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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 47

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Detroit, Michigan
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47
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I FINANCIAL I SPORTS I mm 104th Year. No. 184 Sunday, November 4, 1934 Free Press Want Ads Bring Best Results Mich. State. .13 Marquette 7 Princeton ....19 Harvard 0 Pittsburgh ....19 Notre Dame 0 Yale ...7 Dartmouth 2 Illinois Army Purdue 26 Chicago .....20 Northwestern.

7 Wisconsin 0 Iowa 0 Indiana 0 Lund Rallies Gophers and They Down Michigan, 34 to 0 5 Herd Is Held Scoreless V- TSV 1 at Half, Then Gallops Lund Dashes 1 6 Yards for First of Oklahoma's Fourth-Period Romp Upsets Titans, 19 to 6 Five Gopher Scores and Alfonse Runs 76 Yards for Second By Tod Rockwell MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 3 The University of Minnesota football team swept aside the Wolverines from Michigan, 34 to 0, in the Stadium here this afternoon and plunged on toward the National football title. Bernie Bierman's powerful eleven, held helpless by a fighting band from Michigan in the first half, took up its blocking stride in the third period and scored three touchdowns with startling rapidity. The Gophers added two more in the final quarter to trounce Michigan more soundly than ever before in the football history of the two institutions. It was Pug Lund, Minnesota's great halfback -and certainly an All-America candidate, who inspired his mates.

Fug was held on the bench until the second period. The Michigan players stopped him in that part of the game, but the mighty Lund showed his class in the third quarter. Lund put his team in the lead early in the second half with a brilliant 16-yard rush around the Wolverine left end for a touchdown. A few minutes later, with the Gophers blocking savagely all over the field, Julius Alfonse, halfback, dashed 76 yards through a broken field for the second score. Pug, adding to his threat and despite a fractured right thumb, threw a 15-yard pass to Maurice Johnson, Gopher substitute end, for wk the third touchdown.

George Ros- ll11a.t.t Knof coe scored the fourth touchdown UliHillO aUCdlO Inspires Gophers to Crush Wolverines iSpartans Hard Pressed to Vanquish Marquette State Wins, 13-7, with Thrills Packed into Last Two Minutes of Play EAST LANSING, Nov. 3 Michigan State today met its football testand passed it. In a thriller that alternately chilled and warmed the hearts of 13,000 homecoming day alumni, the Spartans came from behind here this afternoon to defeat Marquette University, 13 to 7. No game ever played over the turf of Michigan State Stadium ever had more action than this furious fight that two hard-running, clever football teams put on this afternoon. In the end, the Spartans can feel rather good about having old lady luck tapping them on the forehead in their darkest hour and preserving for them their undefeated record for the year.

It was a wild last two minutes of play that needs recitation for Suicide Passes Bring Last 2 Scores Heave for Gain of 64 Yards Eliminates Early 6-0 Lead By Lewis H. Walter University of Detroit's football stock dropped to a new low for the season Saturday afternoon when the Titan were defeated by Oklahoma A. and M. College, 19 to in the Stadium. It was Petrolt'a second successive defeat on her home field and one of the most humiliating suffered In years, for the team was favored to win decisively over the Invaders from the Southwest In the Home- coming Day battle.

Detroit was not outplayed as decisively as the score Indicates for Titans presented the UowDoys with two of their three touchdowns, all made in the laat period. Detroit led 6 to 0 going Into the last quarter. Then a pass from Dean Weber, aub Cowboy quarter-' back, to Leon Asbury, Cowboy right end, gained 64 yards and a touchdown, Asbury kicked goal and Detroit trailed 6-7. Detroit tried to overcome that lead by gambling on passes from the goal line but the gamble didn't work. Two passes were tried and each, one re- suited In a Cowboy interception and those who did not see and stay to 1 i 4 A '-fa-'minTuisissi Jf 1 I Football If -V'J Results i 1 (V V) I 1 'f 4 A i 1 I i a touchdown.

Shun Passes at First Detroit had an edge on Its rival until that final period. The Titans, usually dependent on forward passes, played through the first period without trying a single toss but when they decided to take off the wraps in the second period BIG TEN I i 7 I ...34 Michigan 0 I I 1 4 i 'fi, i a Pitt Stars Dash Through Irish Long Sprints Bring 19-0 Triumph PITTSBURGH, Nov. 3 (A.P.) Thn crnlrlan hnata nf Pittsburgh. sturdy as steel, today "broke up Wot re Dame victory marcn, lo 0, but only after the hard-bitten Hoosiera warned the gridiron world by their die-hard play that the stars of Notre Dame will shine again. More than 64,000 fans filled the sun-lit stadium for the homecoming battle which marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of the first football battle between the schools.

