Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1946 — Page 30
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Irish Invade Deep South
PROBABLE LINEUPS
SPORTS ROUNDUP
By EDDIE ASH
Purd Indians ane Sr iedsen LE oe a, eck wel B ein . coisdie Tacinnns Connor | Pr soda Boys leheart L. G... J)schel SECOND GUESSING . . «+ Gene Hard LG TA a Mastrang wo Shalit, sports editor of the Daily rR Gee naky owland . rR. 2s ropeki Tllini, sat next to Carrol Widdoes in | St «B Tors “Aihflovich : QB. Lujack {the Illinois press hox last Saturday | Dem QB. + Ralmondi ampors ko Hoooooi. LivingsS0€ lat the Ohio State game . , . Wid- |g o B-crnnene ios, DOWRE rice F. B . Mello [does, the ex-Ohio State head foot- Buy rves vii Pihos
p. m. (Indianapolls [ya1) soach, who is #og
Starting Time-2:15 Sime). now assistant to
~~
Sellout Crowd To See Game
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Kickoff—1:30 p. m. (Indianapolis time), Officials—Referee, Lyle M. Clarno, BradE. C. Krieger, Ohio U.; field
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
afayette
a
_ FRIDAY, NOV. 22, 1946
‘Bucket’ Battle
Ilinois Bids
: For Crown
CHICAGO, Nov. 22 (U, P.) .—Illinois, jn the glare of the national football spotlight more prominently than any time since the fabled days of Red Grange, seeks the Western’ conference championship and with. it a Rose Bowl berth
Silent Hoosiers Take Opener
TONIGHT Decatur Central at Ben Davis. Lawrence Central at Warren| Central. Elwood at Seuthport. Speedway at Franklin Township. The Silent Hoosiers and Beech
Heavy Title Is at Stake
Willard Reed and Johnny Denson will meet at the Armory tonight in a neighborhood grudge argument with the Indiana state heavyweight championship at stake. The Brightwood products will clash over the
3
AR RRR RE ENR
tomorrow when it meets Northwestern in one of the nation’s headlin contests. A Illinois goes into the climactic contest with a conference record of
Grove turned in victories last night on the city-county high school basketball front, Opening their season, the Silents staged a third-quarter spurt to de-
10-round route in the featured attraction of a five-scrap pro mitt bill to be staged by Matchmaker Lloyd Carter. Reed, the - defending champion,
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 22.—Coach Prank Leahy and a squad of 36 Notre Dame gridders rolled into New
Paul Bixler, pleaded over the g
“Orleans today aboard the Panama Limited and the Irish players were | sent through limbering-up drills to shake off their train legs before tackling Tulane university's Green | Wave tomorrow. | Undefeated Notre Dame is a heavy | favorite to defeat Coach Henry Frnka's Greenies but a huge crowd
State Grid Card
(Saturday College Games) Indiana at Purdue (1:30 p. m.). Notre Dame at Tulane (2:15 p.m). Rose Poly at Earlham. Hanover at Georgetown (Ky.).
of 65,000 is sure to turn out for the £aturday battle. Many Irish alumni reside in the Néw Orleans area and the South Bend Hoosier school has
thousands of other followers in
i
” Louisiana.
{in John Stungis,
Odds on the leading college football games tomorrow disclose that Indiana, Wisconsin are Big Nine favorites,
phone to the Buck, bench ask=ing Bixler to send
star place kicker, for a field goal try on fourth down = I) when the Illini« (oi were halting a Buckeye drive in- Carrol Widdoes side the five-yard line .. . But his advice was ignored ... . A pass was called instead, and the score that |
became 16-7 Illinois when Julie]
a 8» YOU PAYS YOUR MONEY...
Illinois, Michigan and
Notre Dame, naturally, and U. C. L. A. over Southern California by
Although ‘Tulane has had an in-|g1; points . + + and Yale over Har-
and-out season to date, the local yard by 10.
