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October 07, 1951 - Image 7

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Michigan Daily, 1951-10-07

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9

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1951 - T'HE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE SEVEN

Hearn Excels in Giant Trium1ph

TIHE MORNING LINE
By TED PAPES
Daily Sports Editor

STANFORD'S INDIANS were every bit as jubilant in their Stadium
dressing room after the game yesterday as the Giants must have
been at the Polo Grounds after whipping the Yankees.
For even though no World Series melon was at stake, Coach Chuck
Taylor's Redmen had become the first Pacific Coast football teem
to taste triumph over Michigan.
Red and white uniforms, bearing marks of a bitter struggle, were
- strewn everywhere as shouting players milled around, slapping each
other on the back and heaping congratulations upon the stars who
made headlines-McColl, Kerkorian, Hugasian.
Into the confusion of victory walked Fritz Crisler with
expressions of good wishes for Stanford, modified by grim concern
over Michigan's second reversal.
After shaking hands with Athletic Director Alfred Masters, Criser
encountered Taylor emerging from the shower room and praised the
young Indian mentor for his tribe's fine showing. He cautioned Taylor
not to let his players "ggt too satisfied with themselves," probably
recalling some of the great upsets that have followed close on the
heels of great victories.
* * * *
Stanford Players 'Hungry'
TAYLOR REPLIED that his boys "are hungry now," and indicated
that he anticipates a tough battle against UCLA in Stanford's
conference opener this weekend.
"This game made a team out of them," Taylor told reporters later.
"Their first two victories were no indication of their potentialities, but
this one was. It was their best game so far."
He was especially pleased by the fact that his team "didn't -
lose its poise when Michigan scored first."
The Stanford strategy board had not planned to use its passing
game so extensively, but early Wolverine line play sent Kerkorian to
the airlanes and that move opened the door to conquest. It was also
revealed that the visitors unfolded a new type of pass protection
yesterday similar to that of Michigan State which left the quarter-
back in an almost impenetrable pocket all afternoon.
Just across the runway, gloom settled its heavy hand on
Michigan's dressing rooms for the second Saturday in a row.
Bennie Oosterbaan stood alone as his players dressed quietly, a
striking contrast to scenes of the past few seasons which usually found
the likeable coach surrounded by hungry newsmen, hanging on his
every'word.
Wolverines Looking Better
THERE WAS NO TRACE of bitterness in his comments on the game,
andhe was quick to agree that the Wolverines showed marked im-
provement over their listless play against Michigan State.
"Putich fought his heart out," Bennie remarked, "and you
have to hand it to that little Bradford." Chief Scout Ernie McCoy
and the inimitable Wally Weber joined the boss and handed him
a list of game statistics.,
"That passing yardage made all the difference," said Oosterbaan.
"They kept biting off big chunks of yardage with just a few plays,
and our secondary couldn't prevent it."
The play that probably hurt Michigan most came just after
the Wolverines had taken a one toxichdown lead. Stanford im-
mediately began a drive upfield, but with a third down and 16
yards to go on the Michigan 35 it looked as if the home team could
get out of trouble.
Kerkorian faded to throw and launched a high one into the
left corner of, the gridiron. Pass defender Don Peterson came roaring
up from the secondary with a perfect shot at an interception, but he
overran the ball and it fell into the waiting arms of McColl who
lugged it to the seven where it was first down and goal to go.
That set off Stanford's three touchdown explosion in the second
quarter instead of throwing the Indian attack off balance. The Mich-
igan defense seemed to crumble after that, and the offensive platoon
couldn't quite make up the difference, as it invested 19 first downs
but received a small dividend of only two touchdowns.

