SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 211_ 11192 SIX HE MCHIAN DILYTHTT~flV ~J'PT~'1W~'I 111V1s AVOjJL-z , OV'r i 1.iDr..[L wv, lyb Graduation Losses Hit Defensive BackfieldI ' s: . '4 :: .: The Inside Corner with Dave Andrews /vl-- f > .1 By JIM BERGER Along with the new three-pla- toon system to be initiated this season will be a new look on pass defense for the Michigan gridders. Some of the biggest graduation losses occurred in the defensive secondary, where the Wolverines lost Ken Tureaud, John Stamos, Bennie McRae and Paul Raeder. New Specialists This season Head Coach Bump Elliott has installed a new set of pass defense specialists. Dave Glinka, Michigan quarterback who has seen little action on de- fense,dwill assume both pffenslve and defensive duties this year. Bill Dodd, a junior fullback, and Harvey Chapman, a junior half- back, are both leading defensive candidates, according to Elliott. The fourth position on the start- ing defensive secondary will be occupied by either veteran half- back Dave Raimey or sophomore Dick Rindfuss. "There's no doubt, at least at the beginning of the season, that we will lack experience in pass defense," said Elliott. "We have lost quite a few veteran defensive backs." Concerning Glinka in the start- ing defensive backfield, Elliott said, "We always knew that Glinka was a competent defensive back but we figured it was useless to use him when we had experienced corner men like Stamos and Tur- eaud. MANAGERS? Freshmen and sophomores interested in becoming student managers for Michigan's foot- ball team are asked to contact head manager Tony Klain any afternoon after 3:30 at Ferry Field or to call him . at NO 3-9830. Raimey is the only real veteran in the defensive lineup. The speed- ster from Dayton shared the start- ing role as deep man with McRae for the past two seasons. McRae is now in the Chicago Bear defen- sive backfield. Adding some experience will be both Ed Hood and Jack Strobel. Both were in Michigan's second team defensive secondary last season. No Basic Changes As far as the actual structure of the Michigan pass defense, Elliott plans no basic changes. "We will use two types of pass defense again - the box type defense and the three-deep type." The box type pass defense con- sists of two corner men and two safety men while the three-deep system, sometimes known as the umbrella defense, has three men deep while in the box type there were two. Both the box and the three-deep systems are zone de- fenses and the defensive back is assigned to a particular area. When asked if the hard rushing line is the BEST pass defense, El- liott replied, "It sure helps." . Neither Chapman seen much action in; backfield. Chapman year at halfback, times for 97 yds. and; or Dodd has the defensive lettered last carrying 18 a touchdown. Dodd failed to earn a letter last season. Rindfuss, the lone sophomore of this group, has displayed offen- sive speed in pre-season scrim- mages. Rindfuss, of Niles, Ohio, stands 6'1" and weighs 188. Try on the Fabulous Comfort of SANSABEL SLACKS yours Exclusively from JAYMAR See for yourself how the ingeni- ous waistband idea imported from France does away with belts, buckles and bulges. The re- markable stretch webbing gives two different, ways (one way on the inside, another on the out- side) to give you unprecedented comfort and fit. We have a tre- mendous selection of fabrics, patterns, colors, so try on a pair of Sansabelt* Slacks today. SANSABErL SLACKS Licensed by Y.Le Cottler&A.G.Trentesau of France. Patent No.2,757,861 0% Ctesan luxury acrylic fiber, $096 Goo-! Stevens fabric.s TICE'S Men's, Sho'p 1107 So. University Across from Ann Arbor Bank in Campus Village Store Hburs-9:0 to 5:30 Mon. and Fri. 'till 8:30 Read and Use Daily Classifieds NEW ROLE-Dave Glinka, Michigan's regular offensive quarter- back for two years, now is slated to start on defense too. The other tops men in the secondary will be Harvey Chapman, Bill Dodd and either Dave Raimey or Dick Rindfuss. BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Everybody Scores In 05('s Practice NEW SHIPMENTS of USED TEXTBOOKS arriving. daily! NEW BOOKS IF YOU PREFER For that hard-to-find textbook try MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE By The Associated Press COLUMBUS - Hard-running quarterback John Mummey turned a quarterback sneak into an 80- yd. touchdown run yesterday as Ohio State's top offensive football unit scrimmaged against the No. One defenders. Mummey engineered four touch- SHE'LL WANT YOU IN . . TODD'S Long, Lean and Slim... "ZI PPS~©o They're tong, lean and slim and fit like a second skin, In S fact, "Zipps" are tapered so slim we had to put a zipper at the bottom ... plus a 4 inch vent. Unusual horizontal front pockets. Colors of block, olive, dust.