WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1953 TIE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREW U .,by Ivan N. Kaye__ Phi Delta Ti Swaney Hurls Four Paydirt Passes To Bury Alpha Delts _____________-________ By STEVE HEILPERN. threw to Stu Waggoner for the Four touchdown passes by Russ extra point, decreasing the deficit Swaney gave Phi Delta Theta a to 13-7. 27-13 victory over Alpha Delta Phi Swaney, aided by blocking in a first-place playoff contest back Norm Borgerson, connected Ferry Field yesterday. with Lawrence for two more heta Romps to 27-13 in T HE HISTORY of athletics at Michigan is rich with the accom- plishments of -great teams and great players, but standing above all who have ever served this University on the field of honor is the gigantic and compelling figure of Fielding Harris Yost. Although. it is seven years since his passing, the influence and the spirit of the Grand Old Man of Michigan can still be felt within. the faded brick walls of Ferry Field. Perhaps because he was so much a part of the tradition that is Michigan, and perhaps because it was Yost more than any oth- er one man who was responsible for lifting this University to the height of the athletic world, we would like to tell his story to the readers of The Daily sports page and especially to those in the Class of 1957. Fielding H. Yost first came to the campus of the University of Michigan in the spring of the year 1901. He was then a young foot- ball coach and was interested in making application for the then vacant position of head coach at Michigan. He had gone to Cham- paign to talk with George Huff about a similar position at the Uni- versity of Illinois, but after failing to agree tb the terms of the job, had journeyed north to Ann Arbor. WHAT'S THIS? Penn Rated 83 Points Down Things look bleak for the Quakers this Saturday. According to calculation Penn should be an 83 point underdog to the Wolverines this weekend. Here are the tor- rid details. Penn beat Navy, 9-6. Earlier in the season William and Mary tied the Naval Academy 6-6. Then Cincinnati smeared William and Mary, 57-7. Marquette in turn whipped Cincinnati, 31-7. Marquette then moved into the Big Ten and lost to Indiana, 21-20. Indiana lost to Iowa, 19-13 and Michigan edged the Hawkeyes by one point, 14-13. In summation, our once beaten Wolverines are apparently 83 points better than the twice whipped Quakers. Weather Dampens Practice; Walker Back at Tackle Slot, Yount Leads Cooley House To Cross Country Triumph A steady drizzle hampered the ground attack of both squads. The Phi Delts grabbed an early 13-0 lead when Doug Lawrence and Ron Eckert caught Swaney tosses for 6-pointers. ROGER MULIER put the Alpha Delta in contention with a scoring toss to Harry MacCallum before intermission. George Hammond SPORTS HANLEY GURWIN Night Editor touchdowns in the second half. The losers staged a brief rally in the final minutes when Fos- ter Aschenbrenner caught a Mulier pass for a tally. In a second place playoff con- test Alpha Tau Omega defeated Tau Delta Phi, 2 1-7. Kelly Tara- chas starred for the ATO's, pass- ing to Bruno Boelster twice and to Jerry Davis once for touch- downs. A Gene Curtis-to-Sherm Carmell aerial in the second half provided the Tau Delts with their' lone score. * * * THE LAMBDA Chi\Alpha-Delta Tau Delta and Sigma Chi-Kappa. Sigma first place playoff games were postponed because of im- pending darkness. By ART EVEN With Ben Yount leading the way, Cooley House copped the an- nual residence halls cross country meet yesterday at the University Golf Course. Despite a continual drizzle and a stiff breeze Yount managed to tour the approximate two mile dis- tance in 10.24:4. He finished 12 seconds ahead of Bill Follett also of Cooley. Their teammate John Stewart finished 8th giving Cooley a combined team total of 11 points. ,* * * GOMBERG House was the only real threat to the lads from Cooley as they accumulated a total of 16 points. The Gomberg trio of Ed Godfrey, Kurt Lewis, and Lou Megyesi finished 3rd, 4th and 9th' respectively. Breaking the Cooley-Gomberg monopoly were Dave Gasman of Adams House who finished 5th, Ken Fisher df Williams House, who took 6th, and John Mont- gomery, 7th place finisher for Michigan House. The outcome of the meet went according to 'Hoyle' as Yount led his team to a repeat performance of last year's victory. The results of the meet are as follows: 1. Cooley ......... .........11 2. Gomberg .....,.........16 3. Adams ..................31 4. Williams ................36 5. Michigan ......... ... ... 