THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven PcTe Seven New coach bolsters thinclads' hopes McLain strikes out competition, gets Athlete of the Year award BY KEITH WOOD A new coach, a new track, re- turning champions, and some tal- ented newcomers all combine to give t h e Michigan track team hopes of winning its first Western Conference team title since 1964. Michigan's new head coach is Dave Martin, a former Michigan miler. Coach Martin takes over the reins from Don Canham who is now the University's Athletic Director. Martin attended Michigan in the late fifties when he set two varsity track records; 9:07.5 in the 3,000 meter steeplechase, a record which still stands; and a 4:06.9 mile which was broken by . Tom' Kearney in 1967. As an assistant under Canham since 1963, Coach Martin m a y have inherited Canham's winning ways which led to twelve confer- ence championships during his nineteen-year tenure. Jack Harvey and Ken Burnley have joined the coaching staff as Martin's assistants. Harvey, who was captain of Michigan's 1967 squad, will concentrate his atten- tion on the field event competi- tors. Harvey holds the current Big Ten shot put record with a throw of 58'-4". Burnley will work with the sprinters. He was an outstanding sprinter on the Wolverine teams which won Big Ten titles from 1962 to 1964. The team itself will be running on a ,new $35,600 rubberized as- phalt track that was installed in Yost Field House to replace the outmoded cinder track. The new track should provide easier run- ning and faster times. The Wolverine thinclads boast .,..... 't daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL DINNER Russell is only a Junior, but he has already established a reputa- tion for himself. Indoors, he fin- ished third in both the Big Ten" and NCAA Championships. Out- doors, he captured the conference crown with a leap of 24-feet 11/2 inches. Senior hurdler Larry Midlam returns after grabbing a share of the Big Ten honors with an :08.1 clocking in the 70-yard high hur- dles. Coach Martin admits that our strength is in the middle distaric- es. "But then we're pretty good in most events," he adds. Evidence of this can be found among the sprinters. Grid star George Hoey returns with a var- sity record of :06.1 in the 60-yard dash. Senior Leon Grundstein fin- ished second in the 220-yard dash at the outdoor Big Ten meet, and junior Sol Espie finished third in the 100-yard dash. Other returning lettermen of note are Tom Kearney who broke Coach Martin's record in the mile and Paul Armstrong who is strong in the middle distances. New comers will help to fill the weak spots of last season's team. The shot put was a sore spot for the Wolverines last y e a r after Jack Harvey left the squad. This year linemen Dan Dierdorf and Giulio Catallo will join the squad after posting throws of 62-feet while in high school with a 12- pound shot. Adding strength to the mile and half-mile will be Rick Storrey of Windsor, Ontario. He carries a 4:14 and a 1:51.8 respectively in the two events. Coach Martin also has high re- gard for Lorenzo Montgomery, a :48.9 quarter-miler from Detroit and John Thornton who runs the 880 in 1:53. It 1 o o k s as though Michigan does have the ingredients for a championship team. The cinder- men should be a welcome addition to Wolverine's winter sports 'bri- gade. Indoor Track Schedule Jan. 25 MICHIGAN RELAYS Feb. 1 Western Michigan Relays (Kalamazoo) Feb. 8 Michigan State Relays (E. Lansing) Feb. 15 INDIANA Feb. 22 IOWA Feb. 28 Big Ten Championships Mar. 1 at Champaign, Ill. Mar. 8 USTFF Championships (Milwaukee) Mar. 14-15 NCAA Championships (Detroit) RON KUTSCHINSC DAVE MARTIN three returning conference cham- pions, Ron Kutchinski, Ira Rus- sell, and Gary Knickerbocker. These three men provide some justification for Michigan's title hopes. Captain Rlon Kutchinski will be. the nucleus for this season's squad. Kutchinski was a member of the United States Olympic team last summer, competing in the 800--meter run. He currently holds two Michigan varsity rec- ords, the 880-yard run and the 1000-yard run. He also shares the record for the 600-yard run and is a member of the record-holding Two-Mile Relay and Distance Medley teams. Knickerbocker won the confer- ence, indoor and outdoor h i g h jump championships last season, and broke the Big Ten outdoor record with a jump of 6-feet 92/x inches. This event will also be bol- stered by senior Clarence Martin who won the Big Ten champion- ship outdoors in 1967. NEW YORK (,P)-Denny Mc- Lain, the flamboyant Detroit pitcher who is equally at home standing on a mound or sitting at an organ, was named yesterday Male Athlete of the Year in the 38th annual Associated Press poll. Continuing recent