THE MICHIGAN DAILY TTTTi!tMAV 1 T EMC IAWfasTLY: ImT mYw £.1. 1iCLA1' YYVILLYR !ucks Stun. wolverines __ r WALKER MOST VALUABLE: Brown Elected Captain by Teammates The Inside Corner, with Dave Andrews Unhappy Ending THERE WILL BE A NEW CHANT in the Michigan gridiron camp next fall. "Avenge the 50." It's no secret that the Wolverines and Coach Bump Elliott weren't too happy with Ohio State and Woody Hayes last Saturday as the Buckeyes poured it on, 50-20. Michigan won't forget easily. Elliott, obviously bitterly disappointed and disgusted with te way Hayes held his first string in the game to the end, couldn't find any justification for the rout. "I don't know what he was thinking of," said Elliott. "Our boys will have to sleep with those 50 points." In the other dressing room his counterpart, Hayes, munched a big red apple and babbled on in Woodyism like a victorious Woody al- ways does. "Those extra touchdowns won't hurt Michigan. Our boys deserve the number one spot and if the extra couple of touchdowns will help them get it so much the better." Ohio's huge fullback, Bob Ferguson, who had personally ac- counted for 152 yds. and four touchdowns, simply smiled. Michi- gan's injured breakaway threat, Bennie McRae, said he wished "he could have played." In the press box the writers and TV men alike sort of stood speechless in wonder at the demolition job they had witnessed. And on the field and in the stands some 15,000 Buckeye fans from 11 chartered trains and countless cars and buses sung "We don't give a damn for the whole state of Michigan, we're from O--HI--O." And well they might have been proud-of their team anyway. The superb Buckeyes had added the long-gainer to their "crunch- crunch" machine-special for the Wolverines. Michigan had added a few more injuries, but with the possible exception of a sunny New Year's for Ohio the season was over.- Run Out of Gas,... ABOUT THE ONLY THING Elliott could be thankful for two days after Turkey Day was that it was. His tape and bandage crew had fought valiantly for three quarters; but they ran out of gas and the healthy Buckeye regulars poured it on. Ten times Ohio had the ball. Seven times they scored. Once they were stopped by the halftime gun, once by an interception, and once by the Michigan team in their greatest offensive show in the 58 game series history. Nothing stopped them in four second half shots. About the only thing that the Buckeyes didn't carry with - them were the goal posts, which were successfully defended in a flurry of fists and tempers by Wolverine partisans at the end. They even took Woody for a ride-on their shoulders-after he and Elliott had glared at each other at the center of the field and exchanged a sharp grab at each other's hand. In the somber Michigan dressing room, however, the praises for Ohio State flew freely. "They were a great football team," said El- liott, "and Ferguson Is the best back in the Conference. But don't forget that he had a great line blocking for him." You could call him explosive, but that wouldn't be enough. You could call him the "Tank" like his teammates do, but he's too fast for a tank. His 10.3 time in the 100 puts himin the truck class. Six times he ripped through the Wolverine line for gains of 10 yds. or more. His longest went 25 yds. and only three times was he stopped for no gain. Not once was he trapped for a loss. Best Fullback Ever... "HE'S THE BEST FULLBACK I've ever had here," spouted Hayes. He's always trying to learn. If he doesn't get the Heisman Trophy (given to the best college football player of the year) then I don't know who should." From anyone else the statements might ring the funny bell. Com- ing from Woody it's another thing. He makes a habit of collecting fullbacks and Big Ten titles and vivid remembrances of fellows like Bob White and Hubert Bobo emphasize what he means. For Ferguson, who is assured his second straight unanimous All- American berth, Saturday was sweet revenge. Two years ago here he stayed on the bench with an injury while Roger Dittrich made the "cloud of dust" go. Last year at Columbus the Wolverines pretty well bottled him up. But despite his greatness, Ferguson wasn't the whole show. Speedsters Paul Warfield and Bob Klein did their share as did quarterbacks John Mummey and Joe Sparma. Of the four, only Klein graduates. Sparma and Warfield will be around for two morel seasons, which means that they'll make another appearance in Michigan's touchdown land in 1963.l It isn't a very comforting thought to Elliott, but at least he canr be sure that his team can't possibly be in worse physical shape then. No less than 14 of the 22 men he had counted on as regulars back in September were hardly healthy Saturday. Beside McRae, guys liket Wally Herrala, Todd Grant, Joe O'Donnell, Jack Strobel, and Lou Pavloff didn't even touch a scarlet and white jersey., The other eight, Dave Raimey, John Stamos, John Walker, ScottI Maentz, Paul Raeder, Ken Tureaud, Jon Schopf, and George Mansf