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1961 Michigan Wolverines football team

The 1961 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan in the 1961 Big Ten Conference football season. In its third year under head coach Bump Elliott, Michigan compiled a 6–3 record (3–3 against conference opponents), finished in sixth place in the Big Ten, and outscored opponents by a combined total of 212 to 163.[1][2]

1961 Michigan Wolverines football
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Record6–3 (3–3 Big Ten)
Head coach
MVPJohn Walker
CaptainGeorge Mans
Home stadiumMichigan Stadium
Seasons
← 1960
1962 →
1961 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   T W   L   T
No. 2 Ohio State $ 6 0 0 8 0 1
No. 6 Minnesota 6 1 0 8 2 0
No. 8 Michigan State 5 2 0 7 2 0
No. 12 Purdue 4 2 0 6 3 0
Wisconsin 4 3 0 6 3 0
Michigan 3 3 0 6 3 0
Iowa 2 4 0 5 4 0
Northwestern 2 4 0 4 5 0
Indiana 0 6 0 2 7 0
Illinois 0 7 0 0 9 0
  • $ – Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

After opening the season with convincing wins over No. 9 UCLA (29–6) and Army (38–8), Michigan was ranked No. 2 in the Coaches Poll. The team fell from the rankings after being shut out by Michigan State (0–28) the following week.

Right end George Mans was the team captain, and center/guard John Walker received the team's most valuable player award.[2] Left halfback Bennie McRae was selected by both the Associated Press and United Press International (UPI) as a first-team player on the 1961 All-Big Ten Conference football team.[3][4] Fullback Bill Tunicliff also received second-team honors from the UPI.[4]

The team's statistical leaders included Dave Glinka with 588 passing yards, Dave Raimey with 496 rushing yards and 36 points scored, and Bennie McRae with 210 receiving yards.[5]

Schedule edit

DateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendance
September 30No. 9 UCLA*W 29–673,019
October 7Army*No. 9
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
W 38–865,012
October 14No. 5 Michigan StateNo. 6
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI (rivalry)
L 0–28103,198
October 21Purdue 
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
W 16–1466,805
October 28at MinnesotaL 20–2363,898
November 4Duke*
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
W 28–1456,488
November 11at IllinoisW 38–640,179
November 18Iowa
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI
W 23–1461,925
November 25No. 2 Ohio State
  • Michigan Stadium
  • Ann Arbor, MI (rivalry)
L 20–5080,444
  • *Non-conference game
  •  Homecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game

[1][2]

Season summary edit

Preseason edit

The 1960 Michigan Wolverines football team compiled a 5–4 record and tied for fifth place in the Big Ten.[6] At the end of the 1960 season, end George Mans was selected by his teammates to be the captain of the 1961 team.[7]

Michigan's 1961 recruiting class included Mel Anthony, Jim Conley, John Henderson, Arnie Simkus, and Bob Timberlake.[8]

In May 1961, halfback Dave Raimey received the Meyer W. Morton Trophy as the player who showed the most improvement in spring practice.[9]

In June 1961, halfback Harvey E. Chapman received the John F. Maulbetsch Scholarship, presented each year to a freshman player "on the basis of scholarship, need, and promise and desire for leadership."[10]

Week 1: UCLA edit

1 234Total
UCLA 0 006 6
Michigan 13 3130 29

On September 30, 1961, Michigan opened its season with a 29-6 victory over 1961 AAWU champion UCLA (ranked No. 9 in the AP Poll) before a crowd of 73,019 (including 13,000 high school band members) at Michigan Stadium. Michigan gained 253 yards, including 227 rushing yards, and held UCLA to 172 total yards. The Wolverines took a 16-0 lead at halftime on touchdowns by Bill Tunnicliff (one-yard run) and Dave Raimey (20-yard run) and a 29-yard field goal by Douglas Bickle. Michigan extended its lead to 29 points in the third quarter on a four-yard touchdown run by Bennie McRae and a 92-yard interception return by Ken Tureaud. UCLA scored its lone touchdown in the fourth quarter on a one-yard run by Dimkich.[11]

Week 2: Army edit

1 234Total
Army 0 080 8
Michigan 10 7147 38

On October 7, 1961, Michigan defeated Army, 38-8, before a crowd of 65,012 at Michigan Stadium. Michigan's point total was its highest in 39 games, dating back to 1956. Michigan touchdowns were scored by Dave Raimey (13-yard run), Bennie McRae (47-yard run), Bill Tunnicliff (three-yard run), Bruce McLenna (seven-yard run), and Bob Brown (36-yard pass from Bob Chandler). Doug Bickle added a field goal and five extra points.[12]

