustration of watching from the sidelines as Harvard came back from the big deficit, yet he understands the rally’s significance in the rivalry’s storied history. “The Game brings together two of the oldest and most reputable universities in the country,” Dowling said. “And the sig­ nificance of the rivalry doesn’t hit you until after you’ve played. What happened in the final game when Vic and I played just adds to it.” So do the extracurricular activities sur­ rounding the game. Alumni come from all over the country to participate in some of the country’s most elaborate tailgating par­ ties. “I’m sure all sorts of deals are rrlade, stocks exchanged and real estate sold out­ side the stadiums,” Gatto said. Students from MIT even get involved in the fun. Last year, a balloon came out of the ground and floated across the field at Harvard Stadium with a message about MIT. “The two teams have a totally different perspective on football,” said Gatto. “It’s a good one.” THE TOTAL SPORTS NETWORK® BY TOM SLEAR The final score was 222-0; 63-0 after the first quarter, but George Allen, Cumberland University’s coach, hardly noticed. He was too busy trying to keep his players on the field to face the behemoths from Georgia Tech. Two players had already deserted, only to be discovered when a frightened halfback ran off the field to avoid an army of Tech tacklers. Not feeling safe enough just being out of bounds, he jumped the fence surrounding the field and landed in the laps of his AWOL teammates. Another Cumberland player refused to leave the safety of the Georgia Tech bench. When Coach Allen looked down at his own bench, his players quickly grabbed a limb and grimaced in pain. Allen even thought about putting himself into the game, but he didn’t work up the courage until the third quarter, when he went in as a punter. His kick was deadly accurate, strik­ ing his own center squarely in the back of the head. The year was 1916, the date was October 7, and the event was the most absurdly lopsided game ever played in college football. Its gen­ esis is difficult to pinpoint. Maybe it was when in 1904, when John Heisman, the inno­ vative and celebrated college coach, was lured away from Clemson to Georgia Tech. Tom Slear is a freelance writer living in Maryland and a frequent contributor to sports publications. While powerful ■JW Georgia Tech was busy running up the score, poor Cumberland College was running for dear life. Illustrations by Jeffrey Allen Heisman was happy with the powerhouse he had built at Clemson and even the bloat­ ed salary of $3,000 could not entice him to go farther south. But a little research did. Georgia Tech’s search committee discov­ ered that the dictatorial coach was a frustrat­ ed Shakespearean actor. Though he was given to occasional outbursts of “Block, you flaming jackasses,’’ he more often pleaded with his players to “Block with courage and determination so we shall win the day.” When the coach was asked if he knew that Atlanta had the best theaters in the South, he replied with something like, “Gentlemen, where shall I affix my signa­ ture so that I may serve you faithfully as your football coach?” Heisman’s theatrics did not stop with his language. A year earlier, on the day before Clemson played Georgia Tech, he sent ahead an out-of-shape group of students to masquerade as the football team. The wel­ coming committee in Atlanta directed them to nearby saloons where the “play­ ers” stayed most of the night. The next day, the Georgia Tech team was confident of beating their hung over opponents until the real players, whom Heisman had TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED sequestered in^a hotel outside of Atlanta, ran out to meet them. In the stands were the bleary-eyed stand-ins, the school’s cheerleading squad. Clemson won 73-0. Predictably, Heisman brought Georgia Tech to national prominence while introduc­ ing the center snap, the command of “hike,” a scoreboard, formations that resemble today’s T and I, and the hidden ball trick. But a national championship eluded him because the polls were based principally on points scored. Heisman thought it ridiculous, but if Heisman was anything, he was practi­ cal. Consequently, the 1916 game with Cumberland University, a small school (now a college) in Lebanon, Tennessee, whose football glory days were 10 years past. The deal was clinched with a $500 guarantee, or, as it would turn out, just over $2 a point. And Allen, a law student fascinated by coaching sports, but not participating in them, was greedy. Though Cumberland had dropped football the year before, he was determined to resurrect the sport with the battle cry of “Remember $500.” Like Heisman, Allen had a theatrical incli­ nation. To get the payoff, he had to field a football team without the school’s hierarchy the PS/2 Laptop has a full-size key­ Introducing A PS/2® Laptop board spaced and arranged the same That Performs Like A Desktop PS/2. way as a desktop PS/2’s. And the large, easy-to-read, lO'-diagonal screen For millions of people, there’s a dehvers VGA-quahty graphics with whole world of business where the win­ amazing clarity and contrast, so it’s dow offices have wings and your lap is easy on your eyes. your desL It’s as far from working in an It even comes with a numeric key­ office as you can get, but it’s every bit as pad you can plug in for serious number demanding. 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Medical studies reveal... 1HEYSMD The eaiiier you use Rogaine, the better your chances of growing hak IT COUIDNT BE DONE Great Comebacks and Other "Against All Odds" College Football Stories — presented by Rogaine. Harvard's Comeback Ties “The Game” ach year Harvard and Yale play in a game so big that their alumni merely refer to it as ‘‘The Game.” E Nothing fancy, just “The Game.” Dating back to 1875, none matched the pyrotech­ nics of the 1968 game, one ing handkerchiefs and shout­ ing “We’re No. 1,” didn’t seem fazed. But Harvard tried an onside kick and recovered the Yale's Calvin Hill (30) in action that saw both teams come into the game undefeated for the first time in 59 years. And go out the same way. But therein lies the “Theysaid-it-couldn’t-be-done” stolyline. For Yale, led by Calvin Hill and Brian Dowling, had dominated the game, leading 29-13 late in the fourth period. That’s when a second-string Harvard quarterback named Frank Champi decided to show the crowd that it was he and not Dowling who was the reincarnation of Frank Merriwell. First, Champi drove Harvard downfield in a nine-play 86-yard drive, cul­ minating with a scrambling 15-yard pass for a touchdown. The two-point plunge was good and the score now stood 29-21. Only 38 seconds remained, and Yale fans, wav­ fumbled ball on Yale’s 49yard-line. Champi faded back and then scrambled down to the the Eli 35. A face mask penalty tacked on another 15. Time remaining: 32 seconds. After attempting two “Hail Marys” into the end zone, Champi surprised everyone and called a trap, which brought the ball down to the six. After a loss of two yards there was time for only one more play. That was all Champi needed as he scram­ bled around in the backfield and found his senior captain, Vic Gatto, for a touchdown. Now down 29-27— and with no time on the clock — the well-wishers on the field were cleared off and Harvard lined up for a two-point con­ version. Champi, living up to his newly-minted hero status, calmly fired a bullet pass into the gut of Peter Varney and the greatest comeback in the history of “The Game” had been pulled off. to win 41-34 in one of the strangest games on record. here have been half-time pep talks and there have been half-time pep talks. Certainly the most famous was the inspirationial one given by Knute Rockne to his ne of football’s surprise down-at-the-heels Notre ploys is the onside kick, Dame team between halves of an Army game when he an ambush of the other team that more often than not mis­ invoked his “Win-One-for-thefires. And yet it is something Gipper” speech and then that every team worth its stepped back to watch his water bucket has in its arse­ team take apart the Cadets nal, saving it for just the right in the second half. moment. Back in 1972, tiny Catawba College of North But perhaps the most unusu­ Carolina needed something, al and effective locker room anything against Carson- speech came from Nebraska Newman College of coach Dana X. Bible during Tfennessee. Down 33-0 at half­ the Indiana-Nebraska game time, Catawba’s coach decided of 1936. Losing 9-0 to Indiana to come out for the second half at halftime, Bible walked and try an onside kick. It dejectedly into his dressing worked and Catawba room and tried to fire up his marched down the field to Cornhusker team. First he score. Not wanting to leave tried ^he usual fire-and-brimwell enough alone, they tried styhe approach: “You don’t another onside kick. It worked have the desire to win!” he and, again, they scored. Again thundered. “You don’t have they tried; again they scored. the courage to fight back.” After that Bible shifted into second gear: “The first eleven players who go through that door will start the sec­ ond half. The rest of you will sit on the bench.” And, with that, he stepped back and Catawba QB Donnie Davis completes a pass against Carson-Newman added one more thing: “Alright, girls, let’s go!” That Five straight times, Catawba did it. A slugging match fol­ kicked off onside and five lowed as players began tear­ straight times they recovered ing at each other to get and scored, controlling the through the door first. Finally ball for 26 consecutive plays eleven strong and stiirdy did and nearly 15 minutes. manage to break away from Unfortunately, it still wasn’t the resisting free-for-all and enough as make it out onto the field, Carson- where they turned the game Newman around and beat Indiana in hung on the second half, 14-9. O T Rogaine is the only product ever proven to grow hair. And studies show that using it at the first signs of hair loss gives you the best chance that it will grow hair for you. What are the early warning signs oi losing hair? Everyone loses a little hair. Fifty to 80 hairs a day is normal. If you’re losing more than 100 hairs a day without normal replacement, the first sign will often be thinning of the “crown” at the top of your scalp. See your doctor when you first notice it, because this small bald spot can grow larger over time. TWo million men worldwide have tried Rogaine. In year-long clinical tests conducted by dermatologists at 27 medical centers nationwide, vir­ tually half (48%) of the men who tried Rogaine saw at least moderate hair regrowth. Thirty-six percent had min­ imal regrowth and only 16% had no regrowth. “/ may not have grown any Doctors also found that it usually hair after 6 months, but most takes 4 months or more before you of my hair’s stoppedfalling out. I’m glad I got to the doc­ can begin to evaluate your use of torfast.” —Luis Silva, 20 Rogaine. Side effects were minimal: only 5% of the men tested had itching of the scalp. Will Rogaine work for you? Only a dermatologist or other doctor who treats hair loss can tell you, so see one soon. The sooner you get your prescription for Rogaine (which is now avail­ able in an economical threepack), the sooner you could be growing hair. For more information, a list of doctors in your area who can help you, and a certificate worth “The first time I saw hair grow­ $10 as an incentive to visit your ing was at about 8 months. I hadn’t lost much.. .but I’m not doctor, call the toll-free number taking any chances.” below. —Tony Vila CaU 1-800-753-5559 ext. 694for your $10 certificate. Soon. “My hair’s completely filled in. It started growing in under 2 months. It was amazing! Early treatment.. .it works!”—Jim Wilets, 30 a Upjohn DERMATOLOGY DIVISION USJ5489.00 © 1991 The Upjohn Company July, 1991 The only product proven to grow hair. For a summary ofproduct information, see adjoining page. 222-0! Rosair^ ^^^inoxidil 2% soujnoN | The only product proven to grow hair. »MI«IIM«KT ROGAINE Topical Solution, discovered and made by The Upjohn Company, is a standardized topical (for use only on the skin) prescription medication proved effective for the long-term treatment ot male pattern baldness of the crown. ROGAINE is the only topical solution ot minoxidil. Minoxidil In tablet form has been used since 1980 to lower blood pressure. The use of minoxidil tablets is limited to treatment of patients with severe high blood pressure. When a high enough dosage in tablet form is used to lower blood pressure, certain effects that merit your attention may occur. These eftects appear to be dose related. Persons who use ROGAINE Topical Solution have a low level ot absorption ot minoxidil, much lower than that of persons being freafed with minoxidil tablets for high blood pressure. Therefore, the likelihood that a person using ROGAINE Topical Solution will develop the effects associated with minoxidil tablets is very small. In fact, none of these effects has been directly attributed to ROGAINE in clinical studies. Now 8000 COO I esgoct roooHs frooi osiog NNNMNE7 Studies have shown that the response to treatment with ROGAINE may vary widely. Some men receiving ROGAINE may see faster results than others: others may respond with a slower rate of hair growth. Ybu should not expect visible growth In less than tour months. NI loopooN to RltAlHi, wfeol wNI Ibo boh look likoT If you have very little hair and respond to treatment, your first hair growth may be soft, downy, colorless hair that is barely visible. After further treatment the new hair should be the same color and thickness as the other hair on your scalp. It you start with substantial hair, the new hair should be of the same color and thickness as the rest of your hair. Now I00| doisI aoood to 000 not RaMMiT ROGAINE treatment, a cure. If you respond to treatment, you will need to continue using ROGAINE to maintain or increase hair growth. If you do not begin to show a response to treatment with ROGAINE alter a reasonable period at time (at least lour months or more), your doctor may advise you to discontinue using ROGAINE. ■hot kogpioi n I stop oolop NNNANKTIHIIII koop Ibo oow koirT If you stop using ROGAINE. you will probably shed the new hair within a few months after stopping treatment. ■hot Is Ibo dosopo ol RNMIRR You should apply a 1 ml dose of ROGAINE fwo times a day. once