Major Grid
Teams Earn
Close Wins
NEW YORK-(IP)-The mighty
Spartans of Michigan State, along
with Tennessee, Illinois, Texas,
and Maryland, emerged from a
day of close games unscathed yes-
terday, although State, the No.
1 team in the Associated Press
Poll, had to come from behind in
the last quarter to whip Ohio
State 24-20.
Upsets were few and far be-
tween, but some of the favorites
came mighty close to falling. Illi-
nois, for example, opened its Big
Ten campaign with a narrow 14-
10 squeak over Wisconsin on a
touchdown in the final quarter.
NORTHWESTERN was another
top heavy choice that barely made
it by surging in the final period
against Army. The riddled Cadets,
stripped of their first team by the
cribbing scandal, scored a pair of
touchdowns in the third period
to grab a 14-7 advantage over the
Big Ten outfit.
But in the final stanza, by a
wearing-down process as much
as anything else, Northwestern
punched over a pair of scores to
pull it out, 20-14.
Tennessee, currently the third
team in the nation, had no trouble
getting past Duke of the Southern
Conference, 26-0. This was signifi-
cant only in that the experts
thought Due would throw up a
stiffer defense.
TEXAS, RANKED No. 6, crush-
ed North Carolina under an ava-
lanche of touchdowns, 45-20. The
contest was close for the first
quarter when the Tarheels grab-
bed a 7-6 lead. The Longhorns
notched three tallies in the second
period and that was that.
Maryland, the class of the
Southern Conference - and
shooting for'a top spot in the
nation - didn't give George
Washington an opportunity to
score until the game was almost
over and ran up a 33-6 tri-
umph.
Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama
and Michigan all were the victims
of upsets while Nebraska had to
settle for a 6-6 tie with Kansas
State, usually a Big Eeven door-
mat, in a league game.
THE DEFEAT WAS the third
straight for Kentucky, which in
pre-season ratings was considered
the only Southeastern Conference
school capable of giving Tennessee
an argument. The Wildcats were
leading until the final period when
they took a gamble, lost the ball
on downs on their own 35, then
saw Darrell Crawford go over from
the one for the clincher for unde-
feated George Tech.
Georgia was the victim of an
opening period touchdown by Mis-
sissippi State. The score looked
bigger and bigger as the game
went on and when the final gun
went off that's how it stood: Mis-
sissippi State 6, Georgia Q.
Alabama couldn't handle Vand-
erbilt and went down to a 22-20
defeat for its second loss in a row.
Dick Foster kicked a field goal in
the third period which proved the
margin of victory, although he al-
so handled most of the Commo-
dores' running.
Players Ask
For Changes
In Benefit Rule

NEW YORK-(P)-Major Lea-
gue baseball players requested to-
day that the status of ten-year
men be reduced to eight years.
Under the proposal, presented
by player representatives to the
Executive Council, a player who
has had eight years' experience in
the Majors would become a free
agent if released by his club.
This would leave him free to
deal for himself. Now the period
a man must pley to receive such
benefits is ten years.

-Continued from Page 1)
the second frame was clean and
above board, and it looked almost
to the last that -it was going to
stand up. Bobby Thomson opened
the inning with a scorching double
down the left line and scored a
moment later when young Willie
Mays got his first hit of the series,
a banjo single into right field. Pre-
* ** a

they couldn't convince Summers
of it.
At any rate, the Yanks were
sore and the panic was on. Dark
poked a ground single into center
field on which Stanky trotted
home, and Hank Thompson, the
Giants' substitute xightfielder,
slashed another grounder cleanly
into right, sending the Giants'
captain to third.
Monte Irvin then took a full cut
and sent a lazy roller toward Bob-
by Brown at third. Brown fielded
it in a hurry and shot the ball to
Berra well ahead of Dark. This
time it was plate ump, Joe Papar-
ella, who first signalled out and
had to change his decision as Yogi
dropped the pellet as though it
were hot.
The zany events of the inning
must have unsettled Raschi, for
he wheeled in a fast one which
Lockman loved, and the vast
crowd had a field day as the three
runners bounced around the bases
to send the score to a safe 6-0.
Stengel sent Raschi on the long,
lonesome hike to the center field
dressing rooms, and Bob Hogue
came in to retire the side.
Joe Ostrowski hurled the final
two innings for the Bombers and
escaped cleanly except for Mays'
second single of the game with one
down in the eighth. A double play,
the only one the Yanks engineered,
ended the rally.
OFFICIAL BOX SCORF

i

Lockman's T hree Run
Homer Clinches Game

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WHITEY LOCKMAN
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* *_
vious to that, Willie had gone 19
for 1 in the playoff games and
series,

