PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1951 PAGE SIX MONDAY, 3ANUARY I, 1951 NO EASY TIME FOR 'M': Illini Scouts Call California 'Tough' Wolverines Trample Dartmouth, 27-7; By BOB ROSENMAN "Michigan is. not going to have an easy time against California it the Rose Bowl New Year's Day." 'This, in essence, is the opinion of two University of Illinois scouts who got a good look at Lynn Wal- dorf's Pacific Coast Conference champions. Brewer also watched a fine University of Washington team blow their chances for a Rose Bowl sojourn with a fumble on Cal's 4-yard line which eventu- ally helped bring the Bears a narrow 14-7 triumph. Purvis and Brewer also got an opportunity to watch the Wolver- THESE GENTLEMEN, Chuck ines in action and both agree that Purvis and Mel Brewer, both look- Chuck Ortmann is a fine passer. ed on as underdog Stanford tied But from their reports, Michigan's the Bears, 7-7. star tailback will have plenty of Good Luck 0 WOLVERINES in your Return Visit to the Rose Bowl wrt ANN OWENS 0 ^.I 500 EAST LIBERTY TELEPHONE 3-8781 rococosoo oeoon ao<- a.oc1o< trouble hitting the mark against California. STANFORD AND Washington admittedly had a degree of suc- cess through the airways against the Bears, and they had two pretty fair passers named Gary Kerkor- ian and Don Heinrich, respective- ly. Because of this evidence, many Wolverine enthusiastsewill jump to the hasty conclusion that "if Stanford and Washing- ton passed against California so easily, just think of what will happen when Ortmann starts throwing" But Brewer, who revealed that he never expected his Illini to miss the Pasadena trip, holds a con- trary view. "UCLA has a better passing attack than Stanford," he declared, "and they couldn't do anything. "THE DIFFERENCE was that Carl Van Heitt, Waldorf's safety man, was out of the Stanford game with injuries. He's the best safety man I saw all season." (Brewer also looked over Ohio State before the Buckeyes met Illinois, and kept a wary eye on the Ohioan's safety man, a fel- low by the name of Vic Jano- wicz, and a pretty fair defensive ballplayer in his own right, not to mention offense.) After Purvis and Brewer had spent a total of twelve hours with Bennie Oosterbaan and his staff early in December, there was evi- dence on the faces of Michigan's coaches that their words had made a deep impression. "CALIFORNIA is a hard-going team that is easily the best the Big Ten has faced in the Rose Bowl," asserted Brewer. Even Wal- dorf chimes in with, the remark that "this is the best team I've ever had at California." That includes a 1948 squad boasting such stellar perform- ers as Jackie Jensen, Bob Cel- eri, Jack Swaner, and Rod Franz, and a 1949 aggregation with backfield talent including Billy Montagne, Frank Brunk, Billy Main, and many others, both of whom rolled through regular season play without a loss or tie. Getting back to the scouts' re- ports, Brewer had this to say about Cal's running power: "I don't think our Conference had a run- ning team to match it.. We had good running at Illinois, but not the slashing, bruising kind that California has shown." * * *- Ground Indians Falter Before Strong PassingGame Ortnann-to-Perry Duo Provides Punch By BOB SANDELL Michigan's gridiron machine be- gan rolling in high gear yesterday afternoon, using a long range ground and aerial attack to whip the Dartmouth Indians, 27-7. Seventy-four'thousand, nine hundred and three fans in .the Michigan Stadium saw the scrappy Indians grab an early 7-0 lead in the' first period and then succumb to a relentless Wolverine attack that threatened to turn the contest into a rout in ,the final stanza. * * * A SLIM WOLVERINE sopho- more, Lowell Perry, stole the show from everybody with three great interceptions of passes by the tal- ented Johnny Clayton. For good measure he took a Bill Putich pass for artouchdown in the second quarter. The Wolverines hit pay dirt on two pass plays that covered 47 yards and two more on running efforts that went for 34 and 3 yards. Harry, Allis was on the receiving end of one of the pay- dirt heaves with halfback Leo Koceski and reserve fullback Ralph Straffon tallying the other two. The Easterners were far from a pushover, though. Clayton was every bit the threat he was ex- pected to be and fullback Bill Rob- erts did a tremendous job of bulling his way through the Michigan line until he was injured in the second quarter. -His loss and- an injury to Charlie Curtis early in the game were both costly to Tugg McLaug- hry's Big Green. * * * DARTMOUTH'S LONE score came early in the first per- iod. Michigan kicked off and after t h r e e punt exchanges, the Indians r e c o v e r e d a fum- ble in the Wolverine backfield on the 22. Roberts carried the pig- skin down to the 11 and then Clay- ton found end John McDonald in the end zone with a perfect pitch. McDonald was covered by two men and pnade a leaping catch of the ball. Charlie Dey kicked the extra point to make it 7-0' for the In- dians. On the kickoff the Maize and Blue started from their own 36 and eight plays later Koceski raced around left end on a re- verse to go over standing up. The play started from the 34 with the fleet Wolverine' right Attack Trips Badgers, -26-13 :~ ~Homecoming :: CowdSees i :r -Daily-Carlyle Marshall DARTMOUTH'S JOHN CLAYTON MOMENTARILY ELUDES 'M'S' DICK McWILLIAMS * * * .k halt simply outrunning the slow- er Dartmouth defense. Allis' kick was wide. Perry grabbeda Clayton pass on the Michigan 21 to halt the next drive by the visitors. Dartmouth had penetrated deep into Wolver- ine territory, mostly on the strength of a long pass from Clay- ton to Bob Tyler, the Indian left halfback. S. . THE WOLVERINES then mess- ed up two great scoring chances when two of Putich's passes were dropped with practically a clear field in front of the receivers. Halfway 'through the second period Dartmouth started mov- ing again. With Clayton and Roberts leading the way they drove down to the Michigan 30 before Perry again thwarted the Indian advance