* Tuesday, November 27, 1951 THE BATTALION Page 5 SWC Statistics Lippman Number One SWC Ball Carrier, Higgs Second one of the Best | Longfaor ns Ha ve to Win i o Get Orange Bowl .Bid Although in last place in SWC standings, A&M is still the offense leader, having racked up a total of 3025 yards rushing and passing. Close behind is the Larry Is bell sparked Baylor team with a total of 3022 yards, with confer ence leading TCU third with 2657 yards and Texas fourth with 2521 yards. On pass defense the Aggies are in first place, allowing opponents only 82.6 yards through the air per game. The Longhorns hold down the second position giving up 92.0 yards through the air and Baylor third allowing foes 97 yards per contest. Lippman Still Leads Glenn Lippman Cadet halfback is still the leading SWC ball car rier with 628 yards on 99 tries for a,n average of 6.4 yards per carry. Teddy Kiggs of Rice is very near Lippman with 623 yards on 113 carries and an average per carry of 5.5 yards. Among the leaders is Bruisin’ Bob Smith, A&M fullback, with 446 yards an 95 carries and 4.4 yards per carry. For the Steers, Gilbert Dawson has third position with 513 yards on 79 carries for the best average, two tenths better than Lippman’s, 6.5 yards per carry. Texas Fullback, Richard Ochoa, has run with the pigskin 99 times for 483 yards and an average of 4A yards. Don Barton, Orange and White back, is also up with' the leaders with 450 yards on 116 tries for 3.9 average gain. Graves and Gardemal J Isbell and Benners are the con ference’s leading aerial artists, but Ray Graves and Dick Gardemal of the Aggies are near the top. Graves has thrown the hoghide 98 times and completed 45 for 621 yards and an average of 13.8 yards per pass. Only six of Graves’ pass es have been intercepted and sev en of them have gone for TD’s, giving him a completion percent age of .459. Gardemal has the best average per pass in the SWC with 18.0 yards per pass. Out of 49 aerials thrown, Gardemal has completed 22 for 395 yards, had only four in tercepted, five went for touchdowns for completion average of .448. Individual offense leaders have Isbell, McHan, and Benners in the top three positions respectively with Graves close behind with 682 yards running and passing for a Wrestlers Elect Lay The 1951 A&M Wrestling Team recently elected officers for the coming year. Bill Lay, a junior from Pasa dena, Texas, was elected president. Brad Bradford of Devine was voted Vice President. Secretary-Treasurer is Joe Slack from Tomball, and Bob Poteet of Farwell was elected reporter. Coach of the team is Mr. Jim Griffith, who has 10 new members on the squad bringing this years’ total to 25. 5.2 average per try. Lippman has no passing yard age, but is right behind Graves in total offense with his 623 yards rushing. SMU back, Jerry Norton is the top punter in the SWC with an average of 41.2 yards per kick. Lary Averages 37.7 Yale Lary, Cadet’s number one kicker is fourth with a 37.7 aver age per boot. Larry is also the second leading punt returner in the SWC with a 17.8 yards per return average, be hind Val Joe Walker of SMU who has a 24.8 yards per return aver age. Walker has only returned six boots while Lary has returned 20, racking up 356 yards to gain the most yards in the conference on re turns. Hooper Tied Darrow Hooper is tied for the lead in the place kicking depart ment of the SWC, with 22 points out of a possible 25. C. O. Brocato, of Baylor has 22 points but three of these points came by the way of a field goal, and has kicked only 19 out of 27 attempts. Aggie back, Billy Tidwell, is among the leading pass receivers in the SWC with 13 passes for 256 yards and two touchdowns for an average of 19.7 yards per pass. Lippman is also the Aggies lead ing scorer and in a five way tie for sixth place in the conference with 30 points. Harley Sewell TU Guard Sewell Rated Best Of Texas Guards In this day of concentrated rc- cruitiing, Texas University points pridefully to the fact that one of Sports Thrill of a Lifetime Ags Scrimmage Freshman Team In Gym Tonight The 1951 Edition of A&M’s basketball team will be on view for the first time this year when the varsity team scrimmages the freshman squad in DeWare Field House at 8 p. m. tonight. This will be a warmup game in preparation for the varsity’s first official game of the season Dec. 3 against North Texas State Col lege. The freshman will tangle with Victoria Junior College in a preliminary prior to the main event. The Aggie Varsity squad will be appropriately dressed in their new uniforms while the Fish have in herited last year’s varsity outfits. Workouts began for both squads Oct. 15 under the guidance of Coach John Floyd. The man who ilirected the Cadets to a share of the 'conference crown last year will give his cagers their first test under fire. No admission will be charged for the games. first TD On Kyle Field In ’51 Oklahoma Game Is W. H. Ritchey, D.D.S. Announces the Association of Tom B. King, D.D.S. For the Practice of Dentistry 101 South Washington PHONE 2-7865 Bryan By GLENN LIPPMAN As Told To PEPE’ LcBLANC “We were on the Oklahoma 25 yard line. “It was early in the second quar ter and this year’s Oklahoma game was scoreless. “We were in the