Jefferson Dragons 1960

 HOME     SITE-MAP     CONTACT      PRIVACY     PHOTOS    SPONSORS     COMMUNICATIONS  

Jefferson Football 1960

As the 1960 Football season opened for Jefferson, the Dragons were expected to be a strong contender for the 4-B Region title. Despite being few in numbers and inexperienced in several key positions, the Dragons returned without a doubt one of the premiere running backs in the state. Jeff Davis was a unanimous All-State performer in 1959. He was expected to utilize his speed and size to have an outstanding senior season. With George Waddell, Burton Riddle, Eddie Marlow, Roger Jackson and Don Tompkins returning from previous season starting roles, the team was highly ranked in the top five teams in Class B as the season opened.

East Hall - 34 - 0 - Thursday Night, September 8, 1960 in Gainesville

East Hall was never in the game. Jeff Davis rushed for 93 yards in only 10 carries with two touchdown runs of 23 and 12 yards along with a 71-yard punt return as the Dragons held the Vikings to only two-yards rushing and 3 first downs. Jimmy Sexton and Tompkins also added touchdowns on short runs.

Riddle and Waddell combined for seven backfield tackles of Viking ball carriers and line-backer Don Tompkins had another two backfield tackles. The second half saw mostly younger Jefferson players getting some much needed game experience.

Oglethorpe County - 32 - 12 - Friday Night, September 16, 1960 in Jefferson

Jefferson led 25 - 0 at halftime as Jeff Davis scored on runs of 56, 38 and 72 yards. Burt Riddle scored on a 16-yard pass from Davis and Don Tompkins added the final score early in the third quarter as the Dragons ran out to a 32 - 0 lead.  Davis had only seven carries for 206 yards. He did not carry the ball the second half, but had 12 tackles on defense. Jefferson was ranked number five in the Atlanta Constitution high school football poll. Morgan County was number 1 and Washington-Wilkes was number 3.

Commerce - 0 - 0 - Friday Night, September 23, 1960 in Jefferson

If anybody ever won a 0 - 0 football game, Jefferson High School did it at Memorial Field on this night in 1960.

The Opponent was arch-rival Commerce. No points went up on the new electric scoreboard, but the Dragons managed to dominate in everything else.

They came very close to pay dirt on two occasions. In fact, they came so close one time that many goal line watchers, including this writer, thought they made it. The officials thought otherwise.

The first scoring threat was stopped short by the horn ending the first half with the ball on the eight-yard line. The Dragons had driven 72 yards ~ from their own 30 ~ to get within scoring distance.

The last scoring threat came early in the fourth quarter. This drive started late in the third quarter when a 15-yard clipping penalty forced Commerce to punt from their own nine-yard line. Jefferson halfback Jeff Davis took the punt at the Commerce 45-yard marker and brought it down to the Commerce 22-yard line.

Davis crashed the line for seven yards. Fullback Don Tompkins drove for two before Davis got three more and a first down at the Commerce 10-yard line.

One more play was run before the quarter ended as Davis went off tackle to the six-yard line.

The fourth quarter started with Jefferson having a second down and goal at the Tigers six-yard line. On second down Davis carried the ball to within a foot of the goal line. On third down, many observers thought Davis scored on a quick plunge into the line. On fourth down another crash off tackle by Davis looked to be a touchdown. Jefferson fans cheered as the ball was placed with the nose apparently beyond the goal-line stripe. The officials ruled the ball had not crossed the goal line. Jefferson photographer Bob Freeman later released a picture showing the ball was clearly over the line. The ruling by the officials stood despite strong protest by Coach Davis.

Jefferson had one more scoring opportunity late in the final period. This came after the Commerce Team had kicked on third down from their own 19-yard marker. Davis took the punt on the Commerce 45 and was tripped up on the 37. A Davis to Burton Riddle pass picked up 15 yards and a first down on the Commerce 22. In three plays the Dragons moved the ball nine yards to the Tiger 13. With fourth down and one yard needed for the first down, Davis fumbled and that was it for the Dragons.

The Tigers ran out the clock and it was obvious they were most happy to escape with the draw.

Commerce had failed to make a first down the second half. While they had a slight statistical edge over the Dragons at the end of the first half, they were manhandled the second half.

