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November 08, 1964 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-11-08

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNRAY, NOVEMBERS, 1964

PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1q64

Michigan
Stop Illinois
Air Attack,

Hopes

Alive

for.

BIG TEN ROUNDUP:
Title Penn State Bombs OSU

27.0

(Contin
Timberlake's
brought the
setting the
dash.

iued from Page 1)
11-yard dash'
ball to the Illinois 13,
stage for Ward's TD;

Following ,the Illinois touch-
down pass to Trumpy and an ex-
change of punts, Custardo again
went to the air lanes, but this
time the Blue defense plugged up
the gaps. Nunley racked up Trum-
py as the Illinois end gathered in
Custardo's pass at the 40, and
Mader's recovery brought Timber-
lake back into the ball game to
throw to Detwiler for Michigan's
next six points.
The Wolverine quarterback hit
home on five of eight passes for
53 yards during the afternoon
while picking up 44 net yards on
the ground. Custardo was 11 for
22 and 137 yards.
A Good Day
Timberlake's quarterback sneak
for the third tally came seconds
before the announcement that
Michigan State was on the way to
knocking Purdue and capped off
Michigan's longest offensive
thrust of the season.
It all started at the Wolverine
six-yard line, where a pair of
eight-yard sprints by Ward and
some key runs by Detwiler brought
Michigan out to breathing room
at the 38.
Timberlake passed to senior
Ben Farabee just short of a first
down and then picked it up him-
self on a fourth-and-inches play
at the Michigan 40.
Ward supplied most of the yard-
age, latching on to a Timberlake
pitchout and skirting left end to
the Illinois 23. The next play
Timberlake kept himself, driving
to the 13, and two plays later
handed to Detwiler, who just
missed the flag in the right
corner.
Timberlake drove over for the
score and then calmly booted his
66th point bf the year.
While the Michigan offense put
the second-half yardage on the
statistics sheets, the defense was
holding the Illini to 29 yards on
the ground and 37 in the air
after the intermission. Custardo
didn't even get his charges into
Wolv.erine territory in the second
half until the fourth quarter -
and then only to the 35.
Michigan made one more scor-
ing threat before the final
whistle, as senior quarterback
Frosty Evashevski brought full-
back Dave Fisher and a second-
string team to the four-yard line'
in the closing minutes.
For Pete's Sake

By Tihe Associated Press Iowa Nip ped
Michigan Ta es Advantage COLUMBUS - Penn State's MINNEAPOLIS Minnesota's
four time losers turned Ohio strong rush thwarted a two-point
State's second-ranked juggernaut conversion attempt by Iowa in the
Of Illnois Miscues ToWinibgg ongmms yesterday and
O i lli ois m is uesW in yesteday and beat the highlyI preserved a 14-13 Big Ten football
favored Bucks 27-0 in what must victory for the Gophers.
By CHARLIE TOWLE Illinois had its share of mis- go into the books as the season's, Hawkeye sharpshooter G a r y
Contributing Sports Editor cues in the game, also. At onebiggest upset. Snook fired an 87-yard pass with
point in the second quarter Illinois The Nittany Lions in winning less than two minutes to go but
Michigan's hopes for a Pasadena fumbled the ball on three out of their fourth in four starts against missed his target on the conver-
Bowl trip this year took a rosier four plays. the Bucks annihilated both the sion try after being boxed in by
hue yesterda'y-thanks to a 21-6 offense and the defense of Coach the Minnesota defense.
win over Illinois while the two The first fumble was by Illinois Woody Hayes' Big Ten Confer- Snook's late bomb to scatback
other top candidates for the trip right half Ron Acks. Acks fumbled ence leaders. Craig Nourse capped a game of
cwest, Ohio State and Purdue, on is ownflat er gain ngball With quarterback Gary Wyd- dramatic counter-rallies that saw
came out on the short end of the ded up on the 29. Ten Illinois man guiding the Lions and full- the Gophers turn the tide twice
quarterback Fred Custardo drop- back Tom Urbanik blasting the when Iowa appeared ready to take
Michigan State, which has miss- ping back to pass dropped the forward wall, Penn State scored command.
ed out on Rose Bowl trips in years ball on the Illinois 26. On the in every quarter as it handed The game was replete with
past because of losses to Purdue, third fumble, which came on a Ohio State its first shutout in 45 theatrics until the final gun. After
downed the Boilermakers by a14-yard pass play Wolverine games and blasted any national scoring the touchdown with 1:49
score of 21-7. The East Lansing tackle Gerry Mader fell on the ball championship hopes. remaining, the Hawkeyes tried an
contest was closely followed byss The victors went 65 yards in onside-kick. It rolled out of
Michigan fans via a bevy of pocket to put Illinois out of its misery. Thendvictorse Genter658yawits in
eight plays, 35 in five, 42 in seven bounds at the Gopher 38 with the
transistor radios. Mader was playing in place of and 64 in 10 for their touchdowns. Iowa bench heatedly contending
Purdue scored first in the game senior tackle John Yanz who will Ohio State failed to reach enemy a Hawk was the last to touch the
and the Michigan fans changed be out for the rest of the'season territory until the final minute. ball.
their well-known chant, "Let's go with a knee injury. Elliott expects Bewitched, Bothered, and Minnesota then killed the re-
Blue!" to "Let's go State!" the 6-3, 220-pound tackle to be ..' maining 1:30 with four running'
operated on today. Michigan's only The Bucks appeared bewildered plays, gaining a first down on the
Purdue plays two more Big Ten other injury was to halfback Dick and were completely futile in the Iowa 33 at game's end. M
games with Minnesota and' In- Rindfuss who sprained his ankle opening half as they failed to Snook went for the victory after
diana, and both games are away and will be out for an indeterm- score a first down, and wound up Nourse had fielded his pass at the
contests for the darkhorse Pur- wt iu 4Yrae
due eleven. Either a tie or a loss mate amount of time. Illinois had with a minus 14 yardage. Iowa 35 and out-sprinted three
for the Bnilrmakers w l bno serious injuries. It wasn't much better in the Gopher defenders to score.
forth Bilrmaer wul b

