THE MICHIGAN DAILY IPR ESS PASSES By BUD BENJAMIN _ _ EDITOR'S NOTE: This column is part of an exchange being worked by George Maskin, sports ed. of the Michigan State News, and myself. Naturally the opinions expressed are those of the writer only. C onfidence In Sparta .. . By GEORGE MASKIN EAST LANSING, Sept. 28-"State will win. . ." . It's on the lips of every Michigan Statefootball fan as he talks about the pending game with Michigan in the Stadium at Ann Arbor Saturday. To back his prediction, the Spartan fan submits first-class reasons-rea- sons which show the State supporter just isn't picking .Charley Bachman's eleven because he or she happens to attend school here. The Spartan rooter will tell you State has its Johnny Pingel and Gene Oiolek to shoot against Michigan. Also Eddie Pearce, Usif Haney, George Kovacich, Steve Szasz, Leslie Bruckner and Al Diebold, all veterans of previ- ous Michigan battles. Then, too, Ole Nelson, the pass-snatching end star who scored two of the three touchdowns against Michigan last year; Mike Kinek, another end; Lyle Rockenbach, guard; Ron Alling, center, are pre- I pared to lead the State line onto the field of combat. You ask the fans about the tackle situation, where State lost four 1937 3alwarts and was supposed to be weak this year, and you find out: "Michig .n will run into softer tackles this year than those they'll face in the State game Saturday." Further, you learn the Spartans are a better team than the one which won eight out of its nine games during its regular season a year ago. The Spartans have more experience. They're .smarter and they're faster. * . * N ONE DENIES here Michigan will have a stronger team this season. But all insist Michigan will not show enough improvement by Saturday to bowl over'the Spartans for the first time in five years. tate fans have only to go by newspaper accounts and hearsay in judging the Michigan team. According to the most reliable reports, Coach Fritz Crisler will start several sophomores, which may include an all-first year backfield combination. The Spartah follower can't see how Michigan can hope to beat State with sopho'mores. "Those sophs wil! orack up under the strain of playing before 85,000 spectators," one hears in spots where the football bugs gather. "Meanwhile, the game will be old stuff to most of the Spartans. Besides, allthe pressure will be on Michigan, while State can ride along with nothing to worry about." The current State team is fortified by capable reserve strength, some- thing which Bachman lacked last year. The Spartans are two-deep with good men at every position, and at some posts, Bachman comes up with three and four classy Spartans. All of State's aces will be on hand Saturday, barring a major catastrophe. Pingel, of course, will lead the attack, but great things are expected again of Ciolek, his understudy, who has showed tremendous improvement this season. Bruckner, Szasz and Haney will complete the starting backfield, with Nelson and Kinek at the ends; Bremer and Ketzko, tackles; Abdo and Rock- enbach, guards and Alling, center. Incidentally, the return of Tom McShannock and Unk Schaefer, both centers who missed, the Wayne game because of injuries, will bolster the center of the line no little. .* * ,* BAST LANSING will close down Saturday. One establishment has put up a sign reading as follows: "The Smoke Shop staff will go on a sit-down strike Saturday, starting at 10 a. m. in order to attend the Michigan game." Only a scattering of the college's record student body of 5,700 students will sweep in on Ann Arbor. They'll tgo by all methods. But the main idea is to be in the Michigan Stadium, at 2 p. m. State's football team will not leave here until Saturday morning as in Grid d ers Polish Plays As State ConflictLooms Starting Line-Up Remains Uncertain; Tom Harmon May Be At Halfback Crisler told his gridders, "Our main work is finished." A grim-faced, yel- low and blue helmeted Wolverine squad raced to the Field House; the semi-final drills on pass defense and offense, punting and place-kicking had been concluded: new plays de- signed to baffle Spartan ,opposition had been rehearsed and the Michigan head coach walked slowly off the field. He was met by a group of reporters who were still puzzled about a Wol- verine starting line-up for the Michi- gan State game which is now but 'one day away. As the drill had ended, halfbacks Tom Harmon and Paul Kromer were in the same backfield-for the first time since preparatiops for State had begun, and it was time for a few questions. "Were Harmon and Kromer in the same backfield just now?" asked a reporter hoping for an answer which would reveal Crisler's intentions on this score.. "I don't know, were they?" came' the non-committal reply. "Well," spoke up another cor°es- pondent, "suppose you had a back- field composed of Evashevski, Krom- er. Trosko and Phillips, who would do the kicking?" "Probably the alumni," smiled Cris- ler and it was evident that the inter- view would be amusing as ever but fruitless as far as any line-up news was concerned. And that was that. As for the afternoon's drill itself, secrecy was again the keynote. Spec- tators and the press were barred from the field. Two photographers who wished to snap a few action shots had to wait until Coach Earl Marti- neau personally escorted them on the field and when Crisler explained a new trick play to the first two elev- ens, even the reserve squad was sent away to another part of the gridiron. Only a few fadts were gettable. Vince Valek, end, showed up best in