West Virginia University Press
Transcription
West Virginia University Press
THE BACKYARD BRAWL ® Elated fans storm the field after West Virginia’s 1975 victory over Pitt, which came down to the final play of the game. The celebrations lasted well into the f ollowing week in the Sunnyside section of town. ® Stories from One of the Weirdest, Wildest, Longest Running, and Most Intense Rivalries in College Football History MORGANTOWN • 2012 West Virginia University Press 26506 Copyright 2012 by West Virginia University Press All rights reserved First edition published 2012 by West Virginia University Press Printed in the United States of America 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 987654321 Paper: 978-1-935978-82-4 EPUB: 978-1-935978-83-1 PDF: 978-1-935978-84-8 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Antonik, John. The backyard brawl : stories from one of the weirdest, wildest, longest running, and most intense rivalries in college football history / by John Antonik. -- 1st ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-1-935978-82-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 1-935978-82-9 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-13: 978-1-935978-83-1 (e-book) ISBN-10: 1-935978-83-7 (e-book) [etc.] 1. Football--United States--History--Miscellanea. 2. College sports--United States--History--Miscellanea.. 3. Sports rivalries--United States. I. Title. GV950.5.A67 2012 796.332--dc23 2012013718 Photo credits: All photos WVU Sports Communications except where noted. Other photos courtesy of All-Pro Photography/Dale Sparks, Bill Amatucci, Dr. Carolyn Peluso Atkins, George Gojkovich, Joedy McKown, Sam Sciullo, Jr., University of Pittsburgh, and WVU Photographic Services. The indicia featured on this product are protected trademarks owned by West Virginia University and the University of Pittsburgh. “Backyard Brawl” is a registered trademark of West Virginia University and the University of Pittsburgh. Dedicated to the memory of george antonik 1935-2011 A B C D E A. Jeff Hostetler scores winning TD against Pitt in 1983. B. Larry Williams sits on the field in disbelief in 2007. (All-Pro Photography/Dale Sparks photo) C. Action from the 1975 Pitt game in Morgantown. D. Matt Cavanaugh runs for yardage against WVU in 1976. E. Marc Bulger had great games against Pitt during his four-year career. F. Phil Braxton scores a 79-yard touchdown against Pitt in 2002. (All-Pro Photography/ Dale Sparks photo) G. LeSean McCoy was a one-man show on offense for Pitt in 2007. (All-Pro Photography/Dale Sparks photo) See color photo sections for detailed captions G F CONTENTS Prologue1 1943-1955: The Rivalry Resumes9 1943 - The Long Shadow of Sutherland 9 1947 - Finally! 17 1952 - Pappy Makes ‘em Happy 26 1954 - The Power of Positive Thinking 37 1955 - Pass the Sugar 46 1957-1965: Wild Times57 1957 - West Virginia Survives 57 1959 - A “Pitt-iful” Performance 64 1961 - The Garbage Game 71 1963 - The Battle of the Brothers 78 1965 - Points Galore 87 Color Photo Section A A1–A16 following page 96 1967-1979: The Birth of the Backyard Brawl99 1967 - “Jusk” for Kicks 99 1970 - Bobby Blows It 109 1975 - McKenzie Kicks the Hell out of Pitt 120 1976 - Tony D Gets Tossed 136 1979 - Farewell, Old Mountaineer Field 144 1982-1991: A Changing of the Guard157 1982 - A Classic Comeback 157 1983 - “Let's Do It!” 170 1985 and 1987 - A Tie and a Sigh 181 1989 - Kissing Your Sister; Clubbing Your Neighbor 189 Color Photo Section B B1–B16 following page 200 1991-2011: The Big East Years203 1991 - A Big East Blowout 203 1994 - E-I-E-I-O, Tractors and Corncob Pipes 209 1997 - For the Love of Pete 221 2002 - Collins Steals the Show 228 2007 - 13-9: Miracle in the Mountains 237 2009 and 2011 - Down to the Wire 247 Epilogue260 Score History 265 Acknowledgments266 Bibliography273 Index283 A B C E A. No one did more to stoke the emotions of the Backyard Brawl than Jack Fleming. B. Art Lewis plants a kiss on the forehead of his freshman quarterback Fred Wyant in 1952. C. Amos Zereoue runs into Pitt’s defense in 1997. D. Bobby Bowden’s most embarrassing moment as a coach came at Pitt in 1970. E. A wide view of WVU’s game against Pitt in 1967. See color photo sections for detailed captions D 260 EPILOGUE We all remember 1963 as the year John F. Kennedy was assassinated, but it was also around that same time that the University of Pittsburgh finally agreed to play football games in Morgantown, W.Va., on a regular basis. Before that, the vast majority of West Virginia’s games against Pitt were played either at Forbes Field or Pitt Stadium – 40 out of 55 to be exact. F rom 1919–1929, all 11 games West Virginia played against Pitt were in Pittsburgh. The same goes for the eight times the two schools played from 1938–1948, as well as the four games played from 1950–1953 and the three played from 1960–62 – and for good reason: the Mountaineers were simply not on par with