News Scrapbook 1958-1961

EVEN/ G TRIBUNE" T!:sND:~~~.~·v;MAa\':~~~',~sa ...... Sports_Section .. .. Page B-3 Governali Promises His Aztecs 'Will Show Up' Hopes Bass 'Lure' g Out Crowd

Gloomy 'Bult' Forecasts Tough Pendleton Fracas Jj pass,11::: e:\llihitiun Satul'day was rl,•scrd11•d b~ a pro M'OU1 as "tliP fi1wst p<'rforman,•p rl'otn tl1p slandporn1 01 aecurac,• 1 ha. t he l1ad SC'<'n." fJO\\ 1e1· M<"CUlelH!o11 JJointt>d • out tliat Cl1apman "vroba bly Is too 11ma1J tor pro ball.' "Our Ofll'n,e ,~ I N•Jly rolltng no\\', ' said M ccutcllE'Oll "The> !{ifls arP ronlid011I," Bull Trom,,tlC'r said his Mai ine Con, Recruit .Uepo1 also played Its lw~t game of tl1e ~·ea1· 111 heating 1iam- il1011 AFB, 18-H, las1 \ll Maj. Ted StawiC'kl', C,01,p Pt>nd!Pton dllb at MCHD Saturday nltPt•noon. Nol ,;o, t'Ounll'rPd SIHwic-ki. who.SP Marlnps lost to Ilantllton. ,16,7. WI ii<' compiling n 3-~-l ITCoi·c:1. ''WP ha,·<' a good lilll<' hall elui>," ~aid ~lawtclo. '•hu1 if doc>.·n' t ha,·<> lhllt •amlout guy whid1 you nerrl We're do in g 1hr' b C's t "e can, hut we make mislakefi and 1>ad1 mi,tak" costs u~." · c,,01·gp Schutte sald San Diego Junior College pJ~yM a good game> against Long 13Pach City Coll<'g'P l;at- urday bul "lost ll'l-181 on the in of thPir ball <'anit>rs ." "Thal balance. "bP.cau~P we had won a couple on th<> tndi vlctnal exc<'JlPnce oi our ball carriers.." • Grid Swamis Reeling • It Has Been Tough Year • Daugherty Unhappy Man l\lEitCll'UL J<;NDING: The homestretch of this rather daffy football season is Just around the corner. It can't end fa t enough for many of the coaches and a majority of the "experts" who like to stick ..~.:. !!~RR1cK GJcORt;E HI losing foolhall coach. the pig,Jdn 1mndiis 11rwr arr askrd to rPsign hi'• <'ause they ca11't pick the righi tram to win all the time. No one is forcing them to make these selections. For that matter, 110 one is twisting a coach's arm and compelling him to coach, either. However, his situation is somewhat different. His tenure is determined on the number of wins his teams can manufacture. And when the books don't balance. or the results don't satisfy 1he alumni. he gets his walking papers. some rather startling uprisings this season. They still eledrif?. althougl1 by this time football followers should be taking the e unexpected thump- ings in stride. Here it iij the next-to-last wee!, of the cam- paign and fan,- were amazed wlw11 l\l inursota, a 11011-winner until Saturday, fi nally g rew some muscles a11d C'uffed around 1'riC'higan State. From our standpoint this was the grandpappy upset of the day. It must have added another push out 1he door lo Spat·tan coach Duffy Daugherty, who got the effigy hanging treatment early in the year and a blast in the school's paper yesterday. RECORD \\EARING THIN: Before the season was very old, it was rather obvious that Michigan Slate wasn't going to field an all-winning club de- spite the fine things that were forecast for the Spar- tans. But as the weeks rolled by, insult was added to insult as the hapless Michigan Staters couldn't untrack themselves. Each week Daugherty, has been forced to come up ,\ith a different exp lanation. By this time Duffy must be pretty expert at it, but getting smacked by a team tbe likes of Min- nesota must have taxed his imagination. E:\18.\RR,\ :SSING: That Minnesota caper cer- tainly had its repercussions out here on 1he Pacific Coast. It's an old Spanish custom. SP\H'I'ANS ST.\GGERt 'G: There have been out tlieir necks each week to dispensP 1heir selections in the na1ion's sports pages. It has been a bad year for these gridiron swamis, what with so many upsets evel'y Saturday. We don'1 know if any one keeps any ret·o1·ds of things like that, but if hl' did, 1958 probably would go down in the books as the year when college foot- ball re[m;ed to follow the form chart. It got l'.O barl on several ocea~ion~ Hrnt some of the prognostkatori; must havr

