THE MICHIGAN DAILY
,oaches Name A' Stars
MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP:
KC's Shaw Flips Three-Hitter
GRID SELECTIONS
11I
t
By JOHN DOBBERTIN
Michigan grid captain George
Mans and veteran tackle Jon
Schopf are pre-season picks for
All-America nominations in early
balloting by 2,000 college coaches.
Mans and Schopf are among 80
players listed by the American
Football Association in their first
of three season polls for grid hon-
ors.
Mans, 6-4, 220 pound senior,
won his Michigan,' varsity letter
in his sophomore year as a mem-
ber of the well known "Raiders"
group.
Last year Mans played in all
games for a total of 246 minutes
alternating with Bob Johnson.
Mans was picked as lineman of
the week by UPI for his play in
last year's opener against Oregon.
Schopf, standing 6-2 and weigh-
ing 230 pounds, has been a bul-
wark on the Wolverine line for
two seasons. He was one good
reason why last year's Michigan
line led the c6nference in ;defen-
sive standings. Last year his great
play against Oregon, Northwest-
ern, Illinois and Ohio State stood
out in particular."
The pre-season selections by the
American Football Association are
determined by practice and pre-
vious game performances.
Coaches will nominate again in
mid-season and end-of-the-season
polls and the final ballot will be
reviewed by the All-America
Board of Coaches.
Three members of last year's
first-team All-America squad are
also among the pre-season pros-
pects for the 1961 team. Last
year's All-America players listed
were fullback Bob Ferguson of
Ohio State, halfback Ernie Davis
of Syracuse, and guard Joe Ro-
mig of Colorado.
AFL Standings
--
By The Associated Press.
Veteran right-hander Bob Shaw
of the Kansas City Athletics de-
feated the Detroit Tigers 6-3 last
night on a 3-hitter, Bubba Morton
spoiling his bid for a no-hitter
with a line single to center in the
ninth inning.
Going into the 9th Shaw had
retired 23 Detroit batters, 5 by
strike-outs, walked 3 and hit one
with a pitched ball.
Shortstop Dick McAuliffe of the
Tigers, who had been hit by a
pitch leading off the first and
walked leading off the seventh,
bounced to A's shortstop Dick
Howser but Howser's throw to
first was wide and McAuliffe was
safe on the error.
Morton then got his single and
the runners advanced on an in-
field 'out. George Alusik scored
McAuliffe with a sacrifice fly and
Larry Osborne hit a home run
over the right field fence.
Detroit's third hit bounced off
the bat. of Jake Wood, usually a
light hitter who got a pair of key
hits in the first game of the
double-header, which Detroit won
6-4.
Frank House made the final out,
popping to Howser.
The first game victory clinched
second placei
League for the
*
in the
Tigers.
* *
AmericanI
The Milwaukee Braves strength-
ened their hold on fourth place by
defeating the St. Louis Cardinals
2-1 last night before a chilled
crowd of 4,689, the smallest turn-
out in County Stadium history.
Carl Willey, with ninth inning
relief from Don McMahon, earned
his sixth victory in 18 decisions
as the Braves moved two gamesi
ahead of the Cardinals in the
battle for a share of World Series
money.
Hank Aaron hit his 34th homer
in the first inning and the Braves
added another run in the fourth
on a single by Joe Adcock, Joe
Torre's double to deep center and
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
a balk by rookie Ray Washburn,
a righthander making his first
major league start.I
Willey, who allowed only one
hit after the fourth inning, was
Bowlers Wanted
Five-man teams and individ-
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The weekly cost will be $1.75
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replaced by McMahon after Julian
Javier opened the ninth with a
walk.
Javier moved to third on a
double by Ken Boyer and scored
on an infield out by Stan Musial.
Boyer went to third as the run
scored, but was cut down trying
to score.
* * *
In other action, rookie John
Orsino smacked two home runs
to pace an 18-hit attack as the
San Francisco Giants defeated the
Philadelphia Phillies 10-2.
