Word: carideo
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...combination he thinks is just good enough to win and make the game exciting. Philadelphia has never before seen such football as Notre Dame exhibited against Penn. Marty Brill, a Philadelphia boy, made three impressive touchdowns for which, according to report, his father gave $1,000 a touchdown. Quarterback Carideo, indisputable All-American choice, sent Schwartz or Savoldi through plays which came off with astonishing precision, shifting around end, feinting, tearing through the line. Notre Dame 60, Pennsylvania 20. On the eve of the Pennsylvania game, Coach Rockne took occasion to reply to the unsavory charges pressed against football...
Schwartz's 60-yd. run on Notre Dame's first running play showed how things were going to be. Pittsburgh had not been scored on this year but Coach Knute Rockne was taking no chances, had started his regulars under brainy Quarterback Frank Carideo. Toward the end of the first half he took them out because Notre Dame needed to score no more. Pittsburgh did all their scoring against second and third stringers in the final quarter. Notre Dame 35, Pittsburgh...
Dedicating a new stadium, Notre Dame's big team made the Navy look easy. Quarterback Carideo showed that he remembered all Coach Rockne's lessons, but when he really wanted to make sure of a score he gave the ball to Fullback Savoldi. Notre Dame 26, Navy...
...four-yard line, got to an Army pass. Instead of knocking it down and covering receivers, in the fashion proper for goal-line defenders, he caught it, raced 96 yards for the only touchdown of the game. Notre Dame 7, Army 0. Brainy, hard running, hard kicking Carideo's punts were sometimes blocked but his generalship vindicated the judgment of critics who had already made him their choice for All-American quarterback. Once "All-American" meant the personal opinion of the late great Walter Camp. Now each U. S. newspaper has its Camp, its All-American team. Notre Dame...
...none has been so convincing in victory, so steadily capable as this trio, the "Big Three" of 1929 football. To mention the names of a few of the players who have born the standards of these teams to victory sounds like reading an all-American team. Elder, Cannon, Carideo, Brill, Moynihan, Yunevich, Harmeson, Welch, Uansa, Parkinson and so on almost indefinitely...