The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 9, 1980-Page 9 Stubborn Georgia Tech battles Irish to 3-3 tie I FEELI G ATLANTA (AP)-Top-ranked Notre Dame, plagued by five turnovers, needed a fourth-quarter 47-yard field goal by Harry Oliver in salvaging a 3-3 tie yesterday against the three- touchdown underdog Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, winners of only one game this season. STech, 1-7-1, took a 3-0 lead on Johnny mith's second quarter 39-yard field goal and the swarming Yellow Jackets defense managed to bottle up Notre Dame's potent offense throughout the contest until the last quarter when the Irish tied the score and. threatened to win it in the closing minutes. Notre Dame, 7-0-1, possibly looking ahead to next week's battle against No. 6 Alabama, tied it with 4:44 remaining when Oliver booted his three-pointer af- ter the Irish drove 60 yards in seven lays before stalling at the Georgia Tech 29. The tying drive was set up when Tracey Toran intercepted a Ted Peeple's pass on the Notre Dame 1 and returned itnto his '11. Toran's theft came ony seconds after Phil Carter's second fumble was recovered by Tech linebacker Robert Jaracz on the Notre Dame 12. eorgia 26, Florida 21 JACKSONVILLE (AP ) -Lindsey Scott turned a short pass from Buck Belue into a 93-yard touchdown, longest in Georgia's' football history, with 1:03 to play yesterday giving the unbeaten second-ranked Bulldogs an incredible 26-21 victory ovr No. 20 Florida. The stunning windup came on a third- and-11 play after Florida, which erased a 20-10 deficit with 11 points in the final period, backed Georgia within the shadow of its goal line when Mark Dickert punted out of bounds at the 7- yard line with 1:35 left. And it overshadowed a 238-yard rushing show by Herschel Walker, Georgia's fabulous freshman, who bolted 72 yards for a touchdown on the fourth play of the game and became the Bulldogs' single-season rushing leader with 1,344 yards, smashing the mark of 1,317 by Willie McClendon two years ago. Georgia's Rex Robinson kicked field goals of 25 and 20 yards in the third period, plus a pair of extra points and tied the Southeastern Conference career scoring record 254 points held by Louisiana State's Charles Alexander. The last-gasp Georgia triumph-the Bulldogs are 9-0 overall and 5-0 in the SEC-offset a 286-yard passing display by Florida freshman Wayne Peace, who completed 20 of 37 passes in only his fourth start. Southern Cal 34, Stanford 9 STANFORD (AP)-Marcus Allen ran for two early touchdowns and team- mate Ronnie Lott stole the football for a game-breaking touchdown in the second half, leading fourth-ranked Southern California to a 34-9 Pacific-10 victory over Stanford yesterday. Allen, the nation's third leading, rusher, totaled 196 yards running as the Trojans stretched their unbeaten streak to 28 games, a new school record. They improved their season record to 7-0-1 before the conference's biggest crowd of the year, 84,892, and a regional television audience. Southern Cal was unstoppable the fir- st three times it had the ball, mounting touchdown drives of 95, 96 and 80 yards. Allen scored on runs of 4 yards and 1 yard, and quarterback Gordon Adams added a 1-yard touchdown dive. Alabama 28, LSU 7 TUSCALOOSA (AP)-Major Ogilvie bolted 3 yards for a fourth-quarter touchdown following a 1-yard punt as sixth-ranked Alabama trimmed Louisiana State 28-7 in a Southeastern Conference football game yesterday. Ogilvie's second score of the day gave the Crimson Tide a 14-point lead after the Bayou Bengals had driven from their 10 to the Alabama 41, where pun- ter David Johnston dropped the center snap and barely got off a bouncing punt that was taken by an Alabama lineman at the Tide 40. The victory lifted Alabama, which had a 28-game winning streak snapped ,last week by Mississippi State, to 8-1 for the season and 4-1 in the SEC. The setback broke a five-game win- ning streak for LSU, which fell to 6-3 overall and 4-1 in the conference, giving second-ranked Georgia at least a championship tie in the league race. Pittsburgh 41, Louisville 