They saw the Irish gridiron renaissance cut short by the dashing backs of Pitt, who scored or paved the way for the home team's three tallies by breath-taking sprints in the last three periods. The clash, packed with thrills all the way and the most sensational strife waged in the stadium this year the score notwithstanding found Pitt In command all the way, hut the Psnthers battled furiously for every one of the nine first downs they annexed to five for Notre Dame. Nlckslck Oops 65 Yards After a scoreless first quarter in which Miller Munjas, Pitt field general and Wallace Fromhart and Buddy Bonar, Notre Dame quarterbacks, probed the weak and strong spots, Pitt swung into action in the second period. Early in the second period Leon Shedlosky, Pitt back, took Andy Pllney'a punt on his 85 and behind a wave of blockers side-stepped, weaved and sprinted 65 yards for the first touchdown of the afternoon. Izzy Weinstock was wide on his kick.

Late in the third period, after the passing attacks of both teams had been shackled by the defense, Mike Nicksick was shaken loose on his own 45-yard line. He faked to his right, cut back, and romped through a big gap in the right side of the Irish line. With the aid of slam-bang blocking by Weinstock and Larue, he sprinted past the South Benders' secondary and traveled 55 yards for the second touchdown. Pllney Makes Gains Weinstock booted the extra point and the fight was resumed, well within the respective 30-yard line stakes. Pllney brought the fans to their feet at this juncture with successive dashes of 12 and 11 yards behind splendid interference but the Irish could not keep it up.

It was late in the laat period when Pitt scored again. Heinie Weisenbaugh started the drive when he grabbed Pllney'a pass on his own 34 and carried it to the Irish 30-yard line. Shedlosky cut back and raced to Notre Dame's four-yard line where he was run out by big Don Elser. On the next play Nicksick slammed through the Irish line to register his second touchdown. Welsen- Pleate Turn to Pane A Column 1 4 Vsr, early in tne tourtn period, smasn- ing inside the Michigan lett end for 15 yards.

The final touchdown was made by Bill Proffitt, sub halfback, after a two-yard smash over the Wolverine right guard. Every one of the Minnesota touchdowns was spectacular. Each one followed breaks upon which the Gophers pounced eagerly. The game ended with Minnesota pounding down the field on the road to another score. The Wolverines plainly were exhausted.

Kipke'a players gave just about all they had In the first half, dur ing whlrh they actually outplayed Minnesota even with Pug in the line-up during tha second quarter. A Familiar Ton A few minutes after the game started It appeared that it might be tha old, old Minnesota-Michigan story. Willis Ward, Negro end, who was outstanding today, and Statistic! of Game Mlaanota Mlfhlcsa Viral daa II A raaaea alteaanted 8 6 raw a maapMrd faa-ea Interrrptral I Wde (alaeal bf S.t 1 fanta l' JO erase Sit 43 Total vnrria gained bj arrlmmac SOT IS ramhiee I FumMee recovered I Fenaltlee fclrkntfe. averane AH 48 dUeraae tarda, hlrkoffa returned tit BO Capt. Tom Austin, rushed In on Roscoe, sub for Lund, and blocked a kick on fourth down on the Gopher 18-yard line.

The Wolverine 140-pound package of dynamite, Ferris Jennings, reached down deep In the old Michigan trick' bag and brought up the old fake place kick. Regeczl kicked through as Ferris was kneeling on the ground, but Johnny didn't kick the ball. Instead Jennings picked It up snd ran 14 yards through a completely baffled Gopher eleven to the four-yard line. Here Minnesota's great line lived up to Its reputation. Jennings sent Aug and Regeczl at the tackles on three plays and on fourth down called the old fake place kick again.

This time it was a pass, Regeczl to Ward. The ball Just slipped off the tips of Ward's fingers as he raced full speed for the corner of the Minnesota end zone. Begnczi's Kicks Help All the plunging of Lund, the cagv generalship of Glenn Seldel and the running of Beise and Ros coe behind a truly great Gopher line could not offset the Michigan edce in the first period. It couldn't be done because Regeczl was punt ing remarkably well. His kicks were high, long and well placed.

