The Coleman Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 2, 1982 Page: 7 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 24 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
..... f . ■ - - % . $
* .
Coleman, Texas, November 2, 1982
COLEMAN DEMOCRAT-VOICE
Nicholas Defies "Ban The
*3 ;
Bomb" at Comanche, 38-30
Bluecats Tumble Again
1981 HE/SMAN TROPHY WINNER
By Stan Brudney the Bluecats, 38-30.
At one point early in the Nicholas combined with
second quarter last Friday ends Curtis Goforth and
night at Comanche, I
thought I overheard some-
one yell “Ban the Bomb”
from the Bluecat stands.
Unfortunately, Indian jun-
ior quarterback Scott Ni-
cholas did not heed the
order.
The 6‘2“ version of a
V computerized sling shot
destroyed the visiting Cat
secondary with four long
"bombs” during the first 14
minutes of action, thus
fueling Comanche’s 10th
consecutive victory over
Duane Crownover for
touchdown passes covering
55,56, and 76 yards to
enable the Indians to erase
and early Bluecat lead of
6-0. Another 47 yard strike
set up a 23 yard field goal
by Scott Davis late in the
first quarter. On the str-
ength of Comanche’s “first
strike capability", the Ind-
ians built up a 24-6 margin
before a furious Cat rally
tied the contest in the third
period.
The victory was the
Coleman Comahche
19 First Downs 18
105 Yds. Rushing 178
252 Yds. Passing 291
12 of 30 Passes 9 of>15
2 Intcptd By 4
8 for 64 Penalties 8 for 90
1 for 32 Punts 4 for 34
1 Fumbles Lost 0
*****
Scoring by Quarters:
Coleman .. 6 12 12 0 -30
Comanch^ 17 7 7 7-38
* ,A
he 17 7 7
fir^t in E
BECAME THE FIRST
COLLEGE PLAYER
IN HISTORY TO
RUSH TOR OYER
2,000 YDS.
IN ONE
SEASON.
\(2,342
I TO BE
exact.)
HE PLAYED TAILBACK
FOR THE UNIVERSITY
OF SOUTHERN CALIF.
ALLEN LED THE NATION
IN TOUCHDOWNS -23,
AND HE RUSHED FOR
OYER 200 YARDS IN
7 GAMES. MARCUS,
" INI WINNING THE
TROPHY, HANDILY BEAT
SUCH GRID GREATS AS HESSCHEL
WALKER AND JIM McMAHON. HE
WAS DRAFTED BY THE RAIDERS.
ssr was-“
i
% OFF
AND MORE
tS*e“t
losses
&l9e’
S\*eS
4W»S
$s«s
Smith and Company win
less thus far at 0-3-1.
Comanche is 1-3, thus es-
caping the basement.
Friday night's shootout
at Indian Stadium was a
real spectator^ delight.
There were 68 points regis-
tered, 37 first downs, 45
passes thrown and 826
yards in total offense gar-
nered by both clubs. There
was defensive fireworks as
well. Six interceptions
were made and an onside
kick was recovered by the
Bluecats.
The visiting “Blue Crew”
drew first blood with an
“all new” backfield consist-
ing of QB Tony Seballos,
Jody Barr, Charlie Villegas
and Albert Dela Rosa.
Seballos lofted a 47 yard
scoring strike to Barr with
8:57 remaining to give the
Cats a 6-0 lead. A Mark
Dela Rosa interception set
up the tally. Street’s
attempt for the PAT was
unsuccessfuL.it was a sign
of things to come...the
Bluecats failed on five ex-
tra point tries.
Three plays later, “Jolly
Scott Nicholas” went to
work. He fired a 56 yard
strike to Duane Crownover
at the 7:43 mark. Davis’
kick made it 7-6.
only briefly delayed the
Cats' comeback.
The determined visitors
set sail downfield on a
picture perfect 85 yard
scoring march. Neal was
three for three on the
drive, completing passes to
Hubbard, Stallworth and
own. It took them only four
plays. Neal connected with
Villegas for 36 yards and a
touchdown to cap the
march. A Neal to Hubbard
pass-run for 34 yards set
up the play. The Cats
trailed 31-30 at this point
and decided to go for two.
But a pass intended for
Villegas for 49 yards along Mark Dela Rosa was tip-
the way. Stallworth bulled Ped and fell harmlessly to
his way into the end zone
from 21 yards out ind the
Cats cut the Inidan lead to
24-18 at the half.
Bluecat defensive end
Eric Brannon blocked a
the ground.
