The NCAA November 8,1982, Volume 19 Number 25 Offkial Publication of th atiunal Collegiate Athletic Association D ivisi -on I criteria Seeding proposal outlined format Proposed legislation to strengthen seven annual Convcntrons. the criteria for membership in Division Meanwhile, Divisions II and Ill- I, as backed by the NCAA Council and first the latter and more recently the changed the Division I Steering Committee in former-have been steadily refining their October meetings, has been the crttcrra m their divisions as their In order to increase flexibility for placed in final form for considcratron mcmbcrs move toward the homogene- seeding teams, the Division I-AA at the 1983 NCAA Convention. ity intended in the three-division strut- Football Committee has announced a The lcgislation~all amending ture . change in procedure for the I982 Bylaw l l-l-will bc included m the The frustrations mamfcstcd by the championship. Official Notice of the Convention, to various annual proposals and debate Under the old procedure, the Nos. be mailed November 22, and will be within Division I were reviewed by the I- and 4-seeded teams were to be voted upon by the Division I membcr- NCAA division steering committees placed in the top half of the bracket for ship during the Convention January and the Council in 1979, when the quarterfinal play, while the Nos. 2- IO- I2 in San Diego. Special Committee on NCAA Govern and 3-seeded teams would be placed in the lower half of the bracket. A resume of the plan and imple- ante, Organization and Services was With the new format, the committee menting Icgislation, as developed and appointed and charged with studying, has the flexibility to place the Nos. I - announced by the NCAA Council, foil among other things, the problems in and 4-seeded teams and the Nos. 2- lows: the NCAA divrslon structure. Two years later, that study culminated in and 3-seeded teams in the half of the refinement of the criteria for Divisions bracket that would keep the teams as Background near as possible to their natural When Divisions I, II and III were I-A and I-AA in football at the Decem- ber 19X I special Convention. regions. created by the membership in 1973, According to Milton D. Hunter, The Council then turned its atten- the intent was to provide the opportu- South Carolina State College and chair tion to the unresolved problem of the nity for national legislative forums of of the committee, the reason for adopt- overall Division I membership; i.e., reasonably homogeneous groupings of ing the new procedure was twofold. institutions with simrlar commitments the increased presence in that division “In seeding the top four teams we to similar programs. The respective of a number of institutions with neither have two concerns,” Hunter said. division memberships beganestablish- programs nor commitments compara- “We want to reduce travel expenses ing criteria for their divisions at the ble to those of the majority of the diviL whenever possible, and, at the same January I974 Convention. sion’s members. The Council consid- time, generate interest in the champi- In Division I, additional new criteria erations and studies have resulted in the criteria to bc voted upon in January onship by keeping teams in their natu- were adopted at the 1978, 1980 and rzl regions. 1981 annual Conventions and at the 1983. “Changing the pairings format December I Yg I special Convention. gives the committee the flexibility of Existing criteria were subject to revi- Purpose trying to keep teams in their own sions at the 1979, I980 and 1982 The intent of the recommended regions, which in turn will create more annual Conventions, as well as at the Division I criteria plan is to achieve a interest in the championship.” IYR I special Convention. Unsuccess- greater commonality of intercollegiate ful attempts to either strengthen or athletic purposes and programs within The NCAA Division I-AA Football weaken the Division I critcrta have that drvrsron. The votmg mcmbcrs of Championship will have a field of I2 been suhmittcd for each of the past See Dividon I, pqe 15 teams. Eight teams will play first- round games November 27 on the campuses of the competing teams. The top four teams, as seeded by the com- 132 proposals face mittee, will receive byes. Two independent teams will receive berths, and the champions of seven Convention delegates allied conferences-Big Sky, Mid- Eastern Athletic, Ohio Valley, South- January 7. Delegates to the 1983 NCAA Con- ern, Southland, Southwestern Athletic vention in San Diego will be facing the Chief executive officers of active and Yankee-will qualify automati- largest number of legislative proposals and allied memhers will receive forms cally for the 1982 championship. The since 1979. to be used in appointing voting dele- remaining three teams will be selected A total of I32 proposals wrll appear gates, alternates and visitors to the at large by the committee. in the Official Notice of the Conven- Convention. These forms will accom- The country has been divided into tion, which will be mailed from the pany the mailing of the Official Notice four regions: West, Central, South and national ofticc Novcmbcr 22. November 22. East, with the West and Central in the The proposals are distributed among The 132 proposals are the most Western division and the South and IO legislative topics, and the most smcc 1979, when Convention dele- -. _- -- - East in the Eastern division. The important topics appear to bc mcmbcr- gates also faced I32 proposals. After (Photo bv Mdrolm Emm championship finals will match the ship and classification, academic declining to I03 proposals in IYgO, the Men’s c----- Eastern division and Western divi- requirements, and governance. number of proposals rose to I21 in Georgetown’s Pat Ewing turned in 23point.r and 11 rebounds in last sion winners. The NCAA membership will con- 1981 and 122 at the 1982 Convention. year’s NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Chumpionship final. The Quarterfinals are Dccembcr 4, sider the proposed legislation when the Excluding I9 proposals in the con sophomore , shown here leuping high above North Carolina’s semifmals December I I and the cham- Convention assembles January IO-12 sent packages t I5 routine amendments Sum Perkins. will &tempt to lead the Hoyas back to the Finul Four. pionship December I8 in Wichita at the Town and Country Hotel in San to the bylaws and other legislation and For u preview of the upcoming season. see pages 8-10. Falls, Texas. Diego. Related meetings will begin four to the constitution), the largest number of proposals for any topical nnr\ . . 1 1 In the News grouping is I5 found in the governance section. Thcrc will be I4 proposals in LXUs to receive aelegate forms John Kasser, the University of Hous- the playing and practice seasons Forms that chief executive officers other institutional representative is Nb badges will be changed among vot- ton’s new director of athletics, gives group, and I3 recruiting proposals will must use to appoint official delegates permitted to complete the form at the en and their alternates at the Conven- his views on the current issues in inter- face Convention delegates. collegiate athletics .2 to the annual NCAA Convention will time of Convention registration. In tion. Other groupings include champion- be mailed to the membership Novem- such cases, the institution’s represent- l Alliedconferences without voting His coach says Rick ships t 12). academic requirements ber 22. atives will be registered as visitors privileges, associate members and Psonak is a good student of the game, (I 2). financial aid (12). general (nine), until written authorization is received The forms, which accompany the affiliated members may appoint one but the Muskingum College signal personnel limitations (nine), member- chief executive’s copy of the Official from the chief executive officer. delegate each. That delegate may caller has the edge over the coach in ship and classification (nine), and l Once the form has been signed Notice of the Convention, arc not sent speak on the Convention floor but will one category . . . ..I eligibility (eight). and submitted by the chief executive, to faculty athletic representatives and have no voting privileges. Statistics and notes on all NCAA foot- A group-by-group review of the directors of athletics because only no one may be added as a voting or ball divisions .47 proposed legislation for the 1983 chief executive officers are authorized alternate delegate without a letter or l NCAA members and nonmem- Championship previews in Division II NCAA Convention will appear in all to make delegate appointments. telegram from the chief executive. bers are permitted to register as many men’s and women’s cross country. remaining issues of The NCAA News Other delegate-appointment proce- l Once the voting and alternate del- visiting delegates as they wish. Visi- Division II men’s soccer, and Divisions leading up to the Convention. The first dures: egates have been appointed properly, tors are considered observers and may I, 11, Ill field hockey. .11-12 report of proposed legislation will l When no appointment form is they may transfer voting rights among neither address the Convention nor appear in the November I5 issue. received from the chief executive, no themselves as the institution desires. vote 2 November 8.1982 I I The NCAA Comment Kasser answers current athletics questions

By Hal Lundgren It’s a national problem. It’s a concern of our cntirc cducatitrnal A. When would Houston go out and rry to put some TV con- Houston Chronicle system. Schools have gotten away from teaching basics, and cdu- tracts together? When John Kasser arrived on the University of Houston cam- caters are alarmed by some of the test results. A. Not right away. I think we’ll see things happen slowly. If pus last year to serve as assistant athletic director under Cedric We’re hearing more about students having to pass proficiency the ruling is upheld, we certainly would want to talk to television Dempsey, his wardrobe was void of red neckties. tests before they can graduate from high school. Wc’rc hearing people about selling some of our games. But we don’t want it to Now five of them hang in the Californian’s closet. more about high school students being required to write more. But come to that. I can see this ruling being fought all the way to the “I think they look nice.” Kasser said. I don’t think it’s fair to say that the problem is only among the ath- Supreme Court. If nothing else succeeds short of the Supreme The red-tie count keeps increasing. Dempsey departed in letes. They’re the most visible students on campus. If other stu- Court, I hope that’s what happens. August to become athletic director at the University of Arizona. dents were interviewed, they might not speak as well as the ath- If the ruling stands and there are five games on a Saturday after- Kasser replaced him when officials decided that the most quali- lete. noon, we’ll see a dilution of the product and of advcrtismg dol- tied man for Dempsey’s job was in the next office. Q. There’s so much talk about ucademic emphasis In rrthletrc lars. The way tclcvision fights over its shows now. I don’t think The widespread distractions in collcgc athletics-payments to programs. Then something like [a case] comes up. and we five games on the same afternoon is desirable. athletes, academic compromlsc. rising costs and, before the NFL learn that athletes were credited for classes they didn’t attend. Is Q. From a business standpoint, haven’t you rt~toyrd thr NFL players’ strike, increased competition from pro teams-are there a chance we’ll soon see a time when college ,football rrnd strikr because it has givrn collrgr football exrrn media exposure:’ enough to keep any athletic director worried. Many specific prob- basketball players will be treated differently,from the wst of their A. I don’t like to see any kind of strike. I like to.see problems lems pertain only to UH. classmates and openly earn money for playing? worked out. But the strike definitely has helped us. There has The Pepperdine graduate hopes he has the background to meet A. I don’t see it happening right away. Until homcthing been more media coverage, more visibility. The NFL still is cov- those challenges. His business grooming came in California. changes, we have a responsibility on the academic side. But there crcd. But after several weeks, the strike coverapc has become old where he worked for Chevrolet. His athletic training came on the is a high-priority item on the agenda for the NCAA Convention in hat. basketball court. At 6-feet-6, he was one of the leading rcbound- San Diego. I think there might be some legislation proposed to Q. It might be becuuse Houston’s three college team.) sta~trd ers in Pepperdine history. I I the season so poorly. but the payrng fk hrrr doesn’t srrm IO be Kasser’s manner has about as much m common with Demp- /locking IO collrgr gamrs drspite,the absencr o/‘Oiler,[~x~tbull. sey’s as enchiladas do with custard. Dempsey was reserved. Pea- A. I think we would have seen a shift in attendance if the fan ple who didn’t know the man well called him too formal. even Colufnnary Craft had known the strike would last so long. He hasn‘t been willing to stuffy. Kasser has a lighter stroke. I I make the shift because the strike has continued on a week-to-week But the two men shared a good working relationship, not to give the student-athlete a reasonable amount of expcnsc money. lt basis. If the pros don’t come back, I think we’ll see it rctlcctcd mention the problems that keep ADS awake at night. would be a stipend to meet some of his costs (above the present most in bowl-game attendance this winter. Q. I’ve been in eight of rhe nine SWC,football dressing rooms, perrhissible grant). Q. When the pros play, they htrvr so much more continuir?, in including Houston’s, the past two years. It’s a little disappointing That would make some dense to me. The student-athlete can’t rhrirproduct. The Oilers hovr an Elvin Brrhrrr in rhrir linrup /i)r to find a few players on each team who can’t conjugate simple work during the school year. He can only hold a job in the sun- 15 yeurs. Tommy Kramrr has one rerr(Jic.vrar at Rice. but he’s a senior and rhqv can’r sell tickets around him the nert .scason. How verbs when they speak. How do .voufeel about it:’ mer. That makes it tough on all but the wealthiest families. The A. I don’t think you can relate that to intelligence. You have to typical college athlete doesn’t get as much of a stipend as the other do you market a college program when the public is morefirmilitrr consider accents and speech patterns. Where the person came scholarships on our campus. Expense money is included in aca- with pro pluyersY from can be as much a factor in a player’s speech as how smart demic scholarships. They run about $500 more than our athletic A. I think ’s program sells itself. with all those he is. Even a highly intelligent person can be nervous and tongue- scholarships. winning seasons and the bowl games. Q. But the public insists on a star svstrml) tied when he confronts cameras, microphones and notebooks. Q. The court ruling that ordered the NCAA nor IO regulare That’s true. Media exposure puts a lot of heat on an I g-or l9-year-old. I don’t football telecasts has been stuyed. If the ruling stands. will you A. Q. So how do you markrt thr footbull rram? think a Saturday Night Live portrayal of a dumb football player is find yourself in the posirion of doing what you’re opposed to- A. One of our big problems is that so many college fans in the fair. arranging for Houston football telecasts? Houston area went to Texas or Texas A&M. Most of them won’t I don’t mean to gloss over what you’ve asked. We are interested A. That’s right. I think the ruling is unhealthy for college foot- in offering help with more than just classroom instruction. We ball. Television already dictates enough of what we’re domg m come to our games unless we’re playing their schools. Right now, feel it’s part of a well-rounded program. We offer mandatory football. But if the ruling stands and WC have a treelance system, we’re trying to reach the tremendous number of newcomers mov- ing to Houston. study halls, not just a time where athlctcs come in and open a things will be worse. The rich will get richer. They might h?ve gone to school at or Notre Dame, book. We have them on a daily schedule. We refer them for coun- We’re not in a bad position. We’re in the upper half of college but we would like them to come to our games now that they’re in seling if it’s necessary. football. But the sport isn’t for the top 20 or 30 teams, it’s for all Houston. We tell them in the thousands of mallcrs that the Cou- We try to impress on all our athletes that only about one in 100 the schools. If the ruling stands, we’d see Notre Dame on TV gars arc Houston’s winningest team. As the ticket deadline will make it to pro football and basketball. We want them to know every week. We could only schedule certain teams or we’d ncvcr neared, we told them that it was fourth down and two weeks to go. that we’re trying to prepare them for other careers. be on TV. I think that’s the wrong direction to go. I believe there’s We sent out about I 10,000 inserts in sports magazines this year. Q. Is the p,rogram working:’ A survey this summer showed that, such a thing as antitrust, but I also believe there’s such a thing as We have about 16,000 football season-ticket holders. and about even at Rice and SMU. which talk about their higher academic opportunity. 1,500 of them have come from contacting the new people. standards, a small percentuge of SWCf3otball seniors graduated Q. What outcome do you expectfrom the case:’ You’d be amazed at the response. People don’t know how sucm last spring. A. We’ve learned something since this issue came up. When ccssful the team has been; they don’t know WC play in the Astro- A, That’s what I would call an inflammatory statistic. I can’t colleges tried to make television deals on their own, they learned dome; they don’t know we’re a member of the Southwest Confer- compare our program with the others, but graduating in four years there weren’t as many dollars available as there were thought to ence. isn’t that common hcrc. We’re an urban university. Thirty-seven be. Sponsors aren’t willing to spend the same kind of money they percent of our students work 40 hours a week. The average stu- paid for a nationally televised game if the game the college has Many of those new people come to our school as students. A dent’s age is 27. arranged offers limited television exposure. large company like Exxon might be paying for graduate studieh. I’m not saying wc’rc doing an excellent job. But the NCAA A. You’re talking as though the ru1in.g will be upheld m the We want those people to support us. We have only I2,OtMI under- requirement is that the student-athlete make normal progress courts. graduate students (in a student body of more than 30.000). toward a degree. We do a good job in monitoring that area. Q. I’m not sure it will. If the ruling is upheld, it will be a back- Q. It appears as though there’s still a marketing co@icr. Most a. Getting back to your comments on an athlete using the lan- ward step. If it isn’t upheld, I think we will see a looscnmg up by coaches, and Bill Yeoman is certainly among guage. Aren’t you jolted when a player who has no regional the NCAA so that games not scheduled for television might be them, don’t like to see too much urtrntion given theirplayers untd accent and isn’t nervous still speaks poorly? telecast if they’re sold out. The Texas-Oklahoma game, which they’re seniors. How do you get around that problrmr A. I’m not jolted, but I think there is a problem. It’s not just a was not televised, was an example of a game that could have been A. I don’t consider it a problem. We’re selling the entire pro- Southwest Conference problem. It’s not just an athletic problem. on TV. gram, not a player or two. Hedgessays philosophical differencesan AIAW problem Barbara Hedges, assistant director of athletics Bill Grimes, president ryday studies. They learn the value of sacrifice with the sport in University of Southern California Entertainment and Sports Programming Network which they are involved and they carry this over to their academic Los Angeles Times Arizona Republic work. “One of the major problems that I saw in AIAW was that there “We cannot compete with the networks because they’re in 80 “They have learned on the field that if they give a littlc extra in was a philosophical difference. Many of the larger institutions million homes and we’re in 20 (million). We’re trying to get the practice, it sometimes pays a good reward. They also have wanted rules changes (i.e., the athlete-transfer rules) and these best we can without spending ourselves out of business.” I 1 were things we simply could not get passed legislatively. After Editorial five years, we became extremely frustrated. National High School Arhlrlic Coaches Associurion 1 Opinions Out Loud 1 “Many people, such as myself, felt very shut off from the lead- “The fall sports season poses a monumental challenge to high I I ership of the AIAW. I thought there was an anti-large-school school athletics because of the ever-increasing flow of college and lcamed that if they study for I5 minutes longer than they normally mentality within the AIAW, even though the larger schools like pro sports telecasts on week nights. The emergence of TV-frcc- do, that it pays off in the classroom.” this one, UCLA, Stanford and Arizona State real!y brought the home TV, cable TV, closed-circuit TV, super stations, VTRs- John Reeves, director of athletics visibility to the organization because of our programs.” and its far-reaching impact on the American viewing public has University of Rochester created a monster on the sports and entertainment scene. TV and The A.ssocioredPress its megabuck revenues arc reshaping the face of intercollcgiatc “I’m not criticizing big-time athletics. They have a valid and The NCAA and pro sports. [ISSNCQ27-61701 significant place in higher education. It’s right for some places, Published weekly, except biweekly m the summer. by the National Colle- David Kissinger, counselor but it’s not right for others like the University of Rochester. giate Athletic Association. Nail Avenue BL 63rd Street. P.O. Box 1906. Ankeny (Iowa) High School “Where WC get into trouble is when we pretend that athletics at Mission, Kansas 66201. Phone. Yl3/384-3220. Subscription rate: $15 Des Moines Register those schools is an avocation and that the education is serious annually. Second-class postage paid ~1 Shawnee M~ssmn. Kanws. Addrcbs corrcchons quested. Postmaster >cnd addtess changes to NCAA Publish- “We have found here that there is a high correlation between business. ing. P 0 Box 1906. Mission, Kansas 66201. academic and athletic success. Kids want to be successful in all “If we call a spade a spade and say nothing’s wrong with thst Publisher _. _. TedC Tow ventures of life, whether it be on the football field or in the clasc- and devise a curriculum for those who want to be professional Editor-in-Chief . ._._. ._. .Thomss A. Wilson room. The people involved in athletics have very little free time athletes, like we do doctors and lawyers, it would quiet my objec- Managing Editor _....._...... Bruce L. Howard Advertising Director Wallace t. Renfro on their hands and what they do have, they seem to budget prop- tion to borderline illiterates getting college degrees or athletes The Comment section of The NCAA News is offered as opinion. The views erly investing four years and not getting a college degree at all. It expressed do not neceswily represent a consensus of the NCAA member- “Kids who arc involved in activities are happy kids, productive would be a valid and sound way to prcparc those people for whaf ship. An EQunl Opportumty Employer. kids who have something to look forward to other than their eve- they want to be.” THE NCAA NEWS/November8.1982 3 )E lsewhere in EducationJ

C-average proposal debated

A proposal requirmg at least a C average of pupils who participate in extra- curricular activities like sports has drawn mixed reviews from city school offi- cials in Los An&c%. Including a suggcrtion 1~1expand it statewldc. “I strongly 5upporl it in principle,” school board prcsidcnt Tom Bartman said of board member Rita Walters’ proposal. which will hc considered at the Novem- bcr meeting of the board. However, board member Roberta Weintraub said she was “deeply troubled, because an awful lot of kids just wouldn’t show up for school except for sports. I think It’s a very hot Issue and something that affects an awful lot of people.” “All of us want to see a youngster have a C or better. hut we don’t want a young adult to drop out just because he got a 1) In algebra,” \ald board mcmbcr Richard Ferraro. Jimmie Jinkawa, athletic dircctorofcarson High School, said the plan “has its merits, but what’s going to happen to our athlctc\‘!” He warned that it might place Los Anpclcs school5 at a dlsadvantape agalllst other teams in the state. “I think if something like this passe\, we’d \cc ;I lot more kids on the streer,” Jinkawa said. “I think personally it’s not a bad den. but it’s really unfair if it’s just Los Angeles. It should be done umformly throughout the state,” he told the Associated Press. The California Interscholastic Federation. which governs clcmcntary and XC- ondary public school sport5 in the state, require5 pas\lnp at least 20 scmcstcr units in the preceding term for an athlete to bc eligible. Current Los Angclc\ school guidelines. virtually identical to the state’s, mean an athlete could be eligible for sports with four D’s and two F’s in a semester. Walters offered her proposal to counter “the myth that so many young people have that they will become a millionaire when they become a pro-sports person,” an aide said. Bartman, supporting her, disputed the “argument that some children stay in school just to play football or play in the band.” By Jim Krummel ofjumping school that they would sep- Muskingum. He picked the liberal-arts A similar proposal went into cffcct in San Franci

