THE MICHIGAN DAILY 14-7, for rFist Conference I i THE BIG PLAY-This sequence of pictures shows the play that brought Michigan from 'a 7-6 defeat to a 14-7 vicotry. The picture on the extreme left shows Larry Wood, Larry Benz, and Albert Kimbrough of Northwestern circling under Glinka's long aerial while Michigan's Bob Johnson seems out of the play. In the middle frame the Northwestern trio bump together and bat the ball in the> air. Meanwhile Johnson turned back, picked up the loose ball, and heads toward the end zone where he was bumped out on the one. Glinka Pass Bounces Off 'Cat Defenders Into Johnson's Hands To Set Up Final TD 4 --Daly-Gnltrow MAN n ttkn by MIKE GILLMAN (Continued from Page 1) 1 (rOn third down Thornton was The most serious of the late chased by Guy Curtis and Bill Freehan as he tried to pass and threats came with less than four: theball popped from his grasp minutes remaining when the when Curtis nailed him on the 43. Wildcats' Wayne Chamberlain re- Bill Stine fell on the ball for the covered Ken Tureaud's fumble on Wolverines and ended the threat. the Wolverine 31. Northwestern had three more Thornton, trying to direct his plays at the end of the game, but team towards possible victory, the contest ended with McNitt threw two sideline passes. Both making his second legal intercep- were caught, one by Michigan's tion of the game, on the 14-yard Gary McNitt and the other by line. Albert Kimbrough, but both were The first 25 minutes of play nabbed out of bounds. , were solid defensive' football with the two teams trading the ball on punts, fumbles and interceptions as they vied for strategic posi- tion- In the first quarter neither team was able to get a drive go- ing as the ball changed hands on seven punts and an intercepted pass. Northwestern was unable to iget past their own 30-yard line as they gained only 18 yards and made no first downs. Not Much Better The Wolverines did little better gaining but 35 yards and two first downs. They penetrated to the Wildcat 38 on one occasion: and had another potential drive . . thwarted when Al Kimbrough in- tercepted a Glinka toss on his own eight. The Wildcats got the first scor- ing opportunity of the game early in period two- when the Wolver- ines were penalized for clipping before they gained possession of the ball on a Thornton punt. Thus the ball was returned to N'orthwestern, who gained its first down of the day on Michigan's 23. Northwestern made eight yards on three running plays, but an illegal procedure penalty nullified a first down run to the 11. Freehan then batted down Thornton's fourth down pass and Michigan took over. Trade Ball Again The teams traded the ball once again and there were only five minutes left to go, in what was' beginning to look like a score- less half, when Thornton punted for the sevenlth time in the game. Reid Bushong fielded the ball on the Michigan 46.and cut down the east sideline for 14 yards to the Northwestern 40. Two running plays and an in- complete pass set the scene for the first successful Glinka-John- son pass. Expecting a run or a short pass on fourth down Al Kimbrough let Johnson get behind him and JOSH WHITE -SATURDAY NIGHT- OCTOBER 29 All seats reserved On Sale Now at' Follett's and Ulrich's Glinka laid a perfect toss into his hands on the five and he scored unmolested. John Halstead's attempted con- version skidded wide and to the right of the goal post and the score at half remained 6-0. Still Trading The familiar ball trading pat- tern was continued early in the second half, but Northwestern got the break they wanted when Wood grabbed a deflected Glinka pass and carried to the Michigan 36. Two complete passes and short running yardage gave Northwest- ern a first and goal to' go on the seven. However ,the Michigan de- fense put on a brilliant display as it completely thwarted Thorn- ton's efforts. Tureaud, McNitt and John Stamos were each responsi- ble for breaking up one pass. Taking over the ball Michigan could gain only four yards and was forced to punt again. The Wildcats were similarly stalled, but Thornton's punt bounced from the hands of Raimey and Dick Nichols covered it on the Michigan 27. Thornton Hits Stock Two plays gained nothing as the third quarter ended. Then, however, Thornton combined with Mike Stock on an 11-yard comple- tion to the 19. On the next play Al Kimbrough took a pitchout from Thornton, beat Scott Maentz and Tureaud, the only two men who had a shot at him, and went into the end zone standing up. Stock added the conversion and Northwestern lead 7-6. The Wolverine victory thus avenged two consecutive losses to the Wildcats, particularly the 55- 24 debacle of 1958. The win' also put deliott's coaching record over the .500 mark for the first time, at 7-6. 'Cats Tamed NORTH- MICHIGAN WESTERN FIRST DOWNS 11 6 Rushing ...... 7 2 Passing ...... 