4©7S
Contents
ALL-ACADEMIC 63
ALL-AMERICANS 44
ALL-CONFERENCE 45
ASSISTANT COACHES 8
ATHLETIC DEFT. DIRECTORY 3
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR — CARL JAMES . 5
AWARDS — National Inside Back Cover
I97S
43
Maryland 43
Coaches 61
BASKETBALL (1979-80)
CLAIBORNE ERA 11
COACHES 1892-1979 48
FACTS VBOUT MARYLAND 3
HEAD COACH JERRY CLAIBORNE 6
LETTERMEN — All Time 56
MOTELS - TRANSPORTATION 4
N( VIES ( )N TERPS 65
OPPONENTS 1979 28
PLAYER PROFILES 13
PLAYERS PICTURES 38
PRONUNCIATION GUIDE 37
RADIO - TV SCHEDULE 27
RECORDS 49
REVIEW OF 1978 40
ROSTER-ALPHABETICAL-NUMERICAL 36
STATISTICS FOR 1978 41
SIGNEES FOR 1979 24
WEIGHT TRAINING PROGRAM 35
MARYLAND FOOTBALL 1979: Printed by University
Printing Department — Henry Kuhn, Manager.
The Athletic Department wishes to express their sincere
and grateful thanks to these University Printing Dept.
employees for their untiring work and efforts in publish-
ing the Football Book.
Ray Leber. Supervisor: Bill Rolf. Supervisor: Rusty
Jones and Bill Robertson. Linotype Operators. Richard
Douglas, Compositor: Ron Leonard and Joe McDanald.
Photolithographers; Dick Gregory and Lee Tyson. Press-
men: Ron Pusak. Folder Operator.
To The News Media
We hope die I97S idiiiou of Maryland football will
be helpful as you cover Jerry Claiborne's Terrapins this
fall. With this book goes an invitation to visit us as
often as possible. Our offices are located in Cole Field
House, room 1145.
Wc will have several telephones available For
copier use in the Byrd Stadium Press Box. However
if you wish exclusive use of a telephone phase order it
through your local office and we will have it installed
at your seat.
Only accredited photographers on assignment and
game personnel arc permitted on the sidelines. All
sideline photographers must check in and pick up an
arm-band before going to the field. The arm-bands
are available at the west end of the working press
section on the second floor ol the press box.
Please advise when your order is placed for credentials
if you will be transmitting copy from the press box
and if you will have equipment with you. The Sports
Information Office will have two telecopiers available
for use with all copy sent according to deadlines.
Personnel from the Sports Information Office will
send your copy and we will be in the press box until
all copy has been transmitted.
A play-by-play, halftime and final statistics, scoring
summaries and brief post-game comments from the
coaches will be provided the working press at all home
games.
For additional information and special requests please
address all correspondence to the following address for
quickest delivery.
Sports Information Office
Box 295
College Park, Maryland 20740
SPORTS INFORMATION DIRECTOR
Jack Zane (Maryland '60)
OFFICE: (301) 864-4076
HOME: (301) 322-3265
ASSISTANT SID
Patti Wessel Flynn (Maryland 77)
OFFICE: (301) 454-2123
HOME: (301) 474-8665
The University of Maryland actively subscribes to a policy of
equal educational and employment opportunity. The University of
Maryland is required by Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972 not to discriminate on the basis of sex in admission, treatment
of students, or employment.
#979 SCHEDULE
THE FOOTBALL STAFF
DATE
OPPONENT
Sept.
8
Villa nova
15
at
Clemson
22
Mississippi State
29
at
Kentucky
Oct.
6
Penn State
13
at
N.C. State
20
at
Wake Forest
27
at
Duke
Nov.
3
North Carolina
17
Louisville
24
Virginia
TIME
1:30
3:20
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:00
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:30
1:30
HEAD COACH
Jerry Claiborne
(864-4384)
ASSISTANT COACHES
(454-2123 or 2128 — 454-4066, 4067 or 4068)
LINEBACKERS John Devlin
QUARTERBACKS Jerry Eisaman
DEF. GUARDS George Foussekis
OFFENSIVE SETBACKS Thomas Groom
OFFENSIVE LINE John "Jake" Hallum
RECEIVERS Morgan Hour
OFFENSIVE LINE & KICKERS Dick Redding
DEF. TACKLES Gib Romaine
DEF. ENDS Rod Sharpless
DEF. SECONDARY Terry Strock
SECRETARIES
Cerne Redd
Linda Kubany
SPECIAL DAYS
VILLANOVA
MISSISSIPPI STATE
PENN STATE
NORTH CAROLINA
BYRD STADIUM
— Youth Day
— Band Day
— Parents Day
— Homecoming
DATE
Sept.
9
16
23
30
Oct.
7
14
21
28
Nov.
4
11
18
Dec.
23
OPPONENT
SCORE ATT.
at
at
Tulane 31-7
Louisville 24-17
North Carolina 21-20
Kentucky 20-3
N.C. State 31-7
at Syracuse 24-9
Wake Forest 39-0
at Duke 27-0
at Penn State 3-27
at Virginia 17-7
Clemson 24-28
SUN BOWL — EL PASO, TEXAS
TERP NOTES
OFFENSIVE FORMATION Multiple EYE
DEFENSIVE FORMATION Wide Tackle Six
LETTERMEN RETURNING 33
LETTERMEN LOST 19
THE LETTERMEN
OFFENSE (16) ( ) Denotes Number Letters Earned
SE
QT
QG
C
SG
31,458
TE
36,142
QB
48,000
42,873
FB
TB
WB
45,319
DEFI
15,709
LE
LT
LG
43,119
23,600
RG
RT
RE
78,019
19,874
LLB
RLB
LI IB
51,376
RUB
SAF
Gary Ellis
Scott Collins (2) Scott Fanz
Paul Glamp (2)
Bruce Byrom (2) Chris Grey
Kervin Wyatt (3) Richard Cummins
Larry Stewart (2) Phil Livingston
Eric Sievers (3) Tom Burgess (2)
Mike Tice
Rick Fasano
Charlie Wysocki
Jan Carinci
NSE (15)
Jimmy Shaffer (3) Brad Senft
Ed Gall (2) Jerry Rogers
Mike Carney
Marlin Van Horn (2)
Todd Benson
Pete Glamp
Darnell Dailey
Brian Matera (2)
Lloyd Burruss (3) Sam Johnson
Steve Trimble
Ralph Lary (2) John Baldante
SPECIALIST (2)
Texas
0-42
33,122
Punter — Placekicker Dale Castro
Punter — Holds for Placements John Papuchis
Facts About Maryland
LOCATION College Park, Md 20740
ATHLETIC DEPT Cole Field House
PRESIDENT Dr. John S. Toll
CHANCELLOR Dr. Robert L. Gluckstern
FOUNDED:
1807 as College of Medicine of Maryland
1812 changed name to University of Maryland
1920 merged widi Maryland Agricultural College
ENROLLMENT: (Spring 1979)
12.096 undergraduate men — full time
10.411 undergraduate women — full time
2.570 undergraduate men — part time
2.566 undergraduate women — part time
2,168 graduate students — men
2.380 graduate students — women
22.570 undergraduate students — full time
34,741 total students on College Park. Campus
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Carl C. James
FACULTY CHAIRMAN-
ATHLETICS Dr. Charles Taff
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
FOOTBALL STADIUM Byrd (45,000)
NICKNAME Terrapins (Terps)
COLORS Red and White, Black and Gold
(The colors of the State Flag)
GAME UNIFORMS Red and White
TEAM PHYSICIAN Dr. Stanford A. Lavine
TRAINER John J. Bush
ASSISTANT TRAINERS Jim Weir
Sandra Worth
VARSITY SPORTS (Men 13)
Baseball, Basketball, Cross-Country, Fencing, Football.
Golf, Indoor Track, Lacrosse, Soccer, Swimming,
Tennis, Track and Field, Wrestling.
Athletic Department
STAFF
Mailing Address: Box 295
College I'. uk. Maryland
20740
T
eiepnone:
\KI \ ( ODE (301)
ADMINISTRATION
OITICK
Athletic Director — Carl C. James 454-4705
Assistant AD — William "Spider" Fry 451-17111.
Assistant AD — Frank < .r .in (54-2641
Assistant AD — Christine |. Weller . ... 454-5854
Assistant to AD — Bob Wall 454-3332
Gothard Lane 454-4067
Business Manager— I)i<k Dull 454-2121
Faculty Chairman — Dr. Charles A. Taff .... 454-2403
Ticket Manager— Deborah Russell 454-2121
Educational Foundation — Col. Tom Fields 454-4562
M Club — A I Heagy 454-5158
l)irr( inr of Golf Course — Frank Cronin .... 454-2131
Band Director — John Wakefield 454-2501
COACHES — MEN
Baseball— |a< k fackson 454-4041
Basketball — Charles C. Driesell 454-2120
Cross Countrly — Stan Pitts 454-4810
Fencing — Mike Dowhower 454-3286
Football — Jerry Claiborne 454-2125
Golf — Randy Hoffman 454-2131
Lacrosse — Bud Bearclmore 454-4328
Soccer — Jim Diets, h 454-5212
Swimming — Charles Hoffman 454-2750
Tennis — Doyle Royal 454-4130
Track — Frank Costello 454-4810
Wrestling — John McHugh 454-2052
COACHES — WOMEN
Basketball — Christine J. Weller 454-5854
Cross Country — Stan Pitts 454-6685
Field Hockey — Suzanne J. Tyler 454-3076
Gymnastice — Bob Nelligan 454-5854
Lacrosse — Suzanne J. Tyler 454-3076
Swimming — Lisa M. Papa 454-5939
Tennis — Sylvia Feldman 454-5854
Track — Stan Pitts 454-6685
Volleyball — Barbara Drum 454-3090
STAFF
Trainer — John J. Bush 454-4819
Assistant Trainers — Jim Weir 454-2758
Sandra Worth 454-5854
Rod Martin 454-2758
Equipment Manager — Ron Fulton 454-4817
Jack Gable 454-4817
Don Cressinger 454-2127
Stadium and Grounds — Lindv Kehoe 454-2822
Bud Apple 454-2825
HOME
Unlisted
1 14-3784
262-4590
I nlisted
■174-4077
(301)
-, ;-, iis-,j
I llllslri!
277-3460
439-1118
277-5594
345-3957
277-0794
459-6692
1 nlisted
Unlisted
(717)
794-2918
345-3344
779-4059
Unlisted
(301)
544-2270
Unlisted
431-1170
530-1941
445-1780
530-1553
Unlisted
(717)
794-2918
345-7409
345-7409
474-4667
384-5544
1717)
794-2918
345-8710
345-3030
431-0991
445-1258
474-7269
593-0304
384-6572
454-5122
(Women 10)
Basketball, Field Hockey, Cross-Country, Gymnastics,
Indoor Track, Lacrosse, Swimming, Tennis, Track and
Field, Volleyball.
SPORTS INFORMATION OFFICE
Director — Jack Zane 864-4076
Assistant — Patti Flynn 454-2123
Secretarv — Therese Ryan 454-2123
Student Assistant — Steve Whelton 454-2123
322-3265
474-8665
ROYAL PINES MOTEL
(Best Western)
9133 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—345-4900
SI [ERATON-NORTHEAST
8300 Annapolis Rd.
New Carrollton. Md.
Tel. 301—459-6700
SI I ER ATON-NORTH WEST
8727 Colesville Rd.
Silver Spring. Md.
Tel. 301—589-5200
HOTELS AND MOTELS
IN THE COLLEGE PARK AREA
All Motels listed are within 10 miles of Byrd Stadium
and Cole Field House, or on the Beltway.
CENTER OF
ADULT EDUCATION
University of Maryland
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—779-5100
BETHESDA MARRIOTr HOTEL
1-495 & 1-270
Bethesda, Maryland
Tel. 301—897-9400
HAMPSHIRE MOTOR INN
7411 New Hampshire
Langley Park, Md.
Tel. 301-439-3000
HOLIDAY INN
Capitol Beltway Motel
10000 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—345-6700
HOLIDAY INN MOTEL
9137 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—345-5000
HOWARD JOHNSON'S
Balt.-Wash. Pkwy.
Cheverly, Md.
Tel. 301—779-7700
INTERSTATE INN
OF COLLEGE PARK
8601 Baltimore Blvd.
College Park, Md.
Tel. 301—474-2939
QUALITY INN
7200 Baltimore Ave.
Tel. 301—864-5820
RAMADA INN
5910 Princess Garden Pkwy.
Lanham, Md.
Tel. 800—238-5800
LOCAL TRANSPORTATION
IN COLLEGE PARK
Yellow-Blue Bird Cab — 864-7700
Union Cab — 779-4500.
AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION
TO COLLEGE PARK
From: National Airport — Cabs, $12.00 with a 50 cent
charge for each additional person going to the
same place.
Dulles Airport — Cabs, $27.00 with a 50 cent
charge for each additional person going to the
same place.
Baltimore-Washington International — Cabs $14
or $16 on the Meter with NO additional Charge
for additional passengers.
— Airp<. imousine Service: $8.00 single or
$12.00, two five people, with drop at your
Motel.
TERRAPIN HEADQUARTERS
(Travel Plans)
All Flights via Piedmont Charter
Baltimore - Washington International
CLEMSON (Sept. 15)
Holiday Inn of Clemson
(803) 654-4450
Arrive Greenville/Spartanburg
5:25 P.M. Sept. 14
KENTUCKY (Sept. 29)
Holiday Inn
1-75 &. Newton Pike
(606) 233-0512
Arrive Lexington
8:10 P.M. Sept. 28
NORTH CAROLINA STATE (Oct. 13)
Governors Inn
Research Triangle Park
(919) 549-8631
\rrice Raleigh/Durham
8:00 P.M. Oct. 12
WAKE FOREST (Oct. 20)
Holiday Inn / Pilot Mountain
' (919) 368-2237
Arrive Winston-Salem
8:00 P.M. Oct. 19
DUKE (Oct. 27)
Governors Inn
Research Triangle Park
(919) 549-8631
Arrive Raleigh /Durham
8:00 P.M. Oct. 26
INTERVIEWS
PLAYERS: It is requested that all player interviews be
arranged through the sports information office. We will
make every attempt to have the players call you at a
designated time or be available for an interview on
campus. Please make request at least a day in advance
so we can arrange with the athletes at practice. On many
class days it is impossible to get in touch with diem until
they show up lor practice.
HOME GAMES: Coach Claiborne will meet the media
in the Team Meeting room on first floor of football
building about 10 minutes alter game. Key players
will also be available in tins area billowing Coach
Claiborne.
TUESDAY PRESS LUNCHEON: Coach Claiborne and
Athletic Department officials will attend a weekly
luncheon each Tuesday during the season beginning
September 4 at the Center of Adult Education on
Campus. Coach Claiborne will be available there from
11:45 to 1:15 or upon completion of the interviews.
TV and Radio interviews will be accomodated prior to
and following the luncheon as requested. NOTE: For
those requesting Tuesday player interviews if (lasses do
not conflict we will have them available in the sjxirts
information office at 1:30 P.M.
CARL JAMES
DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS
Carl C. James, as Director of Athletics, is the chief administrator of one of the
most successful departments <>f intercollegiate athletics in the nation. The department,
as a self-sustaining; division of the University of Maryland serves the College Park
Campus as one of the few in the nation not operating at a deficit.
He administers a program that includes 2.3 sports for men and women with a staff
of over 100 and a budget of over $3 million.
James came to Maryland as a nationally known administrator having served as the
Director of Athletics at Duke University and as the Executive Director of the New
Orleans Mid-Winter Sports Association that includes the Sugar Bowl among its many
activities.
He has served 21 years as an administrator in intercollegiate athletics, and has a
business background as well as serving as District Sales Manager for Roadway Ex-
press, as a Sales Representative with Atlantic Refining Company and on special as-
signment with Bryan-Cooper Oil Company.
I [e is .i native of Etali
North Carolina when
had an outstanding high
sr hool i .iki r al Ni edham
Broughton High playing
football, basketball and
track.
II* earned seven varsit)
letters al Duke with three in
Football '4'). -.0 and '51 and
four in Track. In 1951 he
was c onsidered one ol tin
lop linemen in the south al-
though handicapped by a
knee injur)'.
James played his football
at Duke under Wallace
Wade and Bill Murray and
joined the staff there in 1954
as an assistant to tin Athletic
Director. He was also die
Blue Devils chief recruiter.
Ul-Americans he recruited
included such as Mike Mc-
Cce. Mike Curtis. Tee Moor-
man. Art Gregory, Jay Wilk-
inson and Bob Matheson.
In lybo lie joined Road-
way Express. Inc. of Akron.
Ohio, as the distrct sales
manager with his office in
Kemersville, North Carolina.
In 1969 he returned to
Duke as Associate Athletic-
Director and took over the
department in 1972 upon the
retirement of E. M. Cam-
eron.
He joined the Mid-Winter
Sports Association in 1977
and took over at Maryland
in 1978 upon the retirement
of Jim Kehoe.
He has been active in the
Fellowship of Christian Ath-
letes, has served as Chairman
of several ACC committees
and on numerous V \\
Committees. He is a mem-
ber of the National Football
Foundation Hall of Fame.
While at Duke he was
elected to membership in
Omicron Delta Kappa hon-
orary leadership fraternity
and was a member of Phi
Delta Theta social fraternity.
He Ls married to the for-
mer Marjorie Anne Pettit.
also a Duke graduate. They
have two daughters Susan
and Sally.
WSWWj
JERRY CLAIBORNE
Head Football Coach
Jerry Claiborne's 17 year record as the Head Coach
of a Major college football team, 119-62-4, ranks him
among the nation's top coaches. His seven year record
at the University of Maryland is especially impressive,
58-23-2, with a winning percentage of .711.
He has not only captivated the College Park Com-
munity but has earned a national reputation as one
on the top men in his profession. His teams have
visited six consecutive bowls, from Jacksonville, Florida
to El Paso, Texas, and he has participated in coaching
activities from Ramstein, Germany to Tokyo, Japan.
He is a firm believer in the benefits derived from
intercollegiate football and devotes many off-season
hours to furthering the interests of football.
During his ten years at Virginia Tech he served
on the staff of the Blue-Gray and Coaches All-American
game. Since joining the Terrapins he has served on the
staff of the Coaches All-American game, the East-West
Shrine game, and the Hula Bowl and as the Head Coach
in the East-West Shrine game and the Japan Bowl in
Tokyo. He has conducted clinics in Europe (Ramstein,
German and Alconbury, England, for the USAF, partici-
pated in the NCAA College Football Press Day and the
1977 NCAA College Football preview in Kansas City.
He has contributed his support to many charity drives,
serving as the Chairman of the Prince George's County
Cancer Crusade and as the State Chairman of the
Cancer Crusade while at Virginia Tech.
He serves on the United Press International Board of
Coaches and the American Football Coaches Rules
Committee among his many, off die field, duties and
devotes considerable time to each of these activities.
He is an active member of the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes and has served as a Deacon in the Baptist
Church.
How he finds time to participate in so many activities
is a tribute to his organizational and motivational ability.
His time is budgeted to include everything from his
travel to a few minutes relaxation playing tennis with
several facult) members during his lunch hour one day
a week.
When Claiborne arrived in College Park in 1972 he
was taking over a football program that had suffered
through five head coaches in 16 years with a combined
record of 60-100-1. The last bowl visit by a Maryland
team had been the 1955 team that met Oklahoma in
the Orange Bowl. In just seven years Claiborne has re-
corder a 58-23-2 record, with three Atlantic Coast Con-
ference Championships and six consecutive bowl visits.
The bowl visits and wire service polls indicate the
national interest in the Maryland program and at-
tendance figures indicate the local interest. The 1971
team averaged 15,679 for six games in Byrd Stadium
while the 1978 team averaged 42,829 for five home
games.
Claiborne's first Maryland game was in Raleigh, North
Carolina in 1972 and the Terps were suffering with a
six game losing streak in the league. The game ended
in a 24-24 tie but the Terps picked up their first con-
ference victory four weeks later with Maryland's first
league shutout in seven years and went on to a 5-5-1
season.
His second conference shutout came in 1973 and began
a league record 21 consecutive conference victories.
In seven years his Terrapins have won 33 league games
with only six losses and the tie while outscoring the op-
position 1107 to 422 and 12 shutouts among the 40
games.
In 1973 another Claiborne joined the Maryland Foot-
ball Program, as a non-scholarship player. Jonathan,
the coach's son earned his scholarship the hard way,
excelling for the junior varsity. At 5-foot 10 and 170
pounds he was the starting safety for Maryland's Cotton
Bowl team of '76 and the Hall of Fame Classic team of
'77. He was an ACC Honor Roll Student each year he
was at Maryland and graduated with a double major in
Accounting and History. He is now attending the Duke
University Law School. During the 1976-77 school year
he recorded a perfect 4.0 average in the classroom and
was named to the SKOAL/Happy Days Academic All-
American Football team.
Jonathan was also the recipient of the National Foot-
ball and Hall of Fame Scholarship and received a $1,500
NCAA Scholar Athlete Award.
Coach Claiborne also developed two other Academic
Ail-Americans with Kim Hoover honored in 1975 and
Joe Muffler in both 1977 and 78.
Claiborne is a strong advocate of recognition for his
athletes. Prior to his arrival the Terps had five All-ACC
players in seven years and since then have had 31
named to the all-league in his seven years, including
seven on the 1976 team.
The last Maryland All-American had been Gary Collins
as a first team selection in 1961 but Claiborne has
developed Paul Vellano, Randy White, Joe Campbell
and Steve Mike-Mayer as first team selections with Louis
Carter, Ed Fulton, and Mark Manges as second team
selections. Steve Atkins and Charles Johnson have
picked up third team honors.
Randy White also picked up such honors as the ACC
Player of the Year, Outland Trophy, Lombard] Trophy,
UPI Lineman of the Year and had his jersey number
94 retired by the University.
The many accomplishments of Claiborne since his
arrival at Maryland are listed on the following pages
under "The Claiborne Era".
As an athlete Claiborne earned considerable recogni-
tion himself. He was named the "Outstanding Senior"
on the University of Kentucky's 1949 team that went
on to the Orange Bowl, while playing as a defensive
hack for Paul Bryant During his senior year the de-
fensive secondary at Kentucky established and still holds
the NCAA record for pass interception returns.
In addition he was held in high esteem academically,
elected into several honorary leadership-scholarship or-
ganizations including Lamp and Cross and Omicron
Delta Kappa. He was selected the "Outstanding Senior"
in the College of Education and graduated from Ken-
tucky with "High Distinction" accumulating a 2.7 out
of a possible 3.9 grade point average. In 1968 he was
elected to the University of Kentucky Hall of Fame.
During his addetic career the most popular dress of
youngsters in Hopkinsville, Kentucky was a football
jersey with Claiborne's 88 on it. Many youngsters even
painted the number on their TEE shirts when the
jerseys were not available.
Claiborne began his teaching career at Augusta Mili-
tary Academy as Head Football Coach and Basketball
Coach. The first year his basketball team won the
Stale Prep Championship and the second year his foot-
ball team won die state title.
After two years at die Vcademy he returned to his
Alma Mater as assistant coach with Paul Bryant Two
years later (loach Bryant moved to Texas A & M and
Claiborne went with him as defensive coordinator. In
two years Texas A S: M was the Southwestern Conference
Champions and (>>ach Claiborne's defense led the
league.
In 1957 Coach Claiborne joined the Missouri coaching
staff with Frank Broyles. Once again Claiborne was
the defensive coordinator. However his slay in Missouri
was short-liver as the next year found Coach Bryant
accepting the Head Coaching position at Alabama and
Claiborne returned to Bryant's staff as the assistant
head coach in charge of the defense.
In two of the next three years the Alabama teams
were among the best in the country defensively as they
played in both the Liberty and Bluebonnet Bowls.
With such immediate success being the pattern of
Claiborne's coaching career he was selected as the Head
Football Coach at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. In
three short years Virginia Tech won the first Southern
Conference Championship in the history of the school.
In 1966 and 1968 Claiborne's Virginia Tech teams
played in the Liberty Bowl.
In 196.3 he was selected as the Southern Conference
"Coach of the Year". In 1966 he was selected as the
District III "Coach of the Year". His overall record
of 61 -.39-2 at VPI ranked him among the top 25 coaches
in the United States and he has continued to move up
on the list since his arrival at Maryland.
Mrs. Claiborne, the former Fay Hooks of Hopkinsville,
is also a University of Kentucky graduate. The Clai-
bornes have two sons David and Jonathan and two daugh-
ters Katie and Eileen.
Claiborne was born on August 26, 1928.
I MM ■■■ *-" ■■■
!■ 111 jm ■■■
/ SUN -_B0W1 I
■ %#
P
WMAL RADIO 63
TEAMS UP WITH
THE TERPS.
THE MARYLAND COACHING STAFF: (From Left) "Jake" Hallum, John Devlin,
Head Coach Jerry Claiborne, Dick Redding, Jerry Eisaman (Back Row) Terry
Strock, Gib Romaine, Tom Groom, Morgan Hout, Rod Sharpless, George Fous-
sekis.
John Devlin
Linebackers
(West Chester '59)
Coach Devlin was honored this past spring by West
Chester State College with a "Distinguished Alumnus
Award" the first athlete to receive the honor and lie
certainly has been a credit to his Alma Mater.
He works with the group that Coach Claiborne has
often mentioned as the key to the success of the wide
tackle six defense.
Devlin has developed some of the best over the
years and last year Neal Olkewicz established a Maryland
record lor tackles in a season with 188 and blocked a
Clemson punt in the final game ol the season that re-
sulted in a Man land touchdown.
Brad Carr was the leading tackier on the Cotton Bow i
team with 157. Kevin Benson led the Cator Bowl team
with 149 and Harry Walters si I a Mankind record with
17.3 on the 1974 Liberty Bowl team. All three achieved
Ml- \CC honors and Honorable Mention All- American
honor', wiih Carr puking up 106 of a possible 110 votes
in the balloting for .ill-league honors as a ju i.
Walters is now- an established star in the Canadian Foot-
ball League.
Devlin joined the Terps in 197.3. replacing Bobby
Ross who assumed the head coaching duties at The
Citadel. He served with Coach Claiborne at Virginia
Tech from 1966 through 1970 and was the defensive
line coach at Florida State for two years before joining
Claiborne at Maryland.
The native of Norristown, Pennsylvania began his
football career at St. Matthews High in nearby Consho-
hocken and went on to West Chester State College.
While at West Chester he achieved all-conference
li rs as a tackle and was also the weight man on the
track team. His 1958 team at West Chester was called the
best ever coached by Glenn Killinger. the Rams coach
for 25 years.
Devlin began his coaching career at Waynesboro High
and then coached the Fourth \rm\ team while serving
in Germany. He joined Paul Die l/el at West Point for
three years before moving to Virginia Tech.
He was born in Norristown on April 12. 19.37. While
in Germany he married the Former [rma Kleemann of
Regensburg, Germany. They have Four children, fohn
III. Elizabeth, William and Michael.
Devlin is seldom seen on a Saturday afternoon except
when rushing to the locker room ;ii halftime. He spends
iln- game in the puss box calling the defensive signals For
the team thai ranked as the Nation's second best in total
defense in 1976.
Jerry Eisaman (Kentucky 'GO)
Quarterbacks
Coach Eisaman opened the 1978 season without a
letterman at quarterback and the Tcrps behind Tim
O'Hare went on to a 9-3 record and the Sun Bowl.
The Tcrps were second in die \( ( . in passing, and
scoring and third in total offense.
This fall Eisaman has Mike Tice as a letterman
candidate hut Tice suffered a shoulder separation in
die spring game. However he is expected to Ik- in
peak condition this Fall and along with Bob Milkovich
gives Eisaman i\\o line candidates as starters.
Eisaman's quarterbacks led the league in passing
in 1974 and 1977 and three are in die professional
ranks. Boh Avcllini has started with die Chicago
Hears. Larry Dick is in Canada with the Saskatchewan
Roughriders and Mark Manges is with the St. Louis
Cardinals in the NFL.
His quarterbacks have averaged 15.3.6 yards a game
passing over the last seven years and the passing game
alone has accounted for 43 percent of the Maryland
offense.
While at Kentucky Eisaman was recognized as the
. MI-SEC Sophomore Quarterback and was selected Co-
Captain his senior year. He also played in the Blue-
Gray All-Star game.
Academically he received the Sam Huey award for the
highest scholastic standing among the members of the
football team for four years, and was a member of the
Scabbard and Blade Society.
While an officer in the Army he coached the First
Cavalry Division to the Far East Championship and
also coached die Fort Knox Tankers. From there he
spent three years at Seneca High in Louisville. Kentucky
before joining Coach Claiborne at Virginia Tech in
1966. coaching the offensive backs for three years. He
served as the offensive coordinator at the University of
Cincinnati for thre years before rejoining Claiborne
at Maryland.
Eisaman also spends his afternoons in the press box
calling the offensive plays for the Terp quarterbacks.
Coach Eisaman is a 42 year old bachelor.
George Foussekis
Defensive Guards
(Virginia Tech "68)
Coach Foussekis achieved All-American recognition
for three years while playing for Coach Claiborne at
Virginia Tech and has developed a All-American at
Maryland in Paul Yellano. a first team selection by
the American Football Coaches Association in 197.3.
He has also had Paul Divito. Larry Seder. Ted Klaube
and Bruce Palmer on the wire service honorable mention
lists. His All-ACC guards include Yellano twice. Divito.
Seder. Klaube and Palmer.
Foussekis coaches widi the same fervor that made him
an All-American and is just as successful.
Dave Yisaggio. one of his guards, won the ACC's
Brian Piccolo Award in '74 and Ernie Salley earned
three letters at guard before moving l<> tackle as a senior.
lbs guards recorded a dozen quarterback sa< ks in 1977
and had II in each of the two previous seasons.
Lasl Fall thej i hipped in with 28 ini luding a i. am
record 13 by Palmer and II by Marlin Van lb.,,, the
leader of die defensive line this fall.
Coach Foussekis has been especially effective recruit-
ing in his name state of Virginia. His recruits have in-
cluded Walter White, a tight e,,d In, m Charlottesville,
now with Kans.is City and Sieve \lkins. the Terps all i.
ground gainer now widi Green Bay. Lloyd Bnrniss. also
ol Charlottesville, the Tcrps All-American candidal, ,s
another of his prize ice mils.
As a player he was a member of the Cobblers 1966
Libert) Bowl team and signed with die Denver Broncos
in 1968. He returned to Virginia Tech with Coach
Claiborne in 1969 and worked with die defensive line
there lor two years. In 1971 he served as the defensive
coordinator al William & Mary and rejoined Coach
Claiborne when he assumed the head coaching duties
at Maryland.
Coach Foussekis is a graduate of Lane High in Char-
lottesville. Virginia where he captained the football,
basketball and baseball teams, lie was named the Most
Valuable Player in all three sports. His 196.3 football
team at Lane High won the state championship and he
was named first team All-State.
The 33 year old bachelor was born on April 28.
1946.
Thomas Groom (Virginia Tech '67)
Offensive Sethacks
Coach Groom has produced Maryland's all-time ground
gainers in Steve Atkins and Louis Carter. Atkins ran
for 1,261 last fall breaking Carter's mark of 991 yards
in a season, and his career marks for yards gained
rushing and touchdowns scored surpassed diose estab-
lished by Carter.
\tkins joins Green Bay this fall and Carter has moved
from Tampa to Washington to join the Redskins.
Atkins and Maddox gave the Terps a pair of strong
tailbacks and Groom is now preparing Sophomore
Charlie W'ysocki to take over.
Carter was a second team All-American selection by the
Football News and the Most Valuable Player in the
Coaches All-American game in Lubbock. Texas. Tim
Wilson another Groom product was the second leading
ground gainer for Houston last fall in the NFL.
Groom's backs scored 21 touchdowns rushing in 1976.
added 27 in '77 and 21 last fall.
Groom played his collegiate football for Jerry Clai-
borne at Virginia Tech where he was a three year letter-
man and as a fullback captained the 1966 Liberty Bowl
team. He also captained the undefeated 1963 State
< liampionship team at Charleston Catholic in Charleston,
West Virginia.
Following graduation from Tech he remained as a
graduate assistant until entering the Army as a Com-
missioned 2nd Lt. He served as an assistant coach at
the USMA Prep School at Fort Belvoir. Virginia in 1968
and in 1969 transferred to West Point as an assistant
coach under Tom Cahill.
In 1971 he served as a graduate assistant under Head
Coach Eddie Crowder at Colorado. He moved to Man-
land widi Coach Claiborne.
He is married to the former Sharon Dalton and they
have two children Thomas and Gina.
John "Jake" Hallum
Offensive Line
(Newberry '61)
Coach Hallum opened the 1978 season with 10 letter-
men in the offensive line and seven of those return for
'79. This fall Hallum starts the season with 1 1 lettermen
as four more picked up their first letter last fall. Coach
Claiborne has labeled this the best offensive line for the
Terps since the 1976 line diat led Maryland to the
Cotton Bowl and sent four of five starters to the NFL.
Hallum has developed ALL-ACC linemen in Stan
Rogers, Marion Koprowski, Ed Fulton and Tom Schick.
Center Mike Simon played in the Hida Bowl last winter.
Rogers, Fulton and Schick were on the wire services
Ail-American lists.
Coach Hallum played four years of collegiate foot-
ball at Newberry, receiving his B.S. degree in 1960.
He received his Master's from Murray State in 1965.
He began his coaching career at Pickens High in South
Carolina as assistant coach in football and basketball
and head baseball coach. In 1962 he moved to Hopkins-
ville High in Kentucky, again as an assistant in football
and basketball and head baseball coach.
He then moved to Paul G. Blazer high in 1966 as
head football and track coach, recording a three year
record of 20-6-0 in football. His 1966 football team
captured the District Championship and in 1967 won the
State title. His track team placed third in the State in
1967.
Coach Hallum was named the "Outstanding Young
Man" for the Ashland and Boyd County area in 1967,
the Lexington Herald "Coach of the Year" in 1967
and the Kentucky High School Athletic Association
"Coach of the Year."
In February of 1968 he moved to Morehead State
University as assistant football coach and in April was
named the head football coach and assistant professor.
He served in this capacity until moving to Maryland to
join Coach Claiborne. He left Morehead with a winning
program and a 7-3 record in 1971.
Coach Hallum was born in Liberty, South Carolina
on November 2, 1938. His wife Mable is a native of
Greenwood, South Carolina. They have two sons, Tod
Jacob and Bart Jeffrey.
Morgan Hout (Temple '71)
Offensive Receivers
Coach Hout took over the duties as receivers coach
in 1977 and saw his men contribute to the teams leading
the ACC in pass offense and scoring. His three top
receivers pulled in 76 receptions accounting for 1.200
yards. Last fall his top three receivers had 77 receptions
and accounted for 1,062 yards.
Dean Richards accounted for a Maryland record
160 yards on receptions in the Penn State game as a
junior and Chuck White caught eight for 126 yards
in the Hall of Fame Classic in 77.
Last fall Richards led the team with 35 receptions
for 575 yards while Eric Sievers and Jan Carinci each
pulled in 21 passes.
Coach Hout came to Maryland as a graduate assistant
in the spring of 1974 after having served as a head
coach in the high school ranks in the Carolina's for
three and a half years.
He started the football program at Harbor Christian
School in Columbia, South Carolina as Coach and Ath-
letic Director in 1971 and in his second year had a
6-4 record while also coaching basketball and baseball.
In 1973 he moved to Northside Christian School in
Charlotte as Head Football and Basketball coach and
recorded a 10-2 football record. Working with the
Junior Varsity at Maryland he has coached the defensive
backs, defensive ends and linebackers and handled the
Scout team when they worked with the varsity.
Coach Hout is a native of Marietta, Georgia where
he lettered in football, track and baseball, earning All-
State honors in football.
The 31 year old coach is married and he and his
wife Brenda have no children.
Dick Redding (Springfield *40)
Offensive Line, Kickers and Junior Varsity
Coach Redding has handled the Junior Varsity, work-
ed with the offensive line and coached the kickers for
the Terps. He has also coordinated the scouting program
that has been so effective for the Terps. He has con-
centrated on the use of film for scouting, establishing
this preference even before the restrictions on scouting
went into effect.
Among his former kickers are Steve Mike-Mayer, Mike
Sochko and Ed Loncar with Mike-Mayer named the
best placekicker in the first 25 years of the ACC with
his selection to the Silver Anniversary team last year.
Prior to joining Coach Claiborne at Maryland he had
coached at Virginia Tech for 18 years, including 10 years
there with Coach Claiborne.
He began his coaching career at Vermont College where
he served as Athletic Director, football, basketball,
baseball and track coach.
He entered the Navy in 1941 as an aviator and in
1947 resumed his coaching career at Davidson College
as assistant football and head swimming coach.
He is a member of Sigma Delta Pso Honorary Fratern-
ity and the National Football Coaches Association.
Coach Redding captained the football, basketball and
track teams at Springfield College. He played in the
1940 basketball tournament as Springfield won the New
England Championship.
He was born in Auburn, Maine on July 23, 1918
and is a graduate of Langley High in Pittsburgh, Penn-
sylvania. He married the former Elva Hedly and diey
have a son Dick.
Gib Romaine (East Stroudsburg '66)
Defensive Tackles
Coach Romaine had an honor in '74 that few coaches
ever achieve. He coached the winner of the Outland
Trophy, The Lombardi Trophy, the UPI "Lineman of
the Year" and the ACC "Player of the Year" in Randy
White.
After having White as a two year All-American he
came up with another Wilmington, Delaware product as
a consensus All-American in Joe Campbell. White was
a first round NFL draft choice of the Dallas Comboys
while Campbell was a first round choice of die New
Orleans Saints.
Last fall Charles Johnson gained the Associated
Press and Sporting News All-American lists and will
join Green Bay this fall in the NFL.
His defensive tackles had 14 quarterback sacks last
fall with Johnson contributing 12.
Coach Romaine was a defensive line coach at Kansas
State for three yens before joining Coach Claiborne's
staff. He had joined the Kansas State staff in 1969 as
a graduate asistant working with the freshman team.
10
He received his Masters in Physical Education From
Kansas Stale in 1970 and served as varsity line Coach foi
three years.
Co-Captain of the 1965 undefeated and third ranked
\ \l \ team ai East Stroudsburg, he began Ins coaching
career al Mansfield State in 1967. He served two years
as assistant football coach and assistant Dean of Men
at Mansfield,
The .'3.'J year old was horn in Franklin, New Jersey
on May Hi. 1944 and attended high s< li< . I in Porl
Jarvis, New York where lie earned 1(1 varsity letters
before concentrating on football in college, lie is a
member oJ the Masonic Lodge and Phi Sigma Kappa
Social Fraternity.
Romanic married the former Mania Seymour, a
cheerleader al East Stroudsburg and native of Mans-
field. Pennsylvania. She taught school in Mansfield
and also in Kansas. They have a son Jonathan.
Rod Sharpies* (Maryland '7o)
Defensive Ends
Coach Sharpless is another of Jerry Claiborne's former
players who returned to coach under his mentor, lie
joined the Staff in the fall of 1977 and works with the
defensive ends, the position he played well for the Teqis.
He has Jimmy Shaffer returning as a three year letter-
man but lost Joe Muffler a two time Academic All- Amer-
ican from the other side.
He is an active recruiter for the Terps in his heme Mate
of North Carolina.