huddle. I can’t remember who was the quarter back at the time but Billy Tidwell had a hunch for a good play. “We listened to Billy call the play. He said that he had great idea. In his plan I was to carry the ball. “The ball was snapped. Tidwell got the ball and handed it off to me. “I started out wide around my right end. There were three block ers ahead of me. As well as I can remember it was W. T. Rush, Elo (Nohavitza) and Hugh (Mey er), doing the blocking. “This hunch play of Tidwell’s must have caught O. U. off guard because I went all the way. “This was the first time that I had scored a touchdown on Kyle Field. “This first touchdown is truly my greatest thrill in football. “Last year in the games played on Kyle Field, it seemed as if everytime we got near the goal line, I was replaced. “I remember in the Arkansas game last year, played here on Kyle Field, that Yale Lary scored three times. “Tidwell and I alternated at the left half position in that Arkan sas game. I never did score from the position, but he did. “I also got a great thrill when I scored our second and final touchdown in this years’ 14-7 win over O. U. The two scores that I had made in this game were the only scores that I had made at Kyle Field. “The funny thing about it all was that I scored both times when we were against the wind. “I can really remember the wind. I think that it helped us beat O. U. “Whenever O. U. got the ball with the strong wind to their backs, they would punt on third down just to try to get extra yardage or some break on the exchange of kicks. “We fooled them. Whenever we got the ball, we kept it. “We had possession of the ball all during the fourth quarter. At Lippman All-SWC this time when we were going so good and working like a team, again, the wind was against us. “We had been near the goal several times and couldn’t score. Of course, at these times the wind was with us. When this scribe asked Lippman as to how he and the team felt prior to the game, he commen d, “I felt good before the game and I had a hunch that we were going to win this one. “I know the team felt fine. We knew that this OU team was really the test for us. “This game gave us some’kind of indication as to what kind of team that we had. We all knew that Oklahoma had a great team. Lippman responded about what happened after the final gun blast. “The Corps was in an uproar and it looked like a bedlam broke loose in the stands. “The first person that I saw was Jim Weatherall of the O. U. team. He was a friend of mine. We had played against each other in the North-South High School All-Star game. “Some freshman earned me off the field. I don’t remember the freshman saying anything but I know that he was happy. I felt great. “We (the team) .all went to the lecture room. Coach George con gratulated us. It sure made us feel good. “In fact, Coach George always comes around and congratulates us, no matter how we had played or what we had done in the game.” Glenn Lippman is a 5’ 8”, 170 pound halfback who is the current leader in total offense in the SWC. Earlier this season, this 21-year- i old senior was picked by the UP as the “Player of the Week” for his outstanding performance in the Oklahoma game. Everyone was surprised in this O. U. tilt when Lippman’s name was announced to start at the full back slot. This' El Campo product also played defensive guard in the ’50 SMU tilt. In high school at El Campo, Lippman received such high honors as All District and All-America. He ig majoring in mechanical en gineering and has a straight “A” average. its greatest players cost only one penny post card. That was the investment made by Texas in its efforts to re cruit Harley Sewell, termed by Line Coach J. T. King “the best defensive lineman I’ve seen in the Southwest.” Now in his junior sea son with the Longhorns, the 220- pound Sewell from St. Jo, Texas is the team’s nearest approach to a 60-minute man. Impressed with Sewell’s appear ance, Blair Cherry, then the TU head coach, dropped a post card to the youngster early that sum mer and offered him a scholarship. Sewell becamci a regular on the defensive platoon as a sophomore, and has been that middle man of Texas’ five-man line ever since. Sewell Quick “Sewell is so quick and strong he can react and get back into play after being partially blocked,” Head Coach Price points out. “Harley never has had a bad day,” says King, “and what’s more he has never had a bad practice. He is the most consistent lineman I have ever seen. In addition to his physical qualifications he has the desire to play good football. Sewell did not play a single of fensive down as a sophomore, but he won All-American Bud McFad- in’s position on the offensive pla toon this year without much com petition. He plays virtually full time on defense, about half time on de fense and is a member of the kick off, punting and extra-point pla toons. Sixth Sense King credits Sewell with having a sixth sense so far as defensive play is concerned. “He is lot like KiK Aldrich (TCU’s All-Americaan center in ’38) and other great line backers; he has a nose for that pighide.” Sewell plays what King describes “the most difficult positions in de fensive football,” that middle man in the five-man