TIE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE -THREI Nine Clinches Share Of Title; Netmen Advance In Match 4 iIIG iI By ART IlHLL EVANSTON, Ill, May 29.-It was a plenty happy bunch of Michigan ball players that tramped off the Northwestern diamond today after Mase Gould's great relief pitching had given them a strong hold on their first Big Ten baseball championship since 1936. There wasn't any ostentatious show of emotion but it was easy to see that the boys were mighty pleased with themselves. The locker room banter was just a little gayer than usual and not one of the players seemed to have a care in the world. There won't be any celebrating tonight however. The Wolverines have another contest with the Wild' cats scheduled for tomorrow and they aim to win it. If they do the Conference title will be theirs for sure, but even if they lose this one, Iowa will have to win four straight to tie them for the championship. And judging from what the Hawk- eyes have shown so far, it isn't very likely that they will accomplish this feat. No, it loks as if they can start egraving the names of the Michigan players on those little gold baseballs they hand out to the club which cops the crown. There were eight or nine big league souts in the stands at today's battle and they were there to look at just two ball players, Northwestern's grid- iron great, Bill de Correvont, and Michigan's Dick Wakefield. There wasn't much doubt about who got the best of the hitting duel between the two. De Correvont went hitless in five trips to the platter wihile Wakefield clouted two of the longest home runs seen iII these parts in many a year. He hit the first one so far over the Wildcat right fielder's head that hb had rounded the bases before the gardener had overtaken the rolling pellet. His second time up Dick hit a long fly to right. Tencame the payoff. When the Michigan long distance clubber step- ped up to the disk with two men aboard in the fourth inning, Dick Fd tz, the Wildcat right fielder was playing so deep that adnear sighted gentleman in the stands thought he was visiting friends in Oak Park. It didn't do him any good, though. Wakefield stepped into one of Bob Motl's fast balls and it was three more runs for Michigan. It may not mean anything, but, at just about the time of that hit, a few drops of rain fell in downtown Chicago. Best crack of the trip thus far came from Whitey Holman before the team had even left Ann Arbor. Departure was delayed because a Detroit paper wanted the boys to put on their uniforms for a pic- ture, to be used when they won the championship. So they dutifully climbed into their suits and started warming up while waiting for the photographer to ad- just his apparatus. Holman was play- ing catch with Capt. Bill Steppoh, who has been out of the Iineup for weeks with an injured foot. After a few tosses, Whitey remarked: "Well. Bil, you seem to be in pretty fair shape except that your face loops sort of like dried glue" That wasn't the only gem, how- ever. Coach Fisher came through with a honey after Wakefield had Michigan Tops Wildcats Tilt AtEvanston, 9-7 Chamberlain Paces Batsimeii In C")-it Atack; Wakefield J3e hs Two HoIers (Continued from Page 1) the next two men had fouled out, both Hennerich and McKinnon tallied on Sampson's single to left. Michigan completed its run mak- ing in the eighth when Nelson singled, advanced on a sacrifice, and came home on Chamberlain's clean base hit into right field, In the Wildcat half of the eighth Stoddard pitched a single to Hen- nerich and walked Irv Madsen. Gould then replaced him on the hill and promptly forced :Russ Wendland to hit an easy grounder to Steppon. Bill grabbed the ball, tagged Mad- Box Score en and, threw to first for double >lay, Hennerich tallied on Sampson's tingle but Gould hela the home club scoreless for the remainder of the game. The Wolverines will face North- western tomorrow in the second game Wolverine NeLt Squad Leading western Meet Northwester Is Second; flammnlett Is Vanquished II Upset; Tb Wis (Contilued from Page 1) Playing his first match in 10 days, Jim Porter was carried to three sets before he finally downed Earl Crane of Iowa 6-0, 4-6, 6-2 in the thirdt division. Wayne Stille also had a hard strug-f gle on his hands in beating Bill Lip- ton of Chicago. 6-3, 5-7, 6-1. In the second set, "Dubre" had a 5-2 ad- vantage over his steady opponent but 1 couldn't hold it. In the afternoon, he and Porter teamed to beat Ed Koehl and Bob Negendack of Wis- consin 6-4, 5-7, 6-1. Again in the second set, the Michigan duo was leading 5-2, but couldn't hang on to their advantage.-C Tom Gamon's backeourt game was, tco much for Dick Moore of Minne- seta, and he won easily, 6:-3, 6-2. In the; last singles battle, AldenI Johnson ran his victory streak to 10 straight by downing Dick Cole of Ohio State, 6-2, 4-0, 6-0, in a match that was much closer than the score indicates. 