anaheim-gazette 1950-10-23
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AUHS Nabs Sunset Open
Anaheim's Colonists rocketed into a temporary first-place tie in the Sunset league by whipping Huntington Beach 26-0 Friday night, but it's strictly a matter of opinion as to how long they're going to be there.
They face co-leader Fullerton this Friday in their second conference test, and the Indians massacred what was supposed to be a strong Newport team by a 33-0 count in their opener. So Fullerton, the defending champ, can't help but be favored when the two clash in La Palma park.
Win With Ease
Although the Colonists won with ease, it was a rather freakish triumph. They were able to make a net of only 25 yards on the ground—a department which had contained practically all of their offensive strength in the first three outings.
Fortunately, however, the air arm worked and the Colonists were able to tally three times in that manner. What's more, they added two conversions during the night, twice as many as they had been able to make all during the first trio of games.
No Threats
Huntington Beach's heavier but less talented Oilers never were able to generate what might be called a real scoring threat. They briefly visited Anaheim territory twice in the second half, and they moved to the 31 in the second quarter, but these were the maximum encroachments.
Each team fumbled four times during the game and it was a pair of these that set up the first score for Anaheim. The Oilers bobbled it away on their own eight early in the game and Fred Head grabbed it for the Colonists, but Anaheim couldn't cover the distance in four cracks at the line.
Short Possession
The Oilers then held it long enough to get out to the 27. Harley Cleem pitched a 14-yard pass to Ken Kredell, but he fumbled it when hit, Gene Geselle grabbing this time for Anaheim. A penalty and John Steinborn's seven-yard romp got a first down on the 28. A two yard loss followed and then Enoch Peterson passed to John Cyprien who was all by himself near the 10. He merely walked into the end zone. Steinborn missed the conversion.
Thereupon the Colonists added a quick one in the second quarter. Failing to advance, the Oilers kicked out to the Anaheim 18. Augie Huesca grabbed it, wriggled a bit, and then streaked 82 yards down the south sideline under escort of the only concentrated blocking effort of the evening. This time Steinborn made it, his first of the year.
Three Steals
Huntington Beach then had its moment at Anaheim, with fourth and one to go Lowever came up from the sary defensive spot to nae Boswell for a yard loss. were very quiet in the period.
For the second straight time the Colonists have interthree passes and all three of the final period against the Ira Webber snatched the first ging it 26 yards to the two he was bumped out of by Plunges by Weaver and W proved futile, so Jerry Dick flipped to Lee Webb for no conversion.
Huntington Beach pitched other to Anaheim next time the ball, Steinborn racing 40 to pay dirt with it, but the thing was called off because penalty, and the Colonists fit it back four plays later.
Defense Tight
Undaunted, Steinborn pick another one, moving 22 yards five with it. Peterson to Dick Alvarado on the first end making a diving grab inside the goal line. Dick converted this time.
The victory put the Co into a three-way deadlock Sunset league leadership with Fullerton and Santa Ana naturally somebody's going after Friday's La Palma cl...
No Threats
Huntington Beach's heavier but less talented Oilers never were able to generate what might be called a real scoring threat. They briefly visited Anaheim territory twice in the second half, and they down the south sideline under escort of the only concentrated blocking effort of the evening. This time Steinborn made it, his first of the year.
Three Steals
Huntington Beach then had its converted this time.
Upsets Continue to Whittle Undefeated List
As More Due to Lose First Game This Weekend
NEW YORK (AP)—The ranks of the nation's unbeaten and untied major college ball teams, whittled to a mere dozen by a wave of upsets, headed for further thinning week-end.
The perfect record of Cornell and Princeton will be matched in the Ivy league liner at Princeton, and one is bound to be sullied.
Northwestern and surprising Miami of Florida will risk unblemished marks and dangerous rivals.
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Others Safe (?)
Other clean records, in those of top-ranking Army Oklahoma, appear safe enough the time being. The list in Kentucky, California, So Methodist, Wyoming, Wichita Loyola of Los Angeles.
Wisconsin, Washington Ford, Rice and Vanderbilt the powers who fell for the time Saturday as the spot rocked again by upsets from to coast.
Michigan Rebounds
Wisconsin bowed to a beaten Michigan team on the bound from its loss to An New York.
Illinois put skids under the ly rated Washington Huskie came East to absorb a 20-1 ing. Bowl-minded Stanford tripped by Red Sanders' charged UCLA eleven at Los Angeles 21-7.
