TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE SEVEN mTmmUmESDAY, DECEM BER 2, 1952 PAGE SEVEN~mahnimlmiimliili Michigan State Named AP National Champion NEW YORK - (MP) - Michigan State, victor in 24 straight games, took the No. 1 place in The As- sociated Press' final poll Monday to win the O'Donnell trophy, em- blem of the national collegiate football championship. The O'Donnell trophy was established in 1948 after Notre Dame had won its third cham- pionship. It is awarded yearly on the basis of the final Associ- ated Press Poll. Tennessee won it last year. The Michigan State Spartans won the honor for the first time this year in a walloping ballot in which 271 sports writers and broadcasters took part. PRE-SEASON favorites, they re- ceived 207 first place votes and a staggering total of 2,683 points, one of the largest ever accumulat- °.d in the poll. Points are awarded on the ba- sis of 10 for a first place vote, k- nine for second, etc. Georgia Tech, Sugar Bowl- bound and the only other major unbeaten team in the nation, took second place in the final standings with 2,249 points, followed by No- tre Dame, the upset king, with 1,809, and once beaten and once tied Oklahoma, with 1,685. * * * BIGGIE MUNN, Michigan State coach, received the news enthusi- astically in New York where he addressed a luncheon meeting of football writers, but he proved modest. "It's the first such honor for Michigan State," he said, "and I am thrilled. However, the honor really belongs to the play- ers and assistant coaches on my staff. The O'Donnell trophy is an honor we will cherish for- ever." Picked in a pre-season Associ- ated Press poll as the team most likely to succeed, the Spartans took charge the first week and held the No. 1 slot for nine of the 10 weeks of the campaign. * * * THEY were rooted out by Wis- consin the second week. But the following week they moved on top again and never were headed thereafter. A well manned squad which could throw in any one of three platoons without noticeably weak- ening its effort, Michigan State had only two tight squeaks. The Spartans barely beat Oregon State, 17-14, and Purdue, 14-7. In other games, they downed Michigan, Texas A & M, Syracuse, Penn State, Indiana, Notre Dame and Marquette. The 20 leaders with total points based on 10 for a first place vote, 9 for second, etc. First place votes and team won, lost and tied rec- ords in parentheses: 1. Michigan State 207 9-0 2,683 2. Georgia Tech 36 11-0 2,249 3. Notre Dame 4 7-2-1 1,809 4. Oklahoma 14 8-1-1 1,685 5. Southern Cal. 2 9-1 1,404 6.UC LA 1 8-1 983 7. Mississippi 3 8-0-2 950 8. Tennessee 8-1-1 781 9. Alabama 9-2 693 10.Texas 8-2 454 SECOND TEN: 11. Wisconsin 6-2-1 281 12. Tulsa 8-1-1 145 13. Maryland 7-2 87 14. Syracuse 7-2 56 15. Florida 6-3 55 16. Duke 8-2 48 17. Ohio State 6-3 46 18.Purdue 4-3-2 45 19. Princeton 44 20. Kentucky 5-3-2 41 -Daily-Don Campbell HIGH POINT MAN-Milt Mead, 6' 7" Wolverine forward, drives in for a shot during last night's 80-72 victory over Marquette. Mead was Michigan's leading scorer with 16 points. Hoernschmeyer Injures Rib; May Miss Game with Bears Kress Tops Wolverines On Offense Perry, Topor Pace 'l' Pass Receivers Tailback Ted Kress paced Mich- igan's football team in individual statistics according to figures re- leased yesterday by Sports Public- ity Director Les Etter. The wiry Detroit junior rushed for 623 yards and passed for 559 more to set a first year record at 1182 yards. This performance sur- passed the first year totals of Tom Harmon and Bob Chappuis, Mich- igan's All America tailbacks of re- cent years. * * * FRESHMAN WINGBACK Tony Branoff was second to Kress in rushing with 342 yards on 86 trips with the leather. Frankie Howell's 4.8 yards per try was high in that department. Howell gained 223 yards in 46 attempts. The Teds, Topor and Kress, accounted for most of the var- sity's passing yardage. Topor had 33 completions in 58 tries good for 441 yards and two touchdowns. Duncan McDonald completed seven out of 17 for 90 yards and two scores. Topor was on the receiving end of 18 passes good for 208 yards and four touchdowns. Lowell Perry, the Wolverines' brilliant end, was the top pass catcher with 31 re- ceptions for 492 yards and five touchdowns. Tad Stanford caught 12 for 200 yards and Tony Bran- off grabbed 10 for 138 yards as Michigan passers threw to various receivers. * * * KRESS AND TOPOR, with six touchdowns apiece, led the scoring parade, with Perry only one tally behind on the strength of the five scoring catches. Bill Billings finished the sea- son with a respectable 36.7 av- erage on 40 punts. In the extra- point department, Russ Rescorla converted 24 times in 31 at- tempts. The team statistics showed Michigan ahead of combined op- ponents in every department ex- cept passing. The varsity lost pos- session of the ball via the fumble route on 22 occasions. Opponents' fumbles were recovered 20 times by the Michigan defense. The rugged Wolverine forward wall allowed only 1149 yards rush- ing to the nine opponents, while the Maize and Blue offense netted 1852 yards on the ground in the nine games. Lions, Rams Hold Lead In National Conference TED