AGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1952 t SPORTS SLANTS . ..By Ed Whippie Iowa Hunts Cage Center r. I To Fill Darling's Shoes Y: 7'k HIS IS A lazy man's way anonymous communication Daily Managing Editor: "Sir: of writing a column. Tie following made its way via postcard to The "I spent four years at Michigan State and read the college paper daily but never did'I read an article of the kind which appeared in Monday's (the Daily doesn't publish Mondays. It was Wednesday, December 5) 'Sports Slants.' To say it was insulting and childish would be an understatement. "It seems strange that a paper can have an editor win so many honors and yet have a writer the caliber of Whipple. "Believe me there is not one MSC fan who begrudges Michigan their many All-American players of the past. How can an article such as this win prestige for a school? SIGNED, an MSC Grad" * * * * The Cause... HERE'S WHAT he didn't like: "You needn't waste 15c, but if you run across a copy of the latest Collier's'magazine (December 6 issue) take a look at the con- glomeiation of gridiron glory. boys that make up the Collier's All- America. "That big cover photo of Michigan State's Don McAuliffe surrounded by all-time greats Bronko Nagurski, Jim Thorpe, and Red Grange is something of a sacrilege when you consider Mc- Auliffe carried the ball only 98 times for 531 yards. "He wasn't even the leading ground-gainer for his own team. It's worse when you consider Collier's overlooked tailbacks like Minne- sota's Paul Giel and UCLA's Paul Cameron, who each gained twice as much yardage as McAuliffe against tougher opposition. "And that picture of MSC's coach Biggie Munn among the ten members of 'The All-American Board' (of selectors) gets bigger and bigger as you run your finger down the list of 'All- American Specialists. There's Jim Ellis under 'defensive backs' He was mediocre, at best, all year. But he played for Michigan State. "Under 'Pass Receivers' you'll find Paul Dekker. The top ten' pass receivers in the Big Ten alone caught more passes for more yards than Dekker did. He caught 13 aerials for 492 yards and one touch- down. Michigan's Lowell Perry snared 31 for 492 yards and five TD's. But Perry didn't qualify for Collier's. Dekker too plays for Michigan State, in case you hadn't guessed. "Oh well, to the victor the spoils, no matter how much they smell . . ** * * The Effect.. . GUESS IT ALL depends on your point of view, "MSC Grad," and I'm glad you were courageous enough to sttae your affiliation clearly. (You might have done the same with your name.) .But after four years at Michigan State you should be liberally educated enough to understand it takes all kinds of people to make up the world. And so it is with newspapers. For every prize-winning Papes or Connable, there is also a Whipple. I don't profess to be the typewriting epitome of journalistic Idealism, but I thought I had substantiated my prejudice fairly well with facts and figures. Michigan State is only one more illustration of the evils. of Al American teams-a player has to play with a topinotch team or get a big pre-season buildup, or both, to be All-American. Talent and performance are secondary criteria. Cage Rules' Change Abolishes Free Throw-Possession Option By DICK LEWIS (Fifth in a Series) Undoubtedly the biggest task facing Coach Bucky O'Connor and his Iowa hoopsters this season is how to replace the tremendous gap left by the graduation of All- American center Chuck Darling. The Phi Beta Kappa pivot oper- ator amassed 561 markers, 364 coming in. conference play for a 26.0 average, to spearhead a Hawkeye attack that led to 11 wins in 14 league games and a second-place finish. O'Connor's charges took 19 of 22 scraps over- all. * * * BUT WITH Darling and cap- tain Bob Clifton gone, the Corn- staters are definitely in the re- building stage with only five let- termen and two regulars return- ing. Forwards McKinley (Deacon) Davis and Captain Herb Thomp- son, starters in 1951-52, figure to top the Hawkeye scorers dur- ing the current campaign. Both of these colorful perform- ers gave indications of just that in Iowa's opening 62-52 triumph over Butler. Davis registered 21 tallies and Thompson backed up the Deacon with 18 to engineer the Hawks' 55th straight non-confer- ence win at home. DAVIS WON a starting position last year as a freshman and rank- ed fourth among Iowa scoring leaders with 175 points. Standing 6-2, the Freeport,Ill crowd-pleas- er is also regarded as a superior floor player and tricky ball han- dler Also at 6-2, Thompson rates as the best defensivesman on the squad and looms a potent , threat from the floor. The sen- ior forward racked up 187 points in 22 games last season for an 8.5 average. Iowa's biggest deficiency is in the vacated center slot. Gene Het- trick, 6-6 junior, was regarded as the best bet .for this position be- fore he drew three quick person- als and failed to score against Butler. FOLLOWING Hettrick into the Bulldog scrap was 6-4 Roger Mau, who notched only five points be- fore fouling out. Bob Miller, a 6-6 DEACON DAVIS ... Hawkeye deadeye * * * 195-pound sophomore, is also given a chance at the wide-open pivot role. Two scrappy juniors, Ken Buckles and Chuck Jarnagin, form the backcourt starting alignment for the Hawkeyes. These *two saw limited action behind Clifton and departed Herald Greene during the 51-52 flag chase. Coach O'Connor, however, is sparking on the backcourt tandem to provide the spark that will ig- nite a Hawkeye surge to the top of the Big Ten standings. * * * FORMERLY all-state at Daven- port High School, Buckles broke into 17 of Iowa's 22 games and placed eighth in scoring, collect- ing 11 field goals and eight free throws for a 30-point total. Jarnagin saw action in all but two of Iowa's games in the front court last year and finish- ed one notch ahead of Buckles in the individual scoring race with 41 tallies. Only other monogram-winner back for another whirl is 6-4 Bob Diehl, a player who goes at either a forward or center spot. He gained his letter as a forward in 1950-51, but was -sidelined most of last year with a leg injury. ASIDE FROM these competitors, the Gold and Black bench appears leaner than usual Guards Dan McBride and Merle Jensen are both hampered by lack of exper- ience as is forward Gerald Ridley, up from the freshman unit With the dearth of tall talent, O'Connor and assistant coach Chalmers (Bump) Elliott will have to count on more running to compensate for the lack of big men. The use of the pivot man in the Hawkeye scheme of things is also expected to be lim- ited. Even with the lack .of man- power evident in past years, the Hawkeyes present a definite threat on their home hardwood. Since 1943, Iowa squads have conquered 96 opponents while falling to only 11 before the home fans. Football Made $300 Profit.... (52 ,Years Ago) ANN ARBOR, December 11, 1900 -A rather arm session of the Athletic Board was held last eve- ning, and business of considerable importance was transacted. The center of the storm seemed to be the selection of a football manager for next year. One faction of the board held out for the re-election of Harry Crafts, the other faction wanted to see Asst. Football Man- ager Potter promoted to the pre- miership. At times the discussion waxed quite warm, but when the matter came to a final vote Crafts landed the plum for a second time. Mr. Crafts comes from Austin, Illi- nois. Graduate Director Baird report- ed thetotalreceipts of theChi- cago game as $10,174.84. Michi- gan's share of this is $5,087.42 and the net profits of the game to us after expenses are all paid is $4,498.57. The treasurer of the Association reported as having on hand $4,820 with appropriations voted last night of $4,500, leaving balance of about $300 clear and above all expenses to start the track ahd baseball season. Of this $4,500 voted $2,000 is set aside for the grand stand "sinking funds" Graduate Director Baird was authorized to go ahead with -the improvement of Regents' Field vS 450 ent -s quality ated r a . 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