The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 130, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 2, 1971 Page: 4 of 8
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Sapulpa Bowling
Standings
Sun. Night Miiad
Fuur Jokers
3 1 16
'aid Bills
i : n
1 lines & Shipmans
1 3 12
Kin-Fulks
2 2 10
Irvine's
2 2 10
'kitlaws
3 1 9
Little Four
1 3 0
Pin Poppers
2 2 3
■ Individual High Game: (Woman)!
I Barbara Guffey (182)
1
■ Individual High Game: (Man) Mikel
■ Oliva 1192).
1 Slue Monday 1
Ha wdun’s Grocery
2 1 10
The Nuts
3 1 9
Huley Hollers
1 3 7
Gallagher'sClinic
1 3 6
FrniesFina
3 1 6
Herald's Super Mkt
3 1 6
Foolish F ive
1 3 4
low ball's
1 3 3
■ individual High Game: Hunt Anglin 1
| •214 >.
1 Suburban 1
Coca Gila
4 0 10
B-C Old Timers
0 4 6
Rayuuth's
3 1 7
Liberty Glass
2 2 6
B-C Cut-Ups
1 3 6
M.F.A. Bells
0 4 4
Hamsun's
2 2 4
B-C Playboys
4 0 4
■ Individual High Game: Windy Davis 1
227i
cm
Gibson’s
4 0 11
Team No. 5
1 1 10,
TeanNu.8
4 « 7
Team No 3
1 3 6
Bit; Red's Apcu
2 2 6,
Team No 6
2 2 6
Stuart lumber
0 4 2
Hebei Jean's
0 4 1
■ individual High Game: Ed Baldwin!
1 212i
| Tuesday Classic 1
Gibsun's Discount
2 1 13
Green Hill Memorial
3 1 11
Smith's Grocery
1 3 10
Stepp's 66
3 1 10
Charley sKerr-McGee
1 3 6
Blank Seven
1 3 6
Jaci Lynn’s
1 3 6
A AW Root beer
3 1 4
Individual High Game:
1205)
Louise Gravitt
Triple L
B-C Tumblers
4 0 17
Neal & Jean's
3 1 16
lambertOil
2 2 13
B-C Glass
1 3 12
KUngensmith
0 4 11
B-C Shakers
1 3 11
O.G.AE.
2 2 10
Green Spray Dulls
3 1 7
1 Individual High Game: Linda Rideout 1
It 2591.
1 Wad. P. M ars 1
Aluminum Products
3 1 11
Prairie Oaks
2 2 10
Wallace Gulf
4 0 10
Ken's Pizza
2 2 1
Tum'iChlpe
t 4 T
Roberta'. Baauty Shop
. 1 Ij7
Sapulpa Lumbar
1 3 6
Tyler's
2 1 6
■individual High Game: Mae Neal f 204) 1
Malar
Lilly Paint
3 1 12
O.N.G.
3 1 11
RAM Music
4 0 11
Searity National Bank
1 3 10
Stepp 66
3 1 7
Huward's Barber Shop
1 3 6
O.G.liE.
1 3 6
Patty Preciaion
0 4 2
Individual High Game
(2611.
Bob Blackburn
J Wad. Night Scratch 1
Gibson's
4 0 634
M.F A
3 1 61
Cruikshank-Selsor
0 4 43 4
Three Aces
4 0 43
RAM. Music
1 3 36
The Girls
0 4 16
Individual High Game
Wayne Lynch.
jGuy Bolin, Tom Filbeck all with 1212). 1
f Bowlaratte 1
Team No. 2
4 0 8
RAM Music
3 1 7
Arnulds
4 0 7
Monger Oil
1 3 4
Calvert's BAB Slop
3 1 4
Bartlett Hospital
0 4 1
Carl's
1 3 1
Sectrity National Bank
0 4 0
Individual High Game
'216).
Pat Hurst
1 Night Owls K
BIB
4 0 6
Hoot Owls
4 0 0 1
Can Du s
1 3 6
Fearless Four
0 4 34
Patty & Davis
3 1 3
Four Goof ere
2 2 24
Jack Young Glass
2 2 2
Moores A Tomberlins
0 4 0
[Individual High Game (Woman) 1
Iflunna Wilson ( 2211
|Individual High Game
| Young i 2241
■ Man) Harold 1
jj Guys 4 Dolls I
The Happy Four
34 4 64
HasBeens
3 1 7
Four Bears
3 1 7
Fuur Aces
1 3 6
The Skelly Fuur
3 1 6
Owen'sDiggers
1 3 6
KedMen
4 34 44
Fight Balls
1 3 4
Individual High Game
Harvey 1187).