FIELDGOAU YDS AVG TD YDSPG PC1 FGPG TO IPG 246 1396 s 174.5 IO00 2 44 0 1.25 193 1421 :: 864 2 37 277 1413 1: 157.9157.0 a75 2 33 1074 10 153.4 ,875 2.10 :: 1379 1: 139.7153.2 941 2 00 ,750 2 00 1is ::i 1% 10 129.2 6% 17.3 a5 1135 636 1.75 :z 1057 ; 126.1117 4 789 i 67 z: 157 692 11 111.5 lj al2 1.62 144 185 994 : 101.11104 13 765 1 62 137 809 ~_~ ~~~.~JUTttCAROLlNA. 14 933 1 56 :; 161 889 INBUTLER.GEORGlA 14 ,770 1.56 216 666 1: 90.896.2 VECLARK. SOUTHERN MISS. 14 700 156 161 129 % i 93.7907 PUNllNG 187 : 90.4 CLNOYOSTDAVG MIN 36PUNTSPERGAME) NO AVG 161 :: SR 14 247 117.6 A EGGIE ROBY. IOWA.. $k 41 480 151 780 B !I!.! JR 24 389 0162 JlMMYCOLOUI~,TENNESSEE 136 605 SR 9 145 116.1 JIMARNOLD,VANDERBlLT.. :: :: ii.; 772 : 86.485 a SR 18 258 0143 JOHNKIDD,NORTHWESTERN JR 49 46 0 769 SR 11 150 113.6 MIKEMEES.BR~GHAMYOUNG.... 34 45.4 769 ; 85.485 4 JR 20 265 113 2 CRAIGJAMES.SMU.. :E( 54 45 2 SO 23 296 0129 BUCKYSCRIBNER,KANSAS 61 44.0 SO 12 152 012 7 FtALFMOJSIEJENKO MICH.ST. El 63 44 6 JR 11 139 0126 MALCOLMSIMMON$ALABAMA 37 44 4 JR 19 239 1126 RONSTOWE.BAYLOR i; 50 43 a JR 17 202 0119 JAMESGARGUS,TCU 55 434 JR 16 190 111.9 HARRYNEWSOME,WAKEFOREST ;i 51 43 4 JR 26 289 0111 DALEMONEY.UTAHSTATE 41 434 JR 27 295 010.9 MICHAELKEELING, OKLAHOMA % 42 433 JR 14 148 010.6 EVAN CRISWELL. FLORIDA 31 432 JR 16 169 1106 JOHNCONWAY,OKLAHOMASTATE :Ef 36 43.2 Division I-A team leaders - PASSING OFFENSE RUSHING DEFENSE GCAR YDS AVGTD YDSPG ATT CMP INT PCT YOS YOSPG VIRGINIATECH 8 277 375 1.4 2 46 9 LONG BEACH ST. ., 383 219 19 57 2 2719 339 9 LSU 16 3 57 7 DUKE 336 205 13 61 0 2753 305 9 NOTREDAME ! SE :E 1.9 3 64 9 ILLINOIS 425 263 13 61 9 3054 305 4 22 5 77 2 BRIGHAM YOUNG 313 193 18 61 7 2627 291 9 $H&;;CAL 98 284315 618725 23 B 80.6 284 175 12 61 6 2621 291 2 22 3 84 7 343 213 62 1 2619 291 0 ARKANSASSANJOSEST :’ ‘. .’ : ::: !;: 23 7 87.1 321 155 1: 48 3 2544 282 7 CLEMSON 8 283 715 25 5 a9 4 254 144 56 7 2209 276 1 ARIZONAST 9 385 a09 21 5 a9.9 PASS1110EFFIWM~V 344 198 1: 57 6 2462 273 6 NO CAROLINA 8 279 754 94 2 INT YOS, TD RATING 391 200 51 2 2381 264 6 PITTSBURGH a 270 765 ;.i i 95.6 PC1 POINTS 303 147 1: 48 5 2101 262 6 MICHIGAN 9 322 923 29 9 1026 6.92 153.8 343 58 3 2336 259 6 CENTRALMICH 9 369 947 2.6 10 105.2 6 78 146 5 339 :z 1: 52.8 2315 257 2 FRESNOST 9 321 955 30 7 1061 3.70 144.0 197 60 6 2306 256 2 NEWMEXICO... 9 355 965 2.7 12 107 2 6 02 143.5 %: 130 1: 49 6 2204 253 8 NEBRASKA 9 329 969 29 5 1077 6 12 142.8 397 217 ia 54 7 2486 248 6 ALABAMA 9 335 987 29 6 1097 a.30 141 0 321 177 551 18.38 236 0 WASHINGTON 9363 995 27 4 1106 442 140 a 310 173 1: 55 a 2122 235.8 SMU 9 377 1016 27 5 1129 4.70 138.2 356 202 13 56 7 2114 234 9 TEMPLE '. 9 337 1017 3.0 a 113.0 327 177 7 54.1 2085 231.7 ;.:: 1% PASS DEFENSE RUSHINQ OFF 7 19 1364 ““Cl 7.44 135.1 I VII G CAR AVG TO YDSPG 5.31 133.6 INT PCT YDS All TD YDSPG NEBRASKA.. 9 575 6.2 38 399 1 5.10 1299 KANSAS i ;; C\; 7 40.7 1040 6 4 9 1156 OKLAHOMA 9 572 5 2 26 328 6 6 78 129.8 NO CAROLINA B 46 7 932 47 4 116.5 flRlF;;CE .l; ;;; 5.2 32 318 1 TEXAS : 7 17; ;z 5 444 836 7 1 5 1194 5 0 26 295 4 so I 142 82 5775 5 352 1062 748 6 E 1296127 5 MISS. STATE 9 162 a5 10 52 5 1095 68 4 121 7 SOUTHERNMISS 9 519 5 0 27 290 4 ii 10 i25 262 ii.9i ii 3.07 3048 721 14 3.31 127.2 KANSASST 99 15 469 1117 53 3 124 1 SMU 9 514 5 0 21 286 2 SR 9 185 114 61.62 7 3.78 1528 6.26 2 :i 125.5127.0 MISSOURI _... 103 12 435 1124 47 5 124.9 WlClilTAST 10 574 4 9 24 279 3 SR 9 2.94 159 5599 9 3.17 1935 6.61 16 GEORGIA 9 553 4.5 22 2783 JR 9 255 1% 53.33 B 314 1825 7.16 14 5.49 125.3 ARIZONAST.ISU...... 8; 209;;; 10497 1311 49.6443 10091128 4852 52 3: NEW MEXICO 9 473 5.3 25 277 2 SR 9 319 194 60.81 12 3.76 22% 710 11 NEWMEXICOST 95 12 46.6 1265 62 13 1265 ALABAMA 4.6 25 272.1 SO B 223 135 60 54 12 5.38 1573 7.05 10 :.:i 124.3123 8 LOUISVILLE : : :. ‘! ::: 1:; 7 505 1216 63 9 135.1 NO CAROLINA :. .:::.: : :;! 4415 2634 IOWASTATE. 9 214 12 47.2 1254 59 5 139 3 CLEMSON a 457 4 6 22 260.2 OKLAHOMAST 1.: :. 4 478 1121 62 8 140.1 $;UBU$N ; :4; 4.7 17 2539 ALMJRW~~RU~NERK TEXASTECH ; 1:; i: 13 492 1297 66 9 1441 45 17 2527 RUSH REC PR KOR YDS YDSPG WESTVIRGINIA 9 235 117 14 498 1300 55 4 144.4 MISS. STATE...... 9 445 5.0 17 249 6 14u9 ia7 4 ERNEST ANDERSON OKLAHOMAST ...... ;E i 1398 103 .__ CENTRALMICH 9 220 119 19 54 1 1332 i: 1: 148 0 WYOMING 4 i 20 248 4 SAM DEJARNETTE $0 MISS ...... 1257 0 35: 1625 liO.6 HOUSTON .: ..‘I’ : 9 200 9 495 1341 149.0 MICHIGAN.. ..’ ..‘I 54: 50 18 2444 CARL MONROE, UtAH ... ., ...... 1135 1615 1794 OKUHOMA ST 4 6 7 241.2 HERSCHELWALKER. GEORGIA ...... z i ! 3B4 1534 170.4 OHIO STATE 9 462 4.7 22 240 6 1480 164 4 MIKE ROZIER. NEBRASKA ...... JR 9 1::: 46 E ::!%A,NORTH ES ERN. .:. .: ..: 1098 250215234 lg116114 2015a 47.648.754 0 151513471231 547053 1243 151.5153149 79 EAST CAROLINA 9 481 4417 2367 CURTIS ADAMS CENTRALMICH so 7 1074 71 i 1145 163 6 TCU : 9 204 105 9 51 5 1393 68 6 154.8 NAP MCCAutd NAW...... SO a 578 150 2% 26: 1292 161.5 ERIC DICKERSO!/ SMU...... SR 9 1421 1446 160.7 TI&IN~V~I~ MARGIN WILLIE WULT TENNESSEE ...... 4 ;i 12: 46: 1209 151.1 TURNOVERSGAINED TURNOVERSLOST MARGIN GREG ALLEN. kORIDA ST ...... :I : 0 452 1163 1454 FUM INT TOTAL FUM TOTAL /GAME HENRY ELLARD FRESNOST ...... K 1182 -1 1299 144.3 PENN STATE 21 a I;': 22 2000 TIM SPENCER, bHl0 STATE ...... z: ii " 1223 135.9 GEORGIA :. 1: iJ ii 1: 0 :: i 778 MICHAEL GUNTER, TULSA ...... JR 9 1% ii i 1202 KANSAS ST.. 1.776 ROBERT LAVEllE. GEORGIATECH ...... so 9 066 205 1147 1% LSU ii ! 1760 ANTHONY CARTER, MICHIGAN ...... SR 9 24; 2:: 1109 123.2 VANDERBILT . . . . . :: 1; 1: 34 1: 10 :A 1.750 JAIME COVINGTON SYRACUSE...... so 9 4 7;: 1102 WESTVIRGINIA 15 1: 2 1: : 1: 1667 VINCENT WHITE. StANFORD ...... ” ;; ; 104o 25i 970 1;:: SOUTHERN MISS.. 1.1 1.667 MIKE GRAYSON DUKE...... ii ::i 0 ,135 952 119 0 NElPUNllNG SCORING DEFENSE VANCE JOHNSOk. ARIZONA ...... so 7 391 155 1:; 119118.7 0 NO YDS NET G PTS AVG LIONEL JAMES. AUBURN ...... : JR 9 6O6 57 O 'E PUNTS AVG RET RO AVG ARKANSAS 65 81 CURT WARNER PENN STATE...... ;; ; 38i 0 1084 116 2 TENNESSEE.. 41 464 17 134 43.2 SOUTHERN CAL ! Fi 8.6 BRYAN THOM& PIllSBURGH ...... 2Y ARIZONA 41 42.8 9 21 42 3 ARIZONAST 9 RICKY EDWARDi, NORTHWESTERN ...... SR 10 648 i 20: 1163g43 11i.i VANDERBILT.:: 60 452 26 177 42.2 VIRGINIATECH i.! OKUHOMA 42 43.3 16 54 420 NEBRASKA i ii; 108 BRIGHAM YOUNG . ...:.. 34 454 14 132 41.5 TEXAS ..:' 7 77 11.0 RECEIVING Cl I? CT “OS TD NORTHWESTERN 50 45.7 28 235 41 0 NO CAROLINA. 8 88 110 ARIZONA ST... .._.... 51 43 1 15 112 40.9 GEORGIA 9 101 11 2 MIKE MARTIN, ILLINOIS ...... ii 10 ii esi 4 "'62 55 5 61 KANSAS 62 44 2 30 209 40.9 LSU .: GORDON HUDSON. BRIGHAM YOUNG ...... ‘1 JR OKLAHOMA ST 37 43.1 16 96 40 5 SMU i 16 1:: ...... ii E i 5.7 DARREN LONG. LONG BEACH ST WAKE FOREST. 51 434 17 166 402 ALLAMA MAllHEWS. VANDERBILT ...... :i 2 611 VINCENT WHITE. STANFORD...... i :; 476 PUNT RETURNS KICKOFF RETURNS HENRY ELLARD, FRESNOST ...... :: 1162 1: ::53 G NO YOS TO AVG G NO YDS TD AVG OARRAL HAMBRlCK.NOI.-LAS VEGAS .... i : 5.2 AUBURN.. 9 25 407 0 16.3 UCLA 9 22 613 0 279 TOTAL OFFENSE WILLIE GAULT TENNESSEE ...... :i :: E MICHIGAN 9 23 360 1 157 LSU.. 8 13 341 0 26.2 GPLAYS YDSAVG TO' YDSPG NORMAN JORDAN. VANDERBILT...... Fi 348 ; :: COLORADO ST OHIO STATE 9 17 427 0 25 1 NEBRASKA 9 749 4779 6 4 50 DON ROBERTS SAN DIEGO ST...... 319 :i NEBRASKA ” : :“B ii: : 1: i UTAH. 9 20 499 1 24.9 FLORIDAST. " :' 8 608 3756 6 2 41 :i;.i ROBERT GRIFF/N. TULANE ...... 45 ii; :.i PENNSTATE...: :: : 9 34 4% 1 13.8 NEV -USVEGAS.. B 28 691 0 24 7 BRIGHAMYOUNG..... 9 656 4207 64 36 467._. 4 JEFF CHAMPINE. COLORADO ST...... i 43 743 i SOUTHERN MISS 9 20 265 ARMY 9 33 806 2 24 4 DUKE.. 9 683 4077 6 0 33 453 0 DAVID LEWIS CALIFORNIA ...... :i 43 :.i NEW MEXICO 9 663 3948 6.0 40 438.7 DWAYNE OlXt!tN, FLORIDA ...... JR : 38 :!i ; &EGti... 9 3218 234394 ;3 ;;,;12 3 TEXASFLORIDAST. 7a 2612 2%627 0 24.224.1 NO. CAROLINA 8 662360053 29 437 5 CHRIS CASTOR DUKE ...... 42 13 :.: NAW...... 9 29 344 0 11.9 ARIZONA 8 13 312 1 240 PENN STATE 9 677 3911 5.8 40 434 6 BRYAN TwOMA% PIllSBURGH ...... :: ii 37 i2 GEORGIATECH 9 17 197 1 11 6 SAN JOSE ST 9 24 573 1 23.9 WICHITAST 10 758 4308 5 7 37 4308 JON HARVEY NORTHWFSTERN...... 10 46 647 : :.i AIR FORCE 10 744 4301 5.8 37 430 1 DAVID ROBEkON. HOUSTON ...... :: 41 579 BOSTON COL .: 9 67.9 38% 5 7 26 4296 RllL OENRLD. WAKE FOREST ...... :...... SR ; 407 : :.i Division I-A single game highs UCLA 9 691 3843 5 6 39 427 0 TODD JENKINS. NORTHWESTERN ...... 10 :: - ILLINOIS...... lO 772 4181 5.4 27 *is.._.. 1 TIM BREWSTER, ILLINOIS ...... :fl 10 ii: ; 2 PUYER ;f;?;/;E. 9 624 3725 6 0 24 413 9 MARK CLAYTON. LOUISVILLE ...... SR :z 4 4.4 Ruahln9 wad Pwln9 Plapr. loam(a9ponant daln) TOIJI 9 688 3710 5 4 34 412 2 GERALD MCNEIL. BAYLOR ...... iz Rushmgand passrng plays. .WhttTaylar, Vanderb~ll(~eor j la Octoberl6) '77 LONGBEACHST : a 616 3294 5.3 ia 411.7 CARL FRANKS. DUKE ...... i! :i 376 : :.: Rushing and passirqyards MarkMcKay. San DiagoSl ( awall, Navember6) 510 OHIO STATE 9 645 3702 5 7 30 411 3 Rushm plays Curils Adams, Central Mlch (Kent Stats. October 23) ALABAMA. 9 660 3689 5.6 34 4099 Nalrua RInpyards ...I ..Sam DaJarnalte, Southern MISS. (Florida St Seplember25) SOUTHERNMISS. 9 694 3671 5.3 30 407.9 TOTAL OFFENSE STANFORD 9 632 3649 5.8 33 405 4 RUSHING PASSING TOTALOFI LENSE ARKANSAS...... :... 8 663 3230 4.9 25 403.7 CAR GAIN LOSS NET All YOS PLAYS YDS YOPL TDR' YDSPG 520 'TOUCHDOWNSSCOREOBYRUSHINGPASSING ONLY 2602 61 :: 325318.8 2 6 TODDDILLON.LONGBEACHSTSTEVE YOUNG, BRIGHAM YOUNG.. 5695 514111 158211 303-47 3%298 26492566 :ii 2869 7 3 TONY EASON. ILLINOIS 70 202 226 -24 423 3048 493 3024 6.1 17 SCORING OFFENSE . BOSTON COL 77 433 250 183 304 2402 361 2585 68 1: i:: FtANOALLCUNNINGHAM. NEV L.V. ,:. 72 243 280 -37 267 1956 339 1919 5 7 :i 274.1 Racelvmg yards 2:: NEBRASKA 2456 6.7 Puntratumyards.... 125 FLORIDA ST. . ..‘. : i TOMJOHN RAMSEY, ELWAY STANFORD UCLA ,..,.., ,. .., 10650 322153 241268 -115al 260327 23752560 :!f 2445 6 5 20 :x Kickott ratum vards 188 PENNSTATE BENBENNd DUKE 39 38 173 -135 2% 2447 338 2312 6.8 la 2569 ’ scorlnfl UCLA : 1992 54 16 249.0 Touchdownsandpmnts James Matthews. Washington SI. (Idaho, September 11) 56 ..30 NEWMEXICO. TERRYMlKEHOHENSEt NUGdl COLORADOMINNESOTA ST. :! 17189 220la7 -131bl6 3%315 21232207 ii; 2191 6.0 1: 243240.3 4 Freld goals made Al Del Greco. A;b$; (Kentucky, October9) 6 SMU : BABE LAURNBEAG. INDIANA ;; 16 117 -101 319 2266 343 WASHINGTON :z i.; 9 231.1 LSU i GIRYJEFF TEDFORD. SCHOFIELD FdESNOST WAKE FOREST 51 12016 170151 -154-31 329242 20662003 % 2035 6.9 23 226 1 MARYLAND... WHIT TAYLOR VANDERBILT.. 111 3a; f3: 143 281 1641 392 6;; BRIGHAM YOUNG : JEFF HOST&R WEST VIRGINIA.. 36 -19 231 1555 267 1:;: :.i 1: 223.0219 4 '883 AIR FORCE 10 SCOTT CAMF’BELt. PURDUE 58 124 171 -47 314 2021 372 1974 53 595 FRESNOST STEVE ClARKSON, SAN JOSE ST., 69 225 196 29 284 1935 353 1984 5.6 1; 219.3218 2 NO CAROLINA .i 77 210 -133 339 2079 383 1946 51 9 216.2 .:i STANFORD 2147 4 7 ;: DUKE. i TOM TUNNlCLlF#E, ARIZONA -80 226 1791 1711 6.4 1: :1&i ALABAMA '1689 55 13 211.1 Totalflntdowns Nsbraska(NswMer~co St.. Saptsmberl8) '43 TEXAS AhM. : DANNYDAN MARINO BARRETT PllkSBURGH CINCINNATI 2951 ‘ii 1:: -36-56 255260 1725 ii Points scomd Florida (WastTarasSt .Octoberl6) 77 MICHIGAN 9 RANDY WRIG/IT. WISCONSIN 52 245 B4 161 245 1702 297 1F3 2 1: ;I! i 'All-tlma racord ARIZONA ‘Tm-FIJN ABE PIAYERS TDS SCOW) AND PASSkU FOR .' Tiqs allbma rawrd WICHITAST .,...... _...... 1: THE NCAA NEWS/November8,1982 5 Football Notes Passing yards, total offense at all-time highs

A Record Offensive Saturday National passing yardage in Divi- sion I-A avcrapcd an amazing 7Y3.Y yards per game (both team\ combined) for 51 games last Saturday-an all- tmlc high. That wiped out the previous high of 370.0 on Scptcmbcr 25 (with three Saturdays since in the high 360s). At the same time. total offense last Saturday avcragcd an all~timc~ high 732.0 yards per game and scoring hit 46.2~below the season-high of 46.6 a week earlier. This record offensive Saturday pushed the season figures to 365. I passing, 700.8 total offense and 43.6 scoring-all well above the all-time season highs for Division 1-A. And for the first time in collcgc football his- tory, season passing yardage will exceed season rushing yardage. Last season, passing yardage hit a record-high 320.4, hhattering the old Florida quarterback Wayne Peace Mike Hohensee, Minnesotu yuar- Pete Mandley of Northern Arizona Tennessee’sversatile Willie Gauit mark of 315.4 in 1968; and total has 144.0 points in passing @- terback, runks among the rap 10 in ranks among the leaders in kickoff is among the Division I-A leaders in offense also set a record at 668.2. The ciency, good,for third place among Division I-A total offense with returns and punt returns in Divi- three categories-all-purpose run- 1981 figures improve, howcvcr, when ning, receiving and kickoflreturns. you rcmovc the 40 teams that moved to Division I-A leaders. 24.3.4 yards per game. sion I-AA I-AA. The Y7 team\ now in I-A aver- mon was 24 games totaling 2,640 122 , scored projects to 2 13, my nose was broken four or five times, to come from nowhcrc amidst the muf- aged 336.8 passing and 673.9 total plays, both teams combined. Now a compared to the record ot 174 by hut nothing serious.” fled groans of calisthenics, wrote Mike offense last season. career is 44 games totalmg 6.160 Lydcll Mitchell of Penn State in I97 I Dobbs also rcmcmbcrs returning Madigan of the Rocky Mountain The record high for scoring, now in plays. So to project his career flgurcs Whltc’s rushing total of I, I2 I projects from bowl games and playing varsity News. No one can forget the time in JcOp”rdy, I\ 43.2 points per game in on modern terms, you multiply his fig- to 1,962, which would be second in I- basketball two nights later, acting in I98 1, during one of former coach IY69. ures by 2.33. Is that pcrfcctly clear” A history to the record 2.342 by Mar- school plays, never missing a meeting Chuck Fairbanks’ extcndcd evening In Division I-AA last Saturday, SO 552 Points For Old 98 cus Allen in IYX I of the student council and graduating practices, when Ray casually informed games produced averages of 696.6 Harmon’s 237 career points thus White also was 2 I-for-43 passing in scvcn semesters. And he had the stony-faced head coach that total offense, 348.5 rushing, 348. I projects to 552 points in the current for 475 yards in eight games and had a enough tlmc left as a senior to com because of the change from daylight to passing and 47.6 points. All four ftg- era. The I-A record is 356 points by 42.5yard punting avcrapc (the plete 62.6 pcrccnt of his passes (high- standard time, practice had run an hour ures are season highs. The I-AA fig- Tony Dorsctt for Pittsburgh in 1973- national champion averaged 42.Y- est in the nation). average 7.97 yards too long urcs Novcmbcr 21, 1981, wcrc 355.5 1976. Harmon also threw I6 touch- and in those days 20 yards was per rushing-passing play (then a “WC grew up in a family of seven passing and 47.8 scoring, but that was down passes. 50 hc scored or pas\cd deducted if the punt went into the end national record), avcragc 48.3 punting kids,” Marty explains. “WC were just for just 21 game\, when the division for 333 points, which projects to 766 zone). Oh. yes, Colorado was 8-O. and intercept four passes in a I O-O sca- raised to be bold. My mother (Evelyn) had just SO members. points in the current era. The record is And did White win the Hclsman’? No, son. “There was plenty of time for IS bold. My father (Ray Sr.) is bold.” This record Saturday pushed I-AA 562 scored and passed for by Jim Mc- hc was second to Yale’s Clint Frank. studies and campus activities,” Dobbs Ray adds that things just come about season figures to 330.3 passing. 642.X Mahon, Brigham Young 1981. (Harm spontaneously during serious times. total offense and 40.7 scormg. The man kicked 33 extra points and two “You just have to do it sometimes,” same 92 teams last season averaged field goals.) Today’s college pla ers are more talented, bet- says Marty, picking up the line of ream 318.7 passing, 642.0 total offense and In Harmon’s day, single-wmg tail- ter conditioned an i play a more sophisticated soning. “You just try to help people 40.X scoring. backs ran, passed, kicked, rcccivcd get by. And, hey, it’s a free service.” Elway, Walker Career Figures and rcturncd punts and kickoffs. His game. “But I think we had more fun.” - Glenn (lohn Clagrtt, Colorado SID) Stanford’s John Elway has rcachcd career rushing total of 2, I IO yards, Dobbs, all-America tailback at Tulsa in 1942. Quotes Of The Week 8.41 I yards in career total offense and bclicvc it or not, was a record for that North Dakota State coach Don Mar- 8,667 in career passing yards. With era of NCAA official record-keeping, ton, after his ninth straight victory to two games left, he is now third on each A Question For Mr. Goldberg said. “I don’t think it’s that way now. which started in lY37. Harmon aver- clinch the North Central Conference list. He seems likely to reach second in aged 30.5 yards on kick-off returns, Third in the I037 Hcl

