PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY .SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 9162 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1962 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY - - . ..rY ...., .. 1910 Jug Clash Called 'Greatest Game' ....:....... y . , y. ....- .-..... . ... ..... . ... . e. . ..Y ,..-.. ..... v- , Quarterback Succeeds as ac 4.; By TOM ROWLAND The annual Michigan-Minneso- ta game is a classic. Throughout the long history of the series there have been many spectacular grid- iron clashes, full of upsets and thrills in contention for the Little Brown Jug. Clark Shaughnessy, who developed the man-in-motion and T-formation, as the country's leading football coach (Stanford) during World War II, picks one of these games-in 1910-as "the greatest football game I ever saw." Says Coach Shaughnessy: "It was a game I have never seen matched for power in the field'and drama of opposing tactics." The following is derived from his personal account of the game as a third string tackle observing from the bench. Old Ferry Field was jammed to the hilt with 18,000 crowding, fren- zied spectators. They came by spe- cial trains, trolleys, horse buses, and even a few by autos. They came on an overcast, gloomy day in the middle of November to see one of the greatest grid clashes in the new century. They came to see the powerful Maize and. Blue col- lide with the monsters from Min- nesota, unscored upon in six games, 179 points without an opponent crossing the goal line, The Gopher line was mammoth, 228 pounds up and down the line. They were confident that the pow- erful Minnesota defense could THE FATAL FUMBLE-It's too late for Michigan here as backs Dave Raimey (19) and Bennie McRae (43) watch the loose ball and the game bounce away on the Michigan five yard line. McRae fumbled it with three and a half minutes to go to set up Minne- sota's winning touchdown. crush the _Wolverine offensive as- sault and give the Gophers the prize at stake: the western cham- pionship. 285-Lb. Guard The Michigan line was led by Albert Benbrook, 6-5, 285-lb. All- America guard. But what's more the Wolverines had the biggest as- set on the sidelines: the incompar- able Fielding H. Yost at the coach- ing reins. Yost appeared chomping on a long cigar, a yellow chrysan- themum in his lapel. Confident, masterful, he ran his football team like a general would his army. To the tune of "The Victors" Michigan received the opening kick-off, and promptly Joe Magid- sahn, Wolverine left half, juggled the pigskin and Minnesota grab- bed hold at the Michigan 40. The Gopher offense began to roll behind the beefy line. Down to the Blue 18-and there Ben- brook and the Wolverine forward wall held. Johnny McGovern step- ped back for a field goal attempt. No good. The Gophers weren't discourag- ed-they'd proved that they could movetheir line against the Wol- verines, 'the touchdowns could wait. And true to form: Michigan's Stan Lawton dropped back to punt on the next series of downs. Goph- erman Len Frank streaked in to blocknthe kick, the ball skipped into the IM" end zone and a Min- nesota lineman curled on the ball. Touchdown, Gophers! The Minne- sota team went wild. Called Back But wait. "They're calling it back-" As the ball rolled goal- ward it had brushed umpire Frank Hinkey and by the rule of the day the play was void. The Gophers were crushed. And they never fully recovered from that unnerving near TD. Lawton punted out safely on the next play, and the ball went back and forth for the entire mid- dle part of the game. Fourth quarter. Michigan held the ball at the Minnesota 48. Sud- denly Stan Wells, Michigan's 210- lb. All-America end faded to pass -and connected to the other end Stan Borleske at the Minnesota 30. The Wolverines were rolling! Next play. Wells faded again- and again hit Borleske, this time to the Gopher 3! Here was Michi-' gan three yards from a goal line Minnesota Facts Nickname-Golden Gophers. Enrollment-29,000 (approx.) Home-Minneapolis, Minn. Stadium-Memorial, 63,555. Colors-Maroon and Gold. Head Coach-Murray Warmath. Coaching Staff-Denver Craw- ford, George Nash, Robert Bos- sons, Dick Larson, Wallace John- son, Joe Salem, Don Grammer, Jerry Annis. THRILLER AT MINNEAPOLIS: Late Fumble Decides '61 Game By DAVE ANDREWS Associate Sports Editor A lot of Michigan-Minnesota games have been