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October 21, 1962 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-10-21

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

SUNDAY, ocTOSE , ssz

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE N[NE

SuNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE NINE

: DiGravio Passing Spurs Boilermakers

(Continued from Page 1)
igan's safety man Tom Prichard
to catch the perfect aerial on the
Wolverine 20 and coast ini.
Theconversion attempt failed,
but once again Michigan was be-
hind before it had even gained a
first down on offense.
Brumm Recovers
After an exchange of punts,
Harvey Chapman fumbled and
Purdue co-captain Don Brumm re-
covered on the Michigan 34. On
the first play, DiGravio found
Charley King open in the right
flat and King reversed his field,
received a couple of good blocks,
and raced into the left corner of
the end zone untouched.
(Yawn)

PURL
First Downs
By Rushing
By Passing
By Penalties
Rushing Yardage (Net)
Yards Lost, Rushing
Rushing Attempts
Passing..Yardage
Passes Attempted
Passes Completed
Passes Had Intercepted
Total Plays (Rushes and
Passes)
Total Net Yards Gained'
from Scrimmage
Punts
Punting Average
Punts Blocked
Kickoffs
Kickoff Average
Punt Returns
Yards, Punts Returned
Kickoff Returns
Yards, Kickoffs Returned
Interception Returns
Yards, Int. Returned
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalties
RUSHING
Purdue

DUE
I8
10
7
1
200
8
43
212
21
11
1

MICH.
5
3
0,
43
87
4'T
54
13
4
1

64 60

After three plays Michigan was
forced to put again and this time
Purdue marched downfield from
its own 38 to the Michigan six,
where Skip Ohl kicked a field goal .
That gave the Boilermakers a 16-
0 lead after only one quarter of
play and Michigan had run only 14
plays from scrimmage including
three punts..
Losses Hurt
At this point Michigan tried to
open its attack,but every brief
gain was more than offset by loss-
es attempting to pass. This was
borne out right away as first Bob
Timberlake lost four yds. attempt-
ing to pass and another hurried
toss went incomplete.
Purdue struc kimmediately fol-
lowing a short 20-yd. punt by Joe
O'Donnell. It was a carbon copy
of the Boilermakers' second touch-
down except it was Tom Bloom
who took DiGravio's pass in the
right flat and raced to the left
corner of the end zone. The play
covered 58 yds.
Best Drive
Michigan then got off its, best
drive of the game, only to stall on
the Purdue 22. The only other time
'that the Wolverines got into Pur-
due territory was for one play in
the fourth quarter when they got
to the 48.
If the first half was frustrating
for Michigan, the second half was
a nightmare. Purdue Coach Jack
Mollenkopf eventually put all of
those dressed into the game and
the'feeling was that he could have
done it in the first quarter.
The Wolverines netted all of
two yds. in the second half. Quar-
terbacks Timberlake and Frosty
Evashevski lost 87-yds. attempting
to pass, and never really had
enough time to get off a good
pass.
Ups Lead
Purdue upped- its lead to 30-C
six minutes into the third quarter
when DiGravio climaxeda 4-yd.
drive with a one-yd. quarterbacl
sneak.
Inkthe fourth quarter anothei
Purdue drive was stopped on the
one-yd. line when Tom Keating
recovered Roy Walker's fumble ir
the end zone for a touchback. Un-
daunted, the Boilermakers march-
ed right back in eight plays fror
the Michigan 35 for the after-
noon's final seven points. Quar-
terback Gary Hogan hit Tom Bor-
is for the final 10 yds.

The loss gives Michigan an 0-2
record in the Big Ten and a 1-3
mark overall. Even winning the
toss of the coin for the first time
in 14 games didn't help. The last
time Michigan won the pre-game
ceremony it beat Indiana.
Threw More
"They threw a little more than
I thought they would," said Coach
Bump Elliott after the game. "But
we should have been ready for it.
"The man in motion was new to
us. They've used the motion to-
ward the ball before, but this time
it went away from the ball," Elliott
added. "Our pass protection was
not good, but it was the backs'
fault as much as the linemen."
"We hurt ourselves early with
our own mistakes, but they just
overpowered us defensively."
Amen.

