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January 01, 1948 - Image 12

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1948-01-01

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,VE

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TIIURSDAY. JANUARY\ 1, 1948

r As. Y'ftyA' sai 4 'c "^ ~" u<v ~ 'M ' AYu r2« 3O verw helm s 'Pore LI'l B
f.~%5 lCiappiuis Bump Elliott Sec

oys,' 35-0;
ire Twice

W'olverines Run WFild over Hoosiers
As Of fensive Gains 363 Total Yards

Early Training Sent Siekels
Towards Gririron Greatness

MTkaize and Blue Regains High Scoring Form;
SickeI, 'Turns in Finest Contest of Career

I

Yerges lateraled to Fonde who
went over. Brieske made good his
seventh .straight conversion to
wind up the scoring at 35-0.
Line-Ups

By BOB LENT

ANNT ARDOR, Nov. 9-After being partially stalled for two Satur-
cdays in a row. Michigan's high-scoring grid machine moved back into
ih gear by rolling over a :game but out-gunned Indiana eleven 35-0
b( fo.-e a chilled sellout crowd of 85,937.
Flashing the power and daring that made them almost a point-a-
tnint t^ outfit in their first four games, the Wolverines scored three
times in the fi'st 19 minutes, going all the way each time they got
their hands on the ball.
"Big Three" iMlFke Difference
I As expecte 1, it was the Maize and Blue's first set of backs which
made the big difference. Michi-" _________________

pan's "Bid Three" (Bob Chappuis,
Bu,.mp Elliott and Jack Weisen-
Vujrger ) acccunted for 324 of the
Wolverines 363 yards and had a
hand directly in all but one of
their touchdowns.
Chappuis got 103 of these
through the air and 48 on the
ground and passed for three
touchdowns. Weisenburger got 91
yards in ten tries and Bump
ph ,ked up 55 and scored twice.
Chas) Takes Charge
The Chap personally took
charge of the first two touch-
do .nrs. After the opening kickoff,
hie sparred the team on a 72 yard
;sustained march that ended with
one of his passes hitting Yerges
for yards and the first score.
Alter Indiana punted to Michi-
-an's 41, Chap went right back to
work and in nine plays Michigan
had another touchdown. He passed
for 6 to Bump, 22 to Mann, and
then tore 15 ,yar~ds off tackle to
the four. Four plays later, Elliott
dove over for the secoUd tally.
Four minutes passed and Bump
did it again, only this time it was
GWeisenburger who set up the
score. Starting from his own 34,
the slippery fullback took a lat-
eral from Yerges, picked up a key
block by Stu Wilkins and scooted
60 yards down the sidelines all
the way to the Indiana six. Chap-
puis then passed to Elliott in the
fiat and the Bumper drove over.
Brieske made good his third

straight kick and the score read
2 1-0.
Bump's Turn to Sparkle
In the second half it was Bump's
turn to lead a drive down the
field. This one went 84 yards and
took just eight plays. Thrice the
178 pound red head drove for 10
yards a crack and then reeled off
a beautiful 26 yard run to the
Indiana 12.
A fifteen yard penalty nullified
the play, but Chappuis hit Rif-
enburg with a 51 yard pass on the
next play to hoist the score to
27-0.
Indiana's season-long fumble
mania caught up with them with
two minutes of the game left and
Crisler's boys capitalized on it to
score their final marker. The ball
bounced of f Mclnnes' chest and
Wilkins broke through to down it
on the Indiana fourteen: Threej
plays moved it to the one, and

MICHIGAN
Mann...
Rifenburg
McNeill
Ford
Hershberger
Wis:'iiexvki
Hollwa y
IHilkene
Prit ula
Wistert
Kohl
Johnson
Dendrinos
Tomiasi ..
Wilkins
Heneveld
Sickels
Soboleski
McClelland
White..
Dworsky
Brieske
Yerges ..
P. Elliott
Kiesel

Pas. INDIANA
E....Ravensburg
Mihajiovich
Hopper
J. Barthiewicz
Lyoshirf
T .....Wagner
Raw]
Moorhead
Roper
Morrical
G ..... Brown
Barthiewicz
R. Grossman
Smith
Witecki

By PR;ES HOLMES
Psychologists have been argu-
ing for decades that the way an
individual performs in later life
is greatly dependent upon habits
formed, and behavior of that per-
son during his early years.
Here's some more proof! Quen-
tin Sickels' father was athletic di-
rector and coach at the junior
high school Quent attended in
Benton Harbor. With the incen-
tive instilled in him by his father,
Quent naturally included athletics
fin his activities, and was an out-
standing performer in junior high.
Spectacular Tackle
With a firm foundation for his
football career already behind him
as he entered high school, Quent
followed up with three spectacular
years at tackle. Superb on de-
fense, he consistently stopped b~all
carriers all over the field.
In his senior year in 1943, his
team won the championship, and
he received All-City and All Con-
ference awards.
In 'June of 1944 the ubiquitous
Mr. Sickels came to Michigan.
That fall, under the war-time rul-
ing allowing freshman to play,
even though he was moved over to
the guard slot it had no injurious
effect, and he played a full season.
Besides' winning his "'M" he re-
ceived a 2nd team All-Big Nrine
berth.
Sweet Victory
It was during this season that
Quent experienced his "second
greatest" thrill in the game of
football. His brother, Duane, was

.C.

Polke
Sikora

QUENT SICKELS
...outstanding lineman of the
day.
playing on Northwestern's eleven
that year, and now Quent is for-
ever reminding his brother oil the
score of '27-0.
A year anid a half stretch in the
Coast Guard put a gap in his foot-
ball biography, but he returned to
don the Maize and Blue again last
fall.
This year he is enjoying the
"greatest" experience of his long
football history. "We've come so
close to winning the champion-
ship the other two years I played
here," he says, "and now" that
we've made it this year-and the
Rose Bowl-it's great."
Playing on such a star-studded
team hasn't kept him from haul-
ing down a few more honors.

Q ......Grossman
Sebek
Young'

TROJANS! WATCH TIS PLAY-This is the Wo liepa Iythtmn expert sport observ-
ers have termed "unstoppa~bIe." used sparingly this ei reie rnndu wcs ih it in
1946, this play shakes le.9ss one of Michigan'::laiwac' a, e , ri~tewarebc.here
Howard Yerges stands all alone ready to catch the sr, tn.dan ,'s , 1, nlian a on a 12-
yard toss from Bob Chappuis. The Wolverines wen n oikz gim :50

Chappuis I.. ....
C. ElliottM
Derricottef7
Teninga
Fonde
KuickN
Weisenburger F....
PetersonR
Kempthorn

Groomes
VcDonnel
Taliafero
Russel
Deranek
M4cKinnis
Jagade
.obertson

I

Statistics

IMI
14 17

86,00 (1 bllFas
See Woiv rau o

First downs ........
forward passes at-
tempted..........
Forward passes com-
pleted.............

i

13
7

Yards by forward
passing ............72
Forward passes inter-
cepted by......... 1
Yards runback of inter-
cepted passes .. 4
Punting average
(frot, scrimmage) .32
Total yards all kicks
returned.......... 57
Opponent fumbles re-
covered ............1
Yards lost by penalty 40

14
7
113
2
43
44.4
55
1
25

A s hivering throng of un.,>
86,000 yesterday saw the ,r4i,_v
Michigan Wolverine';s s m t'i i tiW-
ana, 35 to 0.
T1he mercury took -a d ive > rt -llv
after the gamfe gor i~e'uy s
chill wind sent the tci~eau(t
the low thirties. And ith;;~ j
sell-out throng of IThsasn
taste of winter as thewid\I]
pod scattered snow ,.,,nro
the field.h
With cold we<.t lzcr in vrJet
for the first time thisyr,,, ii
time honored fire-wl 'f;s ~
put in an appearnce in e' e
local police report 1 iti'tV. tPi
inebriates. And local li o'5 c :
revealed that business 1adInl!
far below last we-s-il~ hc
were boosted by thein.. i
homecoming alumni.
The lone, r'ed-clad Ira
cheerleader seemed to be t c.onl
Hoosier rooter able to anse~
cheer after the tWol v:vie iirr
naut started rolling. Hlis ehr.a
tions failed to move the ' 0i''i
dened Indiana, farts whio ren'
trek from Bloomin>t on.

}cit 'il onests of the game to-1
0'vwo,,e 80 hospitalized soldiers
'1%-,~ Percy Jones lHospita and 5011
x'fters from the VAl center atI
f c~ ICusterE

r/ yp
7
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