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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1941)
Sport Sparks By RON GEMMELL Nothing definite yet as to whether Little Skipper Bunny Griffiths will or will not return as Senator manager this season, but another indication that he WILL NOT comes in the form of a letter from Griffiths to Al Lightner, the Little Skip's most likely successor at this writing . . . Griffiths writes Antelope Al he has a ,4very good job" as a ship Joiner in a shipyard just across the Delaware in Pennsylvania from his Camden, New Jersey home. . . The nimble little gent who set a new defensive mark for Western International, league shortstops last season is hauling down around $60 a week, and it isn't likely he'll give that up for a 25-weeks' job at slightly less pay. If Griffiths doesn't return, it means the Senators will be in the market for virtually a com plete new infield. . . While little Charlie Shoemaker, first base man, and Eddie George, third baseman, are still Senator chat tels, neither is ready for class B ball, second base was left wide open when San Diego recalled Freddie Lanifero. For that matter, the 1942 Solon outfield may also be at least two thirds manned by newjcammT. . Bob Bergstrom, recalled by Port land, Is quite likely to stick with the Beaveri. this time, while Charles Baldy Petersen has indi cated an Intention of giving up baseball unless he obtains an op portunity in the Coast league. . . With Peterson and Bergstrom gone, only Clint Cameron, who filled the rightfield patrol for the latter half of the 1941 season, would remain. O Fundamentals Tell Fancy football tactics, such as the T-formation, etc., have im measurable spectator appeal and are very slick when they work, but, events this season (probably the best season college football has ever experienced) further tend to prove there is absolutely no substitute for those for those big football fundamentals, tack ling and blocking. . . Stanford's T was thrice stopped this season, and in each instance it was by a team which ground out the ver dict the hard way by outblocking and out-tackling the Indians ra ther than through any spectacu lar maneuvering. There certainly isn't any thing particularly spectacular about Oregon S t a t e's bowl bound Beavers, who first stop- p e a i n e sianiora i . . . as I have said many times this sea son, they are just the best block ing and tackling footballers on the coast, that's all. Moves to Front i I ,y 1 LA., o n LON STINER Stiner Makes History With Bevos of OSC Packard Pop In Hoop Opener, 39- 28 Collegians Unimpressive In Loss to Independents Gail Fowler, northwest AP sports editor, very much agreed with me on this score following the game at Eugene Saturday, saying he had seen but one team Minnesota against Washington which was as soundly grounded in those two big fundamentals. . . . And, if you will, look across the nation at the so-called tcp-teams: Minnesota, Duke, Michigan, Tex as, Notre Dame, Fordham, Etc. each of which has earned its rep utation more through the execu tion of sound football fundamen-tal-by adequate man power than through hipper-dipper tactics. O Tony Named Again It was furious tackling, block ing and charging which earned the Beavers each of their five round- robin victories and most notably, their 10-0 triumph over Stanford ... It was furious tackling, block ing and charging that enabled Washington State's Cougars to conquer the T, with the furious charging, tackling and blocking of Ends Dale Gentry and Nick Suse ff leading the way. . . And it was the furious tackling, blocking and charging by California, led by Tackle Bob Reinhard, that upset the T last Saturday. Substitution of a victory belle for the missing victory bell is announced by Ucla. . .The Ucla students, missing their bell which tolls out victories after athletic contests, decided to -elect a victory belle to preside over the celebration they hope? to stage after their meeting with USC this Saturday. note mat xony rraioia was named by the Idaho Vandals to their all-opponent team? .... Fraiola hasn't yet missed an all opponent team in two years, and these include Goraaga's and Port land ITs of last season. . . The lit tie Italian submarine is good, but ' definitely. . . Dan Walton, of the Tacoma News-Tribune, points out that two ail-American