SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Nine Wolverine Grldders To End College G ireer Janowic s Stellar Play Sparks OSU Buckeye Offense Features Passing (Continued from Page 1) Stribe, Jim Wolter and Tom Kel- sey. OHIO STATE BEGAN the cur- rent campaign as big favorites to cut fancy figures in league and na- tional circles, but they had trouble making a one-season transition from single wing to Coach Woody Hayes' T-formation. Their 0-0 tie with the Illini a week ago is the only imper- fection on the record of the cur- rent Conference leaders, and as a result the Bucks rate a slight choice over Michigan, now mir- ed in a three-game losing streak. In the starring role for Ohio is triple threat halfback Vic Jano- wicz. Winner of the Heisman tro- phy and All-American plaudits last year, Janowicz has failed to live up to high expectations so far this season, but he is still the workhorse in the Buckeye back- field. He holds down the left halfback position from where he runs, puntsi * * * Big Ten Crown at Stake As Illini Clash with NU 'M' HOLDS EDGE: Brilliant Victories Mark OSU Series I- ---, - --t- -- VIC JANOWICZ .triple threat and passes. He shares throwing assignments with the quarterback, Tony Curcillo. FULLBACK JACK Wagner and freshman sensation Doug Good- sell at right half complete the Ohio backifeld. Goodsell has suc- ceeded in wresting the starting as- signment away from letterman Walt Klevay who was a leading ground gainer in the loop last year. The rookie was hurt early in last week's game, however, and Klevay turned in a sparkling performance so he'll probably see some extended duty this aft- ernoon. Michigan's familiar backfield is ready to roll again, with. Putich at left half, Wes Bradford on the wing, Ted Topor as the blocking quarterback and Peterson at full. THE WOLVERINES WENT through a signal drill on the sog- gy turf of Ferry Field yesterday afternoon and all hands are re- ported in good physical condition. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan spent a few moments after the workout talking to his players in a last minute effort to key them up for the final battle. They spent the night in their pre-game base at the University golf clubhouse, while the Buck- eyes set up camp in Toledo. They arrived in Ann Arbor this morn- ing. No Ohio State team has beaten Michigan since the 1944 edition turned the trick by an 18-14 mar- gin. A 7-7 tie in 1949 gave the 9 9 * DON PETERSON . . . hard driving fullback Key Battles Mark Final* Grid Gamnes NEW ,YORK-(/P)-The South, Southwest and far West offers much of the college football dyna- mite today as the fading 1951 sea- son comes up with half a dozen bowl-tinged games. A possibility that Tennessee, the nation's No. 1 team, might be knocked off by up-and-coming Kentucky has made this tradition- al battle at Lexington, Ky., a clash of national interest before 36,000. * * * HOWEVER, there's plenty of action elsewhere on the pigskin firing line, with such pairings as Illinois-Northwestern, California- Stanford, Southern Methodist- Baylor, Texas Christian-Rice, Wis- consin-Minnesota, and Purdue-In- diana. All have a New Year's day bowl flavor. The Big Ten's Rose Bowl rep- resentative can be decided at Evanston, Ill. Illinois can clinch the trip west by defeating or tieing Northwestern betfore a sell- out throng of 54,000. Wisconsin and Purdue are still in the running if Illinois falters. THE OTHER HALF of the Rose Bowl picture is finished, for Stan- ford, winner of nine straight games, has clinched the Pacific Coast Conference title. Stanford is host to twice-beaten California before a S.R.O. crowd of 90,108 at Palo Alto. In another major west- ern affair, some 75,000 will watch Southern California and U.C.L.A. at Los Angeles. Stanford is the only team to beat Southern Cali- fornia in conference play. In the Southwest, where all is confusion as usual, Texas Chris- tian and Rice will try to break their first-place conference dead- lock before 25,000 at Fort Worth. These two, along with Baylor and Texas, still are in the run- ning for the title and a cotton Bowl berth against Kentucky. Baylor plays dangerous South- ern Methodist in Waco before 30,- 000, although the Southwest snarl won't be untangled until a week later. Texas plays Texas A&M next Thursday, while Baylor meets Rice and Texas Christian tackles S.M.U. Dec. 1. An Orange Bowl bid may go to one of the scrap- ping Southwest outfits. Powerful Princeton, the No. 5 club in the AP poll and tops in the East, can clinch a second