WEDNESDAY, l5M M'SER 2!, I95S THE MICHIGAN DAILY - WEDNESA...S.T.,B _.i,1955- Oosterbaan Starts Eighth Season at Gridiron Helm, Sports Thrills Highlight Exciting Year Nw-ool v4ft ../ 1 Rounding into his eighth yearv as Michigan football coach, Ben- jamin G. (better known as Ben- nie) Oosterbaan is one of the best known figures in modern gridiron history. Both as a player and a coach, Oosterbaan has been accorded some of the highest honors in the game. In 1948, his first year at the Wolverine helm, he was named "Coach of the Year," and in 1951, in recognition of the great playing career he had at Michigan, Oosterbaan was named to the all-time All-American squad by sportswriters and sports- casters throughout the nation in an Associated Press poll. All-American As an undergraduate at Michi- gan, he earned All-American hon- ors in 1925, 1926, and 1927, the only Michigan man ever to be selected three times. He was also named an all-American in bas- ketball, both in college and high school, and while at Michigan learned a total of nine letters. These awards were in baseball, football, and basketball. He led the Big Ten in scoring in basketball one season and headed conference batters in baseball during another. As a baseball player he served as a pitcher and firstbaseman. A native of Muskegon, Ooster- baan won All-American basket- ball honors during a national scholastic cage tournament at Chicago, was an all-state gridder and a state discus champion in Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS* at BARGAIN PRICES Three Stirring Moments Make Michigan History BENNIE OOSTERBAAN *. . all-time All-American track.According to the late Steve Farrell, one of Michigan's great track coaches, Oosterbaan could easily have made the Olympics in the discus, had he wanted to for- go baseball. Joins Staff Upon graduation in 1928, he continued his football career, joining the Wolverine coaching staff. To do this he turned down many major league baseball con- tracts. Under "Fritz Crisler, he served as end coach and backfield coach. He became first assistant to Crisler and when the latter re- tired to the Athletic Director's post, Oosterbaan took over. Justly famed for his remarkable pass receiving, he was a master in other departments of gridiron as well. With another Michigan All-American, quarterback Bennie Friedman, he was the receiver in one of football's greatest all-time pass combinations. Oosterbaan is an exponent of the single wing formation. He has added to his plan of attack an emphasis on punting and defense. He also has used the T-formation to some extent. BY PHIL DOUGLIS e Daily Sports Editor The wonderful world of sports is often measured in matters of split seconds - of thrilling mo- ments -- of decisive action. It was just such things as these that went to make up the greatest moments in Michigan sports dur- ing the past school year - mo- ments fraught with the drama and action that only top level collegiate sport can offer. It is difficult to selec" thst t few out of the many thrilling Michigan moments of glory. Some thrills were bitter ones, such as Dave Hill hammering at the Ohio State forward wall three fruitless times, or the fraction of an inch defeat suffered by a Michigan track relay squad before nearly 75,000 screaming partisans in the Los Angeles Coliseum. But pleasantly, there were far more happy thrills in a year that saw the Maize and Blue legions sweep to six team championships- their finest mark in over ten years. Five Conference Titles There were such things as the five conference titles, all thrills in themselves, the dual meet, one point swimming victory over Ohio State, Jack Wardroes world re- cords, the nip and tuck 5-4 tennis triumph over mighty Western Michigan, that thrilling overtime basketball victory over Robin Free- man and his Ohio State team- SPORT NOTES-Record for the most goals and total points in a Western Intercollegiate Hockey League play is owned by Clare Smith of Colorado College. In a contest against the University of British Columbia on March 8, 1954, Smith scored seven goals and got two assists for a total of nine points. mates, or the spine-tingling eighth inning home-run blast by Moby Benedict which gave Michigan a hard fought conference victory over rugged Iowa. But of all of them, there were three that stood out in this writer's mind as the outstanding thrills of the year. One was a national championship effort, another a re- cord smashing sweep of the Big Ten, and a third a heart-stopping game winning basket. By far the greatest sports thrill of the year, at.least in this writers opinion, took place far from Ann Arbor - some 3,000 miles to be exact. Hockey Thrills Nestled high in the mighty Rocky Mountains is the fabulous Broadmoor Hotel - home of the National Collegiate Ice Hockey Championships - and on last March 12, the scene of the wildest game college hockey has seen in many a year. But to set the stage, let's go back a few months, to a grey, blea kscene that took place on the steps of the Michigan Union. It was February 11, 1955, ap- proximately 5:30 in the evening. The sun had just set - and State Street was wreathed in a grey, bitter cold shroud. To fit the at- mosphere, Michigan hockey coach Vic Heyliger was also gloomy. His Michigan team Was just boarding a bus to take a journey to East Lansing, where the dangerous Michigan State Spartans hungrily licked their chops in anticipation of their first triumph over Michi- gan in 27 years. The Pessimist Heyliger was more pessimistic than