11, 1959 TilE MICHIGAN IDAILY 11, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan Whips Oregon State on 4 -Daily-Fred Shippey Daily-Michael Rontal PO14TRAITS OF VICTORY--(Lower Left) Michigan Captain George Genyk (70) lends encouragement to his teammates during the fourth quarter of yesterday's battle with Oregon State. Genyk, injured in a pre-game accident, was only able to lend morale support to the Michigan squad. (Upper Left) John Halstead (81) gives Michigan an early 3-0 lead as he boots a 27-yd. field goal in the first quarter. Holding for Halstead is quarterback Stan Noskin. Although Halstea d's boot gave-the Wolverines an early lead they needed a fourth quarter rally to defeat the Beavers, 18-7. (Center) Fred Julian (16) is smashed by Oregon State's Bill Stinnette as he drives towards the goal line during Michigan's fourth quarter victory drive. Julian was halted on the OSU 5-yd. line. (Upper Right) Darrell Harper, Mich- igan halfback turns right end for five yards in the first period yesterday. His run carried to Oregon State's 21-yd. line. Four plays later Halstead put the Wolverines into the lead with his field goal. (Lower Right) Harper (41) desperately tries to escape the grasp of Oregon State's Howard Hogan (72). However, Hogan was unable to stop Har per until he reached the Beaver's 11-yd. line. The jaunt gave the Wolverines a first down as they drove for their final touchdown. Three plays later Harper cut off tackle and swept into the end zone 'to assure the Wolverines of victory. The win was Michigan's first under Coach Bump Elliott. IN FOURTH QUARTER: Tureaud Scores Winning Tally 4,,t~n (Continued from Page 1) tercepted the only pass OSC full- back Bill Stinnette threw during the game. Bushong returned it 13 yards to the Michigan 32, and from there the Maize and Blue launched a 68-yard drive for an insurance touchdown. Once again the Wolverines stuck to the ground. Fred Julian ran for gains of five, nine, two and 13 yards. Noskin and Harper con- tributed advances of 11 and 14 yards. Fifteen more were provided by an Oregon State personal foul. Harper went over from the two for the clinching score, and Hal- stead, whose field goal earlier in the game had given Michigan a 3-0 halftime lead, booted the ex- tra point. At game's end, Michigan was attempting to expand its 18-7 lead still further. A fourth-down Osc gamble that failed gave the Wol- verines the ball on the visitors' 16. Reserve fullback Paul , Raeder slashed for gains of seven and five yards before time ran ojut on the OSC four-yard line. Visitors Well Controlled Except for the brief 22-yard drive preceding the Beavers' only score, Michigan's defense kept -Daily-Fred Shippey ELLIOTT, PLAYERS JUBILANT: 'M' Discovers Safety in Numbers-Also Victory By FRED KATZ Associate ,Oports Editor Michigan and Coach Bump El- liott have proven that there is more than safety in numbers. 'There is also victory. Thirty-eight players did battle for the Wolverines yesterday. And until Michigan fans have memorized the numbers of the many new faces playing football for the Maize and Blue this fall, the program vendors are going to do a land office business. Substituted generally in, waves of 11, Elliott said the platooning gave the team "a real boost." Because Michigan Is a team with many average-to-good players and few outstanding ones, it is one team that doesn't give away strength when the third unit is on the field. The Wolverines appeared to get stronger as the game wore on and were unstoppable in the fourth quarter, a period when sluggish- ness is not unusual. Victory was a strange but wel- come visitor to the Michigan lock- er room and the players were al- most reluctant to leave. It was a moment they wanted to enjoy, for, who knows when it shall make another appearance. Northwestern is next on the list, followed by Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio State. Not a breather in the lot. Which means that from one point of view the victory was a "must" win. "It was," agreed Elliott "from the standpoint that the men. worked hard and wanted to win badly. It would have been a bitter disappointment had they lost." "We really needed this," he con- tinued. "It took a long time com- ing, but now that we have this first one, it feels pretty darned good." Did Elliott give the team an old- fashioned pep talk during the in- termission after it blew a touch- down opportunity on the Oregon State four-yard line with two min- -utes left in the half? . "They didn't need it," he count- ered. "They were mad enough at themselves to go out there in the second half to do something about it." .i Overlooked in the excitement of the clinching touchdown was a decision that might have had tre- mendous bearing on the final out- lone. When Michigan scored the first time in the fourth quarter, the score was 9-7. But instead of set- tling for the single extra point, Stan Noskin pulled a fake beauti- fully and lobbed a two-point con- version pass into the end zone. The reasoning was obvious. A single PAT would have made a tie possible for the Beavershmerely with a field goal. 