THE MICHIGAN DAILY indefeated Hoytmen Face Illini Saturday InOniy Hon e Mee Illinois Strong In Mile Relay, SpringEvents Schwarzkopf Will Attack Two Mile Mark; Gedeon To Run AndPlay Ball Michigan's undefeated track team returns to the home cinders for the first and last time of the outdoor campaign Saturday afternoon when they take on the University of Illinois at Ferry Field. It will be the first time the local customers have had a chance to wit- ness Chuck Hoyt's powerhouse in ac- tion since the Wolverines laced Ohio State at the outset of a brilliant in- door season. The prospet is appe- tizing to those who have heard much but seen little of Maize and Blue track prowess this season. Michigan Favorite Michigan goes into their home op- ener a smart money favorite on their past record. Illinois, always an im- proved team outdoors, will be no soft touch. It will be a wide open affair the whole afternoon with the Illini looming in the sprints, mile relay, hurdles and high jump. The mace of the day is slated for the meet finale pitting Illinois' high geared mile relay against Michigan's vastly improved foursome. At the Drake Relays last week the Illinois quartet of Gains, Downs, McCown and Ashly snared fourth. Their pace, however, was not as important from the Michigan angle as the fact that they negotiated the route in 3:16.2. Illini Milers Strong Illinois already holds one decision over the Hoyt mile crew which placed fourth behind the Illini at the indoor Conference championships. No mile team that Charlie Hoyt has been able to tack together so far this season has bettered 3:20. Michigan's quarter milers, on the other hand, have apparently galvan- ized into action since their Penn Re- lays junket. Should Faulkner, Hayes, Clarke and either Jim Rae or Waldo Abbot fullfill this week's practice promise the mile relay will only add another five points to the Michigan total. New Marks Expected The. predicted sell-out crowd can look forward to the probability of at least one event producing a new mark as Rambling Ralph Schwarzkopf swings into action in the two-mile. The Sophomore distance sensation, who last week flabbergasted Eastern track experts by outracing Don Lash and Joe McClusky at Penn, will be a practical certainty to wipe out Walt Stone's Michigan mark of 9:31 which the veteran put on the books in 1935. The 120-yard high hurdles offers one of the best dual meet fields ever to appear at Michigan. Two Big Ten indoor champions ' and a man who has beaten both of them are slated to settle up as Elmer Gedeon, and Stan Kelley for Michigan and Jack Robinson of Illinois take their marks. Gedeon To Run, Play Ball Gedeon and Robinson are the loop title holders, Gedeon this year and Robinson in 1937. Silent Stan Kel- ley is the timber topper who has a win over both of his competitors. Kelley took a perlim heat from Rob- inson at the indoor conference meet and was well ahead of the Illini ace in the semi-finals when a fall elim- inated him from the race and finals. Kelley took a prelim heat from Rob- race at Cleveland after the close of the indoor season. Gedeon's "two-sports on the same afternoon" program goes into effect Saturday when he runs the highs and immediately afterwards gets into baseball cloths to attend his first- base post when the ball team takes on Indiana. It will be his initial out- door race of the season and his first flight of hurdles since the Cleveland exhibition in March. 1 4 F 9 I i 4 J a i t t 1 } A Cons THUI re ing ar Post, W' INS s5 aparta analyz by the reveale He t ing sc "The S Hold E McCar am m of the Carthy Michig Pink, oc Trosko Brewer Peckin: Kreme Campb Smick, Gedeon E. Smi Beebe, Evashe Dobson Barry, To Toledo Green, Crow, Craig,1 Kapell Slovak, Drafts, Davis, Condon Alvarez Camp, R. Smi *Henso To *Ran f Erro base hi Smick. Left on Struck 7, by C on ball off Car Dobson 4 in 6 inning; Double son to Peckin Ump SIDE LINES lh idine Reveals ... MBING through the magazines cently, we came across a divert- ticle in the Saturday Evening Nritten by Bob Considine, crack ports writer. Considine took a few rules for John Q. Fan, ed a few strategems employed wily managers and otherwise ed a few diamond shenanigans. artly labelled the two contrast- hools of b'aseball strategy as hoot-the-Works A.C." vs. "The :verything Boys," and cited Joe thy and Bill Terry, the Goth- anagers, as respective examples two types. For example, Mc- believes in acquiring runs by Summaries an 8 AB f.............0 ,cf...........4 ,ss ............6 paugh, 3b ......6 r, If ..........3 ell, If ..........2 rf ............6 , lb .........5 th, 2b .........6 c ........., ....2 vski, c ........2 , p ............2 p .............2 tals ...........48 R H 1 0 0- 0 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 3 2 2 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 10 O 1 1 4 3 1 0 0 14 2 6 4 0 0 36 O 3 2 10 4 4 2 1 0 10 0 0 0 Al 1. 