AY, OCTOBER 30, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY - - -- ------ -------------- - - - ------ .. .. . ........ Kipke Minnesota Is Refuses To Concede Victory To Gopher Powerhouse Ace Of Gopher Juggernaut In A(,ction Against Iowa -i w Not Out As An 'Upset Victimj 'Worse Spots Before,' He Says; Pleased With Play In Illinois Game After the recent Chicago game. Coach Harry Kipke vowed that the Michigan football team would upset; one of the three highly touted Con- ference elevens remaining on her schedule, the three being Illinois,' Minnesota, and Ohio State. Playing in the rain last Saturday, Michigan almost realized Kipke's vow, but the Illini managed to eke out a* win by the narrowest possible margin,' 7 to 6. A tie would have been an upset, perhaps not a full-fledged one,, but an upset just the same. As it' was, the play of the Michigan line was well above expectations, and manyE were satisfied anyway, in spite of the tantalizing score. Backfield Needs Work Yesterday Kipke expressed himself as well pleased with the work of the "whole"ine last week-end, if not with the score. "'The backfield needs a lot of work though," he said. "We'll have to work on the backfield a lot this week." Asked what he thought about the Minnesota team, Kipke used one word to describe them, a word which has been applied to them quite often this year, especially after the 48 to 12 triumph over Iowa last Saturday. Kipke called the Gopher's a "power- house" team. "Then you would say that the one big team you hope to upset this year is Ohio'State?" "No," said Kipke, shocked. "We haven't given up hope of taking that Minnesota bunch yet. Things have looked worse than this before when we went up to Minnesota." Which is1 quite a statement considering that the Gophers have not beaten Mich- igan at Minneapolis since 1892. 1926 Game Recalled] In 1926 Michigan was as much the underdog as it is this year, but managed to beat the Gophers, 7 to 6, at Minneapolis as a result of a fumble which Benny Oosterbaan scooped up and ran with for a touch- down. So Minnesota is still on Michigan's list. No 20-to-0 victory over Nebraska,' nor 13-to-7 defeat of Pitt, nor 48-to- 12 submersion of Iowa is going to dis- courage Kipke. Things certainly do look bad, but it doesn't count for too much when you consider the "Michigan tradition" and some more' practical aspects: the improvement of the Michigan line and an apparent weakness in the Gopher defense against passes, long ones in particular. Iowa scored two touchdowns via the long pass route. Practicing inside Yost Field House for the first tirre this season, Kipke had Regeczi throwing long passes, ap- proximately 30 yards in length. Ward, ennings, . Patanelli, Savage, and Sweet were on the receivingend. Kipke also had a look at Minnesota' plays yesterday and with the help of' Line Coach "Cappf" Cappon planned a defense against the Minnesota line plays which have been such an im- portant factor in Coach Bernie Bier- man's system. "FUMBLEITIS'" CHAPEL HILL, Oct. 29. - (P) -It takes just one look at the records to show how keyed-up the North Caro- I lina and North Carolina State teams were at the start of their traditional battle Saturday. In the first five min-' utes they fumbled seven times. STAR * Cappon From By FRED DE LANO D U S T I ~lThe first football team that Harry Kipke turned out as head football coach here was the last Michigan *-BV ART CARSTENS- , eleven that Franklin C. Cappon, as-, - sistant grid and head basketball LAST SATURDAY morning I made mentor, saw lose until last Saturday some rather nasty remarks about afternoon when he watched Bob Michigan's line, drawing some unflat- Zuppke's Illini defeat the Wolverines tering parallels between it and Pro- 7-6. fessor Hussey's dinosauri. I take it In 1929 "Cappy" accompanied the back. The line was playing heads team to Lafayette, Ind., for the Pur- up football all day Saturday and due game. Purdue that year won the showed real defensive power. Conference championship, the last one Just the boys I had in mind when that hasn't been at least partially held writing about the dinosauri played by Michigan, and boasted of such the best games Saturday. Captain stars as Yunevich, Welch, Harmeson, Austin must have made a majority Sleight and Van Bibber. of the tackles in the first half, even Purdue defeated the Wolverines 30- following plays to the other side of 16, leading at the half 6-0 and then the line to get the ball carrier from folding up before a fierce Michigan behind. attack in the third quarter to trail at the end of that period, 16-6. How- To really do justice I would ever, in the fourth quarter the Boiler- have to mention every lineman maker attack started goalward and who played Saturday. Their 24 points were scored before the end blocking was weak, that is ad- of the game: mitted, but John Viergever, Wil- Cappon, himself a star at Mich- lard Hildebrand, Bill Borgmann, igan in his undergraduate days, who Jerry Ford, Mike Savage, Matt has been called by Yost, "the most ver- Patanelli, Chet Bead, Tage Jacob- satile man ever to play football son, and Willy Ward all did some for Michigan," graduated in 1923.'j smart defensive work. He assumed a coaching position at I salaam particularly to the three Luther College in Iowa and returned