PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1953 Spartan Depth, Experience Beats Good Michigan Eleven HOUSTON BURIES BAYLOR: Vann Stars As Army Topples Favored Quakers By IVAN N. KAYE Daily Sports Editor Special to Th. Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan in defeat played its best football of the season here at Macklin Field yesterday. The Wolverines were up against one of the great teams of the sea- son in Michigan State's Spartans. Biggie Munn's team is loaded with experienced personnel and has. great depth at every position. WE DOUBT very much if the Spartans felt the loss of Billy Wells very much, what with the excellent job that was turned in by his replacement Bert Zagers. Zagers threw for the all-im- portant second touchdown. It was the first college pass he had ever attempted, and it proved very important in the final an- lysis. Michigan's defense, which had looked so helpless at times in the Illinois game a week ago, ivas a tower of strength yesterday. Le- Roy Bolden was contained much Well Stated MICHIGAN LE-Topp, Stanford, Dutter LT-Strozewski, Walker, Bennett LG-Dugger, R. Williams C-Morrow, O'Shaughnessy RG-Beison, Cachey RT-Balog, Geyer RE-Knutson, Veselenak, G. Wil- liams GB-Jaldacci, McDonald, Kenaga LH-Kress, Cline RH--Branoff,. Hickey FB-Balzhiser, Hurley, Baer MICHIGAN STATE LE-Quinlan, Lewis, Duckett, Pos- tula LT-Jebb, Nystrom, Frank LG-Hallmark, Hollern, Schiess- wohl C-Neal, Badaczewski, Rody' RG-Bulough, Masters RT-Fowler, Dotsch RE-Dohoney, Kauth QB-Yewcic, Morrall, Matsock LH-Bolden, Ellis RH-Zagers, Buggs, Lekenta FB-Slonac, Planutis SCORE BY PERIODS MICHIGAN......0 0 0 6- 6 MSC.............0 7 7 0-14 Michigan scoring: Touchdown, Baldacci. MSC scoring: Touchdowns, Ellis, Duckett. Conversions, Slonac 2. stop Illinois' rushers short of the goal line The Illinois quart- erback waited for fourth down and then simply floated a pass over the line to an end who was waiting all alone in the end zone. Michigan lost that day too. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, look- ing very tired himself, paid tribute to Michigan State in the locker room after the game. "They're a wonderfully coached team with plenty of -poise," he said. He add- ed that he was very proud of his team. ** * SEVERAL of the Wolverines were suffering from minor in- juries incurred in the game. Tony Branoff has a sore neck and shoul- der. Fullback Dick Balzhiser ag- gravated his injured shoulder ear- ly in the game, and Gene Knutson and Ron Williams were recoved from the game with leg injuries. It is expected that all will be ready for the Ohio State game next week. We noted that this was Mich- igan's third defeat in as many away games. The white jerseys seem to be jinxing the Wolver- ines. This Saturday the team will return to its traditional Maize and Blue, while Ohio State will wear the white uniform of the visiting team. In the final analysis yesterday's game, witnessed by millions across the nation, was a well-played con- test between two old rivals, and was typical of midwestern football at its best. We are in complete agreement with Coach Oosterbaan that Michigan did itself proud with a fine performance. The Spartans, unfortunately were just a little better. West Virginia Winning Skein Ended, 20-14 MORGANTOWN, W. Va. - ) -Quarterback Johnny Gramling scored twice and passed for a third touchdown yesterday to lead South Carolina to a 20-14 victory, blasting West Virginia's hopes for a bowl bid and snapping the na- tion's longest winning streak at 13. The Gamecocks put on a display of ground power which outshone the West Virginians' much-publi- cized game which had seen it through victories over Pitt and Penn State earlier in the season. The game was played before 31,000 fans, most of whom had come with the hope of seeingĀ° West Virginia gain a bid for one of the major bowls. But South Carolina squelched the hope in a thrilling contest, marred by two crucial Mountain- eer fumbles which set up two scores. West Virginia flexed its muscles after taking the opening kickoff and working the ball from its 27 to the South Carolina 7. But there Joe Marconi, on a pitchout from Freddy Wyant, let the ball squirt out of his hands and Blackie Kin- caid fell on the ball. for SC's first big break. PHILADELPHIA - (P) - Quar- terback Pete Vann passed Army to the top of the eastern football rankings yesterday with a 21-14 victory over Pennsylvania, which had been favored by one touch- down. With the score tied 14-14 in the final period. Army took a Penn kickoff and moved 75 yards in 10; plays for the deciding touchdown, Vann passing twice for big chunks of yardage. * * * HE HIT Tom Bell for a 19-yard advance to Penn's 45, and two plays later found the same target for a 27 yard gain to the 15. At that point the Cadet running at- tack took over and Pat Uebel went the final nine yards on an off tackle slant. Joe Varaitis scored both the Penn touchdowns. Army's first touchdown came after recover- ing a fumble on the Penn 20 and the second was made by Uebel after a 48 yard march. hand of Vann coupled with his sharpshooting were too much for the Quakers. Penn had trouble,I too, with fumbles and intercepted passes at critical moments. * * * Penn came from behind twice in the game to tie the score, the second time on a 63 yard drive at the end of the third period, and covered the distance in 10 plays, with Varaitis scoring in 