COLLEGE FOOTBALL: CLU STEWING AFTER MUDD SLIDE : BYE WEEK FORCES KINGSMEN TO PONDER LOSS, PREPARE FOR OXY.Byline: Jim Inghram and Heather Gripp Gripp talking raven, beloved pet of half-wit Barnaby Rudge. [Br. Lit.: Dickens Barnaby Rudge] See : Birds Daily News Staff Writers Losing to Claremont-Mudd, which hadn't had·n't Contraction of had not. hadn't had not hadn't have won a football game in two years, was bad. Having two weeks to think about it is plain unfair. With their second bye in four weeks, the Kingsmen can't do anything about the loss or take out their anger on anyone until Oct. 31 when they host Occidental oc·ci·den·tal or Oc·ci·den·tal adj. Of or relating to the countries of the Occident or their peoples or cultures; western. n. A native or inhabitant of an Occidental country; a westerner. Noun 1. . Cal Lutheran started well enough Saturday Saturday: see week; Sabbath. . Dorian Dorian Any member of a major division of the ancient Greeks. Coming from the north and northwest, they conquered the Peloponnese c. 1100–1000 BC, overran the remnants of the Mycenaean and Minoan civilizations, and ushered in a dark age that lasted almost three Stitt scored on a 22-yard run with 9:25 left in the first quarter with such ease it appeared the Kingsmen would roll over the Stags for the 24th time in 28 meetings. That, however, wouldn't would·n't Contraction of would not. wouldn't would not wouldn't would be the case. Claremont, which had last won Oct. 19, 1996, tied the game with four seconds left in the first quarter when Stags quarterback Bryan Banta connected with Joel Weiss on a 21-yard touchdown. Claremont took its first lead 14-7 when Ryan Mele scored on a 3-yard run. Cal Lutheran tied it at 14 on Stitt's 2-yard run with 36 seconds left in the half. A halftime tie seemed imminent, but Banta connected with Damion Wright on a 49-yard pass that put the ball at the Cal Lutheran 2. Two plays later and with just two seconds left in the half, Mele went in on a 2-yard run that gave Claremont the lead. It also gave the Stags confidence and momentum. ``That score gave us a boost,'' Claremont coach Rick Candaele said. ``And it gave the players a feeling that they could win this game.'' Cal Lutheran remained in the game, tying it twice, though its offense sputtered. Cal Lutheran tied it for the final time 28-28 when Paul Sanford caught a 9-yard touchdown pass from Zack Hernandez with 3:25 left. The Kingsmen had the ball twice more but were unable to move against an inspired Stags' defense. Claremont moved down the field as time ran out, reaching the Kingsmen's 17-yard line. It set up Scott Hainlen's 34-yard field goal with six seconds left to clinch Clinch, river, c.300 mi (480 km) long, formed by the junction of two forks in SW Va., and flowing generally SW across E Tenn. to the Tennessee River at Kingston. the victory. ``We didn't get it done on either side of the ball,'' Cal Lutheran coach Scott Squires said. ``We made mistakes on both sides of the ball and on special teams. They played well, give them credit. It's a great win for their program. It's an awesome win for them. It's just too bad it was at the hands of us.'' Moorpark College Moorpark College is a California-state funded community college located on a 134 acre (542,000 m²) property reclining on a hill in Moorpark, a town in Ventura County, California. : So much for scouting scouting: see Boy Scouts; Girl Scouts. scouting Activities of various national and worldwide organizations for youth aimed at developing character, citizenship, and individual skills. Scouting began when Robert S. reports. Coach Jim Bittner predicted passing would be the way to go Saturday against Harbor College. Similar to the Bakersfield team which the Raiders' Carl Richarson ran wild against a couple weeks before, the Harbor defense The defense of a harbor or anchorage and its water approaches against external threats such as: a. submarine, submarine-borne, or small surface craft attack; b. enemy minelaying operations; and c. sabotage. was described as too tough to against the run. The Raiders, however, proved their coach wrong. Emory Holmes and Richardson provided a solid ground attack in Saturday's 42-24 win against visiting Harbor (1-4, 0-2). Holmes relieved Richardson in the second half and ran for 154 yards and three touchdowns on seven carries. He gave Moorpark (4-1, 2-0) the lead for good with a 51-yard touchdown jaunt to start the fourth quarter, sparking a 21-0 Moorpark run. Holmes sealed the victory with two 10-yard scoring runs in the final five minutes. Richardson gained 92 yards on 14 carries in the first half. Harbor quarterback Jack Hawely lived up to his reputation as the conference's top passer, completing 20 of 38 attempts for 195 yards and a touchdown. CAPTION(S): Photo PHOTO (Color) Carl Richardson and Moorpark found the running game to be more than sufficient to handle Harbor College 42-24 at home on Saturday. Myung J. Chun/Daily News |
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