Newspapers / The Kings Mountain Herald … / Sept. 28, 1961, edition 1 / Page 2
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7 i Pats Peckings By NEALE PATRICK r -- * Five-Year Score: KM 38, Shelby 37 Making note of the sports scene and taking note of the fact that it’s that time again, speaking of Kings Mountain vs Shelby in football at City Stadium Friday night... And when closer games are played and records written for clo ser series, the Mountaineers and the Golden Lions proba bly will play 'em, and rewite the records. The closeness of the games and of the series between the Cleveland County rivals for the past five years bor ders on the incredible, the scoreboard for the past five games reading: KINGS MOUNTAIN 38, SHELBY 37. You can’t play them much closer than that over the five-year stretch which has seen a pair ot one-toucndown deadlocks, Shelby win two games by a grand total of four points, and Kings Mountain win once by a five-point mar gin. The Mountaineers haves cored six touchdowns, Shel by five, in the five close games which started with the 19 56 tie . . . The Lions have closed the point-deficit by the method of putting the “foot” back in football, kicking four points-after TD and one field goal, compared to the Moun taineers’ two extra points in the five contests. Kings Moun- ] Iain’s 12-7 win at Shelby last year was the only time in the five years that one of the teams has outscored the other, touchdown-wise, and also was the biggest point-spread of the close series . . . Shelby won both of its games by a “boot”, an extra point one time and a field goal the other. The close-to-the-vest series started in 1956 when the clubs battled to a 6-all tie, KM deadlocking the game with a 64-yard scoring dash by Johnny McGinnis late in the contest . . The other tie (7-7) came here in 1959, when, again, the Mountaineers rallied late on a Don Fisher TD and a Mike Ware extra point following a 66-yard drive in the* fourth period, matching the opening-kickoff touch down by Charlie Noggle of Shelby. The Lions pair of wins in the past five years came in 1957 here when Jim Grice added two extra points for a 14 13 edge . .. and the foot did it again in ‘58 when Grice kick ed a field goal for a 3-0 margin. Last year, the Mountaineers scrapped back for two touchdowns to offset Shelby’s early 7-0 lead, Punch Park er and James Robbs scoring TD’s in the second and fourth period for the first win (12-7) over the county rivals since 1955 . . . That ‘55 game, incidentally, was the last time the foes didn’t play it close, Coach Shu Carlton’s Conference champions belting the Lions, 27-0. Now it’s that time, again. Punch First-String At Citadel Picking up the pieces from all-around the sports whirl: Punch Parker is running first-team at one of the half bad; positions for The Citadel freshman football team which opens its season against the Baby Birds of South Carolina at Orangeburg, S. C., on Saturday night, October 1... . Reports from The Citadel reveal that freshman coach Jack Hall is very impressed with Punch’s running and is counting heavily on him this fall . . The Citadel frosh play four games this season, the others being against Dav idson at Charleston, Gordon Military at Savannah, Ga., and Furman at Greenville . . . That latter game is set for October 27. Fleete McCurdy’s Statesville Owls already can mark up one bonus baby for next season’s team. . . The Los An geles Angels recently signed a pitching prodigy, Pat Ro gan, from Lynwood, Calif., to a Statesville contract . . . The 6-2, 190-pounder received a sizeable bonus. In case it escaped your attention, a couple of former Legion junior hurlers from neighboring communities now are members of the Kings Mountain High School faculty . . . Blaine Froneberger, one of the pitching twins at Cherry Vll*e a few years ago, has moved in from Bethfare to teach in KMHS this year . . And another addition to the staff is Junior Baucom, a pitcher on the Gastonia national finalist Legion junior team of 1954 . . . Junior also pitched for the Gaston team coached by Fred Withers two summers later losing in the state finals. The recent appointment of Lou Pucillo as new fresh man basketball coach at N. C. State reminded of a conver sation involving some sports writers and Wolfpack mentor Lverett Case last winter . . . The writers were trying to name an all-time basketball team from Carolinas colleges, and most of the scribes settled on a quintet of Lennie Ros enbluth, Banks McFadden, Dick Hemric, Dick Groat, and r rank Selvy . . . Case merely offered the remark: “I’d start