THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN PAGE SEVEN i TA LK IN G SH OP with Bud Weidenthal Associate Sports Editor Football's iron curtain is closing .. but nobody seems to know why, or care much about it ... The much discussed, but easily brushed off meeting of the two powers of the nation, our Wolverines and our Indiana neighbors, Notre Dame, has once again been swept into the realm of impossibility because of a couple of superficial statements issued from the Michi- gan front office. SO THE NATION'S scribes have returned to the comfort of their swivel chairs to ponder comparative scores and AP polls ... It makes readable copy, we'll admit, and it sure fills up space. But it doesn't solve a thing. And to prove it let's take a look at the record of the present season. TO START THE whole controversy off Purdue gave the Irish a whale of a battle only to lose by one point .. . Two weeks later the Maize and Blue made the trip down to Lafayette and polished off the Boilermakers 40-0 ... it looks pretty good for our side. But the Notre Dame rooters claim a foul-the 39 point difference doesn't mean a thing, they said, Purdue was softened up by the Irish and Northwestern, who played them the following week .. , And they may well be right, but who's to decide? SEVERAL WEEKS later the South Benders meet the Navy in Baltimore and proceed to make Pearl Harbor a minor encounter in the memories of the middies. This was the yard stick said some . . . if the Wolverines could do better the following week the thing would be decided .. . At this a faint whimper was heard emanating from the area of ,Southeastern Michigan-to the effect that that "nasty" man Frank Leahy had laid it on thick . .. he was trying to roll up a score to impress somebody or other .. . Again we say-could be--but who can say for certain? . And then we came to last Saturday's game heralded by many not as a gridiron contest at all, but instead, a sort of a tape measure to de- termine the relative merits of not the two teams meeting on the play- ing field, but a couple of aggregations, that haven't met since 1943 and probably won't meet again 'til 1993. WELL, WHAT DO our big, bad Wolverines do? You guessed it- for three quarters they turned on the pressure as if they were playing Minnesota for the Conference championship and ran up a margin one whole point greater than the Irish. Does this mean we're the better team? We contend it doesn't and furthermore, we contend that it really doesn't matter too much. Of course, we don't claim that we could read Ben Oosterbaan's mind Saturday as he paced the sidelines mapping the game's strategy, but one thing is almost certain-he wasn't thinking in terms of tape- measures or AP polls, instead he was thinking in terms of winning a football game and making an impressive performance ... We contend at the risk of being called idealistic that Mr. Leahy's outlook is much the same. * * * * THE IRISH COULD well have replaced such eastern "powers" as Cornell or Dartmouth on the Wolverine's schedules when they were drawn up last summer ... the real reason, we believe is this : The Wolverines, win or lose, cannot afford to risk their entire Big Nine schedule by pointing for one game. They did this in 1946 with Army and promptly proceeded to be tied by a mediocre Northwestern team and then toss away the conference title the following week by dropping a close one to Ilinois .. . The brass hats in the front office don't want a repetition of 1946 ... and this, we believe, is why the two midwestern powerhouses don't meet ... H-osers Planl944-45-t"epa _____DUL~iiI~u1 v :.'No :::: ... ... .... ... ... .:.. .y .. . ".... .. :: ::v :" s-.,:;,.-::t WE'VE GOT ONE TOO: Chuck Ortmnann Named With Nation's Top Sophs By ROG GOELZ Michigan will be out to annex its 22nd straight victory at the ex- pense of Clyde Smith's invading Hoosiers Saturday, and if they win (a fact that most fans have long since conceded), the Wolver- ines will be sure of at least a tie for the Western Conference title. For the Hoosiers it will be an- other story. There is no long win- ning streak to defend, no Big Nine Title to win, and no Rose Bowl bid looming on the horizon, but there is a chance for the Indiana eleven to continue its role as the principal thorn in Michigan's side. In their last five encounters, the Hoosiers, under Bo McMil- lin, won two games to boast a record that only Army's wartime team can match. Indiana stunned Wolverine followers in 1944 with a 20 to 0 win, and fol- SHAPING UP-Gene Derricotte, despite the severe handicap of his knee injury, is again run- ning with the swivel-hipped shiftiness he showed last year. Frosh Forward Wall Shows Promise in Practice Sessions By BOB SANDELL With the daily practice sessions of the Michigan freshmen team finished for the season, several lineman of the first year squad ap- pear to be headed for greater heights if they show similar im- provement next spring. To Wally Weber, well known coach of the freshmen, falls the responsibility of developing these young gridiron candidates for the time when they will become var- sity prospects under the Wolver- ine line coach, Jack Blott. :: sa MICHIGAN HAS been known for their light fast lines, and from the beginning of the season Wally has been stressing the importance of speed to his youthful aspirants. In his own words, the fiery mentor states