Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1951 — Page 17
be more inter flag than the
first prize as in front they e game lead. ” the only cone solid profit for mighty Red Sox uster only threes 3 win over fifth § nd the Boston aces .as crimson er the two-way suffered from day. d the most fun - f the Yankees. yonald won his singling in the the opener with iinth. Then two ted ex-Yankees, Tommy Byrne, he second game. e-run homer to 1 front for good sd credit for his though Satchel me in to pitch for the last 3'3
at Rookie Tom Allie Reynolds," x like a second finally knocked rra hit a homer bring his geaBen Taylor and ed for St. Louis
von the opemer rer ‘Early Wynn the tie-breaking edit for his 18th cond game after two-run doubla four-run Clevepoiler A's burst sssion of singles vay, Bob Hooper triumph in re-
~ IX scored three th after Detroit ple-play to cut previous frame. vered a two-run blow as Rookie 3 sixth game ald a little help r. pther American m Mele singled ’ Tun in the 10th shington victory t broke a nineak. League, Brooknes in front of 1 Rookie Clem six-hit, 7 to © Reds as New 1g. at St. Louis, then losing, 4 to d the Pirates, 3 pberts pitched a is 19th victory, outslugged the
ER
3g
..pary and Cliff Cunningham made.
3 . 0 : '
| WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 12. 1051 Football '51 . . . The Midwest— °
There'll Be More G
This is the fourth of six ar- , ticles by Seripps-Howard sports writers sizing up. the nation’s college football scene for readers of The Times. Tomorrow The Times -Football Express
Rolls into the Rocky Mountain area,
when he
| as a junior; John, Karras of
llinois, the country’s
(the -U. 8. in yards gained last year; and a young man the foot{ball world has been waiting two years to see, Harland ‘Carl of By PAT HARMON | Wisconsin. Sports Editor Cincinnati Post = ” o ! | | THIS SCRIPPS-HOWARD reMIGHTY MIDWEST porter found optimism, unique strongest segment of college/among college coaches, in his surfootball, has bad news for the vey of the broad Midwest football
rest of the nation's touch- redoubt. down foundries.
In 1951 the Midwest will have by team: more good teams than ever be- |
a n o fore. OHIO STATE—A new coaching If that is a system usually means faulty ball
shock consider handling, mixed signals, and these findings in sloppy execution for at least a Scripps How-/year of reconstruction. But Ohio ard’s annual col- State, whose new mentor is lege gridiron Woody Hayes, surprised in a checkup! |dazzling, 40-34 intrasquad spring Two of the game. In it, every offensive Midwest entries, maneuver was sparkling. Ohio "State and! Hayes has the horses, beginning Michigan State, with Vie Janowicz, Tony Curcillo, may be notand Walt Klevay, three-fourths merely good, butiof a grand 1950 backfield. With _ great, They can them are such new backfield men be powerful contenders for the as Bill Wilks and Marts Beekley, national championship. {who looked almost as good inthe Notre Dame, which dipped to|SPring as the proved veterans. . 500 last year, for the first time The line is headed by Joe Camin 18 campaigns, is ready to Panella, aggressive tackle, and bounce back up. Capt. Bob Heid, smacking lineEvery team in the Big Ten race, packer, Ends such as Ray Hamilexc : on rst to De paitback), Bob Joslin, Bob Grimes, Ralph Armstrong, and
A formidable dark horse, Wis- Sonny Gandee highlight another consin, threatens the favorites. segment of worthy material.