The Rice Owls, def Southwest conference chain ran afoul Southern Meth powerized Mustangs and suced 42-21. Vanderbill got late and lost to Florida; 31 More Upsets
Just to give the topsy season a further confusing plexion, the once all-cong Notre Dame lost its second
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Opener
ment at the Anaheim 31, but fourth and one to go Leonard haver came up from the second-defensive spot to nail Bob Well for a yard loss. Things were very quiet in the third-fold.
For the second straight game Colonists have intercepted three passes and all three came in final period against the Oilers. Webber snatched the first, legging it 26 yards to the two where was bumped out of bounds. Anges by Weaver and Webbar lived futile, so Jerry Dickenson ripped to Lee Webb for the TD conversion.
Huntington Beach pitched an offer to Anaheim next time it had ball. Steinborn racing 40 yards pay dirt with it, but the whole thing was called off because of a delay, and the Colonists fumbled back four plays later.
Defense Tight
Undaunted, Steinborn picked off either one, moving 22 yards to five with it. Peterson hurled Dick Alverado on the first play, end making a diving grasp just inside the goal line. Dickenson inverted this time.
The victory put the Colonist's no three-way deadlock for the asset league leadership along Fullerton and Santa Ana, but naturally somebody's going to go Friday's La Palma clash.
Varsity, B Statistics
Colonists Oilers
Yards gained running ... 56 127
Yards lost running ... 31 22
Net yardage running ... 25 104
Pases attempted ... 15 12
Pases completed ... 9 2
Pases incomplete ... 6 7
Pases bad inter ... 0 3
Yards gained passing ... 128-20
Yards inter, passes ret. ... 48 0
Total yards gained ... 153 124
First downs running ... 3 5
First downs passing ... 3 0
First downs penalties ... 0 0
Total first downs ... 6 5
Number kickoffs ... 5 1
Aver. length kickoffs ... 50.00 35.00
Aver. length kickoff ret. ... 12.00 21.60
Number punts ... 4 5
Yardage punts ... 129 160
Average length punts ... 32.25 32.00
Yardage punt returns ... 122 0
Average length ... 24.40 0.00
Penalties against ... 5 3
Yards lost penalties ... 55 15
Ball lost on downs ... 1 3
Number fumbles ... 4 4
Pumples recovered ... 2 6
Ball lost on Fumbles ... 4 2
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing
ANAHEIM— TCB YG YL Net Avg
Laiola ... 1 4 0 4.00
Huesca ... 2 6 0 3.00
Webber ... 6 16 5 11.83
Roberts ... 2 6 0 3.00
Steinhorn ... 4 13 13 0.00
Weaver ... 7 10 4 6.84
Peterson ... 2 0 9 -9 -4.50
Dielenson ... 1 0 0 0.00
Hon Beach— TCB YG YL Net Avg
Arevalos ... 1 1 0 100.6
Bowell ... 8 5 1.43
Kredell ... 12 68 0.53 4.42
Van Osdell ... 1 0 0 0.00
Kimball ... 1 0 0 0.00
Williams ... 5 10 2.8 1.60
Sylvester ... 1 1 0 1.00
Forward Passes
ANAHEIM— Att Com Int % YG
Dickinson ... 4 2 0.50 15
Peterson ... 10 6 0 bp .8
Steinborn ... 1 1 0 100.28
Hunt. Beach— Att Com Int % YG
Cleem ... 1 1 0 100.14
Williams ...8 8/200.0
Bowell ...1/2/ooo .o
Arevalos...1/2/ooo .o
Bodine...1/2/ooo .o
Colonists Oilers
Yards gained running ...64 124
Yards lost running ...34 24
Net yardage running...30/100
Passes attempted...5/11
Passes completed...1/1
Passes incomplete...3/7
Passes had inter...1/3
Yards gained passing...13/44
Yards inter, passes ret...2/8
Total yards gained...43/144
First downs running...1/7
First downs passing...0/1
First downs penalties...1/0
Total first downs...2/8
Number kickoffs...3/1
Aver. length kickoffs...37.33/42.00
Aver. length kickoff ret..26.00/10.66
Number punts...6/4
Yardage punts...201/146
Average length punts...33.50/36.50
Yardage punt returns...46/8
Average length...15.33/1.60
Penalties against...1/1
