6 Monday, October 2. 1972 University Daily Kansan Kansan Staff Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE Seminoles' Ed Davis Plays Tough ...fantacles catches were usual for FSU By DAN GEORGE Kansas Sports Editor Seminole QB Tosses 4 TDs Huff Spellbounds Jayhawks, 44-22 For Gary Huff it was just another chapter in the long history of the Magic World. But, as far as the University of Kansas football team was concerned, the only thing long was the afternoon, as Huff and the Florida State Seminoles passed their team to Memorial Stadium over the Jawahra Saturday in Memorial Stadium before a crowd of 41,500. Jaymes tossed one TD pass, but was also damaged seven times trying to throw and dribble. FOR THE GAME, Huff hit on 26 of 42 attempts for 256 yards. KU's Jaynes, although plaged by inconsistency, was able to hit an 18-for-33 performance vials on an 18-for-33 performance. What was billed as a passing duel between Huff and the Jayhawks' David Jaynes became pretty much a one-sided affair. Huff riddled the KU secondary for 15 minutes, first in his first hall, putting the Jayhawks in a 28-7 hole from which they never escaped. But Huff, although he was intercepted three times, was not dropped once by the Hawks. His four TD throws against KU, which included a goal in an accomplish that feat against a Jayhawk squad. Oklauna's Crawl anrod in 1950 and Missouri's Terry McMillan in 1969 also The Seminoles piled up 500 yards total offense against KU and, almost all of this was attained passing, the Florida State runners were surprisingly successful. The Seminole workforce was Mitchell, who rolled up 130 vards on 23 carries. THE FLORIDA State ends, however, effectively closed off KU's outside attack and the Jayhawks were limited to only 93 vards on the ground. DENVER (AP)—Mike Livingston fired three second half touchdown passes and safety Jim Kearney returned two interceptions for scores to lead Kansas City past Denver, 45-24, Sunday in National Football League action. The quick, but not overpowering Jayhawk backs were forced to turn inside the cockpit. Chiefs Explode Late,45-24 Livingston, who replaced starter Len Dawson in the second half after Dawson reinjured some ribs, hit tight end Willie Frazier and wide receiver Dennis Homan for touchdowns within a six-minute shot and found Ols Tayler in the final period. Kearney returned one interception 43 yards and another 38 yards in the fourth quarter. 10-10 halftime deadlock Early in the third quarter, Livingston's 16-yard toss to Frazier, set up by Mike Sensibaugh's interception, made it 17-10. An interception by Charles Greer several minutes later helped Denver tie the count and then Detroit skirted left end from 15 yards out. Kansas City, however, dominated the rest of the game. By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Sports Writer Other scores: Pittsburgh 25, St Louis 19 New Jersey 4, NJet 20 New England 24, Washington 23 San Francisco 37, New Orleans 23 FSU's Jones Happy With Defensive Play Larry Jones, Florida State football coach, had few complaints about his team's performance in Saturday's game with the University of Kansas Jayhawks. "I was most impressed with our defense," Jones said after the game. "They gave 100 per cent the whole way. You have to understand how important we are with so little depth. Past our first unit we ran real thin. I was real proud of them." Jones praised quarterback Gary Huff and the defensive secondary, which collected five interceptions. Florida State won the game 44-22. "Our offense has been good all year." College Scores E164 Buckleen 17, Maline 14 Burrell 15, Cormell 27, Galway 14 Cormell 27, Galway 14 Delaware 49, Boston University 12 Delaware 49, Boston University 12 Edinburgh State 7, Sligo Rocky 7 Edinburgh State 7, Sligo Rocky 7 Lehigh Bay 9, Vermont 10 Lehigh Bay 9, Vermont 10 Navy 27, Buckleen 19 Navy 27, Buckleen 19 Oberlin College 21, Carnegie-Mellon 14 Oberlin College 21, Carnegie-Mellon 14 Princeton 7, Rutgers 8 Princeton 7, Rutgers 8 Springfield 27, Ambrose 3 Springfield 27, Ambrose 3 Temple 15,bury Cross 7 Temple 15,bury Cross 7 Alabama 48, Vanderbilt 21 Auburn 10, Tennessee 6 Cincinnati 7, Kentucky 5 Florida 28, Mississippi State 13 Georgia 26, N. Carolina State 12 Nebraska 40, Minnesota 9 Oklahoma State 31, Colorado 6 Oklahomba State 21, Missouri 6 Bowling Green 15, West Michigan 13 Michigan State 22, Northwestern State 8 College Bridge 26, Western State 8 Florida State 44, Kansas 12 Kansas State 44, Pittsburgh 8, Emory State 23 Kansas State, Pittsburgh 8, Tampa 7 Louisville 28, Dayton 1 Miami (Ohio) 26, Xavier Arkansas 21, Tulsa 10 Army 24, AM1 14 Texas 25, Texas Tech 10 Texas Tech State 20 Chennai 21, Tamilnadu 14 Air Force 84, Dartmouth College 16 Boston University 9, Ohio State 20 Oregon State 28, Young 3 Pacific University 24, Morton 6 West Virginia 45, Northwest Virginia 35 Utah State 95, West Virginia 20 Utah State 95, West Virginia 20 Washington 31, Illinois 11 Washington 31, Illinois 11 Jones said. "They usually give Huff quite a bit of protection. However, we had some real fine catches by our backs to help us along." HUFF COMPLETED 26 of 42 attempts for 295 passings. "We practice two hours a day," Jones said. "We practice an hour or a little more on passing. Some of the guys stay after practice and work on it, too." But Jones was not completely happy with Florida State's performance. "We had too many penalties," Jones said. "We were overanxious in the first half." Jones said. "We play with confidence. There is a lot of closeness on this team. We talk to each other. And that is what it's all about." The Seminoles were tagged for 125 yards in penalties, compared to 34 yards against the Browns. Jones also saved some of his praise for the Javahawk sound. "THEY'RE A Great bunch of athletes." Jones said. "They were don, 28-7, and then they were right back in the game. They went on. And that is a real credit to their team." "If there was a turning point," Jones said, "I think it was the final goal. It gave us a cushion to rest on. It took some of the heat off." Baltimore 17, Buffalo 0 Atlanta 31, Los Angeles 3 Miami 16, Minnesota 14 San Diego 17, Oakland 17 Cincinnati 24, Detroit 38, Chicago 24 Green Bay 16, Dallas 13 "He picked up on the quick passes real well. I was impressed with the coolness that he exhibited when he was under pressure—he's got a lot of composure." "We came out in the second half and worked more on ball control. We started using the flat pass, which worked very well for this game, but not for this game and our play showed it." Both Jones and Huff thought KU quarterback David Jaynes performed "This was an especially good game for (our) offensive line," Huff said. "Kansas used a tremendous amount of stunts and tackles." The team also gave and give me all the protection I needed. "He's a fine quarterback," Huff said. "He had a fine game. He threw real well too." Jones and Huff pointed out the presence of Florida State fans as a boost to their spirits, especially the attendance of Florida governor Reubin Askew. W. L. T Pct. Pts. Op. Miami 3 0 1,000 70 37 NY Jets 2 1 0 .667 105 84 N. England 2 1 0 .667 52 74 Baltimore 1 2 0 .333 54 54 Buffalo 1 2 0 .333 53 78 Cleveland 2 1 1 0 .667 64 69 Cincinnati 2 1 0 .667 52 44 Pittsburgh 2 1 0 .667 69 62 Houston 1 2 0 .333 56 84 PRO FOOTBALL STANDINGS American Conference "We tried to put some heat on him and he was hitting our seams," Jones said. "It's hard to get much support when you're this far from home," Huff said. ★★ Kansas City 2 1 1 0 .667 75 61 Oakland 1 1 1 1 .500 75 61 S. Diego 1 1 1 1 .500 75 65 Denver 1 1 1 0 .333 75 99 "We may not see the fans but we know they're up there cheering." The KU squad drove 72 yards to the Florida State five yard line on its first possession, but Bob Helmacher's field goal gave Florida a victory. By Seminole linemaker Larry Strickland. Although their passing proficiency was the main factor in the 16th-ranked Seminoles' victory, a missed scoring attempt and a missed mistakes were also major determinants. Five Florida State interceptions and a fumble by KU punter Marc Harris that gave the Seminoles the ball on the ground in line also aided the Florida State cause. W. L. T. Pct. Pts. OP Dallas 2 1 0 667 64 36 Washington 2 1 0 667 71 55 St. Louis 1 2 0 333 75 NY Giants 0 2 0 .000 30 53 Philadelphia 0 2 0 .000 23 53 BUT THE JAYHAWKS came back only a few moments later, mixing their ground and air attacks to march 70 yards in 14 plays. They had to score a goal with a vault dash around the left, end. After blocking the field goal try, let the ball go over the fence and the Hawks what they could do. A 3-play, 90-yard drive on their first possession was capped by a 14-yard touchdown pass from the 25-yard line. Two possessions later, however, it was the Semmoles who came back as Huff costing them one, then completed one more, this one to wide receiver Barry Smith for 27 yards. National Conference East Detroit 2 1 1 0 .667 78 74 Green Bay 2 1 1 0 .667 56 43 Minnesota 1 2 0 0.333 69 50 Chicago 1 2 0 1 .167 18 86 The Jayhawks stalled again on their next drive, but Florida State didn't. If things began to look