PAGE THREE Y, OCT. 8 1936 THE MICHIGTAN fDAILY Freshmen Use Indiana Plays As Varsity Polishes Up D lefen se In juries Force Regular Trio To Sidelines Sweet And Smick Shifted To Varsity Posts; Kipke Strengthens Offense With the freshman gridders exhib- iting Indiana's running and passing attack, Michigan's Varsity and re- serve elevens concentrated on defen- sive play in yesterday's practice drill. Coach Kipke also sent his proteges through an offensive dummy scrim- mage in an effort to polish off the Wolverines' attack. Bothered by thigh injuries, both Capt. Matt Patanelli and Bob Cooper were again kept out of action in an effort to safeguard the regulars from further injury. A badly bruised shoul- der also kept Johnny Smithers from taking part in practice for the second straight day. Smick Replaces Loiko Cedric Sweet returned to his old fullback post as Coach Kipke shifted Tex Stanton and Alex Loiko to the reserve team with Danny Smick re- placing Loiko at the Varsity left end post. Previous to the dummy scrim- mage the entire squad was sent through a long session in covering punts. With Cooper out of action, Sweet and Campbell shared the kick- ing duties. Both managed to come through with.some fairly long punts enabling the linemen to cover them quite accurately. Bob Curren, sophomore prospect, was advanced to the Varsity squad and alternated with Sweet at full- back during the offensive drill against thesfreshmen.Elmer Ged- eon was also used at right end in place of Art Valpey who was given a much needed rest. Other players on the first team were Fed Janke and Mel Kramer at tackles, John Brennan and George Marzonie, guards, and Joe Rinaldi, .center. In the backfield, Bill Barclay remained at quarter with Stark Ritchie and Bob Campbell shared the passing as- signment. All-Soph Backfield An all-sophomore backfield fea- tured the make-up of the reserve eleven which alternated with the Varsity on defensive and offensive work. Louie Levine was a quarter with Ed Phillips and Wally Hook at the halfback positions and Stan- ton at fullback. Levine did most of the passing. After both teams fin- ished their dummy scrimmages, Coach. Kipke returned to his old role as a kicker in order to give Ritchie, Campbell, Barclay and Hook added practice in returning punts. The reserve lineup with the excep- tion of Smick who replaced Loiko remained the same. Norm Nicker- son was at the right end post, Don Seigel and Forrest Jordan, tackles, Jesse Garber and Clarence Vande- water at guards and John Jordan at center. The rest of the squad scrim- maged against another freshman ag- gregation. Star Tackle And Captain Of Hoosier Eleven 4 '6he PRE-SS IANGLE. By GEORGE J. ANDR... - (Daily Sports Editor) By CLAYTON HEPLER an end originally rated as a bit too The nine touchdown blast of the green for a starting position, started Ohio Scarlet Scourge against the in the Conference opener and did N.Y.U. Violets and the powerful drive their part in bottling up the mighty of the Minnesota Gophers, which wizardry of Oze Simmons. have placed them among the fore- Also included on that line, around mo stly contenders for national as which Simmons broke only once dur- well as Big Ten crowns this year, are ing the entire game when he scored going to find tough opposition at the the the tire gm w he son hand ofthesurrisetea ofthethe lone touchdown of the Iowans on hands of the surprise e of the a lateral pass, were five men who saw Western Conference within the next- And the Purple backfield will stack up with the Ohio State secondary man to man. There are six backs, with the junior, Don Heap, as the shining star, who have served notice that as far as running, passing and punting are concerned. The Wildcats meet North Dakota State this week before going to bat against the Buckeyes. Illinois will follow the Columbus team on the Northwestern calendar, and the wily Bob Zuppke will do anything but furnish a breather before the Goph- ers invade Evanston. Northwestern --Conference Dark Horse VY , 41 i LVliG C~~t, v"'"" uci. " - 'service in thf Bach To Set-Up Days month. sersoc n For if any team can upset the dope 1season when HARRY KIPKE is con- it will be the fighting Wildcats under cassed the C vinced that Michigan State is too itwlbehefginWldasueri football, the the tutelage of their new mentor, Dame. tough an opponent for Michigan in Coach Lynn Waldorf. Northwestern the opening game of the season, ac- and Michigan are the only Big Ten JII|III|Ii|(111 