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I, II

INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL
MEETING

THE SAFE WAY to stay alert
without harmful stimulants

-Daily-Bruce Taylor
CHALK UP ONE MORE - Purdue quarterback Ron DiGravio (17) here shows he can also beat
Michigan on the ground as well as through the air as he crosses the goal line for the fourth Boiler-
maker score. On hand to watch the festivities are Tom Pritchard (21), Harvey Chapman (46), and.
John M ink (E2).
OUNCE IS ENUGH:

412
2
38
0
8
47.5

31
a
a
1
2
2
1
5

97
S
31
0
4
0
2
13
114
1
19
3
3
3

Wednesday
4:15

October 24
Union,

Mollenkopf's

Plan Perfect

By DAVE ANDREWS t
Associate Sports Editor
Special To The Daily
LAFAETTFE-"We planned iti
that way."
That's what smiling Jack Mol-J
lenkopf said of his Purdue football1
team that demolished Michigan
y e s t e r d a y. The Boilermakers
scored on their first play from
scrimmage. And that was the ball
game - just as Mollenkopf had
planned.
The maneuver was very simple.-
Halfback Tom' Fugate went in
motion, broke down the left side-
lines and took a 54-yd. pass from
quarterback Ron DiGravio.
"We planned that play Thurs-
day night after practice" thet
smiling coach announced. "We
worked on it in secret in thef
stadium.
"It was kind of funny," Mollen-]
kopf continued. "All that care to
be alone in the stadium and a
Michigan alumnus watched the
whole thing.t
"I hadn't seen the guy before
and I wondered about him," Mol-]
lenkopf said. "It turned out thatc
he was setting up telegraph lines,1
but after seeing him we weren't
sure whether to use the play or
not."
Much to Michigan's distress the;
decision was "Go."
"If the first one hadn't worked.
we were going to change halfbacks
and run it again. We were going
to throw three in a row."
To here him tell the story was
magical. The Boilermakers had no
doubts-even down to the toss of
the coin.
"We wanted the wind," Mollen-
kopf said. "If we would have won
the toss we would have elected the
goal and depended on the defense
to stop Michigan. Our defense has
been pretty steady all year."
How Purdue ever lost to Miami
is anybody's question.
"The play was well executed,"
said Michigan's dejected Bump
Elliott. "We didn't expect it, but
we should have been prepared for
it.
"A play like that unnerves you,"
Elliott continued. "It's like an
early fumble or pass interception."
The way it turned out, however,
that play was only the beginning.
Besides the opening score. Di-
Gravio passed for two more scores
and sneaked over for another. The
"other" Boilermaker quarterback,

Gary Hogan, added a fourth score
through the air.,
How Purdue ever lost to Miami
is anybody's question.
C rndiens,
Celts W in
MONTREAL (P)-The Montreal
Canadiens put on a third-period
display of power Saturday night
and crushed the Boston Bruins 7-3
in a National Hockey League
game.
Montreal's Henr Richard con-
tinued his hot scoring pace, pick-
ing up two goals and an assist.
Gilles Tremblay also scored two
for Montreal, and Billy Hicke,
Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion
and Phil Goyette added singles.
* * *
BOSTON -Big Bill Russell got
the Boston Celtics off to a fast
start last night and the National
Basketball Association champions
crushed the New York Knicks. 149
to 116 before a record opening
game crowd of 10,705 in Boston
Garden.
Then Sam Jones went on a
scoring rampage and the cham-
pions opened the bulge to 103-67
by the halfway mark of the third'
period. Jones came out of the
game at that point but still paced
Boston's scorers with 25 points,
hitting on 12 of 13 shots.
* * *
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (=) - T h e
Syracuse Nationals came from be-
hind in the final period and beat
the Los Angeles Lakers 108-102
in tl'e Nat's opening game of the
National Basketball Association
season.
* * *
CHICAGO (P) - The Chicago
Zephyrs blew an 18-point lead in
the third quarter but managed
to outlast the Cincinnati Royals
113-109 in the Zephyrs' home
debut.
* * *
TORONTO (A})-Frank Mahov-
lich, the Toronto Maple Leaf left
winger Chicago tried vainly to buy
for a million dollars, scored the
tie-breaker with less than four
minutes remaining last night as
Toronto took a 3-1 National.
Hockey League victory over the
Black. Hawks.