ends who worked Saturday. All were diagnosing Illinois' tricky end runs and lateral passes perfectly. Ward NTM is still a master at effortless end plat.0E The age old truth that you can't S P O R T S please all the people all the time is being learned by football schedule makers to their sorrow. A few years Thursday marked the conclusion ago the public was demanding that of the first round of the inter-class the major schools dispense with hockey tournament. The seniors de- warm-up games and mid-season feated the sophomores, 3-0. The three breathers against smaller schools, goals were made by Gertrude Morris, with the result that every major Floradine Beardsley, and Althea Lyle. team this year is playing what would The final games of the tournament have been called a suicide schedule will be played this Thursday. four years ago. The first and second freshman Now the pendulum is swinging hockey teams defeated a team from the other way and the nasty- University High school in a match sounding name "money-sched- played last week. Mary Redden made ule" is being applied to what was the only goal of the game. formerly a "suicide" schedule.* Paul Gallico wrote yesterday Four student golfers met four local morning of an Eastern team los- golfers in a match Saturday. Dorothy ing because its "money schedule" Shappell, '36, Cora Nielson, '36, Kitty was too heavy for the players. Miller, '37, and Jane Brucker, '35, rep- -Associated Press Photo The picture above shows Francis "Pug" Lund, ace of the Minnesota powerhouse, starting on one of his long runs against Iowa Saturday. A triple-threat star in his own right, Lund last year was accorded general all- American recognition. His play against Michigan last year in the bitter scoreless tie is well remembered by Wolverine fans. Always noted for strength and power, Minnesota teams under Coach Bernie Bierman have combined those qualities with speed and deception, as typified by Lund. The picture shows not only Lund, but also the weight and strength of the rest of the backfield as it forms a blocking unit. Powerful Gopher Eleven Has Scored 137 Points In 4 Games! By ART SETTLE phonse, and Kostka, a twenty-two-, Minnesota's championship - bound year-old fullback weighing 210 football team has scored 137 points pounds, who hits a line in the man- in four games. Michigan's muscle- ner of the former Minnesota crash- bound eleven has tallied 15 points in ers, Joesting, Nagurski, and Manders. four games. That's the difference Kostka scored three touchdowns in which the Wolverines must surmount the Iowa game, which made him the when they meet the Gophers at Min- leading individual point scorer in the neapolis Saturday, in the outstanding Conference. Big Ten game of the week. Despite Lund, all-American half-' The difference in points doesn't back, Oosterbaan says that he can't mean that Minnesota is 122 points pick the best Gopher back, which better than Michigan, but it indicates exemplifies the caliber of Minnesota's significantly the characteristics of backs. Minnesota relies almost wholly each team. Bernie Bierman's boys are on its running game, using the, for- a powerful offensive aggregation, ward pass only little. Lund does the while Coach Kipke's gridders are very kicking and passing, much better defensively than on the According to Oosterbaan, Minne-, offense. sota has departed somewhat from its Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, who typical powerhouse attack, to employ scouted the Gophers against Pitts- a little deception, making its offense ourgh and Iowa, admits that they are a diversified one. a "very good team." They have a great Against Iowa, the Gophers exhib- running game, built around Lund,Al- ited their staggering power, rollingj up 14 points before the Hawkeyes' " placed a hand on the ball except to' ee kin RegainS hold it for two kickoffs. Minnesota made 23 first downs and gained 595 S oring Lead yards by rushing to 70 for Iowa. e O r1 g e RNot only is Minnesota a strong of- L L fensive team, but it also has good de- i rou 'rrr fensive qualities, having held its op- ponents to 37 points, while opposing CHIICAGO, Oct. 29 -{)- A touch- ielevens have scored 52 against Mich- Cigan. In the Pittsburgh game, Minne- down against Northwestern, and a sota's line withstood successfully on revision of Jay Berwanger's total, to- its own four-yard line, four plunges day found Dick Heekin, one of Ohio by Weinstock, crashing Panther. State's numerous ball-carriers, back in the Big Ten football scoring lead - N. with 24 points. Spartans Vision No Berwanger, Chicago's ace halfback, * Fe t was credited with two touchdowns HomecomingFeat Jacobson's Injuries In Motor Accident Slight Facial cuts which Tage Jacob- son, reserve tackle on the Varsity football team, received Sunday night in an automobile accident near Dixboro, will probably not keep him out of next Saturday's game with Minnesota, according to Dr. Frank Lynam, team physi- cain. The two cuts, one on the lip and the other on the chin, each re- quired about five stitches. Jacobson was returning from his home in Detroit with friends when the automobile went off the road and tore down several posts be- fore coming to a stop. Gene Mako Is Rated Ranking Collet e Netter against Indiana a week ago, but lost one