domination by baseball players of the year- end award, McLain became the fou th in succession and the sev- enth in the last eight polls to find himself sitting on top of the sports world. In those eight years only Don Schollander, the swimming star of America's 1964 Olympic team, has managed to break baseball's hold on the award. But no Olympian from the 1968 U.S. team or such an outstanding college football player as O. J. Simpson, the Heisman Trophy winer from Southern California, was able to overshadow McLain's exploits both on and off the field during the 1968 season. For the 24-year-old right-han- der conducted a delicate balancing act during the entire season, pitching baseballs with one hand and playing the organ with two. He received acclaim for the for- mer, notoriety for the latter and money for both. And, when the season had end- ed, McLain had posted 31 victories -becoming the first pitcher to reach the 30-victory plateau since Dizzy Dean in 1934-and was on his way to a Las Vegas opening dress in mink. In the balloting by sports writ- ers and broadcasters, McLain was rewarded with 108 first-place votes and amassed a total of 517 points on the basis of three points for first place, two for second and one for third. Billboard Michigan R u g b y Footbal Club announces the beginning of spring conditioning. Practices will be held at Yost Field House Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:30 P.M. Anyone interested is urged to attend. The Lacrosse squad will hold practice this evening in Yost Field House at 8:00 p.m. Any- one interested is urged to at- tend. -Daily-Andy Backs IMMERSED IN CONCENTRATION, Denny McLain (17) displays the winning form which netted him thirty-one season victories. As a result of his achievements, the part time organist was yes- terday voted the Male Athlete of the Year. Tanker cubs seek spurs at State On Stengelese in Glendale--- Mighty Casey's going strong Only three other athletes re- ceived more than 200 points- Simpson, pitcher Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals and quar- terback Earl Morrall of the Balti- more Colts, the only pro football player able to crack the Top Ten. The poll, however, was taken before the Super Bowl game, which will become a part of the 1969 voting, and therefore does not reflect the stunning upset pulled off by quarterback Joe Na- nath in leading the New York Jets to a 16-7 victory over the Colts. By ROD ROBERT Michigan's Freshman Swim- ming Team travels to East Lan- sing .tonight to take on Michigan State's yearling squad at'7:30 P.M. Coach Gus Stager says, "We're going into the meet blind. I'm just putting each man in his best *events, and hope that everyone swims well.", The Wolverine mentor said the same thing last year before his first-year tankers swamped State 79-53 in their dual meet of the year. Again this lone dual meet will serve as a warm-up to the. 'Big Ten Freshman Swimming Championships to be held in Ann Arbor at the end of February. If Stager can come -up with a frosh squad as powerful as the one last year, which incidentally won the Freshman Championship Meet, the prospects for a Big Ten Cham- pionship for the varsity swimmers will be greatly enhanced. Three freshman tankers stand out from the rest of the squad. Stager' says of Greg Goshorn, Dave Kelly, and Byron MacDon- ald, "All three are really tough. They've each had quite a bit of experience in AAU competition and it's encouraging to watch their times 'suddenly come down in preparation for this meet." Greg Goshorn will be swimming the 200 yard backstroke, and could fill the need for a top-flight dor- sal man on the varsity team next year. Dave Kelly will probably swim the 200 yard individual medley, plus the 500 and 1000 yard free- style. Commenting on Kelley's versatility, Stager says, "Kelly is the only swimmer that I'll be able to play around with. He's capable of doing well in as many as four events." Byron MacDonald leads a strong contingent of freshman butter- fliers. After the graduation of Lee Bisbee and Tom Arusoo this year, these "flyers" will be eagerly re- ceived on the varsity squad. Three other freshman that could do well in the meet tonight are Ed Kenehen, Jeff Thornberg, and Harry Duffield. Kenehen will enter the individual medley, Thoi'nberg swims the butterfly and freestyle, while Duffield is a free- style sprinter. Stager has been encouraged by the progress of his yearling team this year. "A lot of these boys aren't used to the all swimming that we do in workouts. But they are adjusting gradually and get- ting in good shape." GLENDALE, Calif. (R) - Th e doctor gave strict orders. T h e news conference was to last 1 minute. No more. Thirty minutes went by and the old boy still was going strong. It