ends will meet when WSC and the Texas Aggies tangle at Tacoma Satur , iay. They're Cougar Dale Gentry and Aggie Jim Sterline, both of whom were chosen on the New York Sun's all-Amerk. . By GAIL FOWLER CORVALLIS, Ore., Dec. 2-P)-He was hired as head coach at cut-rate prices during the depres sion in 1933. In 1936 the wolves wanted his fast-thinning scalp. In 1938-39-40 his team finished third in Pacific Coast conference standings. And on January 1, 1942, he'll lead his school's team into Hose Bowl battle for the first time. He's Alonio L. "Lon" Stiner, the genial 38-year-old football coach of the Oregon State col lege Beavers, who won the 1941 conference championship in the wildest scramble since the tough eight-team round-robin schedule was instituted in 1936. Back in 1925 the University of Nebraska had an ail-American tackle named Ed Weir. The Uni-. versity of Washington, 1925 Rose Bowl team, was playing the Corn huskers, and instructions were to steer the plays away from Weir toward the other tackle. The other tackle was the stocky Stiner. Washington willingly settled for a 6-6 tie and Stiner received ail American mention. Lon graduated in 1927, and the next year was assistant coach at Colorado. Then he came to Oregon State as frosh track coach and assistant foot ball coach under Paul Schis-sler. The high-priced Schissler and Oregon State came to a parting of the ways after the 1932 season. The depression was being felt and the school, after casting about for a "name" coach, finally gave the job to Stiner, who was tickled to get it at a 50 per cent reduced price rumored at around $3500. He made school history in, his first year. Although his Beavers only had three games against con ference opponents in those pre round robin days, Stiner's "iron man" club beat Washington State, lost to Oregon and, with only 11 men playing the entire game, held Southern California to a scoreless tie which snapped a Trojan win ning streak of 25 consecutive games. For good measure he took his team east where it beat Ford- ham. The Beavers had a bad year in 1936, whining four out of 10 and some of the again-affluent alumni clamored for a new coach. But Lon, with consist ently the smallest squads in the conference, and with a small coaching staff, kept plugging. Now, after nine years, his teams have won 48, lost 29 and tied 11 He's the youngest coach in the conference, and he's now making at least twice the money he got back in 1933. That's a sketch of the affable, boyish Stiner, who makes his Rose Bowl debut against Wallace Wade at Duke, who will be scenting roses for the fifth time as coach. By RON GEMMELL . Statesman Sport Editor A Willamette basketball team with a strong tendency to mill instead of drive made its 1941 42 debut here Tuesday night by bowing, 39 to 28, to the Pacific Packards of Portland, an or dinary independents outfit. The Willamettes at least were consistent. They were equally "as bad defensively as offensively. Headed by Carl Miller, dimin utive forward with number "0" on his jersey, the Packards pulled out in front of the 'Cats, 10-8, as the third quarter 'opened and were never headed. Miller, a quick-firing lefthand er, hit six field flips and one gift er for 13 points in the first half. His efforts largely enabled the Packards to post a 23 to 15 half time advantage. He hit one field goal in the second half to take scoring honors with 15 points. Most of the Bearcats' offen sive surge was wasted out in front of the keyhole, circling it in a ring-'round-rosy that got them nowhere fast. Only twice in the rough con Coast Prestige At Stake In UO-Texas Mix By ROBERT MYERS LOS ANGELES, Dec. 2-(P)- What is left of Pacific Coast Con ference football prestige in inter sectional battle this season will be at stake Saturday when the University of Oregon moves against the Texas Longhorns at Austin and Washington State en tertains Texas A&M at Tacoma. Coast prestige, at this writ ing, has been kicked around something shameful, and Mr. Gerald A. "Tex" Oliver, coach of the Oregons isn't too confi dent it won't get another set back in the southwest corral of the Longhorns. Popular Tex, whose excursion to Austin will be something of a homecoming in that he's a native Texan and began his successful test did the Willamettes hold a coaching career at Houston high lead. Sum Gallaher, veteran