THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY,OCTOBE Defensive Backfield Is Key to Halting Purd R 20,1961 ue Wolverines Hold 12-2 Series Margin By PHILIP SUTIN Infrequent meetings are dominant characteristic of Wolverine-Boilermaker series. the the Although Michigan has met Pur- due 14 times, the two teams have met only eight times this century. In the 1890's Purdue met Mich- igan six times, losing all but one of the contests. The scores, pro- viding no consistent clue about the character of the series, range from a 12-10 squeaker in 1895 to a 46-8 romp two years earlier. Other Michigan victories register- ed are a 34-6 triumph in 1890; a 16-0 shutiut in 1896; and a 34-4 victory in 1897.' The Wolverines took their lumps in 1892 when Purdue swamped them 24-0. New Method accounted for five of the six touchdowns scored against the Boilermakers. Nussbaumer ran 165 yards in 15 carries to top a spark- ling day for the Wolverines. Elliott Stars The running and passing of Pete Elliott, now coach of the Il- lini and brother of Wolverine Coach Bump Elliott, highlighted the 1945 meeting of the two teams as the Wolverines downed Purdue, 27-13. The Wolverines won by their widest margin in the 1948 game. Revived Memories "They looked like the magnifi- cent team of old as they ran and passed circles around the highly touted Riveters and had them at their mercy throughout most of the contest," 1948 Daily Associate Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal ex- uberantly wrote that day. Scoring twice in the first 90 seconds,-the Wolverines edged the Boilermakers 20-12 in the 1949 game. In the last meeting between the two squads, the Wolverines tri- umphed over the Boilermakers, 21- 10. Tradition favors Michigan in Saturday's encounter. The Wol- verines have won 12 and lost 2 in the history of the series, but in recent years Purdue has proved to be the "Spoilermakers" of the Big Ten. Will form hold? Only Saturday's game will tell. By JOHN SCOCHIN 1 Preventing any passing wizard or would - be breakaway threat from denting the Wolverine goal line is the job of the defensive backfield, the last line of defense against overt enemy attackers. Maintaining this stalwart bar- rierare a bevy of fast backs under the tutelage of backfield coach Hank Fonde. At the deep positions are agile Bennie McRae and Dave Raimey. Backing up the lineback- ers in the middle ground are Ken Tureaud and John Stamos. On the second unit are sophomores Dave Hood and Jack Strobel in the deep spot with Jim Ward, Paul Raeder or Tom Pritchard up front. Fairly Speedy The unit on the whole is a fairly, speedy flock with adequate size and the potential to race down- field and knock down aerial mis- siles intended for any collegiate Ray Berry. In the three games so far this season, the secondary has inter- cepted four passes, good for 156 yards. In the UCLA contest, Ken Tureaud's 92-yard run after an interception for a touchdown was a keyblow to Bruin upset hopes. Against Army Jack Strobel pil- fered a Black Knight toss and rambled for a 42-yard gain. Even on the grey Saturday of the Mich- igan State game a Wolverine de- fender intercepted a, pass in the closing seconds, but was tied up by a teammate before he could race toward the unguarded goal line. UCLA Fails UCLA tailback Bob Smith had other troubles with the Wolverine secondary besides intercepted passes. Although Smith is adept at the roll out option pass or run, he could only rack up three first downs with his tosses. For the afternoon the UCLAns were held to 58 yards in the air and com- pleted five passes out of ,18 at- tempts. The Army eleven took over the habits of the Air Force in the Michigan game as quarterback Dick Eckert riddled the air with pigskins, clicking for 22 of 33 passes for a line .666 percentage. Despite these impressive statis- tics the "M" defenders were tough in the clutch, holding thel Cadets to short passes and pro- tecting against the longer aerial bombs. Though the cadets rolled up 164 yards in the air, they couldn't get the long one by the secondary which would count on the score- board. MSU Successful With Pete Smith having a fine afternoon for Michigan State, the Spartans put the first real dent in the Wolverine pass defense, scor- ing on a nine-yard fling in the second half for their third touch- down of the game after posting a 77-yarder in the first period to set up their second tally. The de- fense settled down in the last two periods, however, to keep the steamrolling Spartans to a re- spectable 105 yards gained in the air and five for 10 completions. Coach Hank Fonde commented, "the secondary is fast and capable and has the potential to be a sound unit." Practice Notes Ed Hood hurt his foot slightly in practice but resumed play after being soundly taped. The squad worked on the entire offense in preparation for the Purdue game with emphasis on the passing game. Refinements in, place kick- ing were also worked out while contact work was excluded from the drill. i 411 The contest in 1900 was a close one, marred by fumbles. Accord- ing to the Oct. 21, 1900 Daily, "The fumbling of punts in the first halfI was more or less excusable, owing to the sun being in the players' eyes. There was