THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEI~ .. ... ............... Pass Defense Proved Deficient AT MIDSEASON: 1962 All-American Team Taking Shape I By STAN KUKLA Six touchdown2 passes out of 27 completed, a 22 per cent aver- age, 27 completions out of 60 passes, a 45 per cent average, an average gain of 12.4 yds. per pass completion-pretty good record? It's the record of the Nebraska, Army, Michigan State, and Purdue passing attacks against the Maize1 and Blue. At first glance this record does not appear too promising. But let's add the record of pass intercep- tionis to that. The Wolverine deep backs have intercepted seven of the 60 passes, for a 11 per cent average, which bespeaks of some ability, albeit limited. In 1961, Michigan's nine op-' ponentsa completed 80 passes out of 161 attempts for a 49.6 com- pletion average. The 1961 team in- HOMECOMING: incentive ToBlue By JERRY DILLER ' Homecoming has again come to the University of Michigan cam- pus, but will it have any appre- ciable effect upon the as-of-date faltering gridders? The Wolverines are still winless and scoreless after two conference games with iichigan State, 28-0, and Purdue, 37-0. This year's homecoming oppon- ent, Rosebowl champion Minne- . sota, has compiled a 1-1 Big Ten record, the loss coming at the bands of undefeated Northwestern. This 53rd meeting between Michigan and Minnesota will see the Yellow and Blue as real un- derdogs owning to their previous performances and loss of veteran quarterback Dave Glinka, whose gridiorn career was ended last Saturday by a knee injury. Two for Four In the past four homecoming contests the Wolverines have split but held their own against two Big Ten champions. Last year the, team rebounded from a 28-0 shutout by Michigan State the previous week to trip the Purdue Boilermakers 16-14 on the passing of Glinka. 1960 saw the Wolverines drop a 10-0 loss to another powerful Gopher team which was destined to the Big Ten title for that year. In the previous season the team bowed at Homecoming time to an- other Rosebowl participant-to-be, Wisconsin, 19-10. This score was quite close considering that the Badgers intercepted six Wolverine aerial efforts. In 1958 Bump Elliott's men kept the Little Brown Jug at Michigan by squeezing past the Gophers 20-19. tercepted seven passes and gave up six touchdowns through the air waves. The opponents only gained 6.8 yds. per completion. This says' something for the Wolverine's pass defense this year, or maybe it just throws a darker light on last year's defensive team. Already this year, the defensive backs have intercepted in four games as many passes as last year's team did in nine games. However ... Let's look at the other side of the picture. In four games so far, the Wolverines have given up six touchdowns on passes (last year it took the opponents nine games to get that many), the opponents have gained 12.4 yds. per pass vs. last year's average of 6.8 (almost half)'. This all points up to what coach Bump Elliott says, "It's the long gainers that get the notice." How right you are, Bump. Case in point: Purdue's 54-yd. touchdown pass on the first play of the game, a 34-yd. touchdown pass on the first play the next time Purdue got the ball, and a 58-yd. touchdown pass in the sec- ond quarter. It's hard not to notice these glaring errors. What's wrong? The type of defense employed by the Wolverines is a zone cover- age, with the men instructed to play the ball whenever possible. The backs don't seem to under- stand this. As has been aptly put by a fan, the Michigan backs look like they are playing ring-around-the-rosie. They ring the player, wait until he catches the pass, and then try to tackle him. This is not the way a pass de- fense works. This week, after the debacles at East Lansing and Lafayette, Ind. which destroyed Michigan's image as a football power, Elliott has re- turned to teaching his charges the fundamentals of pass defense. He is doing this behind locked gates -perhaps to save his boys some embarrassment? Elliott cites Bob Timberlake, Dennis Jones, and Tom Prichard, as his mainstays on defense. A look at these players will show why the Wolverine defense hasn't been playing up to Big Ten stan- dards. Timberlake is a sophomore, Jones is a sophomore, Prichard is a junior, who played only 49 min- utes last season. Ouch Inexperience hurts-the more inexperience, the more it hurts. The defense has been able to stop the short passes, but its those long gainers that kill the squad. The backs have yet to learn how