TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1945 . 1UTrT-lTrAlT "ATT*V ILII Hlir IiuJnII IN/i 1 TAGI~ K *! rcE.P A , O O T O B E R ' , 1 4 I r ~T r A ' .T r a ... . . 7 irom 14e GRANTSTAND By MURRAY GRANT... Daily Sports Editor MICHIGAN'S GRIDIRON wonder has two conference games under its belt, and a quick look at the statistics shows that the Wel- verines' opponents in these contests have gainted the grand total of 83-net yards rushing. It doesn't take an adding machine to figure out that this makes an average of less than 42 yards per game. GREATER HEIGHTS of defensive action have seldom been reached. In years past, Michigan teams have been noted for their powerful offenses, and the art of holding that line has been shunted into the background. Not so this year. Aside from one disputed touchdown scored in the Michigan State fracas the Wolverine goal line has not been crossed. In the last 195 minutes of play Michigan has held its op- ponents scoreless. Jack Blott, Michigan's line coach, can be rightly proud of his charges. In each of the last three games the Wolverine forwards have thrown back the opposition when Michigan's back was to the wall. IN THE OREGON tilt, Van Brooklin piloted the Webfoots to a first down on the Michigan 4-yard stripe, but Pete Elliott and Ed Mc- Neill stopped the first play, Kempthorn; the second; Ozzie Clark bot- tled up the third; and Brick Wahl took care of the fourth attempt to crash into the forbidden zone. Again against Purdue the Michigan line held with first and four to go. The goal line stand came again in the second quarter when the Wolverines held a scant advantage and a score could easily have turned the tide against the Maize and Blue. With another flash of brilliance the determined Michigan line held again, and broke the opposition's heart with their amazing stand. AND IN THE Northwestern clash the Wildcats met that' same stone wall. It was second and four on the 12-yard stripe. But Al Wistert, Kempthorn, Lloyd Heneveld and Brick Wahl rose up and held the Purple to one yard in three tries. K-Ale the defense faltered in any of these instances the opposi- tion might have scored and the complexion of the game taken on a voznpietely different hue. In Minnesota the Wolverines face their severest test. They'll be outweighed by a least 14 pounds to the man in the line. And when you realize that the men in the Wolverine defensive line aren't exactly midgets, as they average 202 pounds, this isn't anything to be sneezed at. * * * * THE GOPHERS have also excelled at defense. In their first four games the Minnesotans have given up 25 points, holding Washington and Illinois scoreless. Led by Leo Nomellini, a veritable monster, at 250 pounds and Clayt Tonnenaker, at 225 pounds, the Gophers will be tough to stop. They've rolled up 81 points thus far or an average of three touchdowns per game. The lightest men on the Minnesota line are Vern Gagne and Bud Grant, the ends, who scale in the neighborhood of 200 pounds each. Couple with this the Gophers' desire for a Rose Bowl bid and pos- session of the Little Brown Jug, and it's obvious that the Wolverines are in for plenty of trouble when they take the field against Bernie Bierman's proteges. It'll be a battle of great defensive units when these two clubs meet Saturday. And the age-old question of whether the irrestible force can budge the immovable object may well be answered. AP Choice of 'M' Parallels Last Season's Polls f- SCRIBES HARDER TO CONVINCE! Wolverines o tTop in Second'47Poll ONE OF THREE-Wolverine Leo Koceski takes a perfectly placed pass on the five-yard line from Wally Teninga in last Saturday's tilt with Northwestern. The pack of Wildcats who surrounded, the shifty halfback, but were unable to stop him, as he dodged over the goal line were Peewee Day (11), extreme left), Tom Worthington (16), Alex Sarkisian (54), and Ray Wietecha (56). TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Sold, Bought, Rented, Repaired STATIONERY & SUPPLIES O. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted A beautiful assortment of GREETING CARDS made by RUSTCRAFT Order your Christmas Cards early. Also lovely gift wrappings and ribbon. OFFICE EQUIPMENT SERVICE CO. 1116 South University Ave. SPORTS PRES HOLMES, Night Editor jayvees Line Play Sparkles In N.W. Gamte Sparkling defensive line play featured the Jayvee's 13-0 victory over the Northwestern 'B' team Saturday morning.. With the offense showing little after the first quarter, the line led by Dave Gomberg, repeatedly rose to the occasion and threw back the Wildcats whenever the foe ap- proached scoring territory. * * * CONSIDERING the small pe- riod of time Coach Don Robinson has had to get the Jayvees work- ing as a unit, the squad showed or- ganization and seemed to work to- gether better than did their op- ponents. While brilliant on defense, the offense of the Jayvees left much to be desired. Both touchdowns resulted from the recovery of Wildcat fumbles deep in Purple territory. The heavy Northwestern line stopped most of the Wolverine of- fensive efforts without too much difficulty. NEVER DID Coach Robinson's charges manage to get a sustained drivelgoing and were able to com- pile only five first downs. It was the Wildcat Bees' sec- ond defeat in as many starts, having previously lost to Illinois '7-6. The Jayvees will have an oppor- tunity to really prove their worth, as they clash with Michigan State's "B" team next. YOU'RE HANDSOME! With a crew-cut personality hair style blended and shaped to your facial features. Today 9 Barbers - No Waiting The DASCOLA BARBERS Between State and Michigan Theatres HOLIDAY rhe MosT Talked About Stout'M' Defense Outslines Offense in wildeat. Shutout By B. S. BROWN It took 'em three weeks, but the members of the fourth estate have finally climbed on Michigan's bandwagon.' For the first time this season, the Wolverines have been