in the morning and once at night, before bedtime. Each bottle should last about 30 days (one month). The applicators in each package ol ROGAINE are designed to apply the correct amount of ROGAINE with each application. Please refer to the Instructions lor Use. ■bat If I arias a dooo or torpot to 000 RNNdNKT If you miss one or tvro daily applications ol ROGAINE. you should restart your twice-daily application and return to your usual schedule. Ybu should not attempt to make up tor missed applications. Coo 1080 NONAMI wore lhao twics o dapT PNH H work lOolofT No. Studies by The Upjohn Company have been carefully conducted to determine the correct amount of ROGAINE to use to obtain the most satisfactory results. More frequent applications or use of larger doses (more than one ml twice a day) have not been shown to speed up the process ol hair growth and may increase the possibility of side eftects. ■bat are the owst ooooooo oldo effects lopoitod bi oNolcol otodloo wHb NNNdNKT Studies of patients using ROGAINE have shown that the most common adverse effects directly attributable to ROGAINE Topical Solution were itching and other skin irritations of the treated area ot the scalp. About SS of patients had these complaints. Other side effects, including light-headedness, dizziness, and headaches were reported by patients using ROGAINE or placebo (a similar solution without the active medication). ■hat are ooom of tho oldo effects poopio bovo roportod? The frequency of side effects listed below was similar, except for dermatologic reactions, in the ROGAINE and placebo groups. Respiratory (bronchitis, upper respiratory inlection, sinusitis); Dermatologic (irritant or allergic contact dermatitis, eczema, hypertrichosis, local erythema, pruritus, dry skin/scalp flaking, exacerbation of hair loss, alopecia): Gastrointestinal (diarrhea, nausea, vomiting): lYeuro/ogy (headache, dizziness, faintness, light-headedness): Muscu/oske/efa/(lractures, back pain, tendinitis): Cardiovascular (edema, chest pain, blood pressure increases/decreases, palpitation, pulse rate increases/ decreases): Allergy (nonspecific allergic reactions, hives, allergic rhinitis, facial swelling and sensitivity): Special Senses (conjunctivitis, ear infections, vertigo, visual disturbances, including decreased visual acuity): Uetabolic-Nutritlonal {edema, weight gain): Urinary Tract (urinary tract Infections, renal calculi, urethritis): Genital Tract (prostatitis, epididymitis, sexual dysfunction): Psychiatric (anxiety, depression, fatigue): Hematology (lymphadenopathy. thrombocytopenia): endocrine. Individuals who are hypersensitive to minoxidil, propylene glycol, or ethanol must not use ROGAINE. ROGAINE Topical Solution contains alcohol, which could cause burning or Irritation of the eyes, mucous membranes, or sensitive skin areas. If ROGAINE accidentally gets into these areas, bathe the area with large amounts ol cool tap water. Contact your doctor if irritation persists. ■bat an tbo possIMo sMo oftocts that eooM alloct tbo boarl aari oltoolotloo whoo aoiai RIRMNET Although serious side effects have not been attributed to ROGAINE in clinical studies, there is a possibility that they could occur because the active ingredient in ROGAINE Topical Solution is the same as in minoxidil tablels. Minoxidil tablels are used to treat high blood pressure. Minoxidil tablels Iqwer blood pressure by relaxing the arteries, an effect called vasodilation. VOsodilation leads to retention ot fluid and increased heart rale. The following effects have occurred in some patients taking minoxidil tablels for high blood pressure: Increased hear! rate—some patients have reported that their resting heart rale increased by more than 20 beats per minute: Rapid weight gain of more than S pounds or swelling (edema) of the face, hands, ankles, or stomach area: Difficulty in breathing, especially when lying down, a result of an increase in body fluids or fluid around the heart: worsening ol, or new onset of, angina peeforis. When ROGAINE Topical Solution is used on normal skin, very little minoxidil is absorbed and the possible effects attributed to minoxidil tablets are not expected with the use of ROGAINE. If, however, you experience any of the possible side effects listed, discontinue use of ROGAINE and consult your doctor. Presumably, such effects would be most likely If greater absorption occurred, e.g., because ROGAINE was used on damaged or inflamed skin or in greater than recommended amounts. In animal studies, minoxidil, in doses higher than would be obtained Irom topical use In people, has caused important heart structure damage. This kind of damage has not been seen in humans given minoxidil tablets for high blood pressure at effective doses. ■hat laetora soy lociooso tho risk of oorlaas sMo effects with RNNMNCT Individuals with known or suspected underlying coronary artery disease or the presence of or predisposition to heart failure would be at particular risk if sysfemic effects (that is. increased heart rate or fluid retenfion) of minoxidil were to occur. Physicians, and patients with these kinds of underlying diseases, should be conscious of the potential risk of treatment it they choose to use ROGAINE. ROGAINE should be applied only to the scalp and should not be used on other parts ot the body, because absorption of minoxidil may be increased and the risk of side effects may become greater. You should not use ROGAINE if your scalp becomes irritated or is sunburned, and you should not use it along with other topical treatment medication on your scalp. Coo awa atttk high Maori pressore aoo RMMKT Individuals with hypertension, including those under treatment with antihypertensive agents, can use ROGAINE but should be monitored closely by their doctor. Patients taking guanethidlne lor high blood pressure should not use ROGAINE. IhoaM aay pncaoUaos ka MIoworiT Individuals using ROGAINE should be monitored by their physician one month after starting ROGAINE and at least every six months afterward. Discontinue ROGAINE if systemic effects occur. Oo not use it in conjunction with other topical agents such as corticosteroids, retinoids and petroiatum or agents that enhance percutaneous absorption. ROGAINE is for topical use only. Each ml contains 20 mg minoxidil and accidental ingestion could cause adverse systemic effects. No carcinogenicity was found with topical applicalion. ROGAINE should not be used by pregnant women or by nursing mothers. The effects on labor and delivery are not known. Pediatric use: Safely and effectiveness has not been established under age 18. Caution: Federal law prohibits dispensing without a prescription. You must sea a doctor to receive a prescription. Upfohn knowing about it. So he formed a choir, which sang badly off key until the administrators went home. Then the singers dropped their songbooks and headed for the practice field. Allen’s ruse worked well enough, but his coaching expertise was limited. Cumberland’s first game against Sewanee was a warm-up for Georgia Tech in an unex­ pected way. The Bullddgs lost 107-0. Many of Allen’s recruits promptly quit. Some people, it seemed, just couldn’t appreciate the value of $500. But a lot of people could appreciate $3,000. A few weeks before the scheduled game with Georgia Tech, a Cumberland law student dug up a contract signed by the former coach—back when his school had a legitimate team—which required Cumberland to pay Georgia Tech $3,000 if it forfeited. The nascent law school might be the first fiscal casual­ ty if the small college was set back by that amount of money. “Good God,’’ the law school dean said, “you students get out there and play!” Unprepared and overconfident, 24 Cumberland students left by train on October 6 to meet one of the best college teams in the country. Allen arranged for a stop in Nashville in an unsuccessful attempt to persuade Vanderbilt’s coach to lend him a few players. When he returned to the train, all of his players were gone; Most of them were at a nearby bar. However, three made the wis6 decision to abandon ship entirely. Would Allen have felt guilty using Vanderbilt players? Not at all. As the baseball coach the previous spring, he suited up professional players from Nashville to deal with Georgia Tech’s powerful squad. The Cumberland players sat in the stands and watched themselves become heroes while Georgia Tech got thrashed 22-0. The opposing coach, John Heisman, was not amused. So the cast of characters for college football’s biggest laugher was set. On one side was a highly disciplined Georgia Tech team with a coach steaming over the previous spring’s humiliation and livid with the sports writers’ polls. On the other side was a hapless bunch of coerced players from a school that was not even supposed to have a football team. “The only way to look at it is as a comedy,” says Bob Keys, an independent producer who started filming a movie about the game in Vancouver last spring. By today’s standards of college football competition, it certainly was a joke, but neither Heisman nor his players were laughing. Yet a few minutes into the game, most of the 1,000 spectators at Tech’s Grant Field were. The Cumberland players gave them no choice. First downs, what were they? Cumberland never made one and Georgia Tech never needed to. Jo pile up 63 points in the first quarter, the Yellow Jackets couldn’t waste the time. Graciously, Georgia Tech elected to kick off despite winning the pre-game toss. After all, what difference would it make? Within a minute, Cumberland received the ball, gained nothing, had their first string quarterback knocked cold for the first of three times, fumbled, punted, and gave up two touchdowns. On the sidelines. Coach Allen was pleading with his players to remember the Bulldog pride, or at least the $500. But his strategy didn’t match his enthusiasm. After Tech’s fourth touchdown, he decided to kick off (the rules allowed the scored upon team the option of kicking or receiving) in order to put Tech deep in its own territory. However, a Tech player returned the kickoff 70 yards, which led to a touchdown on the next play. But Allen was slow to catch on. Once again he had his players kick off and the results were predictable. And in the second quarter, Allen outdid himself. Behind 70-0, the Bulldogs were facing a third down with only one yard to gain for a first down. At that point, a first down would have brought the crowd to its feet. Instead, it remained seated and laughed unashamedly. Allen ordered his troops to punt. With the game sewn up so early, the Tech players decided to pro­ vide a little humor of their own. Canty Alexander, a senior tackle who had never scored a touchdown, was shifted to halfback when The Upjohn Company © 1991 The Upjohn Company USJ-4536.00 Febniary 199) TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED 222-0! Georgia Tech’s offense had little trouble getting past Cumberland’s ‘down linemen.’ Tech had the ball on Cumberland’s 1-yard line. The Tech players knew they could score at will, so to make Alexander earn his honor, they dropped to the ground when the ball was snapped. Not to be outdone, the Cumberland players joined their opponents on the ground. Alexander trotted into the end zone untouched. But don’t get the impression that the Cumberland Bulldogs did not know how to hit. A second quarter play corrects that notion. While one Bulldog was running to avoid tacklers, another was running to avoid any possibility of having to block. Allegedly, the collision produced an echo that could be heard all the way back in Tennessee. During the halftime intermission. Coach Allen mapped out the only sensible strategy for a team down 126-0: He asked Heisman to shorten the last two quarters. Heisman agreed to go from 15 min­ utes to 12 minutes, but he was suspicious. He told his players not to let up. “You never know what those Cumberland players have up their sleeves,” he said. “ So, in the second half, hit ’em clean and hit ’em hard.” For the most part, his players obeyed. Wary of a comeback, they piled on 54 points in the third quarter and 42 points in the fourth. In a game where the remarkable was routine, three incidents stand out. Unbelievably, two Georgia Tech players were injured. The first was kicker Jim Preas. His golden toes were so overused for kickoffs and extra points—18 in a row, an NCAA record—that they spent the second half in an ice bucket. The other was an ankle bite caused by a set of Bulldog teeth strong enough to cut through shoe leather. Cumberland’s major contribution to the ill-fated matchup was the most memorable on-field, live-ball conversation ever in the annals of football on any level. Late in the fourth quarter, with every Cumberland player urging the clock forward. Bulldog halfback Eddie Edwards fumbled and the ball rolled towards B.F. Paty, one of several Cumberland players who would go on to a successful career in law. “Pick it up,” Edwards urged Paty. Paty thought about it for a moment, but a phalanx of onrushing Tech beefs changed his mind. “Pick it up yourself,” Paty shouted back. “You dropped it.” Meanwhile, a Tech player took advantage of the argument and recovered the ball. When the clock mercifully ran out, Heisman walked across the field with a $5(X) check to meet with Allen, who would live down the disaster and become director of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and a Commissioner of the District of Columbia. The Tech players were so untested that Heisman put them through an intense scrimmage immediately after the game, which, by the way, motivated the Cumberland refugee to return to his teammates. Meanwhile, the Bulldogs got off the field as quickly as possible. They were all looking forward to sp>ending their bounty while see­ ing the sights of Atlanta—though through swollen eyes. TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED LABE1IN6 SYSIENI The fastest, easiest way to create adhesive labels for endless uses in the home or office. Worldwide Sponsor of the 1992 Olympic Games in Just imagine...it fits in the palm of your hand, weights less tlm a pound and has unlimited uses. It aeates adhesive labels in 4 slides, 5 sizes and in over 25 available colors... vertically or horizontally. You simply enter the information on the lype^ter-style keyboard, press "print" and out come your labels. It features an LCD display so you can edit out errors before printing. Saves time and work. Stick it to 'em with the P-Touch. Available At Sears, Staples, Office Depot and Sharper Image [H 11 We're at your side. brother. Brother International Corporation 200 Cottontail Lane, Somerset, NJ 08875-6714 international fashion Rfea *11111. AMERICA made hart in SCHAFFNBH& MARX Dine-ln ■ Carryout ■ Delivery Edinboro Pizza Hut«^ 127 MeadvilleSL For ^ Ddiveiy CaII:734-7370 19 Riot 4lut. Edinboro University 1991 Roster Ashton, Dave .................. Fr., WR, 6-1,180 Erie, PA/Strong Vincent Barnes, Mike................. Jr, OLB, 5-10,210 Cleveland, OH/Euclid Baynes, David ................. So., DL, 6-0,275 Pittsburgh, PA/Penn Hills Bemat, Sean...................... Fr., QB, 6-1,194 Apollo, PA/Apollo Ridge Betti, Benedetto ............... Fr., OL, 6-2, 240 Albion, NY/Albion Boler, Julius....................Fr., WR, 5-10,175 Ambridge, PA/Ambridge Campbell, James..............Fr., OL, 6-3,265 Jefferson, OH/Jefferson Clare, Steve...................... Sr., FB, 5-11,212 Lockpoint, NY/Starpoint Central Cray, Russell.....................Sr., DL, 6-2,248 Cleveland, OH/Collin wood Danowski, Dan................ Fr., OL, 6-2,280 Erie, PA/Cathedral Prep Davidson, Otha..................Fr., DL, 6-2,245 Rochester, NY/Brighton Dickerson, Jody.................Fr., QB, 6-0,175 McKees Rocks, PA/Sto-Rox Dimickele, Dean................Sr., DB, 5-9,176 Canton, OH/Glen Oak Edwards, Mike...............Fr., OLB, 6-1,190 Washington, PA/Washington Edwards, Roderick......... So., DL, 6-1,243 Cleveland, OH/John Hay Fan> Vidal.......................... Fr., TB, 5-8,160 Aliquippa, PA/Aliquippa Fiorenza, Dave ............... Fr., QB, 5-11,170 Aun, NY/Adirondack Central Fiye, Lester........................ Jr., TB, 5-9,210 Latrobe, PA/Jeanette Gentile, Mike ................ Fr., ILB, 5-10,200 Greenville, PA/Reynolds Gibson, Frank................... Jr., OL, 6-4,270 Langhorne, PA/Neshaminy Giles, John ....................... So., DB, 5-8,180 Erie, PA/East Glus, Robert ................... So., WR, 5-9,170 Albion, PA/Northwestern Haiper, Bryant....................Fr., DB, 5-9,175 McKeesport, PA/McKeesport Heebsh, Brian ................... Sr., TE, 6-2,230 Tiffin, OH/Uffin Columbian Hill, Corey........................So., TB, 5-10,165 Miami, FL/Palmetto Sr. Hitchcock, Gordon............ Jr., OL, 6-3,251 Andover, OH/Pymatuning Valley Hladio, Matt.......................Fr., ILB, 6-2,215 Hanover, PA/Southwestern Holt, Jason ....................... Sr., WR, 5-8,173 Kane, PA/Kane Area Houston, Mario.................So., DB, 5-9,168 E. Cleveland, OH/East Shaw Jackson, Greg.................... Fr., TB, 6-3, 205 Monroeville, PA/Gateway Jackson, Larry................... Fr., RB, 6-0,193 Pittsburgh, PA/Penn Hills Johnson, Aaron............. Jr., OLB, 5-10,180 McKeesport, PA/McKeesport Johnson, Isaac................. Sr., DL, 5-11, 264 Buffalo, NY/Buffalo Traditional Johnson, Mark ................. So., TE, 6-4, 218 Pittsburgh, PA/Westinghouse Kegarise, Mike................... Jr., OL, 6-6,289 Milan, OH/Edison Knight, Phil ..................... So., QB, 5-9,185 Pittsburgh, PA/Westinghouse Kuhn, Eric.......................... Fr., QB, 6-2,185 Erie, PA/Strong Vincent Lavis, Tom.......................... Fr., OL, 6-6, 235 Seward, PA/Laurel Valley Lewis, Derrick.................... Jr., RB, 6-1,235 Youngstown, OH/Rayen Lewis, Georj ...................... Jr., DB, 5-9,175 Connellsville, PA/Connellsville Lhotsky, Gaiy...................... So., P, 6-2,205 Bridgeport, WV/Bridgeport Macintosh, Jeff................So., WR, 6-0,156 Trafford, PA/Franklen Mariani, Anthony...........Jr., DL, 5-10,214 Pittsburgh, PA/Central Catholic Marratta, Joel ................. Sr., ILB, 5-10,210 Springfield, OH/Kenton Ridge Martin, Wrentie............... Sr., WR, 6-1,180 Massillon, OH/Washington McGinty, Brian................ Fr., OL, 6-4,250 Lakewood, OH/St. Ignatius McKamey Jr., James ....... Fr., WR, 6-5,193 Harrisburg, PA/Susquehanna Messura, John.................... Sr., DL, 6-0,265 Rochester, NY/Aquinas Institute Miller, R. G........................ So., OL, 6-5,265 Apple Creek, OH/Waynedale Modlin, Jason.....................Fr., DB, 5-9,170 Waldorf, MD/Thomas Stone Murphy, Pete ................... So., DL, 6-4, 210 New Brighton, PA/New Brighton Nagy, Steve...................... Jr., OLB, 6-1, 215 Stow, OH/St. Vincent/St. Mary Naklizki, John................... So., FB, 6-2,226 Brook Park, OH/Berea Nickel, Scott ...................... Jr., OL, 6-4, 270 Conneaut, OH/Conneaut Nowacki, Dave................. Fr., OL, 6-0, 275 Hamilton, ONT/Bishop Ryan O'Connor, Teny.............. Sr., WR, 5-9,167 Erie, PA/Harborcreek Perkins, Jason................... Jr., ILB, 6-2, 220 Geneva, OH/Geneva Pickett, Delvin ................. Sr., DL, 6-1, 245 Akron, OH/Garfield 20 Reifsnyder, Bryan........ Sr., OLB, 5-11, 200 N. Canton, OH/St. Thomas Aquinas Rose, Curtis....................... Sr., OL, 6-3, 278 Logan, OH/Logan Ross, Anthony.................. Sr., DL, 6-2, 240 Cleveland, OH/Shaw Ross, Steve......................So., DB, 5-10,168 Cleveland, OH/John Hay Rupert, Scott...................... Fr., K, 5-11,170 Harrisburg, PA/Central Dauphin East Russell, Derrick.............So., TB, 5-11,190 Pittsburgh, PA/Perry T. A. Russell, Steve......................Jr., LB, 6-0,185 Pittsburgh, PA/Perry T. A. Schrimper, Eric.................. So., TE, 6-4,235 Waterford, PA/Fort LeBoeuf Seibert, Sean....................... Jr.; QB, 6-2,215 Painesville, OH/Harvey Simmons, Devas.............. So., LB, 6-1, 205 Pittsburgh, PA/Peabody Smith, Wade...................... Sr., FS, 5-10,182 Lockport, NY/Lockport Snyder, Chris............. Fr., FB/DB, 6-3,195 Wattsburg, PA/Seneca Sparenberg, Bill................So., OL, 6-3,250 Talbotville, ONT/London Junior Spisak, Wally..................... Sr., OL, 6-2,260 Wickliffe, OH/Wickliffe Starr, Ed...............................Fr., DB, 6-0,175 Butler, PA/Knoch Stone, Paul.........................Sr., WR, 6-0,190 Norton, OH/Norton Tanner, Jeff....................... So., OL, 6-4, 265 New Castle, PA/Shenango Tedder, Tom ...................... So., FB, 6-1,210 Pittsburgh, PA/Baldwin Tighe, Tony !..................... So., DL, 6-7,275 * New York, ONT/W. A. Porter Venant, Pierre.....................Fr., DL, 6-2,245 N. Lauderdale, FL/Coconut Creek Walker, John...................... Sr., ILB, 6-0,200 Ashtabula, OH/Harper Wallick, Chadd ................ Fr., OL, 6-3, 245 Dover, OH/Dover Walters, Lateef.............. So., WR, 5-10,168 Pittsburgh, PA/Westinghouse Way, John .......................... So., LB, 5-8,187 Cleveland, OH/Shaw White, Mike.....................Fr., DB, 5-11,175 Temple Hills, MD/Forestville Whitfield, Philip ........... Sr., ILB, 5-11, 225 Detroit, Ml/Detroit Chadsey Woods, Joseph................. Fr., WR, 6-5,180 Pittsburgh, PA/Perry Yauch, Craig..................... Fr., ILB, 6-0, 205 Library, PA/South Park Zele, Rob .......................... Fr., ILB, 6-1,198 Euclid, OH/Euclid GOOD LUCK SCOTS See ns for all your automotive needs! 'veA Little^ \^Dea!er New Buicks New Chevys New Chevy Trucks Used Cars Leasing Rentals Service Parts + Full Body Shop BUICK BUICK LKER BROS— / CHEVROLET “Celebrating our 75th Anniversary" QUICK $19.95 oil, lube, filter ~ no appointment necessary 29 minutes or less or your next one is free Present This Coupon By December 31,1991 Receive $5.00 Off PA STATE INSPECTION - Other Parts and Labor Extra - One Coupon Per Car Coupon EDINBORO UNIVERSITY DEFENSE OFFENSE 4 75 74 53 63 62 88 2 6 5 33 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 WRENTIE MARTIN............................................ WR MIKE KEGARISE ...................................................LT SCOTT NICKEL ................................................... LG GORDON HITCHCOCK .................................... C CURTIS ROSE..................................................... RG WALLY SPISAK.................................................... RT BRIAN HEEBSH ................................................... TE LATEEF WALTERS .............................................WR JODY DICKERSON ............................................ OB TOM TEDDER..................................................... FB DERRICK RUSSELL ........................................... TB Walters, L....... ...WR Farr.V............ .....TB Martin, W...... ,...WR Tedder, T........... FB Dickerson, J. ....QB Frye, L........... .... TB White, M......... ... QB Houston, M. .. ...DB Knight, P........ ...QB Seibert, S....... ...QB Fiorenza, D. .....QB Lhotsky, G...... ..... P Rupert, S........ ..... K Kuhn, E.......... ...QB Jackson, G. ... ...TB 17 McKamey,J. ...WR 18 Smith, W. ..... ...DB 19 Woods, J........ .. WR 20 Bernat, S........ ... QB 21 Lewis, G......... ... DB 22 Jackson, L...... ... RB 23 Modlin, J............DB 24 Marratta, J...... .. ILB 25 Boler,J........... .. WR 26 Reifsnyder, B. QLB 27 Starr, E........... ...DB 29 Dimickele, D.. ...DB 30 Hill. C.............. ...TB 31 Simmons, 0. ..... LB 32 Zele, R............ .. ILB FAIRMONT STATE 1 33 Russell, D. ........TB 34 Mariani, A. ........DL 35 Lewis, D. ..........TB 36 Walker, J. ......... ILB 39 Clare, S...... ...... FB 40 Gentile, M. . ..... ILB 41 Stone, P........... WR 42 Russell, S. .....QLB 43 Barnes, M. ......QLB 44 Yauch, C. .........ILB 45 Naklizki,J. ....... FB 46 Johnson, A. .... QLB 47 Snyder, C, ..FB/DB 49 Harper, B.......... DB 50 Nagy, S....... .... QLB 34 90 76 52 42 24 51 9 21 43 18 OFFENSE ANTHONY MARIAN I............................................DE RUSSELL CRAY....................................................DT JOHN MESSURA................................................. DT DELVIN PICKETT................................................. DE STEVE RUSSELL................................................LB JOEL MARRATTA.................................................LB JASON PERKINS .................................................LB MARIO HOUSTON...............................................CB GEORJ LEWIS..................................................... CB MIKE BARNES.................................................... SS WADE SMITH....................................................... FS 51 Perkins, J......... .ILB 52 Pickett, D............DL 53 Hitchcock, G.... .OL 54 Gibson, F........ . OL 55 Ross, A.............,.DL 56 Tanner, J........... . OL 57 Schrimper, E.... .TE 58 McGinly, B........ .OL 59 Campbell, J...... .OL 60 Sparenberg, B. .OL 62 Spisak, W........ .OL 63 Rose, C............ .OL 64 Nowacki, D....... .OL 65 Baynes, D......... .DL 66 Johnson, 1......... .DL 68 Tighe, T. ....... ....OL 69 Edwards, R....... DL 71 Lavis, T......... .... OL 72 Wallick, C...... .... OL 73 Danowski, D. .... OL 74 Nickel, S........ .... OL 75 Kegarise, M....... OL 76 Messura, J.... ....DL 77 Betti, B................ OL 79 Miller, R.G...... .... OL 81 Ashton, D....... .. WR 82 Macintosh, J.... WR 83 O'Connor, T. .... WR 85 Glus, R........... .. WR 87 Holt, J............. .. WR 88 Heebsh, B. ....... TE 89 Boler,J.......... ... WR 90 Cray, R.......... .... DL 92 Whitfield, P. .. .... ILB 93 Edwards, M.. .. OLB 95 Davidson, O. .... DL 96 Hladio, M........... ILB 97 Venant, P. .... .... DL 98 Johnson, M.......TE 99 Murphy, P..... ....DL 81 53 51 50 75 54 85 25 37 42 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 12 13 14 DEFENSE BRYAN WILSON .................................................. SE TONYARBAUGH................................................. LT JOHN FRIEND ..................................................... LG DAVE COOPER.......................................................C TIM YACKIN..........................................................RG DAVE NEWSOME ...............................................RT MATT KANICKI..................................................... TE THOMAS FOSTER............................................. WB ARAMISN FIGUEROA........................................ OB DAVE KOREN....................................................... FB IRWIN HASTINGS................................................TB Koski, B..............SE Soiiday, C....... ...P/C Martin, P......... ...WB Zapolnik, M......... FS France, J........ ....CB Flickenger, H...SS/P Frazier, D....... ....DE Rogers, D.A.......PK Hurley, T........ ....CB Goines, J........ ....SS Reed, K...........,...QB Murdy, D......... ....FS Daloia, C.............CB 15 Risner, C........ ...WB 16 Lewis, S................ K 17 Southern, R.... ....SS 18 Fike, S............ ....SS 20 Hutchins, E..... ...WB 21 Hodgkiss, E........TB 22 Page, V........... ....SS 24 Rodgers, R..... ....FS 25 Foster, T......... ....TB 26 Finiey, L...........,...SS 27 Kiger, K............ ...PK 28 Chevrine, R.J.. ...CB 29 Hastings, 1.......,...TB 30 Helser, J.......... ..WB 32 Weishington, C. ...TB 33 Frankiin, T........ ...TB 35 Massey, B........ ..QB 36 Sharp, L........... ..QB 37 Figuerda, A...... ..QB 38 Bercaw, M........ ..QB 39 Guadet, B........ ...LB 40 Judd, b.............,..FS 41 Pinardo, M....... ....LB 42 Koren, D........... ..FB 43 Barker, B...........,..LB 44 Hilling, A........... ..TB 7 76 69 99 49 48 56 11 5 40 22 DEION FRAZIER......................... ...................... DE ALLON SANSOM ....................... ...................... DT STEVE GRETCHEN................... ...................... DT TJ. WINKLER ............................ ......................DE MATT JOSEPH ........................... ....................OLB ADAM WEST.............................. ................... . ILB JEFF CRABTREE ....................... ................... OLB JIM GOINES................................. ......................CB JAMES FRANCE......................... ......................CB DEREK JUDD.............................. ...................... FS VASHON PAGE........................... ......................SS 45 Franchina, N... ....FB 46 Fiatt, J............. ....TE 47 Sales, E.......... ....FB 48 West, A........... ....LB 49 Joseph, M....... ....LB 50 Cooper, D....... ......C 51 Friand,J.......... ...QB 52 Rhodes, B....... ...OG 53 Arbaugh, T..... ...OT 54 Newsome, D... ...OT 55 Stolz, D............,...DT 56 Crabtree, J...... ....LB 57 Austin, A.......... ...DT 58 Darnell, A...... ..... LB 59 King, S........... ....OG 60 Snyder, M...... .....LB 61 Jackson, J..... .... DT 65 McIntosh, T.... .... DT 67 Jenkins, F..... .... LB 69 Gretchen, S........DE 71 Hopkins, M.........OT 72 Prusha, G...... ....OT 73 Wirth, J............... DT 75 Yackin, T.............OG 76 Sansom, A..... ....DT 77 Grimmet, A..... ....OT ERIE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO 78 Krocker, M..........DT 79 Larkin, S...... ...... DE 80 Baird, M....... .......TE 81 Wilson, B..... ...... SE 82 Copley, K..... ...... SE 85 Kanicki, M.... ...... TE 86 Savage, A.... ..... .TE 87 Ritz, E................. SE 92 Hartwig, B.... ...... TE 93 Billanti, P...... ..... .TE 95 Good, M....... ..... DT 96 Popeck, S..... ..... DT 99 Winkler, T.J....... DE Fairmont State College 1991 Roster Arbaugh, Tony ................. Jr., OT, 6-3,270 Hamlin, WV/Hamlin Austin, Anthony ............. So., DT, 6-1,270 Columbus, OH/Beachcroft Baird, Mike....................... So., TE, 6-3,235 On an Independent Survey Troyer Farms Potato Chips have been chosen as people's #1 choice and here's why . . . Troyer Farms'''Potato Chips are made naturally. Our own specially grown, spe­ cially selected potatoes are cooked in pure veg­ etable oil to give Troyer Farms Potato Chips the light taste they're famous for. And no preservatives are added, so our chips come Farm Fresh . . . from Troyer Farms to you. Good, Matt........................ Fr, DT, 6-2,225 Smithsburg, MD/Smithsbui^ Gretchen, Steve.................Jr, DE, 6-0,240 Martins Ferry, OH/Martins Ferry Grimmett, Andy............... Fr, OT, 6-3,265 Hilliard, OH/Hilliard Hampden, WV/Gilbert Barker, Brooks .................. Fr., LB, 6-0,205 Hartwig, Brett................. Fr, TE, 6-4,180 Metz, WV/North Marion Monrovia, MD/Lingamore Bercaw, Mark.................. Fr., QB, 5-10,170 Hastings, Irwin............... Jr, TB, 5-11,200 Lima, OH/Elida Massillon, OH/Massillon Billanti, Pool.......................Fr., TE, 6-0,195 Helsei^ Jeff....................... So., WB, 6-2,200 Smithsburg, MD/Smithsburg Lafeyette, OH/Allen East Cheverine, R. J................... Fr., CB, 6-1,200 Hilling, Andy...................Fr, TB, 6-0,185 Bridgeville, VA/Chartiers Valley Erie, PA/Cathedral Prep Cooper, Dave....................... Sr., C, 6-0,250 Hopkins, Mark................ Jr, OT, 6-0,240 Akron, OH/Archbishop Hoban McConnelsville, OH/Morgan Copley, Kevin......................Fr., SE, 6-0,190 Hodgkiss, Ed.................... So., TB, 6-0,190 Ravenswood, WV/Ravenswood Laurel, MD/St. Vincent Palotti Crabtree, Jeff....................... Jr., LB, 6-0,220 Hurley, Todd.....................Jr, CB, 6-0,180 Lucasville, OH/Valley Upper Marlboro, MD/Douglass Daloia, Chad.......................Fr, CB, 6-1,170 Hutchins, Ellis.................. Fr, WB, 6-0,175 Washington, PA/Trinity Garfield Heights, OH/Garfield Heights Darnell, Aaron....................Fr, LB, 6-2,205 Jackson, Jason.................... Fr, DT, 5-9,230 Franklin Furnace, OH/Green Sherman, WV/Ravenswood Fansler, Aaron......................Fr, C, 6-0,201 Jenkins, Frank................ Fr, LB, 5-11,210 Parsons, WV/Tucker Coimty Chesapeak, WV/East Bank Flguerda, Aramis............. So., QB, 6-1,184 Kanicki, Matt...................... Jr, TE, 6-0,240 Roselle Park, NJ/Barringer Ashtabula, OH/Edgewood Fike, Stacy ......................... Fr, LB, 6-0,195 Kiger, Ken ......................... Fr, PK, 6-0,190 Friendsville, MD/Northern Garrett V\^lliamstown, WV/Williamstown Finley, Laundell .............. Fr, SS, 5-11,173 King, Steve........................ Fr, OG, 6-1,230 Milton, WV/Barboursville Cortland, OH/Cortland Flatt, Jason...........................Fr, TE, 6-2,220 Koren, Dave.................... So., FB, 5-11,220 Westdale, NY/Camden Central Gates Mills, OH/Mayfield Flickenger, Heath.............. Fr, CB, 6-2,180 Koski, Biyan...................... So., SE, 6-2,180 North Benton, OH/West Branch Toronto, OH/Toronto Foster, Thomas....................Fr, TB, 5-8,170 Krocker, Mark.................. So., DT, 6-3, 265 Sidney, OH/Sidney New Philadelphia, OH/Central France, Jim..........................So., CB, 5-8,155 Larkin, Sean ...................... Jr, DE, 6-3,245 Zainesville, OH/Zainesville Mentor, OH/Mentor Franchina, Nick ................. Jr, FB, 6-0,200 Lewis, Scott ......................... Sr, K, 6-2,185 Greer, SC/Greer Bridgeport, WV/Bridgeport Franklin, Tony .................. Sr, TB, 6-0,190 Martin, Pat..................... So., WB, 5-10,185 Palmyra, VA/Fluvanna Herndon, VA/Herndon Frazier, Deion....................Sr, DE, 6-3,240 Massey, Brian....................Fr, QB, 6-1,168 Jacksonville, FL/Paxon Chesapeak, WV/East Bank Friend, John ..................... Fr, OG, 6-1,225 McIntosh, Tom ................. Fr, DT, 6-1,220 Accident, MD/North Garrett Rivesville, WV/North Marion Gaudet, Brian.................. Fr, LB, 5-11,201 Murdy, Dan........................Fr, FS, 5-9,165 Buckhannon, WV/Upsher Pittsburgh, PA/West Mifflin Goines, Jim.........................So., SS, 6-1,200 Newsome, Dave............... Sr, OT, 6-3, 285 Zainesville, OH/Zainesville Wheelersburg, OH/Wheelersburg 21 Page, Vashon................... So., SS, 5-10,200 Porcellville, VA/Loud in Valley Pinardo, Mike.................. So., LB, 6-0,215 Parma Heights, OH/Valley Forge Prusha, George................So., OT, 6-2,250 Maple Heights, OH/Maple Heights Popeck, Steve.................... Jr, DT, 6-0,250 Washington, PA/Washington Reed, Kevin ...................... Fr, QB, 6-1,195 Clarksburg, WV/Liberty Rhodes, BUI...................... Fr, OG, 6-1,195 Duncanville, PA/Hollidaysburg Risner, Chris .................. Fr, WB, 5-11,170 Wheelersburg, OH/Wheelersburg Ritz, Eric............................So., SE, 5-10,180 Youngstown, OH/Griard Rodgers, Rob ..................... Fr, FS, 6-2,190 Parma, OH/Valley Forge Rogers, D. A........................ So., K, 5-9,205 Fairmont, WV/East Fairmont Sales, Eddy........................ Fr, FB, 5-11,220 Beaver Falls, PA/Riverside Sansom, Allon.................... Jr, DT, 6-4,275 Newnan, GA/East Coweta Savage, Anthony............... Fr, TE, 6-3,247 Wheeling, WV/Central Sharp, Leonard.................. Fr, QB, 6-2,177 East Cleveland, OH/Shaw Snyder, Mark .................. Fr, LB, 5-10,205 Ravenswood, WV/Ravenswood Southern, Robin..................Fr, SS, 6-0,175 Sidney, OH/Sidney Stolts, Dirk....................... So., DT, 6-0,260 Bellaire, OH/Bellaire Soliday, Casey....................... Jr, P, 6-0,222 Sistersville, WV/Sistersville Washington, Charles ....... Fr, TB, 6-0, 200 Clarksburg, WV/Liberty West, Adam ........................ Jr, LB, 6-2,270 Barlow, OH/Vincent Warren Wilson, Bryan................... Sr, SE, 6-1,190 Ripley, OH/Ripley Winkler^ T. J....................... So., DE, 6-1,245 Lima, OH/Lima Senior Wirth, Jon ......................... So., DT, 6-1, 240 St. Marys, OH/Memorial Yackin, Hm ...................... Sr, OG, 6-4,280 Willoughby, OH/Willoughby South Zapolnik, Mike ................ So., FS, 6-3, 220 Steubenville, OH/Steubenville (^ood- JLucf^ fighting Scots CHECK YOUR RREC€>NCEIVED NOTIONS THc JUE-Ngw BonnG^UG, If you've always believed the only way to get an agile, aero-styled, high-performance sedan was to buy small, you're in for a big surprise. It's time to forget the past, and introduce yourself to the all-new 1992 Pontiac Bonneville." By its engineering specifications alone, the new Bonneville shatters that myth convincingly. Under its beautifully redesigned shape lurks a potent 170 horsepower EH23EZ232C3 sequential fuel injection locked onto an advanced electronic 4-speed automatic. Available and a precisionengineered, road-gripping sport suspension for outstanding control, stopping or steering. Available advanced ESS32SE3ISIIZH2 fo'" superb power application on slippery for additional Cfjr# safety assurance. That's the technical side. But to really get the feel of the new Bonneville, you've got to get behind the wheel. Notice how the solid-feeling controls react smoothly to the touch. How the full comple­ ment of analog gauges are well-defined for quick, decisive reads. How the whole cockpit is driveroriented. and designed for performance. And by the way, the new Bonneville is a fullfledged. EZ2ZSSSS ^our-door that can easily carry six adults. Just thought we’d remind you. The all-new 1992 Bonneville. Climb in and throttle one up. Just be prepared for an attitude adjustment to take place. Very, very quickly. t I HOUSE OF EDINBORO FACTORY DESIGNER SHOWROOM ROUTE 6N EDINBORO Hours: Weekdays 8-4 Saturday 9-1 PONTIAC.BuiM ExdtGm&nt I — u Call toll-free 1-800-762-4900 tor more product information, ^- - - - - Buckle Up, America! ic'1991 GM Corp All rights reserved See your dealer for terms of this limited warranty •«««!! «> 22 HOW SHARP AREVDU? Army’s wide receiver Bill Carpenter was a stranger to the huddle, receiving plays via hand signals from the quarter­ back. He was known as: A. Mr. Lonely B. The Lonesome End C. Alone Again, Naturally D. Home Alone 1 2 A. B. C. D. 3 A. B. C. D. A quick quarterback sprints to the tackle hole and either hands the ball off to the RB or keeps it. This formation is called: The I The Spread The Veer The Split-T The quarterback’s signal-calling rhythm is called a: Soliloquy Cadence Rap Chant An almost defunct play where the quar­ terback raises the ball high above his head on a pass fake, then the running back comes by and takes the ball for a sweep. A. Golden Gate Bridge B. The Grand Canyon C. The Statue of Liberty D. The Chrysler Building 4 Two defensive players coordinate an action to penetrate the line. This is called a: A. Stunt B. Stutter Step C. Charge D.Juke 5 6 A. B. C. D. A mobile protective area for the passer is called a: Naked Reverse Submarine Moving pocket Shoulder pad 7 A. B. C. D. A runner capable of going for a touch­ down on any play is called: The Rocket Speedburner Breakaway threat Scrambler The place where combat occurs among opposing linemen. ' A. The locker room B. The trenches C. The parking lot D. The end zone 8 Match 1. Straight-ahead sprint by a receiver 2. The deepest defensive back 3. Open area between two defensive zones 4. A faked rush, then a pass 5. Lineman positioned opposite the center 6. Poorly-thrown pass 7. Elapsed time of a punt 8. Delayed rushing attempt 9. Strong-side fake, weak-side run 10. Defensive secondary charge into the backfield ^ ( / a. Blitz b. Hangtime c. Mallard d. Counter Play e. Noseguard, f. Safety g. Fly Pattern h. Play action i. Draw Play j. Seam ORGANIZATIONAL POWER: PURE AND SIMPLE. phone numbers, important dates, your schedule, memos and more. You don't need to enter DOS commands. Just touch any function key and the Wizard displays the information you want. Answers «(0l P(6 1(8 q(Z. 3(9 3(& M(t7 f(e J(3 §(l :sJ3Aisuv EASY TO EXPAND. 8 (8 3 (Z. 3 (9 V (9 D (t' 9 (£ D (3 8 (l :sj3msuv z«nO The Sharp Electronics Sports Trivia Quiz The Wizard* 02-8000 has all the power FROM SHARP MINDS COME SHARP PRODUCTS’ . ” stay on time, on track and Eleven built-in functions h'pewriter keyboard to store, retrieve and sort Insert any optional Wizard software card for easy access to more power. The Wizard's patented touch-screen turns each cardintoacustomized keypad. Choose from reference, business, entertain­ ment, telecommunications and memory expansion cards that are as easy to use as the Wizard itself. EASY TO EXCHANGE DATA. With the optional Organizer-Link and cable, you can load files from your PC into your Wizard, or download work doneonyour Wizard to you r PC. EASY TO COMMUNICATE. An Organizer Fax/Modem gives you the power to send a fax directly from your Wizard. Or, connect with on-line services to send and receive data over direct phone lines and even from a cellular phone. To learn how easy it ___ is to organize your business and personal life, call 1-800-321-8877.lnCanada, call 1-416-890-2100. And ask for the dealer nearest you. FROM SHARP MINDS COME SHARP PRODUCTS'* K TIPS ON SHOOTING SPORTfi Imagine this. There's less than two minutes left in the game. Buffalo Bills quarterback Jim Kelly goes into a no­ huddle offense. He’s working out of the shotgun, taking one-step drops and fir­ ing 10-yard passes to star wide receiver Andre Reed. The L.A. Raiders are caught off balance. Kelly remains cool. In just a few quick plays, the Bills have marched 50 yards down the field, deep into Raiders territory. The Raiders defense has no time to get set. And neither do you. Not if you’re the photographer. With this kind of fast, unpredictable action you’ve got to be ready to catch it the instant it happens. Today’s sophisticated SLR equipment can get us into the game like never before. Autofocusing lets us cover all the angles, while fast film and fast lenses offer more action-stopping potential than ever. But now, there’s even more. Another breakthrough in photo history. Just recently, the photographic com­ pany that pioneered autofocusing in SLR cameras introduced a camera that operated in an entirely new way. With the use of an intelligence system featur­ ing fuzzy logic control, they created a camera that actually thinks! Programmed with the experience of professional photographers, this revolu­ tionary new decision-making 35mm SLR can make up to a million calcula­ tions per second and distinguish between sports action, closeups, por­ traits, landscapes, and even romantic low-light scenes. All in the blink of an eye. Since the camera thinks along with you, it can react instantly to any situa­ tion at any time. This sophisticated new SLR can respond to the most subtle changes in movement, lighting or contrast within the scene being photographed. It dis­ cerns the main subject and sets the best exposure program for that subject SEASON I I |3~|X.|Aw.*. IT ONLY LOOKS, ACTS AND THINKS LIKE ONE Presenting the TM Houston's Emmanuel Hazard shattered the season catch mark with 142. NCAA Division l-A Player, Team Emmanuel Hazard, Houston.......... . Howard Twilley, Tulsa........................ Jason Phillips, Houston...................... James Dixon, Houston........................ David Williams, Illinois...................... Jay Miller, Brigham Young................ Jason Phillips, Houston...................... Mark Templeton, L. Beach St............. Rodney Carter, Purdue....................... Keith Edwards, Vanderbilt.................. Year No. Yards TD .1989....142....1,689.. ...22 .1965....134....1,779. ...16 .1988....108....1,444. ...15 .1988....102....1,103. ...11 .1984....101....1,278. .... 8 .1973....100....1,181. .... 8 .1987..... 99...... 875. .... 3 .1986..... 99...... 688. .... 2 .1985..... 98....1,099. .... 4 .1983..... 97...... 909. .... 