Left Tackle Thayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about Left Tackle Thayer.

Left Tackle Thayer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about Left Tackle Thayer.

And Chase’s prophecy proved fairly correct.  Chambers had shot her bolt.  Brimfield secured the ball by inches on a fourth down near the middle of the field and her first desperate attack, a skin-tackle play with St. Clair carrying the pigskin, piled through for nearly ten yards, proving that Chambers was no longer invulnerable.  Carmine, still in control, called for more speed and still more.  The Maroon-and-Grey warriors fairly dashed to their positions after a play.  Chambers called time for an injured guard and substituted two new linesmen.  Kendall and Harris were poked through left tackle for good gains and St. Clair got away around left end and was not stopped until he had placed the ball on the twenty-three.  A fake kick worked for a short gain through centre, Carmine carried the pigskin around left tackle for three, Harris hurled himself through the rapidly weakening centre for four more and on the next play netted the distance and a yard to spare.

The grand-stand had well-nigh emptied itself, the spectators hurrying along the side line toward the Chambers goal.  Amy and Clint and Chase squirmed to the front of the crowd where Tracey Black was wildly imploring the fellows to “Keep back of the line, please!  Don’t get on the field, fellows!”

Chambers put in a new left half and Coach Robey sent Gafferty in for Hall.  The latter had been pretty badly treated in the third quarter.  The pigskin was on the Chambers twelve yards now and Carmine and Captain Innes went back and put their heads together.  Then Harris joined them and the crowd along the edge of the field set up a demand for a touchdown.  “We don’t want a field-goal, Innes!  We want a touchdown!  Give us a touchdown!  Touchdown!  Touchdown!”

But Jack Innes apparently thought a field-goal with its accompanying three points was sufficient to try for, for Harris walked slowly back to kicking position and spread his long arms out.  But no one expected a try-at-goal on first down and there was none.  Harris got the ball, made believe hurl it to the left, turned and raced to the right.  Kendall and Carmine bowled over an opponent apiece and Harris ducked through and was pulled down on the six yards, while some seven score excited youths danced along the side line and howled gleefully.

Again Harris went back, but this time it was Carmine himself who sought a breach in the opponent’s defence and was finally upset without gain.  It was third down now, with four to go.  The ball was well to the right of the goal, but Harris had done harder angles than that in his time, and hardly anyone there doubted that he would manage to land the ball across the bar.  For there was hardly a question but that Brimfield was to try a field-goal this time.  She weakened her end defence to provide protection to the kicker, both Kendall and Roberts playing well in and leaving the opposing ends unchallenged.  But if Harris was capable of dropping the ball over from that angle he failed to do it on this occasion.

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Left Tackle Thayer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.