L 1, 1949 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE __ _. _ Yom. M' Nine Invades Georgetown for Season's Opener <.P BULL SESSION by b. s. brown, sports editor _J N Hoya Game Inaugurates A nnual Exhibition Tour Fisher Begins 29th Year as Head Coach ; Four Lettermen Bolster Wolverine Squad By HERB RUSKIN Michigan's baseball team moved into Washington today to open! its 1949 season against the Hoyas of Georgetown this afternoon. For Coach Ray Fisher, it will be an old story. The dean of the Michigan coaching staff, Fisher has seen 28 such openers and from this and the following eight games on the southern trip, he hopes to fashion the team that will bring another Big Nine title back to Ann Arbor. HAMPERED BY THE loss of most of the hitting talent from the team that brought the Wolverines a tie for the Conference crown last year, Fisher has been pessi-- f«. THE MICHIGAN OF THE EAST" has given lie to its newly-acquired title. Harvard University, owner of the label, last night fired it; ead basketball pilot, Bill Barclay,. a former Wolverine sports figure and coach. By this time, it seems a well-established fact that Michigan doesn't give the boot to its coaches-they quit ! ! ! And if the Crimson intend to keep the title picked upin the oourse of last year's grid season, they had better mend their ways. Barclay, a three letter man--football, baseball and golf-at the Ann Arbor institution back in the middle thirties, resigned his job as assistant cage mentor at Michigan three years ago to take over the top spot at the eastern school. Winning 16 games in his initial campaign against only nine losses, Barclay seemed well on his way to a long tenure. But in the past two seasons, his forces have garnered a mere eight victories while drop- ping 32. Then Art Valpey, another Wolverine football star and end coach under the master of masters, Fritz Crisler, followed his boss' ex- ample and resigned his mentorship--to take the reigns of the Crimson fotball squad. In his first season, Valpey revamped Harvard's style, employ- ing the Michigan single wing system. He was so successful and the Crimson gridders were so flashy, Harvard became known as "the Michigan of the East." Now the lads who call it "Haavaad" are doing the moniker dirt. Incidentally, a recent announcement by Yale (and beg pardon for using Yale and Harvard in the same story) told of Holgate's ap- pointment to the Bulldog backfield staff. Gib resigned his position as head coach at Hillsdale to take the job. His head coach, a monstrous guy, is Herman Hickman, line coach at Army in the days of Blanchard and Davis. * * * * WORD HAS IT THAT Johnny 'VanderMeer will be Cincinnati's choice in the season opener against the Cards .... Ken Raffensberger is slated for mound duty on the second day . . . . College and high school wrestling, devoid of any phony stuff, is gaining box office mo- mentum And here's one typical of Frank Leahy. The Irish coach pre- dicts his team will lose five games this fall . . . . Frank isn't too red-hot in his prognostications. Last year, he said that Michigan would lose its first five games . . . . Robin Roberts, ace Philly hurler, was more highly regarded as a basketball player than a diamond star in his days at Michigan State. * * * * PAUL J. (POOCH) HARRELL, Indiana's athletic director, went to great pains recently to get his entire football coaching staff invited to the Indiana High School Coaches Association meeting at Indianap- olis. Harrell finally got his chance to introduce his relatively new staff to the high school mentors. He presented all of the assistants and sat down. Clyde B. Smith, head grid pilot at the Hoosier school, was unruffled as he calmly walked to the microphone and said, "I'd like to introduce the head coach; you're looking at him." Harrell has been in hiding ever since. HERE'S ONE FROM and for the record books: Beginning in 1901, in 5 games whichended four years later, with a 2-0 loss to Chicago, Michigan's gridders scored 