10 plays, with Varaitis scoring from the two in the last quar- ter. Army cashed a break for the first score of the game as Norm Stephen dropped a punt fumbled by Ken Smith on Penn's 20. From there it took the Cadets, with Jerry Lodge carrying the load,; just seven plays to score. Lodge took the ball on six of them and. went the last three yards. * * * HOUSTON 37, BAYLOR 7 WACO, Tex. - R) - Underdog University of Houston, shooting for a prestige victory, got it with a brusing 37-7 victory over Bay- lor's 9th ranked Bears yesterday. The thrice-beaten MissouriVal- ley team scored the first two times it got the ball and a hard charg- ing* line that chewed Baylor's for- ward wall to bits insured the upset over the Southwest Conference team. There was never much doubt that Baylor, flat as the Texas prairie, after its undefeated rec- ord was ruined by a single point last week by Texas, was going to lose. The only thing the sparse crowd of 15,000 didn't know was the final score. -Daily-Chuck Kelsey WHOA, NELLIE-Michigan's Lou Baldacci stopping MSC's Bert Zagers after short' gain in fou r1 Wolverines T (Continued from Page 1) rtl h quarter action. 9 Army's line and the slight-of- hwarted In Upset Bid, 14- that ensued, Baldacci let the Dohoney was there again, this ball squirt off to the left of the time getting Baldacci for an eight uprights and Michigan trailed yard loss. AHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE * *.*316 SOUTH STATE STREET Has an EXClUSiVe Selection of /rsontazeI 5nrnai CaL smartly sty led to express.. . YOUR INDIVIDUALITY couldn't quite get to it, but Spar- tan Bert Zagers did and MSC had possession on its own 34. ' * * * BOLDEN, Slonac and Zagers then alternated in hitting the Michigan line and they moved up the field in steady spurts of three, four and five yards. MSC collect- ed five first, downs on the drive and had the ball with goal to go on the Michigan four when Wol- verine tackle Jim Baog sprang through the State line to drop Slonac for a five yard loss. It looked for a moment as if the Spartans would stall-espe- cially when Bolden only brought the ball back to the four with one down remaining. But Zag- ers rose to the occasion with the first forward pass in his colleg- iate career, a left-handed spiral that Ellis Duckett snared all by himself in paydirt. Slonac's kick made it 14-6 with 12 minutes and 37 seconds gone in the third period. Michigan stalled in its drive after receiving the ensuing kick- off and Baldacci was forced to kick from his own 37. He cut loose with a good one and the flashy Ellis grabbed it on the seven and danc- ed back into his own end zone. * * * THE SWIFT Spartan proved a little too fancy for his own good, and he fumbled on the five with Wolverine guard Dick Beison re- covering the ball in the shadow of State's goalposts on the four. From there it only took Mich- igan three plays to score. Bob Hurley hit the line for three yards in two bucks and Baldacci tallied on a one-yard plunge. In the all-important placement 14-6. Actually, the scoring ended! there-but not before the Wol- verines let a golden scoring oppor- tunity go by the boards. The fum- ble shook the Spartans and after Bob Topp kicked off to Bert Zag- ers and the State half returned the ball to the 27, Munn's club seemed to disintegrate. * - ON THE FIRST play from scrimmage, Morrall fumbled and lost 13 yards. Then Morrall pass- ed to Planutis, who in turn fum- bled but recovered himself. If this wasn't enough, Mor- rall went to the air once again but this time Topp was there where Morrall figured Dohoney should have been and the end intercepted on the State 35 and lateralled off to Dan Cline, the safety man who carried it down to the MSC 24. Cline, operating out of the tail- back spot on offense seemed super- charged. He got five yards on two plunges and then hit Baldacci with a jump-pass for a first down on the four. Michigan was in a good spot- it was still early in the fourth quarter and it had a first and goal to go, while only trailing by eight points. On the next play Hurley cut the distance to the goal line in half with a buck to the two. But then, srangely enough, Ed Hickey was sent wide-Don Do- honey, State's great captain was there and Hickey lost four yards. Still, it was only third and six- but Michigan chose to pass, and By this time it was fourth and fourteen and the only alternative was a desperation pass. Cline tried it, but a beVy of Spartan defend- ers was there and the ball went over. State took possessionl and kept to the ground-effectively running out the clock. STATISTICS Michigan First DgWns.............12 1 Rushing Yardage.......80 1 Passing Yardage ....... 78 2 Passes Attempted.......14 Passes Completed ...... 7 Passes Intercepted by .. 1 Punts3...................3 Punting Average ..... 52 4 Fumbles Lost . . I Yards Penalized......... 5A MSC 16 194 22 13 4 2 ' S 41 2 70 and Then'FiveNueas D cN~C I better than was J. C. Caroline of Illinois. When Michigan was final- ly forced to give. ground it was done so grudgingly as the great number of plays needed for the Spartan touchdowns indicates. . * * MICHIGAN STATE took clever advantage on both touchdown marches of the tightened Michigan defense. Just when it looked as though the Wolverines might stop the State runners short of the goal, the Spartans took to the air to strike for touchdowns. 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