THEMICHIGANDAILY Footba jtlI. (Continued from Page 1) dominance over 81 of the 90 foes they have faced. Of the nihe teams having an edge in victories, five have been played only once. Cornell has the best record over the Wolverines with 11 wins to five Michigan triumphs, the last game with the Big Reds occurring in 1933, when the U of M handed them a 40-0 pasting. Big Ten Rivalries Best Michigan's sharpest rivalries have been with three Big Ten foes, Chi- cago, Ohio State, and Minnesota. The Golden Gophers have provided the most trouble, defeating the Wol- verines 13 times while the Maize and Blue have turned the trick 15. Min- nesota's last victory was in 1942, when a disputed field-goal gave them the game, 16-14. The margin of wins over the Buck- eyes is much larger, Michigan vic- tories standing at 27, Ohio State's at 12, with three ties thrown in. The Bucks did not succeed in beating Michigan until 1919 when they won 13-3. After repeating twice they again suffered consecutive losses un- til 1928, and since then the odds have' been even. Coaches Originally Students During the first few years of Michi- gan football, coaches were picked from the student body, itself, and it wasn't until 1891 that a special per- son was hired for the job. From 1891 to 1900 five men-Murphy, Barbour, McMauley, Ferbert, and Lea-led the Wolverines. In 1901 the immortal Fielding H. Yost came to Ann Arbor, and began producing some of the greatest foot- ball machines the gridiron world has ever seen. His "point-a-minute" teams during their five-year reign scored 55 triumphs while losing only one and tying one. The lone loss, which broke the undefeated string, came in the final game of 1905 when Chicago eked out a 2-0 victory. The tie was a 6-6 affair with Minnesota. During the five yea:rs Michigan scored 2821 points while holding their moved in. Coach Crisler is now opponents to an insignificant 42. This launching his ninth season, a season included a' phenomenal 130-0 massa- made completely unpredictable by cre of West Virginia, a 128-0 blast-retig et reshmetu ing of Buffalo, a 119-0 murder of eligibility of freshmen. Michigan State, and a 107-0 shellack- ing .ofeIowa. Yost coached Michigan football - ** from 1901 until 1927, excluding a one- year interval in 1924 when Lou Little (Continued from Page 1) took over. In 1927 the Grand Old - - Man retired to become athletic direc- each failed to hit the .500 spot on tor, and Tad Wieman took his place. foreign soil. Cliff Keen's men took all In the same year, the Michigan Stad- three of their home matches but ium, with its 86,000 capacity, was could win only two of five on the opened. road. Wieman was succeeded in 1929 by It took the World Champion De- Harry Kipke, who remained until troit Tigers to hand the Maize and 1938 when H. O. "Fritz" Crisler Blue baseball team its lone home loss of the year. The Wolverine nine breezed through 10 college oppon- ents on the Ferry Field diamond. Away from home Ray Fisher's outfit salted away eight of ten contests, but the pair of setbacks cost them the Big Ten title. Matt Mann's swimmers did well both at home and on the road. Out of nine meets the natators took seven, three at home and four away while losing to Great Lakes here and Ohio State at Columbus. Fritz Crisler's football team played both Army and Navy on unfamiliar ground, but managed to break even away from home with a two and two mark. On Michigan Stadium turf they took five of six. Only the Wolverine tennis ar outdoor track teams failed to turn winning records at home. The ne men snagged only two of six at Fern Field but turned around and swe all seven away matches. Ken Dohe ty's thinclads lost their only horn outdoor meet to Ohio State b managed to win two of three awa The indoor track squad won two its three home meets but did not rL in any away meets. All in all 1945-46 wasn't such bad year for Michigan athletes. nine sports the Maize and Blue cc or-bearers failed only twice to wii up among the top three teams in tl Conference. Summary of the Big T championships listing the top thr teams in each sport. Ulrich S Connections with 600 Schools and Bookstores Throughout the United States Have Stocked Our Store with f TONS and TONS of USED and NEW TE TBOOKS 1 U -i For Every Course on the Michigan Campus A ULRICH'S WHOLESALE BUYING Enables us to give you great values in Student Supplies NOTICE! ENGINEERS and ARCHITECTS ULRICH'S carry the largest stock in Michigan of Engineers' and Architect's Book and Supplies at-Special Student Prices Zipper Notebooks ..*. $3.50 and up raundry Cases . 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