Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, April 10, 1968 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Springis If nothing else, spring football practice has shown that the Wolverine's old nemisis, lack of depth, has made its appearance on the squad. This problem plagued the gridders last season, and is an important factor again this year. ; Both the offensive and defensive back- fields are experienced and fairly solid. The lines and defensive linebacking, though, are a different situation. The most critical area is the offensive line. The Wolverines have had to come up with one entire side from new players. Of the four positions opened, two will probably be filled by redshirts. One, Stan Broadnax, used to play tackle but will be moved in to guard to plug one of the holes. The other, Dave Denzin will hold up the center of the line, while Werner Hall is expected to fill in the open tackle hole. The problem comes if any of starters are injured. Last year a couple of starters were hurt and the Wolverines were hard-pressed to replace them. If anyone is hurt this year, the problem will be even more acute. While the tight end position is well sup- ported by veteran Jim Mandich, the split end is not as certain. Spohomore Bill Harris was given the inside edge, but George Hoey,. a Time of Testing a safety last year, has been working out as a receiver. The Wolverine backfield, all of which re- turns, looks as strong as ever. Dennis Brown runs farther laterally than forward, but he is still quite a groundgainer. Halfback Ron Johnson, last year's leading Big Ten rusher, is as much a threat as last year, and Garvie Craw is an excellent blocker. Flankerback John Gabler was an excellent receiver last year, and the Brown-to-Gabler passing com- bination looks even more effective than be- fore. Offensive coach, Tony Mason has op- timistic hopes for the team. "The offense is moving excellently against the defense," he said, "They are pushing through hard enough so that we are fairly certain of their strength, but they are being stopped by the defense enough so that we don't have to be concerned about them either." The defensive line and linebackers ,are sturdy as long as they too aren't hit by in- juries. Tom Stincic has spent the whole spring practice on the bench with injured ribs, and replacements have been recruited from newcomers. A freshman is almost cer- tain to be one of the linebackers, and sopho- more Cecil Pryor, who had intermittant action last season, has been working out as another. The front wall of the defense is not as stable as could be hoped. Gerry Miklos will hold the middle guard position. Tom Goss returns to one of the tackle spots with the other up for grabs. The end positions are very strong with veterans at each. Upfortunately depth is sporadic. The end holes are solidly backed up, but Miklos at middle guard may be hard to replace. The linebacking replacements are there, but their strength is still an unknown quantity. The only thing new about the defensive backfield this year is the coach, Hank Fonde, who moved from offensive to defensive back- field coach. The four backs are all strong, and the only change would come if Hoey transfers to the offense. Cornerback-Tom Curtis set a conference record last year for number of interceptions, and his partner, Brian Healy, was also very effective. Hoey's mate at safety, Jerry Hartman, is even more sold than last season. Coach Bump Elliott is still concerned about the upcoming freshmen. "If we're to be a strong team next year," he notes, "We've got 'to have solid performances from our freshmen and must be relatively injury- free. If either of the two turns against us, recovering will be hard." -ANDY BARBAS q *a Photographed by Thomas R. Copi 419 m ..:.. -:raw . .:. {: ;