THE MICHIGAN DAILY sUNDAY , JANUARY 20, 1946 WHY COACHES GET GREY: risler Returns to Nest of Troyb Aers venge Last Wek's 60-41 Loss, e ting Northwestern by Same Margin By BILL MULLENDORE Daily Sports Editor WE HAVE a hunch that Herbert Orrin Crisler, Michigan's ordinarily im- perturbable athletic director, has reached for the aspirin more than once since his return to Ann Arbor Friday. Mr. Crisler very definitely has troubles-of the variety that comes in bunches. Yesterday's announcement by University officials to the effect that no more applications for admittance from outside the state of Michigan will be accepted must have given Crisler something to think about. Chances are the ruling will continue to operate during the fall term. The impli- cations for Michigan athletics are obvious-and all bad. Michigan has always drawn a very large proportion of its athletes from out-state. Twenty-one of the 29 football letter-winners this past season,! for instance, were non-Michiganites. Not one of the 17 members of the hockey team is from Michigan. Nor is any one of the starting basketball five. If deprived of this generous source of material, Wolverine athletics stand to suffer severely. Crisler, as the man responsible for Michigan football in particular and all Michigan sports in general, has good reason to worry over the situation. Also greeting Crisler when he returned to his desk at the Administration Building was the task of finding a substitute for the University of Penn- sylvania on the 1946 football schedule. Penn, under contract to play here Oct. 5, has asked to be relieved of its obligation, just as it did in 1945. The new opponent will probably be announced later this week. Tigers Dispatch BASEBALL FLOOD: 1946 Contracts IT lentSurpl Four Regulars, Three. I MEMPHIS, Jan. 19 - ( ') - Billy Servicemen Signed Evans, president of the SouthernAs- sociation, prescribed an aspirin diet DETROIT, Jan. 19, (P-With only today for baseball managers who he four members of the Detroit Tigers' said in a few weeks would be greeted World Series baseball champions al- by "the greatest spring turnout of ready signed for 1946 along with three players in the history of the game." former servicemen, General Manager Talent thumpers, he said, will earn George M. Trautman announced that their pay as never before. contracts were mailed today to 42 "The training camps, majors and other men on the club's active player minors, will be flooded with candi- list, dates," Evans asserted. "Many Outfielder Roy Cullenbine, Catcher leagues are expecting twice as many Bob Swift and Pitchers Virgil (Fire) as in normal times. Trucks and George Caster from the -- . -- - -- - 1945 American League pennant win- ners already are in the fold, Traut- WnVerlfle 1o0 cpste1r man said. 1 Others under contract are Dick Wo'n't Forget Pathto Wakefield, Navy dischargee who bat- ted .355 for Detroit in 1944, Walter Gordon Rosencrans, a member of (Hoot) Evers, who starred in the out- the Michigan basketball squad, had field for Beaumont before the war, an especially warm spot in his heart and Lewis Kretlow, rookie service for the late Gen. George Patton. team pitcher signed by the Tigers A B-24 pilot, Rosencrans was shotI during the major league meetings in down over Vienna in August, 1944 and Chicago for 'a reported five-figure wounded three times by strafing fire bonus. as he dangled from his parachute. Altogether 49 players constitute the After being marched distances of group of Tiger candidates scheduled 120 miles and 130 miles by SS troops, to report to Manager Steve O'Neill he was finally liberated April 21, 1945 for training at Lakeland, Fla., begin- -his birthday-by Patton's armored ning Feb. 20. In addition, Trautman columns. said, the club still has 33 players on The most welcome sight of his life, its national defense list, several of j he "says, was Patton, pearl handle whom are expected back by the open- pistols and all, marching down the ing of camp. prison camp street A S IF these two problems weren't enough, Crisler still has the not in-j considerable headache of finding and signing a new line coach to replac Clarence (Biggie) Munn. The finding of candidates has not been hard. Crisler has a list of more than 30 persons who apparently would like nothin better than to take over line coaching duties here. The signing probably won't present any great difficulty either, once it has been determined to whom the offer should be made. In the running are five men who now hold head coaching positions elsewhere, several ex-Michigan linemen, an assortment of high school mentors and sundry other individuals. Just when the final decision will be made is a matter of speculation. T Board in Control of Athletics meets tomorrow night, but no action will b, taken on the line coaching problem. Sorting the credentials and qualifica- tions