Ti!!DAY, OCTOBER 10, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Army Leads Nation's Grid Poll 12 BENNIE'S PRESCRIPTION: Speed Provides Tonic for Wolverines Michigan In 18th Spot As Irish Plunge to Tenth * * * By TED PAPES Chuck Ortmann had good rea- sons for his enthusiasm along the sdelines at Michigan Stadium Saturday. Responding to his shouts of en- couragement, his teammates pull- ed themselves out from under an early Dartmouth lead to log their first victory of the 1950 football campaign. A HASTY analysis of that game might indicate that all the storm crowds which hovered over the Wolverines in their opening con- test have been blown away. In reality there is a mixture of. good and bad indications hid- den in Saturday's action. On the asset side, Michigan came up with that extra step of speed that can make a champion, an element which has been miss- ing since 1948. LOWELL PERRY and Leo Ko- ceski touched off the fuse that sparked both passing and running attacks to produce the first su- stained long-range offensive in three years. Perry skyrocketed out of his KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR end position to catch a Bill Pu- tich aerial good for 47 yards and a touchdown at 13:22 of the second period. Koceski had al- ready salvaged something out of the first quarter by clicking on his favorite reverse off left tackle in a 34 yard scoring tactic. The Koceski play demonstrated near-perfect blocking an the part of Michigan in general, and end Fred Pickard in particular as he spilled the defensive line backer, springing Leo into the open. * * * HARRY ALLIS joined the speed fraternity when he outran the In- dian secondary and safety man for another 47 yard payoff on aj third quarter pass from Don Peter- son. The aforementioned Putich, playing his second complete game, added considerable polish to his field generalship, and pro- mises to reward the confidence of4iis coach, Bennie Oosterbaan. He was supported adequately by Pete Palmer who took his place in the game's closing minutes. DEFENSIVELY, Perry again gets the plaudits for his sharp maneuvers out of the Wolverine safety slot. His cat-like alertness on pass defense paid off with three key interceptions of tosses from Johnny Clayton. Clayton had some other trou- bles all afternoon as Ozzie Clark stalked him from his defensive right end position. Clark more than made up for a passing bob- ble with his flank work. The charging Michigan line kept -Daily-Burt Sapowitch CHUCK ORTMANN ... let's go Blue! * * getting progressively closer to a block of a Dartmouth punt, cul- minating finally in Momsen's third period success which set up the fourth and last Wolverine touch- down. THERE WAS nothing to cheer about in Michigan's first quarter play, however. The team started extremely slowly with erratic ball handling and blocking. Crew-cuts Flat Tops New Yorker 1 9 Hairstylists - No Waiting DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State . 1 t c t t 'ti C r c f r t c Clayton riddled Oosterbaan's pass defense in the early stages but was handicapped by the in- aptitude of his receivers. A pot- ent 'T' formation offense like Army's is dangerous in the short pass- area. Rain and wet grounds slowed the usual light Monday workout yes- terday as the varsity held a skull session to discuss Saturday's mis- takes. Don Dufek's injury turned out to be a pulled leg muscle and he should be ready for the Cadets. So should Al Wahl and Tom John- son who were shaken up by Dart- mouth. Ortmann remains the chief cause of concern,. with all eyes focussed on the progress he is making with his bad ankle. Oos- terbaan is planning to' inject his ace into the lineup sometime this week. By The Associated Press Army's Black Knights took over the No. 1 spot among the nation's college football teams yesterday as Notre Dame dropped, to tenth place, its lowest position in the memory of the younger generation.1 Purdue's upset of the Fighting Irish, 28-14, last Saturday, shook4 up the football ratings like an earthquake. There were other form reversals on "Black Saturday," in- cluding Maryland's 34-7 thump-f ing of Michigan, State.l When the debris had cleared away, the pigskin experts from coast to coast had to start from scratch in figuring their top ten teams. Today the Irish received .only one first place nomination. Notre Dame has finished no lower than ninth since 1941. - MICHIGAN'S Wolverines, who bounced back to beat Dartmouth, 27-7, after losing their opening game to Michigan State, advanced a notch to eighteenth place from the nineteenth placing of last week. However, the Mazie and Blue Classes Stop While ]Purdue Honors Team LAFAYETTE, In d.