Evening Star Newspaper, November 20, 1922, Page 23

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SPORTS. Princeton Earns TIGER TEAM HAS GAINED TOP RUNG BY BATTLING| Undoubtedly Is Hardest Fighting Aggregaiion in - East—Victory Over Chicago Also Gives Eleven Even Broader Honor. BY H. C. BYRD. \ RINCETON has won a place in the sun. No doubt th& Tiger, will wear the eastern foot ball crown. Washington and Jefferson, con- queror of Lafayette, defeated by Pittsburgh, by a decisive score; West Virginia held to a tie by one of the weaker South Atlantic elevens, Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, Brown, Columbia, Colgate, Penn State, Navy, Harvard, all whipped, Princeton absolutely is in the best position to be designated for’ the eastern championship. And, with a victory to its credit over one of the stronge3t of the products of the middle west, the Tigers are in an even more enviable position than that of holders of the castern honors. - Many were the groans and lamentations that came from Jersey in the carly part of the season. So loud and long were they that even Princeton alumni were deluded into the belief that the Tiger’s tail _would remain cternally bent from the number of knots due to be tied in it dur- ing the 1922 season. But those that knew the true status of the gridiron situation in Tigertown knew that Princton was far from weak and that it had the material out of which might be built a great machine. And subsequent facts proved that estimate to haye been correct. Princeton deserves all the glors that| pronably had consigned it to de- ha scome to jt in the season it closed: cisjve defeat. Certainly Washington %o brilliantly Saturday ‘against its Iong- | and Jefferson's record has been such standing rival. Undoubtedly, the hard-| (l.at it seemed the lolgical favorite. est fighting team in the east. number- | = ing among its personnel, spme brilliant | It Cormell be Pennaylvania individual performers, well ‘coached. and | Thanksgiving day, its partisans may well directed on the field of play. Prince- | put in their say about the eastern ton has shown remarkable aptitude for | foot ball title. However, Cornell's ay, has evinced | schedule hardly ‘has been strong . defense which has withstood the on- [ énough to test the real mettle of the slaughts of some of the best conceived |team. In-fact, Cornell men them- attacks and has brought to beur on its | selves have been usking why more opponents a strength and strategy on!big teams have not been listed the offense with which no defense has | especially when prospects last year been able to cope. |were for an exceptionally ~strong ‘ eleven this fal nd it is by no e means certaln that Pennsylvania will Even Yale men are loud in their) o gefeated, although the experience pruises of Princeton. id one Yale | of Jyst season would seem to indicate alumnus today: “Of course. I W that result. Pennsylvania, though, Yale to win, but T am glad that Prince- | pa& [ESMIE CoRMET TS at times ton has been able to come through 0| ing has shows what it can do when weli, especially after the loss of suchl|ijy really makes up its mind to get out stars as Lourie and Gharrity and Keck- | 3ng push the apple cart as fast as it Jt was a wonderful game and I belleve cun. = Witness, for instance, the gamé that Yale had the more powerful eleven, | with the Navy, and also the contest but nevertheless, Princeton won an with ey e ryes SIt the mood things thatiare) L L onw State lastiweelk being said of it.” . 2 T Yale outweighed Princeton approxi- | Georgetowny Sttt Suturtay ain mately tweive pounds to the man, ac- | 115 Eame Wi Bucknel shove, KA Cordiug fo the weights published In the | & Georgetown team can €o whet it official program of the game. The uvwr ';,co” The Blue and Gray realized age weights of the Bulldog was 192 ;,¢" it had reached the point where bounds and a fracton over. and the | (heL It Tal, feached, OO% RERG CEG average welght of Princeton. 