SPOR Ts SUPPLEMENT YI e Lit a 4:3attH SPORTS SUPPLEMENT ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, AUG. 25, 1944 MAKINGTH r Fresh Start? When the Wolverine football team resumes play here Sept. 16, they will not only be renewing a series with the Iowa Sea- hawks, but they will be out to start another cycle of Conference championship wins. For it was the grid men's first place tie with Purdue last fall that got Michigan started, and they wound up winning six individual titles and tying for another. These records of 1943-44 ended the most successful athletic Year ever enjoyed by the University of Michigan, as they won individual crowns in baseball, wrestling, swimming, tennis, indoor and outdoor track and golf. The football team's dead- lock with the Boilermakers for first place was the other cham- pionship.r The past year also marked the first time in Wolverine athletic history that any man has captured four letters. Elroy Hirsch, the versatile Marine from Wausau, Wis., performed this feat. Hirsch played on three championship squads," football, baseball and track. His other sport was basketball. Meanwhile, the Wolverines put the finishing touches to their summer practice this year and are now taking a brief respite before fall workouts get underway. Though Michigan has nothing to resemble the wealth of ROUNDS ... . ...By Hank Mantho great material which crowded the campus last summer, Coach "Fritz" Crisler is more than sure that he can muster up a better than average team for the coming campaign. The Wolverines will again have a strong backfield, if sum- mer drills are any indication, but their line will be weaker than usual. In the backfield will be veterans Bob Nussbaumer, Bob Wiese, Don Lund, Joe Ponsetto and Jim Aliber. Nussbaumer, a scat back, has been showing up well in running and passing, while Captain Wiese, a three year veteran, will operate at full- back, with Joe Ponsetto at quarter. The other backfield posi- tion is wide open with Bill Culligan, Warren Bentz, Gene Derri- cotte and Bill Wenzlau competing for the starting assignment. Ralph Chubb, a first year man, has been also showing up well at the fullback slot, and he was designated by the coaches as the most improved player on the squad. Hence, if the situation warrants, Wiese may be shifted to another position to utilize the material on hand to better advantage. With this starting backfield and the wealth of reserves on hand, Coach Crisler has no worry on that angle, but his main frustration is being caused with the lack of experienced person- nel on the line. Art Renner, Bruce Hilkene and Dick Rifenberg are the out- standing flankmen, with Clem Bauman, Quent Sickles and Roger Chiaverini operating at tackle. George Burg is most prominent at the guard post while Chuck Wahl and John Lintolarf fight- ing it out for the pivot position. Although the Maize and Blue squad was blessed with some outstanding freshmen material, several of their brightest stars have given notice that they will soon be in some branch of the service, with chances that many more will follow the same path before the end of the year. Rifenberg and Derricotte are both scheduled to leave be- fore long. Rifenberg, an All-Stater from Saginaw Arthur Hill, who was voted the outstanding prep athlete in Michigan last year, will soon be in the Merchant Marine, while Derricotte, an All-Stater from Defiance, 0., passed his pre-inductiqn physi- cal for the army a short time ago. Both boys are far down the list in the respective service calls and they may not be called up for ninety days, which means that they can still be available for at least part of the season. Crisler will be working plays off his spin series and will add punch to this attack with his modified T formation. Along with Michigan, four other schools, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota have also incorporated the T formation as their offense. This sudden popularity of the T formation has been due to the fact that coaches have younger and brighter backs. In ordler to utilize the talents of these green hands, they are going to the T to capitalize on its quick opening plays and its greater opportunities for passing. As reports from various football camps poured in this year, I realized that numerically summer football squads in the Midwest were well back to prewar levels. The 125 men who reported for opening drills at Notre Dame were tops for the Midwest. Ohio State, Northwestern, Michigan and Wisconsin all had turnouts which topped 100, while Minnesota, Purdue and other schools have more than doubled their quotas of last summer. This begins to indicate that after several years of unequal competition, the caliber of play will be more even than last season when a few teams, loaded with prewar stars furnished by the Navy and Marines, dominated this district. It should be interesting to watch this year's games, for the close competition which will be afforded to the public will more than make up for the lack of stars and experienced gridmen. 