Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 31, 1983, Section A, Page 9, Image 9

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    NFL's leaders take a fall
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from Associated Press reports
The San Francisco 49ers, Los
Angeles Raiders and Minnesota
Vikings, all division leaders, were
the prime victims in Sunday Na
tional Football League upsets.
Richard Todd threw for 201
yards as he led a balanced, virtual
ly error-free Jets' offense and the
New York defense contained San
Francisco's runners in a 27-13 vic
tory over the National Conference
West Division leaders.
Cornerback Jerry Holmes ran
back an interception 43 yards for a
touchdown in the final minute to
seal the victory for the Jets, now
4-5 after snapping a three-game
losing streak.
Linebacker Shelton Robinson ig
nited slow-starting Seattle with a
12-yard fumble return for a
touchdown and the underdog
Seahawks went on to whip the
Raiders 34-21 for their second vic
tory over the American Con
ference West leaders in three
weeks.
The lowly Cardinals, meanwhile,
knocked off the NFC’s Central
leading Minnesota Vikings 41-31.
Neil I o m a \ fired two
touchdown passes to Roy Cireen
and one to Pat Tilley, and Ottis
Anderson ran for 136 yards and a
touchdown in St. Louis, leading
the Cardinals to their 41-31 upset
over Minnesota.
The victory was only the Car
dinals third this season, and Min
nesota dropped to 6-3.
Come-from-behind efforts by
the Pittsburgh Steelers and
Cleveland Browns continued the
frustrations of the league's two
winless teams.
Frank Pollard ran 2 yards for a
touchdown with 31 seconds left as
the Steelers overcame seven tur
novers and an NFL record 42 car
ries by Tampa Bay's James Wilder
for a 17-12 victory over the 0-9
Buccaneers.
Boyce Green sprinted 20 yards
up the middle for a touchdown on
the first play following an in
terception in overtime as the
Browns sent the Oilers to their
16th straight defeat, 25-19. The
loss was the second straight in
overtime for Houston. 0-9 this
season.
Dan Marino threw for two
touchdowns and ran for another,
and Tony Nathan ran 18 yards for
another score as the Miami
Hayes shatters meet
mark as runners win
Kathy Hayes set a course record
3t the Washington Invitational in
Rattle Saturday, and the Oregon
Women's cross country team
dominated the meet, winning
with 47 points.
Brigham Young University was
next with 68 points, and California
was a distant third with 87.
Hayes ran a 16:35 to break last
year's course record of 17:01, but
had to jockey with Marty Cooksey
of Oregon International the entire
race. Hayes had the lead at the
mile and one-half mark, but
Cooksey moved out in front short
ly after. The two ran together until
the last 800 yards, when Hayes us
ed a strong kick to pull away.
Cooksey finished in 16:42.
“Kathy didn't feel well all week,
but as usual she showed she can
<u n well under any cir
'mimstances,'' said Oregon coach
Tom Heinonen.
Kim Roth was next for Oregon
in 16:55, and freshman Kim Ryan
ran her best time of the season to
earn a spot on Oregon's Region 8
team. She finished ninth in 17:22
over the 5,000-meter course.
“This was by tar her (Ryan's)
best time of the season," said
Heinonen. "She is becoming
more adjusted to collegiate racing
and our program."
With Ryan's performance,
Heinonen now has four out of
seven .pots filled for the Region 8
championships Nov. 12 at Lane
Community College. Hayes, Lisa
Martin and Roth are assured of
the first three positions.
Junior Rosa Gutierrez, who ran
unattached Saturday, will earn a
spot on the squad if Heinonen
decides not to redshirt her.
“We'll decide in the next day or
so if Rosa will run for us," said
Heinonen. "We just have to
decide if two races at the end of a
season are worth using a year of
eligibility."
Rounding out Duck scoring was
Claudette Groenendaal in 18th
place, Gretchen Nelson in 32nd
and Deanna Schiedler in 35th.
“Both Gretchen and Deanna
went out a little too fast," said
Heinonen-. "They both went for
broke and they paid the price."
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October 31
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Dolphins defeated the Los
Angeles Rams 30-14. Marino, the
Dolphins' rookie quarterback,
completed 25 of 38 passes for 279
yards, including a 46-yard bomb to
Mark Duper in the second
quarter.
Steve DeBerg solidified his hold
on Denver's No. 1 quarterback
spot by completing 21 of 41 passes
for 350 yards and one touchdown
as the Broncos withstood a late
Kansas City rally to defeat the
Chiefs 27-24. DeBerg did not
throw an interception. In a losing
effort, KC's Bill Kenney completed
27 of 52 passes for 365 yards and
one touchdown.
In other NFL action, Dallas ham
mered the New York Giants 38-20;
Atlanta tripped New England
24-13; Baltimore edged
Philadelphia 22-21; Detroit
walloped Chicago 38-17 and Buf
falo outlasted New Orleans 27-21.
Two offensive powerhouses
square off tonight in San Diego,
Calif., as the Chargers host the
Washington Redskins, 6-2, in a
Monday night telecast.
The Chargers, i-5, will be
without the services of starting
quarterback Dan Fouts, out with a
shoulder iniury. Former San lose
State University star Fd Luther will
start his second game in a row in
place* of Fouts. Last week, Luther
and the Chargers lost I4-6 to
Denver.
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