named as the No. 1 team in the country, on the basis of the Associated Press poll which garners its in- formation from 148 sports writers from coast to coast. IN THE FIRST two weeks of the current campaign, Notre Dame and North Carolina copped the top position, respectively. What the writers based their choices on was questionable. Neither team had played serious opposition and it looked as though the scribes were tagging along with the Irish and Tar Heels on the basis of pre- season publicity. Back on October 8 of last year, Michigan ranked second to the South Benders in the first poll of the year. Michigan had start- ed on its undefeated season, having trounced Michigan State, 55-0, and Stanford, 49-13. The Irish had one win under their belts, over Pitt's Panthers, 40-6. Yet the men of Leahy were look- ing down at the rest of the field. But the Wolverines kept on roll- ing and on the following Saturday reminded the old-timers of Field- ing Yost's point-a-minute teams, as they smothered Pitt, 69-0. Two days later, Michigan was on topI with 93 first place votes to 23 for the Irish. To say that friend Leahy was irked was to do a beautiful piece of under-stating. When asked at a luncheon of the Herald-American Quarterback Club by what score Michigan would beat his team, the Green mentor said, "Notre Dame would welcome the opportunity to play Michigan any time, on any Saturday, during any fall." MICHIGAN'S margin increased the following week on the basis of 0oar?>orte By HERB RUSKIN Few teams ever reach the point where they are tops both offen- sively and defensively, but the cur- rent edition of the Wolverines comes as close as any to filling the bill. Michigan proved this point Sat- urday when they held- a vaunted Northwestern offense scoreless while rolling up 28 points against their strong defense. On defense, the Wolverine forward wall was superb, stop- ping Aschenbrenner, Murkow- ski and company with a meager 47 yards via the ground route. Standouts for the Wolverines on defense were their unexcelled pair of line backers, Dan Dworsky and Dick "Killer" Kempthorn. In one series of plays, Kempthorn made nine of 11 tackles, while Dworsky was brilliant in covering the right side of the line. In the line itself, Lloyd Hene- veld played a top-notch game along with Al Wistert and Irv Wis- niewski. The Wolverines were equally as good on offense as they tal- lied four times, dividAng the scoring between the aerial and ground routes. Michigan's soph- omore duo of Chuck Ortmann and Leo Koceski added to their stature and, more than ever showed promise of becoming a really great team. In the scoring column, it was almost all Koceski, as he crossed the goal line three times and but for a fumble would have made it four touchdowns. As it was, cen- ter Bob Eben got credit for the tally as he fell on Koceski's fum- ble. Although he failed to figure in the scoring, Ortmann was a valu- able cog in the victory. He was the top groundgainer for the Wolver- ines with 44 yards in 10 attempts. He maintained a better than .500 passing average, connecting four times out of seven for 54 yards. Dick Rifenburg showed more of the stuff that could place him in the All-American ranks. Rifenburg carried the ball twice on the end-around for 42 yards, one setting up a Wolverine touchdown. Operating from both the tail and the wingback slot, Wally Teninga again proved his worth to the Wolverines, with his fine running, passing and punting. He completed two of his four passes for 22 yards, averaged 42.4 yards on his punts and ran exception- ally. Altogether, it was a great day for the Wolverines who proved that they have no peer in the Big Nine for the second straight year. a 49-21 win over Northwestern, but seven days later, after the Wol- verines barely edged Minnesota, 13-6 and the Shamrock toters downed Iowa, 21-0, Notre Dame was ranked first again. The reasoning in this case, as the AP adroitly said, was that "Notre Dame was still suppos- edly playing 'under wraps.' s For two weeks the South Bend gridders stayed on top. Then Michigan pushed Wisconsin around on a muddy field, 40-6, as the Irish got by the Wildcats, 26- 19, and back into first place went the Ann Arbor team. * * * - AFTER MICHIGAN finished the season with a 21-0 win over OSU, Notre Dame defeated Tulane, 59- 6, and USC, 38-7. The final season poll read: Notre Dame first, with 107 first place ballots and 1,410 points; Michigan second, with 25 votes for the top spot and 1,289 points. Then carne the Rose Bowl, 49- 0, and the fans began to squawk. After all, Michigan had played three opponents that the Irish had faced, and had beaten all by bigger scores than the Notre Dame eleven., A special poll, with only the two teams participating, was/held and Michigan won in a breeze. Cris- ler's squad took 226 first place votes to 119 for ND. There were 12 writers whocouldn't make up their minds. The final results were conclu- sive except in the minds of the most fanatic Irish followers. Sports-the Greatest Ever- '49 'ENSIAN s >';,. ;,. : . ___' I EXECUTIVE CAREERS IN RETAILINI One-year Course leads to Master's Degree * Prepare to step into a responsible executive position in the retailing field: buying, advertising, fashion, personnel. Specialized training, exclusively for col- G lege graduates, covers merchandising, personnel management, textiles, store organization, sales promotion, and all phases of store activity. Realistic ap- proach under store-trained faculty. Classes are combined with paid store work. :students arc usually placed be- fore graduation. Co-educational. Mas- ter's degree. Tuition $350. Four full- tuition scholarships available. Limited enrollment. Write Admissions Office for Bulletin C. RESEARCH BUREAU FOR RETAIL TRAINING UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH . Pittsburgh13, Pa. ;.';. : ,< , ,:; (AMPUS . . i J. 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