PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 22. 196+8 P AE.I XT E I C I A N D A L SaTURDAY. XAii M' L"WTAV 9 .r 1Ofl. a Tankers Down Spartans STREAK ENDED AT 34: Gopher Wrestlers Hand 3M' 18-8 Loss * 4, By BOB McFARLAND "The only way we could have won was if I had been entered in the diving events," Spartan Gary Dilley Jested after the swimming meet last night. If Michigan State had entered Olympian Dilley in the diving events instead of his specialty, the backstroke, it wouldn't have affected the outcome. Dilley's points only helped to lessen the impact of a solid 70-53 Wolver- ine victory, as the Michigan tankers easily disposed of their intra-state foes. The diving, with or without Dilley, provided the highlight of the otherwise routine Wolverine victory. Michigan senior Bruce entertained\ the crowd with a tre- mendous performance, taking two first place finishes. Wins Low Board Taking a comparatively easy victory in the one meter event, the judges awarded Brown 285.45 points, well ahead of the Spar- tans' Fred Whiteford at 248.1, but the best was yet to come. In the three meter dive, Brown completed the six dives in near perfect fashion, earning a remark- able 345.50 points. On his best plunge, the judges recorded scores of 9, 8.5, and 9 on a 10 point scale for the Wolverine. Brown's feats are comparable to a slug- ger cracking four home runs in one game, or a halfback scoring five touchdowns in a single con- test. Whiteford again placed next behind Brown in the three meter 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Michigan (Orland, Scheerer, Wie- beck, Walls); 2. Michigan State. Tune-3.41.18. 1000 YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Robie (M); 2. Glick (MSU); 3. Farley (M). Time-10:18.72. ONE - METER DIVING -1 . B. Brown (M); 2. Whteford (MSU); 3. F. Brown (M). Points-285.45. 200-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Mac- Millan (MSU); 2. Hoag (M); 3. Walsh (MSU). Time- 1:47.27. 56-YD. FREESTYLE -1. Groft (M); 2. Dilley (MSU); 3. Kifer (MSU). Time-:21.86. 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY-- 1. Vry (M); 2. Wiebeck (M); 3. Wil- liams (MSU). Time--2:02.44. THREE-METER DIVING - . B. Broj~n (M); 2. Whiteford (MSU); 3. F. Brown (M). Points-345.40. 200-YD. BUTTERFLY - . Robie (M); 2. Glick (MSU).; 3. Harner (MSU). Time-i1:57.78. 100-YD FREESTYLE -- 1. Hoag (M); 2. Groft (M); 3. MacMillan (MSU). Time-:48.53. 200-YD. BACKSTROKE-1. Dilley (MSU); 2. Kingery (MW); 3. Orland (M). Time-1:58.21 (pool record). 500-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. Walsh (MSU); 2. Hill (MSU); 3. Williams (MW). "Time--5:05.49. 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE - 1. Scheerer (M); 2. Driver (MSU); 3. Cushing (M). Time-2:16.91. 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY - 1. Michigan State (Glick, MacMil- lan, Walsh, Dilley); 2. Michigan. Tine-3 :16.46. event with a respectable but out- classed 252.1 marker. The Wolver- ines' other Brown, Fred, took two third for his dives. Easier Than Last Week The Wolverine natators streak- ed to nine firsts out of a possible 13. Michigan was assured of enough points to take the meet at the conclusion of nine events, when the score stood 55-29 in favor of the Wolverines. Despite his desire to become a diver, Dilfey snapped the pool record in the 200-yard backstroke with a 1:58.21 clocking, in addi- tion to contributing a :47.1 leg to the Spartan win in the 400-yard freestyle relay. Dilley was push- ed hard in the backstroke by Wolverine Russ Kingery who placed second with a 1:59.40 tim- ing. John Vry, a Michigan junior, turned in his top performance of the season in picking up a first place finish in the 200-yard in- dividual medley. He edged out sophomore teammate Ken.Wie- beck by :00.01 seconds, finishing in 2:02.44. Good Combo Michigan's Bill Groft won a first and second place finish in the 50- and 100-yard freestyles, respectively. Bob Hoag provided the Wolverines with a victory in the 100-yard freestyle, placing ahead of Groft, and added a sec- ond in the 200-yard freestyle to give Michigan swimmers a good one-two combination in that de- partment. With his second straight win in the 1000-yard freestyle, Olym- pian Carl Robie chalked up an- other event in the Wolverine col- umn. His time of 10:18.72 Was only a second off the varsity rec- ord he set a week ago against In- diana. He was the winner in the 200-yard butterfly later in the evening to join Brown as a dou- ble winner. Ed Glick, Michigan State's leading distance man, followed up Roble in the 1000-yard event with a 10:22.89 clocking. Glick hung behind Robie who opened up a wide lead until the 30th lap of the marathon race. His pace was noticeably quickened at this point and he narrowed the gap, but failed in his attempt to catch the Wolverine. Paul Scheerer, NAAU breast- stroke champion, placed first in the 200-yard breaststroke, touch- ing in :02.5 seconds ahead of MSU's Lee Driver, for another Michigan victory. Sophomore Dave Cushing turned in a third place performance for the Wolverine natators. Rees Orland, Rich Walls, Scheer- er and Wiebeck combined in the 400-yard medley relay to cop first place. The quartet was timed ii 3:41.18 seconds, which included a 60.6 split by Scheerer on the breaststroke leg. The Spartans pulled out the last event on the program, the 400- yard freestyle relay, barely edg- ing out a young Wolverine squad by .65 seconds. Maybe State should have used Dilley in the dives. Nodaks Throw Icers In Deep.