Cedric Sweet, the sophomore fullback, was the Michigan defensive star. Time and again he stopped Lund by tearing into the Minnesota blocking units with abandon worthy of Wallle Weber or Franklin Cappon at their best But the Gophers had power to spare and in the third ana lourtn penoas wore down even such hardy fight ers as Sweet. Jennings played defensive quarterback well. Several times he was the only Michigan player between a rushing Gopher and his goal line. He made sharp, sure tackles.

Other times he was taken out of thn runner's path by Gopher blockers who never, never ceased smashing into the Michigan secondary. The Minnesota guards, tackles and ends smashed into the Michi-mn secondary and cross-blocked at the line of scrimmage viciously for 60 minutes. The Minnesota nan- backs, had speed in Alfonse; power and speed in Stanley Kostka; more speed in Art Clarkson, Vern Lavoir, Roscoe and Bill Proffitt. The power in the Minnesota backfield was augmented greatly by the blocking of fullback Sheldon Beise, and Lund himself. Have Lota of Stars In Johnson, Bob Tenner.

Frank Larson, (All-America) and John Roning, Minnesota had four worthy ends. Wloaetn. mnn ana tsengi- son were powerful tackles. Bill Bevan. the Gopher guard, was the best at that position on the field today.

Vernon Oech. the other guard, was almost equally as cap- ab e. And Kenneoonm proved good center. The Minnesota line had greater punch and stamina because any player could be replaced by a substitute only a shade less in ability. Though decisively outplayed and had.lv beaten in the aecond half, Michigan did not look poorly today.

rieae Turn to Page 4 Column 4 Army Eleven Cadets Meet First Defeat, 7-0 CHAMPAIGN, 111., Nov. 3 (A.P.) In a corral drenched with driving rain and fetlock deep in mud and water, Illinois saddled the Army mule with a touchdown handicap In the first five minutes of battle today and then rode him over a spectacular finish to hang on for a 7 to 0 victory before 41,000 soaked spectators. The Illlni won with great football, but never will they forget their ride for life in the closing minutes of play when tha mule kicked back even with Its famous Jack Buckler relegated to the sidelines by injuries. The final mulish kick sent the Illlni reeling to their own five-yard line, but they finally got their second wind and lashed the mule back to square their four game aeries with Army and remain standing among the rank's of the nation's gridiron undefeated. Nelson Blocks Punt Illinois, forever on the alert for breaks over the treacherous grid-Iron, manufactured the big one that produced the victory.

Engaged in a series of punt exchanges. Buckler paused with the rain and wind at his back. Through the Cadet line rushed Ken Nelson, who blocked the kick. The mud-covered ball bounced toward the Army goal and Gene Dykstra recovered for the Illlni and ran it to Army's 14. Into the battle then stepped Craln Portman, who ran interference for two plays and then swung into action on the Army 12 and raced around his left end for a touchdown behind interference that top pled tne cadets, ine Kick tor the extra point was scored by Les Lind-berg, with Jack Beynon holding the ball.

Illinois made another big threat in the closing minutes of the second period after El Sayra had intercepted one of Buckler's desperately tossed passes and ran it back to Army's 33 and even pushed over a touchdown on a 17-yard pass, Beynon to Dykstra, but it was nullified by offside. On the first play of the final parted, Buckler, who dazzled tha crowd with his lightning thruste despite the muddy field, was injured and taken out, Maurice Simons replaced him. Fumble Are Frequent In three blasts at the line, Simons lugged the ball to the Illinois 28. Then came a series of fumbles and breaks and when they cleared Illinois held the ball a foot from its own goal. An unidentified Army player, covered with mud, pounced on tha ball after a blocked kick on the two-yard line.

It bounded out of his arms, and Port-man, with one desperate leap fell on the ball for Illinois. Llndberg, who toe kept Illinois out of trouble all day, then kicked out a low one. Army threatened once again but a fumble ended that. Pleate Turn to Page 2 Column I Goodby Jug MICHIGAN MINNESOTA Jennvp hmith Orfh orj Rorcmaaii Renos boh at AOitl Ward no tan Wis. "-Mb IJL-Ptejh Ttmnljigt HrUe AUK RfMsTO KtKCU sweet Mlphliran ft Minnesota 30 1434 Tonrhdown tanrf.