to make the right turns, diagnose the pass pattern, and cover their zone adequately enough to be rated as good, or even fair, pass defend- ers. That comes with time. Michigan doesn't have much time left. R TCM WEINBERG T- Zephyrs, Hawks Victorious in NBA ly 1 ~ YL A~}~, As the 1962 football season passes its halfway mark, many stars are mentioned for All-Amer- ican honors. Some of these are experts' pre-season picks for top laurels, while others have been shocks to many of the coaches, as well as to the so-called experts. The most highly-touted All- American candidates are in the backfield. Quarterbacks in parti- cular have a large number of stars: George Mira, Sonny Gibbs, Tom Myers, Dave Hoppman, Terry Baker and Billy Lothridge. Myers, Northwestern's unbeliev- able passing sensation, leads the cluster of Big Ten stars mentioned on the exclusive list. A 19-year-old from Troy, Ohio, he is third in passing nationally, having passed 90 times and completed 61 for a .677 percentage. His outstanding performance, particularly in the Ohio State game last week, has led the Wildcats to the Big Ten lead and national ranking. Down South, Miami's Mira, TCU's colorful 6'7", 230 pound giant Gibbs, and Georgia Tech's junior marvel, Lothridge, are the most highly-touted quarterbacks. Dave Hoppman, Iowa State's leader ranks fifth in the nation in scoring and Terry Baker of Oregon State is regarded as the top all-around quarterback in the Far West. Other backs across the country, rank as top choices. In the South, halfback Jerry Stovall of LSU rates as one of the greatest run- ning threats in the nation. Michi- gan State's rugged fullback George Saimes has lived up to his All- American ranking with an out- standing year. Texas' tough Ray Poage, Mich- igan State's Sherman Lewis, South Carolina's Billy Grambell, and powerful Bill "Thunder" Thornton of Nebraska are a few of the other backs mentioned with the nation's best. Wisconsin's surprising Badgers boast some of the nation's top linemen in the persons of senior end Pat Richter, 210 pound center Ken Bowman, and 245 pound tackle Roger Pillath. Richter, also a basketball and baseball great, has been given much credit for the Badgers' fantastic success. At Northwestern, tough guard Jack Cvercko, a 230 pound senior is rated "a definite All-American two-way performer" by his coach, Ara Parsegian. Elsewhere around the Big Ten, center Dave Behrman of Michigan State, tackle Don Brumm of Pur- due, tackle Bobby Bell of. Minne- sota reign as rulers in tne line. Bell, a 6'4", 218 pound converted high school quarterback from Shelby, N.C., will present problems to Michigan's Wolverines this Sat- urday. Last year Bell made most All-American teams and iw is prob- able he will duplicate the feat this season. Others prominently mentioned are ends Hugh .Campbell of Wash- ington State, Chuck Logan of Northwestern, Hal Bedsole of Southern Cal, Dave Robinson of Penn State and Cloyd Webb from Iowa. ''ackles high on the roll are Herschel Turner of Kentucky. Tom Kern, Army, and Villanova's Al Atkinson. Glittering guards in- clude: Harrison Rosdahl, Penn State; Navy's Al Krekich; Wash- ington State's Jim Paton; and Bill Delbiaggio of Oregon. The center sensations are SMU's John Hughes, Southern Cal's Ar- mando Sanchez, and Doug McKin- non of Dartmouth. RABI DEAU-HARRIS STORE-WI DE -4 CHICAGO (P) - Center W a 1 t Bellamy sparked a fourth quarter surge that carried the Chicago Zephyrs to a 118-107 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers last night in the National Basketball Associ- ation. It was the fourth loss in five starts for the Lakers, last season's NBA runners-up. Chicago squared its mark at 2-2. Bellamy, who.topped the scoring with 42 points, contributed 16 in the last.12 minutes in pulling the Zephyrs out of danger. Chicago, leading 90-75 early in the fourth quarter, had its ad- vantage whittled to 95-90 as rookie Leroy Ellis and Dick Barnett col- lected six baskets between them in less than two minutes, putting the Lakers into range. Then Bellamy rattled in three dunk shots and a lay-up * * * ST. LOUIS (A') - Guards Len Wilkens a n d J o h n Barnhill brought the St. Louis Hawks to life in the second half and paced them to a 121-114 decision over the Cincinnati Royals last night. Oscar Robertson, high scorer for the game with 31 points, tried to bring the Royals back into con- tention with some late baskets, but the closest Cincinnati could get was seven points. Barnhill's long set shot iced the game for the Hawks, giving them a 120-111 bulge with 