WEDNESDAY, M.AY 28, 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAILY U- Major League Roundup By The Associated Press Detroit made it two in a row over the Cleveland Indians today as Al Benton and Hal Newhouser teamed up to beat Rapid Robert Feller, 4-2. George Kell led the victors with four hits in as many trips to the plate. He was re- sponsible for all four Tiger runs, batting in three of them and scoring the other. In Chicago, the White Sox and the Browns split a double- header, the Chisox taking the first game, 5-2, with Gillespie the winning hurler. Brownie Cliff Fannin pitched his club to a 2-0 win in the nightcap. Over in the National League, Ewell Blackwell gave Pittsburgh only four hits as Cincinnati took a 6-1 triumph in the afternoon's only contest. In a night contest, Boston whipped the Philadelphia Phil- ies, 7-3, with Johnny Sain win- ning his fourth of the year. The high-flying Giants took a 7-3 beating from their arch rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers, as Ralph Branca pitched a masterful sev- en-hitter before 51,780 fans, the largest crowd ever to witness a night ball game. Meanwhile the Cubs moved into undisputed possession of first place as Bob Chipman pitched Chicago to a 10-3 win over St. Louis. While over in the American League the Red Sox and Yankees moved into a virtual tie for sec- ond. The Yanks had their four- game streak snapped as they dropped a 5-4 decision to Wash- ington, while the Bosox snapped a four game losing streak.E Y MSC Notches 84m Win over Michigan Linksters Stake Crown at Purdt State Rally Scores Six Runs in Fourth Special To The Daily EAST LANSING, May 27 - Baseball became the only major sport Michigan failed to defeat their arch-rivals from Michigan State in, as the Spartans added another line to their Big Nine petition yesterday by walloping the Wolverines 8-1 before an over- flow crowd of 6,000 at Jenison Field. Paced by the beautiful four-hit pitching of Robin Roberts and the heavy stickwork of Pat Peppler and Ed Sobzak, State repeated its earlier season 2-1 win but with a little more emphasis this time. Most of this emphasis came in the fourth when the lads from East Lansing jumped on Bud Rankin and his successor Art Dole for six hits and six runs. Hansen Starts it Off-, Marty Hansen started things off for MSC in the big inning with a booming triple to the score- board in right field. Sobzak sing- led Hansen home, took second on a sacrifice and scored on a single to center by Bucky Walsh. Rob- erts then sent Rankin to the showers with a 400 foot triple to the flag pole. He scored a mom- ent later when Peppler rifled a double to center. Frank Bagdon singled Peppler home and raced home himself with the sixth run of the inning on an error by third baseman Charley Ketterer. Wiese Drives in Run Michigan had jumped to a lead in the first when Bump Elliott beat out a hit to third and Bob Wiese doubled him home. State tied it up in the third on two singles andna wildhpitch, and picked up their final marker in the fifth on four walks by Michi- gan's third pitcher, Bob Hicks. Hicks settled down and retired the last nine men in order to turn in a creditable relief job. The only other hits off Roberts were a sin- gle by Elliott in the third and an- other by Weisenburger in the fourth. It gave the husky right- hander his second win of the sea- son over Michigan and a 6-2 rec- ord for the season. Rankin was charged with the loss. MICHIGAN 100 000 000-1 4 2 MSC 001 610 000-8 11 2 Rankin, Dole, Hicks and Ray- mond, Kulpinski; Roberts and Walsh. COACH BERT KATZENMEYER -Youthful golf coach who seeks to garner his first championship and keep the crown in Ann Ar- bor when his links squad tees off in the Western Conference golf championships Friday. 4. Dad Relaxes } ~ Tool, 3XS Our stock of casual shoes is now most complete, including Bass Weejuns. Prices are reasonable, top, and rangej from 6.95 to 11.50. Sizes up to thirteen. VAN BOVEN SHOES 17 NICKELS ARCADE Xasesaes :.mysaa SPORT SCRAPBOOK By JACK MARTIN, Daily Sports Editor "EVERY BIG NINE FOOTBALL TEAM will lose at least one game next fall." That's Mr. H. O. Crisler speaking, and Michigan's head gridiron tactician has been known to utter some very sage say- ings during his coaching career. The correctness of Crisler's prediction becomes quite evident if one takes even a brief survey of the prospects and prayers of Western Conference coaches at the close of their annual Spring outings. Illinois and Michigan will both be strong again, but Minnesota is looking more and more like a surprise package while Northwestern, under its new master, may also startle more than a few opponents. The Hoosiers of Indiana, at present, appear weaker than last year's third-place outfit, and neither Wisconsin or Purdue show possibilities of doing much more than they did last fall. Iowa on the other hand, is a good dark-horse bet, and Ohio State, unpredictable and always dangerous, may come up with something under its newest regime. The Wolverines, of course, have lost Elmer Madar, Paul White, and Bob Wiese. But 25 other veterans of various years are return- ing and several men displayed definite progress in the brief spring work-outs. To fill the fullback hole left by Wiese, Crisler has newcomer Dick Kemnthorn, and a comfortable quantity of good, experienced halfbacks should be on hand. TJHE QUARTERBACK SITUATION, which originally was a sore spot, may be solved if Howard Yegges plays next fall as