the Panthers. In fact, West Virginia needed Pitt much more than Pitt needed West Virginia. For many years, WVU’s coaches realized that the city of Pittsburgh was the gateway to national attention and respect for their teams: Perform well against the Panthers and recognition and praise will follow. That’s why West Virginia continued to play football games in Pittsburgh for so long and on such an unequal basis – and with such passion and great determination. Pitt won eight mythical national titles during a 22-year period from 1915–37, including four from 1931–37 under legendary coach Jock Sutherland. The Panthers played in four Rose Bowls in 1928, 1930, 1933 and 1937 and had more than 30 All-American players from 1914–37 – one of them being Marshall “Biggie” Goldberg, an Elkins native who crossed enemy lines to become one of the most infamous turncoats in state history. For Mountaineer fans, losing Goldberg to Pitt was a massive psychological blow that lasted for decades. Back then, the West Virginians who played at Pitt – guys like Goldberg, Parkersburg’s Gibby Welch and Benwood’s Emil Narick - were referred to as “Snakes” by their Panther teammates; “Snakes” served as WVU’s unofficial nickname well into the 1920s, when the school understandably made the official switch to the much more appropriate Mountaineers. Pitt players referring to their West Virginia teammates as “Snakes” was a clear reminder of where they had come from. Epilogue 261 Beginning with Pitt’s 53-0 win over West Virginia in 1904 (back when Pitt was still being referred to as Western University of Pennsylvania), the Panthers won 38 of 49 games over the next 58 years. The two schools played annually from 1919 until 1939, when the series was interrupted for three years, from 1940-42, as Pitt tried to get into the Big Ten Conference, then known as the Western Conference. When the Panthers began to make room on their schedule to play more Big Ten schools, West Virginia was the local team most expendable, as the WVU-Pitt games were neither competitive nor interesting. But gasoline and rubber rationing during the war years forced the two schools to resume the series in 1943 because of their close geographical proximity, and the two played every year from then until 2011. Bill Kern ended Pitt’s 15-game winning streak in 1947 with a 17-2 victory in the fog and snow up in Pittsburgh, and five years later, Art Lewis surprised everyone by blanking the 18th-ranked Panthers on the very same field. It was the first time that the Mountaineers had defeated a nationally ranked football team. Lewis did it again in 1959 in stunning fashion – this time in Morgantown – with a team that had no business even being on the same field with Pitt. In between, much stronger Lewis teams also won games against Pitt in 1953 and 1957. Finally, West Virginia was beginning to hold its own in the series – and Pitt athletic director Frank Carver took notice. Carver was Mr. Pitt for nearly 40 years, beginning as a student in 1927 before eventually working his way into the AD’s chair on a permanent basis in 1959, when Captain Tom Hamilton left to become commissioner of the Pacific 8 Conference. Carver’s path toward a career in athletic administration was born of an aversion for making the steep walk up Cardiac Hill to go to his freshman chemistry lab. Instead, he discovered that a journalism class was being offered at the same time in State Hall (at the bottom of the hill), and from there he found his niche in Pitt’s publicity office, working first for Don Saunders and then Fred Turbyville. Carver became the school’s lead publicist in 1931, when Sutherland was beating everybody in America, and it was Carver who very quietly – and very effectively – promoted college football’s No. 1 program. When he was younger, Carver used to believe his publicity efforts helped fill the stadium. He realized otherwise when Sutherland left and the Pitt Stadium crowds grew sparse once again. “No publicity man can take the place of a couple of good tacklers,” Carver used to say. Carver was the guy who came up with the slogan “Dream Backfield” to describe Panther greats Goldberg, John Chickerneo and Curly Stebbins, and he also labeled Pitt basketball coach Doc Carlson’s innovative offense the “Figure Eight” – today a common 262 T H E B A C K YA R D B R AW L basketball term. In the late 1940s, when James Hagan resigned as athletic director, it was Carver who was asked to step in and serve as the school’s interim AD. And when Hamilton was finally wooed from the Naval Academy, Carver acquired the nebulous title of graduate manager, which basically meant that he was Hamilton’s No. 2 guy. Carver fit that role perfectly, quietly working in the background while riding the train to work every day from his home. It was said that he rarely took his car out of the garage. “Frank Carver was one of the nicest guys I ever met,” said Mickey Furfari. “He was just a great