R Monday, October 29,1973 University Daily Kansan Injuries Mount in Jayhawk Victory By GARY ISAACSON Kaman Sports Editor University of Kansas football coach Don Fambrough must be wondering when the sky is going to stop falling in on him and his Jayhawks. The "Hawks won a "must" game Saturday, 22-20, over the Iowa State Cyclones at Ames. But KU paid a big price for the victory. Senior defensive end Don Doogue's college career came to an end when he suffered a dislocated shoulder in the first quarter. Sophomore safety Jim McKinnon left the game and is also out for the remainder of the season. there is a definite note of worry in Fambridgeoice when he talks about the battle. "We started out this season with more depth than we've had in a number of years," Farnham said, "but everything that seems to be in a season order for the player." IN THE FIRST game of the season guard Mike Engelbrack and cornerback James Bowman were sidedl. Before the season started, quarterback Scott McMichael, slated to be Dave Jaynes' backup man, dislocated a shoulder of backup players, have suffered injuries that have kept them out of at least one game. "it's getting to the critical point" Farnabrugh said. "We just can't lose" them. But the injuries are not hurting the team's morale, Fambrough said. "they feel that they just have to play harder to take up the slack," he said. KU linebacker Steve Tate, who missed the Iowa State game because of a hyder- extended knee, is a basketball starter for next Saturday's game against Oklahoma State. "WE JUST hope he'll be ready," Fam- brouch said. The victory this weekend put the 'Hawks in a three-way tie for second place in the Big Eight, as the conference tightened considerably. Colorado upset Missouri; 13. Oklahoma walked over K-State; 15. Oklahoma and Oklahoma State played to a 17-17-16. to a 11-12 win. Ku and Iowa State engaged in a game of giveaway. The 'Hawks gave up two fumbles and Dave Jayne was intercepted sports twice. The KU defense came up with four fumples and four pass interceptions. Almost all the scoring came on or after big plays. The Cyclones wiped out a 3-0 KU first quarter lead with two touchdowns, on an 82-yard punt return and on a 38-yard drive after the interception of a Jaynes pass. "THAT WAS the biggest play of the game as far as I'm concerned," Fambrough said. Late in the second quarter, with Iowa State leading 14-3, the Hawk defense held and forced an Iowa State punt. Freshman defensive end Terry Beeson, Fcoffeyville, broke through the Cyclone line, blocked the punt, picked it up and ran 50 yards for a touchdown. A two-point conversion failed, and ISU ended at halftime, 14-9. The Hawks took the lead in the third quarter on a 44-yard screen pass from Jaynes to tailback Delvin Williams. Midway through the fourth quarter the Cyclones relied on power football to score on an 89-yard drive consisting of 15 running plays, ISU tailback Mike Strachin, who had been injured in the game, carried 11 time for 62 yards on the drive. Strachin finished the day with 151 vards on 27ushes. With Iowa State primed for another pass, Jaynes sent Williams up the middle on a draw, and the fleet tailback outraged the Cyclone secondary to the endzone. An interception by corner back Eddie Lewis cut off ISU's last effort. The 'Hawks, behind 20-16, got the ball back with four minutes left in the game. Despite two intentional ground penetrants and a clipping penalty, KU moved to the Cyone 32 on the passing of Jaynes and the receiving of split and Emmet Browns. JAYNES COMPLETED 20 of 32 passes for 321 yards, but the KU rushes were held to 47 net yards. Ineffectiveness close to the opposition's endzone again plagued the offense, but Fambrrough said there had been a good reason for it. "His name is Larry "Big Daddy" Hunt," he said. Hunt, ISU's nose guard, was constantly in the Jayhawk backfield and was Jaynes' biggest expression. But Farmbrouw echoed a feeling expressed by Edwards about the "We may fumble around a lot, but anytime we're close, we have the capability of doing something. We have the weapon (the pass) to score," he said. Dave Throws, Emmett Catches Rv VAEL AROUHALKAH TABLE MOUNTING KansanSportsWeiter Give University of Kansas receiver Emmett Edwards a yard and he'll take a game. Give quarterback David Jaynes a few seconds and he'll pitch a touchdown pass to KU's 5-2 record this season has been sparked offlessly by a passing attack led by quarterback Jaynes, Bomber Springs and Todd Hankins, then mentioned as an All-America candidate. And Edwards, Kansas City, Mo. junior, has been the man at the other end of many of Jaynes' passes. He currently leads the Big Eight in pass receiving, with 29 receptions