If injuries do not interfere this The Buckeyes were No, 1 time, the Badgers may go to the the nation for a few weeks last top. : year, while they rolled up 204 Never before have so many points on Minnesota, Iowa, Pitt, good backs been ready to operate and Northwestern. T in one sector. The list includes slipped. Vic Janowicz 6f Ohio State, a| They open this campaign with unanimous All-American
Harmon
Prep Patter— :
At Least, Our Football
‘Here Is 'Interesting’ |
By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS
Angie’s Picks
_ OURS MAY not be the best aor high school football played in’ Rioht AST WEEK w Indiana, but our local teams % Tong can play some “interesting” ZERO-ED
Plainfield 19, Pike Township 0. Lebanon 19, Beech Grope 0. THIS WEEK Franklin Township over Beech : rove—Changing my luck. vely's Hawks, gouthport over Ben Davis— relatively ° inex- mime to get reckless. : perfenced b u t| pt wayne Central Catholic promising, have over Crispus Attucks—Just wait already d o n e'tj]] pasketball starts, s ome record-| Tech over Howe—A good ofshattering in this fense is the best defense. No? infant footballl Lawrence Central over Pike season, {Township —— The Bears haven't The Hawks lost under Lawrence lights in scored on a 106-/four years. yard touchdown| Sacred Heart over Manual— pass play against |Rocking Noah's are. Ben Davis last week. I wonder! Speedway over Danville— if the Hoosier football archives Seniors are wonderful, ain't they, can produce a touchdown pass Mo? : play any longer than that. | Warren Central over Greenfield : 2 = = |—A week for Warriors. HAROLD HOLDERFIELD Broad Ripple (Open) — Watch and Rex McKinney covered all the Rockets. that TD acreage. Holderfield, an! end, moved to a halfback slot in| Ville—Upsetting Hawks. the second quarter. : | Shortridge over Ft. The ball was on the Hawks’ South Side—On a hunch. two-yard line. Holderfield took Cathedral over Washington at the pass from center behind his CYO-—Between me and a couple own goal line. He heaved a run- of good Joes {Dezelan and Tofil), ning jump pass six yards behind tie 1s a hum-dinger, et the goal line to Rex McKinney, fae OTE: Home teams in bold who had eluded the Giants’ safety joan. COACH BILL SMITH,
The flip, good for nearly 50 - Lawrence Central mentor who yard : y yards In the air, Was smaved L,. ',,.. "ot with a little, is
by McKinney near the mid- | . stripe. McKinney also scored a face) pram a the
sec . | . second TD last four years and lost only
This week the Hawks face i Moorésville’s Sam" Settles, the Shree al) - Soom Be
All-Mid- : two Mia-giate conference back ing as though they'd like mak- . 4 ing it No. 4 this‘’year.
football. | Decatur Central High School! can take a bow.| Coach Leo Shi-
Angie
Wayne
the
= = F i
DON WILBUR, Dave Marks-
Amateur Football =
The Indianapolis Open Football League will hold its first meeting at 7 p. m. tonight at the Sportsman's Store. 126 N.
the Giants’ TDs—just for the records. Ben Davis won, 19 to
13. Benheylvania St. The league will begin . | Sept. 30. : The Giants have the biggest ~ persons interested contact Ott Hurle of freshman turhout in history — the Sportsman's Store
more than 60 yearlings. they®e husky. But the County champs missed! one outstanding prospect. His Today
And Solunar Tables
No. 1 sophomore runner of 1949; John Bright of Drake, who led]
Here’s how the Midwest col‘lege gridiron picture looks, team {headed by Capt. Bob Carey, 6-
{and John Petitbon, halfbacks,!
{are potential stars. | Back of them Notre Dame will|
{ment with the old—such as Chet | Ostrowski, who | . (whom Hayes shifted from|e. om end to guard.
in | from Akron, O., or Jim Barlett
{to have: The biggest Joe in col-
hen theyl sophomore end who is 6 feet, 9 'inches tall. Siw
choice three tough foes — Souther n| | straight years in. first place. the| | Wolverines seem doomed to slide]
itricate three consecutive seasons.
‘has never played a varsity minute
Decatur Central over Moores-
y! OXYGEN THERAPY
Methodist Sept. © 29, Michigan] State Oct. 6, and Wisconsin Oct. | 13. If they get by those, they| should be No. 1 again—for awhile, | anyway, x u
5 =
MICHIGAN STA TE — Until 1953, Michigan State will not par-
{ticipate in the Big 10 race. But
the Spartans are under the Western Conference rules, anyway,
and they are contenders for the 3
Don Coleman, tackle. Michigan State; national title, Their games with Bill Gable, guard, Wisconsin; Bob Carey. end, Michigan State;
Ohio State Oct, 6 and Notre Dame Nov. 10 should be among the best in the country. The Spartans have a good line,
foot, 4-inch pass-catching sensa[tion at end, and Don Coleman, a springy, 185-pound tackle. | Twenty-five lettermen are in the fold, and a lot depends on how Coach Clarence Munn makes out in his search for a left half.
ac a = NOTRE DAME — Following their break-even season of 1950— /lworse Notre Dame record since 1933—Coach Frank Leahy says he is “hopeful” about ’51. . He has the nucleus of a strong {first team. Men like Bob Toneff,| tackle, Jim Mudscheller, and, {Paul Burns, guard, Bill Barrett
and John Mazur, quarterback,
use a lot of new men or experi-! is being moved | Jerry Groom, the all-American center, will be replaced by Art Hunter, an 18-year-old sophomore
from Cincinnati.