' Woman i Pat
Individual High Game
Snuth >223)
Mam V B
Fri. Night Late Birds 1
Wild Four
4 0 4
Slow Starters
3 1 3
Sherwuod Machine
3 1 3
Smiths and Scutts
1 3 1
In-Laws
1 3 1
S L S
0 4 0
High Bailers
0
loetri 0
Individual High Gam«. (Woman) |
JuAnn Buckley <20ti.
Individual High Game:
Wuodrdl 2261
(Man) Bob 1
(discount CIMTIRj
1720 So. Main
By United Press International
Fired-up Oklahoma hit 61 per
cent of its shots from the field
to down Big Eight Conference
rival Nebraska 79-67 Monday
night, and Missouri took advan-
tage of an Oklahoma State
scoring drought to whip the
Cowboys 63-55.
The Sooners pushed their rec-
PAGE FOUR—Sapulpa (Okie.) Herald, Tuesday, February 2, 1*71
Technical
Keeps KU
Winning
By CHARLIE SMITH
UPI Sports Writer
An uncalled foul and the re-
sulting technical foul called on
Kansas State Coach Jack Hart-
man allowed fifth - ranked Kan-
sas to continue its 23 - game
homecourt winning streak Mon-
day night.
The crucial play came with
2:59 to play and Kansas leading
arch - rival Kansas State, 67-64.
Mark Williams missed a free
throw and Dave Robisch went
over the back of Bob Zender to
wrestle the ball away and put
it in the basket for a 69-64 lead.
Hartman first called timeout,
then appealed to referee Pat
Haggerty. The official immedi-
ately called a technical foul on
Hartman. Williams made the
free throw and Kansas got the
ball and went on to a 79-74 vic-
tory.
“He didn’t call it (the techni-
cal) on what I said,” a distres-
sed Hartman said after the
game. “He couldn’t have. He
must have called it on a pro-
testing gesture. It’s a tough sit-
uation when your kids work
their tails off and then some-
thing like that happens.”
Hartman said all he asked
Haggerty was, “How could you
possibly not call that?”
It was a strange game statis-
tically. Kansas shot only 34.6
per cent to Kansas State’s 49.1.
The Jayhawks’ Bud Stallworth
scored 20 points, but made only
9 of 26 attempts. Robisch led
all scorers with 25.
Kansas State lost the game
because it could not protect the
ball. Ihe Wildcats committed
25 turnovers, 19 in the first
half.
“Anytime you turn the ball
over that many times, it’s got-
ta hurt,” said Hartman. “Our
kids were a little tense, there’s
no question about that.”
Much to the distress of 17,000
Kansas partisans, a sellout
crowd, Kansas State opened
the game by making 10 straight
field - goal attempts.
The victory moved Kansas to
4-0 in Big Eight Conference
play and 15-1 on the season.
Elsewhere Monday night, Okla-
homa subdued Nebraska, 79-67,
in Norman and Missouri dealt
Oklahoma State its fifth straight
conference loss, 63-55.
Clifford Ray scored 19 points
and Bobby Jack 18 for Oklaho-
ma, which shot a torrid 61 per
cent from the field. Marvin Ste-
wart had 18 for Nebraska. Mis-
souri was led by Henry Smith's
30 points and a stingy Man-man
defense that did not yield a
field goal to Oklahoma State in
the last 13 minutes.
Ilic .^ii/mI/hi lhiil\ llcr,ild
SPORTS
OU Tips Huskers
While OSU Falls
ord to 4-2 in the conference
and 14-4 overall, dropping Ne-
braska to 2-2 and 12-4. Missouri
moved to 4-1 and 12-5, and the
Cowboys fell to 0-5 and 5-12.
In the Missouri Valley Confer-
ence, Tulsa came from behind
to defeat St. Louis 75-70. The
Hurricane improved its record
to 4-3 in league play and 13-5
Manning Leans
Toward Saints
In Pro Draft
NEW ORLEANS (UPI)- Oliv-
ia Manning doesn’t like baseball.
“She doesn't like baseball at
all,” grins her 6-3, 205-pound
husband Archie Manning, the
Mississippi quarterback.