-Freeze, 6-4 By R. NEIL FEFERMAN One half of the gymnasium was totally deserted, a darkened caw er of ominous and oppressive solitude. On the other side of an invisible border, forming a sort of moat, was a sea of humanity, a teeming mass of people, a raging torrent of ideas and emotions and opinions and reactions. Incredulously the torrent had been reduced to a mere trickle; instead of the boisterous interplay of feelings, only sporadic com- ments punctuated the deadening silence. Gradually the state of shock evaporated, and little by little the zombies of a few moments before resigned themselves to the radical- ly altered state of affairs and re- turned to life; within 20 minutes they nearly went berserk at the particularly exciting termination to the contest. Perhaps this merely proves the fickleness of man, that when he is divested of something which he long has revered and which has been a part of him, its glamor dis- appears and is repressed in his thoughts. Or perhaps it simply is indicative of some element in sport and athletics which gives it an- intrinsic Value, that of escape from hardened reality. The fact remains however, that just as death is a part of life, de- feat is a part of competition. It must be expected, though certain- ly not eagerly awaited. Most likely this accounts for the shock last night when the University of Min- nesota wrestling team thoroughly and unquestionably defeated Mich- igan. Though the loss counts as only "one," it ranks much higher in significance than a mere num- ber can indicate. The Gophers managed something which the previous 34 opponents of the Wol- verines had failed to accomplish; a victory skein spanning four sea- sons was snapped, twisted, and stomped into the mat, much to the amazement and consternation of Michigan's numerous and fanati- cal supporters. Again, however, numbers can- not relate the story of what went into this streak, which seems re- markable in view of the compe- tition against which it was com- piled. Strictly speaking, it repre- sents uncountable hours and ef- forts throughout the duration, both on the part of the athletes and the coaches. Perhaps as it pertains to the present team the scope of last night's events is not merely so great; the Big Ten meet determines the conference cham- pion, not the dual meet stand- ings. But somewhere you must inter- ject the person of Clifford Keen, who has coached at Michigan for 40 years. He is a man who takes immense pride in his work and thus devotes himself quite intense- ly to his job. Rather than develop- ing only wrestlers, Cliff Keen en- deavors to develop men. And nothing was more in evidence last night when Michigan went down' to defeat than the simple fact that they had fought and lost like true sportsmen, and even more, like gentlemen. When they fell behind, the coaches and the team implored and encouraged the boys to go all out, to try for more than a vic- tory-to try for a pin. And when the winning streak was all over, though two individual matches! still remained, the coaches and the squad did not sit back and sulk, but continued to yell en- couragement and hopes to the boys wrestling. And hopefully people saw how, after the meet, a smiling, almost jocular Cliff Keen went over to congratulate the Minnesota coach and tell him he deserved the vic- tory. And there was Jimmy Kam- men, the Big Ten champ at 147, hobbling over to Minnesota's coach on crutches, wholehearted- ly praising the efforts of the Gopher team. You could go on and on, for it is the sort of ,thing which lasts much longer than any sort of win- ning streak. Michigan won the opening and closing rounds quite decisively, and that was about all. Bob Fehrs started out and outmuscled, out- wrestled, and overpowered Jim Anderson. It was almost a thing of beauty as Fehrs gave a lesson on the art of wrestling. L a r r y Lgyd outmaneuvered Michigan's Gordon Weeks in the 130 pound class; then came what Minnesota coach Wally Johnson termed "the turning point of the meet." Michigan captain Bill Johannesen was administering a thorough beating to Terry Barett. The score indicates little, for Bar- ett continuously ran from Johan- nesen. Twice he was penalized for stalling; he aggravated his coach to the point where Johnson got up and yelled "Terry, get in that circle!" But with less than 30 seconds left, Billy Jo got careless and Barett grabbed the oppor- tunity to score a takedown, a pre- dicament, and a victory. 123-Pound-Fehrs (M) d. J. An- derson (Minn.), 11-3. 130-Pound - Loyd (Minn.) d. Weeks (M), 6-0. 137-Pound - Barett (Minn.) d. Johannesen (M), 5-3. 147-Pound - Henry (Minn.) d. Jenkins (MW), 9-4. 157..Pound - Ankey (Minn.) d. Hansen (M), 8-3. 167-Pound - T. Anderson (Minn.) d. Waterman (M), 8-5. 