PAGE STX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1953 - i Southern Cal. Minnesota . 17, 7 | Missouri Purdue . 14 |1Illinois * . . 21 Wisconsin. . . 21 Penn State . . 20 Northwestern 35 .0 lowaState . 0 Stanford Oregon. . . . 7 Georgia . . . . 0 Tulane . . 16 Georgia Tech. . . 14 Florida. .* . 0* Nebrask . . . 0 Reserves Look Strong. In First Grid Triumph Gugliolmi Sparks Notre Dame Attack As Irish Rally to Sink Sooners, 28-21 (Continued from Page 1) rambled 14 yards late in the period to cap a four-play, 63- yard effort which featured some excellent broken field running by sophomore tailback Tom Hendricks. Dave Hill, carrying the ball for the first time since his return from Korea, scored the varsity's last touchdown mid-way through the fourth period. He took a lat- eral from Dan Cline and bulled 14 yards, carrying two Husky de- fenders the last five across the goal. HILL, WHO AS A highly-touted sophomore had failed to come up to expectations three years ago, now seems to be one of the bright- est of the new stars, and should be much in evidence this season and in 1954..- Throughout the long after- noon as the scoreboard reflected the varsity's point-getting prow- ess, observers increased conjec- ture as to whether it was Mich- igan's greatness or Washington's weakness that was responsible for the unbelievable final out- come. Athletic Director Fritz Crisler summed it all up in perhaps the best fashion when he commented that Michigan wasn't as good as the score, nor the Huskies as poor. It seemed generally agreed all around however that the Wolver- ines, are a very strong team and have been under-rated in the pre- season forecasts. BEFORE the game Michigan was untried at the vital quarter- back position. By the middle of the second period, however, it was pleasantly obvious that sopho- more Lou Baldacci was more than capable of filling the bill both as a blocker and as a play-caller. The 200-pounder from Akron reacted with the poise of a veteran in his first appearance on a college grid- iron. His linebacking was good, but throughout the .afternoon Michigan's linebackers were not really tested because the Huskies lacked possession of the ball for great periods of time. The alertness of the Michigan squad was directly responsible for most of the damage inflicted upon the visitors. Passes were intercepted, fumbles recovered, a kick blocked; in short, it seemed that Washington could Eight to Go MICHIGAN LE Topp, Stanford, Williams LT Strozewski,. Walker, Kolesar LG Dugger, Fox, Marion, Dutter C O'shaughnessy, Morrow, Peck- ham RG Beison, Cachey, Shomsky RT Balog, Geyer, Bennett, Meads RE Knutson, Veselenak, Schlicht QB! Baldacci, Kenaga, McKinley, McDonald LH Kress, Cline, Hendricks RH Branoff, Hickey, Corey FB Balzhiser, Hurley, E. Johnson, Hill WASHINGTON LE Black Houston LT Wardlow, Esser LG Noe, Monlux, Cassity C Lindskog, Jack Lindskog RG Bahart, R. smith RT Parsons, Kucinskas, Chambers RE Warsinske, McClary QB Lederman, Roake LH McNamee, Bergh, Dunn, Hoss- feld R Crook, Bridges, Kyllingstad FB Nu gent, Sprague,. Sage' MICHIGAN 13 18 13 6-50 WASHINGTON 0 0 0 0- 0 TOUCHDOWNS Michigan - Branoff (2), Baldacci, Kress (2), Hurley, Hickey, Hill. CONVERSIONS Michigan-Branoff, McDonald TIME OF GAME: 2 hours, 31 minutes OFFICIAL ATTENDANCE: 51,233 STATISTICS Mich. First Downs.......... 20 By rushing......... 12 By passing.......... 7 By penalty ....1 Rushing Yardage ....337 Number of rushes . 53 Passing Yardage ......134 Passes Attempted .. 21 Passes Completed.....10 Passes Intercepted ... 2 Punts.. ........5 Punting Average ...27.6 Fumbles Lost......... 0 Yards Penalized....... 65 Wash. 5 3 2 0 172 34 61 19 5 3 7 36 3 60 do nothing right and Michigan made 50 points taking advantage of that fact. The 'running of Michigan's corps of ball carriers was out- standing. Moving behind the pre- cision blocking of the line, Bran- off, Kress, Balzhiser, Hurley, Hick- ey and Hendricks galloped for huge gains, to the delight of the crowd. THE FULLBACKS, Balzhiser, Hurley and Hill, romped through the Husky middle for big yardage all afternoon. Several times the Washington linemen were com- pletely fooled by Balzhiser's spin- ning. The Wheaton, Illinois sen- ior also turned in a fine bit of defensive play while backing up the line. Hurley, fully recovered from the back injury which sidelined him last season, flashed his great speed on several long.runs through the hapless Huskies. All things considered, the var- sity showed a powerful first team and surprisingly good reserve strength, two factors which should cause no little uneasiness in East Lansing and Columbus, not to mention New Orleans. British Golfers Level Sig;hts On Ryder Cup WENTWORTH, England-P)- A determined bunch of British golfers will try to break the Unit- ed States stranglehold on the Ry- der Cup, symbol of world golfing supremacy, in matches over the tough Wentworth course Oct. 2-3. The British look on Wentworth as their lucky course. It was there, back in 1926, that they gained a runaway 13-1 victory withone match halved in the first inter- national clash between the two countries. * * BUT THEY'LL need more than luck to regain the Ryder Cup.