Although the New Orleans
Saints picked Manning No. 2 in
the pro football draft last week,
he had been drafted earlier, too,
by the Kansas City Royals of
the American Baseball League.
This left Manning a choice of
careers, but he indicated at a
news conference called Monday
by the Saints that he was now
definitely leaning towards foot-
ball.
And that, undoubtedly, will
make Olivia Manning happy.
The Mannings were married
last month and honeymooned a
week in Acapulco.
“I’m not going to try and play
college baseball this spring,”
said Manning, who quarterback-
ed Ole Miss’ football team
and played shortstop on the
Rebel baseball team as well.
“I prefer to play football. My
family and people close to me
want me to play football,” Man-
ning said.
Besides, the Drew, Miss., sen-
ior said, “I don’t know what the
pro baseball scouts really think
Robinson: No Coaching
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI)-
Brooks Robinson, winner of the
21st annual Hickok Award as
the “Pro Athlete of the Year,”
said today he has no manager-
ial ambitions but that Balti-
more Oriole teammate Frank
Robinson “will become highly
successful if given the chance.”
“I’m going on record as
stating that I will not be
interested in becoming a major
league manager,” said the 33-
year old hero of the Orioles’
World Series victory over the
Cincinnati Reds. “But Frank
Robinson has been grooming
himself as a manager and has
done a great job. He will
become highly successful if
given the chance.”
Frank Robinson, the Orioles’
Triple Crown Winner in 1966
and the only player in major
league history who has won
Most Valuable Player awards
in both leagues, would be the
first major league Negro
manager. He has been school-
ing himself in recent years by
managing in the Cribbean
Winter League.
Brooks Robinson, who says
some of his defensive gems
"aren’t as difficult as they
look," admitted Monday night
that he was surprised to win
the $10,000 Hickok Award.
“This tops it all off,” he said.
“It’s got to be the most
satisfying moment of my
career because the Pro Athlete
of the Year Award encompas-
ses all sports. I literally
jumped in the air when told I
had won the award because I
thought either Bobby Orr of the
Boston Bruins or George
Blanda of the Oakland Raiders
would win it.”
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of me.”
Manning, who wore dark red
Bell bottoms and a mod striped
shirt, said that even if he opted
for a baseball career, he’d have
to stay in the minors, probably,
at least a couple of years.
“I’m not too crazy about that.
It just seems I might have a
better opportunity in football.”
Coach J. D. Roberts of the
Saints was at the news confer-
ence. He munched potato chips
and talked approvingly of Man-
ning and other new players
acquired in the draft.
"The Saints look good right
now. We had a real good draft
and we have the makings of a
nice young football team,” Rob-
erts said.
He said he would meet with
Manning in June to “give him a
briefing on the Saint offense.”
He and Manning would talk,
said Roberts, “about how we
call plays, huddle discipline —
things like that.”
Manning said his broken left
arm “is completely fine now."
He displayed the scar on his
forearm and said the arm
would undergo a second opera-
tion at the conclusion of his
rookie season as a pro to re-
move the screws from a metal
pressure plate holding the bones
together.
Manning said he wouldn’t at-
tempt to pattern himself on any
particular pro quarterback, but
that he had always admired
Fran Tarkenton of the New
York Giants.
“Fran Tarkenton is a real
good passer. He runs the ball
some and scrambles," he said.
And the problem of learning to
be a pro-style drop-back passer
as opposed to the throw-on-the-
move threat he was at Ole Miss
seemed a slight one to Manning.
“I really like to drop back.
But Coach (Johnny) Vaught had
success for 22 years with rolling
out at Ole Miss and he wasn't
going to change it when I came
along.”
Pirates Sign
Pitching Pair
PITTSBURGH (UPI)—Catch-
er Manny Sanguillen, who
batted .325 last season, signed a
1971 contract Monday with the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
The Pirates also signed two
pitchers, John Lamb, who
worked as a reliever in 23
games for Pittsburgh at the
end of the 1970 season, and
Bruce Kison, who played last
year at Waterbury, Conn.
Sanguillen, 26, finished the
1970 season tied for second
place in the National League
batting averages. He begins his
third full season with the
Pirates.
Lamb, 24, a righthander,
from Pittsburgh’s Columbus,
Ohio, farm club last Aug. 12
and was credited with three
saves.
for the season, and St. Ixiuis
dropped to 1-3 and 9-9.
In preliminary games, the
Oklahoma freshmen defeated
Grayson, Tex., 87-81, and Tul-
sa’s frosh stopped Okmulgee
Tech 64-60.
