SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE THREE a Illinois . . . . 0 Mich. State Ohio State . . 0 Indiana . . 30 Purdue . 26 Minnesota. . 19 Wisconsin . 13 Iowa . . 34 1 Stanford .71 t. . 35 te. :14 S.M. U. Arkansas . .47 1UCLA. . 20 Notre Dame . 20 N. Carolina .12 . 7 Oregon Sta 7 Washington . . J n 1'r^a a s r ' T !V /'1 1I1 !Y'f f !\ ?> T1 f Y i SPEAKING SPORTS:Q u etW Gloom of Defeat Quiets olverine Offense Outgains Wildcats mLichtgan Locker noon By JIM PARKER Associate Sports Editor it's hard to imagine anything more pathetic than a beaten ath- lete-unless it's a group of beaten athletes. Such was the feeling that pervaded the Michigan dressing room after the Wolverines had heard Northwestern's sorrowful rendition of "Taps" to Michigan's last hope of salvaging a wiining season and to its slim mathematical chance of capturing Big Ten title glory1 for the fifth straight year.1 HERE WAS THE Michigan team, a group of stout-hearted under- dogs who had so valiantly fought to maintain a winning tradition, now sitting silently in a dressing room where the only evidence of warmth and cheer was that which was supplied by the steam drifting from the shower room. Here were gathered the young men who hadn't been granted the slimest prayer of making better than a second division Con- ference showing, but who had stunned the sporting world with a fighting spirit that had carried them to three straight Big Ten victories before Illinois had started to strip them of their Confer- ence invincibility. Here in the silence of their dressing room the Michigan players x were left with only their exploded dreams to console them-if such a thing were possible. There wasn't much talking-there wasn't any- thing to say. They had done their best, but they just couldn't turn back this fired-up Northwestern team that was bent on ending a three-game losing streak of its own. "WE JUST RAN OUT of steam," muttered Coach Bennie Ooster- baan as he spoke softly from a corner of the dressing room. Over in the Northwestern locker room boisterous, shouting Wildcats, feeling only power surging through their veins after beating Michigan, seemed more concerned with the score of an- other Big Ten game-Illinois' tie game with Ohio State. That was a score that gave the Wildcats a feeling of confidence that they could shatter the Illini's Rose Bowl hopes again this year as they had done on a snow-swept gridiron the year before at Evan- ston. And these players were loudly proclaiming their intentions of doing just that. * * * * NORTHWESTERN COACH Bob Voigts seemed as pleased as a doomed convict who had just been granted a reprieve. "We've been waiting for this one," said Voigts. "And, yes, we were sure we could handle the Wolverines. We got our six points and we were sure we could win with that much of a margin. That was all we needed." The Wildcat coach was impressed by the defensive play of Michigan, which held his squad to 156 yards rushing while Michi- gan was gaining 244 on the ground. "That Osterman (Russ Oster- man, defensive right end) played a great game against us. He was wandering around in our backfield just a little too much for my satisfaction," said the Northwestern mentor. * * * * AND BILL BILLINGS kicking was something that gave Voigts more than a little concern. While the Flint junior didn't compile too impressive an overall average, he sent one out on the one-foot line and later dropped one out on the five. Voigts was more than pleased with the results orf his pass defense which hauled in five errant Michigan aerials. "We were waiting for those passes," said Voigts. But it's this writer's opinion that, with the exception of the two- man defensive cloak the Wildcats had plaguinlg Lowell Perry, it was more a case of Wolverine passers failing drastically to hit their targets than it was of an over alert Northwestern pass defense. But then, maybe that's just sour grapes. 