Prey
Purdue
Voights, has compiled one of the finest
from last year’s offensive unit— Richie Athan and Dick Alban, backs, pound tackle. This leaves Voights ja rebuilding job.
{provement Coach Clyde velop into a determined bid for a first division spot this fall.
back, plus a host of promising sophomores. The .chief holdovers are passing quarterback, Bobby Robertson, a fast halfback, and Cliff Anderson, who ied the Big 10 in pass receiving two years ago.
omore who bears watchimg—Bill Holzbach, a halfback from the! Despite these standout victor-|
:
TOP 10 IN THE BIG TEN Ohio State 6. Indiana Wisconsin 7. lowa | . Illinois 8 Purdue "Michigan 9. Minnesota
Northwestern : MISSOURI VALLEY CONFERENCE
Tulsa 5 Wichita Housthn 6. Bradley Detroit
7. Drake Oklahoma A. & M. .
ALL-AMERICAN CANDIDATES Midwest
Vic Janowicz, back,
tate; Tom -Johnson, tackle, Michigan,
Leo Sugar,
Northwestern's coac
Only three regulars are back and Ray Huizinga, 235-
un ” ou INDIANA—The steady imat Indiana under Smith should de-
The Hoosiers have 18 lettermen D’Achille,
Louis accurate-
The Hoosiers also have a sopnh-
.- THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
tackle;
nhc ERTERN center, and Chuck Denning, hardNORTHWESTERN Bob nitting linebacker.
‘
.
a potent Calumet district of North-[ies, the Boilermakers finished “in ern Indiana. :
u ” n IOWA —The surprising sopho|more unit which carried Iowa to yels, sparkling quarterback, con{most pf its 1949 victories now has|tinye to improve. Samuels hit imatured into a senior footballlenoygh passes to gain 1069 yards |group. |lettermen, most of whom have) gked like a coming great. Ohio State: John had two years on Big Ten grid-|
Karras, back. Illinois; Bob Tonefl, tackle [jrons. Notre Dame; Joe Campanella, tackle, Ohio;
The Hawkeyes have 23
Best remembered of this list ,;.,
are Bill Reichardt, 208-pound full-| a He has able comend back; Hube Johnston, 248-pound | 62d Je way. s
John Towner, 200-pound
MINNESOTA One of the'most|to seven for Wisconsin and six| November records in the Big 10 ynysual coaching switches of the for the others. in his four years. If the Wildcats generation finds Wes Fesler in|
ever get untracked again in time Bernie Bierman’s old spot at Minto tie a good October campaign nesota.
onto their traditional finish, they, pegier. quit Ohio State at the will be a terrific title contender. ang of last season, and said he! was through with coaching. After a brief, unsatisfactory whirl at| selling = real back. The Minnesota job became | his. Citizens of Minnesota are en-| {thusiastic brought a hew concept gf public relations, a friendly, easy-to-meet attitude which is new there. Not much is expected in the] way of victories this fall. | Gophers were at their most inept|/head coach in the nation, 28-year-| last year, are not too bright.
n 8 ” PURDUE-—Last year - Purdue beat Notre Dame and Indiana. It was the third time since 1904 a Purdue team had.beaten both in one season. :
estate,
about Fesler.
The and prospects again both
its intrastate. rivals,
One thing the Irish are sure
|lege football. He is Joe Katchik, W ” ” =n { MICHIGAN — After four
Michigan's biggest losses were! Don Dufek, Leo Koceski, and Chuck Ortmann, backs who had operated the inWolverine offense
The biggest remaining asset u
classmen, three clever orijqers ready for Saturday's {Varsity—“B"” team clash in the] for Bow. Despite the absence of the |{frosh, the Bulldogs are
is Tom Johnson, a 60-minute man | things done,
tat tackle who mav be a standout!
‘all-American candidate. [Sees to have the edge
isearch for a punter.
The Huddle— Butler Varsity B Teams
Clash in Bowl Saturday
| 3 | BUTLER'S TONY HINKLE is;saw scant action as reserves last (down in the Big Ten standing. fresh(man) out of football play- season. {They are the only Conference ers for a few days. Blame it on]
team which does not virtually freshman convocations and in-|by a sprained ankle, drilled for iron this fall. | guarantee improvement. over '50. qocrination.