+ + + The betting temple
warriors form a hard-fighting squad | figures (single game):
{dominate as favored Indiana. seeks
and proved it by holding Alabama, Favorite Underdog Points| 7 to 6, and formidable Mississippi Alabaite Button College 3 State, 14 to T. Clemson ad > y Holy Cross 'emple 2 The Green Wave has won three iinois Ten esters 3 games and lost four and managed! Indiana Purdue 10% to score one or more touchdowns in| Mickigin Silo uote 1 every contest. In last year’s clash|N, Carolina Duke ™ between Tulane and Notre Dame,|N. Caroline St. Feria ” the Wave looked the part of champs Oklahoma . Nebraska | i a regon in the first half and the lish yes Srogon Stale Pittsburgh 1 forced to step lively after intermis- | Princeton Dartmout : Ri Texas Christian 13! gion to win by a decisive score, s Methodist Baylor a 82 to 6. Stanford California s n entucky Coach Frnka made special ef- UC. L. A. sguthern California 6% forts to obtaifr a true line on the Wiseanain Jinnescta a
Irish this year by hiring Andy Pilney to scout for him. The former Notre Dame star turned in a complete report and Tulane will be on the alert for Frank Leahy's favorite scoring plays. Leahy announced that two Notre Dame first stringers are on the hospital list and will not be available] | yndiana is No. 22 in the list, tomorrow. They. are Jim Martin,| purdue No. 45. starting left end, who is sidelined a8. with a knee injury, and Floyd Bim-| ypigy PASS CATCHERS . . .
” . » GRID RATINGS . .. The Quarterback, national football weekly, rates its first 10 college teams teams in this order: Notre Dame, Army, Georgia Tech, Michigan, Georgia, Louisiana State, Illinois, Tennessee, Rice, North Carolina
,|ited their Big Nine foes to an aver-
ley; amptre, judge, Bill Orwig, Michigan; head linesman, Stuart V. {llson, Minnesota, Broadcasts — WBAA, Purdue; WASBK
Lafayette; WISH, WIRE and WIBC, Indianapolis,
LAFAYETTE, Ind, Nov, 22. = Aerial tactics are expected to pre-
to retain possession of the old
oaken bucket in the 48th gridiron}
battle with injury-disrupted Purdue here tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 o'clock. Hoosierdom's
colorful football
might have become 10-9 Ohio State finale, which seldom runs true to morr if a Buckeye .fleld goal was good, form, will attract a record-break-
ing crowd of 43,000- fans that will
Rykovich intercepted and ran 98|jam every nook and cranny of the yards to score.
Ross-Ade stadium. The game has been a complete sellout since last
| August and no tickets of any kind
will be available at the stadium. Offensively and defensively, both the Hoosiers and Boilermakers have) been much more effective in the alr than on the ground. Tops Big Nine Indiana tops the Big Nine in the passing department, with an average of 130.8 yards per game, while! Purdue is close behind with an| overhead average of 115.8 yards per game. Strangely enough, the Hoo-| siers also top the confererice in the pass defense department, having allowed the opposition only 42 yards per game by the aerial route, while the Boilermakers are runners-up in the same department, having lim-|
age of 62.6 yards per game overhead. The conflicting figures would indicate that Bob DeMoss, Purdue's sophomore passing ace, and Ben Raimondi, the Hoosier aerial artist, | are in for a busy afternoon. DeMoss currently is leading the Big Nine passers in all departments of play with the single exception of completions average, with Raimondi in close pursuit, Several modern Big Nine offensive records will be endangered by the] aerial artistry, DeMoss, credited with 570 yards in five]
8!
