Griffin daily news. (Griffin, Ga.) 1924-current, January 07, 1977, Page Page 9, Image 9
n S' W H ■flfln ■Bfllf 4? fl 'fl H . Vi - fl~ fl'B-Vv' fl W KtMflifl ■l7 JfliwflT ■fl '^^^■r, V SBT , |£ —fl fl ? tm »T~ • 'flflH fl ,< .aU#.-* |L ™ 1 ■Hr*kX jOl ■hMflflflflflflKi) ' The Indiana Pacers defeated the Atlanta Hawks 103-95 last night at the Omni and Billy Knight (25) and Lou Hudson, who is guarding him closely, were the game’s high scorers. Knight pumped in 41 for the Pacers and Hudson scored 30 for the Hawks. Outcome didn’t surprise Brown ATLANTA (AP) — It’s a mir acle the Atlanta Hawks weren’t beaten any worse than they were Thursday night, said Hawks’ Coach Hubie Brown. Super shooting by Indiana guard Billy Knight, who got 41 points, plus an intimidating de fense led the Pacers to their fourth consecutive victory by a 103-95 score. “Knight is quite a player,” conceded Pacer Coach Bob Leonard, whose star guard has 80 points in his last two games. “You aren’t going to do much better” than he did. “The outcome was no sur prise,” said Brown, whose Hawks lost their ninth game in 10 outings. “What we prepared for, Indiana did.” “We had 14 turnovers inside the dotted line of the lane and we were intimidated eight TV networks in super battle LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Minnesota Vikings and the Oak land Raiders won’t be the only ones having at it this Super Bowl weekend. NBC and CBS square off Sat urday night in a battle of preg ame comedy-variety specials. This gets complicated, so maybe you’d better take notes. CBS aired the Super Bowl last year and the night before the game put on a show called “Super Night at the Super Bowl.” NBC has the game this year and decided it would also like the pregame variety show. NBC asked the producer, Pierre Cossette, to ask CBS if it could borrow the title and con cept. Perhaps they could alter nate it, as they do the Super Bowl game. CBS said nothing doing, it was their idea and they wanted to keep it, espe cially since they air the game next year from the Superdome in New Orleans. So NBC called on Norman Rosemont to come up with a show. He did. It’s called “The Mad Mad Mad Mad World of t THINK OF IT A 24-Hr. Electronic Policeman in your home — everyday. The cost is less than yon might think. ‘SECURITY SYSTEMS By Air Comm Your Peace Os Mind HOT LINE 227-1442 times, causing us to change our shots and not score,” moaned Brown. “Any time you’re zero of 22 inside the dotted line and give up 18 points on second shots (by not getting the rebounds) and still not get beat any worse than we didn, it’s a miracle.” “Summed up, it was our lack of execution inside of six feet, and the intmidation factor at both ends,” Brown said. He still had some praise—but not for the Hawks. “For the fans of Atlanta, who may not have known about Billy Knight, let me tell you he’s a super player. He’s an all-star performer. You can’t use the word ‘potential’ in describing him. He executes,” Brown said. Knight executed well enough to get 14 points in the third pe riod-matching the Atlanta team total. In that period, the Pacers the Super Bowl” — and it’s up against the CBS show. I told you it was complicated. “It tees me off a little be cause it was my idea to begin with,” said Cossette, “but what’re you going to do.” NBC's “Mad” show, at 9 p.m. EST, is all football-oriented comedy. The show was taped in a studio. CBS’ “Super Night,” at 9:30 p.m. EST, offers music, dancing and comedy live from outside the Rose Bowl. “Most of the comics are real ly doing the attitude and style that made them famous,” said Rosemont in a telephone inter view from the NBC stage where he was taping the show. “Take Pat Cooper. He always plays the angry Italian. He talks about his mother and how he visits her every Sunday. What we’ve done is make him a rabid football fan torn be tween seeing his mother or the game.” Norm Crosby, noted for his mixed-up words, tries to ex plain the game of football. built a 51-47 halftime margin to a 79-61 lead. “We moved the ball real well in the third period and were able to open up the game,” Leonard said. “But we aren’t the type of team that is going to run away from anybody.” Siiner Bowl $lO5-mil lion business