for- school, was none too Tiappy about ward who led the Bearcat scor- the prospects as he stopped with ing with 8 points, gave them 6-4 his team here Tuesday, advantage with seven minutes He voiced fear tha D. X. Bible's played on a steal and floor-length Longhorns might still be mad dribble, and Jimmy Robertson, about missing out on a big bowl veteran guard, shoved them in invitation the Rose Bowl in par front again momentarily, 8-6, with ticular and will take it out on 8:30 played on another steal and his Webfoots. Tex might be go. :w right, at that. The Washington Huskies started the string of Coast Con ference intersectional losses in a game stab at Minnesota, and Southern California followed suit, taking an embarrassing 33-0 shellacking from Ohio State and then dropping a hard fought, encounter with Notre Dame,. 20 -18. Oliver said his team was a lit tle "lame" from the tough Ore gon State game which was lost in the last quarter--and one of his ace half backs, Tommy Roblin, Church Named President of Wildlife Body CORVALLIS, Dec. 2-(vP)-Elmer Church. Salem sportsman, was elected president of the Oregon Wildlife Federation Tuesday suc ceeding W. J. Smith, Portland. Other officers: Carl Baker, Eu gene, vice president; W. P. Win kle, Eugene, secretary; Alva Day, Hood River, treasurer. Charles E. Jackson, Washing ton, D. C, endorsed a proposal that Oregon, Washington and Idaho Join with the federal gov ernment in setting up a manage ment plan for salmon of the Columbia rivar. Resolutions favored: Accept ance of a big game management plan, proposed by the State Game Commission, provided that the plan be based" on scientific facts; stricter enforcement of game reg ulations, especially regulations on splash dam construction; tagging of all artificially raised game birds; a study of comparative construction costs of fish hatch eries in various states. New Giant Skip y ', , " ' if ! I ..... ,PJ) , ::v--v.,.:A.'.,..'.'i; v:-' .-... t"-: -.- i MET OTT PACKARDS (39) Miller, f ...... Manning, f Helser, 1 Cooney. c ... Oberg, g Wocdside, g Salvadore, g Totals WILLAMETTE (28) S Gallaher, f 10 Toolson, f 5 Murray, f 4 S 13 6 16 2 ..... 5 3 ..... 49 Fg Pt TP 7- 2 2 4 0 0 1 16 1 1 0 1 0 2 2 7 15 5 4 9 0 2 4 39 Richards, f .. Careson, c .... Medley, c Robertson, g Walden Ragsdale, g BarnicK. g - 6 6 -4 14 4 3 1 Totals 51 rg Pt tp 4 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 1 2 0 2 0 3 1 0 0 13 2 4 0 4 0 6 4 0 0 28 Personal fouTs: Manning 2, Woodside had a severe shoulder injury. Salvadore z. CJarson J. waraen 2. Uutlsv 9 Rinharri Rnoorlalp 2. Tool- son 3, Robertson, Helser, Miller 2, horns: Don't let the wily Tex fool Meclford Coach Called by Army MED FORD, D e c. 2- (P) -Bill Eowerman, Medford high school football and track, coach," left Tuesday for Vancouver barracks for physical examination prepara- gory 10 a caxi w icuvs uv uuv, Eowerman, a first lieutenant in the infantry reserve, said he ex- eerted to report to Fort Lawton, EeatUe, Dec. 17, if he passed tho physical examination. . v But confidential to the Long- 3. Toolson 2, Robertson 3, Walden, Woodside 2. Shooting percentages: Packards .327, Willamette .234. Officials: Weisgerber and Lightner. Cooney. vr, w;th too much nessimism FroA thrnum miKHI. MlllAr 2. I "raiTiev . His team, nut ior a iacK 01 re serve strength, would rank with any out here. It showed sustained brilliance in cutting down USC, which had beaten Oregon Stat and Oregon State, you know, is the Rose Bowl champion And in Curt Mecham, Oliver has one bf the shiftiest fastest and best backs hi the west. Lame or otherwise, Oregon is no pushover. At least, it wasn't out here. Duckpin Scores TUESDAY LEAGUE Waters Schooley 166 Littwiller, B 141 Littwiller, M 142 Griffin 161 Beardsley 189 Total State Employes Handicap - 76 Page. M 158 Hartley 133 Hogan 147 Van Ausdell 141 Dirks Total Hubbards Wood, T. . King, D Elgin Dethman ... Total ...... Stiffs Handicap Callahan ... Soland Stiff Clark Clark Total 129 786 ...... 112 128 109 182 531 44 114 123 174 174 151 606 Hoggins Osborn Johnson Esteb .. Gale . Ski Race Postponed PORTLAND, Dec. 2-()-The fifth annual Arnold Lunn ski race, scheduled for Sunday on Mount Hood, has been postponed for one week. Yackey Total Dyers Handicap Dyer Woodward Grabenhorst Cooley Wilkinson Total 96 143 164 212 .. 174 .... 