His defensive ends have contributed 21 quarterback
sacks during the past two seasons although they often
are serving as outside linebackers and dropping off on.
pass coverage. They have also contributed four pass
interceptions during the two years.
Coach Sharpless, excelled at defensive end in Mary-
land's wide tackle six defense and the native of Jackson-
ville, North Carolina had 11 tackles in the backfield for
the 1974 Liberty Bowl team. Only Randy White had
more. He set opponents back 56 yards with his tackles
that year including four quarterback sacks.
Since graduation he has taught Physical Education
Recreation and Health al Winningboro High in New
Jersey and also served as \ssistanl Football Coach. V.
|M<' Track < oa< h he led Winningbon he Group IV
Sectional ( hampionship, thi South Ji rsi \ ( hampionship
and runner-up foi the state title.
Coach Sharpless was horn on Novembei 6, 1949 iii
J. ic ksom die. North < Carolina.
Terrj si rock (Virginia Tech '62)
Defensive Secondary
Coach Slice k has developed an Ul-ACC defensive
back in six ill Ills seven years al Maryland and has a
All-American candidate al the position this fall in Lloyd
Burruss.
Rob Smith was an all-league sale i\ For three i 'msec utive
years, Jim Brechbiel an all-league halfback and Ken
Roy picked up the same- honors. Burruss was also a
All-ACC halfback last Fall.
Smiih was mi the wire services Ul-American honorable
mention lists for three years with Brechbiel and Roy
achieving the same honors. Burruss followed them last
fall.
lie has five lellermen in the secondary this fall and
they contributed nine interceptions last year, scored two
touchdowns, and Burruss bloc keel (we. field goal attempts.
His 1977 safety Jonathan Claiborne was an Academic
All- Amerie an selection.
Coach Strock was Co-Captain of Coach Claiborne's
first team at Virginia Tech where he received his B.S.
degree in Business Administration in 1962. He also
played baseball for the Cobblers.
He began his coaching career as an assistant at Colonial
Heights High in Virginia and a year later was named
head coach at Culpepper, Virginia.
In 1966 he returned to Virginia Tech where he coached
the offensive receivers for two years and the defensive
backs for three years under Coach Claiborne.
He is a native < > f Hagerstown, Maryland and 1957
graduate of South Hagerstown High. He- was born in
Hagerstown on March 12. 1939. Coach Siren k married
the former Cynthia Fralin and they have two daughters
Cheryl Lee and Christi Lynn.
THE CLAIBORNE ERA AT MARYLAND
1972 (5-5-1)
After seven consecutive losing seasons by
his predecessors.
Made his debut in ACC with a 24-24 tie
against N.C. State in Raleigh (3-2-1) best
ACC record since 1962.
1973 (8-4) First Bowl appearance since 1955 with
trip to die Peach Bowl.
8-3 was best regular season record since
1955.
Ended North Carolina's 15 game ACC
winning streak 23-3 at Chapel Hill.
Started 21 game ACC winning streak with
37-0 win over Wake Forest.
5-1 ACC record best since 1955.
ACC and District III Coach of die Year.
Two All-Americans in Paul Vellano and
Randy White. Maryland's first since 1961.
1974 (8-4) Maryland's first trip to Bowls in consecu-
tive years with Liberty Bowl invitation.
Maryland's first outright ACC Champion-
ship and 6-0 Terps' best ACC record.
Extended ACC winning streak to 10
games.
1975 (9-2-1)
Coached winner of Oulland Trophy.
Lombard] Trophy and I PI Lineman of
Year in Randy White.
Also ACC Player of Year, in Randy
White.
Seven Players received some sort of A1I-
American Recognition.
Terps established 31 Maryland Records
and four ACC Records.
Attendance Marks were set for Byrd Sta-
dium (single game, season and per game
average) .
Claiborne was named The Sporting News
National Coach of die Year.
Six players named to All-ACC Team.
Maryland's third consecutive Bowl trip
with invitation to Cator Bowl.
Second consecutive ACC Championship.
62-14 win over Yirginia tied ACC Record
of 15 consecutive conference wins.
Terps established 12 Maryland records
and seven ACC Records.
11
Attendance marks were again set for Byrd
Stadium (single game, season and per
game average) . Per game average also
league mark.
Claiborne named ACC Coach of Year.
Four Terps named Honorable Mention
All-American by Associated Press.
Seven Terps named to All-ACC Team.
Three Terps named to All-ACC Academic
Team.
Terps led Nation in Kickoff Return aver-
age.
Led ACC in Defense for fourth consecu-
tive year. (Last in league in 1971).
1976 (11-1) Maryland's fourth consecutive Bowl trip
with invitation to Coton Bowl.
Third consecutive ACC Championship.
ACC "Coach of Year"— third time in last
four years.
Win over Virginia, 28-0, ended season
with record 20 consecutive league wins.
Team led ACC in seven of eight major
statistical categories.
Led ACC in defense for fifth consecutive
year (last in league in 1971).
Ranked among nation's leaders in Total
Defense, Rushing Defense and Scoring
Defense.
Seven Terps named to All-ACC team.
First team All-American in Joe Campbell.
Seven Terps received some sort of All-
American recognition.
Three Terps named to All-Academic
team.
Team was not scored on in diird quarter
during season.
Team ended die season with three con-
secutive shutouts.
Team did not give up a touchdown on
the ground in last 22 quarters.
First Maryland team to ever win 11 games
in one season.
1977 (8-4) Defeated Clemson, 21-14, in opener to
extend Atlantic Coast Conference record
winning streak to 21 games.
Won six of last seven games, losing only
to North Carolina, to gain bid to Hall
of Fame Classic.
Team led ACC in passing, after having
led league in defense the previous five
years with Coach Claiborne.
Win over Clemson extended Terps reg-
ular season winning streak to 15 games.
Terps won the last three regular season
games for the fifth consecutive year to
gain their fifth consecutive Bowl bid.
Ted Klaube was named to the All-ACC
team.
Five Terps (all on defense) were named
to the 1977 ACC All-Academic Football
Team. They were Jonathan Claiborne,
Chris Ward and Ralph Lary in the sec-
ondary, and Joe Muffler along with
Kenny Watson on the line.
Jonathan Claiborne became the first Terp
to be honored with a National Football
Foundation and Hall of Fame Craduate
Fellowship, one of 11 to be honored this
year with a $1,000 scholarship. He also
won a $1,500 Craduate Fellowship from
the NCAA as a scholar athlete.
Jonathan Claiborne and Joe Muffler
were named to the COSIDA Academic
All-American team and Claiborne re-
ceived the ACC's Jim Tatum Scholar-
Athlete Award.
Terps ended the season with a shutout
for the third time in the last four years.
Claiborne was honored by the Baltimore
Quarterback Club at a dinner attended
by over 1,000 fans as the "Man of the
Year," receiving the Johnny Unitas
Trophy for his contribution to football.
The Terps defeated Minnesota 17-7 in
the First Annual Hall of Fame Classic
in Birmingham, Alabama.
1978 (9-3) Won first eight games of season to rank
filth in the nation.
Lost to Clemson 28-24 before 51.376 in
Byrd Stadium to finish second in the
ACC after being picked to finish fourth
in pre-season polls.
Joe Muffller named to the SKOAL Happy
Days Academic All-American team honor-
ed at half-time of the Sun Bowl game
the only player in uniform as a participant
in the Sun Bowl game.
Served as the Head Coach in the East-
West Shrine Ail-Star game.
Had four players named to the All-ACC
team, two on the Football News All-
American third team and four on the
All-American Honorable Mention lists.
Had Charles Johnson and Steve Atkins
playing in the East-West Shrine game,
and the Senior Bowl All-Star game and,
Mike Simon in the Hula Bowl.
Hid nine players named to the ACC
Honor Roll for 1977-78 and seven were
named to the All-ACC Academic Team.
Team received sixtli consecutive Bowl bid
with selection by Sun Bowl.
Team led ACC in Rushing Defense, and
ranked second in Pass Offense. Total De-
fense. Pass Defense. Scoring Offense and
Scoring Defense.
Quarterback Tim ()"Hare led the league
in passing.
Ran string of consecutive games scored
in (o 95 before suffering shutout in Sun
Bowl. Streak of 95 was third longest in
nation at time.
Willi Snii Bowl selection every player
Claiborne has recruited at Maryland has
had the opportunity to play in a bowl
game.
12
1979
TERPS
EDWARD "ED" JOSEPH AULISI (63) — Freshman
6-1, 230 (8/3/59) West Orange, New Jersey
Did not play last fall and will still be a freshman
for eligibility . . . worked at quick tackle in spring
but was injured and missed the spring game . . .
bench presses over 370 pounds . . . was a prep school
all-american at Seton Hall Prep . . . high school
team gave up only six points in 11 games with 10
shutouts and won state championship in '76 and '77
. . . played in north-south all-star game . . . falher
played at Kansas State and brother is at Perm State
. . . born in Newark, New Jersey.
Lloyd Burruss
Jan Carinci
JOHN W. BALD ANTE (8) — Senior
6-0, 182 (2/1/58) Colonia, New Jersey
Played on the Hall of Fame Classic team and
lettered as a starter on the Sun Bowl team . . . had
57 tackles last fall while recovering two fumbles and
intercepting two passes . . . returned the interceptions
19 yards . . . returned in interception 17 yards against
Penn State and also had one of the fumble recoveries
in the Penn State game . . . had an interception against
Wake Forest as sophomore while picking up 10 tackles
and one fumble recovery . . . was a quarterback at
Colonia High but played defensive back for Maryland
junior varsity as a freshman . . . strong tackier bench
pressing 325 pounds ... on Scholastic Coach all-
american team in high ... a government and politics
major . . . member of Omicron Delta Kappa National
Leadership Honorary Fraternity . . . captained the
football team in high where he also ran track and
earned a pair of letters in wrestling . . . father played
football and baseball at Upsala . . . born in Newark.
New Jersey.
JOHN CHRIS BARBIASZ (38) — Sophomore
6-3, 210 (2/19/58) Ware, Massachusetts
Prefers to use Chris . . .was on the Sun Bowl nam
but did urn play and still a sophomore for eligibility
. . . injured and missed spring practice ... a linebacker
who came to Maryland from Worcester Academy and
Ware High . . . all-New England in both football and
basketball in high . . . played for former Terp Mike
Stubljar . . . brother Michael played football at West
Point . . . captained the Ware high football team . . .
on Western Mass. championship team in '74 the team
that lost post-season game to Northbridge 20-21 . . .
scored winning basket with two seconds left in post-
season basketball win in '76, a 51-50 win over St.
Michaels . . . born in Cleveland. Tennessee.
TODD EOREST BENSON (68) — Junior
6-2, 225 (6/12/59) Altoona, Pennsylvania
Prefers to use Todd . . . defensive lineman who
lettered on Sun Bowl team with 18 tackles and excelled
on special teams . . . had one sack for a nine yard
loss, caused one fumble, recovered a fumble and knocked
down one pass with his pass rush . . . his caused fumble
gave the Terps a touchdown on a kickoff against N.C.
State . . . all-state at Altoona high where he played
tight end. linebacker and defensive end . . . captained
the football team in high . . . also wrestler for three
years . . . brother Brad played at Penn State . . . also
played Golf in high ... on winning team in Big 33
East-West game . . . born in Altoona.
LESLIE "Les" CARL BORING (74) — Sophomore
6-3, 240 (4/10/59) Richmond, Ohio
Did not play last fall and still has three years
eligibility left . . . started at strongside tackle in spring
game . . . all-conference in football at Jefferson Union
High where he played both offense and defense . . . also
a wrestler in high . . . three brothers all involved in
sports and one sister . . . captained the football team
in high . . . played in the Ohio - West Virginia all-
star game in high . . . had a pass interception in his
first game as a sophomore in high school . . . born in
Steubenville, Ohio.
GURNEST BROWN (99) — Freshman
6-3, 235 (12/15/59) Wilson, North Carolina
Did not play as a freshman and missed spring practice
while recovering from injury . . . could move into
starting lineup as defensive tackle . . . has excellent
quickness and good strength . . . played football and
wrestled for three years and was on the track team
for two years at Fike High School . . . captained the
football team and played in the East-West all-star
game . . . born in Wilson.
THOMAS EUGENE BURGESS (87) — Senior
6-5, 225 (9/15/56) Forestville, Maryland
Prefers Tom . . . tight end for two bowl teams the
13
Hall of Fame Classic and Sun Bowl . . . playing behind
Eric Sievers he gives the Terps two of the finest tight
ends on the same team . . . caught four passes as a
sophomore and eight with one touchdown last fall . . .
started the opening game of the "77 season at Clemson
and as a freshman in '75 played in his first varsity
game against Villanova . . . caught a two point con-
version pass against Wake Forest as sophomore and
caught a touchdown pass against Kentucky last fall
on a halfback option play . . . prep all-american as
tight end and kicker for Frank Nietzey at Bishop Mc-
Namara where he kicked a 37 yard field goal and
extra point in 10-6 win over Anacostia in RFK Stadium
Championship game . . . caught 30 passes for 417
yards and punted for 45 yard average in senior year
in high . . . seven field goals in high included a 42
yarder . . . born in Washington. D.C.
LLOYD EARL BURRUSS JR. (25) — Senior
6-0, 195 (10/31/57) Charlottesville, Virginia
Three year letterman who has started in three bowl
games, the Cotton, Hall of Fame and Sun Bowl . . .
The Terps "Big Play Man" . . . blocked a field goal
attempt by Minnesota in Hall of Fame Classic and
followed with two more blocked field goal attempts
last fall . . . blocked one against North Carolina with
Tar Heels on Maryland 12 and Terps went on to win
21-20 .. . blocked one against Syracuse on the Maryland
12 and it set up a Terp score as the blocked kick
went back 19 yards where Joe Muffler picked it up
and advanced it to die Syracuse 11 completing a 77
yard return for the Terps who scored four plays later
... he returned a punt 56 yards to set up a score
against Duke and returned one 47 yards for a touch-
down against Tulane . . . had 71 tackles last fall and
one came in the opponents backfield for a nine yard
loss . . . caused three fumbles, intercepted three passes
with a first quarter interception against Wake Forest
returned 43 yards to the 19 setting up a field goal . . .
all-ACC last fall and Associated Press honorable men-
tion all-american ... as a sophomore intercepted
three passes and had 47 tackles and had 27 tackles
and a interception as a freshman . . . had a 63 yard
return of an interception against North Carolina as
a sophomore setting up a touchdown . . . had his first
collegiate interception as a freshman in his hometown
of Charlottesville against Virginia . . . the quickest man
on the team and one of the best all-around athletes
. . . bench presses just under 350 pounds . . . played
for Charlottesville high where he was named the "out-
standing adilete" in the school . . . on a track team
that won the state championship and football team
that won the district title . . . Prep all-american in two
sports ... on track team ran die 440, 880, on the
relay team, the long and triple jumps and handled
the shot put chores . . . for his career has 145 tackles.
seven interceptions and two tackles for minus 19 yards
all in regular season games ... a recreation major born
in Charlottesville .
BRUCE BYROM (50) — Junior
6-3, 215 (6/21/59) McKees Rods. Pennsylvania
Two year letterman on two bowl teams the Hall of
Fame Classic and the Sun Bowl . . . has handled the
snaps on kicking situations for two years . . . came to
Maryland from Sto-Rox High . . . gives Terps good
depdi at center.
Gary Ellis
RODNEY C. CALDWELL (97) — Freshman
6-4, 250 (5/12/58) Williamstown, New Jersey
Did not play last fall so still has four years eligibility
. . . came to Terps from Massanutten Academy after
three years of football at Williamstown High . . . was
a defensive tackle in high and prep school . . . also
wrestled and handled shot put chores on track team
. . . captained high school team . . . was third in state
wrestling tournament after winning regional champion-
ship . . . worked at defensive left tackle in spring . . .
born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
JAN FRANC CARINCI (21) — Junior
6-2, 205 (2/2/59) Toronto, Canada
Played as a freshman on the Hall of Fame Classic
team and was a starter for the Sun Bowl team . . .
wingback who is rated by Coach Claiborne as one of
the finest blockers around on the corners and down-
field . . . also catches everything dirown near him
says Claiborne . . . caught 21 passes for 229 yards
last fall . . . can also run the football scoring one
touchdown but had only six carries from scrimmage
. . . was a running back and defensive back for Agin-
court Collegiate Institute in High where he captained
the team for three years and was named die "Adilete
of the Year" in '75 and MVP in 76 . . . rated first
two years in a row in the Toronto Argonauts' high
school camp for the best players in the Toronto area
. . . placed second in punt, pass and kick in Canada in
'73 and '74 . . . scored all 10 points in 10-6 win
over West Hill in championship game in '75 and his
team beat Wexford for title 32-12 in '76 . . . he was
the defensive MVP and captain in both games . . .
he was the Toronto triple jump champion in 1975
. . . played four years of football in high, diree years
each of basketball and track and one year of rugby
... a pre-dental major . . . born in London. England.
MICHAEL FRANCIS CARNEY (59) — Junior
6-1, 230 (10/8/57) Claymont. Delaware
Prefers Michael . . . came to Maryland from St.
Marks where he was a guard-tackle for three years . . .
14
started at defensive right tackle in spring game after
lettering on the Sun Bowl team as a sophomore . . .
had 21 tackles as a reserve and on die speciality teams
with one quarterback sack for seven yards . . . scored
a touchdown in the A.OC Championship game against
Clemsoii as hi- recovered a Mocked kick in (lie end
/one . . . on stale championship team in 74 and '7.r> and
all-state honors in '75 and '76 . . . brother John played
at Dartmouth . . . has three brothers and five sisters
. . . bench presses 360 pounds . . . horn in Wilmington.
DALE EDWARD CASTRO (16) — Junior
6-1, 170 (11/26/59) Shady Side. Maryland
Handled the punting chores for the team last fall
and all kicking chores in the Sun Howl game when
Ed Loncar was injured . . . punted 66 time during
regular season for 35.9 average and had only 22 re-
turned with a net of 33.8 . . . longest punt was 55
yards . . . soccer style kicker and candidate for all
kicking chores this fall . . . dressed for several games
as a walk-on freshman . . . played quarterback at
Southern High where he was an all-metropolitan kicker
in football and pitcher in baseball . . . also lettered in
basketball . . . captained the football and baseball teams
in high and was a honor student . . . Sister Caryn and
his brother-in-law attended Maryland ... a political
science major . . . bora in Annapolis.
SCOTT S. COLLINS (73) — Senior
6-3, 245 (3/11/57) Glen Burnie, Maryland
Lettered on Hall of Fame Classic and Sun Bowl
teams after joining the team as a walk-on and earning
a scholarship ... on All-ACC Academic team last
fall . . . offensive quickside tackle . . . bench presses
380 pounds . . . was a linebacker at Glen Burnie High
where he letered diree years and also played baseball
for three years . . . lettered as a wrestler twice placing
second in the regional tournament both years . . .
captained all three teams in high ... a Liberal Arts
Major . . . born in Baltimore.
MICHAEL "Mike" JOSEPH CORVLNO (77) — Fresh-
man
6-2, 235 (7/27/60) Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania
Joined the varsity last fall but was injured and
regained his year of eligibility . . . has four years
remaining . . . candidate for starting defensive guard
position where he started on the left side in the spring
game . . . excellent quickness and the strength to excell
. . . captained the football and basketball teams at
St. Pius X High where he was a first team UPI all-state
selection and second team choice by AP . . . born in
Philadelphia.
RICHARD "Ritchie" JOSEPH CUMMINS (54) —
Senior
6-2, 240 (1/11/58) Queens Village, New York
Offensive strongside guard who backed up Kervin
W'yatt in the spring . . . lettered on the Sun Bowl team
and played on the Hall of Fame Classic team . . . one
of the Strongest nun on the team bench pressing 450
pounds in the spring . . . came to Maryland from
Brooklyn Technical High where he was <>n the Daily
News and Coaches all-star trams . . . captain of his
high school team . . . born in New York ( n\.
DARNELL L DAILEY (46) — Junior
6-3, 215 (9/8/59) Baltimore. Maryland
Sophomore letterman linebacker on the Sun Bowl
team . . . expected to take over for Neal Olkewicz on
the left side . . . strong, bench pressing over 375 with
excellent linebacker quickness . . . dead lifts 600 |x>unds
. . . captained Baltimore Polytechnic Institute to the
conference championship after losing one |>oint decisions
to Calvert Hall 8-7 and 14-13 in consecutive years . . .
all-state playing for Augie Wiabel . . . born in Baltimore.
JOSEPH VINCENT DeMATTIO (95) — Sophomore
6-2, 230 (3/19/58) Wescport, Connecticut
Played on the Hall of Fame Classic team as a freshman
but did not letter . . . did not play last fall . . . defensive
guard . . . on state championship team at Staples High
and captained the team his senior year . . . brother played
at Milford Academy and Westchester . . . also wrestled
and was on the track team for three years . . . twice
second team all-state . . . born in Norwalk.
Bob Milkovich
Mike Tice
BRENT ALAN DEWITZ (12) — Freshman
6-0, 180 (4/23/59) Orrville, Ohio
Did not play as a freshman last fall and has four
years eligibility remaining . . . quarterback for Terps and
also played as a defensive back at Orrville High . . .
four sport athlete in high with football, basketball,
baseball and track . . . shortstop and pitcher in baseball
and ran the hurdles, 880 and mile on the track team . . .
all-conference in football and basketball and honorable
mention all-state in football . . . father played at the
University of Cincinnati . . . accounting major . . .
born in Ironton, Ohio.
15
GARY DWIGHT ELLIS (29) — Senior
6-2, 190 (4/26/57) State College, Pennsylvania
Lettered as split end on the Sun Bowl team . . .
caught 11 passes for 170 yards and a touchdown . . .
also played but did not letter on Hall of Fame Classic
team . . . against North Carolina with Terps third and
28 on the Tar Heels 35 he caught a 28 yard pass for
a first down on the seven and Maryland went on to
score with 7:27 remaining for the 21-20 win . . .
touchdown came on nine yard reception against North
Carolina State . . . split end and safety for State College
Area high where he was the MVP in football and also
played basketball . . . all-state and "Big 33" in high . . .
brother Bruce played at Penn State with father an As-
sociate Dean there and his mother Director of the
Undergraduate Library at Penn State . . . State cham-
pions in '73 with win over Central Catholic and league
champions in basketball losing to Altoona in the Dis-
trict Championship game . . . lost one game in senior
year . . . caught 32 passes for 16 touchdowns and 731
yards in senior year with 27 career touchdowns in high
. . . Law enforcement major . . . born in Harrisburg.
SCOTT HERBERT FANZ (76) — Junior
6-3, 260 (12/7/57) Hingham, Massachusetts
Letterman quickside offensive tackle on the Sun Bowl
team . . . could start there this fall . . . has excellent
quickness and strength, bench pressing 430 pounds
. . . injured and did not play in '77 and missed the
spring game in '79 with an injury . . . All-Scholastic
tackle at Hingham High where he also wrestled . . .
captained the football team in high . . . started for the
varsity in tenth grade . . . born in Berea, Ohio.
over at fullback when first two fullbacks were injured
and later injured himself . . . had a 5.1 yard per carry
average playing in nine games with 12 carries . . .
missed spring practice recovering from injury . . . fresh-
man in '76 and did not play in '77 . . . has good speed
and strength bench pressing 350 . . . was the only
ninth grader to play on the varsity at Elkton High
where he went on to set records for the most points
scored and yards gained in a season and career . . .
while at Elkton scored 280 points and gained over 3.200
yards while serving as captain of the football and track
teams . . . ran the 100 and on the 440 and 880 relay
teams . . . also handled the shot put chores ... on
Scholastic Coach Ail-American list . . . born in Brooklyn,
New York.
Coach Claiborne
Phil Livingston
Marlin Van Horn
Ed Gall
EDWARD JOSEPH GALL, JR. (72) — Junior
6-5, 260 (4/25/58) Egypt, Pennsylvania
Lettered on Hall of Fame Classic team with 86 tackles
and as starter on Sun Bowl team widi 106 tackles . . .
starting left tackle and had 18 tackles in the season
opener against Tulane . . . had one quarterback sack
and one tackle for no gain last fall . . . also recovered
two fumbles and knocked down two passes with his
pass rush . . . had a quarterback sack and four tackles
for no gain and three in the opponents backfield as
a freshman . . . had 19 tackles against North Carolina
as a freshman including a big goal line play . . . followed
that with 17 against Villanova causing a fumble and
gaining ACC defensive player of the week honors . . .
had a 13 yard quarterback sack in the Hall of Fame
Classic . . . strong bench presing 395 . . . three year
letterman in football, two in track and one in basketball
at Whitehall High . . . won the district championship
throwing the discus in high . . . '73 team was undefeated
winning the Lehigh Valley championship . . . born in
Allentown.
RICHARD "Rick" JOSEPH 1 AS WO (44) — Junior
5-10, 215 (5/1/57) Elkton, Maryland
Letterman fullback on die Sun Bowl team . . . look
ROBERT "Bob" RUDD GIOIA (67) — Sophomore
6-3, 250 (3/17/59) Cresskill, New Jersey
Played but did not letter for Hall of Fame Classic
Champions as offensive tackle . . . did not play in '78
16
. . . quickside taclde . . . played three years of football
ami basketball for Cresskill High where he also lettered
once in baseball and track . . . all-league in both Football
and basketball . . . on state championship team in basket-
ball and captained both Football and basketball his
senior year . . . Marketing Major . . . born in New York
City.
PAUL JOSEPH GLAMP (58) — Senioi
6-2, 235, (9/25/56) Dublin, Maryland
Two year Ietiernian . . . lettered on Cotton Bowl
team as a sophomore and then regained a years eligi-
bility after suffering a Fractured arm early in '77 season
. . . suffered a broken ankle wrestling in sophomore
year anil then had the arm injury . . . strong, bench
pressing over 400 pounds . . . has a twin brother Pete on
the team . . . Paul enrolled in '75 hut Pete did not join
the Terps until 76 due to injury suffered in all-star
game . . . Paul was a defensive and offensive tackle at
North Harford High where he also reigned as the stale
heavyweight wrestling champion . . . captained the
wrestling and football teams . . . wrestling team won
the Bel Air Tournament twice, the Perryville Champion-
ships twice, the county championships twice and the re-
gional championships in '74 . . . football team was runner-
up to Howard for district championship ... in one high
school game he blocked a punt, his brother Pat picked
it up and scored a touchdown and brother Pete kicked
the extra point . . . Industrial Technology Major in
college of education . . . born in Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania.
Larry Stewart
PETER JOHN GLAMP (89) — Junior
6-0, 205 (9/25/56) Dublin. Maryland
Letterman defensive end and twin brother of offensive
guard Paul . . . was injured in Maryland all-star game
and then again prior to freshman season thus a year
behind his brother as far as eligibility is concerned . . .
excellent strength bench pressing 380 and handling 600
dead lift . . . also good quickness . . . had 26 tackles
last fall with two for minus yards including a quarter-
back sack . . . caused one fumble . . . captained the
football and wrestling teams with his brother at North
Harford where he also lettered in baseball for three
years and track once. . . total of nine letters in high . . .
runner-up for state championship as wrestler . . . his
uncle Joe Glamp played for the Pittsburgh Steelers
. . . his father Walter played for Duquesne University and
brother Pat for Harford Community College where he
wrestled in die Junior College Nationals and was all-
region in football . . . education major . . . born in
Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania.
LARRY GENE GREGORY (88) — Sophom
6-2, 198 (4 25/59) Kingsville, Maryland
lias worked at split end and wingback Marling at
wingback for the red team in the spring game . . .
did nol play last Fall and still has sophomore eligibility
. . . has worked hard In the last two spring practices . . .
has good speed . . . was a wide receiver for Perry Hall
where he also played soccer, basketball and handled the
shot put chores for the indoor tr.uk team placing seventh
In the stale In the shot put ... a Prc-Mcdical major
. . . born In Baltimore.
CHRISTOPHER "Chris" JOHN GREY (55) — Senior
6-1. 226 (5/8/58) Falmouth, Virginia
Lettered as a center on the Sun Bowl team after
joining die Terps in the spring of '78 . . . came from
Ferrum Junior College where he was a first team All-
American selection . . . bench presses 400 pounds . . .
played for Stafford High . . . also wrestled and played
tennis at Ferrum . . . won all honors at Ferrum in addi-
tion to all-american he was the most valuable offensive
player, outstanding offensive player and on the Coastal
Conference all-star team . . . captained the Ferrum foot-
ball team that won the conference championship, region
10 title and the National Championship . . . born in
Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
CHRISTOPHER "Chris" ALAN HAVENER (22) —
Junior
5-11, 190 (7/22/58) Springfield. Virginia
Played on the Sun Bowl team but did not letter
catching one pass as a split end . . . backed up Gary
Ellis in the spring . . . came to Maryland from Colonial
High in Orlando, Florida where he was a wide receiver
and defensive back for two years and a sprinter on the
track team for three years ... on the winning team in the
East-West all-star game won by the East 33-6 . . . captain-
ed the football team in high and was named die most
valuable offensive lineman . . . Government and Politics
major . . . born in Washington, D.C.
GARY KING "Kip" JAWISH, JR. (43) — Sophomore
6-2, 215 (6 6 56) Kensington, Maryland
Kip came to Maryland from Georgetown Prep where
be was a middle guard and running back and received
the Brookland Club Award as the "Outstanding High
School Player" . . . started at defensive right end for the
white team in the spring game . . . played on the
Hall of Fame Classic Champions as a freshman linebacker
but did not letter . . . did not play last fall and has
sophomore eligibility . . . his father Gary was a boxing
champion at Maryland and played football in Canada
... lie captained the football team at Georgetown Prep
where he was all-metropolitan, all-state and all-american
... as the weight man on the track team was the state
private school champion indoors and outdoors . . . had
a 57 foot shot put and a 155 foot discus throw . . . his
hobby is scuba diving ... a business major . . . born in
Washington. D.C.
17
SAMUEL LEVI JOHNSON (20) — Junior
6-1, 188 (5/18/59) Gambrills, Maryland
Played but did not letter on the Hall of Fame Classic
Champions as a freshman and then lettered on the Sun
Bowl team as sophomore . . . played in all 1 1 games
last fall with 31 tackles and a pass interception . . .
bench presses over 315 and has good quickness . . .
came to Maryland from Arundel High where he was
a running back and defensive back and captained
the football team . . . his team beat Southern for
the county championships in '74 and Parkdale for the
state championship in '75 . . . all-state in high . . .
born in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
FRANK STEPHEN KOLENCIK (90) -
6-1, 225 (11/22/59) Cleveland, Ohio
Freshman
Had a lot of work with the Sun Bowl Team but did
not play as a freshman and will still have four years
eligibility . . . strong bench pressing 380 pounds . . .
defensive guard . . . was a middle guard and defensive
tackle for Lakewood St. Edward High ... on prep
all-american list . . . all-scholastic selection by the
Cleveland Press and Plain Dealer . . . captained the
football team and named the defensive MVP in high . . .
won the Golden Helmet Award . . . all-state selection
playing in the North-South all-star game . . . born in
Uniontown, Pennsylvania.
... on All-ACC Academic team both years . . . also on
the ACC honor roll his first year at Maryland but was
injured prior to the season and regained his year of
eligibility . . . starting his fourth year at Maryland with
two years of eligibility remaining . . . business manage-
ment major . . . captained the baseball team to the league
championship at Thomas S. Wootton High and helped
end Churchill's 26 game winning streak with a 7-6 win
in football . . . all-state and all-metropolitan in high
. . . national honor student in high with a 3.92 grade
point average . . . born in Jacksonville, North Carolina.
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Steve Trimble
Brian Matera
JOHN T. KREIDER (48) — Freshman
5-11, 215 (2/22/59) Cornwells Heights, Pennsylvania
Also had a lot of work with the Sun Bowl team as a
freshman last fall but did not play and is still a freshman
for eligibility . . . linebacker who has good strength
bench presing 375 . . . was an offensive tackle and line-
backer at Bensalem High . . . MVP in both football
and baseball . . . all-american, all-state, "Big SS^, top
100, Bucks County Player of Year, among honors he
received in high . . . captained both the football and
baseball teams in high . . . born in Philadelphia.
ROBERT "Bob" CHARLES LARKIN (79) — Junior
6-2, 255 (4/2/58) Monroeville, Pennsylvania
Strongside offensive guard on Sun Bowl team but
did not letter . . . came to Maryland from Gateway
High where he was an offensive guard and defensive
tackle winning all-WPIAL, and all-state honors . . .
captained the basketball and football team in high . . .
football team won WPIAL championship . . . business
major . . . born in Pittsburgh.
RALPH LEON LARY III (4) — Junior
6-2, 195 (3/6/58) Potomac, Maryland
Two year letterman safety . . . lettered as a freshman
on the Hall of Fame Classic Champions with 31 tackles, a
fumble recovery and an interception . . . had his inter-
ception against Richmond and returned it 30 yards . . .
on die Sun Bowl team and had 42 tackles missing two
games widi an injury . . . caused one fumble as sophomore
PHIL BRYAN LIVINGSTON (78) — Graduate
6-7, 270 (3/13/57) Gaithersburg, Maryland
Lettered on Sun Bowl team as a strongside tackle . . .
played on Hall of Fame Classic Champions but did not
letter . . . freshman in '75 and did not play in '76 . . .
will play this fall while attending graduate school work-
ing on his degree in Management and Finance . . .
he received two degrees at the May commencement, a
B.S. in Business Management and a B.A. in Government
and Politics ... he is a member of Omicron Delta
Kappa National Leadership Honorary Fraternity ... he
was also on the All-ACC Academic team in '78 . . .
all-state and all-metropolitan selection while playing for
John Harvill at Gaithersburg High . . . was a center
on the Gaithersburg basketball team diat beat DeMatha
68-65 in '73 . . . on Montgomery County AA Champions
in both football and basketball in high . . . played in
Maryland All-Star game . . . born in Havre de Grace,
Maryland.
JAY MICHAEL LOMAC (30) — Freshman
6-2, 210 (7/18/59) Bethesda, Maryland
Worked as a defensive end last year but did not play
and is a freshman for eligibility . . . moved to full-
back in spring and started there for the red team . . .
had a 16 yard pass reception in the game . . . was an
offensive tackle and defensive end at Winston Churchill
High where he was all-state, all-metropolitan and all-
american . . . also attended die American Community
School, Beirut, Lebanon . . . on state championship
teams in high beating Bowie in '76 championship game
while playing offensive tackle and beating Woodlawn in
18
'77 while playing defensive end . . . bench presses ovei
315 pounds . . . bom in Frankfurt, Germany.
KYLE DAVID LORTON (51) — Junior
6-3, 235 (2/15/58) Danville, Kentuck)
Center on Hall of Fame Classic Champions and Sun
Howl team but did nol letter . . . enrolled as a freshman
in '76 but was injured and regained the year of eligibility
. . . defensive and offensive end for Lakeshore High in
Michigan (72-74) and Boyle County High (74-76)
in Danville. Kentucky . . . co-captain of the football
team for two years ai Boyle County High where he was
all-state his senior year . . . also all-confcrenc c three
times . . . also captained the basketball team in high
earning two letters and three letters as a pitcher in
baseball . . . started at defensive end for Lakeshores con-
ference champions in 73 . . . horn in La Porte. Indiana.
BRIAN FRANCES MATERA (53) — Senior
6-1, 215 (10/18/57) Pennsauken, New Jersey
Lettered at linebacker on the Hall of Fame Classic
Champions with 36 tackles and one fumble recovery
. . . credited with a caused fumble in the bowl game . . .
lettered on die Sun Bowl team as die starting right
linebacker with 122 tackles, five in the opponents back-
field, six for no gain, one quarterback sack, caused three
fumbles, recovered three fumbles, blocked three passes
with his pass rush and intercepted one pass . . . had
16 tackles in the North Carolina game and 15 each in
the Tulane and North Carolina State games . . . Scholastic
Coach Ail-American at Pennsauken high where he cap-
tained the football team and lettered three years as a
linebacker . . . strong bench pressing 360 pounds . . .
born in Pennsauken.
jump • . . mile relay team placed second iii iIh: state
. . . on undefeated football team in high . . . also played
basketball in high . . . education major . . . horn in
Johnstown.
ROBERT "Bob" M \KK MILKOVICH (10) —
Sophomore
6-3, 210 (8/18/59) Rockville, Maryland
On the Sun Bowl ic.im hut did nol play and remains
a sophomore for eligibility . . . had a fine spring practice
and completed nine of 17 passes for 130 yards and a
touchdown in the spring game . . . waged close battle
with Mike Tic e lor starting quarterback role through-
out spring practice . . . u.is ,i quarterback at Thomas
Wootton where he lettered three times each in three
sports, football, basketball and baseball and captained
all three sports ... a guard in basketball and first
baseman in the baseball team . . . strong, bench pressing
over 350 pounds . . . sisur Melissa also attended Mary-
land . . . I'ncle Steve Milkovich also attended Maryland
. . . on .Montgomery County football champions . . .
born in Endicott, New York.
KARL DEAN NIEHAUS (35) — Freshman
6-1, 205 (9/3/59) Barberton, Ohio
Defensive end who did not play last fall and still a
freshman for eligibility . . . came to Maryland from
Barberton where he was a linebacker, served as co-
captain and received MVP honors . . . older brother
Les was an all-american in track and Fd played basketball
. . . born in Barberton.
Jimmy Shaffer
DAVID WADE PACFLLA (60) — Freshman
6-2, 235 (2/7/60) Reading, Pennsylvania
Quickside offensive guard starting for white team in
spring game . . . did not play last fall and still a fresh-
man for eligibility . . . strong bench pressing over 340
pounds . . . came to Maryland from Reading High where
he was all-state. "Big 33'\ and lettered three years in
football ... a heavyweight wrestler for two years and
weight man on the track team for two years . . .
captained the football and wrestling teams . . . football
team was Central Penn. Champions defeating Steelton for
the title . . . won offensive lineman of year honors
one year and came back to win defensive lineman of
year the following year . . . born in Swickley. Pennsyl-
vania.
SAMUEL PERRY MFDILE (6) — Junior
5-11, 180 (4/26/58) Johnstown. Pennsylvania
Played but did not letter on the Sun Bowl team . . .
played in eight games as a defensive back with nine
tackles and one pass interception . . . bench presses
300 pounds . . . played for junior varsity in "76 and did
not play in '77 . . . came to Maryland from Westmont
Hilltop where he was a receiver and safety for three
years, captained the team and was named the best
defensive player . . . also on the track team for three
years running on die mile relay, die 440 and the long
JOHN G. PAPUCHIS (9) — Senior
6-0. 205 (8/1/57) Silver Spring, Maryland
Walk on punter who made the Cotton Bowl team
and since has played on the Hall of Fame Classic
Champions and the Sun Bowl team ... in addition to
serving as a backup punter he has handled the all im-
portant chores of holding for the placekickers . . .
was a quarterback, kicker and punter for Albert Einstein
High . . . also lettered in baseball for three years . . .
captained the football team in "75 ... a business major
. . . born in Washington. D.C.
