New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 2, 1924, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY; DECEMBER 2, 1924, BASEBALL TRADES IDAZZY VANGE MOST FEATURF MEFTING. VALUABLE LEAGUER | lons i Session at Nationals Award Prize to Brook- Iyn Pitcher for 1924 League § | | | 1 Dec. 2. —Arthur Brooklyn's famous past al moundsmen, has the season's most Nelal. 1 the most valuable nal league {for co, who led all vietories and Cunninghan for tl year Natlonal leag money will be g ext week at ting, but 1 be pres the ot} (By Billy Yvans) (First Team) Position College lowa Player Received 71 Votes B all n players 's judgme (Second Team) Position Collen; W 1 gan Gowdy Slaughter Grange Brown Tondelik Baker Lidberg Most of the coaches 'k Dieberstein of Wiscon- of Purdue, ) wus 80 rded by the experts last i To to the - approval of = was all at votes in two, his ilana, and ook over the ms, it doesn’t is much differ As 1 lineups seem to v to meet a post-sca- g man ¢ my BOSTON BOXERS WIN THREE 0UT OF FOUR Intercity Amateur Boxing Matches show Hub Boys In Good Torm n boxers ! 1 bouts k and EVERY BIG ELEVEN |15 SCORED UPON None Goes Throngh Season With Clean Slate (By BILLY NS.) Uncroased goal lines are a thing he past {n modern football so many years ago a number teams at the close of the season could point with pride to the failure of the opposition to score. Those happy days are no more. n Bingle jor college Tootb: the country lias been z opponents during 1} \ow drawing f Alabama 1 by the mes of opnp wayside, the season ition score- Kentucky cross the en the seventh game, managed to T ne of the upsets of 3 ating Alahama 17-0. Uncertainty Add Thrills, discuesing the upsets sent eeason with a promi- coach, 1 used ioned that not a single iped being nent ent have for the reason popularity of the game, uncert ty that the for- , the open game has sup- longer is any team hopelessly 1. There is always a chance ierdog to do sometl lic likes t thril uncertainty. T that at try over Y & stadiums. Case of Notre Dame, N Dame eleven of clous combination, one cams of all time, pac 2 nar Centre | | 2 8 this T.ouls it has been scored on in four' of its games Andy Smith's great University of California team was scored on in five of its first ninc games. Yale of the opposition, and Dartmouth on severs In some games the opposition has run {ts &core to very respectable figures. Take the Tllinois statistics. Minnesota scored 20 points to beat Zuppke's team; Chicago made 21 for a tie, while Michigan, although beaten, totaled 14. A number of r tor the unusual & of present season. Forward Pass PPotent. Unquestionably the greéater use of the forward pass has been a potent factor, (Coaches are resorting to it as a scoring weapon rather than threat or last resort play. : abolition of the artificlal tee has also played a part. While the kickoffs 18 pos- en low and fast backs, giving them a get under way behind terference before the get down on the asons are possible on rear to Oppos; kicks. can fal tee, great attained on the returns were the any number atured by a n from the kick- kickof exception ) of games have be run for a touchdo off. The been ar season of 1924 has ith freak happenings, fact footha'l dotted the major ege eleven uncrossed goal line GARCIA VS DUNDE v York, Dec. 2.—Bobby Garcla, Camp Holabird, Md., featherweight and Mike Dundee of Rock Island 1., who eliminated from the ament under the auspice York State Athletic reported to have ed for match at Madisor Garden the ht of Dee, 12, Jose Lombardo of Panama and (Kid) Kaplan Mertden, et in the semi-final bout of lonship tourney. sociation, ary re of Cor the has five times felt the acoring ating, oring <0ndx'l(rns| can | TWO RED GRANGES ARE POSSIBILITY Brother of Famous Star May Join Him in Backlield By The Assoclated Press. Chicago, Dec. 2.