played, some for Big Ten championships, some for national titles, and some for noth- ing but the Little Brown Jug. But last year was something dif- ferent. The teams played that way too, Bennie McRae's last quarter fumble on the Michigan 5-yd. line giving Minnesota the break needed to win. M' Favored Going into the game, the Wol- verines were a touchdown choice, despite a crushing 28-0 whipping by Michigan State two weeks be- fore. The Gophers had been beaten 6-0 by Missouri in the snow on opening day, crept by Oregon 14-7 and edged Northwestern 10-3, be- fore drubbing Illinois 33-0. It was hardly an impressive start for the Gophers, but as the Big Ten and the nation was to find out, the Gophers were just being coy. Michigan, meanwhile, had steamrollered UCLA and Army be- fore the Michigan State game and then bounced back from the Spar- tan loss with a 16-14 conquest of Purdue. Became All-American The game figured to be a battle between the Gopher line and the Michigan backs, but it didn't turn out that way. Minnesota's Sandy Stephens became an All-American, that afternoon and McRae, for all the great running he had done for Michigan, became one of those "wrong way" legends. The following events set it up. Michigan scored early in each of the first three periods, the first two scores coming after Minnesota fumbles, the third on an 11-play drive which covered 60 yds. Going into the fourth quarter the Wol- verines led, 20-8. Stephens' Turn Then it was Stephens' turn. With ten and a half minutes to go in the game, the Gophers took over. From the Michigan 46, Stephens fired to end John Camp- bell for the score. It was one of 11 passes he completed all day-in 31 attempts. At the eight-minute mark, Min- nesota mounted what appeared to be the winning drive, Stephens running the rollout pass-run op- tion to perfection. Yet despite the urging of a record homecoming day crowd; the Gophers stalled. Michigan took the ball on the 9- yd. line, still holding a 20-15 lead. Crazy Bounce But the football took one of.its crazy bounces. On the first Michigan play, Mc- Rae running off right tackle on Michigan's favorite play was smashed to the ground by a re- serve Minnesota halfback. The ball hopped loose to the Michigan five. There Minnesota recovered. It took them four plays to score, but that was enough. The Gophers won, 23-20, and rode to the Rose Bowl for the second straight year. Michigan played football the rest of the season, but it wasn't without a sad look backward - to what might have been. that had never been crossed in the face of the Minnesota line. No team before had even come close enough to kick a field goal. And the Wolverines were there-and it was the last big chance to score. Now or Never The stands tensed as Wells dropped back' to short put forma- tion. The ball was snapped-Wells streaked forward as the two mighty lines crashed in a giant wave. Up, up--and then back went the Blue ball carrier. No gain! Benbrook went over to talk with the Michigan quarterback Neil McMillan. And Benbrook ordered the Blue signal caller: "Run this one over me." The Wolverines broke out of the huddle. Again Wells dropped back. Again the lines rose in crunching cres- cent. Wells drove forward-up, up, and in the last second rode over the wave of blocking into the Min- nesota end zone on Benbrook's back. Touchdown! The Wolverines kicked for the extra point. Good! 6-0, Michigan. (TD's were five points then.) Chaos reigned ram- pant at Old Ferry Field. Michigan had just cracked the impenetrable Gopher line-the Wolverines were grid kings of the day. Bonfires, torchlight parades, and all the victory trimming decorated the Michigan campus as Wolverine rooters celebrated one of the greatest wins ever for the Maize and Blue. Today's Schedule EAST Houston at Boston College Rhode Island at Brown Ohio University at Buffalo Lehigh at Columbia Princeton at Cornell Dartmouth at Harvard Syracuse at Holy Cross Boston University at Massa- chusetts Pittsburgh vs Navy at Norfolk, Va. Rutgers at Pennsylvania Colgate at Yale Xavier (Ohio) at Villanova SOUTH Tulsa at Alabama Auburn at Clemson North Carolina State at Duke Virginia Tech at Florida State (N) The Citadel at Furman Tulane at Georgia Tech Kentucky at Georgia Florida at Louisiana State (N) South Carolina at Maryland Memphis State at Mississippi State Wake Forest at North Carolina Chattanooga at Tennessee Mississippi