19
LYLE PECK (47) — Junior
6-4, 220 (5/17/58) Cumberland, Maryland
Defensive end in spring after working at linebacker
and fullback in past . . . played but did not letter on
Hall of Fame Classic Champions with 18 tackles, two
in the backfield accounting for 13 yards in losses and
caused one fumble . . . did not play in '78 . . . has
good quickness . . . all-state fullback at Fort Hill High
and had a 92 yard scoring run in the State Championship
game . . . handled the blocking chores in high with his
Maryland teammate Steve Trimble the ball carrier . . .
when not blocking he carried the ball 135 times for
741 yards and a 5.1 average per carry with seven touch-
downs and a two point conversion . . . also played
basketball and was a sprinter on the track team for
Fort Hill . . . brother played for Morgan State . . .
born in Cumberland.
BRIAN JOSEPH RIENDEAU (64) — Sophomore
6-2, 245 (3/29/58) Virginia Beach, Virginia
Strongside offensive guard . . . did not play last fall
so still has sophomore eligibility . . . strong bench
pressing 425 pounds . . . earned 10 letters at Frank Cox
high including a school record six as the weight man on
the track team . . . three letters as a tackle in football
and one as a heavyweight wrestler . . . captained the foot-
ball team in high . . . all-state, all-tidewater and district
MVP . . . Frank Cox team was district co-champions . . .
set school record for shot put and discuss and fifth in the
state in shot put . . . also outstanding football player
in district in high . . . born in Jacksonville, Florida.
JEFFREY LEE RODENBERGER (42) — Sophomore
6-2, 220 (11/3/59) Trumbauersville, Pennsylvania
Fullback candidate who had a fine spring practice . . .
can catch the ball as well as run with it . . . caught four
in the spring game . . . came to Maryland from Quaker-
town Community High where he earned three letters
each in football and baseball and two as a heavyweight
wrestler . . . all-conference in football and baseball and
honorable mention all-state in football . . . brother
played football at Western Kentucky . . . scored both
touchdowns in the Bucks County All-Star game won
12-0 . . . captained both the football and baseball teams
in high . . . Business major . . . born in Quakertown,
Pennsylvania.
GERALD "Jerry " STANLEY ROGERS (70) —
Sophomore
6-1, 230 (10/10/60) Pottstown, Pennsylvania
Lettered as a freshman tackle on the Sun Bowl team
. . . played in 10 games with nine tackles . . . brother
Stanley was All-ACC and honorable mention all-american
for Terps in '74 . . . brother Michael started at Cincinnati
as a sophomore . . . cousins Pam and Pat (twins) are
also attending Maryland . . . while at St. Pius X he
captained the football team as a nose guard and offensive
tackle, co-captained the track team as the weight man
. . . all-big 33 in high ... all four brothers served as
captains of their teams in high, including Michael a
basketball and track man . . . undefeated as an amateur
boxer and cites his brother Stan as his inspiration in
sports . . . born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
GEORGE SCOTT (33) — Junior
6-1, 205 (1/6/58) Inwood, New York
Missed die entire 1978 season with a stress fracture of
the right leg, after gaining 1,263 yards rushing in first
two years and adding 122 yards in two bowl games.
ATT YDS. AVG. LG. TD CLASS
1976
82
369
4.5
18
5
Freshman
1976
11
47
4.3
15
0
Cotton Bowl
1977
188
894
4.8
41
6
Sophomore
1977
24
75
3.1
19
2
Hall of Fame
Caught his first collegiate pass in the Cotton Bowl
and added seven receptions in 1977 with one touchdown
catch . . . also had two receptions in Hall of Fame
Classic . . . took over for Alvin Maddox when he was
injured as a freshman . . . Maddox had taken over
when Steve Atkins was injured . . . took over again
as sophomore with both Atkins and Maddox injured
. . . had four games of over 100 yards including a school
record 237 on a record 42 carries . . .
124 on 21 carries vs Virginia, 1976
171 on 35 carries vs Richmond, 1977
173 on 31 carries vs Virginia, 1977
237 on 42 carries vs Villanova, 1977
has good speed and good blocker . . . has worked at
fullback also and worked at both positions in spring . . .
as freshman did not carry the ball in first five games of
season and then had 369 in last six games ... as sopho-
more picked up 581 yards on 108 carries in the last three
games of the season, the best three game performance in
Maryland football history ... in the three games had a
record 237 against Villanova, followed with 171 against
Richmond and 173 against Virginia . . . scored first
collegiate touchdown against Wake "Forest on a one
yard run breaking a 7-7 tie . . . ACC rookie of week
for his performance against Wake Forest as freshman
. . . 894 yards ranks as sixth best ever by a Terrapin
... he was the last recruit signed for die 1976 class.
JkJ-J.
Marlin Van Horn
BRADLEY DARYL SENFT (39) — Junior
6-1, 210 (10/12/58) York, Pennsylvania
Letterman defensive end on Sun Bowl team, playing in
10 games with 23 tackles, one quarterback sack, one
recovered fumble and a blocked pass with his pass rush
. . . did not play in '77 after scoring seven touchdowns
20
for the '76 junior \aisii\ with .37!) yards rushing . . .
mi the Pennsylvania big 33 team against the Ohio all-
stars while at Central York High . . . has good quickness
and bench pusses over 315 pounds . . . captained tlic-
football and basketball teams in high . . . all-state
selection and MVP For York County . . . industrial
education major . . . also played basketball and a sprintei
on the track team ... in Maryland JV game he carried
20 times against Fork Union for 24.3 yards ami scored
four touchdowns on runs o! five, nine. 21 and 95 \.uds
. . . horn in York.
JETHRO VNDRE SENIOR (91) —Sophomore
6-2, 240 (2 3 59) Baltimore, Maryland
Defensive tackle . . . did not play in '78 and still
has .sophomore eligibility . . . captained the football
team at Northwestern High where Ik- was a ta< kle and all-
state selection . . . also a heavyweight wrestler in high
. . . on M.S. A., championship team at Northwestern and
National Football Foundation and 1 1. ill of lame Scholar
Athlete . . . first team all-State . . . horn in Baltimore.
Eric Sievers
Touchdown Club Tiinnue award and Brookland Club
player of year award . . . on honoi roll his last three
years in high . . . Scholastii Coach Ui-American and
on championship team in '73 . . . played in Shrine
Vll-Star name . . . brothei Gary and sisters Bev, Peggy,
and Jerry all :nded Maryland with Bei pi:
1. 1< io.se and tennis foi Terps . . . married to the former
No. i Kay Carstairs and has a son Jeremy Kevin . . .
Engineering major . . . horn in Takoma Park, Maryland.
ERIC st OTT SIEVERS (85) — Senior
6-4, 230 (11/9 57) Vrlington, Virginia
Three year leterman as tight end for Terps and all-
american candidate alter aclne\ inn i onsensus all-amerii an
honors at Washington-Lee High • • • has good speed and
bench presses 423 pounds and handles 600 pounds
(h-A(\ lilt . . . caught 21 passes lasl fall for 2.">K \ards
and one touchdown after Hi for 300 yards as a sopho-
more . . . has played in three howl games, catching his
first collegiate pass as a freshman in the Cotton Bowl
. . . first catch came on a fourth and 14 situation for
a 17 yard gain and a first down . . . on the next play
he caught a II yard reception lor his lirst touchdown
. . . had a (il yard pass play as a sophomore and then
added a 57 yard reception in the Hall of Fame classic
against Minnesota . . . has caught live passes in howl
games for 110 yards and a touchdown . . . he was a
tight end. kicker, linebacker and middle guard in high
. . . also a place kicking candidate- lor the 'I erps . . .
captained the football and basketball teams in high
and was MVP on the track team where he ran the 440
and on the 880 relay and handled the weight chores
. . . caught 14 touchdown passes in high, threw for
a touchdown, kicked 40 I'AT's. three field goals and
caught 4(i passes for 820 yards . . . cm championship
9-1 football team in high . . . father is a graduate ol
MIT . . . ACC offensive lineman of the week last fall
for his two catches, a 1.3 yard touchdown and out-
standing blocking job against Tulane in the season
opener . . . co-winner of Maryland's offensive lineman
of the year award . . . business major . . . born in I rbana.
Illinois.
GREGORY WHITFIELD SMITH (27) — Freshman
6-0. 195 (3 12/60) Springfield, Virginia
Defensive back who did not play last fall and has
freshman eligibility . . . mi'sed spring practice with m-
JAMES "Jimmy" KEVIN SHAFFER (83) — Senior
6-1, 200 (6/8/58) Adelphi, Mankind
Three year letterman defensive end . . . lettered as a
freshman on the Cotton Bowl team, a sophomore on
the Hall of Fame Classic Champions and last fall on
the Sun Bowl team . . . injured and played in only nine
games last fall with 71 tackles, two quarterback sacks
and one tackle for no gain, one pass interception and
one blocked pass with his pass rush . . . had 64 tackles
as sophomore with six quarterback sacks and 10 tackles
in the opponents backfield, also recovered three fumbles
and caused one . . . had 14 tackles in eight games as a
freshman . . . came to Maryland from nearby High Point
High where he lettered three years for John Voight as
a defensive end . . . all-state and received the Washington
Rick Fasano
21
jury . . . came to Maryland from West Springfield High
where he was a free safety winning all-northern district
honors . . . also played tennis in high . . . president
of Fellowship of Christian Adiletes . . . born in Pensacola,
Florida.
JAMES ARTHUR SOMMER (57) — Sophomore
6-0, 240 (6/28/59) Altoona, Pennsylvania
Offensive quickside guard . . . did not play in 78
and still has sophomore eligibility . . . linebacker and
fullback for Bishop Guilfoyle High . . . all-state and
on Big 33 team . . . three year letterman in football
and three in baseball where he achieved MVP honors as
a catcher and pitcher . . . also lettered in basketball
one year . . . brother John played football at Clarion
State College . . . captained his football team two
years in high . . . MVP in Big 33 all-star game . . .
born in Altoona.
touchdown pass and 227 yards on the completions . . .
earned three letters in football and basketball and one
in lacrosse at Central Islip High . . . all-state in football,
all league, all Long Island and winner of the Hansen
Trophy . . . captained the football and basketball
teams . . . played in the band also . . . plays the saxa-
phone . . . born in Bayshore, Long Island, New York.
VINCE LOUIS TOMASETTI (52) — Freshman
6-1, 235 (11/18/59) Old Forge, Pennsylvania
Center who did not play last fall and still has fresh-
man eligibility . . . was a center and linebacker at Old
Forge High where he was all-state and "Big 33'''' . . .
all scholastic for three years and listed on the top 100 in
Pennsylvania in high . . . captained the football team
... on district champions in '75 . . . center and line-
backer in high ... on winning team in PIAA Bowl
against Wyoming Valley West despite underdog role . . .
born in Lower Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
LARRY STEWART (69) — Senior
6-4, 280 (1/11/56) Portsmouth, Virginia
Two year letterman . . . played on Cotton Bowl team
as a freshman and lettered on the Hall of Fame Classic
Champions and Sun Bowl teams . . . Parade and
Scholastic Coach All-American at Woodrow Wilson
High . . . has strength bench pressing 450 pounds . . .
was a guard and middle linebacker in high and rated
one of the top five players in the state by the Roanoke
Times ... a four sport letterman in high playing
basketball, wrestling and as die weight man on the
track team.
DAVID FRANKLIN TAYLOR (26) — Freshman
6-0, 180 (2/9/60) Bridgeport, West Virginia
Injured last fall and did not play . . . still has fresh-
man eligibility . . . was a safety and tailback for
Bridgeport High where he also played basketball and
wrestled . . . defensive captain in high . . . all-state
... his uncle Frank Loria was an all-american at Virginia
Tech . . . born in Evanston, Illinois.
Ralph Lary
JOHN TICE (82) — Freshman
6-5, 225 (6/22/60) Central Islip, New York
Center and defensive tackle at Central Islip High
. . . moved to tight end for Terps . . . did not play last
fall and still has freshman eligibility . . . followed brother
Mike to Maryland . . . also earned three letters in Lacrosse
in high . . . born in Bayshore, Long Island, New York.
MICHAEL PETER TICE (14) — Junior
6-7, 230 (2/2/59) Central Islip, New York
Lettered as a sophomore on the Sun Bowl team . . .
strong thrower . . . suffered a shoulder separation in
spring game diat required an operation . . . expected
to be back at full strength in fall . . . only quarterback
widi game experience on team . . . completed 20 of
37 passes last fall apjx;aring in nine games with one
STEVE GARFIELD TRIMBLE (40) — Junior
5-11, 184 (5/11/58) Cumberland, Maryland
Lettered as starting defensive back on Sun Bowl team
. . . had 55 tackles, recovered two fumbles and intercepted
two passes . . . one tackle at line of scrimmage for no
gain . . . scored a touchdown when Todd Benson
knocked die ball loose from N.C. State kickoff return
man and Trimble recovered it in end zone for touch-
down ... on Scholastic Coach All-American list at
Fort Hill High where he achieved all-state honors also
. . . rushed for 1,677 yards and scored 200 jx>ints in
12 games with 32 touchdowns and four two point con-
versions breaking a 27 year old city record . . . had
300 carries with a 5.5 average per carry, 2,267 all
purpose yards . . . completed passes for 87 yards . . .
caught six passes for 147 yards and returned 19 punts
and kickoffs for 291 yards . . . had two touchdowns
22
called back on returns of more than 70 yards . . .
played For former Terp Charlie La t timer .it Fori Hill,
a school thai has produced .1 dozen 01 more Terp stars
in the past . . . captained the state championship football
team . . . freshman in '76 and did not play in 77 . . .
bench presses over 300 pounds . . . also punt returner
for Terps . . . horn in Cumberland.
GREG V VANDERHOUT (92) — Sophomore
6-0, 240 (II «) 58) Wilmington, Delaware
Denfensive guard . . . did not play last fall and still
has sophomore eligibility . . . strong bench pressing
415 ... a fullback and linebacker at Concord High and
shot putter on the track team . . . two years all-state
and on all-american lists in high . . . captained the foot-
hall team at Concord . . . captain in the Blue-Gold
all-star game . . . Criminology major . . . horn in Cum-
berland, Maryland.
M Mil. IN HENRY VAN HORN JR. (62) — Senior
6-0, 239 (7/12/57) Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania
Defensive guard . . . lettered on Hall of Fame Cham-
pions and Sun Bowl team . . . had 128 tackles last fall
with 14 accounting for 101 yards in losses by opponents
... 1 1 quarterback sacks fourth highest total ever by
Terp . . . eight tackles for no gain . . . caused three
fumbles and recovered three fumbles . . . had 15 tackles
in the Clemson game for his season high . . . ACC defen-
sive lineman of the week for his performance in the
Wake Forest game . . . played in three regular season
games and was on the Cotton Bowl team as a freshman
. . . linebacker at Selinsgrove Area High . . . captained
the wrestling team tor one year and the track team
for two years ... on championship team in both sports
.... set a national freshman record for the javelin
in high and as a senior threw the javelin 222-11 . . .
all conference for three years in football and league
M\T on offense in "74 and MVP on defense in '75 . . .
all Big 33 . . . fourth in state wrestling championships
. . . conference champion and district champion in
javelin, shot put and discus . . . two years each for
javelin and shot and senior year for discus . . . second
in state championship in javelin and shot put . . .
joined the Maryland track team three days prior to
Penn State-Quantico meet and won the javelin throw
for the Terps as a freshman . . . had one quarterback
sack as a freshman . . . placed second in Nationals in
high with a 217-3 throw in California . . . MVP in Big
33 game . . . bench presses 415 pounds . . . born in
Baltimore. Maryland.
his junior year . . . second team ..ll-st.ite in '76 and
first team in 77 . . . on championship team in '71
engineering major .
77
Balti
electric ,il
born
V JOSEPH \\ll.kl\s (37) - Freshman
6-1. 210 (12/2/59) Pleasantville, New J,
Linebacker who did not play last fall and still has
freshman eligibility . . . came to M. inland as a tight
end and linebacker from Holy Spiril High where he
was all-stale . . . also on the- National Schoolboy Cham-
pion five man crew . . . football Icon won fonfrnuci
championship . . . bench presses 325 . . . born in
Atlantic City.
WAYNE WING! [ELD (24) — Freshman
6-1, 190 (2/3/60) Richmond. Virginia
Did not play in fall and still has freshman eligibility
. . . moved to tailback in spring and ran well there
. . . had 71 yards and two touchdowns in spring game
. . . came to Maryland from George Wythe High.
JAMES TODD WRIGHT (96) — Sophomore
6-2, 230 (2/19/59) Parma Heights. Ohio
Prefers to use Todd . . . defensive guard . . . did not
play in fall and retains sophomore eligibility . . . all-
league and all-N.E. Ohio playing for Valley Forge
High . . . defensive MVP in championship game against
Lakewood . . . won league championship with 9-1
record . . . born in Ravenna.
■
Kervin Wyatt
Paul Glamp
TIMOTHY "Tim" FRANCIS WHITTIE (5) —
Freshman
5-10. 180 (2 24/60) Baltimore. Maryland
Worked as defensive back last fall but did not play
and still has freshman eligibility . . . moved to tailback
in spring and ran well . . . came to Maryland from
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute where he was an All-
Metropolitan halfback for Augie Waibel . . . played
three years of football and lacrosse and wrestled for
four years earning 10 letters in high . . . captained
the football team his senior year and the wrestling team
KERVIN DORVN WYATT (65) — Senior
6-1. 242 (10/17/57) Hillcrest Heights. Maryland
Shared Maryland's offensive lineman of year honors
with Eric Sievers on the Sun Bowl team . . . three
year letterman on Gator, Cotton and Sun Bowl teams
. . . injured and did not play in 77 . . . has played
quickside guard, quickside tackle, linebacker and now
settled at strongside guard . . . bench presses 355 pounds
. . . had 18 tackles as sophomore linebacker . . . joined
23
varsity as freshman due to injuries to upper classmen
and played well on the Gator Bowl team . . . all-state
at Potomac High and played in Maryland all-star game
in Byrd Stadium . . . played in Cole Field House in state
basketball championships citing that and beating Bowie
High in football for the first time in Potomac history
17-16 as his most memorable moments in sports . . .
earned two letters as a pitcher on the baseball team in
high . . . honored as Outstanding Young American by
Rotary Club of Southern Prince Georges County . . .
born in Washington, D.C.
four years baseball two years and football his senior
year . . . named best defensive player of year in high
. . . MVP in basketball and MVP in baseball . . . born
in Wausau.
CHARLES DeGRAFFENREID WYSOCKI (18) —
Sophomore
5-11, 190 (12/7/59) Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Lettered as a freshman tailback on the Sun Bowl
team . . . only tailback returning from that team . . .
carried 29 times in 10 games for 103 yards . . . had 96
yards rushing in spring game and had fine spring prac-
tice . . . also wrestled for Terps last year as freshman . . .
all Big 33, all-state, Coaches Prep All-American in foot-
ball at Meyers High . . . all-scholastic in junior and
senior year and won the Mohawk award both years
. . . broke the touchdown record for Meyers High and
gained over 1,000 yards for three consecutive years . . .
three times district wrestling champion and outstanding
wrestler in district his senior year . . . third in the
regional tournament his sophomore and junior year
. . . regional champion his senior year . . . all-state
wresder as senior . . . born in Wilkes-Barre.
1979
SIGNEES
PETER SCOTT ANTONELLI
6-3, 250, Cedarhurst, New York
Born 12/30/60 in Lawrence, New York . . . was a
defensive tackle for Lawrence High where he captained
the football and wrestling teams . . . four year letterman
in wrestling and Nassau County Champion . . . weight
man on track team . . . football team won conference
championship with 7-1 record . . . won public speaking
awards three years in high.
RON YOUNG (23) — Junior
6-0, 170 (6/2/58) Silver Spring, Maryland
Joined Terps as walk-on and made the Sun Bowl
squad as a defensive back . . . played in three games
and had two tackles . . . from Springbrook, High.
PATRICK JOHN ZILLMAN (56) — Sophomore
6-0, 205 (1/5/60) Wausau, Wisconsin
Played in eight games as freshman linebacker on
Sun Bowl team . . . had 10 tackles and caused one
fumble . . . fullback and linebacker at Wausau West
High . . . all-state and all-conference and named to
Shrine all-stars . . . captained the basketball team for
Rodney Caldwell
SHAWN BRUCE BENSON
6-3, 230, Altoona, Pennsylvania
Born 3/13/61 in Altoona . . . Captained the football
team at Altoona Area High where he lettered three
years and was voted MVP honors . . . also lettered in
wrestling . . . started for the varsity as a sophomore in
high school . . . brother Todd is a junior letterman for
the Terps . . . Brother Brad played with New York
Giants.
JOSEPH MARK BRKOVICH
6-0, 210, McKeesport, Pennsylvania
Born 3/9/61 in McKeesport . . . Captained the foot-
ball and wrestling teams at Elizabeth-Forward High
where he was a fullback and linebacker . . . voted All-
Big 10, Top 44 honors . . . scored 23 touchdowns and a
three year letterman in bodi football and basketball
. . . third in WPIAL as heavyweight wrestler and weight
man on track team for two years . . . lost to Buder
in playoff game 27-10 in 78.
DAVID JOHN D'ADDIO
6-4, 220, Union, New Jersey
Born 7/13/61 in Newark . . . fullback and defensive
end . . . also weight man on track team for Union High
. . . All-State honors in football . . . on state champion-
ship team . . . won tide against Plainfield in Meadow-
lands Stadium.
24
RUSSELL DAVIS
(i-4. 205, Steelton, Pennsylvania
Born 6/16/60 . . . All-Big 33 for Central Dauphin
East . . . defensive end . . . one of the TOP 100 in the
nation . . . has excellent quickness.
M Mvk I>\\ II) 1)1 l)\
6-4, 250, Plymouth, Pennsylvania
Born 2/4/61 in Wilkes Barre Ul-State and Bis 33
for Wyoming Valley Wesl where he captained the
Football and track teams . . . high school all-american
... weight man on track team . . .three year letterman
in both sports . . . excellent quickness.
NORMAN JULIUS ESIASON
6-4, 195, Bast [slip, New York
Born 4/17/61 in West Islip . . . Quarterback and
kicker for East Islip High where he won All-State
honors . . . lettered three years each in football, basket-
ball and baseball . . . twice All-Ixague in all three
sports . . . Captained all three sports . . . football team
won the Rutgers Trophy . . . threw three fourth quarter
td passes against Brentwood after trailing 20-6 for 35-
20 win . . . East [slip Most Valuable athlete and Most
Valuable Back .
HOWARD EUBANKS
6-2, 195, Charlottesville, Virginia
Born 12/1/59 . . . came to Terps from Massanutten
Military Academy joining the team for the spring
semester . . . injured in spring . . . safety and defensive
end . . . went to Massanutten from Charlottesville High.
TYRONE FIRMAN
6-1. 240. Reistertown. Maryland
Born 2/19/61 . . . running back for Franklin
County High where he averaged seven yards a carry
and gained 1.173 yards rushing . . . scored 20 touch-
downs . . . All-State and All-Metropolitan.
JAMES M.I.I \ JOY( l
6-4, 205, Gaithersburg, Maryland
Born 9/12/61 in Cumberland . . . offensive and
defensive tackle for Gaithersburg High where he
captained the football team . . . on co-championship
team in high . . . Montgomery County defensive player
ol week while beating state champions Seneca Valley
. . . best defensive lineman and all metropolitan in
football playing for John llarvill . . . all-metropolitan
and Penn Relays Champion as well as Maryland State
Champion as weight man on tra< k team where he was
coached by his falher Fred Joyce . . . his father played
for Maryland as a three year letterman . . . recorded a
61 fool shol pul and 175 fool throw in the discus in
high . . . Maryland Track Coach Frank Costello rates
him the top high school prospect iii the East in the
shot put . . . father made his first start for Terps as a
sophomore.
MICHAEL Willow LEWIS
6-3. 190, Rocky Mount, .North Carolina
Born 2/2/60 in Rocky Mount . . . Captained the
football team two years and the basketball team one at
Rocky Mount High . . . Mi-State and All-American
honors in high . . . on stale championship team in foot-
ball and runner-up team in basketball in high . . .
played in North Carolina-South Carolina Shrine Bowl
. . . from same high school as Buck Williams the Terps
ACC Basketball Rookie of the Year . . . excellent quick-
ness with good hands.
ROBERT JOHN MATTIS
6-1, 195. Elizabethville, Pennsylvania
Born 2/23/61 in Harrisburg . . . two year letterman
as tailback for Upper Dauphin Area High . . . named
to the Big 33 team ... on undefeated 10-0 champion-
ship football team . . . also lettered three years in
basketball and four years as sprinter on track team . . .
captained the football and basketball teams . . . basket-
ball teams had records of 18-1 and 18-0 . . . Civil
Engineering Major.
PALL RAYMOND GENTZEL
6-4, 215, Bowie. Maryland
Born 11/9/61 in Santa Monica, Californi? . . .
defensive tackle for DeMatha High where he captained
the football team . . . brother Ken played for Bowie
and University of Georgia . . . brother Bob and sister
Kathy attended Maryland . . . played three years for
DeMatha . . . Honor Roll student.
SCOTT REGINALD HAYES
6-2, 250, Glen Allen. Virginia
Born 12 16 59 in Richmond ... on championship
team at Hermitage High and played in State East-West
All-Star game . . . middle guard in high.
WILLIAM JOSEPH McFADDEN
6-1, 185. West Islip. New York
Born 7/30/60 in West Islip . . . Captained the foot-
ball, basketball and lacrosse teams at West Islip High
. . . all-conference in all three sports and all-Long Island
in football . . . played tailback, quarterback and defen-
sive back in football lettering three times . . . also
earned four letters each in lacrosse and basketball . . .
in game against Lawrence High had two punt returns
of 55 and 82 yards for touchdowns. 109 yards rushing,
threw 52 yard touchdown pass off option play, inter-
cepted two passes and made 13 tackles as defensive
safety . . . named the Outstanding Male Athlete at
West Islip High . . . named to play in Long Island All-
Star game . . . has excellent speed . . . business adminis-
tration major.
25
JOHN LEE NASH
6-1, 195, Baltimore, Maryland
Born 8/7/61 in Newport News, Virginia . . . quarter-
back and running back for Baltimore Polytechnic Institute
where he was All-Metropolitan, All-MSA and Prep Ath-
lete of Week . . . two year letterman in football and four
letters in track . . . captained the football team . . .
MSA Champions in 77 and '78 . . . track champions
in '78 . . . had 81 yard touchdown run in the '78
championship game . . . rushed for 166 yards against
Oilman.
JOSEPH PAUL NIEDERHELMAN
6-0, 195, Cincinnati, Ohio
Born 9/23/60 in Cincinnati . . . Captained the Roger
Bacon High team and named the best defensive line-
man . . . all-conference . . . four year letterman in
football and track and letterman in wrestling . . . con-
ference discus champion and MVP in track . . . Student
Council President in High.
GARY LEE PEARSON
6-0, 190, Bristol, Connecticut
Born 3/4/61 in Manhattan, New York . . . Captained
the football team at Bristol Central . . . all-state and
all-american in high . . . carried 54 times in champion-
ship game as tailback ... set all-time scoring and
rushing records in high . . . cousin is Willia Hall with
Oakland Raiders.
WILLIAM PORTER PUGH
6-4, 200, Cincinnati, Ohio
Born 7/9/61 in Cincinnati . . . All-State for Marie-
mont High where he was named to the Top 100 high
school players in nation . . . also played at Upper
Arlington . . . tight end and punter . . . All-State as
tight end and all-league as linebacker and punter as
well ... business major.
GEORGE ADEL SAAH
6-2. 245, Silver Spring, Maryland
Born 2/28/61 . . . captained the football and track
teams at Montgomery Blair . . . guard and tackle in
football and weight man on track team . . . All-American
in track and Indoor Shot Put record holder . . . won
first state shot put championship while only 15 . . .
three state championships in shot put.
JOSEPH SPENCER SCRIBER
6-2, 180, Hollywood. Maryland
Born 5/7/61 in Leonardtown . . . captained the foot-
ball and basketball teams at Chopticon Senior High . . .
defensive back and split end . . . all-conference split
end . . . all-conference and MVP as defensive back . . .
won Washington District Football Officials Award . . .
also MVP in track as triple and long jumper.
JONATHAN DARIOS SIMMONS
6-0, 180, Baltimore, Maryland
Born 7/1/61 in Fort Meade, Maryland . . . Corner-
back and Linebacker at Baltimore Polytechnic Higli
where he captained the football team . . . lettered twice
in football and track . . . sprinter on track team . . .
on MSA Championship team in football . . . returned
an interception 55 yards for touchdown as his most
memorable moment.
HARRY ARMOND VENEZIA, JR.
6-4, 250, Norristown, Pennsylvania
Born 7/17/60 in Norristown . . . captained the football
team at Bishop Kenrick where he was alLstate and named
to the Pennsylvania Big 33 team and the Montgomery
County All-Star game.
LOUIS GREGORY WEEKS
6-2 210, Glen Bumie, Maryland
Born 1/28/61 in Baltimore . . . captained the football
and track team at Glen Bumie High . . . fullback and
linebacker in football and sprinter on track team . . .
all-metropolitan as linebacker . . . married to former
Michelle Masteran and has a son Christopher Michael
. . . won the Jesse Owens Track Classic while in High as a
sprinter.
JUNIOR
VARSITY SCHEDULE
Sept. 7
Milford Academy
14
West Point Prep
21
at West Virginia
Oct. 26
at Navy
TELEVISION & RADIO COVERAGE
Sept. 8 Villanova (1 :30 PM)
Sept. 15 Clemson (.'3:20 PM)
Sept. 23 Misissippi State (1:30 PM)
Sept. 29 Kentucky (1:30 PM)
Oct. 6 Perm Stale (1:30 I'M)
Oct. 13 N.C. State (1:00 PM)
WBFF (45) Baltimore 11:00 PM
WTTG ( 5) Washington 9:00 Wl
ABC REGIONAL NETWORK 3:20 P.M. LIVE
WBFF (45)
WTTG ( 5)
WBFF
WJLA
WBFF
WJLA
WBFF
WJLA
(45)
( 7)
(45)
( 7)
(45)
( 7)
Baltimore
Washington
Baltimore
Washington
Baltimore
Washington
Baltimore
Washington
11:00
9:00
11:00
11:30
11:00
11:30
11:00
11:30
PM
\\1
PM
PM
PM
PM
PM
PM
Sept 8
Sept 9
Sept. 23
Sept 24
Sept. 29
Sept. 29
NOTE: ESPN will cablecast nationally the Villanova and North Carolina State games with de
layed times to be announced.
The Jerry Claiborne Show will be televised by WJLA (7) Washington each Saturday throughout
the season prior to die NCAA game of the week. WBFF (45) Baltimore will also carry the Claiborne
Show with the time to be announced. Mai Campbell will host the Claiborne show.
RADIO NETWORK
ORIGINATING STATION: WMAL (630) with Johnny Holliday and Tim Brant
MARYLAND
Annapolis
WNAV-AM
1430
Baltimore
WFBR-AM
1300
Bel Air
VWOB-AM
1520
Cambridge
WCEM-AM
WESP-FM
1240
106.3
Chestertown
WCTR-AM
1530
Cumberland
WKGO-FM
106.1
Frederick
WFMD-AM
930
Hagerstown
WARK-AM
WWCS-FM
1490
106.9
Havre de G
race
WASA-AM
WHDG-FM
L330
103.7
Leonardtown
WKIK-AM
1370
Ocean City
WETT-AM
1590
Prince Fred
•rii k
WMJS-FM
92.7
Salisbury
WBOC-AM
960
Thurmont
WTHU-AM
1450
Westminster
WTTR-FM
100.7
VIRGINIA
i
PENNSYLVANIA
Yorktown WYVA-FM 94.1 Chambersburg WCBG-AM 1590
Salem WJLM-FM 93.5 j
WEST VIRGINIA
Berkeley Springs WCST-AM 1010
WCST-FM 93.5
NORTH CAROLINA
Raleigh WPTF-AM 680
(Will carry Kentucky Game)
NOTE: All stations do not carry
entire schedule due to local
obligations.
MARYLAND'S BOWL RECORD
Jan.
1948
Gator
20
Georgia
20
^^V ^r ^ v^t
Jan.
1950
Gator
20
Missouri
7
Jan.
1952
Sugar
28
Tennessee
13
Pl^- A
Jan.
1954
Orange
0
Oklahoma
7
Jan.
1956
Orange
6
Oklahoma
20
Dec.
28
1973
Peach
16
Georgia
17
Dec.
16
1974
Liberty
3
Tennessee
7
Dec.
29
1975
Gator
13
Florida
0
m M
Jan.
1
1977
Cotton
21
Houston
30
Dec.
22
1977
Hall of Fame
17
Minnesota
7
Dec.
23
1978
Sun
0
Texas
42
Johnny Holliday
Tim Brant
27
#979
TERP
OPPONENTS
VILLANOVA
CLEMSON
MISSISSIPPI STATE
KENTUCKY
PENN STATE
NORTH CAROLINA STATE
WAKE FOREST
DUKE
NORTH CAROLINA
LOUISVILLE
VIRGINIA
VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY
September 8 1:30 P.M.
College Park, Maryland
Byrd Stadium (45,000)
COACH: Dick Bedesem
(Villanova '53)
OVERALL RECORD: 19-24-1
VILLANOVA RECORD: 19-24-1
LOCATION: Villanova, Pennsylvania
ENROLLMENT: 5,772
COLORS: Blue and White
NICKNAME: Wildcats
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Dr. Ted Aceto
ASSISTANT COACHES: Ken Baker, Dick Bedesem
Jr., Bill Cimochowski, Joey Clark, Mike Danaher,
Tim Erb, Lou Ferry, Bob Sabol, Walt Techtmann
TE\M STRENGTH: Overall balance, Receivers, Of-
fensive Backfield, Defensive Line, Linebackers
TEAM WEAKNESS: Secondary and Offensive Line
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 28
LETTERMEN LOST: 15
TOP RETURNING BACKS: QB Pat O'Brien, DB
David Martin, TB Dana Shelton, DB Dan Burke, SAP
Bernie Hober
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: DT Howie Long, DT
Steve Duda, DE Don Brooks, OG John Liszka, TE Paul
Columbia
TOP NEWCOMERS: WR Willie Sydnor, C. Steve
Sugden
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: TE Paul Columbia,
QB Pat O'Brien, DB David Martin, DG Howie Long
SID: Ted Wolff
OFFICE: (215) 527-2100 ext. 200
HOME: (215) 646-1582
1978 RESULTS (5-6)
1979 SCHEDULE
35
Bowling Green
28
Sept.
8 at Maryland
25
Massachusetts
21
15 Massachusetts
17
William & Mary
21
22 at Boston College
0
Clemson
31
29 at Cincinnati
17
Richmond
14
Oct.
6 Youngstown St
14
Colgate
20
13 Delaware
9
Rutgers
24
20 Holy Cross
22
Youngstown State
17
27 at Marshall
28
Boston College
16
Nov.
3 at Richmond
22
Delaware
23
17 at Rutgers
17
Temple
27
24 Temple
28
CLEMSON UNIVERSITY
September 15 3:20 P.M.
Clemson, South Carolina
Memorial Stadium (53,306)
COACH: Danny Ford
(Alabama '70)
OVERALL RECORD: 1-0
CLEMSON RECORD: 1-0
LOCATION: Clemson, South Carolina
ENROLLMENT: 11.478
COLORS: Purple & Orange
NICKNAME: Tigers
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Bill McLellan
ASSISTANT COACHES: Willie Anderson, Mickey An-
drews. Mike Bugar, Curley Mailman. Buddy King,
Jimmyc Laycock, Chuek Reedy, Larry Van Dcr Iley-
den, Billy Ware
TEAM STRENGTH: Running Backs
TEAM WEAKNESS: Offensive Line
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 34
LETTERMEN LOST: 25
TOP RETURNING BACKS: TB Lester Brown. TB
Cliff Austin. FB Marvin Sims. FB Tracy Perry. DB Rex
Varn, DB Willie Jordan. DB Eddie Geadiers
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: C. Jeff Bostic, OG
Chris Dolce. SE Perry Tuttle, DT Jim Stuckey, LB
Bob Goldberg, LB Bubba Brown, DG Charlie Bauman
TOP NEWCOMERS: SE Jerry Gaillard. OT Lee Nan-
ney, OT Gary Brown. DE Paul Williams. DB Anthony
Rose. DB Jamie Pope, DB Randy Learn
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: DT Jim Stuckey
ALL-ACC CANDIDATES: C Jeff Bostic. FLK Perry
Tuttle. TB Lester Brown, K Obed Ariri, DT Jim
Stuckey, LB Bubba Brown, DB Rex Varn
1978 HIGHLIGHTS: Defeated Ohio State in the 1978
Gator Bowl, 17-15
MISSISSIPPI STATE UNIVERSITY
September 22 1:30 P.M.
College Park, Maryland
Byrd Stadium (45,000)
COACH: Emory Bellard
(SW Texas State '49)
OVERALL RECORD: 48-27
MISS. STATE RECORD: 1st Year
LOCATION: Starkville, Mississippi
ENROLLMENT: 12,300
COLORS: Maroon and White
NICKNAME: Bulldogs
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Carl Maddox
ASSISTANT COACI IES: I toward Tippett, Spike Dykes,
Barry Wilson. Joe Crouson, Bruce Arians, Craig Ran-
dall. Marc Dove. John Jenkins
TEAM STRENGTH: Speed, Depth at Running Backs,
Wide Receivers
TEAM WEAKNESS: Defensive depth, Lack of experi-
ence at quarterback, Kicking game
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 46
LETTERMEN LOST: 18
TOP RETURNING BACKS: TB James Jones. FB Fred
Collins, SE David Ellis. TB Len Copeland. FB Donald
Ray King, TB James Otis Doss, DB Kenny Johnson,
DB Larry Friday. SE Mardye McDole
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: OT Alan Hartlein, OG
Alan Massey, OG Matt Edwards, OT Roman Grace,
DE Tyrone Keys, DE Glen Collins, DT Lonnie Greene,
DT Keidi Jackson
TOP NEWCOMERS: QB Gary Schaffhauser, P Dana
Moore. TB Danny Knight. DE Buzz Goodson, DE
Jerry Gillikin, LB Charles Gandy, DB Steve Johnson
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: SE Mardye McDole,
TB James Jones, DE Tyrone Keys
ALL-SEC CANDIDATES: DE Glen Collins, DE Tyrone
Keys. SAF Kenny Johnson, TB James Jones. SE Mardye
McDole, FB Fred Collins, TB Len Copeland
1978 HIGHLIGHTS: Defeated 14th ranked LSU 16-
14, Defeated 16th ranked Florida State 55-27
SID: Bo Carter
SID
i: Bob Bradlev
OFFICE:
(601) .
325-2311
OFFICE:
(803)
656-2101
HOME:
(601)
323-3555
HOME:
(803)
654-5419
1978 RESULTS
(6-5)
1979 SCHEDULE
197;
(11-1)
1979 SCHEDULE
28
West Texas State
0
Sept. 8 Memphis State
58
The Citadel
3
Sept. 8 Furman
17
North Texas State
5
15 OPEN
0
Georgia
12
15 Maryland
44
Memphis State
14
22 at Maryland
31
Villanova
0
22 Georgia
0
Florida
34
29 Florida
38
Virginia Tech
7
Oct. 6 Virginia
17
Southern Miss
22
Oct. 6 at Tennessee
30
Virginia
14
13 at Virginia Tech
55
Florida State
27
13 at Florida State
28
Duke
8
20 at Duke
34
Tennessee
21
20 Marshall
33
N.C. State
10
27 N.C. State
14
Alabama
35
27 Southern Mis
51
Wake Forest
6
Nov. 3 Wake Forest
0
Auburn
6
Nov. 3 at Alabama
13
North Carolina
10 at North Carolina
16
L.S.U.
