THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1951 T HE MiCHIGAN D AiLY PAGE THREE Thomson Leads Giants to First Pennant Since '37 BIG CITY AFFAIR: Giant Rooters Run Wild After Victors 'Get Bums' Gridders Stress Offense As 'M' Awaits Stanford I-M Gridiron New Yorkers Explode in Ninth Inning Champions To Win Playoff Series from Dodgers 4 (Continued from Page 1) j the Giants won the National ;League title 15 times previous to this year In the World Series, the Yan- kees have won 13 times and lost only four. The Giants have won four World Series and lost eight, three of their National League championships coming when no series were played. The Giants and the Yankees have met five times before in the World Series, and the Yankees hold the edge, three to two. The last encounter was in 1937, when the Yankees under Manager Joe McCarthy won, four games to one. Bill Terry managed the Giants. THIS IS the first World Series to be televised on a network that stretches from coast to coast, and the television and radio fees amount to $1,000,000. Tlils series will draw the rich- est gate receipts ever, for each park is the biggest in its league. When the same two teams last met in the series in 1937, ticket prices were modest compared to the 1951 scale. * , * NEW YORK-(IP)-Whooping, . hollering Giant fans overran the Big Town last night celebrating a baseball victory that wrung the ' heart out of the Brooklyn Dodgers and spread desolation from Flat- bush to the Gowanus Canal. The joy of the Giant rooters was something to behold. And, some- 4 how, their jubilance caught on w'ith even the most sedate non- partisans. WITHOUT EVEN a struggle New Yorkers surrendered to the baseball madness. It was not the same old stuff of the Yankees winning, as they have done in the American League three years straight. This was a National League pen- nant for the Giants, their first since 1937. As the excitement spread dur- ing the day, business almost came to stop except in those cases with television sets. CARLOADS of young Giant fans roamed Manhattan last night carrying signs: "Mass suicides in Brooklyn.' Brooklyn, the home of 3,000,- 000 die-hard Dodgerites, was a picture of despair. In bars, on the streets and in many thousands of homes there were moans and wringing of hands. And the plaintive cry: "What in Heaven's name did they put Branca in for? Thomson always blasts him." * * * SOMEBODY grabbed Durocher around the :shoulder and yelled that he did a great job of master minding tin the ninth inning. "I sure did," said Durocher jokingly. "It didn't take much master minding to get those hits that set it. up for Bobby." . Asked if he had said anything on the bench before the start of the Giants' ninth, Durocher re- plied: "I TOLD THE boys we had three big outs left. You haven't given up all year so don't give up now. Let's get some runs. And the reply, al- most 'in a chorus was, 'We'll get the Bums'."' "I knew I fit the ball hard but it started sinking very fast," said Thomson of this 32nd hom- er. "But when I saw it go into the stands I don't think I touched the ground a single time the remain- der of the way. I just floated around. It was that kind of a feeling." * * * DUROCHER PAUSED long enough to discuss the World Series, almost forgotten in the furore of the pennant fight. "Well," he said, "the Yankees never lose. You've got to work real hard to beat them. But I've got a good club and we'll battle them. I'm pitching Koslo tomor- row." Leo was forced to change his pitching plans when Larry Jensen * * * Michigan's impotent offensive team of last Saturday ran, through a long scrimmage yes- terday afternoon in an effort to give Stanford a more vigorous welcome than was accorded the Spartans. The Wolverines, who were able to net only six yards forward in the Michigan State clash, got their offensive rolling several times against the reserves yester- day at Ferry Field in the long three-hour session which also in- cluded some defensive practice. THE RUNNING attack func- tioned quite smoothly as the var- sity moved up and down the field against the reserves. Frank How-i ell looked very good on his car- ries of the pigskin, picking up several long gains in yesterday's practice. Wes Bradford saw consider- able action in the scrimmage and got off a number of long runs against the deserves, as did Bill Putich, who was used prin- cipally at the left halfback spot. With Putich at the tailback spot, Coach Bennie Oosterbaan employed Ted Topor, linebacker on defense, at quarter for the most part. Topor gives the Wol- verines a strong blocker at quar- terback, a necessary item in the single-wing system. li nsiaml Wins Senior Loop Batting Crownr NEW YORK-()-The batting averages of members of the New York Giants and Brooklyn Dodg- ers among the league's top ten hitters underwent slight changes during the three games playoff series between the two clubs for the National teague pennant. Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals finished the regular sea- son Sunday with the batting championship. Musial picked up his fifth crown with a .355 mark. Richie Ashburn of Philadelphia came in second with a .344 aver- age. * * BROOKLYN'S Jackie Robinson owned a .335 record after Sunday's games and tacked on three points during the playoffs to wind up with a .338 figure. Roy Campanella of Brooklyn lost two points during the play- offs and wound up fourth with a .325 average. Monte Irvin of the Giants slipped from .313 to .312 and finished fifth. Johnny Wyrostek of Cincinnati wound up sixth with .311 and Ralph Kiner of Pittsburgh, seventh with .309. Al Dark of the Giants lost three points du-ing the series and came home eighth with a .303 record. Carl Furillo of Brooklyn failed to get a hit during the series and his average dropped from .301 to .295. Defeat SAM DON PETERSON and Tom Witherspoon alternated at the fullback post in yesterday's drill. From this week's practices it looked like Coach Oosterbaan would use a backfield of Topor at quarter, Putich at left half, How- ell at tailback, and either Peter- son or Witherspoon at full in his opening offensive backfieldj against Stanford. Lowell Perry, injured end, was in uniform yesterday, but left practice before the scrimmage started to have his back treated. Bob Dingman played at Perry's left end position yesterday and may get the starting assign- ment if Perry has not recovered. Gene Knutson and freshman Leo Schlicht who both saw serv- ice at left end in the scrimmage, are also in the running for the offensive end position.- The passing did not look as im- pressive as the running attack as the reserves rushed through to down Putich on a number of his passing attempts. Several short passes did net yardage in the scrimmage, however. The defensive portion of the practice was devoted to halting the expected Stanford thrusts through the Michigan line and the passing of the visitors' T-for- mation quarterback Gary Ker- korian. Iowa, MSC On Defense NEW YORK -- () - iowa's Hawkeyes and Michigan State's Spartans share defensive honors in college football this weekend. On the basis of its one game with Kansas State, Iowa tops the nation's major college elevens with a defensive mark of 68. That's the total amount K-State was able to gain on Iowa last week. Iowa held K-State to 21 yards on the ground and 47 in the air. FOR TEAMS which have played two or more games, Michigan State is the leader. The high-fly- ing Spartans have yielded an av- erage of only 106.5 yards per game in tilts with Oregon State and Michigan. The Spartans' defense against once-mighty, Michigan was re- markable. They tossed the Wol- verines around for a minus 23 yards rushing. Michigan picked up a skimpy 29 yards on passes for a total gain of six yards. On total defense, figured on av- erage yardage per game, Tulane was second to Iowa with 78 yards made against the Green Wave. Holy Cross was third with 95 fol- lowed by Michigan State, 106.5. Figures are compiled by the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Bureau, statistical agency of the NCAA. Delta Sigs Tally Initial Win, 14-0 By DICK LEWIS Sparked by the running and passing of Milt Heath, Delta Sig- ma Phi, defending intramural fraternity football champions, fought to a 14-0 victory over Sig- ma Alpha Mu yesterday, in their initial test of the new campaign. Heath scampered around end for five yards and the first Delta Sig tally, and then tossed a 25- yard pass to Carl Bryant for the second TD. Bob Moore added a safety to round out the scoring. RUBBER-ARMED Jerry Davis connected for four touchdowns and fifteen out of seventeen pass completions to lead Sigma Chi to a one-sided 32-0 triumph over Chi Psi.' Davis hit Bill Ammerman, Paul Fancher, Jim Young and Dick Demmer for 30, 40, 5 and 10 yards respectively. Fancher passed 20 yards to Ammerman for a fifth touchdown. Phi Kappa Psi used a fake reverse play twice to pass Theta Chi into 13-7 submission. Davey Settle threw 40 yards to Karl Krueger and also found Bud Jones with a 50-yard aerial. Janj Moeller tallied for the losers. Bob Hastings ran for two counters and passed for another two to account for a 27-0 Delta Chi win against Sigma Pi. Fred Roneker was on the receiving end; of the two Hastings' TD tosses. : * PHI DELTA THETA'S Gil Sa- buco found the mark with nine out of thirteen passes, good for three touchdowns, to down Beta Theta Pi 18-0. Mike Papista hutng All soccer players interested in playing on a team of Ameri- cans in the International Soccer League, please contact Bob Ely at 2-0805. --Rod Grambeau on to two 15-yard throws for 12 points, while Dave Krupp gath- ered in a 25-yard toss for the other six. The offensive-defensive combi- nation of Lee Krumbholz and Herb Spence led to a 19-6 Chi Phi win over Kappa Sigma. Spence made a spectacular catch of a 20- yard Krumbholz aerial, which was followed by two pay dirt intercep- tions by Krumbholz. In other contests, Swede Lauri- tsen and Lyle Lapine collabora- ted for a 29-0 SAE conquering of Phi Kappa Sigma; Jerry Rovner completed ten out of ten, passed for two Pi Lambda Phi touch- downs, and ran for another, to turn back Trigon 27-0; and the arm of Moe Katz featured a 20-.0 Tau Delta