SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DATTY In A &"-lot bvp"Vmw "'TU"DA,"NOVEMER13,L91l TU"MIlI AtitL1AWN1 PAGE SEVEN t M, Tangles with NU in Battle of, Backs By GIL SAMBERG You can bet your draft card on it. Fangs will flash and fur will fly when the Wolverines and Wild- cats churn the turf at Dyche Sta- dium this afternoon. It may not be the game of the year, but the Blue want some satisfaction t h i s season and Northwestern is in the way of an express that's high-balling it for the rest of the route. MICHIGAN Steve Smith (230) .......... . L Charlie Kines (240).........L Dennis Flanagan. (215) .,....u. Joe Dayton (215)...........C Don Bailey (200).........Ri Tom Mack (240) . . ... R Jack Clancy (195)..........R Wally Gabler (195).. . .. Q Rick Sygar (180)...........L CarlsWard (180) ...........1F Dave Fisher. (215).........1 After the Wisconsin roadblock was wiped off the map three weeks ago in a 50-14 slaughter,' head coach Bump Elliott made it clear that "once a team gets roll- ing like that it just can't be stop- ped." Illinois got the message loud and clear last Saturday when the Wolverine Special slammed 'em down and ran them over, 23-3. Next, Please The next obstacle on the line is Northwestern. And as long as NORTHWESTERN there are no sacred cows, Mich- igan would rather annihilate them than hurdle them. The Wildcats want to salvage something out of this year of re- building, and have a running backfield capable of derailing even the team which is universal- ly acknowledged as the NCAA's best four game loser. With the graduation of Tommy Myers, coach Alex Agase had to do some searching to find his offense. Myers, who made his entrance at Northwestern's peak under Ara Parseghian, ran off with just about every passing record in the Wildcat book, leaving even Otto Graham in the dust. But when he left the amateurs for greener pro pastures, he clipped the wings off of every football in the house. Junior Casimir Banaszek is what's left of the passing game. A tight end, this 228-pound junior is no ball of fire, but makes up for it with deceptive moves and sure hands. Cas' greatest asset is his ability to catch 'em when they count-no matter how they come at him. Agase found out soon enough that his top quarterback, senior Dave Milam (formerly known by Big Ten fans as "Who's He"), was going to make his star receiver look good. When Banaszek went down field the footballs came at him in ALL ways. Scratch one quarterback. Tommy Myers' understudy's un- derstudy turned out to be Denny Boothe, a junior, and he hit the spotlight against Michigan State on Oct. 30. Results? Wildcat publicity releases whis- per that "as yet, Northwestern's passing game has not jelled, al- though the 'Cats have a fine re- ceiving threat in Cas Banaszek, who has caught 19 passes for 183 yards." But Agase knew it all along, and although it must have taken him quite awhile to teach his offensive line that it can go forward as well as back when it blocks, he made his squad into a running team. Woody Campbell and Ron Rec- tor are the Wildcat left and right halves, while Bob McKelvey leads the pack from his fullback slot. McKelvey, a 220-pound junior, is currently seventh among Con- ference rushers, with 285 yards, while Campbell is tenth with 260 yards in 53 carries-a 4.6 average. In the Drivers Seat.- But both of them take back seats to the Blue's Carl Ward and .E Caz Banaszek .T ..............Jim Burns .G . .. ....Jaff Brooke S....Jim Haugsness .Bruce Gunstra" .T ..... . Jerry Oberdorf .E . ... Dick Smith B . .......Denny Boothe .H .. Woody Campbell Bn . .. . on'Rector 'B.....Bob McKelvey (230) (230) (225) (225) (215) (235) (200) (180) (200) (200) (220). STUDGNT BOOK SGRVICG 1215 S. University PRINTS STUDY GUIDES FREE BLUEBOOKS. IBM STRIKES'AGAIN: Technology Changes Football- By BILL LEVIS . Remember the day when a foot- ball team was just 11 men and a coach? Well, neither do most people. We're in the age of tech- nology and football has joined the bandwagon. This is the era of the instant replay and the isolated camera, and it's not only being used by the - i television networks. College foot- ball is going Hollywood. Early additions to college foot- ball were the scouts which schools sent out to learn about the op- ponents of the coming weeks. Later, head coaches stationed their assistants in the pressbox to find the opponents' flaws. They report- ed their knowledge to the coach by telephone. Movie Stars Then came the motion picture camera and Hollywood burst upon the s c e n e. Coaches stationed cameramen in the pressbox to film the action on the field. After the game, the coaches and players would analyze the films and de- cide what went wrong and what could be done about it. This way, the school became aware of its strengths and, more important, its weaknesses. The biggest boom to electronic football came with the develop- ment of the videotape machine. With this device, a team can in- stantly replay a segment of the game in progress. While Michigan has not yet chosen to use such a device, other schools are employing them to their advantage. Texas Tech has used videotape instant replays