0 Aii Divisions Year No. Yards TD Player, Team (Division) Emmanuel Hazard, Houston (l-A)..... .1989....142....1,689. ...22 Howard Twilley, Tulsa (TA).............. .1965....134....1,779. ...16 Brian Forster, Rhode Island (TAA).... ..1985....115....1,617. ...12 Jason Phillips, Houston (I-A)............. ..1988....108....1,444. ...15 Barry Wagner, Alabama A «& M (II)... ..1989....106....1,812. ...17 Theo Blanco, Wis.-Stevens Point (HI) ..1987....106....1,616. .... 8 Jerry Rice, Miss.Valley St. (TAA)..... ..1984....103....1,682. ...27 Jerry Rice, Miss.Valley St. (TAA)..... ..1983....102....1,450. ...14 James Dixon, Houston (TA)............... ..1988....102....1,103.....11 Mike Healey, Valparaiso (II).............. ..1985....101....1,279.....11 Source: NCAA TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED IHIS IS NOT A COMPUTER! CATCHES E PATRONITE/ALLSPORT and condition. Autofocusing is lightningfast, continuous, and omni-directional. It tracks even quick, erratic subject move­ ment in any direction with ease. But what about the unpredictable? Those split-second expressions, ges­ tures, or moments that can be missed in the time it takes to zoom the lens and compose the shot. Two exclusjve new features called eye-start operation and autozoom provide the solution. When you pick up the camera/and look through the viewfinder, special sensors in the grip and eyepiece activate all its functions. So the camera is always ready when you are. And then an amazing thing happens. The lens automatically zooms to com­ pose your shot, and you don’t have to touch a single button! The camera does all the work. It instantly gives you an ideal subject magnification, saving pre­ cious seconds so you can capture that once-in-a-lifetime shot. This is the first of a new breed of SLR cameras born for action. It gives you ulti­ mate performance while keeping you in the creative driver’s seat. With a unique transparent graphic display viewfinder, you can monitor camera functions and select shutter-priority, aperture-priority, expert program, or metered manual exposure control. And if you'want unlimited creative potential^^check out today’s optional SLR accfessories like the tiny software cards that program the camera for spe­ cialized functions. One such card tells the camera to select the highest shutter speeds possible—to freeze sports and other fast action without a blur. So, to catch fast sports action as fast as it happens, tap into today’s advanced technology. All you have to do is look through the viewfinder, and the camera does the rest. Just press the shutter but­ ton when you want to take the picture. And if the action gets really hot, hold that shutter button down and the camera will shoot high-speed action-stopping sequences at four frames per second, ALL IN PERFECT FOCUS. Fuzzy logic control, eye-start opera­ tion, autozoom, and camera software cards. Incredible advancements in pho­ tographic technology created for just one purpose—to give you expert results that were at one time limited only to pro­ fessionals. Imagine what it can do for you. Good luck and good shooting! ALLpTIME Notebook Work Organizer T Xhe PowerNote does virtually everything you need a computer for. Think about it: it does word processing, spread­ sheets, organizing, scheduling with alarm and calculating. It can also send faxes, interface with PC’s and any printer, access on-line information services and play Tetris™. Plus, it has a 2-way switchable backlit LCD display and 3.5" disk drive for unlimited memory. No experience is necessary because easy to use pull down menus tell you what to do in plain English. It's notebook size, wei^s 5 lbs. and operates on batteries or AC, so you can use it anywhere. The PowerNote may look, act and think like a computer, but at under $500...you’ll think it’s terrific. Brother International Corporation, 200 Cottontail Lane, Somerset, NJ 08875-6714 TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED ralmolive Softest Hamk ^^^^^^^Sb(-P3ft^^Series^SdJ^ing College Footbsll’s GrestestRoceivers THE SOFT HANDS THAT MADE THE HEISMAN By Bert Randolph Sugar There have been twosomes throughout history as well After all, so the reasoning goes, all those completions paired as salt and pepper. These twosomes have sprung ^ went to someone, didn’t they? Then why has the name of in every imaginable field — food: ham and eggs; mythdothe receiver who made all of the completions been airgy: Damon and Pythias; music: Gilbert and Sullivan; brushed over, lost to the annals of time? finance: Dow and Jones; theatre: Lunt and Fontaine. Where, for example, would Auburn’s Pat Sullivan / But what about football? Why have the soft hands of have been if it weren’t for the soft hands of Terry Beasley? the receiver been as overlooked as Whistler’s Father when And Johraay Lujack without Terry Brennan or Tommy ; discussing passing twosomes? \ Harmon wi^out Forest Evashevski? / Look at the number of quarterbacks who have won In a-belated effort to set the record straight, let’s look the Heisman Trophy. Who were they throwing the ball to? at tta^ejfcisman Trophy winners who won at quarterback And why haven’t the other halves of these passing and their feivorite receivers that brought them fame, the tandems shared in the quarterback's celebrilv? Heisman and, not incidentally, all those completions: _______________________________ Year QUARTERBACK RECEIVER 1937 Clint Frank, Yale Larry Kelley 1938 Davey O’Brien, TCU Earl Clark^ 1940 Tommy Harmon, Michigan Ed Frutig and Forest Evashevski 1943 Angelo Bertelli, Notre Dame Jack Yonakor 1944 Les Horvath, Ohio State Jack Dugger 1947 Johnny Lujack, Notre Dame Terry Brennan 1956 Paul Hornung, Notre Dame Jan|<^ Mor^ 1962 Terry Baker, Oregon S^te'^-^^ern Burke 1963 Roger Staubach, Navy Dave Sjuggerud QUARTERBACK John Huarte, Notre Dame Steve Spurrier, Florida 1967 1970 1971 1984 1986 1989 RECEIVER Jack Snow Jim Yarborough Dick Trapp Gary Beban, UCLA Dave Nutall Jim Plunkett, Stanford Randy Vataha Pat Sullivan, Auburn Terry Beasley ig Flutie, Boston College Gerard Phelan ly Testaverde, Miami Brett Perriman re Ware, Houston .Manny Hazard / But, just as it’s unfair to single out the quarterback without mentioning his favorite target, so, too, is it equally unfair to mention a Heisman winner who was a receiver without mention^tfie man who threw him the ball. Therefore, in the name of fairness, we list those soft-handed receivers who have won the Heisman and the quarterback who made their accomplishments possible: Year 1936 1972 1987 RECEIVER Larry Kelley, Yale Leon Hart, Notre Dame Johnny Rodgers, Nebraska Tim Brown, Notre Dame QUARTERBACK Clint Frank Bobby Williams David Humm Tony Rice ^ ^ * There you-have it. The perfect passing combinations, the passers with the strong arms wbd threw the ball and the receivers with the soft hands who caught it. That makes a Heisman winner, a twosome that goes together like salt and pepper, ham and eggs, etc. Colgate products ensure the finest quality available. You can count on the Colgate Team to always deliver In the clutch.. .That’s the C-P focus and that’s what Colgate Team U.S. really means. COi^ Softens Hands While You Do Dishes The first team.. .part of your team BY DAVID LEON MOORE A boy named Mike grows up in Oregon and decides the two things he values most in his young life are his family and sports. So, he sets his goal early and never wavers: a college athletic scholarship, which will further his dream of playing professional sports and help out his family financially. Many dream this dream, of course, and some succeed. Like Mike, who becomes a model student and a talented, multi-sport athlete who attracts college recruiters and, one day, is awarded a football scholarship at UCLA. Nothing particularly unusual about Mike’s story. Nothing except the fact that his given name is actually Huy Hung Nguyen and he was born in Saigon in 1972, which makes Mike Nguyen (pro­ nounced M7>j), an otherwise typical redshirt freshman striving for playing time at a bigtime football power, the first person born in Vietnam to play college football. It also makes whatever difficulties he might face on a football field this fall against Stanford or USC trivial by compar­ ison to what his family has already been through. “Everything I know about Vietnam is second-hand,” he says in perfect English. “I was very young, and I don’t really remember. I know this, though. We’re real­ ly lucky to be alive.” Mike does not remember the dangers his WINNING TOSHIBA David Leon Moore is a Los Angeleshased sports feature writer for USA TODA’Y. A 1978 graduate of USC, he can occasionally he coerced into writing about UCLA. r Thinkofitas turbodiar^dTV Now high-performance can be experienced in a different kind of vehicle. The new Toshiba 32-inch Super TUBE™ TV with Super Carver Sonic Holography.® The Super TUBE™ does for TV what turbocharging does for engines. The power comes from increased voltage, via a dual path electron gun and eight larger lenses. Perhaps, a few quotes from the February 1990 issue of Video Review will help put all this technology in its proper perspective. When judged against seven other big screen TV's, the new 32-inch Super TUBE™ TV was unanimously voted as having "...the best picture...." As well as being "...morethan 50% brighter than other sets..." with ".. .great focus, superb edge sharpness, and fine brightness..." And it comes loaded with features, all standard of course, that make it easy to control and incredibly responsive. Including remote-controlled swivel rnotors that allow the TV and two of its six speakers to each turn 15 degrees left or right. Finally, there's a television for people who want high-performance in their living-room, as well as in their garage. In Touch with Tomorrow TOSHIBA family faced in Vietnam. He wasn’t yet 3 years old when his mother carried him through the chaotic streets of Saigon the night of April 29, 1975, just hours before North Vietnamese troops captured the city. He doesn’t remember the nightmarish scene at the South Vietnamese naval base, where families fought each other, even shot each other, for spots on a boat that would carry them to God only knew where. When the boat appeared ready to leave Mike’s mother on the dock, his father, an electrician in the South Vietnamese navy, cut the ship’s power until Mike’s mother could board. Left behind to face the wrath of a vengeful enemy were Mike’s grand­ parents and aunts and uncles, whom he has never seen since. “It’s been hard to have any contact with them,” says Mike. “My mom sends letters, but a lot of them don’t get through.” Having escaped Saigon, the fam­ ily—father Hung Nguyen, mother Hoang Tran, Mike and his infant sister—headed for the Philippines, then to Guam, then to Camp Pendleton in California. Within a year, they were sponsored for residency in a small town in Oregon, where Hung was employed as a gardener and Hoang as a maid. Their total compensation: $150 a month and use of a one-bedroom house. But when Hoang became pregnant, the family was kicked out of the house and ended up in Roseburg, Ore., aided by a Lutheran minister who sought donations for them and helped them find a house. “Our living conditions were very, very difficult,” says Mike’s mother, Hoang. “We had difficulty learning English, and my husband and I both went to school, which meant we didn’t have as much time with the kids as we wanted.” Their goal was to blend in. They had no Mike Nguyen has overcome tremendous odds to be the first Vietnah^se-born college football player. 1989 STEVE DIPAOLA Toshiba America Consumer Products, Inc., 82 Totowa Road, Wayne, Ni 07470 TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED WINNING ’EM OVER choice. Mike remembers little of that period. As he grew up, he began hearing stories of who he was and where he came from. The details would fade from memory until, one night, the story would be retold, and it was like a new story all over again. “My mom doesn’t always remember what she’s told me,” he says. “It seems like sometimes I’ll hear a new story, and I’ll be shocked.” Like the story about his father, before Mike was born, riding in a jeep with three other sailors and striking a land mine. His father was the only one who survived the explosion. “I’ve never been back to Vietnam,” says Mike. “Someday, I’d like to. But growing up, I didn’t feel Vietnamese, really. I didn’t know anything about the war. I was becoming very Americanized. You have to be, whether you want to or not, because of the interaction with the other kids. You have to fit in.” What Mike remembers, mostly, is sports. “I started when I was 8 years old,” says Mike. “A friend of mine at school was on a baseball team. I’d go watch his practices. I never really had any intention of playing, but one day they were short a man. I went in, and I guess I liked it. From there, I started playing baseball.” One thing led to another, and pretty soon young Mike was excelling in just about everything: baseball, football, basketball, track. Meanwhile, Mike’s father had earned his electrician’s license and the family had moved to Portland, with the American dream clearly in sight. Then, in 1982, his father was seriously injured in a motorcycle accident. For two and a half years, he was paralyzed, unable to move or speak, and he died in 1985 at age 39. Says Mike: “It was really hard, something you can’t explain unless you go through it. I was at an age that I just wanted to know why. It was a really sad time, something we all had to deal with. I knew that I had to go see him, yet I dreaded it, and then I felt bad for not wanting to see him.” After her husband’s death, Hoang started her own business, helping southeast Asian refugees with a wide range of services, such as taxes, language skills and referrals. She also now owns an Oriental gift and flower shop. “She’s very independent,” says Mike. “She had to be.” Despite the demands of her business and coping with being a single parent in an adopted country, her children blossomed. All three, Mike and daughters Susan and Melissa, have excelled in the classroom. Mike left Portland’s Franklin High School as one of four recipients of the school’s out­ standing citizenship award, and his 3.9 GPA placed him in the National Honor Society. On Franklin’s playing fields, Mike was similarly special. He routinely set records and won honors. He lettered in baseball, basketball and track, but it was in football,^ where he was a team captain for three* years, that he attracted the most attention. As a senior wide receiver and defensive back, he caught 53 passes for 745 yards and 10 touchdowns, and intercepted four passes. He was first team All-State and on various All-America lists. “His concentration and his motivation were just incredible,” says his football coach, Frank Geske. At 6-2, 180, he is unusually tall for a Vietnamese man. His father was 5-9. His mother, barely 5 feet, says there are tall men in the family back in Vietnam. Says Mike: “It’s really strange. 