SATURDAY, OCTOBER - 3, 1953 Hail to the Lions Sgm's . Song!! By SAM PROCOPIP Collegian Sports Editor PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 3—Several years ago spectators and sportswriters and coaches were hollering "Break up that Pennsylvania football powerhouse!" which ruled the Ivy League for nine 10 - rdly years. It was like trying to break up the New York Yankees. If there is a collegiate football team that can put a stop to the Quakers' power, it's Penn State. Whether the Lions can continue, it remains to be seen. However, to Penn State it is a matter of. stepping onto Franklin Field. This easy step began in 1937 when the Nittany Lions edged out a 7-0 triumph. Since then, Penn has never topped Coach Rip Engle's football 11. From 1890 to 1910, Penn did a sound job of trouncing the Nittany Lions.. Penn was so strong offensively and defensively that the players from the Nittany Vale did not score more than six points in any one game. And in 12 out of 19 contests the Lion gridders were shutout. It wasn't until 1911 that Penn State got on the winning side. The Lions wan, 22-6, that year and followed through with a 14-0 triumph the next time out. In 1926 Penn had a drop-kicking specialist who kicked goals from the field in four games, two of his boots winning games and another tying a game. Against Penn State he drop-kicked one from the 40 yard line to win the game, 3-0. Before the Lions began their monopoly against Penn on the gridiron'in 1937, it would seem that each school would trade seats sitting on the winning side. Because when State walked off with the laurels, Penn would rebound with a win the following yeai.. Despite Penn's prodigious kicker, Franny Murray, who averaged 67 yards on punts—one traveling 80 yards—Penn State was able to maintain a drive and squeeze through with a 7-0 victory in 1937 the year the so-called jinx began. Pennsylvania could not shake off its temporary slump when it met Penn State in 1942. Penn outgained its opponent, register ing 16 first downs to six and 310 yards to 144, but in the scoring department the Quakers trailed, 13-7 in the final count. Penn found itself on a 13-0 deficit count when both teams battled to remain unbeaten. An oddity during the 1948 contest oc curred when blocking back Carmen Falcone, who caught a pass, was tackled by Wally Triplett, State defensive back, 1 inch from the goal line. Last year, it was another story. One of defense. It was the fine defensive unit which repeatedly stopped Penn's scoring threats and was mostly responsible for the 14-7 upset. Unlike Murray's• line, Engle's fast charging forward wall g•ive Ted Kemmerer's long booming punts just enough time to land before the line was on the intending receiver. In nine tries he averaged 38 yards. As far as the punting situation is concerned, both teams are set. In the Wisconsin game Penn State's Don Eyer and Don Bailey com bined to average 39.2 yards. Penn's Walt Hynoski is capable of punting better than 40 yards and is always a threat on quick kicks. We believe this game is the one to watch because each team in its last outing did not exhibit the caliber expected. And too, since the game is one of those rivalry affairs and the jinx is still intact, you can look for anything to happen. • Series Just ;eginning For Brooklyn Rooters NEW YORK, Oct. 2 (W)—A' Brooklyn tabloid came out today with a giant front-page headline: "World Series Starts Today," and as far as Dodger fans are concerned, it did. The all-but-deceased hopes of the beloved Bums stirred, then sat bolt upright, revived by a victory in as fine a Series game as anyone could ask to see It was mounting drama from the start, piling climax upon cli max in the final two .innings until a record Ebbets Field crowd was limp and exhausted by the steady drain on the nerves. You might say the story was Carl Erskine, and you would- be in a large measure right, but Roy Campanella can sneak in from the wings and take a bow. Here was a guy whose right hand was swollen into the shape of a sugar-cured ham yesterday as the result of being hit by one of Allie Reynolds' pitches in the opening game. He couldn't grip the bat firmly, every time he touched the ball it brought ex cruciating pain, and the word was out he would not play at all to day. But he played, and in-the eighth inning he somehow managed to forget pain for one brief -moment. It must have been like a man pulling his own tooth, yet he put EUTAW HOUSE ?otters Mills SUNDAY DINNERS ' Pan Fried CHICKEN • CAPETTES - -30- everything he had into one swing and sent the. ball into the left field stands for \ what turned out to be the winning- run. Only he knows what he was thinking as he rounded the bases with the crowd roaring its ac claim, but it was noted that when teammates reached for his hand as he came into the bench he withdrew it as if the slightest touch would be more than he could stand. NEWMAN CLUB DAILY ROSARY During October Starting Mon. Oct. 5 4:30 p.m. At the Church THE "DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE . COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA R. B. Saylor Explains System; By BILL SNYDER Fall is here and, like everybody else on campus, the thoughts of R B. Saylor, associate professor of economics, have turned to football. But if Saylor feels a twing of regret along with the joy, he can be forgiven. You see, lots of brain wracking and pencil chewing lie