THE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan Baseball Team Meets IlliniAt Champaign Ay TMM To0day Varsity Clings To Faint Hope In Title Race Bond And Barry To Pitch For Wolverine Team In Two Game Series (Continued from Page 1) ches, catches and plays about every- where else for Illinois, is the team's leading batter with an average of .385. Beside him, Bill Hapac, John- ny Drish and "Hoot" Evers, all mem- bers of the Illini basketball team, and outfielder Russ Drechsler are well over the .300 mark. Johnny Pacotti, who won his let- ter as a sophomore back in 1938 but who was out last year because of a sore arm, will start the first game of the series against Michigan. Pacot- ti's first effort of the season was a two-hit shutout victory over North- western. Grant To Pitch Al Grant, number two pitcher on the staff who handed the Hawkeyes their dnly Conference defeat of the current season, is slated to take the mound against the Wolverines'in to- morrow's game. Grant lost a 4-1 duel with Jack Barry last year. As usual, Coach Ray Fisher will stake the Varsity's hopes on the right arms of Barry and Lyle Bond. Barry has dropped three straight decisions since he set back Wisconsin two weeks ago, but might have fared bet- ter in the last two games with ade- quate support from his mates. Bond was impressive in his four-hit tri- umph over Indiana last weekend. Forest Evashevski will continue in right field for the Wolverines, but whether Bud Chamberlain has re- covered sufficiently from a bruised thumb to supplant Davie Nelson at third will be undecided until game time. THE LINEUPS: Carries Howard Colors In Derby Strong Illinois Track Team May Give Doherty Squad Battle By HERM EPSTEIN Illinois greatest concentration of Coach Leo Johnson will bring to strength is in the hurdles where they Ann Arbor tomorrow anIllmois track have no less than four standouts. n Veterans Dick Reising and Jim team greatly improved over the one Wham were reinforced this year by which absorbed an 88 to 38 shellack- sophomores Don Olsen and Clyde ing from Michigan's Conference Hale. champions last year. Olsen is one 01 the brightest pros- A number of good sophomore pros- pects on the Illinois team, running pects in the hurdles, dashes, and high the dashes as well as the barrier events. Reising has been a steady performer over the hurdles, and Capt. Ralph Schwarzkopf, Mich- Wham is showing up better as the igan's crack two-miler, was confined season progresses. The quartet plac- to the University Health Service yes- ed third in the Drake Relays shuttle terday with a severe cold and prob- event in which Michigan placed fifth. ably will be unable to compete in Sophomore high-jumper Jim Ed- the Michigan-Illinois track meet. wards is expected by Johnson to take According to trainer Steve Bronson, his place among the track elite of Schwarzkopf will definitely not run the Conference before his days of in the mile event, but might be ready competition are over. The newcomer for one of the shorter distance races. has cleared six feet two inches sev- eral times this year, and though he will not give Michigan's Don Can- and broad jumps have raised Illinois ham a real battle this year, is expect- hopes higher than they have been in ed to be right up there next year. years. The boys from Champaign Still another sophomore, Bill Lewis, placed fourth in the Conference in- will carry the visitors' hopes in the door Meet at Chicago. broad jump. While still in high Heading the list of men Johnson school, Lewis leaped twenty three will present is Capt. Will McCown, feet nine inches, and has bettered brilliant quarter-miler who runs with twenty three feet already this sea- the best in the Midwest. He de- son. He will give Michigan's Carl 'eated Michigan's Conference chain- Culver a hard fight, and can easily pion, Warren Breidenbach, in the come out the winner, In addition to Illinois Relays Special 300, and plac- I his jumping duties, Lewis is a mem- ed third in the indoor Big Ten meet ber of the Illini's crack mile relay last March. team. Mioland, Charles S. Howard's candidate in the 66th running of the Kentucky Derby tomorrow, is one of the three or four horses in the field that is conceded an outside chance to upset Col. E. R. Bradley's Bimelich, the top-heavy favorite. Son of Mio D'Arezzo and Ioland and ridden by jockey Lster Balaski, Mioland was clocked at 2:08 over the Derby route last Saturday for the fastest workout time of the year. Following that, he did 1:02 2/5 over the five-eighths distance. Golfers Face Two Conference Foes Saturda, Monday With a break in the weather, Mich- igan's unbeaten golfers will hit the fairways again this weekend as -they face two of their Big Ten foes, Ohio State and Northwestern. The Buckeyes, whom the Wolver- ines tripped up in their first Con- ference match of the season, come here Saturday with a season's record of two losses and one win. Michi- gan State swamped the Bucks last' week, 12/2-5/2. Northwestern, Big Ten champs last year, lock clubs with Coach Ray Courtright's high flying varsity Mon- day in what promises to be one of the closest matches of the season. The Wildcats recently were upset by Illinois, 141/2-12/2 after swamping Chicago, 24-2 1, and losing to Wis- consin, 161/2-101/2. American League ScoresI Detroit 020 010 110-5 8 21 Washington 101 000 001-3 6 0 Newhouser and Tebbetts; Hudson and Ferrell. I IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG tI Michigan Pink, cf Sofiak, ss Evashevski rf Steppon, 2b Trosko, lf Nelson or Chamberlain, Ruehle, lb Harms, c Barry, p . Illinois Astroth, 3b Drechsler, If Evers, cf Hapac, 1b Drish, 2b Pyrz, ss Milosevich, rf Brewer, c Pacotti, p 3b NATIONAL LEAGUE RESULTS New York 102 011 200-7 14 St. Louis 031 000 00x-4 5 2 0 ir OFFICE EQUIPMENT STUDENT SUPPLIES RIDERS "Rent a Typewriter" FOUNTAIN PENS . . 