Newspapers / Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1985, edition 1 / Page 23
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NMMMUUMIillNHUHUIUHUIWitHUUtUilitiHUtMM Sports Beat WMMttSWMIIiiUtUtMiUMlltlUIMIlillimiMIMtllltmi score a few more points and we had two opportunities that we didn't take advantage of." A&T scored on three of its first - j - W/V1V/1V halftime. "That field goal was a very bij play for them," Forte added. "I let them go into the locker roorr with some momentum. "So, if we had put the ball ir the end zone or kicked a fielc goal on those other two drives we probably would have put ii out of reach." Instead, freshman Keith Tor rence returned the second-hall kickoff 54 yards and the Rams * were off to the proverbial races By the time sophomore Calvir Handsome raced 50 yards for a touchdown with 6:53 left in the third quarter, the Rams were even with the Aggies. The final quarter saw WSSU hold on despite a blocked punt b> A&T's Johnny Coleman and the gutty play of teammate Alar Hooker. So flashy was Hooker that his hi aiuctuL running ana passing drew favorable comparisons tc ?former North Carolina Central star Gerald Fraylon. "He's slippery like Fraylon," said Ram linebacker Angelc Spruill ot the Aggie sophomore quarterback, who ran for 81 Sports Cava MHUMttlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllll next summer in Los Angeles with her father. "I will run with a track team, but I don't know which one," the West senior said. "My father's arranging it. "One of the reasons I'm going to California is to get away from where everybody knows me. Then I can concentrate on runn _ ?? ing. T _ ? U - - ' in uic meantime, me Diggest iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Notebook iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The Eagle freshman has had record-breaking games in each of his first two games. Last Saturday he completed a school-record 26 passes for 343 yards in a 31-13 , win over St. Paul's. The week before he threw a school-record 46 passes in a 24-21 loss to Livingstone. Harvey was named the CIAA Rookie of the Week for the second straight week. Teammate Terrence McNeil is the Offensive Lineman of the Week. McNeil, a tight end, caught a career-high eight passes for 127 yards. Carl Boldra of Livingstone was named the Offensive Back of the Week. He completed 12 of 21 passes for 249 vards and two TDs in a 31-7 win at Clark College. Teammate Angelo Chapman was the Defensive Back of the Week for a second time. Chapman had six solo hits, a sack and two fumble recoveries. He also RTPT^ \ w J o J E?*; "JKjj five possessions. The Aggies drove to the Ram 38- and 27-yard lines in their sixth and seventh possessions. Failing to score, A&T watched WSSU finally get untracked with a 10-play drive that resulted in Tyrone Smith's 39-yard field i II <it hffrvrfl From Page B1 t yards and two scores. "But he's a better passer than Fraylon." It was WSSU's first view of the former all-stater who led Eastern Randolph High School to the 1983 state 3-A championship. In last year's game, Alvin Grier started .at quarterback for A&T. Grier lost his starting job to Hooker by the third game. Grier now is a wide receiver. 44Hooker was so fast," noted Hayes. "We don't have a man 5 that quick at quarterback, so we t can't practice for what he did." i -1 - * j in tne urst series of the game, Hooker had runs of 24 and 42 j yards, the latter for a touchdown, j He put some astonishing fakes on a quick Ram defense. t "Our guys would be all over him," said Defensive Coordinator Pete Richardson. I "Hooker would give them a little dip and a little dab and be back turning the corner for a big ! gain." v i Minor Changes f But Hooker's moves were no , more abrupt than the change of j momentum. Indeed, the Rams , took control of the game as fast as MacBeth murdered his . enemies. The abrupt turn of events sug\ gested that Hayes may have made one?of his patented -strategic changes at halftime. But. an ecstatic Hayes said he simply tied , some loose ends. "We didn't execute well in the ' first half," said Hayes, seen highilcade From Pagt IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHUHIIItlimilllllll challenge of her senior year will be improving her Scholastic Aptitude Test scores. Whitten, who wants to major in computer programming, takes the SAT twice before she graduates in May. Williams A Falcon East Forsyth graduate Renee Williams is attending St. iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiinniuumiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii From Page B2 lllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllltlllllMIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIH caused a fumble. Hampton's Tony Holden is the Defensive Lineman of the Week. He had six unassisted tackles, two assisted and two sacks in the Pirates' 31-7 win over Cheyney State. Reggie! Reggie! > Wake Forest's Reggie McCumi mings had a leading role in the Deacons' 30-0 