my team with Lou Pucillo, the smartest kid, basketball wise, I have ever coached.” Wilson To Scout Winter League Kings Mountain’s George Wilson soon will be heading for the winter baseball leagues, again, but not as a player his lime ... He will go to Panama in October as a scout and instructor for the Los Angeles Angels, the parent club J^J V Statesville Owls which he managed this summer . . I he I.A club has entered a team in a Panama Winter Lea gue and has assigned George to keep tab on the prospects. \\ ell, Roger Maris missed the Frick-style homer rec-' ord in the dramatic ninth inning against Hoyt Wilhelm * season °f 61 will be known as the year of other homer records ... The Yankees have set a new team mark with round-trippers, and Maris and Mickey Mantle have set a new two-man high for homers in a sea son, also the first time ever that one team claimed two smss<?rs with oO-or-more homers in a single season. feason’ als?’ reveals Ford Frick as an esteemed mathematician . . .As Babe Ruth will be known as the 60 homer hitter, and Maris a 59-homer man, so will Frick for ever be recognized as the 154-game commissioner. Old hometown Gastonia was out of pro baseball dur mg the Past summer, but the never-say-die diamond faith ful point with pride to the fact that three of “their bovs” managed pennant winnings teams in leagues this summer. . Ai ‘x Cosmidis piloted Salisbury to the Western Carolim crown, he being the shortstop for the old GaSoSaRoSleB of tho early fifties . . . Ray Hathaway, manager of the Gas' toma I mates in *59, guided Asheville to the Sally Leaeue . ,a^ * • • Sheriff Robinson whomanaged Amarillo tc the lexas League title was a pilot of a Gastonia Class D team several years ago . . . And ex-Gaston Legion ace Har old Stowe was the ace pitcher for the Amarillo team and simm»rVedThLre;urn‘ticke’ to Yo"k«' Stadium fir ne"i * ’ - Then too, of course, ex-Gastonia junior Geor WGL. S°n Pll°ted Statesvi,le t0 the half crown in the It7s K M vs Shelby Friday ... ‘Nuff Said? It's Kings Mountain vs Shelby time again, and that should be ‘nuff said, without any further embellishments. But for the sake of reporting facts, a build-up of the game at City Stadium on Friday night is in order. For instance, the South west Conference top rung is at stake in the 7:30 p. m. game, the winner assuming command of the circuit, the loser tumbling a mong the also rans. The Records KINGS MOUNTAIN 14 Forest City 0. 9 York 26. 27 Chase 6. SHELBY 31 Chase 6. 31 Marion 7. 7 Llnoolnton 0. coin teams nave won two Straight in the SWC, as has RS Central. And the victor here Friday will be nearly half-way through its quest foir the crown. Shelby carries an undefeated mark into the game, also having won a non-conference game (ov er Marion), while Kings Moun tain lost its outside activity (to York). The pair have played one mutual foe (Chase) and both coasted with little trouble over the Rutherford County school, Shelby winning, 31-6, and the Mountaineers rolling 27-6 last Friday night, with subs seeing extensive adtion in the second hallf. That game with Chase is the lone basis of comparison this season and if that close margin KM-Shelby Winner Will Move Into Top Spot In SWC Grid Race r Southwest Conference Football CONFERENCE STANDINGS Team W L Pet. Kings Mtn. Shelby R. S. Central Lincolnton Cherryville Belmont Forest City Chase 2 0 1.000 2 0 1.000 2 0 1.000 I 1 .500 1 1 .500 0 1 .000 0 2 .000 0 3 .000 SEASON'S RECORD (For all games played) Team W L Pts O-Pts Shelby 3 0 69 13 R. S. Central 3 1 66 20 Kings Mtn. 2 1 50 32 Cherryville 2 2 31 85 Forest City 2 2 38 40 Lincolnton 1 2 25 26 Belmont 0 3 6 56 Chase 0 4 19 86 RESULTS LAST WEEK Kings Mountain 27, Chase 6. Shelby 7, Lincolnton 0. Forest City 12, Taylorsville 6. North Mecklenburg 25, Bel mont 6. Monroe 34, Cherryville 0. Brevard 14, R. S. Central 6. SCHEDULE FRIDAY Shelby at Kings Mountain. iCheiryville at Belmont. Forest City at R. S. Centra1!. Newton at Lincolnton. Chase, open. Football Reserved Seats Still On Sale An extra gate will be put in use here Friday nighit for the large crowd expected to attend the Kings Mountain • Shelby football game at City Stadium. Principal Harry Jaynes said that the usual pass-gate to the left of the main gate will be used to sell tickets and for ad mission to the park. The gate was also used to handle the large crowd at the York game here two weeks ago. Jaynes said that he still has j several reserved seat tickets to I Mountaineer home games and ! that persons wishing ducats for the assigned seats can pur chase them from his office at