23 PIT'SBURGH (AP)-Rick Trocano threw two touchdown passes to fresh- man sensation Dwight Collins and became the University of Pittsburgh's all-time passing leader as the ninth- ranked Panthers rallied from a second- quarter deficit to beat Louisville 41-23 yesterday before scouts from five bowls. All-American defensive end Hugh Green, who had his No. 99 retired at halftime, joined Pitt's other end, Ricky Jackson, in leading a Panther defense that turned the tide during a 20-point second quarter explosion that erased a 9-0 Louisville lead. Oregon 20, UCLA 14 LOS ANGELES (AP)-Slick quar- terback Reggie Ogburn guided under- dog Oregon to a 20-14 upset victory over eighth-ranked UCLA in a Pacific-10 Conference football game yesterday. Ogburn completed 11 of 19 passes for 142 yards and one touchdown and rushed for another 83 yards on 18 carries as the Ducks, 5-2-2, snapped an eight-game losing streak against the Bruins. UCLA played most of the game without tailback Freeman McNeil, the country's fourth-leading rusher with an average of 144.5 yards per game. Mc- Neil suffered a bruised left hip in prac- tice last Monday andaggravated the in- jury late in the first quarter. He wound up with 18 yards on five carries. Ogburn broke a scoreless tie py firing a 6-yard touchdown pass to Curt Jackson early in the second quarter. The Bruins, 6-2, and losers of their last two games, tied the contest midway through the period on a 4-yard scoring dash by freshman Kevin Nelson. U I FOR ED? u URE OF YOURSELF? Kenty retains crown in unanimous decision 4 DETROIT (AP)-Hilmer Kenty, overcoming an apparent leg injury in the late rounds, successfully defended his World Boxing Association light- weight title yesterday with a unanimous decision over third-ranked Vilomar Fernandez. Kenty, a 25-year-old from Detroit, kept his professional record un- blemished at 20-0 while Fernandez, a Dominican Republic native now living in New York, dropped to 24-8-2.. THERE WERE no knockdowns and neither fighter suffered any cuts. Under the 10-point scoring system, referee Walderman Schmidt scored the bout 145-141 for Kenty while judge Rodello Perez had it 147-141 and judge Guy Jutras put Kenty ahead 146-141. Kenty was making his third defense since winning the lightweight crown with a ninth-round knockout over Er- nesto Espana in.March and piled up an early lead, winning all but two of the first 12 rounds. HOWEVER, THE 5-foot-11, 135-pound champion appeared to develop a cramp in his right leg during the 12th round and wound up having to hold off Fer- nandez in the 13th and 14th rounds. In the 15th round, both fighters ap- peared exhausted and merely hung on. Kenty used a swift left hand that stung Fernandez to the head in the early rounds. Then, in the 11th round, Kenty's best, he put Fernandez on the ropes and SCORES EAST Penn State 21, N. Carolina State 13 Pittsburgh 41, Louisville 23 Navy 6, Syracuse 3 Massachusetts 17, Holy Cross 13 Princeton 24, Maine 7 Army 47, Air Force 24 Dartmouth 48, Columbia 0 slippery Rock 18, Shippensburg St. 16 West virginia 41, Temple 28 vlllanova 34, Penn 3 Boston U. 28, Connecticut 24 Harvard 24, William and Mary 13 MIDWEST Missouri 14, Iowa State 10 Nebraska 55, Kansas State 8 Oklahoma 21, Kansas 19 "'Illinois State 15, E. Michigan 7 Cintral Michigan 32, Bowling Green 10 Teiddeo 13, N. Illinois 6 Gand Valley st. 35, Ferris St. 7 South Dakota 16, S. Dakota St. 7 Northern Michigan 38, Akron 10 Ball State 34, Kent State 7 Ohio U. 28, Marshall 20 SOUTHWEST Texas 15, Houston 13 Baylor 42, Arkansas 15 southern Methodist 34, Rice 14 -' Oklahoma State 42, Colorado 7 SOUTH delivered several combinations to the head and body. But the challenger refused to go down. Fernandez reboun- ded'with a hard right to the head that stung the champion, but Kenty escaped any danger when the bell rang. \ \ \ N iN Spaghetti Special Sundays you can get a spe- cial spaghetti dinner in- cluding a garden salad & J r ' h . garlic bread for $2.95. only 114h OU UNIof f dipaSto 1140 SOUTH UJNIVERSITY 663-8411 get over it with chic Lirhtltun43italin- - c. l r. l E i