PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1953 _____.a+ Nation' S To SGridironSquads Stagger, Stu ble Duke Squeaks Past Purdue; Washington Deadlocks USC Oklahoma's OhlaState Tnet Boilermakers Beaten,20-14. DURHAM, N. C.-(P-Quar- terback Jerry Barger, who re- gained his-starting role two weeks ago when Worth Lutz was injur- ed, went on a fourth-period rai- page yesterday to lead unbeaten Duke to a 20-14 victory over Pur- due's battling Boilermakers. Barger scored the deciding touchdown with 40 seconds to play, running wide around end. EARLIER IN the fourth quar- ter, Barger and halfback Red Smith got together on a 49-yard pass play to break a 7-7 tie that hfad existed from the opening min- utes.of the second period. Purdue, seeking its first vic- tory in three games this year, came storming back with a '70- yard drive that tied the score with less than sixminutes to go. Halfback Karl Kerkommer smashed over from the two for the score and quarterback Roy Evans converted to tie it up. Then Barger rolled into action. He sparked the 10-play Duke drive with an amazing 21-yard run to the Purdue 45 after seemingly be- ing trapped on his own 30. Eight running plays after that, Duke had its winning touchdown. But Barger wasn't through yet. With Purdue driving to tie the score, Evans let fly a long pass which Barger intercepted on Duke's 33 as the game ended. Purdue ........7 0 0 7-14 Duke ........0 7 0 13-20 Purdue scoring: Touchdowns, Brock, Herkommer. Conversions, Reichert, Evans. Duke scoring: Touchdowns, Pascal, J. Smith, Barger. Con- versions, J. Smith 2. Trojans Tied 13-13 by Foe SEATTLE - (A) - Startled and stunned by the upstart Huskies of Washington, the outplayed South- ern California Trojans desperately needed two long runs by Aramis Dandoy and Lindon Crow to sal- vage a 13-13 tie yesterday in their Pacific Coast Conference football clash. Mighty Troy, seventh ranked na- tionally, made only nine yards from scrimmage and no first downs in the first half and gained very little more than that in the last two quarters. - * * BUT THE break the Trojans needed came on the opening kick- off of the second half. Dandoy fumbled the boot on the SC 30, but scooped it up, skirted a pileup of players and rambled 70 yards to score. USC still trailed, 13-6, at the start of the fourthquarter. Then Sandy Ledermnan, Wash- ington's southpaw sophomore quarterback, was rushed on an attempted pass. He got the ball away but Crow hauled it out of the air on the Trojan 22 and loafed down the sideline to the goal unmenaced by Husky tack- lers. Sam Tsagalakis booted the point that knotted the score. Unimpressed by the Trojan rep- utation, Washington played the visitors off their feet in the first half, scoring twice within two min- utes in the second quarter. Jack Kyllingstad pounded two yards for the first one to cap a 65-yard drive, and Lederman sneaked over with the second, which was set up by a recovery of a Trojan fumble. I Long Gains StopTexas DALLAS, Tex.--OP)-Oklahoma's ball-handling houdinis rolled up 19 points on glittering runs by Merrill Green and Tom Carroll and Texas fumbling then hung on desperately for a 19-14 victory yes- terday in a nationally televised game. For three quarters the Sooners, with Gene Calame as the master magician, had the Longhorns al- most completely baffled with the way they handled the pigskin. A TEXAS fumble set up one Sooner score, Green ran 80 yards with a put for t4p second and Car- roll skipped 48 yards for the third. Then, in the final minutes, the Longhorns, with sophomore Charley Brewer, a passing, run- ning wizard, in the driver's seat, rolled to two touchdowns. The first was on a 20-yard throw from Brewer to Delano Womack. Brewer's passing also set up the second Texas touchdown. A crowd of 75,504 roared in the Cotton Bowl as