Alpbame, Maarlea, ohnann. Froifttt. Koacoc. Point after loach do wn Hfi 3. lv.r (placement 9ubti tut tons: Minneaa(a---Flri4 quarter kiMtka for Beta, Levolr for Seidt.

Lund for Kwoe, Rooninc for Larwotv Kmith for Hengtiton, Bruha for Oech. tteeonsl quarter- Heidi far Lerolr, Heotto far Smith, M. Johnson for Roon.na. Third auorter Tenner for Ronninjr. Rrl fie Rowtfca, Oeeh for Bevan, leTofr for Htlktnoa for Brahn, D.

Smith for Bmt-ston. Konnlnr for Johanoa, Clartttoa for Alton, Kotcoe for Land. Fourth quarter Antil for Konainr. Hndoa for Renn hnhm. freemmh far D.

mila. Prof fit for Urttftoa, Heine for Kaatka. Kaatvrw for UMaofh. Thalia ffl Ma-. aa BW.KU Jnhniioi, Krnniv for Koteoe.

Rorh for Beie. IlkiBtson foe Freiwaih. Mtrhif anMr aaarter Ntte, nartr Rrard for Borxntaan. Thrd aoarter Unhn for Antia, ftear for ttemeter, KIIU for Aug, avace te rUiHltl. Font-th aaarter -Fatanelll for age, Aatla for Hahe.

Fung fur Ford. Bitted for Vlergerer, Beard for HlMehrand. Rfre Makee Newlu western la. nlre- hammer tChtraga). FteM )dgo- Birch tFaarlham).

Head Maniaa 1 Mi well (Ohio hi ate). I a ah r. a K. QB I. AiranM F.B Beta wilt after the 60 minutes of play.

In those 120 seconds, Marquette sighted victory two yards away and then saw her fade across the tops of the stately pines that border this picturesque football playground. Here it was. Lose Ball on Th we-Yard Line State was guarding Its six-point lead, 13 to 7, held onto the ball for three downs, trying to kill time on Its own 35-yard line. Out of the blue came a swarm of Marquette linemen to block Bob Armstrong's Dunt. The ball sailed high, end- over-end back over his head to ward the Spartan goal.

Jim Mc- Crarv. State'a Negro fullback, ram bled back frenetically to get the leather. He missed it the first time and lunged again as the Gold Shirts poured upon him. When they unfolded, the ball was on State's three- yard line and belonged to the mil-toppers. Al Gueppe, a substitute, ran wide at right end, but got only one yard.

Then the tragedy took a place in the Avalanche backficld. Confusion must have been there too, for a pass from center sailed through the huddled Hilltop back-field and out of bounds on the Marquette 15-yard line. It was the life saver for State. Marquette had not finished, however. Elmer Seefeld, sub back, ran back 20 yards and fired a long forward pass that teetered off the fingers of Roy Mc-Mahon, reserve end, in the promised land.

Tide Changes Swiftly Swiftly the tide changed. Another desperate heave by Seefeld fell into the hands of Dick Colina, State right half, who took the ball in at full stride on his five-yard line and he swept down the field toward the Hilltop goal. At the 25-yard line, the speedy Marquette backfielders, cut across and hit him. The ball sailed toward Ward Cuff, Marquette back, who barely grazed it with his fingers as it went out of bounds. Seefeld tried once more, this time Statistics of Game State Marquette Sora 13 7 Yarda Rained from arrimmaKO 70S IftS Ylrat downa 1A 8 Taaaea attempted 8 0 Paaaea completed a 9 Paaaea Intercepted hj A 0 Tarda sained, 111 Flrat downa, pnaaes 2 1 Pennltlea 4 Yarda lost, penaltlca 17 SO Number of pnnta 8 ft I'unta yardaie S71 411(1 Average distance, pants 34 44 Fnmhles 1 3 Fumbles recovered br 1 the ball'' being caught by McCrary on the Hilltop 35 as the game ended.

It was a climax that left the spectators weak and wobbly as they filed out on the field to embrace their black-shirted Spartans. With Ray Buivld, 195-pound halfback who runa like a sprinter, doing most of the work, the Avalanche rode down on a strong south wind to peril the Spartans' goal from the start. The whistling wind almost nullified Armstrong's attempt to punt in this period. Marquetta got the ball on State's 35-yard line soon after the kickoff and missed a try for field goal from that point Reynolds Has Bad Day Russ Reynolds, who had the worst day of his career handling punts for State, fumbled and recovered one on the Spartan two-yard stripe. The punt gave Mar-Please Turn to Page 3 Column 1 In 1891 Cornell defeated Michigan 58 to 12 and the next year the same team blanked the Wolverines 44 to 0.

