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October 16, 1965 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1965-10-16

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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1965

THE MICHIGAN JDAIIX

s c..:;: ....... ..~.UN~~ ~d

PAGE SEVEN

4

'Michigan Fights

To Snap

Three-Year Purdue Jinx

By JIM LaSOVAGE
The Wolverines got a taste of
Purdue's sophomore quarterback
Bob Griese last year and didn't
like it very much.
From all indications, when Mich-
igan meets him again this after-
noon, the flavor won't be any
better."
As a junior, Griese has been
running the Boilermakers at a
record setting pace in attempting
to lead the boys from Lafayette
to their first Big Ten champion-
ship and Rose Bowl. Griese has
completed 66 of 95 passes for 838
yards and a no less than spectac-
ular percentage of .695. He ranks
third, in the nation in total of-
fense with 907 yards in 136 plays
from scrimmage,

PURDUE
Bob Hadrick (195) ..........
Bob Hopp (259) ............
Charles Erlenbaugh (214) . . .
Larry Kaminski (211).......
Sal Ciampi (204) ...........
Karl Singer (235) ..........
Jim Beirne (190)..... .. .
Bob Griese (185)...........
'Gordon Teter (183)........
Jim Finley (170) ...........
Randy Minniear (200) ......
Due to this, Purdue is sittin
prettily in seventh place amon
the nation's leaders with a 3-0-
record.
Griese has a favorite target i
Bob Hadrick. Hadrick has latch
ed on to 31 passes in the first fot
games, putting him third in re
ceiving in the nation. , He ha
racked up 402 yards for a fourt
place standing among receivers.
But 'M' Has Hopes
Taking a look on the other sid
of the fence one finds that nc
all is hopeless. Although halfbac
Jim Detwiler is lost to the Wo]
verines for the balance of tb
season, Rick Sygar (although 3
pounds lighter) is an experiences
runner who can replace him. Sy
gar went both ways in last week'
loss to MSU, but Dick Wells wi
fill in at defensive safety today.

MICHIGAN
LE ...........Steve Smith
LT .........Charles Kines
LG .......Dennis Flanagan
C............. Joe Dayton
RG ............ Don Bailey
RT ... ....... Tom Mack
RE ........... Jack Clancy
QB .......... Wally Gabler
LH ............ Rick Sygar
RH ............CaS' Ward
FB ...........Dave Fisher

(229)
(238)
(215)
(218)
(198)
(235)
(195)
(195)
(180)
(177)
(215)

*

*

*

*

*

*

OSU Battles Unbeaten MSU

Michigan has some consola-
tion in that other injuries sus-
tained against the Spartans will
not keep anyone else from seeing'
action. Wally Gabler is expected
to get the nod as starting quarter-
back against Purdue. Gabler
missed the second half last week
with rib injuries. However, X-rays
revealed no breaks.
Right end Jack Clancy, who
BOB GRIESE was knocked out after a recep-
Michigan Statistics

tion in the third quarter last
week, is healthy again. Clancy has
proved an invaluable receiver this
year, snagging 17 passes for 244
yards and a No. 24 rating in the
national statistics.
Halfback Carl Ward and full-
back Dave Fisher have also recov-
ered from injuries which kept
them from some of last week's ac-
tion, and both are expected to
play.
One thing will be different to-
day than in either of the last
two weeks' setbacks-it is Michi-
gan's homecoming. Some fans will
recall 1963's homecoming game,
when the Northwestern Wildcats
stormed into Ann Arbor with a
4-0 record and a high national
ranking. The Wolverines were de-
cided underdogs.
Stuns Wildcats
But the team fired up and
handed the Wildcats a decisive
27-6 shocking, holding the visi-
tors scoreless until the final min-
utes of the game.
While no one is expecting an
easy time against Purdue, the
battle is calculated to be hard
and bloody, despite the fact that
Michigan is a six- to 10-point un-,
derdog.
If Michigan is to win this after-
noon's battle, it will have to im-
prove its ball handling. Last week
the Maize and Blue men ran
their total of fumbles to 20, los-
ing half of them, and three State
interceptions ran the Michigan
total up to eight. Purdue is the
type of team that can take ad-
vantage of such breaks in a
hurry.
The Boilermakers have lost pos-
session on fumbles only six times,
and have had only three passes
snared by the opposition.
Passing Possibilities
Michigan may go to the air
again, after attempting 40 passes
against State. After Clancy left
the game, Steve Smith took on the
brunt of the receiving burden,
picking off seven aerials for 110
yards. Sygar, Ward, Ernie Sharpe
and Craig Kirby each latched on
to two passes, as Dick Vidmer
was fairly successful when he did
not get bowled over by MSU's
monsters.
Although the defense looked
sharp against State, it will have
a much tougher job today. Purdue
is ranked in sixth place nation-
ally both in passing offense and
total offense.
Nevertheless, statistics mean but
little when there's a grudge to
settle. If Purdue looks over its
shoulder it may realize how many
teams are out to get it. It may
soon be Purdue's turn to be spoil-
ed.