ons, halfback, who has a ruptured Although used but briefly in the blood vessel in his leg. Northwestern game due to an in-| COLLEGE FOOTBALL jury, Terry Brennan,.nalfback, still | pShlifornia (Pa.) Teachers 61, Lock Ha. heads the Notre Dame pass re-|
. ceivers with six receptions for 98| ra yards and two touchdowns ... . Jack ‘Colan-Thomas Bout ‘On WISH Tonight
Zilly, end, is second with one touchdown and 113 yards gained from five catches -. , . Bob Skoglund, end, has picked up 68 yards with his five receptions . . , Brennan has carried the ball more than any other back on the Notre Dame squad . .. In the first six games, Terry carried 50 times for 258 yards
” » ~ GOTTA TICKET? . .. If Southern California upsets undefeated {and untied U. C. L. A. tomotrow and {fs named the Pacific coast Rose {Bowl representative, Hoosier grid {fans lucky enough to buy a ticket, will be able to see the Trojans {against Notre Dame at South Bend, | Nov. 30. ,.. Notre Dame has already |defeated Illinois, today’s favorite to [represent the Big Nine in the roses | classic,
CM CALIFORNIA FOLDING
- Headlined on New York's fistic card | tonight is the ten-round return bout |
MONEY . .. Carl Kuprion, Indianapolis, reports from Los Angeles that he was offered $80 for his two tickets to the U. C. L. A.-
between heavyweights Johnny Colan (above) of Long Island and John " Thomas, Florida. Last May, the Long Island battler | was outpointed by Thomas, but Johnny is confident this time he'll| ono send the Floridian down for a toll of| PURABLE PASTIMER . . . New ten. Always a capable boxer, he has| York professional football fans will added power. to his hitting — now honor Ken Strong, veteran back | punches with authority, He's the kind 2nd field goal specialist, during the | of fighter who drives straight away Pittsburgh game Sunday. . . . with both mitts, |Counting high. school and college, ; .aconsistent crowd-pleaser, | Strong has been - playing the grid sre as the No. 1 trial horse of | 5POTt for 24 years. "the heavy division. Included in his! e Rue an nar list of victims are such familiar names 1 NE BUCKET BATTLE. . .. All as Abel Cestac, Billy_Grant, Joey roads lead to West Lafayette ol Maxim, and others, morrow where the Purdue BoilerEnjoy the excitement, blow-by. makers and the Orimson Hoosiers blow, on Gillette's Cavalcade of Sports of Indiana clash in the renewal of over American Broadeasting Co. and their long grid series. . . . It looks WISH (1310 on your dial) at ® p. m.|. ©: U. by a decisive margin to,
this corner, i - points. | And remember = an estimated 10- points. —
8S. C. U. encounter, . . . He didn’t sell. ,.. It's a 103,000 sellout, hence the inflation bidding for the scarce pasteboards,
games, needs to pick up an additional 145 yards to break the vee | ord of 714 yards gained through the air set by Otto Graham of North. | western in 1942. In addition, both| DeMoss and Raimond! have an out-| side chance of shattering Graham's record of 53 completions established |
mark 14 times and Ben 15 times to surpass the Wildcat’s mark.
Star Receivers
In the receiving department, both | Purdue and Indiana stars have al
passes caught in conference competition which was established last | year by Bill Canfield, veteran | Boilermaker left halfback, who has been on the sidelines through the!
jury. Lou Mihajlovich, Indiana's pint-sized end, must snag four more passes to tie Canfleld's mark, while Norman (Ned) Maloney, veteran Boilermaker wingman, and Mel Groomes, Hoosier halfback, must both pick off six aerial heaves to accomplish the same purpose, Another conference mark has been placed in a shaky position by John Galvin, Purdue's left-footed kicker, who needs only to. maintain his present average of 42.8 yards per punt to break the old standard of 426 yards set by Don Scott, Ohio State, in 1940. Coach Cecil Isbell, harried by personnel problems all season due to an unprecedented series of inJuries to key men, faces another terrific assignment in attempting to realign his disrupted forces due to the loss of Dick Barwegen, allstar guard, and Kenny Smock, vet eran left halfback, both of whom have been definitely ruled “out of action,
five victories as against one loss and a triumph over Northwestern will bring it the undisputed champlonship regardless of the outcome of the battle between second-place Michigan and Ohio State at Columbus. Should Illinois lose, Michigan could grab the crown and the bowl bid by beating the Bucks. If Illi-
nois ties Northwestern, while the
Football fans of all Hoosier ow for the annual “bucket” b
(1) Ben Raimondi of I. U., the Hoosier pass-pitching star. (2) Howard (Goon) Brown, Crimson guard and captain. (3) The old caken bucket, trophy in the state rivalry. (4) Joe Kodba, veteran center of the Boilermakers. (5) Bob DeMoss, sophomore sensation of Purdue, (6) Lou Mihajlovich, pass-catching Hoosier end.