If you have ever thought you knew anything about football
Or have ever wanted to see a free show ...
Or have ever been able to pick the Daily Double
Then Grid Picks is for you.
This is a chance for Daily readers to beat the experts and try to
pick the winners in 20 of the natiofi's top college games every week.
Whoever can guess the most games right each week will receive
two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "Two-Way
Stretch."
To enter, either pick up an entry blank at The Daily building
or indicate your selections on this article and mail it in with your
name, address and phone before Friday midnight to Grid Picks, The
Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor.
Don't forget to include the score of the Michigan game, because
it will settle any ties. If tie games are played, they will count as wrong
answers unless they are specified as ties on the entries.
The choices of the Daily sports staff and one guest selector will
come out in Friday's paper.
No fair sending in more than one entry per person.
I_ #
1
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New Yo
Boston
Housto
Buffalo
San D
Dallas
Denver
Oaklan
EASTERN DIVISION
W L Pct. Pts.
rk 2 1 .667 87
2 1 .667 88
n 1 1 .500 79
1 2 .333 72
WESTERN DIVISION
W\ L Pct. Pts.
lego 3 0 1.000104
1 1 .500 52
1 2 .333 67
d 0 3 .000 35
OP
89
56
34
76
OP
34
61
90
141
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
UCLA at MICHIGAN (score)
Columbia at Brown
Colgate at Cornell
Baylor at Pittsburgh
Maryland atClemson
Rice at Georgia Tech
Vanderbilt at Georgia
N. Carolina St. at N. Carolina
Auburn at Tennessee
South Carolina at Wake For.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Washington at Illinois
California at Iowa
Missouri at Minnesota
Arizona at Nebraska
Boston Col. at Northwestern
Oklahoma at Notre Dame
Texas Christian at Ohio State
Michigan State 'at Wisconsin
Texas Tech, at Texas
Stanford at Oregon State
I
THIS WEEK'S GAMES
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
Dallas 42, Oakland 35
San Diego 34, Houston 24
New York 35, Denver 28
SATURDAY'S RESULT
Boston 23, Buffalo 21
New York
Detroit
Baltimore
Chicago
Cleveland
Boston
Minnesota
Los Angeles
Kansas City
Washington
105
97
91
84
75
73
69
59
57
L Pct. GB
51 .673 -
60 .619 8
65 .583 14
71 .542 20%
80 .484 29%2
82 .471 31/
84 .451 34%.
88 .429 38
97 .377 451,4
97 .370 47
.
ii
Place-Kicking Specialists Highlight
Close Weekend Wins in NFL Action
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YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Detroit 6-3, Kansas City 4-6
Only games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
Baltimore at New York
Chicago at Boston
Detroit at Kansas City
Washington at Los Angeles
Cleveland at Minnesotaj
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Cincinnati 91 59 .607 -
Los Angeles 86 62 .581 4
San. Francisco 83 66 .557 7Y,
Milwaukee 80 70 .533 11
St. Louis 78 72 .520 13
Pittsburgh 71 76 .483 181/2
Chicago 62 88 .413 29
Philadelphia 46 104 .307 45
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
San Francisco 10, Philadelphia 2
Milwaukee 2, St. Louis 1
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, rain ..
Only games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
Cincinnati at Chicago
St. Louis at Milwaukee
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
Only games scheduled
Cessna 150
172,
By BOB WAZEKA
Jim Martin, Lou Groza and Pat
Summerall, three stalwart veter-
ans of the National Football
League, kicked game - winning
field goals in pro action Sunday
as the field goal, the defensive
line, and Lady Luck played key
roles in determining winners.
A 16-15 win over the Balti-
more Colts left the Detroit Lions
all alone at the top of the West-
ern Conference. It was the same
valiant Lion team which had sur-
vived 'a bitter battle with the
Green Bay Packers the week be-
fore.