Phi score oveI TKE. NEW STYLES FIRST N ATW ,LD'S NEW YORK-(')In a heart- stabbing finish, Bobby Thomp- son slammed a three-run homer with two mates aboard in the ninth inning to give the New York Giantsa 5 to 4 victory over Brook- lyn in the deciding game of their playoff for the National League pennant yesterday. The tremendous blow, one of the most valuable ever struck, came with one down in the final * * * GOING INTO the ninth, big Don Newcombe had shackled the Giants with four hits and poured his fast ones across with what looked like increasing effective- ness. Then Alvin Dark, shortstop and field captain of the new 1 e a g u e champions, rapped a scratch single. Then Don Mueller followed with a solid shot to left which cent Dark scampering around to third. Monte Irvin, the Giants' most dangerous slugger, lifted a pop foul to Hodges. That brought up the left-swing- ing Lockman, and he smashed a hard double off the left field bar- ricade to bring Dark home and put the tying runs on the sacks, ,* * * THOMSON PREVIOUSLY had collected two of the Giants' four blows off Newcombe, one of them * * * had not been alert on a grounder by Andy Pafko to let a run in and help keep the rally alive. In other words, Bobby had something to make up for when he strode up there and looked Branca in the eye. He let the first one, a strike, go by. On the next he swung from his boot tops, and from the crack of the bat there was never a doubt that the game was over and that the Giants had won their first flag since 1937. The ball disappeared almost on a line into the stands above the 315-foot mark. * * Brooknly Furillo, rf Reese, ss Snider, cf Robinson, b Pafko, if Hodges, lb Cox, 3b Walker, c Newcombe, p Branca, p TOTALS New York Stanky, 2b Dark, ss Mueller, rf C-Hartung Irvin, if Lockmnan, lb Thomson, 3b Hays, cf Westrum, c A-Rigney Noble, c Maglie, p B-Thompson Jansen, p TOTALS AB s 3 2 4 4 4 4 4 0 34 AB 4 3 4 El 3 4 3 0 1 0 1 30 * R 1 1 0 4 0 0 El 0 0 4 R 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 5 H" 0 1 s x 0 2 I. 0 0 z H 0 a I 0 I 2 3 0 0 8 A 0 X o 2 1 4 3 2 1 0 1 A 4 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 e 0 11 DAVE KOSLO- .. Durocher's choice * s0 was called to Maglie's relief in the4 ninth. TELECASTS of tne World Se- ries, opening today, will go to 57 stations in 52 cities with 85,000,000 of the nation's pobulation. Radio broadcasts will blaniket the nation from some 740 stations and be re- layed around the world by short wave. The television setup will carry over almost unchanged from that for the Dodgers-Giants playoff which provided a rous- ing semi-final for the main event. As on the last two games of the playoff, the telecasts will go over thefull 52-station coast- to-coast hookup of the National Broadcasting Co. Gillette and the Mutual network have put up $6,000,000 for TV rights to the series over a six-year span and $1,370,000 more for radio rights. All campus tennis singles en- tries close at 4 p.m. Friday, October 5, at the IM office. The first round will take place at 2 p.m. Sunday, October 7, at the Ferris Field tennis courts. RALPH BRANCA .:.two pitches * * chapter to electrify a crowd of 34,320 in the Polo Grounds which had been resigned to a Dodger victory only minutes before. FEW MADDER scenes ever have been seen that that put on by Manager Leo Durocher's men as the Flying Scot trotted around be- hind Clint Hartung and Whitey Lockmam after powdering the second pitch thrown by Ralph Branca, Dodger reliefer. The great blow climaxed the most spectacular pennant dash in the game and sent a club in- to the World Series which had been 13/ games out of first. place as recently as Aug. 11. Giants supporters will concede nothing to their series rivals, the Yankees, after what hap- pened today. Until Thompson teed off to send the crowd into hysteria, the Giants never had been aead in the gall game. They had tied the' count at 1-1 briefly toward the end, but the Dodgers rallied for three runs in the top of the eighth. tr BOB TIOMSON ...money player a double in the fifth. He had ap- peared in a fair way toward being the goat of the contest when, after singling in the second inning behind a hit by Lockman, he had torn on to second only to find Lockman standing there and had been tossed out. Also in Brooklyn's big eighth the speedster from Staten Island X-One out when winning run scored. A-Struck out for Westrum in 8th. B-Grounded out for Maglie in 8th. C-Ran for Mueller in 9th. BROOKLYN ...... 100 000 030-4 NEW YORK ........000 00. 104-5 E-None. RBI-Robinson, Thorn- son 4, Paf ko, Cox; Lockman, 2B- Thomoson, Irvin, Lockman.IR- Thomson. S-Lockman. DP-Cox, Robinson and Hodges; Reese, Robin- son and Hodges. Left-Brooklyn 7; New York 3. BS-Maglie 4 (Reese, Snidfer, Robinson 2);" Newcombe x (Westrum 2). SO-Maglie 6 (Furillo, Walker 2, Snider, Pafko, Reese); Newcombe 2 (Mays, Rigney). HQ- Maglie $ in 8 innings; Jansen 8 in 1; Newcombe 7 in 8 1/3; Branca 1 in 0 (pitched to one bater in nintbi. wP --Maglie. Winner-Jansen (23-11); Loser-Branca (13-12). 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