1943-44 Marks Wolverines' Greatest Sport ear i Track Squad Captures Indoor, Outdoor Titles Thinclads Also Win Purdue Relays with Coach Ken Doherty Stressing Team Balance Michigan Takes Eight Of Nine Big Ten Crowns Cagers Break Perfect Conference Record For Maize and Blue's Athletic Season By BOB CLINTON Team balance, the same factor which Coach Ken Doherty has stres- sed during his reign as track mentor at Michigan, again proved successful as the Wolverine thinclads swept to Victories in both the indoor and out- door Big Ten track meets. Besides winning the Conference crowns, the tracksters won the Pur- due Relays as*well as carrying the Maize and Blue fame at the Penn Relays and many promoter events both indoor and outdoor. Even though the team as a whole made its name because of its versa- tility, many individual runners were Cagers Finish Season on Red Side of Ledger Oosterbaan's Charges Complete Year in Sixth Spot in Conference By JERRY LEWIS 1943-44 was just another year as far as Michigan basketball was con- cerned as Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's charges finished the season with an over-all record of eight wins and nine losses and a Western Confer- ence total of five victories in 12 starts, good for sixth place in the standings. Thus, the cagers became the only winter sports aggregation which fail- ed to bring home a Big Ten title and became the only team during the '43- 44 season to fail in Conference play. Michigan Gets Off to Bad Start Michigan opened the campaign with the brightest prospects in years as a Navy-laden squad was estab- lished as one of the Big Ten favorites in pre-season dope. However, the Wolverines got off to a bad start and by the time they straightened out, any chance for a championship was lost. The hopes of the Maize and Blue fans for a winning team after several years of wandering around in the waste landsof defeat were buoyed considerably as Oosterbaan's squad defeated its first two opponents, Cen- tral Michigan and Romulus Air Base, by overwhelming scores, The third contest of the season provided a few more thrills as a fighting Fort Custer quintet gave Michigan a fright before succumbing, 46-44. With a perfect record of three wins in as many outings, the Wolver- ines went confidently into a two- game series with a powerful Western Michigan quintet and were humbled in both tilts, 48-38 and 57-50. The second game of this series brought out the fighting qualities which distinguished the Maize and Blue five all season as it came from behind in the final seconds to knot the count and force the game into overtime. It also saw the birth of diminutive Tommy King as Michi- gan's leading scorer as he pumped in 1 Rnnints. in the limelight. Two of Coach Doh- erty's most prominent stars were the Hume twins, Bob and Ross. Their fame as the dead-heat twins is known from coast to coast, and their victories on the Wolverine cinder paths helped bring about team championships. Hume Twins Star The twins shattered the University of Michigan mile record when they won the Central Collegiate Confer- ence mile run in the excellent time of 4:14.6. Previously, they had tied H. L. Carroll's record of 4:16.4 set back in 1916. At the indoor meet in Chicago, the Humes tied for first in the mile while Bob also won the two- mile. On May 27 at Champaign, they again dead-heated the conference mile and Ross won the two-mile. Bob captained the team all year, and Ross was elected captain of the coming season. "Bullet" Bob Ufer, who was com- peting in his fourth year due to a .r.