0 / e1e-seasoin Pessimism * Michigan Baseball Year By HAL WILSON Daily Sports ELditor MOSTLY ABOUT BASEBALL: When Coach Ray Fisher first looked over his Wolverine baseball squad in the Field House batting cages lastl winter, he didn't fall overboard on chances for a Big Ten title . . . nor was this reticence just a manifestation of a coach's natural pessimism . . . for no one knew better than Ray the rough spots of his squad, and the problems that had to be overcome. In the first placc. there was pitching, often said to be from 60 to 80 per cent of a team's relative strength . . Lyle Bond, the mound depart- ment's leading carry-over from the previous season, was forced' to leave school to undergo a serious operation . . . that left Ray with only one veteran, Mickey Stoddard, from 1940's fifth place Conference outfit . : and even Mickey had not had starting experience . for he gained most, of his fame in a relief role. Another sore spot was the third outfield berth . . for the left and centerfield positions Ray had Don Holman and Davey Nelson. both of whom had performed, creditably as sophomores the preceding season . . . Micigan Ace To Enter AAU Meet At Ypst Michigan's ace half-miler, sandy haired Warren Breidenbach, decided yesterday to enter the outdoor Michi- gan AAU track meet, along with the others of the Wolverine track squad who are making the short jaunt to Ypsilanti tomorrow. Breidenbach, who holds the record for having ruri the fastest half-mile in Michigan's track history, plans to compete in both the 880 and the 4quarter mile tomorrow. However, if the weather turns out to be too warm, the smooth-striding star miay concen- trate on the sprints, running, M he 440 and the 220. Late Entrant Another late entrant who will carry the Wolverine colors into the meet is Gene Hirsch, sophomorp weight man. Hirsch, who has consistently put the shot 44 ft. in practice, will enter the shot put and discus throw. The Wolverines, who because of the nearness of final exams are not enter- ing a team in the meet, can be count- ed on to dominate the field in the events in which they are entered. Capt.-elect Al Piel gave notice in prac- tice this week that he will be ::unning for keeps, when he turned in a 9.8 seccnds 100 yard dash, which was the winning time run by Northwestern's great Myron Piker in the :Big Ten meet. Canham, Allen Favored Capt. Don Cannam and Wes Allen are almost certain to place first and second in the high jump and the Wolverine javelin stars Perry :Kim- ever and Johnny Wise are going along to show their wares to the field in this event. Frank McCarthy will probably double in the high hurdles and broad jump and Wilbert Wede- noja is slated to compete in the pole vault. Northwestern AB DeCorrevont, cf .. 5 Erdlitz, rf........4 McKuinon, ss .... 5 Hennerich, 2b .... 5 Madsen, 3b .......3 Wendland, lb .... 4 Sampson, if .... 4 Arnold, c.3 Moti, p..........2 Porth, p .. ....... 2 R 0 1 1 3 0 1 l 0 0 0 H 0 1 1 3 0 0 3 '1 0 0 Totals ......37 7 9 O 3 2 2 1 2 8 4 5 0. 0 27 0 2 1 4 0 3 8 2 7 0 0 A 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 Q 0 0 3 5 0 0 Q E 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 E 1' 0 0 0 0 0) 3 01 1 0 Michigan AR Nelson, of ...,.... 5 Holman, if....3 Steppon, 2b4..4 Wakefield, rf. 4 Chamberlain, 3b ..,5 Ruehle, lb.......3 Sofiak, ss........4 Harms, c.........5 Stoddard, p.......3 Gould, p1........1 R 2 1 21 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 H 2 1 '1 3 4 1 0 2 0 0 Totals .... 37 9 1327 9 5 Score By Innings Michigan....... 202 400 010-9' Northwestern 030 003 010-7 Runs batted in: Wakefield 4, Ruehle 2, Chamberlain 2, Steppon 1, Samp- son 5, Arnold 1, Hennerich 1. Two base hits: Sampson, Erdlitz, Cham- berlain. Home runs: Wakefield 2, Chamberlain. Left on bases: North- western six, Michigan 8. Sacrifice hits: Holman, Sofiak, Stoddard. Hits: off Stoddard 7, in 7 innings; off Gould 2 in 2; offnMotl, 9 in 4 in- nings; off Porth, 4 in 5. Bases on balls: off Motl, 3; off North, 3; off Stoddard, 2; off Gould, 1. Struck out: by Stoddard, 4; Gould, 2; by Motl, 2; by Porth, 2. Winning pitch- er, Stoddard. Losing pitcher, Motl. Stolen bases: Nelson, Ruehle. clouted his homer in the first in- ning. As Dick walked to the bench, ,Fisher loked at him reprov- ingly. "Listen, Dick," he said, "when they get two strikes on you, stay in there and swing. Don't choke your bat like that." The only sour note of the after- noon came when Nelson scored on Steppon's fly to left field in the first inning. Pitcher Motl was covering home and, after Davey had crossed the plate, the husky hurler tagged him none too gently in the face. There were some heated words exchanged between Fisher and several of the Wildcat players but the incident was soon forgotten. Nelson'-was pretty badly dazed but he came out of it in fine shape. ,. L BUD CHAMBERLAIN of the series, which winds up the Big Ten season for the Michigan team, If the Wolverines win, they will auto- matically become undisputed cham- pions of the Western Conference for the first time since 1936. Iowa has the only team which can touch Michigan in the Conference race. If the Wolverines lose tomor- row's game and the Hawkeyes win their remaining four games, the two teams will go into a tie for first place. It is very unlikely though, from the Iowans' past record, that they will win the number of victories necessary to give them a share of the title. INDIANAPOLIS, May 29.