Week 3: Michigan State edit

1 234Total
Michigan State 14 707 28
Michigan 0 000 0

On October 14, 1961, Michigan (ranked No. 6 in the AP Poll) lost to Michigan State (ranked No. 5), 28-0, before a crowd of 103,198 and a national television audience at Michigan Stadium. The Spartans led, 14-0, at the end of the first quarter and 21-0 at halftime. Michigan was held to 92 rushing yards and 84 passing yards.[13]

Week 4: Purdue edit

1 234Total
Purdue 0 770 14
Michigan 9 070 16

On October 21, 1961, Michigan defeated Purdue, 16–14, before a crowd of 66,805 at Michigan Stadium. Michigan opened the scoring with a safety in the first quarter, when Purdue fumbled a pitchout in the end zone. Dave Raimey also scored in the opening quarter on a one-yard run. Bennie McRae caught six passes for 144 yards, including a touchdown reception that covered 72 yards in the third quarter.[14]

Week 5: at Minnesota edit

1 234Total
Michigan 0 770 14
Minnesota 9 070 16
  • Date: October 28
  • Location: Minneapolis
  • Game attendance: 63,898

On October 28, 1961, Michigan lost to Minnesota, 23–20, at Memorial Stadium in Minneapolis. Michigan led, 20-8, through the first three quarters as Tunnicliff ran eight yards for a touchdown and Dave Raimey scored twice on runs of 27 and four yards. Late in the fourth quarter, Michigan stopped a Minnesota drive at the nine-yard line, but Bennie McRae fumbled on the first play after Michigan took over, and Minnesota scored the winning touchdown with one minute and 24 seconds remaining.[15]

Week 6: Duke edit

1 234Total
Duke 0 068 14
Michigan 7 1407 28

On November 4, 1961, Michigan defeated 1961 ACC champion Duke, 28–14, before a crowd of 56,488 at Michigan Stadium. Bennie McRae scored three touchdowns on a five-yard run in the first quarter, a 15-yard pass from Dave Glinka in the second quarter, and a 34-yard interception return in the second quarter. Dave Raimey also rushed for 116 yards on 15 carries.[16]

Week 7: at Illinois edit

1 234Total
Michigan 7 71014 38
Illinois 0 006 6

On November 11, 1961, Michigan defeated Illinois, 38–6, before a crowd of 40,179 at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois. The outcome was the second consecutive Michigan victory in the seven-year rivalry between head coaching brothers Bump Elliott and Pete Elliott. Michigan played all 38 players who traveled to Champaign in an effort to keep the score down. Michigan gained 309 rushing yards and held Illinois to 55 rushing yards. Dave Raimey began the scoring on a 54-yard punt return. J. Paul Raeder scored two touchdowns, and George Mans caught a touchdown pass from Dave Glinka.[17]

Week 8: Iowa edit

1 234Total
Iowa 7 700 14
Michigan 3 0137 23

On November 18, 1961, Michigan defeated Iowa, 23–14, before a crowd of 61,925 at Michigan Stadium. Iowa was led by first-year head coach Jerry Burns who had played quarterback for Michigan. Michigan lost Bennie McRae with a shoulder separation in the first quarter, and Iowa took a 14-3 lead at halftime. Michigan rallied with three unanswered touchdowns in the second half. Dave Glinka ran 44 yards for his first collegiate touchdown. Dave Raimey totaled 102 rushing yards and scored on a one-yard run (set up by a 54-yard run by Harvey Chapman). Glinka threw a touchdown pass to Bob Brown that covered 20 yards. Iowa was held to two first downs and negative 16 rushing yards in the second half. Michigan outgained Iowa by 266 rushing yards to 97. In the Detroit Free Press, Joe Falls praised the courage of Bump Elliott's team and called the game "Elliott's finest victory of the season."[18]

Week 9: Ohio State edit

1 234Total
Ohio State 7 14029 50
Michigan 0 668 20

On November 25, 1961, Michigan lost to Ohio State, 50-20, before a crowd of 80,444 at Michigan Stadium. Ohio State fullback Bob Ferguson scored four touchdowns in the game. The Buckeyes' 50 points was the fourth highest point total allowed by a Michigan team up to that time, with two of the prior occasions occurring in the 1890s. Michigan's three touchdowns were scored on a 90-yard kickoff return by Dave Raimey and one-yard runs by Bruce McLenna and James Ward.[19]

Post-season edit

At the end of the 1961 season, center and linebacker John Walker received the team's most valuable player award.[20]

Halfback Bennie McRae received first-team honors from both the Associated Press (AP) and United Press International (UPI) on the 1961 All-Big Ten Conference football team. Halfback Dave Raimey received second-team honors from the AP and UPI, and fullback Bill Tunicliff received second team honors from the UPI.[3][4]