win at Boston > University. The former North Forsyth standout set up two touchdowns with fumble recoveries. ^cCummings probably can't wait for Saturdav's nm game with North Carolina State at Groves Stadium. Last year, he had two of the team's six interceptions. And State's quarterbacking situation hasn't improv[ ed much, even with a personnel change. ?vM > * IMIIIIillttiltMllltMttttllMMMttMlllltllHttlltillllttllltHJIli fiving with his boss, Bighouse Gaines, after the game. "We had runners lined up wrong and we corrected that. We also split the tight ends in the second half. We wanted to pass, but weren't very successful in the first half (three for 12 for 60 yards)." Richardson did make one change on defense in the second half, switching from a "44" to a "base 60" defense with fewer stunts. "Hooker was burning us on broken plays when we stunted," Richardson said. "So we backed off." The Cutting Edge The latest game in this rivalry distilled into one evening the careers of the two head coaches. A fierce, calculating battler, Hayes added another chapter to his legend. The Ram coach, owner of a 65-32-2 career record and a 6-3 mark against A&T, certainly needed the win in a bad way after the season-opening loss at Virginia State. Still, that sparkling. record and triumphs like Saturday night's have left Hayes quite secure in his job. But Forte, who has put all of his money on his Hooker-led offense, needed a victory worse, so the loss is all the more significant ?for him. The fourth-year A&T coach, lugging around a burdensome career record of 7-26-1, is very aware that this is his judgment season. Somehow you suspect iiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiaii 3 B1 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHINNHIIIIIIINIII Augustine's on a basketball scholarship. Williams originally planned tc attend North Carolina State, bu failed to meet the academic re quirements. Williams, who averaged 32.1 points and 25 rebounds for Easl last season, was the Northwesi Player of the Year. Foster Leaves WSSU Basketball recruit Nicky Foster has left Winston-Salem State. Coach Clarence "Bighouse" Gaines said he was not snrp u/hv Foster, a 6-foot-5 wing, left WSSU. "He told me he has problems only he could understand," I LYNX TOPQ5 harquis-o* LINCOLN TOWN < BACK! I '85 COUGAR 1*10,90 I J"ST T~e?0 ' I YOUR ?ck \ub ILNCOL u The C EX hel MuiiiitMimmiHiiiiiiniuiiinninimnmmiMimiiiiiiiiii that the powers that be in Greensboro might make this his Ex-La judgment game. Forte, up going against a brutal schedule (the Ag- why n gies still have to play South Chocc Carolina State, Bethune- any ot Cookman, and Mississippi Valley y?ur State), may have seen his last, ReadUb. best hope of saving his job slip c ^ ^ away in the second half last Saturday night. When Hayes kissed Forte before the game, he told the Ag gie coach it was in fact the kiss of death. Undoubtedly, that was just some psychological jousting. H MOf Yet what the Rams achieved in H the second half may be a literal ^ kiss of death for Forte. H Still, it was hard to leave H without the feeling that the Ag- H 1 gies have come a long way since first day of Forte's regime. H With only 35 players that day in H April of 1982, the program was H running on empty. H | | 4'They are vastly improved and H are close to putting it together," H |p said WSSU's Richardson. "But H I qJ they don't have the depth yet'in H IcuhTcmmiI the line for that kind of H |cLc**wmj schedule." H nSF?t _ . , 23.5 C So, with the two teams not in ?crus the same conference anymore, H AND( the WSSU-A&T game now serves H S/i as sort of a cutting edge. That is, H *= the series in the 1970s and '80s H IH has measured the greatness of H Mo<j#| Hayes' tenure at WSSU. After wwA3iooe all,-no other-Ram coach won ? H 3 even a single game against the H P Aggies. I Jl Conversely, it has focused H critical light on the shortcomings H of his A&T counterparts. . H MoO?l ^ DOE40006 I LARGE CAP MATCHING IIIIIIIIIIHIItllllimilllllllltllHIIIIItlMllllllllllltlllllMlltlll* BuV f1 _ . for Or 1 Gaines said. H Foster is a native of H tt3j > Yanceyville and went to Bartlett- H rrmJH Uink CokA/%1 i mivv; 111511 uviiuui> I ) On The Sideline cJSDTiSSSJ Random Acc t Hats off to Chris and KelC|i SAVI Mackie for their handsome H publication, Sideline, a monthly H IHHHB dedicated to covering Triad prep sports. Their initial issue, which came H r out this month, included ex- H Front 1 cellent features on non-revenue H Only * sports. It also had interesting col- H B umns on scouting and sports H 3ooO H medicine. H |li] This is truly the right stuff. And it's free. Keep it up, guys! * 0 FRO FAC CAPRI ? $400 CASH BACK! AND MARQUIS COUGAR ? S< 2AR ? $750 CASH BACK! 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Winston-Salem Chronicle (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
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Sept. 19, 1985, edition 1
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