182 and a | j, "gegpite the absence from the fraction. Which s to show that there e ameining clae o a foot ball game be | line-up of several of its most es- SOUTI_IERN E F sides weight, or which proves, perhaps, { *“* gul ; 2 OUTHERN ATHLETIC CLUB. did not get the foot ball champion- ship of the District yesterday when it encountered Mohawk Ath- i to} provent ahue yErd be letic Club at Union Park, but its wonderful showing against the fig gained had Jordan as important engagements, and so- | titular” combination brought gemeral commendation and left spectators at the conflict with the impression that another meeting between the teams vegulars started, and one of them,| might result in a transfer of the city gridriron laurels. Although beaten, 3 to 0, the Southerns certainl scored a “moral” victory, and if any foot ball team ever deserved to triumph that one vanquished on the north- t field yesterday did. The Mohawks were outplayed and outgeneraled, otten no more a . whole_lot * e el vaically between & 180-| Again the Univefsity of Maryland Dound man and 196-pound man. has defeated Johns Hopkins, putting o M tuation. In the Yale-Prince- | forth in doing so its greatest effort ton game that has puzzled foot ball|of the year. Against Pennsylvania coaches who did not see the con- i‘ldu-;y!l);r:d‘:lg l:!l;::t;;_:eh;::’lze:‘tml‘(l test was the failure of Yale to score;had, but in no other game has 1 even 3 X he 1-yard nr’x‘:" l:"m\d .:n)zl:hb:lp{::rlv;r{eul Sack | Princeton a complbte substitute team as Jordan behind its line, it would | played practically ihree-quarters of Tiave been mnext to impossible for|the game, against North Carolina and Princeton to prevent that yard be- | Virginia, Polytechnic Institute no ef- fort was made to lay stress on them line instead of attempting to drive through. which it seems he did. ‘One | called first-string men played only Yale nan whe watched the contest | half of each. Againsj Yale only three stated this morning that Jordan was Struck even before he reached the|Capt. Nisbet, was removed after the Jine of scrimmage and never had a |first two plays, the other cight being good chance either to dive over or |left at home to watch Hopkins play in drive through. - Baltimore. The whole campaign was | €as " subordinated to the Hopkins game.|and but for a break of the game certainly would have g than a scoreless ti This break came early in att of the Mohawks punted | barracks. Brown's victory in_the Harvard [and the success of the season- was game after having suffered a 20-to- |banked om the winning of that. The 0 defeat by Yale creates a fine game was won, 3 to 0, Hopkins mak- tion for the greatest upset of the ing one first down and Maryland four- | period. W. to Willie Snow, who was behind his 20-yard line, and the lattqr fumbled. Durity recovered the bal Mohawks and a line drivé ed. This was checked by the South- grne and Deakins fell back of the v g - T rop-kicked L vard probably has the best scouting | vergity of Maryland eleven, also a L T e Sy stem I R oy rdamle” 1o | tackle. playing his last time against|yithin fair striking distance of their S i b RRae L Hopkins, probably put up the best|gpponent's goal. Southerns Held at Goal. Not so with the Southerns. invaded ‘Mohawks territory time and | time again. Three times Murray Snow attempted field goals. but falled. His kicks were directed from the 22, 36 and 46 yard lines. Southern made a determined bid for a touchdown in e Recovering a wic fumble on their own 45-yard the Southerns, with smashing off-tackle plays and a forward pass, got to-the Mohawks® 8-yard line. Then, came an off-side penalty against the Four times the Southerns year this week when the Bulldog |teen. and the Crimson face across the white | Maryland’s next game Is with an- lines. Probably everybody figures |other old rival, Catholic University. Yale to win rather easily, but one|Jt will be played in the Central High thing must be remembered—Harvard | School stadium Saturd: seldom loses a game toward which it bends its greatest efforts. Har-| o . Nisbet, capthin of the Uni- make the best use of what the scout- | ¥ the be game of his career. Practically every { EisieyntaIe st . |play lhalHe:klnlluemy(edd. through. It in weldom that anything more jout the entire game was directed at expected happens than the Eecish'e Nisbet’s position, and the fact that Victory Pittsburgh won over Wash- | Hopkins' total offensive result for ington and Jefferson. The Panther |the entire day was just gne first orew came through with colors flying | down shows jugt how effective Nis- in.a game in which public opinion bet was. IN REALM OF FOOT BALL BY WALTER CAMP. N EW YORK. November 20.