With a skeleton crew of upper-| Hinkle's getting his;
getting |
Sophomore Norm Ellenberger in the Hinkle's|
WISCONSIN — Harland Car]/8rooming him to fill the shoes of}
for Wisconsin, but he is a legend already. | | { It began when Carl, as a fresh-| man halfback, broke away for| five touchdown gallops against a pretty fair 1949 Wisconsin varsity. He was supposed to make a spectacular start as a ‘50 soph-| omore, but a broken hand, suf-| fered in pre-season practice, kept! him from playing at all. Now he’s ready, they say. Someone asked a Wisconsin coach
Ist year if Carl’s presence would | have made any difference in a|
certain game. The reply: “I don’t know if it would have made any difference. in the score, but any time Carl carried the ball, everybody in the stadium would have |stoed up to watch.” That's what they think of Carl around Madison, Wis, If he clicks, if all-American guard candidate Bill Gable isn't out with injuries again, if John Coatta re-| peats his '50 quarterback success, and if the linemen come through as expected, Wisconsin can be terrific. ~
2 n
ILLINOIS — As John Karras goes, so goes Illinois. Two years ago Karras, a sophomore, set a Big Ten rushing record, and the Illini were dangerous. Last year he was‘'out a great deal with an “injury, and the Illini just missed a title. | Illinois will have a formidable front wall. If Karras can run
with _his '49 speed, and if Coach Ray Eliot can find a quarterback among Don Engels, Eiry Falken|stein, Don Henss, or Tom O'Con-, nell, this team can beat any foe.
{the kamp, last season’s country-best| {booter.
{Davis and Tommy O’Brien. |Gerlach, Tech standout last season. is pushing ahead, too.
{to the No, 1 right-half spot. Both
graduated Flavian Weide-|
n = 2 THINGS LOOK fine at quarter-
back. Senior Ron Hallam is the likely starter. He's getting plenty] of competition from Sophs Fred
Les|
So far the injury list has been| light. Halfback Bill Jessee -has| turned up with bruised knees; Capt. Guy Fish, tackle, reports a sore | ford's shoulders are aching and Tackle John Foutty's: hands are
for Saturday's game.
=o 2 o | I. U. WASN'T blue yesterday. The 1950 reserves are sparkling| enough for promotion and Sopho-| more Halfback Petey Fisher is| off the injury shelf. After yesterday's Indiana grid workouts, Coach Clyde Smith made the following promotions: Moved Bill Kincaid to firststring guard. Advanced Bill Dizier
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|Bringer and Darrell Tackles Bill Bruner, Fred Preziosio and Bob Ruskusky; Guards Allen Hager, Jack Houston and
he wanted!
-
/ . : - i ; 5 . £ > Shackover, Ark.; and Jim Beas- creased to 60 aspirants -by Coach ley, 6-foot, 4-inch center.
la tie for the Big Ten cellar. They [can move out of that spot if the |’50 sophomores “like Dale Sam-
lin nine games _last year and
The brightest spot on the Purdue roster is end, where a poten-All-American, Leo . Sugar,
|panions in Darrell’ Brewster, Bob Bringer, and Bernie Flowers. | Purdue plays only five Big Ten |Conference games, as compared
Brothers uncovered a new flash— Dick. Kercher Ind. alumni game:
an immortal Earl by some the greatest all-around back ever to play in the National Football League, is the man.
PAGER HT
”
n -
(Ears) Whitworth.
J. B. . has- 12 lettemen, heaged
Another prideful note from ’'50| Ears
was a freshman team that downed by Phil Smith and Will Wilbanks, Oklahema's strong yearling flock, a guard pair the equal of any in 10-9.
the valley. There are hopes that a new quarterback, 6-foot, 2-inch Don Barbers, wil! be the answer to the Aggie’'s offensive problems. " = 2
In spring. practice Coach Buddy
from Evansville, He gained 200 yards in the
2 # =n BRADLEY — Bus Mertes. the DETROIT—A new coach, with former Iowa ace, moves in as
takes over. considered
name, Clark,
head coach at Bradley, with a big job on his hands. The Indians lost 19 lettermen off last year’s squad, which finished last in the Missouri Valley.