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BOS )lcCL'TCHEOX \'Oit'P,S rei,pect for Beni;-als

PA UL (,0\'t<;R, >\ LI '1\'orst gaml'' for Ar.tee,;

a telephone inlenie" from Pocatello, formed a mu- tual-admiration society a, eaeh compared the, others team to M:ontana State. USD lo t to Montana State, 31-t:i, while Idaho State bowed to the same club, li-ti. "I thi:ik Idaho ::,tate Is pretty close to the . ame call· ber a~ '.\[ontana State," said :\lcCutcheon. "U D has had tremendou~ impro, ement,'' countered Caccia. ' "R<'sult~ probahlr would he a little different it

the) played Montana State now.

"This will be one of our tougher games," hi' con- tinued . "Its a long trip for us. We look lor quite a truggle " Caccia ~aid this i~ a "building" ) ear at ldaho Sta,,. "'\'.,. ha,·" only three . enior~ on the s1aru11g club," h,. explained. :\!l'Cutcheon said quar1<>rback Jan Clta])man 's 13-101•

uttheon reported Umver ity Of ~an "onr or our outstanding ef!ort.<" in e 4. -13 but he cautioned, tlli> 1-'1· tough a 1gnment in Balboa Stadium Sat• t; y will pl y Idaho State and Idahn tat? COa<"h BabP CacC'ia, Ill

I ers Roar Into W ide Lead

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Iowa Loses Ground In Footba II Polls

Pads_Hope To Land Cub Talent By EARL KM,Ll~R

IOrtT (OOPI-:R Jlalt of brothP.r 11<-t

'Brother

It created a rather cmba rrassi ug situatio11 in which California, the likely l'CJ)l'Cseutatirn of the Pacific Coast Conference in the Rose Bo" I game against Iowa, has t he stigma of a 32-12 bopping by this same Michigan State team. The Spartans failed to win a Big Ten tilt. Quite confusing, eh? Opposes Third Loop

Bob .Mc utcheon, head football coach and athletic director at University of San Diego, will have to wait until Feb, 28 to lea whether his contract Will be renewed when It expire~ :\Tay I. M · 'ulc•hf'on, m his secon

Recommendations o! the athletic board have to go to the board of regents. Reports 1rom the athletic board earlier were that McCutcheon·s job was in jeop- ardy. "The reason I asked tor a clarilication at this time is because I want to know what my future is going to be," said Mccutcheon. "l don't want to be mak- ing any plans for next year if I'm not going to be around . "I wouldn ' t have taken this iob if I thought it was going to las1 only two years. T may look around and see what other coaching job I can obtain." USO i. nuarmg the completion of the most ~ucces. ful eason it has had in the two years Mccutcheon has been coaching football there. The Pioneers have won six games and lo~t one. They have 6C'ored 209 points to 88 for their oppo Jtion.

MILWAUKEE (UPil-Warren Giles , president of the National League, indicated last night he is opposed to a third major league, and took a stand in favor of sub- sidization of mmor leagues and against lavish oonuses tor big league prospects. Giles spoke at a teslimonial dinner for John c.,iurnn, vice prei;ident and general manager of the Milwaukee Bra,·es. The National League pre,iden1 did not mention specil- !cally proposals for a third major league in his talk, But he said "we must keep a small structure rather than enlarging it and diluting it." Giles said tbere were loo few i:ood pla~el's in the maJor

leagues and that lie was opposed to expanding the ma- jors at the cost of lowering the caliber of play. His re- marks indicated he would only support expansion of the majors if the quali1y ol play could be maintained. In this resvect, Giles said the "greatest Job of the ma- jors is 10 attract more young men to baseball." The sen- ior circuit leader said 1he minors are tile source of this material and then stated. "We must. when necessary and only when n<'c<>ssa1·y, i;ubsidize tile minor leagues." But hP also indicated lha1 thf' minors, plagued by red ink at the box office, needed some reorganization in or- der to be put on a paying basis. "\''P mu~t haw• c·ompact minor leagues playing In nat- ural nvalries and grouping,i," he satd.

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