THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY~ ~E~TEMBER 16,1957 ..,, Football at Michigan Requires Extensive Coaching Program * By BOB ROMANOFF Michigan's perennial football powerhouses are guided by the brains of eight of the top coaches in college football, who in their prime were also great players. The Wolverines' head coach is Bennie G. Oosterbaan, who is en- BUMP ELLIOTT tering his 10th year in this posi- .new backfield guide tion and his 28th year as a mem- Herrnei Pace Keys To 'M' Gridders' A ttack Top guard candidates are the veterans Larry Faul and Mary Nyren, who should provide head- aches for the opposition only, but their substitutes are either new- comers or relatively untried hold- overs such as Gerry Marciniak, Tom Berger and Alex Bochnowski. Watch, in particular, for Stan Larmee, an Ann Arbor all-stater who was injured last year; Tom De Massa of Detroit; Mike Filli- chio, Chicago; Jared Bushong, Toledo, and Fred Olm, a 225-lb. hopeful from Niles, among the new guard prospects. Center is fortified with experi- ence, with Gene Snider back along with Ray Wine, both lettermen. Add to these two Bill MacPhee, a hard-luck senior who has been 1956 GRID RESULTS MICHIGAN 42, UCLA 13 Michigan State 9, MICHIGAN 0 MICHIGAN 48, Army 14 MICHIGAN 34, Northwestern 20 Minnesota 20, MICHIGAN 7 MICHIGAN 17, Iowa 14 MICHIGAN 17, Illinois 7 MICHIGAN 49, Indiana 26 MICHIGAN 19, Ohio State 0 hurt the past two seasons, but shows real promise, and Don Rembiesa, among the reserves. A pair of sophomores could break in, too. Mike Dupay, of Monongahela, Pa., a 6'3" 225- pounder, and Bob Dutnell, 5'11" and 195 from Lakewood, O., will be in evidence. Whether or not this provides us with an optimistic picture can be debated. That it is an interesting one will quickly be proven once the opening whistle sounds. ber of the coaching staff. Since 1948, when he replaced Athletic Director H. O. "Fritz" Crisler, he has compiled the best record of any Big Ten coach. .719 Percentage In Big Ten play his teams have run up an enviable .719 record. In compiling this record, the Wolver- ines have won or shared three Conference titles, a national cham- pionship, a Rose Bowl crown, and have finished second twice, third cnce, fourth twice and tied for fifth once in the Big Ten. In 1948 he was named "Coach of. the Year" and in 1951 he was hon- ored for his playing days when he was named on the all-time All- American team selected by sports-, writers and sportscasters through- out the Nation. During his playing career at Michigan, he earned nine letters in football, basketball and base- ball As an end on the football team, he earned All-American hon- ors in 1925-26-27 and was captain of the team in 1927. On the basketball team he was also an All-American, and as picther and first baseman on the baseball team he is called by Ray Fisher, who is still head coach of the team, one of the two greatest players he ever coached. Muskegon Product Oosterbaan, who hails from Muskegon, was state discus cham- pion in track and considered a top Olympic prospect but at Michigan he decided to concentrate on base- ball instead. Following his graduation' in 1928, he turned down major league base- ball and professional football con- tracts in order to accept a position with the Michigan coaching staff. Oosterbarin, who is married, has one daughter. The newest member of the staff is Michigan's backfield coach, Chalmers "Bump" Elliott. Elliott, whose brother Pete is head coach at California, was backfield coach of last year's Rose Bowl winners, Iowa. Elliot is one of the most popu- lar figures in recent Maize and Blue history and tradition, ever since he earned four letters on Michigan's football and baseball teams. He was right half on the 1946 and 1947 teams, the 1948 edition going unbeaten and untied and ripping Southern California in the Rose Bowl, 49-0. During this sea- son, Elliott was the Conference's top scorer with 63 points. He further distinguished him-l self in '47 by being named to the Coaches' All-American and be- coming the fourth Michigan man7 to be selected as the most valu- able player In the Big Ten and thus become winner of the Chi- cago Tribune trophy. Elliott hails fron Bloomington,' Ill, and is the son of Dr. J. Nor- man Elliott, former Illinois Wes- leyan athletic star and later head coach there and line coach at Northwestern. ' He is married and the father of three. Th( man who is responsible for the tremendous lines which Mich-{ Michigan is renown for is Jack{ L. Blott, who in 1923 was an All- American center for the Wolver- ines. During his coaching career,. Blott has turned out a-half-dozen All-Americans. His lines are dis- inguished by quickness, smartness and poise, rarely by size and weight. Besides playing football, Blott was also a teammate of Ooster- baan on the baseball squad, which he captained during his senior year. He earned three letters in this sport and Fisher considers him to be the finest catcher he ever coached and with Oosterbaan one of the two greatest players to play the diamond sport for Michigan. After graduating, Blott, played briefly with the Cincinnaati Red- legs. He is married and has one daughter. Assisting Blott with the line coaching is Robert Hollway, who is a local boy and a 1950 graduate from Michigan. Hollway played defensive end on the 1947-48-49 football teams which were all championship squads. Rollway, whose father is athlet- ic director at Ann Arbor High, is married and has a son and two daughters. The man who is responsible for Michigan's perennially fine crop of ends is Matt Patanelli. Earns Eight Letters Patanelli, who needless to say is a Michigan graduate, was an out- standing end during the 1934-35-36 seasons ano captain cf the team' in his benior year. Patanelli earned. three letters in football, three in basketball and two in baseball. Besides coaching football duringI the five years he has been here, he has been assistant basketball and baseball coach. Patanelli, who hails from Elk-'; hart, Ind., is married and has one soil. Assistant backfield coach is Don Dufek who in 1951 was the star of Michigan's last Rose Bowl team when he scored both TD's against California During the 1948-49-50 cam- paigns he earned the reputation of being one of the hardest hit- ting, most reckless fullbacks in the Big ren. Dufek, who is married, has a son and a daughter. Keen Enters 32nd Year Cliff Keen, who with the ex- ception of Fisher has served the longest tenure as a Michigan coach, is now entering his 32nd year as head wrestling coach and assistant football mentor. Keen, who is a product of Mich- igan's law school, holds the dis- tinction of being the only assis- tant football coach to develop two championship Maize and Blue grid teams. He accomplished this dur- ing the two seasons of the short- lived 150-pound football league in the Western Conference. As head wrestling coach he has p r o d u c e d nine championship teams and 12 second-place teams. He was coach of the 1948 Olym- pic wrestling team and was active in, setting up the 1952 and 1956 teams. In 1954 he served as president of the Collegiate Wrestling Coaches and Officials Association. Keen, who is married, is the fa- ther of three children. Rounding out the football coaching staff is Michigan's genial freshman coach, Walter J. "Wally" Weber. Acquaints Freshmen He has the job of evaluating the talents of eager freshmen and ac- quainting them with the funda- mentals of the Michigan style of play, which is an extremely im- portant j*b. Weber, who was a teammate of Oosterbaan on the 1925-26 cham- pionship teams, was a powerful fullback and tremendous defen- sive player During the football season, Weber also serves as a sports com- mentator following broadcasts and telecasts of Michigan football games. He is widely sought as an after- dinner speaker, and in his job as good-iill ambassador for Michi- gan he has circled the globe many times in actual mileage. Weber is married and has one son. ""I}{< R J