Schmidt Leads Defense
Detroit had many heroes: all-
pro Joe Schmidt, who captained a
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tremendous defense which held the
potent Colt offense to 83 yards
rushing, 103 yards passing, and
only seven' first downs; Nick Piet-
rosante, the bulling fullback who
ran for 86 yards in 16 carries; the
entire interior line; and, of course,
Martin, who botted a mammouth,
game-winning, 49-yd. field goal in
the last three minutes and 11
seconds to accompany his field
goals of 30 and 28 yards earlier
in the game.
, But the Colts had' their share.
of problems. Ray Berry, their all-
pro, all-everything end, sat in-
jured on the sidelines. The Colt
offensive machine, dormant until
the last period, awoke in the last
period -under 'the leadership of
faithful Johnny Unitas, only to
crumble, to the disappointment of
54,249 Baltimore fans,'in the fad-
ing minutes. Unitas ,hurled a
seven-yard toss to Lenny Moore
to climax a Colt touchdown thrust
in the last period, putting the
hosts ahead 15-13.
Martin's Longest
The Colts had begun another
TD drive, only to lose the ball to
the Lions on a fumble. This set
the stage for the longest field
goal of Martin's career.
The Baltimore attack following
the kickoff fizzled and Detroit
took over, ahead 16-15, with less
than a minute to play. The final
Colt hope went awry as Earl
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Morrall fumbled, and much to the '
amazement of the TV audience,
managed to sneak in under three
Colts to recove and put the game
on ice.
Groza Clinches Win
Lou "The Toe" Groza, who has
been playing for Paul Brown and
the Cleveland Browns ever since
the team's inception back in 1948
and who seems to be exempt from
old age, kicked a 19-yd. field goal
with 35 seconds to play, salvaging
.a 20-17 win for the Browns over
the underdog St. Louis Cardinals.
The Cardinals, themselves held to
only 188 yards, put up a, stalwart
defense, holding Jinr Brown, Bobby
Mitchaell,. and Co. to only ,111
yards rushing.
The New York Giants also pall-
ed upon the field goal, using it to
defeat the Pittsburgh Steelers, 17-
14. Veteran Pat Summerall's 19-
yd. boot 'andtherunning of 'Alex
Webster paced the Giants. A
fumbled punt gave the, Philadel-
phia Eagles the break they needed
to outlast the inspired Washing-
ton Redskins. 14-7.
More Field Goals
Field goals played an important
role in Green Bay's 30-10 win over
San Francisco. Paul Horning, last
year's leading scorer, booted field
goals, of 13, 27, and 43 yards.
Hornung added ,a, touchdown and
three extra points to rack up a
total of 18 points for the day. On
the 49er side, Tommy Davis set
a new team field goal record with
a boot of 46 yards.
Dallas rolled to its° second .suc-
cessive victory, crunching the
Minnesota, Vikings, , 2 1-7, to tie
the PhiladelphiaEagles for first
place in the Eastern Division. In
earlier NFL action on Saturday
night, the Chicago Bears beat the
Los Angeles Rams, 21-17.
NFL Standings
WESTERN DIVISION
W L T Pct. Pts. OP
Detroit 2 0 0 1.000 33 18
Greey Bay 1 1 0 .500 43 27
Baltimore 1 1. 0 .500 42 40
Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 44 34
San Francisco 1 1 0 .500 45 33
Chicago I 1 0 .500 34 54
Los Angeles 0 2 0 .000 41 48
EASTERN DIVISION
W L T Pct. Pts. OP
Philadelphia 2 0 0 1.000 41, 27
Dallas 2 0 0 1.000 48 31
Cleveland 1 1 0 .500 40 44
New York 1 1 0 .500 27 31
St. Louis 1 1 0 .500 38 30
Washington 0 2 0 .000 10 49
Pittsburgh 0 2 0 .000 38 44
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
Detroit 16, B~altimore 15,
New York 17, Pittsburgh 14
Cleveland 20, St. Louis 17
Philadelphia ,14, Washington 7
Dallas 21, Minnesota 7
Green Bay 30, San Francisco 10
SATURDAY'S RESULT
Chicago 21, Los Angeles 17
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