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November 04, 1962 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-11-04

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



PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~TT?.JflAV. ~flVI~M1!FU~ Ā£ ZAA~

Red Wings Win Seventh;
Rangers, Canadiens Tie

Badgers Finish Fast, Stop

Wolverines

By The Associated Press
TORONTO-Gordie Howe, Par-
eachscored twcelast nighta
the Detroit Red Wings downed
Toronto 7-3 and remained unbeat-
en in the National Hockey League
with a 7-0-2 record..
Howe scored both his goals in
the last period, breaking the tie at
7:48 and giving the Wings the In-
surance goal at 15:52. Floyd Smith
made it 6-3 and MacDonald wound
up the Detroit barrage with his
second goal of the game at 19:21.

.Keon scored -twice
inthe second erord

for Toronto
to keep the

* * *
MONTREAL -- Ken Schinkel
slammed a short shot through the
legs of Montreal goalie Cesare
Maniago midway through the fin-
al period last night as the New
York Rangers managed a 3-3 tie
with the Habs. Maniago handled
only 15 shots, compared to Rang-
er goalie Gump Worsley's stopping
of 27. -

Vander elen, Richter Dent

Candler's

Return

To Form Sparks '1W

(Continued from Page 1)
cause of weak ligaments in his
right knee," Elliott explained.
On the Badgers' first play from
scrimmage, Dodd let his man, full-
back Fred Reichardt, behind him.
VanderKelen threw a spiral which
Dodd jumped up and intercepted,
running the ball back to the Wis-
consin 20 yd. line.
Two plays later, end Jim Conley
got behind his man, who had slip-
ped in the wet turf. Chandler hit

him with a perfect pass good for
16 yds. On the next play Dave
Raimey went in for the first Wol-
verine touchdown in four games.
Wisconsin countered on a some-
what dubious series of downs
sparked by pass interference and
piling on penalties. With fourth
and inches to go; VanderKelen
barely made it over center into
the end zone for Wisconsin's first
score.
Gary Kroner mnade his first of
four successful conversions.

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.>S.

Firs Downs
Passing *
Penalty
Total No. of Rushes
Net Yards-Rushing
Forward Passes Attempted
Completed
Intercepted by
Yards intercept, ret.
Total Plays (Rushes and
Punts, Number
Kicofsreturned by
Yards Kicks Returned
Kickoffs
Fumbles, Number
PenaltiesNumber
Yards penalized
RUSHING
Michigan

1:

10 25
4 12
1 4
31 47
19 30
[1 19
1 1
31 0
50 77
6 4
97 137
84 111
0 1
o0 0
DI 82

MI!. WISC. I

VanderKelen
silvestrit
Reichardt
Norvell
Holland
Bill smith
Brandt
Totals
Chandler
Evashevski

13
3
1
8
5
.1
5
47

63
4
22
18
8
20
183

No Shutout, Anyway

4
0
0
0
5
0
18
33

59
27
4
22
13
3
2
150

PASSING
Miichigan
Att. Comp.
1 0

Int. Yds.
0 0

--Daily--James Keson
IMMOVABLE OBJECT-Bill Dodd (38) is doubled up in his at-
tempt to prevent Wisconsin's halfback Ron Smith (25) from
gaining another. Coming up from behind to try to pull Smith
back is Michigan end Bill Laskey (83). Jini Conley (82), too far
from the play, watches and hopes the tackle is a solid one.

gravy and potatoes.e
Homemade soup...

....70c
....20c

Van derK
Brandt
Totals

WicAtt Comp. Int. Yds.
elen 25 17 1 202
30 192 224
PASS RECEIVING
Michigan
Number Yds.
n 2 2
Lke 3 56
1 6
1 *1
11 120

U

Tibrlake
Raimey
Dodd*-
Prichard
Sparkman
Totals

Tries Gains Loss Net
5 16 0 1
13 34 5 29
2 7 0 7
2 5 0 5
4 8 0 8
31 71 26 45
Wisconsin
Tries Gains Loss Net

ATTENTION
SOCIAL CHAIRMEN
DICKIE JOHNSON
ORGAN TRIO
is back in town .
ore Set
oregagemn
call NO 3-6760

Sparkma
Timberla
Rnfuss
Ward
Farabee
Totals
Purnell
Richter
Kroner
Leaf blad
Howard
Ron Sm
Nettles
Totals
O'Donne
Richter

By TOM WEBBER
Sports Editor
Bob Chandler, making his first
significant appearance as Michi-
gan 's quarterback since a crip-
pling tackle in the 1960 Michigan
State game, gave Michigan fans a
little glimpse yesterday of what
he might have been without that
knee injury.
Passing brilliantly in the first
half (8-10), he led the Wolverines
to their most impressive show of
the 1962 season.
Chandler had taken over as
the first string quarterback in the
closing minutes of that Spartan
game when Michigan was vainly
trying to catch up. He had com-
pleted one pass to the Spartan-yd.
lin which wsnllified by ae-
ay. The sideline tackle finally
put himn out of commission.
Last year was spent mostly on
the bench with the still shaky
knee. Used only in spots, the 6'3'',
200-pounder couldn't backpeddle
simmge. This yearhe nee
was pronounced completely well,
but still he sat on the sidelines
while coach Bump Elliott tried
three other quarterbacks.
But last week was the turning
point as a fourth quarter passing
performance kept Michigan from
being held to minus yardage. El-
liott says he'll be back in there
against the resurging Illini next
week.
The best part of it all is that
Chandler still has another year
of e .li gility'.
* * *
Mistakes and penalties continue
to plague the Wolverines. Wiscon-
sin was helped considerably to its
first touchdown as first a pass
interference penalty and then a
personal foul moved the ball from
the Michigan 21 to the one.
Early in the third quarter, with
the score still 14-12, a 20-yd. com-
pletion from Chandler to Bob
Timberlake was called back, pre-
venting, the Wolverines from get-
ting a needed first down. That
would have put the ball near mid-
field, and as it was the Wolver-
ines never were able to come that
close to Wisconsin territory again
until the final minute of play.
The real turning point of the
ball game, however, came on a
fourth and eight situation on the
Michigan 20-yd. line. It looked
like Michigan might hold, but
senior quarterback Ron Vander-
Kelen found Pat Richter open on
a down and out pattern for a first
down on the Michigan nine.
One play later the rout was on.
"That was the key play," sighed
Elliott in the dressing room.