}...,"'"Ao~ BOB HUME change in the eligibility rules, ran his usual strong races. He success- fully defended his Big Ten 440 cham- pionship and spaxked the mile relay team to victory. "Hose" ran" into tough luckvoneweek before the out- door conference meet. While run- ning the 100-yard dash he pulled a muscle and was deprived of running in what would have been the last meet of his college career. Swamp Broncos Elmer Swanson captured both the high and low hurdle championships at the indoor Big Ten carnival and then was lost to the track squad during the outdoor season when he played varsity baseball. Bill Dale was another Wolverine champion. He tied for first in the highjump at both the indoor and outdoor Conference' meets. Michigan's thinclads started their long string of victories on Feb. 11, when they swamped Western Michi- gan 93-11 in the Yost Field House. The next week Notre Dame fell be- fore the Wolverine powerhouse, and it appeared that the Wolverines wunlda hve nne of the strongst cnl- ( By BILL MULLENDORE The year 1926 has always been remembered by Michigan sports' fans as the greatest in Wolverine athletic history, but the 1943-44 season so far eclipsed it both in individual per- formance and team championships that it will inevitably supplant the 1926 campaign. No less than eight Big Ten titles were brought to Ann Arbor by men carrying the Maize and Blue banner, two more than were garnered in 1926. Only in basketball was Michigan unsuccessful in its quest for titular laurels in the Big Ten, and while the hockey team did not win a crown it was only because there was no om- petition available. Gridders Start It Off Football started things off in the fall of 1943 as the Maize and Blue gridders swept through six Confer- ence foes to finish unbeaten in the Big Ten. The only sour note of the season was a 35-12 loss at the hands of Notre Dame in a game played before the largest crowd ever to see a Michigan football game. Here's the Record I-M BUILDING-This building contains almost every facility for indoor sport and recreation. It forms the north side of the quadrangle of sports buildings, which consist of the Administration Building, Yost Field House and a concrete stand for track and field events. GRAND OLD MAN OF FOOTBALL: Fielding Yost Still Stands as a Symbol of Past Great Wolverine Gridiron Campaigns Whenever the subject of Michigan football is 'discussed, the name of Fielding H. Yost is inevitably drawn in for Yost is to Michigan football as "x" is to "y" in any- arithmetical equation. Known throughout the land as "Hurry Up" and "Michigan's Grand Old Man," the genial Yost has blazed a trail in athletics which few have equalled and none have excelled,J ranking with such great names as Amos Alonzo Stagg, Bob Zuppke, Knute Rockne and the rest of the gridiron greats who made their chief contributions from the sidelines rather than on the field. 'Point-a-Minute' As a coach he turned out some of the mightiest elevens ever assembled, including his famed "Point-a-Min- ute" squads of 1901-'05, possibly the greatest succession of teams ever to don cleats. Thus, he opened his ca- reer in a blaze of glory and closed it in the same manner 25 years later with four more great teams in 1922- '26. Yost's story cannot be told in the records of great football teams, how- ever, nor can it be told in his other accomplishments as an athletic dir- ector, among them the building of the present $3,000,000 athletic plant which now stands as a living tribute to his name. Builds Up Youth These were all great feats, typical of his boundless energy and enthusi- asm, but the thing that he has left behind which will be remembered long after these others have faded is his insurmountable spirit and his faith in youth. Perhaps no man has been so universally acclaimed for his contributions to the elevation of got his first introduction to the game of football distinguishing himself as a player and also as a student of the game. No doubt inspired by his experi- coaching game to devote all his time to his duties as athletic director. When he resigned in 1940, Yost could look back with pride on 39 years of service to the University of Michigan, to his career as a coach, to his physical education teaching program, to an outstanding intra- mural athletic program, to the mam- moth athletic plant which bears his name, and to the fine traditions which have since become institutions under his guidance. Won Lost Football............8 1 Basketball .......... 8 9 *Indoor Track ...... 4 0 *Wrestling .......... 4 0 *Swimming ........ 4 3 Hockey .............5 3 Baseball .............15 4 *Outdoor Track .... 3 0 * Tennis............9 1 *Golf ....,........ 