Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1936 — Page 20

oLLowiNG FooTBALL with John W. Thompson

cuse All Primed to Surprise Indiana Saturday, Advance Agent Discloses; ‘It Can’t Happen Here,’ Probable Reply From Bloomington Backers.

HE boys from Syracuse are all steamed up about that game at Bloomington Saturday. There is nothing they would like to do more than spoil a perfectly good matinee for e Hoosiers. They spoiled a good one for the same school back in 1925, by a score of 14 to 0. However in 1919 1. U. frounced the Orangemen, 12 to 6. We have it on the word of Jim Decker, the Syracuse § athletic publicity director, who is in town, that this year’s Syracuse team, although tough luck and adverse scores have beset it on every side, is bound to click some time during Nowember. He hopes it is this Saturday. It isn’t that he would wish ill luck on Indiana. It is rather "that he would compliment them. He said yesterday that the * folks back home in New York would think a lot more of Syra- " guse ff they beat (or even made a good showing against) Indiana, than if they defeated a great many other more pub‘licized football teams. Vie Hanson, the Syracuse coach, who up until this year “Was regarded in the same bracket with Bernie Bierman (now : the whole thing, bracket and all, is gone), has a special in-

ES ferest in winning from Indiana. He played on the Syracuse

team that defeated the Hoosiers in 25. In fact, Vie happened to be in the right spot to fall on the two fumbles which paved the way for the Syracuse scores. The two assistant coaches, Gotch Carr and Harvey Levy, also took part “in the 1925 battle.

» = al ” » ” E of the biggest reasons why Mr, Decker thinks maybe . Syracuse might, by some hook or crook, through sleight-‘of-hand or gridiron miracle, upset the Old Oaken Bucketeers, is Vannie Michele Albanese, the 23-year-old, 5 feet 11-inch = fall, 182-pound fullback who has made a niche for himself I © the Syracuse hall of glory. - Vannie is of Italian vintage. He came to Syracuse from ' ¥ " Manlius, N.Y. His only football experience prior to his ma- * triculation was with a county sandlot league. He went out for , football in his freshman year mainly because he wanted to "find out just how tough the college sport was. Well, couldn’t make the freshman team. But in his sophomore year, he must have slipped into a game without anybody see- _ ing him, because he suddenly emerged as the Syracuse Iron Man. If the coaches had paid little attention to Vannie before " his sophomore year, they more than made up for it after- ~ wards. He carried the ball two out of every three plays last * year, He gained a total of 1400 yards, an average of four yards * every time he tried. He never has been hurt in a game nor * asked for time out. The doctors, around whom he works in “his pre-medic course at the university, say he has the bone + structure of a 200-pound man. He comes from a family of 14. % = = = 2 = = until this year, during the 1934 and 1935 seasons, Syracuse won 12 games, lost three and tied one. In its “series” % games with other schools, such as Cornell, Baldwin-Wallace, E Penn State and Colgate, the latter is the only one that leads = it-in number of games won. Coach Hanson's system (again we say, up until “this . year) has always relied upon strong linemen, usually supplemented by strong backs, big men all the way through. This year it looked as if he had gotten his wish—there were some speedy boys in the backfield. Then the line fell down on him. One of the boys who possesses speed in the Syracuse & stable is Martin Glickman, a 19-year-old Brooklyn lad ‘who is said to have a pair of the swiftest open-field shanks tin the country. In Brooklyn he was chosen all-city quarter- : Marty made the Olympic sprint team last year, and was placed on the 400-meter relay squad for Uncle Sam. Then on eve of the race in Berlin, he and Sam Stoller (of Michigan) were mysteriously withdrawn. It hasn't been proven that Der Fuehrer Hitler knew it, but Messrs. Stoller and ‘Glickman were the only Jewish boys on the team. » #» » » # fo BUT Marty ran with the Olympic team in exhibition races in Sweden and England. He was instrumental in establishing the new world’s record for the 400-meter relay in ‘England. During his younger days (he’s 19 now!) Marty " was named National Interscholastic schoolboy sprint champion, and he won the Metropolitan senior and junior A. A. U. 00-yard sprint titles. Here's the type of hard luck Coach Hanson has had to put up with this year—a year he had expected to be among ‘his happiest since starting at Syracuse in 1930: Ray Reckmak, a 190-pound halfback, was rated: among the country’s most sensational forward passers last year. is hands almost swallow a football. His tosses are like canon shots. And he broke his hand the week before the seapn began! Mr. Decker whispered to us,vesterday that Ray y be back in there passing for all he’s worth Saturday. Last year Ray completed 42 passes out of 95 he atsted. And he tossed seven straight in the Columbia , winning it for Syracuse, 14 to 2.

