Wolverines emerge as leader of the pack By ERIC SIEGEL The Michigan football team, which meets Southern California in the R o s e Bowl on New Year's Day, already has what it wanted most this season-a share of the Big Ten title and a first class ticket to Pasadena. A victory over the Trojans would be the crowning glory to a season that saw the Wolverines come back from a pair of early season losses to go undefeated in the second half of the year, and whip previously unbeaten Ohio State, 24-12, on the last day of the regular season. The Wolverines ended all the talk about the second-best team representing the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl as they com- pletely _outplayed the favored Buckeyes before the largest crowd in college foot- ball history and a national TV audience. For a while, though, it looked -as though the Wolverines wouldn't go to Pasadena as conference co-champions or anything else. After winning three of their first four games, the Wolverines vere dumped by an unimpressive Spartan squad, 23-12, in a game played at East Lansing. The Spartans scored first in that game. driving 80 yards in 12 plays, and the Wol- verines never managed to recover. Schem- bechler called his team's performance "terrible" after the game, as they scored their lowest point total of the season and mrade numerous mental errors. The loss to MSU was all the more disappointing since Michigan had thrash- ed highly-regarded Purdue 31-20 the week before. The Wolverine defense was instrumental in the victory, picking off four interceptions from the hands of Mike Phipps, the Boilermaker's Golden Boy, and also pouncing on three Boilermaker fumbles. But the Maize and Blue's offense was good in that game, too. Led by quarter- back Don Moorhead and halfback Billy Taylor, the Wolverines forged to a 24-14 halftime lead. The victory over Purdue represented quite a comeback for Michigan. T h e week before, the Wolverines had dropped a 40-17 decision to a tough Missouri team. The loss to the Tigers came after the Wolverines had blasted Vanderbilt 42-14 and smashed Washington 45-7 to gain a spot in the top twenty in both wire ser- vice polls. The Wolverines' record was thus a mediocre 3-2 over their first five games. There was nothing mediocre about the Wolverines' record in the second half of the season, however, as the Wolverines went undefeated outscoring their oppon- ents 212-34 over the five game stretch. Michigan rekindled its Rose Bowl bid with a 35-9 victory over Minnesota as Taylor, making his first start of the year, carried the ball for 151 yards and scored-three touchdowns. The Wolverines rolled down the Rose Bowl trail by blasting Wisconsin, 35-7, at home and then travelling to C h a m- paign to cream the Fighting Illini 57-0. Then Michigan faced one of its big- gest tests of the year, as they met the tough, albeit unpredictable, Hawkeyes in Iowa City. The Wolverines passed their test with flying colors, obliterating t h e Hawks 51-6. In the process, the Wolver- ines set Big Ten records for total yard- age (673, rushing yardage (574), and st downs (34). Michigan's victory over Iowa virtually assured the Wolverines of a trip to the Rose Bowl. But the Wolverines didn't rest on their laurels as they stunned O h i o State in the final game ,of the season to climax their regular season play. -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Wolverine ends Jim Mandich (88) and Billy Harris (80) do their thing Agmmmp g, ".".I MIA IN R l NO MICHIGAN 4, PCL 0 I 2! rolitla By CHRIS TERAS If certain California people had examined Michigan's bowl record, they might never have circulated that petition. Before the end of the regu- lar season, a group of Cali- fornians drew up a petition pro- testing the Big Ten policy that prohibited the conference's best team from appearing in the Rose Bowl. Ostensibly this w a s Ohio State, but their game in Ann Arbor on November 22 changed the complexion of things. But even if Michigan h a d gone as the second best team. the petition was unjustified as the Wolverines have had few problems against West Coast opposition in their four R o s e Bowl appearances. THE SCORES were the fol- lowing: (1902) Michigan 49, Stanford 0; (1948) Michigan 49, Southern Cal 0; (1951) Michigan 14, California 7; and (1965) Michigan 34, Oregon State. 