over Wisconsin yesterday.
Star passer Tommy Myers toss-
ed only nine Northwestern passes,
keeping up a ground assault hub-
bed around fullback Steve Mur-
phy which swept the Wildcats to
a 17-0 halftime lead.
Wisconsin came to life in the
second half. The Badgers' erratic
passing attack finally clicked on
a 52-yard scoring toss from Jesse
Kay to Jimmy Jones midway in
the third period.
In a wild final quarter, the
Badgers scored their second touch-
down. Carl Silvesgri blocked Mer-
lin Norgenberg's punt on the
Northwestern 15 and center Ern-
est Von Heimburg fell on the ball
in the end zone for a touchdown.
Wisconsin's Hal Brandt failed
on a pass for a two-point conver-
sion and the Badgers trailed 17-13
with five minutes to play.
Indiana Loses Again
CORVALLIS, Ore.-Quarterback
Paul Brothers threw two touch-
down passes and ran for another
score as he led favored Oregon
State from ,a 14-14 halftime tie
to a 24-14 football victory over
Indiana yesterday.
It was the seventh straight win
for Oregon State which may well
become the Pacific Athletic Con-
ference's Rose Bowl entry.

U

-Daily-Frank Wing
CARL WARD SLIPS the tackle of Illinois defensive back Dick
Kee in yesterday's game. Ward was the leading Michigan rusher
with 67 yards in nine carries. He scored one touchdown on a
quick shovel pass from Bob Timberlake.
NATIONAL ROUNDUP: '
Notre Dame Tos
Pitt In Cose Call

By The Associated Press
Top-ranked Notre Dame, led by
daring John Huarte, built up a
14-0 first period lead and then
fought off the inspired Pittsburgh
Panthers yesterday for a 17-15
victory.
It was unbeaten Notre Dame's
defense, yielding almost as many
yards rushing as it had in their
first six games combined, which
staved off possible defeat in the
end.
The Irish forward wall rose up
to stop Pitt quarterbaok Fred Ma-
zurek for no gain on a fourth-and-
one situation in the last quarter
on the Notre Dame 16.
F 1i

ILLI

MICHIGAN

First Downs 15
Rushing 11
Passing 3
Penalty 1
Total No. of Rushes 58
Net Yards-Rushing 202
Passing . 53
Forward Passes Att. 8
Completed 5
Intercepted by "1
Yds. interceptions ret. 8
Total Plays (Rushes
and Passes) 66
Punts, Number 7
Average distance 38
Kickoffs, returned by 1
Yards Kicks Returned 62
Punts 38
Kickoffs 24
Fumbles, Number 2
Ball lost by 1
Penalties, Number 9
Yards penalized 68
RUSHING
Michigan
Tries NetA
Ward 9 67
Timberlake 20 44'
Fisher 9' 41
Detwiler 9 27
Anthony 7 18
Evashevski 2 7
' Bass 1 0
Totals 57 202
Illinois
Tries Net A
Grabowski 17 62
Custardo. 12 30
Acks 4 9
Price 6 3
Dorr 1 -7
Totals 40 97
PASSING
Michigan
Att. Comp.Int.
Timberlake 8 5 0
Illinois
Custardo 22 11 1
Acks 1 0 0
Dorr 1 0 0
Totals 24 11 1
PASS RECEIVING
Michigan
No. Yds.A
Detwiler 1 24
Henderson 2 20
Rindfuss 1 5
Farabee 1 4
Illinois
No. Yds.A
Trumpy 5 89
Acks 4 33
Batchelder 1 8
Wa7ters 1 7

