PAGE STT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1953 PAGE STX~ SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 195~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY otre Dame Marches to 37-=7 Victory over Purdue ----------- Iowa, Illinois, Northwestern Pro Golfers .Topple Intersectional Foes Lattiier, Worden Irish Offensive Standouts; Iowa's .54 Points Highest Total Since 19471 HEADS UP FOOTBALL: 'M' Takes Advantage of Tulane Errors LAFAYETTE, Ind. - (P) -- No;. tre Dame's neat and nifty football team scored a 37-7 victory over big but befuddled Purdue yesterday. The Irish scored as they pleased -with fullback Neil Worden's power; halfback Johny Lattner's speed and quarterback Ralph Gug- lielmi's lateral passes overwhelm- ing Purdue. NOTRE DAME started its point production with a 23-yard field goal by guard Menil Mavraides less than seven minutes into the first quarter and Purdue never caught up. Latner showed the sell-out crowd of 49,135 sweltering fans his All America caliber in an 86- yard kickoff return in the sec- ond quarter. He simply exploded down the sideline and outran everybody in the Purdue back- field for Noire Dame's second touchdown. Worden, however, was the main payoff weapon for the Irish, scor- ing two of Notre Daine's five touchdowns. They were on 11-yard runs in which he smashed through the Purdue line like a ram. * * * IOWA CITY, 'Iowa - Iowa splurged to one of its wildest scor- ing binges yesterday in running up 6 54-12 victory over Washington State in an intersectional football contest. The Hawks turned it into a rout with a 35-0 first half lead. COACH FOREST Evashevski, who came to Iowa only a year ago from Washington State, started six sophomores against the over- matched Pacific Coast conference team but everyone was in on the act before the finish. The 54 points were the highest Iowa total since North Dakota State was crushed, 59-0, in the opening 1947 game. Not only dic an assortment gf Iowa backs scoot around in talent- ed ground-gaining consumption, but a rugged Iowa line restricted the Cougars to a net rushing gain of 13 yards. In the first half when Iowa was in supreme command, Washington State had a net loss of 21 yards by. rushing. CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Elry Fal- kenstein, a second-string quarter-I back, and comet-like J. C. Caro- line, sophomore halfback, geared Illinois to an uphill 33-21 victory over Stanford yesterday. A burst of 19 points in the last quarter, two touchdowns stem- ming from intercepted passes, gave the Illini their first triumph of the season after a 21-21 opening tie with Nebraska. . The game was played in 86- degree heat before 32,737 fans who watched the weary Illini collapse in the first period to trail 14-0 then strike back in sudden bursts eventually to tie the score 21-21 at the outset of the final period. EVANSTON, Ill. - Northwest- ern's wildcats, a fast and vicious pack, whipped by the arm of quar- terback Dick Thomas, sped past Army 33-20 yesterday in an in- tersection football battle. A crowd estimated at less than 30,000 witnessed the game. L With fast and rugged Wildcat backs like Bob Lauter, Gerry Weber and Dick Ranicke forc- ing the Cadets to play a ground- wary defensive game, Thomas found more than adequate op- portunity to crack open the on-target heaves. The Northwestern quarterback completed 14 of 19 passes, two of them good for touchdowns and two others setting up a third score in accounting for 209 yards of the Wildcat total. Top Britain In Rider Tilt By The Associated Press VIRGINIA WATER, England - By the narrowest possible margin, America's overconfident golf pro- fessionals barely retained the Ry- der Cup yesterday with a 6-512 victory over a determined British team trying to bring the famed international trophy back to Eng- land in Queen Elizabeth's corona- tion year. A pair of flubbed three-foot putts cost England the cup. A THREE-FOOTER missed by Bernard Hunt of England on the 36th hole of the last