no excuse for fumbling the ball while carrying it. A new method of passing (the forward pass) is being introduced and that accounts for many of the mistakes made." There was a long interlude be- tween games, but the next meet- ing in 1929 was not a joyous one for the Wolverines who got smash- ed, 30-16. The Wolverines overcame a 13 point first quarter lead in the 1930 game to gain a close revenge on the Boilermakers, 14-13. Steady passing and stout defense marked Michigan play that day. Harry Newman's place kick provided the margin of victory. Led by Team Captain Bob Weise and Bob Nussbaumer, the 1944 Wolverines swept by Purdue 40-14. Weise and Nussbaumer, now a coach of the Detroit Lions, PUT SPRING IN YOUR SOLE! Slip into a pair of these glovey, cushion-soft Mansfield CLIPPERS. The jumbo- size sole gives miles of extra wear and firm, buoyant support. Come try a pair-for tiefun of it! CAMPUS BOOTERY 304 South State ROUGH GAME: SAE Tr ounces DU In Playoff Game. -Dily--Ed Langs BATTED DOWN-Defensive back Tom Pritchard falls to the turf after leaping high to bat down a pass intended for speedy Spartan back Sherman Lewis in the final quarter of the MSU game. Quarterback Ron DiGravio and his Boilermakers should give Pritchard and his teammates a real workout Saturday. Wolverine Reserves i Face State All .is not over yet. The Wol- verines will get another crack at, those mean guys from Michigan State this afternoon in what's., slated 'to be a rough and tumble gridiron battle between the re- serves of both teams at Ferry Field at 3 p.m. Those who will see action today will be: at left end, John Yanz, Bill Tageson and George Ginger; at left tackle, John Lehr, Paul Schmide, Jim Gallagher and John Coplin; at lett guard, Wally Her- rala, Chuck Collin, Don Baty, Dave Kovacevich and Ron Kocan; at center, Dave Slezak,.Don Blan- chard and Dave Voight; at right guard, Dick Szymanski, Gerry Cowan and John Pasch; at right tackle, Dick Schram, Dan Stringle and Paul Woodward; at right end, Bob Filar, Tom Moth and Paul Doersam; at halfback, Ron Spacht, John Iowalik, Bill Hornbeck, Don Kornowa, Jim Locke, William Rat- cliffe, Jim Steckley and Herb Wil- liams; at fullback, Bill Dodd and Wayne Sparkman and at quarter- back, Bill Dougall and Dennis Alix. By ED HEISER and TOM ROWLAND Tempers flared in thq first round of the social fraternity "A" play- offs yesterday as a ,'superb Sigma Alpha Epsilon team rolled over Delta Upsilon 28-0 at Ferry Field. . Sigma Alpha Epsilon, social fra- ternity football champion for the last two years, showed its power immediately as Jack Mogk con- nected with a long pass to Dennis Spalla in the end zone on the second play from scrimmage. Mike Ratterman caught a short pass for the PAT. Hard Play Both teams had played exceed- ingly hard during the first of the game and toward the end tempers began to wear thin. Several inci- dents broke out among the players after a couple of rough plays and words flew back and forth on the field. Finally, with .two minutes left to play, two of the players squared off against each other and pandemonium broke loose on the field. Fifty or so members and supporters- of both fraternities rushed on the field and joined in the row. Seieral moments later the field superintendent broke up the crowd and warned both fraternities that any more such conduct could dis- qualify their team from continu-- ing in the playoffs. The game was called with two minutes left to go, and SAE was credited with the victory. In professional fraternity play yesterday, Alpha Omega defeated Alpha Chi Sigma 8-0 and Nu Sig- ma Nu trounced Phi Delta Chi 38-0. Alpha Omega had only four players as they held a full strength ACS team scoreless and scored the lone tally of the, game on a pass from Dennis Webber to Arnold Ager. Roger Metzer passed and ran Nu Sigma Nu to a smashing vic- tory over Phi Delta Chi as he completed four touchdown passes and carried the ball over the goal line once himself. In the only other game of the afternoon, Fletcher whipped the Pioneers 28-12 in the Independent League. PEK Romps In activity under/ the lights, Wes Maki's power running paced Phi Epsilon Kappa to a 44-0 romp over Tau Epsilon Rho. Maki scored after taking a handoff from Gary McNitt, crossed the goal af- ter hauling in a pass from Butch Nielsen, and ended up on the scoring end of a tricky five-man interchange to chalk up a third six-pointer. Reverse Pass Phi Alpha Kappa twice took ad- vantage of a flanker reverse pass to trip Delta Sigma Pi 16-0. Dick Lenters tossed to quarterback Jack Faber for both tallies. Hitting to the airways for four touchdowns, Falcons knocked Eta Kappa Nu for a 28-0 count. Bob Gamble fired aerial stlrikes to Nick Kredich and Bob Topp, .and then handed the passing chores to Topp, who followed with duo touchdown tosses. Eight plays of overtime action found Phi Chi perched 13 yards in Psi Omega territory and one- point victors after the two teams had battled to double-naught at, the end of regular playing time. Phi Rho Sigma defeated Gam- ma Alpha, 28-0, on the strength of Barry Zindel's pair of touch- down runs and a scoring pass to Kent Gibbs. 4 i Left to right: Ira E. 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