40 6. Allen-Rumsey ..........58 READ AND USE DAILY CLASSI F I#EDS Spirit, Manpower, Coaching . . NE OF THE FIRST to meet him was Charlie Baird, then Michi- gan's graduate manager of athletics. Baird was impressed with the young applicant's self-confidence. "Mr. Baird," said Yost, "there are three things that make a winning football team, spirit, manpower and coaching. If your boys love Meechigan (he could never pronounce it "Michigan") then they have the spirit. If they will come out for football, then that takes care of the manpower. I'll take care of the coaching." Whether it was because he was impressed with the young man's brash confidence or whether it was because he was desperate for a coach to rebuild the fading Michigan team, Baird took a change and hired Yost. Forty years of distinguished service to the University were to prove the wisdom of Charlie Baird's decision. Yost's challenge was simple: "Rebuild the Michigan football team and beat Chicago." Not that Michigan had never had a good team understand, the 1698 squad had won the Western Conference title and was the deserving subject of Louie Elbel's wonderful new fight song which heralded the praises of the "Champions of the West," but in- terest had declined rapidly from '98 through the 1900 season and Chicago had trounced the Wolverines, 15-6 in that first campaign of the new century. Yost looked over his 15-man varsity, his weed-strewn prac- tice field and the coming schedule which included Chicago, the Carlisle Indians, Northwestern, Indiana and Iowa, and then set to work to build a football team. It is doubtful if even the supreme- ly confident Yost could have forseen the events of the coming sea- son and the ones immediately following, for from the beginning of 1901 and continuing through to the last game of 1905, Michigan was to rule supreme over the college football world, and the succession of great teams turned out by Yost was to be grouped under the title "Point-a-Minute" teams and remembered as the greatest collection of gridiron strength ever put together on the American sports scene. How did he do it? That is what they were wondering from Pasa- dena in sunny California, where Yost's first great team had destroyed the best in the West, Stanford, in the first Rose Bowl game in 1902, to Carlisle in Pennsylvania where he had beaten Pop Warner's Indians in convincing fashion earlier in the same season. The answer was in the speed and condition of the Michigan teams. Early in the fall of his first year on the Ann Arbor campus a Detroit sportswriter aft- er hearing Yost's incessant cry of "Hurry up, hurry up, and if you can't then make way for someone who can!" labeled the young Michi- gan'coach "Hurry Up" Yost. * . . * A Point Every Minute . .. SPEED, SPEED and then more speed; that was the cornerstone of Michigan's early success. With the all-time immortal Willie Heston carrying the ball, and with a rugged defense keeping all opponents from the Michigan goal, the Wolverines rolled' to national prominence and completely stole the football thunder from the Ivy League teams which had dominated the sport until Yost's arrival at Ann Arbor. In all, the "Point-a-Minute" teams won 55-games tied one and lost the final game of 1905, while outscoring opponents 2,821 to 40. It stands today as the greatest record in the history of the sport. No other coach in the annals of the game of football ever had such instantaneous success as did the Hurry-Up man at Michigan. His comments on various occasions are almost a legend in them- selves. Of the Victors" he said, "I reckon it was a good thing Louie El- bel was a Meechigan man when he wrote 'The Victors,' because if he'd been from any other school they wouldn't have had much chance to sing it y'know." * * -, * Ten Years From Now .. . WHEN A WISCONSIN team protested the outcome of a game lost to Michigan in 1923 on the grounds that their members had tackled quarterback Tod Rockwell and that his 67 yard return of a punt which gave Michigan a 6-3 victory was illegal, Yost merely drawled in his West Virginia accent, "I reckon you should have nailed Rockwell down so's he couldn't run y'know. I reckon ten years from now the record books'll say that Meechigan won a game of football from Wisconsin, 6-3." And that is exactly what the record books do show. Through the years and 169 victories for his beloved Michigan teams as opposed to only 28 defeats in a quarter century of active coaching, the Hurry Up man gained wide acclaim as the foremost coach in the nation. Football was his life, and although during one season he dust- ed off his Law degree from Lafayette and went into practice represent- ing a pover company in Tennessee, it was merely a lark and he was soon back in Ann Arbor directing his team to another successful season. The great and near greats developed by Yost would fill any roster of the game's outstanding players. There was Adolph "Germany" Schultz, first center ever to pull out of the line and become a linebacker; the incomperable punter Harry Kipke, who later followed Yost at the coaching reins; and there was the unparalled forward passer Benny Friedman and his all-time All-American receiver Bennie Oosterbaan. It was Oosterbaan, per- haps the Old Man's favorite, who was to play the leading role in the drama of the dedication game at Michigan Stadium the year after Yost retired from active coaching. It was in October of 1927 that Oosterbaan turned