with an inter-, ception on the five. Michigan couldn't get anywhere, though, and Koceski booted to the Dartmouth 45. After three plays failed for the Indians, Michigan got its big break of the game. Bob McCraney's punt skidded off the edge of his foot and traveled for a net gain of one yard to the 47. Capable Coaching Staff Backed Wolverines' 50 Grid Success A football coach's fortunes are known to sway back and forth ac- cording to victories his team ac- complishes and the defeats it ab- sorbs. Michigan's Bennie Oosterbaan had to weather plenty of abuse during the season's early stages as his Wolverine machine ground to an awkward halt against Michi- gan State, Army, Illinois and Min- nesota. * * * WHEN HIS BOYS delivered a third consecutive Western Confer- ence crown to the genial mentor'sE doorstep, all the storm clouds were swept away and Bennie silently and graciously accepted the usual plaudits. Oosterbaan himself carries a brilliant record as a player at Michigan. He was an All-Ameri- can end in 1925-26-27 and re- ceived similar acclaim in basket- ball as a senior. I The job he did, in his first year as head coach earned him the dis- tinction of Coach of the Year. That cane as a result of an unde- feated and untied season in which Chuck Ortmann and Leo Koceski emerged as sophomore stars. * * * OOSTERBAAN is surrounded with an able group of assistants whose integrated efforts have been the driving force behind Wolver- ine successes. Prominent on the list is Jack Blott, the line coach, recognized as the best in the business. He was an All-American center as a player and is the big reason why Michigan has been noted for formidable defense for the last two decades. Other assistants are Bill Orwig, the end expert, George Ceithaml, backfield mentor, J. T. White and Don Robinson. Wally Weber, foot- ball's wizard of words, is director of freshman football activities. ERNIE MCCOY, who is currently embroiled in a basketball cam- paign as Michigan hardwood coach, was chief scout for the gridiron team. He failed to secure necessary data on California dur- ing the season since a possible Wolverine Rose Bowl appearance was so remote. His work was done by Illinois' scouts who were quite confident that the Illini were headed for Pasadena. Their reports were la- ter made available to Ooster- baan. Dominic Tomasi . and D i c k Kempthorn are making their sec- ond trip to California in three years, l Ortmann Star Belated Wisconsin Bid Falls Far Short By BOB SANDELL The passing and running bril- liance of the great Charlie Ort- mann and a bounce-back gang of Michigan Wolverines made it a happy Homecoming Day in the Michigan Stadium yesterday' with a convincing 26-13 conquest of the Wisconsin Badgers. With the talented blonde half- back putting on a sensational first half show for the 91,202 fans, the Wolverines completely dominated the Badgers for three periods in taking their first big step in de fense of their Conference crown. ONLY TWO LATE scores in the fourth period against the Wolver- ine reserves marred an otherwise completely one-sided affair for the revitalized Maize and Blue. Ortmann had one of the greatest days of his collegiate career although he retired early in the third quarter with a slight leg injury. He rambled 14 yards for the first Wolverine marker and then heaved a long pass to Bill Putich for another. In all he accounted for 185 yards on the ground and through the air. In the first half alone he comi- pleted 10 of 14 passes for an amaz- ing percentage against the sup- posedly defensively alert Badgers. * * * THE MICHIGAN defensive pla- toon, led by Roger Zatkoff, Tony Momsen, and Tom Johnson com- pletely throttled every Badger of- fensive attempt until the Maize and Blue had piled up a 26-0 lead. The Wolverines made it a sad return for Ivy Williamson and must have left him wondering if they had heard of the word "letdown." Hard hitting Don Dufek had another good day as he personally accounted for the third and the fourth Michigan tallies on plunges from the three and one. He rolled for 74 yards through the stunned Badger defenders, averaging near- ly four yards a play. ENDS LOWELL Perry and Fred Pickard and quarterback Bill Pu- tich each . caught three of Ort- mann's accurate tosses. Putich scored the second touchdown on a brilliantly executed pass play that covered 28 yards. Michigan jumped into a 7-0 lead just before the period end- ed. The other first period Wol- verine touchdown was a re- sult of superb ball-handling and a fine Ortmann-Putich pass. The ball came back to Dufek. He handed it to Putich who in turn pitched out to Ortmann who ran. wide to his right. The blonde flash sped toward the sidelines, paused, then threw across -field to Putich who was waitingalone with open arms in the end zone. Michigan's third marker climax- ed the first 'drive of the second half, Dufek crashing over from the one. Minutes later Dufek ended Michigan's scoring with a two- yard plunge. The Badgers came to life late in the final period. With two min- utes left, John Coatta flipped a pass to Bob Manfield in the end zone. After recovering an "M" fumble on the 25, they scored again with seconds remaining. WisC. MICH. First Downs i 12 Rushing Yardage 55 125 Passing Yardage 137 15 Passes Intercepted 0 3 Punting Average 41.3 43.5 Punts 4 Fumbles Lost I I Yards Penalized 5 49 4 A AI First Downs MI Yards Rushing 1 Yards Forwards T Forwards Attempted Forwards Completed Forwards Intercepted By Punts, number Punts, average distance 'Fumbles, balls lost Yards Penalized CH. DART. 12 15 168 148 178 127 19 30 8 9 >}, 5 7 32.6 5 9 0 9 29.2 0 50~ NOW AVAILABLE The New Official Album of p UNIVERITY of &W4~~u9CqJee $xAh 1204 South University ... serving.. . BREAKFASTS, LUNCHEONS and DINNERS SANDWICHES and SALADS . . . from . . 7:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. and 5:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. Closed Sundays j m6 Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. 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