straight Ivy League crown by taking Dart- mouth before 35,000 at Princeton. Tomorrow also is farewell to 1951's regular campaign for Stanford, No. 3; Illinois, No. 6; Wisconsin, No. 8; and Kentucky, No. 9. Sailors Seek A ngstenCup Michigan's all-weather Sailing Club will climax a hectic year of nautical activity this coming week- end when it competes for the cov- eted Timme Angsten Memorial Trophy at the Northwestern Fall Invitational Regatta on Lake Michigan in Chicago. Sixteen colleges will race for the trophy, presented in memory of one of the Midwest's most promin- ent collegiate sailing enthusiasts. AMONG THEM will be Purdue, Ohio State, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Wisconsin, DePauw, Tufts and Georgetown. Racing skippers and their crews will use ten foot "dyer- dees" to navigate icy Lake Mich- igan and its tricky winds. Last year only ten out of a scheduled 34 races were able to be held as a result of the furious gales. With a successfuis Aasonnof r - EVANSTON, Ill.-Illinois' roar- ing Rose Bowl express hits its final curve today against a jinx bear- ing Northwestern squad in a tense Big Ten final. A crowd of 54,000 will fill Dyche Stadium to see the nation's sixth ranked team try to produce its first victory over a Bob Voigt coached Northwestern team. * * * THE UNBEATEN but once tied Illini, rule a two-touchdown fa- vorite over the Wildcats, who de- railed a similar California bound special last season. Seeking their fifth victory in a row over Illinois, the Wildcats hope to repeat their knockout victory of last season which spilled the Illini from the Big Ten drivers seat and tumbled I them to third in the Conference standings. If Northwestern repeats, the rose scented crown would go to either Wisconsin or Purdue. A tie would still give Illinois the crown. AT BLOOMINGTON Purdue will go after a possible Western Con- ference football championship at Indiana today with no more-and no less-enthusiasm than it car- ried into their 1950 game for the Big Ten cellar. Northwestern must defeat Ill- nois to make the Purdue-Indiana scrap anything but another tra- ditional contest for the Old Big Ten1 St irngs Oaken Bucket. But the pail that Morgan the Raider maybe drank out of always is enough incentive for the intrastate rivals to knock themselves out. Purdue won in a blizzard at La- fayette last year, 13-0, with John Durham running back the opening kickoff 84 yards for a touchdown. THE 54TH meeting of the teams is pretty much of a toss up in spite of a 4-4 Purdue record com- pared with Indiana's 2-6. Indiana has played a tougher schedule and reached its peak last week by matching Michigan State's four! touchdowns in a 30-26 defeat. At Minneapolis Minnesota and Wisconsin wind up their 1951 Big Ten seasons today in the 61st renewal of their football rivalry, with the Badgers still in the running for the champion- ship and the Rose Bowl. Wisconsin-rated eighth in the nation in the Associated Press poll -is heavily favored to win. The Badgers can take the title only if they win and Illinois loses, and Purdue either loses or ties. WISCONSIN tops the Big Ten in both offense and defense. Its defensive platoon has held its op- ponents to an average of less than 150 yards per game. However, on the other side of the picture is Minnesota's record of averaging some 300 yards per game against all opponents. At East Lansing, Colorado comes winging out of the west ready to give Michigan State its make or break football battle today. A win -in the last game would probably make the Spartans num- ber one team in the country. A loss would break a 14-game win- ning streak dating back to the Maryland game early last year. Colorado has won seven out of nine so far this season. The Buf- faloes are trying to build up into a football power. An upset would convince the country they have arrived. I 1 t t 1 1 1 7 1 f 1, Illinois ...... Wisconsin ... Purdue.. MICHIGAN.. Ohio State... Northwestern Minnesota ... Indiana.. Iowa......... A4 4 4 3 1 a L 0 1 2 1 3 3 t T 1 1 0 0 0 0 Pct. .900 .750 .750 .600 .600.. .400 .300 .200 .091 PF 82 128 95 108 66. 