for 404 yards. Edwards gives a the credit for his success this season to Jayves. "He's just a fine quarterback," Edwards said. "He seems to have more confidence this year. He's staying in the pocket a lot longer than he can find the open receiver this season." But passing is a two-man exchange. Jaynes must have someone to throw to and in Edwards and Bruce Adams, junior from two of the finest receivers in the league. Edwards further attributed his recent success to the fact that he's healthy. "Last year I was hampered by a broken wrist," he said. "This season I've been healthy all year and have played in every game." "They're both super receivers," said Jaynes. "Emmett's especially done a great job this year in getting open. Other teams have done it better, but because we went to him so much last year, in the league this year, though, it's impossible to go to just one guy. That's why we're fortunate to have receivers as we do. The other teams know that when one of our players is being double covered, another one's wide open." Edwards disagreed with claims that he's been plagued by bad hands in his football career. He said he had never had any difficulty holding on to the ball. Edwards also noted that receivers had assignments on every play of the game, not just on plays in which they're the primary or secondary receiver. "On every play, we have a certain responsibility to carry out," said Edwards. "If we're not involved in the actual play, we should stop playing our man blocked out of the play." Double teaming, Edwards said, is not prevalent in the Big Eight because of the widespread use of zone coverage. But he also said that the zone could be used to flood certain areas of the field, cutting down on the catchs a wide receiver could make. To conquer the problems of zone warfare, says he, has been throwing fire at payees. "Other teams are bunching up on the wide receivers, "Jaynes said. "They're trying to hold our receivers up at the line of scrimmage, why to stop us from going long. This opens up a passing attack that most teams don't bother to set the time to set up. We do, and have had good success on hitting the back coming out of the backfield." With a total of only four interceptions in 202 attempted passes, Jaynes has improved remarkably on his average of last year of two interceptions per game. He said that he now better knew when to throw the ball and who should be open on certain plays. "I'm more familiar with the abilities of my收据 this year," Jaynes said. "This experience has certainly helped me in not making it easy and getting a careless interception." Chiefs, Bills Clash Tonight BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) --The Buffalo Bills get their first exposure on national television tonight, and they hope to put on a game where they did in a regional telecast last week. The Bills, whipped by the Miami Dolphins 27-6 last Sunday, meet the Kansas City Chiefs in the teams' seventh National Football League game of the season. The Chiefs, beaten by the Cincinnati Bengals last week, have a 3-2-1 record and are in a three-way scramble with Oakland and Denver for the American Football Conference West Division lead. Buffalo, 4-2, is second to Miami in the AFC East. To stop the Chiefs, the Bills must shore up their pass defense and at the same time spring loose running backs O.J. Simpson and Larry Watkins. Simpson, on the NFL's leading rusher with 138 carries, has been pronounced one of the greatest players. On rootodk is the Chiefs' leading ground-gainer with 267 balls on 83 carries. He also is their top pass receiver, with 237 yards on 29 receptions. Defense Sparks KU JV Win Hard-nosed defensive football and two long-range field goals from freshman Mike Love led the University of Kansas to a 6-3 victory Friday over Missouri in a junior varsity football game at Memorial Stadium. The KU junior varsity record is now 31. After the Tigers scored a 39-yard field goal on their first possession, the KU defense held them scoreless. The Tigers amassed 311 total yards on offense but were unable to stop the Tigers from goal attempts at 30 and 33 yards. The last miss came with 152 left in the game. Defensively, the Jayhawks were by freshmen Leyen Barnes, Port Lavaca, Tex., one tackle and 12 assists; Chris Golub, Shawne Mission, seven tackles and four assists; and Don Pile, Garden City, three tackles and eight assists. The KU junior varsity record is now 3-1. The Tigers dropped to 1-1. Love, from Hutchinson, kicked a 45 yard field goal to tie the game, 3-1, in the first quarter. He then put the "Hawks in a lead" into play. The Hawks on a 40 varder late in the first quarter. Big Eight Standings W M L T W L