1 The NCAA Football Statistics [Through games of November 61 Division I-AA individual’ leaders

FIELD COALS CAR VDS AVG YOSPG CL G FGA FG PC1 FGPG YOS 1212 5.2 134 7 TONYZENDEJAS,NEVADA-RENO JR 9 29 23 ,793 256 172 z: 1070 46 133 7 MIKEPRINOLE WESTERN so 9 15 633 1 67 72 219 1113 123 7 St? 9 1: 15 789 1.67 54 161 704 117 3 SR 9 15 76 229 008 115.4 JR 9 ;: ii! E 157 1020 113 3 SR 10 :o' ; 198 990 110 0 JR 10 22 1: ;f? 1.:: 230 983 109 2 10 769 1.25 67 '44 647 1059 :i ! 1: 21 172 951 105 7 JR 9 z 29 gg 223 105 0 so 10 :: 12 0' 199 ii: 104 6 so 8 14 9 ,643 1 12 93 177 938 104 2 55 165 812 101.5 192 903 100 3 195 860 95.6 NOYDSl IDAVG ‘CLNOYOSTDAVG NO AVG 211 949 94 9 9 146 0164 SR 15 502 233 5 75 44.1 175 93 4 11 179 SD 11 324 029.5 43 44 0 192 i:: 93 0 14 220 KY SR 12 331 1216 136 744 93 0 0147 SO 19 516 127.2 :: :; i 101 541 90.2 :i :t: 114 1 SO 11 447 0263 52 42 2 162 709 66 6 25 332 SR 11 289 026.3 61 42 2 153 772 85 a 16 206 ;1;; SF' 17 430 0253 5' 41 0 12 151 0126 SR 10 248 024.8 23 272 011 8 FR 12 297 024 7 ii :1: 011 2 SCORING^, 19 213 SR 21 519 024.7 53 411 XP i 15 167 1111 SR 12 291 0242 61 41 1 13 142 0109 JR 18 434 0241 56 411 2: 21 223 0106 SO 17 406 0239 45 40 9 0 29 307 110 6 SO 14 333 0236 52 409 16 169 110 6 SR 19 450 023 7 43 409 i 22 23' 1105 JR 17 402 0236 49 406 12 125 010.4 FR 17 402 0236 50 404 Division I-AA team leaders PASSING OFFENSE RUSHING DEFENSE GCAR YDS 2: SC STATE 10 320 594 59 4 16 “2 ‘“6YDSPG FLORIDA AL M '7 1 66 2 0 NICHOLLSST i "3:: E 18 4 70.4 JACKSONST .1; if; 0; 19 1' 73 2 c! 20 3 77.4 44 13 ~$&ti~ ,', 1; :;; ;6; ;,i i 6282 25 2 TENN -CHATTANOOGA. 9 343 785 2 23 10 87 2 GRAMELING 9 361 804 21 13 89.3 2 EASTERNILL 22 6 94 9 WESTERN MICH "" 'i "3:: "8:: PLSSINC EFFICIENCY MOREHEADST ,,,, 9 346 869 252.5 83 izi INT CMP TO RATING BOWLINGGREEN 25 4 98 4 IN1 PCT YOS ‘Al?TO PC1 PtI$ DELAWARE.... i % :z 27 5 96 5 5; : Fl “FE SE 6 264 1834 17 606 NEVADA-RENO 9 336 982 2.9 11 1091 so 10 184 104 56 52 7 380 1518 E 16 870 146 9 TENNESSEEST SR 9 148 68 45.95 4 2 70 1316 8 91 10 676 137 6 BUCKNELL ,, II E E ii i 11;: SR 9 312 ‘17 56 73 '0 321 235' 7 54 21 673 '35 8 MONTANA ST 10 334 1196 36 15 1198 JR 8 177 110 62 15 6 3.39 1262 7 24 10 565 134 9 ALCORNSTATE 9 325 1094 34 14 1216 FR 6 172 111 64 53 12 698 1377 6 01 6 465 133 2 NWLOUISIANA 9 353 1103 31 13 1226 so 8 171 6 4.68 1322 7 73 12 7.02 133 1 6 4 91 1286 7 69 11 675 132 7 SR B 163 '8; %Z PASSDEFENSE 6 1.88 2384 747 20 6 27 132.' RtJSHI;GO~ :ENSE :1 i ::; 'Z %9i 7 5.43 131 6 ,111 5 3 BB '044 6 09 'NT PC1 YOS AT-t TO VOSPG YOS AVG TD YOSPG SR 6 137 67 46 91 7 5 11 1079 G All CMP 7 68 11 803 131 3 13 335 732 44 4 91 5 ARKANSASST 9 542 2263 4.2 14 251 4 7 56 TENNESSEEST 8 167 8 4 94 1225 :i MAINE 10 556 4 5 29 250 2 i: 8 162 i; 2:: 3 185 1163 'Y ii: 127125 72 iiNT&RTEE 7 507 675 6 0 5 97 2 7 18 6 99 2 FURMAN 9 524 E 4 3 21 249 8 6 3 77 1056 7 440 124 4 ; 146170 67 8 394 893 5 3 JR 9 159 96 61 64 6 64 7 457 074 5 5 SC STATE 10 532 2467 4 6 77 246 7 7 77 15 411 123.8 NORTHEASTERN...... 69 16 4 30 2037 i 12; : 103105 08 MCNEESEST 9 506 4 4 22 246 1 10 709 1162 4 284 123.3 APPALACHIAN ST...... 1; :;:; g; 51 ;; ; ;fi: 19663 537050.67 6 24 SOUTHERNU. ..,, '. ,, 6" 106106.7 7 BOSTONU.... 6 431 %S 4 5 22 242 4 SR 9 252 143 66 75 13 516 1647 7 33 11 4.37 122 4 2 NO CARO.A&T B" 1,": 56 '2 397 854 :: DELAWARE.. 6 457 1650 40 21 231.2 SOJR 6 370145 2; ;; ;I 19 514 2476 6 69 22 5 95 '22.0 14 36.4 969 5 1 : 107 7 NEVADA-REND 9 471 2014 4315 2230 7 4.83 121.2 GRAMBLING 9 190 73 i716 40 10 714 5 7 4 83 983 '3 472 992 5 0 NDRTHERN'LL. a 429 6 4.'7 9.92 1ENN:CHATTANOOGA 9 197 93 ii! 9 625 121 0 16 529 1137 60 1% M'OOLETENN 2oii 4314 2093 :; Ii 2: 1:: "5::: 7 77 12 490 1198 WESTERNCARO " 10 19' 101 23 939 1903 21 402 1024 5 3 z TENN -CHATTANOOGA' ': "4:: lwJ0 3 8 17 208.9 16 5 33 2332 7.77 5 167 "8 5 FLORIDAAL M 9 194 70 MARSHALL ,, ,,, " ,, 9 154 9 506 1030 67 7 114": NORTHEASTERN 8 405 1663 4 1 16 2019 71 ; ::: 2: ii7 ;: 5 3 62 906 6 58 4 290 118 5 AKRON ;"5 7 462 1042 57 CITADEL 9 453 1821 4013 2023 MIODLETENN 1: ::: 109 16 436 1172 47 i 1156117 2 SW M'SSOURIST .lO 500 1944 3.9 18 1944 WESTERNKY 9 175 10 474 1065 61 8 LAFAYETTE 6 351 1553 44 16 194.' CL -G RUSH BALLSTATE ,,,, 9 183 :; 11 497 1067 56 6 1% EASTERNKY 8 369 1549 42 11 1936 PETEMANDLEY,NORTHERNARIZ. JR 9 EASTTENNESSEE '07 100 10 535 1138 61 HOLYCROSS 9 507 1737 3 4 19 193.0 PAULANORIE.YALE JR 6 62 SWMISSOURIST Ii 230 '12 14 487 1301 57 z 130126 41 INDIANAST. ,,, 10 496 1922 39 14 1922 GARRVPEARSON.MASSACHUSETTS SR 9 ALCORN STATE '6 372 1186 54 JAMESMADISDN 9 431 1702 39 12 169 1 CALWHITFIELD RHOOEISLANO '% SC STATE 1: ::: 1;: 11 442 1370 5 1 : 131132 60 RHODEIS'ANO... 9 439 1684 3 6 14 1671 RICHERENBERG,COlGATE ;R" : TURNOVER MARGIN EOGODBOLT,LEHlGH iE TURNOVERSGAINED TURNOVERSLOST MARGIN PAR'SWICKS.YOUNGSTDWNST i! : 1113 FUM IN1 TOTAL FUM IN1 TOTAL /GAME AVG TO'YOSPG SCOtlYCALDWELL,TX~ARLlNGTDN s"; 8' 951 MlAMl(0 ) 10 5 15 1 556 PAULLCWIS,6OSTONtJ 1070 VMI ,, .,, ,, 19" le6 i; 1 444 30 16 '800 33 12 '91 4 VICWALLACE, IDAHO. WESTERNKV 27 9 1; ;: 1 333 31 19 1970 JOEMARKUS.CONNECTICUT.. zi : 4:: MAINE 15 :: i: 22 1 300 JEROMESTELLY.WESTERNlLL SR 8 0 HARVARD 8 33 14 1974 1 250 3, 17 1994 JERRYBUTLER SELOU'SIANA JR 9 772 PENNSYLVANIA ii ii B' 1:12 zi 1 250 j5 9 2035 M'KEWILLIAMS,ORAKE SR 10 0 LAFAYETTE " 1: 11 23 7 6 13 1 250 CARLWILL'AMS.TEXASSOUTHERN ., SR 10 0 32 19 211.0 NETPUNTtNE FR 6 SCORING OEFENSE 3.7 7 232 0 GARVBENOIT,NORTHEASTERN 704 NO YDS NET TONYBDODIE.MONTANAST 756 G PTS AVG 40 16 2364 PUNTS AVG RET RET AVG AMEROWARE.DRAKE :21 'i WESTERNMICH. 3 7 10 244.2 TERRVLVMON.BALLSTATE JR 6 iii BOWLINGGREEN 37 429 14 72 41 0 EASTERN'LL :; if 39 13 2449 T NN-CHATTANOOGA 52 42 2 12 181 38 7 GREGISEMAN.MDNTANA SR 9 837 4 2 22 253 3 hFONTANAST 59 404 22 99 38 7 JAYPElERSON.M'AMI 0 ) JR 9 945 40 18 256.1 505 YOUNGSTOWNST 53 405 29 111 36.4 4 3 13 2576 MlCHAELADAMS.SOU $ HERNU so 9 EASTERNKY 32 36.6 7 13 36 2 ANTHONYREE0.S C STATE. SR 9 1020 TENNESSEEST 43 414 23 144 380 MIODLETENN .,,, 107 107 37 16 2599 TENN -CHATTANOOGA 9 103 11.4 37 11 2611 EASTERNKENTSTATEILL ...,,,,,,,,. 6567 3942 92 4327 123 38 0 HOLYCROSS 9 111 123 4 2 16 273.7 RECEIVING HARVARD 106 13 2 39 14 2749 TD CTPG BROWNDELAWARE...... 434' 384409 1612 2;;126 ;;; DELAWARE : 106 132 4 0 ‘8 215 6 OONLEWIS.COLUhlBIA MARSHALL 52 41 0 21 169 37 98 BOWLINGGREEN B 106 13.2 40 14 2760 KEVlNGUTHRIE,PRlNCETON : 8774 ~PASSINGONLY B'LLREGGID.COLUMBIA 11 71 PUNTRETURNS KICKOFF RETURNS MARVlNWALKER,NORTHTExASST 660 9 G ND VOS TO AVG TD AVG MIKE WILLIAMS, DRAKE RR7 4 :.; NICHOLLSST 9 18 293 1 '6 3 MlAMl(0 : % :z 1 296 TRACYSINGLETDN.HOWARO 5 57 MISS VALLEY 9 11 147 1 134 SC STAT4 2 294 MARKMANLEY.WESTTExASST 4 5.7 DARTMOUTH 8 16 12 7 NICHOLLSST 'i :: & 1 26' JERRYR'CE,MlSS VALLEY 850 NORTHERNAR'Z 9 28 '32 ; 12 6 WESTERNKY 2 259 JEFFSANDERS. WILLIAM8 MARY 650 4 :i LAFAYETTE 8 25 309 1 12 4 BOWLINGGREEN i ;: :;: 0 24' PATOUNSMORE.DRAKE 547 i 52 NORTHTEXASST' '95 0 122 TENN~CHA'TANOOGA 9 2' 497 JACKGATEHOUSE.LAFAYETTE 682 TENN -CHATTANOOGA if 2 442 1 11 9 EASTERNKY a 28 650 i z: TOMRADLE.VMI 513 ! :1 PENNSYLVANIA 8 16 190 1 11 9 TENNESSEEST 8 16 410 0 22a KURTWRIGLEY,WMAMARY 719 JAMESMAO'SON 9 28 331 1 11 8 MURRAYSTATE 9 25 566 0 226 JACKfJALY,DARTMOUTH 789 : 20" BRAOURSCHEL.PRlNCETON 474 FARRISCURRY,PRlNCETDN 372 3 :: Division I-AA single game highs KIMMETCALF.BDISEST 506 : 46 JIMDAVIDSON, LEHIGH 457 PLAYER 1 4544 OENNlSROGAN.WEBERST 295 RurhlngandPasslng Playsr.Tsrm oppsnant,dale) Total TOMMUT,RHODElStANO 696 Rushing and psssmg plays Brent Woods, b onceton (Lafayette. Novembcr6) AUSTlNKAllENBRAKER.LA TECH 373 4 :; Rushlngandpass,ngyards John Wrtkowskr. Columbra (Danmouth. Nnvember6) 4;: ; 42 CLARENCECOLLINS.lLLlNOlSST 612 Roshrngplays. JamesBlack, Akron (Marshall. October23) 47 James Black, Akron (TermesreeTech.October30) 47 Netrbshrng yards Tony Corley, Nevada-Rena (Webcr State, November6) 274 TOTAL OFFENSE Passesattsm ted TOTALOFF'iNSE John Holmao. NE Louwma Lou~srana Tech October9) RUSHING PASSING PassescompetedP YDS YOPL TOR' YOSPG John Wrtkowskr. Columbia artmouth. November6 2 CAR GAIN LOSS NET ATT YOS PLAYS Pawn yards. 2607 5 3 20 325 9 John Wrtkowskt Columbra iiDartmouth. November6 I 461 BRENTWDOOS.PRINCETON 121 470 151 327 374 2280 495 91acalvlnparrd Klrtr Returns 13 365 2637 443 316 7 V'CTORMCGEE WESTTEXASST 16 :g y; Passescaught Kevm Gulhrte, Princeton 'Lala ette. November6) JOHNW'TKOWSKI,CDLUMB'A 44 105 370 2476 414 '2::: 657 4 :; 296 4 14 Recervrng yards Jetf Sanders. W~llkam8 Mary Mramr.0 ,Septemberll) '252 SCORING OFFENSE KENtiDBART,lDAHO 121 396 199 197 319 2384 440 ;4558;59 286 8 r 2236 272 3 Pool return yards OavrdMcCrary,Tenn ~Chattanoo a(JdcksonvrlleS1 ,October23) 140 PTS AVG MATTOUNIGAN. LOUISIANATECH 94 333 233 100 312 2351 406 Krckofi return yards 2444 Ei 271 6 Jerome Stelly. Western Ill (SW d rssouh St Octobcr16) 208 337 33 1 GARVVAGELSK'.ORAKE 112 300 2332 392 SCOrlllC- ~98 433 2746 483 2640 5 5 1: 264 8 265 331 JOHNHOLMAN.NELOU'SIANA zi 2g677 175lU4 Touchdownsand pomts- Paul Lewrs. Boston U (Maroe, September 25) STEVECAtABRIA,COLGATE ~41 245 1903 282 1862 66 12 232 7 5 8 30 261 32 6 &Id goals made Dean Brasuccr, Western Carolrna (Mars Hrll, September 16) 276 309 TIMBERNIL, WEBERST ;: :I ;:; 1'5 324 '939 3.39 228 2 "5 FRANKNDVAK tAFAVE'-TE 46 120 190 70 211 1834 257 :;24" 6"; las 220 5 Tony Zendetas Nevada Rena NorthernArfrona.October9) "5 at 159 364 -205 357 2121 1916 44 212.9 "5 2 zl F V~nceScoll Nor'hernlll (Ohro U Novembers) 547 63 464 170 1213 1677 63 1: 209 6 "5 270 300 TEAM 158 204 -46 292 2016 1972 5.6 197.2 235 29 4 176 193 ~17 270 1975 1956 5 7 ;; 195 6 1mm lop onetlt.eels) Total 285 205 34 124 .90 252 1847 1757 62 195 2 Arkansas Pt (Southern III September25) 8’ 222 27.7 137 121 16 276 1915 1931 6 2 193 1 Furman (Oavrdson.October30) 466 251 163 1286 1537 63 1: 192 1 Delaware (Wrllram 8 Mary October 30) $2 :: ; Passfng yards 243 225 1482 '725 56 '3 191 7 2 261 261 iz 1!3" Fewestrush~pasryards allowed 222 116 '06 229 1564 1690 5 7 12 167 6 16 208 26 0 li7 620 195 425 166 1197 285 1622 5 7 '1 180 2 Fewestroshmg yardsallowed ~45 Passasattem ted 36 36 152 .116 294 1703 330 '507 48 176.3 NE Loulsrana(Lours~anaTech, October91 66 :z ?i Y g ::$ ;:; 134-80 225237 14721448 275293 1582 54 1: 175.0 PaSSescompetedP Colombra (Dartmouth, Novembers) 219 24 3 1392 5.1 6 1740 Polotsscored .VMI (Central Flooda. Septembsr25) ,, :PtAYERSTOSSCOREDANOPASSEDFDR * All-time record 2 E .. Tres all-bme record 192 24 0 November 8,1982 7 The NCAA Football Statistics

Division II individual leaders RUSHING FIELD GOALS INTERCEPTIONS CAR YOS TO VOSPG FGA FG PCT FGPG CL G NO VDS GEORGEWORKS,NORTHERNMICH.. :A 204 llB9 20 132 1 15 10 66 7 143 JOHNFARLEY.SACRAMEN~OS~ 144 941 10 1176 15 11 73 3 1 38 soSR a 109 1:: MAJOR EVERETI. MISSISSIPPICOL $4 142 934 9 116 8 19 11 JR 7 8ENNVTATE.N CCENTRAL. 195 89.3 112 3 18 11 ii:; 1138 38 so a : 1:: RANIJYSULLIVAN,MOORHEAOSTATE 2: 151 877 1: 1096 53 3 1 14 ROGERWILEV,SAMHOUSTONSTATE 163 867 4 108.4 :: ! 81 .Y 1 13 JR 6B 7 :: 115 736 6 105 1 15 9 60 0 1 13 SR 9 : 73 166 708 ; 100101 51 ANTOINEGAITER. ASHLAND 189 804 MITCHELLCLARK. LIBERTY BAPTIST 170 790 RONPERKINS,WESTCHESTERST 148 774 1: 9896 8 PUNTING JOHNNVSHEPHERO.LlVlNGSTON :; 138 765 6 95 6 CLNO VDS AVG NO YOS AVG MN 36PFRGAMFl AVG SO 13 264 203 11 310 282 47.0 SCORING so 11 223 20 3 15 417 276 44.8 CL G so 18 322 179 12 324 270 43'1 GEORGEWORKS,NORTHERNMICH.. SR 16 284 17 a 10 264 26 4 43.6 RONPERKINS,WESTCHESTERST SO 10 176 176 14 354 25 3 436 RANDYSULLIVAN.MDORHEAOSTATE. SR 15 236 15 7 11 275 750 41 3 11 271 24 6 BOYDHANSON,MlNN -DULUTH SR 17 236 13 9 41.2 JOHNRlCO.HAVWARDST SR 24 331 13 8 19 456 24 0 JOHNFARLEY.SACRAMENTOST KEN WEIK. NEMISSOURIST. JEFFCHADWICK.GRANDVALLEYST 8ENNVTATE.N C CENTRAL BlLLHAUSWIRTH,MlCHlGANTECH MlCHAELWOOLFOLK,FORTVALLEYST DAVEAUSTINSDN,NEMlSSOURlST Division II team leaders