14
10 at Auburn
28
Maryland
24
17 at Notre Dame
7
Mississippi
27
17 at L.S.U.
17
Ohio State
15
24 at South Carolina
24 Mississippi
29
KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
September 29 1:30 P.M.
Lexington, Kentucky
Commonwealth Stad. (58,000)
COACH: Fran Curci
(Miami Fla. '60)
OVERALL RECORD: 70-48-2
KENTUCKY RECORD: 36-29-2
LOCATION: Lexington, Kentucky
ENROLLMENT: 23,500
COLORS: Blue and White
NICKNAME: Wildcats
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Cliff Hagan
ASSISTANT COACHES: Charlie Bailey. George Cata-
volos, Dan Coughlin. Bill Glaser. Larry Kirksey. Charlie
McCullers, Jon Mirilovich. Tom Turchetta
TEAM STRENGTH: Defensive Secondary
TEAM WEAKNESS: Offensive Backfield, Offensive
Line, Defensive Ends
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 24
LETTERMEN LOST: 29
TOP RETURNING BACKS: QB Mike Shutt, FB
Shawn Donigan, WR Felix Wilson, CB Larry Carter
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: OG Tom Kearns, OT
Leon Shadowen, C Ken Roark. TE Jim Campbell.
DG Rick Jaffe, DT Tim Gooch, LB Lester Boyd, DE
Chuck Jones
TOP NEWCOMERS: RB Ron McGahee. RB Chris
Jones, Rob Mangas, DT Kevin Kearns, DE Don
Fielder, OT Mickey Cochran
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: DG Rick Jaffe, LB
Larry Carter
ALL-CONFERENCE CANDIDATES: DG Rick Jaffe,
DB Larry Carter, OG Tom Kearns, WR Felix Wilson
SID: Russell Rice
OFFICE: (606) 257-3838
HOME: (606) 277-5639
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
October 6 1:30 P.M.
College Park, Maryland
Byrd Stadium (45,000)
COACH: Joe Paterno
(Brown '50)
OVERALL RECORD: 123-25-1
PENN ST. RECORD: 123-25-1
LOCATION: University Park, Pennsylvania
ENROLLMENT: 27,000
COLORS: Blue and White
NICKNAME: Nittany Lions
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Edward Czekaj
ASSISTANT COACHES: Dick Anderson, Booker
Brooks, Fran Ganter, Bob Phillips. John Rosenberg,
Jerry Sandusky, J. T. White. Jim Williams
TEAM STRENGTH: Overall Defense, Rushing De-
fense. Rushing Offense
TEAM WEAKNESS: Inexperience at Skill Positions
Offensively.
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 22
LETTERMEN LOST: 26
TOP RETURNING BACKS: TB Mike Guman, FB
Matt Suhey, DB Karl McCoy, SAF Pete Harris, TB
Booker Moore, SE Tom Donovan
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: TE Irv Pankey, RG
Jim Romano. RT Jim Brown. DE Larry Rubin, DT
Bruce Clark, DT Matt Milieu. LB Rick Donaldson,
LB Lance Mehl
TOP NEWCOMERS: QB Dayle Tate. FB Mike Meade,
TB Joel Coles. SAF Grover Edwards, DB Tom Wise,
TE Brad Scovill, OT Bill Dugan, C Bob Jagers, DG
Greg Jones, DE Gene Gladys
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: OT Jim Brown, DT
Bruce Clark, DT Matt Millen, SAF Pete Harris
1978 HIGHLIGHTS: 4th ranked team in final polls,
undefeated regular season, participated in 1979 Sugar
Bowl
1978 RESULTS (11-1)
1979 SCHEDULE
197!
(4-6-1)
1979 SCHEDULE
10
Temple
7
Sept.
15 Rutgers
14
South Carolina 14
Sept.
15 Miami (Ohio)
26
Rutgers
10
22 Texas A&M
25
Baylor
21
22 at Indiana
19
Ohio State
0
29 at Nebraska
3
Maryland
20
29 Maryland
26
Southern Meth.
21
Oct.
6 at Maryland
0
Penn State
30
Oct.
6 at West Virginia
58
Texas Christian
0
13 Army
24
Mississippi
17
13 Mississippi
30
Kentucky
0
20 Syracuse
0
LSU
21
20 at LSU
45
Syracuse
15
27 West Virgina
16
Georgia
17
27 at Georgia
49
West Virginia
21
Nov.
3 Miami (Fla.)
28
Virginia Tech
0
Nov.
3 Bowling Green
27
Maryland
3
10 at N.C. State
53
Vanderbilt
2
10 at Vanderbilt
19
N.C. State
10
17 Temple
16
Florida
18
17 at Florida
17
Pittsburgh
10
24 Pittsburgh
14
Tennessee
29
24 Tennessee
7
Alabama
14
30
NORTH CAROLINA
STATE UNIVERSITY
October 13, 1:00 P.M.
Raleigh, North Carolina
Carter Stadium (45,600)
COACH: Bo Rein
(Ohio State "68)
OVERALL RECORD: 20-14-1
N.C. STATE RECORD: 20-14-1
LOCATION: Raleigh, North Carolina
ENROLLMENT: 18,500
COLORS: Red and White
NICKNAME: Wolfpack
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Willis R. Casey
ASSISTANT COACHES: Chuck Amato, George Belt.,
Dave Bui key. Bishop Harris, Bobby Mauro, Darrell
Moody. Bobby Morrison. Greg Williams
TEAM STRENGTH: Experienced offensive line, Place-
kicker Nathan Rittcr, Defensive Line
TEAM WEAKNESS: Replacing Ail-American Ted
Brown, uncovering depth at several key positions
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 38
LETTERMEN LOST: 15
TOP RETURNING BACKS: QB Scott Smith, RB Billy
Ray Vickers, RB Wayne McLean, SAF Woodrow Wil-
son, DB Ronein Lee
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: C Jim Ritcher, OG/T
Chris Dieterich, OG Chuck Stone, OT Chris Koehne.
TE Lin Dawson, DT Simon Gupton, DT Brian
O'Doherty, LB Joe Hannah
TOP NEWCOMERS: QB Darnell Johnson, RB Andre
Marks, OG/T Todd Eckerson, OT Chuck Long, WR
Mike Meadows, LB Neal Musser
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: C Jim Ritcher, SAF
Woodrow Wilson
ALL-ACC CANDIDATES: C Jim Ritcher, OG/T Chris
Dieterich, TE Lin Dawson, K Nadian Ritter. SAF
Woodrow Wilson, DT Simon Gupton. LB Joe Hannah,
CB Ronnie Lee
1978 HIGHLIGHTS: Defeated Pittsburgh in die 1978
Tangerine Bowl, 30-17.
SID: Ed Seaman
OFFICE: (919) 737-2102
HOME: (919) 829-9186
WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY
October 20 1:30 P.M.
Winston Salem, North Carolina
Groves Stadium (31,500)
COACH: John Mackovic
(Wake Forest '56)
OVERALL RECORD: 1-10
WAKE FOREST RECORD: 1-10
LOCATION: Winston Salem, North Carolina
ENROLLMENT: 3,080
COLORS: Old Gold and Black
NICKNAME: Demon Deacons
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Dr. Gene Hooks
ASSISTANT COACHES: Marty Galbraith, Mike Work-
ing, Jim McNally, Ray Sherman. Archie Strimel,
Dennis Ilaglan, Bill Urbanik, Bill Faircloth
TEAM STRENGTH: Middle of die Offensive Line and
die Defense
TEAM WEAKNESS: Young and inexperienced team
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 34
LETTERMEN LOST: 16
TOP RETURNING BACKS: TB James McDougald,
WR Albert Kirby, WR Mike Mullen
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: OT Syd Kitson, OG
Bill Ard, DG James Parker, LB Carlos Bradley, LB
Marc Hester
TOP NEWCOMERS: QB Brent Offenbecher. TB
Robert Johnson, TB Leo Leitner, WR Paul Sherlock
ALL-AMERICAN C\NDIDATES: OT Syd Kitson. OG
Bill Ard
ALL-ACC CANDIDATES: TB James McDougald. OT
Syd Kitson, OG Bill Ard, WR Mike Mullen
SID: Pat Gainey
OFFICE: (919) 761-5640
HOME: (919) 768-9991
1978 RESULTS (9-3)
1979 SCHEDULE
29
East Carolina
13
Sept.
8
East Carolina
1978 RESULTS (1
27
Syracuse
19
15
Virginia
14
Virginia
29
West Virginia
15
22
at
West Virginia
6
VPI
34
Wake Forest
10
29
Wake Forest
11
LSU
7
Maryland
31
Oct.
6
at
Auburn
10
N.C. State
34
North Carolina
7
13
Maryland
7
Purdue
10
Clemson
33
20
North Carolina
29
North Carolina
22
South Carolina
13
27
at
Clemson
0
Maryland
10
Penn State
19
Nov.
3
at
South Carolina
7
Auburn
24
Duke
10
10
Penn State
6
Clemson
24
Virginia
21
17
at
Duke
0
Duke
30
Pittsburgh
17
14
South Carolina
10) 1979 SCHEDULE
0 Sept. 8 Appalachian State
28 15 at Georgia
13 22 East Carolina
34 29 at N.C. State
14 Oct. 6 at Virginia Tech
34 13 at North Carolina
39 20 Maryland
21 27 Auburn
51 Nov. 3 at Clemson
3 10 Duke
37 17 at South Carolina
31
DUKE UNIVERSITY
October 27 1:30 P.M.
Durham, North Carolina
Wallace Wade Stadium (40,078)
COACH: Red Wilson
(Davidson '50)
OVERALL RECORD: 73-34-2
DUKE RECORD: 1st Year
NORTH CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
November 3 1:30 P.M.
College Park, Maryland
Byrd Stadium (45,000)
COACH: Dick Crum
(Mt. Union '57)
OVERALL RECORD: 39-16-1
UNC RECORD: 5-6
LOCATION: Durham, North Carolina
ENROLLMENT: 9.286
COLORS: Blue & White
NICKNAME: Blue Devils
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Tom Butters
ASSISTANT COACHES: Mickey Brown, John Guy,
Richard Kemp, Mark Landon, Sam Story, Larry
Thompson, Eddie Williamson. Cliff Yoshida
TEAM STRENGTH: Wide Receivers and Defensive
Backfield
TEAM WEAKNESS: Linebackers
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 37
LETTERMEN LOST: 21
TOP RETURNING BACKS: DB George Gawdun, DB
Craig Hoskins, TB Stanley Broadie. TB Keith Cren-
shaw, TB Greg Rhett, QB Craig Browning
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: OG Bob Riordan. DT
Paul Heinsohn, C Kevin Kelly, LB Charles Bowser,
LB Eric Drescher, WR Cedric Jones
TOP NEWCOMERS: DB Dennis Tabron. WR Ron
Frederick. OL Greg Bamburger
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: TB Stanley Broadie
ALL-ACC CANDIDATES: TB Stanley Broadie, OG
Bob Riordan, WR Cedric Jones, DB Craig Hoskins,
DB George Gawdun. LB Eric Prescher. OT Paul Hein-
sohn
SID: Tom Mickle
OFFICE: (919) 684-2633
HOME: (919 929-1844
LOCATION: Chapel Hill, North Carolina
ENROLLMENT: 20,400
COLORS: Carolina Blue and White
NICKNAME: Tar Heels
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Bill Cobey
ASSISTANT COACHES: Cleve Bryant, Jack Hime-
bauch, Denny Marcin, Larry Marmie, John Matsko
Chuck Priefer, Jim Tressler, Randy Walker
TEAM STRENGTH: Offensive Backfield and Defen-
sive Linebackers
TEAM WEAKNESS: Lack of experience in the De-
fensive Secondary and Defensive Line
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 40
LETTERMEN LOST: 19
TOP RETURNING BACKS: TB Amos Lawrence, DB
Ricky Barden, FB Doug Paschal, QB Matt Kupec,
FB Billy Johnson. QB Chuck Sharpe
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: OG Ron Wooten. OT
Steve Junkmann. C Rick Donnalley, DT Donnell
Thompson, LB Buddy Curry, LB Darrell Nicholson
TOP NEWCOMERS: TE Shelton Robinson, TB Kelvin
Bryant, DB Billy Jackson
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: TB Amos Lawrence,
DB Ricky Barden
ALL-ACC CANDIDATES: OG Ron Wooten, OT Steve
Junkmann. QB Matt Kupec. DT Donnell Thompson.
LB Buddy Curry, LB Darrell Nicholson
SID: Rick Brewer
OFFICE: (919) 933-2123
HOME: (919) 929-2721
L978 RESULTS
(4-7)
1979 SCHEDULE
1978 RESULTS
(5-6)
1979 SCHEDULE
28
Georgia Tech
10
Sept.
15 East Carolina
14
East Carolina
10
Sept.
8
South Carolina
16
South Carolina
12
22 at South Carolina
20
Maryland
21
22
Pittsburgh
0
Michigan
52
29 at Virginia
16
Pittsburgh
20
29
at Army
20
Virginia
13
Oct.
6 at Army
3
Miami (Ohio)
7
Oct.
6
Cincinnati
8
Navy
31
13 at Richmond
34
Wake Forest
29
13
Wake Forest
8
Clemson
28
20 Clemson
7
N.C. State
34
20
at N.C. State
0
Maryland
27
10 at Wake Forest
24
South Carolina
27
East Carolina
0
Tennessee
34
Nov.
3 at Georgia Tech
18
Richmond
27
Nov.
3
at Maryland
3
Wake Forset
0
27 Maryland
9
Clemson
13
10
Clemson
10
N.C. State
24
17 N.C. State
38
Virginia
20
17
at Virginia
15
North Carolina
16
24 North Carolina
16
Duke
15
24
at Duke
32
LOUISVILLE UNIVERSITY
November 17 1:30 P.M.
College Park, Maryland
Byrd Stadium (45,000)
COACH: Vince Gibson
(Florida State '55)
OVERALL RECORD: 54-75-1
LOUISVILLE RECORD: 21-23-1
LOCATION: Louisville, Kentucky
ENROLLMENT: 18,000
COLORS: Red. White and Black
NICKNAME: Fighting Cardinals
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Dr. Howard Hohmar.
ASSISTANT COACHES: Dave Moore, Boh Weber, Jay
Cunningham, Bill Baker, Dave Nusz, Ted Death and
Steve Goldman
TEAM STRENGTH: Linebackers and Secondary;
Quarterback
TEAM WEAKNESS: Offensive Line
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 36
LETTERMEN LOST: 16
TOP RETURNING BACKS: QB Stu Strain. TB Bo
Haden, TB Don Craft
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: DC Jeff Henry, DT
Dan Dihtzeruk, LB Otis Wilson
TOP NEWCOMERS: FB Mike Sims, DB Sebastian
Curry, P Dave Betz
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: LB Otis Wilson. DG
Jeff Henry
SID: Joe Yates
OFFICE: (502) 588-6581
HOME: (502) 239-4340
VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY
November 24 1:30 P.M.
College Park, Maryland
Byrd Stadium (45,000)
COACH: Dick Bestwick
(North Carolina '52)
OVERALL RECORD: 5 27-1
VIRGINIA RECORD: 5-27-1
LOCATION: Charlottesville, Virginia
ENROLLMENT: 15.500
COLORS: Orange and Dark Blue
NICKNAME: Cavaliers/Wahoos
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR: Gene Corrigan
ASSISTANT COACI IES: Jack Daniels, Ralph Kirchen-
heiter, Dick Lage, Joe Robinson, Ixe Moon. Rip
Scherer, Charlie Taaffe
TEAM STRENGTH: Offensive speed and experience
in the interior line and at running back
TEAM WEAKNESS: Defensive depth and the kicking
game
LETTERMEN RETURNING: 35
LETTERMEN LOST: 18
TOP RETURNING BACKS: TB Tommy Vigorito, TB
Greg Taylor, QB Todd Kirtley, FL Andre Grier, SAF
Tony Blount, SAF Mike Brancati, LB Bryan Holoman
TOP RETURNING LINEMEN: OG Kurt Pierce, C
Brian Mussleman, DE Steve Potter, DT Stuart Ander-
son, TE Mike Newhall, DT Grant Hudson
TOP NEWCOMERS: K Wayne Morrison. LB Shawn
Rayder, DG Reggie Woods. DG Ron Booker, TB
Rickey Callinder. LB Kevin Riccio
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES: OG Kurt Pierce, TB
Tommy Vigorito, DT Stuart Anderson
ALL-ACC CANDIDATES: TB Tommy Vigorito, OG
Kurt Pierce. C Brian Mussleman. TE Mike Newhall.
DE Steve Potter, DT Stuart Anderson, LB Bryan Holo-
man, SAF Tony Blount
1978 HIGHLIGHTS: 17-7 win over VPI before largest
crowd in history of Scott Stadium (34.275)
SID
: Todd Turner
OFFICE:
(804)
924-3011
HOME:
(804)
295-2671
L978 RESULTS (7-4)
1979 SCHEDULE
1978 RESULTS
(2-9)
1979 SCHEDULE
54
South Dakota State 7
Sept.
8
Virginia Tech
0
Wake Forest
14
Sept.
8 Richmond
17
Maryland 24
15
at Miami of Fla.
0
Navy
32
15 at N.C. State
28
Cincinnati 14
22
Cincinnati
21
Army
17
22 VMI
31
Indiana State 12
29
at Drake
9
VMI
17
29 Duke
7
Tulsa 24
Oct.
6
Florida State
13
Duke
20
Oct.
6 at Clemson
51
Northwest Louisiana 7
13
Tulsa
14
Clemson
30
13 James Madison
35
Boston University 7
20
at Indiana State
17
Virginia Tech
7
20 at Navy
33
William & Mary 21
27
OPEN
17
West Virginia
20
27 OPEN
38
Wichita State 20
Nov.
3
Southern Miss.
7
Maryland
17
Nov.
3 at Georgia
22
Memphis State 29
10
at Memphis State
20
North Carolina
38
10 Virginia Tech
3
Southern Miss. 37
17
25
at Maryland
Rutgers
21
N.C. State
25
17 North Carolina
24 at Maryland
33
MARYLAND vs. #979 OPPONENTS
VILLANOW
i
(6-2)
1970
Lost
3-21
1971
Lost
13-28
1972
Won
37-7
1973
Won
31-3
1974
Won
41-0
1975
Won
41-0
1976
Won
20-9
1977
Won
CLEMSON
(15-11-1)
19-13
1952
Won
28-0
1953
Won
20-0
1954
Won
16-0
1955
Won
25-12
1956
Tie
6-6
1957
Lost
7-26
1958
Lost
0-8
1959
Won
28-25
1960
Won
19-17
1961
Won
24-21
1962
Lost
14-17
1963
Lost
6-21
1964
Won
34-0
1965
Won
6-0
1966
Lost
10-14
1967
Lost
7-28
1968
Lost
0-16
1969
Lost
0-40
1970
Lost
11-24
1971
Lost
14-20
1972
Won
31-6
1973
Won
28-13
1974
Won
41-0
1975
Won
22-20
1976
Won
20-0
1977
Won
21-14
1978
Lost
24-28
MISSISSIPPI STATE
(First Meeting)
KENTUCKY
(3-1-2)
1931
Tie
6-6
1954
Won
20-0
1956
Lost
0-14
1975
Tie
10-10
1976
Won
24-14
1978
Won
20-3
PENN STATE
(1-23-0)
1917
Lost
0-57
1937
Lost
14-21
1938
Lost
0-33
1939
Lost
0-12
1943
Lost
0-45
1944
Lost
19-34
1960
Lost
9-28
1961
Won
21-17
1962
Lost
7-23
1963
Lost
15-17
1964
Lost
9-17
1965
Lost
7-19
1966
Lost
7-15
1967
Lost
3-38
1968
Lost
13-57
1969
Lost
0-48
1970
Lost
0-34
1971
Lost
27-63
1972
Lost
16-46
1973
Lost
22-42
1974
Lost
17-24
1975
Lost
13-15
1977
Lost
9-27
1978
Lost
3-27
N.C. STATE
(15-16-4)
1909
Lost
0-31
1917
Lost
6-10
1921
Tie
6-6
1922
Won
7-6
1923
Won
26-12
1924
Tie
0-0
1946
Lost
7-28
1947
Tie
0-0
1949
Won
14-6
1950
Lost
13-16
1951
Won
53-0
1954
Won
42-14
1956
Won
25-14
1957
Lost
13-48
1958
Won
21-6
1959
Won
33-28
1960
Lost
10-13
1961
Won
10-7
1962
Won
14-6
1963
Lost
14-36
1964
Lost
13-14
1965
Lost
7-29
1966
Lost
21-24
1967
Lost
9-31
1968
Lost
11-31
1969
Lost
7-24
1970
Lost
0-6
1971
Won
35-7
1972
Tie
24-24
1973
Lost
22-24
1974
Won
20-10
1975
Won
37-22
1976
Won
16-6
1977
Lost
20-24
1978
Won
31-7
NCAAfen)
WAKE FOREST
(19-7-1)
1917
Won
29-12
1943
Won
13-7
1944
Lost
0-39
1954
Tic
13-13
1955
Won
28-7
1956
Won
6-0
1957
Won
27-0
1958
Lost
0-34
1959
Lost
7-10
1960
Won
14-13
1961
Won
10-7
1962
Won
13-2
1963
Won
32-0
1964
Lost
17-21
1965
Won
10-7
1966
Won
34-7
1967
Lost
17-35
1968
Lost
14-38
1969
Won
19-13
1971
Lost
14-18
1972
Won
23-0
1973
Won
37 0
1974
Won
47-0
1975
Won
27-0
1976
Won
17-15
1977
Won
35-7
1978
Won
DUKE
(8-14-0)
39-0
1932
Lost
0-34
1932
Lost
7-38
1941
Lost
0-50
1942
Lost
0-42
1947
Lost
7-19
1948
Lost
12-13
1950
Won
26-14
1957
Lost
0-14
1960
Lost
7-20
1962
Lost
7-10
1963
Lost
17-24
1966
Won
21-19
1968
Lost
28-30
1969
Won
20-7
1970
Lost
12-13
1972
Lost
14-20
1973
Won
30-10
1974
Won
56-13
1976
Won
30-3
1977
Won
31-13
1978
Won
27-0
NORTH CAROLINA
(18-23-1)
1899
Lost
0-6
1920
Won
13-0
1921
Lost
7-16
1922
Lost
3-27
1923
Won
14-0
1924
Won
6-0
1925
Lost
0-16
1926
Won
14-6
1927
Lost
6-7
1928
Lost
19-26
1929
Lost
0-43
1930
Lost
21-28
1935
Lost
0-33
1936
Lost
0-14
1946
Lost
0-33
1947
Lost
0-19
1948
Lost
20-49
1950
Tie
7-7
1951
Won
14-7
1953
Won
26-0
1954
Won
33-0
1955
Won
25-7
1956
Lost
6-34
1957
Won
21-7
1958
Lost
0-27
1959
Won
14-7
1960
Won
22-19
1961
Lost
8-14
1962
Won
31-13
1963
Lost
7-14
1964
Won
10-9
1965
Lost
10-12
1967
Lost
0-14
1968
Won
33-24
1970
Lost
20-53
1971
Lost
14-35
1972
Lost
26-31
1973
Won
23-3
1974
Won
24-12
1975
Won
34-7
1977
Lost
7-16
1978
Won
21-20
LOUISVILLE
d-0)
1978
Won
VIRGINIA
(26-15-2;
24-17
1919
Won
13-0
1925
Lost
0-6
1926
Tie
6-6
1927
Lost
0-21
1928
Won
18-2
1929
Tie
13-13
1930
Won
14-6
1931
Won
7-6
1932
Lost
6-7
1933
Lost
0-6
1934
Won
20-0
1935
Won
14-7
1936
Won
21-0
1937
Won
3-0
1938
Lost
19-27
1939
Lost
7-12
1940
Lost
6-19
1942
Won
27-12
1943
Lost
0-39
1944
Lost
7-18
1945
Won
19-13
1957
Won
12-0
1958
Won
44-6
1959
Won
55-12
1960
Won
44-12
1961
Lost
16-28
1962
Won
40-18
1963
Won
21-6
1964
Won
10-0
1965
Lost
27-33
1966
Lost
17-41
1967
Lost
7-12
1968
Lost
23-28
1969
Won
17-14
1970
Won
17-14
1971
Lost
27-29
1972
Won
24-23
1973
Won
33-0
1974
Won
10-0
1975
Won
62-24
1976
Won
28-0
1977
Won
28-0
1978
Won
17-7
34
STRENGTH AND QUICKNESS
Jerry Claiborne rates strength and quickness high on
his 1 ist dl tangibles contributing to a winning football
team. He was .i|>|>.illc<l al the lack of both attributes
when he assumed the duties .is the Maryland Coach in
December of 1971.
In his initial testing ol the Terrapins only seven were
able to bench press 250 pounds or more and only 14
nm the 40 yards in 4.9 or less. Claiborne immediately
established a weight training program thai has had
phenomenal success with Ins ability to motivate others
a major contributor to the results.
This past spring 74 players bench pressed 250 pounds
or more and 59 ol them topped .'300 pounds. He lias
had 19 players join the 400 pound club.
In addition to the improvement by the Terrapins
many high schools and collegiate teams have adopted
Claiborne's training programs.
The weight training program received a big boost with
the addition of football facilities that include one of the
finest weight rooms in any collegiate facility.
Ail-American Randy White has proven what dedica-
tion and adherence to the program can accomplish, and
has provided incentive to many Maryland adiletes. He
enrolled at Maryland as a 212 pounder who ran a 4.9
for the 40 and could bench press 260 pounds. He left
Maryland weighing 248 pounds and while playing for the
Terps bench pressed 450 pounds and could run the
40 in 4.6. He increased his bench press to 460 pounds
before joining die Dallas Cowboys.
The Terps have worked widi a down hill running
program instituted by Track Coach Frank Costello, a
training program diat he picked up from the Russians.
Demonstrating that die program is just as beneficial
to the backs Louis Carter a 190 pounder, bench pressed
230 pounds and ran the 40 in 4.8. He left Maryland
as a 201 pounder who bench pressed 330 pounds and
ran a 4.5 for the 40. He is now with the Washington
Redskins.
There are currently nine members of die team bench
pressing 400 or more pounds with Offensive Linemen
Richard Cummins and Larry Stewart bodi at 450 and
Scott Fans at 430.
In addition diere are 38 members of the squad who
have been timed in 4.9 or better for die 40 yard dash.
FOi
~§jf ;
A. C. C.
THALL CHAMI'loi
74 1975 V)7i\
PROGRESS CHART
250 275 .300 350 375 400 450 TTL
Dec.
1971
5
2
0
0
0
0
0
7
Mar.
1972
17
11
8
0
0
0
0
36
Aug.
1972
16
6
19
3
0
0
0
44
Mar.
1973
11
1.3
20
3
0
0
0
47
Aug.
197.3
10
19
17
4
2
1
0
53
Mar.
1974
22
11
2.3
7
2
4
0
69
Mar.
1975
8
15
25
9
2
3
0
62
Mar.
1976
4
16
34
8
4
2
1
69
Mar.
1977
9
11
32
8
5
4
1
70
Mar.
1978
10
12
30
7
8
8
0
75
Mar.
1979
3
12
37
7
6
7
2
74
♦
%
•II
•^
THE 400 POUND BENCH PRESS CLUB
460 Mike Yeates, OG
450 Randy White, DT
450* Larry Stewart. OT
450* Richard Cummins. OG
430* Scott Fanz. OT
425* Brian Riendeau, OG
425* Eric Sievers. TE
420 Steve Koziol, FB
415* Greg Vanderhout. DG
415* Marlin Van Horn, DG
415 Keith Calta. DT
400* Paul Glamp, OG
400* Chris Grey, C
400 Steve Cianciulli, OG
400 Stan Rogers, OT
400 Kevin Benson, LB
400 John ZemhelL OT
400 Chuck Moss, FB
400 Bob Raba, TE
Denotes diose on die 1979 Roster.
35
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DALE CASTRO SCOTT COLLINS
MIKE CORVINO
BRENT DEWITZ GARY ELLIS
SCOTT FANZ
i3n or^l i#i2J
RODNEY CALDWELL JAN CARINC
RICK FASANO
ED GALL
<
1
LES BORING GURNEST BROWN
MIKE CARNEY
^fl 7
RICHARD CUMMINS DARNELL DAILEY JOE DeMATTIO
BOB GIOIA
SAM JOHNSON FRANK KOLENCIK JOHN KREIDER
BOB LARKIN
RALPH LARY PHIL LIVINGSTON
■
JAY LOMAC
KYLE LORTON BRIAN MATERA
SAM MEDILE BOB MILKOVICH KARL NIEHAUS
DAVID PACELLA JOHN PAPUCHIS
LYLE PECK
BRIAN RIENDEAU JEFF RODENBERGER JERRY ROGERS
GEORGE SCOTT
BRAD SENFT JETHRO SENIOR
JIMMY SHAFFER
ERIC SIEVERS
JIM SOMMER
*
QATk
GREG SMITH LARRY STEWART DAVID TAYLOR
JOHN TICE
MIKE TICE VINCE TOMASETTI
I
ruTil %«^^
STEVE TRIMBLE GREG VANDERHOUT MARLIN VAN HORN
TIM WHITTIE
JOE WILKINS WAYNE WINGFIELD
TODD WRIGHT
KERVIN WYATT CHARLIE WYSOCKI
PAT ZILLMAN
NCAA^g
THE 1978 SEASON
Jerry Claiborne's University of Maryland Terrapins
opened the 1978 collegiate football season in Byrd
Stadium with a 31-7 win over Tulane and the game
was indicative of the season to come.
The Terrapins did not have a proven quarterback
and only one wide receiver with game experience. The
leading ground gainer from 1977, George Scott with
894 yards, was lost prior to the opener with a stress
fracture of the leg and would be out for the season.
However Tim O'Hare, a senior lefthander, took over
the quarterback chores and provided the necessary
leadership throughout the season. O'Hare had worked
with some outstanding quarterbacks over die last four
years in Bob Avellini, Mark Manges and Larry Dick and
knew the system well despite his lack of playing time.
In the opening win he hit six different receivers
with passes while completing seven of 1 1 and throwing
a pair of touchdown passes. Tailback Steve Atkins
rolled up 110 yards rushing, his first of seven consecutive
games over the century mark. Lloyd Burruss returned
a punt 47 yards for a Terrapin score and Ed Loncar
kicked the first of his season record 16 field goals,
hitting from 47 yards out.
Maryland then visited Louisville, fumbled the opening
kickoff falling behind 7-0 and had to fight to catch up
the rest of the evening. A record Fairgrounds Stadium
crowd backing the Fighting Cardinals in what had been
billed as their biggest game ever saw the Maryland Wide
Tackle Six defense pull the game out in the fourdi
quarter. The Terps scored with 7:34 left for a 17-17
tie and with 2:45 remaining the defense came up with
the ball on the Louisville 19. Brian Matera and Charles
Johnson knocked the ball loose from the Cardinal
Quarterback and Linebacker Neal Olkewicz came up
with the fumble. The Terps scored with 1:36 left in
the game for the 24-17 win. Atkins had 118 yards rush-
ing and O'Hare had passed for 161 yards and a touch-
down.
The Terps then visited Defending Atlantic Coast Con-
ference Champion North Carolina and trailed 20-15 in
the fourth quarter, before O'Hare hit Gary Ellis for 28
yards on a second and 28 situation, to the Tar Heel
seven. Atkins carried it in for the score and the 21-20
victory. O'Hare had passed for 164 yards and Atkins
rushed for 162 while Eric Sievers, Dean Richards and
Jan Carinci each caught four passes.
Maryland returned home to meet Kentucky and
the defense shut down the Wildcats while O'Hare,
Atkins and Richards continued to excell. Kentucky
picked up only 42 yards rushing on 36 carries while
Atkins rushed for 153 on 31 plays. O'Hare passed for
157 yards and Richards had six receptions for 102
yards. Loncar kicked field goals of 31 and 49 yards
and the Terps never trailed in the 20-3 win.
North Carolina State visited College Park next and
the Terps provided the most exciting 25 seconds of the
season. The Wolfpack scored at 3:33 of die third
quarter to pull within three at 10-7. However Steve
Atkins dien returned the kickoff 98 yards for a Mary-
land touchdown at 3:49. Ed Loncar dien placed a high
kick in the corner at die 18 and Todd Benson hit the
ball carrier at the 18 trying to get around the wall,
stripped the ball loose knocking it back into the end
zone where Steve Trimble fell on it for a touchdown
at 3:58. Maryland now led 24-7 and went on to win
31-7 with Atkins rushing for 132 yards.
The Terps moved on to Syracuse and trailed 6-3 at
the half as Atkins had rushed for 15 yards on die
slippery turf. Atkins changed his shoes at the half and
picked up 87 yards in the second half, 102 for the
game, as the Terps scored three touchdowns in the
third quarter enroute to the 24-9 win.
Back in Byrd Stadium the Terps shutout Wake Forest
39-0 as Atkins picked up 104 on 28 carries and Wake
Forest 37 on 32 carries. Atkins and Alvin Maddox each
scored twice and Sophomore Mike Tice threw his first
touchdown pass.
Atkins scored three touchdowns at Duke and Loncar
added three field goals in Maryland's second consecutive
shutout, 27-0. For die first time in die season Atkins
with 74 yards did not top die century mark.
The Terps were now ranked fifth in the nation with
a 12 game winning streak, the nation's second longest,
and were matched with second ranked team Penn State
sporting the longest winning streak at 17 games. The
Nittany Lions held the Terps to a 39 yard Loncar field
goal in the nationally televised game and won 27-3
before 78.019 a record crowd in Beaver Stadium.
O'Hare took over the ball carrying duties himself
in Charlottesville and picked up 102 yards rushing in the
17-7 win over Virginia. He established a school total
offense record for the game adding 222 yards passing
for 324 yards in the game. The Terps gained 222 through
the air and 222 rushing in the game. Richards caught
six passes for 120 yards.
On November 18 the Terps and Clemson Tigers
tangled in one of the most exciting football afternoons
in Byrd Stadium in many years. Clemson brought over
3.000 fans to College Park and 51,376 packed the 45,-
000 seat stadium, expanded with additional bleachers.
Maryland led 7-0 at the end of the first quarter and
Clemson tied the score in the second quarter 7-7. With
22 seconds remaining in the half Neal Olkewicz blocked
a Divid Sims punt and Mike Carney recovered it in the
end zone for a touchdown and a 14-7 halftime lead
for Maryland. Sims had punted 104 times in his career
and it was the first punt he had ever had blocked.
Clemson's Jerry Butler scored on a 87 yard pass from
Steve Fuller in the third quarter and Maryland scored
less than a minute later on a 98 yard run from scrimmage
by Atkins, the longest in the history of die conference.
Fuller then hit Dwight Clark with a 62 yard pass and
another tie at 21-21 and in the fourdi quarter the Tigers
scored on a mere five yard run while Maryland could
muster only a 35 yard field goal by Ed Loncar.
The match for the conference championship ended
in a 28-24 win for the Tigers while die Terrapins picked
fourth in the pre -season poll finished second, 5-1 in the
ACC and 9-2 overall for the season.
Atkins in his final game in Byrd Stadium rushed for
197 yards on 28 carries as he captured all the single
season and career rushing records and added the single
game mark with the longest run from scrimmage, his
98 yard gallop.
The invitation to the Sun Bowl was presented to
Director of Athletics Carl James and Coach Jerry
Claiborne by Mr. Jimmy Rogers Jr., a Past President of
the Sun Bowl and a member of the selection Committee
following the exciting 28-24 finish against Clemson.
The acceptance by Mr. James gave Coach Claiborne
his sixth consecutive Bowl appearance.
40
MARYLAND STATISTICS 1978
GP ATI' (. \l\ loss M I AVG I.G I I)
TEAM STATISTICS
Atkins
1 1
283
1351 'in
1261
4.5 !
IS
in
Maddox
1 1
90
39S 3
192
4.1
IS
7
OPPON1 N I
MARYl VND
Dudish
W\scH kl
8
Hi
33
29
162 I
112 9
161
103
1.9
3.6
IS
it;
1
1 IRST DOWNS
142
207
Pasano
!)
1.'
61 (i
i,l
5.1
12
Rush Pass
Pen.
80/52/10
112/80/15
O'Hare
1 1
80
258 225
33
0.4 :
20
PENALTIES
YARDS
68/602
Dottei
8
1
31 ii
,'il
7.8 :
24
1
1 I Mill I s i OST
25/18
IS III
Kit hards
('.mm i
10
n
I i
6
19 22
1 1 3
17
II
1.2
1.8
9
6
1
VVC PER (AMI Rush
137.8
187.1
Sievers
11
o
8 2
6
3.0
8
Pass
118.4
147.1
Koziol
8
2
6 (1
6
3.0
3
Total
256.2
334.2
Tice
9
25
67 91
..'1
16
rOUCHDOWNS
HELD GOA1 S
16
5/10
31
TOTALS
11
580
2504 446
2058
3.6 !
is
21
16/26
OPPONENT
522
1887 371
PASSING
1 5 1 Ii
2.9
70
in
PAT KICK
PASS
RUN
14/15
0/1
0/0
25/28
0/2
1/1
•
rOTAL POINTS
125
261
GP
ATT
COMP .PCT
INT
YARD
LG
IT)
AVG PER GAME
11.4
23.7
O'Hare
11
192
105 .547
11
1388
45
4
Tice
9
37
20 .511
2
227
31
1
SCOF
Dotter
8
1
1 1. 000
0
3
3
1
Maddox
11
1
II
PLAYER PTS
Papuchis
11
1
(i
Loncar
73
(16 26
FG) — 25/28 PAT)
TOTALS
11
232
126 .543
1 1
1018
15
/. Atkins
Maddox
66
54
(1-1-1-2-3-b-i^-io-jb-ya Kui\-y» mj k«j
(1-1-2-3-3-4-8 RUNS-15-31 PASS)
OPPONENT
222
ion .455
12
1302
63
6 Richards
12
(4 RUN -- 45 PASS)
1
[Others)
6
Burruss
47 punt ret, Ellis
9 pass,
TOTAL
Dotter
24 run. Dudish 15
run,
Sievers
13 pass. Burgess 3
pass,
PLAYS YAF
AVG
TD
Carint i
2 run. Trimble Fumble recovery
O'Hare
Atkins
272
283
1421
1201
5.2
4.5
10 Tice
2
Carney Blocked runt recovery
(Conversion run)
Maddo?
Tice
91
62
392
203
4.3
3.3
6
1
KICKOFF RETURNS
Dotter
5
34
7.0
I>I AVFR
NO
YARDS
AVG LG
TD
TOTALS
812
3673
4.5
27
Ukins
8
228
28.5 98
1
OPPONENT
744
2818
3.8
16 Dotter
10
180
18.0 29
Maddox
3
40
13.3 23
RECEIVIN
Burruss
1
19
19.0 19
Carinci
1
16
16.0 16
NO
YARDS
AVG
LG
TD J?.1"1'5..