—~A pair of “Red"” Granges” as halfbacks in the Uni- versity of Tllinols lineup is a possi- bility for the 1825 gridiron season, Garland Grange, younger brother of the famous Harold, the most satis- factory producer of football thrills the nation has known for years, will be eligible for the varsity cleven next year, Young Grange, or “Pinkey,” as he is known to distinguish him from the original “Red,” played halfback on the freshman team during the 1924 scason and did a great deal of pass- ing for the yearlings. Grange the younger stands feet, eleven inches, is eigh old and welghs 165 pounds, While he did not make an out- standing showing against the varsity this year, Young Grange was han- dicapped by having been #11 and be- ing twenty pounds under weight most of the season, Grange played four years at Wheaton High school, starting at the end of his first year, His second vear le was shifted to halfback, where he stuyed the rest of his high school career. During his sopho- more year he co-starred in the back- field with his brother and Gustav- son, now a freshman at North- western i While at Wheaton, young Grange .was a star on both and de- and got away for five or six touchdowns during a game. He is exceptionally fast, being credited with several annual second performances in the 100 yard dash and is an all-around athlete, GASCD TEAN WINS Takes on Landers in Industrial League and Vanquishes Them by fense often the Score of 61 to 37, The Gasco basketball team played first real game of the night, stacking up against th Frary & Clark Industrial am. Beor their jast Landers, vague by the The Ga Dudak, 150N of 64 to 37. teams lined up as follow W. Waojak 18t fo Luke, Kerlyn McCormick forward Klatka right Restel Luke Center Preis: Joft guard . Itobinson Shechan er, Davis I". fheehan, Barnes e . Recanno ight guard Gonls from the ficld Restelli 14 goals after | Gasco: | dak MeCormic 6, J. $hechan 5, Wojak: fouls, McCormick. L. & from field, Buccheri 9, Davis 1, Klatka r foul, Luke 1 with Industrial Goals ‘uke 6 Kerlyn 1; The hallenge rague teams. goal af’ Gaseo team is any of to the FIGHT FAST DRAW Wilkes-Barre, Pa Wolgast fought ten to a draw here last night. The Gasco outfit won | Landers | Buccheri | PAND DOWN THE TRAILOF SPORTS CONN, AGGES HAD A GREAT RECORD Dé!ense Best of Any Team ln‘ Country By The Assoclated Press. New York, Dec. 2.—Ninety-fivc representative collego football clev- ens amassed 11,308 points in the season which closed Saturday, an average for of 110, scores of 780 games being consider. A ycar ago the team average was approximately 127 and in 1922 it was 133, indicating a fall in scoring power over the three-year period No team in the country, at least among the larger institutions, scorcd 300 or more points, Alabama's 200 being the nearest approach. Clo behind is West; Virginia with A year ago Cornell led the national records with 320, and West Virginia gathered In 1922 California had a total of 398 and Cornell 330., The standing ot the high scorers, those who made more than 200 points this year, follow: Alabama 290, West Virginia 282, Notre Damc 8, Middlebur, 4, Rutgers 249, Muhlenberg 243, Dartmouth (Colgate 218, New Hampshire Columbia 210, Cornell 209, 1 204, Penn 208 and Penn State In 19 the College of the City of New York, Villanova 1l Rhode Jsland State failed to score upi opponents but in the campaign just ended there is no such record weakness as this. Stevens of boker seored Iy points, Boston University 13 ington State (four gan: ity 24, and Colby 28, The Connecticut Agg have the scason’ t record, 13 points opponents. Pennsyl- ed the K in of victories and was undefeat ¢d only 17 points. Other elevens which kept their goal well protected includ Vir- nia Polytec 18, e Alabama 24, Johns Hopkins ginia Military and Dartm 31 Rome toucl n » heaviest each team ed, owever, or s appear to a only having by which vania, 15t her allo num- opposition drive acro eir sufferer niversity of Vermont, buried 1 22 to the opposition, ¥ J Trinity 165 nation's teams Was Twenty-t permitted | mor¢ Cornell ol found one ptively reil bright disastrous tory swept spot vl ) gather its force nwiay Susquebanr almost its against team Jargest SCoT to ( | peating same of §7 the total ru s Hopkins over 1 huykil score © Games 44 tie conte amcs conside 1go-1inois California-§ ' Page) ::,V‘Movie of a Man and a Hot- Mince Pie INJURED, BUT PLAYED stivers, Tdaho Quarter Season With Two Vertebrae of Neck Dislocated, LUDERUS A MANAGER - fid. Doc 0 TFred Lus went Entire “AR - JUuST MY DisH" "I LOVE HOT MINCF PIE" BRIGGS %Alflfi\Flu naven ! qnne Hvaruw woeny or o0an e 0t »

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