-P)-- While most of this inland 2ity and -Its influx of visitors yielded tonight to carefree carnival, thirty-three race drivers - all Americans -- sought sleep and rest on the ave of their perilous journey for $100,000 in prize money in the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's annual 500-mile test of nerve, speed and endurance.- Headed by Wilbur Shaw of Indian- apclis, seeking his -fourth speedway victory and his third in succession, the field of cntranits will r~oar away from the starting line at 10 a.m. (CST) tomorrow. Major Lea giwe S 't #iii (hugOs Waners Make Last Stopover I n Big Leag;ue By BUD HENDEL Baseball's most famous brother act has been restored. For when the Boston Braves signed Paul Waner to a contract the other day they brought together, for what will probably be the last time in the major leagues, the renowned outfield duo of Paul and Lloyd Waner. We're not forgetting that former great pitching team of the St. Louis Cardinals, Dizzy and Daffy Dean. Nor are we overlooking that once potent Boston Red Sox battery of Wes and Rick Ferrel. But the test of time has scored a jackpot homer in favor of the Waners -- only they have survived the diamond wars for over a decade - only they can be called the greatest of all time. And now it seems as if the Waners have reached the end of their dia- mond days. Playing with the Hub City's senior circuit entry, sport- ing the strange Boston uniform, Big and Little Poison, as the sports scribes long ago dubbed them, are fading out of the baseball picture. Wins Batting Crown But it wasn't alwas so. In 1926 the Pittsburgh Pirates went to the Pacific Coast to bring a hard-hitting young outfielder into the Buccaneer fold, buying Paul Waner from the San Francisco Seals. After brother Paul had won the Na- tional League batting crown in l'is first year of big time competition with a .386 average, he went to the Pittsburgh front office and told them that he had a younger brother play- ing for San Francisco who was as good or better than lie was. The Pittsburgh management lost little time in grabbing op the other half of thle Waner combination, Lloyd Lcd by the pot nt bats of indom- inatable spiritof the Waners, te. Steel City aggregation walked off with the 1927 lonant. And until last, year when frankie Frisch took over the managerial reins of the Corsairs, Big and Little Poison were fixtures in the Pirate outfield. But Frisch was seeking new blood, young blood with which to make the Pittsburgh entry a serious flag con- tender. Age was creeping up on the Waners. So this last winter :Frich cut Paul loose and kept Lloyd around as a pinch-hitter. Paul Cast Adrift The elder Waner caught on with Brooklyn, but just a couple of weeks ago he was cast adrift. He didn't fit in with the youthful plans of the Dodger administration. And when the Bucs discovered a pressing need for pitchers, they traded Lloyd to Bos- ton about three weeks past for hurl- er Nick Strincevich. As brother Paul had opened the way to the big leagues for Lloyd in 1927, so Lloyd opened them for him not so long ago. 9n his recommendation the Braves put Paul's name to a dotted line. And now, no longer with their be- loved Pirates, Paul and Lloyd Waner are making a last ditch stand to stay in the major leagues the last stand of baseball's greatest brother act. EMPLOYMENT Some excellent positions are open to the college graduate through the office of the Na- but the other spot was wide open. ON THE WHOLE the outlook was a none too bright at the begin- ning of the season . . . most of the experts emphasized that the Wol- verines carried too many "ifs" to rate as one of the outstanding con- tenders for the crown . . . It took but little timedfor the Michigan squad to explode these pre-season potentialities into base hits, fine fielding and champion- ship calibre hurling, however . . . once they had swung into the Big Ten pennant scramble they actu- ally speeded up the torrid tempo maintained in the Southlands . . . and from that first Conference series right up through yesterday's Northwestern clash, Fisher's fight- ing crew has never been headed. THERE IS STILL a slight possi- bility that Iowa may sweep its final four games and tie the Maize and Blue outfit if the Wolverines drop today's season finale at Evan- . . . but the chances of this hap- pening are slimmer than a tooth- pick on a diet . .. 