PASSING EFFICIENCY PASSING OFFNSE RATING RUSHING OFFENSE ATI CMP PCT INT YDS YDSPG G CAR CMP TO POINTS VDS YDSPG ATl PCT INT ST.CLOUDSTATE. ; 310 162 52 3 19 1994 284 9 MlSSlSSlPPl COL 2711 1358 13 162 5 3012 121 56 2 NORTHERNMICHIGAN 354 189 53 4 19 2539 282 1 TEXASA& : ::: El 1416 17 163.4 2184 273.0 151 596 i HAYWARDSTATE a 271 145 53 5 11 2219 277 4 WESTCHESTERSTATE.... .: 2106 156 97 1472 11 1557 62 2 JACKSONVILLESTATE 7 282 166 58 9 7 1929 275 6 NORTHALABAMA ! ::i 2050 127 59 6 : 1666 :: 1401404 7 %i 213 MICHIGANTECH NORTH DAKOTASTATE 9 514 2288 255 3 266 143 11 2183 53 a SDUTHWESTTEXASST 8 437 2001 la0 96 53.3 1536 12 139 1 250 1 MOORHEADSTATE.. 8 408 1922 240.3 220 130 59 1 : MINNESOTA-DULUTH. 230 101 43 9 11 1:: :i 135132 64 223 1 TOWSONSTATE JAMESTOWN t 2 :z! 221.2 186 108 58 1 6 1391 202 118 56 4 11 1512 1: 130 30 tFENSE 121 221 54 a a 1766 pA88 oEFEIESE AT, CMP PCT INT YDS YDSPG G CAR VDS VOSPG 165 99 60 0 7 1091 1; 128.1127 0 ELIZABETHCITYSTATE Li 145 52 35 9 13 479 59 9 LIVINGSTON 8 305 551 68.9 NORTHCAROLINACENTRAL 155 :i 30 3 '5 K a3 4 CENTRALOHIO...: a 298 72 5 OISTRICTOFCOLUMBIA 128 36 3 CENTRALMISSOURI B 320 E 74.0 RECEIVING JAMESTOWN "' : 106 ii 358 11 507 1:: EASTERNWASHINGTON '. 7 218 546 78 0 Cl CT VOS TO CTPG EASTSTROUDSBURGSTATE '. ! 215 37 2 18 887 110 9 ASHIANO 8 289 625 78.1 JEFFZUBIA.SHlPPENSBURGST :z 768586 i 76 HAMPTON 167 ii 41.3 11 930 116 3 JAMESTOWN 5 180 402 EDDIEPATE.HUMaOLOTST.. 4 BOWlESTATE 138 47 a a 938 117 3 SOUTHWESTTEXASST 8 321 tz; BILLHAUSWIRTH.MlCHlGANTECH 41 621 8 ;A TENNESSEE-MARTIN i 160 73 45.6 15 941 117 6 CAL POLY~SLO a 298 ii: OANSTARK.MlCHlGANTECH :II NORTHOAKOTASTATE 9 325 793 88 1 JOHNRICO.HAYWARDST :; 556789 1: Ii JOECHESTER,FRANKLlN ;"R TOTAL OFFENSE MARCEROWN.TOWSONSTATE SR :; 1007819 ; 2XP SAF PTS AVG 12 DIG YDSPG JERRVMCCUNE,NORTHERNMlCH 2 965501 : 57:: NORTHERNMICHIGAN i 47 3 351 39 0 TEXASALl “s’6’5j 445 6 TOMASHENERENNER,ST CLOUDST :R" JACKSONVILLESTATE 7 i 248 35 4 NORTHERNMICHIGAN 9 791 442 7 GREGGOLDSTEIN, WAVNEST.(MICH ) JR 51 753 3 5.7 NORTHEASTMISSOURISTATE :: 0 243 34 7 EASTERNWASHINGTON i 563 429.3 RICKCARBONNEAU.NORTHRlOGEST SOUTHWESTTEXASSTATE : 36 265 JACKSONVILLESTATE 7 530 422 7 MlKEBOS.PUGETSOUND... ZEl 4348 764581 ; :: MINNESOTA-DULUTH 9 i 298 ::1 MDORHEADSTATE 8 606 422 6 SOUTHERNCOLORADO.. " " ; :: 261 32 6 ALABAMAAhM 8 581 410 4 TEXAS A&I 37 A 260 32 5 SOUTHWESTTEXASST 8 612 408 6 TOTALOFFENSE NORTHALABAMA " ; 0 254 31 8 MlSSlSSlPPl COL 9 664 PLS YDS VOSPG EASTERNWASHINGTON ii 1 217 31 0 SOUTHERNCOLORADO 8 528 :kE TOMNELSDN,ST CLOUDST . 343 2017 268 1 BILLMVATl.HAVWARDST 313 2121 265 1 SCIORINGDEFENSE TOTAL DEFENSE KEN O'BRIEN, CAL-DAVIS 270 1834 262 0 G TO 2XP SAF AVG G PLS VDS VDSPG STEVEOUODY.NORTHRlDGEST 360 2039 256 9 JAMESTOWN JAMESTOWN... 5 286 909 161 a TODWEOER.STEPHENF AUSTIN 363 2020 252 5 ;;;T;;;LEYST 2" 0" 5784 NORTHCAROLINACENTRAL: a 467 1504 lBB.0 TIMEaERSOLE.SHlPRNSBURGST 347 1977 247 1 0 1 85 LIVINGSTON. a 511 1628 2035 JIMLVNCH,GRANDVALLEYST 291 1972 246 5 BUTLER CENTRALOHIO 1667 2084 TOMHAVES.NEMlSSOlJRlST.. 277 1621 231 6 NORTHDAKOTASTATE.. ; i; ASHLAND ! ::i 1688 211.0 TOMBERTOLDI,NORTHERNMlCH 343 2075 230 6 EASTSTROUOSBURGSTATE ELILABETHCITYST 8 623 1751 218 9 JIMBRITTAIN,EASTERNWASH. : 1594 227 7 NORTH ALABAMA. i 1:: BUTLER El 577 1758 219.8 ANANIAS HARRIS, ALA8AMAAIM E 220 5 SOUTHERNCONNECTlCUlSTATE 0 10 6 CALPOLY-SLO . . . . :.. .:: " a 531 1778 222.3 JOEANDERSON,TDWSDNSTATE 123 1::: 219.4 ST. MARY'S(CAL.) 1 10 7 CENTRALMISSOURI 8 525 1781 222.6 Division III individual leaders

RUSHING FIELDGOALS INlERCEPllONS Cl G CAR YDS TO YDSPG CL G FGA FG PCT FGPG CL G NO YDS IPG 7 221 1136 14 162.3 a 16 11 68.8 1 30 1060 1: 151 4 STEVEVARGA.BALDWIN-WALLACE'~ARRYCAVAGNARO,HOFSTRA JR B 16 10 62 5 125 CRAIGMICKMCCDNKEY.NEB CALAFIORE. RAMAPO...... WESLEYAN SRSO 8a 119 111133 1: i 222173 1010 126 3 9 189 1135 9 126 1 aOBLOZ2I.SANCLAYVAJGRT.WIS DIEGO STOUT :FI ii 1617 1110 62.564 7 1.251 22 TOMPHILANNESE.ALMA OEVINE.JUNIATA SRJR 8a Ba ii 1; a 212 969 1: 121 1 BERNlEWEBER.flUFFALO SO a 11 8 72 7 100 841 120.1 7 1;: 634 : 119 1 KICKOFF RETURNS : 126I48 830 118.6 CLNO VDS AVG MIN 1 2PERGAME CLNO VOS AVG CL NO AVG 791 E 113 0 JR 10 194 194 BCOTTREPPERT,LA iv RENCE SR 12 342 26 5 JR 44 44 3 ; 122 789 112.7 FR 20 348 17.4 BRETlClAYBERG,CENTRAL(IOWA) SO 16 423 26.4 so 44 41.8 9w : 1125 SR 16 252 158 MAURlCEHARPER,LAVERNE JR 9 232 258 JR 37 41.6 a 1:: 870 108.8 FR 12 180 150 BRENTAGETl. THIEL... JR 16 405 25.3 j; g 414 7 147 756 2 1080 SR 10 137 137 CEDRICWALKER. ADRIAN JR 9 227 252 _. 40 7 so 13 173 13.3 MARKKONECNY.ALMA.. SO 16 400 250 JR 4i 40'7 JR 14 178 127 CHARLESHARRIS. FROSTBURGST SR 17 411 24.2 SCORING PHlLSPENCER.SANDlEGO JR 10 237 23 7 Cl G FG pTS PTffi SR 17 208 12.2 JRFR 4g44 it: TOOORAMSEV,CORNELLCOL JR 11 259 23 5 RICKBELL, ST JOHN'S MINN ) i 110106 1513.5 7 so 31 367 11 a SR 53 (0.1 SO 14 164 11 7 so 20 38.5 MIKE WARD, WARTBURb :21 SCOTT REPPERT, LAWRENCE 0 1z 12 9 RONCORBErr.CORNELLCOLLEGE ELI 0 12 8 MIKE KRUEGER.TUFTS. SR JOEDUOEK.PLYMOUTHSTATE FR 0" 62 1211 41 GREG PETERSON,NEB. WESLEYAN PEOROBOWMAN, OUOUESNE. zi : :; El Division III team leaders BOBMCKENNA.HOFSTRA LARRYDAVIS. LUTHER...... jr4 : i:62 !i PASSINQ OFFNIt RUSNING OFFENSE RElOCHRISTOPHERSON,CONCOROlA(MINN.) SO 3 70 aa ATT PCT INT YDS YDSPG G CAR YDS YDSPG WHEATON.. L 319 "1:; 51 1 14 2253 321 9 WESTGEORGIA 2224 317.7 AUGUSTANA(ILL.)aCF : Yiii 2139 3056 PASSING EFFICIENCY F5;F5;fAS 285323 170180 59.655 7 2012 24502422 3063302 8 WITlENaERG 8 498 2241 2SD.l RATING WARTBURG "" " " : 282 143 ::.: 20 2204 275 5 WORCESTERTECH.. 7 407 1945 2779 MIN 15AT-T PERGAME) CL G ATT CMP PCT INT YDS TO POINTS WAGNER : 7 4DB 1920 2743 bIKEBENNm,CORNELLCOLLEGE. 526 7 1086 15 161 7 ~O~s;ERGSTATE ; 257197 145loo 149 20471666 255.9238 3 DAYlON a 491 2169 271 1 DENNISSCHLEPER.ST.JOHN'S(MINN.) i: : '16169 10161 59 a 1581 15 160.6 ;;pT.~~~'S(MINN.). ; 316194 104162 z.:51.3 2111 16631892 237236.5 6 NORTH CEKTRAL 7 419 1885 2693 RANDYMU~EL ST 010M1s SR 8 250 156 62 4 E :::: :7 155 D CONCORDIA'MINN.)...... 8 M7 m94 261.6 so 8 147 UPPERIOWA 9 381 172 45 1 22 2042 226 9 OHIONORTHERN a 506 2072 258 9 SO 8 232 1:; 55560 a 1: 2052 15 i::.: SR 7 192 98 510 9 1626 15 1384 521 5 1062 13 135 5 INT YOS VOSPG RUSHIN OEFElXE pA88 oEFEGWsE All CMP PCT c CAR VDS VDSPG JR 8 254146 1:: 2047 14 131 a PLYMOUTHSTATE 124 35 20 2 16 311 FR 6 161 57.152 2 1: JUNIATA : 179 E 36 9 la 697 :: WESTGEORGIA... i xi z :; '7 SR a 172 !: 13491534 10a 1;:: SWARTHMORE L 155 406 18 610 87 1 FRANKLIN IMARSHALL..... 7 264 SR 7 183 103 5256 93 1; 1374 11 128 1 GETTYSBURG 171 i"7 374 11 711 88 9 LYCOMING JR B 203 107 527 13 1579 14 127.9 PRINCIPIA. : 142 472 11 720 90 0 AUGUSTANA ILL.) ;ii '2 it: 4M 57.7 BISHOP 120 38 3 a 547 SUSOUEHANIt A ; g; ALBRIGHT. ; 135 2 34.1 12 643 :1 i BALDWIN-WALLACE 511 639 486 69.4 YDS TO CTPG LOWELL 1;; :i 55 7 8 757 94 6 ALBRIGHT CARTHAGE. 7 45 7 9 663 94 7 TRENTONSTATE. : ::i 557 69 6 PLYMOUTH STAT'...... a 327 602 75.3 023783 : :: SCORI\G OF;$lSE 866 i :1 891 XP 2XP FG SAF AVG TOTAl OFFENIE a33 i 63 WESTGEORGIA i 41 ii- : i 0 2 41 7 G PLS YOS YDSPG 717 PIVMOUTHSTATE 1 323 40 4 WESTGEORGIA 7 484 3211 4581 681 4 Ei CORNELLCOLLEGE ; :: zi 2 3 i 313 39 1 WAGNER 7 555 3123 446.1 ST JOHN‘SLMINN ) ;: 1 6 262 37 4 CORNELL COLLEGE...... 8 616 3520 440.0 579 : :i :;y LAWRENCE ..' i :i : A 249 356 STTHOMAS a 5% 3469 4336 DEPAUW " 2 1 283 35 4 WHEATON ...... 7 528 3DM 429.4 486 : :; AUGUSTANADLL) i ;i 0 1 242 34 6 PLYMOUTHSTATE 8 569 3435 4294 742 4 56 ST.THOMAS 38 1 : 269 33 6 .55~~wRENCE "" 7 556 MO2 426.9 CENTRALLIOWA) ; j; i 301 334 8 604 32% 412. WAGNER 21 3 6 231 330 TOTAL OFFENSE ST JOHN'S(MINN) 7 525 2X5.4 407 ? CL PLS vos YDSPG OAVEMCCARRELL,WHEATON SCORItG DEFTEn)E RANDYMUETZEL,ST THOMAS. ;p E 20622132 294266 65 XP 2XP TDTAL DEFENSE JOHNROONEV.ILL WESLEYAN ii: 16461641 235234.4 4 PLYMOUTHSTATE ii '3 2 G PLS GREGHOPKINS,LAVERNE.. WESTGEORGIA : PLYMOUTHSTATE GARVWALLJASPER.WARTBURG i! 274 ,868 233 5 AUGUSTANAOLL) : i : AUGUSTANAOLL ) OENNISSCHLEPER,ST JOHN'S MINN) SR 105 1572-~- 56 SWARTHMORE 3 2 1 ALBRIGHT 7 457 .__ JOBlEWALDT.FROSTBURGSTA ! E SUSOUEHANNA : WESTGEORGIA '.. 7 437 1185 169.3 OAVIO PIERMARINI,TUFTS z ;:z 17611311 222218 65 FRANKLINLMARSHALL : SWARTHMORE 7 427 1199 171.3 BlLLKISELICK.CARNEGIE-MELLON 252 1692 211 5 LYCOMING.. ; JUNIATA... a 518 1395 1744 MARKFERRANTE.ST LAWRENCE 1: 253 1478 211 1 UNION 7 Fi FRANKLIN6MARSHALL. 7 457 1240 177 1 TONYGALLIS,CATHOLlC 190 1230 205 0 LAVERNE 7 SUSOUEHANNA 7 426 1281 1830 FLlPFAHERTY.TRENTONSTATE 5; 239 1586 19a3 CARLETON 7 i BISHOP.. 6 352 1121 1868 8 November 8.1982

1 T The NCAA News Men’s Basketball Preview North Carolina, Georgetown head Division I

By Bob Hamtnel 0 Sun Belt Conference - thrcc- variances. America Jatnes Worthy, named the (redshirted last year after a knee injury Bloomington (Indiana) Herald-Telephone point shot; 45second shot clock until Coaches, too, decided some brakes outstanding player in the Final Four, to Thompson calls “one of the worst I’ve When last seen, collcgc bask&all the last four minutes. should be applied. In July, the the pros one year prematurely. experienced”)-are the keys, Thomp- was enjoying a spectacular hour. On 0 Big East Conference4S-second National Association of Basketball The physical losses. primarily tn son said. “If they conic into their own, March 29 at New Orleans, North Caro- shot clock until the last five minutch. Coaches hoard of directors a\kcd for finding someone to ignttc offcnscs a la by midseason we’ll have a pretty good lina and Georgetown matched all- l Southeastern Conference--4% another study of the approved vari- Black and to consummate them :I la team.” America blayers and all-America play second shot clock the entire game. anccs to try for standardization. Worthy. are more of a concern than the Well bcforc that-on the night 01 in a game either could have won, and 0 Ohio Valley Confercncc-30- “We’re definitely concerned with mental problem ofcomtng back after a December I I in Capital Centre at Lan- North Carolina delivered unto Dean second shot clock only in the last four all the experimentation on the rules,” chatnpionshtp. Stntth said. dover, Maryland-Georgetown and Smith his first national championship. minutes. said Tcx Winter, head coach at Long “We usually can handle the mental Ewing will meet Virginia and Samp- The game itself was celebrated 0 Pacific- IO Conference-No shot Beach State and president of the side,” he said. son. “It’\ a great situation,” Thomp- roundly, a highlight in the sport’s clock, no three-second shot and no NABC. Jlmmy Braddock, a 6-2 senior, was son said. “There will be a tournament- steady evolution from peach-basket opening tip. Games will start football- “WC think WC have a prcat game the man who started practice October like hype for that game. It’s part of our days in the I89Os through the introduc- style, with a coin toss for the first POS- now. We don’t want to look ltkc IS at Black’s vacated point-guard responsibility to put that in perspec- tion of national tournament play in the session. fools.” spot. “I don’t know whcthcr he’ll htill tive.” 1930s to, in the 1980s. a grtp on the 0 Metro Conference-No shot The conference plans rcprcscnt a be there when WC open (vs. St. John’s Perspectives will alter quickly when captivated public unlike anything else clock, no three-second shot, but six national laboratory, Stcttz said. A stip- Novcmbcr 20 in the National Basket- the Hoyas cntcr lcaguc play, bccau,c in sports cohabited by collegians and fouls before disqualification, not five. ulation in granting the variances called ball Hall of Fame preview gatnc at the Big East bccamc really big last year pros. Late last season, Edward S. Steitz, for data to bc kept on all games played Springfield, Massachusetts),” Smith with three of its members in the The game comes back next month. secretary-rules editor of the NCAA under the rules to see how things like said before workouts began, “hut he’ll NCAA’s final eight. It has changed a lot in the off-season. Basketball Rules Committee, con- strategy, shot selection and general get the first shot.” Villanova and Boston Collcgc were Rules variations approved by major ducted a poll of coaches to dctcrmine if flow of the games will be affected. Buzz Pctcrson, a 6-3 sophomore eliminated one round bcforc New conferences call for I I different games a spate of slowdown games-includ- The data will go to the committee who came back from early physical Orleans. Villanova, beaten by North to be played this year and called col- ing a widely criticized stretch of stall- for consideration after the 1983 NCAA problems to contribute to the national- Carolina, kept four starters and added lege basketball. ing in a nationally telcvtsed game tournament-which, it should be championship run, also could be the 6-6 freshman Harold Prcssley, a stand- Most of the variances involve one of between the Nos. I- and 2-ranked noted, will be played without any of point guard, Smith noted. out wtth hts 6-10 sophomore team- two things generally identified with teams in the land, Virginia and North the tailoring. That’s a factor an inde- Last year, Worthy and h-9 Sam mate, Ed Pinckncy, in the National professional basketball: a three-point Carolina--had convinced coaches the pendent coach, Digger Phelps of Notre Perkins played essentially the same Sports Festival last summer. shot or a shot clock. game needed a 24-second clock. Dame, noted in saying that he will roles in the Carolina offense, Smith John “The Bear” Pinone also These are the alterations being tried The vote .was 391 to I against the decline any invitations to play by any said, though one nominally was the returns on the potent Villanova front on the sport-perhaps not all of them clock. of the altered rules. “Those rules “strong forward” and the other the line, and Stewart Granger is back for but representative of the variety: Even a 45-second clock was won’t be used in the NCAA tourna- “center.” Perkins, who also made his fourth year as coach Rollie Mas- l Big Ten, Southern, Southwest rejected in the Stcitz poll, 275-l l9- ment,” Phelps said. “Why should we scvcral all-America teams, has one ot simtno’s court director. and Missouri Valley Conferences - almost a 70-30 percentage breakdown. practice them’!” the spots, and 6-l I sophomore Warren St. John’s, which will make ISth- three-point shot. St& also had data showing that, Meanwhile, the game will go on, Martin and 6-l I freshman Brad year coach Lou Carnesecca a 300- 0 Atlantic Coast Conference ~ without a shot clock: “In 30 seconds, probably quite popularly, with the two Daugherty are among the leading can- game winner with its sixth victory this three-point shot; 30-second shot clock the ball changed hands 99.3 percent of teams that were so visible in the cham- didates for the other. year, kept all five starters, including 6- until the last four minutes. the time; within 24 seconds, 97.6 per- pionship game last March at the New Other starters back arc 6-X junior 6 all-league forward David Russell l Pacific Coast Athletic Associa- cent of the time; within 20 seconds, Orleans Superdome inevitably out Matt Doherty, who averaged 9.3 ( 17.4). from a team that was 2 l-9 and tion ~ three-point shot; 30-second 97.3 percent of the time. front in consideration of the new sca- points a game, and 6-S guard Michael third in the Big East last year. shot clock, starting when the midline “You look at that data,” he said, son. Jordan, the freshman who sank the l6- Boston College (22-10) lost junior is crossed; no shot clock the last four “and people who don’t want a clock Each has firepower back. Each has foot shot that teetered Carolina on top star John Bagley to the pros and coach minutes. say, ‘who needs a clock?“’ formidable opposition within its own for the final time with I7 seconds left Tom Davis to Stanford, and the Eagles 0 Atlantic IO Conference -three - Yet coaches were in the forefront of league in the championship game. It was no start anew under former American point shot; a-second shot clock until the movements within the various North Carolina lost starting guard fluke. Jordan was the ACC’s rookie of coach Gary Williams. Syracuse (IO- the last four minutes. leagues that produced the approved Jimmy Black to graduation and all- the year, averaging 13.5. 13) returns cvctyone and may move Smith’s intraconfcrence worries up. start, as they have for the last four In the Big Ten, tamed last year after Returning statistical leaders years, with 7-foot-4 Ralph Satnpson a seven-year stretch filled wtth and Virginia. Division I national champions, top-ranked tcams Scoring 1983 Class 1982 AVE. l9RL Rank Sampson, a two-t& all-America and No. I pro draft choices, Indiana . Teaa* Swthem Sr 2Y 7 I and player of the and Iowa start with fingers pointed Willie Jackson, Centenary Jr. 77 9 h year, survived all the slowdowns last Sr 21.x 7 their way. MItchelI Wlggms. Florida State year to average 1S.X points and I I .4 Melvin McLaughlin. Central Mwh. Sr 23.2 Y Indiana coach still has JclcJakubick. Akron Jr. 22 x IO rebounds. The ACC three-point shot all&Big Ten forward and Rebounding 19113 Class 1982 AVK. 1982 Rank lint will he only I9 feet out-3’Iz feet guard , starters on his Harry Kelly. Texas Southern Sr II 5 11ed 13 clo