the gallant Long- horns put up their roaring finish. But it wasn't enough. The first Oklahoma touchdown was scored by Larry Grigg, who climb'ed over tackle on the Texas one-yard mark. A badly thrown lateral that Carroll intercepted, fumbled . then recovered on the Texas 25 set up this score. The second Texas touchdown was made by Ed Kelley on a two- yard sprint around end. Oklahoma ......6 6 0 7-19 Texas ..........0 0 0 14-o-14 Oklahoma scoring: Touch- downs, Grigg, Green, Carroll. Conversions, Green. It Texas scoring: Touchdowns, Womack, Kelley. Conversions, Branch. s " . . 'By Illinois, 41-20 COLUMBUS, Ohio - ('-) - The Buckeye football bubble burst with a bang yesterday as Illinois turned loose its touchdown twins for an astounding 41-20 upset victory over Ohio State in a Western Conference game. A crowd of 81,745, seventh larg- est ever to fill Ohio's big horse- shoe, sat stunned as the Illini ran up three touchdowns in the first period, allowed the Bucks three touchdowns in the second quar- ter, and then won going away. TWO SOPHOMORE sensations, halfbacks Mickey Bates and J. C. Caroline scored the six Illinois1 touchdowns, Bates getting four and Caroline two. The youngsters ran over, un- der, around and through the big Ohio line as Bates scored on runs of 2, 41, 4 and 4 yards. Caroline picked his up on a 2- yarder following a 24 yard jaunt by Bates, and on a 64 yard jaunt around end. Ray Elliot's alert Illini convert- ed sthree intercepted passes and one fumble into four of their six touchdowns. After Bates had scored twice and Caroline once in the startling first period to give Illinois a 21-0 lead, Ohio turned loose its expected power in the second session to come within an eyelash of tieing the invaders. JOHN BORTON passed 19 yards to Howard (Hopalong) Cassady for the first Buckeye score. Ohio had another touchdown in less than a minute as Bobby Watkins whirled for 12 and a score after Dave Leggett of Ohio had picked up a fumble by Bates on the kick- off. Late in the quarter Ohio, aid- ed by a 29-yard pass interfer- ence penalty and a 20-yard Bor- ton-to-Cassady aerial, rolled 80 yards in nine plays with Borton sneaking the finial one foot for a touchdown. Tad Weed, Ohio's 135-pound, left-footed place kicker missed the extra point after the third touch- down and Illinois led 21-20 at the half. *1 * * AS THE Ohioans lined up for the extra point, Jan Smid and Stan Wallace of the Illini broke through and knocked Weed and quarterback Borton who was holding the ball to the ground. They were penalized for off side. and Weed then missed the second attempt. The 41 points piled up by Illi- nois was the greatest total ever scored by that club against the Bucks in the unbroken series which goes back to 1914.wThe only comparable score was a 37-0 Illinois victory in 1914, Ohio State's first conference meeting with the Illini. The visitors ran up their huge score by rinning. They rushed for 443 yards to Ohio's 138 but' completed only one pass, a harm- less 15-yarder in the final two minutes of the game.; * * * CAROLINE and Bates, two ofI the most scintillating backs ever to appear on the Ohio field, just couldn't be stopped. Caroline reel- ed off 192 yards in 24 jaunts, and Bates 147 yards in 23 tries. Bobby Watkins, who scored four touchdowns for Ohior against California a week ago, paced the Buckeye runners with 81 yards in 10 attempts. Borton completed 10 of 18 Ohiol passes for 97 yards and one touch- down but the three interceptions which he allowed made the big difference. Bates' second touchdown came after John Rocky Ryan, Illinois end, had intercepted on Ohio's 46. His third came after guard John Bauer had made a one-hand- ed interception on the 31 and raced it to the 4. His final marker resulted from an interception by Wallace, who carried 28 yards to Ohio's 21.l Illinois .........21 0 14 6-41 Ohio State...... 