"We threw the ball and we
caught it this week," said Mollen-
kopf. "Last week we dropped nine
passes, four of them touchdowns.
"No I don't think it weas the
Michigan defense. We :imply out-
ran them and our passes were hit-
ting much better. You know,"
Mollenkopf reflected, ".they're not
a fast football teem."
That if anything seemed to be
an understatement.
Not only were the Purdue backs
fast, but the Boilermaker end
exploded in on the Wolverine
quarterbacks so fast they didn't
have time to turn around.
Bob Timberlake, who drew the
starting assignment for the first
time, wasp thrown for 61 yds. in
losses. Frosty Evanshevski dropped
23-never even getting a pass .off.
Michigan's other quarterback,
senior Dave Glinka, was helped
from the field in the second period
with a knee injury. Reports have
it he's lost for the season.
Evashevski was also hurt when
he was blasted from behind on a
rollout pass option in the fourth
quarter. He's all right.
The rest of the Wolverines, with
the exception of tackle Joe O'Don-
nell, who is still bothered with an
ankle sprain, and center Bill Muir,
who was shaken up early in the
game, survived with little damage
except to their pride.
On the brighter side, Mollen-
kopf thinks Michigan will win an-
other game. He neglected to men-
tion which one. Nobody else did
either.

DiGravio
Fugate
King
Bloom
Weil
Donaldson
Boris
Walker
Hogan
Yakubowski
Marks
Totals
Timberlake
Strobel
Raimey
Sparkman.
Chapman
Prichard
Evashevski
Anthony
Dodd
Rindfuss
Totals
DiGravio
Hogan
Weil
Brush
Totals:

Att. Gain Loss Yds.
2 1 3 -2
7 37 2 35
7 39 1 48
4 15 0 15
2 2 0 2
5 51 2 49
4 12 0 12
6 26 0 26
1 3 0 3
3 5 0 5
2 7 0 7
33 208 8 200
Michigan
Att. Gain Loss Net.

17
2
8
2
5
2
6
2
1
2
47
PASSING
Purdue
Att.+
8
10
1
2
21

25
6
34
5
12
2
7
4
9
6
130

6I
2
1
0
23
0
0
4
87

-16
6
34
3-
11
2
-16
4
9
6
43

3rd Floor
Conference Roorn
REFRESHMENTS
Senior Officers and Committee Chairmen
will be introduced.
SPEAKER: JOHN FELDKAMP
Fraternity Advisor
INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL

I

Big Ten Standings

Comp.Int. Yds.
4 0 153
0 0 0
1 -0 9
11 1 212

Northwestern
Wisconsin
Michigan State
Pu rdue
Ohio State
Minnesota
Iowa
Indiana
MICHIGAN
Illinois

3
2
1
1
1
1
0
0
0

L Pct. PF PA
0 1.000 97 36
0 1.000 47 6
o 1.000 28 0
1 .500 6i5 33
1 .500 39 34
1 .500 28 52
2 .000 16 44
2 .000 05 s
3 .000 15 113

Timberla
Prichard
Totals

Fugate
King
Bloom
Weill
Longmir
Schulz
Boris
Kubecka
Totals
Chapma
Brown
Laskey
Totals

Michigan
Att. Comp. Int. Yds..
ake 12 4 1 54,
S1 0 0 0
13 4 1 54
PASS RECEIVING
Purdue
Cacthes Yds.
1 54
2 43
3 75
1 s
e I 7
1 S
1 10
a 1 9
Michigan
Cacthes Yds,
n 1 32
2 15
1 7
s4 54

_

L .4

Table Tennis
Headquarters
Tables - Nets - Balls - Brackets
Paddles of all styles
Walk a few blocks and save at
ST EIN & GOETZ Sporting Goods
"Your friendly dealers"
315 So. Main St.-Downtown

ROMNEY

or SWAINSON?

YOU CHOOSE!
VOTE in the

I

It's now a fact: every Ford-built car in '63 has self-adjusting brakes

F/

"Give us a brake," Ford Motor Company engineers were told, "that
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is needed-and make it work for the entire life of the lining."
Tough assignment-but not insurmountable. Today, not only does
every Ford-built car boast self-adjusting brakes, but the design is so
excellent that adjustments can be made more precisely than by hand.

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