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COLLEfiF ARnniVF<;
EDINBORO UNIVERSITY vs. CLARION UNIVERSITY
2:00 p.m.
Sat, Sept 29,1990
Sox Harrison Stadium

'McDonald^
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McDonald^s Day

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SEPTEMBER 29,1990

THE SCOT SCOREBOARD
EDINBORO UNIVERSITY'S 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 caU 814-732-2811.

OFFICIALS FOR TODAY'S GAME
REFEREE..................................................................Pete Rota
LINE JUDGE....................................................Gene Steratore
UMPIRE...............................................................George Geyer
FIELD JUDGE.......................................................... Rich Rine
LINESMAN.......................................................................MikeDobos
BACK JUDGE...................................................................LarryKupec
CLOCK OPERATOR...................................
JimTrovato

1990 SCHEDULE

PROGRAM FEATURES
Scots Host Clarion in PS AC West Opener ..
Edinboro University....................................
R-esident Foster F. Diebold.........................
McDonald's Day........ .................................
Athletic Director Jim McDonald.................
A Look at 1990............................................
Scouting the Scots.......................................
Head Coach Tom Hollman..........................
Edinboro's 1989 Harlon Hill Finalist..........
1989 Honors and Accomplishments ..........
Edinboro University Alphabetical Roster....
Edinboro University Lineup and Numerical
Clarion University Lineup and Numerical..
Clarion University Alphabetical Roster......
Assistant Coaches........................................
Checking the Records.................................
Meet the Players..........................................
Priester Watch!............................................
Letter from the Chancellor..........................
Three-Game Individual and Team Stats......
Trainers and Cheerleaders..........................

SepL
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.

............. 3
............. 5
............. 7
..............8
............. 9
...... 11-13
...........13
...... . 14
........... 16
..... 17-18
...........20
.... Center
.... Center
...........21
..... 23-24
..... 25-26
27,29,31
...........33
...........34
...........38
...........40

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.

OPP
EUP
6
48 SHEPHERD COLLEGE
1
31
8
27 at Youngstown State
6
22
33 at Bloomsburg University
CLARION
UNIV.
(2:00
p.m.)
29
(Homecoming)
LOCK HAVEN UNIV. (1:00 p.m.)
6
SHIPPENSBURG UNIV. (1:00 p.m.)
13
at
California University (2:00 p.m.)
20
SLIPPERY ROCK UNIV. (1:00 p.m.)
27
at Indiana Univ. of Pa. (2:00 p.m.)
3
at Fairmont State (1:30 p.m.)
10

Touchdown Insert
Special Teams Play
Legend: Bobby Dodd
1989 Academic All-America Picks
Rivalry Hijinks
Practice Makes Perfect
College Football in the 90s
1989 Football Hall of Fame Inductees
1990 FIGHTING SCOT SENIORS AND CAPTAINS (L-R);
Chris Conway, Hal Galupi, Jeff Jacobs, Brad Powell, Matt
Miller, A1 Donahue, Ernest Priester

1

We're dose by
light on your way
On your way around town today,
look for McDonald’s® We’re always close by
Just remember, good food and good
fun are right on your way every day

SCOTS HOST CLARION IN PSAC WEST OPENER
THE GAME:

Frye is one of the top rushers in the PSAC averaging
110.7 yards per game. Through week three, Frye has rushed
67 times for 332 yards and three scores. His numbers include
132 yards and a pair of scores last week. Russell, subbing for
Chris Conway last week, set an EU record with a 92-yard
touchdown run on the game's second play. He tallied 111
yards on 8 carries against the Huskies. Conway, recovering
from ankle injury, has totaled 73 yards on 19 carries and 1
score this season.
Galupi, a returning All-American, continues to be
solid connecting on 32-of-61 passes for 590 yards and 5 TDs.
He has thrown five interceptions. Backup Sean Siebert has
also been effective with five completions covering 160 yards
and 1 score.
Fullback Tom Tedder and tight end Greg Castellarin
continue to clear the way along with an outstanding front five.
Center Scott Nickel, guards Curtis Rose and Brad Powell and
tackles Mike Kegarise and Wally Spisak have been the key to
a solid offensive attack.
For Clarion, look for QB Mike Carter to get on track.
Considered one of the PS AC's top quarterbacks. Carter has
thrown for 580 yards on 46-of-89 passes and 1 touchdown. He
has thrown six INTs.
The receiving corp is led by flanker Art Walker (11
catches, 155 yards) and end Brenckm Nair (9, 117). Backup
Tim Smith has put up good numbers (5,119) while tailback
Brad Kline (6,61) has the lone touchdown reception.
Kline is the top rusher with 144 yards on 42 carries
while fullback Den Dworek has added 126 on 29 totes. Back­
up fullback George Mehalic has three touchdowns on just
seven carries.

The Fighting Scots open Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference Western Division play today as they host the
Golden Eagles of Clarion University.
The 1990 Homecoming tilt is sponsored by McDon­
ald's and is set for a 2:00 p.m. Idckofif in Sox Harrison Stadi­
um,
THE RECORDS:

120 Plum Street, Edinboro

Edinboro is 2-1 overall while Clarion enters the game
at 1-2. The Scots opened '90 with a 48-6 decision over Shep­
herd College (WV) then fell at I-AA Youngstown State, 3127. After a week off, the Scots got back on the winning track
with a convincing 33-6 mark over Bloomsburg last Saturday.
Clarion, traditionally one of the top teams in the east
in Division II, won their opener 31-17 over Fairmont State
(WV) but have fallen to nationally ranked New Haven (21-7)
and lUP (42-0) in consecutive weeks.
In '89, the Scots were 8-3 (6-0) and western champs
while the Golden Eagles posted a 3-7 overall mark including
3-3 in the division.
THE SERIES:
Clarion holds a 27-32-2 edge in the series which
dates back to 1926. Edinboro posted a 6-4 advantage in the
1980s including three of the last four games. The Scots earned
a hard-fought 12-7 win in Clarion last year.
A LOOK AT THE NUMBERS:

THE DEFENSES:
Scoring
Total Offense
Rushing Offense
Passing Offense
Team Defense (Yield)
Rushing Defense
Passing Defense
Team Scoring Defense

Edinboro
36.0 ppg
464.7 ypg
214.7 ypg
250.0 ypg

Clarion
12.7 ppg
338.3 ypg
127.0 ypg
211.3 ypg

217 ypg
74 ypg
143 ypg
14.3 ppg

341.7 ypg
137.7 ypg
204 ypg
25.7 ppg

While the Scot offense has been consistent, the
defense has been the key to the success. Linemen John Messura (34 tackles, 2 QB sacks). Matt Miller (16 stops, 1 sack),
Jeff Jacobs (17,3 sacks) and Delvin Pickett (13,1 sack, recov­
ery for TD) have controlled opponents.
The linebacking crew has been anchored by veteran
A1 Donahue (21) who leads the squad with two interceptions.
Inside backers Jason Peikins (26), Anthony Ross (17, 1 sack)
and Michael Edwards (7) have fiUed the void for the Plaid this
season.
In the secondary, the Scots appear to be coming
together. Comerbacks Georj Lewis (12 stops, 1 INT) and
Wade Smith (12, 3 deflections) are two-year starters while
safeties Mario Houston (13, 1 INT) and Mike Barnes (12, 2
defl.) continue to play well.
For the Golden Eagles, nose guard Bo Hamlett (28
stops, 1 rec., 2 caused) is one of the best in the state at his
position. Linebackers Doug Caruso (44) and Kevin Weaver
(30) are making most of the tackles for the squad with Caruso
totaling 19 and 16 stops respectively the last two weeks.
The secondaiy is strong 1^ by returning All-Ameri­
can free safety Jacque DeMatteo and cornerback Damon
Avery. DeMatteo led the country in INTs/per game last year
and is third on the squad with 34 tackles this season. Avery,
likely to draw Priester today, has 21 stops, two interceptions,
four deflections and a blocked punt through week three.

THE COACHES:
Tom Hollman, '89 PSAC West and East Region
"Coach of the Year," is in his third year directing the Scots. He
holds an overall slate of 15-8-1 (.625%) at Edinboro including
a 10-1-1 mark in western play. One half of his eight losses
have come against I-AA opponents.
For Clarion, Gene Sobolewski starts his 8th year as
head coach and his 20th season overall with the Golden
Eagles. He posts a 43-31 (.581%) mark directing the program.
THE OFFENSES:
The Scots are led by running backs Lester Frye and
Derrick Russell and the passing combination of Hal Galupi
and Ernest Priester.

©1988 McDonald's Corporation

FOOD FOLK5 ^ FUN.
2

3

EDINBORO UNIVERSITY

EVERY
NIGHT
AT6&11
ACTION A/EM/S

After 125 years of service to the tri-state area,
Edinboro experienced its most significant change in history on
July 1, 1983, when the College became Edinboro University
of Pennsylvania. Founded as a private academy in 1857,
Edinboro University has continued its surge to the forefront as
one of the leading educational institutions in western
Pennsylvania. Situated on a sprawling 585-acre campus in the
scenic resort community of Edinboro, the University is within
100 miles of the educational and cultural centers of Buffalo,
Cleveland, and Pittsburgh. It is just 15 miles south of Erie, the
third largest city in Pennsylvania, and easily accessible from
all directions by interstates 79,80 and 90.

Edinboro now makes contributions in the fields of education,
government, environmental improvement, urban and rural
problems, crime prevention, and service to business and
industry. Recent program developments include those in the
high-demand areas of allied health, business administration,
communication, computer technology, nursing, and various
pre-professional offerings such as law, dentistry, medicine,
pharmacy and veterinary science. Numerous student intern­
ships provide additional examples of the University's efforts to
create a close working relationship with the people it serves
while, at the same time, offering students intellectual and
career opportunities.

Edinboro has the distinction of being the second nor­
mal school established in Pennsylvania and the 12th in the
United States. It has grown to more than forty buildings
including the 400,000 volume Baron-Fomess Library, a mod­
em seven-story stmcture which serves as a focal point for the
spacious campus. More than 7,700 students representing
almost every county in the Commonwealth, as well as numer­
ous states and foreign countries attend Edinboro. Its tradition
of educational service and research is matched by a distin­
guished faculty, more than two-thirds of whom have earned
doctoral degrees.

Edinboro has initiated the University Honors
ftogram to provide challenging and enriched learning exper­
iences for academically gifted students. Undergraduate stu­
dents are encouraged to strive for academic excellence both in
their major fields and in other disciplines. Honors students
pursue studies that are greater in depth and scope than those
required of other undergraduates.
Although the costs for attending Edinboro rank
among the lowest in the Commonwealth, over $16,000,000 in
financial aid is available annually to eligible students.

The University now offers more than 100 undergrad­
uate, graduate, and associate degree programs, a diversity
unmatched by any other college or university in northwestern
Pennsylvania. While seeking to meet the educational needs of
its region from both a professional and cultural standpoint.

Students are admitted to the University in September
or January and are considered for admission on the basis of
their general scholarship, nature of secondary program, and
SAT or ACT scores.

5

PRESIDENT FOSTER F. DIEBOLD

The Alumni Association of
Edinboro University of Penn­
sylvania is proud of the Uni­
versity's continued excel­
lence in academics, sports,
and special programs, and
proud to support the 1990
football season.
t

f

Go Fighting Scots!

Since his appointment as president of Edinboro
University of Pennsylvania on August 1, 1979, Foster F.
Diebold has initiated a wide variety of policies and programs
designed to complement his desire for an increased level of
excellence and quality in higher education.

Colleges and Universities' Committee on Governance,
President Diebold has emerged as a national and international
figure in the world of higher education. His special fields of
interest are ethics in education and international programs. As
chairman of the National Committee on Governance, he pre­
sented a statement of ethics to the American Association of
State Colleges and Universities in November 1988. The state­
ment, "Ethical Practices for College Presidents," was unani­
mously adopted at the annual meeting of AASCU and has
been published and circulated as a policy statement by that
organization. It should be noted that this code of ethics is the
&st ever to be officially adopted by a professional organiza­
tion and directed to the performance of college and university
presidents.

Noted for his extensive experience in the field of
education management. President Diebold previously served
as president of the University of Alaska Statewide System.
His principal fields of professional interest include ethical
issues in higher education, higher education management,
budget development and fiscal control, legislative affairs, per­
sonnel management and collective bargaining, and interna­
tional education.
A native of Orange, New Jersey, President Diebold
served as president of the University of Alaska from 1977 to
1979. Prior to that, he was executive secretary to the Board of
Regents and special assistant to the president of the University
of Alaska Statewide System. From 1969 to 1976, he was
director of the Division of College Development and Planning
at Kean College in New Jersey; and from 1965 to 1969, he
was assistant superintendent of the Neptune Township Public
Schools in New Jersey.

President Diebold also serves as chairperson of the
Advancement Committee of the Chancellor's Executive
Council (State System of Higher Education). He is a member
of the Western Pennsylvania Education Council and the
International Association of University Presidents.
Active in the community, the President, among other
activities, serves on the Board of Directors of the United Way
of Erie County, the Board of Corporators of the St. Vincent
Foundation for Health and Human Services, and the Advisory
Board of the McMannis Educational Trust Fund. President
Diebold is also a member of the Hamot Medical Center Board
of Corporators, the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Corporation
Scholarship Review Committee, and the Marine Bank
Advisory Board.

A graduate of Monmouth College, President Diebold
holds a bachelor of science in education and a master of arts in
educational administration from Seton Hall University. He has
met course requirements for his doctorate in education at
Rutgers University and is currently enrolled in the Ph.D. pro­
gram in higher education at the University of Pittsburgh.

President Diebold resides in Edinboro with his wife,
Patricia, and daughters, Jessica and Stacey.

As chairman of the American Association of State

7

ATHLETIC DIRECTOR JIM McDONALD

Celebrity
Field Goal
Contest

vs. the Buffalo Bills annual rookie scrimmage, which has been
a yearly mid-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 (19621975) 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 Conference 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.

Pre-Game
Edinboro Homecoming

Prior to accepting his position at Edinboro,
McDonald served as assistant basketball coach in Erie, Pa. He
is a 1956 graduate of Bridgeport High School in his home
town of Bridgeport, West Mrginia.
In 1960 he received a degree in chemistry and physi­
cal education from West Virginia Wesleyan College and he
also holds a master's degree in health from the University of
Buffalo.

Jim 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.

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 second 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 AllTournament Team in 1959 and 1960.

Through his efforts more than $3.3 million has been
raised during the past nine 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
fifteen intercollegiate sports.

Watch your favorite local TV sports announcers
compete to kick the longest field goal!
WJET-TV24 ❖ WSEE-TV35 ❖ WICU-TV12
The WINNER receives thirty dollars ($30) per yard
Donated to the Edinboro University Athletic Scholarship Fund
in their name — courtesy of McDonald's ®

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-Time College Basketball
Team and membership in the West Virginia Sports Hall of
Fame. He served four years on the NAIA's All-American
selection committee and was chosen by the NAIA to coach an
All-American team of NBA-bound cagers who won the Gold
Medal in Israel's Hapoel Games.

“EUP has outstanding coaches
and facilities. With these ingredients,
there is no reason we could not be
competitive in the PSAC and Division
II."

In addition to his classroom and basketball coaching
duties, McDonald was Edinboro's golf coach for 17 years dur­
ing which his teams won over 40 tournaments and finished as
high as third place at the NCAA Division II National
Tournament.

In addition to maintaining Edinboro's respected win­
ning tradition in intercollegiate athletics, the former health and
physical education professor has vastly expanded the
University’s summer activities.

As a resident of Edinboro, McDonald has a record of
extensive community 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.

Fifty-two camps were sponsored by the Fighting
Scots Booster Club this past summer on the University's cam­
pus. Sox Harrison Stadium is the site of the Cleveland Browns

9

CAN THE SCOTS REPEAT? A LOOK AT 1990
The thoughts of last year's Pennsylvania State
Athletic Conference Western Division title and trip to the
NCAA Division n playoffs will be with Edinboro University
for a long time. But 1990 is a new season and the Scots are
not about to rest on past accomplishments.
"The league we play in doesn't allow you think about
the previous year," said Scot head coach Tom Hollman. "Sure
'89 was a good season. It assured our staff and players that we
can play very competitively at that (playoff) level. We lost
some quality individuals from last year but we have a solid
group of veterans coming back that can lead us back into con­
tention. But no matter who we are playing, we need to be
focused every week."
Hollman, beginning his third year, has earned thir­
teen wins and a tie in his initial 21 games directing the Scots
and has an even more impressive 10-1-1 mark in west play. "I
am pleased with the progress but we cannot stop. We got a
taste of championship football last year and can only hope that
we benefitted from that experience."
A look at the '90 schedule has the Scots playing four
of their first six games at home and concluding the year with
three of four on the road.
EU opens early with a September 1 home date with
the Rams of Shepherd College (WV) before a trip to Division
I-AA Youngstown State on the 7th.
After a week off, the Scots will trek across
Pennsylvania to battle PSAC east foe Bloomsburg on the
22nd. Week four will then have Edinboro back at home
against Clarion in their western opener. The contest will be
homecoming '90 and begins a three-game home stand for the
Plaid.
Lock Haven and Shippensburg on the 6th and 13th of
October will be the Scots next home opponents before taking
to the road for three of the next four weeks.
The Scots will travel to California on the 20th but are
right back in Sox Harrison Stadium the following Saturday to
tangle with Slippery Rock. The regular season will conclude
with away games at lUP and Fairmont State on the 3rd and
10th of November.

yards rushing (5 TD) last year and posted an impressive 7.3
yard per carry average. Conway proved his abilities with a 65yard scoring jaunt against lUP and an 85-yard kickoff return
for a touchdown at North Dakota State. Frye was close behind
with 255 (6.4 ypc) yards and four scores. Frye will likely see
time at both fullback and tailback.
Fullbacks Steve Clare and Matt Koehle return as do
sophomore wideouts Wrentie Martin and Paul Stone.
OFFENSIVE LINE
Plenty of question marks remain as the staff must
replace a pair of All-Americans in Joe Brooks and Ron
Hainsey. Seniors Brad Powell and Wally Spisak return to
anchor the interior as does junior Curtis Rose. Junior Scott
Nickel and sophomore Mike Kegarise will look to contribute.
The staff is looking for quality depth from a solid recruiting
class.
DEFENSIVE LINE
Seven linemen return with significant playing time
on the defensive front. Matt Miller (68 tackles, 8 1/2 sacks)
turned in an outstanding '89 and will likely get recognized for
it this fall. Jeff Jacobs (40, 2 1/2) will anchor one end spot
while Kurt Schmidhamer hopes to return from two injury
plagued seasons. Delvin Pickett (26, 3) also showed promise
on the outside last season and is back.
Tackles John Messura (24 stops including four for
loss), Troy Marin, and Phil Whitfield also give the Scots depth
inside.
The Scots gave us just under 110 yards per game
rushing last year and hope to duplicate the feat in '90.
LINEBACKERS
A big void left by the departure of All-Conference
linebackers Michael Wayne and John Williams must be filled.
The twosome combined for 214 tackles and five interceptions
in '89.
Veteran A1 Donahue (84 tackles, 3 INT) returns to
add to his career tackle total of over 300 and has been solid
for the past three years. Donahue will be a key leader on the
defense.
Between Anthony Ross (30 stops), Mike Edwards
(18,2 INT), Matt Smith, and Jason Perkins someone will need
to step to the front to solidify this line of defense.

A breakdown of the Scots for the 1990 season:
OFFENSE: SKILL POSITIONS

BREAKFASi; LUNCH, DINNER
HOURS

SuLn tlmru.
6sOO AM
Fxri-

OREN

2QO

Sc

2A

Rlu.m

Tlnxiirs M±cin±gHt
Sa.t .

HOURS

Stor^e-t

EH±nt>oiro ,
RA
RH.
73A-A600

The Scots will return a pair of All-Americans in
quarterback Hal Galupi and wide out Ernest Priester. The two­
some combined for a PSAC record 16 touchdowns last season
and give the Scots an immediate scoring threat from anywhere
on the field.
Galupi ranked second in Division II last fall in quar­
terback efficiency, completing 122 of 224 passes for 1,911
yards and 22 touchdowns. His leadership abilities will key the
offense in 1990. In 33 games for the Scots, Galupi has tossed
for over 3,500 yards and 33 touchdowns. Priester is coming
off a banner season where he caught 49 passes for 1,128 yards
(23.0 ypc) and the 16 scores. He has caught 101 passes for
over 1,900 yards and 20 TDs during his 31-game career.
Looking to offset the passing game will be the rush­
ing abilities of Chris Conway and Lester Frye. Conway, a twotime PSAC sprint champ, was second on the squad with 365

SECONDARY
All-American free safety Michael Willis will be
missed but comerbacks Wade Smith and Georj Lewis give the
Plaid a good foundation to build on. Smith is a returning AllPSAC performer and registered 53 stops and three intercep­
tions in '89. He also led the team with 13 pass break ups.
Lewis, just a freshman last season, was in on 45 tack­
les an picked off two enemy passes. He was also credited with

11

SCOUTING THE SCOTS
Name: Edinboro University of Pennsylvania (1857)

Head Cokih: Ibm Hollman (Ohio Northern, 1968)

Location: Edinboro, Pa. 16444

Seasons, Overall Record: 2,13-7-1

President Foster F. Diebold (Aug., 1979)

Press Box Phone: 814-732-2808

Enrollment 7,700

1989 Record: 8-3, Conference 6-0

Colors: Red and White

Team Trainer George Roberts

Conference: Pennsylvania State Athletic

what athletes fear most
is what we treat best
The sharp pain, the throbbing ache—
a sudden injury that puts you out
of action.

Affiliations: NCAA Division II

Assistant Coaches: Scott Browning, Dan Gierlak,
Mark Niswonger, Gene Smith, Ed Stults

Stadium: Sox Harrison (4,500)

1990 Team Captains: TBA

Athletic Director: James K. McDonald

Lettermen Returning, Lost: 36/13

Athletic Dept. Phone: 814-732-2776/2778

Starters Returning: 12

Sports InformatLon Director: Todd V. Jay

Team Strengths: Quarterbacks, Receivers, Secondary

Sports Information Phone: 814-732-2811 (office)
814-734-4317 (home)

Team Question Marks: Offensive Line, Linebackers

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 healtj«iy; 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.

five deflections. He was named the top freshman on the squad
last fall by his teammates and staff.
The free safety spot returns sophomore Mike Barnes.
A converted fullback a year ago, Barnes earned 29 tackles in
just over half a season of play.