1 * *
MAINLY because of his wild-
ness, Hearn was in mild difficul-
ties in virtually every inning he
pitched, but with men on the paths
the willowy righthander was a
man to reckon with. Two double
plays back of him eased his work
in the early innings.
In all, the Yankees left 10 run-
ners stranded, at least onein
each frame except the second
and ninth. They couldn't get
hold of Jim's curves in the
clutches. He was a sad figure
when he finally txudge4, slowly
out to the clubhouse, because
he had had a brilliant world ser-
ies triumph in his very grasp.
Joe DiMaggio, still batting clean-
up for the Bombers, remained in a
terrible slump against the Giants'
twirlers. His four futile trips to-
day, which included the only
strikeout registered by Hearn,
brought the clipper's record for
three games to 11-0.
GIL MacDOUGALD was the only
Yankee to connect off Hearn more
than once. He laced a pair of
clean singles, one against the left
wall and another past shortstop
into centerfield. A single by Phil
Rizzuto in the first inning and a
bleeder toward first base in the
second by Yogi Berra on which
Lockman made a poor toss to
Hearn were the Yanks' only other
offensive gestures of the day, and
they were not very offensive.
In the final analysis, it prob-
ably was a cute piece of base-
running by Eddie Stanky, scrap-
ping little Giants second base-
man, early in the fifth inning
which turned the tide completely.
If Durocher's dandies hadn't
made these five runs which came
in the wake of Eddie's little
stunt, Woodling's ninth-inning
blow might have been the de-
cider.
One was out and Raschi was
looking very tough when the Brat
worked him for a walk on a 3-2
pitch. With Al Dark at bat, Eddie
set sail for second. The ball was
a pitch-out, and Berra's peg to
Rizutto at second was there in
worlds of time. He made the tag
with his gloved hand and Umpire
Bill Summers gave the big out
sign, but an instant later he chang-
ed it when the ball flew from Riz-
zuto's glove and rolled toward the
outfield.
Stanky, who had ploughed into
Phil hard, came off the ground in
a flash and raced on to third as
the Yankees, including Pilot Sten-
gel, gathered angrily around Sum-
mers. They didn't object, it turned
out, to Eddie's kicking the ball out
of Phil's hand. They claimed he
never had touched the bag, but

New York (A) AB R H O
Woodling, if 4 1' 1 3
Rizzuto, ss 4 1 1 2
McDougald, 2b 3 0 2 2
DiMaggio, cf 4 0 0 4
Berra,C 3 0 1 5
Brown, 3b 3 0 0 0
Collins, lb 3 0 0 6
Bauer, rf 4 0 0 2
Raschi, p 1 0 0 0
Hogue, p 0 0 o00
A--Hopp 0 8 0 0
Ostrowski, p 0 0 0 0
B-Mize 1 0 0 0
TOTALS 30 2 5 24
A--Walked for Hogue in 7th.
B-Fied out for Ostrowski in 9th.

A
0
4
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
S

100% NYLON
JACKET
(A $10 Value)
4.95

New York (N)
Stanky, 2b
Dark, ss
Thompson, rf
Irvin, If
Lockman, lb
Thomson, 3b
Mays,: cf
Westrum, c
Hearn, p
Jones, p
TOTALS

AB
3
3
4
4
4
4
3
0
31

R
1
1
1
1
1
1
e
a
a
0
6
000
010

H O A
1 2 z
1 1 0
1 1 1
1 3 4
2 3 0
0 2 1
0 0 2
0 0 1
7 27 15
050 O0x--6

NEW YORK (A) ...
NEW YORK (N) ...