ter at winning the opening game
toss. Capt. Bob Brown made It
three straight against Wisconsin,
and for the second straight week
elected to take the wind rather
than receive the kickoff.
The move looked pretty good
too, when Bill Dodd intercepted
VanderKelen's pass on the first
play from scrimmage.
* * *
The game was eventually de-
cided when Wisconsin stopped
Michigan's passing game in the
second half while keeping its own
going.
"We made some adjustments at
halftime," Badger coach Milt
Bruhn said. Michigan even ran
from a tackle eligible formation
mluch of the time, but to no avail.
"We used the .tackle mostly as
a decoy to break the halfback open
over the middle," Elliott said.
''We've seen them run from that
formation before," Bruhn added.
"They've (Michigan) had so many
formations, they were tough to de-
~'e were hoping to get a little
better rush from the line,'' Elliott
said of his own pass defense, "but
I'm not disappointed about tne
way the kids played."
Big Ten Standings

ith
11

Wisconsin
Number
1
7
4
1
1
1
30

Northwestern
Wisconsin
Minnesota
Michigan State
Purdue
Ohio State
Iowa
Illinois .
Michigan
Indiana

3
3
2
2
2
2
1
0
0

0
1
1
1
1
2
2
3
4
4

1.000 123 57
.750 88 32
.750 84 41
.667 64 36
.667 73 17
.5.00 93 68
.500 59 92
.250 29 123
.000 12 116
.000 45 98

Yds.
-2
104
49
19
13
27
12
224

PUNTING
Michigan
Number Yards Avg.
6 230 38
Wisconsin
Number Yards Avg.
4 141 35

BATON ROUGE (if') -Mighty
Mississippi ended five years of
football frustration last night
when Glynn Griffing led the
aroused Rebels to a 15-7 upset
victory over Louisiana State in a
clash of unbeaten Southeastern
Conference giants.
The triumph left Ole Miss with
a 6-0 season record and gave
Coach Johnny Vaught a good shot
at his first perfect season in 16
years as boss of the Rebels. Rank-
ed sixth nationally in the Associat-
ed Press poll, Mississippi has games
remaining with Chattanooga, Ten-
nessee and Mississippi State. LSU,
the No. 4 team, now has five vic-
tories, a loss and a tie.

-Daily-Ed Langs
LONE SOME QUARTERBACK-This was a familiar scene yester-
day afternoon as Ron VanderKelen, Wisconsin signal-caller, found
himself all alone, with no Wolverine linemen to keep him com-
pany. VanderKelen liked his solitude so well that he completed 17
out of 25 aerials.

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I

Colg Scorestg

S
- ~
,, ..-' N
-, .
5.
,1v11Ey
5-
N
- .
I

GRID PICKS
Wisconsin 34, Michigan 12
Minnesota 28, Michigan State 7
Boston College 27, Vanderbilt 22
Northwester P26, Indiana 21
Florida 22, Auburn 3
Iowa 28, OhIo State 14
Georgia Tech 20, Duke 9
Notre Dame 20, Navy 12
No. Carolina St. 10, Georgia 10 (tie)
Columbia 25, Cornell 21
Clemson 17, North Carolina 6
Pittsburgh 24, Syracuse 6
Mississippi 15, LouIsiana St. 7
Penn State 23, Maryland 7
Missouri 16, Nebraska 7
Iowa State 34, Oklahoma St. 7

UCL-A 26, California 16
so. California 14, Washington 0
Air Force 35, Wyoming 14
OTHER GAMES
Princeton 28, Brown 12
Colgate 13. Lehigh 0
Villanova 14, Detroit 0
Dartmouth 9, Yale 0
Army 26, Boston Univ. 0
Harvard 36, Penn 0
Kansas 38, Kansas State 0
Tulsa 24, Cincinnati 18
Holy Cross 36, Dayton 14
Ohio Univ. 35, Marshall (V. Va.) 0
Western Michigan 19, Kent State 6
West Virginia 28, Win. & Mary 13
Furman 14, Dvidso~ln
Tennessee 23, Wake Forest 0
VMI 16, Citadel 7
Alabama 20, Mississippi State B
Virginia Tech 24, Tulane 22
Rice 14, Texas Tech 0
Texas 6, Southern Methodist 0
Teas C hrstian a28,Baylor 26
Oklahoma 62, Colorado 0
Idaho State 33, Drake 14
Oregon 28, Stanford 14
Oregon State 18, Washington State 12
Brigham Young 27, New Mexico 0
Thiel 27, Wayne State 8

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