Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
ALva Maves Ja " . Sports Editors
Thirty-Four All-SEC
Stars Return In 52
ATLANTA, Dec. 3.— (AP) —Thirty-four of the 66 foot
ball playvers who were selected for the Associated Press
All-Southeastern Conference squad yesterday will be back
in uniform next vear.
That’s an unusual high return on
anv investment.
The 66-man All-Star squad is
composed of 32 seniors, 25 juniors,
seven sophomores and two fresh
men, Befere the season no fresh
man was given any chance of mak
ing the All-Southeastern squad
and not more than two sophomores
were considered good enough to
make the team.
Frosh Fournet
Sid Fournet of L. S. U, a 205-
pound guard from Bogalusa, La.,
was one of the least known of
Coach Gus Tinsley’s yearlings. In
the Georgia gfme however, frosh
Fournet blocked a punt which led
tc a 7-0 L. S. U. victory and Four
net was on his way to All-Star
honors.
The ether freshman is Georgia
Tech’s Larry Morris, a 190-pound
fullback=linebacker from Decatur,
Ga. Morris hasn’t played a bad
game all season and in three
gamel,hparticularly the S. M. U,
game, he was outstanding. Young
Morris made the third team.
Sophomores on the squad are:
First team—End Steve Meilinger,
Kentucky; Second team—Quarter
back Zeke Bratkowski, Georgia;
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One Hundred Loaded Freight Cars Are Carried on a Seatrain
Another Link in the Chain of Progress
of the Friendly Central
The inauguration of coastwise steamship service *
gwnn the ports of Savannah and New York by
Seatrain Lines, Inc. is a long step forward in the
1 of progress for the Southeast. It represents
e successful culmination of éears of effort by the
ntral of Georgia Railway Company to suppiy a
rvice described by the Interstate Commerce
%:mi&lion as of “immediate and urgent need.”
This responds to the insistent demand, on the part
of shippers throughout the entire Southeast, for the
storation of a service that theg' had _enjoyed for
years—until its suspension due to war condi
in 1942,
h Interstag; tEmnmc}me Cox;!mission, pending
eonsideration e application for permanent au
g’:r,xt'y, has grented permission for Enmediate op
ration, and the first of regular weekly sailings
&mflu port of Savannah is set for Tuesday,
cember 4th.
The Central of Georgia is 00-operatingr with
fitrnifl Lines, Inc. in every possible way. Traflic
wili move over our Savannah terminals, where we
ve made space available, comstructed trackage
d other hg?! ties, assisted in the installation es
e cranes and other et%uipment for the handlin
b solid carloads, a method modern, efficient anj
s,
m Lines, Inc. is an organization with a
?fi r;::rd :f tgcuoeoss inl‘flni‘G&:o aervic:k between
mer poits, an Centra rgia takes pride
: achicvement,
Guard Joe De-Agostino, Florida
Linebacker Ralph Carrigan, Ala
bama, and Back Vince Dooley,
Auburn; Third Team—Guard Ed
Duncan, Auburn, and running
back Leon Hardeman, Georgia
Tech.
For the first time the AP picked
a two-platoon team. Sports writ
ters, announcers, head coach and
scouts throughout the Southeast
participated in the balloting. Tenn
essee’s great tailback, Hank Lauri
cella, almost a sure thing for All-
America, was top man in votes
with 293.
Babe Parilli, Kentucky quarter
back, was second with 242 and
Georgia’s pass catching and block
ing end, Harry Babcock, was third
with 210.
Six Vols
The Tennessee Vols, first team
in the nation in the AP poll, placed
six men on the first offensive and
defensive platoons. Georgia Tech
and Kentucky placed four apiece
with Tech scoring much heavier in
votes-per-man. Vanderbilt and
Georgia placed two men each and
L. S. U,, Alabama, Mississippi and
Mississippi State placed two men
each.
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Bulldogs Finish
With 5-5 Mark
Georgia ended its 1951 grid-iron campaign Saturday in
Atlanta, losing to one of, if not the best team that Georgia
Tech has ever fielded and certainly the most well-rounded.
The setback gave the Bulldogs
a five-five record for the season.