EAST LANSING (IP)-A com-
bination of power running, some
potent passing and a fancy kick-
ing game makes Michigan State a
slight favorite over Ohio State in
a test of early Big Ten front-
runners at East Lansing today.
The fourth-ranked Spartans are
unbeaten in four games and last
week dumped Michigan, defending
Big Ten and Rose Bowl champ,
24-7.
Ohio State has a 2-1 record but
showed its potential by coming
from behind to run over Illinois
28-14, three of the touchdowns
coming within eight minutes of
the second quarter.

Il

Big Ten Standings

1

Michigan State
Purdue
Northwestern
Ohio State
Minnesota
Wisconsin
MICHIGAN
Illinois
Iowa
Indiana
Minnesota-Iow(

Conference All Games
W L Pct. PF PA W L T PF PA
2 0 1.000 46 19 4 0 0 82 22
1 0 1.000 17 14 3 0 1 94 49
1 0 1.000 20 0 2 2 0 56 69
1 0 1.000 28 14 2 1 0 54 49
1 0 1.000 42 18 1 2 1 81 69
1 0 1.000 16 13 1 2 1 22 76
0 1 .000 7 24 2 2 0 57 63
0 2 .000 26 50 1 3 0 78 62
0 2 .000 27 33 1 3 0 54 47
0 2 .000 18 62 1 3 0 49 95

-

u

- -I I - - - - -- - - - - I

"It was more like 12 yards and Minnesota's Golden Gophers
a cloud of dust," said MSU Coach take on Iowa's Hawkeyes on Iowa's
Duffy Daugherty of the perform- home ground as they attempt to
ance of the team that tradition- move their conference mark to
ally has been described as an out- 2-0. Last week the Gophers
fit with a "four years and a cloud bounced Indiana, 42-18, behind
of dust" grind-it-out attack. the passing of John Hankinson,
Fullbacks Tom Barrington and who tossed three times for touch-
Willard Sander are the bread and downs, and the running of full-
butter boys of the ground game back Joe Holmberg, who plunged
for Ohio State with 383 yards and owmeanwhile lost to Purdue
six touchdowns between them. Iw ma hotPr

-Daily-Robert Sheffield
MICHIGAN'S TIGHT END STEVE SMITH crashes into Mich-
igan State defensive back Jim Summers (20) driving for extra
yardage. Smith grabbed off 7 of Michigan's completed aerials last
weekend for a total of 110 yards. Wally Gabler will start today
to spearhead the aerial attack.
RUSSELL, DARDEN RETURN:
' 4'Capers Go To Work

r H~ST DOWNS
Rushing
Passing
Penalty
NO. OF RUSHES
Net Yds.-Rush.
Net Yds.--Pass.
FORWARD
PASSES ATT 'D
Completed"
Intercepted-by
S ,Yds. Int'ept. Ret'd

c

Mich.
65
33
33
2
189,
555
589
83
39
4
54

Opp.
59
38
3$
2
186
649
441
84
43
8
152

TOTAL PLAYS
PUNTS, NUMBER
Ave. Dist.'
KICKOFFS,
Returned by
YARDS KICKS
RETURNED
Punts
Kickoffs
FUMBLES
Ball lost by
PENALTIES, Number
Yards Penalized

272 270
20 29
36.7 40.6

16
385
190
195
20
10
20
147

13
304
40
264
8
2
27
271

Little Olympics 'Disappointing'

The 1965 Michigan basketball
Wolverines held their first offi-
cial practice session yesterday in
Yost Field House.
Fifteen players, including five
newcomers took to the court un-
der the direction of coaches Dave
Strack and Jim Skala.
Chief among the returnees were
lettermen Cazzie Russell, Oliver
Darden, John Thompson, Craig
Dill, Jim Myers, John Clawson,
Dan Brown, Van Tillotson, and
Dennis Bankey. Marty Slobodnick
and Mark Delzer round out the
list of veterans.
Giants' Spahn
Gets Release
SAN FRANCISCO (/P)-Veteran
Warren Spahn, winner of more
games than any other left-handed
pitcher, was given an uncondi-
tional release last night by the
San Francisco Giants.
All other clubs in the National
League had waived on the 44-
year-old southpaw and the Giants'
action leaves him free to make his
own deal for the 1966 season.

