SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Texas . Purdue * . . . . . 14Illinois . . . . .. 0If UC L A . : . . . . . . . 27 Washington ... 20 Wisconsin . 13 Minnesota .,... 20 Marquette ....22ilowa . . . . 6Iansas . . . . . . . State#. 16 Olhio State . .. 0 S L . . . . .... 7 Notre Dam e ... 48 O Indiana...... 6 FootbI Scor PAGE SEVEN aal1 es * * *> * * *, Mun Happy YPPJ a , With Team0's P. erform~ran.e- . : . By GEORGE FLINT' Associate Sports Editorw Michigan State celebrated a Spartan victory indeed after yes- terday's 25-0 conquest of Michi- " gan.. Biggie Munn and his boys were a joyful but not boisterous crew in the MSC locker room while hordes' of well-wishers congratulated the victors. Footba ?- Not Nearly Enough! EAST *' * * *k * # * 4, (4. (Continued from Page 1) ,inds when he grabbed the third eriod kickoff on his own eight, :umbled the ball long enough to uck in the entire defending force, end then plummeted through the niddle and down the western side- ines 78 yards to the Michigan 14 Nhere he inadvertently stepped out >f bounds even though he was in ;he clear. * * * ' FOUR plays later, left halfback Don McAuliffe crashed through 'eft guard and over the double line to score after only a minute and 40 seconds had elapsed in the period. Carey converted the extra point, his only successful place kick of the day, and the Spartans were on their way, 13-0. A few moments later Michigan received its biggest break when Y * * MUNN, crunching a big red ap- ple between his teeth, was better- satisfied with his team's showing this week than last, when they squeezed out a 6-0 win over Ore- gon State. "I couldn't be prouder of my boys," he said. Munn singled out linebacker Roger Zatkoff of Michigan for special praise, and was pleased with his backs' showing. "We played conservative ball, particularly in the first half. After the balihandling last week, we couldn't take any chances on the tricky stuff," Munn said. OVER IN the Michigan locker room,ECoach Bennie Oosterbaan blamed lack of experience and in- ability to get a running game going for the Wolverines' four-touch- down defeat. "I think we learned a lot from that game," Oosterbaan said. "After Johnson (tackle Tom Johnson,. a three-year veteran) was hurt, we didn't have a single experienced man in our defensive S line. State had a fine bunch of running backs-the hard-driving type-and we just didn't have enough to stop them." * * * JOHNSON was all right after the game and will return to ac- tion next week. Oosterbaan was pleased with the defensive play of Zatkoff and his running mate, Ted Topor, at the line-backing spots. He also praised the play of Dave Tinkham, defensive halfback. For State, Vince Pisano and any one of the myriad runners Munn sent against the Wolverines looked good-too good-to the Michigan coach. * * * FOR MICHIGAN STATE, the victory as only a prelude to pro- jected bigger things. Next week MSC meets highly-regarded Ohio State. They were chanting: "Come on, Spartans, beat Ohio!" while Munn was doing his apple act. Firstl Yards Yards Passes Passes ,tPasses Punts Puntin Hoiy Cow!!r MSC C Downs.............21 Rushing.........249 Passing .......... 58 2 Attempted!. . 11 1 Completed,... 4 6 Intercepted .... 1 ................. 3 ng Average ...... 39 MICHA 4 13 11 33 -Daily-Roger Reinke MSC'S SENSATIONAL SOPHOMORE BACK, JIMMY ELLIS, IS SHOWN ABOUT TO BE TACKLED BY PETERSON AND OSTERMAN Buckeyes Thwart SM U on PVass, 7-0 SOUTH BEND. Ind )- - A brand-new Notre Dame football jugger-naut, powered by a four touchdown scoring sophomore full- back and unveiling a surprising "I" formation, smashed bewildered In- diana, 48-6, in the seasonopener for both yesterday. A Notre Dame Stadium throng of 55,790 was electrified by a five- touchdown Irish second quarter in which Neil Worden, 187-pound fullback from Milwaukee, Wis., scored four times on bull-like rushes. THE GAME, for all intents and purposes, was over at