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Page 542 text:
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. at X . ..N.N. 61,2 ig N -r ' x .F . ,aW.x..w.w , wt sl .th N We x ,xii S.. .... R XXNXA XM.. X i ts N X s .NX ,QNX X, X ts SX rx Nx ,Q X we haw-W' kx..w-v.....ss-N-N xnxxmNww.swww-- XXXW-wg Xwv.-.us touchdown by Simondinger, followed by Brouissard's extra point, accounted for the Purp-le's ten points. Captain Bill Healy's boys from WO1'CCSt61' displayed great fighting spirit in downing the Hilltoppers and avenging the defeat of the previous year at XVorcester. The one redeem- ing feature of the defeat, from a Georgetown angle, was the defense showed by the Georgetown eleven throughout the game. On one occa- sion it held the Purple on the one- foot line for three downs. The game was a hard one and in the final analy- sis the Hilltop eleven was unable to a stand the strain. The two hard battles with Fordham and the Marines had taken much out of the Georgetown players and without many substitutes it was a difficult task. VViggie King, who returned to the game for the first time since the Cincinnati battle, was in- jured, as was Butler and Flavin. The Purple fiashed a consistent attack and sturdy defense that took the Hilltoppers off their feet. The score was even until the third quarter when a field goal put the XVorcester boys in the lead. The crippled Georgetown eleven suf- fered its third straight defeat on the fol- lowing Saturday at Atlanta, Ga., when the Georgia Tech team downed the Blue and Gray, IQ - 7. Georgetowns only touchdown came in the third quarter as a result of the brilliant playing of Jack Flavin who entered the game at this time. The Georgetown march to the Tech goal started on a pass from Flavin to Snell for go yards. After losing the ball on downs and then recovering again on Brewster's -- - .-w -,m,ff,.i : 9 mm - H f ' , , .tit , ,, l, ,,. 6 JACK TILAVIN Iix-Captain and one of the greatest halfbacks in Georgetown annals b fb pm KENYUNJ lfullhaclq punt, Flavm dashed around right end for ggsx i
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Page 541 text:
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,N is N x , ,gg---NX ....... ...tm N,.....:M NN xx, is . s 3 ,,,,,,..N.w Q ,tw W N N . NX MI.. Nm, owwgxxs-'X K S v N,,..l.,...... N.,,. c ,XXX NX cs-S is-+-'ts Qwvwvvw.sm.elf.--ss xNXNXwQ? Sxxxw.-3 ing ace, and his long spirals were the cause of several Fordham fumbles. Georgetown sent in a second team in the final quarter that looked fairly well against the New Yorkers. Kenyon registered two touchdowns, while Byrne and Snell were getting one apiece. The Quantico Marines defeated the Blue and Gray in a hard-fought contest at American League Park on Saturday, October 28, the Devil Dogs scoring a victory on a fumble and a safety, while Georgetown was scoring a touchdown. The score was 9-6, the first defeat administered to George- town. Ten thousand fans watched one of the greatest battles of the year, the Marines, with an exceptionally fine team, composed PAUL FLORENCE of former college stars, among whom were Larson of the Navy, Goettge of Ohio State and other celebrities, 'upsetting the dope in winning over the Georgetown eleven. Fumbles were responsible, to a great extent, for the Blue and Gray loss, one occurring with the ball on the Marine's 15-yard line, and then again on the I7-yard mark. The Devil Dogs were on the alert for every opportunity and took advantage of every break of the game. The feature play of the afternoon, and perhaps of the entire season, in this section, occurred in the final chapter when Jack Flavin caught a Marine punt and raced 76 yards through the entire Qantico team before he was downed on the Marineis I5-yard line. It was the most spectacular run ever seen in VVasliington, and the former Georgetown captain was the outstanding char- acter of the day. The run resulted in a touchdown for Kenyon, and Dufour, on successive line plunges, carried it across, making the score, at that time, 7-6. lflavin's ' . s --A drop-kick for extra point was blocked, however, and although Georgetown tried hard to turn the tide in the CaPfal'l'EleCt of 1923 last few minutes, it was useless, Coach Exendine finally sending in the reserves. The Marines gained a safety when Adams was tackled behind his own goal line. The following men started the game for Georgetown: Dufour, G-oggin, Comstock, XVerts, Lieb, Sullivan, Butler, Flavin, Lowe, Malley and Kenyon. On November 4, Holy Cross sprung a surprise on the Georgetown eleven by travelling to American League Park from XVorcester, Mass., and whitewashing the Hilltoppers, Io-o. Many Blue and Gray men were injured in the game which was the second defeat in a row for Georgetown. A drop- kick from the 25-y2l1'Cl line, in the third quarter, by Lastie Brouissard, and a Team, and one of the best ends Georgetown has ever had. x www xx X swan N I X3 .- W - .xx N .X we-.WY Y as K ,H .. .vs - X N X A X. .. ws 5 asp-.lx ww Q W wx W W XX K WX ,xc WX, W ww Xxgstc.. Q . A, - A- sw--A ws
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Page 543 text:
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.. .a.m.N..w.mw-QW..-fmxxaaax - ,cvs sex N NW-x ,,.,.a.N..W-..?.i..:.....,,,,,,NN X N x X Nx vt.-53---X L ya ' -' Q 5 A ,,.aN.W.3 me X Mk, ox ,...,.....ix I i .- -S Xa XvM,,,,,,sw- xx , Q R-- wx X-xx,.M-nl-w ' gxwyxs.-.ttsdu,-,m..tl.. xxkxxxvls Xu-..3 a touchdown, Dufour kicking the extra point. Comstock, Sheehan, Kenyon, Lowe, Florence and Snell starred in the defeat. B ILL Goccl N, Tackle Pete Reynolds' Bucknell machine, from Lewis- burg, Pa., fell before the Georgetown eleven on November 18th in one of the finest games played at American League Park all season, I9-7. The scrappy little Pennsylvania outfit that had given Navy a close call two years running, showed a powerful strength offensively and defensively, and the game was fairly even until Gus Malley recovered a fumble as Bucknell was about to score, and with excellent judgment ran the entire length of the field for a touchdown. It was one of the most thrilling plays of the season, Mal1ey's running being approximately Q7 yards. The Georgetown eleven took on added power with this score and registered two more touchdowns while the Reynolds-coached outfit secured one, making the Hnal score 19-7. TUE BIG FOUR Reading, left to right+Jackie Maloney, Backfield Coach, Albert A. Exendine, Head Coach, Dan O'Connor, Line Coach, and John D. O'Reil1y, Trainer T1'T -TK? 'fg'3T'- 's-'Y' , jg may . i-W LAK - ,, L... - , A 5232? ,mis - - w- w -sm sw -- w-www wwewx 'Ns' t' W' awww ,N X wx -w we-www X, 5'
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