—Foot ball in the east has had anotherl kaleidoscopic shift. Princeton has won the premier place among | the big three and Yale and Harvard have been shunted into the background by defeats. Washington and Jefferson has moved out of the limelight as a result of being beaten by Pittsburgh, and has lost its chance for top rating. Pennsylvania, that jack-in-the-box team, hasl thrust its head above the ruck again by beating Penn State. \ Princeton has hung up a champion- | its conquering way, smashing Nevada, ship foot ball in the trophy house 6l to 13:- As was expected, Southern and today is out of tralning. Harvard | California beat Idaho. 14 to 0, while nd Yale can only battle each other|Cregon triumphed over the Oregon for an_inferior position, but each|Aggles, 10 to 0. California apparent. has a bitter determination to wind ly can look for another overwhelm up the season with a victory over the | ing victory over the old rival—Stan- other. ford—when the two meet at the end Army has gained somewhat in its|of the season. prospects for success over the Navy| In -the south, Auburn and DMike | through its decisive defeat of Bates |Donahue earned a great triwmph when and Pennsylvania's defeat of Penn!they defeated Centre, 6 to 0. Ken- State. The latter game lessens the » also proved a surprise by tak- importance of the Navy victory over!ing Alabama, the conquerors of Penn, Besdgk's men. {into camp. Pitt Back in Running. " West Virginia to Fore. 3 Rittsburgh gained a niche in the eorgia Tech, as was expected, de- reayrangement hall of fame by beat-|feated North Carolina State, Vander- ing Washington and Jefferson, which | bilt beat Georgla and Tennessee won had; conquered Lafayette. Syracuse,,from Sewane Virginia Poly ran lospt to Pitt, knocked out Colgate. | wild over Washington and Lee and anjold rival, and Brown took sweet!|West Virginia beat Virginia, 13 to 0. revenge on Harvard. | This latter victory. taken In conjunc- other sections teams ran more | tion with Washington and Jefferson's neggly true to form. Iowa came from | defeat by Pittsburgh.\gives West Vir- beMind and beat Ohio State as was|ginia a far better outlook for its big exgected. Michigan had a hard bat-|game with Neale's: men on Thanks with ~ Wisconsin. but pulled | giving day. ~ thrpugh to a victory, and Chicago was |~ Cornell’s victory over @lbright was ungfeeted by the hoodoo which hasinot unexpected, nor was Dartmouth’s d other teams when they met|smothering of Columbi: Rutgers is. Notre Dame and Nebraska|swept easily over, New York Univer- } easy sledding and Marquette sity and Willlams had an equally easy out Detroit. time with Amherst. Holy Cross and Tiges” mbsiate end, v Kicked 4 goal tht harbled OMI K. UNBEATEN IN SECTION ’ ri wien the Auburn Plainsmen tipped the Danville, Ky., eleven from their pinnacle of feot ball fame Satur- By the Associated Press. % tie for the western conference cham- plonship took a firmer hold on the Michigan, the three leaders, cmerged victoricus from Saturday’'s games. to have the hardest row to hoe and Towa the easiest. The Maroons must deteal Wisconsin while Towa will face | teams in the conference. Michigan will play Minnesota. The first Athletic Club, 13 to 0, at Was In the second period Hufd went through the Georgetowr team for 65 yards to a touchdown gnd season. will see every-team in action | Ohio State will meet Tilinois and Pur- T the the next period .Sowers recovered &; due opposes Indiana. OF; Georgetown fumble and ran 15 yards Sullivan made good kicks for extra to another score. with one of ita backfleld working well, Knickerbocker Quincy eleven, 12 to 0. both touchdowns for the victors. Athletie Club measure of the Terminais in a 13-to- Byng and Shebe Sothern made engagement. counted for the Winners. vards, Workman to Byng, was the feature of' the match. Mount Ralnier Emblenss kept their slate clean by trouncing_the St. Te- resa Reserves, 14 to 0. The Emblem Midgets and LaFrance Midgets of Hyattsville. played to & 7-T score. B ANOTHER DRASTIC SHIFT |: gnes Athletic Club disposed Quentih _Midgets, 3 to 0. Neith- er team was able to gain consistently. Mohawk