LLOYD GRAFF Taking a Swipe at Big Ten Smugness Occasionally it's fun to see coaches sink like basalt in their own salty crocodile tears. Every year we get the same forlorn dirge from the football and basketball salesmen from, Iowa City to Columbus. "Well, our record may not be anything to bellow about, but the Big Ten schedule is the toughest in the country," they croon. If you saw the yawning pass defense of Michigan State in the Rose Bowl you know that Big Ten football supremacy is a farce. It has been for five years. If Michigan had played the best team on the Coast, Southern California, instead of also-ran Oregon State, last year's Rose Bowl would have been a game too. Football is all over but the recruiting, so let's turn to Big Ten basketball to show that the coaches' chauvinism is scarcely warranted. We all know that Michigan blasted out of the starting blocks this winter with all the vigor of an arthritic platypus with a hangover. But the Wolverines' snazzy 6-4 record still rates better than six of their competitors for the conference chain- pionship. In fact the Big Ten teams have managed to win just 51 of 92 nonconference games, and five teams have even records or worse. Only Iowa has "played like a Big Ten team" posting an 8-1 mark worthy of seventh ranking by the Associated Press. Texas Western plastered the one defeat. Michigan State, with 7-3, folded before such collossi as Western Michigan and Tulsa. Tulsa fell to unranked Loyola of Chicago by 28 points and it would have been 50 if the Ramblers had cared. Minnesota (minus Lou Hudson) is also 7-3 with 25 point losses to Utah State and St. Joseph's. The Gophers now depend on Archie Clark to score 30 points a game because the other players are scrubby. John Kundla's sophomore center, Tom Kondla, generally shows more fouls than field goals in the box score. Ohio State with an illustrious 5-4 record out of the conference was slaughtered by St. Louis, Kansas, North Carolina and UCLA. Only Kansas and UCLA are even mentioned in the top twenty-five teams. Diggin Deeper ... And if I want to grovel in slime there are titans like Illinois and Purdue to describe. The Illini hold a two-point trouncing of Cornell among their three wins out of nine tries. The Ivy League had its revenge, however, when Princeton nicked Illinois 84-81 in the Chicago Stadium-without Bill Bradley. Purdue's Dave Schellhase leads the nation in points per game which is ,a testament to balanced scoring attacks. The Boilermakers lit few fires among the homefolk with their flatfooted defense. They're also three against six. So what does all this show? That the Big Ten is , just another conference. The Missouri Valley, Southeast, Atlantic Coast, and Big Eight are easily its match, and probably superior. As a group the independents like St. Joseph's, Loyola, DePaul, LaSalle, Dayton, Syracuse, Boston College, Seattle, Villanova, Providence. Oklahoma City, Davidson and Army may be stronger than any league. And if you stuck a couple of those small college sluggers like Evansville and Southern Illinois in the Big Ten they just might stake out first and second place. There may be only one Cazzie Russell, but there are dozens of hot shot basketball teams. So far, just one belongs to the Big Ten. Join The Dai Sports Staff C, 4c Bk A!Mr n Da3 it Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 84 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 6,.1966 SECTION TWO OSU NEXT: I1_________ vi --v AL Misses Santa's Visit r i c z c By CHUCK VETZNER not been consistent. We've won So now Strack takes his charges sell, this was the year for re- and TOM WEINBERG our last two games and I think out for 14 games in the erratic Big venge. Sports Editor we've got all five guys wheeling Ten which has already seen its On the day of the game anyone together rather than going on favorite sons demolished and its wearing Maize and Blue in Wich- It could have been the lighting three or four cylinders." riff-raff startle top notch opposi- ita would have been as safe as in his office, but Dave Strack's Thompson Injured tion. a Ku Klux Klansman wearing his closely crapped hair looks a bit Now, however, the coach is forc- These are the games the Wol- sheet down the main drag in Har- grayer and his set of wrinkles ed to search