7 1902: Stanford The 1902 Rose Bowl was the first bowl game ever. The 1901 squad that participated in it was coached by none other than the immortal Fielding H. Yost, in his freshman year as Mich- igan's coach. This was the famous "point- a-minute" team that had out- scored ten opponents by a total of 501 to 0. Though the com- petion may not have been as stiff as it is today, (they beat Buffalo 128-0 and ran up 1300 yards total offense), the play- ers had to work a lot harder to make a point a minute because only five points were allotted for a touchdown. NOT SURPRISINGLY, Mich- igan had to beat Ohio State on the way to California. Yost was quoted after this game as say- ing, "The Ohio State game prov- ed to be a hard one. We could score but 21 points against them, although there was no doubt in the minds of all who saw the game, that Michigan's team was superior." As good as this squad w a s, however, a man named Casper Whitney formulated a list which erfect put Harvard at the to follow- ed by Yale and then Michigan. He said then that, "Michigan has a strong, heavy line and a good backfield; but in handling kicks, and in highly developed team play, they are quite a bit inferior to the eastern teams." IN THE PROCESS of destroy- ing Stanford, the Wolverines ran 142 plays from scrimmage and gained 1463 yards. All- American Snow scored five times. 1948: Southern Ca! It was 46 years before Mich- igan returned to Pasadent, even though Michigan teams had re- corder such successes as unde- feated seasons in 1932 and 1933. DURING THE 1947 c a in - paign, the Wolverines were once again undefeated although they were scored upon at times, in contrast to 1901. History re- peated itself in more ways than one as Michigan trounced the Buckeyes by the identical 21- 0 margin on their way to the Big Nine crown. Southern Cal had swept the Pacific Coast title that year with a 6-0-0 conference mark and a 7-1-1 record overall. Their only loss was at the hands of Notre Dame, 38-7. Coach Fritz Crisler threw one of the nation's most devastating offenses at the Trojans, as the Wolverines had run up 3 4 5 points in nine games. Going ' against USC, Michi- gan's offensive platoon aver- aged only 183 pounds to the Trojans 210 pounds. Just as in 1902, however, the Wolverines came away from Pasadena with a 49-0 win. Num- erous records were set or de- stroyed in the process of blast- ing Southern Cal. in bowl history Michigan came out and blew the Bears off the field in the se- cond half. Fullback Don Dufek and quarterback Chuck Ort- mann led the way with their offensive show. Roe ow uppleni PAT ATKINS, Editor THOMAS R. COPI, Photo Editor 1951: California It required only three years following the 1948 Rose Bowl, for Michigan to build another champion. A champion w h o was allowed to make the trip to Pasadena, that is. For in 1948 the Wolverines were 6-0-0, but the no-repeat rule permitted second-p 1 a c e Northwestern, 5-1, to go. In 1949, Michigan was 4-1-1 and co-champions with Ohio State. The team lost to Northwestern, 21-20, and tied the Buckeyes, who were subsequently desig- nated as the Big Ten's Rose Bowl representative because Michigan had gone last. THE 1950 campaign started disasterously, but ended in Cali- fornia. For the first time since 1937, and for the seventh time since 1898, MSC (now known as MSU) downed the Wolver- ines. The score was 14-7. Michigan suffered two more losses, 27-6 to Army and 7-0 to Illinois, and