Edinboro
Travel
Service

FRESHMAN CLASS
The Scots will welcome nearly 50 new faces to camp
this year for quality depth purposes.
The class has a local flare led by quarterback Eric
Kuhn and Dave Ashton from the Erie area. Kuhn holds six alltime Metro League records and tossed 31 career touchdowns.
His teammate, Ashton, graduated as the League's all-time
leader in receptions (107), yards (1,531) and touchdowns (23).
Other quality additions appear to be running back
Cory Hill, linebackers Jamael Brown and Mike Gentile and
linemen Tony Tighe, Ron Miller and John Steffens.
Overall the Scots return 36 lettermen and a dozen
starters from their western division championship squad of a
year ago. If Coach Hollman and his staff can fill a few spots,
watch for the Fighting Scots to once again contend on the
state and national level.

122 Erie Street
Edinboro, Pa. 16412
Phone (814) 734-1639

Hamot

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Hotel and Car Reservations
Cruises and Tours

13

HEAD COACH TOM HOLLMAN
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 interceptions 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 dur­
ing his three-year stay.

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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 champs in '74, imbeaten at 9-0In '76, Hollman moved on to the collegiate ranks where
he was the defensive coordinator for his alma mater at Ohio
Northern University.

Tom HoUman

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 January 1988, Edinboro University hired Tom
Hollman, Athens, Ohio, as its eleventh head football coach in
the school's history. Hollman comes to Edinboro from Ohio
University, where he was the defensive coordinator.

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 coordi­
nator position at Ohio University.

Hollman, beginning his third year, has turned the
Scot program around. With the Scots he has earned 13 wins
against just seven losses and one tie and owns an impressive
10-1-1 slate against the PSAC West.

"It has been a very comfortable transition for me,"
Hollman added. "I have found the community to be supportive
and the administration is giving me every opportunity to be
successful here at Edinboro," h^ concluded.

Last season, 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

f

Tom resides in Edinboro with his wife, Kandi, and four
children, Mari, Jon, Tim and Denise.

"Edinboro has been a great experience and I like the
direction of the program," Hollman said.

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"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 appealing 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 play­
ers 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 educa­
tion from Ohio Northern University in 1968. Three years later
Hollman received his master of science degree in education
from Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Benefits Senior Citizens

14

15

EDINBORO'S 1989 HARLON HILL FINALIST
This past fall, the Edinboro University football team enjoyed its finest sea­
son ever on the NCAA Division II level and the accomplishments achieved by
running back Elbert Cole may have been unmatched by any athlete in the school’s
history.

1989 HONORS AND ACCOMPLISHMENTS
8-3 Overall, 6-0 PSAC West
NCAA Division II rankings - 7th final ranking
National playoffs first time ever in Edinboro history

Named to three All-American teams, highlighted by his first team selection
by the American Football Coaches Association, Cole capped off his career as one
of three finalists for the prestigious Harlon Hill Award given to the top small-col­
lege player in the country.
The Rochester, New York, native finished his 39-game career with 3,341yards rushing and a PSAC-record 48 touchdowns. In all. Cole established eight
state conference records including single season marks of 1,507-yards rushing and
24 touchdowns. This past season, the 5-9, 180 lb. tailback gained over 100 yards
on nine occasions including a 220-yard, six touchdown performance against
Slippery Rock. In the Scots' national playoff game against North Dakota State,
Cole rushed for 125 yards and three touchdowns.
As a finalist for the 'Hill Award, Cole earned a trip to Florence, Alabama,
for the three-day festivities that concluded with the award ceremonies the night
before the Division II national championship game.
'
Along with 'Hill winner Johnny Bailey (Texas A & I) and Barry Wagner
(Alabama A & M), Cole spoke to area elementary and junior high school students
about the importance of education and the hazards of drug use.

Lambert-Meadowlands voting-top team in East Region-2nd
Co-champions of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
Western Division champions
6-0 division record, 46-8 average score vs. PSAC West
TEAM STATS
NATIONAL STATS - NCAA DIVISION H
Scoring - 40.3 ppg - 2nd
Total offense - 456.9 ypg - 4th
Rushing offense - 257.0 ypg - 10th
Total defense - 247.5 ypg - 15th

Rushing defense -109.9 ypg - 15th
Scoring defense -15.7 ppg - 19th
Passing offense -197.9 ypg - 29th

PENNSYLVANIA STATE ATHLETIC CONFERENCE

Elbert Cole with former Steeler great John Stallworth
at banquet ceremonies.

Scoring - 1st PSAC, 1st West
Total offense - 1st, 1st
Rushing offense - 1st, 1st
Total defense - 2nd, 2nd

The 1989 National Harlon Hill Award Committee Banquet marked the fourth
presentation of the Harlon Hill Trophy — to the outstanding college football player in
the NCAA Divison II. The player, selected as the "best" in Division II by the sports
information directors at the 116 Division II schools which play football, came through
both regional and national balloting to claim the award. The award, named for former
Florence State (now the University of North Alabama) receiving great Harlon Hill,
was created to bring long overdue recognition to a division of college football that has
produced such greats as Walter Payton, Neil Lomax, Ken O'Brien, John Stallworth,
Deiter Brock, Harlon Hill and others. The originators of the award didn’t feel that
accomplishments in professional football should have to be the measuring stick for tal­
ent in Division II, however, and so they set out to help recognize those players whose
achievements have placed them among the top players to ever play the game. The
award is a tribute to all Division II players for their efforts to be the best they can be.

SINGLE SEASON SCHOOL RECORDS
Most points - 435
Most yards total offense - 4,935
Most passing yards - 2,134
Most TD passes - 25

Most rushing TDs 35
Most overall TDs - 63
Total yards offense - single game- 611 yards
vs. Shippensburg

INDIVIDUAL SCHOOL RECORDS

Schools may nominate any player who has distinguished himself as being
among the best players in the NCAA regions. To ensure national representation on the
voting for the Harlon Hill Trophy balloting, voting is first conducted on a regional
basis within the four NCAA regions. Players nominated in the East, South, Midwest
and West are voted on by the sports information directors in their region first. The top
two selected in each region then move on to the national ballot of eight with the final­
ists invited to Rorence.
The trophy, created by Herff Jones, Inc., and sponsored by Coca-Cola, is 30
inches tall and weighs 63 pounds. It has a life-size replica of a football that sits on a
walnut base.

Rushing defense - 1st, 1st
Scoring defense - 2nd, 2nd
Passing offense - 5th, 4th

Set 16 individual school marks during the '89 season
PSAC SINGLE-SEASON RECORDS TO DATE

Harlon Hill and the Hill Trophy.

Elbert Cole, RB - 1,507 rushing yards
Rushing TDs - 21
Overall TDs - 24
Most points -148
TDs in one game - 6 vs. SRU
TDs rushing in one game 5 vs. SRU
Ernest Priester, WR - TD receptions - 16

16

17

PSAC CAREER RECORDS TO DATE
Elbert Cole - most career TDs - 48
Most points - 288
INDIVIDUAL HONORS AND AWARDS
Tom HoUman

Michael Willis, FS

East Region - Coach of the Year
PSAC West - Coach of the Year
Edinboro University - Coach of the Year

All-American - Honorable Mention - Football Gazette
PSAC West - 1st Team (3rd straight year)

Elbert Cole, RB

Ron Hainsey, OT

Harlon Hill Award - Top Division II Player - 3rd place
All-American - 1st Team - Kodak - Football Coaches Assoc.
All-American - 2nd Team - Football Gazette
All-American - 3rd Team - Associated Press
PSAC West Player of the Year
PSAC West - 1st Team

All-American - Honorable Mention - Football Gazette
PSAC West - 2nd Team
Pittsburgh Press, 2nd Team

Ernest Priester, WR

All-American - Honorable Mention - Footb^l Gazette
PSAC West - 2nd Team /
Pittsburgh Press - 2nd Team

Chip Conrad, DL

All-American - 3rd Team - Associated Press
All-American - 3rd Team - Football Gazette
PSAC West - 1st team

Other PSAC West Honors
Joe Brooks, OG
Dave Pinkerton, OC - 1st Team
Michael Wayne, LB - 1st Team
Wade Smith, DB - 2nd Team
Randy Mcllwain, TE - 2nd Team
John Williams, LB - 2nd Team

All-American - 2nd Team - Football Gazette
PSAC West - 1st Team
Pittsburgh Press - 2nd Team
Hal Galupi, QB
All-American - Honorable Mention - Football Gazette
PSAC West - 2nd Team
Ranked 2nd Nationally - Quarterback Efficiency Rating

BY RONNIE CHRIST

'i

EDINBORO TEAM AWARDS
Special Teams - Bill Burford, P
Defensive Most Valuable Player - Michael Wayne, LB
Offensive MVP - Elbert Cole, RB
Demonstration Team MVP - Tony Dudowski, LB
Marine Bank Award - Joe Brooks, OG
William Engh Award - Michael Willis, FS
Freshman of the Year - Georj Lewis

/

What’s so special about college foot­
ball’s specialty teams?
Just about everything, if you take the
word of the men who select and coach
these units.
They are college football’s “Special
Forces,” an elite group which often can
make the impossible suddenly possible.
At Notre Dame, Lou Holtz makes sure
his players understand just how much
importance he places on the performance
of the special teams.
“From the day they get here, we preach
to our players about the importance of the
special teams,” said Jay Hayes, who han­
dles the specialty teams for Holtz. “We
won’t let a kid become a starter if he
doesn’t want to play on special teams.
“We want starters we can trust. We want
kids who put the team ahead of their indi­
vidual goals. Lou preaches that kicking is
one-third of the total game. You’re not
going to win many games by being good
just in 66 percent of the game.”

Special teams players
are often the difference
between the good teams
and the mediocre ones.

A placekicker in high school, RONNIE
CHRIST is now a sportswriter for the
Harrisburg (Pa.) Patriot-News.

18

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

SPECIAL FORCES

MORESPormNa
Even without the block, good pressure on the punter can cause a botched kick or a shorter effort
When people talk about Miami’s surge to
the top of the football ladder, they say the
Hurricanes did it with their high-powered
pass-oriented offense.
Football purists would probably give the
Miami defense a pinch of credit.
Hardly anybody talks about the Miami
special teams.
“Jimmy Johnson placed great emphasis
on the kicking game when he was hefe,”
said Dave Arnold, who coaches the Miami
special teams. “Dennis Erickson attaches
the same kind of importance.”
Art Kehoe, who along with two other
coaches works with Arnold in the kicking
drills, points out that Miami set an NCAA
record for the least yardage allowed on
punt returns.
“Going into the Alabama game our punt
return unit had given up zero yards,” said
Kehoe. “No team had ever done that
before.
“There is so much competition for our
specialty teams that players are actually
fighting. We look for emotional kids who
are anxious to make a big contribution to

the team.
“We probably do things a little different
than most teams. All our position coaches
work along with Dave when we go to spe­
cialty drills. Each of us concentrates on a
couple of players and that way we get a
much better look at anything that might be
giving us a problem.”
Tom Bradley, who coaches the specialty
teams at Penn State, said that Joe Patemo
always has claimed that you win consis­
tently with good defense, great kicking,
and then offense.
Bradley knows as a player and as a coach
just how much emphasis Patemo places on
the kicking game.
When he played at Penn State, Bradley
was the captain of the specialty teams. His
teammates called Bradley “Scrap Iron,”
and they called the specialty teams “The
Scrap Pack.”
“When I played on those teams, I saw it
as my best way to contribute something to
our effort to win the national champi­
onship,” said Bradley. “I took it as my role
to be one of the leaders on those teams.
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

“I like 9'kid who
doesn’t care if he’s
not on the center
stage.”
Jay Hayes
“We probably didn’t have any players
who started at regular positions. All that
has changed. It’s not hands off the starters
any more. Today, you will find a good
many starters out there on the special
teams.”
One of the key players for Bradley on
Penn State’s 1989 team was Andre
Collins. The Nittany Lion senior earned
All-America honors as an inside lineback­
er. He also tied a school record by block­
ing four kicks.
“We changed many of our kick blocking
schemes because of Andre,” said Bradley.

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“He had unusual quickness and good
strength. Mix that with his aggressive
nature and you have the perfect guy for
blocking kicks.”
Notre Dame’s Tim Brown is probably the
player who added the biggest touch of glam­
our to the role of special teams performer.
It was Brown’s exploits as a game-break­
ing kick returner that helped him win the
Heisman Trophy.
When the Irish won their last national
championship two years ago, they got a
helping hand from the best kick return
game in college football.
Raghib (the Rocket) Ismail led the nation
in kickoff returns. Ricky Watters was
fourth in punt returns.
Ismail and Watters were both starters on
the offensive unit and represent a clear
change in the philosophy of not exposing
starters to the risk of possible injury on the
special teams.
“Our philosophy is to use the best people
to get the job done,” said Hayes. “We even
had our fullback in there on our punt block
team. We use anybody we think can make
us better.”
What’s the most important attributes a
coach looks for when he’s trying to put
together a specialty unit?
“I look for a guy who has a lot of pride; a
guy who wants to do things right,” said
Hayes. “I like a kid who doesn’t care if
he’s not on center stage. I want a player
who doesn’t mind being a part of a larger
plan.”
Bradley looks for pretty much the same
things at Penn State.
“The very first thing we look for is atti­
tude,” said Bradley. “If a player doesn’t
want to do it, then we’re only wasting our
time by working with him.
“I want a kid who jumps at the opportu­
nity. If I have to spend a lot of time selling
him on what we are going to attempt to do,
then chances are good it’s not going to
work.”
All of the coaches know the specialty
teams often contain more of the best ath­
letes than any of the other units.
“You’re looking for kids who have that
rare combination of speed, strength and
agility,” said Hayes. “\^en you have guys
like Ismail and Watters leading the way, it
can make coaching the specialty teams a
real pleasure.”

The option play is an automatic.

THE PUNTING
GAME

HONDA.

TheCRX

Every punt block scheme uses a number
of decoys whose main objective is to
enable one or two of their teammates to

(H) ©1989 American Honda MocorCa, Inc. AutomaricTtansmissiooDocavaihblconSiof HFmodels.

TOUCHDO¥rN ILLUSTRATED

SPECIAL FORCES
break through the initial wall of blockers.
“If we’re going up the middle for the
block, we’ll try to create some kind of
diversion on the comers,” said Bradley.
“We want to make it look like the attempt to
block the kick is coming from the outside.
“If we can force their blockers behind
the line of scrimmage to become aware of
the outside rush, we have a better chance
of springing someone free in the middle.”
So how do they create an opening in the
middle?
If you concentrate on what happens
before the ball is snapped, you might find
out. Often you will see defensive linemen
shifting all around; moving from one spot
to another.
All this movement is an attempt to create
confusion in the minds of the blockers. A
sort of 'now-you-see-me, now-you-don’t'
kind of plan. When a player breaks
through the initial line of blockers
untouched, it’s a sure sign the confusion
attempt worked and someone missed a
blocking assignment.
Once the ball is snapped, watch how the
mshers attempt to get to the kicker. They
might simply try to overpower a blocker or
they might loop around a teammate to cre­
ate even more confusion.
For every player who blocks a punt,
there are three or four guys who made it
possible. They’re the players who
absorbed the blocks, perhaps even forcing
a second player to stop their rush.
The punt block scheme and the punt
return game might be obvious. Then,
again, they might not.
“We like to make a team think we’re
going for the block when, actually, we’re
trying to set up a return,” said Bradley.
“To do that, we have to use the same
scheme we have on the block.
“The difference is that after they have
made the initial penetration, the players
will turn and sprint to the area where we
want to make the return.”
The best way to prevent a return is to
find a kicker who can boom the ball 45 or
50 yards, right? Wrong!
“The secret of preventing big returns is
not how far the punter can kick the ball,
but how high,” said Kehoe. “If he kicks it
too far, there’s no time for the coverage
team to get to the return man.
“If you can find a punter who kicks
between 40 and 45 yards and gets a hang
time of from 4.2 to 4.5 seconds, then
you’re in business. If you find a kicker
who can give you a hang time of 5.0, that’s
outrageous.”
Kehoe said the Miami coaches use three
different stopwatches to time punters dur­
ing drills. The first will be used to time the
snap to the kicker. The second is used to
time how long it takes the punter to get the

ball into the air. The third is used to record
the amount of time the ball stays in the air
before it is caught by the return man.
At Miami, they want the ball to go from
the snapper to the kicker in 1.2 seconds.
The total elapsed time from snap to kick
should be two seconds.
Watters thinks the key to being a good
punt returner is to have the ability to make
the first tackier miss.
“It’s difficult to do because you must con­
centrate on fielding the football,” he said.
“You don’t have time to be looking all over
the place. If you can make the catch and

“The secret of
preventing big
returns is not how
far the punter can
kick the ball, but
how high.”
Art Kehoe
break free from the initial coverage, then
you have a chance to make a big play.”
The first two or three players down the
field are the key to good coverage. They
are the quickest and most athletic mem­
bers of the punting team.
The rest of the punt coverage team must
be able to do two quite different jobs.
First, they must be capable blockers who
can provide protection for the punter.
Once the ball is kicked, they must be
able to switch from offensive players to
defensive players as they run down the
field to cover ffie punt.
Although all eyes are on the kicker, there

THE PLACEKICKING
GAME
really are three key people in a successful
placekicking game.
Bradley believes that most of the time
when a field goal or extra point try is
blocked, the problem can be traced to the
snapper or the holder.
“If the snap is off even just a little bit, it
breaks the whole tempo of the kicker,” he
said. “It’s the same thing when the snap is
mishandled. The difference between a suc­
cessful kick and a blocked kick can be a
fraction of a second.”
The recent changes which eliminated the
use of a kicking tee in college football has
changed the approach teams are using in

their attempt to block kicks.
“We’re doing mostly what the pro teams
do,” said Kehoe. “You now find a lot of
people putting their tallest linemen in the
middle because they expect the ball to be
kicked lower.”
Every special unit has to prepare for
every eventuality. If the snap is so bad the
holder feels he won’t have enough time to
spot the ball properly, he has to make an
adjustment.
Because his teammates can’t see what
has happened, he has to have some way of
alerting them to the problem.
He will shout “fire” or any one of a half
dozen other signal words that serve as an
alarm bell.
Miami used to always have their backup
quarterback as the holder. That way^ when
something went wrong, they had a holder
who could throw the football.
“We always had some type of a rollout
option in wWch the holder could try to run
it in or throw to one of our'ends,” said
Kehoe.
Last year, the Hurricanes used their regu­
lar punter as the holder for field goals and
extra points.
“He had good hands and he could
throw,” said Kehoe. “It enabled all our
kickers to work together all the time. We
didn’t have to take one of our quarterbacks
out of his drills to go over and work with
the kickers.”
There are a variety of kickoff returns.
Some teams get a lot of big linemen in the
middle and try to wedge the ball behind
that group of blockers.
Other teams will try to get their return
men to the sidelines. The most popular
return is one in which blockers attempt to
clear an alley.
“You want tp get all 11 people involved,”
said Hayes/“You want the ball in the
hands of your best return guy and you
want the other 10 people blocking for him.
If you want to stand and watch, do it on
the sideline.”
The kickoff coverage unit will include
many of a team’s fastest players. One of
those players is designated as a safety. His
job is to proceed slowly down the field and
be in position to get to the return man if he
finds some daylight.
“ The most important thing for the return
unit to do is stay in their lanes,” said
Bradley. “If they get out of those lanes, it
becomes easier for the blockers to create a
hole in your coverage.
“Speed is a priority, but so is toughness.
Those guys can’t get knocked off their
feet.”
They are college football’s unsung
heroes. They may not make headlines, but
the men on the special teams really are
special. ♦

THERE ARE

32

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TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

THE RIGHT
LENS FOR
THE ULTIMATE
SHOT

Picture this. It’s fourth down and
goal to go with four seconds on the
clock. The 49ers need the touch­
down for the win. An anxious crowd
is on its feet in one loyal, harmonious
roar. Quarterback Joe Montana
motions for quiet. He takes the snap,
fades back, quickly checks his
receivers, and fires a ten-yard bullet
to Jerry Rice, who executes a spec­
tacular mid-air grab between two
Bronco defenders, to win the Super
Bowl. Pandemonium breaks loose as
the entranced 49ers smother Rice in
victorious jubilation.
This is sports excitement at its best.
And what’s also exciting is that with a
35mm autofocus SLR camera and
the proper lenses, this dramatic
moment in sports history could be
recorded in a range of photos that will
capture the full power, action, and
emotion of the event. Choosing the
right lens for the job isn’t difficult,
once you know the facts. Here are

some important lens tips that will let
you get the most memorable sports
photographs.
To begin, there are three major lens
types. Normal, wide angle, and tele­
photo. A 35mm autofocus SLR will
accept them all. A 50mm or “normal”
lens sees just about what your eyes
see, with no increase or decrease in
magnification. It is fine for general allaround photography. But for the fastpaced action of sports you’ll need
more versatility.
A wide angle lens takes in a greater
field of view. A 24mm, 28mm, or
35mm wide angle lens would allow
you to photograph the entire
49ers/Broncos line of scrimmage in
one frame, with edge-to-edge sharp­
ness. When you’re working in tight
quarters, a wide angle lens is worth its
weight in gold.
For close-ups, you could use a tele­
photo lens. A telephoto lens has a high
magnification and lets you isolate a
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

particular subject, while providing an
additional benefit. Its shallow depth of
field will render a distracting back­
ground out of focus, thereby concen­
trating all the emphasis on that
subject. You could fill the entire frame
with that shot of Joe Montana as the
ball leaves his fingertips. Focal lengths
of 200mm or 300mm would be ideal.
Since telephoto lenses are susceptible
to vibration, when using shutter speed
under 1/500 sec., it’s best to steady
the lens as much as possible. One
drawback of a telephoto'lens is its
fixed focal length and bulk.
For the greatest versatility and per­
formance, a zoom lens will give you
the best of both worlds, especially if
you can’t move around much. Zoom
lenses are available in focal lengths
that range from wide angle to short
telephoto (28mm to 85mm or 35mm to
80mm), midrange (35mm to 105mm),
or short telephoto to long telephoto
(70mm to 210mm or 100mm to
300mm.). Today’s autofocus zoom
lenses give you unparalleled conve­
nience in an ultra compact and
lightweight design. A couple of these
in your bag will give you incredible
focal length coverage, and will not
weigh you down. You could cover the
entire wini)ing play with wide angle
group sho^te, close-up telephoto shots,
and midrange action shots. All without
having to leave your seat!
For photographing sports, a 35mm
autofocus SLR camera along with
the right lenses can offer profession­
al-looking results right from the start.
If you don’t own one as of yet, do
yourself a favor and make that initial
investment. Many of today’s SLRs
offer predictive autofocusing which
tracks moving subjects effortlessly,
programmed autoexposure with
manual overrides, action-stopping
shutter speeds, and quick and easy
operation even for first-time users.
Plus, some also accept the optional
camera-programming computer soft­
ware cards—an inexpensive way to
expand and enhance your creative
abilities. With this kind of equipment,
the next time sports history is made,
you’ll have it as part of your own his­
tory-in outstanding sports photos!