For the game, Jefferson had ran 40 rushing plays, while Commerce had ran 32. The Dragons gained 165 yards rushing, Commerce had 121. Jefferson attempted 10 passes, completing 4 for 48 yards. The Tigers had attempted 8 passes with 4 complete for 25 yards. The Dragons had 50 yards in penalties while Commerce had 35 yards. Jeff Davis had punted 3 times for an average of 50 yards, the Tigers punted the ball 4 times for an average of 31 yards per punt. Jefferson had 12 first downs for the game. Commerce had 7 first downs, all in the first half.

Jeff Davis had rushed for 104 yards on 18 carries to lead the Dragons. Billy Hendrix had rushed for 73 yards to lead the Tigers.

Commerce entered the game with two earlier wins over Madison County and Winder-Barrow and a 13 - 7 loss to Central Gwinnett. The Tigers would lose only one more game to St. Pius X on October 20 by a 12 - 6 score.

The Dragons saw the tie drop them from number 5 in the Class B rankings to number 6 with Class AA North Hall awaiting in Gainesville the next week.

North Hall - 38 - 6 - Friday Night, September 30, 1960 in Gainesville

It was katy-bar-the-door on a cool, rainy night in Gainesville for the North Hall Trojans as the Dragons Jeff Davis ran the opening kick-off back 83 yards to open the game, Davis would rush for two more scores ( 29 and 64 yards ) and also throw a 27-yard pass to Burton Riddle for another as the Dragons rolled up over 200 yards rushing in the easy win over a slow, out-manned North Hall team.

The Dragons were now 3 - 0 - 1 with defending state Champion and number 1 ranked Morgan County coming to Jefferson the following Friday.

Morgan County - 0 - 0 - Friday Night, October 7, 1960 in Jefferson

The Defending state champion Morgan County Bulldogs rolled into Jefferson with a 5 - 0 record with wins over Newton County ( 27-0 ), Mary Persons

( 24-0 ), Thomson ( 19-13 ), Monticello ( 7-6 ) and Jackson ( 20-0 ). They were ranked Number 1 in the Atlanta Newspaper weekly high school football poll.

The Jefferson High School Dragons stopped the state champions on this night, but the state champions also stopped the Jefferson Dragons.

The score was 0 - 0 in the heavy rain and mud at Memorial Field. This marked the second time in three weeks that the Dragons had battled their opponent to a scoreless tie on their home grounds. In two games the new electric scoreboard donated by the Touchdown Club and Athletic Association that debuted in the Commerce game had not registered a point.

The 0 - 0 game was somewhat of a moral victory for the Dragons. The Atlanta Journal in its headline about the game mentioned that Jefferson had won a 0 - 0 “victory.”

Morgan County was rated number 1 in Class B all year. They were seeking their 33rd win without a loss and were heavy favorites coming into the game. However a rock-ribbed Dragon defense ~ and the rain ~ were great equalizers in the game.

First downs were practically even. Morgan County made three in the first half, Jefferson made two in the second half. That was it.

Jeff Davis of the Dragons punted 12 times for 401 yards ~ a 34-yard average. Morgan County punted 11 times for 378 yards.

But for kicks of 5 and 9 yards, both of which were partially blocked, Davis would have averaged over 40-yards per punt.

Both teams had scoring opportunities, but penalties stopped their momentum.

Jefferson, in the fourth quarter got the ball on the Bulldogs 47-yard line. Quarterback Brian Duke picked up two yards, and Davis added two more. On the next play Davis almost broke loose before going down on the Bulldog 32. Two five-yard illegal motion penalties in the next three plays moved the Dragons back to force a punt.

Morgan County’s scoring opportunity came in the first half. In fact, a pass was caught and carried in for a touchdown, but a holding penalty brought the play back.

In the third quarter, a blocked punt on the Dragon 12 set the Bulldogs up for a short drive. The Bulldogs could gain only eight yards to the Dragon 4 in four plays. Jefferson took over at their own four.

Coach Davis singled out the defensive play of J.W. Holloway and Wayne Butler, two of the heavier boys on the squad.

Two Jefferson linemen were out with fractures ~ “Hardrock’ Jackson and John Parks, so a 125 pound freshman, John Davis stepped up at guard play during the game. Also cited as outstanding on Defense were Don Tompkins, Burton Riddle and George Waddell.