off field By KEN PETERS Associated Press Writer PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - It may only be a game, but Super Bowl XI is serious business off the field — $lO5 million worth, promoters say. The trappings of the Min nesota-Oakland pro football championship, the banquets, the cocktail parties, the endless string of press conferences, are straight out of Ringling Bros., Barnum and Bailey. Knight moans Hoosiers 9 plight By KEN RAPPOPORT AP Sports Writer After sitting on top of the basketball world last season, Bobby Knight seems to be car rying it on his shoulders this year. “We just aren’t getting the job done,” said the troubled coach of Indiana University. “We have a lot of areas where we need considerable improve ment.” With markedly less talent than last season’s NCAA cham pions, the Hoosiers are losing as much as they are winning this season. Thursday night’s 80-63 Big Ten loss to Purdue marked Indiana’s fifth setback in 10 games this season —a dramatic turnabout from last year’s 32-0 record. “We are not a great team,” says Knight, “and teams that aren’t great are going to get hurt some time.” There has been internal strife on the defending national champions as well. Some play ers have walked off the squad and even All-American center Kent Benson has not been spared Knight’s acid tongue. Purdue Coach Fred Schaus, had a revenge motive Thursday night. He remembered a 104-71 beating from Indiana two sea sons ago. “What a difference in two years!” Schaus exclaimed. “It was a real juicy win for us, es pecially when we think of the way they rubbed it in two years ago.” Elsewhere in college basket ball, top-ranked San Francisco blitzed Portland 95-73; No. 5 Michigan routed Northwestern 102-65; No. 11 Arizona edged SPORTS Lawrence bowls 623 Larry Lawrence had a 623 series and a high game 231 Thursday night in the Commercial Bowling League. Ed Thompson had a 604 series and a 254 high. Ray Jackson posted a 615 series with a 245 high. Other individual scorers were: Billy Bevil 211, Melvin Whidby 213, Leo Rothbauer 212, Ray Robbins 219, Craig Sharpe 221, Jimmy Wilkerson 211, Horace Phillips 214, Tony Vaughn 202, Tony Ellis 200, Mickey Cochran 217, Tony Strickland 215 and Jack Jones 201. Team scores were posted as follows: Oliver Sewing Machine 3, Cedrics 1; Speir Insurance 3, Drug and Surgical Shop 1; Capri 4, Highland 0; Shelby Electric 3, Spalding Square 1; Mayfield Motors 3, Pro Sports 1; Hjllhouse 3, Cole’s Drug 1; Sigman-Buick 4, Tommy’s Used Cars of Griffin 0; Commercial Bank 4, Tommy’s Used Cars of Thomaston 0. Roy Mansir TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) - Funeral services were held Tuesday for Roy Mansir, a top authority on running facilities for thoroughbreds. Manir spent the last 45 years as track su perintendent of Agua Caliente race track. “You saw what happened tonight,” he said. "We had a lot of turnovers late in the game when they were trapping us.” Atlanta rallied to cut the margin in the fourth period, but never led. Lou Hudson paced the Hawks with 30 points. The most impressive num bers are neither the passing statistics of Raiders quarter back Ken Stabler nor the rush ing totals of Vikings running back Chuck Foreman. The big statistics are people and dollars. “We estimate a total econom ic impact — using a multiplier of five —of between SBS million and $lO5 million,” said Chris Hills, an official with the Los Angeles Convention and Vis- San Diego State 80-77, and No. 20 Memphis State beat Okla homa City 82-72. A 16-point scoring burst in the first half, sparked by Walter Jordan and Bruce Parkinson, was the impetus Purdue needed to put away Indiana. The loss snapped a 37-game winning streak in Big Ten play for the Hoosiers. Winford Boynes scored 20 Coral Gables golfer leads By The Associated Press SEBRING, Fla. (AP) - Deb bie Raso of Cape Coral, Fla., had a three-under-par 145 total for 36 holes and was the leader in the 54-hole women’s inter national amateur golf tourna ment at Halder Hall Golf Club. The Cape Coral, Fla., golfer fired a three-under-par 71 Thursday on the 6,062-yard course. At 146 was first-round Return Performance "The Southwind Bend” Sat. Night, Jan. 8 VFW Post 5448 1205 West Poplar St. 9’Til Battle of the losers Quarterbacks will decide it . jflihPMK 8k ©'fl fli l. __ « JwiliJi jfljfl i 10 Ey Ml ~yW* Super Bowl HfQfdn!. X..' v uniokis as M ttie classic / Or ’’l H •.