177-Pound - Ramsted (Minn.) d. Wentz (M), 12-7. Heavyweight-Porter (M) pinned Staebler (Minn,), 6:25. By JIM TINDALL Special To The Daily GRAND FORKS, N.D. -It was 21 BELOW zero INSIDE the un- heated North Dakota rink last night, and the Sioux cooled the Wolverines win streak at five as they bounced the high-flying icers by a score of 6-4. The loss leaves Michigan with a 5-2 WCHA mark, but they held on to second place over North Dakota by .022 percentage points. The Wolverines held a slim 2-1 advantage at the end of two per- iods of play in what North Dakota fans call "Pneumonia Gulch," but the Nodaks' four-goal outburst that began at 0.46 of the final period proved to be too much. Gymnasts Go To Flint To Enter Open Meet . By HOWARD KOHN For Michigan gymnasts, Satur- day morning and sleeping-in are as unrelated as Lady Bird and Barry Goldwater. By 10 a.m. today, while the rest of the campus is blissfully curing a week of all-nighters, Newt Lok- en's charges will be on their way north to Flint for, an open exhi- bition with other collegiate gym- nasts. Eastern M i c h i g a n, Western Michigan, and Michigan State's freshmen and independents from across the state and from Canada Cagers Host Minnesota In Crucial Game for Both By RICK STERN A very short ten months ago, Michigan defeated Minnesota 87- 85 to win the Big Ten champion- ship. This afternoon the Wolverines can eliminate the Gophers before they even get warmed up to the idea of their first Big Ten cham- pionship since 1937. Minnesota has. already lost one game (to Michigan State) and to fall two games behind at such an early point in the season would in all probability do irreparable harm to the Gophers. The game at Yost Fieldhouse is a sellout. The tipoff is at 1:30 with the doors opening two hours earlier. "It's an important game .-. and a loss would hurt us real bad," says veteran Gopher coach John Kundla. "In the Big Ten you sim- ply can't afford any losses if you expect to do Well." Crucial for Both A win over the Gophers at this stagel of the race is crucial for other reasons too. Michigan is a basketball team which is, or should be, at its peak. Minnesota is a team on its way toward a peak. The Gophers will get better long, before they get worse. Right now, their All-America forward Lou Hudson is barely at half strength, recovering from a broken wrist and playing with a two-pound cast on his right hand. If Hudson scores 20 (as he did last Saturday in a win over In- diana) playing half a game at half strength, the sky would seem to be his healthy limit. And Hudson's former partner in mayhem, guard Archie Clark, has averaged around 25 all season, which should give Minnesota the nation's finest one-two scoring punch when Hudson regains the use of his encased extremity. 'Play Him Normally' But for Dave Strack and the Wolverines, Hudson's future is im- portant starting this afternoon. "We'll be playing Hudson just as if he had two good arms," said Strack yesterday, adding "I've al- ways considered him one of the five best players in the country." Kundla was highly pessimistic about Hudson's condition. "He's not in good shape, but I hope to get him in there to spell our boys whenever possible." Publicity re- leases have listed Hudson in the starting line-up, but Kundla indi- cated that this would not be the case. (A reliable source who witnessed Minnesota's workout in Yost Field- house yesterday afternoon report- ed last night that Hudson did not appear to be bothered by the cast' at all while working out. He was shooting jump shots right- and- handed and sank several 20-foot right-handers. The cast covers his arm from the elbow to the wrist, but does not seem to interfere with his hand or his shooting, accord- ing to the source.) Probably Ready Just how bad the neophyte left- hander is,is a question which won't be answered until game time, but it's a good bet that he'll see plenty of action against Michigan even if he breaks the other arm. Interestingly e n o u g h, both Strack and Kundla pointed to the opposition's rebounding strength as the potential key factor in the game. Said Strack, "Minnesota's main asset is definitely their board strength. They're leading the league in rebounding. They're fast, too, and have an excellent fast- break attack." Kundla's comment took much the same position. "Michigan's strength is on the backboards. We are actually fairly weak though the statistics don't indicate it." The brunt of Minnesota's board work is borne by a 6'6" senior and a 6'7" sophomore. The senior is Denny Dvoracek, a forward who averaged 9.2 points per game last season. The 19-year-old soph- omore is Tom Kondla, whom many experts rate as the key to Gopher championship hopes. Kondla has not scored as well as expected this season, but his coach credits him with "considerable progress." will be competing with the Wol- verines. "The Flint Open will be excel- lent preparation for Big Ten weekend," explained coach Loken. "Several of our boys will have a chance to perform two complete routines." Preliminaries will start at 1 p.m. with finals set for 8. The top five finishers in each preliminary event will qualify for the -evening