a tie, 7-7 w it h Minnesota, before clashing with Ohio State for the champion- ship. The game came to be known as the "Snow Bowl" because the worst blizzard in Ohio's his- tory had struck the night be- fore and was still raging during the contest. The teams traded a total of 45 punts, but it was the punts that the Buckeyes didn't g e t off that proved fatal to the biome team. In the first quarter, Michi- gan blocked a Buckeye p u n t which rolled out of the end zone for a safety. With 47 seconds left to play in the first half, linebacked Tony Momsen crash- ed the OSU line, blocked a punt, and fell on the ball in the end zone for the wining 9-3 margin. ILLINOIS would have gone to California had it not been up- set by Northwestrn, 14-7, but the Wolverines finished alone on top. and were invited to play California on New Year's Day. The Golden Bears had won their third straight Pacific Coast Conference title. It was also their third straight attempt at beating the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl. In fact, the Big Ten representative had not b e e n beaten since the contract with the Pacific Coast went into ef- feet in January, 1947. California's success lay in a crunching rushing attack. This was good enough to send the Bears into the game undefeated for a third straight time. The Wolverines got off to a terrible first half. They tallied only two first downs as com- pared with California's 10. Michigan ran only 11 offensive plays, and were in possession of the ball for but five of the 30 minutes. Just to prove that it doesn't happen only in the movies, ORTMANN FIRED 13 com- pletions in the second half for a game total of 146 yards, with 141 recorded after halftime. Dufek was just as good. On 23 carries, he gained 123 yards, and also scored both Michigan touchdowns. 1965: Oregon State In 1964 the Michigan squad was supposed to be good, but nobody expected them to be as good as they were. The Wol- veriens won eight of their first nine games, including a 17-10 victory at East Lansing. The only defeat was a 21-20 set- back against Purdue as quarter- back Bob Timberlake was stop- ped inches short of a two-point conversion. THUS, MICHIGAN took a 5-1 conference record down to Co- lumbus where the Buckeyes awaited them with a 6-0 mark. They scored the game's only touchdown with less than a minute to play in the first half. Following a fumbled punt re- covery, Timberlake hit Jim Det- wiler with a pass at the two, and the big halfback carried two Buckeyes with him into the end zone. After the conversion, the halftime score was 7-0. In the second half, Michigan's defense was again non-yielding and Ohio State was shut out. The final 10-0 margin was set up when do-it-all Timberlake kicked a 17-yard field goal in the opening minutes of the fourth quarter. See MICHIGAN, Page 3 THE ROSTERS -Daily-Thomas R. Copi WOLVERINE OFFENSIVE AND DEFENSIVE platoons show the teamwork which put them into the Rose Bowl. Above, defenders Henry Hill (39), Pete Newell (82), and Cecil Pryor (55) come to the aid of linebacker Ed Moore in chasing down Rex Kern. Garvie Craw (48) and Don Moorhead (27) pave the way for teammate Billy Taylor. ,i THE CARDIAC KIDS: Uiid ef eated season tig ht squeeze for USC By PHIL HERTZ The word around sports circles for years has been that the true test of a team is its ability to battle back from behind and gain victory. If this assessnwnt is accurate then Southern Cal truly has one of the great football teams of all time. Indicative of the kind of season the Trojans have had were games against UCLA and Stanford. The Cardiac Kids. as one sports- writer nicknamed them, kicked a field goal with three seconds left to top Stanford, 26-24, and scored a touchdown in the closing min- utes to top the Bruins, 14-12. USC compiled a 9-0-1 record. with a tie against the Irish of Notre Dame marring their record, but only in