o~,i,~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY olverine Fotbal Squad Keyed For Battle With Ru PAGE SEVE ekey e Work Of Second String Line men Impresses Coach Fritz Crisler 1. Riggs, Leading Net Amateur, Will Play Here I IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG_ _ Now Or Never One-Man-Gang, on the other b Trosko Holds Edge Over Kromer F o r Starting" Post At Left Halfback The manner in which a weary but high spirited Wolverine squad sailed into the tackling dummies at the conclusion of another practice ses- sion yesterday afternoon must have warmed Coach Fritz Crisler's heart and it left no doubt that Michigan Saturday will be a team that expects to win, underdog or no underdog. Team spirit is at the highest pitch of the year, and if Crisler can keep the Wolverines in this frame of mind right up to the opening kick-off against the Ohio State Buckeyes, Michigan fans are going to see a great team in action-a greater team than the one which nonchalantly walked off with four in arow at the beginning of the season. Squad In Fighting Mood Every man on the squad was shout- ing words of encouragement to his teammates. Tom Harmon, when Bob Flora stopped an Ohio State play We have a lot for which to be thankful..- We hope you do too! - - -- - -=-- t I cold, yelled: "That's the way to stop those Buckeyes, Flop!" In the, signal drill, Freddie Trosko's shrill voice could be heard shouting ''Over that# Buckeye line, gang!" when the boyst neared one end of the field. That's1 the kind of a team Coach Francis Schmidt will see Saturday-a Michi-' gan team that can and will fight to the finish. Particularly impressive yesterday was the work of Crisler's second line in a scrimmage against Ohio plays of all kinds and descriptions. Tackles Bob Flora and Reuben Kelto stood out in this department and indica- tions are that each will do plenty of relief work for Joe Savilla and Bill Smith, Evashevski, Sukup Block Well Crisler also sent his charges through a stiff blocking drill and the manner in which Forest Evashevski cut down tacklers in the secondary. as of old was heartening to the en- tire squad. Milo Sukup also was ef- fective in downfield blocking, with Tom Harmon, Freddie Trosko and Here Renda showing the most speed in following the rotund Muskegon Heights guard down the field. Harmon's short passes were deadly yesterday, with long John Nicholson and Ed Czak hauling them in and showing speed in the getaway. Czak's work in particular has shown steady, improvement, especially in pass-re- ceiving, and'it is probable that he will get the nod Saturday over Joe Rogers. Trosko On First Team Paul Kromer -was not used in the. defensive workout against the Buck- eye plays, but alternated with Fred Trosko in the blocking drill. Trosko, however, has the edge over the Lorain, Ohio speedster at the present time for the left half berth. For five members of the probable startnig line-up Saturday, the game will mark the conclusion of their collegiate grid careers, Captain and center Archie ,Kodros,- end John Nicholson, tacklesRoland "Joe" Sa- villa and Bill Smith, and halfback Freddie . Trosko will all be playing{ their last college game, as will reserve backs Herc Rendsa and Dave Strong, guards, Fred Olds, -Art 'Bennett and; Forrest Jordan, tackle Dennis Kuhn, rI ~ I Bobby Riggs, the world's ranking amateur tennis player who won both the Wimbledon and American singles titles this past season, will play an exhibition match at the I-M indoor court Nov. 28. Coach Leroy Weirthas arranged this match in order to build up in-' terest in tennis on the Michigan cam- pus, and an admission. will not be charged for the per ormance. Riggs will meet Tokey - Hansen of Detroit in the feature match, and following this Riggs will team up with Capt. Sam Durst of the varsity to play Hansen and Jim Tobin, num- ber one man on the Wolverine squad. The winner of the Riggs and Han- sen match will be decided on the basis of the best two out of three sets. Riggs will probably also give a demonstra- tion of some of the finer points about tennis playing. Alaskans To Hold First Bowl Game JUNEAU, Alaska, Nov. 22.-(P)- Getting a 38-day jump on their near- est competitors, the first "Bowl" game of the present football season will be played here tomorrow. It's the "Gold Bowl" game between the Alaska Sourdoughs and the Bar- anof Bears. The contest has aroused so much interest that ministers are holding their Thanksgiving services early so churchgoers can join the ex- pected crowd of 2,000. The natives, whose only glimpse of football has been in the newsreels, were wagering on the Sourdoughs in Alaska's only Thanksgiving day game in history. I-A LEAGUE HOCKEY New Haven 6, Cleveland 3. Springfield 2, Pittsburg 0 center Horace Tinker and end Paul Nielsen. Crisler plans to introduce some new plays in a short practice session early this afternoon.. hand,1 rhas been injured. He didn't play in, When Michigan's football team runs the Minnesota game at all, and for out on the field in its last contest of all ekcept two minutes of the Illinois the 1939 season more things will be game he was severely handicapped about to happen than the staging of by an injured leg. Whoever shines NEW YORAK, Nov. 22.-RP)-Four (pass receiving record on the books. new individual National Professional It took Davey O'Brien some time Football League records have been to get going, but once he started written into the books as a result of there was no holding him and his last Sunday's games, making it the pitching. Sunday, he completed 21 sixthstraight week in which old loop passes to break the record of 19 marks were surpassed. which he set only a week previously. Don Hutson, Green Bay's classy end, accounted for two of the new marks, and a pair of backs, "Anvil Andy" Farkas of Washington and "Li' Davey" O'Brien of P h pia,ne shattered one each. a mere contest between Ohio State; and the Wolverines. 