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The National Football Foundation’s College Football Hall
of Fame has opened its doors to 13 former All-America play­
ers and three coaching greats. The honorees, led by former
NFL greats Jack Ham, Earl Campbell, Leroy Keyes, and Jim
Plunkett, will be inducted on December 4th at the
Foundation’s 33rd Annual Awards Dinner, taking place in
New York’s Waldorf Astoria.
Other inductees include Don Boesseler, Ron Burton, Jack
Cloud, Vaughn Mancha, Max Starcevich, Mike McGee, John
Tavener, and Coach Ray Graves. Posthumous honors are
scheduled for former players Wayne Millner and Dr. Ed (Big
Mo) Molinski, as well as former coaches Richard (Dick)
Colman and Harry Baujan.
Jack Ham, a three-time lettering linebacker, helped Coach
Joe Patemo’s Penn State Nittany Lions to two undefeated sea­
sons as well as two Orange Bowl victories between 1968 and
1970, before embarking on a suc­
cessful pro career. A fixture in the
“Steel Curtain” defense. Ham played
on all four Pittsburgh Steeler Super
Bowl winners and was inducted into
the NFL Hall of Fame.
The Johnstown, PA-bom Ham still
resides in Pennsylvania, working as
both a sales representative for a coal
company and a sportscaster in
Pittsburgh.
Texas Longhorn fullback Earl
Campbell may have been the great­
est runner ever to come out of the
Southwest Conference. From 197477, the Tyler, Texas native broke
every SWC and Texas rushing
record on his way to 4,443 yards
and 41 touchdowns. Campbell, who
rushed for 100 yards in a game 31
times, and over 200 yards in a game
on three occasions, capped off his
career by being voted a unanimous
All-America, and winning the 1977
Heisman Trophy.
Earl’s success continued as a pro. .
Starring for the Houston Oilers and
later the New Orleans Saints, he
became only one of two men ever to win
the Most Valuable Player Award three
times. The Oilers retired his number 34
upon completion of his career.
Today Earl Campbell is back at his alma
mater, the University of Texas (where his
number 20 is also retired), working as a
special assistant to the vice president of
student affairs.
The last of the great two-way ball players

It’s another stellar
list of inductees ^
to the National Football
Foundation’s College ^

You've got the tickets, the team and all the right
gear—picnic baskets and coolers, stadium blankets
and more. Success is assured—if you can win on
the road.
"Vanagon, get in there."

THE Football Hall of Fame.
CLASS.
Pictured from top:
Jack Ham,
Earl Campbell
and Leroy Keyes.

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Vanagon is shorter than a midsize station wagon so
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Don't drink and drive.

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

it gets in to some pre^ tight places. And with power
rack-and-pinion steering and four-wheel independent
suspension, Vanagon gets out of some tight spots, too.
Handling like this contributes to Fahrvergnugen—
the rewarding and distinctly European experience of
driving a Volkswagen.
Prices start at $14,080f And Vanagon Carat
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e 1990 Volkswagen

•M.S.R.P. excludes options, tax, registration, destination charges, and dealer prep.

THE CLASS OF
best describes Purdue’s Leroy Keyes.
Keyes, a Boilermaker from 1966-68, was
Coach Jack Mollenkopf’s “ace in the hole”
on either side of the ball, but made his
major impact on the offensive side, becom­
ing the first Purdue player to msh for over
1,000 yards in a season (1968). He also
shone brightest when the game was on the
line, as he demonstrated with a devastating
three-touchdown final quarter in a game
against Indiana, erasing an 11-point deficit,
in a game won by Purdue, 38-35.
Leroy was recognized for his “double­
trouble,” being the last player voted
All-America status on both offense and
defense, as well as respectable second- and
third-place Heisman Trophy finishes.
^roy Keyes went on to play pro football
with the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas
City Chiefs, and today works in a
desegregation program for the
Philadelphia school system.
With Jim Plunkett’s strong arm,
you could say Stanford football
was a “Passing Fad” at the start of
the ’70s. Plunkett finished his
Stanford career (1968-70) with 530 com­
pletions in 962 attempts (55% completion
rate) for 7,544 yards, becoming the first
major college player to exceed the 7,000yard mark, with 52 TD passes.
After a sensational performance in the
1970 Rose Bowl, in which Stanford beat
Ohio State 27-17, Plunkett took home both
major college awards, winning the
Heisman and Maxwell Trophies.
Jim’s pro career included stints with the
New England Patriots, San Francisco
49ers, and a seeming rebirth with the
Oakland, then Los Angeles Raiders, whom
he led to Super Bowl victories over the
Philadelphia Eagles (1980, in which he set
a record for the longest touchdown
pass—80 yards), and the Washington
Redskins (1984).
Don Boesseler made his mark in the
backfield of Andy Gustafson’s Miami
Hurricanes in the mid-fifties. The 200pound Bavaria, N.Y. native captained the
Hurricanes in 1956, also reaching AllAmerica status. Six years with the
Washington Redskins followed. Upon
completion of his playing career,
Boesseler scouted for the Redskins and
Pittsburgh Steelers before becoming a suc­
cessful stockbroker in Miami.
Northwestern halfback Ron Burtqn set
several career rushing records, while
sparking Coach Ara Parseghian’s offense.
Despite being only 5-10 and weighing
only 185 pounds, the speedster set Wildcat
career records with 132 points, 21 touch­
downs, and a season-high 76 points. The
Springfield, Ohio native was voted AllAmerica in 1959, and played with the

Boston Patriots after college. Today
Burton is an executive with the John
Hancock Insurance Company.
Born in Britton, Oklahoma, on
Oklahoma’s Cherokee Strip, “Flying
Jack” Cloud starred at William and Mary
in 1946-48. During his college career.
Cloud, a bruising 215-pound fullback,
rushed for 45 touchdowns (including five
in one game), on his way to being named
All-Conference three times as well as
NEA All-America in 1948. After gradua­
tion and a short professional career with
the Green Bay Packers and Washington
Redskins, he became an associate profes­
sor and served for 22 years on the football
staff at the Naval Academy.
When it comes to overcoming adversity,
few can tell the tale of Alabama center

Clockwise from top: Don Boesseler,
Jim Plunkett, Ron Burton and
"Flying Jack" Cloud.

THE CLASS OF 1990

Vaughn Mancha. Despite having the use
of only one eye, Mancha anchored “The
Red Elephants” offensive line on Coach
Frank Thomas’ Crimson Tide of the mid­
forties. Mancha played two seasons with
the NFL’s Boston Yanks, and later became
involved on the coaching level at
Livingston State University in Alabama,
Florida State, and Columbia (under Hall of
Fame coach Lou Little). Mancha served as
athletic director at FSU for 12 years,
where he still is a professor.
One person who can relate to the Vaughn
Mancha story is Washington Huskies’ 1936
All-America guard Max Starcevich.
Despite blindness in one eye, Starcevich
was a three-time letterman in the mid-thir­
ties for Coach Jimmie Phelan. Starcevich
later passed on his experience as an assistant
at his alma mater and also on the high
school level in the Seattle area. Today Max
is vice president of the Hood Canal
Environment Council, but is still involved in
football on the local level as a coach and
official.
Hall of Fame coach Bill Murray called
Mike McGee one of the all-time great
Duke linemen. Anyone who saw him would
probably concur. TTie press certainly did in
1959, when the 6-1, 220-^und Blue Devil
guard was named All-America, Athlete of
die Year, and Outland Trophy winner as the
nation’s best lineman. McGee’s profession­
al playing career with the St. Louis
Cardin^s ended prematurely due to a neck
injury after only three seasons, but the

Washington, D.C. native’s football career
was far from over. McGee served as an
assistant coach at Wisconsin, Duke, and
Minnesota before taking over the reins at
East Carolina State, and later at his
alma mater. Today, McGee is the direc­
tor of athletics at the University of
Southern California.
Indiana center John Tavener
played for legendary coach Bo
McMillan from 1941-44. The
Johnstown, Ohio native won AllAmerica acclaim and was twice named
Hoosier Most Valuable Player.
Calling Ray Graves a successful coach
would be like calling a Mercedes Benz a
nice car. Hailing from Knoxville, Tenn.,
Graves compiled a 10-season (1960-1969)
record of 70-31-4 (a nifty 68.6 winning
percentage) at the University of Florida. A
defensive specialist. Graves is crediteu
with creating an alignment called The
Monster Defense, which featured use of a
free and strong safety. Graves mastered his
craft with 13 years of service at Georgia
Tech, under the tutelage of Bobby Dodd,
and as an assistant at his alma mater,
Tennessee. As a player. Graves helped the
Vols reach the Sugar and Orange Bowls in
his three-year college career, before going
pro with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1942.
He played one year with the Eagles, before
becoming an assistant with them, and then
Joined Dodd at Georgia Tech. For two
decades (1960-80), Graves served as ath­
letic director for Florida. Today, he works
TOIICHDO¥ni ILLUSTRATED

No trees. No match.

Hold a classic wooden racket in your hands. The way tennis champions have done for
centuries before you. Feel its resilience and grace. Its balance and its power. Remember without
trees, there would never have been wood rackets. And only you can prevent forest tires.
From top left: Mike McGee, John
Tavener, Max Starcevich, Vaughn
Mancha and Ray Graves.

A Public Service of the US-QA. Forest Service, sod your State Foresters. © Internatioral Tennis Hall of Fame

I

, '

(

^ //

THE CLASS
OF 1990

as a consultant to New York Yankees
owner George Steinbrenner.
End Wayne Millner made a name for
himself with the Fighting Irish of Notre
Dame between the years of 1933-35. A
three-year starter, Millner may best be
remembered for catching two fourth-quarter
touchdown passes in a minute-and-a-half
span, propelling the Irish to a come-frombehind 18-13 victory over Ohio State in
“The Game of the Half Century." In 1942,
he became an assistant coach at Notre Dame
under Frank Leahy before embarking on a
pro career with the Washington Redskins,
which would ultimately end with his
enshrinement in the Pro Football Hall of
Fame. After his playing days, Millner
became a coach and scout for the Baltimore
Colts, Philadelphia Eagles, and the
Redskins before he died in 1976.
Tennessee All-America guard Dr. Ed
(Big Mo) Molinski was a real fighter. In
1939, “Big Mo” anchored a line that did
not yield a single point during the entire
regular season! While at Tennessee, Big
Mo also captained the boxing team and was
a state Golden Gloves champion. After col­
lege, Molinski went from inflicting pain to
caring for it. Graduating from the
University of Tennessee Medical School,
he became team physician at Memphis
State. The Scranton, Pa. native’s successful
medical career ended when he died in 1985.
Bom in New York City, Richard (Dick)
Colman crossed the Hudson to make a
name for himself, coaching the Princeton
Tigers. Between 1957 and 1968, Colman’s
teams posted an impressive 75-33 record
(a spectacular .694 winning percentage).
The Tigers won two undisputed Ivy
League titles (1957 and 1964) and shared
the title two other times (1963 and 1966),
compiling a 61-23 record in the confer­
ence (a .723 winning percentage). In 1964
the Tigers probably shined brightest. Led
by All-Amerj^ans Cosmo lacavazzi and
Stanislaus Malizewski, Princeton complet­
ed a perfect unbeaten and untied season.
After retiring from Princeton, Colman
served five years as director of athletics at
Middlebury College before retiring. A
heart attack claimed Colman in 1982.
Henry Baujan may be remembered
more as an architect than a coach. Baujan,
a Notre Dame product who played under
coaches Jesse Harper and Knute Rockne,
won All-Western and All-Indiana honors
three times before turning pro with
Massilon and Cleveland, a career that was
cut short by World War I. Between 1923
and 1942, he took control of a small, littleknown independent Dayton program, and
turned it into a member of the mighty Ohio
and then Buckeye Conference. After World
War n, Baujan was once again called upon,
and once again successfully rebuilt the
Dayton program. The Beardstown, 111.
native finished his coaching career with an
impressive 124-64-8 record.

f
. .

Line Up With the Pros.
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CITIBAN<0

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system. I have read and undeistand the CreditShield insurance and cost disclosures on the back of
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By sighing below I authorize Citibank (South Dakota). N.A. to oh«k my
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and/or vS^informaion to Citibank (South Dakota). N.A. and its affil«“
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all-time

SINGLE-GAME
RUSHING YARDS
NCAA Division l-A
Yards
377
357
356
352
350
349
347
347
343
342
342

Date
Nov. 11,1989
Oct. 27, 1984
Nov. 11, 1978
Nov. 4, 1989
Oct. 30,1971
Oct. 11,1986
Oct. 9,1976
Nov. 16,1968
Sept. 13,1986
Nov. 3,1973
Nov. 13,1971

Player, Team (Opponent)
Anthony Thompson, Indiana (Wisconsin)
Rueben Mayes, Washington State (Oregon)
Eddie Lee Ivery, Georgia Tech (Air Force)
Mike Pringle, Cal St. Fullerton (New Mexico St.)
Eric Allen, Michigan State (Purdue)
Paul Palmer, Temple (East Carolina)
Ricky Bell, USC (Washington State)
Ron Johnson, Michigan (Wisconsin)
Tony Jeffery, Texas Christian (Tulane)
Roosevelt Leaks, Texas (SMU)
Charlie Davis, Colorado (Oklahoma State)

Ricky Bell of USC powered his way
into the single-game top ten in 1976.

-----1
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CITIBANK NFL VISA® CREDIT TERMS

All Divisions
Yards
382
382
377
373
370
370
367
363
363
357

Div.
III
II
I-A
II
II
II
II
III
II
I-A

Player, Team (Opponent)
Pete Baranek, Carthage (North Central)
Kelly Ellis, Northern Iowa (Western Illinois)
Anthony Thompson, Indiana (Wisconsin)
Dallas Garber, Marietta (Washington & Jefferson)
Jim Baier, Wisconsin-River Falls (Wis.-Stevens Pt.)
Jim Hissam, Marietta (Bethany, W. Va.)
Don Polkinghorne, Washington, Mo. (Wash. & Lee)
Terry Underwood, Wagner (Hofstra)
Richie Weaver, Widener (Moravian)
Rueben Mayes, Washington State (Oregon)

Date
Oct. 5, 1985
Oct. 13, 1979
Nov. 11,1989
Nov. 7, 1959
Nov. 5, 1966
Nov. 15, 1958
Nov. 23,1957
Oct. 15, 1988
Oct. 17, 1970
Oct. 27,1984

Source; NCAA

-

louchdouM
Magazine
Vol. 26
President: Jarred R. Metze
Publisher: Pamela L. Blawie
V.P., Operations: Robert L. Fulton
Associate Publisher: Peggy Kearney
Production Director: Gloria Yoshida

V.P., National Advertising Director
Joel G. Fisher
National Account Managers
NEW YORK: Cecil D. Lear, V.P.; Neil
Farber, V.P.; Thom Hering, V.P.; Sean
Hallinan, Paul Abramson (212) 697-1460
LOS ANGELES: Dan Parker (213) 553-7106
DETROIT: Joseph J. Colucci (313) 626-9918
CHICAGO: (312) 951-5593
DALLAS: Bob Jameson (214) 361-3232
ATLANTA: Dave Thomas (414) 594-0482

TDI Editor: Scott Van Camp
.TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTPaTED-

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED is
published six times between September 1
and December 1 each year at 355 Lexington
Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017. All
contents of this issue of TOUCHDOWN
ILLUSTRATED copyright © 1990 by
TOUCHDOWN PUBLICATIONS.
A

Delaware North Companies
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RalmoOve Softest ifamfe
/\ Six-Part Series Saluting College Football’s Greatest Receivers

FOOTBALL'S MOST FAMOUS PASSING TWOSOME
By Bert Randolph Sugar
Football archeologists can pinpoint
the exact date the forward pass became id
one of the game’s most potent weapons.^
The date, forever etched into the legend of ^

I I
-

collegiate football, was November 1, 1913.

Up until that fateful date the game of
football had been a steady diet of three yards
and a cloud of dust, as teams tried to over­
whelm their opponents with a startling reg­
ularity and dismal monotony of runs and
more runs.
But, on that Saturday afternoon, two
Notre Dame players, Gus Dorias and
Knute Rockne, wove sand castles in
the air and forever changed the face
of college football.
The story of the game itself is one
which has been described in chapter and
verse extensively, if never plausibly
and recreated in some of football’s most memorable fiction. It
is the story of the East’s most
powerful eleven. Army, looking
to fill up its 1913 schedule,
inviting a Notre Dame team so
unheralded that the New York
Times lead announcing the game
said, “...has come all the way from
South Bend, Illinois.” It is also the
story of how a little midwestem
David — with only 18 players and
14 pairs of cleats — rose up and
smote the Eastern Goliath.
In the days of mannerly
football, ancient and honorable
romantics had committed them­
selves to the plain vanilla notion
that teams were expected to
punt on first down inside thenown 20-yard lines and never,
never throw anything resem

Wing a forward pass. The only trouble
was nobody had bothered to tell Notre
Dame quarterback Gus Dorias.
And so Dorias took to the airways
■pnd found a small, balding, spindly-legged
PPend named Knute Kenneth Rockne. Rockne,
^ all of 5-foot-8 and 145 pounds, time and time
again eluded the defending Cadets, leaving them '
standing around as if struck by apoplexy, as he '
hauled in pass after pass and went that certain /
“somewhere” his bandylegs would take him. '
Dorias threw passes from any point on the
field, throwing some “as far as thirty-five yards
away,” throwing hard, fast and, most incredible of
all, leading his
receivers with
them. On
Notre
Dame’s very
first posses­
sion, he
found Rockne,
all alone, and
connected on a 25yard touchdown pass.
'
It was enough to make
Army folloy^ers wonder if
their faith in'Gibraltar had been
misplaced as Dorias completed
13 of 17 passes, 12 of them in suc­
cession, for 243 yards. The final
score was a tribute to the Dorias-toRockne combination: Notre Dame 35,
Army 13.
It was the first pebble to hit the waters of
collegiate football, a pebble that would cause
ripples for generations to come. And all
attributable to a combination of the strong arm of
Dorias and the soft hands of Rockne that on one
November day in 1913 at West Point made the
, forward pass forever part of football’s arsenal.

Softens Hands While You Do Dishes

PAlMOliVE’S DECORATOR COLLECTION
CHOOSE FROM SIX DESIGNS

Not only did Merlin Olsen win the
Outland Trophy, but he was also out­
standing in the classroom.

MERLIN

THE MAGNIFICENT
BY NICK PETERS
Long before Merlin Olsen made it big in
television, and prior to his superstar suc­
cess in the NFL, he epitomized what the
term “student-athlete” is all about.
As is the case with his diverse lifestyle
and myriad professional and business
activities, Olsen’s versatility also was evi­
dent while he was a strapping 6-5, 265pound All-American lineman at Utah State
University.
Winning the Outland Trophy in 1961 as
college football’s outstanding lineman
crowned his gridiron achievements as an
underclassman, but there was ample time
to command the ROTC unit, to be class
president, and to gain distinction as the top
business student on campus.
“I’ll always look back fondly on those
days at Utah State,” Olsen said. “They
contributed so much to my growth and
development. It’s very sad to me that so
many schools discourage athletes from
participating in other activities.
“They just recruit them to play football,
and it really bugs me because college has
so much more to offer. That sort of empha­
sis is resulting in a whole generation of
one-dimensional people.”
Olsen, who turned 50 this year, certainly
isn’t among that group. He took advantage
of all the activities afforded at Utah State,
the result being a well-rounded, multi-tal­
ented man who hasn’t forgotten his hum­
ble roots.
But were it not for a clerical error, Olsen
may not have remained in his hometown,
Logan, Utah, to attend college. In fact, he
was scheduled to enroll in the University
of California at Berkeley, which admired
his grade point average as much as his
physical prowess.
NICK PETERS is a sportswriter for The
Sacramento (Calif.) Bee who covered col­
lege athletics for 27 years.

Working his magic on
field, Merlin
Olsen
helped put
a sagging
Utah State
team on
the map.

