Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday. Oct. 15. 1962 Fourth Quarter TD's Give KU 29-8 Win The Kansas Jayhawkers' forte was depth as they scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter to defeat the Iowa State Cyclones 29-8 Saturday, at Ames. At the end of the first quarter, the Jayhawkers and the Cyclones were tied 0-0. And, by the end of the first half, the Jayhawks had only accounted for a touchdown and an extra point. Going into the final period, KU held only a 14-0 lead, not a safe margin at all. But, when you look at the final score, you get the impression that it was a one-sided affair. It wasn't — at least for three quarters. The Jayhawkers literally wore down the Cyclones, gaining their third straight win and second Big Eight victory of the season in spoiling Iowa State's 50th annual homecoming. AND, BESIDES depth, KU quarterback Rodger McFarland, aided the Jayhawker cause by netting 105 yards in 22 attempts to finish ahead of ale Sayers, who ran 14 times for 94 yards, as the game's top rusher. In the first half, the Cyclones had six first downs, the Jayhawks only five. Iowa State had the same edge on number of first half drives, once holding the ball for 16 plays and 49 vards. KU had possession of the ball once for 10 plays in the first half. After that spurt, ended by an I-State pass interception, the Cyclones moved the ball three plays before the Jayhawkers regained possession and scored in eight plays. TONY LEIKER TERMINATED the 50-yard drive with an eighty- yard run to the left side aided by a key block from fullback Armand Baughman. A key play in the drive was a 35-yard pass play from Leiker to Ron Oelschlager. In the Cyclones' 16-play drive, spread over the end of the first quarter and the beginning of the second, Dave Hoppmann picked up three first downs for I-State. On a third-and-two situation at the 50-yard line Hoppmann picked up a fumble by quarterback Larry Switzer and ran for a first down. FULLBACK KEN COLEMAN scored on the Jayhawkers' second series in the third quarter on a one-yard run. McFarland set up the score with quarterback keepers of nine, two, six, five and three vards and two first downs. And, it was such displays as this which made McFarland the game's star performer. Following the game KU coach Jack Mitchell called McFarland's signal-calling job "tremendous." "Our offense was a success due to McFarland's check of overshifting," Mitchell said. Mitchell said McFarland checked 90 per cent of the KU plays at the line of scrimmage. "WE RAN RIGHT all day long, that's all we did was run right," Mitchell added. "They kept overshifting us for Sayers. We couldn't run around the end. It hurt us." While Sayers and McFarland picked up yardage consistently, Hoppmann, Iowa State's all-America, covered only 17 yards in 23 carries. Running as a quarterback, Hoppmann made a seven-yard run, was thrown for losses of thirteen and four yards and tossed an extra-point pass after the lone Iowa State score. The Jayhawkers never lost yard-age. WITH KANSAS LEADING 14-0, the Cyclones made their only score early in the last quarter. End Larry Hannahs picked up a McFarland fumble and six plays later, Hopp- mann scored on a one-yard keeper. The key play in the series was a 40 yard reverse-pass. Switzer handed to Hoppmann who gave the ball to Otis Williams on a reverse. Williams returned the ball to Switzer who passed to end Larry Schrieder on the eight. KU's third score covered 70 yards in 11 plays. Leiker broke into FOLLOWING THE SCORE, putting KU ahead 20-8, McFarland tossed to Pack St. Clair, who was all alone in the end zone, for a two-point conversion. open field, slipped by three Cyclone defenders and scored on a 15-yard run. The last scoring was made with 1:09 remaining to play. Sayers, picked up a block from Coleman, skirted left end and scored from the eight. Gary Duff added three extra points to the four KU touchdowns in as many placement attempts. THE ONLY OTHER Cyclone threat besides their touchdown march came at the end of the third quarter. Hoppmann moved the ball from the Iowa State 22 to the Kansas 32 with three straight pass completions. The drive was stopped when KU's Baughman intercepted a Hoppmann pass at the four and ran to the 17. YESTERDAY'S postponement was called shortly after 8 a.m. and both teams sojourned to Modesto, Calif., to work out in the park of the Modesto Colts of the Class D California State league. Sixth Series Game To Be Played Today "I think that pass interception was probably the biggest play of the ball game." Mitchell said afterwards. The coach also praised both fullbacks for their blocking. It was a block by Baughman that freed Leiker for a touchdown and Coleman who set Sayers loose on his touchdown run. It was the first time in series history that both teams worked out at a site away from the scene of the competition. The two teams have not met since Wednesday when the Yankees won in New York 5-3 on Tom Tresh's home run. The sixth game of the World Series was to be played today. The Yankees held batting practice for an hour and 20 minutes. The pitchers loosened up, but none threw batting practice. And it was about time. Rain forced postponement of the game on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. NOTES AND QUOTES — "We played four of the worst defensive downs we've ever played." Mitchell said of the Jayhawker defense when Hoppmann completed those three straight passes, one to the right, one to the left and the last again to the right. The Giants practiced for two hours and employed several of their pitchers for batting practice. The Yankees are favored $6\frac{1}{2}$ to 5 to end the series today. Mitchell called Clay Stapleton's eleven "one of the best football teams we've played. They've got a tremendous team. We're not much better. We stayed with it for 60 minutes and were able to drag it out." If a seventh game is played tomorrow, Ralph Terry is scheduled to start for New York while Jack Sanford will pitch for San Francisco. The Candlestick Park field is in good condition according to Matty Schwab, the Giants groundskeeper. The footing appeared solid early this morning. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. THE YANKEES, who lead 3-2 in the series, will start Whitey Ford on the mound while the San Francisco Giants will pitch Billy Pierce who has not lost this year in Candlestick Park. Now is the time Burch Higgins, Photographer RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Dave Hoppmann, Iowa State's All-American tail back, has been named Iowa Athlete of 1961-62 by the Iowa Association of the Amateur Athletic Union. 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