Statistical leaders edit

Michigan's individual statistical leaders for the 1961 season include those listed below.[5][21][22]

Rushing edit

Player Attempts Net yards Yards per attempt Touchdowns
Dave Raimey 99 496 5.0 6
Bennie McRae 75 453 6.0 3
Bill Tunnicliff 96 396 4.1 3

Passing edit

Player Attempts Completions Interceptions Comp % Yards Yds/Comp TD Long
Dave Glinka 96 46 5 47.9 588 12.8 5 72
Bob Chandler 11 6 0 54.5 100 16.7 1 36

Receiving edit

Player Receptions Yards Yds/Recp TD Long
Bennie McRae 10 210 21.0 2 72
George Mans 14 138 9.9 1 16
Robert Brown 5 110 22.0 2 45

Kickoff returns edit

Player Returns Yards Yds/Return TD Long
Dave Raimey 10 308 30.8 1 90
Bennie McRae 8 148 18.5 0 29
Ed Hood 1 42 42.0 0 42

Punt returns edit

Player Returns Yards Yds/Return TD Long
Dave Raimey 7 92 13.1 1 54
Bennie McRae 10 39 3.9 0 11
Harvey Chapman 4 32 8.0 0 17

Scoring edit

Player Touchdowns Extra points Field goals Points
Dave Raimey 8 0 0 48
Bennie McRae 6 0 0 36
Doug Bickle 0 20-23 4-7 32

Personnel edit

Letter winners edit

The following 40 players received varsity letters for their participation on the 1961 team.[23] Players who started at least four games are shown with their names in bold.[2]

  • Doug Bickle, 6'3", 210 pounds, sophomore, Traverse City, MI - started 4 games at right tackle, 3 games at left tackle
  • Robert M. Brown, 6'4", 225 pounds, senior, Kalamazoo, MI - end
  • Bob Chandler, 6'3", 210 pounds, junior, LaGrange Park, IL - quarterback
  • Harvey Chapman, 5'11", 175 pounds, sophomore, Farmington Hills, MI - started 1 game at left halfback
  • Guy Curtis, 6'0", 215 pounds, senior, South Bend, IN - tackle
  • William Dougall Jr., 6'2", 190 pounds, senior, Detroit - quarterback
  • Dave Glinka, 5'11", 195 pounds, junior, Toledo, OH - started 2 games at quarterback
  • Todd Grant, 6'4", 230 pounds, senior, Lathrup Village, MI - started 6 games at center
  • Lee Hall, 6'0", 210 pounds, senior, Charlotte, MI - started 5 games at right guard, 3 games at left guard
  • Edward Hood, 5'9", 175 pounds, junior, Detroit - halfback
  • William Hornbeck, 6'1", 185 pounds, senior, Los Angeles - halfback
  • John Houtman, 6'4", 235 pounds, junior, Adrian, MI - started 6 games at left tackle
  • Tom Keating, 6'3", 220 pounds, sophomore, Chicago - tackle
  • James Korowin, 6'2", 195 pounds, senior, Wyandotte, MI - end
  • Dave Kurtz, 6'0", 201 pounds, sophomore, Toledo, OH - started 1 game at right guard
  • John J. Lehr, 6'0", 225 pounds, junior, Cincinnati - tackle
  • Scott Maentz, 6'3", 230 pounds, senior, East Grand Rapids, MI - started 9 games at left end
  • Frank Maloney, 5'11", 195 pounds, senior, Chicago - started 1 game at right guard
  • George Mans, 6'4", 212 pounds, senior, Trenton, MI - started 9 games at right end
  • Bruce McLenna, 6'3", 218 pounds, sophomore, Fenton, MI - halfback
  • Bennie McRae, 6'0", 172 pounds, senior, Newport News, VA - started 8 games at left halfback
  • John Minko, 6'1", 222 pounds, junior, Connellsville, PA - started 6 games at left guard
  • Delbert Nolan, 5'11", 205 pounds, sophomore, Clare, MI - guard
  • Joe O'Donnell - started 1 game at right guard
  • Thomas Prichard, 5'10", 198 pounds, sophomore, Marion, OH - quarterback
  • Jim Raeder, 5'11", 190 pounds, senior, Lorain, OH - started 4 games at fullback
  • Dave Raimey, 5'10", 195 pounds, junior, Dayton, OH - started 9 games at right halfback
  • Paul Schmidt, 6'4", 245 pounds, senior, Skokie, IL - tackle
  • Jon Schopf, 6'2", 230 pounds, senior, Grand Rapids, MI - started 5 games at right tackle
  • David Slezak, 5'11", 185 pounds, junior, Ann Arbor, MI - center
  • Jeffrey A. Smith, 6'3", 200 pounds, senior, Kohler, WI - end
  • Ron Spacht, 5'10", 180 pounds, senior, Kent, OH - halfback
  • John Stamos, 6'1", 208 pounds, senior, Chicago - started 7 games at quarterback
  • Willard Stawski, 6'3", 215 pounds, junior, Caledonia, MI - tackle
  • Jack Strobel, 5'10", 175 pounds, junior, Maywood, IL - halfback
  • Richard Szymanski, 5'10", 185 pounds, junior, Toledo, OH - guard
  • Bill Tunnicliff, 6'0", 230 pounds, senior, Ferndale, MI - started 1 game at fullback
  • Ken Tureaud, 6'0", 194 pounds, senior, Detroit - started 3 games at fullback
  • John Walker, 6'0", 205 pounds, senior, Walled Lake, MI - started 3 games at center, 1 game at right guard
  • James A. Ward, 6'1", 195 pounds, Tr., Imlay City, MI - halfback
  • E. James Zubkus, 6'1", 205 pounds, senior, Munhall, PA - end