\\ vsocki
2
1
11
4
5.5 6
4.0 4
Richards
Sievers
35
21
575
258
16.4
12.3
45
19
1
1
rOTALS
26
498
19.2 'is
1
Carinci
21
229
10.9
24
OPPONENT
52
828
16.3 85
Ellis
11
170
15.5
28
1
Maddox
10
107
10.7
31
2
INTERCEPTS
Dudish
9
96
10.7
21
Burgess
8
78
9.8
17
1 ]
PLAYER
NO
YARDS
LP
Atkins
6
73
12.3
21
Koziol
2
9
4.5
6
1
Burruss
3
45
43
Dotter
1
19
19.0
19
Trimble
2
25
25
Havener
1
5
5.0
5
1
Saldante
2
19
17
Fasano
1
-1
I
5. Johnson
Huffier
1
1
18
15
18
15
TOTALS
126
IMS
12.2
45
6 ]
OPPONENT
100
1302
11.9
87
6 :
Medile
1
11
11
]
Viatera
1
2
2
PUNT RETURNS
<
Shaffer
1
0
NO
YARD
AYG
LG
TD
TOTALS
12
135
43
Burruss
25
169
6.8
56
1 i
DPPONENT
13
103
27
Trimble
15
14
0.9
6
Olkewicz
1
22
22.0
22
Eric Sievers
Lary
1
7
7.0
7
J '* *^t - Ui< 1
_^^^_ ME^—
TOTALS
42
212
5.2
56
1
v* ' v^
■ t A. £
OPPONENT
22
143
6.5
45
_ j£ i* 1
SR
'-^■ai v * - Y»
PUI
^ «^5m
~ %J£
^fe * j ■
WPjL ' i
NO
YARD
AVG LG YD-RET
NET
kjR>£i
RjlSf
Castro 66
2372
35.9 55
22-143
33.8
T <
Opponent 83
2971
35.8 52
42-212
33.2
FG MADE 26 30 31 31 32 33 34 35 38 39 39 47 47 47 49 50
MISSED 26 27 30 30 34 39 47 49 49 52
>'/
41
MARYLAND DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
Olkewicz
Palmer
C. Johnson
Van Horn
Matera
Gall
Daily
Shaffer
Burruss
Muffler
Baldante
Calta
Trimble
Lary
S. Johnson
Haussmann
Pete damp
Senft
Carney
Benson
Zillman
Rogers
Medile
Corvino
Robinson
Young
Haley
Sober
Byrom
POS GP
TKLS
NO CAUSE REC BLKD INT BLKD
FIRST ASST NO-LOSS GAIN SACK FUMBLE FUMBLE PASS PASS KICK
LB
11
188
106
82
5-17
6
9
2
3
1
0
1
DG
11
151
77
74
17-81
1
13
2
0
0
0
0
DT
11
129
78
51
18-119
6
12
4
1
0
0
0
DG
11
128
80
48
14-101
8
11
3
3
0
0
0
LB
11
122
65
57
5-10
6
1
3
3
3
1
0
DT
11
106
31
75
1-4
1
1
0
2
2
0
0
LB
11
71
35
36
1-2
3
0
1
0
1
0
0
DE
71
41
30
2-6
1
2
0
0
1
1
0
DB
11
71
36
35
1-9
0
0
3
0
0
3
2
DE
11
68
28
40
6-34
1
4
0
0
1
1
DB
11
57
21
36
0-0
1
0
0
2
0
2
DT
11
56
24
32
2-2
1
0
1
0
0
0
DB
11
55
29
26
0-0
1
0
0
2
0
2
SF
42
14
28
0-0
0
0
1
0
0
0
DB
11
31
14
17
1-2
0
0
0
0
0
1
DG
11
26
17
9
3-22
3
3
0
0
0
0
DE
11
26
11
15
2-9
0
1
1
0
0
0
DE
10
23
10
13
1-8
0
1
0
1
1
0
DG
11
21
12
9
1-7
0
1
0
0
0
0
DT
11
18
13
5
1-9
0
1
1
1
1
0
LB
8
10
5
6
1
DT
10
9
3
6
OB
8
9
6
3
1
DT
2
7
6
1
DE
5
6
4
2
DB
3
2
1
0
LB
1
2
1
1
1
DB
1
0
0
0
C
11
0
0
0
1
~w
~5T
NOTES ON DEFENSE (Tackles in Single Game)
27 by Neal Olkewicz vs Penn State
23 by Charles Johnson \-s Louisville
21 by Neal Olkewicz vs Louisville
20 by Neal Olkewicz vs N.C. State
20 by Neal Olkewicz vs North Carolina
19 by Charles Johnson vs Clemson
19 by Bruce Palmer vs N.C. State
19 by Bruce Palmer vs Louisville
18 by
18 by
17 by
16 by
16 by
16 by
16 by
15 by
15 by
15 by
15 by
15 by
Neal Olkewicz vs Clemson
Ed Gall vs Tulane
Bruce Palmer vs Tulane
Neal Olkewicz vs Tulane
Neal Olkewicz vs Kentucky
Bruce Palmer vs North Carolina
Brian Matera vs North Carolina
Brian Matera vs Tulane
Marlin Van Horn vs Clemson
Neal Olkewicz vs Syracuse
Bruce Palmer vs Penn State
Brian Matera vs N.C. State
Lloyd Burruss blocked Field Goal Attempt by North Carolina
blocked Field Goal Attempt by Syracuse (knocked ball back 19 yards where Joe Muffler picked it up
and ran 58 yards setting up Terp Touchdown with 77 yard play).
Neal Olkewicz blocked punt by Clemson (line of scrimmage was 22) ball bounced into end zone and was recovered
by Mike Carney for touchdown.
OPPONENTS
MARYLAND
SCORING BY QUARTERS
1ST 2ND 3RD 4TH— TP
30 27 41 27 — 125
67 45 82 67 — 261
ATTENDANCE FOR SEASON
1 1 Games Total 435,489
11 Game Average 39,590
5 Games Home 214,145
5 Game Average 42,829
42
MARYLAND ALL ■ AMERICANS
HONORABLE MENTION ALL-AMERICANS (AP & UPI)
1931 Jess Krajcovic — (I
1934 Norwood Sothoron — FB
Vic Willis — E
Hill Guckeyion — III)
I'd Minion — T
1935 Bill Guckeyion — IIB
Vic Willis — E
1936 Bill Guckeyson — HB
1937 Jim Meade — HB
1940 Bob Smith — C
Ralph Albarano — T
1942 Tommy Mont — QB
Paul Flick — C
1947 Lou Gambino — HB
Gene Kinney — C
1948 Ray Krouse — T
Elmer Wingate — E
1950 Ed Modzelewski — FB
1951 Jack Scarbalh — QB
Tom Cosgrove — C
Dave Cianelli — FB
Joe Petruzzo — HB
1952 Stan Jones — T
1953 Chet Hanulak — HB
Ralph Felton — FB
BUI Walker — E
John Irvine — C
Bob Morgan — T
1954 !).<k Bielski — FB
Ronnie Waller — HI!
Jack Boweriox — C
John Irvine — C
Hill Walker — E
Bob Pellegrini — G
George Palahunik — G
1955 Mike Sandusky — T
Jack Davis — G
Frank Tamburello — QB
Ed Heuring — T
1956 Mike Sandusky — T
Jack Davis — G
Gene Aldcrton — C
1957 Rod Breedlove — (.
Ed Cooke — E
Cene Alderton — C
1958 Rod Breedlove — G
Fred Cole — T
1959 Rod Breedlove — G
Jim Joyce — FB
Gary Collins — E
Tom Cunderman — G
Kurt Schwartz — T
1960 Gary Collins — E
Dale Betty — QB
1961 Bob Hacker — C
1962 Dick Shiner — QB
[965
1970
1972
1973
I'i, l
1975
1976
1977
1978
Walter Hock — <:
Roger Shoals — - T
Torn l'i ow n — 111!
Bob Sullivan — in:
Ralph s.,,,nt.ig — OT
(.m Roberta — DE
Paul Vellano — DG
Bob Smith — 1)1'.
Randy While — DT
Louis Carter — III)
Bob Smith — l)B
Louis ( .illrr — III',
Sum- Mike-Mayei — KS
Stan Rogers — OT
Bob Siniili — DB
Harry Walters — I. II
Waltei White — l E
LeRoj Hughes — DE
Jim lire, hbicl — 1)11
Ki\ in Benson — 1,11
Paul Divito — IX.
Brad Can — Eli
Ed Fulton — OG
Mark Manges — QB
Ken Roy — DB
Tom Schick — OT
Larry Seder — IK.
Ted Klaube — IK.
Stoc- Atkins — TB
Charles Johnson — DT
Bruce Palmer — I)' .
Lloyd Burruss — DB
FOOTBALL WRITERS ASSOCIATION
First Team
Gary Collins — E
1961
1974
1976
Randy White — DT
Joe Campbell — DT
AMERICAN FOOTBALL COACHES ASSOCIATION
First Team
Gary Collins — E
1961
1973
1974
1976
Paul Vellano — DG
Randy White — DT
Joe Campbell — DT
ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Team
1950
Bob Ward — G
1951
Bob Ward — G
1952
Jack Scarbath — QB
Dick Modzelewski — T
1953
Stan Jones — T
1955
Bob Pellegrini — C
1973
Randy White — DT
1974
Randy White — DT
Second Team
1923 Bill Supplee — E
1928 Gerald Snyder — FB
1949 Ray Krouse — T
1951 Dick Modzelewski — T
Ed Modzelewski — FB
1953 Bernie Faloney — QB
1954 Bill Walker — E
1961 Gary Collins — E
1976 Joe Campbell — DT
Third Team
1955 Ed Vereb — HB
1973 Paul Vellano — DG
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE
(now merged as UPI)
First Team
1951 Bob Ward — G
1952 Jack Scarbath — QB
Dick Modzelewski — T
1953 Stan Jones — T
Bernie Faloney — QB
1955 Bob Pellegrini — C
Second Team
1953 Chet Hanulak — HB
1955 Ed Vereb — HB
THE SPORTING NEWS
First Team
1951 Bob Ward — G
1952 Jack Scarbath — QB
Dick Modzelewski — T
1953 Stan Jones — T
Bernie Faloney — QB
1955 Bob Pellegrini — C
Mike Sandusky — T
1974 Randy White — DT
Steve Mike-Mayer — KS
1976 Joe Campbell — DT
UNITED PRESS
First Team
1951
Bob Ward — G
1952
Jack Scarbath — QB
Dick Modzelewski — T
1953
Stan Jones — T
1955
Bob Pellegrini — C
1961
Gary Collins — DT
1974
Randy White — DT
Second Team
1950
Bob Ward — G
1951
Ed Modzelewski — FB
1953
Bernie Faloney — QB
1955
Mike Sandusky — T
Bill Walker — E
1973
Paul Vellano — DG
1976
Joe Campbell — DT
Third Team
1951
Dick Modzelewski — T
1955
Ed Vereb — HB
TIME
MAGAZINE
First Team
1974
Randy White — DT
Steve Mike-Mayer — KS
43
TERPS ON ALL-ACC TEAMS
"Atlantic Coast Sportswriters Association"
1953 — FIRST TEAM
Stan Jones — Tackle
Jack Bowersox — Guard
Bernie Faloney — Back
Chester Hanulak — Back
— SECOND TEAM
Bill Walker — End
Bob Morgan — Tackle
Ralph Felton — Back
— THIRD TEAM
John Irvine — Center
Marty CryUer — End
— PLAYER OF YEAR
Bernie Faloney — Back
— COACH OF YEAR
Jim Tatum
1954 — FIRST TEAM
Bill Walker — End
Dick Bielski — Back
Ronnie Waller — Back
— SECOND TEAM
Bob Pellegrini — Guard
John Irvine — Center
— THIRD TEAM
Jack Bowersox — Guard
1955 — FIRST TEAM
Mike Sandusky — Tackle
Jack Davis — Guard
Bob Pellegrini — Center
Ed Vereb — Back
— SECOND TEAM
Bill Walker — End
Russell Dennis — End
Frank Tamburello — Back
— PLAYER OF YEAR
Bob Pellegrini — Center
— COACH OF YEAR
Jim Tatum
— JACOBS BLOCKING
TROPHY
Bob Pellegrini — Center
1956 — FIRST TEAM
Mike Sandusky — Tackle
Jack Davis — Guard
— THIRD TEAM
Gene Alderton — Center
1957 — FIRST TEAM
Ed Cooke — End
Rod Breedlove — Guard
— SECOND TEAM
Gene Alderton — Center
1958 —SECOND TEAM
Fred Cole — Tackle
Rod Breedlove — Guard
1959 —SECOND TEAM
Tom Gunderman — Guard
Jim Joyce — Back
1960 — FIRST TEAM
Gary Collins — End
1961 — FIRST TEAM
Gary Collins — End
Bob Hacker — Center
— SECOND TEAM
Roger Shoals — Tackle
Bill Kirchiro — Tackle
1962 — FIRST TEAM
Walter Rock — Guard
Dick Shiner — Back
Tom Brown — Back
1963 —SECOND TEAM
1973
DEFENSIVE TEAM
Dick Shiner
Back
1964
1965
1966
1969
1970
1971
— FIRST TEAM
Jerry Fishman — Guard
— SECOND TEAM
Olaf Drozdov — Tackle
Tom Hickey — Back
— DEFENSE TEAM
Bob Sullivan — Back
— DEFENSE TEAM
Dick Absher — End
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Ralph Sonntag — Tackle
— JACOBS BLOCKING
TROPHY
Ralph Sonntag
DEFENSIVE TEAM
Guy Roberta — End
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Dan Bungori — End
1972 — DEEFENSIVE TEAM
Paul Vellano — Guard
Bob Smith — Safety
Randy White — Tackle
Paul Vellano — Guard
Bob Smith — Safety
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Louis Carter — Tailback
— COACH OF YEAR
Jerry Claiborne
1974 — DEFENSIVE TEAM
Bob Smith — Safety
Harry Walters — Linebacker
Randy White — Tackle
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Louis Carter — Tailback
Stan Rogers — Tackle
Steve Mike-Mayer — Kicker
— PLAYER OF YEAR
Randy White — Def. Tackle
1975 — DEFENSIVE TEAM
LeRoy Hughes — End
Jim Brechbiel — Back
Kevin Benson — Linebacker
Joe Campbell — Tackle
Paul Divito — Guard
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Marion Koprowski — Tackle
— SPECIALIST
Mike Sochko — Kicker
— COACH OF YEAR
Jerry Claiborne
1976 — DEFENSIVE TEAM
Ken Roy — Back
Joe Campbell — Tackle
Brad Carr — Linebacker
Larry Seder — Guard
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Mark Manges — Quarterback
Ed Fulton — Guard
Tom Schick — Tackle
— COACH OF YEAR
Jerry Claiborne
1977 — DEFENSIVE TEAM
Ted Klaube — Guard
1978 — DEFENSIVE TEAM
Bruce Palmer — Guard
Charles Johnson — Tackle
Lloyd Burruss — Back
— OFFENSIVE TEAM
Steve Atki
Taill:
44
THE TERP AWARDS
The
Alvin L. Aubinoe Trophy
to
the u
1956
\l Wharton — Tackle
1964
1957
\\ illuir Main — Center
I'M,".
l!).r»S
I ed Kerahner — Rat k
1966
1959
|ik- ( ..inh — Tac kit-
1967
I960
Leroy Dietrit li — Center
1968
1961
Dick Barlund — End
1969
1962
M ii i ii i s Bannei — 1 l.ilfli.u i.
1970
I'M. f
George Stern — Halfback
1971
John Kciiii\ — End
( Ii. nits ECrahling — Center
Bobby Collins — Hack
Pat Baker — Ba< k
Ku k ( larlaon — I nd
Paul E. Fitzpatrit k — Bat k
Robert J. MarBride — Tackle
Jiff Shugars — Quarterback
1972 Ron Kei man — Ci
1973 Ken S, oil — I a. I •
1974 Frank Ruasell - End
1975 Jim Richey —Tackle
1976 Bob Raba ■ I nd
1977 Don Rhodes — Center
1978 Mike Simon — Center
The George C. Cook Memorial Scholarship Trophy to a member of the football team with the highest scho-
lastic average.
1962
Don White — Quarterback
1968
1963
Dave Nardo — Knd
1 969
1964
Dave Nardo — Knd
1965
Bruce Springer — Hack
1970
1966
Larry Bagranoff — Tackle
1971
1967
Clunk Tine — Tackle
1972
Ralph Intclgcn — Guard
William (Irani — Knd
Ralph H. Friedgen — Guard
Patrick M. Burke — Guard
Steve Fromang — Tackle
Steve Fromang — Tackle
1973 James Martell — End
1974 Kim Hoover — 1 nd
1975 Knn Homer — Knd
1967 Jonathan Claiborne — Safety
1977 Jonathan Claiborne — Safety
1978 Joe Muffler — Def. Knd
Anthony C. Nardo Memorial Trophy to the best football lineman of the year.
1950 Bob Ward — (iuard
1951 Bob Ward — Guard
1952 William Maletzky — Guard
1953 Stan Jones — Tackle
1954 Bob Pellegrini — Guard
1955 Mike Sandusky — Tac kle
1957 Don Healv — Tackle
1958 Fred Cole — Tackle
1959 Tom Cunderman — (iuard
1960 Gary Collins — Knd
1961 Bill Kirchio — Tackle
1962 Dave Crossan — Tac kle
1964 Fred foyce — Guard
1965 Dick Absher — End
1966 Dick Absher — End
1967 Jim Lavrusky — Linebacker
1968 Ron Pearson — Knd
1969 Peter Mattia — Tackle
Bob Beall - Tommy Marcos Trophy to the best football lineman of the year.
1970 Guv M. Roberts — Knd
1971 Dennis O'llara — Knd
1972 Paul Vellano — Guard
1973 Randy White — Tackle
1974 Rat:
White — Tackle
Ray Krouse Memorial Award to most valuable senior.
1974 Ranch White
1977 Ted Klaube -
- Def. Tackle
Guard
1975 John Schultz — Wingback
1978 Neal Olkewicz — Linebacker
1976 Tim Wilson
Fullback
Jim Tatum Memorial Trophy to the outstanding tackle.
1950
Kurt Schwartz
1960
Tom Sankovich
1961
Bill Kirchiro
1962
Dave Crossan
1963
Olaf Drozdov
1964
Larry Gagranoff
1965
Larry Bagranoff
1966
Tom
Cichowski
1967
Tom
Mvslinski
1968
Tom
Plevin
1969
Peter
Mattia
1970
Peter
Mattia
1971
Guy
Roberts
1972
Paul
Vellano
1973 Randv White
1974 Randv White
1975 Paul Divito
Manon Koprowski
1976 Joe Campbell
1977 Ted Klaube
1978 Charles Johnson
The Teke Trophy to the student who during his four years at the University has rendered the greatest service
to football. (Became the Terrapin Club Award in 1975).
1965 John Idzik — Back
1950 John Idzik — Back
1951 Bob Ward — Guard
1952 Ed Fullerton — Back
1953 Bernie Faloney — Back
1954 John Irvine — Center
1955 Bob Pellegrini — Center
1956 Mike Sandusky — Tackle
1957 Gene Alderton — Center
1958 Bob Rusevlvan — Back
1959 Kurt Schwartz — Tackle
1960 Vincent Scott — End
1961 Garv Collins — End
1962 Tom Brown — Halfback
1963 Bob Burton — Halfback
1964 Olaf Drozdov — Tackle
1965 George Stem — Back
1966 Dick Absher — End
1967 Lou Stickel — Back
1968 Billy Lovett — Fullback
1969 Kenneth B. Dutton — Back
1970 Peter Mattia — Tackle
1971 Tommy Miller — Back
1972 Don Ratliff — End
1973 Paul Vellano — Guard
1974 Randv White
1975 LeRov Hughes — End
1976 Bob Raba — End
1977 Brad Carr — Linebacker
1978 Dean Richards — End
45
TERP LEADERS OVER THE YEARS — Single Season Marks
(Regular Season Games)
SCORING
97 Bob Shemonski — 1950
96 Lu Gambino — 1947
96 Ed Vereb — 1955
84 Louis Carter — 1973
79 Steve Mike-Mayer — 1974
73 Ed Loncar — 1978
69 Steve Mike-Mayer — 1973
67 Mike Sochko — 1975
66 Steve Atkins — 1978
66 Ed Modzelewski — 1951
56 John Schultz — 1974
55 Darryl Hill — 1963
55 Kambiz Behbahani — 1971
54 Steve Atkins — 1977
54 Bernie Faloney — 1953
54 Dick Bielski — 1954
53 Ralph Felton — 1953
TOUCHDOWNS
16 Lu Gambino — 1947
16 Bob Shemonski — 1950
16 Ed Vereb — 1955
14 Louis Carter — 1973
11 Steve Atkins — 1978
11 Ed Modzelewski — 1951
9 Alvin Maddox — 1978
9 Steve Atkins — 1977
9 Bernie Faloney — 1954
9 John Schultz — 1974
TOUCHDOWN RECEPTIONS
8 Dan Bungori — 1971
7 Billy Van Heusen — 1966
7 Darryl Hill — 1963
6 Don Ratliff — 1972
5 Walter White — 1973
5 Kim Hoover — 1975
TOTAL OFFENSE
MOST PASS RECEPTIONS
INTERCEPTIONS
10 Bob Sullivan — 1965
8 Tom Brown— 1961
7 Bob Smith — 1972
6 Larry Marshall — 1971
6 Tom Brown — 1962
6 Bernie Faloney — 1953
6 Joe Horning — 1951
RUSHING PLAYS
283 Steve Atkins — 1978
224 Louis Carter — 1974
221 Art Seymore — 1970
218 Louis Carter — 1973
217 Billy Lovett — 1968
188 George Scott — 1977
182 Bo Hickey — 1964
169 Tommy Miller — 1969
156 Len Chiaverini — 1962
147 Steve Atkins — 1977
141 Alvin Maddox — 1976
1689
1593
1426
1421
1395
1386
1301
1265
1261
1257
1186
1156
Bob Avellini —
Mark Manges —
Dick Shiner —
Tun O'Hare —
Alan Pastrana -
Jack Scarbath -
Larrv Dick —
Al Neville — 1
Steve Atkins
Bob Avellini —
Dick Shiner —
Larry' Dick —
1974
- 1976
1962
— 1978
— 1966
— 1952
1977
971
1978
■ 1972
1963
1975
YARDS PASSING
1648 Bob Avellini — 1974
1499 Alan Pastrana — 1966
1388 Tim O'Hare — 1978
1351 Larry Dick — 1977
1324 Dick Shiner — 1962
1275 Al Neville — 1971
1251 Bob Avellini — 1972
1190 Larry Dick — 1975
1165 Dick Shiner — 1963
1149 Jack Scarbath — 1952
1145 Mark Manges — 1976
1076 Tommy Mont — 1942
1053 Alan Pastrana — 1968
MOST PASS COMPLETIONS
121
Dick Shiner — 1962
112
Bob Avellini — 1974
108
Dick Shiner — 1963
107
Al Neville — 1971
105
Tim O'Hare — 197S
102
Al Pastrana — 1966
98
Bob Avellini — 1972
90
Larry Dick — 1975
83
Larry Dick — 1977
82
Dale Betty — 1960
81
Al Pastrana — 1968
81
Mark Manges — 1976
MOST YARDS
PASS RECEPTIONS
593 Lloyd Colteryahn — 1952
575 Dean Richards — 1978
557 Tom Brown — 1962
536 Billy Van Heusen — 1966
532 Kim Hoover — 1975
516 Darryl Hill — 1963
515 Don Ratliff — 1972
505 Vince Kinney — 1977
499 Roland Merritt — 1969
490 Dan Bungori — 1971
472 Frank Russell — 1972
468 Frank Russell — 197.!
462 Bobby Collins — 1965
MOST TOUCHDOWN PASSES
17 Alan Pastrana — 1966
12 Tommy Mont — 1942
II Mark Manges — 1976
II) Al Neville — 1971
II) Dick Shiner— 1963
10 Vic Turyn — 1948
8 Jack Scarbath — 1951
8 Larry Dick — 1975
47
Tom Brown —
1962
43
Darryl Hill —
1963
39
Frank Russell -
- 1973
38
Kim Hoover —
1975
36
Don Ratliff —
1972
35
Dean Richards
— 1978
32
Vince Kinney -
- 1977
32
Dan Bungori -
- 1971
32
Dennis O'Hare
— 1971
32
Lloyd Colteryahn — 1952
31
Frank Russell -
- 1974
30
Frank Russell -
- 1972
30
Gary Collins —
- 1960
30
Gary Collins —
- 1961
27
Walter White -
- 1973
27
Walter White -
- 1974
YARDS RUSHING
1261 Steve Atkins — 1978
991 Louis Carter— 1974
963 Billy Lovett — 1968
945 Art Seymore — 1970
904 Lu Gambino — 1947
894 Bo Hickey — 1964
894 George Scott — 1977
834 Ed Modzelewski — 1951
801 Louis Carter — 1973
753 Chet Hanulak — 1953
678 Alvin Maddox — 1976
642 Ed Vereb — 1955
629 Tom Miller — 1969
625 Ed Modzelewski — 1949
621 Steve Atkins — 1976
610 Tim Wilson — 1976
602 Len Chiaverini — 1962
TACKLES
188
Neal Olkewicz
— 1978
186
Ted Klaube —
- 1977
173
Harry Walters
— 1974
157
Brad Carr —
1976
151
Bruce Palmer
— 1978
147
Randy White
— 1974
SACKS
13 Bruce Palmer — 1978
12 Randy White — 1974
12 Charles Johnson — 1978
11 Marlin Van Horn — 1978
8 Ernie Salley — 1975
7 Joe Campbell — 1975
TACKLES IN BACKFIELD
24 Randy White — 1974
18 Charles Johnson — 1978
17 Brace Palmer — 1978
11 Marlin X.u\ Horn — 1978
14 Chip Garber — 1976
13 Charles Johnson — 1977
13 Ernie Salley — 1975
12 |oe Campbell — 1975
12 Paul Divito — 1975
4(i
MARYLAND COACHES
DOWN THE YEARS
MARYLAND AGGIES
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
1916
1917
1918
1919
Head Coach
WLT
192?)
1921
•W. W. Skinner
0 3
0
1922
•S. 11. Harding
6
0
0
1923
*J. G. Harmon
3
3
I)
1924
No Team
1925
•Grenville Lewis
6
2
2
1926
* John Lillibridge
2
4
(t
1927 >H. C.Byrd
*J. F. Kenly
2
5
0
1928
♦S.M.Cooke
1
4
0
1929
*F. H. Peters
3
4
1
1930
•E. B. Dunbar
1
7
0
1931
3
,5
?
1932
D. John Markey
7
2
4
4
0
2
1933
1934,
6
4
n
1935 1
Fred Nielsen
5
3
0
19361 JackFaber
1937 >
C. C. Church & C.
rV.
Melick
3
6
0
1938 Frank M. Dobson
Bill Lang
3
8
0
I939J
Barney Cooper & E
R. Alston
C. F.Donnelly &H
.P
.c
Larkin
Byrd
2
4
4
6
5
3
4
1
0
l
2
1
1940*1 Jack Faber, Al Heaj
194 1J Al Woods
1942 Clark Shaughnessy
H. C.Byrd
6
5
3
3
0
0
19431 rl c
19441 t-'arence Spears
6
3
0
J
1945 Paul "Bear" Bryant
1946 Clark Shaughnessy
1947 -a]
1948
MARYLAND
STA'
1949 -b
1950
1951 - c >Jim Tatum
6
2
0
1952
H. C.Byrd
4
4
3
1
1
1
1953-d
1954
5
4
0
1955 - e
J
2
5
5
2
3
5
4
7
6 3 1
4 4 2
7 5
8 1
6
7
3
19561
1957 VTommy Mont
1958J
•Tom Nugent
1966 Lou Saban
Bob Ward
4 6
1967
1968
1969")
1970^ Roy Lester
197lJ
1
1
7 2 0
4 5 0
1 7 1
Jerry Claiborne
0
2
3
2
2
5
8
8
9
II
8
9
354
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
I)
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
38
2
6
2
4
1
2
10 0
7 2
10 1
7 2
10 1
86 Year Totals 422
* Teams coached by captains
a Gator Bowl co-champions, tied Ceorgia,
20-20
b Cator Bowl champions, defeated
Missouri. 20-7
c Sugar Bowl champions, defeated
Tennessee. 28-13
i National champions, lost to Oklahoma
111 Orange Bowl
e Orange Bowl, lost to Oklahoma. 6-20
f Peach Bowl, lost to Ceorgia. 16-17
£ Liberty Bowl, lost to Tennessee, 3-7
T Gator Bowl, defeated Florida, 13-0
i Cotton Bowl, lost to Houston 30-21
j Hall of Fame, defeated Minnesota. 17-7
k Sun Bowl lost to Texas 0-42
ALL TIME MARYLAND FOOTBALL RECORDS AGAINST ALL OPPONENTS
WLT
W L T
Air Force Acad 2
Alabama 1
Alex. High 1
American Univ 0
Auburn L'niv 1
Bainbridge Training 1
Baltimore City Col 2
Baltimore Med. Col 0
Baltimore Poly 3
Ba\lor Univ 1
Bethel Mil. Acad 1
Boston Univ 2
Business High 1
Carnegie Tech 0
Catholic Univ 8
Central High 6
Charlotte Hall Mil 1
Chicago Univ 0
Cincinnati ..
Clemson Univ.
2
15
Clifton Ath. Club 1
Columbia Ath. Club 0
Connecticut 1
Curtis Bay Coast Guard 0
Delaware 3
Dickinson Col 1
Duke Univ 8
Duquesne Univ 1
Eastern High 4
Episcopal High 0
Univ. of Florida 6
Florida State 0
Fortress Monroe _ 0
Fredericksburg Col 2
Gallaudet 9
Georgetown Univ 6
0 0
2 0
0 0
1 0
1 0
1 0
0 0
1 0
1 0
1 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
1 0
1 2
2 0
0 0
1 (I
0 0
II I
0 0
1 0
0 0
1 0
5 1
0 0
14 0
0 0
0 0
3 0
9 0
2 0
0 1
0 0
6 1
9 0
Georgetown Prep 1
George Washington 10
Univ, of Oeorgia 3
Gibraltar Ath. Club 0
Gonzaga High I
Greenville (SC) AAB I
Guilford Col 1
Gunton Temple Bapt. Ch 1
Hampdeii-Svdney 2
Haverford Col 0
Houston 0
Indiana Univ 0
Johns Hopkins 16
Univ. of Kentucky 3
Lakehurst Nav. Air Sta 1
Louisiana State I'niv 3
1 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
Louisville
U.S. Marine Barricks
Merchant Marine Acad 1
Miami (Florida) 5
Miami (Ohio) 0
Michigan State 1
Minnesota 1
Mississippi 1
Missouri 6
Mt. St. Joseph's Col 2
Mt. St. Man's Col 2
Mt. Washington Club 0
Navy 5
New York Univ 2
Univ. of N.C 18
N.C. State 15
Ohio Univ 1
Oklahoma Univ 0
Old Univ. of Md 3
Olympia Ath. Club 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
5 0
1 0
4 0
0 0
1 0
0 0
0 0
2 1
1 0
14 0
0 0
23 1
16 4
0 0
4 0
2 1
0 0
\V L T
Orient Ath. Club 1 0 0
Pennsylvania 14 0
Penn State 1 23 0
Penn Military 3 1 0
Princeton 0 2 0
Randolph-Macon Col 0 2 1
Rich. Army Air Base 1 0 0
Richmond I niv 11 5 2
Rock Hill Col 3 1 0
Rutgers Univ 4 3 0
St. Johns Col 18 11 0
Univ. of S.C 17 11 0
SMI 2 0 0
Swarthmore Col 0 1 0
Syracuse Univ 11 13 1
Tech. High 5 2 0
UCLA 1 1 0
Univ. of Tenn 14 0
I'niv. of Texas 0 3 0
Texas A £.- M 0 2 0
Third Army Corps 10 0
Tulane Univ 2 1 0
Yanderbilt I 5 0
Yillanova 6 2 0
Yirginia 26 15 2
Virginia Mil. Inst 14 9 2
Virginia Tech 14 10 0
Wake Forest 19 7 1
Walbrook Ath. Club 0 1 0
Washington & Lee 13 5 2
Washington Col 18 3 1
Western High 0 0 1
Western Md 18 13 I
West Va 8 7 2
William & Mary 1 2 0
Yale I'niv 2 8 1
47
MARYLAND FOOTBALL RECORDS
SINGLE GAME— INDIVIDUAL
SCORING
Most Points Scored
31 by Bob Shemonski vs. Virginia Tech, 1950 (5 TDs, 1 PAT)
Most Touchdowns Scored
5 by Bob Shemonski vs. Virginia Tech, 1950
Most Points-After-Touchdown Scored
8 by Steve Mike-Mayer vs. Duke, 1974
8 by Mike Sochko vs. Virginia. 1975
Most Touchdown Passes Caught
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
2 by
Don Gleasner vs. Virginia, 1945
Leroy Mortor vs. Michigan State, 1946
Lou Gambino vs. West Virginia. 1947
Elmer Wingate vs. George Washington, 1948
Stan Karnash vs. George Washington, 1949
Pete Augsburger vs. South Carolina, 1949
Henry Fox vs. Georgetown, 1949
Lloyd Colteryahn vs. LSU, 1952
Bill Walker vs. Alabama, 1953
Gary Collins vs. Clemson. 1959
Billy Van Heusen vs. N.C. State, 1966
Dan Bungori vs. Florida, 1971
V'ince Kinney vs. Villanova, 1975
Most Touchdowns Responsibility (Run and Pass)
5 by Bob Shemonski vs. Virginia Tech, 1950
Most Field Goals Scored
3 by Steve Mike-Mayer vs. Alabama and Villanova, 1974
3 by Mike Sochko vs. Clemson, 1975
3 by Ed Loncar vs. Duke, 1978
TOTAL OFFENSE
Most Net Yards Gained Rushing and Passing
324 by Tim O'Hare vs. Virginia, 1978
Most Total Plays
46 by Al Neville vs. Penn State, 1971 (35 passes, 11 rushes)
Best Offensive Average
(Minimum Four Plays, Rushing and Passing)
24.0 by Ernie Arizzi vs. Syracuse, 1961 (4 plays, 96 yards)
RUSHING
Most Yards Gained Rushing (Net)
237 by George Scott vs Villanova, 1977
Most Rushes
42 by George Scott vs. Villanova, 1977
Best Rushing Average
24.0 by Ernie Arizzi vs. Syracuse, 1961 (4 carries)
Longest Scoring Run From Scrimmage
98 yards by Steve Atkins vs. Clemson, 1978
Longest Non-Scoring Run From Scrimmage
76 yards by Harry Bonk vs. North Carolina, 1949
PASSING
Most Yards Gained Passing
314 by Bob Avellini vs. Duke, 1972 (21 for 31)
Most Passes Attempted
35 by Jim Corcoran vs. Penn State, 1965 (completed 18)
35 by Jeff Shugars vs. Miami (Ohio), 1969 (completed 19)
35 by Al Neville vs. Penn State, 1971 (completed 23)
Most Passes Completed
23 by Al Neville vs. Penn State, 1971 (attempted 35)
Best Completion Percentage
(Minimum, 10 attempts)
.909 by Bob Avellini vs. Duke, 1974 (10 of 11)
Most Touchdown Passes Thrown
4 by Mark Manges vs. Villanova, 1975
Most Passes Caught
10 by Darryl Hill vs. Clemson, 1963
Most Yards Gained By Pass Receptions
160 by Dean Richards vs. Penn State, 1977 (9)
Longest Scoring Pass and Run
92 yards by Stan Lavine to Ed Bolton vs. South Carolina, 1949
(pass 15 yards, runn 77 yards)
Longest Scoring Run After Pass
77 yards by Ed Bolton on pass from Stan Lavine vs. South Caro-
lina, 1949 (pass 15 yards)
Longest Non-Scoring Pass and Run
73 yards by Tommy Mont to Hubie Werner vs. Lakehurst, 1942
(pass 32 yards, run 41 yards)
Longest Non-Scoring Run After Pass
41 yards by Hubie Werner vs. Lakehurst, 1942, on 32 yards pass
from Tommy Mont
Longest Scoring Pass
40 yards by Dick Novak to Jim Davidson vs. West Virginia, 1959
Longest Non-Scoring Pass
50 yards by Alan Pastrana to Ralph Donofrio vs. Wake Forest, 1966
Most Passes Had Intercepted
4 by Dick Shiner vs. Navy. 1963
4 by Alan Pastrana vs. Clemson. 1966
4 by Larry Dick vs. North Ca:olina, 1977
Most Passes Intercepted
3 by Bob Shemonski vs. Georgia, 1951
3 by Tom Brown vs. Air Force. 1961
3 by Bob Sullivan vs. Navy, 1965
3 by Bob Smith vs. V.M.I., 1972
Most Yards Gained On Interception Runbacks
111 yards by Dick Lewis vs. North Carolina State, 1956
Longest Scoring Run of Intercepted Pass
100 yards by Joe Horning vs. Missouri, 1951 (105 actual)
100 yards by Dickie Lewis vs. N.C. State, 1956 (103 actual)
100 yards by Tom Brown vs. Virginia, 1962
Longest Non-Scoring Run of Intercepted Pass
89 yards by Kevin Benson vs. Virginia, 1973
Longest Scoring Run of Intercepted Pass
By Opponent
93 yards by Walter Matson of Pennsylvania, 1941
OTHERS
Most Punts
11 by Greg Fries vs. Clemson, 1968, Syracuse, 1969
Most Total Yards Punting
510 by Bill Guckeyson vs. Syracuse, 1936
Best Punting Average
53 yards by Lynn Beightol vs. Oklahoma, 1956 Orange Bowl
(3 punts)
Longest Punt With Roll
88 yards by John Fritsch vs. Miami, 1956
Note: "Untz" Brooke Brewer had a 93-yard punt vs V'MI,
1916 but records are incomplete. Kick may have been
measured from point of kick, not from line of scrimmage.
Longest Punt With Roll By Opponent
84 yards by Charlie Justice of North Carolina, 1948
Most Punts Returned
8 by Larry Marshall vs. Villanova, 1971 (141 yards)
Most Yards Gained Returning Punts
146 by Bob Shemonski vs. North Carolina State, 1950
(5 returns)
Longest Punt Return For Touchdown
90 yards by Dick Nolan vs. Clemson, 1953
Longest Punt Return For Touchdown By Opponent
100 yards by Frank Brady of Navy, 1951
Longest Non-Scoring Punt Return
67 yards by John McVicker vs. Syracuse, 1956
Most Punts Blocked
I by several players
Most Kickoffs Returned
6 by Larry Marshall vs. Miami (Ohio), 1969 (129 yards)
Most Yards Returning Kickoffs
153 by Tom Brown vs. Miami 1962 (5 returns)
Longest Kickoff Return For Touchdown
100 yards by Dick Novak and Dennis Condie vs. Virginia, 1960
(102 actual). Novak ret. to nine yard line, then lateraled
to Condie who returned 91 yards.