In the past 13 years, I3 schools have Names and Notes-Stonehill and Kentucky Wesleyan in the quarterfin- Columbia in last year’s NCAA won the NCAA Division II Men’s Bas- Springfield were first-round NCAA als. The Pioneers should bc con- regional finals. The Mountameers will ketball Championship. There has not losers last year American Interna- tenders. with forwards Keith Bennett be rebuilding around forward Mike been a repeat winner since Kentucky tional returns all-conference guard (22.2 ppg) and Rhonie Wright (16.Y Jones (I I .4 ppg) Senior Rick Wesleyan in 196X-69. But all that Tony Thomas ( I X.2 ppg) and Icague ppg, 10.6 rpg) Swingman Russell Moreland (1X.5 ppg) will lead Mary- could change this year. rookie of the year Mario Elie (I 5.4 Brown ( 17.6 ppp) and forward Nate land-Baltimore County . . Radford Quite simply, defrndinp champion ppg, X.3 rpg) Bryant has fourdou- Dickey (13.4ppg, X.0 rpg) should lcad dclcatcd District of Columbia once last District of Columbia is loaded. Coach ble-figure scorers, headed by Paul Southern Connecticut State Kevin year and returns lvey Cook ( 15.5 ppg). Wil Jones rctums the rive starters from Berlo (17.9 ppg) The division’s Hightower (16.4 ppg) is hack at Cm- a team that manhandled 1981 cham- No. 2 scorer last year, Bob Rcitz (25. I tral Connecticut State New South Region pion Florida Southern, 73-63, in last ppg), returns to lead Stonehill. He was Hampshire College, regional champi- year’s title game. Jones is not, how- the conference’s player of the year and on in 1980 and I98 I, has Jay Cirocco Top Teams-Columbus (Georgia), ever, taking anythlng for granted. is a key in the Chieftains’ title defense (17.3 ppg). 19-7, l’our, WestGeorgia, l5-ll,four. “If I can keep my players hungry, . . Senior guard Buddy Clarke (17.0 Names and Notes-There are a tew keep them from getting lazy, we ppg) leads Springfield’s bid for a East Region indcpcndcnts m this area, but Colum- should be able to make it back to the third-straight 20-victory season. bus and West Georgia could challenge final four,” he said. “But we will Top TeameAdclphi. I X-8, tour; the confcrcncc schools . .Columbus have a real tough schedule; and when Northern California C. W. Post, 16-10. four; (&non, l7- won I4 of its last I7 games in 19X2 you are one of the top tcamr in the 9, four; Monmouth (New Jersey), 2 I behind the play of Troy Morris ( 16.8 country, cvcrybody IS up for you. We Top Team-San Francisco State, 9, four. ppg) and Elton Ruffin ( 16.6 ppg) . . have to be lucky, too. and keep down 20-10, two. Names and Notes-Monmouth, a Kenny Lee (17.0 ppg) and Melvin the injuries to our key pcoplc.” Names and Notes-Defending first&round loser to Cheyney State in Gibson (13.8 ppg) return at West Barring the unforeseen. it is a good champion San Francisco State again last year’s championship, has its sights Georgia. bet District ofColumbia will he among should be challenged by Division III set on Division I. Guard Gary Carter the 32 teams at eight regional sites power Stanislaus State. Sacramento ( 15.4 ppg) i, the Hawks’ top returnee South Central Region March IO- I2 seeking a trip to the final State and Chico State are darkhorses . Adelphi will rely on Buzz four March 25-26 in Springfield, Mas- . . Conference player of the year Neal Matthews 11X.X ppg) and Steve Top Teams--Sam Houston State, sachusctts. Hickey (14.5 ppg), a senior forward, is Pollack(Ih.Xppg, 10.6rpg). .C.W. 22-Y, two; Southwest Texas State, l6- Here is a look at the I I conferences the top veteran at San Francisco State Post will challenge Monmouth in IO, three. in Division II that have automatic- The league was known as the Far the Big Apple Conference behind the Names and Notes-At&large bids qualification status, followed by a Western Conference last year. play of center Mike Henderson (13.X in this region likely will rest on the out- summary of each of the eight regions: ppg, 8.0 rpg) Southampton was a come of the Lone Star Conference surprise winner in the Big Apple last race, where defending champion California Collegiate Pennsylvania State year hut must plug some hack-court Stephen F. Austin State must replace holes. five starters Sam Houston State Central Missouri’s Ron Nunnelly State, 28-3, Top Teams-Bakersfield State, Top Teams-Chcyncy also must rebuild but returns confer- 25-6 record in 198 l-82, three starters four; Edinboro State, 22-X, four; Ship- South Atlantic Region ence co-freshman of the year Yommy returning; Cal Poly-SLO, 23-6, three; pcnsburg Srdte, 19-X. three; Slippery Sangodeyi (9.3 ppg) Kerry Mur- Dominguez Hills State, 17-7, Civr; Gulf South Rock State, 16-10, four. Top Team-District of Columbia, ray ( I X.7 ppg) and Rick Garrison ( I I .9 Northridge State, 17-7, three. Names and Notes-Bloomsburg 25-5, five; Maryland-Baltimore ppg) could lead Southwest Texas State Names and Notes-In his first year Top Teams-Livingston, 20-10. State, Cheyney State and Edinboro County, 17-X. four; Mount St. Mary’s, to the league title. at Bakersfield State, coach Bobby Dye two; Tennessee-Martin, 20-I I, two. State received NCAA tournament 20-8, two; Radford, 1X-8, three. Names and Notes---Defending berths last season. Cheyney State lost turned a 6-20 club ( 1981) mto a 25-6 Names and Notes-Center Earl Great Lakes Region team, which finished fourth in the champion Livingston and runner-up by three to District of Columbia in the Jones (23.6 ppg, 10.5 rpg) and for- NCAA championship. Hc will build Tennessee-Martin made NCAA tour- quarterfinals New Cheyncy State ward (21 .X ppg, 10.9 rpg) Top Teams-Central Ohio, 21-X. around veteran guard Sam Bamett (9.0 nament appearances last year, but both head coach Charles Songster has are among 1 I letterman at District of three; Northern Kentucky, l5- 12, pomts per game) and forward Howard have holes to fill Mitch Stcntiford plenty of returning talent, headed by Columbia. Jones and Britt ranked in four; Wright State, 22-7, four. Hosbey (7.0 ppg) Cal Poly-SLO (9.2 ppg) 1sback at Tennessee-Martin, all-conference forward Leonard Gog- tlhe division’s top 20 in scoring and Names and Notes-Central Ohio, is pointing for its fourth straight 20- but Evansville transfer Jerry Davis gins (12.7 ppg) . . . Edinboro State’s rlebounding last year Mount St. making its first NCAA tournament could he the key Livingston will veteran squad should be led by Steve victory season and’ fourth straight Mary’s lost, 67-b6, to District of See Defending. page 15 NCAA bid . . All-conference per- rely on guard Will Cotchcry Senko (13.1) and Land Battle (12.3 former James Shaw (IO.0 ppg. X.5 Valdosta State, with lvey Hubbard ppg, 10.4 rpg) Shippensburg rebounds per game) returns at Domin- (22.1 ppg), could be a darkhorse. as State must replace its top two scorers, gucrr Hills State along with Ed Fitzpa- could Delta State and Troy State. while Slippery Rock State returns Bill trick(IZ.hppg). .BenBalke(II.I Rausch (17.4 ppg) and Troy Mild ppg) and Cliff Higgins (I I .O ppg, X.0 Missouri Intercollegiate (17. I ppg, 7.9 rpg) West Chester MARIC, Inc. T rpg) lead Northridge State’s challenge. State, which has moved from Division Top Teams-Central Missouri I, could bc a factor. manufacturer of Central Intercollegiate State, 20-9, three; Southca\t Mis~uri State, 21-10, three. Southern Intercollegiate SPORTS TIMING SYSTEMS Top Teams-Hampton Institute. Names and NotesSoutheast Mis- 28-X. five; Virginia State, 19-9, three; souri State won the NCAA South Cen- Top Teams-Albany State (Gcor- Virginia Union, 1X-7. three. tral regional last year. Central Mis- gia) 17-9, three; Clark (Ccorgia), IX- Names and Notes-Hampton Insti- souri State was third Central 9, two; Tuskegee, 20-9, three. tutc finished third 111NAIA play last Missouri’s top returnee is sophomore Names and Notes-Clark and year but rcportcdly will go NCAA this guard Ron Nunnelly (16.4 ppg). He Albany State tied for the conference year. Hampton will defend its CIAA should get help from Darrell Jones crown last year The top returnee at postseason tournament title with Tony (10.3 ppg. 6.3 rpg) Southeast Albany State is Lamar Harris (22.X WashIngton (I X.X ppg) and Greg Missour returns all-conference per- ppg), the 12th leading scorer in Divi- “Dunkin” Hines (IS. I ppg, 9.6 rpg) formers Terry Mead ( 16.X ppp) and sion II last year . Tuskegee still Virginia State won the CIAA Jewcll Crawtord (I4.Y ppg, 6.3 rpp) should he tough inside with senior Northern Division title last year and. Northcast Missouri State and Donnie Carter ( 12.X rpg. tied for first along with third-place Virginia IJnion, Northwest Missouri State had solid in the division) returning. advanced to NCAA play (both lost in I982 seasons but fact rebuilding years. the first round). Virginia State has Sunshine State high-\corinp seniors Julius Norman North Central (22.2 ppg) and Darrell Stith (19.5 Top Teams-Central Florida, 2 I - ppg), while Charles Oaklcy ( 12.5 rpg, Top Teams-Nebraska-Omaha, 8, one; Florida Southern, 22-10, two: 61.7 field-goal percentage) returns for 22-7, three; North Dakota, 27-5, two; Rollins, 17-9, two. his sophomore season at Virginia North Dakota State, I X- 1 I , two. Names and Notes--The top three Union . Johnson C. Smith. Norfolk Names and Notes-North Dakota teams in this league are rebuilding. SAME CLOCKS TRACK TIMER: State, St. Augustine’s and Winston- dcfeatcd Nebraska-Omaha in the leaving things uncertain FlorIda for Salem State could figure in the CIAA North Central regional final last year Southern, 1982 runner-up and 1981 race The CIAA’s two divIsIonal only to lose to Bakersfield State in the NCAA Division II champion, will Basketball, Football, PACECLOCKS winners both will receive automatic quarterfinals Ncbraska~Om;iha’s have to replace all-America center Soccer, WaterPolo, (AC, DC, Analog & Digital) NCAA bids this year. 22 victoric\ last season was B \chool John Ebelinp. Guards Moses Johnson Wrestlins. for record. The Mavcrlcks return Dean (9.4 ppg) and Scott Pospichal will pro- Swimming, Track & Great Lakes Valley Thompson ( IS 5 ppg) North vidc an outside game Sophomore Fitness Training. Dakota coach Dave Gunther won his forward Ronnie Thornton ( I I 4 ppg) is SHOT CL.OCKS Top Teams~Bellarminc, 20-9, 300th game last sca’run but is faced the lone returning starter at Central for three: Kentucky Wcslcyan. 27-5. four; with replacing center Dan Clau\scn FlorIda, which made its sixth NCAA Basketball & WaterPolo Lewis. 20-9. tour. The return of all~contcrcncc l’orward trip in the past scvcn years last season Names and Notes--Bcllarminc, Stcvc Rrckkc (I4 7 ppg) will help Thcu McWhite (I I. I ppg) ic LCWIS (regular-season champion) and Two-tlmc all-conference guard Jeff Rollins’ top returnee. Kentucky Wesleyan all rcccived Askew (IS.5 ppg) will lead North Our digital systems incorporate the latest innovations in NCAA bids last year. Kentucky Wes- Dakota State Lcapuc newcomer New England Region electronic timing. They use highly visible, large, 7-segment, leyan finlshcd third nationally Mankato State (IX-Y last year, with electromagnetic readouts, not lights. This makes them crisp Buddy Cox (23. I ppg, tied for eighth three starters back) could he a surprise. Top Teams-Central Connecticut and clear close in and easily readable at wide viewing angles and in the division) again will lead Bcllar- State, 1X-9. tour: New Hampshire distances up to 400 feet. all models are fully user programmable, mine Corncrmcn Dwight Htggs College, IX-IO, four; Sacred Heart. Northeast-Eight some are battery powered. Rugged all aluminum housing, (20.5 pgg) and Ray Zuherer( 15.3 ppg) 26-6, four; Southern Connecticut audible signal, time-in-time-out, automatic reset. are back at Wesleyan, along with Top Teams-American Interna- State, 22-X. three. guard Rod Drake (13.X ppg) . . tional, 16-l 1, five; Bryant, 14-12, Names and Notes-Sacred Heart Lewis rctums Larry Tucker (20.6 ppg) five; Stonehill, 21-X. two; Springfield, defeated Southern Connecticut State in 12755-E Western Ave., Garden Grove, CA 92641; (714) 898912! and Ron Lcsiak (IX.5 ppg). 21-X. four. last year’s regional final but lost to 10 THE NCAA NEWSlNovcmber 8,1982 Division III expected to be wide-open race The NCAA Division 111Men ’s Bas- The Norscmcn must rcplacc all-time the Bears’ attack First-year coach ketball Championship will return to school scoring leader Doug Kint- Bill Williams led Cortland State to its Grand Rapids, Michigan, for a second zinger. The return of Willie McKennie best record in I8 years last season and straight year, but do not bc surprised if (12.5 ppg, 7.7 rpg) will help again will count on Walt Hcnson (14. I there are a lot of new facts in the final Wartburg’s challcngc for the confer- ppg) and Tom Spanbauer ( I 2.8 ppp) . four. ence title will hinge on Mark Merritt . . Oneonta State and Fredonia State Defending champion Wabash has (17.5 ppg), Greg Schmitz (12. I ppg, could bc sleepers, with four returning lost 6-7 Pete Mctzclaars. Third-place 7.7 rpg) and on how quickly guard starters each from teams that finished Brooklyn has moved to Division I. Bobby Garris can recover from a bro- one game above and one below .500, And the folks at Stanislaus State and ken wrist Keith Edmonds (20.7 respectively. runner-up Potsdam State still are ppg) could put Simpson in the title thankful for a

Division II Men’s Division II Women’s The only other region where more was upset, 2-O. by Indiana (Pennsylva- Cross Country than one team qualified is the South nia), a victory that clinched the Penn- Cross Country Central, where Abilene Christian wori sylvania State College Athletic Con- Millersville State will return to It is difficult not to predict that the meet with 37 pomts. Air Force was fercnce Western Division crown for defend its title at the NCAA Division South Dakota State will repeat as second with 50 points and was selected the Indians. They will meet Eastern II Men’s Cross Country Champion- champion in the NCAA Division II as the at-large team. Division winner Cheyney State this ships November 13 at St. Cloud State Women’s Cross Country Champion- In the Southeast regional, Troy week for the conference title. University. ships at St. Cloud State University State won the qualifying berth with its Finally, to confuse matters further, However, the Marauders did not November I3 first-place finish. Tampa was defeated at Central Flor- have a runaway last year, with only a The Jackrabbits won the North Ccn- The team members and individual ida, 3- 1. To make matters worse, two-point margin over runner-up tral regional October 30 with six of the qualifiers by region are: Tampa coach Jay Miller could open Edmboro State; and the prospects for seven runners who helped them to the Northeast the play-offs with four starters injured. Holy Cross (62)-Edeen O’Rourke, IX:20 0, 1983 are even rougher. NCAA team title a year ago, including What all this confusion has created four of the five scorers. 3rd. Jackie McNlff. 1X.34.4. 5th. Laurel Edinboro State also has qualified for Grlhooly, l9:02 7, 13th; Deedee Murphy, arc opportunities for such teams as the national meet, and both teams fin- Kristin Asp, third individually in lY.14.5. 22nd: Mary Kate Donovan. 19.43.1). Central Florida, Oakland, Missouri- ished behind this year’s Northeast last year’s championship, won the 29th; no seventh runner St. Louis and a number of others to West Chester State tX7)&Lrsa Young. regional champion, Indiana (Pennsyl- North Central regional with a 5,000- step into the NCAA Division II Men’s meter time of 17:19.43. Her team- IX.26 I. 4th. Julie Bowrr~. IX.52. I. 10th. Kris vania). Indiana (Pennsylvania) fin- Brandl. l9:13 3, 20th: Rose Glah. 19.20 2. 26th; Soccer ChampIonshIp field. The 12- ished with 66 pointh, well ahead of mates finished third, fourth, fifth, Elaine Yeryer. lY:20.7. 27th: Beth Gamer. team field (two more than last year) Edinboro State (124) and Millersville sixth, eighth and 13th to give the Jack- 19.42 I, 34th: Phwbe Williams. l9:46 6. 3Sth will begin play this weekend. The two Indwduals~laura Mason. East Stroudsburg State (139). rabbits 19 points, just four more than a finalists will meet December 4 on one perfect score. Their nearest opponent State. 18.15.4, IQ, Mlchele Pingar. Kutrtown Adding to the confusion is the West State, IX.19 2. 2nd: IIiane Galleo. Kut/town of the teams’ home field. contingent of California-Riverside, had 72 points. State. 18:36.5,6th. But while it has been a hectic Cal Poly-San Luih Obispo and Eastcm On the other hand, Cal Poly-San Suu(hePs( couple of weeks, do not count the Washington, which finished one, two Luis Obispo was just as dominant in Troy State t54)+Tina Kmll. I9:04. 2nd; Kathleen Robinson. lY:36. 6th; Laura Wallen- reigning powers out. Los Angeles the West regional. The Mustangs fin- and three in the region felt. 19.39. 8th. Vicky Marshal). 19.SO. 12th. State still is under consideration California-Riverside’s Frank ished with 23 points, and their nearest RebbecaHoffman. 20.53.26th: Darlene Richard- despite the five forfeits, and the Assumma, No. 2 m the nation last Carmalo Rios of Cal Poly-SLO opponents (tied for second) had 75 ,on, 21:05,3lst; no seventh runner. expanded bracket could leave enough points. Individualb~Coleen Napohtano. Florida year, is the top returning runner in the room for Lock Haven State to get in. 7th: Manny Solarrab. 33.23. 13th: Rocky Daniel. The Mustangs also return four of International. 1X.53. Ibt. Shrri William\. Jack- event. However, he finished fourth in sonwlle State. 19:06. 3rd: Renee Viertel. Libeny Tampa also is in the thick of things. the regional behind Cal Pal-SLO’s 33:44. 16th,Thoma< Patterson. 34:17. 2Yth: Kun their top five runners, including Amy Wa,dlcr. 34.33. 39th. Baptw, 190X. 4th The loss to Central Florida could cost Harper, who covered the regional Carmclo Rios and Cal Poly-Pomona’s St Augustme’s (52,-Hany Freeman. 32.21, Great Laker the Spartans the Sunshine State Con- Tony Reyes and Matt Blaty. From first 3rd: James Hammond. 33:03, I Ith. Jcny Mcm course in 16:29. The next four scorers Ashland (32)-plane Kc&r. 17.52. I,[. Dcb- tne Gresens, 1X:37. 3rd: Susan Borawskl. 18:4X. fcrence title (Central Florida needed a to last, however, the four were only 16 Lean. 33 49. I&h: Mark Davi\. 33.57. 20th. for Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo were 5th. Mandy Rrpple. lY.4Y. 10th. Tma Graf. victory Saturday against Rollins to seconds apart. Gerald Cross, 33.SX. 21~: Kevm McCant,. third, fourth, sixth and ninth. 34, IO. 26th 19.58, 13th: Geri Spaulding~ 20.07. 14th: Lisa clinch it), but the loss also may take All five of the Mustangs’ scorers Hallberg. 22.52. 33rd. The North Central qualifiers also Indlvlduals-Tony Farrik. M~ss~ss~pp~ CnI- some of the pressure off Tampa. have to be considered among the prime lege. 31 24, Irt. D~mnie Tackle. Radlirnl. 32.33. recorded faster times than anyone in Wiccwxin-Park*ide (32,--Debbie Spirm. 1X.25, 2nd; Sue Meyer, I X:41. 4th: Dona Drw “My assistant coach looked at me contenders, because they raced on the 4th the North Central regional, but com- Great Lakes cnJI. 19.09.7th. Karen Jawbron. IY 4s. Xlh, J.ine after the game and said maybe this is a national course at St. Cloud State. paring times in cross country is hazard- Indrana Srate~Evanswile 140, ~James Nolan. Rosrkowskl, l9:50, I Ith: Kathy De Baere. blessing in disguise,” Miller said. ous at best. 20:14, 17th:ToriMurray.ZI 56,31st North Dakota State, sixth in the coun- 3 I. 16. I \I. TwJd Reller. 3209.3rd. Brett Brcwcr. “We were a little schedule weary. try a year ago, won the regional with 32.28. 6th. Mrke Atkmsun. 3251. 15th: Shawn Assuming that everyone stays Ind~wduals~Deruae Delong. Ferrrs State. 19:0X. 6th: Ronda Guy. Fenir State. 19:4X. 9th We’ve played so many big games, Clodlelter. 32.5X. I7th:Trm Manm. 33.2X. 31% healthy. the results on November 13 ,45 points, one point better than South North Central boom, boom, boom. 1 think we were a Dakota State. The third qualifier from Miku McManuc, 34~04.40th. may boil down to the course. If so, Bellarm~ne t62,~-Jim Vargo. 31.4s. 2nd. Swth DaL[rtd State IIY) Kristtn Alp. little tired, and it was a must game for the region is St. Cloud State (78). Rocky Miller. 32.46. 10th. Larry Schnreders. South Dakota State won the North 17:19.43. Irt;NancyG~eske. l7:32 20, 3rd:Lorl Central .” Bocklund. 17.46.08. 4th. Audrey Stavrum. The best time over the IO,0O@metcr 32 54. ISth: John Nrchwtz. 32.57. 16th: Hank Central regional on the same course Tampa still had one more big game Neumayer. 33.01. l%h: Larry Holt. 33.29.32nd; that will be used for the NCAA cham- 17155.15, 5th: Cmdy Sargent. 1X:32.03. 6th: Jr11 national course was produced by St. Ramsdell, IX:41 X3. 8th; Laura Ceason. to go-a home game Saturday against Cloud State’s Scott Ergcn (3 I :32.3!5); Jeff Moore. 34.45. S4th pionships. lwrr\ State (XY+Dawd Hinkle. 32:45. 9th. IX 5X 13. 13th. Southern Connecticut State, last year’s Not to be disregarded as a factor m Indrvrduals~Lwi Bearion. Mankato State. and his teammate Kurt Threimen was Alan Bengry, 32.4Y. I Ith. Pete Renmger. 32.59. NCAA Division II third-place team. A 17:25.43. 2nd: Jeanne Llkar, North Dakota. second. IXth, Paul Mehlbcrg. 33:14. 23rd. Michael determining the champion, of course, victory in that game, coupled with vie- Nuhuir. 33.23, 2Rth: Robert Stanfield. 33:50. are the other nine teams, plus individ- IX.40 32. 7th. Cheryl Fnrrlcy. Ncbraaka-Omaha. Ergcn was an all-America in 1980 I%42.85,9th tories over such Division I powers as and sat out last season with an injury. 36th uals who qualified in regional comp- Indwduals~Randy Kane, Southern Illinois- Suuth Central Alabama A&M, North Carolina and Mankato State, third in the national Edwardrville. 32:17, 4th: Juhn Adams. Grand tition. Ahilenc Christian (.l’lk--Laurie Taylor. 1X:03, William & Mary, would add up to a 2nd; Juhe Brownrng, 1X:07.5, 4th, Tina Lop/. meet in 1981, failed to qualify as a Valley State. 32:23. 5th. Steve Wagner. Michi- In the West, where three teams quali- pretty fair season. gan Tech. 32.34. 7th. Rxk Mangette. Ashland, fied, California-Davis and Northridge IX.lZ.6. 5th. Cheryl Vmrant. 1X 55 5. 12th: team but will send three individuals to Valerie Huddleston, 1X:SX.X. 14th. Noemi That game probably will not have an the championships. 32 35. Xth State tied for second to fill the two North Central E>pmwa. 21.21 .X. 35th. no \eventh runner. effect on tournament selections. Cer- remaining spots. Indivrduals+Nancy The most unusual finish in any of North Dakota State (45,- Tmn Stambauyh. Cocdwme. Centd Mis- tainly, Southern Connecticut State has sourl S(ate, 17:55.X. 1st. Christine Ridenour. the rcgionals was in the South Central 31:42.43. 3rd. Paul Leblanc. 31:54.94. 7th. Phil There also was a tie in the Great established itself as the top team in the Dubaul. 31.56 23. 9th; Nick Cervino. 32.02 42. Lakes region, where Ashland and Wis- Swtheact Miowri State. IX.15 5, 6th: Janrce where Central Missouri State beat Hivrhrllxr. Mictouri-Rrrlla. IR.29 X. Xth. Northeast region, with a 14-l record as Southeast Missouri State, 44-49, for 10th. Rick Taphn. 32:27.59. 16th: Tom Nelson. consin-Parkside both tinished with 32 32.49.91. IYth: RohCarney. 13.27.76. 29th. Went of the first of the month. Led by junior the team title. South Dakota State (46,pDan Cdrlson, points. Cal PulymSan Lurs Otuap, t23,&Amy Harper. forward Ron Basilc, coach Bob Dikra- I6 2Y. Irt. Jcnnifcr Dunn. 16.47, 3rd: Carol Southeast Missouri State’s Mike 31.46 62. 4th; Joe Chamberlain. 31:47.32. 5th. Holy Cross won the Northeast nian’s club will be seeking its seventh Robert Beyrr. 3t 49 37. 6th: Tim Connclly. regional with 62 points, and West Gleason. 17:04. 4th; Krlstm Thompwn. I7 I I. Vanatta was well ahead of the field 6th. Marilyn Nichrjlr. 17.16.9th: Robyn Dubach. straight NCAA bid. with only 200 yards remaining in the 32 IV 14. 14th; Stuan Lund. 32.42 2X, 17th: Jed Chcstcr State was second with 87 Schemmel. 32.4X 7X. IXth: Lowell Miller. 17:51, 15th: Lorene Loper. 1X:OY. 22nd. The Indiana (Pennsylvania)-Chey- points. Both teams qualify. California-IJavA (75) Patncra Gray, race when his legs began to cramp. Hc 33 07 9 I. 26th 16:46. ney State ganie could be pivotal in the 2nd; Lrnda Somers. 17: I2. 7th. Ann Hxrbcr. slowed and finally crawled the last 10 St. Cloud State (7X) Scott Ergen. 31.32 35. Mideast, where Oakland and Indiana yards to finish ninth, but the ailment 1x1. Kurk Threimen. 31.35.27. 2nd: Randy 17.53. 16th. Nancy RI&I. 1X.05. Zlst: Karen Menge. 1X.20, 29th: Lrna Wolfe. 111.39. 3Yth. State-Evansville also are in the run- probably cost the Indians the team Dlwn, 3250.42. 20th. Pete Keqsler. 33.17.32. 27th. Mark YounX, 33: lX.O1,2Xth. Rl,d Denrme. Denw Frum. lX.39.4Oth mng. Oakland beat Lock Haven State, title. 33.2X 93. 31%; Mark Kanr. 33.57 94. 34th. Nwthridgc State 175,-Magdalena Man& I-O, two weeks ago. quer. 17.14. Xth. (‘awl Kcllw. 17.43. 13th; In the Southeast regional, Troy Indrv~dual,~Mark Sybdrud. Mankatu State. Central Florida, Rollins and Florida 31 55 53. Rth; . Mankato State. Jeancttc Allred. 17.4X. 14th: Tracy Schofield. State placed its first five runners l7:53, 17th. Valene Eberly. 1X.09. 23rd: Colleen International will seek berths in the among the top 20 finishers to capture 32:08.97. I Ith. H[rlli< Reed. South Dakota. 32.10 32. 12th: Dave Avenson. Mankato State, Spadoni. 1X.16. 27th. Tara Slatt~n. IX52.45th. South, while the Midwest-Far West the team championship. The other 32.11 30. 13th. Individuals~Maryanne Scannell. Sacramcnl~, appears to be wide open. Missouri&St. State. 17:lO. 5th. Kathy Way. Hayward State. Southeast qualifier was St. Augus- South Central Louis, the fourth-place finisher m last Ccntrdl Miwxrrr (44)-Rsk Schmid. 32.2X.7, 17.32. 10th. Kathy Koudela, Hayward State. tine’s, 17.39. I Ith year’s championship, has had a solid Indiana State-Evansvlllc won the 3rd: John Mrller, 32.39.3. 6th: Tony Lehr. 32:43 I, 7th. Andy C‘ravenr. 32.56 5. 10th. Ron At Large 9-3-3 season; scvcral of the region’s Great Lakes region, with Bellarmine Clark. 33.2X.4. 1Xth: Ed Lunsfurd. 33:SJ.S. Air Force (50, lay Meycn. IX:06 0. 3rd. Rota traditional powers, such as Chico State Hun. lR.21 9. 7th. Jean Garvm. IX.SI.2. I Ith. and Ferris State finishing second and 24th. Hlair Barnes. 33:56.4-25th. and Seattle Pacific, have struggled. Swtheast M~ssourr State (49, -Ken Hoffman. Shelly Gmder. IX 56.3. 13th. Dana I.mdCley. third and advancing to the national l9:lO I. 16th: i.aurcli Malrk. 19.26.2. 20th. Ll\a Here IS a look at the teams under meet 32 IX 2. 1.1. Michael Byrne. 32 43 5. 8th; Mrchael Vanarta. 32.55 5). Yrh: Scott Lawman. Hoya. IL):21 2. 19th. consideration for the Division II cham- The team mcmbcrs and individual 32.57. I lth. Ken Whrte. 33.3Y. 20th: Paul pionship. The field is to be qualifiers: Brigman. 34:W.Y. 27th. Jw Larkner. 35:42.4. Division 11 announced Tuesday, November 9. Northeast 44th. Records are as of November I, except IndIana (Pennsylvania, thh)~-Scott tireen. indiwdual+Doug Jones. Ahilcne Chrwxwr. Men’s Soccer 31:3X.6. 5th. Lawrence Fees. 32.06 9. Xth: 32: 1X.X. 2nd. Jim Ryan. Northwest Misrouri What was once a very clear picture where more rcccnt information was Stephen Coldcamp, 32.0X.X. Yth: Mark Shreck- State. 32 30 9.4th avallablc. west in NCAA Divi>lon II men’s soccer engast. 32.3Y. I IXth. Gerald Spruull. 33.0X 4, Nurthed Hridprpon (9-d-2). Cenrral C