Freshmen edit

  • Mel Anthony, 5'11", 190 pounds, Cincinnati - fullback
  • Rick Bay, 5'9", 165 pounds, Waukegan, IL - halfback
  • Jim Conley, 6'0", 190 pounds, Springdale, PA - end
  • John Henderson, 6'3", 195 pounds, Dayton, OH - end
  • Richard Rindfuss, 5'10", 176 pounds, Niles, MI - halfback
  • Arnie Simkus, 6'3", 230 pounds, Detroit - tackle
  • Bob Timberlake, 6'3", 210 pounds, Franklin, OH - quarterback

Coaching staff edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "1961 Michigan Wolverines Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 6, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "1961 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved November 6, 2017.
  3. ^ a b "Stephens Unanimous Choice on Big Ten". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. November 28, 1961.
  4. ^ a b c "Saimes and MacRae Selected on All-Big Ten Football Team". The Holland, Michigan, Evening Sentinel. November 29, 1961. p. 16.
  5. ^ a b "1961 Michigan Wolverines Statistics". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 6, 2017.
  6. ^ "1960 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved November 6, 2017.
  7. ^ "Mans Elected '61 'M' Football Captain". The Michigan Daily. November 23, 1960. p. 6 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  8. ^ "1961 Michigan Football Roster". Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. Retrieved December 3, 2017.
  9. ^ "Morton Trophy To Raimey For Most Improvement". The Michigan Daily. May 7, 1961. p. 9 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  10. ^ "Give Award To Chapman". The Michigan Daily. June 27, 1961. p. 6 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  11. ^ Lyall Smith (October 1, 1961). "U-M, MSU Open with Bang: UCLA Ripped, 29 to 6". Detroit Free Press. pp. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Bob Pille (October 8, 1961). "U-M (38-8) and MSU (31-3) Roll On: Fumbles Kill The Army". Detroit Free Press. pp. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ Lyall Smith (October 15, 1961). "It's Michigan State: C-R-U-N-C-H, 28-0: Spartan Defense Ruins U-M". Detroit Free Press. pp. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ Joe Falls (October 22, 1961). "Safety First Pays Off for U-M: Purdue Beaten by 2-Pointer". Detroit Free Press. p. D1, D4 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Fumble Wrecks U-M, 23-20". Detroit Free Press. October 29, 1961. p. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ "McRae Redeemed: M Wins, 28-14". Detroit Free Press. November 6, 1961. p. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ Lyall Smith (November 12, 1961). "Oh Brother! -- M Clobbers Illini, 38-6". Detroit Free Press. pp. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ Joe Falls (November 19, 1961). "Big Finishes Win for M, MSU: Wolverines Overhaul Iowa, 23-14". Detroit Free Press. pp. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ "Bucks Pour It On M, 50-20". Detroit Free Press. November 26, 1961. p. D1, D3 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ "Walker Most Valuable: Brown Elected Captain by Teammates". The Michigan Daily. November 28, 1961. p. 6 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  21. ^ . Mgoblue.com. University of Michigan. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved November 6, 2017.(statistics retrieved by entering "1961" in the box for "Games & Totals by Season" and then, at the next screen, choosing "Display Season Totals")
  22. ^ "Season's Story in Statistics". The Michigan Daily. December 7, 1961. p. 14 – via Bentley Historical Library.
  23. ^ "Footballers Receive 72 'M' Awards: Elliott Gives Monographs For Season". The Michigan Daily. December 7, 1961. p. 14 – via Bentley Historical Library.