4 * Putich, Peterson Spark{ Michigan Running Game (Continued from Page 1) : Illinois has yet to lose a game in ", Big Ten play. (The Illini were tiedw by Ohio State yesterday0-0.) Wisconsin also leads the Wol- ~ verines with a 4-1-1 record.; For Michigan, Don Peterson again carried a major load of the Wolverines' ground game, and ac- N . quitted himself well. But in the second half even the quick-footed fullback found it difficult to broach an ever-stronger Wildcat line. THE WILDCAT forward wall, with Riley, captain and guard Don MacRae, and tackle James Howe as the granite blocks, was great in the clutch and its play belied-the sorrowful losses to three straight conference opponents. Michigan's defense actually played an excellent game after the one scoring thrust by North- western. Guard Don Dugger, greatly improved over the course of the season, was one standout. Hard-tackling Roger Zatkoff was another, and Larry LeClaire came in in the fourth quarter in place of Ted Topor to do a good job of line-backing. It was the Michigan offense, dormant since the scoring outburst against Minnesota, which spelled defeat. The Wolverines used three Purdue Eyes Conference Title Chance CHIGAGO - R) - Darkhorse Purdue could grab the Big Ten Football Title next Saturday by defeating Indiana-if Illinois loses to Northwestern. Purdue, virtually overlooked in the title and Rose Bowl shuffle, plays only a five game schedule. Today the Boilermakers defeated Minnesota 19-13 for a conference record of 3-1-.750. A win over Indiana could leave Purdue with 4-1 for .800. * * * ILLINOIS' scoreless tie with Ohio State 'today gave the Illini a league mark of 4-0-1 for .900. A tie counts as a half game won and a half game loss. If Northwestern should upset Illinois Saturday, the Illini's fi- nal reading would be 4-1-1 for .750. However a tie would clinch the title for Illinois with .833. A Wisconsin victory Saturday over Minnesota would give the Badgers a record of 5-1-1 for .786. CONFERENCE members vote on the Rose Bowl representative. This usually is a formality, since the Champion, if eligible, has always' been the choice in the past. For the entire season thus far Purdue has lost four games, to Notre Dame 30-9, Wisconsin 31-7, Miami of Florida 7-0, and Texas 14-0. DON PETERSON ... blocks extra point * * * passers-Captain Bill Putich, To- por, and freshman Duncan Mc- Donald. None of them could ef- fectively find their targets. Eigh- teen throws netted five comple- tions, none of them long yardage plays. And a tendency to throw STATISTICS Michi- North- gan western FIRST DOWNS..........s17 e11 By rushing ........... 15 7 By passing............. 1 4 By penalty............ 1 0 RRUSHING YARDAGE .244 156 Number of Rushes ..59 50 PASSING YARDAGE ... 39 81 PASSES ATTEMPTED .. 18 16 PASSES COMPLETED .. 5 5 PASSES INTERCEPTED 1 5 PUNTS .......................10 PUNTING AVERAGE . 30 29 FUMBLES LOST ........ 2 0 YARDS PENALIZED ... 25 43 Bucks, Illinii In Deadlock;' MSC wins NEW YORK -- (R) -- Stanford continued its rush toward a Rose Bowl bid today, but Illinois was stopped cold in its tracks and had to settle for a 0-0 tie with Ohio State as most of the major col- lege football teams scored impres. - sive victories. The main exception was Texas Christian which bowed to Texas, 32-21, after hoping to pull out front in the Southwest Confer- ence and go on to the Cotton Bowl. MICHIGAN STATE, as usual, had to spurt in the second half after being tied at 14-14 at inter- mission, to defeat Indiana, 30-26, while Sugar Bowl-bound Tennes- see ran over Mississippi, 46-21. Maryland continued its march toward the Southern Confer- ence crown with a 53-0 victory over North Carolina State. The Terrapins, even if approval from the Conference is not forthcom- ing, will meet Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl. Georgia Tech, headed for a post-season clash in the Orange Bowl, had little trouble whipping Alabama, 27-7. Notre Dame just managed to outlast North Caro- lina, 12-7, and Wisconsin kept its hopes alive to win the Big Ten Title and get the Rose Bowl nomi- nation by flattening Iowa, 34-7. , * * STANFORD HAD rough going with Oregon State for the first half and could do no better than a 7-7 deadlock. But the Indians erupted for three touchdowns in the third period to break the con- test wide open and run up a 35-14 final margin. Stanford now is virtually as- sured of a Rose Bowl spot. Even if the youthful Indians lose to California next week, they'll probably get in the post-season classic. . , , OHIO STATE, an in and out club all season, completely stopped the Illini and their ace back John- ny Karras, who wound up his day's toil with minus 11 yards in 14 tries. Nor could Ohio State bulwark