Yards lost penalties...5/5
Ball lost on downs...1/2
Number fumbles...1/2
Fumbles recovered...2/1
Ball lost on downs...1/3
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing
ANAHEIM— TCB YG YL Net Avg
Shields ...9/17/11/6/0.66
Sanchez ...6/4/15/-1/-1.83
Ball ...5/35/3/32/6.40
Peralta ...4/8/3/5/1.25
Wells ...1/0/0/0.00
Stagner ...1/0/2/-2/-2.00
Hunt. Beach— TCB YG YL Net Avg
Benward ...9/32/5/27/3.60
Kuykendall ...16/72/14/58/3.63
Keplinger ...6/16/16/26.63
Carney ...1/0/4/-4/-4.00
Mollica ...1/0/0/0.00
Montgomery ...1/0/3/-3/-3.00
Davls ...1/0/3/-3/-3.00
Starr ...1/4/4/4.00
FORWARD PASSES
ANAHEIM— Att Com Int % YG
Sanchez ....5/1/120.13
Hunt. Beach— Att Com Int % YG
Davig .....7/1/144.44
Kuykendall .....3/0/0.ooo
Mollica .....1/0/1ooo.oo
One of Junior College’s ‘Big Six’ Due to Tumble This Friday
LOS ANGELES (P)—The Big Six of Southern California's junior colleges kept their perfect records intact over the week-end, but one, at least, is due for a fall this Friday.
East Los Angeles and Long Beach, both with five victories and no losses to date, hook up in the Metropolitan football conference headliner Friday night for what shapes up as the J.C. game of the week.
Long Beach added little College of the Sequoias to its list of victims last Saturday, winning 40-7. The night before, East L.A. crushed Santa Monica, 55-8.
Compton, probably the strongest of them all, posted its sixth in a row by whipping San Angelo, Tex., 27-7. The Tartars take on Ventura Saturday in a Western states conference feature.
El Camino, another power in the Metro loop, racked up its fifth win by drubbing Cal Poly of San Dimas, 42-0 in a non-league affair. Over in the Orange empire, undefeated Mt. San Antonio trimmed Orange Coast, 32-14.
Indians Wallop Newport, 33-0
After having only a so-so practice season, Fullerton's Indians got right down to the business of defending their Sunset League crown by walloping Newport 33-0 Friday night.
Newport, reported to have one of the league's strongest teams, was never in the game as Fullerton scored in every period. Once again the running and passing of Jewell Owens paced the Indians.
Newport ... 0 0 0 0—0 Fullerton ... 7 7 6 13—33
Fullerton touchdowns: Owens, Kramer, Kennington, Hudson, Edgerton. Conversions: Penningger.
Maybe He Should Have Run With It
SACRAMENTO (P) — How futile can you feel?
Nevada quarterback Pat Brady must know. He averaged 56.6 yards on six punts yesterday.
But Santa Clara safety men Marte Formico and Abe Dung averaged 42 yards returning the six.
And Santa Clara won 55-0.
Don Henley Ruins Brea-Olinda, 47-0
Don Henley almost personally ruined Brea-Olinda as he ran for four touchdowns and scored three conversions to lead Laguna Beach to a 47-0 win in an Orange League game on Friday.
Laguna Beach ... 21 0 13 13—47 Brea-Olinda ... 0 0 0 0—0
Laguna touchdowns: Henley 4, Griffith, Lyle 2: Conversions: Henley 3, David 2.
Larsen Captures Texas Net Title
DALLAS (P)—National singles
proved that their Cleveland was no flasher. The Giants came from beat the Browns, 17-14, 34 fans in the Polo era was one of the hottest battles seen in many a moon.
The Rams also tried or the most touchdome game, 10, set by Phi Nov. 6, 1934.
More Record
The combined total call one short of the called by the Cards and Oct. 17, 1948.
Bob Waterfield crouched down passes, and tied a record for Harder of the conversion record on the New York trumped the Browns out of the American conference of the Giants and the Eagles. The Eagles lost the Pittsburgh Steelers Both the Giants and had 1-1 records while the Browns have a 4-2 record.
Cleveland piled up by halftime on two foul Lou ((The Toe) Groza by the Giants' Jim Osso).