With just seconds to go
in the third period, Smith’s
Blues tried another onside
kick but it failed at the
Indian 45. Comanche's
Nicholas punt with 8:21 to Ronnie Williams somehow
go in the third period to set 8ot under the pile amidst a
up the visitors tieing tally. “ bevy of Bluecats to cradle
Noseguard Darren Nunez the leather. It took Coman-
fell on the leather at the
Injun 20. Wingback Jody
Barr picked up a key first
down on fourth and one at
the Comanche nine to set
up Stallworth’s one yard
“leap” into the end zone at
6:25. Again, the PAT failed
as Butch Street’s boot was
blocked...24-24!
Mickey Finley’s Indians
would not be denied! They
marched 64 yards with
the ensuing kickoff and
abstained1 from the pass
along the way. Quarter-
back Nicholas scored a
keeper around the left side
with 2:11 remaining in
mOD€ a DRV
310 Commercial - Ph. 625-5444
A Seballos pass was ^deVSlS ***
Now it was a “man the
lifeboats” and “every man
for himself’ situation! The
scoreboard was lighting up
Henderson Funeral Homes
"People Caring For People"
OFFERING AT YOUR REQUEST
Pre-Arranged Funerals
Funeral Insurance and Counseling
Ambulance Service
Coleman 625-2121 — S-Anna 348-3131
fENCMtr
1 SPECIAL*
6 Foot
"T" Posts
Each -
MTr
JM
m
y
'm
Barb
Wire
U.S. Made
’wBk
picked off by Curtis Go-
forth a short time later and
Comanche struck again
with deadly precision. A
Nicholas 47, yard dart to
Goforth to the Bluecat 17
set up a Davis 23 yard field
goal...l0-6, Comanche!
Senior signal caller Tony
Seballos then engineered a
long drive which was halt-
ed at the Indian 19. The
Cats failed to pick up a first
down there on a fourth and
five situation. Two plays
later and the imal snap of
the first period, Nicholas
numbed the Bluecat faith-
ful with a perfect scoring
pass to Duane Crownover
covering 76 yards. Davis
again booted it true, 17-6.
Matters were getting
completely out of hand as
Comanche scored again on
their next possession early
in the second period. A
55-yard scoring aerial from
Nicholas to Goforth did the
trick. Davis’ kick made it
24-6.
Instead of folding, the
Bluecats displayed a lot of
character and rallied.
Southpaw Keith Neal, who
had been suffering from
pneumonia earlier in the
week, took over at quar-
terback. Neal engineered a
five-play, 53 yard scoring
drive. Key passes to Vince
Hubbard for 14 yards and
Charlie Villegas for 18
set up the six-pointer.
Tailback Leo Stallworth
scored from three yards
out and he was on his way
to a three rushing TD
evening. The Cats went for
two but Phillip Walker
dropped a Neal aerial and
the count was 24-12.
Walker redeemed him-
self by recovering a Sebal-
los onside kick at the
Bluecat 45. But, three
plays later, Ron Coulter
picked off, a Neal aerial at
l(
(U TEXANS i
DAN RAINER
BILL MOYERS
5:30 NEWS
che eight plays to score the
final points of the evening.
Senior Ron Coulter ran
over the center’s back from
four yards out to cap the
trek downfield. Davis a-
gain booted it through the
uprights, 38-30.
The Bluecats had two
excellent opportunities to
tie it from that point
forward but came up short
on both occasions. They
had solid position at the
Indian 47 after a punt but a
fourth down pass misfired
at the Comanche 29. A
Villegas interception a ser-
ies later set up the Cats at
the Comanche 23 but an-
other fourth down pass
was intercepted by Nicho-
las in the end zone to
complete his “four star”
banner performance on
like a Christmas tfee and it' F«day evening. His {day
was only October. The was rewarded by the Abi-
Cats retaliated with a 65 lene Reporter-News on
yard scoring drive of their Monday morning as he was
Father Of
Burkett
Resident Dies
ODESSA: Services for
Hurchel Norman Breeze,
74, of 2104 Glenwood AVe.,
were held at 2 p.m. Oct. 18,
1982 at Hubbard-Kelley
Funeral Home Chapel. The
Rev. Mike Jeffreys officia-
ted. Burial followed in Sun-
set Memorial Gardens.
Mr. Breeze died October
15,1982 in Medical Center
Hospital, Odessa.
He was born Nov. 19,
1907 at Carter, Okla. He
married Ann Paulene
Flusche on Sept. 2,1941, in
chosen “Offensive Player
of the Week” in the area
along with Breck’s Kyle
Parker.