100 yards by Kenny Arabrusko vs. Navy, 1964 (101 actual)
48
Longest Kickoff Return For Touchdown By Opponent
93 y;ir<ls by Jim Mi Phcrson of North < arolina, 1926
Longest Non-Scoring Kickoff Return
92 bj John Schulti vs. North < arolina, 1975
Longest Scoring Run With Recovered Fumble
23 yards bj Howie Dare ^ North Carolina State, l'ir>i
Longest Non-Scoring Run With Recovered Fumble
By Opponent
75 yards bv ll.nr Russell of Washington and Lee, 1942
Most Opponents' Fumbles Recovered
3 b> loin ( ■ ii rider ma ri u. Miami. 1957
Longest Field Goal
54 yards by Steve Mike-Mayer vs. Villanova, 1973
SINGLE GAME RECORDS— TEAM
SCORING
Highest Score
Maryland SO — Washington College 0. 1927
Most Total Points Scored By Both Teams
90 in 1971; Maryland 27 Penn State 63
Largest Victory Margin
80-0 vs. Washington College, 1927
Largest Defeat Margin
0-76 vs. Navy, 1913
Most Touchdowns Scored
12 vs. Washington College, 1927
Most Points-After-Touchdown Scored
8 vs. Washington College, 1927
8 vs. Missouri, 1954
8 vs. Duke, 1974
8 vs. Virginia, 1975
Most Field Goals Scored
3 is. Villanova, 1972. 1973. 1974
3 vs. West Virginia, 1959
3 vs. Alabama, 1974
3 vs. Clemson. 1975
3 vs. Duke. 1978
Most Touchdowns Scored Passing
5 vs. Villanova, 1975
(4 by Mark Manges. 1 by Larry Dick)
Most Touchdowns Scored Passing By Opponents
4 by Wake Forest. 1958 (3 by Norm Snead. 1 by Charlie Parker)
4 by Virginia. 1965 (bv Bob Davis)
4 by Florida. 1971 (by John Reaves)
Most Safeties Scored
2 vs. Delaware. 1947
2 vs. Georgetown, 1950
2 vs. Villanova. 1974
TOTAL OFFENSE
Most Total Yards Gained
802 vs. Virginia. 1975 (5S2 rushing— 220 passing)
Fewest Total Yards Gained
29 vs. Syracuse, 1959
MOst Total Plays
93 vs. North Carolina State, 1973
RUSHING
Most Net Yards Gained Rushing
582 vs. Virginia. 1975 (67 carries)
Fewest Net Yards Gained Rushing
Minus 5S vs. Navy. 1965
Most Rushes
76- vs. Miami. 1958
Fewest Rushes
24 vs. North Carolina Slate. 1965
Best Average Per Rush
10.5 vards vs. Virginia Tech, 1950 (577 yards. 55 rushes)
Fewest Net Yards Gained Rushing By Opponents
Minus 21 bv West Virginia. 1951
Minus 21 by UCLA, 1955
Most First Downs Rushing
28 vs. Virginia, 1975
Fewest First Downs Rushing By Opponent
0 bv Wake I orest, 1373
Fewest First Downs Rushing
1 v.. Mil hig.in State, I'M I
I vs. Syrai use 1959
PASSING
Most Yards Gained Passing
350 vs Vill inova, 1975 i II foi 20)
Fewest Yards Gained Passing
0 vs. Michigan State, 1944
0 vs. Vanderbilt, 1948
0 vs. Missouri, 1951
Most Passes Attempted
48 vs. South ( arolina, 1971 (23 completions (or 210 yards)
Most Passes Completed
27 vs. Penn State, 1971 (40 attempts for 336 yards)
Fewest Passes Completed
Ovs. Michigan Si.iir. 1944 (1 attempt)
0 vs. Vanderbilt, I'M* (12 attempts)
0 v s. Missouri. 1951 (3 .it u-mpis )
Fewest Passes Attempted
1 vs. Michigan State. 1944
1 vs. Wake Forest, 1969
Best Completion Percentage
(Minimum, 10 attempts)
.824 vs. Tulane, 1973 (14 completions, 17 attempts)
Most Passes Intercepted
7 vs. Georgia, 1951
Most Passes Had Intercepted
6 by Pennsylvania. 1941
Most First Downs Passing
18 vs. Penn State, 1971
Fewest First Downs Passing
0—13 times, last vs. Wake Forest. 1969
Most Passes Attempted By Opponents
57 by West Virginia, 1951 (19 completions)
Fewest Passes Completed By Opponents
0 by Syracuse. 1939 (5 attempts)
(I bj Michigan State. 1944 (0 attempts)
0 by F)elaware. 1948 (3 attempts)
0 bv Boston University, 1952 (6 attempts)
0 bv Kentucky. 1956 (3 attempts)
Fewest Yards Gained Passing By Opponents
Minus 1 by Clemson, 1956
OTHERS
Most Punts
14 vs. Virginia. 1937
14 vs. Western Maryland. 1940
Fewest Punts
0 vs. Virginia. 1975
Most Total Yards Punting
510 vs. 'Syracuse. 1936 (10 units)
Best Punting Average
51.7 yards vs. Washington and Lee, 1951
( 155 yards. 3 punts)
Mcst Total First Downs
35 vs. Virginia, 1975
Fewest Total First Downs
! vs. Michigan State. 1944
Fewest Total First Downs By Opponent
1 by Wake Forest. 1973 (passing)
Most Fumbles
8 vs. Georgia. 1952 (lost 2)
49
Fewest Fumbles
0 vs. VMI, 1945
0 vs. Kentucky, 1954
0 vs. South Carolina, 1958
0 vs. South Carolina, 1959
0 vs. West Virginia, 1960
0 vs. Virginia, 1960
0 vs. Syracuse, 1972
0 vs. Duke. 1973
0 vs. Penn State, Syracuse.Duke. 1977
Most Fumbles Lost
6 vs. North Carolina, 1947
Most Fumbles By Opponents
8 by South Carolina, 1947
8 by Mississippi, 1953
Most Opponents' Fumbles Recovered
5 vs. Missouri in Cator Bowl, Jan. 1, 1950
5 vs. West Virginia. 1950
5 vs. North Carolina, 1960
Most Penalties
18 vs. Virginia Tech, 1950
Most Yards Penalized
141 vs. Cincinnati, 1975
Fewest Penalties
0 vs. Duke, 1941
Most Penalties By Opponents
15 by Miami, 1957
Most Yards Opponents Penalized
135 bv North Caroli
1953
Fewest Penalties By Opponents
0 by Western Maryland, 1937
0 by Western Maryland, 1939
0 by Florida, 1939
0 by Washington and Lee, 1941
0 by William and Mary, 1945
0 by South Carolina, 1953
SEASON RECORDS— INDIVIDUAL
SCORING
Most Points Scored, Regular Season
97 by Bob Shemonski, 1950 (10 games)
96 by Lou Gambino, 1947 (10 games)
96 by Ed Vereb, 1955 (10 games)
Most Points Scored, One Season, Including
Bowl Games
114 by Lou Gambino (96 in 1947 season plus 3 TDs
in 1948 Gator Bowl)
102 by Ed Vereb (96 in 1955 season plus one TD
in 1956 Orange Bowl)
Most Touchdowns Scored, Regular Season
16 by Lou Gambino, 1947 (10 games)
16 by Bob Shemonski, 1950 (10 games)
16 by Ed Vereb, 1955 (10 games)
Most Touchdowns Scored One Season, Including
Bowl Games
19 by Lou Gambino ( 16 in 1947 season plus 3
-in 1948 Gator Bowl)
17 by Ed Vereb (16 in 1955 season plus one
in 1956 Orange Bowl)
Most Points-After-Touchdown Scored
37 by Don Decker, 1951
Most Touchdown Passes Caught
8 by Dan Bungori, 1971 in 11 games
Most Touchdowns Responsibility (Run and Pass)
21 by Alan Pastrana, 1966 (17 TD passes, 4 TDs)
Most Field Goals
16 by Ed Loncar, 1978
Most Points By Kicking
79 by Steve Mike-Mayer, 1974
TOTAL OFFENSE
Most Yards Total Offense (Rushing and Passing)
1,689 by Bob Avellini, 1974
Most Total Plays
314 by Dick Shiner, 1963 (10 games)
RUSHING
Most Net Yards Rushing, Regular Season
1,261 by Steve Atkins, 1978
Most Rushes
283 by Steve Atkins, 1978
Best Rushing Average
9.8 yards by Chet Hanulak, 1953
PASSING
Most Yards Gained Passing
1,648 by Bob Avellini, 1974
Most Passes Attempted
222 by Dick Shiner in 10 games, 1963 (completed 108)
Most Passes Completed
121 by Dick Shiner in 10 games, 1962 (203 attempts)
Best Completion Percentage
.621 by Dale Betty in 10 games, 1960 (completed 82 of 132)
Most Touchdown Passes Thrown
17 by Alan Pastrana, 1966, 10 games
Most Passes Caught
47 by Tom Brown in 10 games, 1962 (557 yards)
Most Yards Gained on Pass Receptions
593 by Lloyd Colteryahn, 1952 (32 receptions, 9 games)
Most Passes Had Intercepted
16 by Dick Shiner in 10 games, 1962
Most Passes Intercepted
10 by Bob Sullivan in 10 games, 1965 (led nation)
Most Yards Returning Intercepted Passes
147 by Joe Horning, 1951 (6 interceptions in 9 games)
OTHERS
Most Punts
72 by Greg Fries, 1968 and 1969 (each 10 games)
Best Punting Average
43.7 by Bill Walker in 10 games, 1955 (15 punts). Walker
added four punts in 1956 Orange Bowl for an 11-game
average of 41.2, 19 punts.
Most Punts Returned
40 by Bob Smith in 11 games, 1973 (420 yards)
Most Yards Gained in Punt Returns
420 by Bob Smith in 11 games. 1973 (40 returns)
Best Punt Return Average (More Than Threex
24.5 by Tom Brown on 8 returns, 1961
Most Kickoffs Returned
24 by Kenny Dutton, 1967 (454 yards)
Most Yards Gained on Kickoff Returns
587 by Larry Marshall on 22 returns, 1971
Best Kickoff Return Average (More Than Three)
44 yards by Howie Dare, 1957 (6 returns for 264 yards)
Best Point-After-Touchdown Average
1.000 by John Hannigan. 1961 (17 for 17)
1.000 by Bernardo Bramson. 1965 (15 for 15)
SEASON RECORDS— TEAM
SCORING
Most Points Scored
353 in 9 regular season games, 1951
Fewest Points Scored (Full Season)
39 in 9 games, 1940
Most Points Scored By Opponents
299 in 10 games, 1968
Fewest Points Scored By Opponents
31 in 10 regular season games, 1953
Most Touchdowns Scored
52 in 9 regular season games, 1951
Most Field Goals Scored
16 in 1978
50
Most Points-After-Touchdown Scored
38 in 9 regular season games, 1951
TOTAL OFFENSE
Most Yards Gained Rushing and Passing
•I. LSI In 1974 (2,507 rushing, I.<)77 passing)
Most Yards Gained Rushing and Passing
By Opponents
1.192 in [0 games, 1968 (2.272 rushing, 1,920 passing)
Fewest Yards Gained Rushing and Passing
By Opponents
[,691 in 10 games, 1955 (761 \ar<ls rushing, 930 passing)
RUSHING
Most Yards Gained Rushing
2.921 in 9 re^ulat season games, 1951
Most Rushing Plays
654 in 197() (2,874 yards)
Most Yards Gained Rushing By Opponents
2.371 in 9 games, 19<>7
Most Yards Gained Rushing By Opponents
2,371 in 9 games, 1967
PASSING
Most Yards Gained Passing
1.982 in 11 games, 1972
Most Passes Attempted
287 in 11 games, 1972 (159 completions)
Most Passes Completed
159 in 11 games, 1972 (287 attempts)
Best Passing Percentage
.593 in 11 games, 1973 (118 of 199)
Most Yards Gained Passing By Opponents
1.920 in 10 games. 1968
Fewest Yards Gained Passing By Opponents
731 in 10 games. 1957 (Note: early records incomplete)
Best Passing Percentage By Opponents
.527 in 9 games. 1967 (77 completions, 146 attempts)
Most Pass Interceptions
34 in 9 games, 1951
38 in 10 games, in eluding the 28-13 victory over Tennessee
in the Sugar Bowl. Jan. 1. 1952
Most Pass Interceptions By Opponents
23 in 10 games, 1948
OTHERS
Most Punts
79 in 11 games, 1970
Most Yards All Punts
2.832 in 10 games. 1969 (73 punts) ; 3.180 in 1 1 games. 1970
Best Punting Average
42.6 in 1974 (54 punts)
Most Punts By Opponents
87 in 11 games. 1973
Most First Downs
234 in 1 1 games, 1976
Most First Downs By Opponents
222 in 10 games, 1968
Most Fumbles
44 in 10 games. 1950 (Lost 22)
Most Opponents' Fumbles
40 in 10 games. 1960 (Mar>land recovered 19)
40 in 11 games, 1971 (Maryland recovered 22)
Fewest Fumbles
17 in 10 games. 1960 (Lost 7)
Most Penalties
78 in 11 games, 1953 (492.5 yards)
Most Yardage Lost By Penalties
757 in 1 1 games. 1972
Best Seasons
1951 — Won 9 lost 0 during regular season, defeated Tennessee
28-13 in 1952 Sugar Bowl for 10-0 record
1953 — Won 10 Lost 0 during 1954 regular season, lost to
Oklahoma 7-0 in 1954 Orange Bowl for 10-1 record
1955 — Won 10 Lost 0 during regular season, lost to Oklahoma
20-6 in 1956 Orange Bowl for 10-1 record
Best Season
1976 — Won I I Losl 0 during regular season, lost to Houston 30-
21 in Cotton Bowl for 1 I -I
Worst Season
1967— Won 0 Lost 9
Average Attendance Per Home Game
45,657 for five games
CAREER RECORDS— INDIVIDUAL
SCORING
Most Points Scored Regular Season
203 by Steve Mike-Mayer, 1972-74 (37 FC, 92 PAT)
Most Touchdowns Scored, All Games
32 by Steve Atkins. 1975-78 (all regular season)
Most Points-After-Touchdown Scored
92 by Steve Mike-Mayer, 1972-74 (101 attempts)
Most Touchdown Passes Caught
12 by Gary Collins, 1959-60-61 (30 games)
Most Touchdowns Responsibility, Run and Pass
35 by Jack Scarbath, 1950-51-52
Most Field Goals
37 by Steve Mike-Mayer, 1972-74 (71 attempts)
(added 4 of 5 in 2 bowl games)
Most Consecutive Points-After-Touchdown Scored
29 by Steve Mike-Mayer, 1974
TOTAL OFFENSE
Most Net Yards Gained Rushing and Passing
3,634 by Dick Shiner, 1961-63
Most Total Plays, Rushing and Passing
790 by Dick Shiner, 1961-63, 30 games) avg. gain 3.0 yards)
RUSHING
Most Net Yards Gained Rushing, Regular Season
2.971 bj Steve Atkins, 1975-78 (in 32 games)
Most Rushes
625 by Steve Atkins, 1975-78 (in 32 games)
Best Rushing Average, Regular Season
8.1 yards b\ Chet Hanulak, 28 games. 1951-53
(1.544 yards. 190 carries)
Best Rushing Average, All Games
7.9 yards by Chet Hanulak. 30 games, including 35 yards on
4 carries in 1952 Sugar Bowl and 39 yards on 12 carries
in 1954 Orange Bowl.
PASSING
Most Yards Gained Passing
3,410 by Dick Shiner, 30 games, 1961-63
Most Passes Attempted
536 by Dick Shiner, 30 games, 1961-63
Most Passes Completed
287 by Dick Shiner, 30 games. 1961-63
Best Completion Percentage
.586 by Bob Avellini, 1972-74 (231 of 394)
Most Touchdown Passes Thrown, Regular Season
23 by Alan Pastrana, 20 games, 1966 and 1968
Most Passes Caught, Regular Season
100 bv Frank Russell. 1972-74
Most Yards Gained By Pass Receptions
1.346 by Frank Russell. 1972-74
Most Passes Intercepted
17 by Tom Brown, 30 games, 1960-62
51
YEAR BY YEAR RECORDS
MARYLAND
AGGIES
1892 (0 3 0)
0 St Johns 50
0 Johns Hop 62
0 Episcopal Hi 16
1893 (6-0-0)
36 Eastern Hi 0
10 Central Hi 0
18 Bait City Col 0
6 St Johns Col 0
18 W. Md. Col 10
16 Orient Ath. Col 6
1894 (3-3-0)
52 W. Md. Col 0
12 Wash. Col 0
6 St Johns 22
6 Georgetown 4
0 Col. Ath. CI 26
0 Mt. St. Marys 24
1895 - No Team
No Games
1896 (6-2-2)
0 Eastern Hi 6
0 Gallaudet 0
32 Business Hi 0
10 Central Hi 6
18 Alexandria Hi 0
20 Bethel Mil Ac 10
0 Episcopal Hi 6
16 West. Md 6
14 Central Hi 0
0 U. of Md 0
1897 (2 4-0)
24 Central Hi 6
4 Eastern Hi 0
0 J Hopkins 30
4 St Johns 6
6 Gallaudet 16
0 Bait. Med. Col 10
1898 (2-5-0)
5 Columbian U 17
0 West. Md 32
36 Eastern Hi 0
0 Gallaudet 33
0 Johns Hopkins 16
0 Episcopal Hi 37
27 Rock Hill Col 0
1899 (1-40)
0 West Md 21
26 Eastern Hi 0
0 Johns Hopkins 40
0 Delaware Col 34
0 St Johns 62
1900 (3 4 1)
0 Western Hi 0
0 Gib. Ath CI 17
0 Georgetown Prep 5
6 Episcopal Hi 34
5 Gonzaga Hi 11
15 Georgetown Prep 0
21 Gonzaga 0
21 Char. Hall. Ac 0
1901 (1-7-0)
6 Del. Col 24
10 Gallaudet Re 11
0 Johns Hopkins 6
6 Rock Hill Col 11
0 Central Hi 11
27 U.S. Marines 0
0 Wal'k Ath. CI 36
0 West. Md 30
1902 (3-5-2)
0 Georgetown 27
5 Mt. St. Jos 0
11 Columbian U 10
6 Olympia Ath 0
0 Wash. Col 0
0 Mt. St. Marys 5
6 West. Md 26
0 U. of Md 5
0 Johns Hopkins 17
0 Del. Col 0
1903 (7-4-0)
0 Georgetown 28
5 Clifton Ath 0
21 Gunton Tern 0
0 St. Johns 18
28 Wash. Col 0
27 Tech. Hi 0
0 Mt. St. Marys 2
6 West. Md 0
11 U. of Md 0
0 Dela. Col 16
6 Columbian U 0
1904 (2-4-2)
0 Georgetown 22
0 Ran. Macon 0
0 F tress Monroe 0
1 1 Mt. St. Marys 6
0 West. Md 5
22 Gallaudet 5
0 U. of Md 6
0 Dela. Col 18
1905 (6-4-0)
20 Bait Poly In 0
16 Gallaudet 0
0 West. Md 10
0 Navy 17
17 Wm. & Mary 0
28 Mt. St. Josephs 0
27 St. Johns 5
0 Wash. Col 17
23 U. of Md 5
0 Dela. Col 12
1906 (530)
5 Tech. Hi 0
22 Bait. City Col 0
0 Navy 12
0 Georgetown 28
0 Mt. Wash. CI 29
20 St. Johns 4
16 Rock Hill Col 0
35 Wash. Col 0
1907 (360)
13 Tech High 0
0 Georgetown 10
5 Richmond Col 11
0 Navy 12
6 Mt. St. Marys 12
10 Geo. Washington 0
10 Wash. Col 5
0 St. Johns 16
0 Gallaudet 5
1908 (3-80)
5 Central High 0
5 Tech. High 6
0 Richmond Col 22
0 Johns Hopkins 10
0 Navy 57
5 Gallaudet 0
0 Fred'bgCol 10
12 Balto. Poly 6
0 St. Johns 31
0 Wash. Col 11
0 Geo. Washington 57
1909 (2-5-0)
0 Richmond Col 12
0 Johns Hopkins 9
0 Tech. High 11
5 Rock Hill 0
0 George Washington 26
0 N. C. State 31
14 Gallaudet 12
1910 (4-3-1)
12 Central High 0
20 Richmond Col 0
1 1 Johns Hopkins 11
21 Catholic U 0
1 1 George Washington 0
0 V.M.I 8
0 St. Johns 6
3 West. Md 17
1911 (4-4-2)
6 Tech. High 0
0 Richmond 0
5 Fred'bgCol 0
0 Central High 14
3 Johns Hopkins 6
6 Catholic U 6
0 St. Johns 27
5 Wash. Col 17
6 West. Md 0
6 Gallaudet 2
1912 (6-1-1)
31 Tech. High 6
46 Richmond Col 0
58 U. of Md 0
13 Johns Hopkins 0
0 St. Johns 27
13 Gallaudet 6
17 West Md 7
13 Penn. Mil. Col 13
1913 (6-3-0I
27 Balto City 10
45 Richmond Col 0
26 Johns Hopkins 0
46 West. Md 0
0 Navy 76
13 St. Johns 0
26 Wash. Col 0
52
0 Gallaudei 13
7 Penn. Mil .27
1914 (530)
0 Balto Poly 6
6 Catholic U 0
13 West Md ,20
14 Johns Hopkins 0
10 Si Johns 0
3 Wash. Col 0
0 Gallaudei 23
26 Penn. Mil 0
1915 (630)
31 B.ilto Poly 0
0 Haverford 7
0 Catholic U 16
1 0 Gallaudei 3
14 Penn Mil 13
27 St. Johns 14
28 Wash. Col 13
51 West Md 0
0 Johns Hopkins 3
MARYLAND
STATE
1916 (6-2-0)
6 Dickinson 0
7 Navy 14
15 V.M.I 9
6 Haverford 7
31 St. Johns 6
10 NYU 7
13 Catholic U 9
54 Johns Hopkins 0
1917 (43-1)
20 Dela. Col 0
0 Navy 62
14 V M.I 14
29 Wake Forest 13
6 N. C State 10
13 St. Johns 3
0 Penn. State 57
7 Johns Hopkins 0
1918 (411)
6 American U 13
7 V.M.I 6
19 West. Md 0
6 New York U 2
19 St Johns 14
0 Johns Hopkins 0
1919 (540)
6 Swarthmore 10
13 Virginia 0
0 West Va 27
0 Va Poly 6
0 Yale 31
27 St Johns 0
13 Catholic U 0
20 West. Md 0
14 Johns Hopkins 0
UNIVERSITY
OF MARYLAND
1920 (7 2 0)
54 Randolph Macon 0
0 Rutgers 6
0 Princeton 35
14 Catholic U 0
27 Wash. Col 0
7 Va Poly 0
13 North Carolina 0
10 Syracuse 7
24 Johns Hopkins 7
1921 (35-1)
3 Rutgers 0
0 Syracuse 42
3 St. Johns 7
10 Va. Poly 7
/ North Carolina 16
0 Yale 28
16 Catholic U 0
0 Carnegie Tech 21
6 N. C. State 6
1922 (4 5 1)
7 Third Army 0
0 Richmond 0
0 Pennsylvania . 12
0 Princeton 26
3 North Carolina 27
0 Va. Poly 21
3 Yale 45
3 Johns Hopkins 0
54 Catholic U 0
7 N. C. State 6
1923 (7 2 1)
53 Randolph Macon 0
3 Pennsylvania 0
23 Richmond 0
7 Va. Poly 16
14 North Carolina 0
26 St. Johns 0
14 Yale 16
26 N. C. State 12
40 Catholic U 6
6 Johns Hopkins 6
1924 (3-33)
23 Wash Col 0
7 Wash. & Lee 19
38 Richmond 0
0 Va. Poly 12
6 North Carolina 0
0 Catholic U 0
0 Yale 47
0 N. C. State 0
0 Johns Hopkins 0
1925 (2-5-1)
13 Wash. Col 0
16 Rutgers 0
0 Va. Poly 3
0 Virginia 6
0 North Carolina 16
14 Yale 43
3 Washington & Lee 7
7 Johns Hopkins 7
1926 (5-4 1)
63 Wash. Col 0
0 South Carolina 12
0 Chicago 21
8 Va. Poly 24
14 North Carolina 6
38 Gallaudet 7
15 Yale 0
6 Virginia 6
0 W. & L 3
17 Johns Hopkins 14
1927 (4-70)
80 Wash Col 0
26 South Carolina 0
6 North Carolina 7
13 Va. Poly 7
10 V.M.I 6
6 W. & L 13
6 Yale 30
0 Virginia 21
20 Vanderbilt 39
13 Johns Hopkins 14
6 Florida 7
1928 (6 3 1)
31 Wash. Col. 0
19 North Carolina 26
7 South Carolina .21
13 West. Md. . 6
0 V.M.I 0
6 Va. Poly 9
6 Yale 0
18 Virginia 2
6 W. & L U
26 Johns Hopkins .6
1929 (442)
34 Wash. Col 7
0 North Carolina 43
6 South Carolina 26
13 Gallaudet 6
6 V.M.I 7
13 Virginia 13
13 Yale 13
24 Va. Poly 0
39 Johns Hopkins 6
0 West. Md .12
1930 (7-5-0)
60 Wash. Col 6
13 Yale 40
21 North Carolina 28
21 St. Johns 13
20 V.M.I 0
14 Virginia 6
41 W. & L 7
13 V. Poly 7
0 Navy 6
21 Johns Hopkins 0
7 Vanderbilt 22
0 West Md 7
1931 (8-11)
13 Wash. Col 0
7 Virginia 6
6 Navy 0
6 Kentucky 6
41 V.M.I 20
20 Va. Poly 0
12 Vanderbilt 39
13 W. & L 7
35 Johns Hopkins 14
41 West. Md 6
1932 (5-6-0)
63 Wash. Col 0
6 Virginia 7
0 Va. Poly 23
0 Duke 34
24 St. Johns 7
12 V.M.I 7
0 Vanderbilt 13
7 Navy 28
6 W. & L 0
23 Johns Hopkins 0
7 West. Md 39
1933 (3-7-0)
20 St. Johns 0
0 Va. Poly 14
0 Tulane 20
13 V.M.I 19
7 West Md 13
0 Virginia 6
7 Duke 38
27 Johns Hopkins 7
33 W. & L 13
0 Florida 19
1934 (7-3-0)
13 St. Johns 0
0 W. & L 7
13 Navy 16
14 Va. Poly 9
21 Florida 0
53
20 Virginia 0
23 V.M.I 0
14 Indiana 17
6 Georgetown 0
19 Johns Hopkins 0
1935 (7-2-2)
39 St. Johns 6
7 Va. Poly 0
0 North Carolina 33
6 V.M.I 0
20 Florida 6
14 Virginia 7
7 Indiana 13
0 W. & L 0
12 Georgetown 6
0 Syracuse 0
22 West. Md 7
1936 (6-5-0)
20 St. Johns 0
6 Va. Poly 0
0 North Carolina 14
21 Virginia 0
12 Richmond 0
20 Syracuse 0
6 Florida 7
7 V.M.I 13
6 Georgetown 7
19 W. & L 6
0 West. Md 12
1937 (8-2-0)
28 St. Johns 0
21 Pennsylvania - 28
6 West. Md 0
3 Virginia 0
1 3 Syracuse 0
13 Florida 7
9 V.M.I 7
14 Penn State 21
12 Georgetown 2
8 W. & L 0
1938 (2-7-0)
6 Richmond 19
0 Penn State 33
0 Syracuse 53
14 West. Md 8
19 Virginia 27
14 V.M.I 47
7 Florida 21
7 Georgetown 14
19 W. & L 13
1939 (2-7-0)
26 Hamp.-Syd 0
12 West. Md 0
7 Virginia 12
12 Rutgers 25
0 Florida 14
0 Georgetown 20
0 Penn State 12
0 V.M.I 13
7 Syracuse 10
1940 (2 6-1)
6 Hamp -Syd 7
0 Pennsylvania 51
6 Virginia 19
0 Florida 19
6 West. Md 0
0 Georgetown 41
0 V.M.I 20
14 Rutgers 7
7 W. & L 7
1941 (3-5-1)
18 Hamp.-Syd 0
6 West. Md 6
0 Duke 50
13 Florida 12
6 Pennsylvania 55
0 Georgetown 26
0 Rutgers 20
0 V.M.I 27
6 W. & L 0
1942 (7-2-0)
34 Connecticut 0
14 LakeNAS 0
27 Rutgers 13
0 V.M.I 29
51 West. Md 0
13 Florida 0
0 Duke 42
27 Virginia 12
32 W. & L 28
1943 (4-5-0)
7 Curtis B. CG 13
13 Wake Forest 7
19 Rich. AAB 6
2 West. Va 6
0 Penn State 45
43 Greenv. AAB 18
0 Virginia 39
0 Bainbridge 46
21 V.M.I 14
1944 (1-7-1)
0 Hamp.-Syd 12
0 Wake Forest 39
6 West. Va 6
0 Mich. State 8
6 Florida 14
7 Virginia 18
0 Mich. State 33
19 Penn State 34
8 V.M.I 6
1945 (6-2-1)
60 Guilford Col 6
21 Richmond 0
22 Merch. M.A 6
13 Va. Poly 21
13 West Va 13
14 W. & M 33
38 V.M.I 0
19 Virginia 13
19 South Carolina 13
1946 (3-6-0)
54 Bainbridge 0
7 Richmond 37
0 North Carolina 33
6 Va. Poly 0
7 W. & M 41
17 South Carolina 21
24 W. & L 7
14 Mich. State 26
7 N. C State 28
1947 (7-2-2)
19 South Carolina 13
43 Delaware 19
18 Richmond 6
7 Duke 19
21 Va. Poly 19
27 West Va 0
32 Duquesne 0
0 North Carolina 19
20 Vanderbilt 6
0 N. C. State 0
(Gator Bowl, Jan. 1, 19481
20 Georgia 20
1948 (6-4-0)
19 Richmond 0
21 Delaware 0
28 Va Poly 0
12 Duke 13
47 George Washington 0
27 Miami 13
54
19 South Carolina 7
20 North Carolina 49
0 Vanderbilt 34
14 West Va 16
1949 (9-1-0)
34 Va. Poly 7
33 Georgetown 7
7 Mich. State 14
14 N. C. State 6
44 South Carolina 7
40 George Washington 14
14 Boston U 13
47 West Va 7
13 Miami 0
(Gator Bowl, Jan. 1, 1950)
20 Missouri 7
1950 (7-2-1)
7 Georgia 27
35 Navy 21
34 Mich. State 7
25 Georgetown 14
13 N. C.State 16
26 Duke 14
23 George Washington 7
7 North Carolina 7
41 West Va 0
63 V.P.I 7
1951 (10-0-0)
54 W. & L 14
33 George Washington 6
43 Georgia 7
14 North Carolina 7
27 L.S.U 0
35 Missouri 0
40 Navy 21
53 N. C. State 0
54 West Va 7
(Sugar Bowl, Jan. 1, 1952)
28 Tennessee 13
1952 (7-2-0)
13 Missouri 10
1 3 Auburn 7
28 Clemson 0
37 Georgia 0
38 Navy 7
34 L.S.U 6
34 Boston U 7
14 Mississippi 21
7 Alabama 27
1953 (10-1-0)
National Champions
Co Champions, ACC
20 Missouri 6
52 W. & L 0
20 Clemson 0
40 Georgia 13
26 North Carolina 0
30 Miami (Fla.) 0
24 South Carolina 6
27 George Washington 6
38 Mississippi 0
21 Alabama 0
(Orange Bowl Jan. 1 , 1954)
0 Oklahoma 7
1954 (7 2 1)
20 Kentucky 0
7 UCLA 12
13 Wake Forest 13
33 North Carolina 0
7 Miami (Fla.) 9
20 South Carolina 0
42 N. C State 14
16 Clemson 0
48 George Washington 6
74 Missouri 13
1955 (101 0)
Co-Champions ACC
13 Missouri 12
7 UCLA 0
20 Baylor 6
28 Wake Forest 7
25 North Carolina 7
34 Syracuse 13
27 South Carolina 0
13 L.S.U 0
25 Clemson 12
19 George Washington 0
(Orange Bowl Jan. 1 . 1956)
6 Oklahoma 20
1956 (27 1)
1 2 Syracuse 26
6 Wake Forest 0
0 Baylor 14
6 Miami (Fla) 13
6 North Carolina 34
7 Tennessee 34
0 Kentucky 14
6 Clemson 6
0 South Carolina 13
25 N. C.State 14
1957 (5-5-0)
13 Texas A&M 21
13 N. C. State 48
0 Duke 14
27 Wake Forest 0
21 North Carolina 7
0 Tennessee 16
10 South Carolina 6
7 Clemson 26
16 Miami (Fla.) 6
12 Virginia 0
1958 (4-6 0)
0 Wake Forest 34
21 N. C. State 6
0 Clemson 8
10 Texas A&M 14
0 North Carolina 27
7 Auburn 20
10 South Carolina 6
14 Navy 40
26 Miami (Fla.) 14
44 Virginia 6
1959 (5-5-0)
27 West Va 7
0 Texas 26
0 Syracuse 29
7 Wake Forest 10
14 North Carolina 7
6 South Carolina 22
14 Navy 22
28 Clemson 25
55 Virginia 12
33 N. C. State 28
1960 (6-4-0)
31 West Va 8
0 Texas 34
7 Duke 20
10 N. C State 13
19 Clemson 17
14 Wake Forest 13
15 South Carolina 0
9 Penn State 28
22 North Carolina 19
44 Virginia 12
1961 (7-30)
14 SMU 6
24 Clemson 21
22 Syracuse 21
8 North Carolina i 14
21 Air Force 0
10 South Carolina 20
21 Penn State 17
10 N. C. State 7
10 Wake Forest 7
16 Virginia 28
1962 (6 401
7 SMU 0
13 Wake Forest 2
14 N. C. State 6
31 North Carolina 13
24 Miami 28
13 South Carolina 11
7 Penn State 23
; Duke 10
14 Clemson 17
40 Virginia 18
1963 (3 7 0)
14 N. C State 36
13 South Carolina 21
12 Duke 30
7 North Carolina 14
21 Air Force 14
32 Wake Forest 0
15 Penn State 17
7 Navy 42
6 Clemson 21
21 Virginia 6
1964 (5-5)
3 Oklahoma 13
24 South Carolina 6
13 N. C. State 14
17 Duke 24
10 North Carolina 9
17 Wake Forest 21
9 Penn State 17
27 Navy 22
34 Clemson 0
10 Virginia 0
1965 (4-6)
24 Ohio U 7
7 Syracuse 24
10 Wake Forest 7
10 North Carolina 12
7 N. C. State 29
27 South Carolina 14
7 Navy 19
6 Clemson 0
27 Virginia 33
7 Penn State 19
1966 (4-6)
7 Penn State 15
34 Wake Forest 7
7 Syracuse 34
21 Duke 19
28 West Va 9
14 South Carolina 2
21 N. C. State 24
10 Clemson 14
17 Virginia 41
21 Florida State 45
1967 (0-9)
0 Oklahoma 35
3 Syracuse 7
9 N. C. State 31
0 North Carolina 14
0 South Carolina 31
3 Penn State 38
7 Clemson 28
17 Wake Forest 35
7 Virginia 12
1968 (2-8)
14 Florida St 24
14 Syracuse 32
28 Duke 30
33 North Carolina 24
21 South Carolina 19
11 N. C.State 31
14 Wake Forest 38
0 Clemson 16
13 Penn State 57
23 Virginia 28
1969 (3-7)
7 West Virginia 31
7 N C. State 24
19 Wake Forest 14
9 Syracuse 20
20 Duke 7
0 South Carolina 17
0 Clemson 40
21 Miami (Ohiol 34
0 Penn State 48
17 Virginia 14
1970 (2 9)
3 Villanova 21
12 Duke 13
20 North Carolina 53
11 Miami 18
7 Syracuse 23
21 South Carolina 15
0 N C State 6
11 Clemson 24
0 Penn State 34
17 Virginia 14
10 West Virginia 20
1971 (2 9)
13 Villanova 28
35 N.C. State 7
14 North Carolina 35
14 Wake Forest 18
13 Syracuse 21
6 South Carolina 35
23 Florida 27
38 V.M.I 0
27 Penn State 63
14 Clemson 20
27 Virginia 29
1972 (5-5 11
24 N.C. State 24
26 North Carolina 31
28 V.M.I 16
12 Syracuse 16
23 Wake Forest 0
37 Villanova 7
14 Duke 20
24 Virginia 23
16 Penn State 46
31 Clemson 6
8 Miami (Fla.) 28
1973 (8-4)
13 West Virginia 20
23 North Carolina 3
31 Villanova 3
38 Syracuse 0
22 N.C. State 24
37 Wake Forest 0
30 Duke 10
22 Penn State 42
33 Virginia 0
28 Clemson 13
42 Tulane 9
(Peach Bowl Dec. 28. 1973)
16 Georgia 17
55
1974 (8 - 4)
16 Alabama 21
10 Florida 17
24 North Carolina 12
31 Syracuse 0
41 Clemson 0
47 Wake Forest 0
20 N.C. State 10
17 Penn State 24
41 Villanova 0
56 Duke 13
10 Virginia 0
(Liberty Bowl, Dec. 16, 1974)
3 Tennessee 7
1975 (9-2-1)
41 Villanova 0
8 Tennessee 26
34 North Carolina 7
10 Kentucky 10
24 Syracuse 7
37 N.C. State 22
27 Wake Forest 0
13 Penn State 15
21 Cincinnati 19
22 Clemson 20
62 Virginia 24
(Gator Bowl Dec. 29, 1975)
13 Florida 0
1976 (11-1)
31 Richmond 7
24 West Virginia 3
42 Syracuse 28
20 Villanova 9
16 N.C. State 6
17 Wake Forest 15
30 Duke 3
24 Kentucky 14
21 Cincinnati 0
20 Clemson 0
28 Virginia 0
(Cotton Bowl Jan. 1 , 1977)
21 Houston 30
1977 (8-4)
21 Clemson 14
16 West Virginia 24
9 Penn State 27
20 N.C. State 24
24 Syracuse 10
35 Wake Forest 7
31 Duke 13
7 North Carolina 16
19 Villanova 13
27 Richmond 24
28 Virginia 0
(Hall of Fame Bowl Dec. 22, 1977)
17 Minnesota 7
1978 (9-3)
31 Tulane 7
24 Louisville 17
21 North Carolina 20
20 Kentucky 3
31 N.C. State 7
34 Syracuse 9
39 Wake Forest 0
27 Duke 0
3 Penn St. 27
17 Virginia 7
24 Clemson 28
(Sun Bowl Dec. 23, 1978)
0 Houston 42
TERP FOOTBALL LETTERMEN
"A"
Abbott, Robert 1971
Absher, Dick 1964, '65, '66
Adams, Chester 1908
Adams, Donald 1925, '26, "27
Adams, Ron 1963, '64
Aitcheson, Leither 1917
Aitcheson, Whitney 1913, '14
Albarano, Ralph 1937, '38, '39
Albrecht, George 1952, '53, '54
Albnttain, Lemeul 1902, '03
Alderton, Gene 1955, '56, '57
Alderton, John 1950, '51, '52
Alexander, Richard 1941
Alkire, John 1973, 74
Ambrusko, Ken 1962, '64, '65
Andorka, Bill 1934
Andrews, Olin 1908, '09, '10
Andrus, Robert 1946
Arbutina, Matt 1963, '64, '65
Anzzi, Ernie 1961, '62, '63
Armsworthy, Frank 1950
Athey, Ronald 1955, '56
Atkins, Steve 1975, 76, 77, 78
Augsburger, Pete 1948, '49, '50
Avellmi, Bob 1972, 73, 74
Axt, R. W. (Dutch 1915, '16, '17
"R"
Bach, Billy 1966
