TUESDAY, QCTOBER 13, 1964. TAE MICRIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, QCTOBER 13, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Cecchini, Yearby & Co. Halt Spartans TEXAS STILL FIRST: AP Poll Gives 3M' 'Fifth-Place Berth r, W elcc St~ By TOM WEINBERG How fitting it is that Rick Sygar-primarily a defensive spe- cialist - provided the offensive punch that enabled the Wolverines to dump Michigan State Satur- day. It was the defensive unit that coach Bump Elliott cited as the key to the 17-10 victory. "We were able to contain them three or four times in absolutely critical situations," the coach said. "The defense really deserves a lot of the credit for winning the ball game," he added. "They really did a job." Cechini First The first individual that the coach singled out was linebacker Frosh Tryouts All freshmen interested in trying out for the freshman basketball team should go to the Intra-Mural Building at 3:30 p.m. on October 15 with equipment. Contact freshman coach Tom Jorgensen at 663- 2411 for further information, if desired, the first injury was a major frac- ture, and the second kept him in a cast until late last May. Defensively; Too "Rick did a fine job defensively, too," Elliott said. "The whole sec- ondary has come a long way al- ready this season." The defensive secondary of sophomores Sygar and Rick Volk and senior Dick Rindfuss held. State to 84 yards passing Satur- day, a far cry from the 230 aerial yards piled up by Air Force and the 181 that Roger Staubach and Navy managed in the two open- ing games. Volk, the second string offensive: quarterback, was praised by the coach for his one-on-one defensive coverage so far this season on such standout flankers and pass receivers as Ed Orr of Navy, and the sophomore speedmerchant of Michigan State, Eugene Washing- Sygar for Offense? In reply to a question about the1 possible utilization of Sygar fore more . offensive duty, Elliott was1 noncommittal, explaining that Sygar's defensive abilities were outstanding and that much of the consideration depended on wheth- er John Rowser would be able to return to the lineup. Rowser, a stalwart of the sec-j ondary last year has yet to play in a game this season as a leg" injury has bogged him down. El-. liott pointed out that if Rowser were able to return, it isn't certain whether he would concentrate on, offense or defense. The status of Sygar is jepordized by Rowser only on defense. Offensively, Sygar was the re-; placement for sophomore Jim Det-; wiler, whose running helped power the Wolverines to the first two wins, but had somewhat of an TOM CECCHINI -Daily-Jim Lines MICHIGAN DEFENSIVE BACKS Rich Volk (49) and Rich Sygar (18) reach high to knock down a pass intended for Michigan State end Eugene Washington (84). The Wolverine pass defense only allowed four MSU completions in 12 attempts in Saturday's game. The defensive line allowed Michigan State a net rushing yardage of 73 yards, compiled in 41 attempts, giving MSU a total offense of a measly 157 yards, as compared with the Blue's 27'7. (:, The Young Lovers ; Co lt Rout. Cards, 47-2 7 BALTIMORE ()-The Balti- more Colts demolished the St. Louis Cardinals, last undefeated team ;in the National League, 47- 27 l'ast night with its high octarne running attack turned off voluntarily after an 80-yard touch- down run by Tom Matte. Quarterback John Unitas, who threw one touchdown pass and ran for another six-pointer, turn- ed the offense over to substitutes after Matte's. romp with 14 min- utes left'insthe last quarter. The Cards scored two touchdowns on the defensive reservest The fourth straight victory after an opening loss put the high step- ping Colts back in sole posession of first place in the Western Con- ference. Their 'first setback dropped the Cardinals back to a first place tie with Cleveland in the Eastern standings. St. Louis and Cleveland tied in an earlier clash. The; Colts, who earlier swamped the Chicago Bears 52-0, scored the most points against the Cardinals since they moved from Chicago to St. Louis in 1960. and signalcaller Tom Cecchini. The 195-pound junior was solely responsible for one Michigan State fumble in the first quarter when he jarred quarterback