took hospital attaches a little more than oral persuasion to end it and get him out of the room. Casey Stengel, it may be re- ported today, is back in excellent health. He also was back in his hand- some home in Glendale. The switchboard at Glendale Memorial Hospital and its mail room can rest easier. "Calls, calls and a huge bun- dle of mail every day. But Mr. Stengel is such a wonderful man. Amazing." said Elaine Beers, the hospital's public relations direc- tor. Stengel, who belies his 78 years, underwent recent surgery for clo- sure of a perforated ulcer. While never in serious condition, he was )laced in the intensive care ward because of his age. This was a galling situation. Nurses insisted he appear at this news gathering in gown and robe Casey argued. He wanted to don street clothes. "People will get the idea I'm sick if I go down there in my nightgown," said Casey. The nurses won out. Night shirt or whatever, Casey erased any doubts as to his. phy- sical and verbal shape. An executive with the N e w York baseball Mets, the club's first manager 10 years ago, por- tions of Casey's lengthy, seldom interrupted remarks involved the team. "The Mets never had a Hall of Fame player until I got in but Seaver Seaver is a fine pitcher which if he hasn't had a winning season yet he will have this year, meaning he'll win more than he loses, and Hodges was a g r e a t first baseman who could move his foot quick off the bag and he's a good teacher for our young ball ;layers . . . and those New York Mets, terrific." Get the idea? 6k WHY is ULRICH'S Ann Arbor's busiest bookstore? THERE must be a GOOD Reason- 'lk STRIKE'S OUT: Quinn disavows discord I PHILADELPHIA (P) - General Manager John Quinn of the Phil- adelphia Phillies doesn't believe there will be a baseball players strike. He's counting on the play- ers' love of the game outweighting %their love for money. "While many things have to be resolved." Quinn admitted Tubs- day at the Phillies' annual Jan-' uary news conference, "these players like baseball, know i t s meaning to the public and to their families. I'd be very disappointed if there was a players' strike." Quinn referred to the threat-' Cikan, Czech cager-defects NEW YORK (A)-One member of the Sparta basketball team of jCzechoslovakia remained behind in New York Tuesday night when the teams returned to Czechoslo- vakia. Frantisek Cikan, bid farewell to his teammates after their pre- liminary game in Madison Square Garden. The team had been tour- ing the eastern United States for the past month. fo A friend of Cikan, who identi- fied himself as' Jack McDowell, a student at Brandywine Junior College outside Wilmington, Del., said Cikan wants to attend school at the college. ened boycott of spring training by the players if a pension dis- pute with baseball's club owners is not resolved satisfactorily. The Phillies' general manager got involved in the discussion of pension problems during ques- tioning of Manager Bob Skinner on his plans for spring training. scheduled to start next month. Skinner disclosed that he was unhappy with the physical condi- tion of the players he inherited after succeeding Gene Mauch as manager in June. Mauch was fir- ed. Skinner promised a camp de- dicated to making the Phillies the best conditioned team in bla s e- ball. Quinn said he had not signed many of his veteran players. Ap- parently they are living up to a promise to the Baseball Players Association not to sign contracts until the pension money dispute is settled. "I've reached agreement on terms with some of our veterans- f won't mention names-but they haven't signed," Quinn said. "I've told them we don't want them to sign until the pension agreement is worked out. We don't want them to. break their word to the association." Skin- ner said he has always been a student of the game and studied under winning managers and coaches. He said he arrived at a philosophy of ABC's- Attitude, Basics and Conditioning. The Suitcase I 605 E. William 769-1593 .NAKED DAWN" directed by Edgar G. Ulman with ARTHUR KENNEDY Thurs., Jan. 23 8 and 10 p.m. 75c BRASS SEPTET, Fri. and Sat. January 24 and 25 (downstairs) II I 11 iI '1 I SALE $1490 Reg. $20.00 CORDO BROWN THE KLH* Model Eleven stereo phonograph is the first portable you can take with you and take seriously. The Model Eleven lets you take high-performance stereo wherever there is an AC outlet. It will fill a dorm room, a summer cottage,or the living room back home with the kind of sound once available only from a massive and expensive sound-system.: Built around a remark- able pair of miniature KLH speakers, the Model Eleven provides a solid _ bass response unmatched by many big consoles. 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