(7) Bob Heck, stalwart flanke
Wolverines are beating Ohio State, the race would end in a deadlock. The Illinois-Northwestern battle will draw a capacity crowd of 47,000 fans to Dyche stadium in suburban Evanston. All seats, including temporary bleachers in the end zones, have been sold for three) weeks. Illinois will go into the game as! the favorite. The Midwest's professional odds-makers have made | the Illini a seven-point choice. The
dom turn to Lafayette again toattle between Purdue and Indiana.
r of the Boilermakers.
Past Purdue-Indiana Games
Marked by Thrills and Upsets
record supports such a calciffation for Coach Ray Eliot's combination has beaten Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa and Ohio State during the past month, while Northwestern dropped its last three battles to Ohio, Indiana and Notre Dame,
| missing
Carey Appointed
feat Edinburg, 35-29, while Beech|and Denson will be meeting for Grove, which was ahead at every the third time, with each ring gladirest point, downed Pike Township, | ator holding a previous decision. It 52-30. {was Denson who snatched the After trailing, 17-12, at the half,| crown from the former Tech high the Deaf School five hit its stride|school athletic star after Willard in -the third session to lead, 26-23,|had at the end of that period. Edin-|t0ga from Leo (Red) Bruce. Reed burg came alongside the Silents|then recaptured the title by trimagain at 29-all in the last three|Ming Denson in a 12-round reminutes, but the local team con-|Match. nected on three quick baskets. Both maulers have been through Set Seoring Pace Stiff training campaigns and are reCenter Hoyt Miller, with 12/ Ported In top physical condition for points, and Frank Kaiser, with 11,| ‘"Ta$ht’s “rubber” mill. set the Silents’ scoring pace. The complete program follows: The Deaf School outscored its op- |, Main event—10 rounds—for state ponents from the field, 15-9, Edin-| 1 co" weight title: Johnny Denson, burg making 11 free throws but also| "isnapolis, vs. Willard Reed. In12. The Silents were Jianapolis. charged with 19 personal fouls, | Scmi-windup—§ rounds—heavyTwo six-foot players, Don Wise "eiShis: Dap (Hair) Raisor, Indiand Jack Long, led the Beech | hapolis, vs. Allen Small, Elwood. Grove scoring parade, with 10 and: Prelim—§ rounds—heavyweights: 11 points, respectively. The Hor-|Le€ Carter, Indianapolis vs. Billy nets were ahead, 13-9, at the Sullivan, Chicago. quarter; 26-19 at the half and| Frelim—4 rounds—welterweights: 41-23 at the three-quarter mark, (Jim Chaney, Indianapolis, vs. Jesse = Johnson, Indianapolis. : Prelim—4 rounds — catchweights:
| Woody Green, Indianapolis, vs. Herb WELLSVILLE, N. Y., Nov. 22 (U. Jones, Indianapolis.
annexed the Hoosier heavy
From that first engagement back in 1801 when Purdue trounce Indiana, 60-0, the football series between the two Hoosier rivals has been marked by thrills, upsets and individual heroism. Since 1925 the two rivals have battled for the Old Oaken Bucket. : Here is a complete history of previous engagements of the schools:
Although potentially a brilliant|p) _The Boston Red Sox
offensive outfit, Illinois battled its| announced the
appointment of
way to the top of the Big Nine | Thomas (Scoop) Carey, former Red |
standing primarily on the basis of \gox and St. Louis Browns infielder, an alert, aggressive and rugged de-' 55 1947 manager of the Wellsville fense. jclub in the Pony baseball league.
today :
The Green-Jones clash will start ‘proceedings ‘at 8:30 o'clock.
