The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 14, 1987, Image 13

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OPENS NATIONWIDE SEPTEMBER 18th
FREE SNEAK PREVIEW
Monday, September 14, 1987
7:30 p.m., Rudder Auditorium
sponsored by MSC Aggie Cinema
seating is limited to first 500
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night of event
Monday, September 14, 1987/The Battalion/Page 13
Super Bowl champs
of last 2 years meet
CHICAGO (AP) — The rarity of
an NFL season opener between the
last two Super Bowl champions will
add to the extravaganza Monday
night when the New York Giants
meet the Chicago Bears.
A crowd of more than 66,000 will
jam Soldier Field, while the game is
expected to attract the largest tele
vision audience in Monday night
football history.
“I doubt if the game will be as
good as the hype,” Bears Coach
Mike Ditka said.
It will mark only the second time
that successive Super Bowl cham
pions have met in the following sea-
son-opening game.
Two years ago, the Bears defeated
the Giants 21-0 in the playoffs and
went on to capture the Super Bowl
with a 46-10 drubbing of the New
England Patriots.
The Giants extended their win
ning streak to 12 games last season
with a 39-20 triumph over the
Denver Broncos in the Super Bowl.
The only other time successive Su
per Bowl champions have met in a
season-opener was in 1982 when the
Los Angeles Raiders defeated the
defending champion San Francisco
49ers 23-17.
The game will feature two of the
toughest defenses in the league. The
Bears will be aiming for an unprece
dented fourth straight NFL de
fensive title. They set an NFL record
by allowing only 187 points for a 16-
game season last year.
The Bears also are trying to be
come the first team to lead the
league in rushing five straight years,
and that wot vies Giants Coach Bill
Parcells.
Parcells said he sees little differ
ence between the Bears’ 1985 de
fense directed by Buddy Ryan and
the current unit under coordinator
Vinri° TVvKin
One change finds veteran Gary
Fencik in a backup role, with Todd
Bell teaming at safety with Dave
Duerson.
The Bears’ defense will have to
contain a Giants’ offense led by quar
terback Phil Simms, running back
Joe Morris and tight end Mark Ba-
varo. Simms was voted the Super
Bowl’s Most Valuable Player after
completing 22 of 25 passes for 268
yards and three touchdowns against
the Broncos.
“I hope we don’t have to ask Phil
Simms to carry the load,” Parcells
said. “If we don’t do a little some
thing about running the ball, we’re
not going to win. I’m concerned.”
Simms agreed and said the run
ning game “is the hardest thing to
put together. The passing game
sometimes can work with a mistake.
But in the running game, a lot of
things have to be good before you
can get it done.”
The big question surrounding the
Bears is the quarterback position.
Jim McMahon is out for at least six
weeks, if not the season, because his
surgically repaired shoulder has
been slow to heal.
Mike Tomczak will be the quar
terback. Ditka said he is “not worried
about Tomczak. He’ll do a good
job.”
Ditka could be more concerned
about the offensive line. Center Jay
Hilgenberg missed most of the pre
season because of a shoulder injury.
The All-Pro will play against the Gi
ants while wearing a harness. Tackle
Jim Covert also has been bothered
with shoulder problems.
Walter Payton, the NFL’s all-time
ruushing leader with 16,193 yards,
will lead the Bears’ offense. But Neal
Anderson will start at fullback in
stead of Matt Suhey, a move which
will add speed to the attack.
UH off to shaky start,
loses to Cowboys 35-0
HOUSTON (AP) — The Houston
Cougars didn’t intend for their new
run-and-shoot offense to sputter in
its debut or for their defense to give
up the big play.
But both happened Saturday as
the Oklahoma State Cowboys beat
Houston 35-0, marking the Cougars’
first shutout loss in the Astrodome
since 1965, a string that included
121 games.
Houston linebacker Gary Mc
Guire said, “Going into the game, we
were just trying to avoid the big play
and what we didn’t want to happen,
happened.
OSU tailback Thurman Thomas
ran 49 yards in the first quarter. Af
ter taking a 14-0 halftime lead, the
Cowboys scored 21 points over a
5:04 span, beginning late in the
third quarter.