-The Wentworth course is a tough one to play-so tough that it is known over here as the "Burma Road." It is 6,723 yards long with a par of 72. The narrow fairways are lined with trees, scrub and undergrowth and demand pow- erful, accurate drives and ap- proach shots. The Americans are hot favorites, to add another victory to their long string of successes. They have won seven of the nine Ryder Cup matches. Britain's 1926 vic- tory was just an international clash-one year before the start of Ryder Cup play. BOTH BRITISH victories were chalked up in matches on this side1 of the Atlantic. Henry Cotton, non-playing captain and three times British open winner, has put his men through a gruelling, four-day test on the Wentworth course to prepare them for the challenge. The United States team, 'even without the redoubtable Ben Ho- gan, is a powerful one. Captain Lloyd Mangrum will be able to choose his men for the four foursomes and eight singles1 matches from Sam Snead, Ted Kroll, Dave Douglas, Porky Oliver, Cary Middlecoff, Fred Haas, Wal- ter Burkemo, Jim Turnesa and Jack Burke. -LOWEST WOLVERINE HALFBACK Tom Hendricks spins free in third quarter of yesterday's game to lug pigskin from Washington 35 to 13 yard line and set up touchdown which Michigan punched over on next play. A JOB WELL DONE: Oosterbaan Pleased by Win, But Looks to Future Contests tl By IVAN N. KAYE Daily Sports Editor A tired, but happy Coach Bennie Oosterbaan sat in a deserted cor- ner of the Michigan dressing room after the game yesterday chatting with reporters about the perform- ance of his team against the Wash- ington Huskies. He was pleased to discover that his worries about finding a quar- terback were virtually over, in view of Lou Baldacci's poised handling of the team in the cru- cial early part of the game. * * * THE MICHIGAN coach could not pick out any individuals in his star-studded lineup of yesterday for special recognition. It was ap- parent that in a 50-0 ball game, just about everyone was effective. When Dave Hill's touchdown run was mentioned, Bennie flashed his famous grin, and the newsmen did not have to be told that the coach was pleased at the fine showing of the Korea veter- an from nearby Ypsilanti. We were looking for a note of exhileration, from the man whose team had just finished drubbing a major intersectional rival by 50 points, but Bennie just said in a quiet voice, "I can't get too excit- ed about this one, there are eight more on the schedule.' * * * ACROSS THE narrow gravel runway, there was deep silence in the Washington dressing room. John. Cherberg, the personable coach of the Huskies did not think his team was as poor as its show- ing, and was high in his praise of the Michigan machine. His highly regarded passing game seemed to evaporate in the face of the hard-charging Mich- igan line. His great ends had a miserable afternoon on offense and an even worse time on de- WELCOME MICHIGAN MEN!! collegiate cuts a specialty 4 EXPERT BARBERS Service to Please The Baseola Barbers near Michigan Theatre PRICES_____ fense. His 'running game, crip- pled by injuries to both first string halfbacks last week against Colorado, was totally in- effective. In spite of it all, Cher- berg managed a smile and said that he would forget the events of the day and plunge into the task of facing a rugged Pacific Coast Conference schedule. Cherberg, a highly respected high school coach in Seattle be- fore he moved into the football picture at the University of Wash- ington, will undoubtedly bring his team along to better things later in the season. His debut has been shaky, what with a one-point loss to Colorado last week and yester- day's nightmare in Michigan Stad- ium, but he is well-liked by his players and may yet make some headlines in the coming weeks. MICHIGAN'S inimitable Wally Weber managed one of the short- est appraisals that we have ever heard him give concerning a foot- ball game when he said, "Michi- gan's multiplicity of offensive pat- terns confounded the Huskies im- measurably." .4 NORMAN, Okla. --03 - Notre Dame, with a flaming comeback spirit to match the searing Okla- homa's sun, rallied from early ad- versities yesterday to whip Okla- homa's Sooners, 28-21. Ralph Guglielmi, an under-rat- ed quarterback, took chafge of the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame and led them to victory in the torrid opening game of the season. Guglielmi scored one touchdown and passed to Joe Heap for two others. jBUT CAPT. Don Penza shared the plaudits of a sellout crowd of 59,500 heat-wilted fans. He block- ed one Oklahoma kick and recov- ered the ball to set up a touchdown and recovered a fumble to pave the way for another. The game was played in in- tense heat that reached 94 de- Irish justified their nickname by grees in the shade and must matching Oklahoma touchdowns have been well over 100 on the in each of the first two periods, field. then ramming over two more in * "' " the third quarter. Oklahoma's IN TROUBLE from the first third score, on a 60-yard run by kickoff, Notre Dame's Fighting Merrill Green, came too late. -1 TYPEWRITING SHORTHAND ACCOUNTING OFFICE MACHINES A single subject or a complete course H AMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE *illiam at State Phone 7831 39th Year .i r - S'TORE HOURS DAILY 9 T O :30 A PAUL BANKEY TOM THOMAS Welcome Michigan Students Back to Ann Arbor We are no longer at the Arcade or U of M Barber Shop on campus but are now at RAYTS BARBER SHOP 115 West Huron .. , opposite Bus Station - S I N 3 1 . C STUDENT TRAVEL LET BOERSMA TRAVEL SERVICE HANDLE ALL YOUR bOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS REGISTER NOW FOR STUDENT TOURS TO EUROPE IN 1954 ALSO: THE BOERSMA SPECIAL' FOR THE EASTER HOLIDAYS:. 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