789 68 96 120 116 131 156 687 154 143 161 124 133 715 76 187 134 109 149 153 808 126 101 193 147 567 44 160 157 164 164 136 661 87 147 125 182 121 662 68 112 117. 130 131 229 787 Letters to Go To 22 Vikings 139 459 149 433 144 447 128 413 119 441 6792193 76 228 152 497 100 369 75 331 ill Ann ill -vi I . r. 1 i 120 402 xwemy-iwo oaiem nign loot' 6402234 tan players and one student man ager will receive football letters, 127 it Was decided Tuesday by the 192 494 student council after Coach Har J5S 45 old H a u k had submitted his 311 10IO I . . . recommenaauons. 132 tlW I A , -l WJ T-t ' A " 124 404 Duicn aunmons, rxi r lizsunons Jf? 520 jonn Hoff ert, Don Page, Bob Bar w , t..j r ir:,,-j - 130 417 oer, duu iouns, w maru ivic 5751842 ciaughry, Herb Booth, Owen Gar land, Bill Pettit, Ben Fortner, Bob 332 Sederstrom, Rex Hardy, Harrison 133 422 Wilder, Erwin Winkenwerder, t26 520 Rollie Haag, Robert Warren, Jim 7002151 Wenger, Bill Lind, Bob Palma- toor T.lnvH flriffithe Bav T iter so iu J J 158 366 Manager Fred Bynon. 144 381 Those receiving awards: Wolves Wallop Angels, 44-32 In Hoop Start MONMOUTH Oregon College of Education Wolves took a 44-32 victory from Mt. Angel college hoopsters in the first game of the conference season here Tuesday night. From Bonney's first basket the visitors maintained a lead through the first 10 minutes of play, when the score stood 12-10. Hagan and Macnab each shot a basket to put the Wolves ahead, 14-12 and the two teams seesawed for the remainder of the half. In the last li min utes of play Macnab dropped in two baskets, Hogan, one and Morris one to leave the Wolves with a 26-18 lead. Not once during the second period did the Wolves relinquish their top position. In a preliminary, Dallas whip ped the OCE Frosh, 2 5to 22. Mt Angel (32 (44) Monmouth Epping 6 2 O'Connor Barta 3 8 Morris Bonney 12 10 Macnab Kuppendender 7 12 Kerns Kaminskey 4 8 Hogan Substitutes for Mt. Angel: Wil son 4. Officials: Engelston and Scott. Salem, Orejoa WdnMdcrr Morning. Dcmbr 3, 1841 12 Mel Ott Named Giant Manager; Terry Is Upped By JUDSON BAILEY , JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Dec. 2- (jip)-The New York Giants unex pectedly moved Bill Terry into the front office Tuesday and named Mel Ott playing manager in a sur prise shift calculated to restore the decrepit Giants to a dominant position in the National league. Terry was made general man ager of the farm system and scouting staff and gives general advisory powers In the direction of the club while Ott, 32 year old rlghtfielder, was rewarded for 16 years of faithful playing service by being given charge of the team on the field. President Horace Stoneham said Terry would be available to help Ott if the quiet little veteran wanted any, but declared direc tion of the ball club was up to Ott. Both Terry and Ott were given two year contracts. Terry, who had managed the Giants since suc ceeding John McGraw in the mid dle of the 1932 season, was be lieved to have taken a cut in sal ary from $42,500 to about $30,000 in order to persuade Stoneham to create the Job which Terry long had coveted. Terry's former con tract which had another year to run was cancelled. Ott was be lieved to have been given a salary of about $25,000. After the decision to offer Ott the managership had been made, he could not be located by Stoneham for several hours and he was slightly stunned when Stoneham called newspa permen Into his suite to make the announcement. "This is such a surprise to me that I haven't had tune yet to make any plans," Ott murmured. Consequently the task of out lining the aims of the new admin istration was left to Terry, who asserted, "I'm delighted by the Bevos Offensively Even Better Than Defensively SEATTLE, Dec. 2.