4 3 Penalty 0 1 SAM'S STORE SPECIAL All-Weather COATS and 1495 '.7.R. " Fine Combed Poplin " Raglan Sleeves ICHIGAN COACH Bump Elliott, while preparing the Wolverines 1'last week for yesterday's clashi with Northwestern, said, "Satur- day's game with Northwestern will be decided by a combination of 'breaks' and 'mistakes,' with the team that can capitalize on the other's miscues coming out on top." Elliott could qualify as a prophet if he ever decides to drop out of coaching. There were a lot of "breaks" (or "mistakes") in yesterday's sod- den ball game. Northwestern, a better ball club than their record would indicate, had a few go against them. Michigan, which had given the ball away but three times on interceptions or fumbles in a trio of games this fall, had the roof fall in on them in the "mis- take" department-losing the ball three times on interceptions and twice on key fumbles. But Michigan won. Why? The explanation seems to lie in Elliott's prediction-the Wol- verines simply did a better job of capitalizing on their breaks and NW's mistakes. By actual count, 12 plays in the Wolverines' flist Big Ten win of the season could be counted as "breaks" or "mistakes" (depend- ing on whose side of the field you were on). Eight of these gave a break to the Wildcats, while four fell into the Michigan side of the ledger. Taken chronologically, the first of these occured in the opening period when Jack Strobel returned a Northwestern punt to midfield, only to have most of his run nullified by a clipping penalty (to which the Wolverines were prone .all afternoon). A Michigan drive never materialized. The second came early in the second period when Michigan quarterback, Dave Glinka threw the ball away'rather than eat It for a loss, and NW's Al Kimbrough intercepted and returned to the Michigan 43-yard line. Another "break" or- "mistake" came in the same series when Wildcat quarterback Dick Thornton had to punt. It rolled dead on the M-6, but Northwestern kept possession on the Michigan 23 on another Wolverine clipping penalty. THE TIDE of breaks turned just in time for Elliott's charges as Northwestern was caught offside on the key play of the drive, an apparent first down dive by fullback Mike Stock. The Wolverines held then, and two-thirds of the way through the peribd broke the scoring ice on Elliott's gambler's call of a long Glinka to Johnson pass in a fourth and five situation. There were breaks and mistakes a'plenty in the second half. Michigan got the first of these when a pair of Wildcat receivers got oehind the Wolverine secondary, but Elbert Kimbrough let the TD toss slide off his fingers. The third period also saw yet another clipping infraction on a punt called against Michigan, and another interception by North- western-with second string signal-caller Larry Wood gathering in a Glinka toss in Michigan territory. Again, a rugged Michigan defense held, this time on the five yard line. BUT YOU can't stop all the breaks. They caught up with"Michigan" when McRae fumbled a punt that was covered by the Wildcats on the Michigan 27. Four plays later, Al Kimbrough picked up -the only decent run of the day, a 19-yard touchdown jaunt. The suc- cessful conversion made the score 6-7, and it looked like the tale was told. But the 64,514 fans hadn't seen the best yet. Midway through the final frame, a long Ginka toss was batted away by a pair of Wildcat defenders. But it was batted away to Wolverine end Bob Johnson and the basketball act turned into a 50-yard pass completion, leaving the ball on the NW one-foot line, where Bill Tunnicliff did the honors for the' win. Breaks kept breaking and mistakes kept being made. Michi- gan's Ken Tureaud lost a fumble on his own 31-yard line to send up the danger signals again, but Michigan's final break came only three plays later, when big Guy Curtis smashed Thornton for a loss and Bill Stein jumped on the Wildcat quarterback's fumble. Northwestern got the lion's share of the breaks. Michigan did a better job of capitalizing on them. Which was the better ;team? The scoreboard said Michigan. Who's going to argue? Big Ten Standings CONFERENCE ALL GAMES W L T Pct. Pts. OP W L T Pet. Pts. OP Iowa 3 0 0 1.000 97 36 4 0 0 1.000 119 48 Minnesota ' 2 0 0 1.000 28 10 4 0 0 1.000 39 . 30 MICHIGAN 1' 1 0 .500 31 31 3 1 0 .750 83 37 Michigan State 1 1 0 .500 39 44 2 1 1 .667 67 51 Ohio State 1 1 0 .500 55 31 3 1 0 .750 99 31 Wisconsin 1 1 0 .500 43 41 3 1 0 .750 104 54 Purdue 1 1 0 .500 - 37 45 2 1 1 .667 115 85 Illinois 0 2 0 .000 17 55 2 2 0 .500 67 61 Northwestern 0 3 0 .000- 7 63 1 3 0 .250 26 66 Indiana 0 0 0.000 0 0 1 3 0 .250 46 87 4 TOTAL NUMBER OF RUSHES . 54 NET YARDS - Rushing ......146 Passing:......115 FORWARD PASSES ATTEMPTED 13 Completed ... 4 Intercepted by 2 Yards interceptions returned....23 TOTAL PLAYS (Rushes and Passes) .......66 PUNTS, Number 8 Average distance ......35 KICKOFFS, returned b~y *. 2 YARDS KICKS RETURNED ..114 Punts ........ 78 Kickoffs ..... 36 FUMBLES 35 66 52 27 6 3 19 62 10 35 3 121 45 76 Number ......" Ball lost by ... PENALTIES, Number ...... Yards penalized 3 1 '1. 1 5 65 2, 10 FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 8-8014 IMIDAS Amo U e mmU ~ II I I Ill.. U...... A 11 V!..J_ ..1 ri.. .. kA:...._.. -..,J G.... a.... T..... I= A= oW E== I