THE MICHIGAN DAILY |PAGE ELEVEN Yost Retires After 20 Years Of Directing Michigan ports {v a Fritz Crisler May Get Post As Successor Fine Athletic Plant Stands Here As Great Tribute To The 'Grand OldMan By BUD LOW Supplementing one of the greatest athletic plants anywhere in the world, Michigan has a coaching staff that is envied throughout the nation. Headed for the past 20 years by Field- ing H. Yost, Michigan's "grand old man," this group of men has built up an enviable reputation for -char- acter-building and good sportsman- ship. Coming to Ann Arbor in 1901, Yost began a career that has endeared him to the hearts of every loyal sports ehthusiastc Taking a football team of indifferenthability, "Hurry-Up" Whipped up the first of,the immortal Point-A-Minute elevens that were to sky-rocket Michigan to the top of the sports world. During the years that followed Yost continued to bring out $eams that dominated the football scene. In 1921, when Yost became Director of Athletics, he began a program of expansion that has continu~ed to the Diary Reviews Year's Activity rOf Wolverines Sports Calendar Reveals Michigan Teams Still 'ChampionsOf West' (Continued from Page 9) imperfectly executed basketball per- haps, but there is a compensating let-'em-have-it spirit in the Wolver- ine camp and the home crowd en- joys each tackle and every right upercut. Jan. 11: News headline! Michigan captures state hockey championship! We subdue Michigan College of Mines twic' for our only puck wins oa the year, and the winner of this seies is automatically the champ. Kipda like pro wrestling. March 8: Arrives the biggest sports day of the year, quantita- tively speaking, and the biggest headache for the sports night editor. Michigan not unexpectedly relin- quishes the Conference track title to Indiana. The untouchable swim- ming team sweeps all opposition asunder to aflhass an unprecedented 87 points in the Big Ten meet. And. Jim Galles wins the only Wolverine Conference wrestling title in the 175- pound division. March 29: Yale reduces Matt Mann to a nervous wreck for awhile in the National Collegiates, but his terrible tankmen finally bring home the bacon with 61 points to old Eli's 68. April.5: Even the great must fall at last. Matt Mann meets his neme- sis as the Chicago Towers swimmers filch Michigan's National A.A.U. tank crown by a margin of six inches in the last race of the two-day meet. Story-book stuff with reverse Eng- lish this time. May 10: BINGO! It's bank night for the Wolverines today and a fit- ting end to this summary of the Michigan sport parade for 1940-41. The baseball team wallops Illinois, 7-2, to retain their Big Ten lead asi sophomore Dick Wakefield belts out the longest homer ever perpetratedi on Ferry Field; and the scarlet and; gray banner of Ohio State is sullied most mercilessly when the Buckeyes; -are beaten in golf, tennis and track,1 the latter by an incredible 90-41] runaway. The Great Scalper And Some Of Those Who Will Help Carry On His Traditions Cindermen Seek Big Ten Title (Continued from Page 9) entrants in the dashes, has been ham- pered by a bad leg since the Drake Relays and so is not expected to show much today. It is almost a certainty that the Buckeyes' famous .timber-topper, .Bob Wright, will capture both hurdle events. Northwestern's Capt. Joe Finch is expected to offer Wright the most opposition in the lew hur- dies, with Indiana's Cochran, and Dave Rankin of Purdue, and Michi- gan's Frank McCarthy and Neil Mac= Intyre prioaably pressing him to the finish in the highs. Michigan also has an almost cer- tain first place winner in the person of Capt: Don Canham, leading ,high- jumper °of, the Conference. Canham reached a height of 6 ft., 5 in., in the Buckeye meet and he probably could have gone even higher, had he not .bruised his heel on his next try. However, Canham is ready today, and with Wes Allen, who has appar- ently returned to his previous top form, also entered, the Wolverines (Continued on Page 12) I "" Studerit Supplies Office Equipment RI DEW'S FIELDING H. YOST FRITZ CRISLER EARL MARTINEAU WALLY WEBER present. He started in lifting the face of the campus by building the Field House, which was the first structure of its kind in 1923. Then in rapid suc- cession the Coliseum was purchased, the stadium built, Palmer Field com- pleted, and finally in 1929 the Sports Building was finished. Crjsler May Succeed Yost Probable successor to retiring Di- rector Yost is Herbert O. "Fritz" Cris- ler, who came here in 1938 with a record of winning performances. With an inexperienced squad as a nucleus he has brought forth teams which, in the last three years, have won 19, tied one and lost four games. Crisler was aso an honor student during his undergraduate days at Chicago Uni- versity. Previous to coming here, he coached teams at Chicago, Minnesota and Princeton. Assistant to Crisler and backfield coach, is Earl Martineau, who came here from Princeton along with his boss. "Marty" was All-American at Minnesota in 1923. In that same year he' was also awarded the Western Conference medal for proficiency in scholarship and athletics. -Clarence Munn, in charge of line- man, was, like Martincau, an All- American from Minnesota and