cording to a story that came out last schools to meet both of these teams. night. Team Should Improve A smaller opponent for the first "A team that will be ragged in game is favored by Coach Kipke, but October but should be coming along there is very little he can do about it in November,' was the way Coach at the present, as Michigan's football Waldorf described his players at the schedule is made up for three years beginning of the season. And then E_ in advance-and there are no setups. dolorously, "But by November, it "If we could have had the benefit may be too late. We'll already have of a weaker eleven in our opener this played Iowa, Ohio State, Illinois and season, much of the nervousness Minnesota." shown by our sophomores would have That was at the beginning of the been overcome," Coach Kipke was season. Last Saturday the Waldorf quoted as saying, "and they would team stepped out on the gridiron at have established some more needed Dyche Stadium and dropped the Iowa confidence before embarking upon a Hawkeyes to an inglorious 18-7 de- heavy schedule." feat. This to a big veteran team * * * that was expected to make a splurge Cellar Battle ? in the Conference race with their super star, Oze Simmons, the fleet THERE will be no love lost for Negro. Michigan by Indiana when the Probably the greatest single factor "pa I~ncinc rtkia kh 1iltflf thiffl irtl -axirv aoi tu. .hP Nn :_ Ithc~ ie stunning upset of last the Purple team out- class of Mid-Western fighting Irish of Notre -Associated Press Photo. Two hundred pounds of tackle trouble faces Michigan Saturday in the form of Indiana's Captain Chris Dal Sasso. A veteran of two years' experience, Dal Sasso was mentioned frequently in all-Western Confer- ence discussion last year. Standing 5 feet 11 inches tall, the sturdy Hoosier captain is bound to cause Michigan's line a lot of trouble. Mays Wrecks Car In Speedway Crash' - i WESTBURY, N.Y., Oct. 7.-(A')- Rex Mays, young Los Angeles driver, narrowly escaped serious injury to- day when the Miller special he was driving over the intertwining Roose- velt raceway crashed into the con- crete retaining wall at the east end of the main stretch and was wrecked. He was severely shaken up. With the car out of the Oct. 12 race Mays will drive relief for Babe Stapp, whose mount is a Topping special. Tazio Nuvolari, one of Italy'sl craftiest drivers, turned in the best time for a single lap, 70.100 m.p.h. and averaged 69.929 m.p.h. in to- day's trials for starting positions His elapsed time for the route was 17 minutes, 9.62 seconds. H. E. PHILP ALL KINDS OF TAILORING MaiStr eet OVER CAHOW'S DRUG STORE Delta Sigma Chi Wins I-M Speedball Opener Delta Sigma Chi defeated Kappa Sigma 6-5 yesterday in the first speedball game of the Intramural season. Hall led his team to victory by scoring four points and playing a fine defensive game. CALLS FOR CANDIDATES Freshman track tryouts report to Coach Ken Doherty at 5:15 p.m. at Ferry Field. READ THE WANT ADSI Hoosiers answer Lhe c on wnis e in the Stadium Saturday. Every story coming out of the Bloomington camp has as its gist "revenge last season's 7-0 defeat!" It will be remembered that the Wolverines won from the Hoosiers in, the second game of the 1936 season when Vernon Huffman, Indiana all- around star, did some queer things while catching one of Ced Sweet's punts, the ball rolling over the goal- line where Capt. Matt Patanelli re- covered for the only touchdown of the game. Huffman, who was and is the star of Bo McMillin's "five-man" back- field, reaped some sweet revenge last winter when he led the day to two basketball victories over the Wol- verines, but apparently that is not enough. Indiana swept to an impressive 38- ) win over Coach McMillin's old team, the "Praying Colonels" of Centre, last Saturday, and a victory this week would not only start their Conference schedule off well, but would start Michigan on the way to the Big Ten cellar the Hoosiers have become so well acquainted with in late years. in the Hiawkeye deieaT, was tieNorm- western forward wall, which com- pletely smothered the Iowa offensive, limiting them to only two first downs and a grand total of 20 yards gained by rushing. Two sophomores, Voights who is a tackle, and Diehl, STROH'S PABST BLUE RIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers 0I J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 (signed) Seil, Putt & Rusby Inc. 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