of 30 aspirants takes time. All these matters have been dumped right in Crisler's lap. The schedule problem and the hiring cf a line coach call for immediate decisiens. which decisions should not be too long forthcoming. The out-state enrollment regulation constitutes one of those imponderables whose solution roab,' doesn't exist. If it is necessary, to exclude out-state students, Michig athletics will have to suffer the consequences. The consequences, for Crisler, might not be particularly pleasant. Michiganj fans, conditioned to expecting nothing but winning teams by long years of more or less constant victory, are not the sort to tolerate losing, no matt er} what the reasons. ANYBODY know where you can buy aspirin wholesale? *k, Elliot Lead k gan Scoring C t im ed from Page 1) hari ; toss good to put Northwestern ahead. 3-1. This was the largest lead f r isit crs em all evening. Struck evened the count at three- l on two foul shots, and from then T L~(Word until the Wolverines took the lead at' 11-10 on Elliot's shot, the two teams exchanged fouls and goals to hold one-point margins for a few seconds at a time, only to relinquish their lead. Strack made it 13-19 and Johnj Mullaney countered two more before Northwestern made their last bid to] stay in the game on goals by Wheeler and Chuck Tourek. The Wolverines went ahead by three points on a two- pointer from the far corner by Strack. King and Elliot each countered twice in a succession of alternating] goals for both teams. Just before theI end of the first half, Michigan spurted far ahead with 10 points while holding the Wildcats to a singe field goal. Northwestern scored first after the intermission on a set shot- by Phil Lofgren, but Mullaney got the points back on a layup. The Wolverines gained ground steadily from that point on. Bob Harrison, who had been held scoreless in the first half, countered with four goals from the field in the second half. With about five minutes remaining, the regulars were pulled from the game, but Northwestern was held to two points by the substitutes. MfCtIi GAN ih~uiiioney, f IUur>:en. f I~Y II. 1' §einbutg, f itThiset', 1' >rieirh-h, f C :gesen nv' flS, C Strack, g Wc:;hi'man, g TOTALS JO '1IXVS~TERN iVl~wris, £ W'arthington, f r ttgr('n, I Carter, c I. i nee~ei, g '~srr V~' G 2 4 2 1 0 0 3 0 5 6 0 23 G 1 1 0 1 4 0 4 1 F 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 3 2 0 10 F 1 0 I P TP 0- 4 3 9 3 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 10 0 0 1 13 2 14 0 0 12 56 PTP 0 5 03 3 0 0 2 5 9 0 0 2 9 0 2 1 7 usPredieted "Such large squads are unwieldy and tax the judgment of the men who pick the teams. M46 Season Unprecedented "That means quick decisions, many mistakes and many headaches." The Southern executive said 1946 spring training would raise conditions such as baseball has never seen in the past and may never see again. "During the war, baseball became a global pastime, played from Guad- alcanal to the Aleutians," he de- clared. "Look what you have-hundreds of youngsters who never dreamed of playing ball now envisioning them- selves as another Cobb or Ruth. We have most of the old players coming back, the youngsters and four-F's who held forth during the war and these service-made athletes, all trying to make the grade." Back To The Cornfields Evans said the new and revived minor leagues would absorb some of the excess talent but a big portion of this year's record candidate lists nec- essarily would have to be left on the sidelines. "We have thirty-odd minor leagues now," he asserted. "In a few years I am convinced we will have fifty or more. Nevertheless, a lot of fellows will learn this spring that they had better go back on the farm." Close Race As Red ings Face Toronto DETROIT, Jan. 19. (P)_ The l),- troit Red Wings, beaten only we in their last 10 National Hoeyv League starts. meet the Toronto Mu- ple Leafs for the sixth time thi season here tomorrow and are faced with the necessity of hanging up their fourth victory of the series to kere pace with the League leaders. Currently engaged in a four-way scramble with Montreal, Chicago and Boston for first place, the Red Wings stand fourth going into the Sunday game but are in position to improve their place in the standings by win- ning. Montreal and Boston, who tangled tonight at Montreal, mix it againI Sunday in Boston while Chicago is ail home to the New York Rangers. Sunday's game is Detroit's second of three in a row on home ice. The; Red Wings meet Boston here next Saturday C g' + _ _' .- .. ....'.., ..3 J / ' r i r" I < i i" .;:#. ..; BO4NU TN RLIP 1 P One of our famous Hand Look* slips in rich full bodied BURMIL rayon crepe - beloved for their perfect fit. Machine stitched but with the tiniest stitches, in white or tearose - Sizes 32-40. $30) lVan. Buuen. 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