There may not bc a new champion in the NCAA Division I Field Hockey Championship this year, but thcrc definitely will be a new look IO the event, which will be held at Temple University November 20-21. The most obvious change will be the expansion of the tournament from six to 12 teams. Another change is the addition of several strong teams, prim marily from the East, that compctcd in the AIAW championship last year. Until the last week of October, the question in Division I was whether anyone could beat Iowa. The Hawk- cycs finally did lose, though, creating a scramble for the top position as the selection process ncarcd. The loss dropped Iowa from No. I to No. 3 in the NCAA rankings. Old Dominion, a semifinal loser last year, moved to the top with 2 I2- I record through November I. Defending champion Connecticut also has had a strong season. The Huskies are ranked second and appear prepared to defend their title. Old Dominion was ranked No. I for the first three weeks of the I98 I season before slumping slightly; the Lady Monarchs ultimately were defeated by Connecticut in the national semifinals. Again this year, high-scoring Christy Morgan (I9 goals) and all-America Yogi Hightower lead Old Dominion. Three strong Eastern teams are among those that have joined the NCAA competition from the AIAW; Brenda StaujJer leads Penn State’s bid for the second Division I field hockey championship. . they appear to be the most likely threats to the top-rated teams. Penn Unless Chico State is too powerful this year’s championship November water (Massachusetts) were among the (10-6). Cortland State (I l-4), Drew State was the 1981 AIAW champion, for the others, the safest forecast 19-20 at Elizabethtown College in prcscason favorites. (12-3). Temple finished second and Delaware should be that an Eastern team will Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. Teams under consideration fur Pennsylvania-Franklin and Mar- has been a traditional power. replace Pfciffcr as the champion. The The Lions also were unbeaten in selection today, with won-lost records shall (I 1~2~1). Elizabethtown (14-2- Other contenders are spread only other non-Eastern contenders 1981 (15-O-Z), so it will bc quite a task in parentheses, include: I), Scranton (10~5~1). Wilkes (8-4-3). throughout the country and arc diffi- appear to be BemidJi State and North- for the other Division Ill contcndcrs. It Northeast-Bridgcwater State ( I2- South-Frostburg State (15-3). cult to evaluate. This season was em Michigan, both in the most recent should be tougher for Trenton State, 5-3), New England College (14-l), Lynchburg (l3-3), Sweet Briar (9-3). expected to be one of the most compet- top IO teams. though, because the tournament field Salem State (16-2). Great Lakes-Denisun ( I3-4- I ), itive in the sport’s history. The cham- Pairings for this year’s Division II has been expanded from six to I2 Middle Atlantic-Trenton State Wisconsin-Stevens Point ( 17-4). pionship could follow suit. championship, which will be con- teams. The top four sccdcd teams will (22-O), Ithaca (13-2). Glassboro State Waostcr (I l-7), Hope ( 13-3). Teams under consideration for ducted November 20 on the campus of have to win three games to capture the selection include the following (sea- one of the finalists, are: championship; the remaining teams son records in parentheses): Kutztown State (12-l) vs. Lowell must win four. New EnglandXonnecticut ( 13-2). ( 12-4). November I2 at Lock Haven The top competition for Trenton Massachusetts ( I3-2- I ). Sprmgficld State College in Lock Haven, Pennsyl- State could come from two of the (I l-4). Harvard (10-2). vania; winner plays Lock Haven State teams that reached last year‘s semrfi- Midwest ~ Penn State (13-4). (14-l), Novcmbcr I3 at Lock Haven nals, EliLabcthtown and Franklin and Princeton (I I-2). Rutgers (1 I-Y). State. Marshall. They faced each other last Mid-Atlantic ~ Temple ( 13-2). Chico State (8-5) vs. C. W. Post year in a semifinal contest and are Delaware ( I l-4- I ). Maryland ( I I-7). (IS-S), November I2 at C. W. Post ranked among the nation’s top four South-Old Dominion ( I2- I ), Vir- College in Grcenvalc, New York; win- teams. ginia (14-2). North Carolina (I l-5). ner plays Bloomsburg State (15-4-I). A new entry among the natlonal Davis and Elkins ( 12-2). November I3 at C. W. Post. powers is Ithaca, which finished third Midwest-Iowa ( I Y- I ), Northwest- Division III in last year’s AIAW championship. It em (I 5-4). Southwest Missouri State was the second straight third-place fin- (l6-3), Michigan (12-3). Field Hockey ish for the Bombers. West-California (I l-2). San Jose It is becoming quite difficult in any The remainder of the teams eligible State ( 12-5). Stanford (7-4). sport for an NCAA champion to for selection to this year’s cvcnt seem Division II repeat, but the I982 NCAA Division relatively balanced, but several have Field Hockey Ill Field Hockey Championship may previous tournament expericncc and prove to be the exception. could be contenders. Lynchburg has Pfciffcr. the wlnncr of the first Defending champion Trenton State, six starters back from its 1981 AIAW NCAA Division II Field Hockey which allowed just one goal in two runner-up team, Frostburg State and Championship last year, was hoping games while winning the I98 I title, is Wisconsin-Stevens Point both partici- that a promising group of sophomores undefeated in its 22 games this year pated in last year’s NCAA champion- would provide a rapid rebuilding proc- and must bc considcrcd the favorite for ship, and Glassboro State and Bridge- ess. Since the Falcons were not ranked in the NCAA’s latest Division II poll. that rcbullding apparently still is going on. Championship Summaries One constant from last year in Divi- sion II is that won-lost records are not Division III Men’s Soccer land State in semifinals); Bethany at always true indicators of team Wheaton, November I3 (winner to First-round results: Plymouth strength. Chico State was selected for meet Scranton in semifinals). the 1981 tournament with a 3-6-2 State 3, Worcester State I: Babson I, record, yet lost a I~Oovcrtimc decision Branders 0; North Carolina-Greens- to Pfciffcr in the semifinals. This year, boro 3, Lynchburg 0; Glassboro State Women’s Soccer Chico State again does not have an 3, Kean 2; Buffalo State I, Rochester impressive record (over .SOO. though) Tech 0; Cortland State I, Binghamton First-round results: Cortland State but again is highly rated, primarily State 0 (ovcrtimc); Bcthany I, Deni- 2, Boston College 0; Massachusetts 3. because of a drfficult schedule. son 0 (overtime); Ohio Wesleyan 4, Rochester I; Princeton I, George The successor to Pfeiffer in this Hope 0: Wheaton 4, Colorado College Mason 0; Harvard 3, Brown I year’s championship, which has been 0; MacMurray I, Claremont-Mudd- Second-round pairings: Connecti- expanded from four to six teams, could Scripps 0; Scranton I, Moravian 0; cut (14-O- I) vs. Cortland State (g-5-3); be Lock Haven State. The Pcnnsylva- Messiah I, Elizabethtown 0. Central Florida (8-O-2) vs. Massachu- nia school was the lY8l AIAW Divi- Second-round results: Plymouth setts (14-3); North Carolina ( 16-2) vs. sion II champion and has made an State 2, Babson 0; North Carolina- Princeton (I I- I-I); Harvard (7-5-2) impressive entrance into NCAA corn- Greensboro 3, Glassboro State I; Cort- vs. Missouri-St. Louis (13-o-3). All petition with IO victories in its first I I land State I, Buffalo 0: Bethany I, second-round games are to be com- games. Ohio Wesleyan 0 (penalty kicks); pleted by November 14. Connecticut, Another Pennsylvania team, Wheaton 3, MacMurray I : Scranton 2, Central Florida and Missouri-St. Louis Bloomsburg State, is expected to con- Messiah 0. will host second-round games. The tend for the national title. Bloomsburg Third-rqund pairings: North Car- !i!c of $e ;rrpain,ing second-round State was the 1981 AIAW Division Ill olina-Greensboro at Plymouth Stat;, game was not determined ai press champion. November I3 (winner to meet Cort- time. Southern Connecticut State’s Ron Basile THE NCAA NEWS/November 8. IY82 13 Meet certification required Championship Corner The NCAA Extra Events Commrt- programs and to those institutions that Nonincomr status may be declared have adopted NCAA rules for their based on several factors, including the Availability questionnaires were due to be returned to the appropriate regional tee reminds directors of athletics at advisory committee chairs by October 22 in football (all divisions) and by Octo- member institutions that participation women’s programs. purpose of the event, the entry fee or admission charges and the overall ber I5 in men’s soccer (all divisions). Questionnaires for men’s water polo in gymnastics and track and field out- It is the responsibility of coaches to financial operation. should be returned to the appropriate regional advisory committee chair by side competition must occur in meets be aware of this legislation and to November 18. Teams will not be considered for selection to the championship that have been certified by the commit- check-in advance-with the meet Coaches still should check with the unless the availahtlity questionnaues have been received. tee. management to make certain that an NCAA in all cases to determine Bylaw 2-4 explains the restriction, event has received NCAA certifica- whether the competition has been clas- which applies to all outside domestic tion. Student-athletes could lose their sified as nonincome, prior to allowing Baseball teams play competition during the calendar year. eligibility by partrcipating in noncolle- a studcnttathlete to participate. The regulation applies to all men’s giate-sponsored competition. Several gymnastics meets have been New certifications appear periodi- certified to date. The dates of these loo-inning marathon cally in The NCAA News. These events appeared in the October 25 Handbook for meets must be sanctioned by the issue of The NCAA News. It probably is safe to say that only an mate that between $5,000 and $6,000 NCAA Extra Events Committee, not No indoor or outdoor track and field enthusiastic student-athlete would was generated from the game. Nasson merely by a national governing body meets have been certified. involve himself in an 81/z-hour, lOO- raised $44MJ,but this was not the major travel mailed in the sport. inning baseball game just for a chance fund-raising effort for the Lions; a More information about the certifi- to play more baseball later on. bowl-a-tbon in November will be that Meets that do not involve a large cation procedures can be ohtaincd But that’s what happened October team’s primary effort. to institutions number of competitors and are local in from Ralph McFillen, assistant direc- How do you play a IOO-inning base- nature may not require certification, if tor of championships, at the NCAA I6 in Durham, New Hampshire, where the University of New Hampshire ball game? This one was played with a The NCAA Travel Handbook for they arc classified as “nonincome.” national office. 1982-83 has been mailed to NCAA baseball team defeated Nasson ColJ pitching machine rather than human member institutions. The booklet con lege. The final score was 84-68 in the pitchers. Each team batted for three tains information that commrttcc modified game. innings at a time, and no stealing or Soccer team in Mexico bunting was permitted. In addition, a members and individuals participating The game was played to raise funds designated hitter was used for the in NCAA championships will need for for both schools’ Southern trips next The national boy’s Yale), Mike Wheeler (goahc, Seattle catcher to save time. official Association travel. spring. youth soccer team is participating in Pacific), Paul Caligiuri (defender. Interested individuals and local This marks the second year the the prestigious Joao Havelange Youth UCLA), Mark Arya (midficldcr, Cali- “Each year, we have to ask our kids businesses pledged donations based on Association has contracted with Tournament in Acapulco, Mexico, fornia), (midfielder, to pay $300 to go to Florida,” said the number of innings played. And the Fugazy International Travel, Inc., of which ends Novcmbcr 14. UCLA) and Chris Tonne (midfielder, New Hampshire baseball coach Ted weather even cooperated so that the New Haven, Connecticut, to arrange The U.S. team, comprising players Central Florida). Connor. “Our spring trip is a major game could be held outdoors. If it had airline transportation for NCAA func- under I9 years of age, is competing in The tournament is an important reason for our success in the past. We rained, the teams would have moved tions. a first-round group against Argentina, warm-up for the U.S. squad, which hope to raise enough money in this indoors and used “wiffle” balls. game to pay for the entire cost of the Although the cost of all Association Israel and the Soviet Union. Also in will face Israel and the winner of the “Baseball at UNH can’t survive travel for the first year under the agree- the field are Australia, Brazil, Hondu- Oceania region tournament in January trip for each player.” without outside help,” Connors said. ment with Fugazy has not been detcr- ras and Mexico. for the 16th and final berth in the 1983 It was a smashing success. The “We have to support ourselves when mined, it appears the NCAA realized Included on the l8-man roster are World Youth Championships m Mex- pledges still are being counted, but we want to take a hip that our yearly substantial savings in travel expenses. collegiate stars (goalie, ico. New Hampshire athletic officials esti- budget can’t afford.” Staff personnel to contact for NCAA information P.O. Box 1906, Mission, Kansas 66201 913/384-3220 Academic Requirements Cross Country, Men’s Golf, Women’s Bruce L. Howard Basketball Research. Women’s- Thomas E. Yeager Dennis L. Poppe Patricia W. Wall Subscriptions-Maxine R. Alejos Regina L. McNeal Publications-Wallace I. Renfro Publications-Michael V. Earlc NCAA Travel Service Steering Committees Attendance Richard D. Hunter Div. J-William B. Hunt Football-Jim Van Valkenburg Cross Country, Women’s Governmental Relations Div. II-Ted C. Tow Basketball-Jim Van Valkenhurg Ruth M. Berkey Thomas C. Hansen NYSP Publications-Wallace I. Renfro Div. Ill-Thomas C. Hansen Women’s Basketball-Regina L. Gymnastics, Men’s Ruth M. Berkey Swimming, Men’s McNeal Drug,Education Jerry A. Miles NOCSAE Ralph McFillen Baseball Eric D. Zemper Publications-To be assigned Eric D. Zemper Div. I-Jerry A. Miles Publications--To be assigned Drug Task Force Gymnastics, Women’s Postgraduate Scholarships Media-James F. Wright Swimming, Women’s Ronald J. Stratten Patrrcra E. Bork Fannie B. Vaughan Div. II-Ralph McFillen Patricia W. Wall Publications-To be assigned Div. Ill-Ralph McFillen Eligibility Productions Publications--To be assigned Stephen R. Morgan Halls of Fame Publications-David P. Seifert C. Dennis Cryder, James W. Television John T. Waters Basketball, Men’s Employment Shaffer Football-Thomas C. Hansen, C. Div. I-Thomas W Jernstedt Ruth M. Berkey High School All-Star Games Promotion Dennis Cryder, James W. Shaffer Media-David E. Cawood Enforcement Stephen R. Morgan John T. Waters, Timothy W. Championshipsx. Dennis Cry- Div. II-Jerry A. Miles S. David Bent Honors Program Oleason der, James W. Shaffer Media-Regina L. McNeal ’ Basketball-Thomas W. Jcrnstedt Executive Committee David E. Cawood Public Relations Div. Ill-Ralph McFillcn David E. Cawood Tennis, Men’s Louis J. Spry Ice Hockey, Men’s Publications-James A. Sheldon Daniel B. DiEdwardo Dennis L. Poppe Publishing Extra Events Publications-James A. Sheldon Basketball, Women’s Wallace I. Renfro Ralph McFillen Publications-David P. Setfert Div. I-Ruth M. Berkey Circulation-Maxine R. Alejos Tennis, Women’s Insurance Media-James F. Wright Facility Specifications Cynthia L. Smith Richard D. Hunter Radio Div. II-Cynthia L. Smith Wallace I. Renfro Publications--James A. Sheldon David E. Cawood Media-Regina L. McNeal Interpretations Federations Title IX Div. Ill-Patricia E. Bork William B. Hunt Research Jerry A. Miles, Dennis L. Poppe Thomas C. Hansen Publications-James A. Sheldon Eric D. Zemper International Competition Track and Field, Men’s Bowl Games Fencing, Men’s Jerry A. Miles Rifle Dennis L. Poppe Daniel B. DiEdwardo Daniel B. DiEdwardo Ralph McFillen Lacrosse, Men’s Publications-Wallace I. Renfro Publications-David P. Seifert Publications-Michael’V. Earle Business Manager Daniel B. DiEdwardo Track and Field, Women’s Marjorie Fieber Fencing, Women’s Publications-To be assigned Skiing, Men’s Ruth M. Berkcy Cynthia L. Smith Certification (sport) Lacrosse, Women’s Daniel B. DiEdwardo Publications-Wallace I. Renfro Publications-David P. Seifen Publications-Wallace I. Renfro Ralph McFillen Patricia E. Bork Volleyball, Men’s Publications-To be assigned Championships Accounting Field Hockey Soccer, Men’s Jerry A. Miles Louis J. Spry, Richard D. Hunter Patricra W. Wall Legislation Ralph McFillen Publications-Michael V. Earle Publications-To be assigned Stephen R. Morgan Publications-James A. Sheldon Committees Volleyball, Women’s Fannie B. Vaughan Films Library of Films Soccer, Women’s Div. I-Ruth M. Berkey C. Dennis Crydcr, James W. Patricia E. Bork Div. II-Patricia W. Wall Contracts James W. Shaffer Shaffer Publications-James A. Sheldon Div. Ill-Cynthra L. Smith Richard D. Hunter Long Range Planning Publications-Michael V. Earle Football Controller Ted C Tow Softball Div. I-AA-Jerry A. Miles Volunteers for Youth Louis J Spry Marketing Cynthia L. Smith Div. II-Dennis L. Poppe Ruth M. Berkey, Steve Wenger John T. Waters, Timothy W. Publications-David P. Seifen Council Div. III-Daniel B. DiEdwardo Gleason Sports Safety, Medicine Water Polo, Men’s Ted C. Tow Publications-Michael V. Earle Daniel B. DiEdwardo Membership Eric D. Zemper Convention Foreign Tours Shirley Whitacrc Publications-To be assigned Statistics Arrangements-Louis J. Spry Janice I. Bump Women’s Issues Metrics Div. I-Jim Van Valkenburg Honors Luncheon-David E. Ruth M. Berkcy Gambling Task Force Wallace I. Renfro Div. II-James F. Wright Cawood David E. Cawood Div. Ill~Michael F. Bowyer Wrestling Hotel-Marjorie Fieber NCAA News Dennis L. Poppe Legislation-Stephen R. Morgan Golf, Men’s Advertising-Wallace I. Rcnfro, Football Research-Steve Boda Media-Timothy W. Gleason Media-David E. Cawood Dennis L. Poppe David P. Seifert Basketball Research. Men’s- Publications-Michael V. Earle Publications--Ted C. Tow Publication+Michael V. Earle Editorial-Thomas A. Wilson. Mrchael F. Bowyer 14 THE NCAA NEWS/November 8.1902 North Carolina gain a starting spot. The Southwest coach Dick Vcrsace kept only guards four starters Dana Kirk has back from Conl‘crcnce has Bobby Weltlich, fresh Barney Mines and Willie Scott from his 24-5 club that wtm both the regu- in from Mississippi, coaching at Texas that starting group. Wichita State, lar-season and toumamcnt champion- now, and he hopes 6-9 junior Mike with h-9 Antoine Can ( 16.0) and 6-4 ships. Louisville (23-10 and a Final Wackcr (lS.2) can regain the skills (I 1 .O), and Illinois Four club) hopes 6-X freshman Billy that led Texas to a 14-O start last year State (all five starters back from a 17- Thompson can have a Lee-type rookie before a broken leg cut down both 12 team) may bc the MVC team‘; to year, but the McCray brothers (6-Y Wackcr and the ‘Horns. Eddie Sut- brat. Missouri may continue to domi- Scooter and b-7 Rodney) and juniors ton’s Arkansas team has been up there nate the Big Eight if 6- 1 I senior Steve Charles Jones and Lancaster Gordon annually. but the Razorbacks lost four Stipanovich blossoms, but Oklahoma lead the returnees who will try to give starters from a 23-6 club. looks form~dablc with five starters coach Denny Crum a 12th straight 20- When San Franc&j dropped has- back frotn a 20-10 club and one ot the victory season. kctball. a pcrcnnial power w;~s nation’s most hcraldcd freshmen. 6-Y The Southeastern Conference race removed from the West Coast Athletic . may be decided off the court when 7- Confcrcnce; howcvcr, Peppcrdine West Virginia, with h- I Greg Jones, foot learns whether his went 14-O in that lcapuc last year and ctarts as the tarpct in the new Atlantic injured Icg finally will Ict hum return ttr kept four starters. Newcomer Nevada- IO Conference. play again after a year out. Coach Jot I,as Vegas, with 6-Y Sidney Grcrn DePaul’s 132- IS record over the last Hall still can surround Bowic with the t 16.7) and 6-6 Larry Anderson (6.6). five years IS by far the best in the coun- players who were there when he looks like the power in the Pacific try (runner-up Arkansas. at 123-3 1, is left-husky forwards Derrick Hored Coast Athletic Association. 1 1 l/l pamcs and ,097 points back), but and Charles Hurt and guards Dirk Min- Texas-El Paso, with a standout in h- minus all~America Terry Gumming\, niefield and --or fill in for 6 (14.3); dcfcndinp coach Ray Meyer’s Blue Demons may Bowie again with 6-l 1 mu~clcman champion Wyoming (with 6-3 have to surrender hondrs among the I 13. I ). Michael Jackson bidding for player- independents this year to Marqucttc That may not be enough for a lcapue of-the-year honors); San Diego State and guard Glenn “Dot” Rivers. Notre title. The SEC also has likely powers (four starters back plu\ 6-8 John Mar- Dame. with an all-Amcrlca candidate at Alabama, where 6-9 Bobby Lee tens from San Francisco).and pcrcnnial in guard ; Dayton,,and Hurt and 6-3 Ennis Whatlcy now arc power Brigham Young look be\t in the South Carolina also count on rctumccs sophomores eager to improve their Western Athletic Confcrcnce. and rookies to boost them toward tour- impressive debut season\, and Tcnnes- The Sun Belt Confercncc lost a four- nament stature. see, where Don DcVoe builds around year star in Alabama-Birmingham’s And others will break through. 6-7 Dale Ellis (21.2). , and the league that That’s the only sure thing in a season Houston’s surprise Final Four club has burst into national prominence the made all the more unpredictable by lost guard Rob Williams as an early last two years appears headed for a those wildly varying rules, none of pro, but the whole front line that pow- wild scramble. which will apply when the last four ered the Cougars to 25-U last year Bradley’s NIT championship high- survivors gather at Albuquerque next returns, including intriguing 7-O soph- lighted a year that also included the March to pick the new collegiate omore Akeem Olajuwon, likely to Missouri Valley Conference title, but champion. Division III 4 Conrinucdfrum page IO the top teams in this reRion tradition- Redlands, 14- 13. three; Stanislaus step into the middle for graduated all- ally d&larc for NAIA cclmpetition, but State, 18-12, three; Whittier, 14-14, Basketball publication America Metzelaars if the Little Giants two teams that figure to be in the four. hope to retain their national title. NCAA picture again are Augustana Names and Notes-A young There also are some holes in the back and Wisconsin-Milwaukee Bishop squad made it to the regional has all-time ‘records court, but forwards Merlin Nice (9.6 Augustana dropped a three-point quar- finals last year before losing to Stanis- ppg), Kerry Seward and Jim Beagle terfinal game to Wabash in last year’s laus State. The Tigers’ inside-outside The 1983 edition of NCAA Basket- women’s records for all three divi- return NCAA championship and returns two combination of Shannon Lilly (23.7 ball, containing for the first time a’ sions, statistics and conference stand- veterans in Dave Anderson ( 1 I .3 ppg) ppg. ninth in Division 111)and Conway complete women’s records section, ings from the 1981-82 season, champl- Midwest Region and Gcorgc Wcnzel (9.Y ppg) Jones (IS.3 rpg, fourth in the division) now is available. onshio results and records. 198 l-82 Senior guard Kevin Jones (25.4 ppg. returns along with the rest of the team team-by-team results, and complete tied for third in division) will lead Wis- Center Doug Comfoot is gone at Originally published in 1981 as the Top Teams-Augustana (Illinois), schedules for the 1982-83 season. The Stanislaus State, but the Warriors hope NCAA basketball records book, the 22-6, two; Blackburn, 23-8, three; consin-Milwaukee . North Park book offers the college basketball fan to reach the final four again behind the new format of the publication contains Concordia (Illinois), 20-9, three; Illi- also camcd an NCAA berth last year more than 400 pages of facts and fig- but dropped a first-round game to play of Rico Thompson ( 1 I .O ppg), much of the information previously nois Wesleyan, 20-8, two; Rockford, Bishop in the West regional. Curt Wootcn (IO.6 ppg) and Dave published in the NCAA basketball ures’ 18-9, four; Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 26- To obtain a copy of 1983 NCAA Atkins (10.5 ppg) Whittier also guide series as well as complete record 6, three; Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 20-6, Basketball, write NCAA Publishing, will be hoping for a return to NCAA and statistical information. three; Wisconsin-Stevens Point, 22-5, West Region P.O. Box 1906, Mission, Kansas three. play, with Craig LeSuer ( 14.1 ppg) the Included in the book are men’s and 66201. Cost of the book is $5 Names and Notes-A number of Top Teams-Bishop, 17-8, five: top returnee. 1982-83 NCAA championship dates and sites Fall Winter Spring