: = = » DRAKE — One of the biggest
(Dutch)
With, Ron Horwath, Jack
O'Leary, and Mike Goggins in i a 2 the backfield, Dan Kerins and one-man shows in college football | CINCINNATI—This school, Joe Kutz at tackle, and 15 otheg/—John Bright of Drake—is ready
{runner up
hopeful. The team Coach 8id| Gillman directed to eight victories lin eleven games last season has not been hit too Jhard by graduation. . Among the top-notchers back
He's are Frank Middendorf, center, ®
Gene Rossie, quarterback, Ralph) (Staub, end, and Lee Haslinger, | {guard.
u n
| MIAMI (OHIO)—The youngest |
lold Ara PRarseghian, will direct this team.. He takes over 24 lettermen) from a squad which won nine out of ten for Woody Hayes. Chief of | these are Backs Johnnie Pont, la breakaway artist, and James (Boxcar) Bailey, a powerful full- | back. ! = ns | XAVIER (Cincinnati) — Ed |Kluska, whose coaching has pro-| {duced 18 victories in 20 starts the |last two seasons, expects his '51| {team to be better than '50. “We've got 17 seniors? It’s the {most experience I've had in five] |years at Xavier,” he says. * One of Kluska's pupils, Bernie] |Roeckers, may be the most ver-
Fisher, who had been hampered satile gridder on any U. 8. grid-
|the first time in three days.
n 2 a
PURDUE’'S ROUNDING
Ends Bernie Flowers,
Tom Bettis; Center Clinton Knitz
Quarterbacks Dale Samuels and Roy Evans; Halfbacks Phil Klezak, John Durham, Ear! Henin- | ger and Max Schmalling; Full-|
back Glenn Young.
THE INJURY bug's biting |Coach Frank Leahy and his Notre Dame Irish. Yesterday Halfback] Last year Tulsa set an all-time |Billy Barrett was sidelined with collegiate record for a shoulder hurt. Trainer Hugh in one season—4747. Burns said Barrett would be lost
for two or three days. Barrett was hampered by in- whose passes gained 1102 yards;
right knee: Guard Bob Saf-|juries all
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a rey IR STRAY ey ALM | JOCAY Lai :25 :35 :55 9:00 name is John Brown, who is now | Fomowoy + «3:28 9:38 3:88 J:00 cavorting as a halfback for the Saturday ...... 51s 11:35 $40 11:45 Crispus Attucks varsity. And he's | Tomorrow : : 3:23 9:8 Hf 10:00 | only ‘a freshman. | Tuesday «es 7:30 Nin 7:88 iss Brown is a fine prospect. As. ——m—— a grade-schooler last year, he High School Football high jumped fiver and a half Carmel 12, Kirklin 7. 2 feet: a hin brood junbey mote Sacred Heart 21. Plainfield Charliten 0. . . { = » 5 | 5 Attuck’s game at Ft. Wayne Men's and Ladies’ Central Catholic this week will | nf. he played under the arcs Out-of-Pawn Saturday night. Game time's Sh | WRIST WATCHES : : ” ” = CATHEDRAL'S CITY co-lf 15 17 and 21 . Jewel atest sivie champions apparently weren't as ANTEED Evers Vaich YULLY GUAR. o v freon amm 3 Most green kids make their share § BULOVA As Low As of first-game bobbles . Joe Dezelan lost a big chunk from BENRUS last year’s team . . . including |} GRUEN All-City quarterback and passer § ELGIN Bob Wagner. | The Irish are crippled. Bill] HAMILTON Many Other Niehus has a sprained ankle and § WALTHAM Fine Makes is expected to be out of the, wt Washington game Friday night. LL. at - Danny Sheehan, another speed-| Sacks Bros. OHIO ster, will be out most of the Seas Open to 7 P M.. Sat to 9. Sun to Neon son with a broken arm,
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> Leahy Jake Roberts, the nation's 10th crossed his fingers and Inserted ranking ball carrier,
Sophomore
bruised. They should be in shape Barrett's spot on the first string. witt,
Roeckers plays end, | |quarterback, or halfback on| offense, safety on defense, and|
into rushes in to do the punting. shape. The following players are
getting Stu Holcomb’'s attention as potential starters:
= rn =
OHIO UNIVERSITY—Twenty-
Bob two lettermen make the Athens]
school a football factor once! again, Capt. Al Schneider, tackle, leads! Coat¢h Carroll Widdoes' line pros-| . pects. Ed Roberts, a top-flight ' runner in '49 but injured in ’50,
is the backfield hopeful.
Missouri Valley Loop |
. TULSA—A veteran crew from la squad which lost but one out of 11 in 1950 makes Tulsa a stand-|
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in the Mid-America lettermen, [Conference last year, is frankly prospects.
year’s “Thin Thirty,” one of the good this year. smallest football turnouts on any 36 lettermen, offering Bright little major campus, ‘have been in- help for '51.
out favorite in the Missouri Val-| yards gained|
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