the high school. The tickets will sell for $4 for the four re maining games on the sche dule and will assure the bearer ' of the same reserved seat for the games. As if the Kings Mountain Shelby game here Friday night didn’t have enough angles, al ready, the county rivals will be battling to hold their share in the lead in the Southwest Confer ence, to boot. The Mountaineers and the Gol den Lions are currently involved in a three-way tie with R. S. Central for the top spot in the Conference . . . and the winner of the game at City Stadium Fri day night will continue to share the lead, at least. The three leaders have won two conference games each, and the HiMtoppers meet Forest City in the other game involving a leader. Kings Mountain made it two in a row in the Conference with its impressive 27-6 romp over Chase Friday night, and Shelby deadlocked the issue with its 7-0 win over Lincolnton. R. S. Cntral tral, meanwhile lost a non-Con ference clash to Brevard, 14-6. The trio of leaders are the on ly ones to escape defeat in the Conference, and Shelby is the lone remaining undefeated SWC team on the year, with three wins in a row. Shelby gained the distinction last Friday night of handing de fending champion Lincolnton its first league loss in two years, scoring in the third period fol lowing a bad snap from center on a punt situation _ the same thing that wrecked N. C. State’s Wolfpack at Wyoming. Shelby tackle Joe Broughton recovered the fumble on the bad snap on the Lincolnton 11-yard line, and four plays later Bill Pernell, one of the Lions’ fancy and fast halfbacks, scored the games’ lone TD. Bob Roberts kicked the point. Forest City was the only other SWC team managing a victory last week, defeating Taylorsville, 12-6. Long gallops helped the Tornado to the win, Don Harris trucking 53 yards and Russ Rad ford 45 yards for touchdowns. Belmont scored its first touch down of the season, Tony Allen taking a seven-yard pass from Ray Garrison in the fourth quar ter, but the score was too little and too late, as the Red Raiders lost to North Mecklenburg, 25-6. Cherryville also was the victim of an outsider, losing 34-0 to Monroe. The Ironmen lost five fumbles and had one pass inter cepted, falling apart in the four th quarter when Monroe scored three times. R. S. Central suffered its first loss of the year, a 14-6 defeat at the hands of Brevard. holds-up Friday night, the fans, are in for another typical game; between the Cleveland County i rivals. They have played five years of close ball games, with two ties, two wins for Shelby and one for the Mountaineers. The pair of neighbors also have put in most of the claims on the Southwest titles for the same five years, the two winning or sharing the crown in four of the last five seasons. KM won in 1956, Shelby in 1957 and ‘58, and the two tied with R. S. Central for the championship in ‘59. Lin cdlnton snapped that string for the pair laslt fall. Personnel-wise, Shelby comes to town, big and experienced, fv»-i^i'lriYfirkfijyvatii —■—■7rn-mnrnrrnjnnvrrr‘<iir- -.irir.y ■ while the Mountaineers aire nur sing several bites by the injury bug. Coach Gerald Allen’s Lions are nearly as big as the huge York team which bealt the Mountain eers here two weeks ago, with the lightest player in the line weigh ing in at 175 pounds. Kings Mountain, on the other hand, has only two performers topping that weight. In Charlie Noggle, Shelby has another comparison to the York team and Earnest McCarter which impressed local folks. Nog gle is tabbed as the top prospect in the Southwest Conference. He quarterbacks the Lions and is very dangerous as a strong run AN END. NOW —_ Three-year vet at guard, Curtis Floyd became an end this week, moving out to the flank to take up some of the slack due to the lengthy injury list at the position. Curtis faces a tough task this week, defending the wings against Shelby's outside attack. | Tommy Goforth Scores Three TD's ; In East Midget Win: North Cops East claims the undisputed lead as the lone remaining unde feated team in the midget foot ball league this week. The easterners, coached by; Charles and Don Smith, swept to; its second straight win of the' young season, defeating South,! 