NOIS
14
6
4
4
40
97
137
24
11
0
0
64
81
41
5
102
13
89
4
2
6
60
Avg.
9.6
2.2
4.6
3.0
2.3
3.5
0.0
3.5
Avg.
3.5
2.5
2.3
0.5
-7.0
2.4
Yds.
53
137
0
0
137
Avg.
24.0
10.0
5.0
4.0

i
I
t
t
1

Frosh Football
The annual freshman foot-
ball scrimmage will be held to-
morrow at 3:30 at the Stadium.
The public is invited to watch
the freshmen play against the
varisty reserves in a regulation
game.

It was Huarte who got Notre
Dame its early points by connect-
ing with halfback Nick Eddy for
a 91-yard touchdown pass in the
first quarter. Joe Azzaro kicked a
field goal and Joe Farrell popped
over from the one for the other
Irish scores.
Pitt utilized a determined run-
ning attack to stay close to Notre
Dame, which in winning notched
its seventh straight.3
Alabama Wins
Another highly ranked crew, the
Crimson Tide of Alabama, had a
difficult time against Louisiana
State but finally used their
crushing defense to wrap up an-
other Southeastern Conference
championship.
With 'Bama behind 9-7 in the
second half a defender picked off
an LSU pass on the Tide 22. Quar-
SSkatin
Rink Card
The following is this week's
public skating schedule for the
Michigan Ice Rink.
Sunday, Nov. 8-3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 9-10 a.m. to noon.
Tuesday, Nov. 10-10 a.m. to noon.
Wednesday, Nov. 11-10 a.m. to noon;
8 p.m. to 10 p.m. (adults only).
Thursday, Nov. 12-10 a.m. to noon.
Friday, Nov. 13-8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 14-10:30 a.m. to 12:30
I p.m.

terback Steve Sloan passed Ala-
bama into Tiger territory until
David Ray kicked a 37-yard field
goal.
Another Alabama interception
by Hudson Harris salted away the
game. He took the ball on the
LSU 33 and raced down the side-
lines all the way.
Out west, Arkansas easily oblit-
erated Rice 21-0 to remain un-
beaten. Sustained power football
wore down Rice as the Razorbacks,
monopolized the contest.
Texas Lucky
Meanwhile arch - rival Texas
squeaked by inspired Baylor 20-14
on a desperation pass with 51 sec-
onds remaining in the game.
George Sauer leaped high in the
air to snare the aerial from Mar-
vin Kristynik to bail out the game.
Baylor had forged ahead 14-13 on
two last quarter touchdowns.
In other games Roger Staubach
gave it all he had, completing 25
passes, but Navy still lost to Mary-
land 27-22. Nebraska, in its usual
methodical fashion ground out a
14-7 win against a persistent
Kansas team. Tennessee upset
eight-ranked Georgia Tech 22-14,
thanks to a 69-yard interception
in the last five minutes. Syi acuse
used its crunching running game
to come from behind to beat Army.
Scores7
GRID PICKS GAMES
MICHIGAN 21, Illinois 6
Michigan State 21, Purdue 7
Penn State 27, Ohio State 0
Minnesota 14, Iowa 13
Northwestern 17, Wisconsin 13
Notre Dame 17, Pittsburgh 15
Alabama 17, LSU 9
Arkansas 21, Rice 0
Nebraska 14, Kansas 7
Maryland 27, Navy 22
' Texas 20, Baylor 14
Tennessee 22, Georgia Tech 14
Georgia 14, Florida 7
Princeton 16, Harvard 0
Air Force 24, UCLA 15
Syracuse 27,. Army 15
North Carolina 29, Clemson 0
Oregon State 24, Indiana 14
Washington State 21, Oregon 21
Washington 21, California 16
OTHER GAMES
Oklahoma 30, Iowa State 0
Missouri 16, Colorado 7
Florida State 13, Houston 13
Auburn 12, Mississippi State 3
Tulsa 19, Memphis State 7
Texas A&M 23, Southern Methodist 0
Oklahoma State 31, Wichita 7
Rutgers 31, Lafayette 6
Yale 21, Pennsylvania 9
Dartmouth 31, Columbia 14
Brown 31, Cornell 28
Virginia 14, William & Mary 13
Virginia Tech 28, No. Carolina St. 19
Colgate 14, Bucknell 6
Kentucky 22, Vanderbilt 21
Wayne State 12, Thiel 7
Southern California 15, Stanford 10