Not since Wally Butts took over
the Georgia head reins in 1939
have the Bulldogs lost more games
than won per year excluding ’39
and ’49, and 'sl was no excep
tion. The '39 team, Butts’ first,
had a mediocre five wins, six loses
record and the 1949 squad gather
ed in four wins compared to six
loses and a tie. When '59 rolls
around Coach Butts will attempt
to shatter the ‘“novem” year un
der pars. :
Best Weapon
Georgia’s most effactive offen
sive weapon in the Tech tilt was
Zeke Bratkowski, heralded sopho
more quarterback, who has brok
en more records than a bull in a
phonograph shop. Zeke passed 35
times against the Jackets and
completed 17 for a near 500 aver
age. His feat broke the top SEC
mark of total offense per game
by the season and also topped
Sinkwich’s ali-time Georgia school
passing record set in 1942.
Harry Babcock, Georgia’s great
right offensive end, who was
named to the All-SEC first team
and received the third highest
number of votes in the poll for the
best 22 conference players, broke
a conference record of total pass
receiving yardage for a season.
The Georgia end caught 41 passes
for 666 yards, which broke Reid
Moseley’s All-Time Georgia re
ceiving record of 622 yards on 31
caught set in 1945. Babcock and
the Brat still have one and two
years eligibility, respectively.
Although just breaking even on
the tough ten game schedule, the
Bulldogs were not under-rated in
the all-star selectors eyves., Bab
cock and Bulldog captain, senior
SEC Winds Up 51
Grids Campaign
BY STERLING SLAPPEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
The last of the mythical championships of Southeastern
Conference football is held jointly today by Tennessee and
Georgia Tech because college presidents decided a year
ago that 1952 should be the year to start semi-standardiza
tion of schedules. e e
Beginning next year a South
eastern team must play a minimum
of six conference games to be
eligible for the first full fledged
football championship in the 19-
year old league. All previous
“championships,” including the
1951 crown, were purely unoffi
cial or mythical.
Georgia Tech won seven South
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BY MERRITT POUND, JR.
Banner-Herald Sports Editor
defensive back, Claude Hipps,
made the All-SEC first teams on
offense and defense respectively
and were both voted by confer
ence coaches as the league’s best
in their special departments,
Marion Campbell, Georgia’s al
ternate captain, and one of the
greatest defensive tackies ever to
perform at Georgia, was the
choice of many All-South, South
ern, and conference honor pickers.
Campbell was also voted as the
best lineman of the week im the
SEC after his meritorious play in
the Florida game, which the Bull
dogs won, 7 to 6.
16 Seniors
Next year’s Georgia team will
be without the services of 16
graduating seniors who, in their
tenures in red and black uniforms,
have brought credit to Georgia
and have reaked havoc on all grid
opposition, Campbell, Dick Yel
vington, a three year first string
er at tackle; stellar guards, Ed
Greenway of Athens, Clint Mad
ray of Jesup, and Roceo Principe,
of Chicago; outstanding tackles,
Jeff Burgamy, of Albany, and
Richard Steele, Atlanta; end, Ed
Filipovits, Northampton, Pa., and
Clyde Harrison, Atlanta, and of
fensive center, Ellis‘* Mo’ McClung
of Bremen are the graduating
linemen,
Seniors Hipps, Zippy Morocco,
Mal Cook, Bob Durand, Chuck
Magoni, Dick Raber are the backs
who saw their last action in Bull
dog uniform Saturday.
However, although these boys
will sorely be missed, 38 mem
bers of this years’ varsity, not in
cluding the up-and-coming fresh
men prospects, will return next
season.
eastern games this fall without
defeat while Tennessee won five
without defeat. Such winnings
give both teams 1.000 percentages
and percentages, not the number
of games won or lost, determine
which teams take the lead in
standings. ¢
Southeastern College Presidents
during their annual meeting in
Atlanta last December, decided to
set schedules on a more universal
basis and to force teams to play at
least half the other teams in the
league. The rule they devised was
made effective for the 1952 season.
Many efforts have been made to
have SEC teams play rotating
schedules as they do in basketball,
but all efforts have failed thus
far. The rotation plan which
looked for a time recently like it
might become law, called for each
SEC team to select and play in
football every fall, three tradi
tional opponents. Remaining
teams in the league would meet
that team on a rotating basis.