ahead for him in the coming months. For he is an amateur football expert who has developed a new system of rating football teams, called the Saylor Rating System. His system Is winning new recognition. posed of some 50 high school football teams has adapted his system. The Harrisburg Patriot ratings of central Pennsylvania , high school teams. Probably the biggest honor his system has won is its acceptance by the 14-team Pennsylvania State Teachers' College League. Sys2em Explained In addition, when the present season is over, his, real work will begin. He will start digging through the mass of statistics that he is collecting on the major col lege teams and will again come out with his' annual college rat ings. This will probably be cir culated all over the country through the wire services. Just what is the Saylor system and how does it work? "It's not used, to predict foot ball games," explains the man who originated it. "Nor cio i _ase my ratings entirely on won-loss records, or the personal opinions of anybody. It's simply a system of rating teams by the strength of the teams they have beaten— or been beaten by. Competition Decides "It works ideally in a many team conference like the Western, because of the- difficulty of choos ing the champion when the teams in the league can't all play each other. "According to my system, the team declared the champion, and the succeeding second, third, fourth, etc. place finishers would be the teams that did the best against strong competition. High Schools Consistent "For example, a team with, say, a 7-2 record compiled against the top teams in the circuit would probably be rated over an mi . - beaten team which had played mostly 2nd division competition." Saylor says there isn't much difference in rating college and high school teams, although he believes high school teams are much more consistent in their I play... "College "College teams have elaborate scouting systems and can ' pre pare themselves against an op ponent's weak spots; hence, even the greatest• • , college teams are knocked off once in a while by a much weaker opponent. But high school teams seldom go to • the expense of elaborate scouting. Big upsets in high school ball, therefore, are not as common." Not More Upsets Will the one-platoon system in college ball this year bring in more upsets and make it harder to rate the teams? "I , don't think that the one platoon system will cause more upsets," says Saylor, "even if it does eliminate large schools from using highly talented specialists." Even Orange Bowl champion Alabama's surprising loss to tiny Mississippi Southern doesn't faze this football rater. He says, "Ala bama won by two touchdowns against Mississippi Southern last year and lost by one this year— a difference. of three touchdowns when one-platoon football was Class of '57 Register Now for free prizes 100 Gal. High Test Blue Sunoco at JACK WIMMER'S State College Sunoco E. College Infallible Gridiron Rating Bowl Forecasts Perfect r;( , . r~: ii: g~: ; Roger Saylor Grid Statistician used. Also the Mississippi school, despite being unknown, has a powerful team, losing only to Ala bama last year. So the loss isn't as startling as it seems; on the surface." Picks Closest Bowl When Saylor brought out his final rating of the college teams (last year, he won a great deal of recognition. He was surprisingly accurate in his bowl game pre dictions. For example, he fore casted that Syracuse would take a sound beating in the Orange Bowl; He himself felt that Penn State, and not Syracuse, was the East's best team (final score: Ala bama 61, Syracuse 6). He predicted that the closest bowl game would be the Tulsa- Florida Gater Bowl tussle, be cause in his ratings the two teams finished side by side. Florida won the game by one point. "One of the most surprising things that happened after my So far this year, the Western Conference, corn extending from Johnstown to Lock Haven, has arranged with him to print weekly his • - •,;•:-;":;!;'?;i:Kr ratings were released," Saylor reminisces, "was the discovery that another amateur rating ex pert on the West Coast had re leased a ratings chart that corre lated with my own very closely." Neither man had ever met or ex changed any correspondence. Saylor has been interested in rating teams for about ten years now. Does it take a lot of his time? Don't Sell Lions Short "Only at the end of the season when I make my final ratings of all teams," he replies. Incidently, don't sell the Lions short today when the team goes against undefeated Penn, even though - State lost its opener to Wisconsin. By the Saylor system of rating teams according to opposition, Wisconsin must certainly be rated a tougher foe than Vanderbilt, the team Penn conquered. Close Grid Games Produced by IM's The intramural touch football program is in full swing and the strong competition is producing some very exciting games. Twenty-four teams have al ready played under the lights at Beaver Field and half of •them have been eliminated. • Thursday night produced three close-scoring games. Alpha Chi Rho downed Chi Phi, 7-0 and the Raiders beat the Atherton Men, 6-0. In the final contests, th e Flashers won over. the Dinks, 12-6. There were no games last night because of the Penn game. Teams scheduled for Monday night are: 7 p.m. Meteors vs. Monkey A. C. 7:45 p.m. Alpha Tau Ome ga vs. Sigma Pi 8:30 p.m. Iron Men vs. Killers. PAGE TIIREV