PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAM, LAWRENCE. KANAS MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1950 Jayhawkers Strike Fast To Down Aggies, 40 To 7 KU-A&M Statistics | | KU | Aggies | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | First downs | 14 | 12 | | Rushing | 12 | 6 | | Passing | 2 | 4 | | Penalties | 0 | 2 | | Net yards rushing | 345 | 125 | | Net yards passing | 82 | 60 | | Net total offense | 427 | 185 | | Passes attempted | 8 | 18 | | Passes completed | 4 | 7 | | Passes int'cpt. by | 2 | 0 | | Yds. int'cpt. returns | 68 | 0 | | Number of punts | 7 | 9 | | Punting average | 41 | 42 | | Yds. punts returned | 76 | 88 | | Yds. kickoffs ret'd | 32 | 68 | | Fumbles | 3 | 4 | | Ball lost on fumbles | 2 | 4 | | Number of penalties | 12 | 4 | | Yds. penalized | 100 | 50 | Okla. A. and M... 0 0 7 0—4 Kansas ... 13 27 0—40 Kausas scoring: Touchdowns—Hoag 2, Schaake, Stinson, and Brandeberry 2. Points after touchdown—Cashell 4 (placement). Oklahoma A. A. and M. scoring: Touchdown—Wagner. Point after touchdown—Dry (placement). THE LINEUPS OKLAHOMA AGGIES New Holderman LE—New, Holderman LT—Leierer, Hodge LG—W. Smith C—Spamn, Dry RG—W. Smith, Strevey, Navickas RT—Weaver, Coldazier RE—Schaf, Patton QB—McNeil, Cook, Steele LH—Crabko, Brightman, Wagner RH—Middaugh, Johnson, Bran-sterter FB—Meisenheimer KANSAS LE—Smith, Tice, D. Unruh, Fraser, Pierson, Huber LT—Talkington, Garnett, Sandefur, Nelson. LG—Mrkonic, Idoux, Luschen, Abel, Hammel, White C — Gish, Winter, Stroud, Roberts, Kennison, Kennard, Spencer, Corrall RE- Schaake, O'Neal, Linville, Mayer, Rengel RT—McCormack, Mace, Schaben, Austin QB—Strelow, Cashell, A. U Rodgers LH—Hoag, Wells, Murphy, Lamping RH—Stinson, Cleavinger, Brandeberry, Steanson FB—Amberg, Fiss, Laughlin, Cox, Riverhart INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS OKLA. AGGIES RUSHING Back TC G L N Avg. McNeil 9 44 4 40 4.4 Cook 7 38 7 31 4.3 Meisenheimer 5 22 0 22 4.4 Grabko 9 22 0 22 2.4 Branstetter 1 17 0 17 17.0 Wagner 3 9 4 5 1.7 Johnson 1 1 0 1 1.0 Steele 3 316 -13 -4.3 38 156 31 125 3.3 KANSAS RUSHING Back TC G L N Avg Stinson 7 116 1 116 16.6 Brandeberry 11 48 1 47 4.3 Hoag 8 44 0 44 5.5 Laughlin 7 41 0 41 5.9 Murphy 8 28 3 25 3.1 Amberg 4 15 0 15 3.8 Cleavinger 2 15 0 15 7.5 Wells 5 13 0 13 2.6 Cashell 4 17 3 14 3.5 Cox 2 10 0 10 5.0 Fiss 1 9 0 9 9.0 Lamping 4 10 3 1.8 Rodgers 1 0 0 0 -0.5 Strehlow 2 4 15 -11 -5.5 66 370 25 345 5.2 EXPERT WATCH REPAIR By RAY SOLDAN Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 Week or Less Service Daily Kansan Sports Editor WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. The Jayhawkers scored 40 points in the final 23 minutes of the first half Saturday, and then threw everyone but Trainer Dean Nesmith into the fray to down Oklahoma A. and M., 40 to 7. the Aggies—who according to their coach, J. B. Whitworth, "played about as good as we could—were simply out-played and commended by the Jawhakers. Kansas used 51 players, completely clearing the bench. The Oklahomans—who started the season as the "fightin' forty" and were reduced to the "Thin Thirty"—used their whole traveling squad, 26 men The Aggies—who according to The "tattered twenty," like all of Kansas' previous opponents, couldn't check the Jayhawker running attack. Fourteen backs carried as K.U. ran up 345-yards rushing. Kansas, who raised its per game average 11 yards by this display, went into the game ninth on the nation's rushing tables. The Kansas attack was led by fleet Wade Stinson, who averaged nearly 17 yards a carry—including a 68-yard scoring dash off right tackle. Wade moved into second place in the conference in individual rushing, dropping teammate Charlie Hoag to third. Stinson's five game net-yardage total is 429, Hoag's 421. Both are far behind leader Bobby Reynolds of Nebraska. Hoag and Bob Brandeberry—who was playing his first college game—each scored two touchdowns. Hoag raced 58 yards with an intercepted pass which was deflected into his waiting arms by Jayhawker Bill OKLA. AGGIES PASSING Passer PA PC PI TD Yds Cook 18 7 2 0 60 KANSAS PASSING Passer PA PC PI TD Yds Strehlow 8 4 0 2 82 OKLA. A. M. PASS RECEIVING Receiver C TD Yds. Schaaf 5 0 48 branstetter 2 0 12 Mace, and sliced seven yards over tackle for another. KANSAS PASS RECEIVING RANSAS PASS RECEIVING Receiver C TD Yds. Schaake 1 1 45 Smith 1 0 8 Brandeberry 1 1 15 Linville 1 0 14 — — — 4 2 82 OKLA. A. M. PUNTING Kicker No. Yds. Avg. McNeil 6 252 42.0 Wagner 1 41 41.0 Grabko 2 82 41.0 OKLA. A. M. PUNTING KANSAS PUNTING Kicker No. Yds. Avg. Simons 7 289 41.3 "Brandy" galloped nine yards on his first college carry, and enjoyed himself so much that he romped 38-more yards before the day was