guy and a classy person.” When Carver was athletic director, Furfari recalled Carver once stepping in to resolve a dispute between Tony Constantine and Pitt publicist Beano Cook; Cook would not give Constantine a press credential because he said there were no seats left in the press box. “Tony called Carver and Carver made Beano find him a seat,” said Furfari. By all accounts, Carver was very interested in maintaining good relations with Pitt’s neighboring schools, often remarking that good games were good for the series. “It was cliché, but I think he meant it,” said Eddie Barrett. Carver was first and foremost a football guy, often to the detriment of the Panther basketball program, but he realized in the early 1960s that times were changing – particularly when it came to West Virginia. It was during Carver’s tenure that the football series with Pitt finally became home and home, and it was Carver who made it happen. But why? Why would Carver agree to do that? “I just think West Virginia said we’d like to play at home more often and [Carver] agreed,” said Cook. “The ’63 season was our state Centennial celebration, and Red Brown drummed up a great schedule with Pitt, Navy and Oregon,” said Barrett. “I think from that point on, Red said to Frank Carver, ‘Look, we’re more than competitive against you’ – we had beaten them in 1959, 1961 and 1962, and I think Carver went right along with it.” Back then, game contracts were merely handshakes, sometimes over a couple of cocktails at a social gathering. Barrett imagines that that is how Carver and Brown came to an agreement – just a few words about the football game mixed in with a lot of storytelling. “There were no contracts back then, and there were no lawyers,” Barrett said. “It was not even a handshake – they just agreed. They both respected each other; now Penn State . . . Pitt regarded them as much more of a rival than West Virginia, and West Virginia was perfectly content to be the country boys against the city boys. The attraction of the contrasting rivalry – the city and the country boys and all that stuff – [Carver] liked that.” “We always played Penn State here because their place only seated 32,000 then, and then when Penn State added to their stadium in the 1960s, it became home and home,” Epilogue 263 Cook said. “Pitt was willing to play [West Virginia]. It didn’t cost that much [to go down to Morgantown] – it was just different in those days. Now it’s all cutthroat and business and everything else.” In 1965, when Carver was getting criticized by everyone (including his SID) for creating an unbalanced basketball schedule that featured just seven home games at Fitzgerald Field House, the AD offered some insight into his scheduling philosophy, including his feelings about West Virginia – which dominated the basketball series against the Panthers back then. “We still plan to play West Virginia,” he said. “We have played West Virginia since 1900. Just because we are losing to them now doesn’t mean we should kick West Virginia off the schedule.” Carver continued. “I remember the late 1930s, when every school was taking pot shots at us,” he said. “West Virginia never said a word. They stuck by us and I will never forget this. We will play traditional opponents and games which either side has a 50-50 chance of winning.” And 50-50 is just about what the West Virginia-Pitt football series has been since 1963. The Mountaineers have won 25 games, Pitt 22, with two ties. Roughly the same number of points has been scored by both sides – 1,227 for West Virginia and 1,070 for Pitt; Pitt has been shut out three times, West Virginia twice. Pitt won seven games in a row from 1976–82 while West Virginia won five in a row from 1992–96. West Virginia has won 33 times against nationally ranked teams; Pitt has beaten 32 ranked teams. The series has experienced more than 20 sellouts since 1963, 12 crowds of more than 60,000, 26 of more than 50,000 and at least 32,000 spectators have attended each one (old Mountaineer Field’s seating capacity was just 35,000 for several of those years). “When we played West Virginia, Notre Dame or Southern Cal, the crowds were much bigger and louder,” Pitt coach Johnny Majors once recalled. More than 68,000 packed Mountaineer Field to watch West Virginia and Pitt play the first-ever Big East football game in 1991. In 2002, when both teams were in the national rankings, a record Heinz Field crowd of 66,731 braved frigid temperatures to see West Virginia hang on for a 24-17 victory. The game has been aired on some form of national television 28 times since 1963, including every year from 1995 to 2011, bringing untold millions to the schools’ athletic coffers through the years. There have been good games and there have been bad games, to be sure, but all of them have been interesting. Furthermore, the games have been hard-fought and competitive but without many onfield incidents. Don Nehlen, who