vs Vanderbilt at Memphis (N) William & Mary at Virginia Military Davidson at Virginia MIDWEST Richmond at Cincinnati Nebraska at Colorado Southern California at Illinois Michigan State at Indiana Purdue at Iowa Minnesota at Michigan Iowa State at Missouri Notre Dame at Northwestern Wisconsin at Ohio State Kansas at Oklahoma State Kansas State at Oklahoma Montana State at Wichita SOUTHWEST Hardin Simmons at Arkansas (N) Texas A & M at Baylor (N) Texas at Rice (N) Southern Methodist at Texas Tech FAR WEST Miami at Air Force Texas Western at Arizona State (N) Penn State at California Wyoming at Colorado State University Montana at Idaho State North Texas State at New Mexico State (N) West Virginia at Oregon State at Portland Washington State at University of Pacific New Mexico at San Jose (N) Brigha mYoung at Utah State Brigham Young at Utah State Oregon at Washington By STAN KUKLA "Me a tackle . . . why man, we both knew I was a quarterback!" That was Bobby Bell's reaction to Minnesota head coach, Murray Warmath, when he suggested that Bell take over the tackle position. Bell's surprise was not unex- pected. In his highschool years, he won letters in football, at the quarterback position, and basket- ball. His fame as a quarterback, who could throw the ball 70 yds. with near-perfect accuracy and who could out-spring all but the fast- est of backs, spread far and wide. So far, in fact, that word of his deeds spread from Cleveland High School in Shelby, N.C., all the way to a town in Minnesota-Minne- apolis, to be exact. Gobbled Up In this town was a university, Minnesota. It quickly gobbled up the North Carolina star. In 1959, he played quarterback on the freshman squad. At the same time, Sandy Stephens was warming to the position of start- ing quarterback with the Gopher squad. Throughout the _ winter, Bell groomed himself to the task of trying to make Warmathand his coaching staff forget about this upstart 'Stephens. Then came that meeting with Warmath. WEIGHT-LESS: Two weeks before spring practice was about to start, Warmath called Bell into his office. Once there, Bell saw his hopes of being quar- terback dashed. Stephens was the only quarter- back in the Gophers' future, he was told.-But how would he like to play tackle? Warmath was lavish in his praise of Bell's all-around football abil- ity. So sure was he that he even predicted Bell would be "one of the best tackles in the Big Ten." Mistaken Warmath was wrong. Bell turn- ed out to be the best tackle in the nation, not just in the Big Ten. But, at that time, Bell wasn't so sure he would be a tackle. He thought the coach was joking and forgot all about his little conver- sation. "But I guess coach didn't," Bell declares. "We started spring prac- tice two weeks later and I was a tackle." And a tackle he was, but it took time. First Things First The first thing he had to learn was how to get into a lineman's three-point stance. "He was knock-kneed and he ran slough-f ooted," reminisced line coach Denver Crawford. "His feet flapped like a duck's." Bell wasn't concerned with his running with how he-ran. He told Crawford that he's get the job done no matter what way he ran. The top was the next stop. In 1961, Bell was voted to the All-American team by Look Mag- azine (Football Writers' Associa- tion), Sporting News, Football Coaches' Association, and the ABC-TV network. He was voted to the All-American second team by the United Press Internatioal. The Associated Press and the UPI voted him to the All Big Ten Conference first team. He received national honors ear- ly last season when the UPI named him "Lineman of the Week" for his play- against Northwestern. Minnesota eked by Northwestern, 10-3. More .. . Adding accomplishment to ac- complishment, Bell took over hik- ing the ball on punts. Despite the fact that he had never centered the ball before, Bell did an errorless job. Bell's ability doesn't end on the field. He is finishing his studies as a physical, or recreational, therapist. He hopes to work with handicapped persons in hospitals or institutions. Interested in a professional ca- reer, Bell knows that the scouts have an eye on him. He also has an eye on them. Gopher Linemen Fail To Meet Tradition By STAN KUKLA What has happened to the stor- ied "Giants of the. North"? Year after year, Minnesota fans have always thought that there would be plenty of husky, raw- boned