two games did the tent. offense at times this season with the attack keyed by quarter- back Jimmy Jones and tailback Clarence Davis. Jones, a six-foot- one sophomore from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, was fifth in the Pacific-8 in total offense and pass- ing, but he failed to live up to his advance billing as an All-Amer- ican. He completed only forty per cent of his passes and netted only CG yards rushing in 85 attempts due mainly to losses in rushing of 250 yards. Davis, the successor to O. J. Simpson in the Southern Califor- nia backfield, was the leading rusher in the Pac-8 with 1275 yards, a figure which put him high in the national rushing standings. Sharinug the rushing duties with Davis are juniors Charlie Evans posts are six-foot four, 245-pound sophomore John Vella and veteran six-foot four, 254 pound senior Sid Smith. Senior Fred Khasigian and junior Wayne Yary are theI guards while the starting center is senior Bill Redding. One final key to the USC of- fensive machine has been the kicking of junior Ron Ayala. Ayala booted five of eight field goal at- tempts and hit on 26 of 29 at- tempts. Much of the success of South- ern Cal has been due to their de-- fense. The Trojans had the top defense in the Pacific-8 and gaver up the fewest yards rushing in the conference. Spearheading the .de- fense has been the line, which has been Riven the nickn me "The Wild Bunch." No. 60 99 28 23 76 56 94 36 48 25 35 72 22" 21 37 31 18 92 14 75 81 71 80 24 44 39 70 89 86 90 57 88 78 65 97 MICHIGAN Player Pos. *Baumgartner, Robert OG Beckman, Thomas DT Berutti, William QB *Betts, James OB Brandstatter, James OT *Caldarazzo, Richard. OG Carpenter, Alden DE Coin, Dana K-DE *Craw, Garvie FB **Curtis, Thomas S Darden, Thomas Wolf *Dierdorf, Daniel OT Doughty, Glenn TB Elliott, Bruce DB *Federico, Eric FB "Francis, Alan MG Gabler, John WB Grambau, Frederick DT Gusich, Frank Wolf *Hall, Werner OT a "Hankwitz, Michael TE *Harpring, Jack OT *Harris, William SE "Healy, Brian DB Henry, Preston TB "Hill, Henry MG *Huff, Ralph LB Huiskens, Thomas TE *Imsland, Jerry SE Keller, Michael DE "Killian, Timothy K-C ^Mandich, James TE McCoy, Richard DT McKenzie, Reginald OG Moore, Edward LB 1't. 215 230 194 185 235 215 210 213 218 188 186 243 195 172 200 195 203 227 187 219 203 218 189 167 185 224 228 200 203 205 215 217 240 236 210 hit. Class 6-0 Sr. 6-7 So. 6-2 Jr. 6-3 Jr. 6-3 So. 5-11 Sr. 6-2 So. 6-2 So. 6-2 Sr. 6-1 Sr. 6-1!' So. 6-4 Jr. 6-2 So. 6-0 So. 5-11 Sr. 5-10 Sr. 6-2 Sr. 6-4 So. 6-0 So. 6-0 Jr. 6-1 Sr. 6-4 Jr. 6-1 Jr. 6-1 Sr. 6-0 So. 5-11 Jr. 6-2 Jr. 6-2 So. 6-2 Sr. 6-3 So. 6-4 Jr. 6-3 Sr. 6-4 Jr. 6-3 So. 6-1 Jr. No. 6 8 10 11 12 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 23 25 28 29 33 34 39 43 46 50 51 53 54 56 58 59 60 64 68 70 71 72 SOUTHERN Player Jim Fassel Jimmy Jones Bob Chandler Bill Jenkins Gary Orcutt Walt Failor John Young Sandy Durko Ron Ayala Sam Dickerson Terry DeKraai Bruce Dyer Mike Berry Bob Giorgetti Clarence Davis Lou Harris Charlie Evans Tom Fitzpatrick Humphrey Covington Tyrone Hudson Gerry Shaw Mike Haluchak Bob Jensen Greg Slough Cliff Culbreath Bill Redding Bob Stirling Rich Oberreuter Wayne Yary Fred Khasigian Steve Lehmer Gary McArthur Willard cott Al Cowlings CALIFORNIA Pos. Wt. QB 199 QB 190 RB 180 DIIB 172 LE 185 ROV 199 DHB 186 DHB 176 DHB-K 180 LE 194 LE 185 LE 172 LH 199 RH 170 LH 194 hB 194 FB 215 FB 207 FB 196 DHB 177 ROV 189 LB 209 LB 215 LB. 237 LB 218 C 217 RG 228 C 230 RG 219 LG 223 RG 238 DT 234 MG 237 DT 249 Ht. 6-2 6-1 6-1 6-3 6-1 6-2 6-2 6-1 5--9 6-2 5-11 6-0 5-10 6-9 5--11 5-10 6-1 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-0 5-11 6-0 6-3 6-3 6--1 6-2 6-1 6--1 5-11 6-2 6-5 6--1 6--5 Class Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. Jr. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Jr. So. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr.