THE MICHIGAN DAILY Injured Gophers Try To Keep Brown Jug Ix CHIPS. by Mike Block By DAVE MONA Minnesota Daily Staff Writer . Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - Tomorrow's battlefor thebLittle Brown Jug, collegiate football's most publi- cized trophy, will involve two of the more thirsty teams in the Big Ten. Presently the Little Brown Jug sits in the bottom of a Cooke Hall trophy case and most likely not one in 100 Gopher fans could tell exactly where it is or what it looks like. Even though this is the case, and in light of the fact that the jug is devoid of liquid refresh- ment, the Gophers would like to keep it in its dirty trophy case for the fourth straight year.- A quick glance at the standings show that for the first time in many years the battle for the jug is also the battle to see which team will escape the Big Ten cellar. Injuries and mistakes have been a deciding factor in keeping the Gophers down. It is commonly heard around the Twin Cities that the Gophers have lost once each to NebraskatNorthwestern and Illinois, and three times to them- selves. Tomorrow's contest will be Minnesota's fifth of the season and will be played before a Home- coming crowd of approximately 60,000 spectators. Murray Warmath's tentative starting lineup will be the fifth different starting eleven of the season. In an effort to find a win- ning combination, only f o u r Gophers have started every game. These four, Carl Eller, Milt Sunde, Larry Hartse and Frank Marchlewski, are all linemen. The Gopher backfield has seen more weekly shuffling than a "Maver- ick" episode. As was predicted at the begin- Ining of the season, Minnesota's biggest trouble has been in find- ing a quarterback who could move the team consistently. Larry Peterson, the probable starter against Michigan, is a fine runner with the passing potential of most intramural quarterbacks. To date his bullet shots' have met with a receiver on only one of six attempts. Bob Sadek, Minnesota'sdalter- nate quarterback, is a definite passing threat (31 of 66 for 315 yards) but is often left behind by his blockers when exercising the option play. ll Fred Farthing has moved bac into the starting backfield at righ half replacing fumble-prone soph omore speedster Al Harris. Dim. inutive Jerry Pelletier, the mos consistent of the Gopher, backs switches to starting left half. As has been" the case all sea- son, Minnesota will enter the game with a distinct weight deficit. The game is rated as a toss-up with the home-field and homecoming advantage making the Gophers a very slight favorite. A t The Quarterback Sneak To accomplish this immense task, Ernie has a staff of 10 collectors. He supervises their training and sets up pro- cedures for them to follow to best accomplish the collections. Ernie Nipper, like many young men, is impatient to make things happen for his company and himself. There are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed or rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business. Sorority Wins Swim Meet Gamma Phi Beta sorority won first place in a swimming meet held last night in the Women's pool in which sororities, dormi- tories and apartments participat- ed. Second place was taken by Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, which scored 33 points, only one short of the winner's total. Stock- well finished third with 28 points. But a surprise in the meet was the entry of four girls froman apartment as a unit which took fourth place. One of the four, Sue Rogers, was a national swimming champion, while Nancy Weiger is a member of the Ann Arbor Swimming Club. A third member of the apartment team did some swimming in high school, but the fourth had never been in any previous swimming competition. Another sorority, Zeta Tau Alpha, came in fifth in the meet. Two standouts-in the meet were both double winners. Cynthia Os- good, from Stockwell, won the 25-yard butterfly with a time of :13.4 and the 50-yard free style in :28.0 seconds. Sue Rogers best- ed all others in the backstroke, in which she turned in a :15.0 timing, and the breaststroke, with a clock- ing of :17.1. A total of 75 girls from 10 dif- ferent houses entered the com- petition. CARL ELLER ... rough Gopher Dodgers Win Semi-Final In Overtim~e By JIM GREINER John Tully caught a 12-yard touchdown pass from Jack Mogt in overtime, propelling the Draft Dodgers to a 6-0 victory over Nu Sigma Nu last night, in the semi- final championship round of Pro- fessional Fraternity football at Wines Field. Phi Rho Sigma, a 6-0 winner over Delta Sigma Delta, will face the Dodgers in the title contest next week. Quarterback Rick Wil- cox scored Phi Rho's only six- pointer on a 15-yard run. The Draft Dodger-Nu Sigma Nu clash was a hard-fought bat- tle, as each squad fought off the other's touchdown bids in regula- tion play. Mogt and Dick Honig, freshman baseball coach, managed to complete 11 of 23 passes, while Mike Ratterman, Nu Sig quarter- back, connected on only eight of 19 against a ravaging defense. The Dodgers' defensive line of Bill Huth, left end; Paul Groffsky, middle line-backer, and Jim Hof- fa, right'end, held the Nu Sigs to only three first downs during the game. Jim Shaw, Todd Grant, and John Edwards were almost as ef- fective for Nu Sig, holding the Dodgers to six. Each team picked off one inter- ception, both stopping scoring at- tempts. Dodger Ron Olson nabbed a Nu Sig aerial on his own 15- yard line in the first half. With less than 30 seconds left in the game, Nu Sig Don Miller caught a Dodger pass in his own end zone and returned it 20 yards. In the overtime, each team al- ternated downs, with both squads having four plays to advance the ball from midfield. -Nu Sigma Nu won the toss of the coin and chose to be second to run plays. On the opening down Mogt flip- ped a 36-yard pass to Ed Hood, leaving the Nu Sigs deep in their own territory. A completed aerial from Ratterman to Grant nutted only eight yards, leaving the Nu Sigs on their 12, and set up the winning touchdown.; The quarterback sneak, as every football fan knows, is a play that's often called by a coach when his team needs very short yardage to pick up a first down. It merely consists of the quarterback receiv- - ing the ball from the center,tand then "sneaking" through the line to conquer the precious territory. However, this column has nothing to h do with that kind of quarterback sneak. The kind of quarterback sneak I have in mind is Bump Elliott. Michigan's head football coach possesses the little idio- syncrasy of sneaking a new signal caller into the game every so often, just when we expect it. Over the last football season, and so far in this one, Michigan's quarterbacks have been in and out more often than an ambassador to South Viet Nam, as the following brief, yet intricate, historical sketch will show: Actually, the story starts way back in the 1960 season. That year, Elliott had no adequate veteran quarterbacks, but two promis- ing sophomores named Dave Glinka and Bob Chandler. Glinka was given the nod to start in the opening game, and led the team to a solid 21-0 victory over Oregon. He also started in the next game at Michigan State, but when the going got tough, Chandler was sent into action. For his efforts, Chandler received his now-legendary left knee injury and was through for the season-but, since this was only the second game, he was entitled to an extra year of eligibility. Meanwhile, the MSU game was lost, 24-17, but Glinka did go on to lead the Wolverines to a respectable (by modern standards) 5-4 season. Evy's Entry . . The 1961 campaign witnessed the arrival of a new quarterback in the person of Frosty Evashevski. He, however, sustained an early injury and was dismissed for the year, and Chandler's mishap bothered him to the extent that his running game was virtually nil. But Glinka had the starting job cinched anyway, and played prac- tically the whole season on offense. Chandler was used only to throw the last-ditch home run ball, which Glinka didn't have in him. All in all, there wasn't an overwhelming problem, as Michigan had a 6-3 record. By the time 1962 rolled around, a few gentlemen named Bennie McRae, Bill Tunnicliff, George Mans, etc., had departed, and the plot began to sicken.- linka was still the number one quarterback, and was even slated to play defense. Both Chandler and Evashevskirwere in much improved physical condition, and there was a sophomiore named Bob Timberlake who was supposed to be a fine prospect, as well as Tom Prichard, a junior who played more defense than otherwise. The season started with a surprising loss to Nebraska, an expected win over Army, and an expected loss to Michigan State. In all t three of these games, Glinka was the opening quarterback, but all four of the others saw action on offense, especially in the first and third. The MSU contest was such a debacle that Elliott decided to change his starter, giving the nod to Timberlake, who, he apparently thought, had played better than the others. - Whether or not that was a serious mistake, Michigan lost to Purdue more convincingly than it had lost to anyone In ages. In the course of the 37-0 rout, Elliott inserted Glinka, Evashevski and Prichard to relieve Timberlake, but to no avail. And in Glinka's first nonstarting game in a Michigan uniform, he sustained a leg injury so serious that he would never play for the Wolverines again. For some reason I could never understand, Glinka was often maligned by Wolverine fans in his tenure as quarterback. But, if for no other reason, the fact that Elliott stuck with him as long as he did is quite a tribute to Glinkas prowess, in light of the many future changes. Timberlake's Troubles.. This narrowed the field to just four, but it didn't stop the juggling. Timberlake also started the following week against Min- nesota, with Evashevski and Chandler relieving, but since it turned out to be the third consecutive shutout, 17-0, Elliott decided it was time for another change, perhaps the most bizarre of all. dbserving that Timberlake, when he couldn't get his passes away, often ran for respectable yardage, Elliott shifted the 6'4" soph to halfback, and started Chandler at quarter. This arrangement, with Evashevski performing only occasionally, was used in the final four battles of the campaign, and although Michigan won only one of them, the caliber of their play had improved markedly. Chandler still couldn't run effectively, but he could give the ball to Timberlake, who posed a two-way threat. So-much for last year. This fall, in pre-season prectiee, both Chandler and Timberlake sustained injuries which were just serious enough to keep both of them from starting the first game. (Elliott had already vowed that Timberlake wolud be strictly a quarterback this year.) As a result, Evashevski got the nod, and with the help of a generally improved Wolverine eleven, sparked a victory over a good Southern Methodist aggregation. In so doing, Evashevski accomplished a feat performed by no Michigan quarterback since the last game of the 1961 season-he played an entire game on offense. As usual, Elliott followed his policy- (and who can blame him?) of sticking with a winner, and gave Evashevski the go ahead in the Navy encounter. So you know what happened-the team was in- effectual under Evashevski's direction (although this inneffectiveness can hardly be blamed on him), and Elliott set in Chandler, who helped produce a couple of second half touchdowns to make the score respectable. Chandler's Vengeance,... On with the dance; naturally enough, Chandler started against Michigan State, his old nemesis. He did a very creditable job, enabling the Wolverines to garner a 7-7 tie, and led a last-ditch surge which looked for a while that it would produce a win over the Spartans. Evashevski played only briefly in this one. Chandler started again in last Saturday's Purdue game, and, for the same mystical reason that's been plaguing Michigan the last two years, couldn't do a thing. Evashevski tried too, but with no luck, so Timberlake, who had by now healed sufficiently to do more than just place kick, tried his luck in the second half. And to and behold, Timberlake did the same thing as Chandler had in the Navy game-he led Michigan to two consolation touchdowns. This means, of course, that Timberlake will in all probability start against Minnesota tomorrow, which will surprise no one. Judging from the unpredictability of the Michigan team under different quarterbacks on different weekends, it's hard to see what else he can do. Timberlake, Chandler and Evashevski are all roughly equal in ability, so why should Elliott go with any one of them consistently, when all he has to do is go to his bench in case trouble arises, which it inevitably does? My complaint, then, is not in that Elliott shuffles his quarter- i -v BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES U School- Time is OLYMPIA TIME ,. . iF /. 1 L I University Typewriter Center 613 E. 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