PAGE, SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1954 PAGE. SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1954 oSlU Stops Purdue, 28-6; Clinches Tie for Title '.*2 'M' Soccer Team Beats State, 3-1 Michigan's football team was not the only one- to snap a four year Michigan State supremacy yester- day-the Wolverine soccer club downed the State squad, 3-1, for the first time in four years. Mehmet Adanli led the Wolverine cause with a two-goal effort. His first tally came in the first half, breaking a scoreless tie, when he faked the State fullback and rove all alone in front of the MSC goal, passing the goalie easily. State Bounces Back State, however, came back later in the first half to knot the score at 1-1, before Adanli booted his second goal of the day with fifteen minutes gone in the second of the two 40 minute halves. John Bilson tallied the third Michigan goal of the game with but five minutes remaining. Tony Wellworth captained and coached the team as well as play- ing a standout game on defense at his right halfback position. Play Ohio State Next The game was viewed by as many as 500 spectators at a time as fans for the football game began to file by. The soccer team travels to Ohio State next weekend to engage the Buckeyes in the second game of that series. MARCH OF DIMES Buckeye Ground Game Nets Win; Watkins, Cassady Star Boilermakers Held Scoreless for Three Quarters ; Ohio State Tallies in All Periods LAFAYETTE ()- - Ohio State's Buckeyes nailed down at least a tie for the Big Ten football cham- pionship and probably a Rose Bowl trip yesterday in a triumph of bril- liant running over Purdue's pass- ing game, 28-6. The Bucks cut up Purdue with long touchdown runs by halfbacks Bob Watkins and Howard (Hopa- long) Cassady and a short plunge by quarterback Dave Leggett be- fore scoring once through .the air for variety. They stopped Purdue three times inside their 15-yard line before al- lowing the Boilermakers to show on the scoreboard. Watkins scampered 30 yards for Ohio State's first quarter touch- down. Cassady sped 68 yards in the second for another Buckeye tally. Thurlow Weed kicked four extra points. Leggett Goes Over Leggett, a converted fullback, plunged inches for the third Buck- eye touchdown in the third quarter at the end of a 75-yard drive. He passed 12 yards to co-capt. Dick Brubaker in the end zone in the final period after Purdue made its only score late in the third. Bill Murakowski got the Boilermaker touchdown on a 9-yard run. Ohio State, which stands second nationally in the weekly Associated Press poll, thus remained unde- feated. It gained 407 yards on the ground, 41 in the air. Purdue made only 88 yards on the ground, 217 by passing. Ohio State used just six plays to cover 87 yards in the first quar- ter. Watkins went the last 30 yards. The Buckeyes started their sec- ond quarter touchdown drive at their 28 after a punt exchange and covered the 72 yards in three' plays. Hubert Bobo dived for three and Watkins for four. Then Cas- sady took a pitchout and seesawed down the right sideline for 68 yards. Dawson Halted Purdue covered 64 yards in eight plays for its third quarter touch- down by Murakowski. Leonard Dawson, who had thrown 14 touch- down passes to lead the nation, didn't add to his total but complet- ed a couple of short ones in the drive. Ohio State ...........7 7 7 7-28 Purdue ..............0 0 6 0- 6 Ohio State scoring: Touchdowns, Watkins, Cassady, Leggett, Bru- baker. Conversions, Weed 4. P u r d u e scoring: Touchdown, Murakowski. --Daily-Dick Gaskill TOM HENDRICKS leaves Michigan State tacklers in his wake as he streaks 68 yards to Michigan's final touchdown. Wisconsin Scores 20 Points In Last Period To Top Iini --Daily-Chuck Kelsey RON KRAMER, in addition to blocking punts, catching passes, punting, and kicking the extra points, heire aides an injured Michi- gan State player after a Wolverine scorer. Mstags Upset Arkansas; Stop Eight Game Win Streak Navy, Army Romp Over Weak Foes Teams To Meet In Service Tilt By The Associated Press ANNAPOLIS-A fleet of fast Navy backs and hard charging linemen shattered Columbia, 51-6, yesterday in a final tuneup for their football date with Army two weeks away, Coach Eddie Erdelatz used his first team less than 17 minutes. It blitzed through the hapless Lions for two touchdowns in the first period and a lightning-like strike in one minute and 56 sec- onds of the second half. The rest was done by reserves. In registering their sixth victory against two defeats theMiddies rolled up 512 yards rushing for a new Navy record. They added 117 on passing. Columbia, losing its seventh game in eight starts, was shackled to only 28 yards rushing and 114 yards in the air. The Lion's lone touchdown came late in the final quarter on a 15 yard pass from Charley Nations to Al Black against Navy's third stringers. PHILADELPHIA-Army's pow- erful football team majestically administered to Pennsylvania its eighth consecutive defeat of the 1954 season yesterday, 35-0. Pete Vann, Army's tricky quar- terback, big Don Holleder, and' Tom Bell stood out for the Cadets, with Bell and Holleder each scor- ing two touchdowns. Despite perfect weather only 34,477 showed up for the game- the smallest crowd for a Penn- Army game in recent years. Only the superb punting of Walt Hynoski kept the score as low as it was. Once the Penn half- back quick-kicked for 75 yards, another time he punted 57 yards out of bounds on the Army 3 and on another occasion he kicked 54 yards out of bounds on the West Point 16. Late in the game he kicked 42 yards out of bounds on the Army 