7 3 Tied 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Fi've winter sports next occupied the athletic spotlight, and the Wol- verines capitalized on the opportun- ity to win three more championships besides hanging up the best recoid made by a Michigan hockey team 'in several years. For a time it appeared as if Bennie Oosterbaan's cagers might join the parade, but hard luck. dogged their footsteps all the. way, and they finally wound up in sixth place. The indoor track team primed itself for the Conference meet at Chicago by taking three straight dual meets and then racking tip a record number of points to take the cham- pionship going away. Illinois, paced by the brilliant Buddy Young, was a distant second. Swimmers Come Through Coach Matt Mann's swimmers' season was marred somewhat by the presence of one of the finest swim- ming teams ever assembled, the Great Lakes aggregation, but in spite of two dual meet losses to the Sailors had enough over-all power, to with- stand Northwestern's challenge in the Big Ten meet. The tankers tried to make it a double victory by adding the NCAA crown but dropped a thrilling one-point decision to Alan Ford-and Yale, The wrestlers opened the season in convincing fashion by winning three straight dual meets to serve notice on the rest of the Conference that they were gunning for their second championship in Wolverine history. The title meet was made close when ace Jim Galles, a sure individual champ, was disqualified, but Coach Ray Courtright's charges came through without Galles' aid to squeeze out a narrow one-point vic- tory. No Competition Coach Eddie Lowrey's hockey team could find no collegiate competition available and so did the next best thing by taking on Canadian and American amateur sextets. Against such stiff opposition the pucksters turned in a very creditable record of five wins against three defeats. The coming of spring found four more squads in quest of Big Ten laurels, and all of them came thro- ugh with flying colors to round out Michigan's domination of the Con- ference. Thus, baseball, indoor track, golf and tennis were added to the list. Baseball Team Wins Coach Ray Fisher's baseball squad got back on the title road after losing out to the weatherman last year by winning ten straight Conference games to leave no doubt as to their mastery. The only blot on the record was a 3-3 seven-inning tie with Illi- nois in a game called off by rain. It was Michigan's ninth crown in 24 years. The track team took up right where it left off in the winter and, although pressed a little more closely by Illinois this time went undefeated in two triangular meets and the Con- ference meet. It was the same old story of Michigan's team balance against a galaxy of individual stars, and again team balance paid off. Coach Courtright was given an- op- rnrs-i 4- n - ho _- A s .e *-Includes Western, meet. Conference Won Big Ten championships in all sports except basketball and hockey. No Big Ten competition in hockey. Wolverine Hockey TeainTakes Five of Season's Eight Contests- 1945 Squad Has Plenty of Potent Manpower; Faces Problem of Finding College Opposition i FIELDING H. YOST ence, he turned to coaching as a pro- fession, receiving his first appoint- ment in 1897. Most of his early jobs lasted but a year or two, and when in 1901 Stanford gave him his release after he had won the Pacific Confer- ence championship in his first year because he was not an alumnus of the University, Yost accepted an offer to come to Michigan. This was in 1901, a year to be remembered by all Wolverine sports fans;: Success Instant His success was meteoric. Led by the immortal Willie Heston and By ROGER GOELZ The University of Michigan's 1944 hockey team playing what might have been its last regularly scheduled season for the duration turned in an enviable record of five victories as against three defeats, amassing a total of 39 points to the opposition's 31. Although this year's competition was against Canadian amateur teams, since all Big Ten schools ex- cepting Minnesota have dropped hockey from their list of competitive sports, the Wolverines of Coach Ed- ward Lowrey defeated such strong hockey outfits as the Detroit Vickers Club, the Brantford, Ont. sextet, the Paris, Ont. team, and a strong team from the Fingal Canadian Royal Air Force. The Michigan team lost nnI n the ntrnit VirrrC lu.h a Vince Abbey deserves special mention for his outstanding defense' work. breaking up many an opposition play before it reached the Michigan ice. If the 1945 Michigan hockey squad becomes a reality it will be one of the strongest sextets ever to take the ice for Michigan. The team will be com- posed almost entirely of returning veterans. The new Wolverine hockey mentor replacing Coach Lowrey, who recently received his release from Athletic Director Herbert "Fritz" Crisler, can be certain of the services of veteran Dick Mixer in holding down the Wolverine goal net. Other returning veterans include Ted Greer, John Jenswold and Herb Up- ton, two crack Wolverine wingmen, Bob Henderson and Tom Messenger, outstanding on defense for the Wol- verines in the last season. Mannower Plus