Giant Bounce
Ostendarp pulled his Groza booted his pointer with 16 seconds the first half. Groza and the ball bounded carp's head and came the one yard line. Osso getting that the ball a kickoff, didn't fall. The Brown's Ken Carr to the situation; drowned browns took over. Osso sneaked over on the field and it appeared the Carr was cooked.
However, the Giants fired up during a charged back in the third and ripped the Cleveland to yarus and a touchback in business. The game in the bag in this with Joe Scott, hard from San Francisco, came from the two with touchdown.
Rice Owls, defending Northwest conference champions, afoul Southern Methodist's overrated Mustangs and succumb-42-21. Vanderbilt got started and lost to Florida, 31-27.
More Upsets
Just to give the topsy-turvy season a further confusing com-ion, the once all-conquering Notre Dame lost its second game the season; battered Navy rose to smite Southern California, North Carolina State whipped Maryland, and little Lehigh stun-Dartmouth.
Bobby Robertson, a fleet Negro back, led the attack that gave Diana its first victory since 1906 or Notre Dame, 20-7, and handed Irish their second setback in the seasons.
Navy's forces rallied from three night defeats to whip Southern, 27-14. N.C. State's victory originated over Maryland, ranked with nationally, was 16-13. Le-remained unbeaten by slap-favored Dartmouth, 16-14.
Home of 60 minute football for last 63 years, Penn State is leading offensive and defensive plans for the first time this year.
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CAPISTRANO, 12-0
Capistrano put together first and fourth quarter touchdowns by quarterback Henry Lobo to score a 12-0 win over Valencia in their Orange League opener Friday afternoon at Placentia.
Capistrano ..... 6 0 0 6—12
Valencia ..... 0 0 0 0—0
Capistrano touchdowns: Lobo 2.
Orange Felled By Sajnts, 21-13
Orage, trying to become the first Panther team in history to trim Santa Ana two years running, couldn't quite make it as the Saints turned in a 21-13 win in the Sunset League inaugural at Municipal bowl Friday night.
Tied 7-7 at half, the Saints led 14-13 at the end of the third period. The Panthers took to the air in an effort to erase this lead near the end of the game, but Santa Ana tackled Ed Foush grabbed one on the final play of the game and scampered 30 yards with the clincher.
Orange ..... 0 7 6 0—13
Santa Ana ..... 0 7 7 7—21
Orange touchdowns: Wilson 2.
Conversion: Smith.
Santa Ana touchdowns: Lozano, Kelley, Foush. Conversions: Terres' 3.
Larsen Captures Texas Net Title
DALLAS (P)—National singles champion Art Larsen yesterday trimmed Herbie Flam, 6-4, 1-6, 10-8, 5-7, 10-8, in the finals of the Dallas Country club tennis tournament.
The match lasted four hours before Larsen finally triumphed.
Larsen and Earl Cochell teamed for the doubles title, beating Flam and Charlie Hare of Chicago, 1-6, 10-8, 7-5.
In playing seven away games, the Villanova football team will travel some 16,000 miles during the current campaign.
NFL STANDINGS
American Conference
W. L. T. Pet. Pts. OP
Giants ..... 4 1 0 .800 68 54
Missouri ..... 4 1 0 .800 152 86
Cleveland ..... 4 2 0 .667 143 74
Cards ..... 2 3 0 .400 130 147
Pittsburgh ..... 2 4 0 .333 84 88
Washington ..... 1 4 0 .200 111 134
National Conference
W. L. T. Pet. Pts. OP
Yanks ..... 5 1 0 .833 291 155
Beams ..... 4 1 0 .800 182 91
Los Angeles ..... 4 2 0 .667 220 177
Detroit ..... 3 2 0 .500 155 123
Green Bay ..... 2 4 0 .333 135 194
San Francisco ..... 1 5 0 .167 110 168
Baltimore ..... 0 5 0 .000 68 218
Sunday's Results
New York Giants: Cleveland: Philadelphia: Pittsburgh: Chicago Cardinals: Washington: San Francisco:
San Francisco: Detroit: Los Angeles: Baltimore: Chicago Bears: New York Yankees: Detroit at Los Angeles: New York Giants at Chicago Cardinals: Pittsburgh at Cleveland: Washington at Philadelphia.
Larsen captured Texas Net Title
DALLAS (P)—National singles champion Art Larsen yesterday trimmed Herbie Flam, 6-4, 1-6, 10-8, 5-7, 10-8, in the finals of the Dallas Country club tennis tournament.