1961, michigan, wolverines, football, team, represented, university, michigan, 1961, conference, football, season, third, year, under, head, coach, bump, elliott, michigan, compiled, record, against, conference, opponents, finished, sixth, place, outscored, op. The 1961 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan in the 1961 Big Ten Conference football season In its third year under head coach Bump Elliott Michigan compiled a 6 3 record 3 3 against conference opponents finished in sixth place in the Big Ten and outscored opponents by a combined total of 212 to 163 1 2 1961 Michigan Wolverines footballConferenceBig Ten ConferenceRecord6 3 3 3 Big Ten Head coachBump Elliott 3rd season MVPJohn WalkerCaptainGeorge MansHome stadiumMichigan StadiumSeasons 19601962 1961 Big Ten Conference football standings vte Conf OverallTeam W L T W L TNo 2 Ohio State 6 0 0 8 0 1No 6 Minnesota 6 1 0 8 2 0No 8 Michigan State 5 2 0 7 2 0No 12 Purdue 4 2 0 6 3 0Wisconsin 4 3 0 6 3 0Michigan 3 3 0 6 3 0Iowa 2 4 0 5 4 0Northwestern 2 4 0 4 5 0Indiana 0 6 0 2 7 0Illinois 0 7 0 0 9 0 Conference championRankings from AP PollAfter opening the season with convincing wins over No 9 UCLA 29 6 and Army 38 8 Michigan was ranked No 2 in the Coaches Poll The team fell from the rankings after being shut out by Michigan State 0 28 the following week Right end George Mans was the team captain and center guard John Walker received the team s most valuable player award 2 Left halfback Bennie McRae was selected by both the Associated Press and United Press International UPI as a first team player on the 1961 All Big Ten Conference football team 3 4 Fullback Bill Tunicliff also received second team honors from the UPI 4 The team s statistical leaders included Dave Glinka with 588 passing yards Dave Raimey with 496 rushing yards and 36 points scored and Bennie McRae with 210 receiving yards 5 Contents 1 Schedule 2 Season summary 2 1 Preseason 2 2 Week 1 UCLA 2 3 Week 2 Army 2 4 Week 3 Michigan State 2 5 Week 4 Purdue 2 6 Week 5 at Minnesota 2 7 Week 6 Duke 2 8 Week 7 at Illinois 2 9 Week 8 Iowa 2 10 Week 9 Ohio State 2 11 Post season 3 Statistical leaders 3 1 Rushing 3 2 Passing 3 3 Receiving 3 4 Kickoff returns 3 5 Punt returns 3 6 Scoring 4 Personnel 4 1 Letter winners 4 2 Freshmen 4 3 Coaching staff 5 ReferencesSchedule editDateOpponentRankSiteResultAttendanceSeptember 30No 9 UCLA Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 29 673 019October 7Army No 9Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 38 865 012October 14No 5 Michigan StateNo 6Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MI rivalry L 0 28103 198October 21Purdue nbsp Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 16 1466 805October 28at MinnesotaMemorial StadiumMinneapolis MN Little Brown Jug L 20 2363 898November 4Duke Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 28 1456 488November 11at IllinoisMemorial StadiumChampaign IL series W 38 640 179November 18IowaMichigan StadiumAnn Arbor MIW 23 1461 925November 25No 2 Ohio StateMichigan StadiumAnn Arbor MI rivalry L 20 5080 444 Non conference game nbsp HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to the game 1 2 Season summary editPreseason edit The 1960 Michigan Wolverines football team compiled a 5 4 record and tied for fifth place in the Big Ten 6 At the end of the 1960 season end George Mans was selected by his teammates to be the captain of the 1961 team 7 Michigan s 1961 recruiting class included Mel Anthony Jim Conley John Henderson Arnie Simkus and Bob Timberlake 8 In May 1961 halfback Dave Raimey received the Meyer W Morton Trophy as the player who showed the most improvement in spring practice 9 In June 1961 halfback Harvey E Chapman received the John F Maulbetsch Scholarship presented each year to a freshman player on the basis of scholarship need and promise and desire for leadership 10 Week 1 UCLA edit 1 234TotalUCLA 0 006 6 Michigan 13 3130 29Date September 30Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 73 019On September 30 1961 Michigan opened its season with a 29 6 victory over 1961 AAWU champion UCLA ranked No 9 in the AP Poll before a crowd of 73 019 including 13 000 high school band members at Michigan Stadium Michigan gained 253 yards including 227 rushing yards and held UCLA to 172 total yards The Wolverines took a 16 0 lead at halftime on touchdowns by Bill