grew up in Ohio and observed the Ohio State-Michigan rivalry for three years in person while working the Michigan sidelines, knows a thing or two about 264 T H E B A C K YA R D B R AW L rivalry games. “I don’t think [Pitt-West Virginia] has quite the national implications that Michigan-Ohio State has, but from a coaching standpoint, it’s exactly the same.” “Nothing against pro football, but to me, [rivalries] are what make college football so special,” said West Virginia assistant coach Steve Dunlap. “There are all of these rivalries around the country that have been playing for over a hundred years. Pro football wasn’t even around then. Now, I’m not talking about the hate thing, but I think that’s what makes college football really special. Pitt, with them being just right up the road, is what makes it so fun.” “Every guy that has coached the game – whether they were coaching at West Virginia or coaching at Pitt – gets emotional,” said Bill Kirelawich. “I can remember Jack Henry, who was an offensive line coach for Frank [Cignetti], and then he later coached at Pitt [for Johnny Majors in the mid-1990s]. When he was here, they were beating our ass, and when he was there, we were beating their ass. He told me after one game, ‘I wish the hell I could get on the right side of this thing!’” “As a Mountaineer – for my family and for us as a University – it will be sad to see this game disappear,” added Jeff Hostetler. “There is nothing like getting a win against Pitt – and you will hear the same thing from their players about us.” Today, West Virginia, Pitt and Penn State – the three schools that used to play for the old Ironsides Trophy and made up three-fourths of the Big Four – have gone their separate ways. Penn State has been a member of the Big Ten Conference since 1993 and hasn’t played Pitt since 2000 or West Virginia since 1992; Pitt made the decision to join the Atlantic Coast Conference in September of 2011, and a month after that, West Virginia was voted into the Big 12 Conference. Three outstanding schools with many outstanding qualities, each within 200 miles of each other, and all three now playing in different conferences in different parts of the country – it kind of makes you wonder what Frank Carver would think of that. 283 INDEX OF NAMES Abdul, David, 233 Abraham, Zach, 5-6, 211-13, 215-221, B10 Abrams, Al, 34-35, 114 Abromitis, Bill, 16 Adamchik, Ed, 81 Ahlborn, Charles, 85 Aldisert, Caeser, 165 Alford, Roger, 81, 83, 84, A11 Alexander, Robert, 138, 153 Ali, Muhammad, 172 Allman, Tommy, 29, 34, 40, A6 Alois, Art, 106 Alyta, Ken, 60 Anastasio, Ralph, 49, 64 Anderson, Bill, 16 Anderson, Eddie, 21 Arnett, Alric, 253 Askew, Chad, 208, 217-18 Atwater, James, 48, 52 Auslander, “Tiger” Paul, 164 Austin, Tavon, 257-58 Avezzano, Joe, 132 Bagamery, Andy “Bugs”, 44-45, 52 Bailey, Scott, 217 Bailey, Stedman, 257 Baker, Bob, 127, 198 Baldwin, Jon, 253-54 Ballweg, Mike, 175 Barber, Kantroy, 217 Barber, Walter “Red” Barber, 79 Barlow, Kevan, 225, 229 Barndt, Tom, 217 Barnes, Walter “Piggy”, 30 Barrett, Eddie, 32, 35, 38, 59, 67-68, 71-72, 79-82, 84, 262 Barron, Wally, 78, 83 Barrows, Scott, 172, 178 Barton, Todd, 218 Bastien, Perlo, 227 Baugh, Sammy, 14 Baumann, Bryan, 214-15, 217, 225 Beachler, Eddie, 11 Beamer, Frank, 230 Beasley, Aaron, 216, 219 Beatty, Chris, 253 Becht, Anthony, 224-25 Bednarik, Adam, 239 Bell, Derrick, 218 Benke, Bob, 66 Benjamin, Leo, 20 Bennett, Glenn, 76 Bennett, Rob, 168, 177-78 Bergman, Paul, 106 Berzansky, Steve, 72 Billick, Dean, 117 Bischoff, Paul, 34-35, A6 Bitancurt, Tyler, 247, 252-54, B16 Blaik, Earl, 77, 139 Blanda, Paul, 34 Bloom, Tom, 59, 82 Boczek, Joe, 170, 185 Bodle, Bill, 81, 85-86 Boeheim, Jim, 205 Bolkovac, Al, 51 Bonasorte, Chuck, 129 Borghetti, Ernie, 81 Bosley, Bruce, 31, 45, 49, 64, 73, 180, A7 Bosley, John, 31 Bostick, Pat, 240 Bowden, Ann, 118 Bowden, Bobby, 5, 99101, 104, 106-107, 109-110, 112, 114-16, 118-21, 123-25, 12829, 135, 138, 144, 146, 150, 158, 175, 180-81, 183, 217, 221, 229, A15 Bowden, Terry, 228 Bowden, Tommy, 122-23, 132-33, 228 Bowman, Glenn, 66 Bowen, Dick, 52 Bowman, John G., 10, 22 Bowser, Charles, 12, 14 Boyd, George, 120 Boykin, Eric, 211-12 Bozik, Ed, 164, 198 Bradley, Henge, 65 Bradshaw, Terry, 90 Brannon, Ed, 27 Brasco, Mark, 186-87 Brady, Ryan, 221, 226 Braswell, Chuck, 131 Braswell, Ken, 129 Braxton, Jim, 109, 115, 123 Braxton, Phil, 233-35, B12 Briggs, Luke, 253 Brooks, Dana, 84 Brown, Anthony “A.B.”, 181, B7 Brown, Dennis, 170 Brown, Jarrett, 240, 252-54 Brown, Jim, 82, 105 Brown, John, 168 Brown, Robert “Red”, 35, 46, 61, 64-65, 70, 78-80, 100, 262, A12–13 Brown, Wayne, 168, 177 Broyles, Frank, 40 Brueckman, Charley, 62 Bryant, Antonio, 232 Bryant, Paul “Bear”, 58, 102, 140, 164 Bryant, Richard, 232 Brytus, David, 240 Buck, Jack, 95 Budig, Gene, 158 Buggs, Danny, 124-125 Bulger, Marc, 212, 22327, B10 Bumgardner, Rex, 20-21 Burke, Mark, 130, 132 Butler, Leroy, 129 Byers, Walter, 