Dave McCormick just as he was hand- ing off, enabling the other red- dogging linebacker, Barry Dehlin, to recover the ball. That play was on the Michigan 35-yard line with the score 7-0 State. Michigan State eoach Duffy Daugherty later called that play a key to the entire game, when he prohesized that "if we could have scored another touchdown there, I don't think they'd have caught us." Cecchini was responsible for another State fumble in the early stages of the game, when he knocked MSU's other quarter- back, :Steve Juday, to the turf and the 'ball squirted to within striking range of tackle Bill Year- by, in his, favorite territory-the opponents' backfield. Yearby Tooe "Yearby had one of his 'finest. games," Elliott said, "but for that matter, you can't take anything away from the rest of the defen- sive line. John Yanz had a fine game, and Arnie Simkus and Jim Conley were real effective too." "Conley hurt his knee and had to come out, but he was right back in there and did an excellent job," he said. Conley has a history of knee trouble, but all the coaches praised the captain for "sticking with it." "The kid who has really stuck with it," Elliott said in the locker' room after the game, "is Sygar. He has broken his leg twice in a year and a half, once in the spring of his freshman year, and then again last spring. The coaches consider the presence of the spunky halfback "a bonus." Elliott says that he had doubts if Sygar would ever play again as off-day in his first away encoun- ter. Rowser practiced yesterday with the starting Blue offensive back-' field, and the: coach said that he was hopeful that Rowser would play this weekend against Purdue. Praises Henderson John Henderson, the rangy flanker, was praised by Elliott for his efforts Saturday, including the game-clinching touchdown catch, but he did say Henderson wasn't assured a starting berth this week. "Craig Kirby's done a fine job for -us, and I expect he and John will be used alternatively, depend- ing on the situation," Elliott said. As for other injuries, Elliott said he was pleased that there were none of any consequence, although speedy halfback Carl Ward didn't suit up yesterday due to a badly bruised hand. Ward is expected to play Saturday. By The Associated Press ' By virtue of their 17-10 victory over Michigan State, the -Wolver- ines of Michigan jumped from sev- enth to fifth place .in this week's- Associated Press Poll. Forty sports- writers and broadcasters took part in the balloting. Texas, which resumed the No. 1 position it held last year as soon as the 1964 season started, con- solidated its position so strongly with last Saturday's televised 28- 7 victory over Oklahoma that 30 of the 40 experts cast first place votes for the Longhorns. The oth- ers put them either second or third. ofAs a result Texas polled" a total s 387" points on the basis of 10 for each first place vote, nine for second, etc. But Ohio State, which walloped Illinois 26-0, jumped from fourth in the rankings to the second spot vacated by the Illini. The Bucks: had seven first place votes and 344 points. Alabama, 21-0 victor over pre- viously unbeaten North Carolina State, clung to thiud with two firsts and 307 points. But Notre Dame which made the Air Force its third victim by a convincing 34-7 score, jumped from sixth to fourth with 281 points, followed by Michigan with 233. Notre Dame drew the 40th first- plac'e vote, but it was notable that nearly half the voters put Notre Dame fourth and Michigan fifth. Following them in the top 10 were Nebraska, Syracuse, Arkan- sas, Louisiana State and Florida State. Illinois, .Kentucky and Michigan State, all' thumped last Saturday, dropped out of the top 10 to make room for Syracuse, the comeback- bound 39-0 winner over UCLA;, LSU, which downed North Caro-" lina 20-3, and Florida State, which knocked off upsetter Kentucky 48- 6 after the Wildcats had beaten. Mississippi and Auburn in con- secutive games.k 1. Teas ( 30) 4-0 387 S2. Ohio state (7) 3-0 344 3. Alabama (2) 4-0 307 4. Notre Dame (1) 3-0 281 5. Michigan 3.0 233 6. Nebraska 4-0 142 7. Syracuse 3-4 89, 8. Arkansas 4-0 86 J.' Louisiana State 3-0 59 10. 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