T HE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCT. 4, 1936 ... ...- The PRESS ANGLE By GEORGE J. ANDROS LL the Michigan State delegation has departed for East Lansing with one of our goalposts, a good part of the town, and their third straight victory in as many years. Whatever else may be said of the game, no one can deny that the Wolverines played typical Michigan football. They waited for the breaks and they got them, but they failed to cash in, with one exception. The why and wherefore is not so easily explained. State had a good ball team. They deserved to win, tough as it is to say for two reasons. They outsmarted and they outblocked Mich- igan. The center of the Michigan line was pretty fair, the tackles looked great throughout the first half, but the ends, excepting only Art Valpey, just weren't there; neither was the secondary. State's first score was as beautifully executed as any end around play ever could be. It's a sucker play, and is designed to cross up a smashing end who mixes up his play. For successful execution the end must be taken out and the secondary cut down. State blocked, Loiko was sucked in com- pletely, and then the whole State team went through and cleared the tracks. O.K. They crossed up Michigan on the play once, Loiko looked bad, all right. Once is enough. But both Loiko and Patanelli spent the greater part of the afternoon watching the same play sweep past them as the Spartans turned on the steam. THE THING that I can't see is why in the name of , after watching Michigan State run around their ends for two years, Michigan could have the memory graphically renewed in the early mjoments of the game, and then let State keep on getting away with it. Bob Cooper had a bad day, but he flashed a lot of stuff, and with the added experience of a game under his belt should develop into a great safety man. He was the better kicker in the first half. Aggett in the second half. Cooper got off a couple of nice boots, but too many of them looked like line drives to center field. Cooper, despite inopportune fumbling gaffe Michigan fans their first glimpse of a Wolverine safety man who can carry the mail since Harry Newman strutted his stuff in the Stadium. Michigan's passing attack stunk. Thirteen passes and one com- pleted tells the story. Smithers and Cooper tossed some good ones, and some' bad ones, but either the intended receivers were smothered by a galaxy of State men, or else the ball bounded merrily off some- one's belly. State didn't have to do a whole lot of passing, but they completed two out of five attempts. MICHIGAN lacked anything .that even resembled scoring punch. They got deep into State territory, and then either moved backwards, or spent so long in the huddle they were automatically moved back. Nothing can be anymore disheartening. Levine found a hole between State's right tackle and right end near the close of the first half, and then slammed at the left side of the line. Michigan could have used one of their other competent running backs. Stark Ritchie, weak on defense, or Chris Everhardus, who was hurt, might have performed to advantage as the running back where Coop had trouble getting loose. Stark has been a consistent ground gainer, while Chris has proved himself a shifty runner who can see and go through a hole that a lot of people don't realize exists. Johnny Smithers turned in about the best backfield performance of the day. He broke away for two beautiful runs, and was then Promptly relegated to blocking back again. And there is a Michigan man who really can block, by the way. kHE TEAM did look a lot better than in the opener last year. Defensively, the Wolverines were tackling sharply. Art Valpey was a standout on the flanks, but too often Michigan men were blocked completely out of the play. Cooper and Smithers were given plenty of protection on their passes, and Coop