TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, AUGUST 29,1967 JI' Teams Ended Last Year Without One Title; Prospects Ii reprove (Continued from Page 1) In the weeks that followed, Clancy led the nation in pass re- ceiving. He was finally edged out of the national title on the last day of the season. .The Wolverine captain set the Big Ten records for passes caught (50) and yardage gained (698) on.lhis way to leading the confer- ence in pass receiving. Both the AP All-Big Ten and All-America teams listed Clancy as a first string member. He signed a con-C tract with the Miami Dolphins, who drafted him as a redshirt. Vidmer tossed 10 touchdown passes to tie the Big Ten record. Rick Sygar booted 24 of 24 extra points to set the conference markI in that category. In addition to Clancy, the Wol- verines had four other individual conference leaders. Stan Kemp led the pack in punting. 'Halfback Jim Detwiler led in kickoff re- turns, doing such an excellent job that Illinois tried onside kicks all day against him. Defensive halfback Sygar was the conference leader in punt re- turns. Linebacker Frank Nunley; set the pace in tackles. All five were seniors and all five have graduated. In all, 22 of the 42 spaces on the roster have been vacated by graduation. The starting lineups are hit hard, with 14 of the 22 berths vacant. The seniors take with them the last of the 1965 Rose Bowl team. Most of them had played together for two or three years, welding into solid, depend- able units. The defensive squad has lost its entire backfield. All-Big Ten 'se- lection Rick Volk, John Rowser, Mike Bass, and Sygar have left. Linebackers Barry Dehlin and Nunley are also gone. The offense graduated all the 'backfield except Vidmer. In addi- tion, both ends, both guards and a tackle have departed. Right halfback Carl Ward and fullback Dave Fisher have finished their careers, along with Detwiler. Clancy and tight end Clayt Wil- hite are gone, as well as guards Henry Hannah and Don Bailey. Tackle Jim Hribal has also graduated. The Wolverines must also re- place their kicking game. Kemp, punting specialist, and Sygar, placekicking specialist, have left. The strong point of tfle coming season appears to be the defen- sive line. Three regulars return at the ends and well-seasoned players man the entire line. The trio battling it out for the end positions are Rocky Rosema, a senior, and juniors Tom Stincic and Jon Kramer. Dick Williamson and former NCAA neavyweight wrestling champ Dave Porter man the tackles, while Gerry Miklos will start at middle guard. The Wolverines have had a year of experience with the new Oklahoma defense and this year should have the kinks wrung out of it. The linebackers will be Dennis Morgan and Cecil Pryor. Morgan skipped spring practice because of an injury, but Pryor looked impressive in the drills. The backfield, "wiped out," as coach Don James says, has only Jerry Hartman returning with any notable experience. Brian Healy, Ted Jobe and Al Doty will start around Hartman. The offense; with more holes to fill, is still confident. Center and captain Joe Dayton has two years of experience behind him and Vidmer at quarterback should give the Wolverines a strong passing game. He will pass to either Jim Ber- line, split end, or Jim Mandich, tight end. The backfield has a On the line Mason exudes con- well-seasoned veteran returning fidence. He has switched Ray in Ernie Sharpe. Warren Sipp has Phillips from tackle to guard. been moved from tight end to Dick Yanz will play he other fullback. Ron Johnson will play guard, while Pete Mair and Bob left half. Penksa will start at tackles. I DETWILER BREAKS through the line on way to touchdown. t.;a. ;{: .... :r:?.. r ,. :;:, .... _ ' _a . "..,:./ Y,.a.. .:.f.. .,".:.l,../. ..,h.. .Y .. ":a~:> ?:.ny ..{... . ~o.,ai:y. . :.r; ., a 7 f,..: ,. '':+., l' },y,:/: 'Y:a. : ~c . I. F '4..:,,,,:rrrr,,,,0::."7 4.. . . . ..}. . . . ..}'t".. . . ..i' - : C y 1'} et. Xt "'r ir.'1:4~r'y: {,qy>. y~rk § I's WEEJUNS 1 a4 § Fof5yer e aepoul ol AS UDO Weejus.resod:xcusvey in Ann{Arbo ait ,§ I ~ rn_ w__k, t. .. ... .._mk_ I III A I j CLANCY LEAPS HIGH adding to his most-passes-caught record, I;s I "§ h~ P h0r ? sL c C- d = / 0 !'-T + Al§ 4t' 'Va &l §ete § Lj §t § Van.BvnSetr § §. inbt§nlr n ctad 'Wloeecm§oS t tet 4 4 A 4 I 11 II