FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1,966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAE 1NINE FRDA._COBR.4 166._ ,:IAN DAL l .7 UfL .\11\li ;o Dull'Career Brings Clancy Stardom ;., By CLARK NORTON It -was like going up to Tom Harmon and greeting him, "Gee, Just think of meeting old number 99 himself." You offer to buy Jack Clancy, a present-day Michigan grid All- American, a cup of coffee while he answers a few questions, and find out you don't have enough money for it. So how did I know the MUG has been hit by inflation. But Clancy had a nickel so the day wasn't lost. It was lousy coffee anyway. Jack Clancy, Split end, captain of the team, leads the nation in pass receiving on 35 receptions for 479 yards, five catches ahead of his nearest challenger. What's it like to be leading the nation in a vital football statistic? 'Am IT' "Am I?" asked Clancy innocent- ly. "I didn't know that." He may just have been telling the truth. "Seriously," explained Clancy, "I try not to read my name in the paper. The worst thing you can do is sit down and read your press clippings during the season. If you start to believe half the things they say about you, you'll convince yourself you're as good as they make you out to be, and then you're really in trouble." Another case of false modesty in a sports hero? Maybe, but it's rnot likely. Clancy sometimes gives you the impression that he's put- ting you on. But he likes to keep things in their proper perspective, and for this reason he doesn't let himself get carried away by his sudden burst to fame. After the Fall "Some day I realize everything will be all over, and people won't know me from Adam. Having pub- licity is great, but is can only hurt if you let yourself get carried away with it." Perhaps Clancy has not forgot- ten that only a short time ago no one was touting him as star mate- rial. "I started out at Detroit Red- Sford St. Mary's High School as a quarterback," Clancy reminisces. "But I couldn't throw very well so when. I came to Michigan it was with the understanding that I'd try another position. I did make all-state honorable mention in high school, but didn't get much publicity. Blocking Half "Then as a sophomore at Mich- igan I was switched to halfback. That was because Dick Rindfuss and John Rowser were hurt before the season started, so I got to ing the ball" a little tougher ed him as a future in last year's then? pro draft. They have first bargain- "I don't know," laughs Clancy..ing rights with the Michigan star, "I've never had that happen to who is seriously considering enter- me. Usually my man is hanging ing the pro ranks. all over me in the end zone. But Dulled Stardom Start th'e weekend. right ~ SCREAMER The BUSHMEN Union Ballroom Oct. 14... 4-6 Free as far as the fans go, I don't even think about them while I'm out there. There's no time. And there's certainly no time to consciously think about catching the ball, which is lucky. It's all 'nstinct. If it weren't, I might tighten up." Getting to Know You Clancy has come a long way from the time that "I nearly quit, football, I had such a bad atti- tude." That was when he was a junior in high school. "I only started playing football in Detroit in the first place in order to meet people. I never had any driving force to excel in it, never set any real goals. "But football has tremendous moulding qualities, and even be- fore coming to college I changed my attitude toward it. Ialike to have close contact with a group of people and football gives me the' chance." The St. Louis Cardinals and the Miami Dolphins would both like to give Clancy a chance to become acquainted with yet another group of players, since both draft- To the readers and admirers of Atlas Shrugged & The Fountainhead Nathaniel Branden's recorded lectures on Objectivism the philosophy of AYN RAND and its application to psychology Begin Mon., Oct. 24, 8 P.M. Ann Arbor Federal Savings & Loan Assoc. 401 E. Liberty St., Ann Arbor Admission opening night-$2.25 I Student admission -$1.75 Nathaniel Branden Institute, Inc. For descriptive brochure, contact NBI's Local Representative Irving J. Ralph 2635 W. Delhi Rd. Ann Arbor, Mich. 48103 Phone: 663-3205 (eves & wkends)j A future pro must have had a million fascinating things happen to him. "Somebody asked me that last year," laughed Clancy. "I told him I hadn't experienced any in- teresting sidelights or highlights yet. I still haven't. I've had a very dull career." That's what comes from not reading your press clippings. .. .. . UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA Livermore, California OPERATED BY THE U$NIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE UNITED STATES ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION 0 -Daily-Lanny Austin JACK CLANCY MAKES one of the more boring catches in his 'dull' career as a helpless Purdue de- fender, who obviously doesn't consider it boring, looks on. The action took place last year in Mich- igan Stadium when Purdue received one of its biggest scares of the year before defeating the Wol- verines. Michigan, again led by Clancy, will try to make it more than a scare on Saturday. start 'every game. But I didn't carry the ball very much, just blocked. And I wasn't very good at it, much less like it." 1964 was a wasted season for Clancy, as an injury knocked him out of competition for the entire year, costing him a trip to the Rose Bowl with the rest of the team. But his misfortune in this re- spect may have turned out to be a blessing in disguise. For "-he was granted an extra year's eligibility, and when the 1965 season com- menced Clancy was switched to split end. "There were plenty of halfbacks last year," explained Clancy. "Not only halfbacks, but halfbacks who were made for that position. I wasn't." Split end, on the other hand, is a position that seems to have been made for Clancy. A Last Resort "Actually it was just a matter of circumstances that I landed in that spot," he claims. "They just kind of ran out of other places to put me." Clancy proved immediately he was not a square peg being forced into a round hole. The 6'1" 192- pound.senior responded to his new not that much of a problem, it's trying to get the defensive man to turn sideways one way while you're turning the other. Blinding speed and great fakes don't make a great end, although they help. Subtle Fakes 'A~ _ '1 assignment by breaking the Mich- "The real secret of running a} igan pass-grabbing mark for one good pass pattern is keeping every- season, on 52 receptions for 762 thing as simple as possible. I yards. don't run a lot of zigs and zags. "When I started out at end III just try to vary speeds, and be didn't know much about the posi- subtle enough to throw the defen- tion," Clancy contends. "First of sive man off balance." all I had to get the feel of running And the thought of 100,000 fans pass patterns. Once I learned to staring at you when you're in the do that, catching the ball was easy. end zone all alone waiting for a Actually grabbing the ball itself is touchdown pass? Is just "catch- MAJOR PROGRAMS NOW UNDER WAY: PLOWSHARE-Industrial and scientific uses of nuclear explosives. WHITNEY-Nuclear weapons for national defense. SHERWOOD-Power production from controlled thermonuclear reactions. BIOMEDI- CAL-The effects of radioactivity on man and his en- vironment. SPACE REACTOR--Nuclear power reactors for space explorations...far-reaching pro- grams utilizing the skills of virtually every scientific and technical discipline. Laboratory staff members will be on campus to interview students in the Sciences and Engineering FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28 Call your placement office for an appointment. U. S. 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