The match lasted four hours before Larsen finally triumphed.
Larsen and Earl Cochell teamed for the doubles title, beating Flam and Charlie Hare of Chicago, 1-6, 10-8, 7-5.
In playing seven away games, the Villanova football team will travel some 16,000 miles during the current campaign.
NFL STANDINGS
American Conference
W. L. T. Pet. Pts. OP
Giants ..... 4 1 0 .800 68 54
Missouri ..... 4 1 0 .800 152 86
Cleveland ..... 4 2 0 .667 143 74
Cards ..... 23 O .400 I3O I47
Pittsburgh .....2 A O .333 B4 B8
Washington ..... I A O .200 I1I I34
National Conference
W. L. T. Pet. Pts. OP
Yanks .....5 I O .833 R9I I55
Beams .....4 I O .800 I82 I9I
Los Angeles .....4 I O .667 R22 I77
Detroit .....3 I O .500 I55 I23
Green Bay .....2 A O .333 I35 I94
San Francisco .....I A O .167 I1O I68
Baltimore .....O A O .000 G8 J2I8
Sunday's Results
New York Giants: Cleveland: Philadelphia: Pittsburgh: Chicago Cardinals: Washington: San Francisco:
San Francisco: Detroit: Los Angeles: Baltimore: Chicago Bears: New York Yankees: Detroit at Los Angeles: New York Giants at Chicago Cardinals: Pittsburgh at Cleveland: Washington at Philadelphia.
Bee Attack Smothered,
But They Triumph 7-2
Ever since football practice first opened just after Labor Day, Coach Sam Keith has been trying to squeeze something out of material that has looked little more than nothing.
Friday night this material followed his example, squeezing out a 7-2 victory in its league opener with Huntington Beach on little more than nothing.
In retrospect, it is almost inconceivable that the Anaheim Bs won, but the points were up there on the scoreboard to prove it. They made only two first downs—one of these on a penalty—and ran up the meagre total of 43 yards gained during the evening. Of this, 30 came on the ground, while the Colonists' one good pass accounted for the remaining 13.
Use Breaks
It certainly wasn't an under-served win, for the Colonists successfully fought off all of the Oiler advances, and, given one break in the game, they used it to turn in the only touchdown. And they fought valiantly to preserve this lead in the final period, repulsing two Huntington Beach drives, although surrendering a safety midway through the quarter.
Naturally the Oilers had the better of it statistically. They netted 10 yards rushing and added 44 more through the air although they completed only one of the 11 passes that they hurled. A fumble and three interceptions hurt their chances, and the combination of these actually gave the Colonists the victory.
Start Fast
As had been the case in their visitors were forced to punt the next time they had the ball, but Sanchez pitched it back to them on the first play.
Colonist Hold
From here—the Anaheim 42—they plodded for two first downs, but with fourth and four on the eight, the Colonist held for a single yard and took over on the seven.
Huntington Beach, undismayed by its failure to tally, then broke through to smash Aaron Peralta into the end-zone lime for a safety.
That's the way it ended, but not without some more action.
Last Threat
Patin's free kick was returned to the Oiler 45. Bob Kuykendall ran for two and then Davis pitched down the north sideline to Kuykendall for 44 yards to the Anaheim nine. Kuykendall immediately fumbled on the following play, however, and alert Tei Tanaka grabbed it to end the final Oiler threat.
Herbel punted out then—his best effort, a 42-yarder—and Winger again dropped the safety without a return. Kuykendall tried a pass which Don Davis swiped and that was all.
proved that their triumph in Cleveland was no flash in the pan. The Giants came from bermuda, beat the Browns, 17-13, before 41, 34 fans in the Polo Grounds. It was one of the hardest-rought grudge battles seen in New York in many a moon. The victory marked the first time that Cleveland and has been beaten twice by the same team in one season.
Sharing the limelight with the Giants are the Los Angeles Rams. The Rams set a new scoring record by trouncing the Baltimore Colts, 0-27. The three score and ten points surpassed the previous high of 65 scored by the Chicago Cardinals on Nov. 13, 1949.
The Rams also tied the record or the most touchdowns in one game, 10, set by Philadelphia on Nov. 6, 1934.
More Records
The combined total of 97 points all one short of the record 98 allied by the Cards and Giants on Oct. 17, 1948.