302 S. State St... TYPEWRITERS (Editor's Note: This week the col- umn is being written by the members of the junior sports staff who are applying for the position of sports editor for the coming year. Today's column is written by Chris Vizas. who covered basketball and is now cover- ing football.) No Time To Pray . . When we were wearing. knickers and ripping them every Saturday by hopping fences in order to watch a high school football game, Michi- gan's grid squads were being credit- ed with winning championships be- cause they were Punting, Passing, and Praying. Our first spring at MichiganI saw the foregoing system revised. The Prayer which we once heard a sports expert, speaking at an athletic banquet, say rather iron- ically, "was the winter jfob that the Wolverines' coaching staff indulged in," is no longer one- third of the so-called "system." Instead in the off-season they gath- er together quite often and for hoursI at a time in a darkened room, not to solicit the aid of unknown powers as Michigan mentors were once ac- cused of, but to study motion pic- tures of the past season's encounters. So Michigan has now turned, as the philosophers might say from the school of mysticism to the empirical or scie ntific method. An eindless amount of time is spent going over and over these films, and when spring rolls around, the coach- ing staff has compiled a Blue Book which tells them such things as how many .yards were gained from passes. Clnck plays, and running, who made what tackles and where they were made in each game, how many times each play was used during the sea- son and how effective it was, etc. One of the surprising revela- tions is that Michigan, labeled a straight running team-a pow- erhouse on the ground last fall did better through passes and trick plays in the matter of pick- ing up yardage. It rolled up 906 yards through the air (204 of this total was made on trick plays) and it rode herd for 848 yards on the ground. The study also revealed that the same play which was the big- gest ground gainer in 1938 was again the most effective in 1939. It was No. 31 to the players, but to the fans and sports writers it was known as the "Harmon Sweep", since the Gary Ace made most of his spectacular runs and yardagekby going wide around the flanks. The sweep was good for 286 yards in the past campaign for an average of 52 yards in 53 attempts, but it fell off considerably from the 1938 record of a total of 527 yards gained for an average of 8% yards in 64 attempts. Almost a first down every time it was tried. The first line of defense brought down the runner 25 times and the secondary 28 times. Among the pass plays, the com- panion to the foregoing sweep, which starts as a fake end run and ends in a pass, netted the most yardage. In six tries it added 79 yards to the Wolverine total and it average 13 1/6 yards per attempt, which is picking up first downs in a hurry.. A very significant fact and very heartening to the coaches which was brought out in this detailed scrutiny of the action films was the fine work done de- fensively-especially in the mat- ter of tackling. Right on top of the list of those stopping oppos- ing runners the greatest number of times was Capt. Archie Kodros with a total of 69 tackles for the Season. Next to Kodros is Bob Wesifall with 36 tackles to his credit, and then Forest Evashevski with 34. Evy missed practically two whole games because of his ankle injury, and his ranking third is an excellent indi- cation of his fine ability as a line- backer. These three men backed up the line and should have made most of the tackles, so the Wolverines ran true to form in this phase of the game. All of the foregoing figures are estimated by Coaches Crisler and Munn to be about 90 per cent accurate since the motion. picture camera misses only on the aver- age of about three or four plays a game. However, in compiling the figures for the past gridiron campaign, r the figures for the Chicago contest were left out. The reason for this was, as Crisler stated, "because it did not show true fooaiail conditions and would distort the averages on each play." And it is important that the fig- ures show conditions as they really are, for this winter grind is import- ant in aiding the coaches to plan for the next season of gridiron battles. By use of these figures they deter- mine which plays were least effec- tive, which side of the line was weak- est, and go ahead in the spring to change conditions in the appropriate manner. For example the sweep on which Harmon picked up much ground in the past two years will have to be slightly revamped for next fall, since its decrease in effectiveness shows that opposing coaches had their teams laying for it. So the winter season around Ann Arbor is far from being a prayer session; it might well be termed the fact finding season. Facts that are missed in the every day coverage of a football game, but important to a coach in developing successful teams. -C.V. YOU ARE ALWAYS o stand unbroken. / i ............... \1 THIS LECTURE - WILL CONSIST Of A FEW CUTTING REMARKS The smartest looking fabric in the world doesn't make a style-right shirt unless it's cut right. That's why Man- i / hattan exercises minute care in laying out patterns and / / /f plying shears. Manhattan Shirts are stream- lined for youth. ..shaped to body lines. Collars are cut with careful balance. Col- ored or white, Manhattans ; are right. . k; i-' CERTAIN OF PERSONAL SAT I SFACT I ON- PERFECT STYLE- NOW... is the time to take ad- vantage of the expert golfing facilities offered at the... Uiversi-t y of Michigan LOW PRICE- N R-H . SUITS or TOPCOATS $ 8.50 - $24.50 There is a difference! I'I II