over and caught a 15-yard touchdown pass from Chet Strehlow. His one-yard buck as time ran out in the BRANDEBERRY LUSCHEN A. UNRUH first half closed the scoring for the Javahawkers—except for Fox Cr-shell's fourth successful extra point conversion in six attempts. JOHN IDOUX Fullback Bud Laughlin also ran well for Kansas, picking up 41 yards in seven carries. Strehlow, Archie Unruh, Jack Rodgers, and Cashell all took turns at running the Kansas team. Strehlow, who tossed two scoring passes, and Unruh were particularly outstanding. Strehlow's handoffs were smooth and at time hard to follow, and his passing was the best to date. He passed only eight times, completed four, and had none intercepted. But for faulty receiving he would have completed at least two more passes. One of his touchdown tosses was a 45-yard beauty to Bill Schaake, the other one was a button-hook peg to Brandeberry. pass and had to operate against eight and nine-man Aggie lines. Unruh ran the Jayhawker attack nearly half the game, guiding it to its final touchdown. He did a good job of quarterbacking—especially so because he was instructed not to The Kansas line played another fine game. The tackling and blocking were crisp, despite the constant flow of reserves into the game. Defensive standouts were Jack Luschen, sophomore guard, John Idoux, Orbon Tice, and the always-dependable linebacking trio of Mace, Merlin Gish, and Galen Fiss. The offensive line opened big holes in the Aggie defense to spring the Jayhawker backs into the secondary. On Stinson's long touchdown sprint, George Mrkonic, Bob Talkington, and Dolph Simons combined to smash open the A. and M. line, and Wint Winter, Mike McCormack, and Schaake applied blocks to secondary defenders to shake Wade loose. He was free about five yards past the scrimmage line. Simons, the Big Seven's leading punter, continued his fine punting. Seven kicks averaged 41.3 yards, dropping his season average slightly to 44 yards a kick. His average would have been about three yards higher Saturday, but he was credited with only a 24-yard punt once when he angled the ball out-of-bounds on the Aggie 12-yard line. The Aggies' top performer was fullback Darrel Meisenheimer who, along with guard Wilbanks Smith, played the full 60 minutes. A former Attica, Kan. player, Meisenheimer was in on 16 of his team's tackles—five of them were unassisted. He averaged 4.4 yards a carry, to lead his team in that department too. The Oklahomans' only score came on a 65-yard punt return midway in the third quarter. Halfback Wilson Wagner took a Simons punt near the sidelines, faked a handoff, and scampered untouched down the chalkline to the touchdown. He didn't have much blocking because he didn't need it, his fake handoff had fooled about half of the Kansas team. The play was reminiscent of the pair pulled against Kansas by Oklahoma's Jack Mitchell and Darrell Royal two years ago. A quick review of Kansas scoring: The first touchdown came on Hoag's 58-yard run with an intercepted pass. Cashell's kick was good. Four minutes later, Strehlow passed 30 yards to Schaake who took the ball over his head and behind the Aggie secondary and ran 15 yards for another touchdown. This play climaxed a four-play, 60-yard Jayhawker drive. Cashell missed the extra point and the score stood 13 to 0 at the quarter. Stinson's 68-yard scoring burst opened K.U.'s 27-point second quarter. Cashell converted. That series of downs started on the Kansas 14. Two plays following the kickoff, Cashell intercepted a Bob Cook pass and returned it to the Aggie 31. In five plays, Kansas scored with Hoag going over from the seven. Cashell converted. The next time the Jayhawkers got the ball they drove 54 yards to score. Brandeberry, Laughlin, and Pat Murphy did the running and Strchlow did the passing. He completed a pass to Aubrey Linville—we played a fine game in the defensive secondary—and a 14-yard scoring pass to Brandeberry. Cashell's kick WADE STINSON was wide. Lehman Brightman fumbled the kickoff for the Aggies and Johnny Amberg recovered on the A. and M. 19-yard line. With Unruth calling the plays, Kansas just barely beat the 'halftime gun. Laughlin carried 13 of the yards and Brandeberry scored from the one. Cashell's extra point attempt was good. STREHLOW In the last half, Oklahoma A and M. defeated Kansas' reserves, 7 +0 I-M Schedule Today's Schedule Field PAUL 1 Dix Club vs. Don Henry 2 Battenfeld vs. Y.M.C.A. 3 Navy vs. Unknowns 4 Oread vs. Sterling 5 Jim Beam vs. AFROTC 6 Lolliffe vs. AIEE IT'S THE "HAWK" For Good Food 14th & Ohio - SIZZLING STEAKS BEAT NEBRASKA - DELICIOUS SOUPS - TEMPTING SANDWICHES Watch the Shows on our New T.V. 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