enough to give Michigan a chance
for the Big Ten championship.
OSU Falls
Ohio State, playing in a non-1
conference game, stayed true to
an Buckeye tradition of losing the
unimportant one by bowing to
Penn State, 27-0. The loss knocked
Ohio State from the ranks of the
unbeaten but meant nothing to
the Big Ten race.
In the game in Ann Arbor, there
was a little disagreement between'
the Elliott brothers over about just
what play in the game could be'
called the turning point. Bump
pointed to Illinois' missed extra
point following their 50-yard TD
pass play in the second quarter.
"It left them flat," he said.
Illinois' coach Pete Elliott felt
it was Michigan's 94-yard touch-
down drive in the third quarter
that signalled the end of the line
for Illinois.
"We matched them pretty well
until that spore," he said. "Our
first half play was as good as
we've produced at any time this
year."
Michigan ran only eight plays
from scrimmage in the first quar-
ter for 21 yards total offense. One
Cage Tickets
A very limited number of
season basketball tickets are
available to students, faculty
and staff. The tickets can be
purchased only through the
mail and cost $27.50 per ticket
for a reserved seat at each of
the 11 home games. Checks
should be made out to the
Michigan Ticket department
and mailed immediately to the
Athletic Administration Bldg.,
reason for the Wolverines trouble
was a rash of offside penalties
leading to kcey first downs for the
Illini and enabling them to con-
trol the ball.
Some Anxiety
"Our guys were a little anxious
at the start, and they (Illinois)
were going on a long count," El-
liott said after the game.
I.i

Statistics Close
All in all, the game statistics
made the contest look much closer
than it really was.
Michigan had only one more
first down than Illinois (15-14)
and 21 yards more in total rush-#
ing (255-234).
One more statistic that really'
misrepresented the game was the !
punting averages. Illinois' George
Donnelly averaged 41 yards on4
eight kicks while Michigan's Stan
Kemp averaged 38 on seven boots.
Kemp actually got by far the
better. of the exchanges. Enjoy-
ing his best day as a punter at
Michigan, he put the ball inside
the Illinois 15-yard line four times.
The best was one that rolled out
on the three. Elliott praised his
sophomore end, saying "The punt-
ing really helped us; Kemp hit,
some really good ones."
Michigan's quarterback B o b
Timberlake had a fairly good day
passing against the Illini, which
rank number one in pass defense
in the -Big Ten. He hit five of
eight passes for 53 yards. Illinois'
Custardo had 11 of 24 passes
caught for 137 yards. Both coaches
praised each other's quarterbacks
for their fine play.
Timberlake had a g o o d 1 y
amount of respect for the Illinois
defense. "They did a real good job
rushing, and they kept our ends
covered. I didn't have too much
time. In my opinionDick Butkus
is truly an All-American," he said.
P4~.S~
a
34 jj
1K

Ohio State
MICHIGAN
Purdue
Michigan State
Minnesota
Illinois
Northwestern
Indiana
Iowa
Wisconsin

W L
4 0
4 1
4 1
3 2
3 2

Pct.
1.000
.800
.800
.600

PF
92
112
101
99

PA
31
49
76
63
64
79
123
93

W
6
6

L
1
1

second half. Ohio State's initial
first down came with 5:11 left in
the third quarter, and it was on a
penalty. The Bucks had only five
first downs for the entire day,
their lowest output in memory.
The only thing Ohio State won
was the opening toss.

2
2
1
1
1

3
4
4
4
4

.600 68
.400 51
.333 61
.200 69

5 2 133 110
4 3 129 91
4 3 115 110
4 3 97 100
3 5 95 154
2 5 111 131
3 4 150 147
3 4 84 156

.200 88 105
.200 59 116

i

[I

it U a x
o a r
EXPANDS
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CONTRACTS
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NU Tops Wisconsin
EVANSTON - Northwestern
stuck to battering ground game,
highlighted by Ron Rector's 51-
yard touchdown run, and ended
a five-game losing streak with a
17-13 Big Ten football triumph,

I

Big Ten Standings

PF
136
157

PA
66
56

1

Pass defense war trhe ckey for
both teams. Quarterback Rich
Badar completed nine of 14 passes
in the first half and made Indiana
the first team to score twice in the
first half of any game against
Oregon State this season.
But in the second half, State's
defenders allowed him to complete
only six of 18 and they intercepted
twice.
Brothers, meanwhile, was com-
pleting seven in the second half,
winding up with 13 of 19 for the
day.
Indiana was unable to punch
any closer than the 24, so fullback
Tom Nowatzke tried a field goal
from the 30. It was wide.
That cheered the State players
and they marched 66 yards to the
Indiana 17 and from there Steve
Clark kicked a field goal that put
the Staters in front, 17-14.

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Illinois
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Donnelly

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Avg.
38.3
41.5

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