line, where rival blockers constantly are trying to double-team him. If Sewell continues to stand out as he has in the past games for the Longhorns, he could easily make things rough for the Cadet ball carriers. He is the center of a good forward wall that will have By GUS BECKER Battalion Sports Writer The Texas University Longhorns playing under a new coach and us ing a new formation will probably get a bid to the Orange Bowl if they can get past the Aggies Thursday afternoon. For the first time the Steers are using the new split T-formation and it has been very successful, grinding out 2521 yards in nine games. One of the strong points of the TU team is the effective defense which has stopped teams such as Kentucky. (Cotton Bowl partici pant), Purdue, Oklahoma, Rice, TCU and SMU. All-American Bud McFadin, All- SWC Ken Jackson, Ben Proctor, and Dick Rowan are missing from the Longhorn line-up but it hasn’t hurt the effectiveness of the Steer forward wall. Page-Jones Dan Page and T. Jones alter nate at the quarterback slot for the Texas squad. Although Ben Tompkins is missed, these two lads have done a very good job of call ing plays. Byron Townsend has failed to live up to pre-season expectations and a junior, Dick Ochoa has been the big gun at the fullback posi tion. The Conference’s leading scorer, Gib Dawson, who has scored 56 points so far this year runs from a halfback post, while Don Barton handles the other Halfback slot along with Bobby Dillon. Menasco—All-American he specialized on defense and he has been the regular defensive end all season. One of the top sophomores on the squad, Gilmer Spring has de veloped into an excellent offensive end for the Steers. At the tackles, Bill Wilson an outstanding defensive man for two seasons and Jim Lansford, chosen on the Houston Press All-SWC de fensive platoon last year, have been seeing double duty this year. Davis who plays guard on of fense has proved an excellent “60 minuteman” along with Bill Mil- burn who was shifted to tackle this year to bolster the weak center of the forward wall. Jack Barton has held down the center slot for the steers, seeing double duty in a few games this year. Harley Sewell the successor to McFadin has come through beauti fully for the Steers and will pro bably receive All-SWC recognition at the guard position. Lippman, Little On [J P All-Conference Big Don Menasco, All-American on the Associated Press poll last year along with June Davis are as good a pair of linebackers as can be found in the SWC. Tom “Swede” Stolhandske, the big end on the Longhorn eleven, has been mentioned for All-Amer ican honors this year and should be one of the ends on the All- SWC squad. Thursday’s game will see half of the top ten leading ball carriers perform, in A&M’s Glenn Lippman and Bob Smith, and TU’s Dawson, Ochoa, and Barton. Stolhanske was one of the two sophomores to make the 1950 start ing offensive lineup and is the lone regular returning to the of fensive line. Last season, Stolhandske caught 23 passes for 314 yards and one touchdown, but since Head Coach Ed Price has been unable to de velop a passer to compare with Tompkins the Longhorns have been mostly a ground team. The Texas squad have attempted the fewest passes of any SWC team with 70 and have completed only 26 for 462 yards. Menasco who was on virtually all defensive selections for All-SWC is a defensive specialist and is called “Tiger” by his teammates. End Paul Williams, made several All-SWC selections last year as Glenn Lippman, leading ground gainer in the Conference, and Jack Little, A&M’s huge tackle, both earned first place positions on the United Press All-Conference team. Aggie center Hugh Meyer won the middle post on the Second team while Bob Smith, Cadet Full back, placed on the Third team. Every team in the loop, with the exception of the conference lead ing Frogs, placed men on the 1951 United Press All-Southwest Con ference teams. Baylor, which has been among the nation’s top 10 elevens in the United Press rankings most of the season, took three of the positions, including the only two unanimous choices, while A&M, Texas, and Rice placed two each. The remaining two first team positions went to SMU and Ar kansas. The combination of Isbell, quarterbacking passer, to Stan Williams pass catching end, shared the unanimous votes. First Team Pos. Name School Wt. E Bill Howton, Rice 180 E Stan Williams, Baylor 195 T Jack Little, A&M 220 T Bob Griffith, Arkansas 230 •G Bill Athey, Baylor , 215 G Harley Sewell, Texas 220 C Dick Hightower, SMU 215 B Larry Isbell, Baylor 180 B Gib Dawson, Texas 170 B Glenn Lippman, A&M 170 B Teddy Riggs, Rice 172 Second Team Tom Stolhandske, Texas E Harold Riley, Baylor E Ken Gasner, Baylor T Doug Conaway, TCU T Herb Zimmerman, TCU G June Davis, Texas G Hugh Meyer, A&M C Ray McKown TCU B Lamar McHan, Arkansas B Bobby Dillon, Texas B Bobby Jack Floyd, TCU B Third Team Pat Summerall, Arkansas E Ted Vaught, TCU E Bill Forrester,* SMU T Dave Hanner, Arkansas T H. Forester, SMU G Alton Taylor, TCU G Keith Flowers, TCU ..C Fred Benners, SMU B Jerry Norton, SMU B Bill Burkhalter, Rice B Bob Smith, A&M B SAVE MONEY ON Christmas Gifts! 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