2,841 points to 42 for the opposition. The Chicago game snapped a consecutive winning streak, marred only by a 6-6 deadlock with Minnesota in 1903. THANKS TO RAY: Roberts Tabbed Best P hill Pitching Prospect for 1949 PETE BARTHELL . . gym captain * * * 'M' Gnnasty Elect Bartliell TO Cap tainey "Daily Double" Pete Barlhell, the Wolverines' sensational sopho- more gym champ, has been elected by his teammates as the captain of the 1950 gymnastics squad. Barthell, termed "a good choice for the job" by Coach Newt Loken, recently won both the parallel bars and tumbling championships in the Big Nine meet held here at Michigan. * * * HIS WORK DURING the reg- ular season, which included tak- ing firsts in his specialties in every meet, was a big factor in Michi- -an's winning record this year. Tomorrow, Loken leads his squad of nine men to Chicago for the Mid-West Open meet to be held at the Navy Pier. This contest, which met with much success when staged in con- junction with last year's Western Conference championships, will be held by itself for the first time. Besides all the Big Nine teams, there will be squads entered from Chicago University, Michigan State, Nebraska and Kent State University of Ohio. * * * . MICHIGAN will also be rep- cesented in the National Colle- giates at California April 16 and will culminate the season by com- peting in the NAAU's April 30 at Chicago. Loken announced the award- ing of nine major letters for the 1949 season. Receiving them are: Pete Barthell, Ed Buchan- an, Captain Dick Fashbaugh, Jeff Knight, Dave Lake, Gordon Levenson, Bob Schoendube, Tomr Tillman and Bob Willoughby. Reserve awards were given to Bob Checkley, Wally Niemann and Bill Parish. mistic about the chances for a repeat performance, but under his watchful eye the squad has devel- oped into another of his fine teams. He has come up with some very capable replacements for the gaping holes left when such men as Jack Weisenburger, Bump Elliott, Bob Chappius, Dom Tomasi and Howie Wikel graduated at the end of last year. Such veterans as Jack McDon- ald, Ted Kobrin, Willard Baker and Hal Raymond have combin- ed with a group of promising sophomores including Bill Buch- olz, Leo Koceski and Pete Palmer to put the Wolverines among the favorites for the Big Nine crown. * * * THE MICHIGAN caravan spent last night at Hagerstown, Mary- land and left there early this morning for the Georgetown cam- pus and the season opener. From there, the Wolverines will swing back and meet the University of Maryland in College Park tomor- row afternoon. Then, in rapid order, the Wol- verines take on the Quantico Marines at Quantico, the Uni- versity of Richmond in Rich- mond, George Washington in Washington, Navy at Annapolis, Virginia at Charlottesville, Washington and Lee at Lexing- ton and winding up with VMI also in Lexington. Last year, the Maize and Blue came home with only one blemish on an otherwise perfect record. That was a 1-0 defeat at the hands of Ohio University in the last game of the trip. ON LAST YEAR'S jaunt, Mich- iganmethonly three teams that are on this year's schedule and beat all of them, edging a sur- prisingly strong Quantico nine, 8-7, on a ninth inning home run by Howie Wikel and blanking Georgetown, 9-0. . Although the third game was played early in the spring, the Wolverines did not emerge with a victory until June 21, when George Washington forfeited because they had used an in- eligible Player during the game. In the actual game,tMichigan found itself on the short end of a 15-11 score in one of the wildest contests of the year. Besides these three victories, Fisher's charges piled up a 19-2 SPORITS PANDRO S. BEHRMAN, Editor victory over Camp Lee, scoring ten runs in the ninth inning, mostly on walks, and scoring a 10-4 triumph over Ohio Univer- sity in the first of the two game series. Exhibition Baseball Detroit (A) 1, Boston (A) 5. New York (A) 9, Boston (N) 7. Philadelphia (N) 4, St. Louis (N) 1. Chicago (A) 10, Cleveland (A) 