PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1953 Gieli Gopher Line Manhandles M1Backfield (Continued from Page 1) Cappelletti made his second straight conversion and the Go- phers led, 14-0. Duncan McDonald replaced Lou Baldacci in the Michigan lineup- the first string signal-caller being 'taken from the field with a face cut. But the next series of plays only brought the bal out to the Michigan nine beforeBranoff was forced to punt from his own end zone and he again lifted a weak kick-this one only lofting out to the Wolverine 28. ** * MINNESOTA moved it to the four before Jim Soltau fumbled a Giel pass and burly John Peckham recovered on his own one. Pack- ham had replaced first-string cen- ter John Morrow when the big Ann Arbor lad was taken to the dressing room for repairs. Five plays later, Baldacci, back in the game with his face swathed in bandages and protected by a plas- tic face mask, had his pass inter- cepted on the 43 by the ever-pres- ent Giel. The. Gophers worked it back down to the Michigan two be- fore Coach Ben Oosterbaan's charges held. Baldacci then made it two for two as he tossed one to Gopher Jerry Johnson on the Michigan six-and Minneso- ta was in business again. But two penalties and a heads- up play by Don Dugger forced the Ski-U-Mah outfit back and the closest they could come to the goal was on a 16 yard pass from Giel to. Soltau ending on the Michigan eleven. 1 Branoff finally cut loose a good kick but Giel reared up and with three completed passes and a trio of runs brought the ball to the Michigan 15. Morrow, back in the game by this time, intercepted his pass on the six. Observers expected the tradi- tionally weak-finishing Gophers to fold In the second half, but the great Giel dispelled all such ideas when after Michigan's at- tack stalled once again, Branoff kicked one to him on the Minne- sota 25 and he proceeded to ' make fools of hte Wolverines. Giel swerved, danced, leaped, back-tracked, reversed his field and only a spectacular shoe-string tackle by Branoff - who leaped over two blockers - stopped him on the Michigan 34. McNamara then powered his way to a 14 yard gain, Giel fol- lowed with an eight yard pick. up, Holme got four and when Giel got nothing in two more tries on the ground, he picked out Rutford all by hislonesome in paydirt with a needle-thread- ing aerial. Dugger blocked Cap- pelletti's kick-the first that the Gopher had missed in nine tries this season. * * * as 1"innesota Stops wolverines Col C- * '.h * C~ * * FINALLY BEATS MICHIGAN:I Fesler Chalks Up Personal Triumph By IVAN N. KAYE on 53 plays and put on an exhi- mented, "We just couldn't get go- DaloSports EDitoybition of all-round football play ing. Minnesota wouldn't let us." that should earn him All-America Many people philosophize that MINNEAPOLIS-How much a recognition. He let Bob McNam- losing a game can do wonders part psychology can play in the ara, his win back, carry the ball for an overconfident team, but game of football was demonstrat- on a few occasions, but whenever in Michigan's case, losing its ed with graphic clarity by the a crucial situation arose, the 5 first away game will not help Minnesota Gophers here yesterday foot, 11 inch, 185 pound senior the varsity's morale. Playing a afternoon. took over the offensive reins and non-conference affair with a Wes Fesler's team, fired to the led his team to immediate success. good Pennsylvania team may hilt, literally ran the favored Wol- * * * be a blessing in disguise. The verines of Michigan out of Me- FOR WES FESLER it was his Wolverines will need to have morial Stadium. first victory over Michigan in a some confidence restored, and * * * career which extends back to 1947 Penn should be a little the worse ALL WEEK preceding the game whe pobably the ail hio State. for wear after California, Ohio the Minneapolis sportswriters had State and Navy. been ridiculing Fesler for not hav- the olveres which was in large measure responsible for his de- Today, for the