Tunnicliff one yard run and Dave Raimey 20 yard run and a 29 yard field goal by Douglas Bickle Michigan extended its lead to 29 points in the third quarter on a four yard touchdown run by Bennie McRae and a 92 yard interception return by Ken Tureaud UCLA scored its lone touchdown in the fourth quarter on a one yard run by Dimkich 11 Week 2 Army edit 1 234TotalArmy 0 080 8 Michigan 10 7147 38Date October 7Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 65 012On October 7 1961 Michigan defeated Army 38 8 before a crowd of 65 012 at Michigan Stadium Michigan s point total was its highest in 39 games dating back to 1956 Michigan touchdowns were scored by Dave Raimey 13 yard run Bennie McRae 47 yard run Bill Tunnicliff three yard run Bruce McLenna seven yard run and Bob Brown 36 yard pass from Bob Chandler Doug Bickle added a field goal and five extra points 12 Week 3 Michigan State edit 1 234Total Michigan State 14 707 28Michigan 0 000 0Date October 14Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 103 198On October 14 1961 Michigan ranked No 6 in the AP Poll lost to Michigan State ranked No 5 28 0 before a crowd of 103 198 and a national television audience at Michigan Stadium The Spartans led 14 0 at the end of the first quarter and 21 0 at halftime Michigan was held to 92 rushing yards and 84 passing yards 13 Week 4 Purdue edit 1 234TotalPurdue 0 770 14 Michigan 9 070 16Date October 21Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 66 805On October 21 1961 Michigan defeated Purdue 16 14 before a crowd of 66 805 at Michigan Stadium Michigan opened the scoring with a safety in the first quarter when Purdue fumbled a pitchout in the end zone Dave Raimey also scored in the opening quarter on a one yard run Bennie McRae caught six passes for 144 yards including a touchdown reception that covered 72 yards in the third quarter 14 Week 5 at Minnesota edit 1 234TotalMichigan 0 770 14 Minnesota 9 070 16Date October 28Location MinneapolisGame attendance 63 898On October 28 1961 Michigan lost to Minnesota 23 20 at Memorial Stadium in Minneapolis Michigan led 20 8 through the first three quarters as Tunnicliff ran eight yards for a touchdown and Dave Raimey scored twice on runs of 27 and four yards Late in the fourth quarter Michigan stopped a Minnesota drive at the nine yard line but Bennie McRae fumbled on the first play after Michigan took over and Minnesota scored the winning touchdown with one minute and 24 seconds remaining 15 Week 6 Duke edit 1 234TotalDuke 0 068 14 Michigan 7 1407 28Date November 4Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 56 488On November 4 1961 Michigan defeated 1961 ACC champion Duke 28 14 before a crowd of 56 488 at Michigan Stadium Bennie McRae scored three touchdowns on a five yard run in the first quarter a 15 yard pass from Dave Glinka in the second quarter and a 34 yard interception return in the second quarter Dave Raimey also rushed for 116 yards on 15 carries 16 Week 7 at Illinois edit 1 234Total Michigan 7 71014 38Illinois 0 006 6Date October 28Location Champaign IllinoisGame attendance 40 179On November 11 1961 Michigan defeated Illinois 38 6 before a crowd of 40 179 at Memorial Stadium in Champaign Illinois The outcome was the second consecutive Michigan victory in the seven year rivalry between head coaching brothers Bump Elliott and Pete Elliott Michigan played all 38 players who traveled to Champaign in an effort to keep the score down Michigan gained 309 rushing yards and held Illinois to 55 rushing yards Dave Raimey began the scoring on a 54 yard punt return J Paul Raeder scored two touchdowns and George Mans caught a touchdown pass from Dave Glinka 17 Week 8 Iowa edit 1 234TotalIowa 7 700 14 Michigan 3 0137 23Date November 18Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 61 925On November 18 1961 Michigan defeated Iowa 23 14 before a crowd of 61 925 at Michigan Stadium Iowa was led by first year head coach Jerry Burns who had played quarterback for Michigan Michigan lost Bennie McRae with a shoulder separation in the first quarter and Iowa took a 14 3 lead at halftime Michigan rallied with three unanswered touchdowns in the second half Dave Glinka ran 44 yards for his first collegiate touchdown Dave Raimey totaled 102 rushing yards and scored on a one yard run set up by a 54 yard run by Harvey Chapman Glinka threw a touchdown pass to Bob Brown