SIX TRF MTr!R7'r_ ins TT.v Ef i!'!'Y!°'W'Yfi+i. i!! .wra .i ...... ...... ... .... .... 1 II G 1/14111 V i \mLA _.-rAU 7+ a ER 28, 1961 3opher Line Challenges Swift Michigan Backs At the 19th Hole with Fred Steinhardt Michigan Bids T o Spoil Minnesota Homecoming Stephens, Gophers Ready To Surprise Wolverines (Continued from Page 1) for touchdowns. This has touched off .more "better than last year" claims in Minneapolis than Rus- sia has A-bombs. And last year the Gophers whipped Michigan, 10-0, with their national champions and the likes of All-American guard Tom. Brown, and 265-lb tackle Frank Brixius. Those two are gone, but another "B"--255-lb Bobby Bell- Maentz Houtmann Minko Grant Hall Schopf MVans Glinkas McRae Raimey Tunniciff KICKOFF: LE LT LG C RG. RT RE QB LH RH FB 2:30 Hall Eller Hook Enga Tellor Bell Deegan Stephens MuIhollandj Cairns Dickson p.m. (EST) out victims the past two.weeks and only an opening 6-0 loss in the snow to Missouri mars a per- fect record.' No team has been able to score in the second half. About the only things the Go- phers won't have going for them up front are a weight advantage and Michigan's .Jehn Walker and Will Stawski. In the starting unit, the Wolverine forwards are ten lbs heavier per man. Stawski and Walker, "two stalwarts last week against Purdue, anchor the shock troops. Only against Michigan State was the Michigan line outplayed. Defensively it won't have to con- ceed a thing to anyone. Purdue found out last week, losing 10 yds. on the ground in the second half. Wolverines Ready Though tackles Jon Schopf and' John Houtman along with assorted other Wolverines including half- back Dave Raimey -and swing- back Ken Tureaud spent the week, nursing bruises, Coach Bump El- liott has pronounced his team ready.. There were a few anxious mo- ments yesterday, however, when the team's chartered flight from Willow Run Airport developed landing gear trouble and wasn't able to take off.' The team picked up another flight two hours later. The only members 'of the football party who were left behind were six roving reporters who were forced to fly to Minneapolis in a private plane. The setback didn't bother Mich- igan's plans as it worked 'out at Ferry Field before the scheduled departure. The team will return to Ann Arbor immediately follow- ing this afternoon's game. BROADCASTS: WPAG, WH- RV, WUOM, Ann -Arbor; WWJ, WJR, Detroit; WKMH, Dear- born. returns to anchor a "smaller but faster" Minnesota forward wall touted as "better" than that of a year ago. Gopher Defense Tough Minnesota's defensive record speaks for itself as the Gophers' have allowed a mere 20 points in racking up victories. over Oregon, Northwestern and Illinois. The, Illini and the Wildcats were shut- Pro Scores NBA , S racuse 126, Philadelphia 1221 hicago 117, St. Louis 106} Detroit, Los Angeles (incomplete) NHLt No games scheduled PLENTY OF BULK -- 217-lb. Gopher tackle Bobby Bell from Shelby, North Carolina, is rated by Minnesota Coach Murray Warmath as one of the best linemen in the country. Bell and the Gopher line have been very impressive thus far, holding the oppo- sition scoreless in Minnesota's last two outings. I-M ACTION: Nlrne Oulpont Soiolog (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article was written especially for The Daily by Roger Luoma, Minne- sota Daily Sports Editor.) By ROGER LUOMA Minnesota Daily Sports Editor MINNEAPOLIS - With its of- fense recharged by the passing of quarterback Sandy Stephens, Min- nesota enters tomorrow's clash with Michigan as a threat for the Big Ten crown. The experts, who under-rated the Gophers as having about as -ruch firepower as the Swiss Navy, were rudely jolted last week when Stephens' long aerials clicked in a 33-0 pasting of Illinois. Though the llinihdefense may have been weak, the Minnesota passing show brought tears of joy to countless fans who have been waiting for years for a team that can strike potently through the air. All week, the Gophers have been working out with grim deter- mination of retaining the Little Brown Jug won last year at Ann Arbor, and all week Stephens has been on target in passing drills, connecting both long and short strikes on roll-outs to either side. Minnesota's homecoming cele- bration opened Tuesday with a rally at Northrop Auditorium, and it's obvious that after three straight victories (over Oregon, Northwestern, and Illinois), fans are beginning to catch the spirit of another winning season. There are even members of the Minne- sota team, including some of the coaching staff, who will say year's team is better than this last year's national champs. The Gophers operate from a winged-T, with a man in motion, and the quarterback (usually Ste- phens) rolling out on the pass- run-pitch option more often than in the past. Behind Stephens, sophomore Jim Cairns is the leading runner with 4.2 yards per carry. The Redwood Falls rookie is one of the shiftiest ball carriers in Gopher history, and is one of Minnesota's most elusive pass receivers. Dave Mulholland, Tommy King and Al Fisheralsorun often at halfback, with 210-lb. Judge Dickson, a