aw ALi. ACI eee
wy Hin Y
—_—-
A GREAT YALE DRIVE.
[Continued from 2d page.|
ble. There was no waiting or confer-
ence. The signal came as quickly as
though the game had only just begun
in the center of the field. Before
Chadwick and Rodgers Princeton’s
tight opened, Dudley entering. Yale
had scored.
It is utterly useless to try to describe
the effect upon the crowd. That touch-
down meant untold business for throat
snecialists. The Yale team trotted back
to the center of the field, looking more
nearly satisfied than at any other time
since the 20th of September. deSaulles
lay along the ground and the youth
Cadwalader approached him. An emi-
nent Yale specialist on football symp-
toms told the Yale center that his ex-
pression at that moment reminded him
of the face of a supreme court justice
casting a deciding vote in a case in-
volving millions to the government.
Yes, the goal was kicked!
MORE GOOD FOOTBALL.
This was all the scoring, but it was
not the finish of the game. There was
yet another run by deSaulles to come.
The irrepressible little quarter took the
ball on the very kick-off at Yale’s 25-
yard line near the West end of the field.
This time he didn’t try much dodging,
for he saw five or six Yale players
stretch out before him in a long line of
defense. The quickness of the forma-
tion of that interference is only equalled
in the writer's remembrance by the
Princeton co-operation with Smith in
the game at New York last year, that
when he took the ball on a pass from
Baird, who had received it from Hink-
ey’s long punt on Princeton’s 30-yard
line. It was when he ran to within
ten yards of the Yale goal, there to be
overhauled by Benjamin after the pret-
tiest race of the game. Hall, Brown,
Rodgers, Benjamin—these all, and
others, seemed to be in this interfer-
ence. They threw tnemselves so well
before their men that not less than
three of the Princeton forwards were
bowled over. 3
éeSariies covered fiity yards’ before
he was stopped. That whetted Yale’s
appetite for another touchdown. But
that was not to be. Dudley, Rodgers,
Benjamin and McBride all smashed
along towards the Princeton goal line.
But after a series or two the Princeton
defense stiffened and the ball was lost on
downs. Princeton’s side roared its en-
couragement, which was well-deserved.
Again the Yale onslaught had been
disastrous, and Reiter left the play for
Kelly, who had not been thought well
enough to open the game. It isa ques-
tion how long his strength could have
stood the strain, but he certainly ‘did
heroic work for the last twenty minutes,
both in defense and offense. Shortly
after this came one of the finest features
of the game, the rally of Princeton in
their smash through the victorious Yale
line for a gain of twenty-five yards, car-
rying the ball to Yale’s 30-yard line.
It was Kelly who generally had the
leather when these plays were made..
It was all over though after an attempt-
ed double: pass which was fumbled,
Rodgers being, as usual, where he
ought to be and recovering the ball.
The Yale line was aroused to a frenzy,
and it was next to impossible to put
any complicated play into operation
before it.
An exchange of kicks and finally
another block by the Yale line of a punt
by Wheeler left the ball on Princeton’s
25-yard line, where Benjamin recov-
ered it. Another Princeton player had
succumbed, Bannard retiring for Ayers.
The Princeton defense was even stiffer
and the old line-breakers couldn’t
break, so there was more kicking. A
little later Princeton tried the line-
breaking again. Rodgers finally spoiled
it by throwing back Ayers for a loss
of two yards. This left the ball on
Princeton’s 30-yard line.
YALE’S LAST ATTEMPT.
There were three minutes of play left,
and Yale was very anxious to have
another touchdown. And she came
mighty near it. Dudley and McBride
took five yards off that thirty. Cham-
berlin, who was making his beautiful
record better every minute, made his
gain. Here Booth showed the effect of
the strain so much that the coaches
dragged him from the field against his
will, and Dickey took his place. Then
Dudley and Chamberlin and Rodgers
hammered at it, and when they were
through only twenty yards were left.
Dudley tried it again, and this time he
took off eleven yards, going round
Princeton’s right. McBride smashed
through for six yards more, and Prince-
ton’s goal was within nine feet. It
didn’t seem possible to stop that Yale
advance, but the timekeepers did it.
And the game was won by Yale and
lost by Princeton.
If you have read through this ac-
count, you will doubtless feel that you
do not yet understand how Yale
marched it out to victory. If you were
given a diagram of the Yale plays you
would not any more understand it.
The simpler the work, the harder to
explain. Hardly more than four times
did deSaulles’ signals call for even end
plays. First it was a smash at one
tackle and then at another; it was guard
left and guard right. And it was sim-
ply the force and the speed of that drive
and the perfect co-operation of the men
in the simple plays that won it out for
the Blue. Therein lies ine great satis-
faction of it for Yale. It was a margin
of superiority, mounting almost to per-
fection, in fundamental qualities.
The line-up and summary follow:
YALE PRINCETON
Hazen leit-end-right (c.) Cochran
Lathrop
Rodgers (c.) left-tackle-right Hillebrand
Chadwick left-guard-right Edwards
Cadwalader center Booth
| Dickey
Brown right-guard-left | Crowdis
Chamberlin right-tackle-left Holt
Hall right-end-left Creigh
deSaulles quarter-back Baird
Burke
Dudley left-half-right Reiter
Ayers
Benjamin right-half-left Bannard
Kelly
McBride full-back Wheeler
Referee, Wiliam Langford, of Trin-
ity; .umpire, Paul Dashiell, of Lehigh;
score, Yale 6, Princeton 0; linesmen,
John Howland,’ of Yale; Dr. Boviard,
of Princeton; timekeepers, V. M.
Coyne, of Elizabeth A. C., and E. O..
Smith, of Wesleyan; time of game, 35
minute halves.
L. S. W.
Figures on the Game.
The following figures, made from the
New York Herald’s accurate story of
the game in detail, show the total
number of yards gained by punting and
rushing:
First half. Princeton Yale
Yards gained by punting...362 286
ef a eFashine .... 35. toe
Total yards*pared 22). 400 388
Second half. Princeton Yale
Yards gained by punting... .343 226
: = ‘ fushine <. 30. 166%
Tetal yards @ained.<...u. <:. 382 304%
The following figures compiled by
Mr. Albert H. Barclay, New Haven
correspondent of the New York Herald,
will give some idea of the fierceness of
Yale’s tackling, by showing in com-
parison the individual losses of the two
elevens, when the runner was thrown
back towards his own goal line:
Yale losses. Yards
DeSatitles——¢- a Oe ee 3
Ben amin-oh. 2 Se a ee 7
Meetal (oi Pete ee 10
Princeton losses. Yards
Reiter=5; 0 35.2.0 .3 oa ws ee ees oe oe
Baicd— 6; 26.2 8s ha Si ee 16
Wantards=0. 405 See eee 2
tO Oe or 3
BUT R68 i er ee 5
AVCTS=4 2 eee re 6
Wiiheelét—3) 3. se ee 6
Baird—11, 20, on blocked kicks..< ~31
79
Chamberlin’s punts averaged 21
yards, McBride’s 29; Baird averaged
40l%4 yards and Wheeler 31 yards. Each
side kicked 19 times. Yale’s average
was about 27%4 yards and Princeton’s
3714, making an average of 10 yards to
the good for Princeton on each ex-
change of kicks.
——-—40
Notes of the Game.
The press and telegraph men say
that the facilities at the Field Saturday
allowed the best service that has yet
been given from a football game.
The Field Corporation and Football
[Continued on 8th page.]
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