2. (Called at the end of 5th because of cold.) Philadelphia (A) 20, Newark (IL) 5. Chicago (N) 7, St. Louis (A) 6. Washington (A) 10, Cincinnati (N) 9. Brooklyn (N) 8, San Antonio 1. Pittsburgh (N) New York (N) postponed, rain. Bob Harrison, first-stringer on :- higan's (age squad for four seasos will imike his last alipearane nder the Maize and Blue tomorrow night at Madison Square Garden when he plays in the annual All-Star game. He is the only Wolverine rep- resentative on the select group of players which includes among others Cliff Crandell of Oregon State, Ed McCauley of St. Louis, Vern Gardner of Utah, Vern Mikkelsen of Ham- line, Leo Barnhorst of Notre Dame, and J. L. Parks of Okla- homa A. & M. Willims Ratih-d Over Gavilart [it Third "Bout NEW YORK -'( A) - Ike Wil- liams, lightweight champion, and Kid Gavilan, Cuban welterweight contender, meet tonight in a 10- round bout. Solid, sharp-punching Ike is a 5 to 8 choice to win the Madison Square Garden "rubber" bout and become the top challenger for wel- terweight champion Ray Robin- son's crown. A CAPACITY crowd of 18,000 paying $90,000 is expected for the non-title affair. In line for the victor is a possible outdoor championship match with Robinson, or a good claim of weight-making diffi- culties. Williams and Gavilan split in their first two encounters, Wil- liams taking the initial contest, a little more than a year ago and Gavilan the return, last Jan. 28. Both were big betting fights as is this one. GAVILAN is a wide-swinging, flurry puncher who draws the vo- cal support of the gallery bugs. Williams throws short, jolt- ing blows to the head and body that are" appreciated best from a front row seat. Gavilan is expectd to carry an eight pound weight edge, 146 to 138. i Montreal in DETROIT-{.1}-A pair of :oails by Doc Couture and Gordie Howe 32 seconds apart in the last four minutes of play gave the Detroit Red Wings a 3 to 1 Stanley Cup playoff victory over Montreal last night and a three-to-two lead in the best seven series. A crowd of 14,299 howling fans sat through a flood of 19 penalties to see the dramatic climax that put the Red Wings within a single victory of a berth in the Cup finals against defending champion To- ronto. MONTREAL scored first, early in the second period, when Rip Riopelle fired a backhander as he sprawled tumbling past the De- troit goal and caught Detroit net- minder Harry Lumley by surprise. For a long time it looked like that was enough, but Detroit after missing innumerable good scoring chances in the first two periods and failing once with a two-man advantage for a full minute, broke loose for all three goals in the final period. Sid Abel tied it up with 15 min- utes left to play when he ripped in an angle shot on an assist by de- fenseman Red Kelly, who swept wide around the Montreal defense. THEN AFTER Joe Carveth failed on a clean breakaway chance, the Red Wings tucked away the decision with two unas- sisted goals in barely more than a half minute. Couture slipped between de- fensemen Doug Harvey and Butch Bouchard of the Canadi- ens and slid a 10-foot shot along the ice that goalie Bill Durnan didn't even make a move to stop. That was the winning goal but Detroit didn't stop there. Howe intercepted a Montreal pass at the blue line, moved one stride in and loosed a 55-foot screen shot that Durnan didn't see until the puck was in the net. * * * IT WAS Howe's sixth goal of the series and his fifth in the last three games. The triumph was another one for Detroit's No. 1 offensive line of Howe, Abel and Ted Lindsay. 1up Playoffs That line now las accounted for 10 of the 13 goas Detroit has scored in the five games with the Canadiens. Both teams headed back for Montreal on a late train last night. The sixth game is scheduled there Saturday and if Detroit doesn't clinch it then they'll be back here for a seventh game on Tuesday. Verdeui'Sets M edley Mrk In AAU Swim DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.