halftime, when Notre Dame held a 42-0 lead after preceding its second period ;xplosion with a first quarter touchdown. The "green kids" over which coach Frank Leahy had mourned so abjectly were a band of fur- ious "fighting Irish," reminiscent of Notre Dame's post-war pow- erhouses. The jubilant Irish carried Leahy off the field on their shoulders after the game. NOTRE DAME displayed the novel "I" formation-a lineup of all four backs perpendicular to the line-only three times. But the first time it resulted in a 40-yard pass from quarterback Johnny Ma- zur to end Jim Mutscheller that set up a four-yard smash by vet- eran back Billy Barrett for Notre Dame's first touchdown. laughter Indiana, 48-6 Menil Mavrades, soph end, con- Bob Joslin, a sophomore end play- verted after six of Notre Dame's ing his first game. Janowicz added seven touchdowns, the last com- the extra point. ing in the final period on a one- * yard thrust by veteran Del Gander. WASH. 25, MINN. 20 * * * MINNEAPOLIS--(P-Washing- OSU 7, SMU 0 ton's huskies, sparked by the run- COLUMBUS, O.- (P) - Ohio ning of Hugh McElhenny and the! State's Buckeyes, picked to finish bullet passing of Sam Mitchell, third in the national collegiate barely squeezed out a 25-20 foot- football scramble, received the ball victory yesterday over a Min- scare of their lives yesterday as nesota team that surprised even they opened with a 7-0 victory its most ardent backers. over the Mustangs of Southern Rated as underdogs by from one Methodist. to four touchdowns before the The talent-laden Ohioans struck game, Minnesota caught fir late for a touchdown in the second in the second period. They tallied period on a 21-yard pass, and then once in that period and sustained fought with their backs to the wall their punch to score in the third most of the remainder of the game, and fourth periods and go into the as tall Fred Benners, who wrecked lead with a 20-18 score. the Bucks a year ago, completed * * 21 of 29 passes for 211 yards but FOR A WHILE, the crowd of no score. 50,634 that jammed Memorial Sta- * . . dium had visions of head coach A CROWD of 80,735, biggest Wes Fesler's first Minnesota team opening day throng in Ohio his- snatching a victory. out of what tory, witnessed the contest in had appeared earlier to be a cer- which Wayne Woody Hayes of tain defeat. Ohio made his debut as a big time But Washington came back coach. after recovering a Minnesota fumble in midfield with less than The Ohio scoring play was a 3 minutes left. The Huskies ad- sensational one. The Bucks vanced the ball to the Gopher 17. picked up the ball on a payy in- Then Dean Rockey tossed a 20- terception on their own 32 yard heave to McElhenny, who yard line and, aided by a rough- took it on the Minnesota ten- ness penalty, moved in six plays yard line and ran across the goal to the Mustang 21. standing up. Dean Chambers All America Vic Janowicz tossed ran to his left after taking a an incomplete pass, but on the lateral to convert. next play quarterback Tony Cur- Virtually all of Washington's cillo, operating from the T, sent scoring punch was concentrated his three other backs winging to in McElhenny. In all, he scored the left while he cut far out to the three of the Huskies' four touch- right without protection, and toss- downs, one on a sparkling 56- ed an aerial into the end zone to yard gallop diagonally across the field that saw him wind up just inches ahead of a pursuing Gopher. * * * TEXAS 14, PURDUE 0 LAFAYETTE, Ind. - (P) - The Texas Longhorns ground out two first half touchdowns on straight power plays for a 14-0 victory yes- terday over a Purdue team that couldn't get Paul Williams and Jack Barton out of its way. Williams, 205 pounds of spring- legged end, pounced on three Pur- due fumbles. Center Barton was a stone post in the road of Purdue's second half drive which piled up heavy yardage too far from the. goal line. . * * * HALFBACK Gib Dawson