The week following the Jefferson game the Bulldogs were beaten at home by Monroe Area 21-13. In the last game of the season the number 1 ranked Washington-Wilkes Tigers would defeat them 6-0 to eliminate them as a state title contender.

Next up for the Dragons was the Georgia Industrial team from Alto.

Georgia Industrial Institute - 45 - 7 - October 14, 1960 in Jefferson

The Georgia Industrial Institute for Boys was located in Alto, Georgia. They didn’t have a football field, so all their games were “road” games. They entered the Jefferson game with a record of 3 wins and 1 loss. Their wins were over Pickens County ( 27-7 ), Forsyth County ( 13-6 and Tullulah Falls ( 19-6 ). They had been beaten the previous week by Stone Mountain ( 12 - 6 ).

After Larry Benton returned the opening kickoff 21 yards to the Jefferson 38-Yard line, Jeff Davis gave an indication of what was in store for the Green Hornets on this night in Jefferson. He took a pitch and dashed 62 yards for a quick 6 - 0 lead.

The touchdown was the first of five for Davis on the night. He scored two more on a three-yard plunge and another on a 75-yard punt return. All in the first quarter.

Early in the second quarter with the score 19-0, Davis took off from his own 30-yard line, ran into a traffic jam at midfield, changed directions and completed one of the most amazing touchdown runs ever witnessed in Jefferson.

With the score 26-0 midway in the second period, the Green Hornets managed their only score of the night on a 26-yard touchdown pass from Newberry to Hagler.

Jefferson quickly answered four plays later when Brian Duke passed to Burton Riddle for 22 yards and a 32 - 0 lead.

Coach Davis unloaded his bench during the second half.

Midway of the third quarter from the Green Hornet 35-yard line, Quarterback Jerry Middlebrooks handed off to Don Tompkins, who in turn pitched the ball back to Jeff Davis, who ran for his fifth touchdown of the night.

Jefferson added a final score late in the fourth when Duke passed to Ralph Kinsey for a 10-yard score, putting the final 45-7 score on the board.

Jefferson had made 19 first downs, rushed for 311 yards, completed 12 of 15 passes for 144 yards through the air and had a total offense of 451 yards.

Jefferson punted only once as Davis booted a 50-yard kick with no return in the third quarter.

Jeff Davis had rushed for 221 yards in only nine carries. An average of 25-yards per carry. It would be announced early in the following week that Davis would attend Georgia Tech and play for Coach Bobby Dodd and the Yellow Jackets. That was not a great surprise to anyone in Jefferson.

Next up for the still undefeated Dragon’s ( 4 - 0 - 2 ) was the Milton team from Alpharetta, Georgia.

Milton - 33 - 0 - October 21, 1960 - Friday Night in Jefferson

The Class AA Milton Eagles came to Jefferson after suffering their first loss of the season to Headland, 26-0. They were expected to provide a strong test for the now ranked number FIVE in Class B Jefferson team.

Milton had been impressive with early wins over Douglas County ( 24-0 ), College Park ( 13-0 ), Roswell ( 28-12 ), Forest park ( 14-0 ) and Hapeville ( 14-6 ).

Undefeated and Number Five Ranked Jefferson ran past a big, talented Milton team as they ran their season record to 5 - 0 - 2.

Jefferson scored 7 points in the first quarter, 7 in the second and 19 in the third quarter to walk away with the victory before a packed Jefferson Memorial Stadium.

After Milton recover a Dragon fumble at their own 20 yard line, made only five yards in four plays, the Dragons marched 85 yards in eight plays for their first score.

Big plays in the drive were a 21-yard run by Davis and a 45-yard pass from Davis to Riddle. Davis burst across from the five-yard line for the first score. Duke passed to Jimmy Sexton for the extra point.

The second Dragon touchdown was set up by a 35-yard punt return by Davis to the Milton 16-yard line. Fullback Don Tompkins crashed in from the three. Davis ran for the extra point.

Lightning struck in the third quarter as Milton attempted a long pass that Jeff Davis intercepted on his own five-yard line. George Waddell threw a block that took out three Milton tacklers as Davis rambled 95 yards for the touchdown.

