THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. JANUARY 6.1967 E 0o 0 is: -Daily-Thomas R. Copi DAVIDSON'S BOB MOSER makes with the goal post hand spread, but Michigan's Bob Sullivan whips the ball around him for a nifty assist that even Cazzie couldn't top. Sullivan shows that he hasn't forgotten his days as a hot shot guard as a prep. _tree Nore Home Wis for MCagers CONTROVERSIAL CHALLENGING CANDID CAMP CLEVER CYNICAL COMING January 5-25, 1967 WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE Books available By RICK STERN Michigan basketball teams don't like to lose at home. Twonyears ago, the Wolverines won 10 straight home games. Last season they won nine. of ten, and this year they have started out with four in a. row, include an 86-75 upset of fifth-ranked- Houston, which has won ten straight since that game. During The Daily's "recess" per- iod, the cagers came from behind to nip southern powerhouse David- son 71-68, then romped to fairly easy wins over Butler (91-80) and Ohio University (86-80). The Davidson game was played Dec. 10 before 3,400 Yost enthu- siasts. Although the Davidson (N.C.) school has only about 1,000 male students it has ranked among the best in the nation during the last four years, compiling season records of 20-7, 22-4, 24-2, and 21-7 under Coach Lefty Driesell and producing All-Amercians Fred. Hetzel and Dick Snyder. Not Ranked Though this is not a ranking Davidson team (current record: 7-5) the Wildcats did make the Wolverines sweat, jumping off to an early lead of 12-4 and hanging on for .a 35-30 margin at the half. But with Dennis Stewart and Ken Maxey sparking the drive, and Craig Dill hitting five clutch free throws, the Wolverines stayed close and finally knotted the score at 57-57 with 5:38 to play. When Maxey hit one of his driv- ing, spinning lay-ups, Michigan took a 63-61 lead with 3:14 re- maining. Davidson pulled into ties of 64-64 and 66-66 before Jim Pitts worked himselfbfree and scored over the heads of three de- fenders to put Michigan ahead 68-66 with 1:20 to go. Two free throws by Stewart and a third by Bob Sullivan put Michigan out of reach. Could Be Better Even with Stewart hitting seven baskets in the final 20 minutes the Michigan shooting percentage was a not too impressive 36.9 (27 of 73); Davidson tossed in 28 of 61 for a 45.9 mark. Against Butler on Monday, Dec. 12, the final score indicated a much closer game than was actu- ally the case. A crowd of 3,000 watched as Michigan zoomed to a halftime lead of 50-37, swelled the margin to 66-43, then relaxed as 13 players saw action. Ed Schilling, 6'6", 220 poundI center, playing with an injured peg stil led all scorers with 27 points. Dill hit 12 for 18 from the field to lead the Wolverines with 25 points, and Pitts added nine for 17 plus six free throws for 24 points. Adams Gone The game was the last of the season for 6'6" sophomore center Clarence Adams. Adams scored six against Butler but was suspended from the team several days later for violating an agreement with Strack concerning class attend- ance. Adams appaiently is not in school this semester. Following th4 Butler game, Michigan took a ten day lay-off for exams. On Thursday, Dec. 22. they whipped Ohio University 86- 80. The crowd, 4,600, was the largest of the season, .surprising considering that many students THE JUNIOR CIRCUIT By RICK STERN (Lew) CLA: How To Win Games Without Really Trying LOS ANGELES CLASSIC- RUNNING SCORE: 0:14 Shackelford, 18 foot jumper from left side 2-0 0:56 Allen, 24 foot jump in right corner 4-0 1:09 Heitz, short jump in key over Taylor 6-0 1:32 Warren, 24 foot jump in right corner 8-0 1:34 TIME OUT USC 1:38 Shackelford, 18 foot banking jump 10-0 2:33 Alcindor, lay-in from Warren 12-0 2:59 Alcindor, (Marsh) two free throws 13, 14-0 And this was a good, strong USC team that had won six of seven previous games and had reached the championship game by coming from 15 back to beat a scrappy Illinois squad 73-72. And UCLA stole the ball four times, hit their first six shots from the field and made USC look like a high school JV squad. UCLA is that good. They are. I went out to the coast a skeptic, along with a lot of other more knowledgable basketball people. And like them, I came back a believer. UCLA shouldn't lose for three years. They have to be the best college basketball team ever as- sembled. They have, four sophomore starters and they are still the best team ever assembled. They lost Mike Lynn for forgery and Edgar Lacey for a bum knee, two of the best players in the nation and they are still the best team ever assembled. Alcindor and Warren made the All-Tournament team at the Classic. You could have put all five Bruins on the team and a sixth, reserve forward Jim Nielsen, would make the second team. Mike Warren, 5'10" junior guard from South Bend, In- diana, played the best three games I've ever seen a college guard play. He's fast, he steals the ball, he goes to the backboard, and he shoots-from everywhere, every type of shot. His mate at guard, Lucius Allen, 6'2" from Kansas City, Kansas, hit for a lower percentage in the tournament but he took more difficult shots, too. If he wanted to take just the easy ones, he could probably hit 100 per cent. He darts around on the awesome UCLA press, teaming with, Warren to harass flustered opponents into numerous and costly errors. Once, in Chicago, I saw a pair of guards, Ben Lilly and Len Perry of Marshall, whom I