-(fl3-Oregon State's defense has been cre dited with putting the Beavers into the Rose BowL but don't for get about the Beaver offense. Statistically, at least, it's more im pressive than the defensive figures. American Football Statistical bureau compilations released Tuesday for the Pacific Coast conference show tht Orangemen finished right behind Stanford for the second straight season in total offense with a 248.8 yard average per game from rushes and passes. Stanford led with 283.4 seven yards better than last year's 286.4, but containing more aerial emphasis than in 1940. The Beavers, on the ether hand, gained three more yards than they did la 1941, and the three yards helped put them on the Pasadena Special. Last year Oregon State gained 2236 yards, this year It waa 2239. Last year's average was 248.4, when the Beaveri finished third for the third straight year. Although ranking fourth as a passing team on the basis of ave rage yards gained per game, Ore gon State boasted the most ef fective passing attack in the con- Game Meet Set PORTLAND, Dec. 2-iT")-A meeting to establish 1942 game fishing regulations will be held here by the state game commis sion on January 10. . Bowling Scores MERCANTILE LEAGUE Gle&ns Handicap 4 Additional Sports On Page 2 19.4 37(1 isilMi Turkey JShoot bet 7992273 A turkey shoot which will in clude hams and bacons, also is scheduled by the Salem Trap shooters club Sunday over the club's traps on the airport road. -7 Myers Walker Bramel Dull Ashby Total Stayton Morgan Tuel Bryant Schuktrich Christensen Total 121 184 132 140 179 760 135 123 126 161 .. 149 694 Monmouth Stump 159 Coaches Generally Agreed Football Rules, Including Unlimited Subs, Should Stand By BILL BONI NEW YORK, Dec. 2-(ff)-The country's college football coaches are in astonishingly strong ac cord on one point the revised football rules that went into ef fect this past season worked out handsomely, and particularly so Khe ruling whkh permits them to make unlimi ed substitutions. In reply to an Associated Press 1 questionnaire, the response was the same in the east, the far west, the midwest, south and southwest Fritz Crisler of Michigan, presi dent of -the Coaches association, Lou Little pf Columbia, chairman of the coaches rules conunittee, and such other, . representative coaches as Wallace; Wade -. of Duke, Dana Bible ofTexas,-Ber-mie Bierman of Minnesota, Babe Uollingbery of Washington State and Frank Leahy of Notre Dame, said the rules should . stand ex cept for minor matters, of clari fication and interpretation., . H like Willis O. Banter,,' diree- tor of athletics at Southern Cal ifornia, Little was particularly pleased with the success of tha substitution role and the fact. that many selections reported this bit of legislation had speed ed np play instead. of prolong ing games. "I think youH find, "said Lou, "that this was due to the 25-sec- end clause, ordering a team to put, the ball in play within 25 seconds after the referee has placed it on the line of scrimmage." The fact that coaches could run in specialists when needed, could take out a player who seemed hurt and examine him on the sidelines instead of taking up time to do so on the field, and at all times could field the strongest possible combination were other factors which brought - the rule into favor. 'The latter point was appreciated above alk by v small colleges, with Steve Harrick of West'Virginia Tech as spokesman: "We had the smallest squad and lightest line-165-poimd averagein my coaching career. I had two guards who weighed 145 each. ' Yet by earefnl we of substitutes, we were able to have fresh, rested men en the field. at all times. A lone and loud . dissenting voice came from Clyde "Cac" Hubbard of Denver, who labeled it the "most terrible thing in the book." The few suggestions advanced concerned clarifications rather than radical changes. Chief trou blemaker was the rule providing that in the last two minutes of each half the offensive team (if it already has taken its three legal times out) shall be penalized if it takes another. The approved ruling calls for the penalty to be paced off while the clock is run ning, but many feel the present wording is ambiguous. . Frank Murray of Virginia wants a sharper definition of when a back is in motion illegally: Bernie Moore of Louisiana State urges a more definite ruling on what should be considered intent irnal grounding of a forward pass; Jack Haggerty ot Georgetown seems toe same on forward nass inter. ference, and Ossie Solem of Syra cuse believes that on kickoffa the receiving 4eam should be barred from purposely knocking the ball out ot bounds a maneuver which now permits it to put the ball in play on the 35-yard line. Dodd Haller Lindsey Dewey Total Semler Handicap .... Lindley Smith Mitchell Dye Burton Total Richfield Handicap Schwab McLaughlin - McCune Hammond Brown Total Dr. Pepper Ertssaard Simon Karr Skipper Jarvis Total Board Walk Handicap .. MiUer Ohlsen Sachtler Junta Seeber Total Valley Thompson Mlsson Farrar Doerfler ColweU Total Botler Henderson Riches Brown .. Walton Saunders Total Lakista Handicap Furukaws Shlaido Tanaka Ogura Yada Total Scio Handicap Densmoor - . Bayburn Zander Bates j -Schmnk Total Capital Kirchner Hoar -J Chappell Wallace Woelk : Total 114 124 112 122 631 7 90 .. 