139, 141 Byrd, Leland, 124, 139140, 145, 158, 204 Byrd, Robert C., 245 Cafego, George, 30 Campbell, Tommie, 238 Carey, Bernie, 80 Caridi, Tony, 189, 198, 208, 227, 234-36, 254 Carlen, Jim, 15, 61, 8384, 99-103, 107-111, 113, 119, 122-23, 125, 140-41, 146, 174, A14 Carlson, H.C. “Doc”, 25, 261 Carnelly, Ray, 18 Carver, Frank, 68-69, 78, 103, 261-64, A13 Casteel, Jeff, 230, 234-36, 240-42, 247, 252, 254-55 Cavanaugh, Matt, 127, 130-32, 136-37, 142-43, 248, B3 Cecconi, Bimbo, 86, 121 Chancey, Roger, 50, 90 Chappell, Jovani, 240 Charley, Doug, 116 Cherpak, Bill, 109 Chickerneo, John, 81, 261 Christman, Paul, 91 Cignetti, Frank, 109110, 112, 120, 122, 125-26, 129, 131, 138, 140-41, 143, 146-50, 152-53, 157-58, 174, 183, 248, 264 Cignetti, Frank Jr., 248 Cignetti, Marlene, 146 Cimonelli, Lou, 51 Claiborne, Jerry, 84 Clark, Bruce, 147 Clark, Ed, 76 Clarke, Ryan, 253 Claudi, Hap, 39 Clegg, Milt, 80 Clermond, Joe, 237 Cline, Patsy, 249 Clounts, F.W., 60 Clyde, Art, 23 Cobourne, Avon, 231, 234, B12 Cochran, Nate, 216 Cogdell, Damon, 221 284 Coker, John “Bubba”, 130 Colella, Sam, 75 Coleman, Mary Sue, 244 Collins, Ben, 234-36 Collins, Dwight, 168 Colvard, Fred “Colt 45”, 75-77, A10 Combs, Russ, 20 Condit, Meryln, 18-19, 27 Congemi, John, 176, 178, 186-88 Connor, Theophilus “Bull”, 81 Copas, Cowboy, 249 Constantine, Tony, 27-28, 34, 119, 262 Cook, Carroll “Beano”, 25, 53-54, 67-68, 262-63 Cope, Myron, 24, 76 Cook, Ron, 257 Corbett, Jim, 122, 142-43 Corum, Gene, 20, 22, 31, 35-37, 50, 59, 69, 71-73, 76-77, 79-80, 82, 86-90, 92-96, 100, 102, 141, 249, A9 Covert, Jimbo, 166, 185 Cowan, Charlie, 82 Cowherd, Colin, 247 Cox, Fred, 66 Cox, Torrie, 233, 235, B12 Cozens, Randy, 133 Crabtree, Eric, 81, 88, 96 Cramer, Gary, 106 Crane, Russ, 72 Criddle, Homer, 85, 90 Crimmins, Bernie, 32 Crouthamel, Jake, 205 Crum, Dick, 250 Csonka, Larry, 105 Culbertson, Ken, 130, B1 Curci, Fran, 112 Czarnecki, Leo “Horse”, 96 Dale, Carroll, 58 Davis, Billy, 216, 218 T H E B A C K YA R D B R AW L Davis, Butch, 230 Davis, Ernie, 82, 105 Davis, Rece, 258 Dawkins, Julius, 168 Dawson, Lowell “Red”, 33, 35, 42-43 Dawson, Mike, 145-46, 148-52, 154 DeGroot, Dudley, 14, 27, 28 DeGroot, Dudley Jr., 27 DeJarnett, Dave, 178 Delaney, Jeff, 133 Delany, Jim, 205 DeLorenzo, Bob, 76 DePasqua, Carl, 23, 112-115, 117-118, 121, 165, 176 Deveaux, Glenn, 208 Devine, Noel, 240, 25253, B15 Devonshire, Jim, 20, Dickerson, Darnell, 197 Digon, Tom, 99, 106-107 Ditka, Mike, 66-67 Dixon, Scott, 180 Dodd, Bobby, 38-39, 101, 140 Doleman, Chris, 165-66 Donaldson, Charles “Chick”, 41, 44-45 Donaldson, Gene, 59, 82 Doherty, William T., 20 Dorn, Greg, 129 Dorsett, Tony, 121-23, 127-28, 130-32, 13638, 141-43, 164, 210, B2 Driesbach, Chuck, 217 Drewery, Willie, 178 Dudley, A.F. “Bud”, 91 Dugan, Eddie, 34 Duggan, Rich, 149 Duhart, Tommie, 237 Duncan, Rashaad, 237 Dundee, Angelo, 172 Dunlap, Steve, 130-32, 252, 264 Dunlevy, Bob, 85, 87, 89, 90-92, 94 Dutton, Bob, 13 Dykes, Greg, 196 Dykes, Keilen, 244 Dyer, Robert, 88 Earley, Steve, 131 Easley, Walter, 139, 143, 174 Eason, Tony, 165 Easterling, S.J., 127 Edwards, Phil, 82 Eisenhower, Dwight D., 22, 170 Elmassian, Phil, 230 Embick, Danny, 233-34 Engle, Charles “Rip”, 90 Enright, Rex, 41-42 Esiason, Boomer, 163 Esposito, Tony, 115-16, 118 Estrada, Angel, 233 Evans, Aaron, 190 Evans, Bill, 36, 54, 69, 177 Evans, Dale, 75 Everett, Jim, 186 Fairbanks, Terry, 64, A9 Farland, Jackie, 65 Farley, Dale, 111, 116, 118, 120 Farley, Larry, 119 Fazio, Serafino “Foge”, 3, 165-66, 168-170, 176, 178-180, 185-88, 193 Fazzolari, Mark, 235 Federovitch, Frank, 29 Ferencik, Chris, 226 Ferris, Denny, 115, 117 Fesler, Wes, 22 Fette, Jeff, 129, 142 Filkill, Mike, 183 Fisher, Charlie, 105, 113 Fitzgerald, Larry, 232-33, 235 Fitzgerald, Sean, 220 Fleming, Bill, 85 Fleming Bill (ABC Announcer), 128 Fleming, Jack, 23-25, 37, 80, 135, 152, A4 Flynn, Tom, 169, 177, 180 Ford, Garrett, 2, 3, 62, 88-89, 92-94, 96, 99, 100-102, 106-107, 137-38, A15 Ford, Garrett Jr., 196, A14, A16 Ford, Henry, 34, 45 Forde, Pat, 250 Foreman, George, 173 Foreman, Shawn, 223-26 Fowler, Delbert, 170 Fowlkes, Dennis, 148, 173-74 Fralic, Bill, 166, 185 Frazier, Ed, 190-91, 197, B8 Freese, George “Bud”, 20 Fretwell, Bob, 127 Friedlander, Paul, 19 Fryer, Ken, 14, 16 Furfari, Mickey, 15, 36, 40, 44, 52-53, 69, 77, 79, 92, 114, 118-119, 206, 262 Furfari, Elizabeth, 114 Gadson, Zeke, 188-89 Gain, Bob, 30 Gaines, Jerry, 84 Galiffa, Bernie, 115-16, 183 Galloway, David, 173 Garcia, John, 152 Gatski, Frank “Gunner”, 31 Garnett, Dave, 115, 117 Gavitt, Dave, 205 Gay, John, 187 Genilla, Sal, 188-89 Gibbs, Alex, 148 Gilbert, Sean, 208 Gillard, Bruce, 183 Gindin, Doug, 117 Glatz, Fred, 45, 47 Glenn, Marshall “Sleepy”, 17, 19 Gluchoski, Al, 131 Gluck, Joe, 47 Gob, Art, 63 Godfrey, Ernie, 28-29 Goimarac, Pete, 72, 80 Index Goldberg, Marshall “Biggie,” 30, 78, 81, 260-61 Gonzalez, Pete, 222, 225-28 Goodwin, Tod, 28 Goss, Ray, 24 Gottfried, Mike, 188190, 193, 197, 