27-7, Saturday night. West squar ed its season’s mark at one-all, handing North its first defeat, 6 0, in the other game last week. East’s loop-leaders meet North at 7 o’clock, with South and West clashing in the second game of the midget double-head er at City Stadium Saturday night. The games mark the half way point in the schedule for the small-fry gridders. Tommy Goforth of East was the big star last week, scoring three touchdowns on runs of 20 yards, 15 yards and 43 yards. Steve Goforth notched the other TD for East on a five-yard run. Rick Hamrick added two of East’s extra points and Steve Go forth made the other one. Danny Sprouse scored the lone South tally on a 53-yard gallop and Jerry Bumgardner went over for the point-after The Goforth lads and Phil Gladden were the big offensive guns for East, with Sprouse get ting off several other nice runs for South. Ben Grimes and Rick Hamrick were defensive stars for the win Optimist Club Assumes Operation Of K. M. Midget Football League The Kings Mountain Optimist Club this week assumed opera tion of the local midget football league, assisting the recreation department with much-needed assistance and manpower in su pervising the program. Optimist Boys Work chairman Jim Guyton will head the pro gram for the club and he already Little Mountaineers Win 19-0. Play Belmont Here Thursday Kings Mountain High Little Mountaineers will seek their sec ond straight victory of the Sou thwest Junior High League sea son, playing Belmont here Thurs day night at 7 o’clock in City Stadium. The Little Mountaineers, coa ched by Fred Withers and Bill Cashion, rolled to a 19-0 triumph at Forest City last Thursday night in their opener. Belmont also won its first game in the new junior high conference, de feating R. S. Central, 14-0. A trio of Little Mountaineer backs shared the touchdown-ma king in the opener, all three scor ing on short runs following long pushes down the field. Pete Putnam scored in the first period following a long drive and the Little Mountain eers held a 6-0 edge at halftime. A 30-yard pass completion from Quarterback Pat Murphy to Ed die Huffstetler set up the TD. Huffstetler was in the clear on the pass play, but was overtaken from the rear ait the five-yard line from which point Putnam went over. Huffstetler also set up a third quarter score with a 40-yard gal lop, scoring himself a few plays later on a short burst. Steve Ba ker added the extra point after this TD. Pat Murphy sneaked over for 1 he third touchdown in the last period. Coach Withers was pleased with the all-round work of his backfield and said that the line also was impressive in its first ( start, mentioning Richard White at end, Steve Griggs and Jimmy Wells at tackles, and Mike Tig nor and George Plonk at guards. The mentor used most of his i nearly-40 member squad in the | game. SCORING SUMMARY Kings Mountain 6 0 7 6 19 Forest City 0 0 0 0 0 Touchdowns, for Kings Mt_ Pete Putnam. Eddie Huffstetler, and Pat Murphy. Extra Point_ Steve Baker. : has named a commissioner and board of directors to govern the league’s activities. Gerald Vailemtine was named the commissioner, and the board of directors will consist of Opti mists Jim Connor, Marion Sex ton, Lawrence (Tib) Bennett, Bob Hulbert, Jake Early as Rec reation Head advisor, and Mearl Valentine, chief official. The commissioner and the dir ectors will set up the basic rules for the program, such as age, weight, boundaries, physical ex aminations and to rule on pro teste which may arise. Guyton said that most of the rules governing the program this year will remain in effect. The program has been operated here by Recreation Director Jake Early tor the past few yearsand he set up the rules and regulations this year which will remain in force. The Optimist boys work chair man said that he hopes that sponsors can be found for the teams before next season. He ho pes to secure the sponsors from other civic clubs or service or ganization. He also hopes to have a team each from Bethware and Grover next fall. The football league is the first project for the local Optimist Club which was organized sev eral months ago. Admission prices to the games will remain the same as usual, 25 cents for adults and ten cents for children. The Optimist will continue to operate concession stands at City | Stadium, and all proceeds will go into a special boys fund to further the midget football pro gram. The program in the future will be known as the Kings Mountain Optimist Midget Football Lea gue. < ners, with Sprouse, Neal Cooper, end Ricky Moore the best defen ders for South. East led in first downs, seven to one. Wayne O’Dell sneaked over from one yard out in the second quarter to give West its 6-0 win over North. The winners allso led in first downs, three to two, in the close defensive battle. O'Dell and Tommy Day were defensive stars for West, and Danny Kiser, Philip Russ and Philip Wright were best on de fense for