Evening Star Newspaper, November 17, 1924, Page 26

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SPORTS THE _EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1924 W. AND L. ELEVEN'S LEAD Supreme Strategies in Foot Ball | GRIDIRON“UPSETS” REVEAL IN SECTION NOT SECURE P 8 || PAST PLAY MEANS LITTLE irginia Presses Generals for “Big Eight” Crown Greatest Play That Percy Haughton Ever Witnessed Was Devised by a Man Who Never Had Taken | | Qutcome of No Game May Be Predicated Upon Little Difference Among Contenders—Tilts FS O Games That Have Been Played, as Perform- Thanksgiving Day May Decide Issue. No. 10—(Second Part). and the rivals came out to renew | combinations quickly neared Trafford.| Unfortunately, having stopped this| ances of Minnesota, Yale and Others Prove. = i 2 their efforts, a murmur of surprise|As they did so Fullback Brewer hurled | play, Yale stopped others. Having | As Told by the Late ran through the throng of spectators. | himself forward between them. At/ prevented Harvard score, it pro- |e BY JOHN B. KELLER. PERCY D. HAUGHTON, Yale lined up in the usual forma- |exactly the right moment the Crimson | ceeded to make one for itself. An in- BY LAWRENCE PERRY. tion, but Harvard was not forming | quarterback touched the ball with his|jury which took Emmons, the Crim- | e T S VIDENTLY 5 the ' time-honored V-shaped wedge, | toe and put it in play. Without chang- | son mainstay at left end, out of the EW YORK, November 17—Princeton beaten e after the ENTLY a shrewd mathematician will be needed to determine the IJ Head Coach, Columbia University;|Her players were maneuvering into |ing its course the five-man combination | line-up counted materially. Brewer Tigers had swamped Harvard with an exhibition of flawless de winner of the South Atlantic varsity foot ball crown this Fall. m’ Former Coach at Harvard. unheard-of positions. Deland’'s triumph | ran past him. The four-man combina- |lifted on long punt to Butterworth, in many scasons has the gridiron situation among the colleges here- I 1892, 2 2 he ki f | was near. tion wheeled to the left, running paral- | who ran it 5 yards to Yale's| _ fensive and offensive foot ball; Minnesota victor over Illinois with 2, as at present, the kick-of Here was the Harvard formation:|lel. Brewer received the ball from Traf- | 10-yard line. “Laurie ss, the Blue | nothing at all to show, so far as préceding games were cnocerned, that the ushered ‘in the battle. However, |Quarterback Trafiord, with the ball |ford and the “flying wedge,” thrillingly | left halfback, made a L e e i ! the rules dil not stipulate that|t00k his customary position at the|dramatic, thundered down upon t vard run to Yale's 50-yard line. Then | OF A 20 21 APy t0 cause suchan upsec; (Cotumbi o kickoff point on the 35-yard line;|right end of the Yale line came @ Serles of irresistible smashes | StTONg Army team to a tie; Auburn holding Georgia to H e the ball must be booted for a cer-|Fullback Brewer stood directly be-| The threat of that attack was limit- | for short distances that e 1y | Centre defeating Alabgma. ington and Lce now seems to have the best claim to the lead. But three | i “qicon o™ Gu of this omission |1nd him on Harvard's 50-yard line [less. The Harvard machine was pitched put . Bliss, Blue right halfback, The present season is showing convincingly what other seasons since especially important games are yvet to be played, one in which Washing- | 2! distance. 3 at the extreme right of the fleld, in | into full speed before Yale could even | over the line for a touchdown. But- | modern foot ball was played have sugested—that the out ton and Lee will meet North Carolina State, so a rightiul champion may |grew the V-shaped wedge which was | tne angle formed by the intersection | get into motion. Harvard and Yale ad- : terworth kicked goal, and the score| may he predicated upon games that have been played. The thir be even more difficult to name after Thanksgiving day than nbw. | to form the basis of Prof. Deland’s fof the side line and Harvard's 35-|herents alike foresaw a