to spot their weak- nesses. Movies usually take a day to develop. Bad View A coach, standing at field level, has perhaps the worst position to watch the action on the playing field. Downfield play is almost im- possible to make out from the sidelines. The use of television and video- tape pictures taken from the press-, box gives the coach an overall view of the game, something he can not obtain from field level. The coach is able to see the exact position of the ball, if he's got a good cameraman who doesn't fall for a quarterback's fake. Accomplishment Vote GROUP The main problem with these Tom Swiftian items is their cost. Now they run about $25,000 but will soon be down to about half that amount. Still, this is an ex- pensive outlay for a college- enough to buy two and a half million pieces of bubblegum. And such machines don't insure suc- cessful seasons. State Tries One There is a cheaper but still ef- fective way of receiving an al- most instant view of the action on the field. This is the Polaroid Camera. Michigan State used it against the Wolverines. Quarter- back Steve Juday studied ten-sec- ond pictures of Michigan's defen- sive formations while State's de- fensive unit was in. Princeton has added the IBM machine to football. Each Tiger player has IBM cards for all his different plays. UCLA was accused of sending messages to their players while on the field. The accusers contended that the Uclan players had re- ceivers in their helmets which could pick up messages broadcast- ed from the bench.I Whether all college coaches will turn to the electronic marvels is still to be seen. Certain football conferences are considering rules which could limit the use of such devices. Dave Fisher, fifth and sixth re- spectively. Ward has piled up 301 yards in 48 carries to lead the Big Ten with a 6.1 yard average. Fish- er is ten yards short of his team- mate's mark, but sports a 4.3 yard average. Rector is a former flanker back who showed Agase that he'd rather run over people than around them. At the time, Agase was taking anyone who ran for- ward, and didn't care how. Predictor's Problem, In the past the two teams have been mutually upsetting. Back in 1925 the Wolverines and Wildcats met to sploosh it out in a monsoon-swept Soldier's Field. The Blue entered the fray unbeaten, unscored upon, and gen- erally unbelieveable. Back and forth they slogged for 60 minutes. Rice paddies were springing up on Broadcasts When the Wolverines meet the Wildcats today at 1:30 In Evanston, r a d i o broadcasters{ will be announcing the_ game on stations WAAM, WUOM, WPAG of Ann Arbor, and WWJ of Detroit at 2:30 local time. the sidelines, but neither team would yield. (No drownings were reported.) The game was decided on a field goal by Northwestern full- back Tiny Lewis, whose first quar- ter boot yielded the only score against Michigan 'that year. Ii the closing minutes the Wildcats elected to deliberately eat the ball in their own end-zone rather than try to punt into the gale. -Final score: 3-2. Even Good Years But the Wildcats didn't stop with little things like that. Three times they've pulled upsets on the Blue when the Wolverines were defending Big Ten champions. The worst of the worst came in 1949. Michigan had copped the Con- ference title in both 1947 and. 1948, and was destined to take it again in 1950. But in 1949 one point in one game kept them from an unprecedented four titles in a row. Guess who? Northwestern 21, Michigan 20. Last Visit to Dyche And then there was 1958, the last time that the Wolverines took on the 'Cats at Evanston. That one was no upset. And if the Wis- consin game this year was a laugher, they must have gone into CARL WARD fits of hysteria down in Illinois that year. By the half it was 43-0. They didn't even.have to dress for the second half, but Michigan came back to finish anyhow and left with a humiliating 55-24 loss. But the Wolverines have a 25 to 10 edge in the series with the Wildcats, going back to 1892, which proves that they must have won sometime. Last year's 35-0 rout would be a good example. "The Ghurkas," Northwestern's defensive unit, have never re- covered. Yet it was probably the game in Ann Arbor in 1963 that remains much dearer to Michigan hearts. The, Wildcats were nationally ranked and picked to run away with the Big Ten. They did no running, but were solid favorites when they invaded Ann Arbor on the sixth weekend of the season. Womp! And with a 27-6 blast- ing (the 'Cats only scored in the last few seconds against third stringers) the upset banners went up around the country. It was with this game, soon to be followed by another upset against Illinois, that the Blue started on the comeback road in football. I NSTAN T MILDNESS yours with YELLO- BOLE The most Walked. about slacks on Campus are HUBBARD slacks with "DAC RON " Great Hubbard styling with the lasting neatness and care-free comfort of "Da- cron", in these slacks of 55% Dacron* polyester, 45% worsted wool. Styled in tra- ditional Classic and Gay Blade plain front models, in all the favorite colors, at better stores everywhere. 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