WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1952 -- THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN I I All Selectors Like oomaw, Lattner UCLA, Irish Stars Only Gridders To Make All-America Unanimously CAGE COMMENT: As Ebert Goes, So Will OSU Fortunes * #. -°---- By IVAN KAYE All-America selectors seem to be having a difficult time agreeing on the nation's top football play- ers. Only U.C.L.A.'s giant Donn Moo- maw and Notre Dame's superb halfback, Johnny Lattner, are mentioned on all of the teams re- leased up to date. * * * y BILLY VESSELS of the Okla- homa Sooners was the recipient of the Heisman Trophy as the outstanding back of the year, but he failed to makehColliers' All ,America. Instead, his teammate fullback Buck McPhail was given a backfield position. Another inconsistency was the omission of Dick Modzelewski from the Associated Press' All America. The 235 pound Mary- land tackle won the Outland Trophy as the lineman of the year. Thus both the back and the lineman of the year failed to make at least one of the All America squads. Appearing on many teams at " the end positions were Tom Stol- handske of Texas and Buck Mar- tin of Georgia Tech. Stolhandske was the outstanding performer on offense for the Southwest Confer- ence champions, while Martin was outstanding on both offense and defense for Bobby Dodd's great Georgia Tech squad. * * * TWO FINE tackles from the South gained recognition on a number of teams, Modzelewski of Maryland and Kline Gilbert of Mississippi's unbeaten Rebels. While Modzelewski was greatly publicized throughout the season, Gilbert's unsung accomplishments were largely responsible for Ole Mis' fine showing. The Mississippi squad reached its peak in the fourth quarter of the game with Modzelswski's Maryland club when it rolled to two touchdowns and a startling 21-14 upset victory. Mentioned on most All America squads were guards Elmer Will- hoite of Southern California and Frank Kush of Michigan State. Willhoite put the Trojans in the Rose Bowl with a 73 yard run with an intercepted Paul Cameron pass in the U.C.L.A. game. DURING ONE six-game stretch, a total of 49 yards was gained through his sector on defense. He played the middle guard position in Coach Jesse Hill's 5-3-2-1 de- fensive formation. Kush survived a near-tragic accident during the summer to bulwark the rugged Spartan line. He caught a steel splinter in his eye while working on a con- struction job. THE MICHIGAN STATE defen- sive line was perhaps the strong- est part of the entire Green and White gridiron machine. It saved both the Notre Dame and Purdue games for Biggie Munn's crew. Moomaw was everyone's All America at center. The big Bruin was perhaps the best line- backer in the nation. His play in the Southern California game kept Coach Red Sanders' team within striking distance until the final gun. The Trojans had the stronger line, but Moomaw tended to equalize the teams. The consensus backfield is made up of Lattner, Vessels, Jack Sear- bath of Maryland and Paul Giel of Minnesota. ** * LATTNER is probably the great- est all-round player in college football today. The only argu- ments concerning the Notre Dame star's ability center around wheth- er he is better on offense or de- f ense. Vessels was the big reason Coach Bud Wilkinson's Oklaho- ma Sooners packed their potent scoring punch. Even in a losing effort against Notre Dame at South Bend, the 185 pound split "T" halfback was magnificent. He scored three touchdowns on long runs through the power- ful Irish defensive line. Scarbath was consistently bril- liant in his dual running and pass- ing role as the Terrapins' split "T" quarterback. His uncanny ability to pick out the weak spot of the defense on his option play was a headache to all opposition. FINALLY, rounding out the All- America eleven, comes the great Giel of Winona, Minnesota and Wes Fesler's Golden Gophers. He is no stranger to Michigan fans, having appeared in this stadium twice, and both times being ex- remely troublesome to the Wol- verine defensive unit. Giel was particularly effective this season when running the option play which gives him the opportunity to pass or run de- pending upon the defense. This was much the same type of play that catapulted Dick Kazmaier to stardom with the Princeton Tigers. By DICK LEWIS (Fourth in a Series) On the shoulders of amazing Paul Ebert rest the chances for Ohio State's first Big Ten basket- ball championship since Dick Schnittker and company turned the trick in 1950. Tallest of the Buckeye regularsI at 6-4, Ebert's scoring prowess as a sophomore vaulted OSU to a 6-8 conference record and fifth place standoff with Michigan