Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, October 13, 1961 Page: 4 of 4
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Page 4
THE LONE STAR LUTHERAN
Friday, October 13,. 1961
Nobody Asked
If Me,
By LAVERNE LUNDQUIST
“Here’s to the trip to Pine.villei”
And so we begin the saga for the
week. Were it possible to play two
football games in one night, ' and
should the Bulldogs have decided
to go to Louisiana last Saturday
after the Sul Ross game, there can
be no doubt that four or five doz-
en fans would have traipsed along
to give their enthusiastic approval.
Such was the spirit, of-ecstasy that
pervaded the campus last week.
Now, things have calmed down
quite a bit, but. the sweet smell
of successful sweat will -linger
long enough to continually remind
us that Texas Lutheran-downed a
favored team by 19 points. And
so to the football team we say—-
Congratulations for -winning a
ball game because you wanted if
more than your opponents.
Of course, this doesn’t explain
the lopsided score that was framed
on the scoreboard after 60 minutes
oi play Saturday night, but the
fact that the Bulldogs had an axe
to grind surely helped in piling up
the points.
In all fairness to the rest of the
squad, all of whom played excel-
lent football, it must be said that
there were no outstanding stand-
outs. The win, as it should have
been, was a team victory. Still,
we can’t _go on without comment-
ing on three men who played key
roles. Let it suffice, then, to say
that Miffy Kaase’s passing was
razor sharp; that Billy. Russell’s
TD run was fantastic, and that
Rawley Johnson’s bull-like charg-
es up the middle aided immeasur-
ably to the Bulldog cause.
But—life being what it is—we
must turn our attention to gloom-
ier things, such as Louisiana' Col-
lege. In 1957 the score was 26-20.
In 1958 the score didn’t matter.
In 1959 the score was 26-23. In
1960 the score was 13-7. Each
time, Louisiana had the larger
score. Each time, logically enough,
we lost. The score stands four
games to none, were way behind.
This year, Louisiana College
has a 3-1 record. They’ve downed
Sam Houston, Troy State, and
Austin College, and lost a squeak-
er to powerful Northwest Louisi-
ana by 7-6."
Nevertheless, Coach Malrnquist
will have his crew ready, and they
should be ready for blood follow-
ing four years of “nothingness”.
BELIEVE IT OR NOT, Billy
Russell, carrying the ball, elud-
ed these three Sul Ross tacklers
and went on to score on a 29-
yard dash ..that will live forever
in the minds of TLC football
fans. Russell also scored earlier
from one yard out in coming
through' with one of his best per-
formance:; thus far this season.
PLATE! OF THE- WEEK
By CHARLIE HARRIS
Miffy Kaase, Schulenburg’s gift
to college football, is this week’s
Player of the Week. The cotton-
topped signal caller,- who Irad to
try out for a scholarship, unlim-
bered his accurate Tight arm fer
nine completed passes out of 13
attempts and. 201 yards last Sat-
urday night, as TLC humbled the
Sul Ross Lobos of the Lone Star
Conference, 33, to 14.
Three of Kaase’s pinpoint tosses
set up TLC touchdowns, and one,
a 16-yarder to Sweeney strong-
man -Ebbie Neptune, was completed
for the 6 points. Kaase’s accuracy
was especially efficient on the
long passes, as he completed pass-
es for 44, 32, 35, and 26 yards in
addition to five other shorter ones
Last season, the. junior quarter-
back was voted the Most Valuable
Player award for the entire 1960
season by the Seguin sportswri-
ters, as he led the Bulldogs in
passing (590 yards) and was the
team’s leading punter (37.7 yard
average).
Also receiving votes was Jast
week’s MVP, Billy Russell. Rus-
sell rushed for 59 yards against
i the Lobos, including a breath-
| taking 29-yard run in which he
j ran through at least six tacklers
| before falling across the -goal
j line. The -Dallas darter scored 12
! points to run his season’s total
■' to 13. . —
| Dogs Take Fourth Victory
By RONALD BACA t score. The point failed and Sul
I The Texas Lutheran Colle„ | Ross out front S-6.
Bulldogs made it four victories in i came right back, though,
a row Saturday night by Troune- Boss took the kickoff, couldn’t
ing previously unbeaten Sul Ross1 move* ,ancl was torCed £6 punt.