Vic Janowicz do anything noteworthy. In fact, he fumbled once on his own eight-yard line. -Daily--Al Reid GO AWAY, SON, you bother me, thinks Michigan fullback Don Peterson (46) as he applies the straightarm to would-be Wildcat tackler John Steeb (86). Peterson was one of the few bright spots in Michigan's 6-0 loss to Northwestern which eliminated the Wol- verines from Big Ten title chances. National Grid Roundup Undefeated Tigers Jolt Yale,_27m0 PRINCETON, N.J. (P)-Dandy Dick Kazmaier had one of the biggest days of his brilliant foot- ball career yesterday as he led Princeton's unbeaten Tigers to a record-smashing 27 to 0 victory over their oldest rival, Yale. Kazmaier engineered every Ti- ger touchdown and gained a total of 237 yards by running and pas ing. He wiped out the eastern record for ground-gaining in one season and gave Princeton the Big Three Championship for the fifth straight year, a feat no team has accomplished since Yale and Princeton first met in 1873. THE VICTORY was Princeton's 21st in succession over a three- year stretch, adding one more tri- umph to a string of record length. Kazmaier scored only one touchdown himself-on a nine- yard end run. But his passes accounted for the other three. He tossed twice to end Len Lyons and once to Frank Mc- Phee, the stellar defensive end who came in just to catch a pass. Today's 132 yards by rushing and 105 by passing gave Kazmaier a season total of 1707 yards. This surpassed the eastern mark of 1693 yards set by Red Marchibroda of St. Bonaventure last year. Late Scores Montreal 3, New York 2 Toronto 1, Boston 1 EAST Penn 7, Army 6 Harvard 34, Brown 21 Navy 21, Columbia 7 Boston College 20, Villanova 13 Princeton 27, Yale 0 Fordham 35, Temple 6 Wesleyan 6. Trinity 3 Cornell 21, Dartmouth 13 Syracuse 9, Colgate 0 Boston University 39, Wichita 6 Penn State 13, Rutgers 7 Wiliams 40, Amherst 7 Connecticut 21, Rhode Island 6 Pittsburgh 32, West Virginia 12 MIDWEST .Oklahoma 35, Iowa State 6 Great Lakes 20, Pensacola Naval 6 Wooster 47, Oberlin 14 Denison 14, Case 7 Muskingum 14, Otterbein 19 Miami (O) 34, Western Reserve 7 Bowling Green 20, Bradley 6 Colorado 36, Nebraska 14 Kansas State 14, Missouri 12 Southeast Missouri Tchrs. 45, South- ern Illinois 6 Marquette 26, Detroit 13 New Hampshire 7, Kent State 0 Xavier (O.) 26, Cincinnati 0 SOUTH Kentucky 47. George Wahsington 13 Tennessee 46, Mississippi 21 Florida A & M 36, Southern Univer- sity 6 Georgia 46, Auburn 14 William and Mary 14, Duke 13 Notre Dame 12, North Carolina 7 IVirginia 28, South Carolina 27 Maryland 53, North Carolina State 0 Clemson 34, Furman 14 ! Georgia Tech 27, Alabama 7 Louisville 14, Washington and Lee 7 Tulane 14, Vanderbilt 10 SOUTHWEST Kansas 27, Oklahoma A & M 12 Rice 28, Texas A & M 13 !Southern Methodist 47, Arkansas 7 Texas 32, Texas Christian21 Baylor 42, Wake Forest 0 Tulsa 21, Texas Tech 14 Arkansas A & M 34, College of Ozarks New Mexico 34, Brigham Young 0 FAR WEST Utah 27, Colorado A & M 21 Washington State 47, Montana 10 California 28, Oregon 26 Who Launders KYER shirtsLaundry ' Best t# 0 t short of the receivers enabled p jwl SPORTS HERB COHEN: Night Editor Northwestern's secondary to in- tercept five. * * * MICHIGAN'S MOST effective plays were weak side thrusts, with Wes Bradford and Frank Howell carrying. And an occasional sweep with Putich or Peterson carrying gained well-as long as the Wol- verines were in Wolverine terri- tory. *neups MICHIGAN LE PERRY, Stanford, Dingman LT JOHNSON, Zatkoff, Bennett LG KINYON, Kelsey C O'SHAUGHNESSY RG WOLTER, Dugger, Timm RT STRIBE, Balog, Pederson RE PICKARD, Osterman, Green QB TOPOR, Billingan, Zanfagna, Mc- Donald LH PUTICH, Howell RH BRADFORD, Oldham, Wither- spoon FB PETERSON, LeClaire, Rescorla NORTHWESTERN LE KUEHL, Steeb, Crawford LT HUIZINGA, J. Roche, Dyer LG EVANS, MacRae, Katchaturoff C HUNT, Riley RG JECHA, Carse, Damore, Belejack RT YOUNG, Duffill, Howe, Berrin RE KRAGSETH, Rich QB BURSON. Springer, Rondon LH ALBAN, Bennett RH JONES, Webber, Israels FB HREN, Johnson, Athan, O'Brien THE NEWEST CAMPUS FAD! BE THE FIRST ON YOUR CAMPUS! YOUR FIRST NAME OR YOUR IN- ITIALS PRINTED IN GENUINE 23 CARAT GOLD ON GENUINE LEATH- ER (size: 2" x 1"). ATTACH IT TO YOUR SWEATER. BLOUSE OR ANY- THING ELSE YOU WEAR . . . 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