State. AMONG HIS eye-catching achievements in 1951-52 was a 40-point effort against Michigan at Columbus. Ebert tossed in 15 field goals and ten free throws that night to lead Coach Floyd Stahl's charges to an easy 80-67 verdict. MINNESOTA'S PAUL GIEL ... concensus All-America tailback DONN MOOMAW . .. all-All American Jesse Owens Had Greatest Day on Ferry Field The sharp-shooting pivot op- erator from Columbus placed second to Iowa's Chuck Darling in the Western Conference scor- ing tabulations with 304 points in 14 encounters for a 21.4 aver- age. This gained Ebert recognition on the all-conference first team and the Michigan Daily honor five. COMPETING in every one of Ohio State's 22 games, Ebert fun- nelled through 443 points, estab- lishing five school records in the process. He easily ran off with the Buckeye most valuable player award. Captain Tom Williams, 6-3 defensive standout, heads a con- tingent of proven performers in one of the forward spots. One of the taller men on the probable starting unit which averages only 6-2, Williams has been hitting consistently from outside in the Buck pre-season drills. Last year he hit often enough to register 127 league markers and came home 28th with a 9.1 average. * * * SIDING Williams in the front- court is Bill Wilks, 6-2 senior who joined the team late because of the football wars. Although Wilks saw limited action over the past two years, he managed to find the range for 72 points in loop scraps dur- ing the 1951-52 campaign. An all-Ohio selection in 1949, Wilks specializes in driving one-hand . shots from all over the floor. A couple of promising shooters appear shoo-ins in the Ohio State back-court. MERRILL HATFIELD, rated the best shot on the seam, is at one guard spot, while hard-driving Dean Cook holds down the other. In all probability, Hatfield will alternate with Jack Jones, a regular last year who pumped in 67 Big Ten scores. Jones pos- sesses an accurate set shot and gets his share of rebounds. Although only a sophomore, Cook picks up a starting role in the Stahl youth movement. He won a varsity letter in his fresh- man year, hitting for 53 points in league action. * * * THE RAGGED Buckeye defense which relinquished on the average of 70 points per game last season is expected to be strengthened by the addition of a few football standouts. Tom Hague, Dave Leggett, Dean Dugger, and Jack Croy only recently made the switch from the grid squad. Hague received a letter last. year, throwing in 20 points from his forward post. Bill French, 7-2 freshman, threw a wrench into the future Ohio State plans when he dropped out of school. Coach Stahl's main de- ficiency again seems to be lack of height, and there is little r- lief in sight. 4> By ED SMITH When people think of Track and Field they think of Jessie Owens. When people think of Jesse Owens they think of the 1936 Olympics and Owens' one man crusade against Hitler's thinclads and their racial superiority claims, but somehow the memory of Owens' greatest day is all but forgotten except to a few track' diehards. THOUGH a brilliant high school track flash in Cleveland, he was just one step from the greenest rookie, when he came to Ann Ar- bor in May, 1935, with his Ohio State teammates for the Big Ten track championships. It was the 165-pound, 5-11 sophomore's first big fling in collegiate track. What he did that day still stands as the brightest page in the big Ten record book. The first event was the 100 yard dash. Dwens streaked over the cen- tury mark in the swift time of :09.4 to equal the world record for the distance. THE NEXT event was the 220. He didn't even bother to use a starting block, but dug a little pit for himself with his spikes. The result was another world's rec- ord, a nifty :20.3. Next of the program was the broad jump, Owens' favorite event. He calmly strode to the edge of the pit and placed a piece on paper in the sand at 26 feet. Then slowly he walked to the start of the runway, paused for a second and took off down the * Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results runway. His foot hit the edge of the board and he was airborn on the longest leap ever recorded by a human being, 26 feet, eight and one-fourth inches. To this day broadjumpers are shooting for that mark. ONLY ONE event was left for him-the 220-yard low hurdles. It was automatic as he romped to an easy win with another world record. The time was :22.6. Owens' performance was made even more remarkable by the fact that he was not in the best physical condition. It seems that the day before the meet he had, fallen down a flight of stairs and hurt his back. 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