THE MICII[IGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER : TUE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Offense, Defense Opposite of Year Ago BIG TEN SHORTS: Line Injuries Hamper MSU By TOM WEBBER ou may not know it, but the higan team you're watching y Saturday is almost the t opposite of the team you last year-statistic-wise, that ast year Michigan grabbed two nctions in the final Big Ten Lstics. The biggest laurel ws of having the most tens- s defense. Last year's Wolver- defense allowed the fewest points per game, the fewest yards, the fewest yards per play, and, well just about the fewest of everything. The other distinction, or a more dubious nature, was that of hav- ing the most impotent offense in the league (Indiana was on pro- bation and didn't count.) Minne- sota averaged 12 fewer yards per game, but also averaged 'eight fewer plays per game. Thus went to Michigan the unique pleasure of gaining the fewest yards per play of the Big Ten teams, man- againg a woeful 3.4q yard average. The situation this year, however, is, as the saying goes, a horse of a different color. The Michigan offense, although basically the same personnel as last year, has suddenly blossomed into an offensive threat. The Wol- verines have already scored 22 more points in four Big Ten games as they did in six last year, and that with a shut-out against Mich- igan State. They are averaging 50 more yards a game than last year and only one other team, Ohio State, Mais Cops MYP Over. Teammate By The Associated Press BOSTON - Roger Maris was voted the most valuable player in the American League yesterday by members of the Baseball Writ- er's Association of America. The Yankee slugger won the honor for the second straight year by nosing out teammate Mickey Mantle by four points in the vot- ing. ,A first-place vote was worth 14 points, a second-place vote nine points, third-place eight points and so on. Seven Firsts Maris received seven first-place votes and wound up with 202 points. Mantle received six first- place votes and finished with 198a points. Last year Maris beat' Mantle by three points, 225-222. Jim Gentile of the Baltimore Orioles finished third, gathering 157 points while the Detroit Tigers' Norm Cash, the American League batting champion, placed fourttl with 151 points. Led League Maris not only hit more home runs than any player in histor, but led the league in the very vital department of driving in runs. He wound up with 142 RBI's; -probably the most destructive .269 hitter in baseball annals. Maris did not break Babe Ruth's mark in the required 154 games,, but he came close enough to push almost everything else on the nation's sport's pages into a sec- ondary role. has averaged more yards per play Practice Notes than the Wolverines. By The Associated Press The big surprise this year, and Coach Bump Elliott drilled his EAST LANSING - Two of the also the biggest disappointment, is team long and late yesterday, as Michigan State starting linesmen the defense. The offense has been he continued to prepare for the are counted out of the meeting scoring points at a new high, the Iowa invasion. The Michigan units with Northwestern here Saturday, defense has also been letting them alternated on defense and offense both because of ankle sprains. in at a new high rate. Only three yesterday, with the redshirts pro- Ed Budde, who plays pulling teams, Indiana, Illinois and Wis- viding the opposition in'each case. guard on the offense, is being consin, have allowed more points The team stayed out until after replaced by Steve Mellinger, a per game than Michigan. The dark for the second day in a 195-pound sophomore. Defensive Wolverines average is a whopping row. Both Ken Tureaud and Jon specialist Wayne Fontes also is not 17.8 per game. Schopf worked out with the team expected to be ready for full They have allowed as many again yesterday. service. points in the four games this year __________________________________ than six last year. Lead in Fumbles The high oposition point total can be described somewhat by then fact that the Wolverines also lead the Conference in fumbles lest, by Brian MacClowry averaging two a game.b Coach Bump Elliott also has a theory. "We just don't have as good defensive personnel as la,,t year. We had some players last' vy Com es H om e year who played nothing but de- fense. Bill Stine, Gary McNitt, IT WAS 21 YEARS AGO when football fans over the nation Reid Bushong and some others were singing the praises of the greatest halfback in Michigan history. did a good job for us on defense His name-was Tom Harmon and he ran out of the tailback slot in the last year. Some fellows who play- single wing. ed on the raiders and then played The single wing, for you undergraduates, was a horse and buggy defense last year are playing of- offense that placed the tailback and fullback some five yards behind fense this year. We also have more the line of scrimmage with knees bent and hands thrust forward in a guys playing both ways than e manner that suggested they were waiting for someone to shove a chair "We've been doing more multiple underneath them so they could sit down. It