Arky Vaughan of the Pirates, out-

flelder Wally Berger and pitcher Bill Walter of the

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PAGE 20

GRIM ES

"THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1936

IS NAMED MANAGER OF DODGERS

~ Washington High Chiefs Key for T ech

Injuries Hit De Pauw’ Team

Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind. Nov. 5— Injuries—the Old Gold bogey man— rise again to plague De Pauw’s football squad as it nears the end

of its schedule. Vernon Rulison, star fullback who has been a mainstay both in defense and offense all season, probably will not see action Saturday against Earlham because of an ankle injured in the Ball State game last week. Another casualty was Kermit Arnold, who has started every game at tackle. Arnold received a hip

Coach Henry Bogue (left) holds a football “field clinic” with Capt. Phil Shoemaker of the Washington Continentals as they “key” for the big battle with Tech High on the West Side gridiron tomorrow afternoon. All indications point to this game as being the most spectacular of the season in local prep grid circles. undefeated and Tech has lost only one tilt and that by the close score of 13-12. Each rival has a tie on its record, Washington with Southport and Tech with Jeff of Lafayette. Both the Continentals and the Big Green are sturdy and powerful, and the clash tomorrow may decide the city interscholastic championship. The kickoff will

be at 2:15.

Washington is

injury that will keep him out of action in the Earlham battle. Only bright spot on the Tiger injury horizon is the tentative return to competition of Chuck Kendall. Kendall was hurt in the opening game and is only now beginning to round into shape again. He has been working out intensively this week in an effort to straighten out layoff kinks. The early part of this week has seen intensive scrimmage against the frosh in an effort to strengthen

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the Tiger offense. Work on pass defense is planned for the last two days in anticipation eof heavy aerial shelling from Earlham and Wabash, the two remaining De Pauw foes. The Tiger frosh play Wabash here Saturday while the Yyarsity is at Earlham.

Additional Sports on Pages 21-22

heaters, Plan.

‘| the Brooklyn Grimes was given a one-year contract.

are a major cause of grid i 1

oe according to the ob-

servation of Bobby Cahn, well-known referee in the Na-

; tional Professional League. |

i i

|Former Pitcher Moves Up

From Louisville A.A. Club

Burleigh Is Given One-Year Contract With Brooklyn, Where He Played Nine Years; Stengel to Be Paid Em.

By United Press

NEW YORE, Nov. 5.—Burleigh Grimes was appointed manager of Dodgers,

National League baseball club, today.

He succeeds Casy Stengel,

who was dismissed at the close of the 1936 season. At that time Stene gel was promised a year’s pay for the 1937 season.

former Dodger pitcher the Louisville Colo-

Grimes, a who

-| nels of the American Association

last season, was given a one-year contract. +» Oddly A enough, the Colonels were a seventh-place club as were the Dodgers.

Announcement was made by John M. F. Gorman, secretary of the club, on behalf of Stephen McKeever, president. Gorman said the choice was the unanimous decision of the board of directors.

It was said by baseball experts, however, that Grimes’ salary would not exceed $8000. This relatively low estimate was made because of the fact the ciub was forced to pay the salaries of two managers—Stengel, who will do nothing, and Grimes, who will be forced to try to please a club directorate which is.loath to

spend money for top-flight players, T Gorman said that the club had considered “a considerable number” of candidates for the position but that after a short time the choice narrowed down between ‘Grimes and Ray Blades, another former Brooke lyn player. { Babe Ruth was one of the candi | {Tarn to Page 2%). © 22.)

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