Olsen was recruited for Cal by an aggres­
sive, young assistant coach named John
Ralston, who convinced the prep allAmerican to head west. It was a done deal
until Merlin began to have reservations
during a lonely summer of work at
Yellowstone National Park.
“I was on my own that summer, and I
really got lonely for home,” Olsen
recalled. “I didn’t want to leave my family,
but I felt I had to honor my commitment to
Cal. It all worked out for the best because
a clerical error gave me an out.
“I phoned Cal to find out about enroll­
ment, and I was told my scholarship would
not be available until the winter quarter.
Because I had such good grades, someone
thought I was coming on an academic
scholarship. I decided to stay home instead
of waiting those extra months.
“I remember the Cal athletic director
calling me and going bonkers when I told
him what happened,” he continued. “A few
years ago, I told the story to Pete Elliott
(Cal’s coach in 1958), and the color
drained out of his face. He’d never heard it
before.”
More than 30 years later, Ralston has no
recollection of that clerical error. The for­
mer coach prefers to believe Olsen stayed
home because of parental influence and his
strong Mormon ties.
“Merlin was an exceptional student-ath­
lete at Logan High, so we went after him,”
Ralston said. “He was all set to come to
Berkeley, but it was against his mother’s
wishes.
“I remember speaking with her and
telling her he was coming to Cal. She told
me that’s where Merlin would go if he
were to leave the state, but that he wasn’t
leaving Utah. It was a devout Mormon
family, and she wanted him close to
home.”
The decision worked out for Olsen and
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

Ralston, who in 1959 was named head
coach of the sagging Utah State program.
With his fervor for recruiting, Ralston built
a powerhouse virtually overnight, and
Olsen was a cornerstone of the Aggies’
sudden success.
The outlook wasn’t as bright Olsen’s
freshman year, however. He wondered if
he’d made the right choice because the
depleted Utah State freshman team was not
indicative of a prosperous future.
“We only had something like 17 players
in uniform for our final freshman game
against Utah. I remember it vividly
because Ray Nagel was building a power­
house at Utah and they had 70 players,”
Olsen recalled.
“Then Ralston came to Utah State and
brought with him a lot of talented players
who couldn’t get into Cal. We became a
pretty good team right away, and by my
senior year (1961), we were ranked among
the top 10 nationally.”
During Olsen’s spectacular college

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MERLIN THE
MAGNIFICENT
career, his teammates included fellow line­
men Len Rohde, Clark Miller and Clyde
Brock, all of whom also attained pro foot­
ball success. Jim Turner, Lionel Aldridge,
Tom Larscheid and Bill Munson also were
on those squads.
Olsen began his college career as a tight
end, his prime position in high school. He
caught two passes for 20 yards on a team
that improved from 3-7 to 5-6 Ralston’s
first year. It was soon evident that blocking
was his forte, so Merlin was switched to
tackle, and he played on both sides of the
line.
“I was a senior when Merlin was a soph,
so we had no way of knowing how good
he was going to be,” recalled Rohde, later
a standout with the 49ers. “He was a high­
ly-regarded local kid, and obviously very
talented. I remember the rest of us worry­
ing about him taking our jobs.”
Olsen vividly recalls that sophomore sea­
son because it was his first as a varsity
player. His clearest image of that 1958 sea­
son isn’t of a significant play or game, but
of his first major trip when Utah State vis­
ited Arizona State in the second game of
the season.
“We were outclassed (34-12) by a good
ASU team, and I’ll never forget that
night,” he said. “It was very hot, and I was
really pumped up for my first big game. I
went out for warmups and just ran my
buns off Well, I ran so hard, I was
exhausted by the time the game started.
“I mainly was a tight end as a soph,
weighing between 225 and 235 pounds.
But I wasn’t catching a lot of passes. I was
a blocking tight end, and I remember park­
ing some people on the other side of the
field.”
Olsen did that with regularity as as full­
time tackle his junior and senior years,
each an All-American season. The Aggies
went 9-2 in 1960 and enjoyed their finest
season ever in 1961, going 9-0-1 prior to a
Gotham Bowl loss to Baylor.
“I had a very good junior year,” Olsen
said, “but I’d never thought about the
Outland Trophy. You have to remember
we played in a region with two voters
within 1,500 miles, one in Denver and one
in Salt Lake City. There were 150 votes
within a 100-mile radius of New York, so
there was no way boys in our neck of the
woods could expect such an honor.
“What really helped me was being an
All-American as a junior and us having a
top 10 team my senior year. We no longer
were an unknown because of the rankings,
and because we were winning games by
some big scores.”

With his playing days long over, Olsen
is best known for his work in television.
The 1961 Aggies outscored opponents
396-102, averaging 36 points per game
despite a 6-6 tie with Wyoming and a 24-9
loss to Baylor. There were two notable
romps that commanded attention.
Utah State crushed Idaho 69-0 in a bliz­
zard, and Olsen, Miller and Brock all had a
chance to play in the backfield during that
bizarre homecoming game. The Aggies
also visited Western Michigan and posted
a 65-22 rout.
“That game helped our reputation
because it was out of our region,” Ralston

“He was a highlyregarded local kid,
and obviously very
talented. I remem­
ber the rest of us
worrying about him
taking our jobs.”
Len Rohde
recalled. “I remember (Giants general
manager) Jim Lee Howell coming to that
game to check out a big Polish lineman
from Western Michigan. Our guys
knocked him all over the field, so Howell
went back to New York singing the praises
of Olsen, Miller and Brock. I’ve never
coached anyone as good as Merlin. I had
Jim Plunkett, who won the Heisman
Trophy at Stanford. I also coached Jeff
Siemon, who had a long career as a
linebacker with the Vikings. But Merlin
was by far the most gifted athlete I’ve ever
coached. He was an absolutely tremendous
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

football player,” Ralston added. “Merlin
was in the Pro Bowl 14 years as a defen­
sive lineman, and I feel he would have
been even better on offense. He could run
the 100 in 10.1 and was under 50 seconds
in the quarter mile. He was a natural.”
It wasn’t always that way. Olsen
described himself as awkward as a young­
ster. He didn’t develop as an athlete until
high school, where he became an AllAmerican in football, an All-Region bas­
ketball star, and captain of the Logan High
swim team.
During those formative years, he devel­
oped an affection for Utah State, the
hometown college. Consequently, it
wasn’t difficult for him to disregard the
Cal scholarship offer and continue his edu­
cation close to home.
“I was very comfortable at Utah State,”
he said. “The school meant a lot to me as a
youngster because I was a hot,dog and
popcorn vendor at the college games. I’d
never dreamed I’d amount to anything as
an athlete, though.
“I always was a good student, but I was
clumsy as an athlete in junior high. I was
excited about going to college, but more
so as a student. Hitting the books was
important to me. I went to school to pre­
pare for a business career.”
Olsen, the son of a soils scientist, was a
three-time academic All-American. He
was a summa cum laude graduate with a
3.64 GPA (out of 4.0) in finance, earning a
Phi Beta Kappa key. He earned his mas­
ter’s degree in economics from Utah State
in 1970.
The product of a family of nine children,
Olsen was Utah State’s top male business
student his sophomore, junior and senior
years. He also was named the school’s out­
standing ROTC cadet two years and was
class president his sophomore and junior
years.
'>
“It was imp6rtant to me to be involved in
a lot of activities,” Olsen explained. “I lost
by five votes for student body president as
a senior at Utah State. I also was the vicepresident of my fraternity. Sigma Chi.
“I really never gave much thought to a
pro football career. Even when I started
playing for the Rams, I felt it was tempo­
rary, something to do before I got on with
my life. I was thinking about corporate
training. The TV announcing and the act­
ing came after the fact.”
Olsen is married to Susan Jane Wakley,
his wife of 28 years. They have three chil­
dren and reside in San Marino, CA. He is
involved in charity work, owns an auto
dealership, and is a motivational consul­
tant for 50 of the Fortune 500 companies.
He’s best known today as an NFL ana­
lyst for NBC and for his work on two TV
series, “Father Murphy” and “Little House
on the Prairie,” all outgrowths of his days
as a well-rounded underclassman at Utah
State, a student-athlete in every sense of
the word.

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ZD

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finished last season as the
A yJ career record-holder in TD catches?

i i Who holds the per game record for
± X all-purpose yards?
i ^ Who holds the all-time record in
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EDINBORO UNIVERSITY 1990 ROSTER
Barnes, Mike................ So., FB, 5-10, 209
Cleveland, OH/Euclid
Bauer, Jayson................. Fr., OL, 6-3,235
McKeesport, PA/McKeesport
Baumann, B. J..................Fr., RB, 5-9,185
Erie, PA/McDowell
Bauman, John .................Fr., K, 5-10,170
Erie, PA/Cathedral P*rep
Bryan, Nick..................Fr., ILB, 5-10, 215
Orange, OH/Orange
Castellarin, Gregg......... So., DE, 6-2,217
University Heights, OH/Walsh Jesuit
Clare, Steve.....................Jr., FB, 5-11,212
Lockport, NY/Starpoint Central
Cochran, Mark........Fr., WR/DB, 6-1,165
Oil City, PA/Oil City
Conway, Chris.................Sr., RB, 5-9,185
Franklin, PA/Oil City
DiMickele, Dean............. Jr., DB, 5-9,176
Canton, OH/Glen Oak
Donahue, A1.....................Sr., LB, 6-1,220
Bellaire, OH/St. John Central Catholic
Dudowski, Tony .............Jr., LB, 5-11,236
Newark, NY/Newark
Edwards, Mike................Jr., LB, 6-1,213
Caledonia, NY/Caledonia Mumford
Edwards, Roderick........ Fr., DT, 6-0,240
Cleveland, OH/John Hay
Frye, Lester ....... ............So., TB, 5-9,203
Latrobe, PA/Jeanette
Galupi, Hal....................... Sr., QB, 6-1,195
Ambridge, PA/Ambridge
Gashgarian, Michael.... Fr., WR, 6-2,190
Erie, PA/McDowell
Geary, Michael .................So., K, 6-1,178
Somerset, PA/Somerset
Gentile, Mike.................Fr., LB, 5-10,200
Greenville, PA/Reynolds
Glauner, Dave............Fr., LB, 6-1 1/2,195
Westlake, OH/Westlake
Hammond, Sean .......... Fr., DB, 5-10,170
York, PA/York Catholic
Harris, Agustus................Fr., OL, 6-2,305
Orlando, FL/Jones
Heebsh, Brian....................Jr., TE, 6-2,230
Tiffin, OH/Tiffin Coltimbian
Hill, Albie.........................Fr., QB, 6-0,180
New Brighton, PA/New Brighton
Hill, Corey.....................Fr., RB, 5-10,165
Miami, FL/Palmetto Sr.
Hitchcock, Gordon ....... So., OL, 6-3, 251
Andover, OH/Pymatuning Valley
Holt, Jason......................Jr., WR, 5-8,173
Kane, PA/Kane Area
Houston, Mario..............So., DB, 5-9,168
E. Cleveland, OH/East Shaw

Jacobs, Jeff..................... Sr., DL, 6-3, 244
Connellsville, PA/Connellsville
Johnson, Aaron........... So., DB, 5-10,183
McKeesport, PA/McKeesport
Johnson, Isaac............... Jr., DL, 5-11,264
Buffalo, NY/Buffalo Traditional
Johnson, Mark.............. So., DE, 6-4,198
Pittsburgh, PA/Westinghouse
Kacsandi, Joe ................ Fr., P/K, 6-1,175
Euclid, OH/Berea
Kegarise, Mike .............. So., OT, 6-6,289
Milan, OH/Edison
Knight, Phil................... So., QB, 5-9,185
Pittsburgh, PA/Westinghouse
Koehle, Matt..................... Jr., FB, 6-0,220
Altoona, PA/Bishop Guilfoyle
Kuhn, Eric........................Fr., QB, 6-2,185
Erie, PA/Smwig Vincent
Lang, Matt.......................So., FB, 6-0,216
Cheektowaga, NY/Maryvale
Lewis, GeorJ....................So., DB, 5-9,175
Connellsville, PA/Connellsville
Lhotsky, Gary................... So., P, 6-2, 205
Bridgeport, WV/Bridgeport
Mariani, Anthony....... So., OLB, 5-9,204
Pittsburgh, PA/Central Catholic
Marratta, Joel................ Jr., LB, 5-10,208
Springfield, OH/Kenton Ridge
Martin, Wrentie...............Jr., WR, 6-1,179
Massilltm, OH/Washington
McCloskey, Jim............... Fr., DE, 6-4, 208
Altoona, PA/Altoona
Medred, Ray .................. Fr., DB, 6-0,170
DuBois, PA/DuBois Area
Messura, John................. Jr., DL, 6-0,260
Rochester, NY/Aquinas Institute
Miller, Matt.................... Sr., DL, 6-1,267
Oil City, PA/Oil City
Miller, Ron G................... Fr., OL, 6-5, 265
Apple Creek, OH/Waynedale
Murphy, Pete.................. Fr., DE, 6-4,205
New Brighton, PA/New Brighton
Nagy, Steve.................. So., OLB, 6-1, 215
Stow, OH/St. Vincait-St. Mary
Nickel, Scott.................... Jr., OL, 6-4, 270
Conneaut, OH/Conneaut
O'Connor, Terry............ Jr., WR, 5-9,167
Erie, PA/Harborcreek
Penhollow, John............ Fr., ILB, 6-0,200
Sinclair, NY/Cassadaga Valley
Perkins, Jason.............. So., ILB, 6-0, 217
Geneva, OH/Geneva
Pickett, Delvin.................. Jr., DL, 6-1, 235
Akron, OH/Garfield
Powell, Brad................... Sr., OL, 6-2, 280
W. Middlesex, PA/W. Middlesex

20

Priester, Ernest ............. Sr., WR, 5-9,185
Cleveland, OH/John Hay
Reifsnyder, Bryan......... Jr, RB, 5-11, 200
N. Canton, OH/St. Thomas Aquinas
Roberts, Quincy.............. Fr., FS, 6-0, 170
Queens, NY/Christ the King Req.
Robison, Ken................. Fr., WR, 6-1, 190
Borea, OH/Borea
Rose, Curtis.................... Sr., OL, 6-4, 297
Logan, OH/Logan
Ross, Anthony ................ Sr., LB, 6-2,236
Cleveland, OH/Shaw
Rounds, Chuck............... Sr., TE, 6-0, 214
Williamsville, NY/Williamsville South
Russell, Derrick........... So., TB, 5-11,188
Pittsburgh, PA/Perry T. A.
Samargia, Todd ........... Fr., OL!b, 5-8, 200
Youngstown, OH/Austintown Fitch
Schmidhamer, Kurt........ Jr, DL, 6-3,245
Altoona, PA/^ishop Guilfoyle
Schrimper, Eric .............. Fr., TE, 6-4,235
Waterford, PA/Fort LeBoeuf
Seibert, Sean.................. So., QB, 6-2,214
Painesville, OH/Thomas W. Harvey
Shippy, Tim.....................Jr., DB, 5-9,153
Yovmgstown, NY/Lewiston-Porter
Simmons, Ron............... So., DB, 6-0,218
Rochester, NY/East High
Smith, Wade............ . Jr., DB, 5-10,162
Lockport, NY/Lockport
Sparenberg, Bill.............Fr., DL, 6-3,226
Talbotville, Ont./London Jr.
Spisak, Wally................. Sr., OL, 6-2,259
Wickliffe, OH/Wickliffe
Stone, Paul ...................... Jr., RB, 6-0,185
Norton, OH/Norton
Tanner, Jeff y<.................. Fr., OL, 6-4,265
*
New Castle, PA/Shenango
Tedder, Tom................... Fr., RB, 6-1,191
Pittsburgh, PA/Baldwin
Tighe, Tony.................... Fr., OL, 6-7, 275
N. York, Ont./W. A. Porter
Vaccaro, Mike ............... Fr., BLB, 5-9,185
Rochester, NY/Gates-Chili
Vollmer, Chris................ So., TE, 6-4, 228
Westlake, OH/Westlake
Walker, John................... Jr., LB, 6-0, 200
Ashtabula, OH/Harper
Whitfield, Philip ........... Jr., DL, 5-11,225
Detroit, Ml/Detroit Chadsey
Woodfolk, Sam............. Fr., RB, 5-10, 180
Cleveland, OH/St. Joe
Wouda, Rich................ Fr., WR, 5-10,170
St. Thomas, Ont./Arthur Voaden
Young, Ian ...................... Fr., OL, 6-1,225
Elyria, OH/Elyria

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PA STATE INSPECTION

$100.00

Receive

$5.00

Present This Coupon By
December 31,1990

10% Off
ANY PARTS OR SERVICE

Only one coupon accepted per car -

- Other Parts and Labor Extra
- One Coupon Per Car

- One Coupon Per Customer
- Body Work Excluded
- Not Useable With Any Other Special

-------------------Coupon

----------------- Coupon--------------------

------------------ Coupon --------------------

I

EDINBORO UNIVERSITY
OFFENSE
3
4
75
65
74
63
62
90
12
5
7
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15

DEFENSE

ERNEST PRIESTER .
WRENTIE MARTIN.....
MIKE KEGARISE ......
BRAD POWELL .....
SCOTT NIKEL.......
CURTIS ROSE.......
WALLY SPISAK.................
GREGG CASTELLARIN ..
HAROLD GALUPI ....
TOM TEDDER ........
LESTER FRYE......

Wouda, R............WR
Kacsandi, J........ J>/K
Priester, E..........
Martin, W...........WR
Tedder, T..............RB
Shippy,T............ X)B
Frye, L.................TB
Baumann, J........... JC
Houston, M........ J)B
Knight, P.............QB
Seit^, S............. QB
Galupi, H.............QB
Lhotsky, G............. J>
Geary, M...............
Kuhn, E............... QB

16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
26
27
28
29
30
31

61
72

/6
j2

y6
.................RT

94
A'7

01
21
1o
lo
9

HilLA............ .....QB
Hammond, S.......X)B
Smith, W........
Gashgarian, M.... WR
Roberts, Q...... .....FS
Lewis, G......... ....DB
Woodfolk, S. „ ....RB
Conway, C...... ....JIB
Marratta, J....... ....LB
Reifsnydei; B... ....JIB
Cochran, M...WR/DB
Baumann, B.J.., ...JIB
DeMickele, D.„ ...DB
HiU, C.............. ....RB
PenhoUow, J..... ..JIB

32 Koehle, M...........JB 52
33 Russell, D............ TB 53
34 Maiiani, A.........OLB 54
35 Lang,M..............jsfl 55
36 Walker, J..............LB 56
37 Glauner, D...........iB 57
39 Clare, S................ FB 58
40 Gentile, M.......... XB 59
41 Stone, P................RB 60
43 Bames, M........... JB 61
44 Dudowski, T....... .LB 62
46 Johnson, A..........J3B 63
47 Bryan, N.............ILB 64
50 Nagy,S............. OLB 65
51 Pfcrkins,J............ ILB 66

JEFF JACOBS ....................
MATT MILLER..................
JOHNMESSURA .............
DELVIN PICKETT.............
MICHAEL EDWARDS......
JASON PERKINS ...............
AL DONAHUE...................
MICHAEL BARNES .........
GEORJ LEWIS....................
WADE SMITH.....................
MARIO HOUSTON............

Pickett, D.............DL
Hitched, G........OL
Vaccaro, M........ .TT.H
Ross, A............... JLB
Tanner, J.............. OL
Schrimper; E........ TE
SchmidhamCT,K..JDL
Samargia, T....... OLB
Sparenbu^,B......DL
Jacobs, J.............. DL
Spisak, W.............OL
Rose, C...........„...OL
Harris, A..............OL
Powell, B.... ...... OL
Johnson. I............ DL

67
68
69
70
71
72
74
75
76
78
80
82
83
84
87

Bauer, J................OL
11ghe,T...............OL
Edwards, R......... .DT
McCloskey, J...... J)E
Young, I...............OL
Miller; M............JDL
Nickel, S..............OL
Kegarise, M......... OT
Messura, J...........DL
Miller; R..............OL
V«dlmer,C............TE
Robison, K.........WR
0'C«Mnor,T........ WR
Medred,R.......... J)B
Holt,J................WR

.... DE
... DT
... DT
...DE
..ILB
..ILB
OLB
.... SS
...CB
..CB
...FS
88
89
90
92
93
94
95
96
97

Heebsh,B............ TE
Rounds, C............TE
Castellarin, G.......DE
Whitfield, P.........DL
Murphy, P............DE
Don^ue, A..........LB
Simmons, R.........DB
Edwards, M.........LB
Johnson, M..........DE

CLARION UNIVERSITY
OFFENSE
7
3
75
52
65
62
76
84
15
30
20

DEFENSE

BRENDANNAIR......
ART WALKER
BRIAN AMMERLAAN
JOHNWNEK............
STEVE HORVAT.....
CRAIG LUCAS........
RUSS KLEIN...................
TIM BROWN..........
MIKE CARTER...........
BRAD KLINE.......
KENDWOREK ....

1 Spears, A....... ......TB
2 AUeman, R__ ....WR
3 Walker, A....... ......SE
4 Jones, C.......... .....TB
5 Casarella, A.... .....DB
6 Burmeisto; D......DB
7 Nair,B............ .....SE
8 Gleaton, J....... ....WR
9 McMonagle, T. ....J>K
10 Barto,T..........
11 DeMatteo, J....
12 Zak, C............. ....
13 Ponder, E......... ....DB
14 Myers, T......... •QB-P
15 Carter, M......... ....QB
16 Fraser, J........... ...WR
17 Boyer, R........... ....PK

..........

.....

18 Rock, D...............DE
19 Cramer, P...... ......PK
20 Dworek, K.... .......TB
21 Henry, D........ .....DB
22 Av«y, D........ ....DB
23 GaiUot, J........ ....DE
24 PtetrilLJ......... .....RB
25 Martin, B........ ....WR
26 Johnson, B...... ....DB
27 Giroski, A....... ....DB
28 Thompstm, C. „.... TB
29 Smith, T.......... ....WR
30 Kline, B.......... ....TB
31 Andrews, F.. ....LB
32 DeFoor, j........
33 Volciak, J.............LB
34 Pritts, B........... ...WR

SE

OT

35 Tonini, J..............J?B
36 Stone, S............... DB
37 Adams, B............J)B
38 Stockslager, D...... SS
39 Sinclair, B............ TE
40 Bratcher, R...........LB
41 Graezyk, P...........TB
42 Reid, M...............DE
43 Mehalic, G............FB
44 Homidge, J......... JDB
45 Polaski, B............ DB
46 Peters, J..............X)B
47 Simeo, E.............. LB
48 Bonson, D...........WR
49 Weaver, K........... XB
50 Hamlett,B...........XB
51 Caruso,D............XB

94
58
50
77
57
49
51
22
26
11
44

GARY THOMAS........
JASONREINHART ...
BOHAMLEIT ...........
CARLOS WARNER ...
DAMON MAZOFF....
KEVIN WEAVER.......
DOUG CARUSO........
DAMON AVERY ........
BERNARD JOHNSON
JACQUE DeMATTEO
JIMHORNIDGE.........

52 Wnek,J..............OG
69 Smith, B.......... ....OL
53 Polinsky, J......... LB
70 Gillespie, E...... ...OG
54 Peterson, R........ NG
71 Sims, S............ ....OL
55 Oberlin, T.......... LB
72 Hodcn.T..........
56 Kirwin, C............XB 73 Hunter, W........ ....OL
57 Mazofif, D............ LB 74 Espy,J............ ...OG
...OL
58 Reinhatt, J.........LB
75 Ammerlaan. B.. ...OT
59 Styer;J...............XB
76 Klein, R............ ...OT
60 HoUenbush, J......OL
77 Warner, C......... ...DT
61 Yamevich, K.......OL
78 Wright, E..........
62 Lucas, C.............. OC 79 Yetter, G........... ..X)E
63 Lubic, T.............. OL 80 Harper, K.......... ...OL
.WR
64 Mariano, E.......... NG 81 Kirsch,R,......... .WR
65 Horvat, S............. OT 82 Dressier, K........ ,..LB
66 Frazekas, J...........OL 83 Bearer, A...........
67 Town, J................OL 84 Brown, T........... .WR
68 Hoover, J............ J)E 85 Ginder, G........... ..TE
WR

ERIE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
©1990 The Coca-Cola Company. “Coca-Cola’

IT

and the Dynamic Ribbon device are trademarks of The Coca-Cola Company.