Earned Runs-Yankees 2; Giants 1.
E-Lockman, Westrum, Rizzuto, Ber-
ra. RBI-Mays, Dark, Lockman 3;"
Collins, Woodling. 2B-Thomson.
HR-Lockman, Woodling. DP-Stan-
ky, Dark and Lockman; Hlearn, Dark,
Lockman and Dark; Rizzuto, McDou-
gald and Collins. Left-New York (A)
10; New York (N) 5. BB-Raschi 3
(Irvin, Thompson, Stanky); Hearn 8
(Woadllng, McDougald 2; Raschi,
Berra, Hopp, Brown, Collins). SO-
Raschi 3 (Thompson, Stanky, Hearn);
Ostrowski 1 (Lockman); Hearn 1 (Di-
Maggio). HO-Raschi 5 in 4 in-
nings; Hogue 1 in 1%; Ostrowski 1 in
2; Hearn 4 in 7% ; Jones 1 in 1%.
HBP-Raschi 1 (Stanky); Hearn I
(Rizzuto). Winner-Hearn; Loser-
Raschi. U-Joe Paparella (AL) Plate;
Al Barlick (NL) first base; Bill Sum-
mers (AL) second base; Lee Balian-
fant (NL) third base; John Stevens
(AL) left field foul line; Art Gore (N
L) right field foul line. ET-2:42. A-
52,035 (paid). Receipts-;243,961.10.

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National Football Roundup

I

By The Associated Press
EAST
Maine 42, Vermont 0
Columbia 35, Harvard 0
St. Lawrence 20, H-tobart 7
Holy Cross 54, Fordham 20
Princeton 24, Navy 20
Cornell 41, Colgate 18
Temple 14, Rutgers 7
Rochester 21, Amherst 6
Middlebury 42, Hamilton 12
Penn 39, Dartmouth 14
Coast Guard 27, Trinity 19
Bowdoin 27, Wesleyan 9
Union 21, RPI 14
villanova 20, Penn State 7
Bucknell 47, Lehigh 7
Brown 14, Yale 13
Williams 7, Connecticut 6
Colby 13, Upsala 7
Northeastern 39, Tufts 7
Franklin & Marshall 27, Dickinson 6
Cortland State Tchrs. 13, American
International 8
Rhode Island 27, New Hampshire 0
Springfield 34, Bates 12
Trenton Tchrs. 19, New Britain Tchrs.
,: 7
Wagner 19, Arnold 7
MIDWEST
Northwestern 20, Army 14
Purdue 34, Iowa 30
Drake 39, Iowa Teachers 6
Indiana 13, Pitt 6
Kansas State 6, Nebraska 6 (tie)
Illinois 14, Wisconsin 10
Wooster 18, Kenyon 13
Xavier (O.) 32, Miami (O.) 14
Ohio Northern 43, Olivet 0
Stanford 23, Michigan 13
Michigan State 24, Ohio State 20
Kent State 42, Western Reserve 20
Central State (O.) 56, Taylor 19
Washington (St. Louis) 33, Central
Mo. 0
DePauw 14., Ball State 7
Marietta 32, Anderson 13
Valparaiso 32, St.eJoseph's (Indiana)
3EC
Ear ian 3, Indiana Central 0

Great Lakes Naval Training Center
26, St. Norbert's (Wis.) 14
SOUTH
Washington & Lee 34, West Virginia 0
Western Maryland 46, Randolph-Ma-
con 7
Tennessee 26, Duke 0
Maryland 33, George Washington 6
Fort Jackson 40, Shaw Field Air Force
Base 0
Georgia Tech 13, Kentucky 7
Case 38, Washington and Jefferson 7
Virginia State 62, Shaw 0
Zavier (La.) 25, Grambling (La.) 7
St. Augustine 6, Johnson C. Smith 0
Vanderbilt 22, Alabama 20
Baylor 27, Tulane 14
Mississippi State 6, Georgia 0
Wake Forest 56, Richmond 6
Texas 45, North Carolina 20
FAR WEST
Wyoming 37, Utah State 0
Idaho State 19,Montana State 6
Colorado 35, Kansas 27
Oregon State 34, Idaho 6
California 55, Minnesota 14
Southern California 20, Washington
13
U.C.L.A. 44, Santa Clara 17.
Eastern Illinois 19, ichigan Normal 12
Ohio Northern 34, Olivet 0
Ohio University 13, Western Michigan
Northern Michigan 7, Ferris Institute
7 (tie)
Albion_ 3, Hope 4

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