line, but the charges availed little and the ball passed to the de. fenders on their 1-yard line. i Josh Licarione, husky fullback, was the hero of this great defense, and it was his sturdy backing up-of his|to line and the excellent kicking of Cox | outk! att that kept the Mohawks The Indlans punters outdistanced Nevertheless the latter was | &D! the outstanding player af the fray. He gained many yards with his hard | now have seven victories to their smashes into the Tnidan line and his | cfedit. to brother Willle| were remarkable for ‘their accuracy. Fumbles Hurt Losers. But for its fumbles, Southern might [ View eleven. have garnered the city laurels. outrushed the Mohawks, nine first mem downs to three, and never permitted { Moulton' Athletic Club, 7 to 0. Joynes made ~the touchdown and Prender passed o Stewart for the e)x!ri point.. néen . Athistte (Club stapped the Nationais in_a 12-to-0-game at Navai|starred for the winners. Fjéld. - McMahon and - Mo- Seamsn Gunners Seat” Pleasant eleven by wi; . © The Gunners outrushed and icked . their. opponents. from _defeat, consistently -Stauton Junfors held onto their tless ' record by trouncing The Stantons y.{ Yorke Juniors, 14 to 0. ke Athletic Club’s big team was defeated, 6 to 0, by the Park Views. -} Oliveri. played well for the Park jub- overcame i game. - Mulvaney, Wattingly and Tur- the latter to get wi tance of the final line. gained 212 yards against 62 for the Both were penalized for about the same around 90 yards. At forward passing, | Hospital were especially pro- | Ginnis dfd the scoring: - “emafly’ difposed - of | the touchdown, the first registered 5.32:t0-B encounter. ) against the Roamers this season. - ® Say Tédsy? . Close Saturday 8 P.M. ' Dafly TIL 6 PM. 3 The well dressed man :of today -has ‘his own ideas- of =+ ot what he wants incorporated in tailoring “of his. ‘clothes. in runming dis- Roamer Juniors, 14 to 6. Hageage the Southern: from. Hathway to the Arlingt ited -the latter from trying for an extra .point that would have given the Washington profes- slonals .a tie with Rochester yester— day at-American League Park. game ended, 7 to 6 for ‘Theré -awas.'10 . &COTing’ A “poor pass Gardner- prevent e ] What Merts. W it wak, ‘the thh: visitors. untll late .in. the fipal. period; Sm of Rochester 1211 on the ball behlndl the local goal affer & punt had been blocked, and King ed 40-yard run -from- the: fol- lowing _ kick-oft passes, Leighty Lefghty’ to Langt down -for the lo Mercury. Athletie Club éstablished itself as a challenger for the Mo- n, hrought' a touch- r Stanford, out on the Pacific|Georgetown won. i hawkse' title by beating Georgetown tos! , had a bitter blow when Wash- n defeated the Palo Alto team! 7 single point. California went on: i INC. Fr. 3684 CHAS. E. MILLER, 14th St. s Save the srice of an eatire mew sult. All colers, sises, pat- VERCOAT |Fimis 6=to. Your.: Order astern Title Y ale.-'FaCes Double Problem With -Harvard HGH SCHOOL ELEVENS | END PLAYTH WEEK Washington's public high school foot ball teams will end their seasons this week with the playing of three sames. Western and Business are to put away their uniforms after they eonclude the annual champio! ship series in Central stadium to- morrow in & match beginiing at 3 o'clock. Saturday Central will face the University of Maryland freshmen in a preliminary to the Maryland- Catholic University battle at Central stadlum, and Tech will go to Staunton to meet ‘Staunton Military Académy. Eastern wound up its campaign last Friday, when' it was beaten by Cen- tral. Tomorrow’s inter-high school en- gagement will determine the cellar champlonship. . Should Business lose, it would have undisputed possesgion of the.lower berth, but a Western de- feat would throw that team Into a tle with its opponent and Eastern for last place. ‘Weetern probably will start play with Dulin, left end: Cox, left tackle; Foley, left guard; Henry Lamar, cén- ter; Capper, right guard; Hawkins, right tackle; Robinson. right end: Welchel, auarterback: Thomas, left halfback; David, right halfback, and Mitchell, fullbac 3{ Business may start Main at le tackle and shift Calker to right end. | Others rlated to begin play for the Stenographers are Cooperman, left end; DuFlef, left guard; May, center: Cummings. right guard; Greenwood right tackle; Watt. 