...DE
...DT
...NG
...DT
...DE
...LB
...LB
,..CB
..CB
...FS
... SS
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99

Lehmarm, B......... DE
Dovenspike, A. ...WR
Terza, C...............DE
Mackewidi, J....... TE
Woodruff, T.........DE
Ddp, J................. dE
Blackburn, R........DL
Swink, J............... LB
Thomas, G...........DE
Accord, E.............DT
Kindel, S............. J>K
Hayco^, R.......... LB
Coleman, C..........DE
Mickey, J.............DL

CLARION UNIVERSITY 1990 ROSTER
Accord, Eric .................. DT, 6-3,200, So.
Mogadore, OH/Mogadore
Adams, Bill................... DB, 5-11, 170, Jr.

Red Lion, PA/Red Lion
Alleman, Ryan............... TE, 6-3,190, So.
Beaver Falls, PA/Blackhawk
Ammerlann, Brian ........ OT, 6-5, 266, Sr.
Yuma, AZ/G. Livingston
Andrews, Frank............. LB, 6-0, 210, Fr.
Cleveland, OH/Glenville
Avery, Damon...................DB, 5-7,160, Sr.
Farrell, PA/Farrell
Barto, Tim........................QB, 6-0,175, So.
Manheim, PA/Manheim Central
Bearer, Andrew............. WR, 6-0,195, So.
Hastings, PA/Northem Cambria

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.

Blackburn, Richard........ DL, 6-2, 219, Fr.
N. Canton, OH/Glen Oak
Bonson, Darren...............WR, 6-0,185, Fr.
Etters, PA/Red Land
Boyer, Rich........................PK. 6-0,200, Fr.
Mogadore, OH/Mogadore
Bratcher, Richard............LB, 6-0,196, So.
Pittsburgh, PA/Perry
Brown, Tim.......................TE, 6-3,214, So.
Pittsburgh, PA/Thomas Jefferson
Burmeister, Dave ........... DB, 6-0,165, Jr.
Coalport, PA/Glendale
Carter, Mike .................. QB, 6-3,195, Sr.
Akron, OH/Akron-Ellet
Caruso, Doug..................LB, 5-10,204, Sr.
Mt. Pleasant, PA/Mt. Pleasant
Casarella, Angelo........ DB, 5-10,150, So.
Berwick, PA/Berwiek
Coleman, Chris...............DE, 6-2,220, Fr.
Marblehead, MA/MCI
Cramer, Paul.................. PK, 5-10, 170, Fr.
Greenville, PA/Greenville
DeFoor, Jon.................... RB, 5-9,195, So.
Ringgold, PA/Punxsutawney
Delp, Jason....................... DE, 6-2, 210, Fr.
Shermans Dale, PA/Susquenita
DeMatteo, Jacque............. FS, 6-0, 192, Sr.
Clearfield, PA/Clearfield
Dovenspike, Adam......... WR, 6-0,165, Fr.
Rural Valley, PA/Shannock Valley
Dressier, Kevin..................LB, 6-0,200, Fr.
Winfield, PA/Selinsgrove
Dworek, Ken.................... TB, 6-2, 205, Sr.
Scottdale, PA/Southmoreland

Espy, John.......................... OT, 6-5,259, Jr.
Tyrone, PA/Juniata Valley
Frazekas, Jason................OL, 6-2,250, Fr.
United, PA/Mt. Pleasant
Fraser, Jack................. WR, 5-10,160, So.
Seward, PA/United
Gaillot, John.................. LB, 5-11,215, So.
Freeport, PA/Freeport
Gillespie, Ed...................OG, 5-1,265, Fr.
Wyoming, PA/Wyoming
Ginder, Greg..................WR, 6-4,200, So.
Manheim, PA/Manheim Central
Giroski, Alex................. DB, 5-10,180, Jr.
Farrell, PA/Farrell
Gleaton, Jonathon.........WR, 5-7,150, So.
Washington, D.C./T. Roosevelt

Graczyk, Pat.................... RB, 6-0, 204, Fr.
Natrona Heights, IWHighlands
Hamlett, Bo...................... NG, 6-1, 243, Sr.
Logan, OHT^ranklin
Harper, Kevin................. WR, 5-8,160, Fr.
Erie, PA/Tech Memorial
Haycock, Robert............. LB, 6-2,198, So.
Berwick, PA/Berwick
Henry, Damien................ DB, 5-8,170, Fr.
Lancaster, PA/McCaskey
Hoden, Tim....................... OG, 6-1,236, Jr.
Sheffield, PA/Sheffield
Hollenbush, Jeff.............. OL, 6-3,255, So.
Hummelstown, PA/Lower Dauphin
Hoover, Jim..................... DL, 6-3,215, So.
Duncansville, PA/Hollidaysburg
Hornidge, Jim...................DB, 5-9,193, Sr.
Paramus, NJ/Paramus
Horvat, Steve....................OC, 6-3,270, Sr.
Irwin, PA/Penn Trafford
Hunter, Willie................. OG, 6-2,223, So.
Cleveland Heights, OH/Cleveland Heights
Johnson, Bernard........... DB, 5-11,180, Jr.
Philadelphia, PA/Overbrook
Jones, Chris................... RB, 5-10,165, So.
Bowie, MD/Bowie
Kindel, Scott.................. PK, 5-11,207, So.
Sligo, PA/Clarion
Kirsch, Ron......................WR, 6-0,170, Fr.
Nicktown, PA/Northem Cambria
Kirwin, Chris....................LB, 6-0,213, Sr.
Franklin, PA/Franklin
Klein, Russ....................... OT, 6-3,264, So.
Pittsburgh, PA/North Catholic
Kline, Brad.................... TB, 5-11,168, So.
Troy, OH/Troy
Lehmann, Brent............... DE, 6-4,195, Fr.
Gaithersburg, MD/Gaithersburg
Lubic, Todd.......................OL, 6-1,215, Fr.
Etters, PA/Red Land
Lucas, Craig....................OG, 6-1,260, So.
Butler, PA/Butler
Mackewich, Joe...............TE, 6-2,210, So.
Pittsburgh, PA/Brentwood
Mariano, Ed.....................NG, 6-0,220, Fr.
Hazleton, PA/Hazleton
Martin, Basil.....................WR, 6-2,180, Jr.
Washington, PA/Trinity
MazofT, Damon............... LB, 6-1,228, So.
Smithmill, PA/Clearfield
McMonagle, Tom............ PK, 5-11,175, Jr.
Holsopple, PA/Bishop McCort
Mehalic, George.............. FB, 6-2,240, So.
Turtle Creek, PA/Central Catholic
Mickey, John.....................DE, 6-9,220, Jr.
State College, PA/State College
Myers, Tim.....................QB-P, 6-2,201, Jr.
Wilcox, PA/Johnsonburg
Nair, Brendan...............WR, 5-10,150, Sr.
New Bethlehem, PA/Redbank Valley
Oberlin, Tim......................LB, 6-1,200, Fr.
Manheim, PA/Manheim Central
Peters, Jeremy................. DB, 6-3,171, Fr.
Lewisberry, PA/Red Land
Peterson, Robert............. DL, 6-1,241, So.
Irvona, PA/Glendale

21

Petrill, John...................... RB, 5-7, 168, Fr.
Hazleton, PA/Hazleton
Polaski, Brian................ DB, 5-11, 195, Fr.
Pennsauken, NJ/MCI
Polinsky, Jeff................... LB, 5-9,200, Fr.
Minersville, PA/Minersville
Ponder, Eldridge............ DB, 5-11,172, Fr.
Cleveland, OH/Collinwood
Pritts, Brian...................WR, 5-11,160, Fr.
Tarrs, PA/Southmoreland
Reid, Mike.......................De, 5-11,200, So.
Pasadena, MD/Chesapeake
Reinhart, Jason...............DL, 6-1,245, So.
Lititz, PA/Ephrata
Rock, Devin.......................DE, 5-9,175, Fr.
Summerville, PA/Clarion Limestone
Simko, Eric........................LB, 6-1,190, Fr^.
N. Huntingdon, PA/Norwin
Sims, Stanley....................OL, 6-4,270, So.
Harvey's Lake, PA/Lake Lehman
Sinclair, Bill.......................TE, 6-2,205, Fr.
Westmoreland City, PA/Norwin
Smith, Brock...................OL, 5-11,230, Fr.
Derry, PA/Derry
Smith, Tim........................TE, 6-2,184, Jr.
Trafford, PA/Penn Trafford
Spears, Aaron.................TB, 5-11,170, So.
Oxon Hill, MD/Oxon Hill
Stockslager, Dusty........... DB, 6-0,185, Jr.
Chambersburg, PA/Chambersburg
Stone, Shane....................DB, 5-11,175, Fr.
Greenville, PA/C.Perry/Greenville
Styer, Jeff.........................NG, 6-0,230, So.
AkiOTi, OH/Ephrata
Swink, Joe....................... LB, 6-0,204, Fr.
Dawson, PA/Connellsville
Terza, Clint..................... DE, 6-1, 182, Fr.
Patton, PA/Cambria Heights
Thomas, Gary..................DE, 6-2,208, Jr.
Gibsonia, PA/Deer Lakes
Thompson, Craig...........RB, 5-10,175, So.
Glenshaw, PA/Shaler
Tonini, Jay....................... RB, 5-9,203, So.
Butler, PA/Butler
Town, James.................... OL, 6-2, 275, Fr.
Johnstown, PA/Bishop McCort
Volciak, Joe..................... LB, 6-2,212, Fr.
W. Hazleton, PA/W. Hazleton
Walker, Art......................WR, 6-0,170, Jr.
Pittsburgh, PA/Baldwin
Warner, Carlos...............DL, 6-3, 245, So.
Cleveland Heights, OH/Cleveland Heights
Weaver, Kevin..................LB, 6-2,210, Jr.
Lititz, PA/Warwick
Wnek, John...................... OG, 6-2,238, Sr.
Silver Spring, MD/Springbrook
Woodruff, Tim................DE, 6A, 220, Fr.
Smethport, PA/Smethport
Wright, Ernest.................DE, 6-0,185, Fr.
Danville, PA/Danville
Yamevich, Kevin............OL, 6-0, 215, Fr.
W. Brownsville, PA/Brownsville
Yetter, Glenn................... OT, 6-2, 250, So.
Steelton, PA/Steelton Highspire
Zak, Chris........................QB, 6-1,175, Fr.
Sagamore, PA/Shannock Valley

Qood Luc^

In the history of the worlds great sports cars,
Scots

success has most often resulted from adherence to the
following principle: When everyone zigs... zag.

HOUSE OF EDINBORO
FACTORY DESIGNER SHOWROOM ROEFTE 6N EDINBORO

Hours:
Weekdays 8-4 ^ Saturday 9-1
Cani-800-NlSSAN-6kxmaclitbnailioa.
22

BufltforthfilftjnianRSCCf

i

1989 Individual Statistics
Rushing

Receiving
YDS
1793
1727
1599
1516
1509
1443
1120
1232
1349
1341

Thompson, Indiana
Pringle, Cal St. Fullerton
Smith, Florida
Bryant, Iowa St.
Gray, Texas Tech
Robinson, N. Illinois
Ezor, Michigan St.
Douglas, Louisiana Tech
Ma^s, Georgia Tech
Thomas, Penn St.

AVG
5.0
5.8
5.6
5.1
5.7
6.5
5.0
4.4
5.4
5.1

TD
24
16
14
19
18
19
16
11
8
5

Totai Offense
RSH
Ware, Houston
-38
Detmer, BYU
-127
S. Mitchell, Utah
-78
B. Mitchell, S. La.
1311
McGwire, SDSU
-228
Leach, New Mexico -210
Willis, Florida St.
-120
Harris, W. Virginia
919
Barnhill, Wake Forest 366
Taylor, California
46

PAS
4699
4560
3211
1966
3651
3573
3124
1939
2454
2738

CMP
265
104
214
125
365
107
211
131
128
152

YDS
1689
1115
900
1315
903
1425
816
1024
634
1089

TD
22
9
5
13
4
16
2
10
2
18

Kickoff Returns
TOT
4661
4433
3133
3277
3423
3363
3004
2858
2820
2784

YPG
423.73
369.42
313.30
297.91
285.25
280.25
273.09
259.82
256.36
253.09

Passing
ATT
Detmer, BYU
412
Brown, Duke
163
Speitz, Cal St. Full. 309
Moore, Virginia
221
Ware, Houston
578
Scharr, Syracuse
169
Willis, Florida St.
346
Harris, W. Virginia 224
Frey, Ohio State
215
Oberg, Iowa State 245

Fieid Goais

CT
Hazard, Houston
142
Buchanan, Northwestern
94
Henley, Rice
81
Mathis, New Mexico
88
Gilbreath, San Diego St.
80
Bitson, Tulsa
73
M. Smith, Kansas St.
70
Palamara, Cal St. Fullerton 69
Gaines, Vanderbilt
67
D. Smith, Utah
73

Smith, So. Miss
Bellamy, Illinois
Oldham, Oregon
Means, Fresno St.
Marshall, Georgia
Gray, Air Force
Boykin, Kansas
Patterson, No. Illinois
Grant, Stanford
Johnson, Kentucky

NO
14
14
14
18
16
21
14
15
16
21

YDS
455
432
402
509
445
571
365
390
412
537

/
TD
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1

AVG
32.50
30.86
28.71
28.28
27.81
27.19
26.07
26.00
25.75
25.75

Punt Returns
YDS
4560
1479
2671
2078
4699
1625
3124
1939
1900
2242

TD
32
14
20
18
46
9
20
16
12
9

Rating
175.6
161.0
156.1
156.1
152.5
152.2
150.7
145.8
145.7
143.7

Hargrove, Ohio
Jackson, Ball St.
Pickens, Fresno St.
Synder, Hawaii
Hughes, Nebraska
Smith, Louisville
McDuffie, Penn St.
Campbell, Colorado
Buckley, Florida St.
Vincent, Wisconsin

NO
17
16
30
19
15
14
19
25
22
17

YDS
309
262
470
293
227
207
278
365
313
235

Doyle, Alabama
McCallum, Oregon
Anderson, Houston
Thomas, Virginia Tech
Hanson, Washington St.
Fuess, Tulsa
Wright, Arkansas
Nicholl, Central Michigan
Gardocki, Clemson
Blanchard, Oklahoma St.

FGA
25
29
36
25
27
23
23
24
26
26

PGM
22
22
22
21
21
20
20
20
20
20

FG/G
2.00
2.00
2.00
1.91
1.91
1.82
1.82
1.82
1.82
1.82

Punting
NO
36
45
52
69
49
57
59
51
40
44

Rouen, Colorado
Maggio, UCLA
Myers, Washington St.
McCarthy, Purdue
Parker, South Carolina
Rutter, Baylor
Keen, California
Luke, Colorado St.
Hertzog, West Virginia
Gardocki, Clemson

AVG
45.86
45.24
44.73
44.57
44.29
43.79
43.47
43.12
42.95
42.68

WHO CAN VOV TRUST?
MetLife, of course. From paying claims
promptly to providing expert advice, we’ll always
be there when you need us.

Interceptions
TD
2
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
1

AVG
18.18
16.38
15.67
15.42
15.13
14.79
14.63
14.60
14.23
13.82

Price, Houston
Navarro, E. Michigan
B. Smith, Georgia
K. Smith, Texas A&M
Briggs, Hawaii
Saul, Texas Tech
Blackmon, Baylor
Lyght, Notre Dame
Koperek, Pacific
Butler, Florida St.

NO
12
12
10
9
9
8
8
8
6
7

YDS
187
73
54
75
116
157
150
42
50
139

TD
2
0
0
1
1
0
2
0
0
1

l/G
1.09
1.09
.91
.82
.75
.73
.73
.67
.67
.64

SET MET. ITPAVS;
OMetLifcr
PEANUTS Charact^s © 1950,1952,1958,1960,1965,1»B8UjjtedFggtWBS|gigcate^

©1990 Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., NY NY

ACADEMIC
ALL^ERICAS
This list of notables
proves that athletics
and academics can mix.

Army defensive back Michael
Thorson and Augustana (S.D.)
linebacker David Gubbrud proved
their gridiron excellence extended
into the classroom, and were
named 1989 GTE Academic AllAmericas of the Year as cho­
sen by CoSIDA (College
Sports Information Directors
of America).
Thorson, a senior at West Point, compiled
a 3.99 GPA in economics while being
named First Team Academic All-America of
the Year in the University Division. For
Gubbrud, also a senior, the honor is twice as
nice. A biology major with a 3.96 GPA,
David was honored as 1988 Academic AllAmerica of the Year in the College Division.
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

Nebraska, Ball State, and Furman
each had two players named to the
University Division First Team.
Representing Nebraska were senior quar­
terback Gerry Gdowski and offensive line­
man Jake Young, also a senior. Ball State
seniors Ted Ashburn (OL) and David
Haugh (DB), and Furman seniors Kelly
Fletcher (DL) and Chris Roper (LB) also
received First Team honors.
In the College Division, Nebraska
Wesleyan and Northern Colorado each had
two First Team representatives. Nebraska I
Wesleyan had one representative on each

1989 ACADEMICi
ALL-AMERICAS
side of the ball, with senior running back
Scott Shaffer on the offensive side, and
senior defensive back Scott Shipman on
defense. Northern Colorado’s representa­
tives, senior Mike Yonkovich (DL) and
junior Tom Langer (LB), both preferred
defense.
Eligibility for the Academic All-America
team requires student-athletes to maintain
at least a 3.20 Grade Point Average while
being a starter or key reserve.

UNIVERSITY DIVISION
First-Team Offense
QB
RB
RB

Ill,

.

imr:

Lineman Eric Chumbley of Georgetown
was a near perfect chemistry major.

ACADEMIC
ALL-AMERICAS

Gerry Gdowski, Nebraska, Sr., 3.56,
accounting
Thomas Frooman, The Citadel, Gr.,
3.75, business adm.
Fred Wittingham, Brigham Young,
Sr., 3.24, psychology

DL

WR Chris Baniszewski, No. Arizona,
Sr., 3.85, poli. sci/pre-law
WR John Jackson, USC, Sr., 3.30, busi­
ness finance
TE Jeremy Garvey, Colgate, Jr., 3.48,
political science
OL Ted Ashburn, Ball State, Sr., 3.78,
chemistry
OL Bruce Brineman, Purdue, Gr., 5.67
(6.0 scale), industrial tech.
OL Dan Hackman, Illinois State, Sr.,
3.68, business admin.

Purdue’s Bruce Brineman earned
a first team berth with a 3.67 GPA
in industrial technology

OL
OL
PK

Joseph Staysniak, Ohio ^tate, Sr.,
3.49, marketing
Jake Young, Nebraska, Sr., 3.39,
finance
Jason Hanson, Washington State,
So., 3.79, pre—med '

First-Team Defense
DL

Donald Davey, Wisconsin, Sr., 3.67,
mechanical engineer

■'

Kelly Fletcher, Furman, Sr., 3.39,
accounting
DL Doug Kley, Duke, Sr., 3.45, electri­
cal engineering
DL Glover Lawrence, Yale, Sr., 3.51,
history
LB Pat Jackson, Bowling Green, Jr.,
4.0, business
LB Michael McGowan, Montana, Jr.,
3.97, business mgmt.
LB Chris Roper, Furman, Sr., 3.67,
physics
DB David Haugh, Ball State, Sr., 3.57,
sports journalism
DB Stacy Russell, Mississippi State, Sr.,
3.57, general business admin.
DB Todd Sandroni, Mississippi, Jr.,
3.57, pharmacy
DB Michael Thorson, Army, Sr., 3.99,
economics
DB Mike Welch, Baylor, Jr., 3.71, com­
puter science
K
Brent Herbel, Minnesota, Sr., 3.26,
biology/pre-med

WR Mitchell Glieber, SMU, Sr., 3.63,
TV/radio
WR Rob Varano, Lehigh, Gr., 3.42, eco­
nomics
TE Dave Roberts, Florida State, Jr.,
3.57, communications
OL Mark Fryer, South Carolina, GR.,
3.71, accounting
OL Derrick Isackson, Montana State,
Sr., 3.78, pre-law
OL Greg Lahr, Kentucky, So., 3.76,
business
OL Eric Still, Tennessee, Sr., 3.32,
transportation/logistics
OL Steven Tardy, Rutgers, Sr., 3.46,
civil engineering
PK Mike Wood, Furman, Sr., 3.78, eco­
nomics

Second-Team Defense
DL
DL
DL

Second-TeamOffense

DL

QB

LB

RB
RB

Eric Arnold, Eastern Illinois, Jr.,
3.79, accounting
Chris Howard, Air Force, Jr., 3.66,
political science
Stefen Scotton, Georgia Tech, Jr.,
3.40, electrical engineering

LB
LB

Ben Cowan, Boston Univ., Sr., 3.43,
biology
Steve Hillegeist, Princeton, Sr.,
3.50, economics
Tom Mathiasmeier, Texas Tech, Sr.,
3.34, finance
Chris Willertz, Michigan State, Sr.,
3.36, history
Greg Gamica, Ball State, Sr., 3.32,
business
Andy McCarroll, Vanderbilt, Sr.,
3.76, English
Mark Tingstad, Arizona State, Sr.,
3.43, accounting

LB
DB
DB
DB
P

Pat Tyrance, Nebraska, Jr., 3.36,
pre-med
Brian Hennen, Yale, Sr., 3.33,
history
Mark Kiefer, James Madison, Sr.,
3.65, biology/pre-med
Louis Riddick, Pittsburgh, Jr., 3.43,
economics
Jeff Jones, Cincinnati, Jr., 3.22,
criminal justice

COLLEGE DIVISION
First-Team Offense
QB

Tracy Kendall, Alabama A&M, So.,
3.91, engineering
RB Larry Anderson, Luther College,
Sr., 3.72, economics/acctg.
RB Scott Shaffer, Nebraska Wesleyan,
Sr., 3.61, biology
WR Anthony Lapes, MIT, Sr., 4.60 (5.0
scale), math/computer sci.
WR Mike Whitehouse, St. Norbert, Sr.,
3.33, business admin.
TE Jonathon Voss, Hamline, Sr., 3.40,
physical education
OL Andrew Barrish, Waynesburg, Jr.,
3.89, sports medicine
OL Peter Burns, Ithaca, Sr., 3.60,
accounting
OL Eric Chumbley, Georgetown
College, 3.96, chemistry

i: i: ,

cte aulomale'has ever me tc such great Mils fi

To be fair, most
[lost minivans
miniVarLS do exactly
pyartlv what
they’re designed to do: haul cargo from one
place to another.^
^ vpichprobablyn^scomparisons
wim the Oldsmobile Silhouette rather
unm Because, as you can clearly see,
the Srlhouette*is designed and engineered
with more than cargo space in mind.
^ j more, in fed
V\Tith Its advanced design, sophisticated
technology and remarkable luxury it has
toe capacity to do something you never
dieted a multipurpose passenger vehicle
could actually d().
^
Namely excite and intrigue yoa
For starters. Silhouette comes standard
with seven individual contoured bucket
seats, instead of the usual bench seats. Which
means you won’t ever feel like you’re sitting
inside a bus.
It also comes with a lot of other stan­
dard features, including a 3.Miter V6 engine,
air coDditforiing, an AJWEM stereo systern,
full driver instrumentation, and one of the

mncf advanced
aH-iranroH solar coated windshields in
most
the world.
Of course, Silhouette’s technology also
extends into the realm of versatility Any or
all of the five rear seats can be removed
easily by one person to create up to 112 6
cubic feet of cargo space,
And in addition to tlie innovative
features we put into the Silhouette, we also
put another one on top of it It’s called the
Oldsmobile Edge7 A comprehensive customer satisfection plan designed to make
Oldsmobile the industry leader in total
owner satisfectioa
To find out more about it, or about the
Silhouette,visit your nearest Oldsmobile
dealer today Or, if you prefer, simply call
toll-fiee, 1-800-242-OLDS, Monday-Friday
9am.-7p.rn.EST.
©1990 GM Corp. All rights reserved

BSilhouelle

■hBNewGenerationofOlclsnx3bile

Official Van I'-or NCAA Championships.

