Word: gonzalez
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Larry Terrell and Jose Gonzalez, the other two members of coach Jack Barnaby's ferocious top four, stopped their Amherst opponents, 3-1. Both players faltered--Terrell in his second game and Gonzalez in his third--but their superiority was clear from the start...
Only the matches of Fritz Hobbs and Fernando Gonzalez were cliffhangers. After jumping to a two game lead, Hobbs grew erratic and let the match slip to a 2-2 tie. But he blazed back in the fifth game to win, 15-7. Gonzalez, with the score tied 13-13 in the fifth game, smashed two deep court drives by his opponent, completing the sweep...
...military crowd seemed to unnerve Harvard's sharpshooters. Anil Nayar, playing number one, trailed his Army opponent in the first game, 8-5. Larry Terrell, number two, dropped his first game, 15-8. John Whitbeck, number five, was clobbered, 15-2. Bruce Weigand, number seven, and Fernando Gonzalez, number nine, lost...
...team rebounded quickly. Nayar, showing the spectators his championship form, rallied to stop his Army opponent, 15-9, in the first game and went on to win the match, 3-0. Terrell cleared his sights and won, 3-1. Jose Gonzalez, captain Rick Sterne, Michel Scheinmann and Fritz Hobbs all rolled to easy 3-0 victories...
...Zimmerman, playing against Michel Scheinmann in the sixth position, was the only Toronto player to win. He defeated Scheinmann impressively, 15-11, 15-12, 15-11. Fritz Hobbs, playing eight, and Fernando Gonzalez, playing nine, won their matches in four and five games respectively...