SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1940 -- .- .a . . aaa.TH CT-TTCN O TT7V PAGE M, .L 1L f:f l1y S. XI L1 y L) .YY X. \ y) i[; y jr y, ' Pa. . T r RaaEW f- Ii Minnesota Ohio State ...... 13 7 Penn.......... Princeton..... . 46 28 Fordham......24 Yale ........... 13 Pitt.. ...........12 Dartmouth...... .7 Northwestern . Wisconsin,... . . 27 Tennessee .,..... ... 7 Alabama ..,.. . 27I 12 Notre Dame ..... Carnegie Tech .. 61 Indiana.... .... 10 . 0 Iowa............6 Wolverines Gain Revenge By Humbling Zuppke'sIlin ti, 28-0 Nelson, Harmon Score Opening Period Tallies Varsity Drives 70, 69, 62 Yards In First Half To Pile Up 21-0 Lead (Continued from Page 1) superior foe. During the first 15 min- utes of play, Zuppke's charges carried the ball four times and punted twice. That was all they saw of the ball. Throughout the day, the Indians threatened the Wolverine goal only once, and that came in the second period after Michigan had scored its third touchdown. The Crisler men tallied this time on a well-executed pass play. After marching from their own 38 to the Illinois 35, the Wolverines opened up the neatest play of the game. Frutig Scores On Pass Harmon took the ball from center, faded back to his left and rifled the pigskin to end Ed Frutig on the 30. A vicious block by Evashevski and the speedy River Rouge flanker, playing one of the greatest games of his career, romped down the left side- lines to the goal line. Harmon again missed connections for the extra point. Then came Illinois' only serious bid of the day. On a barrage of passes, the Indians marched to the Michigan 14, where Frutig stopped the threat by intercepting Worban's pass and carrying the ball back to the Michi- gan 38. Late in the period, Harmon, on fourth down with still five yards to go, stepped back to the Illinois' 20- yard stripe and sent a place-kick whirling straight between the up- rights. It gave Michigan the three points it had missed on conversions. The second half found a bogged down Michigan attack. Their re- vengeful appetites having been satis- fied, the Wolverines closed up shop and eased the pace. Westfall Goes Over The final Michigan tally came mid- way in the third period, and once again it was "Bullet Bob" who led the charge. Alternating with Har- mon and Tippy Lockhard in carry- ing the ball to the three, Westfall stormed over the beaten Illini cen- ter path for his first points of the season. This time Harmon's conver- sion was good. Twenty-eight points behind, the Indians opened up their razzle-dazzle, but the rain and Michigan were too much for them and the scoring was Played A Leading Role In Illinois Rout Kt1 : :v: . ., ,. ry: Mm i. m "St!t a:;:m :::::'"" : ".;.: =::. :' Milo Sukup Forgets Everything But... This should make the girl friend (or friends) of Milo Sukup, that chunky Wolverine guard who serves as a spearhead for every Michigan play, very proud. Sukup got into trouble while run- ning interference for Tom Harmon yesterday and ended up-on his back and out. Revived, Milo forgot who he was, where he was, and what he was supposed to do out there before 40,- 000 people, his teammates report. The only thing he could remember was that he had an important date after the game, they charge. Sukup's romantic amnesia is gone today and it's rumored he and his girl (or girls) are doing fine. Nationwide Gridiron Results Army 6, Harvard 6 (tie) Navy 19, Drake 0 Cornell 33, Syracuse 6 Columbia 19, Georgia 13 Duke 13, Colgate 0 Boston College 60, Idaho 0 Penn State 34, Lehigh 0 Holy Cross 13. N.Y.U. 7 Penn. 46, Princeton 28 Fordham 24, Pittsburgh 12 Yale 13, Dartmouth 7 Williams 13, Bowdoin 13 (tie) Brown +26, Tufts 6 MIDWEST Notre Dame 61, Carnegie Tech 0 Indiana 10, Iowa 6 Minnesota 13, Ohio State 7 Nebraska 53, Kansas 2 Missouri 30, Iowa State 14 Ohio University 15, Furman 6 SOUTH Tennessee 27, Alabama 12 Florida 19, Maryland 0 Georgia Tech 19, Vanderbilt 0 Kentucky 24, George Washington 0 Mississippi 14, Duquesne 6 N. Car. 13, N. Car. State 7 Virginia Military 7, Virginia 0 SOUTHWEST Texas 21, Arkansas 0 Texas A & M 21, Texas Christ. 