first time in a Ig a+"GetmTough"+attite;, +1,ap arture from Columbus. Idecade, the sacred "Little Brown Georgia Aerials Down NC; Rice Edges Texas,_18-13 g4 GOPHER BURIES WOLVERINES-Paul Giel, Minnesota's star All-American halfback, put on a one man show before nearly 65,000 cheering fans as he ran, passed, kicked, and played a. stellar defensive game to give his team a well earned 22-0 win, Navy Given Boot by Quakers; Baylor Moves T'o 5th ,straight 11 his team. The writers said the Gophers had been listless and lackadaisical in their first four games. They were anything but that yesterday afternoon. Another bone of contention among the gentlemen of the press in this city had been the fact that Paul Giel had failed to call his own signal when the team was in scoring position. They said Giel was "too nice" to his compatriots, and pointed out the example of last Saturday's Illinois game when he called fullback Mel Holme's signal and the play resulted in a fumble on the Illini one yard line. The mistake took the steam out of Minnesota's attack and from then on Illinois rolled to a 27-7 victory. Yesterday Giel handled the ball Jug" rests in Minnesota's athletic Yesterday, however he prob- trophy case. The last time the ably assured himself of a long Gophers took it away from Mich- tenure here at Minneapolis, for igan back in 1934, they kept it for in this city as in so many others nine years. in the Midwest, a victory over * * * the University of Michigan THE SMALL PARTY of stu- means a successful season. dents who made the trip from Ann being up Arbor on the Wolverine Club spe-j More than Minnesota's gcial were informed that it is 650 for the game we have a feeling miles from the Michigan campus that Michigan's disheartening af- to Minneapolis. The trip back is ternoon may have also been the listed as the same distance, but consequence of the team looking -will seem much longer. over the Gophers toward the No- vember 14th date with Michigan State. t- 41' t ttt l Ay The Associated Press ATHENS, Ga.-Rugged John Carson caught every football in reach and helped.passer Zeke Bratkowski get Georgia's air car- nival back on the victory circuit yesterday with a 27-14 triumph over North Carolina. The tall end, always the prime target for Bratkowskis precision passes, made acrobatic catches which kept a crowdof 30,000agasp- ing during the second quarter when Georgia salted the game with three touchdowns. HE LEAPED high to snare one at the five and bulled, over for the first score. He caught four in five plays to set up the second in a series that tore the -heart out of the North Carolina defense. Halfback Charlie Madison scored from the four. At least two Carolina backs rode long John all the way but they could not make him miss that football. Bratkowski turned to his other end, Gene White, with a 25-yard For PRIZE-WINNING SHOTS! See the great Pacemaker CROWN GRAPHIC pitch to set up the third touch- down, scored by fullback Bob Clemens on a one-yard plunge. The brilliant Brat completed nine passes in the first half for 128 yards. * * * AUSTIN-A last minute 31-yard pass shot never-say-die Rice to an 18-13 victory over Texas yester- day in one of the most hectic spine-tingling finishes ever seen in Memorial Stadium. Texas threw up a furious goal line defense to stop one Rice drive on the five, and gave the Owls two safeties in the last six minutes in a vain effort to hold on to their lead,, but quarter- back Leroy Fenstemaker and his Owl teammates were not to be denied. With 56 seconds remaining, Fen- stemaker fired to end Dan Hart on the goal line and Hart took the ball between two diving de- fenders to drop to the ground with the winning points. $500oDOWN on the PORTABL WITH SENSATIONAL NO SPEED SELECTOR!; A By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - Pennsylva- nia booted Navy right out of the unbeaten ranks yesterday on a field goal by husky Ed Gram- igna from the 25-yard line that gave the Quakers a 9-6 upset win in the final 60 seconds