Jefferson scored again on their next possession as Davis ran for seven, a 15-yard late hit penalty moved the ball to the Milton 21. Tompkins bulled through the line for 20 yards to the one, and scored on the next play.

With the score 24 - 0, Jefferson, Milton managed a short drive before punting the ball to Davis on his 35-yard line. The swift Dragon halfback zipped 65 yards to close out the touchdown parade for the night. Tompkins scored the extra point and the final score of 33 - 0 was on the board.

Jefferson almost scored again in the fourth quarter as Burton Riddle intercepted a Milton pass on the Dragon 30 and returned it 26 yards to the Milton 44. Duke threw to Riddle for 21 yards as the Dragons moved the ball to the Milton four. On second down a Duke pass was intercepted by Milton to kill the Dragon drive at that point.

Jefferson had dominated the game. Davis had carried the ball only eight times for 65 yards. His big play ability on punt returns and the long interception had taken possessions from the Dragons while adding crucial points to the scoreboard. They didn’t need to run him often from scrimmage.

The defense had been outstanding with three interceptions and five sacks of the Milton quarterback.

The Dragons now stood at 5 - 0 - 2 with a strong Thomson team coming to Jefferson next week.

Thomson - 19 - 33 - October 28, 1960 - Friday Night in Jefferson

Thomson came to Jefferson with two losses. They had defeated Warren County ( 7 - 0 ), Baldwin ( 20 - 0 ), Rockdale County ( 19-6 ) and Jenkins County ( 39-0 ) the previous week. They had been beaten by Morgan County ( 19-13 ), Swainsboro ( 14-12 ) and two weeks prior to the Jefferson game they had battled Washington-Wilkes to a 13-13 tie. They featured an All-State halfback, Douglas Pentecost, that was rated right up there with Jeff Davis of Jefferson and Johnny Gresham of Washington-Wilkes as among the best in Georgia.

Jefferson trailed 20-0 at the midpoint of the fracas before approximately 3,000 shivering fans at Memorial Field. However, the Dragons spotted Thomson two touchdowns on penalties that put them in an early hole they could not climb out of.

Several missed signals, and some missed blocking assignments spelled the first defeat of the season for the home team. This loss damaged considerably any hopes the Dragons had for a shot at the Region Championship.

Now if the Dragons defeat Royston next week, and Morgan County tops Washington-Wilkes this Friday Night, four teams will be tied in the regional standings. It will then be up to various tie-breakers to sort out the eventual champion.

Jefferson. Playing its final home game of the season, received the opening kick. Don Tompkins took a short kick and hustled it out to his own 39.

Tompkins tried the line on the first play for two. Jeff Davis broke outside for 20 yards to the visitors 45-yard line. Brian Duke slammed for five yards before a busted signal resulted in no gain on second down. Davis kicked into the Thomson end zone giving them the ball on their 20.

Thomson was held to one first down before they punted Jefferson into a hole at their own eight. It was a hole the Dragons could not dig themselves out of in the first half.

Davis and Tompkins both tried the line, but could not reach the first down marker. Davis punted to Douglas Pentecost at the Dragon 45-yard line.

He returned the kick to the Dragon 38. With David Hobbs, Earl Hudson and Pentecost alternating ball carrying assignments, Thomson drove to a score. Hudson scored from the two and after he kicked the extra point it was Thomson 7, Dragons 0.

Burton Riddle took the kickoff and returned it to the Dragon 40. Thomson was not going to kick the ball deep to Davis under any circumstances. Another three plays and out resulted in another punt to the Bulldogs. Hudson scored again several moments later on a short plunge to make the score 13-0.

Again Jefferson failed to move the ball as the first half wound down.

Thomson started another drive late in the first half. With 3 seconds left on the clock, Pentecost swept wide to score from the seven-yard line. Hudson kicked the extra point to make it Thomson 20, Jefferson 0, at halftime.

Jefferson Kicked to Thomson to start the second half. After one first down the Bulldogs were forced to kick.

From his own 42-yard line, Jeff Davis ran for 16 yards, then 20 more to the Thomson 22. Tompkins dashed for seven before Davis ripped to the nine. On fourth down Jerry Middlebrooks found Burton Riddle, who out jumped two defenders to gather in the pass and give the Dragons their first score. After a failed Extra point attempt, Jefferson kicked off to the Bulldogs. The score was 20-6, Bulldogs.