that covered 20 yards Iowa was held to two first downs and negative 16 rushing yards in the second half Michigan outgained Iowa by 266 rushing yards to 97 In the Detroit Free Press Joe Falls praised the courage of Bump Elliott s team and called the game Elliott s finest victory of the season 18 Week 9 Ohio State edit 1 234Total Ohio State 7 14029 50Michigan 0 668 20Date November 25Location Michigan StadiumGame attendance 80 444On November 25 1961 Michigan lost to Ohio State 50 20 before a crowd of 80 444 at Michigan Stadium Ohio State fullback Bob Ferguson scored four touchdowns in the game The Buckeyes 50 points was the fourth highest point total allowed by a Michigan team up to that time with two of the prior occasions occurring in the 1890s Michigan s three touchdowns were scored on a 90 yard kickoff return by Dave Raimey and one yard runs by Bruce McLenna and James Ward 19 Post season edit At the end of the 1961 season center and linebacker John Walker received the team s most valuable player award 20 Halfback Bennie McRae received first team honors from both the Associated Press AP and United Press International UPI on the 1961 All Big Ten Conference football team Halfback Dave Raimey received second team honors from the AP and UPI and fullback Bill Tunicliff received second team honors from the UPI 3 4 Statistical leaders editMichigan s individual statistical leaders for the 1961 season include those listed below 5 21 22 Rushing edit Player Attempts Net yards Yards per attempt TouchdownsDave Raimey 99 496 5 0 6Bennie McRae 75 453 6 0 3Bill Tunnicliff 96 396 4 1 3Passing edit Player Attempts Completions Interceptions Comp Yards Yds Comp TD LongDave Glinka 96 46 5 47 9 588 12 8 5 72Bob Chandler 11 6 0 54 5 100 16 7 1 36Receiving edit Player Receptions Yards Yds Recp TD LongBennie McRae 10 210 21 0 2 72George Mans 14 138 9 9 1 16Robert Brown 5 110 22 0 2 45Kickoff returns edit Player Returns Yards Yds Return TD LongDave Raimey 10 308 30 8 1 90Bennie McRae 8 148 18 5 0 29Ed Hood 1 42 42 0 0 42Punt returns edit Player Returns Yards Yds Return TD LongDave Raimey 7 92 13 1 1 54Bennie McRae 10 39 3 9 0 11Harvey Chapman 4 32 8 0 0 17Scoring edit Player Touchdowns Extra points Field goals PointsDave Raimey 8 0 0 48Bennie McRae 6 0 0 36Doug Bickle 0 20 23 4 7 32Personnel editLetter winners edit The following 40 players received varsity letters for their participation on the 1961 team 23 Players who started at least four games are shown with their names in bold 2 Doug Bickle 6 3 210 pounds sophomore Traverse City MI started 4 games at right tackle 3 games at left tackle Robert M Brown 6 4 225 pounds senior Kalamazoo MI end Bob Chandler 6 3 210 pounds junior LaGrange Park IL quarterback Harvey Chapman 5 11 175 pounds sophomore Farmington Hills MI started 1 game at left halfback Guy Curtis 6 0 215 pounds senior South Bend IN tackle William Dougall Jr 6 2 190 pounds senior Detroit quarterback Dave Glinka 5 11 195 pounds junior Toledo OH started 2 games at quarterback Todd Grant 6 4 230 pounds senior Lathrup Village MI started 6 games at center Lee Hall 6 0 210 pounds senior Charlotte MI started 5 games at right guard 3 games at left guard Edward Hood 5 9 175 pounds junior Detroit halfback William Hornbeck 6 1 185 pounds senior Los Angeles halfback John Houtman 6 4 235 pounds junior Adrian MI started 6 games at left tackle Tom Keating 6 3 220 pounds sophomore Chicago tackle James Korowin 6 2 195 pounds senior Wyandotte MI end Dave Kurtz 6 0 201 pounds sophomore Toledo OH started 1 game at right guard John J Lehr 6 0 225 pounds junior Cincinnati tackle Scott Maentz 6 3 230 pounds senior East Grand Rapids MI started 9 games at left end Frank Maloney 5 11 195 pounds senior Chicago started 1 game at right guard George Mans 6 4 212 pounds senior Trenton MI started 9 games at right end Bruce McLenna 6 3 218 pounds sophomore Fenton MI halfback Bennie McRae 6 0 172 pounds senior Newport News VA started 8 games at left halfback John Minko 6 1 222 pounds junior Connellsville PA started 6 games at left guard Delbert Nolan 5 11 205 pounds sophomore Clare MI guard Joe O Donnell started 1 game at right guard Thomas Prichard 5 10 198 pounds sophomore Marion OH quarterback Jim Raeder 5 11 190 pounds senior Lorain OH started 4 games at fullback Dave Raimey 5 10 195 pounds junior Dayton OH started 9 games at right halfback Paul Schmidt 6 4 