also won the Western Conference medal for combined athletic and scholar- ship excellence. Welly Weber, fullback here in 1925- 26, has the all-important job of grooming hopeful freshman football candidates for the step to varsity competition. Michigan's only three-time All- American, Bennie Oosterbadn is head basketball coach. Also serving in the capacity of end coach on the'football staff, he is one of the few men to re- ceive nine varsity awards while at Michigan. Ken Doherty continued in the foot- steps of his predecessors, Steve Far- rell and Charlie Hoyt, by retaining both the indoor and outdoor track crowns in his first year as head coach of the cindermen in 1940. Ken was national decathlon champion in 1928- 29 and he finished third in the same event in the 1928 Oympics at Ant-s werp. Stackhouse Yearling Mentor Chosen to fill the freshman position vacated by Doherty, when Ken was appointed" head coach, Chester "Stack" Stackhouse is the present yearling trace mentor. Before coming here, he coached such track notables as Bill Watson, Ralph Schwarzkopf, and Jack Leutritz at Saginaw High School. Ray Fisher, who is Varsity baseball coach, was a former wig league ball- player with the Cincinnati Reds and the New York Yankees. Coming here in 1921 he has since that time pro- duced six Big Ten championship teams. Varsity swimming coach Matt Mann has probably the most enviable record of the entire staff. Since he began here in 1925 he has produced 12 Big Ten championships and 12 Intercollegiate championships, the last being consecutive. Last year Mann's squad became the first to win the Big Ten, the National Intercol- legiate and the National AAU crowns in one year. Weir Bosses Netters Three years ago Leroy Weir came here as mentor of the Maize and Blue tennis squad with an imposing record. Since then his teams have vastly improved, so that today they rank as favorites to capture this years tennis title. Although Cliff Keen is a lawyer by profession, he much prefers in- structing the University wrestlers. During his undergraduate years at Oklahoma A.&M. he won the national collegiate mat championship. Arbor, he coached teams at the Uni- versity of Nevada. Latest addition to the Wolverine coaching staff is Ernie McCoy, who came here last year to take charge- of freshmen baseball prospects. In 1927- 29 he won five letters and starred in basketball and baseball. "Ren a Typewriter" Fountain Pens 302 S. State St: "Rent a Typewriter" Typewriters rd a Read And Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads i I i 1. i I Netters' Hopes Depend On Seedings By DICK SIMON Although Michigan's tennis stock is booming at the present moment, much of its hope for winning ' the Conference net crown this year will depend on the way the Wolverines fare in the seedings at the Big Ten meet in Chicago, May 29, 30 and 31. So far this season Coach Leroy Weir's netters have walked off with six straight Big Ten victories, knock-, ing off Wisconsin, Chicago, Illinois, Purdue, Northwestern, and Ohio Stae in that order. The Wildcats, defending titleholders, and the Buck- eyes, however, showed that they will have to be reckoned with before any titles are decided. Seedings Vital Seedings can go a long way in help- ing or hindering the chances the Wolverines have for bagging the, championship. The system works in such a way that the players who have won the most victories in dual meets usually get the two seedings in their own division. On the Michigan roster at the present are two men, Wayne Stille, number four man, and Tom Gamon, fifth singles player, whose slates are void of, defeat. Lawton Hammett, number two man, Jim Porter, third singles player, and Alden Johnson, in the last singles spot, have tasted defeat but once, while Capt. Jim To- bin, number one man on the squad, has split even in his six matches. Unless some unforeseen event oc- I curs in the draw, Stille and Gamon should be given top seedings in their respective brackets which means that they are expected to reach the finals without too much difficulty. Since only two players receive top posi- tions, it is quite probably that both of these men will get seeded. Prospects Unknown The prospects of Hammett, Porter and Johnson getting seeded depend on the final outcome of the other Conference teams. Should only one man in their brackets go through his matches unbeaten, the ones who were defeated once would have to flip a coin to see who would get the other seeded position. Tobin, on the other hand, stands very little chance since he has lost to Sherwood Gorenstein of Wiscon- sin, Calvin Sawyier of Chicago, and Seymour Greenberg of Northwesterpt defending champion of the first bracket. As far as the doubles go, the Weir- men stand a very good chance of getting all three duos seeded. The xe. t wt t lobsime ........ 1 { I-t WMCTTEC! Short men who want to look taller. Slim meni who want to look stouter. Stout men who want to look slimmer. TIFFANY F i e I j The Union is the men club of the University. Yours to enjoy are the services in the building. GOOD FOOD - THRIFTY PRICES Soda Bar Billiards Barber Shop Swimming I GUEST ROOMS in the Union are available to alumni and graduate students. Write ,now for information I IN III III