long advance | was 6 to 0 in Yale's favor. That was sheer guesswork, and coaches and others close to foot ball Other big turkey day games in which teams striving for high South | Myention. vard line, five men—Center Lewis,|and even the probability of a tough- | the final result e e o foot ba * Atlantic i ST e ST 1ch teams striving for high South | “princeton originated it and it be-|Left Guard Waters, Right Tackle|down. In the Blue stands a stunned | But, though Harvard had lost, De- S e FALIC ral will take part are those in which Virginia Polytechnic |came standard, making a joke of the |Newell, Right End Hallowell and Left | silence ensued. Followers of the Crim- | land’s strategy had been a sensation | | Minnesota answered the question,; will be appare ustitute will meet Virginia Military Institute and Virginia face North |kick. The quarterback stood over|Halfback Gray—deployed in In- | son were bursting with delight and be- | which continued to thrill for years. |"Who can stop Grange and in an- . te more it is Carolina University. e outcome of these either will clarify the situa- [the ball in the center of the fleld. |dian" file in an oblique line which |gan to shout a chorus of victory. Before the game practical foot ball [ SWering it affirmatively not only won As the late Tomn Shely tion considerably or throw the entire affair into practically a ,mpl_]“\ln,.. rest of the team, starting at a |pointed toward Quarter Trafford: on| The Yale plyae Ilying as quickly | men had b inclined to scoff at his | over the Illini, but justified the splen-| after the Yala jumble. i ®|point slightly in his rear, was ar-|the extreme left, in the angle formed | as they could, threw mselves against 1y device “Delund’s checker- | did material, which rallied to the | feated Prince Marvland rth Carolina State and|itable s o e |ranged in oblique lines, like the[by the side line and Harvard's 35- % e desperately. They 1 plays,” they were called, und | Crimson and Gold standard this Fulll snowed under by e i olinaSEate e ~\xv/:,.."_\‘.;\,“um against Fordham, in | ines of a V, with five men in each |yard line, four men— Right Guard | hindered it, but y did not stop it. | he was jokingly accused of sitting as well as the untiring effo cx- not make two AREE ity to Tetrer B e S wing. Mackie, Left Tackle Upton, Left End | But what they were unable to do, fate | up nights to play “foot ball solitaire” | pended in developing it to the heights) out of one lemon.” So v i naie rusile. DUt e by v Maryland's gridiron athletes ex- A Trick Kickoff. Emmons and Right Halfback Lake—|attended to. Brewer, carrying the ball, | on a chessboard. Afterward, how- |0f its possibilities. Bill Spaulding, |ton. Her men tried hard A Maryland victory over the Wolfpack | Pected to rest today, having no game were similarly arranged. their line|tripped over his own interference on | ever, he was taken more scriousiy.|the coach, hus needed just s well, but the letha Would have put the former well wy in | Seheduled next Saturday, but from| The quarterback put the ball inlalso pointed toward Trafford. the Bulldog’s 33-yard line, fell to the [ He became, in fact, director of } game as this to place him wl and the the ranking of the. octet ai ‘r. “i:“'l;‘..,m(..ruw on will get work aplenty [play by taking hold of it and touch- ground and was pinned .down promptly | vard’s foot ball strategy and in the | belongs field about bheen so involved as it is this year. Of the eight big teams in the | race—Georgetown is not considered because it meets no representative sectional clevens and Wake Forest is left out of the reckoning because 50 far it has encountered but one of the prominent combinations—Wash- come of no gam gome of the prestige it h. ot o thalin preparation for its most impor- [ing it With his foot. Then he tucked Proves Big Senaation. by a Yale man. next few years is said to have per-| For the.Gophers met Tlinois in-|the gridiron this year. A North Carolina State win would have done the same for it Had Virginia Poly overcome Yirginia, instead of succumbing to the liers, ft