Thomson failed to make the first down, but an offside penalty gave them new life at their 23. From here, Pentecost took over as he ran for 11 yards, 8 yards and then broke loose for the 58-yard score that made the score 26-6.

A fired up Jeff Davis gained 35 yards on the next series and scored early in the fourth quarter on a 16-yard draw. Davis scored again with three minutes remaining on a 31-yard pass from Middlebrooks to bring the score to 26-19, after the Tompkins extra point plunge.

Jeff Davis now had scored 20 touchdowns for the season.

Three plays later Pentecost took a handoff at his own 31 and juked and stutter-stepped his way down the sideline for a 69-yard touchdown with less than two minutes remaining in the game. The final 33-19 score was on the Jefferson Scoreboard.

Jefferson had suffered its first loss of the 1960 season.

Royston - 33-7 - November 4, 1960 in Royston

The Royston Purple Hurricanes brought a record of 7 - 1 - 1 into the Jefferson game. They had wins over Tallulah Falls ( 6-0 ), Lavonia ( 6 - 0 ), White County ( 7-6 ), East Fannin ( 19-7 ), Oglethorpe County ( 26-6 ), Madison County ( 7-0 ) and Georgia Industrial Institute ( 20-7 ). The only blemish to their record was a 13-0 loss to Rabun County and a 7-7 tie with Union County.

Even so, very few thought Royston stood much chance against the number 8 ranked Dragons.

Led by their All-State star, Jeff Davis, the Dragons blasted the Royston Purple Hurricanes by a 33-7 score. Davis scored on runs of 30, 35 and 25 yards. He scored 20 points for the game and ran his touchdown total to 23 for the year.

Don Tompkins scored on an 8-yard run and Burton Riddle scored on a 15-yard pass from Davis for the final Dragon score.

Jefferson had 321 yards total offense while Royston could muster only 135 total yards. The Dragons had 20 first downs to only 9 for Royston. Out of 305 yards rushing, Davis picked up 143 on 12 carries. Tompkins rushed for 68 yards.

Following the intermission, Coach Davis played some of his younger players as his mind undoubtedly moved to the Washington-Wilkes game slated for next week. All the young Dragons performed well.

Washington-Wilkes - 6 - 42 - November 11, 1960 at Washington

The Washington-Wilkes Tigers were lying in wait for the Dragons with a team that may have been as strong as any Class B school in state history up to that time.

After a season opening loss to Class C power-house Lincolnton, who would complete a 12-0 season under former Jefferson Coach Buddy Bufford, the Tigers had been tested only twice in a 13-13 tie with Thomson and a 6-0 win over defending State Champion Morgan County. In the State playoffs they would easily defeat Rabun County 35-0, Hogansville 39-12, and in the state final, Jenkins County 40-0.

They had defeated Jenkins County ( 38-13 ), Richmond Academy ( 34-0 ), Elbert County ( 26-0 ), Oglethorpe County ( 47-0 ), Washington County ( 39-0 ), Waynesboro ( 40-20 ), and Morgan County ( 6-0 ) as they prepared to meet the Dragons on their home turf.

The Tigers had Three all-state first team performers on the field. Halfback Johnny Gresham would be the Class B Back of the Year in 1960. He would later attend Georgia Tech where he would be a three-year starter at running back.

Jack Thornton was a 180-pound end that dominated on his side of the field on defense. He was also an adequate receiver for Gresham’s passes when the team chose to throw the ball.

John Harvey Edwards was a 180-pound tackle that covered the opposite side of the field from Thornton. He was a tremendous blocker in the Single-wing attack of the Tigers.

The starting lineup for Washington-Wilkes in 1960 was:

LE - Jack Thornton, LT - Billy Wright, LG - Joe Dyson, C - Tuck Vaughn, RG - John Harvey Edwards, RT - Frank Ewbanks, RE - Mac Edwards, QB - Thomas Gresham, LHB - Johnny Gresham, RHB - Bill Cloer, FB - Mack DeVaughn.

The Starting Lineup for Jefferson in 1960 was:

LE - Ralph Kinsey, LT - Eddie Marlow, LG - George Waddell, C - Earle Tompkins, RG - Roger Jackson, RT - J.W. Holloway, RE - Burton Riddle, QB - Jerry Middlebrooks, LHB - Jeff Davis, RHB - Jimmy Sexton, FB - Don Tompkins.