1 have stretch marks on my body for no reason. On my shoulders and on my back. I really don’t know how I got so tall.” He is playing wide receiver at UCLA, where he figures to see plenty of action with quarterback Tommy Maddox direct­ ing offensive coordinator Homer Smith’s wide-open attack. Although Mike was a good enough cen­ ter fielder to attract some baseball scouts, football was always his first choice. “Football was the most exciting of all the sports I played,” says Mike. “The feeling you get playing a football game doesn’t compare to anything. It’s kind of hard to explain. It just seems there’s so much more work that goes into it, and it’s a lot more rewarding.” And they give you a free education if you’re good enough at it. For a boy who, when his family was struggling financially, promised his mother he was going to get a college scholarship, that meant a lot. “He’s my son, and I’m proud of him no matter what he accomplishes, but 1 have to say that he has been like a dream come true for me,” says Hoang, who recently remar­ ried. Not that she doesn’t get a kick out of Mike’s sports. “At first, she didn’t really know much about football,” says Mike. “She used to think it was just a whole bunch of people out there just beating each other up for the ball. But the last couple of years, she doesn’t miss a game. She really loves foot­ ball now, and she understands it. It’s gotten to the point where if I’m not around or not playing in a game and there’s a game on TV, she’ll sit down and watch it. It think that’s really neat.” Mike has very few feelings about America’s involvement in Vietnam or of the war. In that sense, he’s not too different Nguyen is expected to see plenty of action this season at UCLA after redshirting in his freshman year. from most Americans of his generation. “Most of the people 1 interact with are my age,” he says. “They were the same age I was when the war was going on. They really don’t comprehend it as much as older people would.” He sometimes sees discrimination against Vietnamese, though, “and that real­ ly ticks me off. Most people who discrimi­ nate don’t really understand that for most of the Vietnamese people that are in this country, it wasn’t their idea to come here. The communists took over...” As he growing up, he didn’t delve into the rAany books and movies about Vietnam. He didn’t see Platoon or Apocalypse Now. But he understands the attention he’ll receive as the first Vietnamese-born col­ lege football player. “It’s something that people bring up a lot,” he says. “It’s strange, because the way 1 see myself is just like any other football player. I don’t see myself as different.” His mother does. “I’m very proud that he’s the first,” she saysr“We live in America now. What Mike has accomplished, it’s not only helped him, but all of us in the Asian community.” She points out that, the stereotype notwith­ standing, not all Vietnamese refugees are mathematical geniuses headed for Harvard or Cal Tech. Some have gravitated toward street gangs for a sense of identity. “We’ve had some problems with Asian children and gotten a lot of bad publicity,” she says. “Hopefully, Mike can help show people that there are Asians who work very hard to get somewhere. He wanted to get a scholarship and play sports, he worked hard and he’s accomplished his goals.” *■* There is Nothing more beautiful Than The Power of iNTEmGEHT Engineering. The All-New Eighty Eight Royale. Introducing a brand-new1992 Oldsmobile.® Redesigned and re-engineered from the inside out. !l It’s intelligent. It’s powerful. Fuel-efficient! It’s a 3800 engine fused with one of the smoothest-shifting electronic transmissions on the road. It’s nimble and precise. It’s front-wheel drive and four-wheel independent suspension. !! It’s refined. It’s a family car More overall headroom and legroom and trunk room. It’s comfort for six. And the safety of anti-lock brakes** and a driver-side air bag. !! It’s the Oldsmobile Edge!" The most comprehensive owner satisfaction program in the industry. It’s a hundred thousand ideas engineered together in the new Eighty Eight Royalef Visit your Oldsmobile dealer for a test drive or call 1-800-242-OLD5. *1992 Oldsmobile Eighty Eight Royale ERA estimated MF<318city/28 hwy **Optional on base model. Buckle Up America! iOdsnnotDile The Power Of Intelligent Engineering^ TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED 1991 AT&T Funn)^ it doesn’t look like a eonferenee eenter. LONG DISTANCE AWARD It’s doubtful Hollywood could have produced a more unbelievable long dis­ tance ending than the one that occurred at Cal-Berkeley’s Memorial Stadium on Nov. 20,1982. Actually, fans got two fantastic finish­ es for the price of one. Stanford quarterback John Elway had just directed a thrilling 87-yard scoring drive—including a successful fourth-and17 pass play—to set up a Mark Harmon field goal with :04 remaining. TTie kick seemingly lifted the Cardinal to a 20-19 win over its Pac-10 rival. Dramatic? Sure. On most days, enough to warrant small headlines across the country’s sports sections. By the end of this game, the contest was destined for the network news, and a place in college football history. Stanford, in an attempt to secure a triumph, opted for a squibbed kick. Bear cornerback Kevin Moen fielded the ball at the Cal 44, and advanced three yards. He then pitched backward—although Stanford faithful insist forward—across the field to cornerback Richard Rodgers, who forged ahead a couple of yards before lateraling to running back Dwight Garner, who was at the Cal 43. Garner ran to midfield, where he was met by four Cardinal defenders. In the pro­ cess of going down. Garner pitched the ball back to Rodgers, who was at the Bear 47. That’s when the fun really began. The Stanford band, thinking that Garner had been tackled, marched onto the field to celebrate the Cardinal win. Rodgers, meanwhile, took the ball to the Stanford 45, from where he pitched back a yard to vride receiver Mariet Ford, who ran to the Stanford 25. About to be hit by three defenders. Ford heaved the ball over his head... and the pigskin landed in the hands of Moen, who scampered 25 yards down the right side of field—and through the band, level­ ling a trombone player as he crossed the goal line. But was it a Cal victory? Was it a Stanford victory? Would they run the play over? The officials huddled near midfield before ruling: ‘Touchdown!” Other aspects of the five-lateral play have been talked about since: • There was a penalty flag—but it was against Stanford, so the penalty was declined. • Replays showed California didn’t have enough players on the front line for the play. • With the exception of Ford, all the Bear ball carriers on the final play had practiced lateral plays as members of the Cal rugby team. Try to equal that, Hollywood! AT&T honors Division I-A players in six Long Distance football cathodes, by contributing to their respective school's General Scholarship Fund. At the conclusion of the season, AT&T will present Long Distance Awards and scholarship donations based on sea­ son-long statistics. At AT&T, we honor players who’ve reached their goals on the field and we help others reach their goals off the field. Look for announcements in your local paper each week to see if your favorite players win the AT&T Long Distance Awards. C opyright 1982 Robert B. Stinnett AT&T brings ;^ou another great innova­ tion in long distance connection. Strike up the band: Cal’s Kevin Moen, who began the five-lateral play, crosses the goal line for the winning TD as the Stanford band scatters. "1990 LONG DISTANCE LEADERS" PUNT RETURNS (Avg. per return) Dave McCloughan, Colorado.............. Beno Bryant, Washington................... Jeff Graham, Ohio State...................... Tony James, Mississippi St.................. Tripp Welborne, Michigan................... KICKOFF RETURNS (Avg. per return) ............... 16.38 ............... 15.56 ............... 14.86 ............... 14.83 ............... 14.68 Dale Carter, Tennessee................................ ........29.82 Desmond Howard, Michigan....................... .......29.50 Tyrone Hughes, Nebraska.......................... .......29.06 Raymond Washington, New Mex. St............. .......29.00 Randy Jones, Duke......... ............................ .......28.25 . " Now you can call a conference anywhere. Even in the middle of nowhere. How? Simply carry one of the AT&T Cards. Then all you have to do to make a conference jg nearest public phone and give us your AT&T card number. We’ll set up the whole thing, including getting in touch with everyone you want to talk to. It’s just one of the innovative services available with the AT&T Calling Card, the AT&T Corporate Calling Card, or the AT&T Universal Card. For more on all the ways our cards can help you when you’re on the road, call 1800 222-0300, Ext. 289. All you need to reach out.'” Ife all in the cards ATBT FOLLOW BOUNCING Think today’s ball lUKEAlKSCNE U1 SEASON UNKWIIH KfWFTCENERU FOODS U ■ never has never will change? Don’t be so sure. BY JACK CLARY Back in 1923, Stanford All-America Ernie Nevers needed two hands to hold the portly pigskin. What is the one thing that makes football such a unique game?... You guessed it, the football. Or more specifically, the fact that some wise old rule-makers back in 1896 ruled that the football must be a “prolate spheroid.” And a “prolate spheroid” it has been ever since—the one being used in today’s game being the great, great grand­ son of what came off their drawing board; and like all great, great grand-progeny, it is slightly different in appearance and better built to fit the times. Those bewhiskered gridiron legislators of 1896 couldn’t have realized the eventual impact of their geometric ruling, but the selection of a “prolate spheroid” really gave the game its most distinctive feature because of what can occur every time the football hits the ground and begins to bounce around. Unlike sports played with round balls where bounces are truer, when a football is loose, it can go in a lot of crazy directions—and so can a game— before someone finally gets a grip on it. Just as important in a tactical sense, they also started an inevitable process whereby some of the “foot” eventually was taken out of football, paving the way for a ball capable of being gripped with one hand and thrown to all parts of the field with amazing accuracy. Let’s face it, for young American ath­ letes, life is just one ball after another, most of them round—baseballs, basket­ balls, soccer balls, volleyballs. Only in football, however, must they master some­ thing completely different. It wasn’t always that way. The first official intercol­ legiate game, played between Rutgers and Princeton in 1869, really was an English Jack Clary is a freelance writer who has written more than 40 books on all aspects offootball, including two new histories of the sport at Alabama and the University of Southern California, which were published this fall. TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED football— meaning soccer—game because the ball was a round soccer ball of that time. American football didn’t change until the rugby team from McGill University in Montreal ventured to Boston a few years later and played Harvard. The Harvards liked the running and contact of the rugby game and began to popularize it at colleges throughout the East. Since Harvard led the way for all innovations in the sport at that time, the American game of football began to take a different form—and so did its ball. The “prolate spheroid” shaped ball had been used for five years before it was offi­ cially sanctioned by the rule-makers in 1896, but it still looked more like a mis­ shapen basketjball than the recognizable football of/today. Spalding’s Official Guide thabyear advertised it as “officially adopted by the intercollegiate Foot Ball Association for 1896... the fifth year of its adoption. . .and the only football used in match games between the large colleges.” It sold for $5, including a “polished brass football inflator.” In 70 years, there has been just a quarterinch difference in the end-to-end circum­ ference and just 3/4 to 1 3/4 of an inch at its middle. In 1982, the Rules Committee decreed that the colleges adopt their own “official” ball in the dimensions just described, maintaining “a pebbled sur­ face” and its weight of “slightly less than a pound.” Unlike professional football where the NFL’s ball is made by just one manufactur­ er and its dimensions do not vary, the col­ lege’s football is manufactured by several firms as long as its dimensions fall within the stipulated measurements. Each team can use the ball of its choice whenever it is on offense. Thus, two different brands of footballs often are used in a game. It wasn’t until an intrepid innovator, Charles O. Finley, the former owner of the 91-4928 ©1991 Kraft General Foods, Inc. Printed in U.S.A. BOUNCING BALL This Fall, We’re Lowering Our Rates. Not Our Standards. i / On your next football weekend, why settle for a bargain hotel when you can Thursdays through Sundays $44 P&r Room, Per Night. Conditions Applyf have a hotel that’s a genuine bargain. A Courtyard by Marriott hotel for an incredibly reasonable $44 a night, any Thursday through Sunday. Unlike so many of those too-good-to-be-true offers, our special $44 rate isn’t for a heartbreak hotel. It’s for a Courtyard. The perfect place to rest and retool for the big game. Where you can stretch out in a spacious, comfortable room. And unwind in our pool, whirlpool and minigym that can help even the most worn out fan go the distance. Of course, for those of you who hardly want to move, there’s even a cozy restaurant just steps from your room. So, for a great way to tackle a football weekend for a mere $44 a night, call 1-800-321-2211 or your travel agent, 7 days ahead for reservations. After all, why settle for a runof-the-mill hotel when you can have one that goes the whole 9 yards. ^ COURTO\RD i^ Northern 1968) Location: Edinboro, Pa. 16444 Seasons, Overall Record: 3,22-10-1 President: Foster F. Diebold (Aug., 1979) Press Box Phone: 814-732-2808 Enrollment: 8,100 Team Trainer: George Roberts ■ ■■# ■ AARON JOHNSON, Jr., OLB, 5-10, 180, McKeesport, PA, McKeesport High School... played in 10 games last fall... solid on special teams ... will see plenty of action as the "nickel" back in the Scot secondary ... can play the safety positions or the comer . . . added 22 tackles, including 8 solos last fall... contributed with 1 fumble recovery and 1 break up in '90 ... gives added depth in the defensive backfield. Mario Houston Colors: Red and White Aaron Johnson 1990 Record: 9-3, Conference 5-1,1-1 NCAA Playoffs Conference: Pennsylvania State Athletic Affiliation: NCAA Division II Assistant Coaches: Scott Browning, Dan Gierlak, Mark Niswonger, Gene Smith, Ed Stults Stadium: Sox Harrison (4,500) 1991 Team Captains: TBA (each game) Athletic Director: James K. McDonald Lettermen Retuming/Lost: 40/13 Athletic Dept. Phone: 814-732-2776/2778 MIKE KEGARISE, Jr., OL, 6-6, 289, Milan, OH, Edison High School... Freshman starter at tackle last year . . . pleasant surprise . . . consistent player all year long . . . great size and pass blocking ability . . . gave up wrestling freshman year to concentrate on football... helped Scot offense average nearly 240 yards per game rushing ... #1 on depth chart at tackle in '91... has a brilliant career ahead with the Scots. MATT KOEHLE, Sr., FB, 6-0, 220, Altoona, PA, Bishop Guilfoyle High School... injury ridden '90 but contributed heavily down the stretch ... solid performer during his career with the Scots ... in 6 games he added 71 yards on 20 carries . . . rushed for 53 yards in playoff win at Virginia Union ... career totals include 145 carries for 590 yards and 4 TDs ... has caught 8 passes for 74 yards ... will battle for the fullback spot in '91. Starters Returning: 14 Sports Info. Director: Todd V. Jay Team Strengths: Rimning Backs, Secondary Sports Info. Phone: 814-732-2811 (office) 814-734-4317 (home) Team Question Marks: Quarterback, Place Kicking Mike Kegarise 24 Matt Koehle 25 Edinboro Foodmart John and Larry'$ Village Mall COMPLETE LINE OF Grocery O Meat O Produce Frozen Food O Dairy O Dell and Bakery Products STORE HOURS Monday-Saturday 8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m. Sunday 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Connect with quality... ^^TELEDYNE PENN-UNION "Good Luck to the Fighting Scots" 111 MEADVILLE ST. EDINBORO. PA 16412 229 Waterford Street Edinboro, Pa. 16412 (814) 734-1631 FAX: 814-734-4946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5 (814) 734-7243 26 GEORJ LEWIS, Jr., DB, 5-9,175, Connellsville, PA, Connellsville High School... started in all 23 games since his freshman year ... great athlete ... set to start in the fall . . . 68 tackles last year including 38 solos ... 2 interceptions and 6 pass deflections in 1990 . . . career totals include 113 stops, 4 interceptions and a pair of fumble recoveries . .. team "Freshman of the Year" in '89 ... size is deceiving ... hits hard out of the secondary. GARY LHOTSKY, So., P, 6-2, 205, Bridgeport, WV, Bridgeport High School... handled the pressure duties of punter as a freshman . . . solid effort for his first season . . . averaged 34.6 yards per punt last year on 40 tries ... turned in a great performance in the playoff loss at lUP ... had a long boot of 62 yards in '90 ... will once again be called on in '91 ... great all-around athlete ... can play receiver as well. Georj Lewis Gary Lhotsky Anthony Mariani Troy Marin Joel Marratta Wrentie Martin John Messura Steve Nagy ANTHONY MARIANI, Jr., DE/LB, 5-10, 214, Pittsburgh, PA, Central Catholic High School . . . can play end or linebacker . . . played in 11 games in '90 ... recorded 9 stops last year including 5 solos ... top special teams player ... also added a fumble recovery last fall... will battle for a starting role in '91 ... aggressive hitter on the special teams. TROY MARIN, Jr., DL, 6-3,281, Meadville, PA, Meadville High School. .. will look to make an impact on the Scot defense following a year off... can be a force in the middle replacing graduating Matt Miller... All-State performer for nearby Meadville High School... great strength and quick­ ness on the interior ... had a very solid spring session ... helping secure the DT spot... gives great strength in the middle along with Messura. JOEL MARRATTA, Sr., LB, 5-10, 210, Springfield, OH, Kenton Ridge High School... played in 12 games as linebacker last year ... starter and backup during his career .. . voted the team's top special team player .. . 72 tackles including 45 solos, 7th best on the team in '90 . . . blocked a punt, caused 2 fumbles, one recovery and knocked down a pair of passes from the linebacker spot in '90 ... 82 career stops . .. started his career as fullback where he totals 76 yards and 1 TD. WRENTIE MARTIN, Sr., WR, 6-1, 180, Massillon, OH, Washington High School . . . could step up to be the big-play man in '91 . . . great speed and hands out of the wide out spot... 26 catches for 285 yards and 1 TD last year . . . team high 9 catches for 99 yards and 1 score in the '90 loss to YSU ... career totals include 52 catches for 455 yards and 2 scores . .. key possession receiver over his career ... threat to run the ball as well. JOHN MESSURA, Sr., DL, 6-0,265, Rochester, NY, Aquinas Institute ... 2nd team All-PSAC West pick last year ... '91 pre-season All-American candidate .. . solid performer at DT . .. recorded 4th most tackles (80) in '90 ... team high 62 solo tackles from his interior spot... led in tackles for loss with 10 and was 2nd on the squad with nine quarterback sacks . . . caused 2 fumbles and was credited with a safety in win over Fairmont State. STEVE NAGY, Jr., LB/LS, 6-1, 215, Stow, OH, St. Vincent-St. Mary's High School... Scots long snapper on punt through his career ... back­ up linebacker . . . one of the squad's top special teams player . . . quiet contributor who recorded 4 stops on punt coverage ... key fumble recov­ ery in a Scot victory last fall . . . solid all-around athlete . . . should con­ tribute at the linebacker spot this year. 27 SCOTT NICKEL, Jr., OL, 6-4, 270, Conneaut, OH, Conneaut High School... starting offensive center last fall in first year of playing time ... played outstanding game at YSU in the Scots tough loss there last September ... #1 on the depth chart at center ... helped the Scots rush for 237 yards per ga^ie last year ... All-Conference potential... showed out­ standing improvement last year . . . will anchor the interior . . . excellent pass blocker. Scott Nickel Jason Perkins JASON PERKINS, Jr., LB, 6-0, 220, Geneva, OH, Geneva High School.. . grabbed the starting ILB spot last year . .. was a major key in the defen­ sive success in '90 ... 83 tackles including 55 solos ... 1 interception with 2 pass deflections . .. pair of tackles for loss . .. leading candidate for the inside linebacker spot this fall.. . team high 12 stops in the Homecoming win against Clarion in '90. DELVIN PICKETT, Sr., DL, 6-1, 245, Akron, OH, Garfield High School. .. quietly had a strong year for the Plaid ... 67 total tackles including 44 solo stops in '90 . . . stops included 4 for loss ... 2 fumble recoveries including a 24-yard return for a score in win over Shepherd College ... 3 quarterback sacks for -19 yards ... should help solidify the defensive line in '91. Delvin Pickett Bryan Reifsnyder BRYAN REIFSNYDER, Sr., OLB, 5-11, 200, N. Canton, OH, St. Thomas Aquinas ... solid player for the Scots throughout his career . . . top spe­ cial teams player . . . played in 11 games last fall . . . added 7 tackles on special teams play ... can also perform in the Scot backfield ... carried 15 times for 55 yards and 1 score in '89 ... versatile player, can contribute on both sides of the ball. CURTIS ROSE, Sr., OL, 6-3, 278, Logan, OH, Logan High School... 1st team All-American by the Associated Press and Football Gazette in '90 .. . '91 pre-season All-American by Host Communications and Street and Smith's publication ... 1st team choice to the PSAC West squad at guard . . . will be the "heart and soul" of the offensive front in '91 . . . Scots have averaged over 240 yards per game rushing with Rose in lineup ... Coach Hollman feels Rose has pro potential after college. Edinboro Travel Service Now the Edinboro Inn 122 Erie Street Edinboro, Pa. 16412 Phone (814) 734-1639 Curtis Rose Anthony Ross DERRICK RUSSELL, So., RB, 5-11, 190, Pittsburgh, PA, Perry T.A. . .. 2nd on the squad with 656 yards rushing last year . . . averaged a team high 6.8 yards per carry . . . averaged just under 60 yards rushing per game . . . ripped Fairmont State for 234 yards in 20-13 win . . . netted 99 yards in playoff win at Virginia Union ... 102 yards in 2nd half in the 10-3 win over Shippensburg . . . will battle for playing time in the backfield this fall.. .owns school record with a 92-yard scamper at Bloomsburg. Resort Conference Center Airline Reservations and Tickets Train Reservations and Tickets Hotel and Car Reservations Cruises and Tours (814) 734-5650 (800) 352-3182 Derrick Russell 28 ANTHONY ROSS, Sr., DE, 6-2,240, Cleveland, OH, Shaw High School. .. leading tackier last season with 115 total stops ... numbers included 52 solo tackles from linebacker spot... recorded 3 tackles for loss and 2 fum­ ble recoveries in '90 . . . broke up 3 passes and was credited with 2 sacks for -14 ... caused a pair of fumbles last year to rank 2nd on the team ... career totals include 145 tackles ,.. All-Conference potential. Sean Seibert SEAN SEIBERT, Jr., QB, 6-2, 215, Painesville, OH, Thomas W. Harvey High School .. . will battle for starting QB spot this fall . . . recovering from off-season wrist injury ... led Scots to 1st ever NCAA 11 playoff win at Virginia Union . . . played in 4 games last year . . . averaged over 25 yards per completion ... connected on 8 passes for 204 yards and 1 touch­ down ... gives Scots a strong running threat out of the QB spot. 29 WADE SMITH, Sr., FS, 5-10,182, Lockport, NY, Lockport High School.. CrotvCeys ^B^staurant Lounge . '91 pre-season All-American by Street and Smith’s Magazine ... 1st team PSAC West pick in '90 and 2nd team choice in '89 ... 3 year starter in the Scot secondary ... 81 total tackles last year including 36 solos . . . 166 career stops ... 12 career interceptions rank 2nd all-time in Edinboro his­ tory ... calls the defense for the secondary. WALLY SPISAK, Sr., OL, 6-2,260, Wickliffe, OH, Wickliffe High School . . . Scots starting offensive tackle last fall . . . 2nd team I’SAC West AllStar in 1990 ... '91 will mark third consecutive year for Spisak as a starter ... helped clear the way for All-Americans Elbert Cole and Lester Frye ... once again anchors a tackle spot . . . has All-American potential . . . has developed into an outstanding lineman. Wade Smith Wally Spisak Paul Stone Tom Tedder Isaac Johnson, Sr. DL, 5-11,264 Buffalo, NY Eric Kuhn, Fr. QB, 6-2,185 Erie, PA PAUL STONE, Sr., WR, 6-0,190, Norton, OH, Norton High School... made the transfer from tailback two years ago and had developed into a solid receiver ... 3rd on the squad with 21 catches for 270 yards and 1 TD last year... averaged 12.9 yards per catch in '90 ... lone score of '90 came at lUP in the 36-29 loss . . . career totals include 33 catches for 310 yards and a pair of scores ... will make the Scots a very solid receiving squad in '91 ... will look for the end zone with the departure of Priester. TOM TEDDER, So., FB, 6-0,210, Pittsburgh, PA, Baldwin High School. Lunch Dinner Specials Charcoal Grill your own Steaks or Ribs Fresh Seafood Veal - Chicken Homemade Pasta Sandwiches - Pizza - .. starter for most of the season his freshman year ... played in 11 games . .. totaled 38 carries for 192 yards and 1 score in '90 ... averaged 5.1 yards per carry last year ... did not get tackled for a loss in his 38 carries ... will battle for the starting spot again in '91 . . . also grabbed 4 passes for 23 yards. s 0 Large Groups ❖ Banquets ❖ Private Parties Dave Ashton, Fr. WR, 6-1,180 Erie, PA Dean DiMickele, Sr. DB, 5-9,176 Canton, OH Corey Hill, So. RB, 5-10,165 Miami, FL Rt. 18 South off I-90 774-8450 RESERVATIONS APPRECIATED — CLOSED MONDAYS 30 Terry O'Connor, Sr. WR, 5-9,167 Erie, PA Bill Sparenbuig, So. OL, 6-3,250 Talbotville, ONT John Walker, Sr. LB, 6-0,200 Ashtabula, OH 31 Philip Whitfield, Sr. LB, 5-11,225 Detroit, MI Scots Ready for Challenge in 1991-92 HAMILTON INSURANCE AGENCY Georgiann M. Hamilton, AAI, CIC, CPIW Good Luck Scots Agent Auto-Home-Business-Life ERIE INSURANCE GROUP = ERIE ' tt Ml m 5«V'cf ERIE INSURANCE EXCHANGE ERIE FAMILY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ERIE INSURANCE COMPANY HOME OFFICE ERIE, PA 16530 Your source for fine art prints and custom picture framing 119 Erie Street Edinboro, PA 16412 Phone: 814-734-5618 Framing Gallery 111 Erie Street Edinboro PA 16412 HOUNDS HEAD INN 5480 Route 6N West Edinboro, Pa. 814-734-4700 Good Luck Scots!! Stop in after the game. Bar open 7 days a week 20 cent wings everyday but Friday Lunch specials Monday-Saturday — Start at $3.25 Grill your own steak 5-10 Kitchen open 11 a.m.