1. It will be Michigan's last chance to salvage something from what has been a miserable sea- son. We need not go into the history of why it was miserable. The lone bright spot was the 27- 7 shallacking it handed Iowa's surprising Hawkeves. If the Wol- verines can come back to dopple the Buckeyes from th:ir lofty perch in the Big Ten champion- ship tree, a lot can be forgiven. 2. For the first time this year, [Michigan will go into the game as decided underdogs. Michigan State, Iowa, Chicago, Yale, Illinois, Minne- sota and Pennsylvania were con-a ceded to be weaker. Illinois and Minnesota treated the Wolverine football concessions much as Japan treated English trade concessions in China. They repudiated them. But now, in this last game, Ohio is the favorite. It's a nice spot for an up- set. 3. This is.the last chance for Coach Herbert Orrin (Fritz) Cris- ler to open up his offense, Not once this year has there been an occasion for a sustained and ver- satile attack. Against Yale Har- mon went 58 yards to score on a deep, naked reverse. Against Iowa, two scoring plays were set up by tricky pass plays. But against the Spartans and Chi- cago nothing spectacular was used. Against Illinois and Minne- sota, the Wolverines never hada chance to open up. And in the Pennsylvania game it would have been silly to use razzle-dazzle with the Wolverines ahead for most of the game. This is Michi- gan's chance to show its offense. 4. There will be a dual between Forest Evashevski and Don Scott forl all-Conference quarterback. Scott, a converted halfback, has the edge thus far over Evie, the incumbent. The Buckeye flash is more spectacular. He runs, kicks, passes and plays a whale of a defensive game. He isj second in Conference scoring. The - t at the stadium Saturday will get the nod. 5. It is Tom Harmon's chance to clinch an all-American berth. i it weren't for the fact that there is a disinclination to pick two men from the same section of the country, the Hoosier Hammer would be in. But Nile Kinnick of Iowa and he are the two top halfbacks in the country and Kinnick is also from the Big Ten. The Heisman Trophy for the outstanding player of the year will also be at stake as early returns show that Kinnick and Harmon are running neck and neck for the award. 6. Archie Kodros gets his last fling for all-Conference and all-American honors and Milo Sukup and Bill Nos- ker of Ohio stage a battle for Big Ten guard positions. It'll be a full day as a near-capaci- ty crowd watches the disappoint- ment of the season and one of its surprises. Yesterday we posed some questions for the digestion of the campus and left only the first, and the hardest, unanswered. We'll repeat the ques- tion and give the answer. 1. Michigan kicks off to Ohio State and the ball, without touching a hos- tile hand, rolls into the Ohio State end zone. Evashevski, who claims he's the first man down (on the ground?) after a kick-off, falls on the ball but it pops out of his hands: and rolls thru the end zone and out of the field of play. What is the ruling? Ans. There are two possible interpretations varying accord- ing to the light in which the of- ficials see the play. If they rule that Evie had complete and per- manent possession of the ball be- fore it rolled out of his hands then it is a touchdown because any kick-off is a free ball But however, if they rulethat it was only a temporary possession,,,it is called a touchback and the ball goes to Ohio State on its own 20-yard line, first and ten. ir 11E "C II RABIDEAU-HARRIS CLOTHIERS 1,19 South Main Street W olverine kacle iop' Flora Loves' To" Cook, Hates Coeds r Y\1\ .' ji. ,. M{. O ;.; I A , By HERM EPSTEIN Most people would get the wrong picture of someone who 'loves' to cook, hates coeds, and likes to knock men over, so we'll correct any false impression at once by telling you that Robert "Flop" Flora weighs 210 pounds, and is one of the toughest men on Michigan's football squad. Not very much has been heard this year about the kid brother of the Wolverine all-American end of a few years ago, "Flop" Flora, the 'first, but the Muskegon junior has been grinding away daily, trying to pick up some speed to go' with his weight and natural football instinct. "Now," says line coach Clarence Munn, "he's really coming along and beginning to play ball." And, it would be easy to find that out by just looking at the lineups of the past two or three Michigan games. Flop has played more and more ,every game, and. has worked himself up to the position of first- string reserve tackle, at which posi- tion he'll see plenty of action against the Buckeyes this Saturday after- noon. Last year, Flop decided to stay out of action and be content with just practicing a whole year, for' he's taking a five-year course, and would still have three years to play. The origin of the cooking ability is lost 'in the dim haze of the past, but his being allergic to coeds might be a hangover from his summer duties as a night watchman. "Maybe I never got to appreciate women," Flop admitted. "Maybe, I could be convinced otherwise." Maybe. But his liking to knock men over comes in the family. With his broth- er's record testifying to the football ability inherent in the Flora family, there's no trouble at all seeing why that comes first in the list of his likes. Flop belongs to the school of players which knocks 'em down hard for the sheer pleasure of knock- ing 'em down, and that's the kind of men that make a great team. So, when you start picking out your next year's tackles, don't, forget to leave a spot for the big boy from Muskegon, and leave a big spot, for if his play continues as it has been, he'll be playing a major role in the Michigan line. 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