41 83 60 91 OP 23 34 88 54 59 86 123 86 196 f .J Cards Giee iflarion Gate As Manager ST. LOUIS-(P)-Marty Marion, Mr. Shortstop of another year, was eased out as a manager of the St. Louis Cardinals in a surprise move yesterday. Owner Fred Saigh wouldn't say why the rookie manager was giv- en the gate but it generally was believed Saigh felt Marion lacked aggressiveness, despite the club's third place finish last season. SAIGH INSISTED he had no one in mind for the job. Immediate speculation on his no. 1 choice for the job pointed at Eddie Stanky, the New York Giant's fiery secondj baseman.I Previous statements by Saigh and Marionsindicated that their conference today was merely to settle the question of whether Marion's contract would be re- newed for one or two years. The unexpected announcement was made by Saigh after he had talked with Marion for an hour. "WE ARE NOT renewing Mr. Marion's contract as manager of the Cardinals," he said. "No com- ment on reasons. We have no suc- cessor in mind." The 33-year-old Marion, one of the game's best shortstops, until he was sidelined by an ail- ing knee before the start of the 1951 season, said it "came as a complete surprise to me." Saigh told him, he said, that he "did not think I'm the man for the job." Marion said he would like to re- sume his career as a player-but only if he can regain the form that won him the title of "Mr. Short- stop" in his 11 years in that posi- tion with the Redbirds. Asked if he were interested in Stanky for the manager's job, Saigh replied "I cannot be inter- ested in Stanky because he is the property of the New York Giants." Under the rules of baseball, club representatives cannot tam- per with players on other teams without permission of their own- ers. FRED PICKARD .. aggressive end By IVAN KAYE Time honored gridiron enemies Michigan and Ohio State clash today for the forty-eighth time in their colorful fifty-four year ri- valry. The Wolverines have won thir- ty-one and tied four in the series which began back in 1897 with a' 36-0 Michigan victory. OHIO STATE had to wait twen- ty-two years and fourteen games before their 1919 outfit turned in a 13-3 victory over the Maize and Blue. That was the Buckeye team led by All American Chic Harley' and quarterbacked by Howard Yerges Sr. A pair of blocked kicks in 1920 and a recovered fumble in 1921 spelled two victories for Ohio and brought criticism of Field- ing Yost by a few disgruntled Michigan alumni. This was in spite of the fact that Ohio was the only one to beat the Wol- verines in those otherwise good seasons. In general Yost was encour- aged by the alumni and he and the team showed their apprecia- tion by spoiling the dedication of the great Ohio Stadium in 1922 with a resounding 19-0 conquest of the Buckeyes. Harry Kipke paced Government Views TV Bans Illegal in Kentucky Grid Case TODAY'S GAMES, Ohio State at Michigan Illinois at Northwestern Wisconsin at Minnesota Purdue at Indiana LOUISVILLE, Ky. - 5) - The Department of Justice tossed a bombshell into the college foot- ball-television situation last night when it made clear it considered illegall the restriction of tlecasts of big time games. The explosive situation came to a head as the result of Kentucky Governor Lawrence W. Wetherby's wire to Attorney General McGrath asking to permit a telecast of to- day's big Tennessee - Kentucky game at Lexington. T H E NATIONAL Collegiate Athletic Association previously re- jected a request to permit a tele- cast of the game despite pressure from public officials.' The NCAA set up a controlled one year program last Septem- ber to test the effects of televi- sion on football attendance. A total of 19 games were listed on the victors with two touchdowns and a thirty-four yard fieldgoal. * * THE 1926 SPECTACLE, played at Columbus before a roaring crowd of 95,000, stands as one of the most exciting games in football history. It brought together the'' Michigan team of Friedman and Oosterbaan and an unbeaten Buckeye squad which boasted a great line-plunger in Marty Karow. It was a wild battle from the opening gun as the Bucks grab- bed a 10-0 lead; but the Yost- men came tearing down the field in the waning moments of the first half and Bennie Ooster- baan crossed the goal with a pass from Friedman to make it 10-7. Seconds later Michigan recovered an Ohio fumble on the forty and as the gun sounded Friedman powered a tremen- dous fieldgoal over the bar to knot the score at halftime. Early in the final quarter Fried- man contacted Oosterbaan in the end zone to put Michigan out in front 17-10. With only a few min- utes left, Karow led the spirited Bucks on a brilliant seventy-nine yard scoring march, ripping the Michigan forward wall to shreds in the process. Now only the con- version separated the two teams. a schedule starting Sept. 29 and running through Nov. 24. * 5, 5 INFORMED THAT the NCAA TV committss had unanimously ruled against any telecast, the Kentucky Board of