'quarterback: Bangs, left haifback; McAuliffe. right halfback. and Denovan, fullback. Puul Magoffin of Michigan will be referee. Other officials are to be John Greer of Catholic University, umpire. and Richard Daniels of Georgetown, linesman. : e WEST VIRGINIA STAR DECLARED INELIGIBLE MORGANTOWN, W. Va.. November 20—Arming Mahrt, the clever half- back of the West Virginfa University foot ball team. has been declared in- eligible. The decision was made after it was decided that the University of Dayton, where Mahrt played last year, is classed as a college and not a pre- paratory school. Mahrt's offensive play and kicking were important fac- tors in the Mountaineers’ success mxsl season. FOUR TEAMS IN DIXIE ATLANTA, Ga.. November 20.;—For the first time In two years the Centre lonels _met defeat by a_southern day, 6 to 0. The day's play left four teams with no defeats that wéuld affect their | southern standing. Besides Auburn, th€y are Vanderbilt, North Carelina and Georgia Tech. None of the triumph..nt four plays again until Thanksgiving day brings | CHICAGO, Novi S le|the season to a close. On that day | ovember 20.—The triple |\ 5 th meets Georgia Tech, Vander- | bilt plays Sewanee and North Caro- | | Who saw the contest, returned to New Dercentages as Chicago. lowa and |1ina oes against Virgin Of the three leaders, Chicago seems Northwestern, one of the wonder Saturday, the closing day of the against a conference opponent, ae - Conference standings: Hall, Brown. Eagan, Smithson and White counted for the victors. Virginia Athletic Club won the | Goldsmith cup, emblematic of the foot | = ball championship of northern Vir:| o ginia, when. it beat Fort Humphreys, e 6 to 0. Poss intercepted a forward - A pass and ran 53 yards to the touch- down in the final period. Quentin~ and Brooklamd elevens 3 played to a scoreless tie. The Brook- “ landers never got much beyond mid- . 4 3 field, while on four occasions the Quentins were within striking dis- o De Molay Athletic Club overwhelmed the Havocs in a 20-to-0 match, The winners oytclassed their opponents in % every department of the game. - ‘Waverly_and Stantom clubs battled to a 0-0 tie” The ‘Stantons threat- ened to score on three. occasions, while the Waverly ¢leven had but one favorable opportunity to-get points. Lexington ' Athietic Club’ ran rough- shod over the Arabs in 21-to-0 ner made the touchdowns. Georgetown Athletic Club Juniors had to battle desperately to beat the Kanawha Athletic Club downed the | 2 big Roatner team, 6.to-0. Blake made ! A. B. C. Motor Co., 617 Néw York Ave. H. Addison Bowie, 637 H St. N.W. American . Motor Service,' 1612 Y. St. N.W. you: are ready to have Bafley’s Tire and Accessories Ce., 2260 Sherman Ave, N.W. S ; Ball & Wade, 2054 M¢, Fleasant 8t. ther with. - .~ Birvem Nash Motor, Company, Clar- e T enden, Va. . - our, . Besley e, 309 6tk St. exandria, Vi , 616 Pemnayls Ave. arage; 1000 igan JANKSGIVING. Dress Suits to Order, $45 Up Dapont ; : LITPLE . & COMPANY, INC, AUTOMOBILE NECESSITIES, COR. 13th AND EYE. STS. SPORTS. ONE IS ORDER OF ATTACK; OTHER IS PURELY MENTAL Inability of Old Eli to Carry Powerful Offense To Score Against Tigers Has Presented Real Puzzle for Coaches. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, November 20.—In looking forward to the Harvard game N Yale coaches are faced wfih two problems. One relates to the proper order of attack and the other question is purely mental. In the Princeton game, as every one noted. the Elis gained much ‘more ground than Princeton, and yet fgiled to win the game. ‘This has con- founded not only Yale men, but most of the writers who in the autumn attempt to become gridiron experts. Yale coaches. of course, know that the reason why their team lost, even though gaining more ground than Princeton, was because the Elis did practicaly all of their gaining be- tween the 30-yard lines. Gains here may swell the total of first downs and give the statistics a fat and wholesome appearance, but they have no scoring significance. And scores are what count. = For general information it may be of the game this winter. By the sugg ; v, Sime of the Harvard game the Tigers ested that the reason why