And then today's game, which will rank as No. 5 among the games that partisan Michigan fans would like to forget To make matters worse, Joe Ellis, Wolverine halfback, suffered a possible fracture of the little finger on his left hand in the final quarter today. He the injury while making a tackle. Statistics of Game IXrolt Oklahoma 6 19 Rcore. FirMi rtnwni from rrlmmagr Firiit dovtnt from puin 6 First dawns from pennlHe 0' Tsrrld (Ainrd by trrimmtttr M- Turd find hr patnes Pimm attempted 21 Paflftet) ron-pleled Pen Interrupted 5 omher of pnnU It Average dlntnnrc pnnt 40 dumber of fnmblM Xumher of Tardt lmi by penalties 30 From lint ef terlinatage.

HA ifl jo 3 0 13 0 15 they went to the Oklahoma goal line in a hurry. That lone scoring march by Detroit started on the Oklahoma 42-yard line when Weber kicked outside. Two passes from Nott to Karpus, one of which gained 14 yards and the other 17 yards, ferouirht the malor gains, some plunging by Nott adding the bal ance. The last pass carpus iook to the Oklahoma three-yard line from where he slashed over Okla-I homa'i right tackle two plays later. Bill Pegan, the senior from Ann Arbor who Is regarded as the best placement kicker on the squad, was rushed out to replace Karpus and try for the extra point.

His kick was six feet to the right of the bars and that miss was one of the most costly ever made by a Titan for it led directly to the desperate passes which enabled the Cowboys to clinch the game in the period. Tablea Are Turned The Cowboys had been in Detroit territory several times but had not really threatened until they scored in the last period. That score was a sensational turn of events that took the play entirely away from the Titana and left them a beaten team. Cliff Wright, Oklahoma halfback, changed his team's' fortune by in-u tercepting one of Nott's tosses on '( his own 25-yard line and bringing it up to the 36-yard mark. It was 'Tleate Turn to Page 2 Column 1 Suicide Passes 1 OKLAHOMA A.

M. DETROIT fMttie Mnrrle i rtmnor L. Diiki-r nrownmg b. Andrankins Lorlna; ll.on i.im K.l Rnrna Tirnnor Aabary Hrlmrr Blainrk Nott lamia HodKlOB TlnprM R. Fan mlw KB Wlroorck fccora br Darlnrfai Ptrlt A I) (1 a PUG Minnesota Northwestern 7 Wisconsin Iowa 0 Indiana Illinois Army Ohio State ....76 Western Purdue 28 Chicago .......20 STATE Oklahoma Detroit Michigan State.

13 Marquette 7 llntw 14 Hillsdale Defiance 0 Lawrence Tech 0 Adrian 33 St. Mary's, O.L. 0 Western State 13 Central State 0 Michigan 13 St. Viator's 0 Albion 7 Alma Ironwood J. C.19 Northern State 0 EAST Yale 7 Dartmouth Princeton IB Harvard 0 Fordham 13 Tennessee 12 Carnegie Tech 6 New York 0 Temple 14 Holy Cross Columbia ,.14 Cornell Pittsburgh ....19 Notre Dame Vanderbllt 7 G.

Washington Syracuse 16 Penn State Navy 26 wasb-Lee St. Lawrence ..21 Alfred 7 Cortland 29 Trenton State 0 Clarkson 27 Buffalo 0 Tufts 26 N. Hampshire Hamilton 7 Rose Poly 6 Pennsylvania .41 Lafayette 0 Penn Military .25 St. Joseph's 0 Juniata 0 Lebanon Valley 0 .48 Muhlenberg 6 Shinpensburg .14 Bloomsburr 9 Union ,..3 Williams 21 Rochester .20 Hobart 7 Vermont 7 Norwich 0 Rhode Island .44 Worcester Tech 0 Maine 20 Colby 6 Davis-Klklns .14 Findlay Waynesburg 9 Geneva Washington C. 6 Susquehanna 6 Shenandoah ..13 Baltimore 7 Oheriln 6 Allegheny 0 Thlel 20 Edlnshoro 9 Mass.