the Con- ference bigwigs have declared is permissable. In addition a gentleman named Walt Teninga is coming back to Ann Arbor. As a freshman in 1945 he was a brilliant half, but that ouarter spot may becKon mm. The ends seem no difficulty, with a host of tried regulars on hand led by Len Ford and end-around artist Bob Mann. Tackles and guards will be bolstered by such standouts from spring prac- tice as the third edition of the Wistert clan, Alvin, Ralph Kohl, and Pete Dendrinos. J. T. White will be back at center, aided possibly by Dan Dworsky, former fullback. Illinois' champions will have 34 lettermen back next fall. The line suffered most from losses - Alex Agase being the principle de- parture; but ends Mickey Owens and Sam Zatkoff will be back, plus Lou Agase and Bob Prymuski. The Illini backfield again looks like dynamite on paper, with Captain Art Dufelmeier, speedy Paul Patter- son and Julie Rykovich all scrapping at halfback, Perry Moss at quar- ter, and Russ Steger and Ray Florek at full. No one can predict what Coach Bernie Bierman will master- mind at Minnesota next September. The Gophers regained their old Golden tint in their final games last season, and it's no bad guess predict a continued upsurge. AT NORTHWESTERN Bob Voigts replaces Lynn Waldorf, but whq will replace Vic Schwall and Ed "Buckets' Hirsch. Frank Aschen- brenner and Art Murakowski will be there, however, together with Ralph Everist and sprinter Jim Holland, so the Wildcats won't be any bunch of tame kittens. Eddie Anderson has Dick Hoerner and Emlen Tunnell coming back to Iowa and Wolverines well remember how troublesome this Hawkeye duo can be. The Buckeyes of Ohio have another new administration now which seems to be driving right at the difficult problem of making its Colombus sojourn a permanent one, Wes Fesler will have good back- field talent to help him, such as Jerry Krall, Alex Verdova, Joe Whis- ler, Ollie Cline (1945), and Dean Sensenbaugher (1943), but the line is questionable. gat n ii Wt'" Tui'i i-,c It'. Track will be s'ivered 1tolaorrw By MURRAY GRANT Michigan's chances of retain- ing the only Conference crown they nowholdnrest squarely on the shoulders of the six men who will represent the Wolverines on the fairways of the Purdue Uni- versity Course Friday and Satur- day in the Western Conference golf championships. As yet Coach Bert Katzenmeyer is undecided as to who those men will be. He's named five who will definitely make the trip and a 36-hole medal event between three others is being held to de- termine the sixth. Barclay Leads Group From last year's champions will come Captain Dave Barclay, Ed Schalon, who finished third in the meet, Rog Kessler, and Bill Court- right. The fifth man will be Johnny Jenswold, champion in 1944. The sixth position will go to the low man in the three-way match now under way between Bill Ludolph, Pete Elliott, and Jack Vezina. When asked for his opinion on each of the men making the trip Coach Katzenmeyer called Schal- on "the best medal play golfer on the team" and said the Courtright was "the best competitor on the team. Not enough can be said for 'Corky's' wonderful competi- tive spirit." He went on to pick out high spots of each man's game and Pipp Is 'Titlist In Horseshoes Ben Pipp, a junior in the Engi- neering School, needed no slide rule to measure his accuracy in pitching horseshoes yesterday as he defeated George Allan, 21-11, 10-21, 21-18 for the championship in the All-Campus tournament. Pipp, son of former New York Yankee first baseman, Wally Pipp, and Allan have helped Sigma Phi advance to the final bracket of the fraternity horseshoe tourney which will continue throughout this week. Sigma Phi also moved another notch closer to the fra- ternity tennnis title as they de- feated S.A.M. in their last match. , 1t11 i BarelaYs chdi ving excelie-iii e:~eckllon1 a windy day since'G his drives are low and stay out of t ie wind. But Coach Katzenmey- er went on to say that the best part of Barclay's game is his short game. "He's excellent on ap- proach shots and his putting eye is deadly." In the five matches he played against Big Nine com- petition this year Barclay took 3 matches and dropped 2. Schalon Praised The youthful Wolverine mentor was high in his praises of Schal- on, saying that Ed has exception- ally long and accurate drives and hits the longest ball on the team. The rest of his game is well above average, but his putting and driv- ing are superlative. Schalon has proved that he merited this praise, for his record is one of the finest on the squad. He has been con- sistently in the low 70's and has a record of 2 and 2 and 1 tie for AMERICAN LEAGUE 14sslr's hippling ntc l lllti u games also caitne in for some praise from Katzenmeyer, lie called the young sophomore golfer a fine prospect and looks for a good per- formance from Kessler this week- end. Kessler has also shot some fine golf with a round of 74 his best thus far. His >ecord against the men he'll face this weekend is 1 and 2. Jenswold Seeks Lost Crown Jenswold, seeking to regain his lost crown, was termed "a con- sistent golfer" by Coach Katzen- meyer, who went on to say that no one part of his game could be singled out. Jenswold's com- petitive record reads 1 win and 3 losses and 1 tie against Big Nine opposition. Courtright, in addition to being a fine competitor, "is marvelousI on recovery shots," Coach Kat- I For that ti... 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