1 Where then does the credit be- long'for the Wolverines' first Con- ference title since 1936? . . . for the answer just turn over a couple <: columns to the box score, and glance at the names . . . add in the all-important l and indispens- ible coaching element . . . and there stands the formula . . . it was a team victory through and through. ,PECIAL CREDIT can be given to a great many of the Wolver- ines . . . to George Harms, for in- stance, who added a potent bat to his achievements of last year, in addition to handling Fisher's hurl- ing,,staff with remarkable finesse and to Bud Chamberlain for his vast improvement over last' season which has landed him right at the top of Conference third- g b.asemen. George Ruehle could be singled out for his steady first-basing . . . and Mike Sofiak for his improvea throwing arm and fiery spirit . . . Nelson and Holman for their re- liable hitting and fielding . credit must go to Cant. Steppon and the sophomore who replaced him in the lineup when a foot in- fection forced him out, Wayne Christenson . . . Stoddard and re- liefer Neil Muir both produced in exceptional fashion on the mound. flU T IT WILL be slighting no one to give an extra special boost to another trio of Wolverines . . . first is the big, slugging sophomore, Dick Wakefield, who has staged a one-man batting onslaught against Conference pitching seldom equaled in Big Ten baseball history ...Art Hill has ex- eelentiy described his feats of yesterday direct from Northwestern . . . and those big league scouts weren't in the stands because they like the Evans- ton variety of peanuts. The second to whom a little extra. boost is fully deserved is another sophomore, lanky Cliff Wise, who shoved his powerful frame into Fisher's pitching gap and plugged it completely . . . big Cliff's right arm has been a prime factor in Michigan's title drive . . . and no matter how he fares at Evanston today the Whizzer's contribution to the team must be termed invaluable. rRHIR)D OUTSTANDING ASSET on this 1941 edition of the Maize and Blue outfit is little Mase Gould . . a senior, Mase has ridden the Wolverine bench for two years ... last season the diminutive southpaw didn't even make the spring trip traveling squad . . that hurt . . . but it, failed to dent his determination to become a leading moundsmnan for Michigan . . . this winter Mase started early and worked hard . . . his record now stands at five wins ... yesterday came his crowning achieve- ient.. . . for the fighting little senior relieved Stoddard, silenced the mien- acing Wildcat bats with a superlative job of relief hurling and protected the lead which his slugging mates had built up. The best way we can praise Ray Fisher's coaching is merely to refer to all of th above . . . the way his veterans improved with another year of his tut oring . . . the way his sophomore sensations blossomed forth into charnum>ionship pertormers . . . the way his entire club kept a sustained drive toward a single objective and succeeded, never slackening its pace for a second . . . all stand as overwhelmingly impressive testimony of day' ability s a coach . . . It has been a great Wolverine baseball year. AREf YOU SICK of" Seavling Bt~ters We invite you to come in and see why we say PARKER 65.9 Forever does away with need for blotters. 11O11 T& ralisher ANN ARDOR 205 5. Fourth Ave. Ph. 3955 1 AMERJICAN LEAGUE '17: L "Up Cleveland ...... Chicago . .. .. .. . New York ....... . Detroit .,..... . . Boston .......... I'lliladelphia . St. Louis Washing ton ...... W 29 22 22 21 18 19 13 14 L 15 16 18 t20 18 21 24 26 Pet. .659 .579t .550 .512 .500 .475 .351 .350 GB 4 5 N7 8 121/2 1J3 ' .. ... _ Thursday's Results: Cleveland 9, Detroit 0. New York 2, Washington 2 (called at end of fifth, rain) , Boston 6, Philadelphia 4. Chicago 4, St. Louis 0. NATIONAL LEAGUE Y TRELAT THE H EAT with as little courtesy as you wish by defying it and eating one of our "cool" meals, which are designed to make you enjpy eating in hot weather. ST P f 1)] :....... .,.a.. ,...w,,.,.,... . . ,x ,...,.n mum~ EVERYONE enjoys the smoothness, the mellowness and W St. Louis ,,....... .30 Brooklyn .. . ..... 27 New York ........ 20 Cincinnati.... ...17 Chicago ... . ... . ..16 Pittsburgh.......13 Boston ........ ,. 12 Philadelphia . . . 10 L 9 12 14 22 20 20 22 26 Pet. .769 .692 .588 .436 .444 .394 .353 .278 GB 3 71/% 13 12 14 151%2 18 2 6 I the goodness of good BEER. A tall, glass of BEER, with its rich body and flavor will hit the spot on these warm summer evenings. This s the season most ideal for the enjoyment of sparkling brew. For the best in BEER, summer- time's favorite beverage, remember our delightful Taproom. Thursday's Results: St. Louis 10, Cincinnati 9. New York 9, Boston 2. Only games scheduled. MICHIGAN WEEKEND IN SPORTS TODAY GOOD FOOD is even better with GOOD WINE 11 III ii I III