of them to Tommy Flinn, Mar- oon quarterback, after a belated check with the referee, Dr. J. H. Nichols of Oberlin College. Berwanger fumbled near the goal line and Flinn fell on the ball in the end zone. Until the final check-up, it was believed Ber- wanger fumbled after the ball was declared dead over the goal line. The change left the Maroon star second with 22 points in two games. The leaders: Heekin, hb, O.S.U. ... Berwanger, hb., Chi.. Kostka, fb., Minn. ... Boucher, hb., O.S.U... Alphonse, hb., Minn.. Bartlett, hb., Chi. .. Crayne, fb., Iowa .... Wetzell, fb., O.S.U. .. G TD .3 4 .2 3 .1 3 .3 3 .1 2 .2 2 .2 2 .3 2 PAT 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 TP 24 22 18 18 12 12 12 12, EAST LANSING, 'Oct. 29 -(OP) - Michigan.State today buckled down in earnest to the task of preparing for its homecoming football game here Saturday with Marquette Uni- versity after a week of comparative rest. Charley Bachman, after listening to the report of two of his scouts on the Hilltoppers, ordered a scrimmage for his first string material. There was plenty of heavy duty during the af- ternoon in a punting scrimmage and later in punishing drills for the line- men. The report of Chief Scout Miles W. Casteel and Freshman Coach John Kobs, who observed the Temple-Mar- quette game Saturday, was not par- ticularly encouraging for Bachman. They pointed out that Temple had made two of its three touchdowns by a recovered fumble and a blocked kick. Of chief interest in the scouting re- port, however, was the appraisal of the Marquette passing game.' With Michigan State itself displaying the best overhead attack in years the air is apt to be filled with passes Satur- day. NEW YORK, Oct. 29 -W)- Gene Mako, University of Southern Cali- fornia star, is the ranking intercol- legiate singles player for the 1934 season, Morris Duane, chairman of the Intercollegiate Committee of the United States Lawn Tennis Associa- tion, announced today. Gilbert A. Hunt, of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, and Jack Tidball, of the University of California at Los Angeles, were seed- ed No. 2 and No. 3 in singles compe- tition. Tidball ranked No. 1 last year. Mako, with Phil Castlin, a' schoolI mate at Southern California, were designated the ranking doubles team, with Tidball and Charles H. Church, another University of California at Los Angeles player, seeded second, and Martin Buxby and Bert Weltens of the University of Texas ranking third. The ranking follows: SINGLES 1. Gene Mako, University of Southern California. 2. Gilbert A.,Hunt, Mass. Institute of Technology. 3. Jack Tidball, U. of C. at Los Angeles. 4. Wilbur E. Hess, Rice Institute. 5. William B. Reese, Georgia Tech. DOUBLES 1. Gene Mako and Phil Castlin, Southern California. 2. Jack T i d b a l1 and Charles Church, Univ. of California at Los Angeles. 3. Martin Buxby and Belt Welt- ens, University of Texas. 4. Gene Smith and Carl Holmes, University of California. 5. Edward Sutter and Kendall Crame, Tulane University. ZUP TAUGHT SCHMIDT Francis Schmidt, now Ohio State coach, took notes when Bob Zuppke lectured at a summer coaching course in Springfield, Mo., some years ago. Of course it is true that eight, nine, or ten top-flight battles each fall are going to bring more money into the athletic coffers than are three big games and a flock of small ones. And it is also true that schedule- makers have this in mind. But is is only right that major teams should play major opponents or, at least, opponents who have maj- or division pretensions. No one ever seems to think of the opponent in these "warm-ups" or "breathers" games. Teams like Westminister, for example, play a tough game against opponents of their own size one week and seven days later are massacred by a team like Pittsburgh. The only solution for this dil- emma is for 'the small schools to forsake the big gate receipts which are their only reason for submitting to a. massacre by a bigger opponent, and withdraw into leagues among schools of equal size. It is the system which is adhered to so rigidly at Wes- leyan, where Jack Blott is head coach this year. FIRST BRINGS VICTORY A field goal kicked by L. B. Asbury, end on the Oklahoma A. & M. College football team, in the first quarter of the recent game with the Haskell In- dians, proved to be the winning points as well as being the first field goal a Cowboy team has scored since 1926 when Charhe Strack booted one through the goal posts to win a game from Grinnell. Strack is now one of the outstanding professional heavyweight wrestelers in the United States. I~-~~BOYS-~-~ I. GOING TO THE GOPHER Game? CELEBRATE at the Hotel Lowry, in St. Paul . . . center of Homecoming Activities in the Twin Cities . . . Two Big Bands . . . featuring renowned Harold Stern's Band direct from New York ... dine at the famous Terrace Cafe, or Coffee Shop . refreshments in Terrace Grill and Hollywood Lounge . . . 25 minutes by Bus direct from Sta- dium. tI :a Get into one of our wool-lined, and in- ner Slicker lined- Corduroy Coats $7.50 Blue, Wool, Nav y REEFER COATS $6.50 to $7.50 t - s hi"ment Received of - rr f/7. 7rrr m rIt u' ! _ .a A REPUTATION of LONG Standing is the best proof of the safety of any bank. Our record throughout the last fifty-two years f a E+ f' iI