# .••• Wl‘- } veteran. /I, wny •' W 1 <accura.-te i ijlife, i t i passers fl ■ 'Ma* I and ' i \ ■ 3inart field \ By Murray Olderman PASADENA, Calif. - (NEA) — This is going to be the Super Bowl that will prove decisively, once and for all, that either the Oakland Raiders or the Minnesota Vikings deserve to be called winners. Both have been to pro foot ball’s biggest jousting before. Both have lost. The Raiders were beaten by the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl II back in January, 1968, and though they have sought solace by pointing to the fact that they boast the best record in the game over the last 14 years, there has always been the rankling accusation they never win the "big one.” The Vikings have been turn ed back three times — in Super Bowls IV, VII and IX - though they, too, try to assuage critics by noting that Coach Bud Grant has produc ed eight division titles in a decade. Only four of the Oakland Raiders bridge the gap between the team’s Super Bowl appearances and, un iformly, they feel this is a better equipped group to prove that they are Number One. “We got so much heart,” said survivor Pete Banaszak, the 32-year-old running back, after the Raiders had qualified for the forthcoming itors Bureau. More than 103,000 fans are expected for the game at the Rose Bowl. About 75 million more — from Japan to Turkey — will watch on television. “It’s Super Bowl fever at its highest pitch,” said Hills. The National Football League expects to gross $5.5 million from broadcast revenue and ticket sales, but that is before expenses, which are consider- points, leading San Francisco past Portland. The Dons, open ing their West Coast Athletic Conference season, shot 55 per cent from the field and had a 46- 38 rebounding edge. Rickey Green scored 20 points and John Robinson 18, leading Michigan over Northwestern. It was a onesided game throughout as the Wolverines leader Laney Smith of Snyder, N.Y., who had a second-round 74. Jeanne-Marie Boylan of Key Biscayne, Fla., was at 147, Marcia Dolan of Danbury, Conn., at 148, Barbara Barrow of Chula Vista, Calif., at 149, Susan McClellan of Leeds, Mass., at 151 and Susan Keeney of Springfield, Va., at 153. game in the Rose Bowl by winning the American Foot ball Conference title. “If heart was money, we’d own the world.” “We are a physically better team,” said guard Gene Upshaw, another survivor. “Ken Stabler is better. I’m better than I was. I was a rookie then. We’ve had so much adversity. This team doesn’t say ‘uncle.’” “This team wants it more,” added Fred Biletnikoff, the wide receiver who has been a regular since 1965. “Green Bay was unbelievable when we played ’em in ’6B. Now we got the team to beat anybody.” “Then,” noted Willie Brown, the 35-year-old corner back, “we were just happy to get into the game. We knew Green Bay was a super team. This time? Hey, there ain’t no way we can lose.” Ten Viking regulars are veterans of all three Minnesota losses in the Super Bowl — Carl Eller, Alan Page, Jim Marshall, Wally Hilgenberg, Bobby Bryant and Paul Krause of the defensive unit; Fran Tarkenton, Mick Tingelhoff, Ed White and Ron Yary of the offensive unit. They won’t need to be jack ed up for this game. Bud Grant, the super stoic, even concedes that there’s a new dimension to the Vikings’ per- able. The NFL is throwing a $75,- 000 cocktail party. It is paying $112,000 in rent for the Rose Bowl. The cost of incidentials such as plane tickets and lodg ing for the teams, and players’ shares, run the total to some $2.5 million in expenses. Not to be outdone, the Nation al Broadcasting Co., which will televise the game, is throwing a breakfast for 1,000 — featuring 10 varieties of omelettes. The won their 14th straight over Northwestern, dating back to 1969. Herman Harris scored 22 points and Gary Harrison’s bas ket in the last two minutes put Arizona ahead to stay in the Wildcats’ victory over San Diego State. Dexter Reed and James Bradley each scored 24 points, pacing Memphis State’s triumph over