Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 96, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, October 29, 2010 Page: 8 of 16
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The Sapulpa Daily Herald
Sports
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OKLAHOMA CITY -The
Sapulpa Chieftains traveled to
Oklahoma City to play a dis-
trict game against the Putnam
City West Patriots on Thursday
night and throttled the team
from OKC 48-0.
The Chieftains wasted not
time in getting on the board.
Sapulpa took the opening
kick-off and Austin Feathers
had two runs for 56 yards to
give Sapulpa first
and goal on the
one yard line.
Tyler
Williams
plunged into the
end zone and
the Chieftains
led 6-0 after a failed
P.A.T.
Feathers had 90 yards on 10
carries through three quarters
before Coach Mike Gottsch
called off the dogs and played
the teams seconds.
The story of the night had
to be the Chieftain defense,
who pitched their fist shut-out
of the year and Tyler Williams
passing.
Williams was 8-of-IO for
248 yards and four touch-
downs. He also rushed for a
score.
The Chieftains led 39-0 at
halftime, after Williams threw
passes to Kendal Davis for 66
yards. Trevor Hall for 80
yards, Levi Pickering for 16
yards and then Williams found
Davis again for 14 yards to
take a 32-0 lead.
With 1:32 left in the half,
Chase Duke blocked a Patriot
punt and Justin Plisinski
picked the ball up and ran it in
for a touchdown to give the
Chieftains a 39-0 halftime lead
after a successful P.A.T.
In the second half, the
defense picked up where it left
off.
Kyle Stephens picked up a
Patriot fumble and rumbled 20
yards for a
touchdown. The
P.A.T. was no good
I and the Chieftains led 45-
0.
With about seven min-
utes left in the third quarter.
Coach Gottsch “called off the
dogs."
The Chieftains tacked on a
field goal to take a 48-0 lead
that would eventually be the
final.
“We needed this win to get
our confidence back, really
proud of the kids and their
effort last night," said Gottsch.
The Chieftains are now 3-6
in the Gottsch era and will host
Muskogee next Friday night
on senior night at Collins sta-
dium.
Kickoff is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. and will be the final
game of the season.
TOUCHDOWN GRAB: Levi Pickering hauls in a touch-
down pass from Tyler Williams during Sapulpa's 48-0
drumming of Putnam City West Thursday night.
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— Fan jumped up and down,
shaking orange pompoms,
waving scarves and chanting
itsw<^! swt^rr n';M ’:,T
While the Giants are look-
ing more and more like a base-
ball juggernaut, they're only
halfway to their first World
Series title in 56 years. They
hope to wrap it up on the road.
“We've just got to take that
confidence and some of the
good approaches that we've
had into these last two games
and take them down to Texas
with us," Matt Cain said after
Thursday night's 9-0 win over
the Texas Rangers gave San
Francisco a 2-0 Series lead.
Cain pitched 7 2-3 innings
and combined with his bullpen
on a four-hitter, and Edgar
Renteria reprised his October
success with a home run and
three RBIs.
While the Giants had the
best ERA in the majors during
the regular season, they were
just 17th in runs — the fewest
among the eight postseason
teams. Yet San Francisco has
outscored Texas 20-7 and out-
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hit the Rangers .314 to .227.
The Giants' offense is picking
up speed faster than a cable car
heading down Nob Hill.
'' ‘We've put ourselves in a
good situation," siiid Cain,
who hasn't allowed an earned
run in the postseason.
After a day off, the Series
resumes for the first time in
Arlington. Texas. Colby Lewis
starts Game 3 for the Rangers
on Saturday night against
Jonathan Sanchez.
Forty of the previous 51
teams to take a 2-0 lead have
gone on to win the title,
including seven straight and 13
of the last 14.
"1 don't think we caught
any breaks yet." Rangers man-
ager Ron Washington said.