would have been right at the heels of the Generals, now credited | with the leadershin. | tant battle of the vear, that with|it against his body, his team mates What did it all mean? This was the Makes Notable in. fected more than 150 strategic vari- | Structed in the various problems t! The Yale Johns Hopkins in Baltimore Thanks- cd in tight against himand the | question in the mind of every person | The “fiyink wedke” had accomplish- | ations, would encounter and versed superbly | iving day. The O1d Liners came oug |merit of the play lay In the circum- |save the few who were in on the secret [ed a notable gain of 20 yards and, X b in methods designed to take advar {36 the scoreless tie with North Caro- |stances that while technically it was | of the Deland strategy. But the mystery | although we .did not immediately Next Sunday—John W. Wilce. | tage of the shortcomings of the Ur- as appro: partment overhead |lia State right fit. Only two play- |a kickoff the opposition did not get |soon was dispelled. Without putting the | suspect it, had opened a new vista| This is the conecluding portion of | bana combination Lut to defeat Harv ers had to be withdrawn from that |possession of the ball ball in play ~F!n:4 prevented the Yale | for foot ball. But I must confess tc ray. I1d Pugh wes battered about| This was the formation with which |men from getting into action—Trafford [ a deep disappointment, which ha | the lews severcly in the first half, but | Yale opened the first half and it was|waved both his arms. Instantly, like | persisted for 32 years, that Deland's the tenth of a series of articles de- Scouts Helped Vale, score than Dartmo scribing great foot ball strategies. 3 73 ; e ( son to stz g : . | = e i . 51d. by (thas leadlre) coashes of the|. S0 With the Vile team at Pr ing team of the Generals Fuirly Consistent. | returned to action in the second and |the one which evervbody expected|two battalions of cavalry, the five-man | really splendid device did not a : er [ons ¥iete s o iictution ot wicdilea] | Notraba S Washington and Lec has played more |2ave a good account of himself. Os-|Harvard to employ when the second | combination on the right and the four- | complish an immetliately commensu- | COUBLTY in interviews with J. P. Gl B e L unnen Wi tation consistently than any ¢ f the eight [born had to retire after sustaining a [half began. But when the intermis- | man combination on the left charged | rate result. It should have been fol- | #nd George Byrnes. Other numbers | © s quron i < jersenpntation, teams through a « marked by [painful hip bruise. In all likelihood. |sion which succeeded the first half | toward him. olwed » by a touchdown, and that | \:m flw:H'u\\“ ki ort ok «'mlluvL‘ ‘“u s line had the the inconsistency of the efforts of the |though, he will be ready for use|cnded—despite the bitterest sort of | Running in lock-step, and gathering | touchdown should have meant a | (CQYTKLL 1924 in U. s strength and ability to stop Prince . orth American Newspaper et 4 ; varsity nations of the South | Thanksgiving day. struggle neither side had scored— | momentum as they progressed, the two | Crimson victory. | SRt cereeay o on’s rushes, just as the or- ic. ~South Carolina, of course, - wards were able to hold the Eli line done better than the Generals on sufficiently in check to prevent scores te b s THREE ELEVENS IN FIGHT | ONE-PIECE GRID SUIT | CHICAGO NOW IS AT TOP |55 v o v e 5000 5000 Shd Nooth Gan State Gollege) Bue] Low to check Prin s overhead | by accepting a type ¢ dront 00 FOR CITY SANDLOT TITLE NENTEDBYDELAND OF BIG TEN GRID. GROUP i it e rated first in head game Princeton had 10t | that when the forward pass is the fi learned _this because in preceding | worked it will score more freq The ( xington have van- When Lorin F. Deland introduced | games Yale had not shown her hand | (han the best brand of rumiine quished Maryland and Virginia, teams W ASHINGTON'S unlimited class sandlot foot ball champion will | Harvard's famous fiying wedge. de- | By the Associated Press In forward passins. What problems | tacks that have ove 1 her formidable ob- scribed in the accompanying inter- “A - - - o e .