-(P)-Pur- due officials tried-not very hard1 and with no success whatever-to promote "education as usual" yes- terday on the campus that pro- duced the first conqueror of Notre Dame's football team since 1945. But, the no-celebrating idea was a lost cause from the time the first underclassmen came whooping out of his dormitory this morning. PRESIDENT Frederick L. Hov- de, himself a former quarterback at Minnesota, took one look at 7,000 screaming students packed into the Hall of Music and gave unofficial approval to the holiday. "Officially," Hovde said, "the University is in session. Unof- ficially, it is yours!" Emotion was so intense in the spontaneous celebration t h a t Coach Stuart I. Holcomb broke all precedent eand promised that his team will win another game- from Iowa Oct. 21. "ABOUT THIE BIG TEN race," Holcomb said, "I still don't know how good the boys are. Wining the conference championship is quite an assignment. We'll take the games one at a time. But I promise we'll beat Iowa in the first one if it's the last thing we ever do!" In a calmer moment, the Pur- due coach had said everybody would be gunning for his team and it might lose the rest of its games this season. But the jubi- lant students didn't want to hear that kind of talk. Holcomb told the crowd he hesi- tated to single out' any one Pur- due player as the herd of the Notre Dame game, but he intro- duced fullback Don Kasperan as "the boy who was as responsible for the victory as anybody." are still behind three Big Ten teams--Purdue, Ohio State and Wisconsin-in the ranking. Army, with an unbeaten string of 22 games, vaulted from fourth to first. The West Pointers re- ceived a total of 2,101 points by a national panel of 241 sports writers and sportscasters. They were named first on 115 ballots. Southern Methodist's air-mind- ed Mustangs moved into second place followed by: 3-Oklahoma, 4- Texas, 5-Kentucky, 6-Stanford, 7-California, 8-Maryland, 9-Pur- due and 10-Notre Dame. * * * MICHIGAN STATE dropped all the way from second to 20th. But the Spartans still have the memory of that win over Michigan to keep them happy. Up until this week, Purdue and Maryland were strictly also rans. The Boilermakers had been beaten by a fine Texas team, 34-26, and Maryland, highly touted before the season, had been shellatked by Georgia, 27-7. A week ago the first ten teams were the following: 1-Notre Dame, 2-Michigan State, 3-Southern Methodist, 4-Army, 5-Oklahoma, 6-Kentucky, 7-Texas, 8-Stanford, 9-California and 10-Washington. The top teams (number in brackets is first place votes; points figured on a basis of 10 for first, 9 for second, etc.): TOP TEN 1. Army (115) 2,101 2. Southern Methodist (53) 1,990 3. Oklahoma (29) 1,387 4. Texas (9) 1,212 5. Kentucky (11) 837 6. Stanford (4) 765 7. California (2) 754 8. Maryland (8) 684 9. Purdue (1) 616 10. Notre Dame (1) 554 SECOND TEN: 11-Washing- ton (2) 444; 12-Ohio State 254; 13-Clemson (4) 211;'14-Tennes- see 205; 15-Rice (1) 178; 16- Wisconsin 178; 17-Cornell (2) 174; 18-MICHIGAN 164; 19- Vanderbilt 142; 20-Michigan State 101 Giving indications of 1951-52 potentialities, 14 Wolverine sopho- mores saw action in last weekend's 27-7 win over Dartmouth. It was the first appearance in the Michigan Stadium for eleven of the rookies, with Lowell Perry, Rog Zatkoff and Frank Howell now ranking as two-game vete- rans. s s s PERRY, who operates off the left flank offensively, and fills in the safety slot on defense, was easily the standout player in the game. Intercepting three Dartmouth passes and scoring what proved to be Michigan's winning touch- down, he provided the Maize and Blue grid machine with the spark it needs for an explosive punch. In the entire 1949 campaign, only two of Dartmouth quarter- back's John Clayton's passes were intercepted and in the 1950 opener against Holy Cross, he lost the ball only once on a pass-play. Perry in- dividually duplicated the figure with his three strategic snags. The Michigan defense, which for the most part included the 160-pound Howell at defensive halfback, stopped Clayton with a total of five interceptions, Leo Ko- ceski and Pete Palmer each grab- bing one. * * * FOR A PORTION of the final period, Michigan coach Bennie Oosterbaan fielded a defensive secondary composed entirely of sophomores. 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