North. Tommy Day and Roy Medlin ran well for West, and the offen sive leaders for North included Charles Carroll, Philip Wright and Scott Cole. SCORING SUMMARY East 0 14 6 7_27 South 0 0 0 7_7 Touchdowns for East: Tommy Goforth 3 (20-yard run, 15-yards, and 43-yards), Steve Goforth 1 (5-yard run). Extra paints for East: Rick Hamrick 2, Steve Go forth 1. Touchdown for South: Danny Sprouse 1 (53-yard run). Extra point for South: Jerry Bumgard ntr 1. West 0 6 0 0 6 North 0 0 0 0 0 Scoring touchdown for West: Wayne O’Dell 1 (1-yard run). Midget Football LAST WEEK'S RESULTS East 27, Sou/th 7. West 6, North 0. SATURDAY'S SCHEDULE East vs North (7 o’dlock). South vs West. The pair of non-conference teams remaining on the Moun taineers’ grid slate divided their games last Friday. Robert Munday scored both touchdowns in leading the Clover Blue Eagles to a 12-0 triumph over Win ns boro. The hard-run ning halfback who spent his summer on Kings Mountain’s side as a Legion junior baseball performer, scared once on a nine yard run and again on an 18 yard pass from quarterback Bruce McWaters. The Mountaineers play at Clover on October 13. Bessemer City, which comes here for a game next week, did n’t fare so well in a Gaston Lit tle Six Conference game last Fri day, losing to Mt. Holly, 43-6. The Hawks railed up a 31-6 mar gin at halftime in the battle of the favorites in the Gaston cir cuit. Bobby King heaved a 22-yard pass to George Hook for the lone BC touchdown. STANDINGS Team East North West South W L Pet. 2 0 1.000 1 1 .500 1 1 .500 0 2 .000 Munday Stars In Clover Win ner on option and roll-out plays. Kings Mountain heads into the big battle still very-much weak ened by injuries. Another end, Robert Whisnant, went of the hurt list this week, a knee injury suffered at Chase. He is a very doubtful performer FTriday and joins flankmen Bill Ramseur and Steve Brown, on the sidelines. Brown and Whisnant began light workouts Tuesday, but their status remains uncertain. Curtis Ployd has been moved from guard to end this week to help the personnel - depleted Tanks on the flanks. The Mountaineer backfield was due to get one returnee for this week’s game in Miike Huffstdckler who was out last Friday with a knee injury. He began drills a gain this week and probably will repain his straiting halfback post. Henry Raines also expects to be nearer top condition after being hampered with an ankle hurt. Probable Starters In KM-Shelby Clash SHELBY Pos. Name Wgt LE Harold Bell 180 LT Joe Broughton 200 LG Doug Turner 175 C Gairy Mauney 180 RG Bob Roberts 185 RT Henry Weathers 195 RE Sonny Dockery 180 QB Charles Noggle 185 LH Bill Pernell 160 RH Charles Peeler 155 FB Johnny Greene 170 KINGS MOUNTAIN Pos. Name Wgt LE Charles Goodson 165 LT Jerry Rikard 185 LG Tom Armstrong 150 C Mike Dixon 160 RG Sammy Houston 160 RT Eddie Ross 205 RE Curtis Floyd 160 QB Wally Harris 160 LH Mike Huffstickler 143 RH Alton Stewart 158 FB James Hope 182 Quick TD’s, Alert Defense Spark Win Over Chase By 27-6 The football superiority of the| Mountaineers was unquestioned j ait Chase last Friday night. Our side scored four touch downs in rapid-fire order, play ed alert defense to the tune of four pass interceptions and one fumble recovery, and let the subs play the Trojans to a fourth-per iod standoff, all adding up to a 27-6 romp in the Southwest Con | ference game. The Mountaineers scored the first three times they had the 1 ball! in the game, added another TD the first time they had the pigskin in the second half, and the subs took over after that. Coach John Gamble cleared the bench, and one of the biggest cheers of the evening from the Mountaineer side of the field went up when Dennis Floyd _ all 112 pounds of him _ went into the game in the final min utes. Teammates and fans alike gave him a Standing sendoff. Halfback Alton Stewart scared twice on sparkling runs and Charlie Goodson hauled-in two Wally Harris passes for the quar tet of Mountaineer TD’s, as they made the scoring drives and exe cution Hook almost too easy. The Mountaineers had two more touchdowns called back, but suggesting that the scores were not flukes, Harris proceeded to pass for a touchdown on the play immediately following the cancelled TD each time. Kings Mountain’s defense was particularly alert in confiscating the ball from the Trojans. The Mountaineers, for instance, cau ght twice as many of the Chase passes as did the Trojan receiv ers . . . intercepting four, as a galnst two completions in seven tosses. At one stretch in the game, the Mountaineers intercepted three straight