UNVDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY p A d, F, q F, w N I I SM J.. ..& . TEX. A& M 20 OHIO STATE .41 ILLINOIS . . . ., . .... 0 14 MICH. STATE 47 CALIFORNIA 28 .0 MARQUETTE 0 U.C.L.A.. . . . . 13 OREGON ... . 13 WASHINGTON 7 ..14 PITTSBURGH 0 IOWA .... U. of M. MEN'S GLEE CLUB '1 'M' Lightweig s -eat ioSate,l3 O'Neill Fired As Manager Of Tiger Nine Third Period Comeback Overpowers uckeyes Prentice Ryan Stars in Lightweight Attack; Ogle,_O'Connell Stand Out onMidgetLine MICHIGAN OR NOTRE DAME: Navy Coach Refuses To Pick Better Team Detroit Club Says No Successor Picked DETROIT - ()-Steve O'Neill, who gave Detroit one World Championship and three American League runner-up clubs in his six- year stay here, was fired yesterday as manager of the Tigers. He was the seventh major league pilot to lose his job this year. 1 * * * ONE Of THE other six, Stanley (Bucky) Harris, deposed New York Yankees manager, has been ru- mored as a likely successor to O'Neill. Other possibilities include Paul Richards, former Tiger catcher who now manages Buffalo in the International League, and Roger (Doc) Cramer, Detroit coach.' An announcement from De- troit General Manager Billy Evans said no successor has been chosen. It said O'Neill's contract is not being renewed for 1949 because of a, belief "that a change in field management would be desirable." Evans' statement said the De- troit management "is keenly ap- preciative of O'Neill's six years of "loyal and conscientious service." O'NEILL, reached at his home in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, said he had no plans for the future. He said he hadn't "given it a thought" before receiving a telegram from Evans. Shortly before that he had received the news of his dismissal from newsmen. O'Neill, who came out of Mi- nooka, Pa., as one of four broth- ers to become major league play- ers, took over the Detroit reigns from Del Baker in 1943. That year the Tigers wound up in fifth place, the same as last season. Last season was O'Neill's 18th as a manager and his ninth in the American League. Of his 17 years as a player he spent 13 as catcher, for the Cleveland Indians. By MERLE LEVIN A vastly improved Michigan lightweight aggregation kept alive their hopes for a second straight 'Little Big Nine" title yesterday by whipping an outclassed Ohio State eleven, 13-6, at Ferry Field. Despite the apparent closeness of the score the story of the game was all Michigan. The scarlet- clad Buckeyes were able to pene- trate the Michigan 30-yard stripe only once all afternoon. S* * LED BY GUARDS Don O'Con- nell and Jere Ogle, the Michigan line was outstanding all day. They opened gaping holes in the Buck- eye defense and tackled with a vi- gor they have lacked all season. Yet, for all their obviously superior play the little Wolver- ines had to win the hard way- by coming from behind after an Ohio State center snared a Michigan pass and raced '28 yards to give thedBucks the lead. Michigan took the opening kickoff and promptly marched 43 yards to the Buckeye 28, but an offside penalty nullified a long gain by fullback Bud Marshall and the Wolverine offensive spluttered and died. THAT WAS the extent of the excitement in the first quarter as both teams spent the rest of the period between the 30-yard stripes. Ohio State put on their best offensive show of the game as they drove to a first down on the Michigan four in the open- ing minutes of the second per- iod. But here Prentice Ryan, who played a bangup game all morn- ing both offensively and defen- sively, hopped on a Buckeye fumble on the Michigan three to avert a certain score. * * * THEN WITH LESS than three minutes remaining in the first half, Michigan quarterback George Sipp faded back to his own 25 and tossed a flat pass in- tended for end Jim Costa. Ohio's Earl Eltzroth pulled it down on the 28 and raced into the end zone unmolested. Eltz- roth's placement was wide and Ohio State led at the half, 6-0. Michigan threatened early in the third quarter when they took over on the Buck's 31-yard line after Nick Radosevich's poor kick angled out of bounds, but a hold- ing penalty set them back to the 46 and four plays netted them on- ly nine yards. THE OHIOANS TOOK OVER and, after picking up tlj'ee yards in three tries, Radosevich kicked out on the Michigan 29. This time the Wolverines were not to be denied. Sparked by Ryan's 34 yard dash through the center of the Buck- eye line the little Wolverines marched 71 yards in eight plays with Marshall phnging over from the two. JOHNNY WILCOX KICKED the extra point and for the first time this year, the Wolverine 150- pounders had forged into a lead. Seven plays later Michigan had scored again. Halfback Jim Morrish intercepted a third down pass for Michigan on the Ohio 43 and, after Ryan lost a yard, Jerry Burns faded back to his own 48 to pass. He connected with end John Picard who made a great catch on the Ohio 23, sidestepped two po- tential tacklers, stiff armed ano- ther, and raced to the seven be- fore being pulled down from be- hind. WILCOX WENT to the five and then Ryan took a lateral from Burns and circled right end for the second Wolverine score. Wil- cox's kick was wide and the quar- ter ended with Michigan out in front, 13-6. End Larry Shaw put Michigan in scoring position once again when he fell on an Ohio fumble on their 18-yard line to open the final quarter. Burns picked up one on a fake pass but Ed Morey was trapped and thrown for a six-yard loss and Burns lost two more on a fumble to end that threat. * * * THE WOLVERINES marched to the Ohio 31 in the last minute of play but a first down fumble