1989 ACADEMIC
ALL-AMERICAS
OL
OL
PK

Dean Gengler, Fort Hays State, Sr.,
3.86, history
Mark Szynkowski, Alfred, Sr., 3.74,
accounting
Shawn Perron, Rose-Hulman, Sr.,
3.71, elec, engineering

First-Team Defense
DL
DL
DL
DL
LB
LB
LB
DB
DB
DB
DB

Bill Clayton, Abilene Christian, Sr.,
3.87, political science
Brett Potts, Pittsburg State, Sr., 3.54,
biology
Mike
Yonkovich, Northern
Colorado. Sr., 4.0, social sciences
Joe Zeszotarski, Muhlenberg, Jr.,
3.85, economics
David Gubbrud, Augustana (S.D.),
Sr., 3.96, biology
Tom Langer, Northern Colorado, Jr.,
3.93, math/computer science
Robert O’Toole, Carnegie Mellon,
Jr., 4.0, mechanical eng.
Bryan Ellington, Centre College,
Sr., 3.97, chemistry/math
David Kane, Nichols College, Sr.,
3.89, economics
Rick Rodgers, St. Cloud State, Sr.,
3.80, accounting
Scott Shipman, Nebraska Wesleyan,
Jr., 4.0, biopsychology
Travis Croll, Grove City College,
Sr., 3.86, mechanical eng.
Jeff Fairchild, St. Joseph’s (Ind.),
Sr., 3.40, mgmt./marketing/info,
systems

Army’s Michael Thorson compiled a
3.99 GPA in economics to/win
Ail-America of the Year honors.

David Gubbrud of Augustana took
top honors in 1989 after making the
Academic squad in '88.

Second-Team Offense

Second-Team Defense

QB

DL

RB
RB
WR
WR
TE
OL
OL
OL
OL
OL
PK

David Battisti, Susquehanna, Jr.,
3.81, political science
Fran Bellante, Carnegie Mellon, Jr.,
3.40, information systems
Jim Tomasin, UC Davis, Sr., 3.55,
physiology
Sean Grady, Abilene Christian, Jr.,
3.62, business admin.
Ed Huonder, Rose-Hulman, JY.,
3.69, electrical engineering
Karl Kuhn, Arkansas Tech, So., 4.0,
biology/pre-med
Timothy Bolser, Denison, Sr., 3.82,
computer science
Ken Jones, Wash. & Jefferson, Sr.,
3.53, chemistry/pre-med
William Jones, Hampden-Sydney,
Jr., 3.84, chemistry
Mark Smith, Grand Valley State,
So., 3.65, pre-med
Thomas Wilson, Hampden-Sydney,
Sr., 3.63, mathematics
Greg Maw, Cal Lutheran, Sr., 3.83,
political science

What many other car repair guarantees
cover after 90 days.

r

Stacy Hand, Morningside, Jr., 3.78,
business/accounting
DL Joseph Hatala, Ashland, Sr., 3.73,
political science
DL Mark Roshell, N. Dakota State, Sr.,
3.76, biology
DL Brad Shamla, Moorhead (Minn.),
Sr., 3.63, engineering
LB Todd Culp, Nebraska/Omaha, Sr.,
3.60, civil engineering
LB Darcy Prather, MIT, Jr., 4.50 (5.0
scale), comp, sci./elec. eng.
LB David Russell, Shippensburg, Sr.,
3.43, computer science
DB Dave Conn, Wash. & Jefferson, Jr.,
3.69, psychology
DB Mike Hoffman, Muhlenberg, Jr.,
3.99, biology
DB Chuck Martin, Millikin, Sr., 3.68,
accounting
DB Victor Terebuh, Wittenberg, Jr.,
3.89, biology/pre-med

The Lifetime Service Guar­
antee lasts for as long as
you own your Ford, Lincoln or Mercury.
umiMC
SfRVKE
ClMIMNrm

Most car repair guarantees last for only 90
days or 4,000 miles. Ours lasts a lifetime.
A lifetime means you only pay for a
covered repair once. If it ever needs to be
fixed again, just hand a copy of the bill to
your dealer. He’ll fix it free. Free parts. Free
labor. For as long as you own your vehicle.
A lifetime means it doesn’t matter how
many miles you drive. Or if your car is
new or used. And that means LSG covers
more parts and labor longer than anyone
else, ’'^ich makes it
rr%//%ADc
WM
America’s best car
car FOR QUALITY CARS
repair guarantee.
Ask a participating Ford or Lincoln-Mercury dealer for
LSG. Because Peace of Mind is having a
guarantee that won’t disappear.

Linebacker Pat Jackson aced the
Bowling Green business department
with a 4.0 GPA.

© 1990 Ford Motor Company

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

FORD
MERCURY
LINCOLN

A good leatker coat
.skould liave two arms and fifty feet.

iml>erlan(l and

are regiatereJ traJemarlu of Tke TimlierlanJ C<

In tkii
many
tilings tkat can ke mass-produced.
But not a coat like tkis.
Not a coat tkat requires over fifty
feet of tke finest caIfskin avadaUe anywkere on eartk. Calfskin so perfect it
can te tanned as is witk vegetakle oils.
Never painted or color corrected.
Not a coat wkose every square
inck kas undergone tke most expensive,
most effective waterproofing known to
man. A process in wkick we flood
tke leatker witk a special waterproof
i compound wkile it is keing tanned in
tke drum, not afterwards.
TkIS IS tke only tecknique
tkat insures total penetra­
tion oftke waterproofing
agent. Tke only tecknique
good enougk for a
garment tkat kears 1
our name.
|
Not a coat
wkose comfort seems
to increase tke more
you put it under tk(
© Tke Timkerland C^ompany

stress of active use. Because of tke extra
feet of calfskin, tke extra kours
of tailoring we spend opening
up tke kack and skoulder di­
mensions. Adding features suck as
two-piece underarm gussets to max­
imize your freedom of movement.
And certainly not a coat
wkose detailing is so meticulous
tkat every zipper is milled and
tumkled smootk so as to not injure
tke leatker, every kutton is genuine
korn or krass, and every kutton
kole is kotk caIfskin kound and cleanstitcking inside and out.
In leatker coats tkat
:k tkis latter feature.
reds of lining will kegin
^ to emerge in a matter
of montks. But
Timkerland design­
ers do not tkink in
terms of montks. Tkey
take a longer view
of product longevity.
iSetting tkeir sigkts on

a decade or two. Or more.
Tkere is a metkod to our
madness, and it is perfectly
clear. We will do anytking for
tke extra comfort and confi­
dence of our customers.
Confidence,
oniiaence, fc
lor examp
tkat gettmg
eettine caugkt in a sudden
sudd
downpour won t spoil your day or
your iValuakle calfskin investment.
C,*kkdence tkat on
on tke
me nigkt
mght your
kudd.ly spills a kteer on your sleeve,
you 11 need to do notking more tkan
find a little water and a sponge.
Tke way we see it, consumer con­
fidence is as kard to come ky, in tkis age
of skoddy products, as tke world s kigkest
quakty calfskin.
Like our leatker coats and jackets.
it can t ke mass-produced.

Boots, skoes, clotking,
wind, water, eartk and /sky.

The Tools of the Tailgating Trade
matches and fuel), unless you’re fond of raw chicken—and
ver been at a tailgate party, looking forward hungrily
to that charbroiled hamburger only to find out that
raw nerves.
• Footballs and Frisbees. For those who don’t want to
somebody forgot to bring the lighter fluid for the bar­
dodge between parked and moving cars (and people) to
becue? Ever find yourself standing or leaning on your car,
chase a Frisbee, bring along a board game or a deck of cards.
saying to yourself, “If only I’d brought chairs?”
• An ice chest with plenty of ice. Metal ice chests are
Ever get tired of sentences that start with the word “ever?”
best—they’ll keep food cold for 24-48 hours—but styro­
There’s an answer to all these questions (at least the first
foam or plastic will work for several hours. As alternatives
two—the last one is up to the copy editor): proper prepara­
to ice cubes, consider “artificial ice” packs like Blue® Ice
tion. By planning ahead, your next tailgate party can have
or freeze water overnight in a sealable plastic container.
all the equipment it needs, from footballs and Frisbees to
• Just in case the weather turns nasty, it’s a good idea to
trash bags and Trivial Pursuit.
bring a thermos or two of hot coffee. Before adding the coffee
Just follow this simple checklist:
at home, fill the thermos with boiling water and drain. That
• A folding table and folding or lounge chairs. For the
will keep the coffee hot for a much longer period of time.
less ambitious, the table is expendable, but unless you like
• A portable TV will keep you updated on games around
standing in one place for two hours or sitting on hot
the country, and if you want to liven up your party a little,
asphalt, chairs are very important.
bring along your portable stereo
• Napkins, plates, drinking cups and eating utensils (in
• An extra set of clothes. You may spill mustard or catsup
short, all the little things that are invariably forgotten until
on you and may not want to smell like a delicatessen for the
it’s time to eat).
rest of the afternoon.
• A large garbage bag for cups and plates, assuming the
• Bottle and can openers and a corkscrew
dishes aren’t your best china. Also, a separate grocery bag for
As for the food, virtually anything goes but the key once
recyclable aluminum cans and glass bottles is a good idea.
again is planning. Have everybody who will be at the party
• Paper towels to help with cleanup.
bring something, but don’t assume that the person bringing
• Depending on the menu of the day, you may need a bar­
the catsup and mustard will also remember to bring mayon­
becue or hibachi, complete with briquets, lighter fluid and
naise. Make a list and have everybody sign up to bring
matches. Some seasoned tailgaters prefer a gas-powered
camp stove. Regardless, remember the little things (like
something.

E

TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

4
peiichs

^

FAVOKITE'
4 (1 1/2 pounds) boneless,
skinless chicken breast halves
1 /4 cup each French's Yellow
Mustard and orange juice
concentrate

RILLED C
WITH BA
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
1 teaspoon rosemary leaves,
crushed
8 strips (8 ounces) bacon

Place chicken in plastic bag. Combine mustard, orange juice concen­
trate, vinegar and rosemary; pour over chicken. Marinate in refrigerator
for 1 hour. Wrap 2 bacon strips around each piece of chicken; secure
with toothpicks. Grill over medium-high heat, 20 to 25 minutes or until
done, basting with remaining marinade. Remove toothpicks before
serving.
Makes 4 servings.

ED SKIN
POTATO SALAD
2 pounds small red skin pota­
toes, cubed
1/2 cup mayonnaise
3 tablespoons French's Yellow
Mustard

1 /4 teaspoon seasoned salt
3 cups assorted cut-up
vegetables (broccoli, celery,
cherry tomatoes, green
onion)

Cook potatoes in boiling water about 12 minutes or until tender but
firm, drain. In a large bowl combine mayonnaise, mustard and
seasoned salt. Stir until well blended. Add potatoes and vegetables,
toss until well coated. Cover and chill several hours.
Makes about 6 servings.

Place pasta or potato salads in tightly sealed
plastic containers or plastic bags. Keep refrigera­
ted until ready to leave. Then place in portable
■Cooler, packing ice or freezer packs around containers.
Wrap hot casseroles with foil or thick towels before
packing in picnic basket to keep warm.

RUNCHY CORN
RELISH
1 /4 cup red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons French's Yellow
Mustard
1 teaspoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon seasoned salt
1 package (16 ounces) frozen

whole kernel corn, thawed
and drained
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/4 cup each chopped red
pepper and green onion

In a large bowl combine vinegar, mustard, sugar and seasoned salt; stir
well. Add remaining ingredients; toss. Cover and chill several hours.
Toss before serving.
Makes about 4 to 6 servings.

Make Your Tailgate a Winner With America's Favorite Mustard
Official Sweepstakes Entry Forms are
available at your participating French's
Mustard Retailer.

FREE
Tailgater” Booklet

No purchase necessary. Full rules and details at
your French's Retailer. Sweepstakes ends November
15,1990. For Official Entry Certificate, send a selfaddressed, stamped standard business envelope to
French's Tailgate Sweepstakes, P.O. Box 710488
Dept. D165, El Paso, TX 88571-0488.

Featuring great recipes and
valuable coupons FREE at
your local French's Retailer.
(Supplies are limited).
© 1990 Durkee-French Foods, A Division of Reckitt & Colman Inc.

...

* In the Continental U.S.

JOHN BARTIMOLE

Augustana’s Bob Reade (top
right) has built the ulti­
mate dynasty; while
the Four Horseman
and Tony Rice
represent the past i
and present
of Notre Dame’s
winning tradition.

With Our Action Packed Stadium Magazines You Can......

Dynasty.
Say that word to a sports fan, and teams like the
Yankees, the Steelers, the Celtics and the Canadians comei'
flashing immediately to mind as examples of legendary*
professional sports dynasties. From those teams came
such memorable phrases as, “Break up the Yankees!” ft.
and the Steelers’ immortal chant, “One for the thumb'” w'
referring to their quest for a fifth Super Bowl ring
College has had its own share of dynasties,
too—particularly in basketball, where for most of the ^
‘60s and part of the ‘70s, college hoop teams vied to be
the second best in the nation, because UCLA was the
undisputed king of the collegiate hardwood.
But what about college football? Has there ever been a
true dynasty on the collegiate gridiron? The question is
exacerbated by the fact that college football doesn’t
crown its king on the field, but in the media—at least on ■
the Division I level. And for that reason, the team with the
greatest college football dynasty—at least in recent
years—is undeniably Augustana.
Who? Augustana. And the Vikings have plenty of
ammo to back their claim.

Catch IHe excitement
CHOOSE FROM THESE
ACTION PACKED
OFFICIAL STADIUM
MAGAZINES

A free-lance writer living in Olean, N.Y.,
^ John Bartimole writes for the Big East

Conference, the NCAA and numerous
sports publications.
I*

A.

SJi

From the high-flying NBA to
the thrills of college football,
we're set to excite you with the
actual magazines from the big
games. Order magazines from
the games you loved, the games
you missed, the games you
shared the excitement of, or
start a collection. Put in your
order for any of the following
1990-91 publications and relive
all the excitement and thrills of
your favorite sports. Just fill in
the order form below and mail
today.

$7.00______ The Breeders Cup 1990

1990-1991 Reaular-Season
College BasketMlI Games

$7.00______ The Breeders Cup 1989

$5.00_____ Indiana vs._________________

$7.00______ The Breeders Cup 1988

$5.00_____ Michigan vs. ________________

$7.00______The Breeders Cup 1987

$5.00_____ Michigan St. vs. _____________

Notional Basketball Association

$5.00_____ TCU vs---------------------------------

Thoroughbred Horse Racing

$7.50_____ 1991 All-Star Game
$7.50_____ 1990 All-Star Game
HOOP Magazine Subscription
$17.95_____ 1990/91 Season

NHL GOAL Magazine Subscription
$14.95_____ NHL record Guide—additional $10.00

There are football teams
and football machines,

^
college programs
could be proclaimed a

Robert BecIr/ALL SPORT USA

>YNASTY
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

$5.00_____ UCLA vs. __________________
$5.00_____ Washington vs.______________

Also Available - Selected
Pre-1990 Bowls, $10
Ask for our List.
Bowl Programs can be mailed prior to game via
Federal Express. $10.00 additional.

Professional Sports Publications
P.O. Box 1750
Grand Central Station, NY, NY

1990 College Football
Regular Season
$5.00____ Arizona vs.________________
$5.00____ Arizona State vs.___________
$5.00____ California vs. _____________
$5.00____ Dartmouthvs. _____________
$5.00____ Hawaii vs. ________________
$5.00____ Indiana vs.________________
$5.00_____Michigan vs. _____________
$5.00_____Michigan St.vs.___________
$5.00____ Northwestern vs. __________
$5.00____ Oregon vs.________________
$5.00____ Oregon State vs. ___________
$5.00____ San Diego St. vs.___________
$5.00____ Stanford vs._______________
$5.00____ TCU vs. _________________
$5.00____ UCLA vs. ________________
$5.00____ Washington vs.____________
$5.00____ Washington State vs.
$5.00____ Disneyland Pigskin Classic
(Inaugural Issue)

10163

Name______________ __________________________
Address____________ ____________________________
City__________________ _________ StateZip
Amount Enclosed ______________________________
Send no cash. Orders include postage and handling. All magazines mailed within 2 weeks
after game. Orders accepted subject to availability. Quantities are limited.

1990-91 College Football
Postseason Bowl Gomes
$7.00____ Eagle Aloha Bowl
$7.00____ Mobil Cotton Bowl
$7.00____ East-West Shrine Classic
$7.00____ Sunkist Fiesta Bowl
$7.(X)____ Freedom Bowl
$7.00____ Mazda Gator Bowl
$7.00____ Sea World Holiday Bowl
$7.00____ Kodak Hula Bowl
$7.00____ Liberty Bowl
$7.00____ Federal Express Orange Bowl
$7.00____ Peach Bowi
$7.00____ Rose Bowl
$7.00____ USF&G Sugar Bowl
$7.00____ John Hancock Sun Bowl

DYNASTY
Consider these facts:
•The Vikings won four straight Division
III national championships from 1983
through 1986, an unprecedented accom­
plishment at any level of college football
play;
•Beginning with the first game of the
1983 season, and ending with the last
game of the 1987 season (a loss in the
quarterfinals of the playoffs), Augustana
put together a streak of 60 games in a row
without a defeat. That represents the sec­
ond longest unbeaten streak in all of
NCAA football history, eclipsed only by
the University of Washington, which went
63 games in a row without a defeat from
1907-1917;
•The only blemish during that 60-game
string was a season-opening 0-0 tie with
Elmhurst in 1986; that tie snapped a 37game winning streak, which is the fifth
longest in NCAA history, regardless of
division.
•Coach Bob Reade’s record since com­
ing to Augustana in 1979 is a glittering
109-13-1, which is a winning percentage
of .890. That winning percentage is the
highest in NCAA history—yes, even better
than Kriute Rockne, who compiled a
record of 105-12-5 for a winning percent­
age of .881. Further, Reade is the first
coach in NCAA history to win 100 foot­
ball games in 10 years.
And what does Bob Reade have to say
about the success of his football team?

“Beginning with
the first game of
the 1983 season
... Augustana put
together a streak
of 60 games in a
row without a
defeat.”
We really can’t brag on a 90 percent
winning record when our pre-n/ed school
has a better one,” he says. “More than 90
percent of Augustana’s pre-med students
are accepted by med schools when the
national average is around 60 percent.”
So, the small (enrollment—2,200) liberal
arts college, located in Rock Island, 111., has
reason to be proud—and to be called a
dyna.sty. Recently, the Vikings have fallen
on difficult (for them) times, slipping to an

With their success in the ’80s, the Miami
8-2 record in 1989. But, like all good dyna.sties, Augustana will be back—and soon.
Of course, there are other—more recog­
nizable—college football dynasties than
Augustana. And at the top of that list has
to be the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame.
A team you either love or love to hate,
Notre Dame has legions of fans across
America who argue that the Irish are the
greatest college football program of all
time—the ultimate Division I football
dynasty. And tho.se fans have a plethora of
facts with which to back their claim;
•Notre Dame has the highest winning
percentage of any college football team
with its .759 mark;
•Since the As.sociated Press poll began
in 1936, the Fighting Irish have won eight
national crowns (1943-46-47-49-66-73-7788), more than any other college. Notre
Dame also earned consensus national titles
in 1924, 1929 and 1930, and has enjoyed
18 different sea.sons in which it has been
voted national champion by at least one
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

recognized selector;
•Seven Notre Dame players have won
the Heisman Trophy (Angelo Bertelli, ‘43;
John Lujack, ‘47; Leon Hart ‘49; John
Lattner, ‘53; Paul Hornung, ‘56; John
Huarte, 64; and Tim Brown, ‘87), more
than any other college;
•The Fighting Irish have had at least 25
unanimous first-team All-Americans, which
supersedes all other schools. Additionally,
Notre Dame has had more than 70 different
consensus All-Americans, also more than
any other .school;
•Five Notre Dame coaches—Jesse
Harper, Knute Rockne, Frank Leahy, Ara
Parseghian and Dan Devine—have been
elected into the National Football
Foundatioii College Hall of Fame. Further,
the all-time winning percentages of
Rockne and Leahy are the two highest in
Division I football history.
Of course, none of this happened
overnight. In fact, the Fighting Irish lost
their first game ever—an 8-0 defeat to a

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bowl game wins than any other coach.