before a roaring crowd of 52,210. Penn scored first on a 36-yard march, literally handed Navy a .matching touchdown and then surged back in the dying seconds of the contest. IT WAS Gramigna who kicked the bottom out of Navy's chances for a clear record this season. He had missed a chance for an extra point, earlier, that would have been a comfortable margin. But with the chips down the six-foot quarterback had the accuracy and the power for the important point. It was a big win for Penn, previously thrashed by Califor- nia and edged out last week by Ohio State. COLLEGE STATION, Tex. - Baylor's magnificent Bears lev- eled Texas A&M's castle of dreams, 14-13 yesterday-the second time in a row to win by a single point in this rib-cracking, vicious foot- ball series. By the grace of James Ray Smith's toe and a deflected try for point by Weldon Holley, big Bear fullback, Baylor remained BIG TEN GRID STANDINGS W L Pct. Illinois 2 0 1.000 Michigan State 3 1 .750 MICHIGAN 2 1 .667 Ohio State 2 1 .667 Minnesota 2 2 .500 Purdue 1 1 .500 Wisconsin 1 1 .500 Iowa 1 2 .333 Northwestern 0 2 .000 Indiana 0 3 .000 undefeated and untied. It was the first loss for the Aggies this season. * * . COODY GOT the first Baylor touchdown with an 11-yard line blast and Davidson sneaked over from the Aggie one for the other, with Smith adding both extra points. 11 "WE'LL PLAY THEM all one at a time," said Bennie Oosterbaan in the hushed Michigan locker room after the game.. He paid { high tribute to Wes Fesler and the Minnesota team and com- I SPORTS HANLEY GURWIN Night Editor humin, Iowa, North Iw estern min A great all-purpose camera for profes- sionals and amateurs alike. Identical in every detail to the famous Pacemaker SPEED GRAPHIC except for focal plane shutter. Among its many features are: * Choice of lenses and shutters with speeds to 1/400 sec. * Versatile Graflok back " Ground glass focusing i Built in body release " Parallax correcting action frame and optical viewfinders " Rising, shifting and tilting front " Accepts attachments for Roll film, cut film, or film pack See the Pacemaker CROWN Graphic today. Three sizes-2M x 34, 3Y4 x 4Y, 4 x 5. Purchase Camera Shop. 1116 S. University Phone 6972 By The Associated Press MADISON, Wis.-Ohio State's Buckeyes battled back from a two touchdown deficit as the fourth quarter opened yesterday to nip Wisconsin 20-19 in a bruising Big Ten football game. Junior quarterback Dave Leg- gett hit Howard (Hopalong) Cas- sady with a 60-yard touchdown toss with 2:31 showing on the clock to cap the 13-point last period scoring splurge. * * * HARD-HITTING Bobby Wat- kins, who rolled up well over 100 yards rushing before being injured, smashed through from the two on the first play of the final period as the Buckeyes pulled up to with- in striking distance. Ohio State's closing,4ireworks wiped out a brilliant offensive show by young Jimmy Miller, Wisconsin's kid 4 quarterback,' making his second collegiate start. The 165-pound sophomore scored two of the Badgers' touchdowns and pass for the third. A last ditch comeback by the Badgers failed with three seconds to go when Bill Miller's attempt- ed field goal from 23 yards out was wide. THE LOSS, Wisconsin's first in defense of its Big Ten co-cham- pionship, was a bitter disappoint- ment to a record crowd of 52,819 which jammed Camp Randall Stadium. The boisterous Buckeyes start- ed with a bang, marching 55 yards in nine plays as Watkins blasted the- Badger line to bits. The drive began midway in the opening quarter after Mike Tak- acs recovered a fumble by Alan (The Horse) Ameche on the Ohio 45. Cassady cashed in on points on the pitchout from Leggett, sweeping left end from the three with Tom Hague converting. Ohio State .....7 0 0 13-20 Wisconsin .....6 6 7 0-19 IOWA 19, INDIANA 13 IOWA CITY, Iowa-Iowa broke out of a 13-13 tie with a 24-yard touchdown pass late in the fourth period yesterday for a 19-13 vic- tory over Indiana, to stir the Iowa homecoming football crowd of 50,129. It