SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAnr.qvlmv THE MICHIGAN DAILY £ £U~.XEJ ~ V ~ ravz z3hvIUn r[ he ham s iON of ti 0 est... Wolverine Defense Stifles OSU; Volk Snares Two Enemy Aerials Timberlake Leads 'M' to Title; First Championship in15 Years (Continued from Page 1) Although it snowed here yester- day, it had no impact on the game such as the famous 1950 "Snow Bowl" game when Michigan last qualified for the Rose Bowl. How- ever, the factors of wind and cold did have an effect on the game. The temperature was 20 degrees. Elliott commented that "The wind was certainly a factor in the game. It was hard to throw against it." Wolverine quarter- back Bob Timberlake completed .only three of nine passes, and the Ohio State percentage was seven completions in 21 attempts. South Wind The wind was blowing out of the south. Ohio State won the toss at the start of the game and decided to defend the south goal so they would have the wind at their backs. Timberlake kicked a field goal 27 yards despite the wind being against him in the fourth quarter. In the third per- iod, Timberlake had attempted a 32-yard field goal with the wind' but it was wide to the left. * * * Wolverine punter Stan Kemp kicked his team out of trouble! several times with a 40-yard average in nine kicks. Three of these kicks went 50 yards. One of these 50-yarders was fumbled by Buckeye halfback Bo Rein on the Ohio State 20-yard line and recovered by John Henderson. Michigan scored its only touch- down of the game two plays later. Kemp, however, narrowly avoid- ed tragedy several times as some of his kicks were almost blocked. Elliott attributed this to a "very hard Ohio State rush." Hayes said that the weather conditions being what they were, his players were purposely rushing Kemp hard in case of a faulty snap which would give them a good chance to block the punt. Center Brian Patchen didn't hike the ball on any of the punts because of a bad shoulder. Instead, linebacker Tom Cecchini took care of the centering job in punting situations. Elliott praised the defensive backfield for the key plays that were made. Dick Rindfuss, Rick Sygar and Rick Volk handled the job without substitution until the final minutes of the game when victory was assured. Rindfuss had a cast for his sprained leg taken off last Sunday after missing the Iowa game. He had practiced with the team since Tuesday. Elliott said that before the game, "we didn't know how much Dick could play, but we knew he could play some." Volk intercepted two passes to halt threatening Ohio State drives in the fourth quarter. Elliott said that the first interception at the Michigan eight-yard line early in the fourth quarter was a key play. Volk Grabs Later Volk picked off another pass at the Wolverine 28-yard line to stop a second OSU drive. Volk had another opportunity to intercept a pass in the closing minutes of the game. He knocked down the pass on a fourth-down situation so the Wolverines could take over at the Buckeye 43-yard line instead of in Michigan ter- ritory. * * * Elliott, looking back over the season, said that after the Purdue defeat, "the team just tried to climb a ladder. They had to battle up from the bottom. We felt we could give anyone a fight in a ball game, We felt we could still win the championship and every week this became a little more realistic." Michigan had its own version of Woody Hayes in offensive line coach Tony Mason. In the fourth quarter, Mason took off his jacket and from a distance was a replica of Hayes in his baseball cap and short-sleeved white shirt. Hayes was in his short-sleeved shirt all through the game despite the low temperatures. (Continued from Page 1) once again was unable to ad- vance. On a fourth-and-ten play, the Buckeyes attempted a fake field goal with Arnie Chonko pass- ing successfully to halfback Tom Barrington. The play went for only eight yards and Michigan took possession. Anthony led the Michigan of- fense with 63 yards in 19 car- ries. Hayes admitted after the game, "One of the big things that hurt us was Anthony's rushing late in the game--he consistently pounded through the center of our line." Shot at Record Timberlake's total offense for the day was 73 yards, which gives him a season total of 1,381. This left the Wolverine senior only 14 yards shy of tying Bob Chap- puis' all-time season offense rec- ord set in 1947. However, Chap- puis' mark included the 1948 Rose, Bowl game. Thus Timberlake is almost certain of setting a new standard. Fullback Willard Sander led the Buckeye ground attack with 65 yards in 14 attempts. Leading pass receiver for Ohio State was Rein with four recep- tions for 69 yards, but Volk's out- standing performance and the charging of the Michigan de- fensive line stymied quarterback Don Unverferth's aerials. Unverferth completed six of 20, pass attempts. Two receptions were each good for 28 yards to Rein, but the Buckeyes could not cap-! italize. On Ohio State's final se- ries, the Michigan defenders knocked down four straight pass- es by Unverferth. Michigan took over on the Buckeye 43 and ran out the clock. Both Incomplete Unverferth intended two "bombs" for Rein, but both were Incom- plete. Hayes commented bitterly, "If he had caught one of these, it would have been a different game." In the second period Unverferth passed towards the Michigan goal line, but the ball was just out of the reach of Rein's outstretched hands. Later in the final quarter another pass to Rein was batted down. Hayes caustically noted "On that second long pass one of our ends missed his blocking assign- ment of the defensive safety." Key Punts Michigan's punter Kemp played an important role as two of his three 50-yard punts came in the fourth period. They went dead on the Ohio State 10 and 25 yard line, respectively. Elliott defeated Hayes in this big one after four straight losses to' succeed his brother Pete of Illinois as conference champion and Rose Bowl representative, the first time a brother act has put the pair back to back. I I . Roses! MICHIGAN Kickoffs, returned by Yards kicks returned Punts Kickoffs Fumbles, Number Ball lost by Penalties, Number Yards Penalized 1 48 37 11 3 2 36 osU 3 78 21 57 6 2 3 25 Timberlake Unverferth Chonko PASSING Michigan Att. Comp. Int. Yds. 9 3 0 45 Ohio State Att. Comp. Int. Yds. 20 6 2 69 1 1r 0 8 :.5.."42' ".' x".2^ +' .... 1., C f S E C ;cS,:r{;: ,".:. . . "" : Sire? 3y'; ' 3 ::i:>r:< k=: -Daily-Jim Lines Detwiler Scores ... McGregor Bernard-Altman SWEATERS $11.95 and up The most complete selection of fine quality, perfectly styled sweaters you can imagine. (Seeing is believing!) & IB U'SIHI RUSHING Michigan Tries 15 10 PASS RECEIVING Michigan No. Yds. Timberlake Detwiler Ward Anthony Totals Unverferth Barrington Rein Sander Dreffer Hudson Totals 1 19 45 I Net Avg. 28 1.8 25 2.5 -1 -1.0 63 3.3 115 2.6 Ohio State Tries Net. Avg. 10 14 1.4 7 7 1.0 3 2 0.6 14 65 4.5 1 3 3.0 3 12 4.0 38 103 2.7 Detwiler Farabee Henderson Barrington Rein Stock Kemp Dreffer 1 1 1 Ohio State No. 2 4 1 PUNTING Michigan No. 9 Ohio State No. 6 18 14 13 Yds. 9 69 -1 Yds. 358 Yds. 181 Avg. 18.0 14.0 13.0 Avg. 4.5 17.2 -1.0 Avg. 39.7 Avg. 30.1 i 1. You can congratulate me. Congratulations. 8. You thought that and I thought that. But it turns out Jane didn't think it. You never can tell what girls think. --- (C:9 5. Here I am, unseasoned in the ways of the world, untried in the fields of commerce, second string on the soccer team - and already faced with grave respnsibilities 2. I'm getting married during Christmas. I thought you were a confirmed bachelor. 4. It used to be they would give you a hint when they had plans. Not any more. Now it's cool, cool, cool. 6. 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