appeared to have enough time to get his kick away, but when it came to opening a hole through the center or boxing in a Spartan lineman for an off-tackle slant, no dice. The Michigan line was beaten across the line of scriMmage, and as long as that's the case, no running attack can function. Michigan couldn't shake Cooper loose all afternoon simply because they couldn't cut down the State ends and secondary like State could. Michiga'n did block well in the open field and gave Cooper a lot of hep on his return of punts, but they couldn't clear the line of scrim- mnage so he cgld get over the hump. When Michigan scored they looked like they had found themselves at last. They got a break when interference to receiver Cooper was called, and with the ball on the 5 yard stripe, they shoved it over with three smashes at the line. Kip called on Chris Everhardus to tie the score and Chris came through with a beautiful placement. The half eded, the bands played, and Michigan went to work again right where they left off-for about two minutes. Smithers got away for a long end run and put Michigan in scoring terri- tory. Then the Michigan attack fizzled when somebody forgot the signals and the ref. called to much time. On the next play, Michigan was off-side, and there they were, first down and 20 yards to go. JF ROM THEN ON Michigan's attack was shot. They never seriously threatened and State went to work. They blocked and they ran and they passed and generally outplayed Michigan throughout the remainder of the game. Even two touchdowns behind, Michigan refused to open up. Maybe I'm Subs' Punch Helps WayneWin, 13-0 DETROIT, Oct. 3 .'(P)-The work of three substitutes gave Wayne Uni- versity the punch that enabled it to overcome Bluffton (Ohio) college, 13-0, today. After the regulars failed to score in the first period the subs, quarter- back Joe Mohr, guard Herb Hamel and end Uyval Jones, weze sent onto the field. Mohr took Joe Creek's long kick on his own 35-yard line in 'the, second, reversed his field once and raced 65 yards for the first touch- down, then place-kicked the extra point. In the fourth Stan Stetera, Wayne halfback, kicked 63 yards to Bluff- ton's five-yard line, where Jim Miller ton's five-yard line, where Jim Miller, the Ohioans' quarterback, was brought down. all wrong, but why must Michigan continue to receive when they are be- hind? You can't score without the ball, and you can't score running two plays into the line and kick- ing. After all, there's nothing to play safe for, you might just as well take a chance and open up the ball game. Perhaps they'll score a touchdown that they couldn't otherwise have gotten, but maybe you will too. It doesn't make much difference whether the final reckoning is 21 or 28-7. Probably someone ought to yell,' if you want to play, put on a uniform" at me, and I guess they'd be right. It's one thing to sit here and write about it, and another to be down there catching it intthe neck on every down, and playing your heart out, and then losing like that. It's a tough start for the team and for Kip, but they've got what it takes, and I think they'll begin to click if some of the glaring weaknesses can be ironed out. They've got the ma- terial, they've got the guts, and they've got the spirit, and they'vegot the coach, and by next Saturday they'll be ready to give Indiana a real workout. N M R T O R JE K F L D N C R D G D Se Po L H R Jo Ms N N GE hi R D BE Ea Fred Fitzsimmons Won Fat Freddie's Fate Wve t w c.~. ite Is Hit By The Curse uew York (N.L.) AB R H O A Of A A jH eFs o.State [oore, lf ........... 5 0 1 2 0 9 First downs..............9 artell, ss ............3 0 1 0 1 Yards gained rushing .....278 erry, lb ...........4 0 1 5 1 NEW YORK, Oct. 3.-(P)-MaybeF tt, rf ............. 4 0 2 4 0 there is a broken heart for every Forward passes completed.. 