finales. "This will give everyone one more practice meet under official conditions before our big test against Iowa next week," added Loken. "I hope to have 18 top gymnasts by then." Iowa is an annual threat to the Wolverines' hold on the Big Ten title. The Hawkeyes amassed 174 points in a dual meet conquest over Minnesota last Saturday. Michigan State is also offering more than token interest in sabo- taging Michigan gymnastics this year, having already rolled up an impressive 181-116- victory over Ohio State. The varsity Spartans meet head on with Iowa today in East Lansing, while MSU's frosh will participate in the Flint Open. For Michigan the meet- will mean another crack at a long- awaited goal. "We'd just love to hit 90 per cent perfection this week- end," cited Loken. Keeping Loken's ambition, in mind, the Wolverines have begun an intra-squad rivalry for top scores. "It's almost like seven teams within one big team," said Loken. In last weekend's non-confer- ence encounter with Eastern, the Wolverine vaulting specialists were tops, averaging 9.23 for the first three places. The ring experts were next with a 9.13 average. target.- On the national scene, in results up until last week, five Wolverines rank in the top ten of their re- spective events. Junior Phip Fuller is the highest Michigan man with a fourth-place rating in vaulting, but soph Wayne Miller ranks fifth in the nation on tramp and tenth in vaulting. Art Baessler is seventh on the side horse, Ken Williams tenth on the parallel bars and Rich Blan- ton tenth on the still rings, One of the more important as- pects of today's Flint Open will be competition for an all-around champion. Junior Gary Vander Voort will probably enter all seven events in an effort to claim the title. He finished fourth in all- around point totals in the Big Ten championships last year, but injuries ot his hand and, shoulder have been plaguing him this sea- son. Michigan fought back from a 4-2 deficit created by the early Sioux goals on back to back tallies by Bruce Kodiak. The first of his pair came on a rebound from a Mike Marttila slap shot that was set up by a slick pass from brother Lee. The second Kodiak score came six minutes later as he took a pass from Mark Thompson at the blue line and beat goalie Mike Curran cleanly. North Dakota came right back to pick up the lead 68 seconds later as Bill Wilms got the puck behind Harold Herman on a sharp pass from Captain Terry Casey. Herman was outstanding in the nets all night as he came up with tough saves, especially in the first two periods. Michigan was forced to play with only three regular defensemen as rapidly improving Hank Brand did not make the trip. His presence was thoroughly missed as Ted Henderson, Bill Lord and Thompson all showed visible signs of fatigue in the final period while trying to find some way to stop the consistent Nodak rushes. Nodaks Hot From the very opening faceoff North Dakota had the upper hand in the play, and it was a combina- tion of Herman's work in the nets, sharp defensive play by Hender- son, and missed shots by the Sioux that enabled Michigan to hang on to their slim 2-1 advantage. Most of the scoreless first per- iod was played between the blue lines with neither team being able to set up any sustained offense. North Dakota outskated the Wolverines, but part of their edge had to be credited to the brutally cold conditions inside the quonset hut rink (only four degrees warm- er than outside). The tempo of play picked up considerably in the second period. Michigan tallied first at 2:03 when Bruce Kodiak picked up the rebound on MacDonald's slap shot and fed Wakabayashi cutting across the front of the crease. Wakabayashi deked Curra'n to the right side of the net, then gently slipped the puck into the goal. Hard to Take Coach Al Renfrew must have cringed every time the Nodaks got started on one of their powerful rushes that characterized their hard skating and style of play. Michigan added its second goal eight minutes later when Kodiak picked up the puck on the right boards and passed to Baird cut- ting in from center. Baird's 20- foot slap shot slipped under Cur- ran's pads and into the net. The Sioux were not to be de- nied, however, as they started their potent rushes with even more vig- or and scored their first goal of the game on a picture book play. Wilms carried the puck into the blue line behind the net where he slipped a sharp pass ahead to Casey who rammed the puck in on a difficult short angle to Her- man s left which made the score 2-1 after two periods of play. The two teams wil meet again tonight in a rematch and the tem- p.erature is expected to drop to 30 below by game time. SSCORES] NBA Detroit 117, St. Louis 108 Philadelphia 19, New York 98 Boston 113, Cincinnati 96 WCHA Michigan State 6, Minnesota-Duluth Michigan Tech 1, Denver 0 (ovt) COLLEGE BASKETBALL Oregon State 62, Oregon 46 No. Michigan 122, Lakeland (Wis) 85 SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: JIM LaSOVAGE -Daily-Kamalakar Rao HEAVYWEIGHT DAVE PORTER CRADLES Minnesota's Jon Staebler. 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