T All Games Oklahoma 1 0 1 0 1 0 Kansas 2 1 1 1 1 1 Missouri 2 1 1 1 1 1 Cincinnati 1 1 1 1 1 1 Nebraska 1 1 1 1 1 1 Kansas St. 1 1 1 1 1 1 Kansas St. 1 1 1 1 1 1 Tennessee 1 2 0 1 0 1 chance he needed. He narrowly missed a third field goal in the fourth quarter, a 40 yard attempt. He also averaged 41.1 yards on six punts. Love had missed from 45 yards, but the Tigers were offides and gave him the extra "You can bet we are going to take a look at him," Fambrough said. Results KI, 12 UA, 20 OKA, 56 Kansas State 14 Nebraska 17 Oklahoma State 17 Colorado State 18 Arkansas The kicking game again caused concern for Fambridge as Steve Hall hit only one of three attempts from medium range. Mike Love Hutchinson freshman, kicked 39-10 and scored goals Friday in the junior varsity game Missouri and barely missed a 50-yarder. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED to investigate and resolve CONSUMER COMPLAINTS Three or more hours per week. Complaints are accepted from all members of the community, CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION The Chefs and Bills have met 30 times, with Kansas City holding a 104 edge in the NBA. The Lakers are not far behind. The game will be telecast by ABC-TV, beginning at 8 p.m. with the Buffalo area blacked out. The Bills announced that 1,408 tickets had not been sold by the 72-hour TV deadline, although Rich Stadium was to be filled to its capacity of 80,020. 864-3963 Room 277 Kuala Lumpur Office AFTER TWO weeks on the road the Hawks return to Memorial Stadium next Saturday against the Oklahoma State football team, though it said it would be nice to play at home. Room 299, Kansas Union 864-3963 The Cowboys use a wishbone offense, the first KU has had to face this year. "It's going to be along hard week getting ready for that offense," Fambridge said. "The doggone wishbone forces you to play so much man-on-man defense. Someone has to back, and you can't forget about their backlash (George) Palmer up the middle." The center of the OSU attack is quarterback Brent Blackman, who is among the players in the game. "He's healthy now and came through the sebnabra garmo all right," Fambrouch said. "I can't believe it." THE COWBOY defense led the league against the pass before this weekend, allowing only 64 yards a game through the ballpark. The Cowboys' bullwallow of Oklahoma State's defense. In the Nebraska game he ran an interception back for one Cowboy touchdown and stopped Cornishus Tony Davis at the OSU game. The question what would have been the winning score? The Hawks beat OSU last year, 13-10, at Stillwater and knocked the Cowboys out of contention for a bowl game bid. Pambrough won the win, 6-4. It would be just another Big Eight game. "The Cowboys are a real offensive power, and everybody in this league has a good defense," he said. "You just have to be up and ready every week." Kansas Iowa State First Downs 20 18 Passing Yardage 654 3824 Passing Yardage 321 61 Return Yardage 103 135 Return Yardage (Int) 20-12 3-14 Punches (Vyard-Number) 5-33 8-29 Punches Lost 7 24 Luffs Lost 7 4-1 Score by Quaters KU 1 2 6 7 0 6-25 KU 1 3 7 0 6-25 KU-Heat 23 field goal KU-Stanley 16 field goal (Goickkert) KU-Stanley 17 run (Goickkert) KU-Hennessy 20 run with thighed kick (run failed) KU-Hennessy 24 run (Hall kick) KU-Shawnee 29 run (kick fail) KU-Shawnee 28 run (kick fail) Individual Statistics KI--William n=26 64; Mildy n=7 29; Jayes n=7 65; Adam n=8 KI--William n=27 114; Dianne K--114; Danish K--114; Moore N--127; Nirail K--127; Danish K--127; Moore N--127 KJ = Layes 20-32-21 (2 interceptions) SK = Stanley 31-11-2 (3 interceptions). Hardeman 0-1-0 (1 Reciting KI-=Edwards 6-126, Miiers 5-114, Williams 4-51, Adams 3-54, Hearson 2-29 KU1 = Harris 5-32, 8 KU2 = Bradley 5-34, 2, team 1-0 RCA Model YZD440 $149^{95} Deluxe RCA 4-channel tape player - Plays both 4-channel and 8-track stereo - plays both 4-channel and 6-channel • tapes with complete compatibility. - tapes with complete compatibility. - Eight speakers for room-filling sound—two in each of the four琴房 - each of the four enclosures. - The luxury look of fine wood cabinetry * Wanut veneers and selected hardwoods GREGG TIRE CO. 842-5451 814 W.23rd If You're planning on FLYING Let M趴mapint Do That! WORK for YOUT! (NEVER Rent cost) for airline tickets) Make Your Thanksgiving & Christmas Reservations Early SUA / Maupintour travel service PHONE 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass A beautiful collection of coats for fall and winter from Pendleton and Lodentrey Deep woolens, rich in color and style. From sporty stadium coats to dressy wrap coats all here. 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