Word: lindley
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While the first team was going through its comparatively restful afternoon, the second team scrimmaged the scrubs. Bench, who has been on the sidelines since the Brown contest, renewed his acquaintance with the pigskin and ran the substitutes with Lindley, Scott and Cutler assisting him in carrying the ball. Both Lindley and Scott played for a few minutes against West Point. On the second string line were Coleman and Wolfe, ends; Root and Conway, tackles; Vandergrift and Frank Butterworth, guards, and Earl, center. Cutler took the ball over twice on line plunges but on two other occasions the scrubs were...
...yards in front of him was the Brown goal line, nothing between. Until that moment, Brown had been ahead by the hair's breadth of a field goal; after that they were four points behind. Demoralized by so abrupt a slight of fortune, they failed to stop Lindley of Yale from crossing the line again, went home defeated, 13 to 3. If the pigskin used in the Harvard-Dartmouth exhibition had been retained by the animal which it originally covered, then greased, and in that state put in play, the feats performed with it by the Crimson players might...
...scrimmage Burt was at center in place of Lovejoy and Osborne took Luman's position at right end. Bunnell ran the team at quarterback. Cottle hurt his ankle slightly towards the end of the session and was replaced by Dan Lindley...
...Lindley of Baseball, Not Crew Fame...
Cutler and Lindley came to the fore when they were sent in toward the end of the game and were the chief participants in the march from the field that was terminated by the final whistle with the ball on Georgia's three-yard line and three downs to go. Lindley is a hard man to stop when in an open field and he is a fiend on end runs. He is not the Al Lindley that stroked the Yale crew to the championship of the world, but gained his fame prior to football as second baseman and right-fielder...