The state’s other major col-
lege basketball team, Oklaho-
ma City University, dropped a
107-103 decision in overtime to
I-oyola of New Orleans.
Two members of the Oklaho-
ma Collegiate Conference took
on outside opposition Monday
night, and managed a split.
Eastern New Mexico defeated
conference leader East Central
65-56, and Panhandle edged
Highlands of New Mexico 92-91
in overtime.
Bethany Nazarene, an inde-
pendent, dropped a 90-89 ver-
dict to I-eTourneau of Texas.
In junior college play, North-
eastern A&M knocked off the
frontrunner again, defeating
Seminole 100-85 and allowing
idle Bacone to regain the top
spot in the Bi-State Conference.
Bacone had been No. 1 in the
loop until last week, when
Northeastern A&M handed the
Indians their first league loss.
Bacone now stands 7-1 in con-
ference play, Seminole 8-2 and
Northeastern A&M 7-2.
In other junior college games,
Eastern outlasted St. Gregory’s
126-107 and Northern defeated
Oklahoma City Southwestern 85-
-82.
Southwestern State gets its
chance to catch up with East
Central in the Oklahoma Colleg-
iate Conference tonight. The
Bulldogs host Northwestern,
while the Tigers take the night
off. Another league member,
I^ngston, hosts independent
Oklahoma Christian.
Other games tonight match
Oklahoma City University at
Centenary, Oral Roberts at La-
mar Tech and Murray at Con-
nors.
Fight Set
For Front
Of Rating
NEW YORK (UPI)—The
stage has been set for Southern
California and UCLA.
The two Los Angeles rivals
were voted 1-2 among the
nation’s major colleges today
by the 35-member United Press
International Board of Coaches.
Now they’ll tangle Saturday
night at the Los Angeles Sports
Arena with the winner probably
laying a solid claim to the top
ranking.
Waiting in the wings, howev-
er, are a pair of unbeatens.
Marquette (16-0) was ranked
third and Pennsylvania, also 16-
0, took down the No. 4 ranking.
Southern California received
20 first-place votes and 318
points after running its record
to 16-0 last week. UCLA, now
15-1 had nine first-place votes
and 301 points while Marquette
had the remaining five for 283
points.
Kansas was fifth in the
balloting, which includes games
played through Sunday, Jan. 31,
with Jacksonville, South Caroli-
na, Western Kentucky, Tennes-
see and Kentucky completing
the top 10.
Five coaches from each of
the seven geographical areas of
the nation comprise the UPI
ratings board. Each week they
select the top 10 major college
teams in the nation, with points
awarded on a 10-94-7-6-5-4-3-2-1
basis on votes from first
through 10th.
NEW YORK (UPI)—The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball
teams with first-place votes and
won-lost records in parentheses.
(Ninth week, includes games
played through Sunday, Jan.
31).
Team Points
1. Sou. Cal. (20) (164) 318
2 UCLA (9) (15-1) 301
3 Marquette (5) (16-0) 283
4 Pennsylvania (16-0) 226
5 Kansas (14-1) 189
6 Jacksonville (14-2) 164
7 South Carolina (11-3) 79
8 Western Kentucky (14-3) 54
9 Tennessee (13-3) 30
10. Kentucky (133) 29
11. Illinois (9-3) 24
12 LaSalle (14-1) 20
13. Notre Dame (1; 5) 19
14. Fordham (13-1) 18
15. North Carolina (12-3; 15
16. Utah St. (16-3) 14
17. Michigan (194) 13
18. Duquesne (11-2) 12
19 (Tie) Villanova (15-4) 11
(Tie) Nebraska (12-3) 11
Others receiving five or more
points: Drake, Arizona State,
Louisville, Oregon, Utah, Hous-
ton.
Gamecocks Drop
Fourth In A Row
By United Press International
What’s wrong with the South
Carolina basketball team?
Coach Frank McGuire’s team
suffered its fourth Atlantic
Coast Conference loss Monday
night when it was beaten by
Duke, 82-71.
The Gamecocks can still
make the NCAA tournament if
they win the controversial ACC
postseason tourney but the
team has now lost four of its
last six games.
The Blue Devils, who had
only two wins in six previous
ACC games, led most of the
game against the cold-shooting
Gamecocks.