7 FAR WEST Southern Cal. 13, Oregon 0 California 9, U.C.L.A. 7 Stanford 26, Wash. State 14 Washington 19, Oregon State 0 O. S. U. Loses Thriller To Gophers; Northwestern, Penn Gain Easy Wins !COLUMBUS, 0., Oct. l9.-(.D)-A, great Minnesota teamwrecked Ohio State's hopes of retaining the West- tern Conference grid title today. Be- fore 63,199 rain-drenched fans, the Golden Gophers won 13 to 7 after epling two Ohio threats near the goal line. It was a game repleted with "breaks" the most heart-breaking one of which came to the Bucks with less than two minutes to go. Trailing 13 to 7, the Ohio team dipped deeply into its razzle-dazzle bag to surge from their own 35 to the Gopher one-yard line. In that 64-yard jaunt were three completed passes, all tossed by quar- terback Don Scott. Then came a Scott to Tom Kinkade forward, with a Kinkade to Leslie Horvath lateral tacked on the end, which carried to the Minnesota six. Scott, who during the final surge had gambled on a fourth down run- ning play when he needed five yards -and made six himself-banged to the one-yard mark. Then came the break. Claude White, Ohio center who had played the entire game on the slippery field, came up with his only poor pass of the fray. Langhurst fell on the ball on the 13, but Ohio's chance had flown. Bruce Smith, Minnesota's 193- pound halfback, was the game's out- standing star. He counted both Gopher touchdowns, one in the first period from the 10-yard line on a fake pass and one in the second on a three-yard plunge. They climaxed drives of 55 and 59 yards, respectively. MADISON, Wis.. Oct. 19.-(P).- The Northwestern Wildcats, con- querors of Ohio State and Syracuse, remained among the nation's unde- feated teams today by overpowering the University of Wisconsin Badgers, 27 to 7. before 25,000 spectators. Floyd Chambers accounted for two Northwestern scores while George Benson and Bill DeCorrevont sup- plied the others. Jim McFadzean countered for Wisconsin. DeCorrevont and Don Clawson, Purple fullback, were injured during the game, but reports from the dress- ing room said both would be able to play next week. NEW YORK, Oct. 19.-(P)-It took. a discerning, not to say hyper-sensi- tive eye, to discover a legitimate foot- ball upset today. Almost without a break, the nation's college leaders moved smoothly past their third October tests and left the general situation virtually unchanged. Not in years have the results on any full football Saturday program so closely followed form. Tennessee gave new evidence (if any was needed) of its terrific power as it steam-rollered Alabama's good team into submission, 27-12, before 25,000. Little Johnny Butler was the spark plug the Volunteers needed, scoring a pair of touchdowns on runs of 68 and 49 yards, and passing for another. Notre Dame, boasting its best team since Elmer Layden took charge, roll- ed over Carnegie Tech, 61-0, using 67 players as a crowd of 35,000 looked on. This head-lined an intersectional pro- gram that otherwise proved nothing except that no section of the country has any monopoly on football talent. Duke, benefitting by an 80-yard touchdown run by Moffat Storer, de- feated Colgate, 13-0, but Columbia's smart Lions paid that one off by de- feating Georgia, 19-13, in a thrilling duel which saw sophomore Paul Gov- ernali of Columbia assume the star- ring role. Carl Snavely used every man on the Cornell bench as the Big Red's long-range attack swamped Syra- cuse, 33-6, while Francis Xavier Rea- gan, Penn's great- back, scored 31 points as the Quakers won a high- scoring duel with Princeton, 46-28. A snowstorm failed to halt Len Esh- mont and Fordham and the Rams took Pitt over the hurdles, 24-12. De-emphasized Yale found the win- ning combination against Dartmouth and won 13-7 as Ted Harrison com- pleted a touchdown pass to John Reed in the last 30 seconds. Army and Har- vard played a 6-6 draw while Holy Cross won over N.Y.U., 13-7. Ed Frutig, veteran Wolverine end, played one of the greatest games of his varsity career yesterday, as