we had ever seen him. His usual genial smile was gone, and his famous cigar hung limp-as so lets not stop now!" As he fin-3 ished the Tiger band struck up the "Victors" -- and with an actual roar of defiance, the blue clad3 Wolverines rushed out onto the ice. On To Glory The rest is history . , . for thatf Michigan team proceeded to play the greatest game of their lives- a game that left the 3,000 fans] that packed the Ice Palace, limpi from excitement.1 Picture this scene. There are only a minute and forty-five sec- onds left to go, and Michigan leads the Tigers, 4-3. In a desperate, all-or-nothing gamble, Colorado coach Cheddy Thompson pulls his goalie, and' puts on six of the hardest shooting forwards in college hockey. The Tigers move in on Michigan Goalie Lorne Howes-and with one min- ute left, the tempers that had been' held in check all night-break loose in a violent free for all .. . gloves fly in the air . . . sticks1 wave ... and pandemonium reigns. The ice is cleared, and with a half minute left, Michigan's Mike Buchanan is sent off the ice for an illegal check and the Wolver- ines are now two men short " The three lone Wolverines fan' out in front of* Howes, and the six Tigers move to the attack. The barrage starts ... one. . . two.. . three shots scream toward the Michigan nets, but Howes, playing the game of his life, turns them all' back. Six Seconds Left Now there are but six seconds left. A faceoff is called and Cap- tain Bill MacFarland wacks the puck the length of the ice and it slams into the empty Tiger net. The red light flashes, and Michi- gan has regained the National Hockey title. The Wolverines go wild ... Howes leaps from the net and hugs MacFarland ... the en- tire squad swirls madly at mid- ice . . . and then hoist coach Heyliger on their shoulders. Some- where a lone fane sings the "Vic- tors". That was the way it ended ... this greatest sport thrill of the year. The Maize and Blue had stormed into the NCAA throne room for the fifth time in eight years ... and there's no telling when they're coming out. Turing to track, Don Canham's thinclads proved to be second great sports thrill of the year by turning in the first triple track crown in Big Ten history - winning the cross-country, indoor and outdoor track championships. The big sweep began during the football season, when the little football season, when the little heralded cross-country team trav- eled to Washington Park in Chi- cago. There, a squad composed of John Moule, Al Lubina, Ron Wall- ingford, Goeff Dooley, and Los Kwiker proceeded to run the con- ference into the ground, winning by some 12 points over runner-up Indiana. But the real thrill came on March 6 - when an underdog Michigan team (so-called by coach Canham) roared into Jenison Field House in East Lansing to threaten Illinois' three-year string. It proceeded not only to end Illinois' strong, but to win its first conference track championship of any kind in ten long years. Unleashing tremendous power in a wild fury, every single Michigan athlete performed up to his capacity that day - and the result was an overwhelming 671/2 point total - a long way above second place Michigan State's 461/. The Canham Caravan didn't stop there . . . it roared all over the nation ... sweeping to victory in every dual and triangular meet it entered. Michigan relay teams ran well in the big meets all over the nation . . . and when the dust had cleared, the Wolverines found themselves in the big horseshow at Columbus for the Big Ten outdoor championships. Canham said, "Not much of a chance here" but Michigan paid no. attention to his wailing. Dashing through the mud and rain, the mighty Wolverines rolled up a lop- sided 621/2 points, doubling Illi- nois's second place mark of 311/2. (SEE THRILLS, Page 6) UP AND IN-Ron Kramer, Michigan sophomore sensation, puts in another basket against Michigan State, This prize-winning photo was taken by Chuck Kelsey of the Michigan Daily staff. he grimly said, "It looks like we're just about through. We've lost five of eight game already, and we have only ten players outside of goalies. State and the other teams in the league are better than ever before. Yup-:-we'll be lucky to win even a few more games this season. Wait 'till next year." With that we boarded the bus--- and few realized that a month later this same bus would be leav- ing for a Colorado-bound plane. For that Michigan team went on to rout the Spartans that night, 7-4, and like a miracle, it proceed- ed to win seven more in a row to sweep to second place in the WIHL and their eighth straight NCAA playoff berth. At the Broadmoor, Michigan opened its bid for the crown by plastering Harvard, 7-3, for their ninth in a row. The stage was set for number ten-the biggest of them all. Their foe was not only league champion Colorado College, son wins over the Wolverines, but a team that held two regular sea- on top of that, this was the Tigers' home den-and at stake was the championship of all America. Vic Heyliger was calm, down there in the Michigan dressing room. What does a coach say to a team before they take the ice for a title game? Michigan is the perennial king of college hockey, so not much was really necessary. He only said "We've gone this far, 'M _i I1 YAN BOVEN SPORTS JACKETS QU4LITY- 11.11 FIRST, LAST AND ALWAYS This old Principle is well nigh a slogan with us-and for 25 years we have steadfastly adhered to the ide of "There is no substitute for quality." 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