PAGE SEVEN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 1966 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY PAfl~ ~u'vw'w cavrG oc r cis .i Big Ten Records By ED GRUCA statistics show that in 1939 (the: It's probably not just by chance first year of the conference "mod- that half of the Big Ten football ern era") teams threw an average teams include on their 1966 ros- of 14 passes per game for an aver- ters ends who hold their school age gain of 68 yards, while last fall record for pass receiving. the average was 22 passes per The evolution of college football, game for 133 yards. more than anything else, seems to The percentage of passes com- be the main cause for record pleted also rose sharply during this breaking efforts by the following period, going from 39 per cent in five ends: Jim Beirne, a Purdue 1939 to 49 per cent in 1965. And junior who last year caught 54 although the number of passes has * passes for 725 yards; Michigan increased, the number of inter- senior Jack Clancy who grabbed ceptions has declined by a margin 52 tosses for 762 yards in 1965; of 15 per cent. Total yards gained Ken Last, a Minnesota senior who by rushing dropped slightly from made 31 catches for 463 yards; an average of 158 per game to 151 Gene Washington, a Michigan yards in the 27-year span. State senior who holds both the Aerials Big Gainer Spartan season record (40 recep- Evidence of the usefullness 'of tions and 638 yards) and the ca- the pass play is found in the fact reer record (75 receptions for 1180 that Big Ten teams this year have yards); and Illini junior John gained an average of 3.0 yards for Wright who last year caught 47 each rushing play while gaining passes for 755 yards. 6.5 for each pass play (whether Passing Increase completed or not). This evolution that has taken George Mans, Wolverine offen- place is the steadily increasing sive end coach, attributes the great use of the pass play instead of the expansion of the aerial attack to rushing play. For example, Big Ten the coming about of the two-pla- Pistons Topped by Hawks In NBA Contest, 113-105 Pass wi toon system and the consequent increase in specialization on the part of each individual player. Whereas in the past players had+ to concentrate on virtually alll aspects of the game, modern play- ers specialize in their particularI forte and place less emphasis on other facets of the game.1 th Time In particular, the offensive ends of today spend more time prac- ticing pass catching and less time on things such as defensive ma- nuevers than their predecesors. And since pass plays are generally more intricate than rushing plays and require precision timing, this, trend of specialization has been of much greater benefit to the air game than that of the ground. Split Ends Help Another factor mentioned by Coach Mans for more flying pig-, skins is the increased use of the split end. A good end can usually beat his opponent if only one man covers him, and in fact can often give two defenders problems. Thus1 an end like Jack Clancy, who needs at least two men to cover him and is spread off to a side of the field, gives his team an ad- vantage of ten players against nine in the middle of the field. This year's crop of Big Ten ends will probably be the best in con- ference history. If the trend to- wards more passing continues to CINEMA GUILD announces the selection of 2 New Board Members Andrew Lugg Elliot Borden TAWAGALAWAS NEVER READ AN OFFSET ! Whqt about you? He never had the chance. NK It Certainly Is Not Too Late To Order Your Ini orted CHRISTMAS CARDS Fro/11 Our Nice Schection. See Them Now At The K John 1Leidy S ilho) 601 and 607 E. Liberty St. NO 8-6779 Ann Arbor , .®.. { I A.a....,e.. Rm. 2X, Mich. Union, 7:30 P.M. Thursday It's as Traditional as Maize and Blue! DETROIT (R) - The scoring of veterans Zelmo Beaty and Len Wilkens and rookie Lou Hudson sparked the St. Louis Hawks to a 113-105 National Basketball Asso- ciation victory over the Detroit Pistons last night. Beaty fired in 31 points and grabbed 20 rebounds. Wilkens and Hudson, the former star at Minne- sota, each contributed 24'points. St. Louis led all the way except for a brief stretch in the second period when Detroit slipped ahead 36-32 on the shooting of player- coach Dave DeBusschere and Ron Reed. The Hawks capitalized on Piston miscues and fouls, with Beaty and Hudson the chief marksmen, to take a 58-50 halftime lead. The nearest Detroit got after that was within six points early in the fourth period, but two baskets by Hudson and one each by Bill Bridges and Wilkens restored St. Louis to a 10-point bulge. DeBusschere led the Pistons with 32 points and 19 rebounds. persist, their records may be eclipsed by even better players in { have set pass catching records that would be envied by any coach of 20, 10 or even five years ago. Lose Something? Find it with a Daily Classified JACK CLANCY _- - OPEN: Mon., Wed. and Thurs., 4 P.M. to 2 A.M. OPEN: Fri., Sot., Sun., Noon to 3 A.M.'(Closed Tuesday) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 DETROIT ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. CARRY-OUT ORDERS ONLY-PHONE 665-2266 FREE DELIVERY BARBECUE CHICKEN AND RIBS FRIED CHICKEN SHRIMP AND FISH DINE OUT THIS WEEKEND , I', I NBA Standings NBA Eastern Division W L Pet. Boston 1 0 1.000 Philadelphia 1 0 1.000 New York 2 1 .667 Cincinnati 1 1 .500 Baltimore 0 2 .000 Western Division x-Chicago 3 0 1.000 St. Louis 1 1 .500 Detroit 1 2 .333 Los Angeles 1 2 .333 x-San Francisco 0 2 .000 x-Late game not included. 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