for replacement parts. verines desperately want to win. lem. seems more deeply embedded in Starting guard John Thompson "Sure we were disappointed when Even the Operators his forehead than last semester. sprained his ankle in practice last we lost." says Strack, "but these The telephone operators and re- The holidays 'twere the season Sunday and will probably miss the games help us to get ready for ceptionists in town answered the to be jolly, but the laughs are OSU contest. His spot will be fill- phone with an urgent cry of "Beat often a little forced if your bas- eS by st.jHioDwislbeyill- Michigan!" Only then would they ed by swift junior Dennis Bankey. Indiana Tickets gen _o,"ayIhl o? Another bruise that must have ickets for Monday's game ma h u OSU Telecast momentarily erased all of Strack's ; ikt o odysgm The game meant that much. Os ii r~~ omenariy ease allof trak's against Indiana will be on sale Armchair fans will be able to optimism was a neck injury~ to Ihursday Friday.and Satur- Wichita Coach Gary Thompson see Michigan open its defense Cazzie Russell who continued to day at the Athletic Building, was aware that salvation would of the Big Ten basketball star during the Wolverine slump. championship against O h i o Russell is still sore but he is ex- require more than fervent loyalty State Saturday in a live telecast pected to be at full blast effective- the conference season. The losses of the fans. Said Thompson, from Columbus on Channel 50. ness by Saturday. that hurt the most were Duke and "Michigan could suit up its three IArizona State . . . you'd have to coaches, student manager and Myers To Start include Wichita, too." Cazzie Russell and have a good ketball team wins only three of Joining him in the starting line-W'a . seven games during the festivities. up will be Jim Myers who started Wichita To show his sincerity, Thomp- But Strack is still brimming at center against Duke and has Wichita, Kansas is a town that son put three men on Russell and with confidence as the team pre- held the position since. "Jimmy doesn't forget, allowed him only 10 shots (he pares for Saturday's Big Ten and Craig Dill were fairly even so If you beat their basketball team made eight). opener at Ohio State. "The key to we decided to give him a chance," once, you'd just better not try it John Clawson tried to offset this our team is defense," he explains. notes Strack. "We still rate them again. And since Michigan top- with 28 points, but when the game "We know we have the offensive about the same and they'll both ped the Shockers last season on fire power, but our defense hasR play an equal amount." a last second shot by Cazzie Rus- See CAGERS, Page 3 t l F r E -Daily-Thomas R. Copi MAKING SURE that this rebound doesn't get away to the Duke Blue Devils is Michigan's Craig Dill. The Wolverines, however. were outplayed on the backboards in the final minutes and lost, 100-93, in overtime. Duke First; 'm' Missing In Top Ten Michigan dropped out of the top 10 cage teams as powerful Kentucky, one of the two re- maining undefeated major-college teams, moved into second place behind once-beaten Duke in the Associated Press basketball poll Monday. Tournament winners St. Jo- f seph's of Pennsylvania. Provi- dence, Texas Western and UCLA also advanced. Duke remained a solid leader, collecting 34 votes for first place and 389 points in the balloting by a special panel of 48 regional experts. The Blue Devils have See'M', Page 3 ENENSEREEEEE UIe Ve/cmCOin 0ou fl ON. II YOU'RE MORE THAN JUST A NUMBER AT THE MICHIGAN DAILY Welcome to the Big "U," 3874642. You've now been numbered, punched and stored on an IBM card. Click. Hum. Lights flash, and you're swallowed into this multi- versity. But if you want to be more than just a blip in some computer, if you're feeling lost and want some thing, some people, some place to come home to, then come on over to The Michigan Daily. Suddenly you're a flesh and blood reality. So show off your individuality. Write, sell, think, persuade, ca- jole, crusade, console, work hard, have fun, meet people, active people, creative people. ' (When you create at the Daily, you see it in print the next morning.) Come alive! Come on over to The Michigan Daily; join us. 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