was discarded in 1959, ball handling this year, too, which along with our national ranking. You may still find a replica of it in might explain some of the fum- the Kelsey Museum. bling," he added. The key to the single wing attack was the blocking back, who Last year it was a question of stationed himself close behind one of the guards. His job was to whether the defense could hold knock down anyone who came near the tailback-in Harmon's the score down enough so Michi- case-friend or foe. In 1940 Harmon's hatchet man was a raw gan could win the game. Now with boned kid who hit so hard they nicknamed him Forest Evashevski. two offensive powerhouses, Iowa The name stuck, although nowadays he's just called Evy. and Ohio State, the question be- comes whether the offense can Michigan only had six plays that year. Harmon over guard, Har- outscore the opposition. mon off tackle and Harmon around end-run to both sides. And on -_- every play the big kid from Detroit was right in front of him, getting the bruises while Harmon got the touchdowns. Harmon stayed so close LSU Sa ys N to Evashevski six games went by before someone found out he didn't have four legs. When Harmon graduated the University retired his bl 1 number. When Evashevski graduated they washed his. Evy spent so much time on the ground it was the first time in three years people rnt.7 n -.,or...,.,,o knew he had one. AL- .Fontes was coach Duffy Daugh- erty's nomination for "Spartan of the Week" for his defensive play against Purdue. This means team captain Ed (Rocky) Ryan, still bothered by a shoulder in- jury, will be called upon for extra duty. Dave Behrman, the big center-' tackle is still trying to shake off a back sprain, but expects to be in there. Behrman wants to keep up his present record as the lines- man with the longest playing time. * * * MINNEAPOLIS - The Min- nesota Gophers held rugged con- tact drills again yesterday pre- paring -the squad for the study in fundamentals Saturday's game with Purdue is expected to pro- vide. Both teams- play close-to-the- vest, make-your-own-breaks foot- ball and Minnesota coach Murray Warmath chose again to risk in- juries to sharpen Gopher block- ing and tackling. The only doubtful starter ;s right end Bob Deegan, taking treatments for an inflamed elbow. If he doesn't pay, junior John Campbell of Wadena will step into his slot. EVANSTON -- Sophomore quarterback Tom O'Grady, who has been used exclusively on of- fense, may be on defense for Northwestern as well at Michigan State Saturday, coach Ara Par- seghian indicated yesterday. 0'- Grady, who will start the game on offense, was on =defense for the first time in a scrimmage yester- day. He shared the spot with junior halfback Chuck Brainerd. They replace defensive specialist Al Kimbrough who will miss the game with an ankle injury. ** * COLUMBUS - Third-ranked Ohio State rolled through another good workout yesterday but the hour and 45-minute session took its toll. Defensive middle guard Wayne Betz, a junior from Cuyahoga Falls, sprained his ankle and is the Buck's only doubtful starter when they meet Oregon here Saturday. #' "t ' I -Daily-Bruce Taylor ANOTHER TD?-Michigan's Dave Raimey skirts left end for good yardage against Duke. Raimey is one of the reasons Michi- gan has had an offensive reversal in form from last season. He is fourth in scoring in the Big Ten. Duke's Mike Rappold is the man trying to stop him. McRae Second in Rushing; Szyk OWVny Leads Pas sers o/ ./ NEW ORLEANS C.P - For once and all, irrevocably and to remove all doubts, Louisiana State's foot- ball team will not be in the Sugar Bowl game in New Orleans on New Year's Day. This was the edict from theT campus at Baton Rouge yesterdayt to clarify any doubts that might exist in the minds of an incredu- lous sports population in New Orleans. Representatives of Lousiana State University have assured commissioner Tom Hamilton of the Big Five that there would be no racial problem if LSU is invitedr to the Rose Bowl. By TOM ROWLAND Michigan's fifth-place Wolver- ines, sporting an even-up 2-2 mark, head toward Saturday's Iowa encounter with a complete backfield quartet among the Big Ten statistical leaders. Helmsman Dave Glinka ranks sixth among the conference quar- terbacks, having connected on 24 of 46 aerial attempts to boost the' Toledo junior past the .500 mark, Get with it, man!You belong in traditional Post-Grand Slacks Speedster Bennie McRae's 5.4 yards per carry is tied for second while the Wolverine halfback's total 244 yards ranks sixth. Full- back Bill Tunnicliff is twelfth Iwith 1'74 Yards for 8.8 Yardsz a carry. Rainmey High Scorer Dave Raimey, the other half of Michigan's halfback scoring duo, lips tallied for four six-pointers this fall, setting him into fourth, place among the Big Ten scorers.1 Michigan end Scott Maentz is second in punting, with an aver-. age 39.8 yards per boot. Jim Bak-. ken, Wisconsin quarterback, is first with a 41.0 yard average. The Wolverines' pass d "ense fortifications will be under strong attack Saturday as Iowa's Matt Szykowny comes to town as the, Big Ten's leading passer. Szy- kowny has hit targets on 59 of 104 