198 Gowdy, Curt, 91 Graham, Billy, 184 Graham, Todd, 230, 256-57 Grant, Steve, 212 Gray, Chris, 208-09, B9 Gray, Paul, 75 Gray, Tom, 177, 187 Green, Hugh, 150-51 Greene, Pat, 224-27 Gresham, Bob, 109, 113-14, 118, 123 Grier, Bobby, 45, 51, 82 Grier, Rosey, 29, 82 Grimm, Russ, 150 Grober, Steve, 183 Grossman, Burt, 188 Guenther, Bob, 49, 92 Gustafson, Andy, 18 Gustine, Frank, 71 Gustine, Frank Jr., 106 Gwaltney, Jason, 239 Hackett, Paul, 197 Hadley, John, 221 Hagan, James, 10, 262 Hall, Galen, 90-91 Halsey, William, 43 Hamilton, Tom, 34, 42-43, 45, 261-62 Hardman, A.L. “Shorty”, 41, 70, 89, 91, 128, 153 Harmon, Curt, 66 Hannahs, Dan, 113 Hardesty, David C., 228 Harlow, James, 124 Harp, Tom, 100 Harriott, Claude, 234 Harris, Franco, 24 Harris, Jim, 88 Harris, Major, 182-83, 187-191, 193-97, 199, 200, 208, 212, B7 Harris, Sandra, 199 Harris, Walt, 221-24, 227, 234, 236, 248 Harrison, W. Don, 10 Hart, Bill, 69 Hart, Dave, 99, 103104, 106, 108, 112-13 Hart, Leo, 111 Harvey, King, 177-78 Havern, Dave, 112-18, 220 Hawkins, Hawkshaw, 249 Hawley, Roy “Legs”, 1213, 17-21, 25-26, 38, 61, A2 Hayes, Woody, 22, 58, 70, 148-49, 211, 253 Haygood, Robert, 127 Heath, Jo Jo, 153 Heeter, Gene, 72, 77 Henderson, Cam, 49 Hennon, Don, 68 Henshaw, George, 228 Henry, Jack, 264 Herock, Ken, 50, 72, 74, 77 Herrig, Dick, 67 Hertzel, Bob, 244 Hertzog, Greg, 191 Heyward, Craig “Ironhead”, 188-89 Hickman, Dave, 244 Hicks, Joel, 152 Hillen, Bill, 44 Hillgrove, Bill, 152, 187 Himic, Jim, 149 Hines, Jack, 135 Hockenberry, Charley, 29 Hoffart, Jake, 225-27, B11 Hoffman, Richard, 22 Hogan, John, 114 Holdinsky, Roger, 75 Holdt, Art, 111, 116, 120 Holgorsen, Dana, 254-58 Holliday, John “Doc”, 192-93, 212 Holloway, Randy, 122, 131, 133, 142-43, B1 Holmes, Jerry, 149 Holton, Glenn, 75, 77, 80, 85-86 Holtz, Lou, 115 Horn, Stephen, 141 Hornung, Paul, 185 Hose, Dan, 176 Hostetler, Doug, 174 Hostetler, Jeff, 3, 162-64, 166-69, 171, 174—75, 177-180, 182, 184, 193, 194, 264, B6 Hostetler, Vicky, 175 House, Robert, 60 Howley, Chuck, 31-32, 49, 52-53, 62, 74, A7 Hudson, Dick, 41, 67-68, 77, 94-95 Hudson, Garland, 107-108 Huebner, Tom, 191 Huff, Sam, 2, 29-31, 40, 49, 64, 73-74, 93, 180, A6 Huffman, Dick, 30 Hundley, “Hot” Rod, 36 Hunt, Brad, 185 Hunter, Hal, 44 Huntz, Bernard, 22 Huston, Tom, 50 Hutchins, Dan, 252-53 Hutton, Bob, 142 Ikenberry, Stanley, 205 Introcaso, Mark, 183 Ireland, Don, 217 Israel, Steve, 208 Jackson, Rickey, 150 Jacobs, David W., 11 Jacobs, Freddy, 153 Jacobs, Mike, 183 Jacques, Russ, 186 James, Todd, 233, 235 Jastrzembski, Steve, 66 Jefferson, Roy, 92 Jells, Dietrich, 216, 219 Jenkins, John, 224, B11 Jenkins, Leon, 116 Jenkins, Tom, 53 Jeter, Bob, 82 Jett, James, 190, 208 Johnson, Cecil, 131 285 Johnson, Dave, 145-47, 151, 166, 168 Johnson, Lyndon, 91 Johnson, Mark, 208 Johnson, Skip, 127 Johnson, Tory, 235 Johnson, Undra, 192 Johnston, Chad, 5, 6, 211-12, 214-220 Jones, David, 205 Jones, Gordon, 129-130, 142 Jones, Grandpa, 249 Jones, Greg (1980s QB), 190, 208 Jones, Keith, 172-73 Jones, Larry, 126 Jones, Ramona, 249 Jones, Ray “Rooster”, 150 Jordan, Bryce, 205 Jordan, Paul, 129 Jozwiak, Brian, 172, 178, 186 Juskowich, Ken, 105, 107-109, A15 Kalmakir, Thomas, 16 Kaminski, Bob, 131 Kash, Jeremy, 254 Kashner, John, 182 Kasperowicz, Eric, 216 Keane, Tom, 20-23, A5 Kehl, Kurt, 178 Kemp, Paul, 113 Kendra, Dan, 122, 12425, 128-129, 131-33, 136, 139, 142-44, 183 Kennedy, Edward, 103 Kennedy, John F., 87, 260 Kennedy, Robert, 103 Kercheval, Hoppy, 125, 135-36 Kerin, Mike, 207 Kern, Bill, 13, 18-22, 25-27, 37, 46, 261, A1, A3 Kettlewell, Bob, 83 Kidd, Harold, 215-16 Kielb, Joseph, 16 Kinder, Chuck, 85, 88-89, 100, 107, A14 286 King, Bob, 50 King, George, 100 King, Dr. Martin Luther, 81 King, Terry, 111, 113 Kirelawich, Bill, 141, 167, 171, 182-83, 18586, 191, 219, 240-41, 243, 252, 264 Kirelawich, Billy, 219 Kirelawich, Maggie, 219 Kiselica, Joe, 72 Klausing, Chuck, 117, 126-27, 130, 134 Klimek, Joel, 116 Knight, Bobby, 195 Knox, Chuck, 103 Kosanovich, Eli, 76 Kosar, Bernie, 183 Kovach, Bob, 196 Kramer, Alex, 43 Kraynak, Rich, 165 Krushchev, Nikita S., 66 Krutko, Larry, 49, 3, 63-64 Kucherawy, Thad, 105 Kulakowski, Ed, 20 Kuprok, John, 71-72, 76 Kush, Frank, 112, 253 Kush, Steve, 84 Kuziel, Bobby, 112-13 Kuzneski, Joe, 85 Lamb, Eleanor, 79 Lamone, Gene “Beef ”, 34, 41, 73, A7 Landry, Tom, 87 Lathey, Gene, 44, 49, 53 Latimer, Wayne, 124 Lay, Josh, 235 Leach, Rick, 159 Lee, Conor, 240 Lee, Ron, 120-21, 131-32 Leeson, Rick, 76, 81, 85-86 Leftridge, Dick, 8187, 92-94, 101, A11, A13-14 Legg, Billy, 168, 178, 212 Leskovar, Bill, 30 LeVinus, Chuck, 183 T H E B A C K YA R D B R AW L Lewis, Art “Pappy”, 26-33, 35-42, 44-53, 57-59, 62-70, 72-73, 82, 94, 95, 100, 174, 261, A6, A8 Lewis, Brad, 231-32 Lewis, Camden, 48 Lewis, Darrell, 53 Lewis, Dion, 254 Lewis, John L., 36 Lewis, John, 48 Lewis, Mary Belle, 48 Lewis, Steve, 139, 143 Liggins, Tommie, 193 Lightcap, David, 226 Lindner, Bill, 66 Lippe, Steve, 