™iOAH lick Cash Po r Emergency, UsF ar^ exas State Credit Pawn Shop 4 I exas Ava r-,, Weingarten Cent? Mlly Tohill Fired as TCU Head Coach A&M Receiver Coach Gil Bartosh Possible Successor THE BATTALION TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1973 Page 7 ALLEN Oldsmobile Cadillac ALES - SERVICeI here satisfaction! indard equipment[ ■ORT WORTH Tex. WP>—Billy Shill, the tough Texas Christian lad ho nearly st his life this spring in an au- Inobile accident, has been fired, he Associated Press learned ex- —asively Monday night. |ohill told Associated Press Jthwest Sports Editor Denne jeman in an exclusive interview I “They fired me because I (n’t been winning.” [he firing is effective Dec. 1 TCU’s last game against in Dallas. Jhe 34-year-old Tohill, who ped into the job midway ugh the 1971 season when 2401 Texas Ave I dropped dead of a 823-8002 ■ attack, relayed the news in demotion-packed speech to his Monday night. 'ohill told The AP that Ath- Director Abe Martin walked |o the office at 2:30 p.m. Mon- and asked, “Are you busy?” ohill said Martin handed him (tatement from chancellor Dr. lies M. Moudy. said I had been relieved my coaching duties,” Tohill , “It was hard to get past first paragraph . . . the rest LANGE MUSIC CO. 110 Texas Ave (Bryan) 822-2234 301 Patricia (C-S.) 846-2851 GIVE-AWAY DEC. 22nd II FREE BANJO egister at Either Store THE BEETLE GETS ABOUT 25 MILES TO A GALLON. BASED ON DIN 70030 I Few things in life work as well |as a Volkswagen. IICHARD BARTON VOLKSWAGEN was kind of blurry.” Tohill, whose team was 3-6 this season and lost 52-7 to Texas last week, has two years remain ing on his contract. Those mentioned in rumors as possible successors to Tohill in cluded Jim Shofner, the San Fran cisco 49er receiver coach, Gil Bar tosh, an assistant at Texas A&M and former TCU star, and Hunt er Enis a former TCU quarter back who has entered private business after spending a few years as a quarterback coach of the Denver Broncos. “They told me they would pay off the contract if I can’t find another job,” said Tohill, who walks on an artificial leg because of surgery required from the ac cident in which his car hit a bridge abutment going 90 miles an hour. Tohill, his voice choking with emotion, said, “I hope I can get another coaching job somewhere ... I don’t have any future plans . . . right now I’m coaching through the SMU game.” The tobacco-chewing coach said, “I would have liked to have had one more year. We had the nu cleus for a good team. We just had so many injuries this year. Just look at what happened to our frontline players like Mike Luttrell and Kent Marshall. . . We didn't have any depth . . . We just needed one more good re cruiting year.” Tohill came to TCU with Pitt man from Tulane. He and Pitt man shared the Southwest Con ference Coach of the Year hon ors in 1971 after Pittman’s death as the Horned Frogs surged to a surprising third place. Tohill said, “There’s no need to be bitter—that’s not going to accomplish anything. I’ve had a good relationship with the people here . . . I’m not going to cut them up.” Tohill opened the season on crutches but has gained strength /ith each succeeding week and walks now with only a slight limp on his artificial leg. “This is the first time I’ve ever been fired from anything,” Tohill said, still not believing the news. “I heard the rumors but I still thought we had done a good job considering the injuries and all. There’s not many folks beat ing Texas these days you know.” TCU plays Rice Saturday at Amon Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, and Tohill said, “I know the kids will give me everything they have. I wouldn’t want to be Rice Saturday.” Before joining Pittman at Tu lane, Tohill had served five sea sons at his alma mater, Mississip pi State. He was a schoolboy All- American quarterback - fullback at Batesville, Miss. He lettered three years at Mississippi State. Tohill, who has an 11-13 rec ord at TCU, said he called his wife, Bobbie Jean, to break the news and “It kind of floored her. It will be a bleak Thanksgiving at our house. Come to think of it . . . it’s going to be that way Christmas, too. I just wished they had given me one more year.” “It upsets me. I really think a lot of Tohill. I think he is a great coach,” said quarterback Lee Cook, who took over the Falcons Destroy Vikes 9 Win Streak ATLANTA <^>—Bob Lee, the field general of an inspired Atlanta offense, fired two second- period touchdown passes Monday night and the Falcons knocked the Minnesota Vikings from the unbeaten ranks of the National Football League with a 20-14 victory in their nationally tele vised