DISCUS

ATHLETIC

group from the University of Michigan on
Wednesday, Nov. 23, 1887—and didn’t
win their first game until a year later when
Notre Dame defeated the Harvard School
of Chicago, 20-0. It took seven years
before James L. Morrison became the
Fighting Irish’s first head coach in 1894,
and 26 years before the Irish had its first
All-America in the person of quarterback
Gus Dorais, whose favorite receiver was
none other than Knute Rockne.
The team’s first national championship
came some 37 years after that debut game,
in Rockne’s seventh season as head coach,
when the Four Horsemen finished 10-0
following a victory over Stanford in the
Rose Bowl.
The rest, of course, is history—a rich,
Irish history which certainly gives Notre
Dame a legitimate—if not airtight—claim
to being college football’s greatest
dynasty.
Fans from Alabama may beg to differ
with their counterparts in South Bend,
however. And though the Crimson Tide
may lack the national appeal of Notre
Dame, Alabama certainly has an arguable
stake at being termed a college football
dynasty.
The Tide has won at least a share of 11
national championships, beginning in 1925
when the pollsters were split as to whether
Alabama or Dartmouth was the nation’s best
team. A year later, four schools—Alabama,
Stanford, Lafayette and Navy—each was
crowned national champ by at least one
respected authority.
Alabama’s only unanimous choice as

best team in the land came in 1979, when
the second-ranked Tide won the title on
the field by beating top-ranked Penn State
in the Sugar Bowl. The game saw what
many consider to be one of college foot­
ball’s most dramatic goal-line stands as
the Nittany Lions faced a third-and-goal
from Alabama’s one-yard line late in the
game and trailing 14-7. Twice, the
Crimson Tide rebuffed Penn State, with
linebacker Barry Krauss stopping tailback
Mike Guman just short of the goal line to
seal the victory.
The Crimson Tide has app>eared in—and
won—more post-season bowl games than
any other team, though Notre Dame parti­
sans could argue that from 1925 to 1970, the
Fightin’ Irish shunned such spectacles and
refused to participate in them.
Of course, no claim to a dynasty would
be complete without a dominating coach,
and Alabama had in Paul “Bear” Bryant
arguably the most dominating coach in
modern college football. Bryant coached
Alabama for 25 years, compiling a record
of 232-46-9, for a sterling .824 winning
percentage. His overall winning percent­
age, when his head-coaching years at
Maryland, Kentucky and Texas A&M are
factored in, slips to an only slightly-less-

impressive mark of .780. He was selected
national coach of the year in 1961, 1971
and 1973, and was inducted into the
National Football Foundation College
Football Hall of Fame in 1986.
use can certainly be suggested as a col­
lege football dynasty, too. The Trojans
have been recognized as national champi­
ons at least 12 times, and were the consen­
sus choice in 1962, 1967, and 1972. They
split the title with Oklahoma, another
dynasty candidate, in 1974, with AP
crowning the Sooners as champs while
UPI dubbed the Trojans as the best in the
country.
What team has the best current shot to
wrest a claim of having a college football
dynasty? Miami of Florida, the defending
champ, certainly has viable—if prema­
ture—aspirations to be called a college
football dynasty, as the team attempts to
repeat as national champ. And Notre
Dame, experts say, may be ready to
reclaim the title from Miami.
Actually, there is one great college foot­
ball dynasty, one which certainly enjoys
the highest success rate year after year, and
one which grows in numbers as the sea­
sons roll on: college football fans.
Who can dispute that?

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Bobby Dodd is gone, but his memory
will live forever on the campus of the
Georgia Institute of Technology, where he
took the football program to heights it had
never before reached—^and hasn’t since.
In 1988, when Dodd was hospitalized at
age 79 for a kidney infection, an inopera­
ble tumor was discovered on his left lung.
Georgia’s state board of regents swiftly
made a rare exception to policy, which
prohibits the naming of public buildings in
honor of the living—and Georgia Tech’s
Grant Field became Bobby Dodd Stadium.
It was a fitting memorial to a man who
gave the school 57 years of uninterrupted
service as assistant coach, head coach, ath­
letic director and consultant for the
school’s alumni office.
In an era of notable Southern foot­
ball coaches, Dodd stood out. His
contemporaries included his predecessor at
Georgia Tech, Bill Alexander, his former
Tennessee mentor, Gen. Bob Neyland,
Alabama’s Paul “Bear” Bryant, Ole Miss’
Johnny Vaught, Auburn’s Ralph “Shug”
Jordan, Georgia’s Wally Butts and
Clemson’s Frank Howard.
Dodd, considered by many to be a
kinder, gentler coach than virtually
any of his colleagues, is remem­
bered as a gentleman almost as
much as he is remembered as a
coach. That he sat calmly in a fold­
ing chair beside a card table on the
sideline during games, hardly ever stand­
ing, simply added to his legendary stature.
Dodd’s football practices rarely lasted
more than an hour. He didn’t put much
stock in scrimmaging, and he seldom
made his players hit each other. In fact, his
teams sometimes played volleyball over
the goal posts rather than practice football.
DAVID DAVIDSON has covered college
sports for the Atlanta Journal and
Constitution for 19 years, and is a fre­
quent contributor to a number of national
sports magazines.

The Gentleman
From
GeoroiaTech

Until his death in 1988,
Dodd had devoted 57 straight years
to Georgia Tech athletics.

“Coach Dodd dele­
gated responsibility.
He told us not to
go to him unless
we had a problem.”
Frank Broyles
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

“There was no doubt that practices were
easy,” said George Morris, an All-America
linebacker at Tech on the ‘52 team whom
Dodd later said was one of the best players
he had ever worked with. “We didn’t have
to stay long because we didn’t hit. And his
philosophy on that was if you’re in good
shape, how much are you going to teach a
guy by beating him up? Also, he never
wanted to hurt a kid during practice. But
he taught us how to win by not beating
ourselves.”
Kim King, the last quarterback to play
for Dodd and now the analyst on Tech’s
radio network, agreed. “He spent a lot of
time coaching players not to make mis­
takes,” said King.
And that may be the most important les­
son a team can learn. Despite his unortho­
dox coaching style, Dodd’s teams
compiled a 165-64-8 record during his 22
years as Tech’s head coach.
Still, the Tech teams did not lack disci­
pline during Dodd’s era as coach. He
refused to be dissuaded when he susjjended senior tailback Billy Teas, now a
Southeastern Conference football official,
for violating curfew—even when he
received a telegram that had been signed
by 250 residents of Teas’ hometown of
Andrews, N.C.
Dodd’s successors at Tech haven’t
approached his achievements—Bud
Carson was 27-27 from 1967-71, Bill
Fulcher was 12-10-1 in 1972-73, Pepper
Rodgers was 34-31-2 from 1974-79, Bill
Curry was 31-43-4 from 1980-86, and
Bobby Ross is 5-17 over the last two
years—yet Dodd never publicly criticized
any of them.
During his coaching tenure at Georgia
Tech, a total of 21 of his players became
first-team All-Americas.
And authorities of considerable stature,
such as Alabama’s Bryant and Ole Miss’
Vaught, have said that Dodd was the best
game-day coach ever.
That’s partly because he’d been a career
quarterback and was used to thinking
strategically. During his high school days

BOBBY DODD

Alabama’s Bear Bryant (left) called Dodd one of the best game-day coaches ever.
However, the two coaches suffered a strained relationship after an Alabama player
incident set them at odds, and didn’t reconcile until years later.
in Kingsport, Tenn., he threw 37 touch­
down passes, ran for 30 more, kicked 51
extra points and seven field goals.
Tennessee lost only one of 26 games
while Dodd was the starting quarterback
under Neyland. Dodd also played basket­
ball and was captain of his team in his
senior season.
Dodd is a member of the College
Football Hall of Fame not because of his
coaching record but because of his accom­
plishments as a player.
After Dodd was named football AllAmerica in 1930 he was hired as an assis­
tant coach at Tech under Alexander. He
became head coach 14 years later, and was
the first to use the “chairman of the board”
style of coaching. During practices he
allowed assistant coaches to work with
players while he watched from a wooden
tower high above the field.
Among the coaches Dodd spawned were
Bob Woodruff, who became head coach at
Florida and later athletic director at
Tennessee; Ray Graves, who succeeded
Woodruff as head coach at Florida; Frank
Broyles, who served as head coach at
Arkansas; Jim Carlen, who worked as
head coach at South Carolina; and Pepper

Rodgers, who had successful tenures at
Kansas, UCLA and Tech.
“In that era head coaches generally did
almost all the coaching and the assistants
didn’t have that much to do with it,” said
Broyles, now the athletic director at
Arkansas. “But Coach Dodd delegated
responsibility. He told us not to go to him
unless we had a problem.”
Nevertheless, Dodd was quite capable of
coaching the fine points of the game as
well as anyone. Once, while observing
practice from his tower, Dodd noticed that
his punters were having problems with
their accuracy, so he came down to
demonstrate the proper technique for
them. One player asked the coach to “put
one on the tower,” and with that Dodd
kicked a ball that sailed high in the air,
landed atop the tower, spun around and
stayed there.
Also, Dodd was among the first to take
advantage of two-platoon rules, in which
two offensive and defensive units would
each play half of the game. “[Coach Dodd]
would use a player specifically for one
thing,” said Morris. “Everyone contribut­
ed. That’s why he got so upset when they
went back to one-platoon football [in
TOUCHDOWN ILLUSTRATED

1953] for a while.”
Dodd’s teams became the first to win six
straight bowl games—17-14 over Baylor
in the ‘52 Orange Bowl, 24-7 over Ole
Miss in the ‘53 Sugar Bowl, 42-19 over
West Virginia in the ‘54 Sugar Bowl, 14-7
over Arkansas in the ‘55 Cotton Bowl, 7-0
over Pittsburgh in the ‘56 Sugar Bowl and
21-14 over Pitt in the ‘56 Gator Bowl. In
all, his teams won nine of 13 postseason
games.
Between a 7-0 triumph over Georgia in
the final game of the 1950 season and a
27-14 loss at Notre Dame in the fifth game
of the ‘53 season, the Yellow Jackets put
together a streak of 31 games without los­
ing, including a 12-0 finish in 1952—
Dodd’s best coaching season. With this
record Tech won its second straight SEC
championship and was voted No. 1 in the
nation by the International News Service
(The Associated Press and the United
Press voted Tech second, behind Michigan
State). That year Tech’s opponents aver­
aged only 4.9 points per game, while the
Yellow Jackets averaged 27.
Despite his gentle nature, Dodd was no
stranger to controversy.
In 1955, for instance. Tech played
Pittsburgh—which had a black player—in
the Sugar Bowl, against the wishes of
Georgia segregationist Gov. S. Marvin
Griffin, who tried to halt the game.
And in 1961, Tech halfback Chick
Graning suffered a fracture of the jaw, a
broken nose and the loss of several teeth
from being elbowed by Alabama’s Darwin
Holt in a 10-0 loss to the Crimson Tide.
Dodd terminated the series against
Alabama three years later because Bryant
refused to discipline his player.
The two coaqhes didn’t reconcile their
differences uiltil years later. “That was one
of the most traumatic times in Bobby’s
life,” said Graves, the former Florida
coach. “For Bear to condone [the behavior
of] Holt made a deep wound— for years.” I
While Dodd’s golden qualities outshined I
his faults, he was unprepared for the tough I
battles he would wage off the field. After I
resigning as coach following the 1966 sea­
son, he remained as athletic director and I
watched as Tech’s athletic facilities gradu- I
ally deteriorated.
I
“Coach Dodd was a coach without peer,” I
said Rodgers, a quarterback on Dodd’s I
golden-age teams of the early ‘50s.
“Almost anybody in that situation who all I
of a sudden has to become the total busi­
nessman, working in a totally different
environment, would have a difficult time.
You can’t be great at everything.”
I
Dodd’s administrative difficulties I
weren’t entirely his fault. One of his first I
official acts was to oppose the appoint- I
ment of Carson as his successor in 1967 by I
Edwin Harrison, then president of Georgia I

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BOBBY DODD
“One player asked
the coach to ‘put
one on the tower,’
and with that Dodd
kicked a ball that
sailed high in the
air, landed atop the
tower, spun around
and stayed there.”
Tech. “A bad way to start,” observed
Vince Dooley, who at that time was the
University of Georgia athletic director.
Carson was fired in ‘71 and replaced by
Bill Fulcher, a former Dodd player who
stayed only two years and was replaced by
Rodgers, who left UCLA only to discover
that the facilities at Georgia Tech were
either in disrepair or obsolete.

Part of the problem, according to
Rodgers, was that Tech president Joseph
Pettit, who died in 1986, “was afraid of a
tonflict between athletic fund raising and
school fund raising. Coach Dodd tried to
upgrade facilities, but he was told ‘no’ by
the administration. I think he got tired of
beating his head against the wall all the
time. If [the school administration] had
turned him loose, I think he’d have done a
hell of a job.”
As a result, Dodd became an absentee
athletic director, and by noon most days he
could be reached at his favorite local ten­

nis court.
The decision to secede from the SEC in
1964 was the most controversial of the
many decisions Dodd made at Tech and
had the most long-lasting effects.
Some said Tech left the SEC because
Dodd—who had built a national football
power—wanted to keep all the bowl and
television revenue. Others i)elieved that he
wanted to form a new conference that
would include schools that were on an
equal financial and athletic footing with
Tech. But in all probability, it was the
SEC’s recruiting limitations that finally

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made Dodd—and Tech—bow out of the
league.
At that time the conference had a “14045” rule, which permitted teams to carry a
maximum of 140 football and basketball
players combined, with 120 normally ear­
marked for football. Also, schools could
sign no more than 45 football players in a
given year (the limit had been 55 until
1963).
Without attrition, signing 45 football
players for four years would have created
a roster of 180 players, or 60 above the
overall ceiling—not including redshiri
players.
Those numbers induced many coach­
es to “run off’ players, a practice oi
forcing them to drop off the
team—and out of school—through
various, sometimes harsh, means.
But Dodd, who had never graduated
from Tennessee, was dedicated to see­
ing that those who played for him
earn their degree, and thus was years
ahead of his time in providing aca­
demic support for his teams. Because
of that. Tech did not have the attrition
that other schools did, and Dodd found
himself with more players than the
league allowed.
His solution to this was to leave the
SEC—and its restrictions. But whether it
was the best decision for the school is
debatable. Tech’s football team, which

After leaving his head coaching
job in 1966, Dodd fought tougher
battles as Tech’s athletic director.

compiled a 142-56-7 record in 19 SEC
seasons under Dodd, went 94-90-4 in the
next 19 seasons. Attendance plummeted
and recruiting suffered. Tech’s basketball
team and nonrevenue athletic programs
suffered even more.
In addition to football, Dodd’s other
favorite sport was gambling—on golf, ten­
nis, checkers, gin, poker or almost any
other game. A pool hustler as a child and a
golf hustler as a young adult, Dodd
became a tennis hustler as a senior citizen.
Yet to Dodd, gambling was not so much
a vice as a motivational tool. “He once
told me that if he were captain of the
Davis Cup tennis team, he’d require that
they put a little money on every practice
set because that would make them try
harder,” explained longtime friend and
tennis partner Ted Dunbar.
Dodd survived controversy and any
problems caused by his gambling habits
because he had a knack for public relations
seldom shown by others in his profession.
Once, when Tech played a night game at
Tulane and a photographer for the Atlanta
Journal and Constitution faced a tight
deadline, he approached Dodd with his
problem. The concerned coach told the
photographer where to stand. The first
time Tech had the ball, Dodd called a
sweep to that side, and the photographer
got his action shot—and met his deadline
with time to spare.

WTNASEATTO
THE COLLEGE BOWL GAME
OF YOUR CHOICE AND
GET THIS CUSHION FREE.

ASSISTANT COACHES
both playing and coaching experience to the staff, giving the
Scot players an added plus on the offensive side of the ball.
Originally from Buffalo, New York, Dan graduated
from Edinboro with a degree in health and physical education.
He is married to the former Amy Adams and resides in
Edinboro.

SCOTT
BROWNING
Secondary

MARK
NISWONGER

Moving to the defensive side of the ball, from the
offensive backfield, Scott brings a wealth of coaching experi­
ence in his fifth year at the 'Boro. Under his guidance the Scot
defense has intercepted 38 passes the past two seasons.
Scott came to Edinboro from Ohio State University,
where he coached receivers and runningbacks including Keith
Byers. Prior to his start at OSU, Browning coached at
Worthington and Dayton-Fairview High Schools in Ohio,
from 1979-81. Then, as a graduate assistant, he coached the
defensive secondary at New Mexico State in 1982.
In 1983, he mentored the receivers at Idaho State
University which advanced to the Division I-AA playoffs.
Browning earned a master's degree in education
administration from New Mexico State in 1983, and a BS in
education from Ohio State in 1981. Earlier, before transferring
to OSU, Scott attended Capital University where he played
football for one season. Browning was a four-year letterman
in four sports at Loudenville High School (OH) prior to his
collegiate days. He is single and resides in Edinboro.

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Mark Niswonger, a veteran of the coaching ranks for
17 years, begins his third year with the Plaid as defensive
coordinator and linebacker coach. Former understudy of head
coach Tom Hollman at Greenville High School, Mark brings
extensive experience both on and off the field to the Scot
coaching staff.
His coaching stint began back while attending
Findlay when he was the head scout for Arlington High
School. His first job after college was as defensive coordinator
for Bryan High School (OH) where the team earned a 9-1
record. The next two seasons, Niswonger was the defensive
coordinator at West Carrollton High School (OH) where his
squad posted an impressive 17-1-2 slate.
After West Carrollton, he then returned to graduate
school at Ball State University where he helped coach the
tight ends and offensive linemen.
From 1981-84, Niswonger was the head coach at
Franklin City Schools and was named "coach of the year" in
1982 when his squad won its first league championship in 18
years. He then moved on to the collegiate ranks in 1984 at
Manchester College as defensive coordinator and then back to
his alma mater from 85-87 as their secondary coach.
Niswonger's education includes an undergraduate
degree in physical education and political science from
Findlay and a MA in physical education from Ball State. Mark
and his wife Patty reside in Edinboro.

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sh. A nether rea
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Defensive Coordinator/
Linebackers

DAN
GIERLAK

^ * So vfei^ a Co^^pird soon and
;r cmr College Bowl Swe^p||afe , Even if you c^lt wirif
^ou’ll have^tliscd^jped a
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Running Backs

purchase necessity, \foid where prohibited,
be 18 oixjlder to cmej. For c^icial rules, visit
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■ 23,1990,

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HOTELS IN AMERICA.
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I

Dan Gierlak enters his fourth season as a full-time
coach with his responsibilities concerning the running backs.
He is also the head women's softball coach for the Scots and
led the squad to the PSAC playoffs last year.
Gierlak came to the 'Boro from Thiel College (Pa.)
where he coached the defensive secondary for the 1984 sea­
son. Dan, a starter and three-year letterwinner for the Plaid in
the secondary, moved on to the semi-pro ranks with the
Chicago Cowboys. During his short stint with the Cowboys,
Gierlak's squad gained national championship honors in 1984
and runner up nationally in the 1985 season. Gierlak brings

hoUdaybov^

23

CHECKING THE RECORDS

GENE
SMITH

INDIVIDUAL

Defensive Line

LONGEST SCORING PLAYS

Gene Smith will enter his third season directing the
Scot defensive line. The Scots defensive line was ranked first
in the PSAC and in the NCAA top ten nationally last season
in rushing defense.
Smith also has past association with Coach Hollman
as he was a graduate assistant working with the defensive line
under Hollman at Ohio University. The following season with
the Bobcats, Smith moved to the offensive side of the ball as
tight end/tackle coach for OU. He also worked extensively
with the weight training program as a strength coach. Gene is
the coordinator of strength and conditioning for the Scot foot­
ball squad.
As a player, he enjoyed an outstanding career at
Heidelberg College. Smith captained Heidelberg his senior
season. He obtained his B.S. degree in education during his
undergraduate years and later completed his M.S. in athletic
administration from Ohio University. Smith has also complet­
ed post-graduate hours.
Smith, originally from Monroeville, Ohio, is single
and resides in Edinboro.

Ed Stults enters his second year directing the Scot
offensive line. In his initial year with Edinboro, Stults orga­
nized an offensive front that was one of the best in the coun­
try. He directed the fortunes of two All-Americans and
numerous All-Conference players. He has an immediate
impact on the Scot fortunes.
He brings over ten years of coaching experience to
the Scot linemen. He began his coaching career' at his alma
mater, Blufton College, in 1981 directing the linebackers.
Later on in his coaching stint he turned his attention to the
offensive line. He played linebacker at Blufton from 1976-79
and he graduated in 1980 with a BA in education.
After his coaching tenure at Blufton that spanned
1981-87, Stults took the offensive line duties at the University
of Cincinnati in 1988. Last season he joined the Fighing
Scots.
Stults is married to the former Pamela Lewis and
resides in Edinboro.

EDINBORO MEDICAL
CENTER, Inc.
201 LOaterford Street
Edinboro, Pa. 16412
814-734M618

TOM R. MILLER II, MD
JOHN L. MORRIS, MD
PETER 0. KROEMER, MD
GRRV C. TflVLOR, MD
Appointments

Hours
9 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

M-T-T-F
lOed.

Good Luck Fighting Scots
From the Staff at
Edinboro Medical Center

Kneeling (L-R): Scott Browning, Head Coach Tom
Hollman, and Dan Gierlak. Standing (L-R): Mark
Niswonger, Gene Smith, and Ed Stults.