attempts for a healthy .567 percentage. Ferguson Leads Ohio State's Bob Ferguson paces the groundgainers, grinding o it 519 yards without a single nega- tive yard in the rushing column. In the process Ferguson has lug- ged the pigskin for five touch- downs, tieing the OSU fullback with Michigan State's G:iorge Saimes for scoring honors. Sandy Stephens, Minnesota All-, American quarterback candidate leads the Big Ter in total of fens(e with an average 5.8 yards per play. Stephens ranks third in pass- ing, second in rushing, and eleventh in scoring. Stephans has gained 810-yards both passing and running. On the ground he has gained 278-yards, and has completed 32 passes in 85 attempts for 527 yards. Ferguson of Ohio State is fourth in total] offense without having even thrown a pass. PROGRAMS by BUD-MOR "We carry p complete line of HARDING programs" GRID SELECTIONS Grid Picks contest are that you don't want to see your name in the paper or win two free tickets to the Michigan Theater, now showing "Town Without Pity." Even more important, though1, is that you don't want to cause u- sc much trouble and make us correct all those entries, espealiyt when nobody wants to help mark them. So don't enter this week's contest. Don't include the Michiga n score to settle any ties and don't send in your picks by Frid~iy midnight to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor. Really, no kidding, don't. THIS WEEK'S GAMES 1. Iowa at MICHIGAN (score) 11. Wake Forest at Maryland 2. Northwestern at Michigan 12. Colorado at Nebraska State 13. Syracuse at Notre Dame 3. Purdue at Minnesota 14. Southern California at 4. Oregon at Ohio State Pittsburgh 5. Illinois at Wisconsin 15. Yale at Princeton 6. Indiana at West Virginia 16. Texas A&M at Rice 7. Georgia Tech at Alabama 17. Mississippi at Tennessee 8. Oklahoma at Army 18. Texas Christian at Texas 9. Cornell at Dartmouth 19. Washington at UCLA 10. North Carolina at Duke 20. Utah State at Utah Take's Coaching job . N 1941 EVASHEVSKI finally got out from under the Harmon shadow. He took the head coaching job at little Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y., where he compiled a respectable 5-2 record. But with the coming of World War II, Evashevski left Hamilton for military service. lie was not to become a head coach again until 1950, when he accepted the post at Washington State College. Evy's reasoning was that if he could get some of those big, backwoods boys to stop rolling logs long enough to go to college he'd have, If not the best, at least the strongest team in the nation. But things didn't work out that way, and Evy finished with only an 11-6-2 record for two years. Nobody really seemed to care though. The students didn't even bother to hang him in effigy. In fact, many of the students didn't even know what the word meant. When they throw a rope over a tree in Washington it's not for such a menial thing as losing a football game. They reserve that for people who throw lighted cigarettes out car windows. And Smokey the Bear springs the trap. Accepts Iowa Post .. . 'O NOBODY really objected when Evashevski left Washington State in 1952 to accept the head coaching position at Iowa. When Evy arrived Iowa was only famous for two things, corn and Jean Seberg. The difference being that one grew up and the other out. Evy swiftly became noted for his tough practice sessions. He was determined to bring Iowa out of a 20-year slump. When Evashevski scheduled a head knocking session the players soon realized he meant without helmets. Evashevski's conception of a helmet was something you used dur- ing a game to protect what you might need to get through school. Evy's teams soon became the scourge of the Big Ten. By the time he retired at the end of last season to become athletic director his Iowa teams had won 52 games, won 27 and tied four. His 1956 and 1958 teams won the Big Ten title and the Rose Bowl games, and in 1960 the Hawkeyes shared the title with Minnesota. To say Evashevski is revered in the corn country is an under- statement. After the last speech he gave in Des Moines, 34 people came forward to make their decision for Iowa. A heretic in Iowa is someone who doesn't like the wing T. The Iowa team that comes to Ann Arbor Saturday will be coached by Jerry Burns. But don't be mistaken. Despite the losses it's still a Forest Evashevski recruited club. A4 Skyline Diamond Setters serv- ices the downtown Detroit area stores. You myo select your dia- mond and witness it mounted by a siled craftsman in the ring of your choice. With your diamond you re- ceive a GUARANTEED CER- TiFICATE OF VALUE from a GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST! 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. T yiiC:1 YOUR PERSONAL SELECTION INVITED Pro Standings NIM W L T Pts. GF Montreal 9 4 2 ?0 59 Toronto 9 5 1 19 46- New York 7 5 4 18 50 Detroit 5 7 3 13 40 Chicago 4 7 5 13 36 Boston 3 9 4 9 44 LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS Toronto 3, Montreal 2 Chicago '2,Detroit 0 TONIG T'S GAMEI Mon treal at Hoston GA 41 36 44 48 41 64 NBA WESTERN DIVISION W L Pet. 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