| Yale submitted to the Tigers in this tacies | way to the title be crowned three weeks hence. Mercury, Mohawk and |fiew aith Perey b. Houghton he not Cmur.n, November 17.—Chicago rose to the top of the heap in |respect had to be solved out on the for instance, has toppled Geoknick gridmen have established themselves as the leading |only gave to foot ball the revolu-| Saturday's Western Conference foot ball championship struggles, | ficld in the course of the game. And quished Virginia Military Intitute and | contenders and are due to stage a three-cornered Tace '—l’.“(‘ <% laur terference, but sounded the knell of ot dvanc Py claim of national honors. a team. E |NTERPRETAT|UN CONFAB Virginia Poly. However, Virginia | The first of the final elimination round competitions will be held next |a practice that had been standard | In a day of upsets the defeat of the previously unconquered Univer- | ’-\mmr Yale had the advantage held the sturdy Lexingtonians to a tie. | Sunday, when the Mohawks entertain the Geoknick combination in Clark | for years. This was the evasion of| ity of | even was outstanding in Midwestern collegiate foot ball. | Y25% PUNtRE superiority. When vou of this sectic far, the University of Virginla| Grifiith'Stadium. On the following Sunday Mercury will play host to the | the rules at the kick-off, when, In-| Nfinnesota soared to the power evidenced carlier in the season and |hove Lo face high boom rics hold n appears entitled to second rank- | (o oknicks at Union Park. The annual gridiron classic between the Mo- | stead of bootiug the ball into enems | ounced the Hiini three touchdowns to of 4 Hiiihistered a coveE bion | op snpone terdliony s e kemnasiv: atholic Univer e thiee mrent State tivats. snowd | hawk and Mercury elevens will be held December 7 in Clark Griffith | (giinea” it with his foot, s that his | in seriously injuring Harold “Red” Grange, the season's sensational back. | ony with guns of I li-| " Managers, plavers, officials and f h. Cavilios wih Thanksetnng ady| Stadiurm; team retained possession as the| Suffering severely from a disiocated | will play Towa and Tlinois mects Ohio |Per and less power the icab | are invited to attend they would clinch the runner-up position | All three rivals have pre Trinity may be arranged by calling | charge was made. | shoulder and out of the game for|State Michigan, Hlinols and Jowa |1 _very material in the s and probably stand su-!gently fer the titular camy | the manager at West 2122 The flying wedge soon produced|the remainder of the season, Gran have lost a game each, while Illinois | Yet Princeton played good foot ball preme were Washington and Lee to bow mes with high-class foot —— legislation which made a genuine|would not deign to say that he had | and lowa have records further marred | It was a team that had en its hax heen ™ North Carolix it Raleigh, t Jhereabout. The Geoknick Lotus Athletic Club had an e kick-off compulsory and which out-| been hurt intentionally, but one y tie each heir champion- | a8ainst Harvard, and the effects of Inte Noih Casol juth |Caroling | era look the measure of i al| time with the Modo winning, lawed the V fortnation that made the | Chicago sports writer, who saw the prospects rest on upsets of rivals | that cont were seenin com- - are ti > teams of the sec- | Rec ation, 26 to 3 ay, | to 0. ll,rd and r'xiv_» r‘l broth l‘l_\_;v.vz ulml:-\- pnm),ly» 1 ‘s«mv. aid: “When they hit Grange, as well as winning their own games. ‘ll'ur'm\'w.