Bafford, Harold 1925, '26, '27
Bagranoff, Larry 1963, '64, '65
Baierl, Ralph 1953, '54
Bailey, Caleb (Zeke) 1918, '19, '20, 71, 72
Baker, Charles 1906
Baker, Pat 1965, '66, '67
Baldante, John 1978
Banner, Murnis 1960, 61, '62
Bannon, J. G. 1892, '93, '94
Barkalow, Gerald 1945
Barlund, Dick 1959, '60, '61
Barnes, George 1941, '42, '45
Barnes, Hank 1969, 70, 71
Baroni, John 1947, '48
Barnt, Ed 1952
Bartlett, W. D. 1923
Bates, Duane 1944
Battaglia, Sam 1967
Bauer, J. W. 1908
Beamer, Francis 1938, '39
Beardsley, Al 1956, '58
Beatty, Bill 1924, 75
Becker, Ed 1958
Bednar, Ray 1970, 71, 72
Behbaham, Kambiz 1971
Behr, Sam 1945, '47
Behrmann, Joe 1957, '58
Beightol, Lynn 1951, '53, '54, '55
Benson, Kevin 1972, 73, 74, 75
Benson, Todd 1978
Bielski, Dick 1952, '53, '54
Bell, Fred 1896, '97
Bell, Karl 1965
Bell, Bobby 1976
Benner, Willis 1932, '33
Bennett, Gordon 1960
Berger, Louis (Bosey) 1930, '31
Bernardo, Ralph 1943
Berry, Harold 1940, '41
Besley, Kirk 1922, 74, 75
56
Betty, Dale 1958, '59, '60
Betz, Theodore 1948, '49, '50
Bilancioni, Bert 1965
Binder, Paul 1910
Birkland, John 1934, '35, '36
Bishop, Randolph 1944, '46
Bissell, John 1945
Bittner, Dick 1955
Blackburn, Ray 1953, '54
Blackistone, Wade 1894
Blandford, James 1897, '98
Bloommgdale, Alan 1973, 74
Bobenko, Alex 1943
Boeri, Walter 1951, '52
Boinis, John 1962
Bonis, Pete 1958, '59, '60
Bolton, Ed 1949, '50
Bonk, Harry 1945, '46, '47, '48
Bonnet, Arthur 1924, 75
Boothe, Dan 1942
Bosley, John 1905
Bosley, Lester 1918, "19, 70, 71
Bovic, Charles 1902
Bouscaren, William 1897
Bowersox, Jack 1953, '54
Bowland, Bill 1904, '05, '06
Bowland, Jay 1911, '12, '13, '14
Bowman, Charles 1967
Boxold, Charles 1953, '54
Boyda, John 1937, '38, '39
Bozeman, Richard 1943
Bracken, Lou 1967, '68
Bradford, Robert 1949
Bradley, J. A. 1898, '99
Bradley, Walter 1933
Bramson, Bernardo 1964, '65, '66
Brancato, Joe 1973, 74
Brand, Robert 1937, '38
Brandt, Marshall 1942
Brannan, Tim 1970, 71, 72
Branner, Cecil 1919, 70, 71, 72, 73
Brant, Mike 1967, '68, '69
Brant, Tim 1970, 71, 72
Branthover, Lee 1970, 71
Brasher, James 1947, '48, '49
Brechbiel, Jim 1973, 74, 75
Breedlove, Rod 1957, '58, '59
Brenner, John 1941, '42
Bresnahan, Tom 1964
Breunich, Tom 1952, '53
Brewer, Edward B. (Untz) 1916, 70, 71
Brewer, Mac 1922, 73
Broglio, Paul 1947. '48
Bromley, Walter 1922, 73, 74, 75
Brougher, Don 1952, '53, '54
Broumel, Tom 1960
Brown, David 1900, '01, '02, '03
Brown, Robert 1937, '38, '39
Brown, Tom 1960. '61, '62
Brubaker, Eric 1975
Bryan, Thomas 1901
Bryant, William 1937
Brzostowski, Art 1965, '66, '67
Budkoff, Nick 1936, '37
Bungon, Dan 1971, 72, 73
Burgee, Dick 1953, '54, '55
Burger, Joe 1921, 72, 73, 74
Burgess, Tom 1977, 78
Burgly, Bill 1956, '57
Burke, Pat 1968, '69, 70
Burlin, Ralph 1939, '40, '41
Burns, Jimmy 1910
Burruss, Lloyd 1976, 77, 78
Burton, Bob 1961, '62, '63
Bury, Lou 1962, '63
Buscher, Bernie 1933, '34, '35
Buscher, F. A. 1932, '33
Butsko, Harry 1961, '62
Byrd, Bill 1942
Byrd, Harry C. (Curley) 1905, '06, '07
Byrom, Bruce 1977, 78
"C"
Calandra, William 1971
Callahan, Charles 1933, '34, '35
Calta, Keith 1976, 77, 78
Campbell. Joe 1973, 74, 75, 76
Carinci, Jan 1978
Carhss, Ernest 1929, '30. '31
Carlson. Rick 1966. '67, '68
Carney, Mike 1978
Carr, Brad 1974, 75, 76, 77
Carroll, Charles 1957
Carroll, Douglas 1899
Carter, A. R. 1914
Carter, Crawford 1918
Carter. Louis 1972, 73, 74
Castro, Dale 1978
Cashell, Dorsey 1897, '98
Chacos, Louis 1942
Chadick, Mike 1968
Chalmers, George (Shorty) 1929, '30, '31
Chamberlain, Glenn 1977, 78
Chiavermi, Len 1962, '63
Chisari, Thomas 1943, '44, '45
Chovanes, Eddie 1941, '42, '46
Christianson, Dave 1951
Church, C. Grant 1897, '99
Church, L M. 1905
Ciambor, Steve 1967, '68, '69
Cianciulli, Steve 1978
Cianelli, Dave 1949, '50, '51
Cichowski, Tom 1963, '65, '66
Cielensky, Mike 1973, 74, 75
Claiborne, Jonathan 1975, 76, 77
Clark, Morrison 1920
Cloud, Everett 1958, '59, '60
Coggins, Bert 1916
Coggins, Irving 1914, '15, '16
Colbert, Bob 1967, '68, '69
Cole, Bob 1958
Cole, Fred 1956, '57, '58
Cole, George 1932
Collins, Bobby 1964, '65. '66
Collins. Gary 1959. '60, '61
Collins, Scott 1977, 78
Colteryahn, Lloyd 1951, '52
Compton, Barnes 1892, '93
Condie, Dennis 1960, '61
Condon, John 1949
Conrad, Dave 1974, 75, 76
Conrad, Luther 1940, '41, "42
Contmetti, Reno 1943, '44
Cooke, Ed 1955. '57
Cooke, Sam 1897. '98, '99
Cooper, Barney 1905. '06. '07
Cooper, Fred 1964, '65. '66
Cooper, Larry 1943, '44
Corcoran. Jim 1962, '64, '65
Cordyack, John 1940, '41
Cory, Ernest 1907. '08
Cosgrove, Tom 1950. '51, '52
Coster, H. 0. 1916. '17, '18
Couch, George 1942
Cozzi, Richard 1975
Cowdrey, Chris 1970, 71, 72
Crapster, Jack 1908
Crecca, Joseph 1932, '33
Crosland, Robert 1945, '46
Crossan, Dave 1960, '61, '62
Crothers, Omar (Gus) 1926, '27, 78
Crytzer, Marty 1951. '52. '53
Cummins, Richard 1978
"D"
Dailey, Darnell 1978
Daly, Ed 1934, '35, '36
Daly, Leslie 1943, '44, '45
Darby, Samuel 1899
Dare, Howie 1954, '55, 57
Davidson, Jim 1959, '60, '61
Davis, Fred 1946, '47, '48, '49
Davis, Jack 1954, '55, '56
Davis, Lynn 1949, '50, '51
Dean, Robert 1948, '49, '50
DeArmey, Frank 1935, '36, '37
DeArmey, John 1938
DeCarlo, Dan 1974, 75
DeCicco, Nick 1955, '56, '57
Decker, Don 1951, '52
Deckman, Joe 1930
Dietz, Guy 1972, 73, 74
Demczuk, Bernard (Sonny) 1968, '69
Dennis, Russell 1953, '54, '55
Derrick, H. B. 1914, '15, '16
DeStephano, Robert 1950, '51, '52
Detko, Chester I960, '61, '62
Devon, Joe 1898
DiCapno, Richard 1973, 74
Dick, Larry 1975, 77
Dickey, Edmund 1900
Dietrich, Leroy 1958, '59, '60
Dill, Chris 1965
Dill, John 1967, '68, '69
DiOno, Joe 1967, '68
Dittmar, Jack 1941, '42
Divito, Paul 1973, 74. 75
Doak, Harry 1906, '07
Dodson, Charlie 1927, 78, '29
Dominic, Brian 1971
Donofrio, Ralph 1966, '67
Doory, Frank 1943, '44
Dotter, Don 1977, 78
Douglas, John 1976, 77
Drach, Joseph 1945, '46, '47
Drass. Pat 1959. '60, '61
Drimal, Chuck 1967
Drozdof. Olat 1962, '63, '64
DuBois, Oscar 1942
Dudish, Mickey 1976, 77, 78
Duley, Tom 1931
Dunbar, Emmons 1900, '01, '02
Dutton, Ken 1967, '68. '69
DuVall, Mearle 1939, '40, '41
Dwyer, Frank 1939
Dyer, John 1968, '69, 70
Dyson, Gene 1955
"E"
Earley. Harold 1949
Edel, Sam T. 1919
Ellmger, Charlie 1934, '35. '36
Ellis, Gary 1978
Emnch, William 1971
Enms, Lou 1933. '34, '35
Eppley, Geary (Swede) 1919, '20
Erhard, Jerry 1970. 72
Evans. Bill 1974. 75
57
Evans, Clay 1907
Evans, Francis 1945, '46, '47, '48
Evans, William 1928, '29, '30
Everson, William 1947, '48
up,
Faber, Parker 1930, '31
Faloney, Bernie 1951, '52, '53
Fanz, Scott 1978
Farrell, Albert 1932
Fasano, Rick 1978
Fastuca, Sal 1944
Feher, Gene 1961, '62, '63
Fehr, Walter 1945, '46
Felton, Falph 1951, '52, '53
Ferrante, Joe 1961, '62, '63
Fesmeyer, Charles 1901, '02
Fiedor, John 1973
Fmcke, Edward 1950
Firor, Guy 1905, '06
Fischer, Stanley 1952
Fisher, Ralph 1973, 74, 75, 76
Fisher, William 1930
Fishman, Jerry 1963, '64
Fitzpatnck, Paul 1967, '68, '69
Fletcher, Andy 1916, '17
Fletcher, Dwayne 1958, '59, '60
Fletcher, Edward 1935, '36
Flick, Paul 1942
Flor, Tom 1957, '58, '59
Flynn, Tim 1953, '54, '55
Forbes, John 1957, '58
Ford, James 1977
Forrester, James 1937, '38
Foster, Daniel 1975
Fotta. Bill 1976
Fox, Hank 1949, '50, '51
Franklin, Jamie 1972, 75
Frattaroli, Joe 1962, '64
Friedgen, Ralph 1968
Fries, Greg 1968, '69, 70
Fntsch, John 1955, '56, 57
Fritz, Emile 1945, '46
Fromang, Steve 1970, 71, 72
Fry, Clarence (Chick) 1949. '50, '51
Fuller, Clifton 1892, '93, '94
Fullerton, Ed 1950, '51, '52
Fulton, Ed 1973, 74, 75, 76
Funk, Mike 1962
Furst, Walter 1911
"G"
Gaetz, Norman 1944
Gaines. Mike 1970. 71, 72
Gall, Ed 1977, 78
Gallagher, Bob 1958
Gait, Pete 1905
Gambmo. Lu 1946. '47
Garber, Chip 1975. 76, 77
Gardi, Joe 1957, '58, '59
Gareis, Hank 1967, '68, '69
Garner, Enoch 1902
Garrott, William 1933, '35
Gawlick, Fred 1965. '66, '67
Gayzur, Rudolph 1949
Gebhardt, John 1967, '68
Getz, Harry 1935
Gibbons, Charles 1896, '97
Gibson. Ray 1962
Gienger, Craig 1970
Gienger, George 1939, '40
Gieula. Chester 1947. '48. '49. '50
Gilbert, Herbert 1918, '19, '20, '21
Gill, Vernon 1903. '04
Gillespie, Bill 1967, '69
Gilmore, Ed 1962, '63
Gilmore, Jack 1940, '42
Glamp, Paul 1976, 78
Glamp, Pete 1978
Gleasner, Donald 1945
Goldman, Luther 1933
Goodman, Jim 1946, '47, '48
Gormley, John 1934, '35, '36
Grace, Mike 1966, '67, '68
Graft, Gustavius 1892, '93
Graham, Duey 1970
Grant, Bill 1967, '68
Grason, Andy 1898, '99
Greene, Tony 1968, '69, 70
Greer, William 1944, '45
Gretz, Harry 1933
Grey, Chris 1978
Groves, John (Boots) 1919, '20, '21, '22, '23
Guckeyson, Bill 1934, '35, '36
Gunderman, Ed 1965, '66
Gunderman, Tom 1957, '58, '59
Gundry, Jesse 1921
"H"
Hacker, Bob 1959, '60, '61
Hater, Robert 1943
Hagan, James 1977
Hagerman, Tom 1942
Haley, Bob 1967, '68
Hall, Irving (Bottle) 1923, '24
Hamilton, Fred 1955, '56, '57
Hamley, James 1969
Hannigan, John 1961, '62
Hanulak, Chet 1951, '52, '53
Harbert, Doug 1975, 76. ,77
Harding, Samuel (Pop) 1892, '93, '94
Hardisty, John 1899, 1900
Harris, Derick 1974
Harris, George 1893, '94
Harris, Leon 1976
Harrison, Roland 1892, '93, '94
Hart, R. G. 1915
Hatfield, Norm 1962, '63
Hatter, Jim 1956, '57, '58
Hatton, Hannibal 1905, '06
Haussmann, Kevin 1978
Hawkins, Ralph 1956, '57
Hayden, Courtney 1930, '31
Hayman, Edgar 1904
Headley, Coleman 1934, '35, '36
Heagy, Al 1927, '28, '29
Healy, Don 1955, '56, '57
Healy, Jack 1955, '56
Heffner, Fred 1952, '53
Heine, George 1923, '24
Heintz, William 1928, 79
Helbock, Bill 1942
Herzog, Fred 1924,75
Hetnck, John 1966
Heunng, Ed 1954, '55, '56
Heward, Harry 1894, '96
Hewitt, Frederick 1937, '38
Heyer, Frank 1940, '41
Hickman, William 1943
Hicks, Chaplain 1907, '08
Hill, Darryl 1963
Hillis, Robert 1943
Hinebaugh, Wade 1896, '97
Hindman, F. R. 1913, '14, '15
Hines, Frank 1898, '99
Hines, Frank Jr. 1932
Hinkle, Monte 1971, 72, 73
Hoch, Mike 1966
Hoen, Ralph 1907, '08
Hoen, Stanley 1908
Hoffecker, Frank 1911, '12, '13
Hoffman, Charles 1968, '69
Hoffman, Edward 1943
Hoffman, Herb 1952, '53, '54
Hoge, Hamilton 1906
Hons, Craig 1970
Hoopengardner, Joe 1940, '42
Hoover, Kim 1973, 74, 75
Horning, Joe 1951, '52, '53, '54
Hough, John 1922, '23, '24
Hrezo, Joe 1960, '61, '62
Hufman, Jack 1942
Hughes, Leroy 1972, 73, 74, 75
Humphries, Howard 1963, '64, '65
Hunt, Max 1940
Huntemann, Charles 1912, '13
Hurd, Art 1951, '52
Hurson, Edward 1943
■iiii
Idzik, John 1947, '48, '49, '50
Iglehart, John 1905
Imphong, Mike 1967
Irvine, John 1952, '53, '54
ii in
Jackson, Fred 1946
James, Robert 1941, '42, '46
Jameson, George 1906
Jankowski, Gary 1960, '61, '62
Jarmoska, George 1940, '41, '42
Jennings, Ricky 1973, 74, 75
Jernigan, Cy 1971, 73
Johnson, Charles 1976, 77, 78
Johnson, Dave 1911, '12, '13
Johnson, Ed 1965
Johnson, Sam 1978
Johnston, Richard 1945, '46
Jones, David 1971
Jones, Stan 1951, '52, '53
Joyce, Fred 1962, '63, '64
Joyce, Jim 1957, '58, '59
"K"
Kane, Ed 1966, '67, '68
Karangalen, Peter 1943
Karnash, Stanley 1948, '49, '50
Kaufman, Norman 1959, '60
Kecman, Dan 1967, '68, '69
Kecman, Ron 1970, 71, 72
Keith, Jeff 1949, '51
Keenan, Charles 1930, '31, '32
Keenan, John 1926, '27, '28
Kefauver, Harry 1898, '99
Kelly, Harold 1970
Kemp, William 1909, '10, '11
Kenley, Frank 1896, '97, '98
Kenny, John 1964, '65
Kensler, Ed 1948, '49, '50, '51
Kern, Fred 1957, '58
Kershner, Ted 1956, '57, '58
Kessler, Gordon 1926, '27, '28
Kichman, Charles 1956
Kiernan, Paul 1931, '32
Kilgallen, Jim 1953
Kinard, Ben 1973, 74
King, John 1968, '69
Kinney, Eugene 1945, '46, '47, '48
Kinney, Vmce 1975, 76, 77
Kirchiro, Bill 1959, '60, '61
Kishpaugh, W. M. 1913, '14, '15, '16
Klaube, Ted 1975, 76, 77
Klingerman, Doug 1964, '65
Kloppmeyer, Charles 1906
Knode, Bobby 1916, '17, '18, '19
Knode, Ken 1911, '12, '13, '14, '15
Koehler, Hugh (Pop) 1909, '10, '11, '12
Koelle, Raymond 1930, '31
Kolarac, George 1954, '55, '56
Kolmo, Bill 1956
Kolodne, Walter 1943
Koprowski, Marion 1973, 74, 75
Koziol, Steve 1976, 77, 78
Krahling, Chick 1964, '65
Krajcovic, Jess 1929, '30, '31
Kramer, Marvin 1949, '50
Kramer, Paul 1953
Krouse, Bill 1939, '40
Krouse, Raymond 1947, '48, '49, '50
Kubany, Glenn 1968, '69
Kuchta, Joe 1948, '49, '50
Kurz, Jim 1946
HI If
Ladygo, Peter 1950, '51
LaHayne, Alfred 1975
Landolt, Dean 1968
Laneve, Ron 1957, '58
Lange, Robert 1973, 74
Lamgan, Pat 1924, 75
Larkin. Edward 1971
LaRue, James 1947, '48, '49
Lary, Ralph 1977, 78
Latham, Ector 1922, 73
Lattimer, Charles 1951, '52, '53
Laughery, Bob 1952
Lavine, Stanford 1948, '49
Lavrusky, Jim 1965, '66, '67
Lawerence, George 1938, '39
Lawerence, James 1968
Lawson, J. W. 1892
Layman, Bob 1956, '57, '58
Lazaro, Bill 1958, '59
Lazzarino, Joe 1954, '55
Leatherman, John 1926
LeGore, Walter 1904
Lewis, Dickie 1956, '57, '58
Lewis, Gomer 1924
Lewis, Grenville 1894, '96
Lewis, Ron 1962, '63
Liebold, Leland 1952
Lillibridge, John 1896, '97
Lilly, Hank 1963
Lindsay, Paul 1951
Linkous, Fred 1925, 76, 77
Lishack. Michael 1971
Livingston, Phil 1978
Lloyd, Edward 1938, '39
Lombard, Henry 1928, 79
Loncar, Ed 1977, 78
Loomis, Lynn 1912, '13
Lovett, Billy 1966, '67, '68
Luckey, George 1923, 74
Lumsden, Milton 1939, '40
Lunn, Cameron (Tubby) 1906, '07
Lutz, James 1943
"M"
MacBride, Bob 1969, 70
MacDonald, Alexander 1916, '17, '19, 70
MacDonald, John 1932
Mace, Ron 1962
Mackall, Thomas 1904, '05, '06, '07
Mackert, Roy 1919, 70
58
Maddox, Alvin 1976, 77, '78
Madigan, George 1928, 79
Mahnic, Robert 1969, 70
Main, Wilbur 1956, '57
Makar, James 1943
Maletzky, Bill 1951, '52
Mallonee. Lloyd 1942
Manges, Mark 1974, 75, 76, 77
Marchetto, Peter 1977
Marcmiak, Walt 1964, '65
Markoe, Dave 1964
Marshall, Larry 1969, 70, 71
Martell, James 1970, 71, 72
Martin, Andy 1963, '64
Martin, Bill 1957, '58
Martin, Charles 1963, '64
Martine. Roy 1950, '51
Massey, Paul 1946
Massey, Tom 1898
Massie, Leonard 1969, 70. 71
Matera, Brian 1977, 78
Matthews, J. Marsh 1900, '01, '02
Mattia. Peter 1968, '69, 70
May, Charlie 1929, '31
Mayer, George 1904
Mayhew, John 1932
Mayo, Edmund 1903
McCarthy, John 1936, '37
McCarthy, Joseph 1944, '45
McCarthy, Patrick 1943, '46
McCaw. Stewart 1934
McDonald, John 1927, '28, 79
McFadden, Earl 1943
McHugh, Thomas 1947, '48, '49, '50
McLaughlin, Tom 1935
McLukie, Tom 1952, '53, '54
McManus, Edward 1970, 71
McNeil, Paul 1940
McNutt, Alonzo 1905
McQuade, Jack 1921, '22, '23
McQuade. Thomas 1949
McQueen, Lone 1964, '65
McQuown, Wymand 1964, '65, '66
McVicker. John 1955
Meade. Jim 1936, '37
Meister. Bill 1968, '69, 71
Melcher, Dick 1963, '65
Melcher. Mick 1963, '64, '65
Merntt, Roland 1968, '69
Mess, R. W. 1913. '14
Michael, R. M. 1916
Mier. Jack 1941, '42
Mike Mayer, Steve 1972, 73, 74
Miller. Charlie 1929
Miller. Chris 1973, 74
Miller, Gary 1963
Miller. Mike 1975, 76
Miller, Tom 1969, 70, 71
Miloszewski, John 1966
Minion, Ed 1933, '34, '35
Mitchell. Hanson 1896
Mitchell, John 1931, '32
Mitchell. Parker 1892, '93
Mitchell. Walter 1900. '01, '02, '03
Modzelewski, Dick 1950. '51, '52
Modzelewski, Edward 1949, '50, '51
Molster. James 1947
Molster, Charley 1918
Mona. Joe 1959. '61, '62
Mondorff. Pershing 1937, '39
Mont, Tom 1941, '42, '46
Montgomery, Tom 1913
Moore, Eric 1970
Moore, John 1919, 70, '21, 72
Moran, J. Patrick 1944
Morgan. Bob 1951, '52, '53
Morhmweg, Fred 1917
Morris, Scott 1943
Morris, William (Country) 1912, '13
Morrison, Clark 1921
Mortensen, Carl 1966
Morter, LaRoy 1945, '46
Morton, John 1939, '40, '41
Moss, Charles 1976
Moss, Joseph 1949, '50, '51
Mudd, Khostka 1909, '10, '11
Mueller, John 1940
Mueller, Leo 1938, '39, '40
Muffler, Joe 1976, 77, 78
Mulhkin, Clarence 1894
Murphy, Bill 1972, 73
Murphy, Joe 1939, '40
Murphy, Scott 1975
Myers. Dutch 1918, '19
Myrtle, Chip 1964, '65, '66
Myshnski, Tom 1965, '66, '67
"N"
Nairn, Roland 1950
Nalewak. Ron 1964. '65
Nardo, Anthony 1942
Nardo. Dave 1962, '63
Nash, John 1973, 74, 75
Navarro. Frank 1950, '51, '52
Naylor, Ralph 1900, '01, '02
Nelhgan, Bert 1896
Nelson, Richard 1932, '33, '34
Nesbit, Andy 1918, '19, 70, 71, 72
Nestor, Paul 1951, '52
Neville, Al 1971, 72,73
Nick, Glenn 1977
Nickla, Ed 1958
Nolan, Dick 1952, '53
Norris, John 1930, '31
Novak, Dick 1959, '60, '61
Nusz, Dave 1953, '54, '55
"O"
Oberlin, Lyman 1914, '15, '16
Ochap, Gene 1974, 75, 76
O'Connor Ed 1952
Odell, Dave 1976
O'Donnell, Dick 1954
Oertly, Fred 1893
O'Hara. Dennis 1968, '69, 71
O'Hare, Tim 1978
Oifebeson. Whitney 1915
Olecki, Bruce 1967, '69
Olkewicz, Neal 1976, 77, 78
Osborn. Downey 1923, 74
Osier, Jerry 1962
Owen, Norman 1943
"P"
Pagannucci, Romeo 1919, 70, '21
Page, Calvin 1901
Palahunik, George 1952. '53, '54
Palmer, Bruce 1976, 77, 78
Pancza, Joe 1967
Papuchis, John 1978
Parker, Alvin 1924, 75
Parsons, Jim 1952. '53. '54, '55
Parsons, John 1926, 77
Pastrana, Alan 1965, '66, '68
Pearson, Ron 1966, '67, 68
Pease, Al 1929, 30, '31
Pelanda, Michael 1977
Pellegrini, Bob 1953, '54, '55
Pennington, Victor 1914
Perlo, Phil 1955, '57
Peters, Francis 1898, '99, 1900
Petronaci, John 1971
Petruzzo, Joseph 1950, '51
Petry, Phil 1964, '65
Pettit, Bill 1964
Phillips, Al 1946, '47, '48
Pietrowski, Joseph 1945
Piker, Robert 1945
Pinck, Guy 1904
Piper, Dan 1960, '61, '62
Pirronello, William 1943
Pitzer, John 1930
Plasnig, Dutch 1921
Plevin. Tom 1966, '67, '68
Pobiak. Ed 1948, '49, '50
Poling, William 1945, '46
Pollock, George (Rosy) 1921, 72, 73
Polyanski, Stan 1955
Poniatowski, Hank 1959, '60, '61
Poppelman, Ray 1930, '31, '32
Posey, Gilbert 1909, '10, '11
Posey. Walter 1913, '14, '15, '16, '17
Pouleur, A. L. 1902, '03
Prough, Pearse 1892, '93
Psira, Ken 1960
Pue, Dick 1892, '93
Pugh, Charlie 1927
Pugh, Ed 1921, 72, 73, 74
Purvis, Bart 1971, 72, 73
»Q"
Queen, C. J. 1896
Raba, Robert 1973, 74, 75, 76
Radice, Julie 1928, 79
Rae, Tom 1960, '61, '62
Raedy, Mike 1918, '19
Rathff, Don 1970, 71, 72
Reilly, Charles 1969, 70, 71
Reilly, Jack 1960
Reitz, Mike 1972
Rhodes, Don 1977
Ribnitzki, Fred 1929
Rich, M. N. 1915. '16
Richards, Dean 1975, 76, 77, 78
Richey, James 1975
Ridgely, Charles 1897
Rigby, Elmer 1940, '41, '42
Riggleman, Mickey 1972, 73
Riggs, M, Talbot 1919
Roberts, Augie 1927, 79, 79
Roberts, George 1928
Roberts, Guy 1969, 70, 71
Robertson, Gilbert 1899
Rock, Walter 1960, '61, '62
Rock, Wilbur 1943, '44
Rog. Ed 1962
Rogers, Jerry 1978
Rogers, Stan 1972. 73. 74
Rollins, W. T. 1892, '93, '94
Romano, Frank 1972, 73, 74
Rooney, Thomas 1930
Rosenthal. Malcolm 1944
Roth, Earl 1947, '48, '49
59
Roulette, Robert 1948, '49
Rowden, Jake 1947, '48, '49, '50
Roy, Ken 1973, 74, '75, 76
Ruff, Seymour 1912, '13, '14
Ruffner, Robert 1905, '06 '07
Rusevlyan, Bob 1956, '57, '58
Russell, Frank 1972, 73, 74
Ryan, Charley 1943
Sachs, George 1933, '34, '35
Salley, Ernie 1974, 75, 76, 77
Sandusky, Mike 1954, '55, '56
Sankovich, Tom 1959, '60, '61
Santa, Jim 1972, 73, 74
Santacroce, Leonard 1970
Santy, Tony 1965, '66, '67
Sappington, Earl 1899
Saunders, Oswald 1908, '09
Scarbath, Dick 1958
Scarbath, Jack 1950, '51, '52
Schaefer, Rich 1963, '64
Schick, Tom 1973, 74, 76
Schmaltz, Richard 1974, 76
Schnebley, Robert 1942
Schneider, Leroy 1943
Schoenherr, Charley 1943
Schrecongost, John 1945
Schroy, Ken 1972, 73, 74
Schultz, Ferdinand 1945
Schultz, John 1973, 74, 75
Schwartz, Robert 1975
Schwartz, Vic 1957, '58, '59
Schwarz, Edward 1945, '46, '47, '48
Schwarz, Kurt 1957, '58, '59
Scioscia, Karney 1949, '50, '51
Scott, George 1976, 77
Scott, Ken 1971, 72, 73
Scott, Vincent 1958, '59, '60
Scotti, Ben 1956, '57, '58
Scotti, Tony 1958, '59
Seder, Larry 1975, 76, 77
Seibert, Vernon 1946, '47, '48, '49
Selep, Tom 1954, '56
Semler, Eddie 1920, '21, '22
Senft, Brad 1978
Settino, Joe 1931
Seymore, Art 1970, 71, 72
Shaffer, Dick 1939, '40
Shaffer, James 1976, 77, 78
Shaffer, Ron 1957, '58, '59
Shamberger, D. F. 1898
Shank H. A. 1915
Shank, Scott 1969, 70, 71
Sharkey, Jack 1975
Sharpless, Rod 1973, 74
Shaughnessy, Emmett 1946
Shelton, Carl 1970, 71
Shemonski, Bob 1949, '50, '51
Sherman, Franklin 1896
Sherman, Henry 1893
Shihda, George 1973, 74, 75
Shiner, Dick 1961, '62, '63
Shipley, Burt 1908, '09, '10, '11, '12, '13
Shipley, James 1897, '98
Shipley, Richard 1952, '53, '54
Shoals, Roger I960, '61, '62
Shockey, Don 1940
Shugars. Jeff 1969, 70, 71
Sievers, Eric 1976, 77, 78
Silvester, Edward 1909
Silvester, Lindsay 1908, '09
Simler, George 1946, '47
Simoldom, Joe 1965, '66
Simon, Mike 1976, 77, 78
Simpson, John 1932, '33, '34
Simpson, Mike 1962
Sikarda, Jim 1955, '56
Skinner, W. W. 1892
Skotmcki, Frank 1937, '38, '39
Slamnka, Richard 1968, '69, 70
Smith, Blair 1935, '36, '37
Smith, Bob 1939, '40
Smith, Bob 1972, 73, 74
Smith, Eager 1899
Smith, Jamie 1916
Smith, Ken 1960, '61, '62
Smith, Les 1944, '45
Smith, Wesley 1902, '04
Sniscak, Bernie 1946
Snyder, Gerald 1926, '27, '28
Snyder, Leo 1917, '18, '20
Snyder, Robert 1933
Sochko, Mike 1975, 76, 77
Sonntag, Ralph 1967, '68, '69
Soporowski, Raymond 1969, 70, 71
Sothoron, Norwood 1932, '34
Speer, Talbot 1915
Springer, Bruce 1965
Stabler, Sydney 1909
Staia, Dom 1952
Staifort, Carl 1933, '34, '35
Stalnaker, Wally 1967, '68, '69
Stanford, John 1975, 76, 77
Stankus, Ray 1951, '52
Stefl, Tom 1955, '56, '57
Sterner, Ted 1969, 70, 71
Stem, George 1964, '65
Steppe, Bill 1957, '58
Stern, George 1963
Stevens, Jimmy 1917
Stevens, Myron 1925, '26
Stewart, Larry 1977, 78
Stickel, Lou 1965, '66, '67
Stoli, Wilbur 1901, '02, '03, '04
Stonebraker, Jack 1934, '35
Stuart, Adam 1946
Stubbs, J. S. 1916, '17, '18
Stubljar, Mike 1967, '68, '69
Stull, James 1967, '69
Suchy, Bob 1955, '56
Sukeena, Dick 1961
Sullivan, Bob 1963, '64, '65
Sullivan, Jerry 1917, '18, '19, '20
Supplee, Bill 1923, '24, '25
Surgent, Mike 1935, '36, '37
Symons, Thomas 1898, '99
"T"
Tamburello, Frank 1954, '55
Tarbutton, Clyde 1914, '15, '16
Targarona, Jack 1949, '50
Tate, Darnell 1970
Tauszky, Carroll 1907
Teraney, Edward 1925, 76
Terry, Richard 1943
Teslovitch, Michael 1943
Thomas, Al 1968, '69, 70
Thomas, Lewis (Knocky) 1925, 76, '27
Tice, Mike 1978
Tiesi, James 1970, 71
Tine, Chuck 1965, '66, '67
Toler. Dick 1945
Tonetti, Paul 1955, '56, '57
60
Torain, Ernie 1965, '66, '68
Trachy, John 1964, '65, '66
Trax G. P. 1910, '11
Trimble, Steve 1978
Troha, John 1947, '48, '49, '50
Troll, Robert 1943, '44
Troxell, Walter 1925
Trust, Don 1960
Tucker, Hubert 1942
Tucker, Joe 1947, '48, '49
Tucker, Robert 1970, 71, 72
Tullai, Fred 1955
Turner, Bill 1955, '56, '57
Turner, J. M. 1901
Turyn, Vic 1945, '46, '47, '48
Tuschak, Richard 1943
Tweedy, James 1970, 71, 72
"U"
Warn, James 1977, 78
Ulam, Pat 1972, 73, 74
Ulman, Bernie 1939, '40, '41
Underwood, Eddie 1900
"V"
Van Heusen, Billy 1965, '66, '67
Van Horn, Marhn 1977, 78
Van Reenan, Don 1960
Van Sickler, Gary 1968, '69
Vellano, Paul 1971, 72, 73
Veradi, Gene 1957, '58, '59
Vereb, Ed 1953, '54, "55
Vesce, John 1973, 74
Vince, Larry 1966, '68
Vincent, Reginald 1940, '41, '42
Vincent, Rufus 1932
Visaggio, Dave 1972, 73, 74
Vucin, Milan 1964, '65, '66
"W"
Waganheim, Phil 1973, 74
Walker, Bill 1953, '54, '55
Walker, Clarence 1894
Walker, Frank 1900
Waller, Ron 1952, '53, '54
Walter, John 1920
Walters, Harry 1973, 74
Walton, Robert 1936, '37
Ward, Bob 1948, '49, '50, '51
Ward, Christ 1976, 77, 78
Ward, Frank 1908, '09
Ward, Kevin 1972, 73
Warfield, Jack 1939
Warfield, Joshua 1900, '01
Waters, Jean 1954, '55, '56
Waters, John 1924, 75
Watkms, Ben 1896
Watkins, James 1970, 71
Watson, Ken 1976, 77
Watts, Harry 1901, '02, '03
Webb, Thomas 1932, '33
Webster, Fletcher 1903
Weiciecowski, John 1953
Weidener, Fred 1939
Weidensaul, Lou 1951, '52
Weidmger, Charlie 1936, '37, '38
Weimer, Clay 1892, '93
Weiss, Don 1972, 73
Welsh, George 1899
Wentworth, George 1903
Werner, Hubert 1942. '47, '48
Wethington, Ray 1970, 71, 72
Wharton, Al 1954, '55, '56
Wharton, Jim 1939, '41
Wharton, Thomas 1893, '94
Whelchel. David 1925
White, Charles 1911
White, Charles 1975, 76, 77
White, Donald 1962
White, F. M. 1908
White, Floyd 1970, 71
White, Henry 1912
White, Randy 1972, 73, 74
White, Walter 1973, 74
White, Wellstood 1904
Widmyer, Earl 1932, '33, '34
Wikander, Gary 1961
Wilhamowsky. William 1943
Williams, Avy 1915, '16
Williams, E. P. 1910, '11, '12, '13
Willis, Vic 1934, '35, '36
Wilson, Len 1912
Wilson, Roger 1905, '06, '07
Wilson, Tim 1974, 75, 76
Wingate, Elmer 1947, '48, '49, '50
Wmslow, J. L. 1903
Wolfe, Percy 1943
Wolfe, William 1935, '36, '37
Wondrack, Arthur 1926, '27, '28
Wood, William 1930, '32
Woods, Al 1930, '31, '32
Woodward, A. N. 1910
Wooters, William 1892, '93, '94
Worthmgton, Arthur 1892
Wright, Jack 1941, '42, '46
Wyatt, Kervin 1976, 77, 78
Wyres, James 1970, 71
Wysocki, Charlie 1978
ityit
Yarnell, Dennis 1971
Yeager, Charles (Buddy) 1933, '34, '35
Yeates, Mike 1975, 76, 77
York, Bob 1964, '65, '66
Young, Walter 1921, '22, '23
Younge, Joe 1972, 74, 75
"Z"
Zachary, Pete 1973, 74, 76
Zannoni, Steve 1972, 73, 74
Zernhelt, John 1974, 76, 77
Zetts, Michael 1943
Zulick, Charlie 1936
Zulick, Earl 1925, '26, '27
THE COACHES AWARDS
OFFENSIVE BACK
OFFENSIVE LINEMAN
DEFENSIVE BACK
DEFENSIVE LINEMAN
1952
Chester Hanulak — HB
Iitni Cosgrove — C
Ed Fullerton — HB
John Alderman — E
pr,;
Ralph Felton — KB
Mart) ( i \ tzer — E
Dick Nolan — HB
Boh Morgan — T
1 95-1
Rom Wallet — HB
Jai k Bowersox — G
foe Horning— HB
Fom Mi Lu< Lie — G
1955
Ed Vereb — HB
Russell Dennis — E
Lynn Beightol — QB
Mike Sandusky — T
1956
Fred Hamilton — HB
\l Wharton — T
Boh Rusevlyan — QB
Mike Sandusky — T
1957
Bob Rusevlyan — QB
Tom ( • underman — G
Boh Layman — HB
Roil Breedlovc — G
I95S
Boh Rusevlyan — QB
1 red < ole — T
Jim Joyce — E B
Ben S< otti — E
1959
|im Jowe — FB
rem ( ! underman — G
Dwayne Flet* her — QB
Rod Breedlove — G
1960
Dale Betty — QB
Bob Hacker— C
Inn I)a\ tdson — OB
Fom Sankovich — T
1961
Dick Shiner — QB
Roger Shoals — T
Tom Brown — HB
Dave Crossan — T
1962
Tom Brow n — HB
Roger Shoals — T
[oe Hrezo— FB
Walter Rock — G
1963
Dick Shiner — QB
( Jene Feher — C
Ernie \n//i — HB
|oe Ferrante — G
1964
Tom Hickey — TB
Joe Frataroli — G
Boh Sullivan — HB
Olaf Drozdov — T
1965
Walt Marciniak — FB
M.iii Vrbutina — T
Fred Cooper — 1 1 B
Larry Bagranoff — T
1966
Alan Pastrana — QB
Tom ( k how ski — T
Lou Sti.kel — HB
Jim Lav rusky — LB
1967
Bill) Lovett — FB
Ron Pea rson — G
Bob Colbert — HB
Mike (.race — G
1968
Bill) Lovett — FB
Hill Meistcr — G
Kenny button — HB
Henry Gareis — E
1969
Tom Miller — FB
Hill Meistcr — G
Tony < .reene — S
Peter Mattia — T
1970
Art Seymore — HB
Pal Burke — G
Tony ( ireene — S
( luy Roberts — E
1971
Al Neville — QB
Tim Brannan — G
Larrv Marshall — HB
Chris Cowdrey — E
1972
Boh Avellini — QB
Tim Hrannan — G
Bob Smith — S
Paul Vcllano — G
197 J
Louis Carter — 'FB
Bart Pun is — G
Harrx Wallers — LB
Randy White — T
197-1
Lotus ( arter — 'FB
Stan Rogers — T
Ham Wallers — LB
Ranch White — T
1975
|ohn Schultz — WB
M irion ECoprowski — T
Kevin Benson — LB
Paul Divito — G
1976
Start Manj;es — QB
Ed Fulton — G
Torn Schick — T
Brad Carr — LB
Joe Campbell — T
1977
Larry Diek — QB
George Scott — HB
Mike Yeates — G
Brad Carr — LB
Ted Klaube — G
1978
Steve Atkins — TB
Eric Sievers — TE
Kervin Wyatt — G
Neal Olkewicz — LB
Charles Johnson — T
Bruce Palmer — G
Don Cressinger, Equipment Mgr. Ron Fulton, Jack
Gable
1953 National Championship Trophy
JOHN W. "JACK" ZANE
Sports Information Director
Jack Zane returned to
Maryland in August of
1969 after serving as the
Sports Information Dir-
ector for The George
Washington University for
six years.