TOPOR . . . most valuable player Grid Team Picks Topor As MY, P (Continued from Page 1) TED TOPOR, '53 Ed., who serv- ed this year as Michigan's quarter- back, was selected as the Wolver- ines' "most valuable player" for the 1952 season. In addition to standing out as the blocking back in Michi- gan's intricate single wing of- fense, he took over part of the passing chore and compiled an excellent pass completion aver- age og .569 on 33 completions in 58 attempts. The 210 pound senior from East Chicago, Ill. was on the receiving end of 16 passes, good for 208 yards and four touchdowns. For Ted it was the climax to a long climb after being converted to quarterback when he came to Michigan four years ago. He was an All-State high school fullback and it wasn't until mid-way in the 1951 season that he started seeing action at quarterback for the Wol- verines The first place ranks of the Na- tional Football League thinned out considerably with the weekend's games. Detroit climbed into undisputed first place in the National Con- ference with a 48-24 victory over the Green Bay Packers in their traditional Thanksgiving Day con- test. The Lions had been in a four- way tie with the Packers, the Rams, and the 49ers. WITH THE EDVENT of Sun-1 day's games the Rams whipped their West Coast rivals the 49ers, 34-21, to climb back up beside Detroit in the driver's seat. Los Angeles quarterbacks Bob Waterfield and Norm Van Brocklin were at their best in leading the Rams to the win. Ends Elroy Hirsch and Tom Fears provided ready targets for the duo. On the ground Dan Towler and Paul Younger rolled up most of the Rams' 251 yards. THE CLEVELAND Browns bounced back after spotting the Washington Redskins two touch- downs to grab a 48-24triumph and gain undisputed first place in the American Conference. They had been tied with the Giants and Philadelphia but the Pittsburgh Steelers slaughtered New York, 63-7, and the Eagles fell victim to the Chicago Cards 28-22. Little Eddie LeBaron lofted two first period aerials to Hugh Taylot and Harry Gilmer to give the Red- skins an early lead. OTTO GRAHAM, stopped cold in the first quarter, then stole the show for the Browns, passing for two markers and running for two more in the remainder of the game. From the moment Lynn Chandnois ran the opening kickoff back 91 yards for a score, Pitttsburgh was in command in a game which marked the worst defeat in New York's history. Four aerials from standout Jim Finks found their receivers in the end zone and Gary Kerkorian came in to heave a fifth. Chand- nois counted a second first quar- ter TD when he skirted end for 47 yards on a play set up by Kyle Rote's fumble. SPIRITED DEFENSIVE play by Card tackle Jerry Groom and the flashy running of Ollie Matson knocked the Eagles from their first place berth. DETROIT - (A) - Bob Hoerns- chmeyer, regular right halfback for the title-contending Detroit Lions, may miss Sunday's National Football League game with the Chicago Bears because of bruised ribs. National Conference and have two games remaining, with the Bears and the Dallas Texans. The Bears edged the Lions 24-23 in their earlier meeting. If loernschemeyer doesn't play, Coach Buddy Parker will probably shift Jug Girard, form- er Wisconsin and Green Bay Packer star, from left half to right half. Girard has"been filling in for Doak Walker since the former Southern Methodist All-American was injured in the second game of the season, Walker, although not as fully recovered from a pulled muscle as he had hoped to be, would be pressed back into ser- vice. IF WALKER can't play Parker will probably use No. 2 right half- back Byron Bailey, a rookie from Washington State, or star defen- sive halfback Bob Smith at Hoern- schemeyer's position. A crowd of 40,000 is expected to watch the Lions tackle the Bears for the 38th time in a rivalry that is one of the league's hottest. Pro Standings NATIONAL CONFERENCE W L T Pct. Detroit 7 3 0 .700 Los Angeles 7 3 0 .700 San Francisco 6 4 0 .600 Green Bay 6 4 0 .600 Chicago Bears 4 6 0 .400 Dallas 1 9 0 .100 AMERICAN CONFERENCE W L T Pct. Cleveland 7 3 0 .700 New York 6 4 0 .600 Philadelphia 6 4 0 .600 Chicago Cards 4 6 0 .400 Pittsburgh 4 6 0 .400 Washington 2 8 0 .200 NEXT SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE Chicago Bears at Detroit Cleveland at Chicago Cards Dallas at Philadelphia Green Bay at Los Angeles Pittsburgh at San Francisco Washington at New York Iii u "I', II, '4 In I '. - $ PRINTING KING SIZE SERVICE Card to a Catalog by Push Button DLOWER PRICES Downtown - 307 N. Main 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Collegiate Cuts to please ._ 8 BARBERS NO WAITING I QUALITY PRINTING The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theater I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 Read and Use Daily Classifieds AL& A A.A. .& A A.& A £Aa&£ £ & A A A .A A A A A A ! I I I arcade jewelry shop Ann AArr, M.. Rgaistersd JeweiersAAmeriwcnGem So4 December 2, 1952 Dear Sir: Engraved Jewelry is becoming more and more in demand. Gifts that can be engraved are becoming too numerous to mention in a letter such as this. 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