11 Thursday, December 22, 1987/The Battalion/Page 15 Ml) players, coaches remain in limbo ijWhile NCAA ponders 'death penalty' DALLAS (AP) — While Southern S Methodist University waits for the NCAA to decide the future of the Mustang football program, players Hd coaches exist in limbo and pon der an uncertain future. MThe NCAA is studying renewed HHarges of recruiting violations that ‘main; could lead to a two-year suspenson ' of SMU football. ItolfiMOri the outside, things are run- 8°'nj ning as usual. The Mustangs began :dtoi their off-season program Tuesday kand by running and lifting weights. ■But beneath the surface, players ! A&l are worried about their future. °ints,M‘Tm scared as hell,’’junior Franky >lloKi iliomas said. “You think about it all the time. I wonder. I wonder.” ■“Honestly, every player has it in "the back of his mind — they’re going ^ to kill the program,” junior Ken Masterson said. “You can look at ev erybody and see they’re thinking the NCAA is going to take it away.” A ruling will likely come after the Committee on Infractions meets Feb. 13-16 in San Diego, Calif. Some players fear the NCAA will make an example of SMU by making it the first school ever to receive the “death penalty” under which its pro gram would be suspended for up to two years. “We know they have done a lot to clean house,” a source within the NCAA told the Dallas 7'imes Herald. “They are saying, ‘We’re bending over backward and the death penalty wouldn’t help anyone now.’ But on the other hand, some are thinking this is a golden oppor tunity to use the death penalty.” Following the resignations of ath letic director Bob Hitch and Head Coach Bobby Collins in December, the assistant coaches are looking for jobs, and recruiting has ceased. In Ownby Stadium, posters and Mustang memorabilia have been re moved from the walls of the athletic office and boxes are stacked in cor ners. “I’m tired of looking at these boxes,” defensive coach Randy But ler said. “They are ready to go and I am, too.” While the coaches wait for job of fers, players mull transfers or life at SMU without football. “I’ve been thinking about it quite a bit,” freshman wide receiver Lynn James said. “It’s my future but I have no control over that part. My future is controlled by somebody else.” However, most players remain hopeful that the SMU program will not be suspended. “I don’t think they are going to give us the gas,” sophomore line backer Dick Anderson said. “But we’ll be on probation the rest of our natural lives.” ew Yorks’ secondary weak link otherwise dominating defense its i hugt:S lebacti bodif lorris runnid y inju;; e Pauit xlbW leva : man 1 i, the :*en hid ?al vail t onlvW bin a Carso:! ivsthe! fayloi I ckeroil a third Ironcoij eir tigiii is om; r if noli: f didai ■st gam! i yards, | ibyElw ett or ft e, marij >r betij p lart s nidi i got ys left 3 :y’ve gl that v<*| : aret who half ige rufJ often c take ill ders I e. idled« : sec® uind'.'d ise coi"® ,rges. PapaP r y, SCOI® own i ■ EAST RUTHERFORD, N,J. (AP) -4 Even the Denver Broncos know what you’re talking about when one mentions the weak link of the New Yprk Chants’ defense. ■ For reasons even obvious to the Gi.mts, the secondary has been sort ola whipping boy this season. ■ Whether the rap is deserved is an other matter. What most people do njinember about the Giants’ second- afv is seeing Gary Clark of Washing ton drop two deep passes in the NFC tith game, passes some thought could have gone for touchdowns in a game New York eventually won 17- 0. ■ “I wouldn’t say they are weak in any sense of the word,” Broncos tvide receiver Steve Watson said. “If you look at their linebacking corps, they are the ones who get all the at tention. Nobody focuses on the de fensive backs because they are over shadowed.” Overshadowed isn’t the word. Dwarfed seems more appropriate to compare the Giants secondary to their front seven. “I suppose we are the weak link,” Giants safety Kenny Hill said. “We don’t have three All Pro players in the secondary as we do at every other position in the defensive unit.” What the Giants will have in the secondary for Sunday’s Super Bowl in Pasadena are a 12th-round draft choice at free safety, Herb Welch; an acquisition from the Los Angeles Raiders at strong safety in Hill; a free agent at left corner in Elvis Pat terson, and a seventh-round draft choice from 1983 at right corner, Perry Williams. It’s a group that has allowed an average of 217 yards per game, a fig ure that ranks in the lower third in the league. Against Denver earlier this year, Broncos quarterback John Elway completed 29 of 47 passes for 336 yards. He did not throw a touch down. “They beat up on our receivers pretty good,” Watson said. “I think we have to approach this game a little differently. We have to change some things.” Most of the passes Elway com pleted were in the comfort zone be tween the linebackers and in front of the defense backs. Denver defensive coach dubbed ‘genius’ ■ NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) — Try as he might, Denver Broncos defensive coordinator Joe Collier can t shake the “genius” tag. ■ He meets the suggestion with a scowl, saying true geniuses belong in the laboratory finding cures for life- threatening diseases, not diagram ming X’s and O’s for football play- ers. ■“He’s uncomfortable with it,” Broncos linebacker Tom Jackson said. “He’d never refer to himself as a genius. But as players, we think lie is one.” In a business where job security is rare, Collier has, at least, shown a genius for survival. As the Broncos prepare for Sunday’s Super Bowl matchup with the New York Giants, he is completing his 18th straight season with the team. He has sur vived four head coaching changes. A poll by a national publication this week showed Collier to be the most job-worthy assistant in the NFL. Head coaches were asked to list the assistants they would choose to begin building a new staff, and Collier was the overwhelming choice. Vida Blue signs with A's for one year OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Pitcher Vida Blue, a major fig ure in Oakland’s glorious 1970s, made an emotional re turn to the A’s Wednesday, and was welcomed by Reggie Jack- son, who also has come home again. “I really want to shed some tears, because I really am elated,” said Blue, who is 37. “I’m really excited about get ting the chance to play for the A’s again.” The A’s announced Blue’s signing to a one-year contract at a news conference. Blue and Jackson, 40, are the only players still active who were prominent members of the A’s rosters during the team’s championship years. The club won five consecutive American League West titles from 1971 to 1975 and won the World Series in 1972, 1973 and 1974. Despite the emotion behind the return of Blue and Jackson, both said they came back be cause they believe they can help the team. “The important thing to me is here’s a guy who om still con tribute,” Jackson said after the conference. 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