eight singles matches enabled Dave Douglas of Newark, Del., to draw even with Hunt. Under the scoring system used in cup play, each country got one-half point. By coincidence, the score was the same as when England last won the cup in 1933. Peter Alliss also blew a three- foot putt on the 18th and was a 1 up loser to Jim Turnesa of Briarcliff, N.Y. * The United States had gone into the second and final day's play with a 3-1 lead gained in the first day's Scotch foursomes. But the British golfers drew even at 5-5 with only the Hunt-Douglas and Turnesa-Peter Allies matches still to be completed. Scotsman Eric Brown surprised Lloyd Mangrum, 2 up, and a few minutes later long-ball hitter Har- ry Weetman of Britain came in with a 1 up victory over Sam Snead. -Daily-Don campbell MICHIGAN'S JIM BALOG STOPS TULANE'S WEIDENBACHER IN SECOND QUARTER Wolverines Win Second; Beat Green Wave, 26-7 By IVAN N. KAYE Daily Sports Editor Throughout the history of Mich- igan football,, her great teams have borne one similarity; the ability to take advantage of op- ponents' mistakes. . blocked kicks, intercepted pass- es and recovered fumbles have been the keys to Michigan victor- Seven To Go MICHIGAN LE Topp, Stanford, Williams LT Strozewski, Walker, Kolesar LG Dugger, Fox, Cachey, Meads C O'Shaughnessy, Morrow, Peck- ham RG Beison, Williams, Ritter LT Balog, .Geyer, Bennett RE Knutson, Veselenak QB Baldacci, Kenaga, McDonald LH Kress, Cline, Hendricks RH Branoff, Hickey FB Balzhiser, Hurley TULANE LE Coates, Duvigneaud, Thompson LT Cummins, Boudreaux L3G Sadisco, Shoultz Camp, Rushing, J. Wilson RG Robelot, Burke, D. Miller RT Burnthorne, Hawkins RE Bravo, Price QB Clement, Weidenbacher LII Kennedy, Partridges RH McGee, Sala, Wall FB Kent, Chauvin Score by Periods: Michigan 7 7 0 12 -26 Tulane 0 0 7 0-7 Touchdowns: Michigan - Branoff (2) Knutson Kress (2) Knutson Kress; 'lulane-Bravo Conversions: Michigan Branoff (2) Tulane-Clement Time of Game: 2 hours, 30 minutes Official Attendance: 52,914 FINAL STATISTICS Michigan Tulane First Downs...........14 9 By rushing.......... 9 8 By passing ...........4 0 By penalty . . 1 I Rushing Yardage .179 150 Number of rushes .. 51 37 Passing Yardage.....94 22 Passes Attempted .... 13 13 Passes Completed .. 7 4 Passes Intercepted .... 4 2 Punts................. 6 4 Punting Average....... 34 47 Fumbles Lost..... 2 3 Yards Penalized ..... 30 70 down that gave the ball to the Wolverines and set the stage for Ted Kress' 62-yard gallop, which produced the final score of the day. And it was the recovery of key Tulane fumbles which enabled the varsity to stall the Green Wave on several important occasions. *; * * ALTHOUGH it takes an alert team to recover fumbles and in- tercept passes, these abilities must be combined with a productive offense if victories are to be gain- ed. Michigan had the offensive guns yesterday and when the situ- ation demanded it, the varsity turned on the power to defeat the Southern team. Tulane's coach, Raymond (Bear) Wolf, was high in his praise of Michigan. As did Washington's John Cherberg, Wolf had great respect for the Wolverine offense. It was the varied attacking formations which caused confusion among the Tulane players. This was their first look at a deceptive single wing and "T" offense, and they are not likely to forget it f or a long time. Coach Wolf's team did not crack under the pressure of a two touch- down deficit as did the Washing- ton squad last week. This was mainly due to the fact that the Green Wave has an all-senior backfield, whereas Washington was playingwithout both first string halfbacks when it took a 50-0 beating from Michigan. BEFORE THE game, Tulane's engaging sports publicity director Eddie Allen commented after watching the show by the Michi- gan band that if the football team was as good, then the Tulane boys should leave before things got started. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan was pleased with his team's second victory of the season, but was none too happy about the punt- ing. He also indicated that some of next week's practice time would be devoted to sharpening the varsity's blocking. The coach thought that the Tulane tepjin showed greater poise than Mich- igan's first opponent, and ad- mitted that the 14-7 score in the last period gave him a few anxious moments. There seemed to be unanimous agreement among the writers and both coaching staffs that the blocked Tulane punt in the fourth quarter (Bob Topp blocked it and Gene Knutson recovered in the Tulane end zone) was the key play of the game. About the only disheartening note yesterday was the report from the Big Ten office that full- back Dave Hill is ineligible to com- pete this season. Hill did not com- plete his semester's work when he withdrew from school in the spring of 1951 to join the armed forces. BIG TEN FOOTBALL STANDINGS Michigan State 2 0 1.000 Ohio State 1 0 1.000 MICHIGAN 0 0 .000 Illinois 0 0 .000 Northwestern 0 0 .000 Wisconsin 0 0 .000 Purdue 1 0 0 .000 Indiana 0 1 .000 Iowa 0 1 .000 Minnesota 0 1 .000 PRO FOOTBALL Detroit 27, Baltimore 17 Pittsburgh 24, New York 14 . d1 FOOTBALL SCORES, Midwest Wisconsin 13, Marquette 11 Iowa 54, Washington State 12 Michigan 26, Tulane 7 Michigan State 21, Minnesota 0 Illinois 33, Stanford 21 Northwestern 33, Army' 20 Kansas 23, Iowa 'State 0 Notre Dame 37, Purdue 7 Kansas State 27, Nebraska 0 East Rice 28, Cornell 7 Oklahoma 7, Pitt 7 (Tie) Princeton 20, Columbia 19 Holy Cross 19, Colgate 6 Yale 13, Brown 0 Penn 13, Penn State 7 Navy 55, Dartmouth 7 Maryland 20, Clemson 0 North Carolna 39, Washington & Lee 0 Harvard 16, Ohio U. 0 Duke 21, Tennessee 7 Georgia Tech 6, SMU 4 Auburn 13, Mississippi 0 Mississippi State 21, North Texas State 6 Louisiana State 42, Boston College 6 aAlabama 21, Vanderbilt 12% Wake Forest 18, Villanova 12 West Virginia 47, Waynesburg 19 * * * West Missouri 27, Colorado 16 Washington 28, Oregon State 0 Ohio State 33, California 19 Texas Tech 27, Oklahoma A & M 13 Texas 28, Houston 7 Arkansas 13, TCU 6 Texas A & M 14, Georgia 12 (continued from Page 1) ines scheme of things darkened considerably. Michigan couldn't generate any kind of offense, and before long the rain came and the 52,914 fans scrambled to get under cover. Then, with Michigan stymied, on its own 30 yard line, Branoff punted out to the Tulane 25 and Greenie end Chuck Coates was caught clipping which*pushed the pigskin back to the Tulane seven. With this, "Old Sol" reappeared and things were looking up for Michigan. Bobby Saia got nothing on a' plunge and Kennedy went back to kick-whereupon Messrs. Topp and Knutson converged and converted the attempted boot to a Wolverine touchdown. . The game's first score came when Kress . snatched McGee's punt halfway through the open- ing period, dropped it, picked it up and brought it to the Michi- gan 32 befor, being downed. Then with Lou Baldacci in the driver's seat mixing up his plays with the mastery.of a proven veteran, Mich- igan moved the ball on the ground to the Tulane 31. KRESS, BRANOFF and fullback Dick Balzhiser ate up the yardage and then Kress lofted a pass to right end Knutson on the Green Wave five yard line to set up the score. On the next play, Branoff slipped around left end and into paydirt as Balzhiser leveled two Greenies with a key block. Branoff converted and the first quarter ended with Michigan ahead, 7-0. At the mid-point of the second quarter, Michigan pulled one out of the football graveyard as Baldacci and Bran- off collaborated on a touchdown scoring Statue of Liberty play, and the Flint youngster made his kick true. Ed Hickey, scatback from Ana- conda. Montana-andBob Hurley, fullback from Alamosa, Colorado had set the score up after Kress had taken Ray Weidenbacher 52- yard punt on his own 27 yard line and had lost four yards tryir, to elude Tulane tacklers. The Wol- verines then marched the length' of the field,. Hurley leading the way with runs of 26 and 12 yards. 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