\' slow d;n'lvvlv»lil play of | = fon’ to o st wo victories e Me v scored a were the outstanding performers. Chis legislation placed seven men |he was hit, and the word ‘hit' is used | Towa' -to-7 victory over Wis- | P’rinceton against Yale and the slug- Aol o e e e e e y aia s e P AR e b L e A L e e ADIATORS, FENDERS ranked er Virginia. even though it |Clul. Unable to cope with the aerial A Iast-minute rally gave the|then devised slant and straight tan- |sota eleven was penalized 15 yards 2 with Michigan this week |started. A complete contrast d ol G meets 1 ctional rivals. The |attack of the Quantico Marine Re-|Apaches a 7-to-0 victory over theidem formations In the backfleld, | after Grange had been tackled by |« lowa team has improved |4 bottle of champagne 1 WITTSTATT'S R. AND F. WORK! Gamecocks won the oniy mes thes ; Mohawks were forced to| Aberdeen team. Sweeney took the|which were used in_mass plays on|two men while out of bounds throughout the ason. | opene i the cork again 1{ 219 13th. k. 1 I P F. S0u6 M schednlad with prominent South At 3-to-0 trouncing. ball over. tackle and on end. With variations,| The Illinois team was sadly bat- a ] an’s forward pass attack came = = o : i " rheels rreat improvement was noted i — these are s*ill in use tered the previous hen Coach h in the last period and the |iQ % Z ZZ intic contend wifle the Tarheels | A great improvement was noted inl Lo Lot G0l a 1in red the previ week wher T v in th t period and the | can show only gan even brezk the | the Geoknick’s defense, the sailor 3 : B 3 He also intreduced the practice, | Stage of Chicago unleashed a tr Iverines triumphed 16 to 6 over |N Milita ns and North Carolina | gle st down O'Connell, Pazellaj OR% EA8 fommer MOsng out, 4 - |ing their legs on defense. This was | battering administered by the strong- a practiced against Wabash ) = ” S e =lta Sou O e sretia | blocked punt in the first period to|through and breaking up the tandem | ference for a 2 tie. meet Purdue next Saturday ke oy temns tnere Seat Pleasant fought valiantly [ &1ve his team its lone score. | formations before they could be| Chicago. however, also showed| Nebraska was added to Army, 'se. Ma Vir- |against the r Mercury team, /i klca’ Vi 2 | started. gns of distress as an aftermath of | Princeton and Georgia Tech as a vie- e e the latters ,||:’i"'lf‘,':"'\:l“‘]‘:_':'[:"(.‘\”':““;g:l be-| “Another curious stunt of Deland's |the Illinois game, and it was only by | tim of the powerful Notre Dame . v i eal four Cirnes | powermnllsotranisive pige | Beyers, || A0 A 2 s ®oal he| . .g contriving the one-piece leather |a field goal in the last minutes of | machine, which member of no e ~ h has \( :wlu:! Stlone vie- ‘,‘\:,mrul..,-q Joyce Levvy and C -lfi;‘r‘ %’n'n'h-“i\ni'é. ,'”:-,N,:“":,”‘.:J"" suits, with which he cquipped the | play t the Maroons scaled the | fercnce, recognizes no boundaries in ar ner u 01110 1 eb feats and one tie. Virginia | blazed the way for the Winged-Foot | ;o5 LY £100H0 €U o Tee- | crimson team in 1893. It was|heights of conference leadership over | secking victims. The Crowley, Mil- Military Institute has played three | aggregation e ormer eon High star, who is|ihought, and correctly, that these|the supposcdly weak Northwestern |ler, Laydon, Stuhldreher combination games to 4 £ one win and two | - Had the Mohawks not fumbled so| CORBINE the Trinitye, s seeking | woula increase the ' difficulty of team. A victors over Wisconsin|stormed around and throuh the e & o | 2 doubtedly would | Z2me s -po ackling Ha Mayers iext Saturday would give Chicago an | Nebraska 1 1 & Corn- / 7. Josses trequently they undoubtedly would| .,os " He may be telephoned at|'>ciing& Harvard player: Al cey wculdigiys (Chicaxo s Nebragka Biging s Corn Have cash on hand of over 14 Million Dol- As a motter 'of fact. though, there | have scored against the Marines. The | {7t0 oo | Others teams soon adopted the | undisputed title husker defe and 1923, by 2 e s o eserve players {ro uantico reg- o uit. One day, according to news-| In other Saturday games Michlgan |a 31-to-6 . 2 ” b yaze s probably i not a touchdown difference |reserve players Trom QUARKCS FOEC| — Déver éccounts: & Erinicetonimunten.| lars, with practically no liabilities—the rate Eetmesn iy w0 et ams i | e enoush, - Payne, Lutzke and | . lansdon Mardfeldts claim a 12-to- | tered a game with his leather garb | > e . T VI Do | merman were big factors in the] S VICtory over the Brookland eleven. | smeared with lard. He was as slip- of assets against liabilities being over 20 to 1. that t Maryl e sshington | Sinermi (o The latter is reported to have left|pery as a greased pig. Then ap- (':: In S ada llr; \l ~ rth C: & 5 LA the field in the last period with only | peared the curious rule, which for olina State. And that No ro- | two more minutes to play. Mattias | yes (ARG 4e. Al OGNS for N e A : scored a 14-t0-0 . 