The newcomers, all sophomores,
were James Pitts, Gerald Peaks,
Mark Fritz, and Bill Thomas.
Back to begin his fourth season
was head manager John Phillips.
The 1965 Wolverines will be
seeking their third consecutive
Big Ten championship. They were
13-1 in league competition last
year. Overall, the Wolverines won
24 games, losing just four.
Yesterday's practice was devot-
ed largely to the filming of offen-
sive plays. Tom Jorgensen, fresh-
man coach, served as cameraman.

Quarterback Don Unverferth has
added a passing threat to the
Buckeye attack with 26 comple-
tions for 292 yards.
Steve Juday, the poised senior
quarterback, directs the aerial arm
for Michigan State and has hit
39 throws fmor 563 yards.
The top rusher is sophomore
fullback Bob Apisa of Hawaii, with
a net of 285 yards. Closely fol-
lowing is Clint Jones with a net
of 260.
Another import from Hawaii,
Dick Kenney, is a crowd-pleaser
with his unorthodox barefoot style
of kicking. Kenney is leading
scorer in the Big Ten with .28
points on eight field goals and
four conversions.
Roverback George Webster and
end Bubba Smith lead an MSU
defense that held Michigan to mi-
nus 39 yards rushing.

by a 17-14 margin, as quarterback
Bob Griese, an All-America can-
didate, riddled its defense with 20
* * * .
Hoosiers Face Illni
In another game, battered In-
diana faces Illinois at Champaign

JOHN HANKINSON

in a contest where both teams are
seeking their first conference win.
Indiana was drubbed, 42-18, by
Minnesota last week, while Illi-
nois took its second straight beat-
ing after whomping Southern
Methodist, 42-0, losing this time
In that game, Illinois jumped off
to Ohio State by a 28-14 margin.
to a 7-0 lead but a second-quarter
spurt by the Buckeyes and their
all running back Tom Barrington
put the game out of reach.
Badgers and 'Cats
Wisconsin, whose lone confer-
ence game was a 16-13 triumph
over Iowa, meets Northwestern,
which also touts a 1-0 league
mark, having downed Indiana 20-
0.
Northwestern, which is rated a
,10-point favorite, favors the run-
ning game-in last week's 15-7 vie-
tory over Oregon State it gained
231 yards rushing but only 35
passing, on two completions in 12
attempts.
Wisconsin, on the other hand
is expected to rely heavily on a
passing attack led by Chuck Burt,
who has 60 completions, despite
being held to 12 for 31 in last
week's 37-0 loss to Nebraska.
passes good for 216 yards. Iowa
managed to get 180 yards in the
air but was held to a total of 35
yards on the ground.

MEXICO CI'tY (M)-The sparse
United States contingent failed to
win a first place in opening day
track and field competition yes-
terday in the Little Olympics, and
suffered a major disappointment
when Tommy Farrell failed to
qualify in the 800-meter run.
The best U.S. showing was a
second-place finish by Ron Laird
of Pomona, Calif., in the 20,000-
meter walk. Laird finished in 1
hour, 45 minutes, 7 seconds, trail-
ing East Germany's Hans Reiman,
who was timed in 1:41:46.
Approximately 250 competitors
from 15,countries are taking part
in the games, being held to deter-
mine of Mexico City's 1%-mile
altitude has an adverse effect on

athletes. There are almost as many
doctors attending as there are
athletes.
Performances, generally, were
well off Olympic standards, but
the class of athletes must be con-
sidered. The men broke five Mexi-
can records and matched another,
10.3 by Claude Piquemal of France
in the 100rmeter dash. That com-
pares with the 10 flat winning
effort by Bob Hayes in the 1964
Olympics.
The United States, which has
only eight men competing in track
and field, had no entrants in the
100 meters, nor in any of the
events in which Mexican records
were set, with the exception of
the 20,000-meter walk.

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