that while the Gophers from Minnesota de- velop their linemen big, we want ours to be quick. Several of his more promising prospects, however, are on the husky side, and with a little more speed will become top candidates next year. FOR INSTANCE, there is Tom Johnson from Muskegon Heights who tips the scale at a little over 220 pounds. He, like quite a few others on the squad, made the all state team of last year. Putting his weight to full advantage this lad plays tackle. Fenger High School of Chi- cago has sent us another huge lineman in the person of Ed Ku- zanek. Ed packs close to 230 pounds on his frame and makes good use of it when he assumes his role of linebacker. Playing center, Ed helped his prep school team to a city and state cham- pionship in 1946. Most of the better looking first- year men, though, are in the 190 pound class. Two of these boast of experience besides that ob- tained in high school. TOM KELSEY of Lakewood, Ohio, who is one of the better ends on the team, spent two years in the army where he got both coach- ing and playing experience. Tom attended Ohio State University in 1945 and earned a letter on the Buckeye squad of that year, but still has three years of eligibility left. - - - - lowed it up with a 13-7 victory the next year. Again, the followers of Big Nine football, have to go back to the days when Bernie Bierman's power laden "Gopher's proved the undoing of the Wolverines' Har- mon paced teams to find an op- ponent that has equalled or ex- celled this feat of taking consec- utive victories from Michigan. In practice yesterday Gene Derricotte resembled his 1947 form as he constantly broke up jump passes and took part in breaking up those passes over the line which have enabled Michigan's opponents to make consistent yardage all season. It was the first time since his injury that Derricotte apparently was able to ignore his leg as he flashed the speed and deception that made him one of the confer- ence's biggest ground gainers last year. Derricotte's apparent return to form will be a big boost to the Wol- verine pass defense which will have to cope with the Hoosier's George Taliaferro who also is ex- pected to be in the starting line- up following his recovery from an injury sustained in the Indiana- Minnesota clash. Michigan, awarded the AP po- sition as the No. 1 team in the country, will be out to better Notre Dame's crushing 42-6 score and will have to be up for the game to do it as the Irish played the entire second half with second, third and fourth stringers, having amassed a 35-0 lead at half time without encountering resistance. Several players answered one of the questions that has been float- ing around campus, to the effect that the Wolverines will be look- ing toward Ohio State rather than the Hoosiers Saturday with an em- phatic "Who has time for Ohio State, look what Notre Dame did last week." WHAT IS A BARBER SHOP? a place for Personalized Tonsorial Service, specializing in * Workmanship * Personnel " Sanitation The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty of State NEW YORK-VP)-Chuck Ort- mann of Michigan, Gil Stephen- son of Army and Kyle Rote of Southern Methodist are stacking up as "sophomores of the year" in college football. These three gifted halfbacks are brightest of a healthy crop of star- studded newcomers to varsity play. Ortmann, a 19-year-old product of Milwaukee, has become the top offensive performer of the rugged Western Conference while leading the Wolverines to their current No. 1 spot in the nation. A crack passer, he has com- pleted 19 of 36 tosses for 371 yards -best in the league-and has gained 113 yards on the ground for an offensive total of 484 yards. Six-feet-one, 183 pounds, Ort- mann is rated one of the best looking backs to hit the football- feverish midlands. Stephenson, up from Columbus, Ga., is currently engaged in mak- ing Army fans forget Doc Blan- chard and Glenn Davis. A tricky runner, he has rolled up 761 yards to rank the fourth best ball-car- There are still 5,000 tickets on sale at the Athletic Adminis- tration Building for Saturday's game with Indiana. SFNSATIONAL SOPH-Chuck Ortmann, Michigan's offensive ace, was named among the top sophomores of the year by the Associated Press. K UR t DICK HURST, Night Editor rier in the country. He has scored nine touchdowns. Rote, only sophomore member of a backfield that also contains All-America Doak Walker, has carried the ball 67 times for 247 yards, and caught 12 passes for 189. Other leading Soph backfield men are Leo Koceski of Michigan; John Brogan, Idaho's great triple threat; Marvin Cross, Washington State's 200-pounder; Oklahoma's regulars, fullback Leon Heath and halfback Lindell Pearson; and Red Bagnell, Penn's passing star. Here are some of the Midwest's sophomore standouts: Ends-Robert Wartinbee, Wis- consin; Henry Minarik, Michigan State; Bob Whitmer, Purdue. Tackles--Allen Wahl, Michigan; Duck Mueller, Iillinois; Rudy Cer- noch, Northwestern. Guards--Charles Yderstad, Wis- consin; Al Tate, Illinois; Richie Anderson, Northwestern. Centers-John Packo, Detroit; Jerry Groom, Notre Dame; Ray Wietecha, Northwestern. Back-Jack Landry, and Bob Williams, Notre Dame; Mike Ghnouly, Missouri; Sam Piazza, Illinois. - i i, !!!!! 11 /D for . ORMAL RENTALS All New - All Sizes See RABIDEAU-HARRIS 119 So. 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