90 seconds left. SA I! SHOP at FO LLETT'S FOR STUDENT SUPPLIES COEDS the 1962 flattering, NEW HAIR-DOS are in our window - No appointments needed " 9 Hairstylists The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre $55,000 Overstocked REDUCTION MORE BIG SAVINGS '' D11' C1 r I SUITS $45 VALUES.... NOW $35.99 $55VALUES.. . . NOW $43.99 $65 VALUES ... NOW $52.99 Do you feel down-trodden, what with all -those bluebooks this week and that 1-3 record for the football team this year. Is that what's troubling you, bunky? Would you like to get away from it all? (That won't work. It isn't loaded.) Just pilfer your roomate's stylus and draw little Cheerios, fol- lowing the clue.. I' l shove you off. But you must fall by yourself. Drop over (to) the Daily sometime and enter. Clue 1: "Sing along with Minni." Clue 2: "All roads lead to Columbus." Clue 3: "Home, home on the range-Moooo!" THIS WEEK'S GAMES F-'M T F' TOPCOATS Would you Like to Know $38.75 VALUES . . NOW $32.99 $50.00 VALUES . . NOW $39.99 $60.00 VALUES .. NOW $48.99 George Romney's Views S PORTCOATS 1. Minnesota at MICH. (score) 2. Wisconsin at Ohio, State 3. Notre Dame at Northwestern 4. Purdue at Iowa 5. Michigan State at Indiana 6. Southern California at Illinois, 7. Houston at Boston College 8. Dartmouth at Harvard 9. Pittsburgh vs. Navy at Norfolk, Va. 10. Colgate at Yale 11. North Carolina State at Duke 12. Kentucky at Georgia 13. Florida at Louisiana State 14. South Carolina at Maryland 15. Iowa State at Missouri 16. Miami at Air Force 17. Penn State at California 18. West Virginia vs. Oregon State at Portland 19. Oregon at Washington 20. Texas A & M at Baylor on Education? $29.95 VALUES . $35.00 VALUES . . NOW $23.99 . NOW $28.99 All styles and sizes in regulars - longs - shorts - -stouts - short stouts Call him anytime at NO 5-3681 ;m- al SPECIAL GROUP SPECIAL Northwestern Boasts Six Big Ten Leaders ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS & PHYSICISTS: Long-Sleeve SPORTSH I RTS $3.65 Value Now 2 Flannels, Cottons, Ginghams, Buttondown and plain collars, SIZES S-M-L-XL. ONE LOT RAINCOATS $5.95 Values Now $419 UMBRELLA SPECIALS O- By LLOYD GRAFF The Big Ten statistics should be written in purple ink this week since Northwestern tops the con- ference with a 3-0 record and leads in six of the nine individual statistical categories. Paced by its sophomore passing sensation, Tom Myers, the Wild-' cats hold the top rung in rushing, passing, total offense, pass re- ceiving, interceptions, and is tied for the scoring lead. Myers maintained his No. 1 ranking by completing 18 of 30 passes aaginst Ohio State to boost his total to 41 completions in 66 attempts for 536 yds and six touchdowns. Three more TD passes will give Myers a share of the Conference season record. The Wildcat- gunner also leads in total offense with 473 yds. in 78 plays, a 6.1 yd. average per play. Mike Talliaferro of Illinois, who set a Big Ten single game record of 42 pass attempts, trails by just 20 yds. r On Target As might be expected, Myers' favorite target Paul Flatley, the flanker back in Ara Parseghian's offensive set-up, leads, the con- ference with 21 pass receptions for 289 yds. and 2 touchdowns. At his present pace Flatley would break the record of 36 catches set by Rex. Smith of Illinois and Pat Richter of Wisconsin. Richter is far behind the Wildcat back this year having caught 11 for 128 yds. and two touchdowns. Northwestern also possesses the leading rusher in Larry Benz with a net of 159 yds. in 29 carries for a 5.5 yd. average. Teammate Willie Stinson, a swift halfback and John Mummey, Ohio State's running quarterback are tied for second with 150 yds. In team statistics Wisconsin has taken a slim lead as the Big Ten's top offensive outfit over Purdue and Ohio State, while the Boiler- makers are the league's best de- fensive team. Purdue, in gaining defensive honors, allowed Michigan 9.0 first downs and a meager 112 net yds., while blanking the Wolverines on the scoreboard. The top rushing attack is found at Michigan State where a fleet array of backs has gained 782 yds. in two games. Northwestern leads in passing with a 215.3 yd. per game average. 9' -C \ If space is your future, your career is with Hughes $319 $419 $519 IN IN IN' IN, ASTROSPACE AEROSPACE TERRASPACE HYDROSPACE As far back as 1890, Jules Verne visualized excursion trains to the moon. Today 72 years later - Hughes' offers you the opportunity to play an important part in man's actual .conquest of space. 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