“We certainly don't feci like
we're defeated. We're heading
home. They took care of us in
their ballpark, now we re
headed to ours."
San Francisco improved to
11-0 against Texas at AT&T
Park and got its third shutout
in nine postseason wins. The
Giants sent the high-octane
Rangers offense to its first
shutout since Sept. 23.
Not bad for a team that
scored 19 runs in its six-game
NL championship series win
over Philadelphia.
"Unbelievable," said
Renteria, who has just eight
regular-season homers in the
last two years. “You guys
know I have power."
No team has overcome a 2-
0 Series deficit since the 1996
New York Yankees against
Atlanta. The Giants have won
each time they took a 2-0 lead:
in 1922. 1933 and 1954.
Sports Briefs
Sooners Lose, QB Bradford Pays Up
ST. LOUIS (AP) — It s humility week for rookie Sam
Bradford.
Not only is he taking the St. Louis Rams' last-minute loss at
Tampa Bay hard, his beloved Oklahoma Sooners got knocked
off.
The No. I pick showed he was a good spori Wednesday, don-
ning a Missouri jersey with his name and college number 14 on
the back to his weekly media session.
That helped lighten the mood for at least a while, and
Bradford returned volley on questions relating to the Big 12
North leaders, whether Missouri's academic standards were too
high for him to consider that school out of college and whether
it was one of his worst moments.
Seconds alter leaving the session, the jersey came oil and the
game face came on. Time to get back to work preparing for this
week's home game against the Carolina Panthers.
Raises OK’d For Oklahoma Assistant Coaches
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - All nine of Oklahoma coach
Bob Stoops' assistant coaches have been given raises for this
football siMsnn
The university's regents voted Wednesday to approve $45,000
raises for defensive coordinator Brent Venables and offensive
coordinator Kevin Wilson. Venables is set to make $440.<KX) this
year, while Wilson w ill make $430,000.
Quarterbacks coach Josh Heupcl got the biggest bump,
increasing his total pay from $200,000 to $250,(KH). Oklahoma s
other three offensive assistants got raises ol $20,000 while three
defensive assistants will be paid about $16,500 more.
Baseball coach Sunny Golloway was also rewarded for taking
the Sooners to the College World Series, getting a two-year
extension through 2015 that includes a $94,000 raise and a
$15,000 stay bonus.
Wolfpack Upset Florida State
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) North Carolina State and Florida
State found themselves in similar positions: inside the 5-yard
line in the final minutes, with a chance to score a go-ahead
touchdown.
The Wolfpack executed. The lOth-ranked Seminoles bumbled
Russell Wilson threw a fourth-down touchdown pass to
George Bryan with 2 40 left, then Nate Irving recovered a fum-
ble in the closing minute on the Seminoles' final drive to give
N.C. State a 28-24 w in Thursday night in a matchup of Atlantic
Coast Conference di\ ision contenders.
Wilson ran lor three scores for the Wolfpack (6-2. 3-1). who
trailed 21-7 at the break before ending a three-game losing
streak to the Seminoles (6-2.4-1). With the win, N.C. State sur-
passed its victory total for last season and matched its best year
under fourth-year coach Tom O'Brien.
Now N.C. State enters November with a shot to win the
Atlantic Division and claim a spot in the league championship
game.
“We’ve got to go through it again," O'Brien said. "We’re in a
must-win mode each and every week, it we want to go to
Charlotte."
Trailing 24-21. the Wolfpack drove to the FSU I-yard line-
only to have the Seminoles stop Wilson on a pair of sneaks and
stuff James Washington's leap over the line on third down. The
Wolfpack appeared ready to kick a field goal, hut called timeout
and sent the offense back out on the field.
This time. Wilson rolled to his right on a play-action fake, then
found Bryan alone near the hack of the end zone for the 28-24
lead.
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Harmon, C. L. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 96, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, October 29, 2010, newspaper, October 29, 2010; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1507221/m1/8/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.