State ...16 Amherst Boston College. 6 Vlllanova 0 Trinity 27 Wesleyan E. Stroudsburg 7 Ithaca 6 Colgate Frosh 6 Kiskl 0 Rutgers 52 Boston U. 0 West Maryland Catholic U. 0 Gettysburg ....14 Lehigh 0 Albright 14 Moravian 13 Delaware 7 Dickinson 6 Swarthmora .12 Johns Hopkins.

0 Brown 13 Springfield 7 Manhattan ...21 C. C. N. 0 Bates Bowdoln 0 Vortheastera .31 Arnold 6 Please Turn to Page 3 Column Fifth Worst According to Dr. Frank Lyman, team physician, who is waiting the outcome of X-rays, Ellis probably will be able to play against Wisconsin next week.

Ellis made the longest Michigan gain today when he circled the Gopher right end on a fake punt. Coach Harrp Kipke expressed concern over Ellis' injury. He said he had planned to use Joe extensively this week in building an offense for the game with Dr. Clarence Spears' Badgers. 6 6 Valiant Harvard Defense Unable to Stem Princeton Tiger, Superior in Every Department, Win by 19 to 0 as Levan Stars LLTN bination of the two Tiger stars was more than Harvard lack of speed could meet.

Kadllc and Levan, the Siamese twins of passing, worked back and forth through this aecond period for 64 yards in three long flying forwards before Pepper Constable finally crashed over the Harvard line for Princeton's opening score. This was supposed to be the shattering shell that would turn the game into a riot It was another story. For over 30 minutes after this first Tiger thrust the scrappy Harvard defense from end to end kept rolling back the always threatening Tiger attack. All through thla sweep of play the Harvard attack remained bottled up, completely smeared, badly outmanned, and this defense held up to the final stretch when tha Tiger opened up his claws. A long run by the brilliant Levan, a Harvard penalty for roughness a moment later, then a fine pass from Snndbach to Lea gave Princeton its second score.

Later on. Dean Hill inter-rented a Harvard pass deep in Crimson territory and two minutes later a lateral from Kaufman PIcae rr fe Page Column Defeat Is Michigan's By Grantland Rice BOSTON, Nov. 3 For 52 minutes Harvard's hard fighting defense held Princeton to a single touchdown today. Then in the last seven minutes, out-manned and overpowered, the Crimson wall crashed in as the Tiger attack swept across the goal line for two more touchdowns to win 19 to 0, as 35,000 sat in tha stands. These 35,000 saw a clean, hard game without the slightest show of hostile feelings on either side.

Harvard came Into this battle outclassed in speed and power, weight and experience. The Crimson offense was almost completely smothered on every play. The Crimson attack could get nowhere. But the Crimson defense was another story. Through the first period an aggressive Harvard line, flanked by tvo good ends, broke up Princeton's running attack and finally, in the second period, forced Kadllc and Levan Into the air.

Beaten back along tha turf, with even the fleet. baffling Garry Levan held in check the reversible forward passing com MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 3 The 34-to-0 defeat Minnesota administered to Michigan here today will go down in Wolverine athletic annals as one of the five worst defeats suffered by a Michigan eleven since 1882. Only on four other occasions has Michigan lost so decisively. In 1883 Yale swamped the Wolverines, 46 to 0.

Cornell set an all-time record in 1889 when it trounced Michigan, 56 to 0. That still stands as the most one-sided defeat in the Wolverine record. vB'iwma II a hi iff TOBfhdownn Karpoa, AahnfT, Wrlfht tnt rtM IddiMom Aubnrjr. KnbMHiitlora: Urtmlt Hunwn. If ft -lMl: Barrett.

Ifft tarklf; tinnrj, lff (aard; Mrtnrr, rrntrr: Crottr. rlht lick If! Karpua. rttht half: Tarnr. full-karkl MarrhraMalt. anarlirlmrk Ntorrlr.

af antlr Ivory. qiiartrrltHfk ontr. rlrtil tnaril: reran, rliht half: l.nti, Irft half: rlarakr. rlrht fad. Oklahnmi Harnnm, Irft half: rhllllppl.

Irft end: Helrllaie, left taeklei Welrr, ouarlerrmrk Wjatt. reetari Kae. left mardi lypy. rlht half; Hrlrht. left hair.

Bafarae Ohaa (nartmonth. lTrpplra Itanri (Hlrhltaa). Head MireamaM Wyatt Vlari), rMi Jodie Brrnaaa.

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