scored both Texas touchdowns and con- verted both extra points. Three or four yards at a crack was the Texas piece in its first half offensive and it was good enough. Without picking' up an inch in the air, the Texans' went 34 yards in eight plays for the first score.' Dawson curved five yards around his own right end for the touch- down. Texas jabbed 31 yards in 10 plays for the second score. Dawson crossed the goal line un- touched, from the Purdue 3. ILLINOIS 27, UCLA 13 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-(P)-Illinois unleashed a whirlwind attack fea- turing Johnny Karras, Bill Tate and Don Stevens yesterday that swept aside UCLA 27 to 13. The game was viewed by 53,256 cheering fans-the largest crowd ever to see an Illini home football opener. THE RUNNING of this tornado- like trio of backs combined with passing by sophomore Tom O'Con- nell and senior Don Engle kept the Illini ahead from the start and more than compensated for weak- ness in the defensive line. What defense Illinois could muster came from the bruising line-backing of Chuck Boerio, Elie Popa and Herb Neathery, a pars-stealing demon, Karras, the 170-pound halfback who is bidding for All-America honors, scored three times, " twice on one yard plunges and again on an 11-yard stampede. Stevens, the 170-pound twin terror at half, rketed 58 yards for the other Illini touchdown in the longest and most sensational gain of hte game. VILLANOVA 21, ARMY 7 WEST POINT, N.Y.-(IP)-Villa- nova, belted around regularly by Army football teams ever since 1908, took its revenge yesterday on the Cadet's shattered forces, grinding out a 21 to 7 victory as Ben Addiego, a fireplug halfback from West Mont, N.J., went across for three touchdowns. Playing their first game since the cribbing scandal of early Aug- ust robbed them of all but two of last year's letter men, the Cadet youngsters acquitted themselves well and lived up to every West Point tradition for fighting, but they simply were no match for the big, rugged Wildcat team which outweighed them some 30 pounds to the'man. The defeat marked Army's first loss of an opening game since 1893, when it bowed to the New York volunteers. F Yards Penalized.......85 27 linebacker Roger Zatkoff inter- cepted a Dorow aerial intended for wingback Vince Pisano and ran it back to the Michigan State 25 for a first down at that point. Right halfback Frank Howell ripped of f left tackle to the 21 and Don Oldham contributed five more around the right side. Fullback Tom Witherspoon then picked up one of Michigan's four first downs on a spinner into the center of the line which perched the ball on State's 14. HOWELL BEGAN another se- quence with a four yard gain off left tackle and Oldham carried to the eight. After a double handoff Howell took a pitchout but was hauled down by Dick Kuh and Don Dohoney on the seven. On fourth down Oldham grabbedraneven wider lateral but Kuh and center Bill Hughes nailed him for a yard loss and tl'e Spartans took over. They immediately put on an- other sustained drive which cov- ered the distance in a dozen thrusts at the line, highlighted by' a 15 yard end run by Dorow, a 19 yard pass play to McAuliffe which gave State a first down on the Wolverine 45, and a lateral to full- back Wayne Benson who crashed over the middle at the 38, cut to his right down the sideline and was finally shoved out of bounds on the two by safety man Lowell Perry. LEROY BOLDEN, a freshman tailback, hurtled into the end zone and the Spartans widened the gap to 19-0. Pisano hung up State's fourth and final touchdown in the last period on a quick-opener from the two yard line. The play culminated a march which began on the Michigan 46 where Bill Billings' punt had wobbled weakly out of bounds. , Carey missed a third time with his place kick attempt and that held the final score to 25. He also missed fire on a 17 yard angle field goal attempt in the second quarter. The