245 pounds senior Skokie IL tackle Jon Schopf 6 2 230 pounds senior Grand Rapids MI started 5 games at right tackle David Slezak 5 11 185 pounds junior Ann Arbor MI center Jeffrey A Smith 6 3 200 pounds senior Kohler WI end Ron Spacht 5 10 180 pounds senior Kent OH halfback John Stamos 6 1 208 pounds senior Chicago started 7 games at quarterback Willard Stawski 6 3 215 pounds junior Caledonia MI tackle Jack Strobel 5 10 175 pounds junior Maywood IL halfback Richard Szymanski 5 10 185 pounds junior Toledo OH guard Bill Tunnicliff 6 0 230 pounds senior Ferndale MI started 1 game at fullback Ken Tureaud 6 0 194 pounds senior Detroit started 3 games at fullback John Walker 6 0 205 pounds senior Walled Lake MI started 3 games at center 1 game at right guard James A Ward 6 1 195 pounds Tr Imlay City MI halfback E James Zubkus 6 1 205 pounds senior Munhall PA endFreshmen edit Mel Anthony 5 11 190 pounds Cincinnati fullback Rick Bay 5 9 165 pounds Waukegan IL halfback Jim Conley 6 0 190 pounds Springdale PA end John Henderson 6 3 195 pounds Dayton OH end Richard Rindfuss 5 10 176 pounds Niles MI halfback Arnie Simkus 6 3 230 pounds Detroit tackle Bob Timberlake 6 3 210 pounds Franklin OH quarterbackCoaching staff edit Head coach Bump Elliott 2 Assistant coaches Don Dufek Sr freshman coach Henry Fonde backfield coach Jack Fouts interior line coach Bob Hollway line coach Jack Nelson end coachTrainer Jim Hunt 2 Manager Richard Asel 2 References edit a b 1961 Michigan Wolverines Schedule and Results SR College Football Sports Reference LLC Retrieved November 6 2017 a b c d e f g 1961 Football Team University of Michigan Bentley Historical Library Retrieved November 6 2017 a b Stephens Unanimous Choice on Big Ten Pittsburgh Post Gazette November 28 1961 a b c Saimes and MacRae Selected on All Big Ten Football Team The Holland Michigan Evening Sentinel November 29 1961 p 16 a b 1961 Michigan Wolverines Statistics SR College Football Sports Reference LLC Retrieved November 6 2017 1960 Football Team University of Michigan Bentley Historical Library Retrieved November 6 2017 Mans Elected 61 M Football Captain The Michigan Daily November 23 1960 p 6 via Bentley Historical Library 1961 Michigan Football Roster Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan Retrieved December 3 2017 Morton Trophy To Raimey For Most Improvement The Michigan Daily May 7 1961 p 9 via Bentley Historical Library Give Award To Chapman The Michigan Daily June 27 1961 p 6 via Bentley Historical Library Lyall Smith October 1 1961 U M MSU Open with Bang UCLA Ripped 29 to 6 Detroit Free Press pp D1 D3 via Newspapers com Bob Pille October 8 1961 U M 38 8 and MSU 31 3 Roll On Fumbles Kill The Army Detroit Free Press pp D1 D3 via Newspapers com Lyall Smith October 15 1961 It s Michigan State C R U N C H 28 0 Spartan Defense Ruins U M Detroit Free Press pp D1 D3 via Newspapers com Joe Falls October 22 1961 Safety First Pays Off for U M Purdue Beaten by 2 Pointer Detroit Free Press p D1 D4 via Newspapers com Fumble Wrecks U M 23 20 Detroit Free Press October 29 1961 p D1 D3 via Newspapers com McRae Redeemed M Wins 28 14 Detroit Free Press November 6 1961 p D1 D3 via Newspapers com Lyall Smith November 12 1961 Oh Brother M Clobbers Illini 38 6 Detroit Free Press pp D1 D3 via Newspapers com Joe Falls November 19 1961 Big Finishes Win for M MSU Wolverines Overhaul Iowa 23 14 Detroit Free Press pp D1 D3 via Newspapers com Bucks Pour It On M 50 20 Detroit Free Press November 26 1961 p D1 D3 via Newspapers com Walker Most Valuable Brown Elected Captain by Teammates The Michigan Daily November 28 1961 p 6 via Bentley Historical Library Michigan Football Statistic Archive Query Page Mgoblue com University of Michigan Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved November 6 2017 statistics retrieved by entering 1961 in the box for Games amp Totals by Season and then at the next screen choosing Display Season Totals Season s Story in Statistics The Michigan Daily December 7 1961 p 14 via Bentley Historical Library Footballers Receive 72 M Awards Elliott Gives Monographs For Season The Michigan Daily December 7 1961 p 14 via Bentley Historical Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1961 Michigan Wolverines football team amp oldid 1189639145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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