passer and threw three scoring aerials to Louie Gilbert for a 21-0 victory over arch-rival Ohio State. There were 87,000 in the stadium that after- noon. They called it "The house that Yost built," and when his presence was announced the great crowd rose as one and gave him a heartfelt ovation. He stood with head bowed to acknowledge the thanks of the multitude. * * * * 'A thletics For All . ..' THEY COULD look out from the top of the massive bowl across Fer- ry Field to the great athletic plant, a four million dollar master- piece, which had been shaped by the hand of Yost. By DAVE BAAD Intermittent rains and a thin mist that hovered continually over Ferry Field yesterday dampened Michigan's first heavy football practice since its upset by Minne- sota last Saturday. However the drab workout Was - 1 PENN VS. HARMON, 1939: Michigan Ace Stars in Historic Duel brightened considerably by the re- turn to practice of first string left tackle, Art Walker. Walker who has worked at only half efficiency all season because of a bad ankle, completely missed last week's en- counter. THE BURLY lineman was much in evidence in practice yesterday and probably will see at least lim-, ited duty against Pennsylvania. Emphasizing especially the pass defense which was split wide open by Paul Giel's pin point aerials, Coach Bennie Oos- terbaan sent his defensive com- binations through a long work- out against the Quaker plays. Hefty John Peckham, who gained a linebacking opportunity against the Gophers when John Morrow and Dick Balzhiser were injured, was given a lot of work at linebacker behind the weak side of the line. By PHIL DOUGLIS Of all the hard fought, bitter battles between Michigan and Pennsylvania, none was more dra- matic than the contest of Novem-t ber 18h, 1939, on. Phladelphia'sf Franklin Field.! For on this day a capacity crowd awaited the long heralded duel between Quaker Frank Reagon,1 the best quarterback in the east, and Michigan's famed Tommyt Harmon.t * * * SATURDAY will again see these teams clash in the big homecom- ing game at the Stadium. Some- where in the vast stands, there will doubtlessly be some who wit- nessed this famed battle of 1939, and who remember seeing the great "one-man gang" of Michi- gan, Tom Harmon, have one of his greatest days. Harmon, the "Hoosier-Ham- mer," was a legend in the east, but the staid Philadelphians were banking on their own Rea- gan to show the way to victory. In front of Reagon, the Quakers had a huge line, a line that had wrought havoc through the east. Penn scored first that gray day, when John Davis booted a 14 yard field goal, but Harmon promptly went to work, scoring within five minutes, and the Wolverines held a 7-3 lead at the half. * * * BUT THE fireworkswere yet to come. With only 50 seconds gone of the third period, Harmon sal- lied forth on probably the most sensational touchdown run in Michigan history. Old number "98" took a rou- tine hand off from Bob West- fall on the Michigan 37, and swept the left end, only to run into the giant Penn captain, Andy Gustafson. So Harmon turned around and headed for right end, only to find himself hemmed in. He dashed back to his own 21, a full 16 yards be- hind the line of scrimmage, and then headed toward right end again, getting two key blocks on the way. That was all Harmon needed. The great All-American turned on the speed, broke into the clear, and scored standing up. WHEN ALL THE statistics were in, it was found that the amazing run had taken a full 30 seconds, and Harmon had traveled 14 yards to the left, 45 right, 16 back, and then 63 down the field. Michigan had a 13-3 lead, but the Quakers were notbeaten. The famed Reagan began to move, and the Penn team rolled to a touchdown, narrowing the gap to 13-10. Thus Harmon again received a call to duty, and he promptly led Michigan to another touchdown, firing a pin-point 28 yard scoring pass to cap the drive. The steady Reagon again urged his team on, and he proceeded to pass' and run Pennsylvania to a touchdown with only 30 seconds left in the game. The big score- board showed Michigan in front 19-17, and Penn knew that they must gamble if they were to win. So the Quakers tried an onside kickoff, and the ball went just beyond the 50. * * * THE PLAYERS dived on the ball in a wild melee, and when the officials untangled the mess, Penn had the ball on the bottom of the pile. Unfortunately for Penn, the referee had forgotten to stop the clock while he was untangling the pile-up, and the game ended just as Penn went back to their huddle. The amazed fans, burning with anger because the clock had been left running, poured out of the stands with blood in their eyes. The mob rushed across the field, grabbed the hapless referee. He was pushed and shoved by the sea of hu- manity, and his hat was even torn from his head, but police rescued him in the nick of time. Mighty Penn, the class of the east, had fallen before a mightier Michigan team. 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