OFF THE CUFF
We would like to thank
the Reporter-News for
their posthumous report-
ing of the game on Satur-
day morning...their head-
lines read 38-30, Coleman...
we’ll take all the help we
can get! Brady fell to
Burnet 7-0 and Llano ed-
ged Marble Falls 6-0 on
Friday night in District
8-AAA to give Burnet an
outright shot at the title
this Friday. They are 3-0-1
while Llano is 3-1. The
Bulldogs hosts Marble
Falls while the Jackets
entertain Comanche...the
Bluecats are now 5-3-1
overall and 0-3-1 in district
play...Bluecat stats-(Rush-
ing) Stallworth 19-87, 3
TDs; Albert Dela Rosa
2- 3; Barr 3-5; Walker 2 -7;
Neal five for minus four;
Brannon 1-7 and Villegas
1- 0...(Passing) Neal 9-22,
180 yards, one TD, three
interceptions; Seballos 3-8,
72 yards, one TD, one
interception...(Receiving)
Hubbard 4 for 83, Villegas
3- 69, one TD; Barr 1-47,
one TD; Mark Dela Rosa
2- 35 and Stallworth 2-18...
Neal now has thrown for
1,040 yards this year and
has 14 TD passes to his
credit...Stallworth has
rushed for 841 yards in
nine gardes and. Has scored
11 touchdowns.!.The Blue-
cats host Brady Friday
evening to wrap up the
1982 season.
Gallup, N. M.
He was an instrument
repairman. He was a mem-
ber of the First Baptist
Church.
• Survivors other than his
wife include one daughter,
Lyn Porter of Burkett,
Texas; two sons, Don
Breeze of Irving, Texas
and Bob Breeze of Tulsa,
Okla.; three sisters, Ella
Short of Borger, Texas,
Rose Richeson of San Die-
go, Calif., and Mildred
Davis of Wichita Falls;
three brothers, Isam J.
Breeze of Wichita Falls,
James J. Breeze cf Abilene
and Eugene Breeze of Flor-
ida; and eight grand-
children.
Stock Show
Meet Tonite
All officers and interest-
ed persons are urged to
attend the Coleman Coun-
ty Livestock Show As-
sociation meeting tonight
(Tuesday).
The meeting will be at 7
p.m. in the Breeder-Feeder
Building at the Rodeo
Grounds.
Page 7-A
SHOP IN COLEMAN
ON YOUR
CREDIT
54950 g up
/ESSSStZ
__■dmssss^-
46 Years
Under New
Ownership
Davis
Garage
-TEXACO DEALER-
Rockwood, Texas
(915)785-4240
Hrs: 8-12 and 1-5:30
"‘■‘•nr,"'"-"1
Auto — Truck — Tractor
Mechanic
Save
up to
*50
Litton
Rebate Days
Big Savings on Selected Litton Microwave Ovens
■ - <'
f I
/
Auto-Cook Microwave Oven
• Litton Exclusive Features
• Auto-Defrost
• Auto-Cook
• Even Wave™ Performance
• 650 Watts Cooking Power
• Electronic Touch Control
• Extra Large 1.5 Cubic Foot Oven Capacity
Our Price
LUTON
REBATE
YOU PAY
5000
*59900
ii
I» .....jjH
Model 1590
----ll
Litton^ire Microwave Oven*
• Litton Exclusive Features
• Auto-Defrost
• Auto-Cook
♦ Large 1.1 Cubic Foot Oven Capacity
• Even Wave™ Performance
• 600 Watts Cooking Power
• Electronic Touch Control
: • .A
P-
li' • . ,•
mm
r ii
l!ji! -
I
Our Price
LITTON
REBATE
YOU PAY
J699°°
-5004
• ' > ‘
$649°°
j- j
Coleman Building
Materials, Inc.
910 S. Concho - Ph. 625-4185
$KTAB TV
YOUR NEWS STATION
We've Got You Covered
Model 1072
Meal-In-One' Microwave Oven
• Litton s Exclusive Even Wave™ Performance
• 700 Watts Cooking Power
• Large 1.3 Cubic Foot Oven Capacity
• Variable Power Control
• Automatic Temperature Control
• Electronic Touch Control
• Time of Day Clock
• Recipe Saver Feature
Our Price ^499^
LITTON
REBATE
-3000
*46T
OTHER MODELS AS LOW AS.... $319.00
YOU PAY
BUY NOW!
Litton Rebate Days End November 30,1982
Geo. D. Rhone Co.
Service After the Sale
* FRIGIDAIIl! * RCA A LITTON
( ult 111 j 111 - - ( -l o! ( niirlliniiM-- I c\;i»
x-v
22
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Coleman Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 25, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 2, 1982, newspaper, November 2, 1982; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth734004/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Coleman Public Library.