Barry Sanders returned a punt 68
yards, Rod Smith ran back a Dacus
interception 41 yards in the third
quarter and quarterback Mike
Gundy ran one yard early in the
fourth quarter to complete the rout.
Houston Coach Jack Pardee, in
his first game as head coach, used
three quarterbacks without much
success in trying to get the pass-
oriented offense off the ground.
Freshman Andre Ware had mar
ginal success in the fourth quarter,
driving the Cougars to their deepest
penetration, the Cowboy 12-yard
line.
“There were some good points,
like the guys were open all day, but
we have to work real hard in the
week we have off,” Ware said.
Ware completed five of eight
passes for 78 yards. Starter David
Dacus hit seven of 18 for 62 yards
but had two interceptions, one re
turned for a touchdown. Ed Powers
hit two of eight passes for 10 yards.
The defense, which was supposed
to be the team’s backbone, couldn’t
contain Thomas, who rushed 111
yards on 21 carries, and Gundy, who
hit 14 of 27 passes for 162 yards.
“Thomas opened it up,” McGuire
said. “Hejust stopped us. We are not
going to have any excuses this year.
There’s no doubt we have got a lot of
work to do and a lot to prove.”
Houston’s defense did stop the
Cowboys at their one yard line in the
first quarter and punter Simon Ro
driguez helped the Cougars with 56
and 54-yard punts.
“We decided we could have put
them away in the first half but
didn’t,” Thomas said. “We had to
have a big play in the second half.
“When Sanders broke the punt
return, that was it. We never looked
back.
“The receivers we have are tall
and have good speed,” Gundy said.
“They can get open and they know
when I’m scrambling, when to come
back to me.
“I felt our line did a good job. The
Houson rushers were slow and
never got to me.”
Oklahoma State, 2-0, plays at
Wyoming on Saturday. The Cougars
have the week off.
UT victimized by turnovers
as BYU deals Horns 2nd loss
AUSTIN (AP) — Quarterback Bob
Jensen threw for two touchdowns
and took advantage of eight Texas
turnovers as Brigham Young de
feated the Longhorns 22-17 Satur
day night in non-conference college
football.
BYU is now 1-1 on the year, while
Texas falls to 0-2.
The Brigham Young defense
grabbed four interceptions — two by
defensive back Rodney Rice — and
four fumbles.
Texas opened the scoring on a 1-
yard run by quarterback Bret Staff
ord in the first quarter, but two of
the turnovers in the second quarter
led to Jensen scoring tosses of 21
yards to David Miles and 27 yards to
Chuck Cutler.
Texas narrowed the gap to 14-10
when Wayne Clements hit a 46-yard
field goal to end the first half.
Stafford, however, was sacked
twice in the early moments of the
second half, forcing the Longhorns
back from their own 20. Then Alex
Waits’ punt was blocked by Brigham
Young linebacker Richard Hobbs
for a safety to make it 16-10.
Texas Tech survives scare,
defeats Colorado St. 33-24
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DATE: Tuesday, September 15,1987
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LUBBOCK (AP) — Texas Tech’s
James Gray rushed for 150 yards,
Ervin Farris ran for two touchdowns
and Scott Segrist kicked two field
goals to carry the Red Raiders to a
wild 33-24 non-conference victory
over Colorado State Saturday night.
It was Spike Dykes’ first victory as
head coach of the Red Raiders after
three tries.
Colorado State, 0-2, made Tech
sweat to the final gun as Sanjay
Beach returned a kickoff 99 yards
for a touchdown after the Raiders
took a 26-17 lead on Gray’s 2-yard
touchdown run with 5:58 to play.
The Raiders finally delivered the
knockout punch with 1:23 to go on a
32-yard scoring pass from Scott To
man to Wayne Walker.
Texas Tech, 1-1, built a 19-10
lead in the third quarter on Farris’
39-yard touchdown run and Segrist’
20-yard field goal.
Colorado State quarterback
Scooter Molander’s 33-yard scoring
pass to J.D. Brookhart trimmed
Tech’s lead to 19-17 early in the
fourth period.
Segrist kicked a career-long 52-
yard field goal, and the Red Raiders
rolled 62 yards on seven plays for a
10-0 halftime lead on Farris’ 3-yard
scoring run.
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