'With the score at 11-7, they then were forced to go all the way for the six-pointer. Elliott said the decision was all Noskin's. It was not called from the bench. For the second week in a row, Elliott couldn't signal out any out- standing individual, although it was for an entirely different reason than last week. "It was a 100 per cent team ef- fort; almost everyone had their fine moments," said Elliott. He started to go down the list of performances he was pleased with. But by the time he had finished, just about everyone had been mentioned. , * * * Darrell Harper's punting cer- tainly must rank among the best in the nation after his great ex- hibition yesterday. He boomed out 160 yards in three tries, and is now averaging 49.1 for the season.. Forty-six yards per punt is usually good enough to win the national title. * * * Captain George Genyk never, made the opening kickoff. He suf- fered a freak injury during warm- up drills--a gash on his forehead. It was nothing serious but kept him out of action for the day. Two other first-stringers were limited to first-half play. Right tackle Jon Schopf twisted an ankle while right end Bob Johnson re- ceived a leg injury. Both are ex- pected back next week against the Wildcats. Sophomore Bennie McRae, ex- pected to share the left half post with Harper was used sparingly because he hadn't fully recovered, from a week-old injury. "He wasn't as effective as usual," Elliott explained, "so we thought it best, not to use him too much." * * * . Noskin is throwing at better than a .500 clip for the first three games, indicating that he's back in the occasionally-brilliant form he displayed as- a sophomore in 1957. The quarterback froi Chicago has completed 20 of 39 passes. * * * The statistics from yesterday's game looked faintly reminiscent of Michigan teams of yore. The Wol- verines had 22 first downs to nine by the Beavers. They also netted 332 yards overall more than doubl- ing 0SU's 152. Oregon State's single-wing attack under control throughout the game. The visitors gained only 68 yards in 34 rushes and added an- other 84 yards passing for a total of 152, compared with Michigan's 252 rushing and 80 passing for 332' yards. OSC moved across the 50-yard line under its own power on only four occasions, and penetrated no farther than the Michigan 36 on' any of them. Key OSC Play Indeed, one scrimmage play can be singled out as the key to the whole Oregan State offensive ef- fort of the afternoon. It was a 20- yard sprint by reserve halfback Ron Miller to the Michigan one with 71/2 minutes left in the third period. Two previousplays from the 22 had gained only one yard, and Miller's run was instrumental in setting up Stinnette's one-yard touchdown plunge. Aaron Thom- as' conversion boot boosted OSC's short-lived lead to 7-3. Interceptions Foils Drive The interception that set up this score ruined an excellent Michi- gan : bid to increase its 3-0 lead. In seven plays' second-string quar- terback Don Hannah's offensive unit moved from the OSC 43 to a first down on the nine. Hannah then uncorked a pass intended for Harry Newman in the. right fiat, but reserve Beaver' fullback Chuck Smith broke through to intercept on the three. He moved unimpeded for 75 yards until tackled" from behind. The partisan crowd, which yes- terday included 13,500 high school bandsmen, was disappointed at the Wolverines' failure to score from close in. But they had been disappointed earlier in the game by similar circumstances. Noskin Pinpoints Passes With 4:30 to go in the half, Michigan began a long sustained drive on its 20 that eventually ended on the OSC 23. Rio and Bennie McRae carried the run- ning attack, and Noskin, flashing the pinpoint passing from that distinguished his sophomore sea- son of 1957, completed three suc- cessive first-down aerials. . On the Oregon State 48, Nos- kin connected with Julian for a 14-yard gain, hit Bob Johnson for a 15-yard advance, then found Halstead, though surrounded by defenders, on another '15-yard gain to the four-yard line. Almost as quickly, Michigan re- treated. An offside penalty shoved the Wolverines to the nine. Noskin lost two more after finding no re- ceivers open. Wolverine Drive Stalls Hannah came in and threw an incomplete pass, but an ineligible receiver downfield cost Michigan 15 more yards to the 26. Noskin came back in, ran three yards, threw incomplete, then connect- ed on fourth down with Julian to the 15. His fumble was recovered by OSC, which then ran out the few seconds'remaining. Thus ended a weird first half in which Michigan, although thor- oughly dominating'the statistics, had only Halstead's first-period three-pointer to show on- the scoreboard. That score came after a stray OSC pass was gathered in by Raeder on the Beaver 49. Kicked From an Angle He ran to the 21, but when the Wolverines could get only 18 yards in six subsequent plays, Halstead kicked his field goal from the 17- yard line at an angle. The combined offensive efforts of Noskin and Hannah's units .in both halves, plus the fact that El- liott used still another unit on defense, helped to wear down the Beavers, who did not substitute as freely. At the game's end, the Beaver line was a weary group. Both Nos- kin and Hannah's units kept mostly on the ground, and con- centrated on running most of their plays inside the OSC tackles. Elliott, carried off the field on his player's shoulders at game's end, did not single out any indi- viduals for their contributions, calling it "a team victory." MICH. OSU Daily-Michael Rontal MONDAY and TUESDAY SPECIAL! 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