hu- man battering ram, at fullback. Bill Munsey, regular at right half, and fullback Jerry Jones, a skilled punter, are suffering leg and hip troubles respectively, and will likely not see action. The line is lighter than last year's but has better speed. Coach Murray Warmath, who handled Lineman - of - the - year Tom Brown last year, is calling junior right tackle Bobby Lee Bell the best lineman he ever coached, which is quite unusual since Brownie was nothing short of great. Bell, who has been practicing field goal kicking (with commend- able success), is far improved over last season. Warmath switches him between left and right tackle, depending on where his leadership, is most needed. Re serves Defeated By Michigan State Reversing last week's situation, the Michigan State reserve foot- ball squad downed the Wolver- ines by a 24-19 margin yesterday at East Lansing. Michigan's reserves won last week at Ferry Field on a come- from-behind 14-12 victory in the first of the two game series. Bill Dodd, who sparked the squad last week again figured in the scoring. He scored a touchdown after State scored first for an early lead. Also scoring for Michigan were Jim Zubkus and sophomore Don Kornowa. Kornowa's tally was a brilliant 80 yd. kickoff return. Comeback for State State was losing until the final minute of play when they con- nected on a pass play to put the game on ice. Michigan State's election to run all threeextra points proed the winning margin. . I F Y x 1 f t e s F t: U 1 t L By JERRY KALISH Nuclear Engineers came from behind last night in the closing minutes of the game to edge Soci- ology 16-10 in Faculty football competition. Sociology dominated play in the first half. A safety early in the game and Dick Robinson's touch- down and extra point accounted for all of Sociology's points. Char- lie Barnes, who engineered the Nuclear Engineer's attack, threw a touchdown pass to Paul Plumen and an extra point pass to John Erickson, as the engineers trailed 8-10 at halftime. In the second -half Nuclear's hard defensive rush bottled up the Sociology's offense. With three minutes remaining and Nuclear behind, Barnes connected with Plumen for the second time in the game for a touchdown to tally the winning points. Erickson Dives Erickson's diving catch for the extra point added unnecessary in- surance for Nuclear. Sociology had possession of the ball on Nuclear's flve-yard line when time ran out. Three other games highlighted the Faculty touch football sched- ule. Chemistry tipped Willow Run 16-8, as Hal Schiller scored all of he points for the victors.i'Bob Ledbetter accounted for Willow HOMECOMING WEEKENDS: Big Ten Championship Race Tightens; Upset-Minded Purdue Takes on Iowa By GARY WINER Capacity homecoming crowds will try to spur their teams on to victory in Big Ten games today as four squads tied for the Confer- ence lead hope todmaintain their unblemished records. With MZI chigan State, Ohio State, Iowa, and Minnesota each tied with 2-0records and playing Indiana, Wisconsin, Purdue, and Michigan respectively, the tie may be cut to two as Iowa and Minne- sota are playing highly regarded opponents. In an intersectional battle be- tween Illinois and Southern Cali- fornia, the winless Illini are ex- pected to put up little, opposition to a powerful Trojan team which almost upset Iowa two weeks ago Run's lone touchdown with Dave Flowers adding the extra point. In the final games, Cooley Lab whitewashed History 14-0, and Zoology nipped Business Adminis- tration 6-0. confidence and Success Case in point-Dave Glinka, at the crossroads of his career as Michigan squares off against Minnesota today in Minneapolis. Whether the wolves who chant "We want Chandler" in every passing situation care to realize it or not, Glinka has the physical skills to be as fine a quarterback as there is in the Big Ten, Wilburn Hollis and Ron Miller included. However, it is no secret that Glinka has not consistently played up to his potential since he took over the starting job as a sophomore last year. His passing performances for example, have ranged from a spec- tacular 9 of 11 completions for 170 yds. last week against Purdue to somewhat less than impressive outings such as 7 ofl 18 completions last year against Wisconsin. Glinka has also come under fire for failure to call his own signals, indecisiveness on roll-out plays, and his play selection. In short, he is an enigma. The explanation may be what some writers prefer to term "mo- mentum," and others "confidence." As 1961 Michigan fans have seen against UCLA, Army, and Michigan State, it can be mighty tough to stop the team which gets the early jump and gathers a head of steam. Success brings confidence which brings more success. The same applies to individuals, more so to the quarter- back because he is responsible for so much more on tlee field than anyone else' Confidence shows up in the little things that separate the adequate signalcaller from the great one, such as that split second decision to uun or pass, or calling a daring play after being personally buried under for a loss. Because he is subject to