24

RUN FROM SCRIMMAGE
91, Joe Sanford vs. Waynesburg, 1971
91, A1 Raines vs. Waynesburg, 1971
PASS
92, Tim Beacham from Steward Ayers vs. Shippensburg, 1980
87, Jim Romaniszyn from Scott McKissock vs. West Chester,
1971
FIELD GOAL
52, Darren Weber vs. lUP, 1987
49, Rich Ruszkiewicz vs. Clarion, 1982
47, Rich Ruszkiewicz vs. Bloomsburg, 1981
47, Rich Ruszkiewicz vs. California, 1979
PUNT RETURN
85, Jack McCurry vs. Shippensburg, 1971
82, Tim Beacham vs. Clarion, 1980
80, Floyd Faulkner vs. California, 1986
KICKOFF RETURN
100, Cleveland Pratt vs. Lock Haven, 1987
100, Eric Bosley vs. West Liberty, 1984
98, Tim Beacham vs. Millersville, 1977
INTERCEPTION RETURN
102, Jack Case vs. Brockport, 1962
FUMBLE RETURN
80, Bob Cicerchi vs. Millersville, 1980

RUSHING
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 295, A1 Raines vs. Lock Haven, 1969
1/2 Game - 218, A1 Raines vs. Lock Haven, 1969
Season - 1507, Elbert Cole, 1989; 1358, A1 Raines, 1971
Career - 3399, A1 Raines, 1969-70-71
LEADING RUSHING AVERAGES
Season -138.8, A1 Raines, 1970 (6 games)
137.0, Elbert Cole, 1989 (11 games)
135.8, A1 Raines, 1971 (10 games)
Per Carry - 8.7, A1 Raines, 1971; 7.3, Chris Conway, 1989;
7.2, Bob Klenk, 1983
Career - 6.7, A1 Raines, 1969-71
MOST CARRIES
Game - 36, Jim Romaniszyn vs. West Chester, 1970
Season - 238, Elbert Cole, 1989
Career - 642, Elbert Cole, 1989; 506, A1 Raines, 1969-71
PASSING
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 376, Scott Dodds vs. Fairmont State, 1986
300, Blair Hrovat vs. California, 1982
275, Mike Hill vs. California, 1976
271, Scott Dodds vs. Lock Haven, 1986
Season -1911, Hal Galupi, 1989; 1903, Jim Ross, 1987;
1752, Scott Dodds, 1986;
Career - 5103, Blair Hrovat, 1981-84
MOST COMPLETIONS
Game - 25, Scott Dodds vs. Lock Haven, 1986
23, Scott Dodds vs. Fairmont State, 1986
21, Scott Dodds vs. West Chester, 1986
20, Scott Dodds vs. Mansfield, 1986
20, Hal Galupi vs. Youngstown St., 1989
Season -153, Scott Dodds, 1986; 147, Jim Ross, 1987;
124, Hal Galupi, 1989
Career - 309, Blair Hrovat, 1981-84
276, Scott Dodds, 1983-86

MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES
Game - 5, Scott Dodds vs. Fairmont State, 1986; 4, Blair
Hrovat vs. Buffalo St and Mercyhurst, 1983; vs.
California, 1982; 4, Hal Galupi vs. Lock Haven, 1989
Season - 22, Hal Galupi, 1989; 19, Blair Hrovat, 1983;
17, Scott Dodds, 1986
Career - 49, Blair Hrovat, 1981-84; 33, Hal Galupi, 1987-89
31, Scott Dodds, 1984-86
MOST ATTEMPTS
Game - 42, Tom Mackey vs. Clarion, 1968
Season - 276, Jim Ross, 1987; 243, Scott Dodds, 1986;
224, Hal Galupi, 1989; 216, Scott Dodds, 1985
Career - 618, Blair Hrovat, 1981-84
PASS RECEIVING
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 248, Tim Beacham vs. Univ. of Buffalo, 1980 (10
rec.)
Season -1128, Ernest Priester, 1989
Career - 2467, Howard Hackley, 1973-76
1952, Ernest Priester, 1986-89
MOST RECEPTIONS
Game -10, Bob Jahn vs. California, 1978
10, Tim Beacham vs. Fairmont, 1979
10, Tim Beacham vs. Univ. of Buffalo, 1980
10, Ernest Priester vs. Youngstown State, 1989
Season - 49, Ernest Priester, 1989
Career -135, Howard Hackley, 1973-76
MOST TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS
Game - 3, Bob Suren vs. Lock Haven, 1986
3, Eric Bosley vs. Buffalo State, 1983
3, Mike Romeo vs. Eureka, 1971
3, Tim Beacham vs. Univ. of Buffalo, 1980
3, Ernest Priester vs. Lock Haven, New Haven, Kutztown
Univ., 1989
Season -16, Ernest Priester, 1989
Career - 20, Ernest Priester, 1986-89; 18, Howard Hackley,
1973-76; 14, Tim Beacham, 1977-80

TOTAL OFFENSE
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 358, Scott Dodds vs. Fairmont State, 1986
340, Blair Hrovat vs. Lock Haven, 1982
318, A1 Raines vs. Lock Haven, 1969
Season - 1938, Blair Hrovat, 1983; 1931, Blair Hrovat, 1982;
1917, Hal Galupi, 1989
Career - 6070, Bto Hrovat, 1981-84
MOST PLAYS
Game - 48, Tom Mackey vs. Clarion, 1968
Season - 342, Blair Hrovat, 1983
Career - 995, Blair Hrovat, 1981-84

PUNTING
HIGHEST AVERAGE
Game - 46.4, Frank Berzansky vs. Clarion, 1971 (5 punts)
Season - 41.9, Mike Raynard, 1987 (48)
40.5, Kevin Conlan, 1984 (42)
39.4, Dan Fiegl, 1976 (57)
Career - 38.5, Dan Fiegl, 1975-77
Longest - 82, Kevin Conlan vs. Clarion, 1983

PUNT RETURNS
MOST YARDS RETURNED
Season - 540, Birt Duncan, 1961 (15 ret.)
Career - 540, Birt Duncan, 1961

25

KICKOFF RETURNS

BEST GAME AVERAGE
307.8 by 1971 team
BEST AVERAGE PER RUSH
6.2 by 1971 team
MOST CARRIES
Game - 71 vs. California, 1979; 67 vs. Slippery Rock, 1970
Season - 571 by 1970 team
PASSING
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 376 vs. Lock Haven, 1986; 329 vs. Lock Haven,
1989
Season - 2134 (1989); 2114 (1987)
MOST COMPLETIONS
Game - 25 vs. Lock Haven, 1986
MOST ATTEMPTS
Game - 44 vs. Clarion, 1968
Season - 315 by 1968 team
MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES
Game - 5 vs. Fairmont State, 1986
Season - 25 by 1989 team; 19 by 1983 team; 19 by 1986
team
TOTAL OFFENSE
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 611 vs. Shippensburg, 1989; 609 vs. Lbck Haven,
1989
Season - 4935 by 1989 team
/
PASS INTERCEPTIONS
MOST INTERCEPTED
Game - 6 vs. Shippensburg, 1983
Season - 26 by 1971 team
DEFENSE
FEWEST POINTS YIELDED
Season - 40 by 1928 team
FEWEST RUSHING YARDS YIELDED
Game - Minus 67 vs. Curry, 1965
Season - 645 by 1970 team
FEWEST PASS COMPLETIONS
Game - 0 (numerous times)
Season - 37 by 1965 team
FEWEST PASSING YARDS YIELDED
Game - 0 (numerous times)
Season - 441 by 1973 team
CONSECUTTVITY
MOST CONSECUTIVE WINS -/l^ 1970-72 (leg. season)
MOST CONSECUTIVE GAMEI'S WITHOUT
A LOSS - 21,1969-72 (regular season)
MOST CONSECUTIVE CONFERENCE GAMES WITH­
OUT A LOSS - 13,1969-72
MOST CONSECUTIVE ROAD VICTORIES -15,1981-84
ALL-TIME BESTS
MOST WINS IN A SEASON - 9 by 1982 and 1970 teams
BEST OFFENSIVE AVERAGE - 461.1 by 1983 team
BEST DEFENSIVE RUSHING AVERAGE
Game - 56.0 by 1957 team
Rush -1.7 by 1970 team
BEST TOTAL DEFENSIVE AVERAGE
Game -199.3 by 1970 team
BEST DEFENSIVE SCORING AVERAGE
4.3 by 1928 team (7 games)
NUMBER OF WINNING SEASONS -17
50th WIN - Ashland College (45-6), 1957
100th WIN - California (47-7), 1971
150th WIN - California (58-20), 1982

MOST YARDS RETURNED
Season - 757, Eric Bosley, 1984 (27.0)
700, Cleveland Pratt, 1987 (26.9)
Career - 1284, Cleveland Pratt, 1985-88 (25.2)
1247, Eric Bosley, 1981-84 (24.0)

SCORING
MOST POINTS
Game - 36, Elbert Cole vs. Slippery Rock, 1989
Season -148, Elbert Cole, 1989
Career - 288, Elbert Cole, 1986-89
MOST TOUCHDOWNS
Game - 6, Elbert Cole vs. Slippery Rock, 1989; 5, Jim
Romaniszyn vs. Lock Haven, 1972
Season - 24, Elbert Cole, 1989
Career - 48, Elbert Cole, 1986-89
MOST FIELD GOALS
Game - 4, Jim Trueman vs. Central Connecticut, 1985
3, Jim Trueman vs. Shippensburg, 1984
3, Tom Rockwell vs. Lock Haven, 1969
3, Frank Berzansky vs. Waynesburg, 1972
3, Rich Ruszkiewicz vs. Shippensburg and California, 1980;
New Haven, 1982; New Haven, 1981
Season -15, Rich Ruszkiewicz, 1982; 12, Rich
Ruszkiewicz, 1981; 11, Rich Ruszkiewicz, 1980; 11, Jim
Trueman, 1984
Career - 43, Rich Ruszkiewicz, 1979-82
36, Jim Trueman, 1983-86
MOST EXTRA POINTS KICKED
Game - 9, Jim Trueman vs. Shippensburg, 1986
8, Jim Trueman vs. District of Columbia, 1984
Season - 42, Jim Trueman, 1984
Career -138, Jim Trueman, 1983-86
Most Consecutive - 41, Jim Trueman, 1984
29, Larry LitUer, 1974-75

DEFENSE
MOST PASSES INTERCEPTED
Game - 4, Dan DiTuUio vs. Shippensburg, 1968
Season - 8, Dave Parker, 1982; 8, Jack McCurry, 1971
Career -13, Ken Petardi, 1976-79
12, John Walker, 1971-73
12, Ron Miller, 1977-80
12, Dave Parker, 1980-83
MOST TACKLES
Game - 30, Rick lorfido vs. Indiana, 1972
Season - 200, Jim Krentz, 1978; 182, Greg SuUivan, 1977;
171, Rick lorfido, 1972
Career - 572, Jim Krentz, 1975-78
429, Greg Sullivan, 1974-77
428, Ron Gooden, 1974-77
MOST SACKS
Game - 7, Ron Link vs. California, 1981
Season -15, Ron Link, 1981
Career - 27, Ron Link, 1977-78-80-81 '

TEAM
SCORING
MOST POINTS SCORED
Game - 83 vs. Alliance, 1928; 74 vs. Mercyhurst, 1983
1/2 Game - 43 vs. Mercyhurst, 1983; 42 vs. Shippensburg,
1971
Season - 435 by 1989 team
Best Scoring Average - 41.2 by 1983 team
RUSHING
MOST YARDS GAINED
Game - 549 vs. Waynesburg, 1971
Season - 3078 by 1971 team

26

MEET THE PLAYERS

Mike Barnes

Gregg Castellarin

Paul Childress

Steve Clare

Tony Dudowski

Mike Edwards

Lester Frye

Hal Galupi

Mike Geary

Brian Heebsh

Jeff Jacobs

Mike Kegarise

Matt Koehle

27

Northwestern
Rural
Electric
Cooperative
Association, Inc.

MEET THE PLAYERS

Joel Marratta

Matt Lang

MON.-FRI 8:30-4:30

Matt Miller

Connect
with
quality. •.

CROSSROADS
DINOR

*

^TELECVNE
Brad Powell

PENN-UNION
Specializing in Home Made Pies

101 Plum Street
Edinboro, Pa.
734-1912

229 Waterford Street
Edinboro, Pa. 16412
(814) 734-1631
FAX: 814-734-4946
28

Ernest Priester

Bryan Reifsnyder

Curtis Rose
29

Anthony Ross

MEET THE PLAYERS

Ztstsiuvmi

-

Xoungz
Chuck Rounds

Derrick Russell

Kurt Schmidhamer

Matt Smith

John Walker

Wally Spisak

.7

/

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Lunch - Dinner Specials
Charcoal Grill your own Steaks or Ribs
Fresh Seafood
Veal - Chicken
Homemade Pasta
Sandwiches - Pizza
7

f
J

t

Large Groups ❖ Banquets ❖ Private Parties

Rt. 18
South off I-90
774-8450
RESERVATIONS APPRECIATED — CLOSED MONDAYS
30

Wade Smith

Paul Stone

Edinboro Foodmart

John and Larry's Village Mall
COMPLETE LINE OF
Grocery O Meat O Produce
Frozen Food O Dairy O Deli
and Bakery Products

STORE HOURS
Monday-Saturday 8:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Sunday 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
31

PRIESTER WATCH!
ERNEST PRIESTER
SENIOR, WIDE RECEIVER, 5-9,175 LBS.
1990 All-American, Football Gazette Magazine, Pre-Season - 1st team
1990 PSAC West "Player of the Week" for week #1 (2 catches, 102 yards, 1 TD - 73 yards, 6 punt returns - 60 Yards)
1989 All-American, Associated Press Little AA team - 3rd team

The Subway Shop
wishes the
Fighting Scots
great success this year

RON BIDWELL

1989 All-American, Football Gazette Magazine - 3rd team

TANNING SALON

1989 Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference - Western Division - 1st team
1989 NCAA n East Region "Player of the Week" by Football Gazette
1989 PSAC "Player of the Week" once

’’Good Luck to the
Fighting Scots”

1986 PSAC-Westem Division - 2nd team - freshman
CAREER STATS AND RECORDS
Games: 34

210 Waterford St.
Edinboro, Pa. 16412
734-1159

Receptions: 114

111 MEADVILLE ST. '
EDINBORO, PA 16412
Mon.-Sat. 10-5
(814) 734-7243

Receiving Yards: 2,258

Yards per Catch: 19.8

Receiving Touchdowns: 24

19 of Priester’s 24 career TD receptions have come from 20+ yards (see below)
CAREER TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS (YARDS)
80 yards (1), 70-80 yards (2), 60-70 yards (4), 50-60 yards (3), 40-50 yards (0), 30-40 yards (4), 20-30 yards (5) less than 20 yards (5)

WE DELIVER

CAREER SINGLE-GAME RECEIVING YARDAGE
200+ yards (1 time), 100+ yards (7), 90+ yards (1), 80+ yards (6)

CREATIVE CUTTING
CORNER

PSAC RECORDS AND CURRENT RANKINGS (9/8/90)
Single-season record holder, most TD receptions, season -16 (1989)
(formerly held by Bob Tucker of Bloomsburg University and the NY Giants of the NFL who caught 13 in 1967)
Single-season receiving yardage, 1,128 (1989) 2nd all-time
(behind Tucker's 1,325 in *67)
Priester’s 16 TDs in '89 put him 8th all-time in PSAC history for touchdowns in a single season
His 2,258 career receiving yards puts him 6th in PSAC history
Needs 471 more yards (67 yds. per game) to move into 1st all-time past Bill Hess (West Chester 85-88)
His 24 career TD receptions has Priester 3rd in PSAC history (needs 5 more to pass Hess into 1st all-time)

103 Erie Street
For appointment call 734-5100

EDINBORO RECEIVING RECORDS
Priester is 1st in:
career TD receptions (24)
single season TD receptions (16)
single-season receptions (49)
single-season receiving yards (1,128)
tied for most catches in one game (10 vs. YSU '89)
tied for most TD receptions in one game (3) - three times in '89
2,258 career receiving yards - 2nd all-time (Howard Hackley - 2,467,1973-76)

l\ies., Wed., Fri. - 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Thurs - 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
Saturday - 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

1990 GAME BY GAME TOTALS

Across from the Edinboro Post Office

32

OPP
Shepherd
Youngstown State
Bloomsburg
TOTALS

REC
2
5
6
13

YDS
102
86
119
307

TD
1
2
1
4

LONG
73
27
26
73

33

RUSH/YDS
l/lyd(TD)
1/16
0/0
2/17 (1 TD)

KO-RET



PNT-RET
6/60
1/11
2/1
9/72

STATE SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDGCATION
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA

James H. McCormick
Chancellor

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 this fine athletic event.
The efforts of the young women and men representing their universities in the athletic arena
are commended. National and regional champions, All-Americans, and top scholar athletes
participate in the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference programs.
The academic achievements of these students are significant, too. Combining classes and
competition as the foundation of an educational experience requires special abilities. The
student athletes’ hard work and dedication to the ideals of intercollegiate athletics are
applauded.
Recognition must also be given to the superior coaching staffs. It is their leadership and
knowledge which make this contest possible.
The Board of Governors, the university presidents, the campus communities, and I hope you
will continue to support our State System athletic programs during the 1990-91 academic year.
We appreciate your attendance.
/

FindYdur
PersonalBest
Sincerely,

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.

James H. McCormick

Pennibank
N

P.O. Box 809, 301 Market Street, Harrisburg, PA 17108 • 717 • 783-8887

34

MEMBER FDIC

PromisingYou Our Pebscnal Best

Backing the Scots

Jay’s

GARY B. MEANS

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734-4451

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16 Market Street

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814-756-4122

"Lrie County s Only Independent Newspaper’*
PRINTING — PUBLISHING

“We re proud to he a supplier to EdiiAoro VmersHy of Pa.*’

THREE-GAME INDIVIDUAL AND TEAM STATS
RUSHING
Name
Frye, Lester
Russell, Dwrick
Conway, Chris
Tedder, Tom
Priester, Ernest
Clare, Steve
Lang, Matt
Hill, Corey
Siebert, Sean
Galupi, Hal
Totals

G
3
2
2
3
3
2
2
1
2

ATT
67
20
19
14
2
5
2
4
1

3

139

G
3
_2
3

YG YL
NET TD
368
36
332
3
172
12
160
1
80
7
73
1
51
0
51
0
17
0
17
1
14
0
14
0
14
0
14
0
13
11
2
0
0
0
0
0
4 _22 ^12 _Q
733
89
644
6

ATT
61
14
75

Baumann. John (3-3)
Geary, Mike (3-3)

G
3
3
3
2
3
3
2
3
_2
3

C
34

INT
5
_Q
5

39

REC
13
10
8
2
2
1
1
1

-L
39

TRAINING

CORPS

YDS
590
160
750

TD
5

YDS
307
116
130
94
44
4
31
15
__ 2
750

TD
4
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
_Q
6

CG
4.3
3.3
2.7
1.0
.6
.3
.5
.3

37- 43. 38
37.33. 30

1990 TEAM STATS
EU
61
33
24
4
139
733
89
644
75
39
5
750
214
1394
10
8
22
188
6.5
464.7
8 (154)
19.3
6 (191)
31.8
10 (80)
8.0

TOTAL FIRST DOWNS
First Downs Rushing
First Downs Passing
First Downs Penalty
Rushing Attempts
Yards Gained Rushing
Yards Lost Rushing
NET YARDS RUSHING
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Passes Had Intercepted
YARDS PASSING
Total Plays
TOTAL OFFENSE
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalties
Penalty Yards
Average Yards Per Play
Average Yards Per Game
Kickoff Returns (YDS)
Kickoff Returns Avg.
Punts (YDS)
Punt Average
Punt Return (YDS)
Punt Return Avg.

6

RECEIVING
Name
Priester, Ernest
Martin, Wrentie
Stone, Paul
Wouda, Rich
Frye, Lester
Castellarin, Gregg
O'Connor, Terry
Heebsh, Brian
Tedder, Tom
Totals

OFFICER S'

FIELD GOALS

PASSING
Name
Galupi, Hal
Seibert, Sean
Totals

RESERVE

13.0

OPP
35
17
15
3
125
328
106
222
50
19
5
429
/
186
651
8
5
19
153
3.5
217.0
21 (402)
19.1
17 (498)
29.2
0(0)
0.0

KICKOFF RETURNS
1990 RESULTS (2-1)
Name
Conway, Chris
Russell, Derrick
Frye, Lester
Totals

G
2
1
_2
3

NO
6
1

A
8

YDS
135
15
4
154

AVG
22.5
15.0

ASl
19.3

LR
33
15
4
33

H
A
A

EUP
48
27
_23
108

Shepherd
Youngstown State
Bloomsburg

, OPP
/
6
31
_6
43

ATT
5,500
9,526
L263
16,289

PUNTS
Name
Lhotsky, Gary
Kacsandi, Joe
Totals

G
3
JL
3

NO
4
_2
6

YDS
AVG
136 ' 34.0
27.5
191
31.8

LP
38

DEFENSE
Name
Messura, John
Perkins, Jason
Donahue, A1
Jacobs, Jeff
Ross, Anthony
Miller, Matt
Houston, Mario
Pickett, Delvin
Bams, Mike
Lewis, Georj

45

PUNT RETURNS
Name
Priester, Ernest
O'Connor, Terry
Totals

G
3
1
3

NO
9
1
10

YDS
72
80

AVG
8.0
8.0
8.0

LR
43
_S
43

G
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3

SOLO
24
15
12
14
11
9
5
9
6
7

ASST.
10
11
9
3
6
7
8
4
6
5

TOTAL
34
26
21
17
17
16
13
13
12
12

BEUEVE 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 yoiu: self-confidence,
develops yoiu: leadership potential and helps you
take on the challenges of command.
There’s no obligation until yourjunior year, and that
means there’s no reason not to try it out right now.
irrAcjjSHiSi

IScellenqsI

ARMY ROTC
THE SMARTEST COLLEGE
COURSE YOU CAN TAKE.
find out more, contact captain terry

38

39

HARVEY, 338 ZURN, 871-7524

TRAINERS AND CHEERLEADERS

Supporting all the
Fighting Scot
Athletic Programs

(athletic trainer), Karla Krenovsky Back row (1
Pavuchak, and Melissa Balter.
^

Stecy Ma^iIIan, George Roberts
Steeley, Taryn Albright, Amber

maBunmm

Li.
Best Wishes
Kip Allen and the Hotel Staff
Joyce Elliot, Michele McCleliand, Amy T^maS^Ka*in“'K»''’^^i'®'’’ J'*™"”" “«"'*«'•>
row (L-R): Larry Klemm, Dan sUney
^op
and Wilson Matthews.

ortugallo, Rich Fuge, Gerry Clemence,

40

100 Meadville Street
Edinboro, Pa.

EDINBORO UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Baron-Forness Library

Porreco Extension Center

After 125 years of service to the
northwestern Pennsylvania region, Edinboro
experienced its most significant change in
history on July 1, 1983, when the College
became Edinboro University of Pennsylva­
nia, a member of the State System of Higher
Education.

Location................................Edinboro, Pennsylvania

Founded as a private academy in
1857, Edinboro University has continued to
be one of the leading educational institu­
tions in Pennsylvania.
Edinboro has grown to more than 40
buildings including the 400,000-volume
Baron-Fomess Library, a modem sevenstory stmcture which serves as the focal
point for the spacious campus. More than
7,700 students representing almost every
county in the Commonwealth, as well as
numerous states and foreign countries attend
Edinboro. Its tradition of educational service
and research is matched by a distinguished
faculty, more than two-thirds of whom have
earned doctoral degrees.

Main Campus..................................................585 acres
42 buildings
Porreco Extension Center........................... 27 acres
11 buildings
President........................................... Foster F. Diebold
Affiliation............... A member of the Pennsylvania
State System of Higher Education
Founding Date.......................................................... 1857
Student Enrollment............................................... 7,700
Faculty.......................................370 full and part-time
Faculty/Student Ratio ............................................. 1:19
Degree Programs .................................. 100 associate,
baccalaureate, and master’s degrees
Colors..................................................... Red and White
Nickname...............................................Fighting Scots
Athletics...................... 16 men's and women's sports
Special Programs................................................ Honors
Disabled Student Services
International Education