Crama Country, Men's: Divr.rion I. 44th. Indiana Unwersny. Bloomington. Basketball, Men’s: Division I, 45th. Univerwy of New Mexico. Albuquerque. Basebnll:Division/. 37th. Creqhton Ilmveoity. Rosenblatt Mumcipal Stadium. Indiana. November 22. 1902: Uivisiw~ II. 25th. St Cloud State University. St. New Mellco. April 2 and 4. 1983: Division II. 27th. American International and Omaha. Nebraska. June 4-13. 1983: Division /I. 16th. IJniverGty of Cal~lom~n. Cloud, Minnesota. November 13. 1982: Divraort 111. 10th. Fredonla State Unwer- Springfield Colleges. Springfield. Massachusetts. March 24 and 26. IYX3.0,~ Ision Riverside. Cahfomla, May 21-25. l9X.3. Dwirion I//. 8th. Marietta Collcgc. rity College. Fredonia. New York. November 20. 19X2 111. 9th. Calvin College. Grand Rapids, Michigan. March IX- 19. 19X3 Manetra. Ohio. June 2-S. 1983. Basketball, Women’s: LJwsron I. 2nd. Old Dominion Univrrrlty. Norfolk Diri.tbn 1. g6th. California State Univerwry. Frewo. San Jonquin Crass Country, Women’s: llivirrnrt I. 2nd. IndIana Unlver11.1ww Davis, California. March 24-26. 19113. Jersey. May 2R. 1983. Dwtsion /I/. 4th. we to be determined Icampw Glc). May II. 10th. McAllcn.Texas. December I I. 19R2:/~r~rrrorr///, IOth. PhemxClty. Ala- Gymnastics, Women’s: Division 1. 2nd. Umverwy ol Utah. Salt Lake t’ity. 22. 1983. bama, December4.19RZ Utah. April U-Y. 1983: Divrron /I. 2nd. University 01 California. I>av~\. Cal~lorn~a. Imroasr, Women’s: 2nd championship. Univcrwty of Penn\ylvanla. Phlladel- March 24-26. 1983. phIa. Penn~ylvanra. May 21.22. 1983. Soccer. Men’s: Division 1. 24th. Jacksonville Umverslty. Fort Lauderdale. Flori- Ice Hockey, Men’s: Divirion I. 36th. Unlver~iry of North Dakota. Grand Rtrks. da, December I I. IYBZ; Division II. I Ith. Gtt to be determmed (campus cite). Nonh Dakota. March 24-26. 19X3: /I~w.rron II, 6th. we to he dclcrmincd Icampus Softbidl, Women’s: /IJrvrsron 1. 2nd. Crcighton Umversity. Omaha. Nebraska. December 4. 19R2; Divisron III. 9th. site to be detertnmcd (campu\ Gte). November bite). March 17.19. IYW3. May 25-29. lY83:Divisron I/. 2nd. Chapman College. Orange. Cahlomla. May ZO- 27. 1982 Rllle, Men’s and Women’s: 4rh rhnmpio~~rhrp. Xavier Unlvcr\ity. Cmcmnau. 22. 1983; /Iwrwm //I. 2nd. Eactern Conncctwt State College. Willlmanttc. Con- Ohlo. March 18-19. 1983. Soccer, Women’s: Isf r~humpbnshrp. IJnivercity of Central Florida. Orlando. necticut. May 21-24. 1983. Skiing, Men’s: .IOrh chompimuhip. Bridge1 B mvl. Montana State lJnlvcr\ily. Florida. November 20-21. IYXZ. Bozeman. Montana. March V-12. 1983. Tennis, Men’s: Division 1. 99th. Unlvrr\ity 01 Georgia. Athens. Georgi.t. May Volleyball. Women’s: Dwsiort 1. 2nd. Unwersny of the Parlllc. Stockton. Cali~ Swimming, and Diving, Men’s: I~rwsiotr 1, 60th. IU Natallwium. lnrllana Unl- 14-22. lYX3. Diwsion II. 21~1. Southwert Tcxa\ State Unlverwy. San Marcor. fornm, December 17.19. 19X2. LJwrrmrr II. 2nd. Cahfornia State Umversny. verslty-Purdue UniverGty. Indwqolir. Indiana. March 24-26. IYR1. />rww>,l I/. Texas. May 12.15. IYX3. Dwision 111. Xth. St&e UnivcrGty of New York. Albany. Northridge. Cal,fom,a. December IO-I I. 1982: LI,w,rorr //I. 2nd. lJniver\ily of 20th. Belmont Plara Pool, Long Beach. Callfomia ICalifornIa State Unlvrr\try. NW York. May I l-14. 1983. Chico, how. March l6- 19. 19X3. I~rvrsirw~ //I. Yth. C T 13ranm N;rt;~lw lum. Can- Cahforma. San Diego. California. December IO-I I. 19X2. Tennis, Women’s: I~rvrsmn I. 2nd. UnlverGty of New Mex~crr. Albuquerque, ton. Ohlo (Case Wwrrn Reserve University. I)eni%on Unwerwy and Kcnyon (.I& New Mexico. May 14-22. IYX~:I~n~r~wn//. 2nd. Cal~lom~a Stale P

. -. - . November 8,1982 15 The NCAA NCAA Record

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS rhac she will devote her full-time coaching durirs SID at Arizona TOM KNUTSON named a1 Y. Furman (6-2) ._. 44 IO Chapman (16-B)...... 69 PAUL LIZZO appointed at Long Ibland. He to solthall, follnwing the coming basketball rea- Minnesora-Duluth. He has been a local high IO Nicholls Stare (6-2) _...... 4l IO Ferrrs State (24-I I) ...... 6Y was named interim AD lact spring and is bcgin- W” schwl teacher and sponswri~er AMY S. I I. Jackson State (7-2) ..3 IO. Lewis(l6-X) ...... 6 9 nmg hrs eighth season as head men’s basketball Men’s swImming-JEFF CAVANA hired to AHLERSMEYER has left Wabash to accept a 12. Colyate(Sm2) ...... 3X I3 Nebraska-Omaha (29-9) ...... 50 coach. coach the men’s and wnmen’s programs a! Wright position as coordinator of athletrc rnformat~on at 13. Miami (Ohio) (6-2) ._. ._. ._._. ..32 14. NonhernColoradoI29-IS) ...... 44 State. He has spent the past TWO years at Hrghm Indrana-Purdue-Indianapolis WAYNE 14. Idaho (6-2) ._. _. ._. .30 15. Indiana (Pecn~ylvanra) (23-9)...... 41 ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS lands High School in I-ori Thomas. Kentucky HOGAN, an assrstmt at NOW MEXICO for TWO IS Gambling Stale (6-2) .24 I6 Wayne Slate (Mich.) (22-7) ...... 36 ROB ZUFFELAPO named at Marshall. where JOHN LYONS named at La Salle years. hired at Florida State DAN 16. Western Michigan (5-2-l) 20 17. Central Mrssouri Stare (35-4)...... 2 6 he has been men’s haskcthall coach the last three Women’s tennis-JEFF MARMON, who had CHMIELEWSKI named at Utica, where he is 17. James Madrson (6-2) I5 IS. C. W. Post(36-3) ...... :: ...... 25 seasons. The 19X2-83 season will be his last sea- been men’~ tennib coach at La Salle. now wll Iinishing his senior year. It7 Bowling Green Slate (S-2) .._...... _..... I I 19. Nonh Dakota Stale (36-7) ...... 21 son of coaching. direct both programs Associate sports Information directory IX. TennesseeChanancmga (5-3) .II 20 WinboroSlale(28-7) ..... I6 JAMIE KIMBROUGH, formerly the SID at Ten- 20 Boston University (4-3). .5 Other teams receiving vu(eb (listed in alpha- nessee Tech. appointed a.~South Carolina. Dlvislon II Football betical order): New Haven, Sam Houston State AssIstant sports informntion director- The top IO teams in NCAA DiGon II football and Southwest Texas State. DAN PEARSON. a pan-time ah&ant 1as1 year at through games of October 30, with season records Division I Women’s Volleybull FIorida State. promoted to a full-trme post. in parentheses and points. The top 20 teams rn NCAA Divibion I v+~mren’b Strength coacb~JOE GREIPP named a( La I Southwest Texas State (8-O) ._. ,613 volleyhall through Xarneb 01 November 2. with Salle. 2. Nonh Dakota Sta@z (9-O) ._. ..56 season records in parenthese* and porn&. 3. Calrlomra-Davrs (7-O) s2 I San Diego State (24-2) ...... I57 CONFERENCES 4. Nonheast Mi*xrurr State (6-I) .4X 2. Hawau (14-O) ...... IS5 BRAD TIJFI.S of Bucknell has hcen named 5. Jacksonvdle State (6-l l 44 3 Slanfurd(lX~5)...... 142 recond vlcempresrdent of the ECAC Spans Inform 6 Virginia Union (6-I) 40 4. Cal Poly-San Luir obirpu (19-4) ...... I37 rnation Direclors Assucialion. replacmg RICK 7. NonhAlabamal7.I) .36 5 Pacific(l7-4)...... I26 VAUGHN, who left Amerrcan IO become puhhc X. North Dakota (7-2) 30 6. Southern Califc?mia (15-S)...... 123 relations director of the Washington Federal5 of 8 Nonhem Michigan (7-2) ..30 7. Arizona State (25-9) ...... II2 the Umted States Fmthall League IO. A>hlandGl) 24 8 AtironaIlX~Y)...... 103 Other teams recervmg votes (hsted rn alpha- 9. Brrgham Young 127-4) ...... 93 NOTABLES betical crrdcr) East Slruudrbury State. tdinboro 1IJ Purdue (21-O)...... 92 LOU REYCROFT, head men’s rce hockey State, Fort Valley State. Sacramento State, II. UCLAIIS-IO)...... 7X COACHES Women’s track and field -DON DENDON coach at Cornell. named prebidmt of the Eastern Southern Connect~cul State and Texas A&I. 12. NebraskalZI-4) ...... 70 Baseball- .FRAN HIRSCHY hired a( Lrmg ha5 been reheved of hrs dutres a, Drake. He wrll College Athlerrc Conference Drv~smn I Hockey Division 111Women ’s Volleyball 13. CalifumiaI21~6). .... 63 Island. bc replaced ~>nan interim ha,i\ by a\ri<(ant cincc I6 Nc>rthwes(em (19-X) ...... 36 at Marshall He has been named the Thundermg diate hurdle. hired at Illin&. Hc frmnerly was ~rf the year by the New EnXIand Track Coaches I. Cahfomla-San Drego (I X-9) I20 17 Calif~>mia~Santa Barbara (I X-1 I)...... 30 Herd‘s associate AD and wdl assume those duties assirtant coach al Penn State. hi* alma mater Association. His indrxx and ouldwr team> both 2. SonomaState(lX-7) .IOY 18. Texas(ZI-II) ...... 26 full-time m the sprmg. Women’s track and field assistants- won conference titles last year. 2. Juniata (34-2) .._...... 105, 19. Pepperdine (14.9)...... I7 Men’s bnaketball rsaaislvnt~BOB ROTH MICHAEL BURKE chosen at La Salle 4 LaVeme (17-B) 102 20. Tennessee I I R-4) ...... 7 named at Hamilton. He was an as&ant al Lc MARYBETH SPENCER. an all-America drb- DEATHS 5. IthacaI26-6)... ._....._...... _.... 96 The other team receiving a vote was Southwest Moyne last year. lance runner a) an undergraduale at Wibc0nGn. A. C. “WHITEY” GWYNNE, 72, dred ocI0~ 6. Western Maryland (27-3) x7 Missouri Srace. Women’s bssketball~BOBB1 BONACE, named a graduate a’ program brn~e 1975, JOHN MER- Sports information directors~DAVID Greenbhoro. Occrdental and Stamrlaus State. IO. Massachusetts (13-2-l) 76 RITT. head coach ar Tennc\see Stare for 20 years. GOLDBERG named at Manhattan I1 SanJoseS1ate(l2-5)...... 69 ha, announced his resrgnatron lollowmg the end LtoNARD N. HARLOW named director 01 NCAA POLLS Division II Women’s Volleybull 12. Prmceton (I I-2)...... 66 c)f the curren1 SLIIILI~I Merritt began the 1982 sea- spans communicatrons at Mame, where he has Dlvlstoa I-AA Football The top 20 learn> in NCAA Drvrsmn II worn- 13. NonhCarolinaIll-5) ...... 55 ton as Ihe wmnmge~t achve cuach in DiGon I- been drrecmr of public information and central The top 20 teams in NCAA Division I&AA foot- en’s volleyball through games ,,I’ November I. I4 Maryland(l l-7)...... 48 AA wrth a 215-64-9 record Merchant services since 1975 In a related ~OVC. r)REw ball through games of October 30, with season wrth season rec~rrd\ in parenthexs and porn& IS. Rutgerslll~P) ...... 40 Muinc ha\ crtcndcd the cnntract rrl DENNIS FINNIE. sport, inlormation specialrst for records in parenthese, and points. I Northndge State (23-6) I 40 16 Springlield (I I-4) ...... 38 BARRETT through the 1984 season. Mame‘s depanmenr crf public inimmation and I. Eastern Kenrucky (7-O) 80 2 California-Riverside 122-S). ._ 133 126 I7 Stanford 17-4)...... 23 Women’s gymnnr(ics assistant~GRA- cenlral bervrces, wrll JOM Harlow in a two-man 2 LouisianaTechf7~1) .._...... _...... 75 3. SacramentoSlatell9-IS) 18. Southwest Missouri State (16-3) ...... 18 CIELA TRILLA named at Ilhnois. She competed sporIs inf~hmalion staff B. B. BRANTON 3. Delaware(7-I) _. ._._.__.._.____...... 69 4. Portland State (19-2) II3 19. Harvard (10-2) ._._ ._ 13 al Yale as an undergraduate and also has reprem selected at Seattle Pacific. replacing TIM HAAG. 3. Tennessee Stare (7-O- I) 69 5 Florida Southern (36-5) I I2 20. Michigan (12-3) ...... 8 sented the Puer~o Rican national team who \~a) named an ass~stam to the AD Branmn 5 Northeast Louisiana (7-2) _. ._. ..64 6. Angelo Stale (35-B) _.. 105, The other team recerving a vole wa< Davis & Women’s soRbal~BOBB1 BONACE, worr,~ was with AthI&* in Action JEFF DIMOND 6. Eastern Illinois (B-O- I ). ..5Y 7 Wright State (26-7) 94 Elkins (12-2). en‘s basketball and \oftball coach the past IO named at Bakersfield State. replacing JoHN 7. HolyCross(7~l) ._.._.._.__.. ____ 5X R. California-Davis (Y-9) 86 years at Cahfomia-Santa Barbara. has annljunced HENDERSON. Drmond has been an assistant 8. South Carolina State (7-2).. .53 9. Florrda International (24-h) .77 See Record, page 16 The NCAA The Masket