-lO p.m.; Sunday Noon-9 p.m. 32 When Edinboro University packed its bags for Christmas vacation a year ago, there were several questions left unan­ swered. Could a struggling team with three early season road losses compete in the PSAC? What the Scots did was more than merely compete. The Fighting Scots showed that a team with early set­ backs could pull together. "Our guys did a great job of com­ ing together," said third year coach Greg Walcavich. "They never doubted each other. We came back in January and start­ ed all over." Walcavich's club may not be so fortunate this year to be able to catch a second wind in January. This is due to a very strong first half schedule that features Bloomsburg (last year's top finisher in the PSAC East) along with two of the best teams in the West Virginia Conference (Salem-Teikyo and West Virginia Tech) in the Edinboro tournament. The road will not get any easier for Walcavich's club. "We have a rigor­ ous schedule," commented Walcavich. "We could have an outstanding basketball team and not win 18 games. We may be competing for a league playoff spot with a lackluster record." The Plaid finished the 1990-91 campaign at 18-10 overall and 8-4 in the PSAC with no less than six league games decided at the buzzer. "We won a number of close games (last year)," Walcavich noted. "Out of twelve league games, six were decided on the last shot. We hit four of them, we were four shots away from being 4-8 or 10-2." Edinboro will have some big shoes to fill in the '91-92 season. The Scots will be without the services of 6-5 forward Sterling Washington, last year's leading scorer and rebounder (17.1 ppg, 8.5 rpg); 5-11 guard Mark Murdock (12.6 ppg) and 6-8 power forward John Mohre (6.9 ppg), all due to gradua­ tion. If those losses weren't tough enough for the Scots' men­ tor, things got worse with the news that Sean Gibson, this year's leading returning scorer at 14.4 ppg, will not return to school. Derek Walton, a 5-9 senior guard will be the nucleus to build around in the backcourt for Walcavich. Walton aver­ aged 12.6 points and 4.4 assists per game a year ago. "We will certainly look forward to a good year from Derek," comment­ ed Walcavich. "He did a real nice job for us last year." The team leader for the 1991-92 campaign will be 6-5 senior forward Aaron Brown, the PSAC "Rookie of the Year" in 1988-89 who averaged 9.7 points per game last year. Brown will likely end his career on the top 15 all-time scorers list at Edinboro. He needs just 194 points to reach the milestone. "Aaron was here before me," noted Walcavich. "I anticipate him being one of the best players we'll have this year, he'll really do well." Also returning from last year's squad are sophomore for­ ward Torry Rollins, junior forward Sam Dickerson, junior guard Greg Fox, and sophomore guards Ron Santiago and Carlos Peterson. Rollins played in 24 games for the Scots last year, aver­ aged 5.3 points and 3.6 rebounds. He shot 49.6 percent from the floor while making 72 percent of his free throws. Dickerson played in 23 games, averaging 4.3 points and 2.5 rebounds per game last year as a sophomore, including 8 rebounds in a win at Lock Haven, Santiago only averaged 2.5 points per game but did play in 26 games last year as a freshman. 33 Fox played in 20 games last year and connected on 8 of his 18 field goal attempts. Newcomers for the upcom­ ing year will include forwards Keith Perry, Price Williams, Marc Pope and Exavier Zolliooffer. Perry, a 6-4 forward, aver­ aged 22.5 points, 12 rebounds and 2 blocks per game for Wilbur Trosch at West Mifflin High School. He scored over 1,200 points in his high school career. Williams is a 6-4,185 pound junior college transfer from Prince George's Community College in the Washington, D.C., area and was a junior college All-American on the nation's number four ranked JC squad. Pope, a 6-6, 205 pound transfer from Cuyahoga Com­ munity College, averaged 10 points and 11 rebounds per game. He was a three-year letterman for Doc Daugherty at Euclid High School, averaging 15 points and 10 rebounds per outing. Zollicoffer, a 6-3, 210 pound sophomore, played at Canton McKinley (OH) Senior High School where he led his team to a state championship with a 271 record. Junior Simpson, a 6-9, 215 pound forward was a redshirt last year and should see action at the forward/center position. Simpson gives the Scots a solid defensive performer on the inside, something the squad has needed for years. Adam Cheek, a 6-2 junior and Walter Reap, a 6-1 junior are the newcomers at the guard spot. Cheek averaged 12.5 points and 5.2 rebounds per game at Ballard High School in Louisville, KY. He also dished out 2.5 assists and had 2.3 steals per game for the Bruins. Reap is a transfer from Cuyahoga Community College where he received All-Conference honors in both years. He is from Atlanta, GA, and played under Coach Mark Osina at C. E. Ellison High School in Texas, where he averaged 20 points and 6 assists per game. He was named to the All-District and All-Central Texas teams as a senior. The Scots will begin their annual tournament in McComb Fieldhouse on November 22. In this year's tournament the Plaid will battle Bloomsburg, West \^rginia Tech and SalemTeikyo for the title. WM BLOOMSBORG CALIFORNIA CHEYNEY CLARION KGTZTOWN LOCK HAVEN MANSFIELD MILLERSVILLE EAST STROaOSBURG EDINBORO INDIANA SHIPPENSBGRG SLIPPERY ROCK WEST CHESTER 203 ERIE ST EDINBORO 734-1885 STATE SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA James H. McCormick NORTH MAIN ST. McKEAN Chancellor 476-1411 JUST ASK EDINBORO ELEMENTARY SERVING INFAN 1S T1IRU SCI lOOL ACAS FATE LICENSED • EUI .L AND PART TIME CARE G.H. SCHLOSSER, OWNER/DIRECTOR 'QUAUTY Cl IllJ) CAKE AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE" TITLE XX FUNDING AVAll.ABLE 734-1885 219 CHESTNUT WATERFORD 796-4405 DEVINE & KUFTIC DAVID R. DEVINE DENNIS G. KUFTIC ELIZABETH A. MALC Greetings, On behalf of the Board of Governors for the State System of Higher Education and the Office of the Chancellor, I am pleased to welcome you to today’s exciting athletic event. Each season, student athletes throughout the State System’s 14 universities compete among the best in the nation as part of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference (PSAC). National and regional champions, All-Americans, and top scholar athletes participate in PSAC programs. The efforts of these women and men representing their universities in the athletic arena are applauded, as are their many academic accomplishments. Balancing a combination of classroom study and athletic competition requires special abilities. The university coaching staffs who give of their knowledge, leadersl^ip, time, and talent in making this contest possible also deserve recognition for their coritributions. For the special talents which they exhibit as teachers and mentors, we are grateful. P.O. Box 41A 114 High Street Waterford, PA 16441 814-796-2661 201 Erie Street Edinboro, PA 16412 814-734-5032 POWELL AUTO SUPPLY INC The Subway Shop wishes the Fighting Scots great success this year Discount Prices The Board of Governors, the university presidents, the campus communities, and I hope you will continue to support our State System universities and their athletic programs during the 1991-92 academic year. We appreciate your attendance. Rt. 6N East Edinboro, Pa. 734-1511 Sincerely, cc: F. Eugene Dixon, Jr. Chairman, Board of Governors 210 Waterford St. Edinboro, Pa.16412 734-1159 Mon.-Sat. 8-8 Closed Sunday WE James H. McCormick P.O. Box 809, 301 Market Street, Harrisburg, PA 17108 • 717 • 783-8887 35 DELIVER Backing the Scots Jay *s Auto Wrecking GARY B. MEANS D.M.D., F.A.G.D., F.A.D.I * 120 Erie St. (beside Pots & Pansies) Edinboro, Pa. 16412 734-4451 17 Acres of Late Model Used Auto Parts Used Engines & Transmissions our Specialty Alternators A Starters A Glass Gum Treatment Wisdom Teeth Root Canals Dentures Braces Child Dentistry Sports Dentistry Emergency Services ♦ Rear Ends ♦ Radiators ♦ ♦ Fenders & Body Panels ♦ STUDENTS WELCOME Go Get 'em Scots! The Albion News 16 Market Street Albion, Pa. 814 756-4122 - 734-4022 "Erie County's Only Independent Newspaper" 11610 Hamilton Road, Edinboro 1 mile off Rt. 99 PRINTING — PUBLISHING Participant in Pa. Blue Shield and Delta Dental 15 Years Experience in all Phases of Family Dentistry *Fellow Academy of General Dentistry Fellow Academy of Dentistry International ALBION BUSINESSES SUPPORT THE SCOTS "Go Boro " Uncle Charlie’s Family Restaurant and Pub « "Were proud to he a supplier to Edinboro University of Pa." ^ Econo ^ Lodge ^ DAYS INN • Meeting Rooms with Banquet Facilities • Hospitality Suite, and V.I.P. Suite with Jacuzzi • Complimentary Continental Breakfast Buffet • Indoor Heated Pool, Jacuzzi, and Fitness Center • Meeting Rooms with Banquet Facilities • 57 Jacuzzi Suites • Complimentary Continental Breakfast Buffet 814-868-8521 814-866-5544 For group rates call (814) 866-2773 or (814) 868-8521, ext. 152 Dinners + Salads *F Pizza + Hoagies + Calzones Spread 5ome sunslvinc on a ciondij dai). ^fovkrsprpfantsfrom%tsfJhnsit can ma[e the ^t^renceiWen a ypitnee^j/oifiers cra^fs including Boro T^i Frosted Pitchers & Mugs 734-7811 All Legal Beverages Larger seating capacity SrieSt. 734-yZl, EDINBORO MALL 734-1715 36 Now Serving: Edinboro and Washington Township Mon. thru Thurs. Fri. and Sat. 8:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. 8:00 a.m.-2:00 a.m. Sun. 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. We will try to accommodate special trip requests. 37 RESERVE Ten-Game Individual and Team Stats G 9 8 7 10 10 7 10 9 9 7 8 2 1 10 ATT 128 58 57 36 24 26 66 4 17 14 2 2 1 435 YL 67 8 10 2 2 10 134 0 2 18 0 4 33 290 YG 704 308 292 160 158 92 204 53 36 37 2 0 0 2046 NET 637 300 282 158 156 82 70 53 34 19 2 -4 -33 1756 TD 11 3 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 jO 20 Name Lhotsky, Gary Rupert, Scott Totals G 10 7 _2 10 ATT 182 20 1 203 Name Smith, Wade O’Connor, Terry Barnes, Mike Totals INT 13 1 0 14 C 98 9 1 108 YDS 1313 160 4 1477 REC 39 21 12 10 8 7 4 3 3 G 10 9 10 9 10 10 7 7 8 _9 10 _1 108 YDS 607 434 141 77 107 38 11 30 29 3 1477 TD 3 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 NO 18 4 2 1 2 2 1 1 J. 32 G 10 10 8 10 10 7 10 8 JO 10 YDS 446 37 28 21 28 16 1 0 0 577 AVG 24.8 9.3 14.0 21.0 14.0 8.0 1.0 .0 .0 18.0 TD 7 0 0 7 CG 3.9 2.3 1.2 1.1 .8 .7 .6 .4 .4 .1 10.8 LR 62 29 20 21 20 14 1 0 32, 2^ 32, AVG 38.0 37.0 38.0 LP 57 37 57 AVG 7.9 19.0 7.5 8.9 LR 47 38 16 47 YDS 1746 37 1783 G 10 4 10 10 NO 16 2 2 20 YDS 126 38 _15 179 EU 174 97 61 16 435 2046 290 1756 203 108 14 1477 638 3233 32 18 48 464 5.1 323.3 291:16 , 32 (577) / 18.0 47 (1783) 37.9 20 (179) 8.9 , OPP 191 80 99 12 417 1840 302 1538 293 145 7 1841 710 3379 20 12 82 735 4.8 337.9 308:44 34 (665) 19.6 61 (2201) 36.1 22 (127) 5.8 '• / 1991 RESULTS (6-4,3-3 PSAC) A A H H A A A H A H Totals _0 62 FIELD GOALS Rupert, Scott (7-4) NO 46 _1 47 HRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty Rushing Attempts Yards Gained Rushing Yards Lost Rushing NET YARDS RUSHING Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Had Intercepted YARDS PASSING Total nays TOTAL OFFENSE Fumbles Fumbles Lost Penalties Penalty Yards Average Yards Per Play Average Yards Per Game Poss. Time Kickoff Returns (YDS) Kickoff Returns Avg. Punts (YDS) Punt Average Punt Return (YDS) Punt Return Avg. KICKOFF RETURNS Name Jackson, Larry Marratta, Joel Johnson, Aaron Houston, Mario Stone, Paul Hill, Corey Reifsnyder, Bryan Edwards, Roderick Heebsh, Brian Totals G 10 _10 10 1991 TEAM STATS RECEIVING Name Martin, Wrentie Walters, Lateef Heebsh, Brian Frye, Lester Stone, Paul Tedder, Tom Hill, Corey Lewis, Derrick Russell, Derrick Clare, Steve Totals CORPS PUNT RETURNS PASSING Name Dickerson, Jody Seibert, Sean Kuhn, Eric Totals TRAINING PUNTS RUSHING Name Frye, Lester Russell, Derrick Lewis, Derrick Tedder, Tom Jackson, Larry Hill, Corey Dickerson, Jody Walters, Lateef Clare, Steve Seibert, Sean Snyder, Chris Kuhn, Eric Team Totals OFFICERS' TL 25, 28 38 EUP 0 25 35 23 17 28 7 45 0 JLZ 197 Youngstown State Northwood Institute Southern Connecticut Bloomsburg Clarion Lock Haven Shippensburg California (PA) Slippery Rock lUP OPP 24 14 16 21 9 12 45 10 7 20 178 ATT 13,756 1,200 4,852 8,362 3,500 550 8,500 4,512 2,500 4.523 52,255 BEUETE IT OR NOT, THIS GUT IS IN CLASS. Excitement and adventure is the course descrip­ tion, and Army ROTC is the name. It’s the one col­ lege elective that builds your self-coniidence, develops your leadership potential and helps you take on the challenges of conunand. There’s no obligation until your junior year, and that means there’s no reason not to try it out right now. rgADEHSHlgl BkcELLENdl ARMY ROTC THE SMARTEST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKL FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT MAJOR BOGGS, 732-2562 39 Battle of Edinboro On Thursday, November 7, the Fighting Scots did battle with the Rolling Scots in a wheelchair football game. The game was played as part of Disability Awareness Week. Both teams were psyched up for the game. The Fighting Scots won the opening coin toss and elected to receive the ball. They were held in check by the tenacious defense of the Rolling Scots who have held their opponents to just 23 points in 5 games. The first score of the game came from a punt return for a touchdown by the Rolling Scots. The Rolling Scots went on to add 30 more points in their 37-0 win over their able bodied counterparts. Jim Valvo led all scorers with 21 points and he also intercepted the Fighting Scots twice. Ken Kisiel led the potent offense of the Rolling Scots with 6 completions out of 9 attempts, 3 touchdowns, and only 1 interception. Although the Fighting Scots didn't get on the scoreboard, they started moving the ball toward the end of the game. They should be commended for their heart and sportsmanship that they displayed during the game. And most of all, they should be applauded for their participation which helped in making Disability Awareness Week a big success. Rolling Scots Roster No. 1 10 11 12 36 38 46 50 52 58 66 67 72 77 87 89 00 Name Corey Rhodes Shane Pullar Eddie Faulkner Ken Kisiel Garth Moore Matt Robb Allen Bennett Jim Valvo Jamie Protho Jason Cook Scott Williams Shawn Bryan Chris Rhodes John Garies Travis Hardester Andrew Murphy Chris Noll Class Junior Freshman Freshman Graduate Junior Freshman Freshman Junior Senior Freshman Junior Senior Senior Freshman Freshman Sophomore Junior Head Coach: Chuck Jesse Assistant Coach: Jim Valvo Manager: Bev Butterfield Statistician: Jeff Garlington Secretary: TinaMeeder by Chuck Jesse What athletes fear most is what we treat best The sharp pain, the throbbing ache— a sudden injury that puts you out of action. It’s what athletes fear most. It’s what we treat best. The staff at the Hamot Sports Medicine Center is skilled in all aspects of athletic care—from prevention and treatment to rehabilitation. We’re specialized in areas such as orthopedics, rehabilitative surgery, neurology and physical therapy. We also conduct seminars to help you stay healthy; we even provide certified trainers to athletic programs of all types. Hamot Sports Medicine Center. We know your sport as well as we know your body. Get to know us at 870-6195. yjj Hamot Edinboro University's 1991 Football Cheerleaders: (front row L-R) Candice Sanfrotello, Amy Tammariello, Amy Lesjak, Karen Kay Tyler, Shelly Loper, Wendy Kwiatkowski. Second row (L-R); Tiffany Conner, Marlene Gormont, Dan Sweeney, Lany Klemm, Nate Portugallo, Curtis Burk, Tracie Danko, Susie Eldred, and Michele Hadel. 40