--(,P)- Olympic breast stroke champion Joe Verdeur of Philadelphia bet- tered the 300-yard medley record in the National AAU indoor men's swimming meet 'yesterday. The La Salle College junior swam the strictly American event in three minutes, 22.9 seconds, a full second better than Adolph Kiefer's mark set five years ago. HE WAS ONE of four indoor champions named yesterday. Bruce Harlan, Olympic diving champion, from Ohio State, add- ed the one meter diving crown here to his laurels. Jack Calhoun, also of Ohio State, was second and Skippy Browning of Dallas, Texas, was a surprise third. Wally Ris of Iowa won the 100- yard free style event in 51.4 sec- onds and Allen Stack of the New Haven, Conn., Swim Club, swam the 150-yard back stroke in 1 minute 30.7 seconds for the oth- er two titles. * * * JAMES THOMAS of North Car- olina, who defeated Verdeur in the morning eliminations for the individual medley event, was sec- ond in the finals. Ris came through in the last lap to get his free style victory by 3/10 of a second over second place Bob Give of the Detroit Athletic Club. Stack had the eas- iest time turning in his victory. Wings Win, 3-1, To Lead HELPS CECILE ACH IEVE ALACRITY AN 1SVA E 8OQUV DON'T CARE IF 100 FLUNK!. TCHjTCH I I DID THINK SHE WAS CECILE,DEAR,YOU'LLA.VeR C, IFEEL SO PROFESSOR MOELLER IS TOO SO CHARMING. ANDNOW MY MAKE THE PROFESSOR LI KE RRITABLE i FUSSY FOR WORDS..-EJUST > t NEW SECRETARY IS ACTING LIKE YOU,IFYOU STARTOUTACTING COULD SNAP HIS DRIVES ME WILD A PERFECT PTERODACTYL! L IKE A MEAN OLD VIRAGO HEAD OFF! MY THROAT FEELS * RASPY AND j:x::>, . _ .: DRY FROM -- .. :: g ..: : : " (1 . -" SMOKING $0 /UC ,TOO OH DEAR. WHATA - TERMAGANT OUR STAR Y a BUSINESS COURSE PUPIL, CECILE, ISI CIGARETTE HANGOVER! CLEARWATER, Fla. - (A) - Robin Roberts, the 22-year-old ex-collegian with only three and a half months of big league experi- ence, appears to have won the No. 1 rating among the Philadelphia Phillies' pitchers. There is no doubt that Roberts, who only a year and a half ago was a student at Michigan State, has come along remarkably fast. The tall, good-looking righthan- der with the crackling fast ball and curve, was signed to a Philly contract in September, 1947. Two months with Wilmington, Del., in the Interstate League, where he won nine and lost one, and presto -he was with the Phils. THE JUMP did not faze the' strapping youth from Springfield, Ill. He won five of his first seven starts, completing all of them. A run of hard luck which saw him beaten by 1-0, 2-1 and 3-2 scores, caused his record to dip to 7-9 for the season. However, he pitched 10 complete games, and wound up with an 3.18 earned run average. Roberts credits Ray Fisher, a former New York Yankee pitch- er, and currently baseball coach at the University of Michigan, with helping him the most. Roberts pitched two summers under Fisher at Montpelier, Vt., of the Northern League, a sum- mer circut made up of the finest college talent in the country. It was there that he was "discov- ered" by Chuck Ward, coach of Rutgers, and also a Philly scout. "Roberts is a very fine pitcher right, now," said Philly pitching coach George Earnshaw, "but he will be even greater with another year's experience. With his nat- ural ability and keenness of mind, there is no telling how great he can become. * * * "THE YOUNGSTER is very in- telligent. He is a real student of pitching. He always is learning, al- ways thinking. What I like espe- cially about him is the way he al- ways wants to win. He feels badly when somebody gets a hit off him. He thinks nobody should hit him safely." Did Roberts think that he was rushed too fast? "No," he replied. "I'm glad I had those few months in the major leagues. I've got more confidence now, and I learned a lot about pitching-like how to pitch to certain batters, how to pace myself and how to keep runners close to the bases. "Cy Perkins, Benny Bengough and Earnshow (Philly coaches) have taught me a lot. 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