13. I I CHAMPAIGN (;) - Wisconsin cashing in on a series of recovered fumbles and crucial penalty yard- age against Illinois, trip-hammer- ed three touchdowns in the last quarter yesterday to chill the Illini homecoming with a 27-14 triumph. Wisconsin, handing Illinois its fifth straight Big Ten defeat, play- ed all but the first five minutes of the game without its star, rush- ing record holder Alan (The Horse) Ameche Reserve Scores Three The Badgers, gaining their fourth conference triumph in six starts, sprung a reserve senior halfback, Bob Gingrass, across the goal line three times. The aroused flini scored twice on long drives in the second per- JANUARY 3-3. I iod to grab a 14 to 7 halftime ad- vantage. With five minutes remaining be- fore the half, the Badgers blasted 62 yards in nine plays to score on Gingrass' four yard cutback. Jim Haluska's 31-yard pass to Dave Howard, who caught the ball only to fumble it and then regain it again on the Illinois 19, set up the touchdown. Glen Wilson booted the extra point to tie the score, 7 to 7. Caroline Goes Across Illinois came right back with Lindbeck returning the ensuing kickoff 24 yards to midfield. From there Lindbeck passed 11 yards to Bates and nine to eligible tackle Percy Oliver. Caroline, whose 16- yard run kept the drive rolling, eventually drilled across from the 4 and Wiman again converted. Wisconsin's first break came late in the third period. Pat Levenha- gen's punt was partially blocked by Illinois' Charles Butler. When the ball came down, Bates, Illini fullback, touched it. Clarence Bratt pounced on it for the Bad- gers. This touched off a 61-yard Wisconsin surge capped by Gin- grass' 2-yard smash. Glen Wilson converted, tying the score, 14-14, with less than three minutes gone in the quarter. Min- utes later, Wisconsin drove 43 yards to score. Momentum was maintained on a 15-yard pass in- terference ruling against Bates af- ter Lindbeck had stolen Jim Hal- uska's toss for the Illini. Wisconsin kept possession of the ball on the 15 and Gingrass even- tually barreled across from the six. He also booted the extra point. In the final five minutes, Illi- nois' Harry Jefferson fumbled and Wells Gray recovered on the Illi- nois 31. Six plays later Bratt ram- med over from the 14. FAYETTEVILLE (A1 -- Southern Methodist's Mustangs, led by the brilliant Frank Eidom, built up a three-touchdown lead and held on to hand the Arkansas Razorbacks their first defeat of the season 21- 14 here yesterday. rt'"'A / .:' ,. / : ....$...i S} '" '" " " MINNEAPOLIS P)-Minnesota turned a goal line Iowa gamble into a game winning safety yes- terday in an ironic climax to a 22-20 victory studded with the running heroics of Gopher cap- tain Bob McNamara. A crowd of 65,429, second high- est in Minnesota history, watched one of the most gripping struggles in the schools' long and fierce ri- valry. Iowa committed its fatal mis- take in the third quarter on the very play which had punctured Minnesota's defense almost with- out challenge for the first two quarters. Fumble Saves Gophers Right half Eddie Vincent fum- bled quarterback Jerry Reichow's high pitchout in the end zone and fell on it for a safety with the score tied 20-20. Seconds earlier, Iowa had an ap- parent winning touchdown snatch- ed away when officials detected a Hawkeye clipping on Earl Smith's 81 yard sprint into the end zone on a punt run back. It was a game of swiftly shift- ing foxtune, bannered by McNa- mara's two long touchdown gal- lops and the deadly end sweeps of Vincent and Smith. Minnesota scored a little more than two minutes after the open- ing kickoff, McNamara banging 36 yards for the touchdown against Iowa's second team. The Hawks retaliated 10 minutes later after' Vincent sped 68 yards to the Goph- er 12. Four plays later Reichow punched over from the 1 for a 7-7 tie. McNamara grabbed the ensuing kickoff on the 11 and pounded 89 yards to score with a magnificent breakaway from three Iowa tack- lers at midfield. Iowa locked it at 14-14 on Smith's one yard blast later in the second quarter before Minnesota's Don Swanson threw 26 yards to Dick McNamara for a 20-14 Goph- er lead. Iowa rolled 68 yards early in the quarter to restore the tie, Vincent grinding over from the 1. The victory was Minnesota's sev- enth in eight games. With five minutes remaining in TRIUMPH 22-20: Iowa Fumble Gives Minnesota Victory The lo s stopped Arkansas' win- ning spreak at eight straight games, i In wirl ring, SMU kept alive its hopes of winning the Southwest Conferenr: title, and moved into the lead JIn the championship race. Arkansas needed no more than a tie to cLinch the crown, The crcawd saw Arkansas' vaunt- ed defense crumble before the tMustangs" onslaught, well-led by Eidom, quarterback Duane Nutt and half-kacck John Marshall. Eidom scored all three of SMU's touchdownus-one on a pass from Nutt, one on a two-yard plunge and one on a 2;B-yard sprint off tackle. Nutt's touchdown pass was the first aerial score given up by Ar- kansas this year. Arkansas' offense couldn't find a loophole iA the Mustang defense for three quarters. The Razorbacks finally came to life in the fourth period to %core twice, but by then it was too late. the game, Iowa launched a last- gasp drive from its own 29 and carried to the Minnesota 16 where Eldean Matheson fumbled Reich- ow's pass, Dick McNamara recov- ering. Iowa ........ 7 7 6 0-20 Minnesota .....14 6 2 0-22 Iowa scoring: Touchdowns, Reichow, Smith, Vincent. Conver- sions, Freeman 2. Minnesota scoring : Touchdowns, Bob McNamara 2, Dick McNamara. 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