constant ups and downs, the quarter- back must be more than confident. He must be cocky. With this in mind, it is easy to distinguish two distinct parts in Michigan's and Glinka's performa ce over the'1960 season: (1) before Minnesota, and (2) after Minnesota. Until the Minnesota game last year, Glinka was playing sen- sationally for a Big Ten sophomore. He opened his collegiate career by clearly outplaying Oregon's touted Dave Grosz. The next week against Michigan State he almost engineered a major upset as he deftly moved the Wolverine attack against the bigger and fresher Spartans, completing 6 of 14, with two late one nullified. He hit 8 of 14 in the 31-6 rout of Duke the following week and in his fourth game he tossed for one TD and set up the other as Michigan beat Northwestern and triple threat Dick Thornton 14-7. Glinka was performing above expectations, and naturally, so was Michigan. The attack was crisp and precise. Over the first four games, Michigan had lost only two fumbles. Then Minnesota came to town. Michigan gave the ball away seven times as Minnesota crossed the 50 only twice under their own power. Michigan's end sweeps were boxed in and the pass protection futile Glinka spent a rather un- comfortable afternoon climbing out from- under the likes of 240 lb. Tom Brown, 260 lb. Frank Brixius, and 225 lb. Bobby Bell. The inescapable fact is that after that game, Glinka and the Michigan team were not as effective, at least on paper. Michigan lost to Wisconsin 16-13 and squeezed by Illinois 8-7 in the next two weeks. Before the game Glinka had completed 45 per cent of his passes for 395 yds. and four touchdowns. After it he completed 40 per cent for 294 yds. and a lone toucj down, against Indiana. This is not forgetting his daring fourth dowf pass and subsequent two point conversion pass which beat Illinois, and his solid performance against Ohio State. Many felt that the bruising Gophers hit so hard a year ago that they forced the Wolverines into their mistakes. That's nonsense. Michigan players will tell you that both Michigan State and Ohio State hit harder last year than did Minnesota. The fact was that both Michigan and Glinka's momentum were stopped cold in a losing game which the team felt it - should have won. The team played every bit as hard the rest of the year, maybe even harder, but things just didn't work out as well as they had before. (And if you don't think that's possible go back two weeks to the Michigan State game for the grisly evidence.) Because he is the quarterback, there may have been more of an adverse effect on Glinka than any other single in1ividual. Not until his tremendous day last week did his passing approach his first four games of 1960. Remember that the quarterback faces his his team as a unit by himself, each instilling confidence in the other. This brings us up to today's game. Obviously, it means a lot to Glinka and to his teammates, who are ultimately the cause of his success or failure. Besides wiping out the bitter memory of Minnesota, a good showing by Glinka would enable him to chalk up two really fine days in succession for the first time since early last year. And as we have seen, momentum can be hard to stop. But win or lose this Saturday, Dave Glinka is a better quarterback than his detractors are willing to admit. Personally, I would like to see him shut the wolves up once and for all. He is capable of doing just that. Colorado-Oklahoma, Missouri-Nebraska Clashes Highlight Big Eight Conference Competition and beat California last week 28-14. Illinois has been beset with many injuries this year and has lost their first four ball games. Southern California, which holds a 3-1 edge in this series, will counter minus star left halfback Willie (The Wisp) Brown. Brown, a dazzling runner before he was sidelined with a foot injury, prob- ably will get into the game, but may be used only sparingly, mostly as a decoy. Irish, Wildcats Clash Northwestern and Notre Dame, each trying to bound back after absorbing losses againsthrugged opponents last week, clash today for the 31st time in a football rivalry stretching back to 1889. The Wildcats have been unable to score a touchdown in their last two contests and may see only limited acti6n from their two main ground gainers, fullback Bill Swin- gle and halfback Bob Snider, who are each handicapped with injur- ies. Last week the Wildcats were downed by Ohio State 10-0. Irish Seek Revenge Notre Dame, on the other hand, is ranked 8th in the nation and will be seeking revenge for its 17-7 loss to Michigan State last week. Fullback Bob Ferguson, Ohio State's All-American candidate, is expected to lead the Buckeyes to a fairly easy victory in today's game against Wisconsin's Badgers before a national television audi- ence. Ranked sixth in the nation, Ohio State will face an upset-minded Wisconsin team which so far this season has displayed little offen- sively while compiling a 1-2 record. The Ron Miller-Pat Richter com- bination has fallen short of its pre-season expectations and the Badgers are no longer considered to be serious contenders in the