couldn't go full steam. Stamos was carried off with a head injury; Raimey's legs knottedt to go along with a shoulder bruise; Maentz reinjured his ankle; Schopf never did regain full strength after his shoulder separation;t Tureaud's leg still bothered him; Mans and Raeder both hobbledt around with injured knees as did gutty John Walker. G i" (Continued from Page 1) to score untouched. Michigan's two-point pass failed and the Wolverines never got closer: All the Way Four plays after the kickoff Ohio State got the touchdown back as Warfield took a handoff after a beautiful fake by quarterback John Mummey and raced 69 yards to paydirt. Not a man touched the swift sophomore as a change of pace and a brilliant fake at the Michigan 30 left safetyman Mc- Lenna holding nothing but air. The Wolverines' return drive, aided by Tom Prichard's fourth- down fake punt and run to the Buckeye 38, wound up at the Ohio 45. Scott Maentz's punt barely trickled into the end zone. and the clock stopped the Buckeyes. Another 'M' Touchdown Down 21-6, Michigan showed signs of recovery, marching 78 yards in 15 plays for a third period TD. Tunnicliff picked up most -of the yardage on the time-consum- ing drive, fiinally bulling the ball to the Buck one. With the drive's first fourth-down situation, Glinka faked to the fullback and gave to' McLenna, who smashed over for' the score. Woody Doesn't Kid A few plays later Warfield made his key run, cutting inside right end for 37 yards after a clipping penalty had placed the Buckeyes in a second-and-17 position. Fer- guson drove the final yard on the second play of the last quarter for the fourth OSU tally. Chandler Tries Too Bob Chandler tried to move Michigan after Klein's TD, but met with no success. Ohio State moved five plays with ease and Ferguson punched across again to make it 42-12. The bruising full- back carried four times, including his longest gain of the day (25 yards). The final Wolverine touchdown came 12 plays after halfback Jim Ward returned the OSU kickoff to the Michigan 45, with Ward diving over for the final one yard and then adding the two extra points on another line plunge. But Ohio State added further insult to injury by scoring in the final 34 seconds, following Michi- gan's kickoff. Sparma lifted a 70-yd. pass to Warfield, who was stopped on the Wolverine ten by senior Bill Hornbeck. Three quick plays later Sparma hit Tidmore for the TD. Another Sparma-to- Tidmore toss scored the 49th and 50th points for the Bucks. By JIM LUTZKE Michigan's football lettermen selected end Bob Brown yesterday to succeed another flanker, George Mans, as team captain and also named center John Walker as the squad's most valuable player. The Chicago Tribune will an- nounce the Big Ten award at the end of the week after all the schools make their MVP nomina- tions. Walker, mostly a defensive mid- dle linebacker who missed action in other years because of knee in- juries, was sorely needed when of- fensive center Todd Grant's knee injury put him out of the Ohio State game. Brown is the first player in Michigan football history to fol- low in his father's footsteps as captain of the team. Bob Brown, Sr. was captain and center of Michigan's 1925 Big Ten cham- pionship team. He was named to several All- America teams while bulwarking the squad the late coach Fielding H. Yost often called his finest. Brown, a second-stringer behind Scott Maentz, caught six passes this season, good for 127 yds. and three touchdowns. Two years ago as a promising sophomore Brown was sidelined because of a water- skiing accident but was granted another year of eligibility by the Big Ten. Last season he played 15 min- utes, catching three passes for 59 yds. He also lettered in basketball and is expected to add another to his collection this winter. A 22-year-old engineering stu- dent, Brown won all-state honors in football and basketball at Kala- mazoo, where he was also a dis- trict hurdles champion.' r7 BOB BROWN ... follows dad MICHIG First Downs Rushing Passing Penalty Total Rushes Net Yds. Rushing Passing Forward Passes Att. Completed Intercepted by Yds. interceptions ret. Total Plays Punts Average distance Kickoffs (returned by) Yds, Kicks Returned Punts Kickoffs Fumbles Ball Lost by Penalties Yds. penalized I1Vft' 24 24 AN OSU 10 22 10 17 6 5 0 0 45 51 162 312 109 200 17 10 10 7 1 2 2 16 62 61 2 1 36 40 7 2 41 63 0 20 41 43 1 0 1 0 4 2 40 20 COLLEGE HOCKEY Michigan 4, Toronto 1 (See story on page 1) RUSHING MICHIGAN Player Tries Gains Loss Net Tunnicliff 13 69 0 69 Raimey 10 40 2 38 Glinka 5 17 5 12 Chapman 2 5 0 5 Tureaud 5 14 0 14 Prichard 1 '7_ 0 7 Chandler 2 0 11 -11 McLenna 3 7 0 7 Hood 1 6 0 6 Ward 3 15 0 15 Totals 45 180 18 162 OHIO STATE Player Tries Gains Loss Net Ferguson 30 152 0 152 Warfield 6 126 4 122 Mummey 9 40 10 30 Sparma 1 0 3 -3 Klein 4 11 3 8 Katterhenrich 1 3 0 3 Totals 51 332 20 312 PASSING Att. CoIp. Int. Yds. Glinka 12 6 2 52 Chandler 4 3 0 40 Dougall 1 1 0 17 Totals 17 10 2 109 Att. Comp. Int. Yds. Sparma 