The Jefferson Dragons were annihilated by the strong washing-Wilkes team. There is not any other way to put it.

For the first 10 minutes the visiting Dragons were in a game that promised a free scoring evening of excitement. After that, Jefferson was mauled continuously for three periods. When the final whistle blew, the bruised Dragons had suffered their worst defeat in many years to a very strong Washington-Wilkes band of Tigers.

Jeff Davis was sidelined for the entire second half with a badly sprained shoulder. Don Tompkins also left the field early in the first half with pulled knee muscles.

The Tigers All-State Star Johnny Gresham put on a show. Taking a direct snap in the Tigers single-wing offense, he shot through the Jefferson line, showing some of the most Amazing breakaway speed  Jefferson fans have ever witnessed. And this is the school with the great running back Jeff Davis.

When the game ended, Gresham had scored three touchdowns and kicked six extra points for the Tigers. He also passed for two other scores. Ironically, Gresham and Davis would both wind up as team-mates at Georgia Tech and both would become starting regulars.

To start the game Jefferson kicked off to the Tigers. After one first down, the Tigers were forced to punt. It was to be their only punt of he night. After holding the Dragons to a three and out, the Tigers took a punt at their own 43-yard line. Five plays later, Gresham scored on a 28-yard run. The beginning of the barrage had begun.

After receiving the kickoff, the Dragons managed their only sustained drive of the night. They started from their own 13 and moved to the eight-yard line from where Tompkins rushed in for the score. A Davis pass to Riddle was successful for the extra point.

From this point on, it was misery for the estimated 500 or so Jefferson fans in attendance.

A 68-yard drive was climaxed by a Mack DeVaughn four-yard touchdown run and Gresham Extra point kick made it 14-6.

Another punt to the Tigers resulted in a 40-yard touchdown run by Gresham on third down. His kick made it 21-6. This was the halftime score.

After intermission Gresham would add a third touchdown on a 53-yard run as he rushed for 206 yards of the Tigers 276 yards rushing. He also was 4-4 passing for two touchdowns. The last of 15 yards to All-State end Thornton.

Brian Duke, Larry Benton, Jimmy Sexton and the Valiant Dragon line continued to fight, but they were clearly out-manned on this night.

Without the offensive skills of Davis and Tompkins, the game ended at halftime for all practical purposes.

The Dragons had completed a 6 - 2 - 2 season. A win should have resulted versus Commerce and possibly a win over Thomson if Pentecost had been contained. The Dragons probably should have lost to Morgan County and Washington-Wilkes clearly had too much firepower for the home team.

An 8-2 record was probably the best that could have happened during this season, if everything had gone the Dragons way.

Jeff Davis, as stated earlier,  would go on to play at Tech along with Gresham. He played early on at running back, then was moved to defensive back, before concluding his career as a bruising fullback for the Jackets.

Gresham was, well, he was Gresham. An exciting college halfback that gave a thrill a minute to the Tech Fans.

That magical 1960 season, when some of the better football was played in Class B in the state of Georgia, saw the Dragons conclude their 6 - 2 - 2 season. 

I followed that team faithfully in 1960. Saw every game and suffered with every loss or tie. My favorite Jefferson team? This one and the 1956 team with Billy Ricks and Benny Tompkins. Which one was the best?  I have my opinion, but I think I’ll just let it remain a private memory. The best football player in Jefferson history. No question. Jeff Davis. Behind him! Billy Ricks.

Coach Davis would remain at Jefferson until the end of the 1964 season. Coach Jim Lofton and a new regime started in 1965.  Things would change. A new era began. But Those Davis years were the foundation of everything Jefferson football would ever become. He built the tradition and I will always treasure his memory and the memory of the 50s decade of Jefferson Dragons football.

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1947

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1948 

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1949

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1950

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1951

  Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1952  

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1953

 Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1954

 Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1955

   Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1956  

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1957

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1958

Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1959

 Jefferson Dragons Football ~ 1960

 

 

 HOME     SITE-MAP     CONTACT      PRIVACY     PHOTOS    SPONSORS     COMMUNICATIONS