Duke held a 33-27 halftime
lead but South Carolina rallied
and outscored the Blue Devils,
10-4, at the outset of the second
half to tie the game 37-37. But
then Duke pulled away and
South Carolina never caught up.
The omside shooting of Rick
Katherman, who scored 16
points, and the rebounding of
Randy Denton played key roles
in the Duke victory.
John Roche scored 28 points
in a losing cause for South
Carolina.
While South Carolina, ranked
seventh, was losing, two other
teams in the top 10—fifth-
ranked Kansas and lOth-ranked
Kentucky--were victorious. But
ninth-ranked Tennessee also
was an upset "ictim as it lost
to Vanderbilt, 65-60.
The other teams in the top 10
were idle including Southern
California and UCLA, who'll
meet Saturday night in a
classic showdown when UCLA
puts its 135-5 record over the
past five years on the line.
Dave Robisch scored 25
points to pace Kansas to the 79
74 victory over Kansas State.
Kansas is now 15-1 this season.
Bud Stallworth backed Robisch
with 20 points while Steve
Mitchell paced Kansas State
with 22.
The turning point of the game
came with 2:59 remaining when
Robisch wrestled the ball away
from Bob Zender after a
missed free throw and scored a
basket to put Kansas ahead, 89
64.
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Kansas Draft Choice
Ready For ‘Jet’ Leap
LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) -
It’s a long way from Centralia,
Kan., to Broadway. But John
Riggins, the New York Jets’
No. 1 draft choice, is prepared
to make the jump.
Riggins has the flare and the
ability to make a big splash in
his rookie season. He’s big —
235 pounds — and fast — 9.8 in
the 100-yard dash in high scho-
ol.
And Riggins has confidence in
his ability. When he scored two
touchdowns against Colorado as
a sophomore for Kansas, he
threw the footballs into the ble-
achers. That caused Kansas
Athletic Director Wade Stinson
to protest, realizing that foot •
balls cost about $30 each. But
Coach Pepper Rodgers didn’t
flinch.
"Fullbacks who weigh 230 po-
unds and run 9.8s are harder to
find than athletic directors,”
said Rodgers.
Riggins played quarterback
at Centralia, a town of about
500 in north central Kansas. As
a senior, he averaged more than
10 yards a carry. At the time,
he weighed 215 pounds.
“I think my size and speed
were a lot of the reason I had
so much success in high scho-
ol," Riggins recalled. “It wasn’t
so much my ability as it was
that I posed such a physical
threat to their well - being.
“I remember seeing a lot of
guys falling down when I turn-
ed the corner. And I couldn’t
blame them. Most defensive
halfbacks in our league weigh-
ed between 120 and 150 and a
150 - pounder was a rarity.”
Riggins says he almost gave
up football in Centralia after
his first workout as a fresh -
man. “We ran a half-mile, then
we had calisthenics,” he re -
calls. "Then we ran a quarter-
mile and had practice. After
practice, we ran another half -
mile. I seriously considered
quitting that day.”
Though he was considered the
best prospect in the state his
senior year, Riggins says he
thought the scholarship from
Kansas was a gift. His brother,
Junior, was a member of the
Kansas team.
“When I first came here I
hadn’t entertained the idea yet
that I could play big time col-
lege football,” Riggins said. “I
figured they’d red - shirt me,
and after a couple of years, I’d
quit. I guess it was mainly be-
cause I had been brain-washed.
I remember a lot of guys say-
ing I wouldn’t have done so
well if I’d played at a larger
high school. After you hear that
a few times, you start believing
it.
“But after I started compe -
ting with the guys on the team,
I realized I could play here.”
Riggins finished at the Uni -
versity of Kansas with 2,706
yards rushing in 546 carries for
a 5.0 average. He scored 22 to-
uchdowns, 14 of them his senior
season.
Riggins went home to Centra-
lia last Thursday for the draft.
After 14 hours of the draft, he
was still waiting. But his father
called and told him he had he-
ard on the radio that he’d been
the sixth choice in the first ro-
und. That’s when Riggins pick-
ed up the telephone and called
the Jets, who apparently had
not been able to locate him.
“This seems like it’s going to
be more of a jump than it was
from high school to college
ball,” he says. ”1 guess I don’t
have the confidence I should.
But I’d rather have that atti-
tude than think I was going to
make it easily. I know one
thing: I’m really anxious, I’m
ready for football to start.
State
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Livermore, Edward K. The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 57, No. 130, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 2, 1971, newspaper, February 2, 1971; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1494580/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.