Trustees said it would have to go along with the NCAA because it is a member and because it agreed to the original blackout plan. Newell A. Clapp, acting chief, of the anti-trust division of the Department of Justice, advised Gov. Wetherby to note the anti- trust suit filed Oct. 9 against the professional National Football League for similar broadcasting restrictions. Clapp indicated that similar ac- tion will be taken against collegi- ate groups if the department wins the Philadelphia suit. Clapp hopes a decision wil lhe rendered in that case within the near future. RUSS OSTERMAN .. deadly on defense 21-7. "Fritz" Crisler's Wolverin got revenge in 1943 with a 45- mauling of the Ohioans. In 1946 a Michigan squad whit was one year away from greatne went down to Columbus ar slaughtered Ohio State, 58-6 i one of the worst beatings ev administered to a major gridiro power. Last year, with a championsh riding on the outcome, the Main and Blue paced by Carl Kraeger sure-handed passing from cents and Chuck Ortman's brilliai punting, forged a historic 9-3 ui set victory. MYERS CLARK, who had kick ed a fieldgoal earlier, stood ami the thundering cheers, and as th second hand entered its final rei lution, swung his leg into the ba In the gathering dusk he bare. lifted it off the ground. A secon later the game was history. Mieh igan 17, Ohio 16. The Buckeye were beatep, and a great Michiga squad ruled the Western Confer ence. Another battle of unbeaten teams took place here in Ann Arbor in 1933 with the Wolver ines emerging a 13-0 winner Once again the outcome decided the conference championship. Tom Harmon and company bur ied the Buckeyes 40-0 in 1940 an forced the resignation of tlie Oh: coach, Francis Schmidt. The ne: season brought Paul Brown c Massilon fame to the helm at Cc lumbus. Brown succeeding in hol ing Michigan to a 20-20 tie i 1941, and the following season h team beat the Maize and Blu * * * TELLTALE TOTALS: Statistics reveal Wolverines Weakest Against Passing Foe By ERIC VETTER Season statistics often turn up revealing and unusual facts and Michigan's totals this year prove no exception. Due to the Wolverine's mid-sea- son surge against Indiana, Iowa, and Minnesota, they have out- scored their opponents on an over- all basis 128-123. In the three games mentioned the Michigan gridders piled up 108 points to 41 for their opponents. MICHIGAN STATE'S 25-0 win is the most lopsided defeat Mich- igaA has suffered, while the other four reverses have come on mar- gins of thirteen points or less. In- cluded are shutouts by Illinois and Northwestern. Only in pass interceptions and yards penalized do the Wolver- ines hold a statistical edge over their opponents. Despite Northwestern's five in- terceptions on Saturday, Michigan holds a 17-15 overall edge in this department. As for penalties, the Wolverines have had 313 yards stepped off against them as com- pared to their opponents 380. MICHIGAN'S offense is primar- ily a running kind and this is born out inthe important first down totals. Here the Maize and Blue have rushed for 74 of their 103 first downs compared with their opponents 78 first downs by rushing. The foes first downs by passing surpass Michigan, 44-25, however. In overall yards gained Mich- igan trails their opponents by 500 yards and is short of the total netted by the 1949-50 out- fits. This year Michigan has gained 1896 yards in eight games to com- pare with the 2461 yards the 1949, and the 2254 yards the 1950 teams made in nine games. THE GREATEST slump by a Wolverine department is in pass defense. Sixty-seven of the enemy aerials have dropped into intend- ed receivers hands for a .475 com- pletion percentage which is the largest in several years. Michigan, on the other hand, has completed 45 passes for a .385 average. In other departments, Bill Billings and Don Peterson haveI a combined punting average of 33.2 yards as compared to the team average is 2.9 yards per try. Frank Howell is second in average rushing at 5.0 and is followed by Peterson who has a 4.2 average. Bradford is the second leading ground gainer with Bill Putich third. Putich heads the Wolverine passers with 316 yards gained on his heaves. Peterson follows with 185 yards but leads the completion averages with a .545 percentage. Putich follows with a .393 average, the same as the team average. Lowell Perry leads the receivers with 15 catches good for 383 yards. Fred Pickard is next with 200 yards on 9 receptions. U TOBOGOANS SKATES .. 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