bad for the Jayhawks when Harris fumbled the high snap from center on KU's next possession, they looked even worse when Huff them used only one play, a nine yard pass to Smith, to get the Seminoles another TD. The Seminoles use only eight plays to go 88 yards and score. Key plays on the ball are as follows: ★★★ | | Kansas | Florida State | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | First Drops | 35 | 205 | | Rushing Yardage | 39 | 205 | | Return Yardage | 119 | 205 | | Return Puntches | 18.35 | 26.42 | | Puntches Lost | 3.43 | 15 | | Puntches Lost by | 15 | 10 | Score by Quarterlies Florida State 7 7 3 3 13–42 Kansas 7 7 3 3 10–42 PURITA 14 pass from Huff (Akini kick) PUILIN 27 pass from Huff (Akini kick) PUILIN 27 pass from Huff (Akini kick) Davis 2 pass from Huff (Akini kick) PC GUILLER 32 PG CUNN 32 JAYES 1 run (Jayes Run) JAYES 1 run (Jayes Run) MICHELLE 1 run (Akini kick) DAVIDSON 1 run (Akini kick) **Running** Rohde 20, Roberts 4.23, Illiams 11-38. HURT 1-11 JAYES 18:35-22 yards YEEKING Smith 1:113, Partis 64; Davis 4.47, Sacchar 5.24; Hafer 5.19 **Punting** San Francisco 2 1 1 0 .667 91 32 Atlanta 2 1 1 0 .667 88 45 Los Angeles 1 1 1 .500 50 58 New Orleans 0 3 0.000 33 91 FSU—Loucks 5-40.8 KU—Harris 5-39.4 Rugby Squad Chalks Up Fourth Win The University of Kansas rugby club extended its unbeaten and unscorded upon streak to four games Saturday as it won against Georgia, 27-0, on the field by Oliver Hall. The highly-touted Creighton team played well the first half. KU had a tough time getting untracked and only 3-0 at halftime. The team lost to a penalty kick by fullback Craig Parker. In the first half the ruggers had a hard time getting the passes down, which forced many turnovers to Creighton. But the Creighton defense contained Creighton all afternoon. In the second half KU dominated play. KU scored on four-point "tries" by John Miller, Jim Thurman, M田Cornick, Dave Moore and Dick Holloway. Parker added four points on extra points led all scores with seven. The ruggers' next action is the big Aspen Ruggerfest, in Aspen, Colo. next weekend. The best teams in the nation will be at this tournament, and KU, even though it is undefeated, will be an underdog this weekend. Hodges Mitchell and a 27-year pass from Huff to Pornis on third-and-one that too was an improbable play. Three plays later, Huff hit a diving Ed Davis in the end zone for the score. FORCED TO PLAY up-catch football, the Jayhawks made a solid effort to come back on the field before he began when roving linebackers硬 hit them percepted a Huff pass on the KU 15 and returned it to the Florida State 20, where he brought down by the Seminole quarterback. The "Hawks quickly pushed it in from there, scoring three plays later on backball Robert Miller's three yard plunge through the middle. The Seminoles got a 22-yard field goal by Ahmit Askin on their next possession, but the Grizzlies won with 35 yards. With 9:57 left in the game the score was 31-22 and the 'Hawks appeared to be bouncing back. But Florida State quickly showed it was not through playing, Several moments later the 'Hawks took the ball from their own one-yard line and drive 99 yards in eight plays to score. The downhatch came on a 35-yard bomb to Baltimore. Jaynes then rambled around right turn for the two-point conversion. Huff marched the Seminoles 80 yards in 11 plays to score. The key play came on a 14-yard pass to Smite on third-and-ten from the Florida State 30. That touchdown seemed to take the life out of the Jawhawks, and, although the Seminoles scored once more, it was merely icing on the cake. Seminole Balance Hurt KU, Says Fambrough By DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Editor Don Fambrigh sat in the coaches' dressing room, his posture relaxed, the shoulder wrinkles on his arm. The University of Kansas football squad had just been dropped, 44-22, by the Florida State Seminoles, but there was no embarrassment or shame in the way he ac- "They're a lot stronger than they were last year, but running game has improved tremendously." "I feel a lot better than after the Washington State game. That was one we really should have won, but today was just of us playing a tremendous football team." Fambrough said the major reason for the Seminola's success was their out stand. "I tell you, they talk about Huff (the Florida State quarterback), but there's a lot more there than that. That line gives me the advantage, and they have a tremendous defense." "THEY'VE GOT to be one of the better teams in the nation," he said. "They've got such fine athletes