2 ipple, cf ...........4 1 1 2 0 shining lgiht on old Broadway, but Forward passes intercepted. 1 ancuso, c.......... 4 0 1 7 0 the biggest fellow with the biggest Yardsb-y forward pasing.. 16 Vhitehead, 2b........4 0 0 3 4 heartache of them all tonight was Lateral passesrattempted.. 1 ackson, 3b .........2 0 1 0 1 Freddie Fitzsimmons, hard luck Lateral passes completed .. 1 :oenig, x ...........1 0 0 0 0 pitcher for the New York Giants. aL ateral passes1 itzimmons, p .......3 0 2 1 1 Toppled from the very pinnacle of Yards by lateral passes ... 1 eslie, xx...........1 0 1 0 0 World Series fame by a ball that Punting average (from scrim- avis, xxx .......... 0 0 0 0 0 squirted out of his gloved hand to rob mage)...............38 % him of a victory he justly deserved, (x) total yards, kicks re- Totals ..........35 1 11 24 8 the big fellow had to fight another turned.. .................144 x-batted for Jackson in 9th, great battle in the Giant dressing Opponents fumbles re- xx-Batted for Fitzimmons in 9th. room to keep back the tears. covered .................1 xxx-Ran for Leslie in 9th. "I dunno," he muttered, "seems Yards lost by penalty...... 85 few York (A.L.) AB R H O A like I can't do anything right enough. (x) Includes punts and kickoff rosetti, ss ..........4 0 1 4 5 That ball that Crosetti hit looked like --- - -- - - - olfe, 3b ........... 4 0 0 3 1 a cinch to me. Why, I've gone over imaggio, of.........3 0 1 2 0 much farther than that to get those ehrig, lb.......... 3 1 1 10 1 nasty hoppers, but today the ball was V ickey, c ...........2 0 0 3 2 a half inch too far. It just seemed elkirk, rf .......... 3 0 1 2 0 to catch the webbing of my glove, owell, if ........... 2 1 0 1 0 hesitate as if to make up its mind to GAGE azzeri, 2b .......... 2 0 0 2 2 come in or go away, and then vote adley, p ...........2 0 0 0 3 against me." uffing, z .......... 1 0 0 0 0 Manager Bill Terry and the rest of ohnson, zz ......... 0 0 0 0 0 the listless Giants offered condol- A alone, p .......... .00 0 0 0 ences. A N "Tough luck, Fitz, but it wasn't u Totals .......... 26 2 4 27 14 your fault," said Terry. "That ball FALL H A z-Batted for Hadley in 8th. was pretty well hit. Anyway, we're zz-Ran for Ruffing in 8th. to blame. We should have given you ew York (N.) . . .000 010 000-1 some runs. We got enough hits but You wil like especic ew York (A.L.) . .010 000 01x-2 -well, baseball's like that. One Roc Errors-None. Runs batted in. break can wipe out the best pitching Gehrig, Ripple, Crosetti. Two base job ever turned in." NIC its: Dimaggio. Home runs: Gehrig, ipple. Sacrifices: Bartell, Lazzeri.. FOOTBALL SCORES ouble plays: Crosetti and Gehrig; Columbia 34; Maine 0.< ;> ; artell, Whitehead and Terry. Pennsylvania 35; Lafayette 0. arned runs NY (NL) 1; NY (AL) Alma 20; Albion 20 (Tie). lY- Cd.1 n .READ TH-iE AIY "lich. 7 140 13 1 1 11 3 3I 11 351/2 75 1 20 ;s. Mich. State Michigan Gaines LE Patanelli Zindel LG Brennan Vanderburg C Rinaldi Gortat LT .Janke Dahlgren RG Marzonie Sleder RT Kramer Bremer RE Loiko Halbert QB Levine Agett LH Cooper Sebo RH Smithers Brandstatter FB Sweet Michigan State .....7 0 7 7-21 Michigan........0 7 0 0 - 7 Referee, Lee Daniels (Loyola); Umpires,dLion Gardiner (Illinois); Field Judge, Ray J. Eichenlaub (Notre Dame); Head linesman, Dr. E. P. Maxwell, Ohio State). ,Suite Statiestics THE INE4N ShoP, presents lew Line in NDK ERCHI EFS lly the French Prints and the hester styles ELS ARCADE 'S CLASSIFIED SECTION 2. Left on bases: NY (NL) 9; NY (AL) 3. Bases on balls: Fitzsimmons 2 (Dickey, Powell); Hadley 1 (Jack- son); Strikeouts: Hadley 2 (Fitz- simmons, Ripple) ; Malone 1 (White- head); Fitzimmons 5 (Lazzeri, Cros- etti, Selkirk,1Powell, Hadley). Hits- off Hadley 10 in 8 innings; 1 run; off Malone 1 in 1 inning, 0 runs. Winning pitcher: Hadley. Umpires: Magerkurth, Summers, Pfirman and Geisel. Time 2:01. 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