Basketball
the same year. Bob must hit the| 0
1891—Purdue, 60; Indiana, 0. The Hoosiers were given a rather rough initiation in the series opener. 1892—Purdue, 68; Indiana, 0. The Boilermakers wound up an undefeated and untied season. 1893—Purdue, 64; Indiana, 0; Capt. Finney starred as the Boilermakers continued to score a point a minute. 1894—Forfeit to Purdue. No games in 1895 and 1896. 1897—Purdue, 20; Indiana, 6. The Hoosiers back on their feet financially, but still on the short end of the score. 1898—Purdue, 14; Indiana, 0. The Boilermakers scored twice in the first 10 minutes of play to win ain. 1899—Indiana, 17; Purdue, 5. Indiana’s initial triumph featured
Halfback Hawley who romped 248
yards during the game. 1900—Indiana, 24; Purdue, 5. Z. G. Clevenger, later Indiana athietic director; led -Hoosiers-to -vie= 1901—Indiana, 11; Purdue, 6. Indiana’'s’ Rucker ran length of field with a Boilermaker fumble to break a tie and win for the Hoosiers. 1902—Purdue, 29; Indiana, 0. Clevenger Stopped as Boilermakers
chance to break the record of 18 bounced back into victory column. | Old Oaken Bucket played no favor- | makers.
No game in 1903 on acqount of the Purdue train wreck . 1904—Purdue, 27; Indiana, 0. Purdue's Sandy Thomas starred in shutout.
current season due to a knee in-| 1905—Purdue, 11; Indiana, 11. Ain the series.
75-yard touchdown-dash—by-Steele, Indiana's fullback, enabled the Hoosiers to tie in game played in
mer Oliphant ran wild in final year long pass from Wendel Walker to
at Purdue, |Vern Huffman won for Indiana, | 1914—Purdue, 23; Indiana, 13.|° 1936—Purdue, 20; Indiana, 20.| Hoosiers overcome early deficit to|The classic of the series. Cecil Is-tie*13-13 only to have Bollermakers | hell, now Boilermaker head coach, rally and win. land Vern Huffman took turns toss1915—Purdue, 7; Indiana, 0.|ing six-point aerials in a frenzied! Heavily favored Hoosiers bow again. | tie. 1916—Purdue, 0; Indiana, 0. There 1937—Purdue, 13; Indiana, 7. Iswas a lot more action than the Pell stars with fourth-quarter scoreless score indicates. {touchdown for victory. 1917—Indiana, 37; Purdue, 0. 1938—Purdue 13; Indiana, 6. Jack Jumbo Stiehm's team had things Brown of Purdue returned the iniits own way. tion kickoff 95 yards for a touch1920—Indiana, 10; Purdue, 7. 10, Sq the Hoosen Wels naver Slava ie a a Big Ten 1939—Purdue, 7; Indiana, 6. Pred ye |Montague's toe accounted for the 1921—Indiana, 3; Purdue, 0. Boilermaker victory. Indiana scored ! Capt. John Kyle drop-kicked to{late in the game on a pass from | upset Boilermakers, Hursh to Brooks, but missed the | 1922—Indiana, 7; Purdue, 7. Both [all-important extra point, teams scored in final quarter to tie] 1940—Indiana, 3; Purdue, 0. Gene and share the Big Ten cellar. White's 37-yard place kick in the 1923—Indiana, 3; Purdue, 0. m. fnal 13 seconds on a sloppy field | mer - (Swede) Wilkens drop-kicked [Proke what appeared. to be a cerin third quarter to give Indiana an- (tain stalemate. ‘ | other unexpected victory. 1941—Indiana, 7; Purdue, 0. All1924—Purdue, 26; Indiana, 7. Boil- America Billy Hillenbrand scored
: nl hd . makers dedicated Ross-Ade sta-| 17 Srustown 20: Purdue, 0. Hil-! ium wit in, vat n with a win : ~ |lenbrand again starred in third 25—Indiana, 0; Purdue 0. The straight shutout for the Boiler-
|
|ites in its debut as the trophy of the
| Pigskin chase, Bauman took a pass from Sam Va1926—Purdue, 24; Indiana, 14.[canti for game's only touchdown Cotton Wilcox outdid Chuck Ben-|and Stan Bubicki added the extra | nett in one of the greatest games|point. The Hoosiers failed on numerous scoring chances. % 1944—Indiana, 14; Purdue, 6. AllAmerica John Tavener, playing his final game for the Hoosiers, and
1943—Purdue, 7; Indiana, 0, Frank
{-—1927—Purdue, 21; Indiana, 6. Pest | Welch was just that to the Hoosiers. 1928—Purdue, 14; Indiana, 0. The
CITY«COUNTY HIGH SCHOOLS
Silent Hoosiers 35, Edinburg 29. | Beech Grove 52, Pike Township 30.
