10, 1935 TTTrT~2ArfiT~ 16- - -.-: ""'Lm"' .. Grid Favorites Oppose Crucial Foes Saturday Minnesota-Nebraska Game Is Turning Point For Bid Ten Champs Upsets Are In Sigh Oregon-California Contest Tops Coast Schedule As Purdue Faces Fordham NEW YORK, Oct. 9. - (P) - The football campaign is only three weeks old, yet the turning point for several of the mightiest squads in the coun- try, highly favored in pre-season pre- dictions, looms as early as this Sat- urday. There's the came of Minnesota, the mountainous Gophers, rated at least on a par last fall with Alabama's Rose Bowl champions, faced all of a sudden with the tremendous task of beating Dana Bible's Nebraska Cornhuskers in the top game on the National schedule. Despite the loss of such gieat backs as Pug Lund and Bull Kostka, Minnesota figured to rate right back up there again this year. But now Al Alphonse, last of the Gopher ball-carrying stars who trimmed Pittsburgh in one of 1934's greatest battles, has been declared ineligible and Minnesota was an or- dinary looking team beating North Dakota State in its first start, 26 to 6. And Nebraska, rising to its old power- house heights, may be just the team to play Minnesota's steamroller role in the Mid-West with that fire-ball halfback Lloyd Cardwell carrying the ball as did Lund last year. He was the best looking back of the year, scoring three touchdowns on Chicago and in the 20-7 conquest of Iowa State. Tough Battle On Coast The team that was labelled TNT- Beware by every coach on the Pa- cific Coast, Oregon, possible rival of Stanford as the coast Conference champion and Rose Bowl candidate, runs into the most improved team out there, California, conquerors of Slip Madigan's St. Mary's Gaels, 10 to 0, last Satu'rday. There, too, igreat hopes may come to a sudden end and new ambitions take lofty flight. In the South this new power at Auburn, victor over Tulane, 10 to 0, meets an aroused Tennessee eleven that took an astonishing 38-13 whip- ping from Carl Snavely's winging North Carolinians. Another _of. Andy Kerr's always tricky and dangerous Colgate teams, perhaps his best since the undefeated, untied, unscored upon, uninvited elev- en of 1933, faces the crossroads of Rose Bowl hopes again far earlier than expected against Iowa's speed demons, headed by the Negro flash, Ossie Simmons and bone-busting Dick Crayne. Yale Meets Penn Most interesting of all the Eastern duels brings Yale, climbing steadily back to football's top stand, against the most powerful Pennsylvania team in years, a massive array that had the Princeton Tigers beaten for three quarters before losing finally, 7 to 6. The husky machine Jim Crowley has moulded at Fordham meets its first big test in Purdue, 7-0 con- queror of Northwestern. Dick Har- low's new regime at Harvard comes under heavy pressure for the first ,time against Holy Cross, one of the most dangerous looking squads in the East. At New York University, where Dr. Mal Stevens, former Yale head coach, is staging a comeback, Car- negie Tech, unexpectedly tough for Notre Dame, brings all sorts of dis- quieting possibilities into the picture. Temple, possibly the East's best this year under the veteran Pop Warner, already winner over Center and Texas Aggies, meets another tough South- ern foe in Vanderbilt Friday at Phila- delphia. Manhattan may cause Lou- isiana State more grief in another in- tersectional struggle here, and South-' ern California has drawn a tartar in Illinois, but the pressure is off most of the other big ones Saturday. Notre Dame looks for little trouble with Wisconsin; Duke rates well over Clemson, and Stanford has an appar- ent bulge on U.C.L.A. Ohio State hasn't much to fear in Drake, the way the Buckeyes now are rigged. Larson Is Pleased With Boxing Squad Twenty boys answered Coach Ver- non Larson's call for freshman boxers yesterday at Waterman Gym. The boxers ranged from flyweight to heavyweight. There will be an All- Campus boxing tournament Dec. 2 which will undoubtedly spur a lot more of the boys to come out and compete. Larson expects the squad to grow very rapidly since the rankE will not be closed for some time. "Most of the boys claim that they have boxed for some association WthT+~~,c this~ Ptainap M wnrk on I e r a f t l l I 1 f x i Latent Speed May Develop.-- Then Watch Team o By AB CARLISLE Dopesters say that Michigan's one big reason for not producing a good team last year was the lack of good material and the same dopesters have the same thing figured out for this, year. It is granted that last year's team was green. Bill Renner, the only big f threat, was out with injuries, and the backfield was made of inexper- ienced sophomores and not too well versed juniors. But this year the stcry is different to some extent, although the first game was something of a disappoint- ment. Renner is back and shooting passes with exceptional accuracy, having completed eight out of fifteen tries in the Michigan State game. On top of that he is rated by some to be the best passing back in the Big Ten Conference. He's light, fast and shifty, and those are the three things that critics say the Wolverines lack. Chris Tricky Chris Everhardus is another back whose flashiness and shiftiness is going to be a big factor in Michigan's squad showing an increase in miles- per-hour over last week's slowness. Chris has had a year's Varsity ex- perience and knows his way around. As soon as his slight neck injury clears up he is expected to start to break loose and to do some fancy ball carrying. Everhardus has the trickiness and the power that it takes. As for Smithers and Ritchey, time will tell. But if they make as good showings as they did against State and keep improving as the season progresses, there will be plenty of that so-called lacking speed put in there. Bob Cooper, another sophomore back, had some tough luck and got banged up and as yet has been unable -to make a showing. But judging from last spring's practice show and the work he did in the first few weeks of practice this fall, there shouldn't be much worry about him not supplying a good share of speed. Line Foster So much for the backfield. Now for the line. At the beginning of practice, the line averaged a good 200 pounds. Admittedly they were -_ . . f, .1 a+ i r Au IV A 1 l. 7 £3. 1' J-L 11J LjY PAGE. SEVEN I Three Veterans Head Fall Golfing Squads i Both Varsity and freshman golf squads for the remainder of the fall season were announced yesterday by Prof. Thomas C. Trueblood, coach. Three veterans from last year's team were included on the Varsity list in addition to several boys who have been playing consistently good golf on campus for several years. Al Saunders, Larry David, and Woody Malloy are old timers. Though Saunders is only a junior, he com- peted in the Big Ten meet at Evan- ston last year and took fifth place in the individual scoring. Other members named on the Var- sity are: Walker Graham, Jack Moo- ney, Al Karpinski, H. Williams, F. Hull, and C. Greenstreet. The freshman list includes Evans, Novak, Smith, Zimmerman, Griffin, and Charnley. Coach Trueblood also announced that the National Intercollegiate golf trophy, won by Michigan for the sec- ond consecutive year, will be on dis- play at Wahr's book store all week. i Figure It Out For Yourself' too slow for a quick get-away out like State. But Ziem and Bissell the be guards at present average about 1 which, isn't too heavy for plenty speed. Patanelli, Savage and Valp weigh in at around 200 pounds. 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