221, 227 Litchfield, Edward, 80 Little, Floyd, 82, 105 Little, Steve, 168 Lockwood, Dave, 252 Logan, Mike, 210 Lombard, Gary, 121-22, 124, 127-28, 130, 135, B1 Longfellow, Dick, 62, 75 Long, Carson, 122, 132, 138, 142-43 Longino, Elige, 216 Longo, Bob, 106 Looney, Doug, 213 Lopasky, Bill, 66-67, A9 Louistall, Victorine, 83 Lucas, Kenny, 87-88, 96 Lucente, John, 13-14 Luck, Oliver, 145, 14749, 151-53, 160, 167, 173-75, 182-84, 193, 254, 258, B4 Lujack, Johnny, 49, 79 Lukowski, Rich, 130, 132, B1 Lumley, Paul, 139, 142 Lynn, Loretta, 171 Lyons, Wes, 240 Lytle, Matt, 222 Maas, Bill, 166, 168, 177 Maczuzak, John, 81 Maguire, Paul, 58 Maisel, Ivan, 200 Majors, Johnny, 1, 3, 4, 113, 121-23, 132, 139144, 150, 164-65, 180, 204, 210, 218-19, 222, 233, 248, 263-64 Malecki, John, 237 Mallory, Bill, 158 Mallory, John, 83, 87, 93, 96, 100, 110 Manchin, Joe, 103, 246, 249 Mani, Jon, 245 Marchal, Terry, 128 Marconi, Joe, 32, 40, 44, 49, 52-53, 64, 73-74 Marcum, Bob, 158 Marino, Dan, 4, 150, 153, 163, 168-170, 173, 210, 223, 249 Marker, Bill, 34 Marra, John, 66 Marshall, Rasheed, 23136, B13 Marshall, Ray, 130-31 Martha, Paul, 75, 78-80, 85-86, 121, A13 Martha, Richie, 78-79, 86, A13 Martin, Bill, 244 Martin, Dick, 148, 153, 157-58, 160 Martin, Kelvin, 186 Mason, Tony, 165 Mattioli, Rudy, 34 May, Mark, 150-51 Mazurek, Freddie, 81, 85-86 McCabe, Rich, 45 McComb, Ben, 65 McCoy, LeSean, 240, B14 McCray, Rube, 59 McClure, Bill, 63 McCune, Allen, 87-92, 96, A14 McCutcheon, Lawrence, 119 McDay, Ben, 139, 142-43 McGhee, Curtis, 226 McGinnis, Bill, 49 McInerney, Jerry, 33 McKay, Jim, 91 McKenzie, Bill, ii, 120, 132-34, 139, 141-43, 253, B2 McKillop, Scott, 4, 237-38, 240-42 McKnight, Barry, 88 McMillan, Randy, 150 McMillan, Tom, 186 McNabb, Donovan, 223 McWilliams, Cliff, 119 Medich, George “Doc”, 106 Meeley, Robin. 136-37 Meisner, Greg, 150 Melenyzer, Keith, 72 Mellace, Bob, 46 Meredith, James, 81 Merrick, Dave, 215-16 Merritts, Jim, 180 Metzger, Sol, 17-18 Michelosen, John, 51, 53, 64, 67, 74-76, 80, 86, 89, 103-104, 112 Mikanik, Paul “Whitey”, 63 Millen, Matt, 147 Miller, Darrell, 149 Miller, Paul, 95 Milligan, Mike, 22 Mills, Dick, 66 Mills, Marshall, 125 Miree, Brandon, 234 Mitrakos, Tom, 99 Moeller, Gary, 159 Moore, Arch, 15 Moore, Lenny, 82 Moore, Mal, 242 Moorhead, Dennis, 129 Moran, Sonny, 100 Morrison, Ray, 21 Mosley, Denorse, 5, 217, 219 Moss, Adrian, 191 Moss, Bobby, 49, 64, 73 Moss, Jim “Shorty”, 75-76 Moss, John, 115 Mozes, Dan, 246 Mule, Marty, 39 Mullen, Jeff, 252 Murphy, Terry, 225, 227 Index Mustakas, Gus, 247 Myers, Greg, 107 Myslinski, Cas, 112, 122, 164 Nagle, Browning, 183, 194, 212 Namath, Joe, 110, 150, 170 Nance, Jim, 82, 105 Napoleon, Eugene, 188-191 Nardacci, Nick, 75 Narick, Emil, 30, 260 Neale, Earle “Greasy”, 18 Nealon, Clark, 39 Neft, Pete, 52-53 Nehlen, Dan, 194 Nehlen, Don, 6, 153, 158-162, 165-182, 184-195, 198-200, 207, 209-217, 219225, 227-231, 236, 246, 249-250, 253, 263, B6 Nehlen, Merry Ann, 159 Nelson, Lindsey, 185 Nester, Frank, 133-34 Newberry, Steve, 161-63, 179 Nicely, Joe, 49, 73 Nicholson, Dick, 34, 44 Niedzalkoski, Larry, 72 Niekro, Phil, 90 Norman, Carl, 34 Oblak, Dave, 145-47, 149 O’Brien, Davey, 19 O’Brien, Jim, 16, 71, 76-77 Osborne, Tom, 211 Oswald, Jack, 205 Owens, Artie, 1, 121, 127-28, 131, 133, 136, B1 Palatalla, Louis, 45 Paluck, John, 44 Paris, Bubba, 160 Pasqualoni, Paul, 230 Passodelis, Nick, 45 Pastilong, Ed, 80, 89, 149, 228-29, 236, 249-251 Paterno, Joe, 111, 204-205 Patrick, Mike, 195-96 Patrick, Oscar, 102, 106 Patterson, Keith, 257 Patton, Bob, 90 Paulin, Tony, 13 Peale, Norman Vincent, 45 Pederson, Steve, 233, 255 Peccon, Chris, 187 Peelish, Vic, 23, 37 Pell, Charley, 162 Pelusi, Jay, 166 Pelusi, Jeff, 153 Pelusi, John “J.C.”, 4, 122, 137, 143, B1 Penney, James T., 60 Pepe, Phil, 91 Perko, Tom, 131-32 Perry, Doyt, 211 Perry, Rick, 192 Peters, Andy, 121, 125, 127-28, 130, 133, B1 Peterson, Ray, 63, 65-67 Petrino, Bobby, 245 Petro, Steve, 53, 86 Pike, Buddie, 16 Pilconis, Bill, 5, 117 Piscorik, John, 92 Plowman, Curt, 66 Polen, Dick, 112, 117-18 Polite, Lousaka, 234 Porter, Jerry, 224, 226 Porter, Wayne, 117 Posvar, Wesley, 164 Powell, Art, 102 Powlus, Ron, 68 Prebola, Gene, 65 Pridemore, Tommy, 130-31, 143, B1 Procopio, Jim, 76 Pryor, Benjie, 150 Purnell, Lovett, 218, 220 Pushkin, Martin, 84 Puzzuoli, Dave, 166 Queen, Ray, 16 Quense, Tim, 177 Rabbits, Jack, 44, 49 Rader, Dick, 87-88, 96 Randolph, Pat, 172, 178-79, 184, B6 Raugh, Mark, 149, 162, 168 Ray, John, 203 Reda, Tony, 183-84, 186-87 Redmon, Ronald, 191 Reed, Ben, 183-84 Rembert, Reggie, 190-91 Renda, Hercules, 30 Renfro, Mel, 80 Reynaud, Darius, 240 Reynolds, Billy, 30 Rhoads, Paul, 237-38, 240 Rice, Homer, 103 Richards, Curvin, 190, 197 Riddle, Fred, 63 Rider, Dave, 63, 65 Riley, Dave, 129, 139 Rivers, Vaughn, 240 Robinson, Alan, 210 Robinson, Dave, 59, 82 Rockefeller, Jay, 245 Rodgers, Franklin “Pepper”, 40 Rodgers, Ira, 13-14, A3 Rodgers, Mark, 253 