Conference race. MSU Favored Spartan halfback George Saimes will be on the scene again as MSU is expected to have no trouble with the Hoosiers, who are sporting an unimpressive 1-2 record thus far. Michigan State has won ten of the :last 11 games with Indiana, the victory going to the Spartans last year by a lopsided 35-0 score. So far this year, State has only given up one touchdown in its four successive victories while Indiana's only victory came on a 33-7 rout over a hapless Washington State team. Upset-Minded Purdue Undefeated Iowa, number five in the country, invades Purdue for a game which appears to be a sure Hawkeye victory; however, Iowa respects Purdue, which is famed for its upsets and has been "tuning its gun" for the Hawkeye invasion. Previously unbeaten Ohio State and Minnesota tasted defeat by a fair Purdue team last year, and the Boilermakers are given a bet- ter than ever chance to give Iowa the same treatment today. In its two losses this year, Pur- due has been on the short end to Notre Dame, 22-20, and Michigan, 16-14. Sophomore quarterback Ron DiGravio will match wits with Iowa's junior Matt Szykony, who scored 11 points and threw three touchdown passes against Wiscon- sin last week. By GEORGE WANSTALL i No conference in the country is composed of such extreme knowns and unknowns as the Big Eight Conference.> Michigan fans remember the tough Missouri team of two years ago which came to Ann Arbor to hand the Wolverines a loss in the 1959 season opener. Few people can forget the great Oklahoma teams of the 1950's which won 47 games before bowing to Notre Dame in 1957. Five Fat Years In the five years in national prominence Bud Wilkinson's Soon- ers provided more excitement and as many All-Americans as any other team in the country. This season, Colorado and Ne- braska are also in the limelight. The Colorado Buffaloes boast an undefeated record and a tenth- ranked rating in the Associated Press poll. Nebraska has provided some exciting action in their games too. Their 1-2-1 record is not rep- resentative of the football they have been playing. Everybody Knows Kansas Kansas is another team in the Big Eight which is familiar to most football fans. The Jayhawks were pre-season favorites for the national championship in several polls, before having their backs broken by a determined TCU team. The other three teams in the league are relatively unknown, however, though they too have had their teams. How many people1 can tell you anything about Kan-( sas State, Iowa State or Oklahoma State. The only exception may be the latter, which tipped Nebraska last weekend, but for the most! part these teams are of minor sig- nificance in the nation's gridiron scene. Buffalo Stampede? Today the Big Eight teams are all in action in conference play. The top game of the day will take place in Norman, Okla., when the undefeated Colorado Buffaloes in- vade Bud Wilkinson's domain to test the recovering Sooners. An- other game almost as difficult to pick will be the Missouri-Nebraska tilt, which will help to determine the first-place status In the con- ference. The Tigers of Missouri are undefeated inleague action and match their 2-0 record with Colorado's 3-0 mark for the league lead. Another tough game pits Kansas against Oklahoma State. The Jay- hawkers have proven they are a hard team to manage, but tough luck has plagued them all season as shown by their record. On Move The State Cowboys came into their own last week with their victory over Nebraska and can move ahead of the Jayhawks in the Big Eight standings with a victory. They stand at 2-2 while Kansas holds onto a precarious 2-1 mark. The fourth game finds Iowa State at Kansas State. It will be Iowa State's fine single wing at- tack against Kansas State's fero- cious defense. You pick the win- ner. Neither team has managedj a league win, with 0-4 and 0-2 marks, respectively. Way Down South Most of the other top games of the week are again to be found in the South. LSU, Texas, Georgia Tech, Mississippi, and Alabama all put their national ratings on the] auction board in their games. Only' LSU and Texas will have their hands full, however. The Tigers travel to Gainesville to tangle with an unpredictable Florida team while Texas hosts the upset- minded Rice Owls. Georgia Tech should have no trouble with Tulane, neither should Old Miss with Vanderbilt, nor j Alabama with Houston. All three teams are pretty sure of maintain- ing their national prominence. Best in East ' In the East, Dartmouth, still stinging from the defeat at the hands of arch-rival Holy Cross invades Harvard land to do battle with the Crimson while Holy Cross will try to make it two in a row at the hands of Syracuse. Other top games finds Duke at North Carolina State. The Blue- devils' primary worry is acquiring a Roman Gabriel complex. The upset-minded Pitt Panthers tan- gle with Navy, and recovering Penn State tries to put itself on a sure victory road when it meets a weak California team. that. SIC FLICS ml FRIAR TUCK SAYS: U ...........,......ib ....,.r....,.I C?:. }:1Xf %'-- ---... i1 +.. :C? Y.,.,: rs?. ... fit ...