Yale lost | 1ime o the Harvuri uae [ Tger was that she bad no long gain attack |, high standard of efficiency, and it capable of carrsing the play well into [iienks well for Yale's hidden ball Princeton territory. She had fine run- | o tackle plays that they should have ning plays qualified to gain from five | gaineq as well as they did. < to ten vards, but she had put them on | o e in_the wrong territory. i Syracuse on Lofty Perch. (o They should have’been used after! Syracuse is amotber team with ong-gain plays—such as forward passes | =oul efeat of Colgate on S Tl e beought e Al e | urddy and her Drevious wictory over striking distance. The fact that long- | Nebraska were lofty feats in which £ain plays did not work well was, how- | the mental and physical were most ever, more due to the strength, intui- | inspiringly balanced. Still “anothe tion 'and eternal vigilance of the Tigers |elcven which has brought 1o the than o any real shortcomings in the gridiron a vast determination ix Au- Xale method of attack. To select w mil- |burn. She defeated Centre on Satur- itary analogy, Princeton spiked all the [day and is now headed for the gr Yale artillers, thus forcing the Yale to | southern classic, the Thanksgi resort to bayonet charges when miles | day contest against Georgia Tech and miles away from her objective. |at Atlanta. s ? Yale Lacks Team Spi Chicago went on her winning was Apain, Yeis ) secmed Nt Jasic team | LS CALZE, BErETont Sinhly i) spirit. She had eversthing but a soul | aauieivers Loating W isconsin. What Individually the plavers had a fine | a“,.?:, it ie that the Maroons and e ittu, e DAt Of snterprise | Wolverines do not meet. mon impulse was lacking. Princeton ended whai_ may me"m"!oREGON ON EVEN BASIS garded as the mout satistactory veason n her history. This, not only because | she Game throush with-a”eian siase| WITH CALIFORNIA TEAM and takes ranking as the outstanding | By the Associated Press. team of the eaust, but because of all| gaxN FRANCISCO. November 20 - the difficuities she surmounted in ac- | gregon's 10-to-0 victory over the Ore- complishing this great feat. After the | por®20 20 "Suturday sent them into rvard-Princeton game Vale players. | 5% SFiil) the champion Callfornin lio/ sl w 0 cleven for first place in the Pacific Kaven st smiling dfacce | 1 coast conference table. Each team e kigers. while victorious. had|j,q won three games and lost nonc not impressed them as overly profi-|Thay do not meet clent Vhat they did not catch was | Gregon plays Washington at Se- the fact that while the Tigers did | geic Thanksgiving day in its last Hor dlgg&sl 2 gridiron juggernaut conference game of the year, while y possess. us few {eams have | Clitornia meets Stanford. An Ore- ger bossessed. the WIll to Vietory. | on win would put the team in lin: A funlyersitInthat oan sturaliont wmen | for selection s the representative of players has done a great feat. the west in the game at Pasadena. jabrinceton hud the facuity of know- g when and how to strike for vic- ! RAN PLAYER DIES. tory. In offense xhe contributed »VETEH 2 = D = nothing new, nothing startling to the | WILMINGTON, Del., November 20.— game this year, but the writer be- |Leonard W. Lovett, seventy-one vears lieves that in ail that goes to make {old, who, half a century ago, as i up an airtight defense against the member of the Reading Actives, be- open game the Princeton ' system |came one of the most noted base ball made a real contribution to modern |pitchers in the country, died ut his foot ball. Nassau's forward pass de- | home here. For fifteen years he had fense will be studied by the scientists 'been a magistrate. For the First Time you can now have absolute freedom from the grimy, ] grouch-breedingjobof spark plug cleaning, when yeu And that’s not all. Because the B-G stays clean it is always at maximum ignition intensity. Tt eliminates *miss-: ing” cylinders ‘au. all the resulting motor disorders and expense, and has the special cold-weather advantage of starting cold motors quickly. Use B-G’s once and you will always use them . For All Cars—Price, $1:00 . THE B-G CORPORATION 136 West 52nd Street New York Contractors to the U, S. Army and the U. S. 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