33-14. The Bulldogs once again ; B-Us°eB returned the punt 14 yards
displayed a potent offense as they; and the BulldoSs were in business
overcame an early Sul Ross touch- a^a*n 011 own 29-yard line,
down and proceeded to run un- Johnson cracked the middle, of
mercifully through the Lobos’ de-! line for 14 yards. Russell
tense. ' j then scooted around right end for
The Bulldogs were led through- 12 more. Two plays got five yards,
out the game by the golden arm anc- then Kaase hit Robert John-
.0 f Miffy Kaase. Kaase, the son on a 36-yarder which car-
Schulanburg slinger, continually riec!- Bie Bulldogs to the Sul Ross
brought the Bulldogs out of the f°ur- Russell carried it in -two
hole as he connected on 9 out of Plays later and TLC was out
13 passes for 201 yards. front to stay, 12-8.
All in all though, it was a team The Bulldogs got a chance to
victory for the fired-up Bulldogs, j widen their lead minutes later,
j Billy Russell provided one of the The -Lobos fumbled ahd the ever-
most dazzling displays . of open alert Fred Graff covered on the ;
: field running seen this year. With Lobos 36-yard line. This set the
i about two minutes left in the first stage for Russell’s spectacular
half the Bulldogs had the ball on touchdown run. Fred Bohls kicked
the Lobos 29-yard line. Russell point and TLC led 19-8 at the half,
took the handoff _ and started Six minutes deep in the third
around right end. At the 20 he quarter, TLC got its fourth, score,
was seemingly boxed-in near the Kaase hit Neptune on a 16-yard
sidelines by three Lobo defenders, t pass play for the TD to cap a 63-
but he somehow got free, eluded yard scoring drive. Bohls kicked
another Lobo at the 15 for a TD: point again and TLC led 26-8.
The Lobos struck first in this j The Bulldogs were still" not
hard-fought contest. With time : through, however." After taking a
running out in the first quarter, punt on their' own 37, they moved
Clinton Humphries hit Jack Ger- to the three yard line, primarily
on in the left flat and Geron went on the arm of Kaase, from where
all the way to complete a 76-yard Arnold took it in for the TD.
pass play. The Lobos tried for two ; Bohl’s kick was again good and
points and made it 8-0, ! TLC pulled way out front 33-8.
The Bulldogs returned the kick- The Lobos were able to push
1 off' to the 17 from where they across another touchdown late in
promptly went to work. Ten plays j the fourth period, but it was to
later, the Bulldogs had their first no ,avail as the Bulldogs won their
score. The big plays in the drive fourth" straight game by a score
were a 3S-yard pass from Kaase of 33-14.
to Ebbie Neptune and a 32-yard; Statistic wise, TLC held the
pass from Kaase to Frankie Ar-j e^ge in total yardage, running
nold. Rawley Johnson carried the up 362 yards as compared to the
pigskin over from the one for the I LoboC 319.
MIFFY KAASE
Out On A Limb
SAVE MONEY
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tion to:
It’s prediction time again, and this week’s games finds the LSL’-s
three pigskin prophets deadlocked with a record of 15 correct guesses
against 8 goofs. Last week, Baca guessed 8 out of the ten correctly,
Harris was second with a 7-3 record, and Lundquist rounded out the
list with a 6-4 mar-k. This week’s predictions are as follows:
The day you know
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Lundquist
Harris
Baca
TT c vs La College............
14-6
14-0 -
28-0
Texas vs. Oklahoma U .......
28-14
3L6
27-6
Rice vs. Florida .............
19-13
10-3
27-13
Texas A&M vs. Trinity.......
28-7
- 38-12
34-6
Baylor vs. Arkansas .........
14-13
14-20
•. 20-7
TCU vs. Texas. Tech .........
34-7
21-3
27-13
Texas A&I Vs. Howard Payne .
23-0
- 30-12 '
21-0
SWTSC vs. S. F. Austin .....
14-8
14-6
2C-10
E. Texas vs. Sam Houston ...
. 21-6
21-0
' 13-20.
Lamar Tech vs. Sul Ross.....
. 24-14
27-8
14-21
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Box 361
Seguin, Texas
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Lone Star Lutheran (Seguin, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, October 13, 1961, newspaper, October 13, 1961; Seguin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1073306/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Texas Lutheran University.