6 Monday. October 15. 1979 University Dally Kansan 'Huskers do it one more time to hapless Jayhawks By TONY FITTS Sports Editor LINCOLN, Neb.-Nebraska fans just never get tired of the routine. They never get tired of sold-out football games. They never get tired of wading red, yellow, and green. They never get tired of wearing with more end zone seats than sideline seats. And they never get tired of boating seats. Saturday was no exception. Nebraska shut out the 'Hawks 42-0 before its 103rd consecutive sellout crowd of 76,011. The last time KU defeated Nebraska was 1968, when Perrodd Rogers was KU's coach, Robby Douglass was the All-American quarterback and John Riggins was the standout back. Since then, they have won KU 401 to 70, with four shutouts. After a decade of disastrous Saturday afternoons, the KU players resent it. I hate Nebraska. Everybody here does," Jim Zidak, sportline bearer, said. "At the end of the game, when it didn't make any sense, they were trying to score more points." But KU coach Don Fambrough would not complain about Nebraska. We just got bat by a really good football game, he said after the game. Nebraska bats too hard, so the defense tense so many opportunities to score, so sooner or later the dam is going to break. Our defense in the first half—you just can't play any better than that. But Nebraska didn't make any mistakes." KU's defense held the Cornershakers through the first quarter, and asked them to score before goals before the half. But the KU offense wasn't able to do anything. The Gators had a good chance through the air—before the half. They got their first down with four minutes left in the game. Kevin Clinton, who came in late in the second quarter, said the biggest problem for KUU of offense was the Huskers' pass rush. "It was tough to get set up," he said. "They brought everybody, I think we could have thrown against their secondary if we had the time." The Kansas quarterbacks were sacked five times for a total loss of 32 yards. And many more times they threw the ball away to avoid a sack. Clinton threw three interceptions, two of which set up touchdowns. The second interception was recovered by the KU one, but it took the Corkshorns only two plays to drive 58 yards and score. Craig Johnson provided most of those injuries. He wrestled Johnson is the running back who exploded for 192 yards on 10 carries against Kansas last year. This year, he had 18 on nine "I couldn't believe it," he said. "I was just shocked when I learned that straight-legged handoff, I cut back underneath the center and all I could see was open fish. Seems like things happy happen." Johnson's touchdown, coming at the end of the third quarter, was the last score of the game. The fourth quarter saw his hunkers had the ball four times and scored four touchdowns. The only thing they made was a 31-20 victory. Yesterday, Fambrough complimented his team on their effort in defeat. "At times in the first half, we played defense as well as we could. Looking at the films, if you could take out three or four plays from the first half, it would look pretty good. At the time they broke some of them of us, and we had been on the field for many claps." Nebraska ran 92 offensive plays against the KU defense. Fambrough also praised some individual players. "Scellars Young had been really disappointing to me until Saturday," Fambrough said. "But he had his best game against him. And Stanley Gardner played well." And it's not that our offensive kids weren't trying, because they were. But they were just up against a brick wall as far as that defense was concerned." Fambrigh had more to say about what makes Nebraska so good. "It doesn't come overright," he said. "It takes years of recruiting and building a good redshipping program. And I don't mean redshifting four or five, like we do in a go year. I mean 25 or 30 a year. They don't play in their junior varsity games because they're redshirtst most of them. "And they have a great weight program. We do too, now, but something like that doesn't really have the effect for three or four years. Their kids are so strong and so "I don't feel it's out of reach for us to have a program like this, but it takes time. "I'm not going to sit and worry about Nebraska, though. We went up there and played them and that's over. Now we have to get ready for Iowa State." Iowa State defeated Kansas State 7-3 Saturday on a six-yard run in the second quarter. "Winning the Kansas State game had to encourage them," Fambrough said, "but we're hungry for a victory, too." In other Big Eight games this