STATE HIGH SCHOOLS Humingburl, 73, Holland 34. ons 41,
ger 29. inslow 50, and 11.
FIGHT RESULTS By UNITED PRESS | AKRON, O.—Tippy Larkin, 143, Garfleld, N. J, stopped Tommy Mills, 144, Valley Btream, N. Y. (4). NEW YORK (Forum Arens)-—Leo Milito, | 126'2, New York, outpointed Johnn russo, 131, New York (8)
y La- | STATE COLLEGES { Anderson 72, Tri-State 38.
Indianapolis at old Washington Pest starred again for the Boiler-|Bob Hoernschemeyer were the big park. makers, guns in Hoosier triumph. No game in 19006 and 1907. 1929—Purdue, 32; Indiana, 0, The| 1945—Indiana, 26; Purdue, 0. Held 1908—Indiana, 10;Purdue, 4. Heze| Bollermakers became undisputed | scoreless in the first half, Indiana Cunningham's 75-yard run high- Big Ten champions, exploded after intermission to win | lighted the Hoosier triumph. 1930—Indiana, 7; Purdue, 6; Ed |its first Western confereace cham- | 1909—Indiana, 36; Purdue, 3. Hughes made all-important extra
Cunningham and Cotton Berndt, | point to win for Hoosiers after the later Bloomington mayor, led Hoos-| Boilermakers. missed their try Yo
plonship.
fers to 30-0 half-time lead. 1910—~Indiana, 15; Purdue, 0. Th Hoosiers finished a great season with an uncrossed goal line. Only Big Ten. loss was to Illinois on a fleld goal. 1911—Purdue, 12; Indiana, 5. Boilermakers wiped out an early I. U. lead. 1912—Purdue, 34; Indiana, 7. Purdue scored almost at will late in the game after Sherman Minton, later United States senator,‘ had tied the score. 1913—Purdue, 42; Indiana, 7. El-
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convert. 1931—Purdue, 19; Indiana, 0. Pur-| ON SHOES {due opened up in second half after Men's Hard Toe
two scoreless periods. od 1932—Purdue, 25; Indiana, 7. Paul Moss, all-American end, caught | passes all over the fleld, 1933—Purdue, 19; Indiana, 3. Boilermakers win again after wiping $ 95 out 3-0 half-time lead of Hoosiers, 14 Pr. 1934—Indiana, 17; Purdue 6. Purdues chance to share the Big Ten
AUTO title blasted by Crimson, BLUE POINT SUPPLY
1935—Indiana, 7; Purdue, 0. A| Delaware, Madison and Ray Sts.
HOCKEY SKATES $12.95 Pr. Ladies’ Lined
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PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
INDIANAPOLIS Vv CHICAGO SECOS S MONARCHS With Lineup of ® Composed of Former Former College Sars Renaissance Players
Sunday, Nov. 24—3 P. M. PRELIMINARY 2 P. M. TOM JOYCE 7-UP GIRLS vs.
KOKOMO G-E GIRLS
ARMORY— 711 N. PENN.
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