Pirates Routed Yost Predicts More O pen Game; l 10 To 1 As Cubs; New Rules Will Bother Defense) I L tIU' In L By MEL FINEBERG1 CHICAGO, Sept. 29-P')-O'n the strong right arm of Bill "Iron Man" Lee, the fighting Chicago Cubs rode to a crushing 10 to 1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates today for a{ sweep of the three game series and a game and one-half lead in the Na- tional League Pennant battle. The husky Chicago righthander, pitching for a fourth time in as many days, set the Pirates down with only seven hits. Their lone run came as the result of four straight passes in the third inning. From the first in- ning, in which the rampant Cubs scored three runs largely through the wildness of Russ Bauers, Chicago took conimand-then surged on to a tenth straight victory in a seemingly unstoppable march to the champion- ship. The Cubs, nine games out of first place five weeks ago and winners over the Pirates in close, dramatic con- tests Tuesday and Wednesday, took their bats and made today's game a rout. the short place-kicking drill with Dan- ny Smick right behind. It's going to be a battle for the starting end posts. Wally Hook is the No. 1 punter at present and may break into the starting eleven because of it, although Ed Phillips is an equal possibility.. It was with the greatest vf trep- dation that I screwed up my courage to the breaking point, braved the I wrath of three assistant managers and invaded that sanctum sanctorum, secret football practice. With the nonchalance of a Murad smoker, I strolled down to the field, approached Fielding H. Yost, and queried, ."Well, Coach, what do you think of the new rule changes?" I found out without the slightest delay. "These two new rules i.e. bringing the ball out fifteen yards from the Ssidelinesinstead of ten and allowing four incomplete passes into the end zone without penalty, are the most sweeping that have ever been intro- duced. Defense Spreads Out "Now," he went on, "the defense will be even more spread out. Instead of having only ten yards to cover they will have to watch fifteen. Plays can be run and passed to either side without the fear of the side lines forc- ing the play in. With a spread defense there's more action. And action's whatI the sprectator wants. passes into the end zone. You know what'd happen, don't you." "Why, they put you in the peni- tentiary for life," was his picturesque way of putting it. "The referee takes the ball back to the twenty yard line" and the Old Man of Michigan football marched off ten of the yards to give us a general idea of the dis- tance. "Then if the team in possession wanted to give up the ball they could kick it forty yards up the field. So in. all your team has lost 55 yards. And for what. For committing the odious sin of throwing two incomplete passes over the goal line. Watch The Passes "This year there's going to be a lot more passing, not only from in close but also from the 40 yard line. Last year the passer had to drop his passes around the 10-yard line to make sure he wouldn't throw the ball into the end zone. But now they'll throw them high, wide and hand- some.t "The defense will be forced to play deeper to prevent long, touchdown passes. And seeing that there will be . nnrn.to tha id. li b fna r n of Ex pect Capacity Crowd Here For P..S.C. Game "We have sold well over 70,000 ticl ets already," ticket manager Harr Tillotson said last night but adde "However there are still a lot of sea of all kinds left." The majority of these tickets st unsold are available at the Athlet Administration Building. The 17,00 ducats sent to East Lansing hav been disposed of but, according Mr. Tillotson, no more will be sen up there. Indications are that reg ;dless the weather, usually an importar factor in the determining of crowd at Michigan games, every seat will 1 filled tomorrow after r~on. Red Sox Clinch Second Place; Win Nat Serie BOSTON, Sept. 29-(')-Drubbin the Washington Senators, 13 to 5, ti Boston Red Sox today mathematical clinched second place in the America league. This is the highest the club has ft ished since 1917 and 1918, when ] Barrok, now with the New Yo: Yankees, piloted them home secon and first, respectively. The victory enabled the Sox clinch their season's series wi Washington. Boston has won 12 gami to the Senators' nine, with the fir of the set scheduled for tomorrow. - Lmrejroam La e e es ealse O "The other rule, the end zone pass, the other rule, they'll be spread out will produce more scoring. Under the into the flat. When the backfield is old scheme, a quarterback was afraid spread out, the offense can work to call for passes into the end zone. their running plays. When they're Suppose a team were on the five drawn in, the passing starts. It looks yard line and threw two incomplete like a new era for the offense." recent years. "Can't change our time of de- parture while we're winning," ex- plained Coach Bachman when asked why he wasn't taking the team out of town Friday. The squad probably will lunch at Howell at noon while enroute to Ann Arbor, and then head directly for the Stadium. And as the student body tends to forget about studying, dates and work- ing for a few bucks, you hear the cry every place on campus: "State will win ... i r Can You Spare $3.00 Until Next Winter? THEN HERE'S THE BUY OF YOUR LIFE SuitsTopcoats O'coats ::53:: " t ;Y ,. ".. '. ii."'N' t, 1 ,.. ..KtKt i.t:i .. { t Pay Only $3 Down This amount will hold any one of our $13.85 - $17.85 Suits or Coats until you need it. 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