I - - - J

intercollcgls,e athletics. This position requira Xadhg apuknce. Experknce in person- IS a full-time, nine-month. non-tenure track W-h &Fthll. Need one team for Dh+ SWO~Qmanagement. sound business princi- position, effective January 1963. Salary is sbn 1.1903 Huron lnvilabonal Tournament Readers of The NCAA News are invited to use The Market to locate pies, sensitwrty to public relations and “nder- based on qualifications. Submit letter of .sppk- Eastern Michi an Universi A ril 15-16, candidates for ositions opt at their institutions, to advertise open standIn :atbn. resume, and names of l?ve references Phone:AnncJ~“sVm.313~jr87-f031. dates in their p Paylng schedules or for other appropriate purposes Uckel saB es. Responsibilities inclu by November 24 b. Dr. Charles A. Eberle. Ing the dlsbursemcnt of lick&s for a 56. Oircclor of Athletics. LDck Haven State Col- seat fmtball stadium and a 7,3O&sea has- egc. Lack Haven. PA 17745. An sftlrmame Rates are _15 cents per word for general classlfted advertising (agate ketball arena. alding In the planning and ¶cdodequal opponunity employer. t pe) and $17.60 per column Inch for display clascifted advertising. Implementation of a ticket marketing plan: d rders and co y aredue fivedays prior to thcdate of publication for ntabllshment of sound business accounti procedures, operation of a computeriz 3 We want your jobs. general class17 led space and seven days prior to the date of publica- Lickcl sy%em. and overall supewi&n of c&e bd F&l C~eh at St. Cloud State tion for display classified advertising. Orders and copy will be pcrsonnel.QuallfkaUonr Includeab-schebr’s Jniwrdy. Nontenure track position. Salary The Market, the NCAA’s job accepted by telephone. ret with managerial espenencc in 6,-w- kpendcnt upon qualifications and cxperl- Open Dates listing service, wants to do a and personnel. Experknce in can- rice. Appbhnmt dak Jsnua 15. 1983 job for you. Member institu- llcket sales system is desuabk. Xher r&ad dutks In men‘s arh7 elks. Pass- For more information or to place an ad, call 9131384-3220 or write should he sent to Mr. John Blanlon, My of ~)me texhing. Q”ali6cation.v ev- Football at Abiienc-Chr,rtian University. tions and conferences are find- NCAA Publishing, P.0. Box 1906, Mission, Kansas 66201. rbslstan, AthleUc Dir&r for Bus,ness and knee of succcurUl foc&all coaching uperi- Needs opponcn~ for 1963. 1984, 1965 and ing that this is the place to Yanagement Unlvcrsiry of FYttxburgh, PO nce required: effcctlve publk relations and 1966. Open dates in 1963 are September 10 Box 7436. Pbburgh, PA 15213. Appkcatkzn skills very desirable. A IlcaUonr and 17. Open date In 1964 is September 15. come when they have a job to claw date November 30. 1962. The Unka- through December IO &2 Con- Dpen dates In 1965 are Seprember 7 and 2 I. fill. For information about of Pinsburgh is an equal opporrunity, al Oian. Mrector of Mc;l.r Athle,lcs. In 1996. open on Septcmkr 12.20 and 27.. placin an ad, call Dave Seifert em of a pl~c.,,on. rcs”ines and names of P Ciurd St&e Unhw,ly, St Cloud, M,nne- Contacl Wally Bulling(cn. athletic director, hrce re Pcrences to’ Employee Relarlans YM 56301. Afnrmatlvc acbor&qual opportu- 4biknc Christin Llnlvers Abtknc. Texas at 913R 84-3220. Department 1ity cmpbytr. 79699. Telephone 915167 ? i 9 I I I41 North Foundabon Hall Positions Available Oakland Untversi Football Rochester. Ml 4 x23 31 u377.3480 Tennis pkcatmns mus, be rcccwed b November Hsd P-1 corh. Reports to dwector YI ,1962. OAKUND UNNERSI l+ IS AN sf athletics. Qualificabonr m,n,mum of Lc Head Football Coach Athletic Director EQUAL OPPORTUNIlYIAFPlRMATNE AC- years’ successful football coaching uperi- lied Men’s Tennb Coach. Porkbn cur- TlON INSI-TUllON enre on the college, “n,vers,,y, or profe,- rentty sva,bbic at Roan&e College, Salem. Athlutlc DIrector. Oakland University. AppliG sumal IeveI, signirlcant experience in recruil- Vtrgmki. l-he pesition Is pall-umc for three Western Illinois University calbns are king accepted for rhe posHion of In demonstrated organirational and publk months in the spnng Roanoke College IS director of alhlctks at Oakland University. a Academic Counselor re Batlana rhlls. demonr!ra,ed integrity and Dwialon Ill and a member of Ihc Old Domin- The department of intercollegiate athletics invites applica- posItin repotin directly to the prcrdent of characler: bachelor’s degree r;q;,rcd ion Athletic Conference Application deadkne the ufieraty Responslblliucs include admlnm Responsibikbes Include. but arc not Ilmked to. lkcember I, 1962. Send rredrnl~alr 10 Ed tions for the position of head football coach. This position the iollowinq direct and coordin&e a staff 01 ~stenng the NC&4 D&ion II athletic woaram Athletic Acadcmlc Counselor. To ass~srin Green. Athletic Director. Roanake College, reports directly to the athletic director and will be responsible for me; and women and ,he “nlvcrriiy.s i&a- assistant ccaches: coach the team udng the Salem. VA 24 I53 a program of counrrllng and academIcI techni ue~. &ra(cg~s, and matlvation for the management of the I-AA football program, coaching mud progrsm, overseeing the manaqement career planning for scholarship audenl-a,h- of spans and recrealional fac,l,tio. sdmmr- requsc a to schleve success: develop a highiy staff and accompanying responsibilities. Qualifications: dem- Ietes. Minwnum of ma~ler’s degree wllh aca- successful recr”,bng program, estabksh and bring pr rams that promote leisure tlmc dem,c prcparatnn or experience in fields of Track & Field recrcalion “4 or members of the “nwersrty cwn- maintain a porfmvc public rclatlans image for onstrated ability and accompanying credentials verifying the human behavior and a strong En l,sh gram Ihc lcam. the Athletic Department, and the munity and for members of ,hc local gee- mar background To receive ful B cormdcr- following-(l) head coaching ability; (2) or anizing and graphic wea. adminislering wellness and car- ation. applkallon. resume and three le,wrs of Head Track urd Field Co&h for Wcn and directing a coaching staff; (3) recruiting; (4) pu %lit relations. &r rehabilitation program. wwaun and recommendation should be received by WanuJW Wratllyl Coach Lark directiw mawr fund-raisin. activities @andi- December I. 1982. Subma to Dr Dale 0 f&en (Pa.) State Colleae. a member of the Appointment: 12 months. Salary open. Applications will be dates tit ha& a master’s &.ree substanbal Roart c/o Athleac Department. Oklahoma Conference. Salary & Able. commensu- Penns,i&,a S,zile Athi& Conference and accepted until November 27, 1982. Send applications to: managerial erpencncc in &&nnel and State Untveraity. Stillwater. Oklahoma 74078 rate with upenence 1 the Eastern Wrestling League, invites sp lica- Rnancbl areas. coaching expenence, 1 corn- ppkcalion deadline Minority and women rand,dales are encaur- December I. 1962. Send resume to: Dr. tions for the position of head track an 8 fleld mitment to the scholar-s,hklc philosophy, a aged 10 apply. An equal opporrunny coach for men and women and assistant Gil Peterson strong Interest in Community Health Mainte- Ronald E. Belier, President East Tennessee employer State Unwers~ly. P.O. Box 2452OA. Johnson *rcsll coach. The candidate should pos- Athletic Director “a”‘= Programs. expanencc ,n successful sess 3a achelor’s degree. with master’s fund-raising actlvlties. The position demands Cky. Tennessee 37614. ETSU 1s an equal Western Illinois University oppoltunltylaffirmawe action employer. degree preferred: abilky to organize. super- a” individual wth leadershIp sblkty and l rong visr. and admmiskr NCAA Division II track Macomb, Illinois 61455 oral and v&ten communication skills who Ticket Manager and Fkld pmgmms far men and women: abil- can interact with bo,h unhwsiry and local lid Foothll Gmch. To be responsible $ b relate dlmely to an NC&4 Dh’ision I communkies. Oakiand Univcrsl IS 1 state- for recruiting. counseling and coaching 01 westiing program. to include coaching tech- Western Illinois University is an affirmative supported unwrsity wi,h 1 I, 23 0 students AlhlcllcTkket mM$sgu. Theuniversity of ntudcnt-athleles; and aeiectiw,, rupwiaiin wilh internatonal experience prefers action/equal opportunity employer. located on a 1.400 acre campus. 25 miles Pittsbur h is acccpring appilcallons for 1 and leadership of coaching personnel. PC& 2 prevlaus coaching cxpriencc in both north of Delrdl. Salary Is negotiable. Send Id- bcket ss9 es manager I” the department of tbn requires a master’s degree end college l&k md 6&i. and ,n weatllng. Appaln~mcnL 16 THE NCAA NEWSINovembkr 8,1982 Newsworthy Division I Continuedfrom page I the division will determine whether DIVISION I TABLE the majority wishes to adopt criteria to Only two players have won rollrgirrte soccer’s co\,eted Hermonn 1979-82 Men’s bring about that result, as provided in Trophy twice during their cureers. Both plqedfor St. Louis Unim No. Men’s Bylaw IO- I-(c), which wah adopted as No. Wvmen’s Championship versity, und they kept rhe award in the Billiken trophy care ,/bur Sports and Sports and part of the three-division concept some Participants straight years (I 969-1972). Con you ncrmr them:’ Category Participants Participants nine years ago. and No. Sports The plan proposes new criteria for Division I-A IO.5 340. I 8.1 131.7 58.6 5.1 Three victories, tie forfeited all mcmbcrs of Division I, whether or Division I-AA IO. I 295.3 7.3 129.1 17.2 2.8 not they sponsor football, basketball California State (Pennsylvania) has forfoitcd its three victories and one tie in Other Division I 8.5 154. I 5.4 14.6 6 0 0.8 football this season because of an ineligible player. or both. It mistakenly has been charac- According to John Pearce Watkins, president of California State, senior Paul terized as a football vs. basketball Palumbo, an all-conference safety last year, wab ineligible to play in the first >ix issue, or reflective of a dispute four basketball games, if the institu- could retain Division I-AA classifica- games this season. Watkins said it had been assumed Pdlumbo had received a between larger and smaller institu- tion sponsors basketball, against insti- tion if it is a member of an allied foot- medical waiver in his freshman year. Palumbo was injured his freshman year but tions. In fact, all sizes of institution5 tutions that arc not Division I members ball-playing confcrencc m which at played in two games, making him ineligible this year. featuring football or basketball pro- and play at least one-third of its reg,u- least six of the conference members Because of the forfeits, California State’s record drops from 3-3-l to O-7, with grams, or both, will be able to meet the lar-season basketball contests at home. sponsor football and more than half of three games remaining. proposed criteria for membership in In addition, all members of Division the football-playing members meet the Division I. I would be required to award collec- attendance criterion for the applicable Basketball hall of fame planned The Council and Division I Steering tivcly financial aid to student-athletes period. Committee have emphasized that the in their Division I sports amounting to Other Division I Institutions A fund-raising drive to collect $2.5 million in pledges for a new basketball hall plan is designed to determine that 50 percent of the total permitted for Any other Institution could be a of fame has reached $I .4 million, according to Jerry Healy, spokesman for the Division 1 members share, to an apprc- those sports under the applicable por- Division I member if it met the above- current museum. ciable degree, a comparable commlt- tions of Bylaws 6-5Qb)-( I), 6-5-(c), 6- mentioned criteria applicable to all The state of Massachusetts has given a .FSmillion grant for the 57 million pro- ment to intercollegiate athletics at the 5-(d) and 6-5-(e). Such aid could be Division I members and complied with ject to build a new hall of fame along lntcrstatc Y I and the Connecticut River on Division I level, including one or both distributed to any number of the var- one of two basketball-attendance the edge of downtown Springfield, Massachusetts. Construction could begin of the major sports of football and has- sity sports sponsored in Division I. options: next year. kctball, and a number of other sports as That would result in a Division 1-A 0 Average more than 3,500 in docu- Promoters claim a new museum would lure more tourists than the current Bas- well. member being required to award aid mented paid attendance per home has- ketball Hall of Fame at Springfield Collcgc, where James Naismith invented the amounting to the value of not fewer ketball game in the immediate past game in 1891. Rationale than 90 full grants-in-aid, with the four-year pcrlod, or Former star Bob Cousy is national chairman of the fund-raising l For the past tight years, there comparable totals being 80 full grants campaign. l Average more than 110,000 in has been an average of five institutions documented paid attendance per sea- per year moving into Division l-an son for all basketball games, at home overall increase of 16.9 percent. With to achieve a League acknowledges record and away, in the past four-year period. few exceptions, these have not been &dter commonality Potsdam State knew it would be difficult to replace goalie Randy Brown during institutions joining the NCAA for the A confercncc cxccption also would the current ice hockey season. Now, it sounds cvcn more difficult with the recent first time; rather, the movement has of intercollegiate ath- be established for institutions not announcement by the Eastern College Athletic Conference that Brown set a been from Divisions II and III. In addi& letic purposes and meeting either of those attendance record last season. tion, some institutions that opted for requirements. Such an lnstltution Brown, who was a four-year standout at Potsdam State, is the ECAC record Division I membership when the divi- programs in Division I could be a Division I member if it is a holder for most consecutive scoreless minutes played. He accomplished the feat sion was created in I973 have focused . . . member of an allied basketball~play~ by playing 166 minutes, 29 seconds during a span of four games last season. He their attention principally on one sport ing conference that meets the require- broke a mark of I52:33 set by David Reccc of Vermont in 1970-7 I. (men’s basketball), to the apparent ments of Bylaw 5-7 and if at lcast six His streak began in the last 36:25 of a game against Buffalo and was followed detriment of most, if not all, of their in Division I-AA and 42.5 full grants conference members and at lcast 80 by shutout victories against Hamilton and Rochcstcr Tech. The streak finally other sports for both men and women. or their equivalent for other Division I percent of the total members of the ended when he allowed a goal to Oswego State at IO:04 of the first period. institutions. conference do meet the applicable cri- l All members of Division I deter- As an option, any Division I mem- mine the policies that affect the con- tena. ber could use a minimum financial aid (1969-1970) ond Mike Swrey (1971~1972). duct of all sports, for both men and In the total-attendance criterion for a: cash cxpcnditurc (cstablishcd at this 0 women, at Division I mcmbcr institu- basketball. attendance at doublehead- tions, except in football, whcrc only time as 25,OoU per grant) instead of ers would bc divided by two, with each football&playing members vote on necessarily reaching the minimum grant of the four teams permitted to include members. In an institution where the Record football-only policies. The Council one-half of the final documented paid believes it reasonable to suggest that if value of a full grant exceeds $5,000, for attendance for the doublchcadcr. In example, the institution could meet the Continuedfrom page I5 Division 111 Field Hockey an institution’s vote IS to affect legisla- both criteria, teams playing more than requirement by awarding collectively Division 111 Football The top 20 rearru in NCAA Division 111 field tion regarding recruiting, financial aid 50 pcrccnt of their home games as part hockey through gameb ot November 2. wdh sea- The top IS team\ in NCAA Dnv~swn III tircrl~ or eligibility, for example, in all other financial aid amounting to $S,oOO tnncs of doubleheaders in college campus hall lhmugh games 01 October 30. with wason son rccwds 10 parcnlhcw* and twin& the appropriate minimum number of sports at all Dlvlsion I institutions, arenas would bc permitted to count the records in parenlhcw and points I, Trenton Stale (22-O) ...... IO0 grants (90,80 or 42.5). I Baldwin-Wallace (X-O) ..... hll 2. Ithaca ( 13-2)...... 93 such an institution should be required doubleheader attendance in lull. 2. West Geor&w (7-O) ...... s.s 3 Frankhn & Manhall (I I-2-I). 92 to display a Division I commitment to Division I-A Football Eflktive Date 3. Augu*tana (III )(7-O) ...... 49 4 Ellzahethtown ( 14-2-l). .. .x5 one or both of the major sports of foot- 4 Wagnerlh-0-l)...... -44 5. Tutts(l3-2-l) ...... 79 In addition to all of the forcmcn- The Council is proposing an cffcc- ball and basketball, as well as a nun- 5. Wabash (U-O)...... 42 6 hridgcwatcr(Mass.) (12-S-3) 73 tioned requirements, an institution in tive date of September I. 1984, for the 6. WirconGn-Stout (X-I ) ...... 35 6 Frostburg Slate ( I S-3)...... 73 ber of other sports. ‘Thus, minimum Division I-A in football would be new criteria, rather than the September 7 La Verne (6-O) ...... 32 8. Bates (10-2-2)...... 63 standards of commitment to Division I 56 required to continue to meet the exist- 1983 date originally discus\cd. All 7 St Lnvrenre (7-O) ...... 3 2 Y. Dcnison ( 13-4 - I ) ...... programs in football or basketball, as 9. Swarthmore (7-O) ...... 231/z II) New England ColleXe I l4- I ) .... 53 ing criteria in Bylaws I I-l-(e)-(2), (3) involved institutions would bc well as other sports, should be IO Bi,h,rp (6-t t ...... 19111 IO Classboro Slate (IO-h) ...... -53 and (4). The exception and waiver required to show compliance with the II. Wldener(7-I)...... IY I2 Corlland sraw ( I I-4) ...... 40 required to assure a fair appraisal of I2 Montclair Stale (6-O-2) ...... IV/2 I3 W~sconw-Stevens Point (I 7-4) 36 legislation as it affects all Division I I 13. Hopel7-I)...... IS 13. Salem Slalc (16-2) ...... 36 sports at all Division I members. 14. Plymouth Slate (8-O) ...... l3’iz IS Lynchburg (13-3) ...... 35 - . . all sizes of institutions . . . will be able to I5 Wanburg(7-I) ...... I3 16. Scranton (10-5-I) ...... 33 l Statistics show that institutions meet the proposed criteria’ Other teams recewing votes llirted m alpha- 17. Wilkc>(X-4-3) ...... 20 with football classified in Division I betical order): DePauw. Franklin & Manhall. IX. Wwsler (I l-7) ...... I3 MI hon. North Cc&al. Ohio Nonhem. Tren- IY. Sweet Briar (Y-3) ...... u and other Division I institutions with opportunities in Bylaws I I - I -(e)-(S) Division I criteria by that date, which ,ooSlatemdUn~on(N.Y.). 20 Drew (12-3) ...... 5 major commitments to basketball and (6) also would remain. would require them to meet the criteria sponsor on an avcragc substantially Division I-AA Football during the 1983-84 academic year. more sports for more participants, both In addition to the requirements for For purposes of meeting the attend- Defending men and women, and experience ance requirements, the seasons to bc greater success in more sports in all Division 1 members, an institution in Division I-AA football would be counted in football would be 1980, Continued from page 9 more competitive region Ferris NCAA championships. required to continue to meet the foot- 1981, 1982 and 1983; in basketball. appearance, lost in last year’s regional State, defending champion in the Bylaw I1 would be amended to ball scheduling requirement in Bylaw the countable seasons would be I980- final to Kentucky Wesleyan. The Great Lakes Conference, has all- specify certain criteria for all members 11-l-(f)-(2). 81, 1981-82, 1982-83 and 1983-84. league performers Dave Swilley (15.5 of Division I, as well as certain addi- Marauders must replace Eric Love, the Waiver Opportunity school’s all-time rebounding leader ppg) and Mike Gillespie (9.9 ppg) . . . tional criteria to be met by those in Also, such an institution would and No. 2 career scorer. The return of Larry Lubitz (15.2 ppg) returns at Division I-A or Division I-AA in foot- have to meet a football-attendance The Council also voted to sponsor Bruce Davis (14.0 ppg) and James Oakland Saginaw Valley State ball and those Division I members that rcquiremcnt for the first time. It would an amendment to Bylaw IO- I-(f) that Marablc (13.6 ppg, 8.3 rpg) will help. has declared for NAIA competition do not sponsor football or do not spon- be required to average more than 4,700 would permit the waiver process in Northern Kentucky had its first . Howard Monk (I I .S ppg) and sev- sor it in Division I. in documented paid attendance per that bylaw to be extended to institu- home football game in one of the tions that believe they will not comply winning season in four years and eral transfers will be the keys at Wayne All Members returns leading scorer Brady Jackson State. immediate past four years or, as an with new criteria adopted by a divi- All mcmbcrs of Division I would be (19.Oppg) . . . Wright State made its option, it could average more than sion. In short, an institution finding required to continue to meet the exist- fourth straight NCAA appearance last 5,500 for all of its football games, at itself in that position could petition the ing criteria in Bylaws I I-l-(a), (b), (c) year. Gary Monroe (12.2 ppg) is the West home and away, in the four-year per- membership of the desired division for and (d). Specifically, each Division I top returnee . . . Georgetown iod. Institutions utilizing the home- a waiver of the pertinent criteria at any Top Teams-Eastern Montana, I9- member, under those bylaws, must: (Kentucky), which will go NAIA and-away option would have to play future annual Convention. 10, two; Seattle Pacific, 16-l 1, five. again, has an 18-game winning streak l Comply with the Division I finan- no fewer than four home games each but only one starter back. Names and Notes-Alaska- cial aid limitations in Bylaw 6-5. season. [The 4,700 and 5,500 mini- Next in the News Anchorage won last year’s Great mums are in direct ratio to the criteria l Sponsor a minimum of eight var- Previews of the intercollegiate Northwest Conference title but must of Division I-A when compared to the North Central Region sity intercollegiate sports for men in average football attcndancc in each swimming and fencing seasons. replace five starters, which is the same Division I. Championship previews in Divi- Top Teams--Ferris State, 20-6, subdivision, 1 task interim coach Joe Folda faces at sions I-AA, II, III football. l Conduct its regular-season com- The plan would include a confer- three; Oakland, 18-9, three; Saginaw Eastern Washington Eastern Championship previews in Division Valley State, 24-8, four; Wayne State, petition under eligibility rules at least ence exception in Division I-AA corn- Montana’s top returnee is Ron I men’s soccer, Divisions 1 and III 15-9, three. Osborne, while Seattle Pacific hopes as stringent as those of NCAA Bylaw 5 parable to that already applicable in men’s and women’s cross country, and Names and Notes-The addition of that are applicable to Division 1. Division I-A; i.e., an institution fail- Gregg Kingma (16.9 ppg) can lead it Division III women’s volleyball. the Michigan schools makes this a into postseason play. l Schedule and play not more than ing to meet the attendance requirement