166 . 150 124 168 705 .. 38 169 132 163 ... 122 148 772 157 149 150 120 159 735 4 138 151 147 147 173 760 144 157 119 164 147 731 175 119 110 138 136 678 7 100 141 139 107 147 641 38 166 160 124 100 201 789 173 137 197 121 128 756 4 12 103 362 114 449 91 310 150 437 181 533 6432163 130 409 132 412 141 386 145 470 104 400 6522077 122 456 120 353 146 380 95 345 100 358 5831892 7 21 121 311 145 - 452 167 456 146 377 167 482 7532099 38 114 157 492 124 416 112 399 158 380 143 492 7322293 118 448 150 436 149 496 106 347 188 475 7112202 68 68 90 112 177 160 151 144 : : 134 136 : 174 115 794 729 . 158 133 ini i?fl 146 167 160 161 174 119 737 700 168 143 107 143 , 146 148 138 144 - 180 123 : 739 701 28 28 162 96 HI 19 ", 139 111 T 174 163 :- 164 135 ;,-, SIS 661 S 56 189 I 162 172,: 149 143 164 167 -133 157 145 884 809 136 .167 138 140 . 159 740 139 .211 134 14T 127 769 204 346 173 512 208 503 123 387 144 433 8622385 153 442 133 354 153 446 176 497 145 438 7602197 167 47S 160 410 140 434 107 389 169 472 7432183 28 84 150 408 172 441 133 383 145 482 142 441 7702239 168 193 654 138 459 166 473 147 447 15 458 856 3559 158- 443 146 831 162434 129 416 161 447 75-22fil Locey Quits Shrine Game CORVALLIS. Ore.. Dec. l.-UPt- Percy Locey, Oregon State college athletic director, said Tuesday a committee to select western clav- ers in the annual New Year's day East-West Shrine football game at San Francisco would meet at Palm Springs, Calif., about Dec. 11. Locey said he would relinquish his job in charge of arrangements for the western team because he must arrange for Oregon State's appearance in the Rose Bowl. He left for Pasadena. new setup and I think this will en able us to make the Giants a strong club again. This is the work I have been wanting to do and I feel sure that I can give Mel some ference. The Beavers completed 61 out of 135 for a .452 percentage, and the Beavers only had eight in terceptions. Gains averaged 83.6 yards per game. Critics who deprecated Cal ifornia's statistical defense rec ord in; the light ef an vnsiiecess fal season, were deflated when the Bears dominated' defensive ly last week against Stanford, their chief rival. The Bears wound up as the coast's leading total defense and rushing de fense unit. California gave up 101.3 yards per game to rushes, compared to Stanford's 114.7 which led last year. In total defense California gave up 170.1 yards per game, compared to Oregon's 171.1 ave rage last year. The figures: TOTAL OFFENSE Gains mining and passing) Stanford. 2S3 4 yards average Per game: Oregon ute. 248.8; Idaho. 222 J; Montana. 221.8; Wash ington. 212.2; UCLA. 210 6: Washington State, 200.4; USC. 199J; California. 186.7; Oregon. 179 7. KCSHING OFFENSE Stanford, 1947; Washington, 169 1; Montana. 168J; Ore gon State. 169.4; Idaho. 139 6: Wash ington State. 130; California. 124 7: Oregon. 118 6; UCLA. 105.5: USC. BJ , FORWARD PASSING OFFENSE UCLA, 52 completed of 136 for 821 yards and 102.6 yards average per game Stanford. 99a; USC. 93 4. Ore gon State, 83.6; Idaho. 833; Washing ton State. 70.4; Oregon. 60S; California, 58.8: Montana. 534: Washington. 43.1. TOTAL DEFENSE I Against rushes and passes) California. 170 1 yards average yield per game; Stanford, 181.9: Idaho. 188 8; Oregon State, 195.1; Washington. 202.8: Montana. 208.7; Washington State. 221.7; Oregon, 2238: UCLA. 224.5: USC. 250 5. RUSHING DEFENSE California, 101 J yards yielded per came; Stanford, 108.2; Oregon State. 1104: Montana 115.4: Oregon. 120.1: Washington, 114 lj Washington State, 142.5; Idaho, 147 USC. 148.4; UCLA. 1S9J. PASS DEFENSE Idaho, 41 J yartft CalW yielded per game: UCLA. 65J; lornia, ess: Stanford, 73.7: Washing, ton. 78.7; Washington State. 7f 1; Ore. ?on State. 81.4: Montana. KX. USC 01 1: Oregon. 102. PUNTING Oregon. 39 82 yards Yer ball players that will be a great V&TJF&iSZ1 ZZTtf? deal better than what I have had 37.04; Idaho. 36.20; California. ysMt sianiora. J3; Montana. 35-30. 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