0 20 0 0--20 Illinois scoring: Touchdowns, Bates 4, Caroline 2, Conver- sions, Miller 4, Caroline. Ohio scoring: Touchdowns, Cassady, Watkins, Borton. Conversions, Weed, Hague. STATISTICS Giel Romps A s Gophers Smash NU EVANSTON, Ill.-- (A') - Minne- sota, with Paul Giel and Bob Mc- Namara providing a terrific one- two punch, jarred Northwestern into a 30-13 ig Ten football de- feat yesterday. It was the Wildcats' first loss in three contests, and their worst trouncing by the Gophers sincebe- ing smashed, 30 to 7, in 1945. WINNING its first game in three outings this season, and its first on Northwestern's home grounds since 1940, Minnesota scored twice in the last three minutes of the opening quarter and was never seriously threatened thereafter. All-America Giel and his un- derrated halfback partner, Me- Namara, tore off yardage almost at will in shattering Northwest- ern's defenses. Giel hit on touchdown passes of 15 yards to McNamara and 6 to Bob Rutford as well as scoring on a 4-yard run himself. QUARTERBACK Gene Cappel- letti pitched another Gopher touchdown five yards to Phil Mc- Elroy and also placekicked all four conversions. The Gophers added a safety in the fourth. Northwestern, the nation's No. 1 total offense leader with an average gain of 466.5 yards in victories over Iowa State and Army, was held to 292 by the Gophers. Workhorse Giel slammed 98 yards in 21 carries and added 21 yards on two out of four pass completions. McNamara gained 69 Iyards in 13 trips. Late in the first quarter Giel capped a 35-yard drive, drilling over from the 4. Minutes later Jim Soltau recovered Thomas' fumble on the Northwestern 20, and Min- nesota scored again, Giel even- tually spearing McNamara's pass for 15. Minnesota .....14 0 0 16-30 Northwestern .. 0 7 6 0-13 Minnesota scoring: Touch- downs, Giel, B. McNamara, Rut- ford, McElroy, Conversions, Cap- pelletti, 4. pelletti, 4. Safety, Thomas tack- led by Holtz. Northwestern scoring: Touch- downs, Weber, Ranicke. Conver- sions, Rondou. EAST LANSING, Mich.(R'}- Evan Slonac, a slight 170 pounder from St. Michaels, Pa., scored the tying touchdown and then kicked a vital extra point yesterday as Michigan State made a roaring comeback in the fourth quarter after trailing by two touchdowns to beat a surprisingly strong and stubborn Texas Christian team 26-19. Under-rated Texas Christian led 13-7 at the half and was ahead 19-7 going into the final period on the strength of three touch- down passes. * * * FOR AWHILE it looked as if mighty Michigan State, the de- fending national champions and a three-touchdown pre-game fav- orite would be ingloriously dump- ed, its string of straight wins stopped at 26. BIG TEN FOOTBALL STANDINGS W w L T Pct. Michigan State's Late Rally Defeats TCU Eleven, 26-19 Leroy Bolden scored at the end of a 69-yard drive to put the Spartans in striking dis- tance. Slonac took a pass from quarterback Tommy Yeweic and sprinted 34 yards to make it 19-19. Slonac then booted the all important extra point. All the pre-game thinking had been that the game would be a romp for Michigan State, just a workout for the Spartan substi- tutes. But Coach Biggie Munin had to play his first string "pony backs" in the fourth period to save his squad from the first de- feat since 1950. Slonac intercepted a pass on the MSC 35-yard line to give Michi- gan State a chance to make its insurance touchdown. Yewcic pass- ed to Jimmy Ellis from the TCU 5-yard line for the final score. Texas Christian 0 13 6 0-19 Michigan State 7 0 0 19-26 Texas Christian scoring: Touchdowns, Clinkscale, San- ford, Finney. Conversons Mc- Kowan. Michigan State scoring: Touchdowns, Wells, Bolden, Slo- nac, 2. Conversions, Slonac, 2. 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