*Duc607,uic6& by Sam Vahey Emerald Sports Editor Although the Pacific Coast con ference football scramble is bare ly two weeks old, it's beginning to look like the nine grid powers have learned well the role assigned them at the beginning of the cur rent campaign, at least at the top and bottom of the ladder. UCLA, picked in a coaches’ poll ns the top team in the conference, has followed its script to a letter, winning easily from Oregon State and Kansas. Southern Cal, tabbed as the runner-up, has also won two, although not as impressively, from Washington State and Minn PACIF1C COAST CONFERENCE W UCLA . 1 Stanford . 1 California . 1 USC . 1 Washington . 0 Idaho . 0 Oregon . 0 WSC . 0 Oregon State . 0 L Pet. 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 1 .000 1 .000 2 .000 esota. And California, number three team, lost to Baylor, but came back Saturday to crunch he hapless Oregon Staters, 26-0. But here’s where the race tight ns up. At the beginning of the reason, the next four, in order, i’ere Washington, Stanford, Ore ion and Washington State. Washington, under a new coach, still trying to make the change one platoon-football. The Husk ’s have lost badly in their first o outings. Stanford looked bad le first week against College of acific, but upset the Oregon cbfoots Saturday. Oregon got f to a good start against Neb ika. but then ran aground down Palo Alto. WSC dropped to 1C, as expected, and tipped COP days ago. his creates quite a phenomen on in • the middle of the ladder. College of Pacific defeated Stan ford, but then lost to the WSC Cougars. And Oregon fell before Stanford. According to compara tive scores, this would rate WSC two spots ahead of the Ducks, and Just behind the California Bears. What all this adds up to is that the final standings are hard to pick at the beginning of the sea son, especially fourth through sev enth place. It does look, however, like WSC is destined for a higher finish than a lot of people thought; and Washington is going to be a lot lower. The bottom two rungs have Just about been conceded to Oregon State and Idaho. From the looks of things, though, it'll be a tie. Neither has shown any scoring punch; yet on the other hand, neither has shown any defense. Al Misses Bag, Loses Bat Title CLEVELAND WP)—AI Rosen failed to touch first base In his last time at bat Sunday and It cost the Cleveland inflelder a "pot among baseball’s elite. It was in the ninth Inning and Kosen beat out a grounder to third. However, in sprinting to first base, Kosen missed the bag. Had he touched the bag, it would have been a single and Rosen would have won the American League batting title by the fraction of a point from Washington’s Mickey Vernon. Rosen won the league homer title with 43 and the runs batted-in crown with 145. Had he added the hitting mark, he would have been the seventh player in big league history to win all three important batting I titles. NO BREAKS SATURDAY Oregon Ducks Lack Power In Clutch; Indians Win. 7-0 by Rodney Morrison Emerald Sports Writer University of Oregon showed plenty of power—but none in the clutch—Saturday at Palo Alto, and dropped its 1953 Pacific Coast conference grid debut, 7-0 to a tribe of Stanford Indians, who just wouldn’t move when they were backed into the shad ows of their own goal posts. Five times during the contest the Webfoots launched attacks which carried deep into Indian territory—and five times the Stanfords met these attackss with a stalwart defense that wouldn’t fold under a passing or running onslaught. Both teams almost reversed their previous Saturday’s per formances. Stanford had fallen to College of Pacific a week be fore. The Indians had showed a polka-dotted defense that melted when the heat was on. Oregon Had Won Oregon, on the other hand, had won its grid opener a week earlier from the Nebraska Cornhuskers. In their first contest, the Ducks had showed a nation full of tele vision viewers a crushing ground offense that seemed almost un stoppable. The Webfoots had also taken advantage of two early Husker mistakes. Down at Palo Alto, the Stanford crew made no errors for the Green and Yellow team to take advan tage of. Instead it was Oregon’s miscues that slowed its own at tack. James Fumbles Behind, 7-0, late in the second quarter, the Webfoots began a drive on their own 24. The march came to an abrupt halt just five yards short of a touchdown when Halfback Dick James fumbled and Stanford’s Len Doster re covered. The Oregons were on the move again in the second half after taking the Indian kickoff. George Shaw, quarterback, plotted the course for the Ducks, mostly on the ground. Pa** Incomplete It took 14 plays for the visitors to hack their way to the enemy two yard marker. On third down, James was thrown back to the five by Indian End Marv Tenne foss. The fourth down pass from Shaw to Oregon Captain Emery Barnes was just a little too high for the 6 feet, 5 inch end to handle. The game was all wrapped up, as far as scoring, early in the first quarter. With Quarterback Bob Garrett calling on the plays Stanford marched 65 yards, with Garrett going over from the four Team Statistics First Downs . J.ards gained rushing * ards lost rushing . Net yards rushing .... Passes attempted . Passes completed . Parses intercepted hy ... Net yards passing . Net yards gained . Vards penalized .. Fumbles . Ball lost on fumbles . Punting average. ORE. STAN. 16 12 ..234 . 7 .227 .. 11 . 2 .. 1 . 35 .262 .. 20 . 3 230 22 208 3 1 3 9 217 70 2 30.3 37.4 Individual Statistics Oregon Rose .. Van Leuven . Shaw . Albright .. Anderson . Gaffney . Holland . Stanford Cook . Dorn . Tarr . Watson .. Wentworth Rogers . Sorenson . Garrett . Tries Yds. Ave. . 1 9 9.0 . 1 6 6.0 ------ 8 43 5.4 16 70 4.4 . 2 8 4.0 .19 72 3.6 . 5 18 3.6 . 2 1 0.5 -- 9 56 6.2 ~~ 9 47 5.2 4 18 4.5 ~~ 9 38 4.2 —- 4 16 4.0 -11 38 3.5 .... 3 -2 -0.7 .... 4 -3 -0.8 r — on a bootleg play around his own left end. This was all the score the home team needed, as they set up a de fense which wouldn’t hold too tight in midfield, but which couldn’t be cracked inside theii* own twenty. Stanford Lacks Pash With the exception of the early Stanford push, Oregon had the ball in Card territory the whole afternoon. Only once, after the first frame, did the Indians penetrate to the Oregon 45, and only twice did they cross the midfield stripe. Coach Len Casanova, whose gridders had defeated Stanford last year, 21-20, was disappointed with his team’s lack of scoring punch; although he commended, his boys on their powerful ground game. The Ducks remain in good physical shape, after two games. Cece Hodges, whose ^absence was sorely felt in the Duck ground at tack, still has an injured neck, but could be in shape for this Saturday’s first home game with UCLA. Barnes showed the effects of a mid-week ankle injury, and Halfback Ted Anderson has taken out of the fray in the second pe riod, with a sprained ankle. Monday, Sept. 28 Touch Football 3 :50 p.m. fjf.W • Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. FI Kappa Sigma . 1 • F» Kappa. Alpha v<=. Beta Theta P Field 2: Phi Gamma Delta vs. Sigma A« pha Mu. Field 3 : Delta Tau Delta vs. Pi Kappa Ph 4:4;> p.m. ha|lM fieM: Susan Campbell I vs. Meiric £ic;'] I ■ Stitzer hall vs. French hall, hie d 2: Nestor hall vs. Susan Campbell II Field 3: Campbell club vs. Philadelphi Special bill baker^ has doubled his store to serve YOU better! . , th!s 0C'a'10" Bi'1 is 9°'"9 t0 give away valuable prizes. 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