youths from Minnesota's "natural recruiting area" to man the interior line positions. It seems that the Gophers' well has run dry, their natural re- sources are used up. Starting at the tackle position, Carl Eller, a junior from Winston- Salem, North Carolina, is the heaviest man on the line. He tips the scales at 240. Eller is rated as the top tackle II Si 15sCR LEAPS INTO ACTION-Bobby Bell, I thought he was a quarterback, leaps i give the Wolverine squad the headac Little Brown Jug in Minneapolis for on the Minnesota squad, next to his state-side neighbor Bobby Bell, who plays the other tackle. "Eller is a better blocker than Bell," said the Gopher coaching staff. "He's got some learning to do on defense, but he'll learn. He's a worker." Eller was given the starting left tackle position last year as an un- tried sophomore. He played and improved steadily through the first four games. Then came the game with Michigan for the Little Brown Jug. What Injury? During the game, Eller broke a bone in his left hand. That didn't deter 'him. During the week he practiced with a cast on his hand. But Big Ten rules forbid a player to wear a cast in a game and Eller had the cast removed for the games. This didn't seem to bother Eller, who played the full 60 minutes in a bruising battle against the Badgers of Wisconsin. (Minnesota lost by two points to the Badgers.) Balancing the line is Bell, play- ing at right tackle. Bell is two inches shorter than Eller (6'4" vs 6'6") and twenty-two lbs. light- er, weighing in at 218. Natural Bell, All-American last year, has great speed and a natural foot- ball ability for diagnosing plays. Backing up the two starters is 240-lb. Minneapolis-born Fred Nord. He's lacking in experience' but is rated as the most improved among the linemen. All the other prospective tackles are light but fast. Number three tackle is Milt Sunde, a wiry, 207- lb. junior from Bloomington, Minnesota. Another lightweight vying for the tackle slot is Jim Krohn at 203. s Worse Moving toward-the center of the line, the weight situation doesn't improve. In fact, it worsens. At left guard is Gene Rabel, a 6'2", 2-0-lb. sophomore, Pacing the right side of the line is senior Julian Hook. Hook doesn't even break the six- foot mark (he's only 5'10") and is the lightest of the interior linemen at 187 lbs. Hook's ability lies in his timing. In 1961, he was the red- dogging 'scourge of the opponents offense. Switch Paul Benson is another product of coach Murray Warmath's fa- mous shifting act. Last year Bell was at tackle instead of his nor- mal quarterback position, this year Benson is playing center instead of, his usual halfback position. Dick Enga, last year's center, has re- turned to his fullback slot of his sophomore year. Benson did not go into the sea- son unprepared for the center po- sition. It was his outstanding sub- stitution for Enga in last year's Rose Bowl game that earned Ben- son the center slot this year. Benson isn't a heavyweight, by any means. Like Hook, he is in the under 200-lb. class. Benson only hits 190 but Warmath has com- plete confidence that he will handle the job capably and, so far I ,4lwa' aWith THE W'ESTER. this season, he hasn't let his coach down. That's it. Looking over the weights of the interior linemen - 240, 218, 210, 190, 187 - the line doesn't measure up to last year's at all. Even with the ends - John Campbell and Bob Prawdzik - the Gophers don't live up to their past. Adding the weights of the ends (201 and 205, respectively), the line's averages drop to just a little over 207 lbs. per man. No more are the "Giants of the North." JE N( ~ ~ ~~~ '+."::":"'r.:"}S}r.: is is i: ::": .:";":": :" :":v:: '. r ....... ..... :r. r. ..........l: fi <:tiY! :... . r rrr...r ...............s .. ... r..r. . ..................................................:"1 :.., w BEEF BUFFI To igyxn MAIL THIS FORM in Today or ca NO 2-3241 PAUL BENSON ... light I I Serving the World's Fii Plate of Roast Beef BANQUET FACILITIES AVAI HOME OF THE COCA COLA COACHE Delivered 6 mornings a week for Only $6.50 ($7.50 by mail) for rest of school year. NAME *--------------------------nnnnn---------------- ADDRESS ---------------------------------------------------- CITY Deliver LI Money inclosed Q Mail Please bill me L 2333 East Stadium Open 11:30 to 8:30 PI "FINE FOOD - NO LIQUO MENE RABEL s...lighter .ter- - - - - - r - + -. -_