Bob Waterfield chucked two touchdown passes, scored once, and tied a record for conversions. Pat Harder of the Cards set the conversion record on Oct. 17, 1948.
The New York triumph knocked the Browns out of first place in the American conference in favor of the Giants and the Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles turned back the Pittsburgh Steelers, 17-10. Both the Giants and Eagles boast 1-1 records while the third-place Browns have a 4-2 slate.
Cleveland piled up a 13-3 lead by halftime on two field goals by Lou ((The Toe) Groza and a boner by the Giants' Jim Ostendarp.
Giant Boner
Ostendarp pulled his rock after Groza booted his second three-pointer with 16 seconds to go in the first half. Groza kicked out and the ball bounded over Ostendarp's head and came to rest on the one yard line. Ostendarp, forgetting that the ball is free on a kickoff, didn't fall on the ball. The Brown's Ken Carpenter, alert to the situation, did, and the Browns took over. Otto Graham sneaked over on the next play and it appeared the Giants' goose was cooked.
However, the Giants, apparently fired up during intermission, charged back in the third quarter and ripped the Cleveland line for so yards and a touchdown to get back in business. They put one game in the bag in the last period with Joe Scott, hard-driving back from San Francisco, crashing over from the two with the winning touchdown.
Naturally the Oilers had the better of it statistically. They netted 10 yards rushing and added 4 more through the air although they completed only one of the 11 passes that they hurled. A fumble and three interceptions hurt their chances, and the combination of these actually gave the Colonists the victory.
Start Fast
As had been the case in their past two outings, the Colonists kicked off and the enemy started right out like it meant business. The Oilers grabbed two straight first downs to reach the Anahim 32, but then Dean Strokes broke through to nail the ball carrier for a five-yard loss and the Oilers went to the air three unsuccessful times.
That was just about the story for the entire first half. The Colonists would have the ball briefly before Gayle Herbel came in to punt them out of a hole, and the Oilers would drive down, never quite making it.
One First Down
During these 20 minutes the Colonists picked up a single first down when Jim Ball ran 20 yards, and they managed to get into Oller territory once when Ball returned a punt 24 yards to the 45. But both fizzled three downs later.
The break came about half way through the third period. Herbel kicked to the Oller 26 and the safety man was downed in his tracks by end Gene Winger—a feat which he managed to accomplish on five of the six Anaheim punts.
Patin Swipes It
Earl Davis passed on first down but center Mike Patin grabbed the errant aerial and trundled back to the 19 with it. Dick Shields lost four yards on the first try, but Ronnie Sanchez found Dick Ramella with a pass for 13 yards and Huntington Beach was socked with an offside penalty to take it to the five.
Shields then punched twice for the tally. Sanchez passed to Winger for the conversion.
Most of the remainder of the evening was spent keeping the Oilers away from the door.
55 Still Have Perfect Marks
NEW YORK (P) — Fifty-five college football teams remained today on the list of unbeaten, untied—as compared to 78 a week for two and then Davis pitched down the north sideline to Kuykendall-for 44 yards to the Anaheim nine. Kuykendall immediately fumbled on the following play, however, and alert Tei Tanaka grabbed it to end the final Oiler threat.
Herbel punted out then—his best effort, a 42-yarder—and Winger again dropped the safety without a return. Kuykendall tried a pass which Don Davis swiped and that was all.
Sanchez quarterback - sneaked into the line twice to run out the clock. It messed up his running average, but it successfully served the more important purpose of preserving the Anaheim victory.
55 Still Have Perfect Marks
NEW YORK (AP) — Fifty-five college football teams remained today on the list of unbeaten, untied—as compared to 78 a week ago.
Among the major teams that failed to survive the week-end were Stanford, Wisconsin, Rice and Vanderbilt. But they had plenty of company, 19 other squads having their hopes for a perfect 1950 season squashed.
At the top of the National list in point of most games won stands Gustavos Adolphus of St. Peter, Minn., with seven victories. The latest conquest came Friday over Macalester, 13-7.
Then comes a cluster of 11 teams with six triumphs, including the rampaging Wildcats from Kentucky. Fourteen clubs have five triumphs, among them such powerhouses as Southern Methodist and California.
Twenty-three teams boast four victories and in that group are Army, Oklahoma, Cornell, Princeton, Miami (Fla.), and Northwestern.
There are five winners of three games and one with a 2-0 record.