He received his degree
in Journalism from Mary-
land in February of 1960
after serving as a student
assistant to Joe Blair for
three years. He served as
a full time assistant to
Blair for two years after
graduation.
While at Maryland he was the first Executive Sports
Editor of the Diamondback, SMC of Pi Kappa Alpha
fraternity and a member of Sigma Delta Chi Journalism
fraternity.
While at GW he served as President of the Southern
Conference SID's and on the Executive Committee of the
Southern Conference Sports Writers Association. He
has served three terms as a Vice-President of the Atlantic
Coast Sports Writers.
He is on the Public Relations Committee of the
NCAA, has been a member of CoSIDA for 16 years, the
Football and Basketball Writers of America, the Sports
Reporters Association of Baltimore and die Maryland
Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi. He is also a member of
the Washington D.C. Touchdown Club.
A graduate of Southern High at Lodiian, Zane is a
native of Maryland and served four and a half years
in the Navy before enrolling at Maryland. He is married
to the former Judy Allen of Fayetteville. West Virginia,
a graduate of The George Washington University.
PATTI WESSEL FLYNN
Assistant Sports Information Director
Patti Flynn is a 1977
graduate of Maryland and
joined the Sports Infor-
mation staff in 1978.
She is primarily respon-
sible for the 10 sport
women's program but
works with all 23 varsity
sports.
Following graduation
she worked with the
Maryland Education-
al Foundation in die areas
of fund raising and pro-
moting the Women's pro-
gram.
She has hosted several AIAW regional tournaments and
traveled with the basketball team throughout die nation
including the AIAW finals in California.
As an undergraduate she played for the Maryland
basketball team and graduated cum laude with a B.S.
in Marketing.
Patti came to Maryland from nearby Regina High
with her home in Adelphi. She married Tim Flynn.
also a Maryland graduate this past summer.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
#979 AWARDS
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE
WEEKLY AWARDS
9
Offensive Lineman
—
Eric Sievers
16
Defensive Lineman
—
Charles Johnson
Defensive Back
—
Neal Olkewicz
23
Defensive Back
—
Neal Olkewicz
30
Offensive Back
—
Steve Atkins
Defensive Line
—
Charles Johnson
7
Offensive Back
—
Steve Atkins
Defensive Back
—
Neal Olkewicz
14
Defensive Line
—
Bruce Palmer
21
Defensive Line
—
Marlin Van Horn
28
Defensive Line
—
Bnice Palmer
11
Offensive Back
—
Tim O'Hare
18
Offensive Back
—
Steve Atkins
ALL - ACC
Steve Atkins,
R.B
Bruce Palmer,
DG
Charles Johnson,
DT
Lloyd Burruss
. DB
HEAD COACH
East West Shrine All-Star Game
(East Team)
Jerry Claiborne
FOOTBALL NEWS ALL - AMERICANS
Steve Atkins — Third Team
Charles Johnson — Third Team
THE SPORTING NEWS
ALL - AMERICANS
Steve Atkins (Honorable Mention)
Charles Johnson (Honorable Mention)
UPI — ALL AMERICANS
Steve Atkins (Honorable Mention)
AP
ALL AMERICANS
Steve Atkins (Honorable Mention)
Charles Johnson (Honorable Mention)
Bruce Palmer (Honorable Mention)
Lloyd Burruss (Honorable Mention)
62
MARYLAND'S ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS
(Selected by College Sports Information Directors)
19.5-1 — George Palahunik (Firal Team)
[956— Mike Sandusk) (Firs! Team)
l!)7() — Sieve Fromang (Second Team)
1975 — Kim I Ii >< >\ <-r (First Team)
(Sponsored bj U.S. TOBACCO)
1977 — Jonathan Claiborne (Second Team)
Joe Muffler (Second Team)
1978— Joe Muffler (First Team)
SKOAL Happy Days SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS
($1,500 Each First Team Academic All-American)
1978— Joe Muffler
CURRENT TERPS ON
ACC HONOR ROLL
("B" Average
for full year)
|ohn Baldante, '78. '79
(Pre-Law I
|.in ( ,.ii mi i. '79
( Business)
s, otl < lolling, "78
( Business)
S, oil I .in/. '79
I Business)
Ralph Lary, '77. 78, '79
( Engineering)
Phil Livingston, '77. '78. '79
( Business)
Kvle Lorton, '79
( Business)
s.iin Medile, '78
( Edu< ation )
Brad Senft, 78
I Industrial Arts)
Jim Shaffer. 79
(Engineering)
Kim Hoover
I 1 A
TT-.
Jonathan Claiborne
NCAA -CHEVROLET SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS
($1,000 Each From ABC-TV Games)
1974 — Louis Carter vs North Carolina
Randy White vs North Carolina
Bob Avellini vs Penn State
1975 — Kevin Benson vs Kentucky
1976 — Mark Manges vs Kentucky
Alvin Maddox vs Clemson
Joe Campbell vs Clemson
TERRAPINS ON ALL-ACC ACADEMIC TEAMS
1954 — George Palahunik
John Irvine
1955 — Stanley Polyanski
John Healey
1956 — Mike Sandusky
Donald Healy
Tom Selep
I960 — Dvvayne Fletcher
1961— Bob Hacker
Dick \ovak
1963— David Nardo
1967— Chuck Tme
1968— Ralph Friedgen
1970 — Steve Fromang
Len Santacroce
Jerry Erhard
Scott Shank
1972— Jerry Erhard
1973 — Kim Homer
1971— Bo I. Avellini
Ru k Jennings
Phil \\ aganheim
Denck Harris
Jim Brechbiel
Tom Schick
1975 — Kim Hoover
John Schultz
Mike Cielensk)
1976— Bob Raba
Gene Ochap
Jonathan Claiborne
1977 — Jonathan Claiborne
Ralph Lary
Joe Muffler
Chris Ward
Kenny Watson
1978— John Baldante
Glenn Chamberlain
Scott Collins
Ralph Lary
Phil Livingston
Joe Muffler
Dean Richards
63
JERRY CLAIBORNE
IN THE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE
1972 Maryland 24
26
23
14
24
31
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
23
22
37
30
33
28
24
31
47
20
56
10
34
37
27
22
62
16
17
30
20
28
21
20
35
31
7
28
21
31
39
27
17
24
N.C. State
North Carolina
Wake Forest
Duke
Virginia
Clemson
North Carolina
N.C. State
Wake Forest
Duke
Virginia
Clemson
North Carolina
Clemson
Wake Forest
N.C. State
Duke
Virginia
North Carolina
N.C. State
Wake Forest
Clemson
Virginia
N.C. State
Wake Forest
Duke
Clemson
Virginia
Clemson
N.C. State
Wake Forest
Duke
North Carolina
Virginia
North Carolina
N.C. State
Wake Forest
Duke
Virginia
Clemson
24
( 0-0-1)
31
( 0-1-1)
0
( 1-1-1)
20
( 1-2-1)
23
( 2-2-1)
6
( 3-2-1)
3
( 4-2-1)
24
( 4-3-1)
0
( 5-3-1)
10
( 6-3-1)
0
( 7-3-1)
13
( 8-3-1)
12
9-3-1)
0
(10-3-1)
0
11-3-1)
10
12-3-1)
13
13-3-1)
0
14-3-1)
7
15-3-1)
22
16-3-1)
0
17-3-1)
20
1S-3-1)
24
19-3-1)
6
20-3-1)
15
21-3-1)
3
22-3-1)
0
23-3-1)
0
24-3-1)
14
25-3-1)
24
25-4-1)
7
26-4-1)
13
27-4-1)
16
27-5- 1 )
0
28-5-1)
20 (
7 I
0 (
0 (
7 i
28 (
29-5-1)
30-5-1)
31-5-1)
32-5-1)
33-5-1)
33-6-1)
1st shutout
2nd shutout
3rd shutout
4th shutout
5th shutout
6th shutout
7th shutout
8th shutout
9th shutout
10th shutout
1 1th shutout
12th shutout
VPI
VPI
MD.
MD.
MD.
MD.
MD.
MD.
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
TOTAL
CLAIBORNE'S BOWL RECORD
Liberty
Liberty
1966
1968
1973
1974
1975
1977
1977
1978
Peach
Liberty
Gator
Cotton
7
17
16
3
13
21
Hall of Fame 17
Sun 0
Miami
Mississippi
Georgia
Tennessee
Florida
Houston
Minnesota
Texas
14
34
17
7
0
30
7
42
4
5
8
6
7
8
7
7
4
5
61
5
8
8
9
11
CLAIBORNE'S RECORD
VIRGINIA TECH
5 0
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977 8
1978 9
TOTAL 58
OVERALL
TOTAL 119
5
2
4
3
2
3
4
5
6
39
5
4
4
2
1
4
3
23
62
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
2
S.C. Coach of Year
S.C. & Dist. Ill Coach of Year
(10) Years
MARYLAND
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
9
ACC & Dist. Ill Coach of Year
Spt. News Nat. Coach of Year
ACC & Dist. Ill Coach of Year
ACC & Dist. Ill Coach of Year
(7) Years
(17) Years
1107 TOTAL POINTS 422
TERRAPIN NOTES
During Maryland's six consecutive Bowl seasons the
Terps have doubled the score of opponents in each of
the last three quarters. The biggesl edge For the Terps
has come in the third quarter where they outscored the
opposition 462-170.
During the 72 games, including the sis bowl ap-
pearances, the Terps have limited the opposition to 11.5
points a game while scoring 24.6. The 72 game com-
parison:
OPPONENTS 250 235 170 201 — 856
MARYLAND 369 500 462 441 — 1772
Of the 10 freshmen visiting the Cotton Bowl, .seven
are expected to start foi the Terps this fall and thn
looking for die ir fourth letter diis fall.
Ten Freshmen were on the Hall "I Fame rosier and
five freshmen nude the trip to the Sun Bowl. Bruce
Byrom. Ed Gall, Ralph Lary, Jerry Rogers. Charlie
\\\s.i(ki and George Scotl joined Lloyd Burruss, Jimmy
Shaffer, Eric Sievers and Kervin Wyatl as current Terra-
pins \\hi> lettered as freshmen.
Burruss, Shaffer. Sievers and Wy.iii are all working
for their fourth varsity letter this fall.
Steve Atkins left Maryland with Career records for
Most Yards ( .ained Rushing 2.971. Most Toui hdowns 32,
and Most Carries 625. lie also established marks for
Most Yards Gained Rushing In a Season 1,261, Most
Carries In a Season 2<H.'j and the Longest Run from
Scrimmage in Man land and ACC History, a 98 yarder
against Clemson in his final game in Byrd Stadium.
Atkins, now with Green Bay. averaged 92.8 yards a
game for the 32 games he played in and averaged a
touchdown a game. He recorded 15 games of 100 yards
or more with the highest 215 yards against Syracuse a
si hool record at the time.
I [e also recorded a 98 yard kickoff return, not a
record, against North Carolina State, a 76 yard scoring
run against Syracuse and a 60 yard td run against
Virginia.
The Terps suffered only 18 fumbles in 11 games last
fall, losing 10 while picking up 18 of the opponents 25
loose balls. The Maryland record for fewest fumbles in
a season is only 17 (seven lost) set in 10 games in
1960.
Jerry Claiborne's ball carriers did not lose a fumble
in the last five games of die season while picking up 13
in the same five games. Including the North Carolina
game earlier the Terps did not suffer a turnover by a
fumble in six of the 11 games.
In comparison die Terps recovered opponent's fumbles
in nine of the 1 1 games, the same mark diey recorded
in 1977.
Every player Jerry Claiborne has recruited since his
arrival at Maryland has had die opportunity to play in
a bowl game. Claiborne has been at Maryland seven
years and the Terps have visited six consecutive bowls.
Claiborne took seven freshmen to die 1973 Peach
Bowl and all seven started for die 1976 Cotton Bowl
team.
Six freshmen went to the '74 Liberty Bowl and three
became four year lettermen for the Terps. Eleven fresh-
men visited the 1975 Gator Bowl and six of the 11
started for the 1978 Sun Bowl team. Two. Steve Atkins
and Dean Richards, were four year lettermen and a diird
Kervin W'yatt should earn his fourth as a starter this
fall.
When Texas handed the Terps the shutout in the
Sun Bowl it was the first time in 96 games the Terps
had tailed to score. Maryland entered the bowl game
with the nation's third longest streak of 95 consecutive
games scored in and 82 of the games had been played
since Jerry Claiborne arrived in College Park. Previous
Terp scoring streaks had been 68 broken by Oklahoma in
1967 and 50 also broken by Oklahoma in the 1954
Orange Bowl game.
While it was the first shutout for Coach Claiborne at
Maryland in 83 games the Terps wide tackle six defense
has recorded 18 shutouts. The Terps have registered at
least one shutout in each of Claiborne's seven years.
Maryland registered one shutout in a bowl game, a 13-0
win over Florida in the 1975 Gator Bowl.
Jerry Claiborne served as the Head Coach of the East
team in the East-West Shrine game last winter. He also
served in the same capacity in the Japan Bowl in Tokoyo
the previous year.
Steve Atkins and Charlie Johnson both played in the
East-West Shrine game and the Senior Bowl last year
while Offensive Center Mike Simon plaved in the Hula
Bowl.
65
Tight End Eric Sievers excells as a blocker and pass
receiver for the Terps from the Multiple Eye offense.
He lettered on the Cotton Bowl team as a freshman and
has started for the past two years catching at least one
pass in 16 of the 22 regular season games and has
caught passes in all three bowl games in which he has
played.
His first collegiate reception came in the Cotton Bowl
as a freshman, a 17 yard gain on fourth and 14 and he
caught all yard touchdown pass on the next play. He
pulled in a 57 yard reception in the Hall of Fame
Classic and grabbed a pair for 25 yards in the Sun Bowl.
He has caught 37 passes for 558 yards in the past
two seasons and five for 110 in the bowl games. He is the
most effective tight end for the Terps since Gary Collins
was an Ail-American in 1961.
The kicking game contributed 97 points for the
Terps last fall and led to several other scores. In com-
parison the opponent's kicking game added only 29
points. Placekicker Ed Loncar scored 73 points on 25
PATs and a record T6 field goals. His longest field
goal was 50 yards and he hit five of eight attempts be-
tween 47 and 50 yards, and nine of 13 between 35 and
50 yards.
Most pleasing to Coach Jerry Claiborne was the four
touchdowns scored by the kicking game. Steve Atkins
returned a kickoff 98 yards against North Carolina State
and Lloyd Burruss scored on a 47 yard punt return
against Tulane. In addition the Terps scored on a kickoff
of their own when Todd Benson knocked the ball loose
from the North Carolina State return man at the 18
and it bounced into the end zone where Steve Trimble
fell on it for a touchdown. Neal Olkewicz blocked a
Clemson punt with only 22 seconds left in the half and
Mike Carney recovered it in the end zone for a touch-
down.
In addition Burruss set up a score with a 56 yard
punt return against Duke and another with a blocked
field goal against Syracuse. With the Orangemen on the
Terp 12 Burruss blocked the kick, knocking the ball
back 19 yards where Joe Muffler picked it up and ran
58 yards to the Syracuse 1 1 completing a 77 yard return.
The Terps scored four plays later.
In seven years at Maryland, Claiborne has a 58-23-2
record with a 33-6-1 Atlantic Coast Conference mark.
His teams have averaged over 25 points a game and 360
yards a game total offense. His offense has been respons-
ible for 206 yards a game on the ground and 154 a game
through the air. Thus 57 percent of the yards gained
have been on the ground and 43 percent through the air.
The middle of Maryland's defensive line contributed
36 quarterback sacks last fall with 13 by Bruce Palmer,
12 by Charles Johnson and 11 by Marlin Van Horn.
Only Randy White, now with the Dallas Cowboys, ever
recorded more in a season with 12 sacks and 24 tackles in
the backfield in 1974.
Van Horn returns for the 1979 season after 14 tackles
in the backfield last fall accounting for minus 101
yards. The three knocked the ball loose nine times
last year and recovered four opponents fumbles. Ed
Gall, the other starter returning in the interior line had
one sack last fall and recovered two fumbles.
The Maryland linebackers, led by Neal Olkewicz,
now with the Washington Redskins, knocked the ball
loose from opponents seven times and recovered six
fumbles. Olkewicz set a season tackle record with his
188, caused two fumbles, recovered three and blocked a
punt for a touchdown. Brian Matera, returning as a
starter, also caused three fumbles and recovered three and
contributed an interception.
The Atlantic Coast Conference sent three teams to post-
season bowl games this past fall and now has sent 32
teams to Bowl games in the 26 years of the league's ex-
istence. Maryland made its eleventh post-season ap-
pearance in the Sun Bowl while North Carolina State
and Clemson played in their ninth bowl games.
The ACC has now sent seven teams to Bowl games in
the last two years and for the seventh consecutive year the
league has sent at least two teams to post season games.
The Terps lost .1 lol of offense from it>< team thai was
picked to finisli third oi fourth in the Ulantii Coast Con-
ference .uul u.is (inliinij; foi the title in the closing min-
utes of the final game. .1 24-28 loss to Clemson.
A'tkins led the Terps to 2058 yards rushing last fall,
gaining 1.261 himself, but 1,901 of those yards are go
>'V'" "<t^( Only l.r>7 return \\ nli Wysocki th<- leading ball carriei
Wft,tr ■'*""" ^J rt-turniiiK wilh I"' yards. S< oil ailds c\|><xicii« i l.nl
' missed (he I97H se.ison with a slres.s fracture of the leg.
Through the air the Terps ( ontributed 1,618 yards and
1.391 of those also are gone, leaving Maryland with only
384 yards lotal offense hack from the team that rolled up
3.676 yards enrouie to their sixth consecutive bowl.
Yards rushing in 1978—2.058
157 returning for 1979
1,901 yds lost from offense
TERRAPINS (I KRIYin IN
PROFESSION \l. FOOTBALL
NFL
New York Bob Raba, TE
Ken Schroy, DB
Denver Vince Kinney, WR
John Schultz, WR
Washington Louis Carter, RB
Neal Olkewicz, LB
Green Bay Steve Atkins, RB
Charles Johnson, DG
Los Angeles Ed Fulton, OG
Larry Marshall, KR
New Orleans Joe Campbell, DE
Steve Mike-Mayer KS
Baltimore Chuck White, WR
Buffalo Tony Greene, DB
Houston Tim Wilson, RB
Kansas City Walter White, TE
Dallas Randy White, DT
St. Louis Mark Manges, QB
Chicago Bob Avellini, QB
CFL
Saskatchewan Larry Dick, QB
Hamilton Harry Walters. LB
Ottawa Brad Carr, LB
Seven members of the Maryland football team were
named to the All-ACC Academic team in 1978. topping
the previous high mark of six named in 1974. De-
fensivemen John Baldante. Ralph Lary and Joe Muffler
joined offensive tackles Scott Collins and Phil Livingston,
offensive guard Glenn Chamberlain and Split End Dean
Richards on the all-star unit. Lary and Muffler are re-
peat performers from the 1977 squad, with Muffler being
named to the Academic All-American First Team.
Yards passing in 1978 — 1,618
227 returning for 1979
1.391 yds lost from offense
Yards total offense — 3,676
384 returning for 1979
3,292 yds lost from total offense
Jerry Claiborne's Terps have won their last four
season openers with victories over Clemson (21-14),
Richmond (31-7), Villanova (41-0) and Tulane (31-7).
Prior to Claiborne's arrival in College Park, the Terps
had dropped the opening game in six consecutive years.
In his firs't game Claiborne gained a 24-24 tie in Raleigh
and then dropped two openers to Alabama (16-21) and
West Virginia (13-20) and now has a 4-2-1 record in
opening games, a big improvement over the 1-8 record
the Terps had in the nine years prior to his arrival.
67
1974— Randy White and THE SPORTING NEWS "Coach of the Year" Jerry Claiborne with White hold-
ing the OUTLAND TROPHY, and Claiborne holding White's ACC "PLAYER OF THE YEAR"
plaque. On table is Liberty Bowl MVP Trophy and THE LOMBARDI TROPHY. White's 94 was
retired by the University.
DR. JOHN SAMPSON TOLL
PRESIDENT
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
John S. Toll, the 22nd president of the University
of Maryland, has been in office lor a little more than
one year bul he has already become .1 vital force for
higher education in the State of Maryland.
The drive behind the Toll presidency is ;i pledge
that "with a determined effort From everyone concerned,
the University of Maryland can, in about .1 decade,
become one of the best state university systems in the
nation."
Since lie became president on July 1. 1978. the Uni-
vcrsiiy has developed planning documents for the Eastern
Shore and Baltimore County Campuses; has initiated
multi-campus programs which utilize the resources of
the College Park Campus and (he University of Maryland
at Baltimore; is helping to develop plans through Uni-
versity College lor a national television education system;
and has raised undergraduate admission standards.
More than $465,000 in grants, including a $190,000
Carnegie Foundation award, were obtained in the first
eight mouths of the Toll presidency to assist Dr. Toll
m developing his "Agenda for the 80s." a plan to assure
that the University will meet future societal needs. The
Carnegie grant will fund an intensive study of the Uni-
versity's roles and missions hy a team of educational ex-
perts. The results of the study may make the University
of Maryland a model for other universities.
''The University of Maryland must adapt to new
circumstances and respond to new demands that are
being made of universities to provide increasing services
to the society,'' President Toll said. ''This process of
' \
-Hk,M
reshaping the University to gain more effective use of
resources, to expand the service mission, .md lo no
the excellence of the teaching and research missions is
now underway. The I niversity intends to bring its re-
sources to hear on the so< i.d and economic development
ol die Slate of Maryland and to develop scholarly pro-
grams and research projects that will help the state and
the nation prosper during the next decade."
Although President Toll has been in office for less
than 15 months, he is very familiar with die ('niversity
and the College Park Campus. Dr. Toll first came to
the University in 1953 as professor and chairman of
what was then a six-man physics department.
Dr. Toll received his undergraduate degree in physics
from Yale where he graduated with highest honors.
I lis advanced physics degrees were earned at Princeton.
An avid jogger, camper and tennis player. Dr. Toll and
his wife Deborah have two daughters.
DR. ROBERT L. CLUCKSTERN
CHANCELLOR
COLLEGE PARK CAMPUS
"The College Park Campus.'' Says Robert L. Gluck-
stern. Chancellor of the eighdi largest campus in the
nation, "is reaffirming its commitments to research,
scholarship, and the advancement of knowledge, in-
cluding the search for solutions to social problems and
the pursuit of excellence for its own sake."
One program that emphasizes academic excellence
is the Chancellor's Scholars Program. With financial
support from alumni and other friends of the University,
die Chancellor's Scholars Program seeks to attract and
retain top quality students to College Park through
the annual award of $500 renewable scholarships to
outstanding high school students.
The Distinguished Scholar-Teachers Program, estab-
lished last year, emphasizes academic excellence by
recognizing faculty members who have been particularly
successful at translating scholarship into classroom teach-
ing. Each of die six professors selected are given time
to develop an honors seminar, a graduate seminar, and
a series of public lectures in connection with dieir
areas of expertise during die coming year.
College Park's General Honors Program, now in its
fifteendi year, has come to be respected as one of the
best of its kind throughout the nation. Despite die
pressures of administration. Dr. Gluckstern contributes
by teaching a General Honors course in physics almost
every semester. He also continues to be active in research.
The accent on quality diat has characterized Dr.
Gluckstern's administration leads naturally from his
own academic background. Educated at the City College
of .New York (Electrical Engineering) and MIT (Ph.D.
in Physics) . Dr. Gluckstern taught at Yale University
for fourteen years. In 1964 he joined the faculty at the
University of Massachusetts at Amherst as professor and
chairman of the physics and astronomy department.
Under his leadership, die department grew from 14 to
52 faculty members and increased federal support from
$30,000 to $950,000 a year.
A member of the Terrapin Club, he is an avid fan
and works out on the racquetball courts. He frequently
reminds people that Maryland can be proud of its
athletes who have combined varsity skills with excellent
academic records.
Dr. Gluckstern. who is 54. was born in Atlantic City,
New Jersey. He is married to die former Norma Block.
The Gluckstems have diree children.
69
DR. STANFORD A. LAVINE
Team Physician
Dr. Stanford A. Lavine
is the Terrapin Team
Physician and one of the
top men in the nation in
the field of "Sports Med-
icine".
Dr. Lavine, a form-
er Maryland Quarterback,
developed his interests in
"Sports Medicine" as an athlete and has worked with all
23 Maryland teams.
He has also worked with professional basketball and
football, and box lacrosse becoming acquainted with
every type of sports injury.
He is still listed in the Maryland record books as
having teamed up with Ed Bolton for a 92 yard
scoring pass play against South Carolina in 1949 as the
Terps went on to the Gator Bowl.
Against George Washington, Dr. Lavine completed
three touchdown passes, a record he shared with several
others until Mark Manges came up widi four in 1975.
Dr. Lavine is an Orthopedic Surgeon.
JOHN J. BUSH
Head Trainer
John J. Bush joined the
Maryland training staff in
1972, as an assistant to
William Fry. He took
over the Head Trainer's
duties in 1978 when Fry
moved into an adminis-
trative position in the
Athletic Director's office.
In addition to working with football "Jay Jay" has
served as Head Basketball Trainer and worked with all
13 Men's sports.
He is a 1969 graduate of Florida State and came to
Maryland from the U.S. Army where he served with
the Airborne Rangers. He holds a private Pilot's
license and enjoys flying when he has the opportunity.
This past summer he hosted a Student Athlete Trainer
Workshop, co-sponsored by Cramer Products, with nearly
a hundred high school students attending along with
30 Trainers from Holland.
ROBERT JAMES WEIR
Assistant Trainer
Jim Weir joined the
Maryland training staff in
1970 after serving 10 years
in the United States Navy.
He served as a trainer for
three years at the Naval
Academy under Red
Romo as a Hospitalman
2nd Class in the Navy.
Since joining the Terps, in addition to duties with
the football team he has served as Head Basketball
Trainer and as the trainer for the National Champion-
ship Lacrosse teams.
A native of Chelsa, Michigan he attended Olivet
College, prior to entering the Navy, and is a graduate
of the Navy Physical Therapy Technical School.
HUGH RODMAN MARTIN
Assistant Trainer
Rod Martin joined the
Maryland training staff in
1978 as the basketball
trainer and also works
with football and other
sports.
He came to Maryland
after having worked as a
Graduate Assistant at the
University of Kentucky and with the Indiana Wizards, a
professional basketball team.
Rod is a graduate of Morehead State University
where he received his B.A. in 1975 and his M.A. in 1977.
He is a native of Lawrenceburg, Kentucky.
( % ^ M
GOTHARD LANE
Administrative Assistant to
Director of Athletics
G o t h a r d Lane has
moved into the Adminis-
trative area of Intercol-
legiate Athletics after four
years as a defensive end
coach and Coach Clai-
borne's Chief Scout.
Lane will coordinate
and supervise the recruiting programs and activities for
the Addetic Department working both with Men's and
Women's programs. He will also coordinate activities
widi the Terrapin Club, "M" Club and Alumni organi-
zations and operate a speakers Bureau for the Athletic
Department.
70
MARYLAND
EDUCATIONAL
FOUNDATION
Tom Fields is one of
the major reasons die
University of Maryland
Athletic Department is
one of the few Athletic
Departments in the nation
operating in the black.
Fields. a retired Colonel
from the Marine Corps,
is the Executive Director
of the Maryland Educa-
tional Foundation, the
organization assuming re-
sponsibility for the schol-
arship aid to Maryland
athletes.
'Flic former Maryland Track Ail-American returned
to Maryland in 1970 when the contributions to the Edu-
cational Foundation were minimal. For the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1970 the contributions were approxi-
mately $30,000.
For the past fiscal year the funds generated by the
Educational Foundation totaled over $900,000.
The membership of the Terrapin Club has expanded
accordingly from the 132 original members to 1.850.
The Club in addition to the contributions to the Educa-
tional Foundation supports the athletic program in many
other ways especially with their attendance at die events.
Over one half of the contributors are not graduates of
the University of Maryland. However all are strong
supporters of Intercollegiate Athletics and its principals
of competition.
The funds provided by die foundation have not only
enabled die University's self - sustaining program to
remain just above die break even point but has enabled
the Terrapins to develop a Women's program that has
also gained National recognition. The scholarship pro-
gram for the women athletes is on a par with the program
of the men's non-revenue sports.
The Terrapin Club membership currently includes
26 life members ($10,000 contribution) 402 Diamond-
back members (1.000 annual contribution) and 575
Gold members ($500 annual contribution) among the
1,850 contributors.
As a track star Fields helped lead the Terps to one of
their finest days ever at the Penn Relays winning three
Championship of America races. During World War II
he served in combat in Guadalcanal, Yella Lavella.
Bouganville and Iowa Jima. He also served in Korea
and Vietnam and at the time of his retirement from the
Corps he was the Deputy Director of Information. Head-
quarters. Marine Corps.
HOTSV ALPERSTEIX is the President of the Terrapin
Club with Joseph Yona and Gregory DesRoches serving
as vice presidents.
The incomparable Alperstein is a former Maryland Box-
ing Champion and also played Lacrosse and Soccer for
die Terrapins. He was recently named to the State of
Maryland Boxing Hall of Fame as a unanimous choice
with induction set for October 21.
DR. CHARLES A. TAFF
Chairman The Athletic Council
Di. Charles A. Taff,
Professor of Transporta-
tion, < ollege of Business
and Manage menl n plat ed
I )r. John Faber as Chair-
iii. in of the Athletic < loun-
cil in 1977. Dr. 'Faff
servi 'I as i haii man of die
Department oJ Business
Administration from 1962 to 1973 and has taught at
Maryland since 1949.
lie is a graduate <>f Iowa where he also received his
M.A. in 1941. After joining the faculty at Maryland he
earned his Ph.D. in Transportation Economics in 1952.
He has served on the athletic council for several years.
FRANCIS A. GRAY, JR.
Assistant Athletic Director
Frank Gray joined the
athletic department as
Business Manager in 1972
and now serves as an
assistant Director of Ath-
letics, responsible for the
financial structure of die
department.
He has been primarily
responsible for the handling of the budgets in die
department that o|>erates on a $3,000,000 annual total
budget, the bids and purchases made by the department,
expense accounts and all other expenditures.
WILLIAM "SPIDER" FRY
Assistant Athletic Director
"Spider" Fry moved in-
to an administrative posi-
tion in the athletic de-
partment in 1978 after
having devoted 15 years to
the athletes as a Head
Trainer.
He served five years
as the Head Trainer at
Dartmouth College before returning to Maryland in
March of 1967.
As a Maryland undergraduate he earned his letter
in varsity soccer and a B.S. Degree in Physical Education.
He was an assistant trainer at Maryland before taking
over the Head Trainer duties at Dartmoudi.
Fry became interested in training after suffering a
soccer injury that ended his athletic career at Maryland.
During his years as a trainer he has worked with all
13 mens sports, understands the scheduling problems in
each sport, the feeding and housing problems and trans-
portation difficulties.
71
MARYLAND
BASKETBALL
THE 1979-80 SCHEDULE
30 (Fri.)
U.M.E.S.
DECEMBER
3 (Mon.)
Penn State (Hershey Pa.)
5 (Wed.)
Georgetown (Capital Centre)
8 (Sat.)
Brown
15 (Sat.)
Catholic University
19 (Wed.)
Georgia Tech
22 (Sat.)
Bucknell
28 (Fri.)
Maryland Invitational
29 (Sat.)
Temple - Harvard
Miami of Ohio
JANUARY
3 (Thu.)
at
Georgia Tech
5 (Sat.)
at
Wake Forest
9 (Wed.)
at
N.C. State
12 (Sat.)
Pittsburgh
16 (Wed.)
Clemson
20 (Sun.)
at
Nordi Carolina
23 (Wed.)
N.C. State
26 (Sat.)
at
Notre Dame
30 (Wed.)
at
Virginia
FEBRUARY
2 (Sat.)
Duke
6 (Wed.)
Nordi Carolina
9 (Sat.)
at
Clemson
11 (Mon.)
Boston University
13 (Wed.)
East Carolina
16 (Sat.)
at
Duke
20 (Wed.)
Wake Forest
23 (Sat.)
Virginia
28 (Thu.)
ACC Tournament
29 (Fri.)
(Greensboro, N.C.)
MARCH
1 (Sat.)
The Maryland Coaching Staff: (from left) John
Kochan, Head Coach Charles "Lefty" Driesell, Tom
Abatemarco.
The Maryland Terrapins will play 16 games in Cole
Field House and meet Georgetown at the nearby Capital
Centre. Once again Maryland and Penn State will meet
at the Hershey Park Arena in Hershey, Pennsylvania
and the Terps will visit Notre Dame.
Georgia Tech has played in the Maryland Invitational
Tournament three times but will be making their first
appearance as an Atlantic Coast Conference opponent
in Cole Field House on December 19. The Terps first
two league games will be against Georgia Tech as they
return die visit on January 3.
The Terps will host their ninth annual Invitational
Tournament on December 28-29 with Temple, Harvard
and Miami of Ohio the visiting teams. Harvard played
in the Terps initial tournament in 1971.
The eight team Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament
will be held in Greensboro on Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, February 28-29 and March 1.
1978-79 MARYLAND BASKETBALL ROSTER
NAME
CLASS
HEIGHT
HIGH SCHOOL
HOMETOWN
Taylor Baldwin*
Sophomore
6-10
Greenwich
Greenwich, Conn.
John Bilney***
Senior
6-8
Pascak Hills
Woodcliff Lake, N.J
Mark Fodiergill
Freshman
6-8 1/2
Somerset
Somerset, Ky.
Ernest Graham**
Junior
6-7 "
Dunbar
Baltimore, Md.
Robert Hart**
Senior
6-3
Laurel
Laurel, Md.
David Henderson**
Junior
6-9
Patrick Henry
Roanoke, Va.
Reggie Jackson*
Sophomore
6-4
Roman Cadiolic
Philadelphia, Pa.
Albert King**
Junior
6-6
Fort Hamilton
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Greg Manning**
Junior
6-1
Steelton - Highspire
Steelton, Pa.
Greg "Dutch" Morley*
Sophomore
6-2
DeMadia
Hyattsville, Md.
Jon Robinson
Freshman
6-4
Hunter Huss
Gastonia, N.C.
Jose Sosa
Junior
6-2
Passaic High &
Mercer C.C.
Paterson, N.J.
Herman Veal
Freshman
6-6
Callaway
Jackson, Miss.
Charles "Buck" Williams*
Sophomore
6-8
Rocky Mount
Rocky Mount
* Denotes Letters Earned
72
Renaldo "Skeets" Nehemlah
11)78-79
ACC Athlete <>f the year
During the Summer of 1979 "Skeets" Nehemiah,
Maryland's sensational Sophomore hurdler was voted
the Anthony J. McKevlin Award .is the Atlantic Coast
Conference "Athlete of the Year". He then went on to
capture a Gold Medal in the I'.m American Games.
Nehemiah held three national high school hurdles
records when he enrolled .11 Maryland and since then
has established Five World Records.
Indoors he holds the best marks ever for 50 yards
(6.04) 50 meters (6.36) 55 meters (6.89) and 60 yards
6.89.
Outdoors he has lowered the world mark for 110
meters to 13.16, then 13.00 and recorded a wind-aided
12.91. He also has been timed in 12.8 the fastest hand
limed rate ever.
Indoors he reigns as the NCAA and AAU champion
and record holder for the hurdles and as the ACC
champion for the hurdles and 60 dash.
Outdoors he is the NCAA, AAU and Pan American
Games hurdles champion and the ACC and IC4A 100
and 200 meter dash champion.
OUTSTANDING AWARDS IN THE PAST
OUTLAND TROPHY (Lineman of Year)
1952 — Dick Modzelewski
1974— Randy White
WALTER CAMP MEMORIAL TROPHY
(Player of Year)
1955— Bob Pellegrini
LOMBARDI TROPHY (Lineman of Year)
1974— Randy White
UNITED PRESS — LINEMAN OF YEAR
1955— Bob Pellegrini
1974— Randy White
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE (Player of Year)
1953 — Bernie Faloney
1955— Bob Pellegrini
1974— Randy White
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE (Coach of Year)
1953— Jim Tatum
1955 — Jim Tatum
1973 — Jerry Claiborne
1975 — Jerry Claiborne
1976 — Jerry Claiborne
JACOBS BLOCKLNG TROPHY
1955— Bob Pellegrini
1969— Ralph Sonntag
HEISMAN AWARD
(Outstanding College Football Player)
1952 — Jack Scarbath (Runner-up)
NATIONAL COACH OF YEAR
(by THE SPORTING NEWS)
1974 — Jerry Claiborne
OUTSTANDING PLAYER — COLLEGE ALL-STARS
1956— Bob Pellegrini
MVP — BLUE-GRAY GAME
1971— Guy Roberts
MVP — COACHES ALL-AMERICAN GAME
1974 — Louis Carter
MVP — LIBERTY BOWL
1974— Randy White
MVP — GATOR BOUT
1975— Steve Atkins
"OUTSTANDING PLAYERS"
HALL OF FAME CLASSIC
1977— Offense— Chuck White
Defense — Charles Johnson
BRIAN PICCOLO AWARD
1973 Al Neville
1974 Dave Visaggio