3 s|years remained in the book, for g " lina, beaten by Marsiand, defeated | Amncostia Eagles scorcd & LoD plaved well for Brookland, together |nidding the greasing of gridiron The unusually healthy financial condition North olina which in turn | victory ove SACs x | with Dun of the Mardfeldts. clothing. vanqui Virzinia Maryland's | Joe Bush impressed throughout for | 5 g A W s conquoror, and huld Maryland to a score- | the Fagles, MeCathran, = Mévers L et - of the Gardner Company., its strong dealer < | erron and Allen also did quite WL e We e et e th Carolina elevens win | - ’ - BOWLERS WANT MATCH. |now in_its twelfth year, has 10 huge over their Virginia rivals next week| With Stewart, Sullivan and Sine _ De Molay's bowling team fs seck- |new athlatic fields and Virginia Military Institute top-|leading the way, Fort Humphreys|ing a match tomorrow night at the ples Virginia Poly, determining the | cleven lowered the colors of lhf! Coliseum Bowling Alleys. Tele- South Atlantic champion would be|Annapolis Marines, 26 to 6. Virginla | phone Manager Charlie Goodman at a worse tashk than solving the most | Athletic Club will entertain the vic- | Adams 3906, intricate crossword puzzle. tors next Sunday at Alexandria in a| e game that will have considerable | 12 Days Georgetown managed 1o keep its|Learing on the title of northern | o S LRI cet well enough in the slippery go- | Virginia a1 trains lenve White Ho R N I M ‘ Your Old Hat]/| oo itk o5 "tk Wi i ST (ot ) 9 | . :00 m. and 12:i5 p.m. day to score over the 3d Army Corps,| Northern Athletic Club revealed a Ag Dot s doing 1t took & severd|decided Improvement in its 26-to-6 | Made New Again Admission s1.50 | physical ating. Several of the|victory over the Circle gridmen. ! (‘nman m‘:ym? and Government tax as 32 e o e Ci om( 3 ‘xperts. § | Iv Dattered they had to spend Sat- | tally when he blocked and recovered | Vienna Hat Co. T . U. I'To 0. urday night in- the university hos | a punt behind the Northern goal. 40D 11tk Street | Saturdays and holidays, 1:00 p.m. q 2104 Pa. A N.W. . but, the aid of Trainer | = R %J"x‘l?fl Albaugh, Coach Lou Little ex.| Aetna players upnet calculations by | a. Ave. N.W. bects to have a sound squad ready | downing Quincy Athletic Club in a for Saturday’s engagement with Loy~ | 33-to-6 match. “The victors have fs- e e e e ] | 1200 H St. N.E. ola at New Orleans Sued a challenge to the Argyle Preps - for a Thanksgiving day game, ac- George Washington, Catholic Uni- | cording to Manager Moran, at North versity and Gallaudet emerged from | 6379, - their last contests in fairly good | = Dhysical “condition and. will Get nta| Virsinta [Athiede Club was forced | Small Down Payment plenty of work this week in pre; to battle all the way to obtain a 12- s e to-0 triumph over the Marine Bar- | Balance 6 Months @ay. The Hatchetites are to racks combination. Peyton's 75-yard < Buffalo to face Buffalo Univ v.|dash to a touchdown in the final ! “P Y Rid 9 twhile Gallaudet will visit Philadel- | period was one of the bright spots ay as 1Iou (3 phia_for a game with St. Joseph's. [of the game. Coach Gormley still has much work S, ahead at Brookland i perfect ihe Ome of the mowt clonely contested Catholic University eleven, but fig- &ames of the season resulted in the ures it will be ready to make a cred-] Mount Rainier Emblem-Hess game, Which the former won, 6 to 0, with H. Sullivan and W. Smith doing their sket Lall coac ctation meeting 7Z organization and the splendid success of its product make this car a safe buy from every L1 ELEAIIY, point of view. All 1925 models now on exhibition at our PR, showroom. A fully Pqfiipped service station is maintained. B. C. R. MOTORS CO. 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