10 7 1 200 Buckeyes Gain On .Alabama By Beating 1M' By The Associated Press Unbeaten and untied Alabama held a slim lead over once-tied Ohio State today in the next-to- last Associated Press poll to deter- mine the national college football champions. The Crimson Tide, idle last week while preparing for a final date with Auburn Saturday, lost con- siderable ground to the Big Ten Buckeyes, who were impressive in dropping Michigan all the way from 12th to 20th with a 50-20 triumph. The top ten, with first-place votes and season records in paren- theses (points on a 10-9-8, etc. GM' Gridders Cop Honors Six Michigan football players received post-season honors yes- terday. Bennie McRae and Dave Rai- mey, both halfbacks, were named to the 1961 All-Big Ten Team. Cage Preview Tonight at 8 in Yost Field- house Coach Dave Strack pre- views his varsity basketball team against a strong freshman squad which Freshman Coach Tom Jorgensen considers to be the best in recent years. McRae was placed on the first team and Raimey on the second. Captain and end George Mans won a spot on the third team, and fullback Bill Tunnicliff and end- placekicker Doug Bickle both made honorable mention. McRae received further recog- nition by being chosen as an All- American back by the Football News on its three-deep team. Senior tackle Jon Schopf also was named an All-American. There were three unanimous choices on the all-Big Ten Team: fullback Bob Ferguson of Ohio State, quarterback Sandy Stephens and tackle Bobby Bell of Min- nesota. George Saimes of Michigan State was the other backfield member. Aside from Bell, the line included ends Pat Richter of Wis- consin and Jack Elwell of Purdue, tackle Dave Behrman of Michi- gan State, guards Mike Ingram of Ohio State and Stan Sczurek of Purdue and center Larry Onesti of Northwestern. 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I *ILL. ~ THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: STEVE BANKS Because of Steve Banks, who just two years ago was an Colorado. His findings shed new light on the source of undergraduate engineering student, the Bell Telephone noise, and on the important methods of measuring it. System is closer to wiping out the noise (or "static") that Steve Banks of Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph sometimes interferes with telephone conversations. Company, and the other young engineers like him in Bell On one of his first assignments, Steve examined the Telephone Companies throughout the country, help make noise levels that had "leaked" into telephone circuits in your communications service the finest in the world. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Sweatshirt Woody?... "OUR INJURIES hurt us a little more than most people suspected," said Elliott, "but we played better'than the score indicates." On the other side, though feeling no pain (he wasn't even cold. An OSU sweatshirt under his short sleeved white one belied his appearance) Woody agreed. "We played our best game, but don't forget that Mich- igan was hurting. Their injuries hurt them more on defense than they did on offense." A quick look back substantiates their conclusions. The Wolver- ines moved the ball, but unfortunately couldn't contain the Buckeyes. Michigan's third quarter surge is testimony in itself. "We blocked better on that drive," said Elliott. "Bruce McLenna (who people will remember as the guy on the seat of his pants when. Warfield sprinted past for an Ohio touchdown) did a good job of blocking for (Bill) Tunnicliff." The drive ate up 8:26 on the clock, but when the Wolverines failed on their second straight two point conversion try their strength was gone. From then on it was just a matter of how much. The fact that Elliott & Co. shunned the use of placekicking star Doug Bickle throughout the game gives some indication of the re- gard the Wolverines had'for the Buckeyes. One couldn't help feeling that the first two-point conversion try after Raimey's 91-yd. kickoff return was an attempt for a one point win, IF Michigan could match the Bucks in touchdown production. What hurt the Wolverines the most? "Their running and pass- ing," Elliott quipped. "Seriously though," he continued, "it was their long gainers." If anything, it seemed to be an understatement. Every- thing they did hurt. Ii ONE basis): 1. Alabama (26) (9-0) 2. Ohio State (21) (8-0-1) 3. Louisiana State (1) (9-1) 4: Texas (9-1) 5. Mississippi (1) (8-1) 6. Colorado (8-1) 7. Minnesota (7-2) 8. Michigan State (7-2) 9. Arkansas (8-2) 10. Missouri (7-2-1) Other teams receiving 459 452 366 354 272 169 168 139 131 31 votes: Penn State, Rutgers, Wisconsin, UCLA, Utah State, Arizona, Pur- due, Rice, Georgia Tech, Michi- gan, Duke, Iowa, Syracuse, Wyom- ing, Kansas. PHOTOS by BUD-MOR 1103 S. Univ. NO 2-6362 Sprechen Sie Deutsch? Whether or not you speak German, you will thoroughly enjoy a meal at METZGER'S ! Traditional dishes in a continental atmos- phere. IMPORTED and DOMESTIC BEER and WINE IL I m