Michigan; trounced Illinois. The River Rouge flanker caught a Harmon-thrown pass and raced 30 yards for a touchdown, intercepted an Illini aerial, and turned in a stellar defensive performance. | i U! ! i I I MINEVA 'Michigan just Outplayed Us,' Zuppke Concedes In .Defeat By WOODY BLOCK 1 Those fellows add zest to the whol In a dressing room full of half- team." dressed, sober-faced football players, 1 He wasn't too downhearted abou Illinois Coach Bob Zuppke nobly took the outcome. He seemed to be takin his licking like a man. "They were it philosophically, as part of th that much better than we," he said game. He kept pacing around th immediately after yesterday's game. locker room, talking as he walked "They just outplayed us, that's all." and pointing out quickly and accur "The Michigan team is much bet- ately just how his gallant crew wa ter than last year's and definitely whipped. superior to the, Southern California When asked by one of the scribe squad we lost to a week ago," the like- able Dutchman continued. "We what he thought about the Notr stopped Harmon but Westfall did the Dame game his team had on tap o damage." next week, he smiled and replied As he puffed oni a cigarette waiting "We never worry about the futur for his team to get dressed, Zuppke we just try to get better." told reporters that the score indicat- And did he think Michigan woul ed clearly just how much better Fritz go on through the season undefeat Crisler's team was. "Maybe we gave ed? "Well," he said, "there are oth them three points when we passed ers Michigan will meet that are lot under our own goal (Harmon's field better than Illinois." goal was the ultimate result) but out- His players, dressing in silence, file side of that, the score was a good, one by one out to a waiting bus. H honest one." stood in the middle of the dark "Y'know my line is weaker this steamy room amidst the bandage year," he went on. "I haven't been and dirt until the last player troope able to replace men like Lenich, out. A reserve filed past Zuppk Brewer and Reeder. And you can and muttered, "We'll lick Notre Dam see I have no runners. But Michi- Coach, we'll lick them." gan, with personalities like West- "Yah," Zuppke answered, "we'll licl fall and Harmon, is bound to be good. 'em." e t g e e d. r- 's es e r d, e, d - ts d e k, es d e e k bra fa or off / C over. The Wolverines revenge. had gained theirI A Toast To Yost MICHIGAN Rogers Wistert Sukup Ingalls Fritz Kelto Frutig Evashevski Harmon Nelson Westfall LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB ILLINOIS Phillips _ Dillon Siebold Wilford Turek Riggs O'Neill Ehni Worban Astroth Pfeifer STATISTICS OF THE ILLINOIS-MICHIGAN FOOTBALL GAMEI ILLINOIS..........0 MICHIGAN .......12 0 9 0 7 0-- 0-28 First downs .......................... Yards gained rushing (net) ........... Forward passes attempted ............. Forward passes completed ............ Yards gained by forward passing ....... Yards lost, attempting forward passes . . Forward passes intercepted by ........ Yards gained, run back of int. passes .. Punting average (from scrimmage) .... Total yards, all kicks returned ........ Opponents' fumbles recovered ......... Yards lost by penalties .... ............. ILLINOIS 5 24 16 4 48 22 1 1 38 68 1 20 - - MICHIGAN 17 240 5 2 49 0 3 42 41 32 1 45 Michigan scoring: Touchdowns, Nelson, Harmon, Frutig, Westfall. Field goal, Harmon (placement). Poirlt after touchdown, Harmon (placekick). Illinois substitutions: Ends-En- gel, O'Neill, Marlaire; Tackle, John- son; Guards, Pawlowski, Jurley; Cen- ters, Cheeley, Kolens; Halfbacks, Miller, Easterbrook; Fullback, Bern- hardt. Michigan substitutions: Ends, Hall, Fraumann, Sharpe, Czak; Tackles, Flora, Butler, Sengel; Guards, Kole- sar, Melzow; Center, Kennedy; Quar- terbacks, Ceithaml, Kohl; Halfbacks, Lockard, Krejsa, Kromer, Call; Full- back, Zimmerman. Referee, Getchell, St. Thomas; Um- pire, Krieger, Ohio University; Lines- man, Simpson, Wisconsin; Field Judge, Eichenlaub, Notre Dame. 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