Chase passes. . Goodson, Curtis Floyd, Butch Harry and Hubert McGinnis were the alert defenders who picked off the pitches, and Gary Collins pounced on the fumble recovery tor KM. only one of the ‘'alertness breaks”, however, led to a Kings Mountain touchdown. The Moun taineers capitalized on Floyd’s interception to move 42 yards for a score early in the second half. The first thiree KM touchdowns, in the first half, came at the end of long drives over half the dis tance of the field. The Mountaineers started it all from the word go, marching from the opening kickoff for 60 yards, in ten plays, for the TD. Stewart climaxed the drive with the longest run, and the most dazzling, a 22-yard maneuver for the score. He bolted through the line, avoiding the linebackers with a change of direction, then pulled away from three defend ers ten yards down field, spin ning out of the “huddle” to race over the goal. He also ran the point-after. A few minutes later, the Moun taineers were on the way again, following a Chase punt. They went 51 yards in 14 plays, not counting an apparent TD by But ch Harry being called back. But ch completely reversed his field to cover a needed eight yards, but a holding penalty set Kings Mountain back to the 23-yard line. Undaunted, Harris calmly toss ed a floating pass to Goodson who gathered it in just before running under the goal posts. A gain, Stewart ran the extra point. Chase came back from the en suing kickoff for its lone score sparked by Bruce Hardin’s 36 yard kickoff return. Hardin also ran 12 yards, down to the one from where he sneaked over. The Mountaineers roared back scoring for the third straight time sweeping 55 yards in four runs by Stewart. He picked up the first ten yards in three short ru-l shes. Then he exploded up the! middle, was in the clear five yards beyond the line of scrim-! mage and streaked 45 yards for the touchdown, displaying his Conference dash-champion srxwi Harris’ fumble while passing stymied the Mountaineers effort to score again before the half was over, although Tommy Arm strong did recover for KM for a 13-yard loss. But ithe KM crowd had the distinction of scoring three of the four times it had possession in the first half, and made it four touchdowns in the first five possessions for the game by scoring the first time in the second half. Floyd’s interception at the Chase 42 yard line set this one in motion. Harry and Stewart each had 17-yard runs in the drive which took only five plays. From the seven, Harris boot-leg ged around the left side for an apparent TD, but it was called back for backfield in motion. For the second time of the game, Harris proceeded to pass for a score on the next play, this time tossing to Goodson on the left side and the end ran over untouched. Harris passed to Har ry for the point and that 27-6 score stood for the final quarter and-a-half as the Mountaineer reserves gained some experience. Quarterback Warren Goforth directed the team throughout the last period, his backfield mates being Harry, Henry Raines and Fired Dixon. The KM second and third strin gers ware backed-up at their own ten-yard line fighting-off a Chase touchdown when the game ended. Mountaineer Gridgraph YARDSTICK KM Chase First Downs 14 9 YardsRushiing 212 125 Yards Passing 40 11 Passes Attempted 12 7 Passes Completed 3 2 Passes had Intcp. 0 4 Fumbles Lost 1 1 Punts - Average 2_30 2_29 Yards Penalized 75 15 SCORE BY QUARTERS Kings Mountain 7 13 7 0 27 Chase 0 6 0 0 6 SCORING For Kings Mountain Touchdowns — Alton Stewart 2 (22-yard run and 45-yard run); Charles Good son 2 (23-yard pass from Wally Harris and 12-yard pass from Harris). Extra points — Stewart 2, (runs); Harry 1 (pass from Har ris.) For Chase Touchdown — Bruce Hardin (1 yard run). INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Kings Mtn. Rushing Player Alton Stewart Butch Harry Wally Harris Fred Dixon Tommy Hope Warren Goforth Henry Raines TOTALS Carries Net Yds. 20 4 7 3 2 1 1 154 27 13 10 9 1 -2 38 212 Player Harris Goforth Kings Mt. Passing Attpt. Comp Yds. 11 3 40 10 0 TOTALS 12 40 Kings Mt. Receiving p1Via^*r „ J Caught Yds. Charles Good son 3 Player Ronnie Parris Charles Teague BruceHardin Jim Hopper Mickey Jolly TOTALS ~ 40 Chase Rushing Carries Net Yds, 14 59 8 35 7 18 6 7 ' 4 6 39 125 Player Hardin Chase Passing Attpt. Comp Intcp Yds. ^ 2 4 11 Chase Receiving D _ Caught Yds Bon me Parris 2 11
The Kings Mountain Herald (Kings Mountain, N.C.)
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Sept. 28, 1961, edition 1
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