$10 Toda'< '' 1209 S. Univ. Ann Arbor NO 5-9426 Triumph Over Tradition Open 'til 8:30 every Monday down drives, scoring once again himself on a nine-yd. run. Full- back Dave Francis set up one score with a 25-yd. gallop and went for a touclidown on a 71-yd. run that saw him bouncing off tacklers. Next, Coach Woody Hayes let the defensive unit try its hand on the attack against the offen- sive reserves. Sophomore quarter- back Arnie Chonko led the way to scores in three of four tries. EAST LANSING - Michigan State's football forces were given a small taste of scrimmage at mid-week The first two units had live hit- ting both on the offense and de- fense against a scouting team armed with Stanford plays. MINNEAPOLIS-Three top ends were on the sick list again yester- day as the Minnesota Gophers held a controlled scrimmage for an hour. Probable starters John Campbell and Bob Prawdzik continued side- lined, Campbell with a virus and Prawdzik with a knee injury. Also missing from the end corps was Ray Zitzloff, who has a bad ankle. IOWA CITY - Iowa's football team went through a routine prac- tice yesterday, attempting to Pol- ish the offense and improve the timing for the season opener here against Oregon State Sept. 29. CHAMPAIGN-Coach Pete El- liott had his reserves put on pass- ing pressure against the first two teams as Illinois stepped up prac- tice for the Sept. 29 football open- er against Washington. the Crucial Step MUCH WILL be made this fall of the great college football teams scattered about this fine land of ours. The rumblings which started Saturday won't cease until the final check is picked up after the last senior bowl game some time into next baseball season. The Associated Press and United Press International have their weekly prestige polls. Every magazine in the land publishes forecasts. And every coach in the country who's not overloaded with all-Americans contends that this is a "rebuilding" year - just to keep the alumni happy and to save his job for another season. It's a curious addition to football jargon, this "rebuilding" year. Everything is fine and dandy until someone uses rotten cement, until a Colorado or an Auburn comes along. Even then, despite rabid head shaking and a bit of finger slapping, the belief is that the college game is clean. But I wonder ... I wonder if it really is as clean as all that? You hear some shady stories. To mass indict the whole sport like that, however, would be a crime itself. Perhaps there should be distinctions made. But then again, how about the rotten apple spoiling the barrel? How many does it take? Different Today ... THE WORD is that football teams are made in the spring. The coach that said that, however, referred to the gridiron. Today it means recruitment, rebuilding, replacing, and making a good or a bad team into a better one. I don't believe anyone could tell you how the whole cycle got started. The important thing is that it did. If you could go through the files of any athletic department in the country you could probably find the name of any high school kid who ever scored a touchdown, blocked a kick or weighs over 200 lbs. The colleges scout the preps like the pros scout the colleges. And the sad thing about it is, either you're in it or you're out-regardless of whether or not you play by the rules. All of this merely brings us to the crux of the problem-the rules or lack of them as the case may be. Some conferences have attempted to stiffen the rules. The Big Ten is one. The controversial "need" factor was one such attempt. Last year's enactment of "predictable" scholarship mini- mums is another such experiment. Unfortunately the "need factor" in athletic scholarship distri- bution didn't work, and despite some sincere efforts on the part of a few men it was thrown out. Why? Simply. because other schools, non-Big Ten members without the "need factor" limitation on schol- arships, were pirating Big Ten football material. Powerful Police... WHAT'S THE answer? It seems to me that the solution is staring us right in the face - a powerful and independent NCAA estab- lished by common consent with the means to enforce heavy penalties on violators. So far the majority of the athletic directors and faculty representatives who act as delegates to NCAA meetings and conven- tions have been reluctant to delegate enough authority to allow the NCAA to do much. Independence, I guess, is an American virtue. We'll police ourselves is the argument. We don't want a dictator to run our athletic programs. But let's face it. The self-policing policy isn't working very well. Standards are different from one Conference to the next, some strict, some lenient. The same is true of individual schools. Sure, the NCAA traps a violator every so often, but only after someone has filed a complaint. And complaints are bad for relations. The situation is critical, if the colleges want to retain some semblance of amateurism in their sports. The answer has to be with the NCAA, or for that matter a separate policing organiza- tion if it proved bureaucratically more feasible. To be effective such an organization would have to possess the KO punch in its powers - the schedule cancellation. This hits where it hurts, in the wallet. Where would the Michigan athletic department be, for example, without football revenue? Others are in the same boat. Football runs the program. That's the only way left to clean up today's mess, a national standard. Maybe someday someone will realize it. The sooner it hap- pens, the better off everyone will be. 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