week, Oklahoma State upset Missouri 14-13 and Texas defeated Oklahoma 16-7. KANAS NEBRAH NIU-Pack 36 NIU-Performance 54 (run kick failed) NIU-Pack 26 NIU-Pack 17 NIU-Pack 23 NIU-Brown 12 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick) NIU-Brown 12 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick) NIU-Brown 12 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick) NIU-Pack 18 (from Hanger) (Sakup kick) Pitch down Kannas Nikelaakh Rushen yards 28.19 70.430 Rushen yards 28.19 70.430 Total takeoff 59 181 Return yard 160 181 Passes 3.235 12.252 Poors 9-495.447 4-138.454 Poors-lost 1-41 1-41 Total takeoff 59 181 INDIVIDUAL LEADERS Rangoon - Cairns Capers Alumni 41-31, Sydney, 21-30, Davie 39, Marion 61, Jamaica 51, Johnson 83, Landwehr 43, Franklin 52, Mauer 52, Nim 11, Passing-Kansan, Clinton 3-19-59, Belford 4-6-40, Nebraska 18-10-17, Michigan 3-19-59, Mauger 9-1-40, Greenville-Kansas, Vereer 2-27, Schlicher 1-8-4, Kansas City, Vereer 2-27, Miller 4-18, Milner 3-18, Harris 11-12, Hurns 5-18. Smith 1-8. Punting - Kansas Hobach 9-402-44.7. Nebraska, Smith 1-103-435. Gember, J. M. 5-04234, Garth 12-18 Tackling - Kansas, McNorton 14, Young 13, Criswell 12, Iwain 11, Wheatle 11, Gardner 9, Tumphc 9, Nebakura, Verng 8, Batek 6, Cale 6, Cols 5, B. Williams 3 Nebraska 42, Kansas 0 Texas 16, Oklahoma 7 Oklahema State 14, Missouri 13 Iowa State 17, Kansas State 3 Sweet Redwine Jarvis Redwine was the only one in red run over KU, but he was most often. On this run, Redwine run over jeecko Joe Tumpel, in Nebraska's 42-8 triumph, Redwine grabbed 175 yards in 24 balls. The entire OKL offense had, half that, 79. 'Hawks end fall season with split The KU baseball team team split a new regular season with the Tampa Bay Sunday afternoon to finish the fall season with a 18-2 record. The Jayhawks lost the first game 7-4, but rounded to win the second game 6-3. KU came back with two runs in the fourth to make the score 5-4. Matt Gundelfinger walked and advanced to second and third on wild pitches. He scored on Juan Ramon's sacrifice fly. Loren Hibbs doubled and scored in the last inning, walked with the bases full for the final tally. KU got off to a good start in the first game when Clay Christian's struck out the side and Brian Gray honored to put the 'Hawks ahead 2-4 in the first iming. KU coach Floyd Temple said he wasn't too pleased with the first game. Gundelinger began KU's scoring when he doubled a down the right line on a hit-and-run in the fourth. Scott Wright, who reached on a lead-off walk, scored on the hit. Clayton Fleeman relieved Christiansen, the loser, 2-1, in the sixth and retired the final six batters. Dick Lewall scored KU's seven run after leading off the shirt with a single. He scored when Steve Jeltz reached on an error. The Jayhawks scored seven runs on six hits in the second game as Fleeman started three innings. He hit two homers andinnings. Mike Watt, 44, relieved Fleeman and gave up his first and only hit this fall, a 10-6 victory. "We gave them too many unearned runs, didn't swing the bat well and we just left too many people on base," he said. Riley drove in both runners with a two-out single. Mark Gile led off the fifth with a single, stole second and scored when Dan Graham reached base on an error. Wright and Gundelfinger walked and scored on Gray's sacrifice fly to center. Broncos use big fumble to humble Kansas City KANAS City, MO. (UPI) - Denver big play artist Bill Thompson scores a bitter touchdown on a 2-yard fumble return in the waning seconds of the first half yesterday to send the Broncos off to a 24-ball nationally televised victory over the Kansas City With less than 30 seconds remaining in the half, and Kansas City in possession at its own 15, Tony Reed fumbled a handoff into the arms of linebacker Benson Swatton on the field. The cornerback Louis Wright, who then fumbled the ball forward to the two, where Thompson son scoped it up to give the Broncos a 10-0 lead with 17 seconds remaining in the half. Jim Turner added a 8-yard first-quarter field goal and Craig Morton both hit Haven Moses and Rick Uphchurch with second-half kickoff to help the Broncos on record to its S-1. Kansas City runny Dan's bid for the third shutout this season on Janet Stenneral's 44-yard field goal five minutes into the fourth quarter. Arnold Mergado rounded out his game with 62 seconds in the game after the Broncos had opened up a 24-13 lead. Coldsmith keys KU win By PAM CLARK Bruce Coldsmith and Paul Schultz finished 1-2 to lead a procession of KU runners to six of the top seven spots and an overall