thought must be the quickest pair of guards in the history of basketball. Lilly and Perry, moving in a blur, would run Marshall opponents off the court, going in circles around and through them. But this was high school and Warren and Allen are doing it in college, and better. The forwards are just as amazing, Shackelford, a Southern California native, shoots around 60 per cent, using his not-so-great height to better advantage under the backboards than anyone else in the nation. He has a towering, deadly, swishing jump shot that he puts through easily from anywhere. within 25 feet. Kenny Heitz, another sun tanned native, looks like a Rhoades Scholar off the court with brown rimmed glasses and an Ivy League suit. He walks with a nervous gait and blinks his eyes at everything, like an 11-year old in Disneyland. But on the court, he is a maniac. Wearing contact lenses, he maneuvers his slim 6'3" frame around the basket with tremendous dexterity and is rugged and skillful on the Bruin press. Substitute forward Nielsen, may eventually get Heitz' starting spot. He had it before the season started, but was clumsy at times, and no one is clumsy around basketball-perfectionist John Wooden, so Nielsen, sat on the bench. But he is the second biggest man on the squad and played well in 'the tournament, hitting eight out of 11 against Georgia Tech for 16 points, and may soon be a regular. A lot has been said about both Alcindor and coach Wooden who aspires to become the first coach to win five National Championships in six seasons. In an attempt to come up with something original I interviewed both Alcindor and Wooden, after the Bruins semi-final win over spunky Georgia Tech. If nothing else the interviews were amusing, but they didn't prove much more than that Alcindor and Wooden don't like DAILY reporters. Excerpts of the abortive dialogues appear below. First Big Lew: ME: (Assertively) Hi, I'm Rick Stern of the MICHIGAN DAILY. Would you say that you are glad to have come to UCLA, even though if you'd gone say to a school where there were less superstars, you could have averaged maybe 70 a game. ALCINDOR: (Glancing Down) Well, all of that's not really very important. The only that really matters is if you win. ME: (Still Asseritve) What about the fact that some people say that you are damaging college basketball because you take all the fun out of it by making it impossible for anyone else to win? ALCINDOR: (Signing Autographs, giving me a snide look) Well, that's not important either. If we win, that's all that matters. If they want to cry after they lose, that's fine with me. ME: (Less Assertive) Why did you decide to come to UCLA, as op- posed to another school, say Michigan? * BIG LEW: (Brushing a piece of lint from his suit) Sorry, I've got to go now. (Exit Alcindor) Previously, just after the Georgia Tech game was over: I had talked to Wooden along with several other reporters outside the UCLA lockerroom. From that exchange: ME: (Provocatively) Coach, how would you reply to the critic who says your team, loaded with All-Americans as it is, is a detriment to college basketball in that there's not even ever any doubt about your winning? WOODEN: (Provoked) Well I'd say that critic is pretty dumb and selfish. People seem to find fault with us for being good, and though we are the best team in college basketball, we're not all that much better than everybody else. And if you are that critic, I'd say that you're pretty dumb and selfish. ME: (Meekly) I was just being hypthetical, I guess. OTHER REPORTERS: Snicker, snicker. WOODEN: (Voluntarily, still provoked) Our team is made up of human beings Just like any other team, and if you don't realize that you're stupid. Feeling stupid and selfish at that point I layed off coach Wooden and let the other reporters continue their barrage. High- lights of some of Wooden's comments include, "Sure, I've told LeW to stop throwing his cross court passes. It doesn't do us any good and his completion percentage isn't too high . . . Yes, its tough to keep a team up for a whole season and I anticipate great problems in this area if we continue to win by as much as we are. Yet on the other hand, I want to keep winning by this much . .. I have never be- lieved in pointing my team toward certain games. Every game is equally important. This game, the last one, all of them. If you'd seen us when we won the NCAA championship, you wouldn't have seen any of that wild joy or anything. It"was basically just another game. None of that throwing in the, showers stuff. I don't go for that, "Yes, I do wish Lew would shoot more instead of passing off, just as I wish that some other players, whom I won't name, would pass off more instead of shooting. But when we need Lew to t * I CRAIG DILL were home for the vacation. Pets hit 8 of 13 shots and Sul- livan £~ of 11, to spark the attack with 23 and 21 points respectively. Mich'gan's shooting percentage was f 1.5, their best effort of the seasc n. The Wolverines pulled from an 8-10 deficit to a 22-13 lead and were not headed after that though Ohio closed the game up midway in the second half and kept it close for the duration. However 15 Wolv rine free throws in the sec- ond holi, after only five in the first 0 minutes, helped put the victory away. Fred Cluff and Mike Hammond each scored 22 points for the visitors. Stewart added 15 for the Wolverines and Dih had 12. 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