The plan was not adopted for
lack of general support.
In the season which ended Sat
urday with traditional games, the
job fell to Vanderbilt to give the
two leaders possibly their roughest
afternoons. Vandy lost to Tech
8-7 and trailed Tennessee by only
one’point Saturday until the game
lacßed just a few seconds of end
ing. The Vols, who are the na
tion’s No. One team despite the
fact they rate only a tie for their
conference championship, ran
across a late touchdown to defeat
Vandy 35-27.
Tech’s margin over Georgia was
a tremendous 48-6, almost identi~
cal with Mississippi's 49-7 vietory
over Mississippi State. L. S. U.
was expected to do much better
than its 14-13 victory over Tulane.
Alabama won from Auburn 25-7,
Tennessee’'s output made the
1951 Vols the third highest scorers,
in Southeastern history. Their
373 points are topped only by Ala
bama’s 396 in 1945 and Kentucky’s
380 last year.
Louisiana State produced a gen
uine oddity by winning four
Southeastern games, losing two
and tying one by scoring fewer
points than it gave up. L. S. U.
scored 63 points in conference
games and gave up 71, i
League Games
» W L T Pet. PF OP
Ga. Tech 7 0 0 1000 175 "41
Tenn. 5 0 0 1.000 150 * @6l
1.8 U 4 2 1 887 .6319%
Miss. 4 % 1 8687 181 350
Kentucky 8 3 0 .500 102: 68
Auburn 3 4 0 .429 101 164
Vanderbilt 3 5 0 .375 147167
Alabama 8 5 0 .375 116’140
Florida 2 4 0 2333 85 96
Georgia 2 4 0 333 7% 94
Miss. State 2 5 0 .286 23 107
All Games
W L T Pct. PF OP
Ga. Tech 10 0 1 1.000 278 76
Tenn. 10 0 0 1.000 373 &8
LS B T 3 1. MRS 111
Miss. 6 8 1 .867 254 157
Kentucky 7 4 0 .636 294 114
Auburn 5 5 0 .500 180 212
Vanderbilt 6 5 0 .545 201 195
Alabama 5 6 0 .55 257 188
Florida $§ 5 0 .500 172 131
Georgia 5 5 0 .500-176 182
Miss. State 4 5 0 .444 82 127
Tulane 4 6 0 .400 1438 172
SPORTS EDITOR RETIRES
COLUMBUC, Ga., Dec. 3—(AP)
Joe Railey, sports editor of the
morning Columbus Requirer since
July 5, 1948 has retired to operate
& farm he has purchased at Qliver,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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TECH BEATS GEORGIA — Driving
through a hole wide enough for a truck,
George Maloof, Georgia Tech half, goes
over from the 5 yard line in the first quar
ter of the game against Georgia in At
lanta. Tech overwhelmed the Bulldogs
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48 to 6. Quarterback Darrell Crawford
(16), of the Yellow Jackets, watched the
play as Engineer Buck Martin (55) blocks
Randolph Ragsdale (60) of Georgia.
Bulldog Claude Hipps (27) moves in on
the play.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1951,
Clemson Nips
Ga. Cagers In
Opener, 57-47
CLEMSON, 8. C., Dec. 3—Geo -
gia’s basketball team opened i,
195152 cage season here Saturd..
night losing to the Clemson Tige,.
57-47 in a close and hard-foyg
court battle. Marvin Robinso,
Tiger forward, swished the cor«
for 19 tallies and high point
honors.
Bulldog Sonny Dykes hit for 17
for Georgia, followed by Jim Uy ..
bricht with 11, and Bill Shain i}
10. Kermit Hall, Bed McGee.
John Marshall, and John Carson
rounded out the Georgia scoring,
netting 6,4, 3 and 1 points re
spectively. Gold was the onl
other Bulldog to see action.
Clemson sported a slim 25-2%
halftime lead and elosed the g,
in the last half.
The Bulldogs meet the Mercer
Bears in Macon tonight and re
turn to Athens Wednesday for
return engagement with Clemsop
in Woodruff Hall.
Telephone wires crossing the
Andes mountains between Argen
tina and Chile are 12,300 feet hig),
highest in the world,