third-ranked angularmedge at Friday's Lone Star Lake. Sports Writer KU won with 18 points. Wichita State came in second with 51, Oklahoma State third with 76 and St. Louis University fourth with 118. Coldsmith completed the winding, hilly 10,000-meter course in 29-41. Schultz finished nine seconds later at 29-50. Bauer was leading卸oxygen debt gave Bauer more control and shoulders tightened up and he began back and Coldsmith took over. Bauer managed to rende on and hang on to fourth David Bauer, the race leader through the mark, took fourth in 60 and Tim Tumayi, fifth in 59. Tim Tays (30,14) Kendall Smith (30,17) and Brent Swanson (30,30) placed first in 2016. KU coach Bob Timmons was pleased with his team's performance. "I've been sick for three weeks, but I'm okay," said Bauer. "The only thing that bothered me was my lungs." "I thought we did a real good job," he said. "We weren't running quite that well together, but we ran real well place-wise." KU students said before the meet he wanted KU to run together as a tight-kick group in preparation for the Big Eight Championship in Stillwater, O.K. Oct. 27. The top seven Hawk players in Friday's meet will compose the KU squad that commutes to the Big Eight meet. "I ran a smart race," Tays said. "I didn't go for the win, I was going for a place on the team. I took off easy and moved up rather than start of quickly." Most of the conversations of the KU runners centered on the Big Eight meet instead of their easy win. "It's going to be good," Schultz said. "Colored is at least one of the top 10 teams in the country. It's going to be a two-team team." Colorado would tell you a me-trainer. "I don't want to say we'll win for sure, but it's going to be close. They are real solid through their first three guys then they break down. We have better depth." Pace setter KU'r's Bruce Coldsmith turns on his stretch run around Lone Star Lake, Coldsmith tauts it on to cough to finish in KU's quadrangle. The UU team didn't do bad Pirates stay alive with 7-1 victory PITTSBURGH (UPI) -- The Pittsburgh Pirates hit a 15-foot double yesterday by baffling the Baltimore Orioles 7-4 on the combined six hit pitching of Jim Rooker and Bert Blythe to assist the world No. 1 pitcher in the MLB. Rooker, who had spent much of the year on the disabled list, allowed only three hits in five innings before turning things over to Orioles. Orioles to just one hit over the final four. Having used most of his pitchers trying to contain the Orioles over the first four games of the Series, Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner turned to the 7-3-year-Rooker because he had no one left. The veteran came through with one of the biggest games It was Blyleven's first relief appearance since 1927. For five innings, it appeared the Orioles were going to return to Baltimore with the world championship. They got to Rooker for a run in the fifth on a double by Gary Roenicke, a single by Doug DeCinces and Rich Dauer's double. play grounder, and it looked as if that would be all left-hander Mike Flanagan would need to post his Serenades victory. Flippenagan gave up four hits and struck out nine in the sixth game, trouble in the sixth with the walked Tim Foley and gave up a single to Dave Parker to start a doubleheader. Robinson, Will Stiles secretré the second run with a sacrifice fly. Madlock followed with a single to center to give Pitta-barah 3-12. Time and again weaner's bench had delivered in the clutch throughout the Series, but this time Blyeven proved to be better at match and struck out Kelly to end the threat. It appeared that lead might not stand up, however, when Rick Dempsey doubled for the Orioles with two in out of the seventh. The team was playing well and was going to be performed by Orioles Manager Waelen when he went to his bench before hitting the bats. Pat Kelly to fit for Fianauan. The Pirates finally got the clutch hits they but so desperately needed when they tugged reliever Stim Bradford for a pair of runs in the seventh innering after two were out to give Byleven some insurance runs. Pilar Garrer beat out an infield hit to open "twelve" seventh, but was thrown out at third by Garrer. At Omar Moreno forced Blyleen at second when shortstop Kilo Garcia made a diving throw at home, then Moreno later, Moreno on was second when Stoddard threw wildly past first base on an attempted Foli fellow followed a triple to right-center field, scoring Moreno, and Parker grazed reliever Tippart Martinez with a double to chase home Foli. In the eight, Stargell opened with a single and went to third on Madlock's fourth single. After Steve Nicosa popped out, Garner delivered a single offender Don Stanhope to score Stargell. Blyeven moved the runners up with a sacrifice. She then ran back, but Poil singled up the middle off Garcia's glove to score Madlock and Garner. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN- Weekend Sports Roundup JV suffers second loss Rick Simmons returned the opening kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown, sparking the Nebraska junior varsity to a 17-0 win over the KU JV's before 5,132 fans at Nebraska's Memorial Stadium Friday. KU's eight point total came on a 15 yard touchdown pass from quarterback Steve Smith to wide receiver Skip Holmes in the third quarter. Smith scored the 2 point conversion on a quarterback keeper. In addition to Simmons' touchdown gallop, the Cornhuskers scored another touchdown in the first quarter and added a field goal. The Chargers led 24-17. KU's chances for victory slipped away with 14:56 left in the game. Smith was sacked in the end zone by defense and Todd Kushner made a stop at home. Neither team was able to generate much offense after the safety. In the last 3 minutes and 23 seconds, the ball switched hands six times as Nebraska intercepted three passes and KU recovered three Cornhusker fumbles. KU's JV, record dropped to 1-2 with the loss. The 'Hawks next game is Oct. 29 against Baker in Lawrence. Female netters drow two The KU women's tennis team won one of three matches for the second straight weekend, beating Southern Illinois 8-1, but losing to Marcie Eery, playing No. 3, singles, lost her first collegiate matches last weekend, falling in the Oklahoma and Missouri state semifinals. No. 1. singles player Val Block won against Oklahoma and Southern Illinois, but lost against Missouri. Mauren Guilfoil, who was hampered by a pulled leg muscle last week, won all of her N. 4 singles matches and two of the three No. 1 Block and Guilford were the only winners against Oklahoma, winning both of their singles and doubles matches. KU Coach Tom Kivisto said before the Oklahoma meet the Sooners would be the team to beat in the Big Fight. The meet against Missouri Friday was tied 4-1 when play in the 5-2 doubles match had to be stopped because of darkness. It was a tough game, with both teams scoring in double figures. Every "Hawk won against Southern Illinois in either a singles or doubles match. Mary Stauffer was the only KU better to lose in singles play, but she came back to win in No. 2 doubles with Shari Schrufer. Female golfers finish 3rd The women's golf team held third in the eight-tone Kansas Invitational Golf Tournament held at the Alvamar Gour Course. KU was 43 strokes behind first-place Texas Christian University, which had a 657 team total for the 36-hole tourney. "TCU is a very strong team and a candidate for post-season national competition, and Missouri is an excellent team." Sally White打 the 'Hawks, carding counts of 82 and 88 for a 171, taking eight place in the individual competition. The other KU scores were Pattie Coye, 89-49-179; Cary Eyre, 86-49-161; Liza Stern, 85-49-179; Sarah Merwald, 84-49-179; and Barbara Goodbee, 84-49-174. Women 3rd at Nebraska Michelle Brown and Susan Phillips finished in the top 10 at the Husker Cross-Country Invitational Friday in Lincoln, Neb. But their efforts weren't enough to boost KU higher than a third-place finish. Kansas State, KU's season-long mercenary, was the wrist with 36 points. Missouri has a three-time winner in the NBA, with D'Angelo at its state in its first three games, was third with 19. Brown, the only senior on the squad, snared seven in 19:36, and Phillips, a freshman, was next in 19:44. Janel LeValley of K-State won the individual honors in 19-10 while teammate Clyde Saxen, a freshman undefeated entering the NCAA Tournament. Round out the scoring in the six-tteam field were Kearney State with 143, Nebraska 143 and Nebraska-Omaha 145. Men netters split matches KU's men's tennis team won a close meet against Southern Illinois 64-but were defeated by Tulsa 7-2 in weekend competition. Only No. 2 singles player Bill Krizman and the No. 2 doubles team of Rick Wess and Kehr Lein won against Tulsa. No. 1 Wayne Sewall, No. 3 Chel Collier, No. 4 Wertz, No. 5 Lehman and No. 6 David Williamilling in singles like James Cox, Bill Trotter, and Kirkinnock. Collier, Werts and Willingham won in singles play against Southern Illinois, as did the doubles teams of Wertz and Lehr, and Lahey and Krizman, Seilman, Krizman, Lehr and the No.1 doubles team of Sewall and Collier lost.