in the skilled positions—in the backfield, the defensive secondary. Fambrough praised hairst, a candidate for the Heisman Trophy, who picked apart the KU secondary for 26 completions and four touchdowns in 42 attempts. The Jahwey coach said the KU game would be to make the Seminoles on the short "He's a fine quarterback," he said. "He'd ride of the ball so fast, it's really hard to stare at." "We tried to do everything against Huff," he said. "We rushed, then we'd drop back—you just can't do one thing all the time against someone like him." FAMBROUGH SAID the fact that the Florida State receivers were bigger than the Jayhawk defenders was also an important factor. "That's what's killing us in the secondary," he said. "You *just can't* expect a 5-10 defender to be able to stop a 62 receive all the time. I'm not criticizing them. It's just a physical thing." The protection that the Seminole offensive line gave Huff was emphasized by Jayhawk defensive tackle Gery Palmer as another factor. "They had a lot better offensive line on we thought," he said. "In fact, it was probably one of the better offensive lines I ever played against. I don't think our team that bad. We knew what they did—they just did it better than we thought." defensively, KU quarterback David Jaynes said, Florida State showed the Jahyhaws a different pass coverage than the Rams, one safely up the middle instead of two. Jim Schum, Jayhawk offensive guard, Florida State's pass rush rushed surely. "From the films, we kind of thought we could hit the outside seam of the zone on curl patterns. But we ended up trying to be more aggressive at the middle on post patterns." Javens said. Although he was dropped several times by a charging Seminole defensive line, Jaynes said he thought the KU offensive line did a good job. "We knew they were a tremendous pass rushing team," he said. "Especially No. 8 (Bert Cooper). He kept giving us trouble on the left side. We made some adjustments, but the problem was that we started too late." MLWAUKEE (AP) -The Green Bay Packers, cashing in on DLA mistakes, combined three field goals by Chester Marcel and hard running by John Breckening as top of the National Football League champion Cowboys Sunday. The Packers snapped the Cowboys' 12- game winning streak. By GARY ISAACSON Kansan Sports Writer KU Freshmen Drop Opener to Missouri Foster had especially high praise for his defense. The University of Kansas freshman football team lost its first game of the season. 20-7 to the University of Missouri and it was clear we know it by coach Dick Foster's reaction. "The kids played better than I expected and there were a lot of bright spots during the play." Kansan Photo by MALCOLM TURNER David Jaynes on the Lam KU quarterback was dumped seven times . . . said. "Our boys adjusted to it and we shut them off in the second half." The Hawks took the lead early with a 77-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Jud Mitchell to wide receiver Eddie Lewis early in the first quarter. But they were outright winners as they penetrated the Missouri 20-yard line four times but could not score. Missouri retaliated, scoring 13 points in the first half but the KU defense got tough and the score remained 13-7 until the final 35 seconds of the game. Missouri then picked off a KU pass and returned it for a touchdown for the final points of the game. Although disappointed by the loss, coach Foster had praise for many individuals, among them fullback Bob McCaskill and cornerback Todd Morgan. McCaskill carried the ball 20 times for 105 vards. Missouri threw the ball 30 times for 192 yards and a touchdown, but Foster said that he was very happy with his secondary and, in particular, Morgan. "Morgan cast us one touchdown but he saved three others." the coach said. ★★ First Downs Kansas Missouri Hashing Yardage 12 17 40 Passing Yardage 177 177 190 Return Yardage 158 158 192 Punts 104 104 100 Punts 9-26 9-26 7-33 Fanfare Lost 3-3 3-3 Yen Palmized 30 30 Kansas 7 0 0 Missouri 7 6 0 K1—Lewis 19 pass from Mitchell (Birmingham kick) K2—Mullett 3 pass from Pixaraxs (kick failed) K3—Mullett 5 pass from Pixaraxs (kick failed) **Kuuring** KU - McMackall 30-10, 105, A90, Mitchell 15-13, KU - Wheatley 17-10, Garrison A90 KU- McCaskill 20-105, Blower 7-59, Mitchell 15-13, KU- Walsh 13-18, Mitchell 15-13 Pass Receiving KU- Lewis 4-14 81 Blair 7-1, Henry 6-1, Birmingham 14- MU- Marshall 3-18, Washan 2-24, Garaviglia 1-52, KU- Mitchell 4-24 88轴, Anderson 3-7-70 yards, KU- Plankiewicz 13-18, Mitchell 15-13 Pawning Punting KU—Morgan 9-26. MU—Marshall 7-35.