was recovered by Ohio on the 32. The Bucks pulled out all the plugs then with a combined later- al and forward pass play but the forward was incomplete and the game ended seconds later.7 SMU Wins, 20-14 DALLAS, Tex. - (P)-Southern Methodist edged down-trodden Texas A. & M., 20-14, yesterday by the grace of the football gods and Doak Walker. The fighting Aggies, playing their best game of the season and outpassing the celebrated Meth- odist aerial circus, had a crowd of 53,000 roaring as they held SMU on the defensive most of the final period and continually knocked at touchdown door. PLUNGES FOR TD-Bud Mar- shall, hard-driving fullback of the lightweight squad, smashed over from the two yard marker for his team's first touchdown in yesterday's game with Ohio State. I- Depth Navy Firsts Downii..........8 Yds. Gained Rushing ..73 Forward Passes Attem... 15 Forward Passes Complet. 4 Yds. by Forw'd Passing 46 Forward Passes Inter., by 0 Yds. Runback of Intercepted Passes . . . 0 Punting Aveage...... 33.9 TotalYards All Kicks Returned.....84 Fumbles. . . Opponent Fumbles Recovered by .......0 Yards Lost by Penalty 54 (I I Mich. 22 231 .18 115 2 By B. S. BROWN The flames of the hottest foot- ball controversy in history were fanned a little higher yesterday afternoon when Navy Coach George Sauer refused to compare Michigan's Wolverines with Notre Dame. When asked in the locker room after the Middies fell before the Michigan onslaught, 35-0, wheth- er Notre Dame was better than the Wolverines, Sauer said, "I refuse to become embroiled in a controversy of this sort, besides you really can't tell unless they play each other." THE RAIPAGING IISH1, who spared Indiana today, 42-6, hand- ed the Gobs their worst defeat of the current campaign before today's game, 41,-7. "Notre Dame has a nmeh more p 'werful team." Sa tier added. 1iit the latter was ap- parently a non.-commital State- ment. The same was said list ,year. Michigan had the finesse and Notre Dame, the power. Sauer also refused to compare Chuck Ortmann, who played the finest game of his Michigan ca- reer yesterday, and Frank Tri- pucka, the Irish passing star. "WHAT DO YOu lhik of igan's defensive team? It was the first game this year in which your team hasn't scored," Sauer was asked. "Oosterbaan has a good de- fensive unit, and Michigan has a well balanced club," the Navy pilot replied.I Sauer expressed displeasure with head-linesman Archie Mor- row's decision on the fourth Mich- igan score. Potential All-Ameri- can end Dick Rifenburg had grab- bed an Ortmann flip in pay dirt and then bobbled the ball as he ran out of the end zone and drop- ped it. The pass was ruled com- plete and the touchdown was al- lowed. SAUER SAID of Morrow's call, "By no stretch of the imagination and by no quirk of judgement could the official rule that a com- pleted pass. I've been in football MICHIGAN Rifenburg Clark Sutiherland Hershberger Hess Wistert . Soboleski Atchison Ifeneveld Tomasi Jackson Raymond. Dwo rsky... Erben Farrer Kreager Sickels . Wilkins McClelland Fith I Kohl ....... Wahl Ohlenroth for a long time and I've never seen anything quite so raw." The Navy coach praised the work of the other three officials. Over the Michigan dressing room, Coach Bennie Oosterbaan was very pleased with his team's showing as it won its seventh straight game of the season and ran the Wolverine streak to 21 consecutive wins. Line-Ups Pos. NAVY .LE ....... Frasier Carson Ridderhof SLT Renneman Emerson 1 . . .. . Sehiweck Weir ... Lawrence Parsons .. .....R. Hunt Cooper Mandeville .. R T ........Beeler J. Hunt ffVACEhEll HSIS NEW MUSICAL KNIGHTS a*od ot HILL AUDITORIUM NOV EMBER 20, 1948 8:30 P.M. $1.50 $2.40 $1.80 49 39.5 24 :3 1 80 JUST PUBLISHED Hollister Noble-Woman With a Sword Thomas Mann-Doctor Faustus Ike Isenhower-Crusade of Europe Lloyd Douglas-The Big Fisherman Betty Smith-Tomorrow Will Be Better A. J. Cronin-Shannon's Way Carl Sandburg-Remembrance Rock W. P. Hedrick-The Land of the Crooked Tree and Many Others OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 South University Golden Bears Take U.C.L.A. In 28-13_Tussle BERKELEY, Calif.-(A')-Cali- fornia's Bears roared through another lap toward an undefeated football season and possibly the Rose Bowl yesterday with a 28-13 victory over a hard-fighting Uni- versity of California at Los Angel- es team. The Golden Bears' eighth tri- umph in a row unfolded before a crowd of 65,000. The Bears, com- bining ground power, a few timely passes and breaks, scored in every period. The Bruins pushed over two touchdowns in the last quarter to change the contest from a rout and provide a fairly close and ex- citing finish. California scored first when Right Half Jack Swaner went over from the one-yard line cli- maxing a drive that went for80 yards., In the second stanza, Quarter- back Ray Nagel raced 85 yards for the Bears' second score. Swaner ripped off another Cali- fornia TD in the third quarter to top off a 69-yard march. After the Bears scored their final tally in the last frame, U.C.L.A. finally pushed over a pair of tallies. Texas Nips Baylor WACO, Tex.--(P)-The Teas Longhorns hit the come-back trail yesterday, coming from behind to nudge Baylor 13 to 10 in a wild, hard-fought football game before 20,000 at Municipal Stadium. Allis ......... RE .........Ryan McNeill Wilson Wisniewski McElroy Hollway Elliott .......QB........ Horne Bartlett Baysinger Ghindia Sinclair Palmer Small Derricotte .... LH......Williams Ortmann Arnold Lentz Earl Teninga ...... RH ........ Green Koceski Powers Souchek Van Summern Kempthorn . . .FB..... 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