was Iowa's first Big Ten tri- umph in three games and the third straight conference loss for the Hoosiers, who had hopes of at least a deadlock after scoring 13 points in the third period. * * * THE CONTEST, turned into Iowa hands when Lou Matykiewicz tossed to end Frank Gilliam, who made a fancy catch in the end zone with 4 minutes and 32 sec- onds to play. Iowa, not noted for its pass- ing in previous games, surpris- ed the Hoosiers with an eight- yard touchdown pass with only 3 seconds left in the first half, and the first scoring break in an evenly fought battle. Roger Wiegmann kicked the extra point for a 7-0 Iowa lead. Paul Kemp, a fourth string quarterback with a bad leg but a good left arm, came off the bench to make the throw to Bobby Stear- nes in the end zone. Iowa had used a big break to get into the scor- ing position. * * * * INDIANA intercepted an Iowa pass but interference was called against a Hoosier and Iowa was on the three yard line. The touch- down came after a loss of 5 yards on a recovered fumble. Iowa ..*....0 7 6 6-19 Indiana ........0 0 13 0-13 * * * NORTHWESTERN 27, PITTSBURGH 21 EVANSTON, Ill.-Northwestern survived a mid-game letdown yes- terday and, with two long passes by Dick Thomas setting up the winning touchdown in the fourth quarter, scrambled to a 27-21 vic- tory over Pittsburgh. The intersectional football bat- tle was witnessed by a crowd of 28,000. THE BIG TEN Wildcats struckC for a 20-7 lead at the outset but found it erased as the Panthers turned two pass interceptions into quick touchdowns and went ahead 21-20 in the third. It looked like Paul Blanda's three successful conversions for Pitt would be the difference then, but with five minutes in the final period, Thomas hit Joe Collier, his former Rock Island, Ill., teammate, with two passes that accounted for 50 yards in a 68 yard drive to the Pitt two. Wayne Glassman then punched over for the winning TD. A subsequent Pitt comeback carried 60 yards but ended when NU held the Panthers on the Wild- cat 10 with a minute left in the game. * ' * THE PANTHERS got themselves in a hole by drawing a 15 yard started by H4E penalty before the game even started for not reporting on the field in time and within three min- utes the Wildcats had recovered a Pitt fumble on the20 and scored. Nick Chandler zipped over tackle for the final 10 yards. Pittsburgh . ....7 7 7 0-21 Northwestern ...7 13 - 0 7-27 ILLINOIS 20 SYRACUSE 13 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-Stan Wal- lace's two long touchdown runs and Elry Falkenstein's passing ignited Illinois to a 20-13 victory yesterday over Syracuse. The unbeaten Illini were forced to come from behind twice and' didn't hold a comfortable lead un- til Wallace's second touchdown at the end of a 45 yard gallop, in the final quarter. IT WAS the speedy Wallace who took over when Syracuse stopped Illinois' one-two punch, J. C. Car- oline and Mickey Bates. With Syracuse ahead 13-7, Wallace sprang loose in the third period for a 55-yard dash across the goal line. Bob Winman booted the con- version that gave the Illini a 14-13 margin. The Orangemen from Syra- cuse counted first on Pat Stark's 7-yard pass to Bob Leb- erman, coming at the end of a 71-yard drive. With the rugged Syracuse line stopping Caroline and Bates, Falk- enstein took to the air for Illinois, and on two passes to John Ryan, tied the score. The touchdown play covered 51 yards, and Wiman's successful conversion pushed Illi- nois ahead by one point at half time. ILLINOIS piled up 222 yards rushing, making its five-game total 1,510, an average of 302. , Illinois, playing a non-confer- ence foe, took over the Big Ten Conference lead as Michigan and Michigan State were beaten. Syracuse .."...... 0 6 7 0-13 Illinois .........0 7 7 6-20 INCLUDING HANDSOME FIBERGLAS CARRYING CASE Small Monthly Payments GOOD RENTAL TYPE- WRITERS AVAILABLE OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY 215 E. 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