Spartans swarmed over any Michigan player who tried to get a forward pass away safely. Wol- verines Bill Putich, Don Oldham and Don Eaddy were able to throw only 13 times with six completions, most of them behind the line of scrimmage. * * * A NET PASSING gain of 29 yards just barely overcame the rushing deficit and averted a mi- nus total offense for the tarnished Western Conference Champs. Zatkoff was a standout on de- fense for Michigan despite his team's futility. LINEUPS MIC H STATE ....P.....MICHIGAN R. Carey ........LE...........Perry Coleman........LT........Johnson Garner........LG..........Wolter R. Tamburo .....C. O'Shaughnessy Kapral ..........RG.........Kinyon McFadden......RT..........Stribe W. Carey ....... RE. ..Pickard Dorowr......EQB.........Putich McAuliffe .......LH........Oldham Pisano.........RH....... ..Howell Benson .'......FB........ Peterson Score by quarters: Michigan ..........0 , . 0 Q - 0 Michigan State ... 0 6 13 6-.5 Substitutes: MICHIGAN - ends- Green, Stanford, Ray, Schlicht, Os- terman, Dingman; tackles-Bartholo- mew, Bennett, Pederson, Walker; Ba- log; guards-Timm, Beison, Dugger; center-Zatkoff; backs-Bilings, To- por, Tinkham, Witherspoon, Eaddie, Bradford, LeClair, Rescorla. STATE -ends-Luke, Dekker, Dohoney; tackles-Klein, Horrell; guards - ,ush, Kuh, Serr; centers-Creamer, Hughes; backs-Bolden, Yewcic, Cor- less, Ellis, Vogt, Duckett, Timmer- man, Panin, Slonac. Duke 19, Pitt 14 Villanova 21, Army 7 Ya.le 7. Navy 7 (tie) Fordliam 14, Dartmouth 6i Cornell 21, Syracuse 14 California 35. Penn 0 Springfield (Mass.) 28, Cortland State Teachers 12 New Hampshire 33, Brandeis 20 Princeton 54, New York University 20 Trinity 27, Dickinson 7 Temple 20, Brown 14 Rutgers 47, LaFayette 12 Massachusetts 2I, Bates 7 Amherst 20, Colby 13 Penn State 40, Boston University 34 Wesleyan 28, Middlebury 6 Trenton Teachers 20. Kings (Pa.) 7 .Holy Cross 33.Harvard 6 Bowdoin 47, Tufts 7 . Coast Guard 20, Norwich 6 Lehigh 20, Williams 6 Indiantown Gap Military 12, Lebanon Valley 7 St. Michaelrs 41, Vermont 7 West Virginia State 33, Howard 7 East Carolina 7, Norfolk Naval Air 6 Xavier 7, Camp Lejeune 7 (tie) Tuskiegee 7, Fisk 0 Maine 12. Rhode Island Q Alfred 27, Rensselaer 13 Bridgeport 7, Connecticut Tchrs 7 (tie) New Raven Tehrs 40, Montreal Loy- ola 0 Final Thiel 46, Hiram 0 Westminster 38, Junita 13 Connecticut 27, Delaware 14 St. Lawrence 48, Union 6 East Stroudsburg (Pa.) Tchrs, 20, Mil- lersville Tchrs 19 Bridgeport University 7, Connectivut Tchrs 7 (tie) Worcester Polytech 46, Massachusetts Maritime 6 Western Maryland 13, Gettysburg 6 Alfred 27, Rensselaer 13 MIDWEST Ohio Wesleyan 20, Otterbein 0 Northwestern 35, Colorado 4 Monmouth 13, North Central 0 Cincinnati 47, Tulsa 35 Mianil (O.) Bowling Green 7 Great Lakes 20, Camp Breekinridge (Ky.) 0 Lake Forest 35, Illinois College 13 Illinois State Normal 20, Southern II- linois U. 0 Lawrence (Wis.) 35, Grinnell (Ia.) 0 Buena Vista (Ia.) 46, Upper Iowa 6 Depauw 14, Hanover 7 Taylor 12, Anderson 0 Butler 7, Western Reserve 6 Indiana Central 6, Franklin 0 Manchester 13, Earlham 6 Wabash 34, Ball State 19 Missouri 27, Oklahoma A. and M. 26 Kansas 53, Iowa State 33 Ohio University 40, Akros 7 Wooster 25, Ohio Northern 13 Wilmington 35, Capital 14 SOUTH Tennessee 14, Mississippi State 0 Georgia 28, North Carolina 16 Davidson 32, Virginia Tech 20 Maryland 54, Washington and Lee 14 Virginia 20, George Washihxgton 0 Louisiana State 13, Alabama 7 Mississippi 21, Kentucky 17 Tulane 21, Miami (Fla.) 7 Oklahoma 49, William & Mary 7 Auburn 24, Vanderbilt 14 Xavier 7, Camp Lejeune 7 (tie) FAR WEST Wyoming 20, Denver 14 Oregon State 61, Utah 2$ Oregon 39, Arizona 21 San Francisco 28, Idaho 7 Camp Pendleton Marines 27, Sauth- ern California 17 (first game of double-header) SOUTHWEST Arkansas 30, Arizona State 13 WELCOME STUDENTS' Try a Collegiate, Personality Hair Style . . . 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