game. Ignited by a crowd of 56,519 who roared almost constantly the entire game, the Falcons rolled to their sixth consecutive victory. It left them only one game be hind the Los Angeles Rams in the National Conference West Division race with a 7-3 record. The defeat was the first after nine straight victories for the Vikings, who clinched the NFC Central Division crown a week ago, their fifth in the last six years. Lee, who connected on 10 of 18 passes for 171 yards in the first half, teamed with Dave Hampton on a 19-yard screen pass for Atlanta’s first touchdown and then scrambled away from a fierce Viking rush to find Eddie Ray alone near the goal line for a 39-yard scoring strike later in the second period. However, the Falcons had to withstand a late charge by Fran Wednesday Night: Tony Booth & Band Prom 9 -1 p. m. Tarkenton, Minnesota’s scram bling quarterback who once was benched by Atlanta Coach Norm Van Brocklin when both were with the Vikings during the 1960s. Tarkenton, who threw a 39- yard scoring pass to John Gil liam in the second quarter, drove the Vikings 49 yards in 11 plays and pitched a two-yard touch down strike to Bill Brown with 6:29 left in the game to cut Atlanta’s lead to 20-14. With less than two minutes remaining, shortly after Atlanta had ground out a first down, Lee fumbled and Jim Marshall scooped up the ball and raced 18 yards where he fumbled, but Alan Page recovered for the Vikings. The Vikings took a 15-yard penalty on the play for tripping, but had possession at the Falcons 48. Tarkenton threw two incom plete passes, was sacked for a four-yard loss and on fourth down scrambled attempting to get the yardage for a first down, but went out of bounds a yard short and the Falcons took over and ran out the final 55 seconds of play. Atlanta’s other scoring came on Nick Mike-Mayer field goals of 25 and 49 yards, the latter a line-drive in the third quarter. Mike-Mayer, the NFC's leading scorer, had missed on field goal attempts from the 46 and 21 in the opening period. Fred Cox, Minnesota’s kicking specialist, had a 49-yard field goal try hit the cross bar and fall away in the final quarter, but he did kick a pair of extra points to extend his NFL scoring record to 150 consecutive games. SPECIAL GROUP RATES Open Daily At 3:00 p. m. ( 11 a. m. On Home Game Days) SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY PITCHER of BEER $125 Weekly Special 3 p. m. - Midnight 311 UNIVERSITY DRIVE • NORTH GATE HOT - Free Dorm Delivery! - FAST 846-1713 starting signal calling job last week after Kent Marshall was injured. “He’s got more courage, more guts, than anyone I’ve known. I really hate to see it happen,” Cook said. “We’ve been hearing about it all along but nobody really be lieved it. It was like something had been dropped on us.” Split end Ronnie Littleton call ed the abrupt dismissal cold blooded and said: “A man has to struggle for his life and come back and now he is gone.” Continuing, Littleton said, “I’m really shocked you know. I care for him not only as a coach but as a man. He’s a very strong man . . . probably one of the strongest on earth.” Ace running back Mike Lut trell, also expressing shock, said “I haven’t really formed an opin ion yet. I think if they were go ing to fire him, they’d want to wait until after the season.” Luttrell called the action “An other setback . . . it’s going to set our athletic program back another three years.” He said Tohill “is one of the greatest men I’ve ever met. He’s been underrated as both a coach and a man.” Merle Wang, the Frogs huge offensive tackle, said “I’m just dumbfounded right now . . . I’m disappointed ... I didn’t think he would be fired.” Wang said he was aware of the rumors that Tohill was on the way out and said, “If there was any truth to them, they should have told him then. I don’t think they should have not let him know.” Jerry Boudreaux, the offensive line coach, said “It was a com plete shock—a shock to Coach To hill, a shock to me, a shock to all of us.” Boudreaux said he could not assess the development at once, saying “We have two ball games left and we’re in the midst of trying to prepare for them.” As the players flowed out of the dressing room into a light rain, one mumbled only to him self: “I don’t like it, I just don’t like it.” Homecoming MUMS Buy your date a 12th man mum from Student Floral Concession. Order yours inside the MSC & in the Floricul ture Greenhouse any day before the game. (Except the week-end) or buy one in front of Sbisa Hall during the evening meal. BEAT THE HELL OUT OF T.U. PEANUTS By Charles M. 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