Rodriguez, Arlene, 229 Rodriguez, Raquel, 229 Rodriguez, Rich, 164, 212, 228-234, 236-39, 241-47, 249-250, 255, B14 Rodriguez, Rita, 229, 242, 244 Rodriguez, Rhett, 229 Rodriguez, Vince, 229 Roeder, Bob, 86 Romano, Al, 122, 132 Romeus, Greg, 237, 247 Rosborough, Michael, 87 Royal, Darrell, 58, 111 Ruffin, Jonathan, 231 Rumsfeld, Donald, 120 Rutherford, Rod, 232-36 287 Ryan, John, 4, 216, 218-220, 222 Salk, Dr. Jonas, 68 Salvaterra, Corny, 43-47, 53 Sampson, Homer, 95 Satterfield, David, 228 Saunders, Don, 261 Sauerbrun, Todd, 213-15, 217, 218 Saunders, David, 223 Scales, Chuck, 177-78 Schaus, Fred, 100, 204 Schembechler, Bo, 159-160, 171, 205, 211 Schell, Johnny, 130 Schnellenberger, Howard, 194 Schillings, Bill, 72 Schmidt, Joe, 34 Schottenheimer, Marty, 81 Schubach, Allen “Emo”, 100, 108, 249 Sciullo Jr., Sam, 103-104, 152, 227 Schulters, Dwayne, 225 Schwartzwalder, Ben, 82, 104-105 Scisly, Joe, 62 Seaman, Eric, 190 Seaman, Norton, 66 Secret, Pete, 100, 110 Sepsi, Andy, 66-67 Shanahan, Mike, 253 Shaunghnessy, Clark, 14, 22 Sheard, Jabaal, 247 Sherrill, Jackie, 1, 3, 152, 163-65, 176, 180, 233 Sherrod, Rick, 230 Sherwood, Mike, 109, 113-19, 123, 183 Shook, Alex, 208 Shires, Abe, 30 Shockey, Ed, 48 Short, Dan “Peep”, 168 Siegfried, Ben, 105 Silverio, Eddie, 107 Simmons, Bob, 161 Simpson, Jim, 79 Sine, Larry, 99 288 Siragusa, Tony, 188 Slater, Mike, 113-14, 116-120 Slaton, Steve, 288, 239-240 Slay, Henry, 225 Smith, Bill, 119 Smith, Chester L., 28, 69 Smith, Chuck, 130, 133-37, 142, B1 Smith, Geno, 258, B16 Smith, Harvey, 184 Smith, Jim, 107 Smith, Ned, 15 Smith, Stacy, 186 Smith, Walter “Red”, 92 Smizik, Bob, 164 Snyder, Bob, 29 Spears, Clarence “Doc”, 13, 15, 27, 37, 47, 255 Spelock, Chet, 20 Springer, George, 57 Stahr, Elvis J., 69, 73 Stansbury, Harry, 18 Starkey, Joe, 4, 237-38 Staubach, Roger, 80 Stebbins, Curly, 81, 261 Stennett, Matt, 178 Stevens, Gary, 147, 149, 153, 174 Stevens, John, 114, 117 Stewart, Bill, 247, 249254, 257 Stewart, Blaine, 249 Stewart, Blaine II, 251 Stewart, Karen, 251 Stewart, Irvin, 19, 21, 47 Stills, Gary, 221 Stone, Jack, 34 Stone, Joe, 33, 122 Stoops, Lowry, 44 Stowe, Ed, 43 Stroia, John, 196, B7 Studstill, Darren, 207-208, B8 Stull, Bill, 253-54 Stydahar, Joe, 28 Suhey, Matt, 148 Sullivan, Bill, 86, 88 Summers, Festus P., 20 Superick, Steve, 177 T H E B A C K YA R D B R AW L Sutherland, Jock, 9-14, 17-18, 42, 51, 164, 260-61, A1 Sweeney, Jamie, 221 Sweeney, Jim, 166 Swider, Larry, 132, 143 Swinson, Randy, 124, 129, 131-34, 136 Van Horn, Jeff, 189 Van Horne, Bill, 220 Van Pelt, Alex, 190-91, 197, 208, B8 Van Pelt, Greg, 197 Vanterpool, Rahsaan, 5-6, 215-16, 218, 220 Vingle, Mitch, 229, 245 Taffoni, Matt, 216 Talbot, Gayle, 42 Talley, Darryl, 2, 144150, 152-54, 160-61, 167, 169-170, 174, B4 Talley, John, 183-84, 186, 189 Tarman, Jim, 206 Tatum, Jim, 32, 60-61 Taylor, Jay, 225-26 Taylor, Lionel, 82 Taylor, Willie, 142 Thackston, Johnny, 66 Thomas, Bryan, 168 Thornton, John, 225 Timko, Mike, 183-84, 187 Timmons, Bob, 68 Thompkins, Gary, 225-27 Tippett, Howard, 111, 118 Tittle, Y.A., 75 Toncic, Ivan, 63-64, 66-67 Traficant, Jim, 75 Tranghese, Mike, 242 Tranquill, Gary, 161 Trocano, Rick, 150 Trimarki, Mickey, 49, 53, 62-63 Turbyville, Fred, 261 Turner, Calvin, 149, 153 Turner, Oderick, 240 Tuten, Henry, 190-91 Wabby, Ron, 194 Walker, Adam, 190 Walker, Fulton, 153, 174 Wallace, Billy, 178 Wallace, Dwight, 195 Wallace, Paul, 127-28 Walthall, Jimmy, 20 Walton, Joe, 45, 51-52 Wannstedt, Dave, 6, 241-42, 247-49, 254-55, 257 Ware, Dick, 92 Warner, Glenn “Pop”, 9 Waters, Bucky, 100 Waters, Preston, 190 Weatherington, Arnie, 122, B1 Welch, Gilbert “Gibby”, 30, 260 Wells, Danny, 127-28 Wenglikowski, Al, 165, B6 West, Billy, 216, 225-27 West, Brian, 217 West, Jerry, 90, 92-93 Weston, Lloyd, 115 White, Kevin, 168, 182-83, 193 White, Pat, 237-240, 242-43, 252 Whiteford, Mike, 128 Wilamowski, Ed, 133 Wiley, Jack, 51 Wiley, Ralph, 194 Wilfong, Danny, 113 Wilkinson, Bud, 103 Williams, Barbara Ann, 83 Williams, Danny (1950s RB), 34 Williams, Danny (1950s QB), 66-67 Williams, Danny (1970s QB), 129-131 Uchic, Bob, 101 Underwood, John, 88 Unitas, John, 4 Valesente, Bob, 197 Vanderjagt, Mike, 214 Van Halanger, Dave, 131, 135, 172 Williams, Eddie, 113-14, 116, 118-19, 123 Williams, Greg, 126 Williams, Juan, 225 Williams, Keith, 168 Williams, Larry, B15 Williams, Mick, 237, 247 Williams, Roy, 90 Wilson, Chasey, 16 Wilson, James, 142-43 Wilson, Kris, 236 Wilson, Quincy, 231 Wirth, Joe, 65 Wolfley, Ron, 177-78 Wood, Pete, 113 Woodeshick, Ken, 85 Woodeshick, Tom, 74-77 Woods, Dwayne, 130, 139 Woods, Michael, 166 Woodside, Paul, 168-69, 172-73, 178-79 Wyant, Fred, 32-35, 39, 41-42, 44-46, 49, 5254, 57-58, 62, 64, 73, 180, A6 Yakim, Sandy, 152 Yeater, Tom, 80, 85 Yost, Jerry, 72, 77, 79, 85-86 Young, Donnie, 74, 85, 92, 126, 130, 183 Young, Marlin, 224 Yuss, Ron, 105 Zambo, Bob, 105-106 Zereoue, Amos, 22328, B11 Zereoue, Bonde, 223 Zinaich, Pete, 20 Zinkoff, Dave, 92