Oklahoma City. Reed and Bradley combined for eight points in the first four minutes of the second half as -REED'S JANUARY SPECIAL— SAVE 50% W ON ANY NORMAL PRESCRIPTION Throughout The Month of January Members of REED'S Senior Citizens ''6o" Club Save an Additional 10% I Rely on Reed's The Discount Drug Storel MARKET Square, Ga. Hwy. 16 Across From K-Mart Telephone 227-7910 S fH Page 9 — Griffin Daily News Friday, January 7, sonality this year — emotionalism. So the basic motivation, vin dication of self, is there for both teams. In style, however, they differ. The Vikings are older, more traditional in playing concept. Their offense is probably better balanced between the run (featuring Chuck Foreman) and the pass (with Fran Tarkenton, the most prolific passer in pro history). Their defense shuns frills, although it’s a little more elastic than it has been with age beginning to slow down its Front Four. The Raiders are the closest thing to a one-man team since Norm Van Brocklin and the Philadelphia Eagles of 1960. Ken Stabler is the indispen sable man. Put him out of the lineup and the Raiders look ordinary, though they are cer tainly gifted in several departments — the receiving corps, the offensive line, the defensive secondary. Though Mark Van Eeghen gained more than 1,000 yards on the ground this year, the emphasis on offense is the air attack, with Stabler the most accurate southpaw passer in the history of the game. Their defense, because of early in juries, converted to an “orange” alignment — which means three men up front and four linebackers. It was sup- tab may hit $75,000. A Japanese firm is flying in 120 of its executives from Tokyo for the game. An American company, unable to find suitable lodging for its corporate officials in Los Angeles, is billeting them in Las Vegas and flying them in for the game. While corporate budgets are on loose rein for the Super Bowl, there also are plenty of free- the Tigers moved into a 56-46 lead and Oklahoma City could get no closer. In other games, Audie Mat thews scored 28 points as Il linois beat Ohio State 89-72; Greg Keiser’s 20 points led Michigan State over Wisconsin 84-61; Mike Schultz scored 21 points as Houston whipped Houston Baptist 111-79, and James Edwards scored 15 points in the first six minutes of the second half, leading Washington to an 85-75 victory over California. posed to be vulnerable agains the run, but it held in key games. I A season brimming with con-, troversy — accusations of violence, hairline officiating calls which decided a couple ol key games — probably pulled the Raiders closer together as t unit. And firmed up their 1 resolve to shed the label of losers. "The big talkers from the East counted us out,” said Banaszak, with an edge of bitterness. The Vikings are more com fortable with their winning mantle, seem less prone to have to apologize for past failures. Confidence has always beenl their forte. In the final analysis, the ver dict on Jan. 9 before the 106,000 people converging on the Rose Bowl through the clogged Arroyo Seco in Pasadena, will be decided on the performances of the two key men in the cast — Tarkenton and Stabler. Both have been uncanny in the palpitating situations when a game hangs in the balance on one or two key plays. It comes down to a duel | between two of the finest passers and headiest field generals in modern football history. My prediction is that Stabler will trigger another of his sen sational closing bursts and that Oakland will defeat Minnesota, 20-17. I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I lance high rollers in town for ti game. A wealthy football fan froi the Midwest, spending “Supe Week” in a plush Los Angele hotel, is keeping a limousine d 24-hour call in case he gets wor of a lively Super Bowl party sti; going at 4 a.m. In this case, “Super Week: was kicked off by another gam — the Rose Bowl. The super spending is provid ing the Los Angeles area a vei itable bonanza. All major hotels in Los Ange les are booked for the weekend The luxurious new Bonaven ture, 15 miles from the stadium has been sold out for Super Bow weekend for a year. 77 FORD TRUCKS CHEAP! Call Griffin's Don Hair INTERSTATE 957-2631 or 228-7609