0 2 5 0 0 0 2 6 0 1 3 1 21 A 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 4 1 0 2 0 wholesale lots and won't sacrifice aj man to second in the first seven in- nings. Terry, on the other hand, al- ways plays for the run, and then re-, sorts to strict defensive tactics to protect it. And the latter will yank even Hubbell at the slightest sign of weakening, whereas The Yankee m-g-r will permit his pitchers to be maimed before salvaging 'em. Considine also makes the shock- ing assertion that the umpire be- hind the plate rarely sees the plate and must guess on the pitches 90 per cent of the time. Would Ernie Vick agree with him? Not content with the charge alone, Considine offers an illustration. " ... Drop a hat on the floor and ask a friend of similar height and heft to stand a yard behind it. Now you stand about a foot behind your friend, and see if you can see the hat." To your likely comeback that the catcher assumes a squatting posi- tion, the writer points to the straight- legged and only slightly bent stance of the backstop after his signal has been given.' What do the umps do, then? " ... picture an imaginary hoop, out in front of the plate. Any ball that enters the visionary ring -which is as wide as home plate and extends from the player's knees to his chest-must be a strike. Any pitch that doesn't shoot through the non-existent hoop must, therefore, be a ball." Considine then relates how many of the present rules came to be writ- ten. Why, for instance, won't the American League permit its players to talk to the fans? Well, a few years ago a ball player posed for a picture with his arm around Alcatraz Al, Ca- pone, and the moguls didn't like it. The Black Sox scandal is still too poignant a memory. Did you know, too, that an umpire cannot rule on three common infrac- tions of the rules unless the oppos- ing players spot them. The infrac- tions are: If a team bats out of order (remember Purdue!), or if a player forgets to tag a base, or leaves a base too soon when attempting to ad- vance after a long outfield fly has been caught. His nibs, the umpire, STROH'S CARLING'S FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 must remain mum, a practice signed to maintain alertness. * * DOTS AND DASHES-Old Alex (I'm Hungry) Loiko, who created a mild furore around here two years ago by withdrawing "to go home to dinner," is doing right well at Wes- tern State Teachers in Kalamazoo . . .. He participates in football, basket- ball and track . . . and has a good (locker room) job, something he couldn't find here'. . . Leo Beebe, Varsity catcher, has a fin bet with cocky Howard Zachar, star flinger for the Ypsilanti Hurons, whom Michigan plays tomorrow .-. It is reported that Zachar was once so certain he'd fan the side he signalled (ala Rube Waddell) his outfield to sit down while he proceeded to retire the side . .. He pitched the 12-inning 0-0 game against Wisconsin recently. Gridders Strip For Hot Spell Shoulder Pads, Jerseys Discarded In Practice No, Gypsy Rose Lee is not a mem- ber of the Wolverine grid coaching staff and Coach Fritz Crisler's charges haven't taken up the strip tease, but an unknown individual witnessing the drills of the last two days might draw some such conclusions. It's the heat. The gridders have gone native in an attempt o find some measure of comfort as they ca- vort through their daily workouts under the tropical sun. Shoulder pads and jerseys were cast aside during the last two days' sessions as the dripping footballers stripped to the waist trying to keep cool. Varsity Manager Phil Woodwdrth indicated that he was in the market for any kind of air conditioning equipment that could be put in op- eration on the football field ., de- -. -by Irvin Lisagor Toledo Downs Baseball Team In 12th Imtinog Dobson And Barry Yield Ninie Runs In Close Tilt; Smick, Gedeon Homer (Continued from Page 1) ing regularity, and Barry had to be called to the rescue. Unheralded by advance motives, Barry pitched the rest of the game, and his work was a thing of beauty. He gave up four hits, only two of them clean blows, walked but three, and struck out seven. Given support he would have breezed through. Michigan's early lead was sparked by the two big bats of Elmer Gedeon and Dan Smick. Elmer slapped a home run and two singles while Dan- ny blasted a homer and a triple. The two homers pushed across three runs all that Michigan could garner off Smith. The Varsity batted around to score five runs in the first. Walks to Don Brewer and Capt. Butch Kremer, singles by Walt Peckinpaugh, Ged- eon, and Leo Beebe, and Smick's crashing triple did the damage. In the Toledo second, Dobson's wildness resulted in two Toledo runs. He walked Marty Slovak, Fred Drafts and Joe Green and allowed Johnny Condon an infield single in that frame. Smick's walk and Gedeon's homerr added two Wolverine runs in the third, and Danny's homer completed the Michigan scoring in the fifth. Dobson couldn't get them over in the sixth. Pitcher Smith and Dick Craig, Negro first baseman, were passed, which, along with Dale Crow's single, ended Dobson's efforts for the day. Barry entered, forced Bill Kap- ella to bound to second, but the Wol- verines missed up on both ends of an attempted double play and the first run scored. A pass to Drafts OOIF 000 9 cf 2b lb a, rf 3b rf if .. n, ss z, c p th, th AB R ............5 1 ..... . ...6 1 6 1 . .........7 1 4 1 . . .....2 1 1 0 s ...........5 1 ............6 1 ............1 0 p ..........4 1 ............0 0 H 2 2 I 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 tal ........ or Drafts in 47 9th. 9 12 36 11 I \ V I rs: Drafts, Condon, Brewer. 2 ts: Green, Alvarez. 3 base hit: Home runs: Gedeon, Smick. bases: Toledo 14, Michigan 7. out: By Dobson 4, by Barry "amp 1, by R. Smith 5. Bases s: off Dobson 7, off Barry 3, mp 2, off Smith 3. Hits: Off 8 in 5 1-3 innings; off Barry, 2-3 innings; off Camp, 4 in 1 off Smith, 6 in 11 innings. plays: Pink to Brewer, Dob- Peckinpaugh to Gedeon to paugh. ires: Vick and Snyder. and Condon't single brought in three more. The Wolverines threatened only twice in the last seven innings, but Smith had them fooled in the clutch. Then came the tragic twelfth. 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