SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1967 IrUE MICHIGAN DAILY pAnp. C SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5,1967 "TIlE MiChIGAN DAILY 1~ A f ~' ~'t~e~'~i VAUL ZJLVLIN i Late By HOWARD KOHN Willy Edwards, a cool head with a hot hand for rebounds, added fuel to the fire in Michigan's 86-74 scorching of Purdue yesterday. Streamlined Edwards snaked into position for, eight jumping- jack rebounds and spit in six points in the last 10 minutes as the Wolverines struck for a come- from-behind victory. Shut down in the first half by Purdue's assembly-line jump shots, 37-30, Michigan opened shop in the second half with 13 points in three and a half minutes. Dennis Bankey's three consecutive hard- rimmed jumpers bounced the Maize and Blue into the lead, X42. Cager Spurt Blisters Purdue, 86-74 For six and a half minutes, the Wolverines held the lead in limbo. Then forward Dave McClellan, playing on a tightly-taped tender ankle, limped off with a charley horse. Enter Willy. "McClellan's injury wasn't ser- ious. He could have gone back in but Willy was doing really well," explained Michigan coach Dave Strack. Edwards usually presents the picture of a high school great be- ing torn up inside because he's sitting on the bench in college. But-to the surprise of a med- iocre crowd of 3200 who came ex- pecting a mediocre game - Ed- wards tore up Purdue instead. Go- ing into the contest he had only1 seven rebounds on the season. But: he shocked Bill Fleming and BigI Ten television, George King and h i s short - shift Boilermakers, Strack and his hit-and-run Wol- 1 verines-and himself.l Amen!! He was all handshakes and hal-< lalejahs afterwards. There was only one drawback. Willy found1 out that excitement riles the in- sides more than frustration as he1 picked at the usual post-game1 meal in the Union.4 In a near paradox, the same reason that gave Edwards his chance to play almost cost the Wolverines the game. Starters Jim Pitts and Bob Sul- livan sat out the game because of "disciplinary" suspensions imposed{ by Strack. Without them, the1 Wolverines lacked the coordina- tion needed to control the pace in the first half. "We looked tired and leadfoot- ed," admitted Strack. Vice Versa1 "Our pre-game plan was to play a deliberate game and wait for their, mistakes. It worked-but in reverse. So in the second half, we threw out that idea and picked up the tempo. "There's a strange mental-phy- sical combination to basketball. When you run fast and shoot more, you don't think about being tired," he explicated. After rolling in the Big Ten cellar for most of the season, the Wolverines (2-4) are now a full game in front of last-place Min- nesota (1-5) and only a half- game behind Purdue (2-3). "We did a complete turnaround. Everyone played a good second half after playing a collectively bad first half. Fortunately, they don't count first half scores," toasted Strack. High-Low Michigan's second half total of 56 points was its highest for a half this year. Its 30 points in the first half equalled the lowest first half in years. Craig Dill, who was four inches taller than anyone else on thea floor, flipped in 15 of his team- t leading 24 points in the final 20 minutes.t With 8:55 left in the game andt Michigan clinging to a 56-55 lead,s Dill broke loose underneath for the first "stuff" of his collegec career.r To set up the play, Edwardse tipped a rebound to Dennis Ste-r wart who dribbled the length oft the court before handing it to Dillr underneath. Herman Gilliam foul- ed Dill on the play and the 6'10" center converted the three-pointer.e Impromptu Pattern A minute later, in one of the: m o s t remarkable combination shots of the afternoon, Ken' Maxey grabbed the ball in a back-' court scuffle, lost it to Dill who leaned over backwards to roll it to Bankey. Caught unaware, Bankey recovered in time to push in a lay-up and give Michigan a 62-55 edge. Bankey, hitting for one of his top scoring performances of the season with 15. was also fouledI and also dropped in the free throw. Edwards and Maxey's high- kicking jumpers in the next min- ute put the Wolverines out of sight. Even Gilliam's popping from the outside couldn't keep the Boiler- makers within range. Gilliam, eventually surrendered, a f t e r notching 29 points and 14 re- bounds, and the Wolverine posse rounded up the stragglers. King, head coach at Purdue, em- phasized that the Boilermakers couldn't outrun the Wolverines. like Michigan, with its height ad- vantage, we must run more effec- tively than the other team. We didn't." King specifically lamented Pur- due's penchant at intercepting the ball for a breakaway and then neglecting to dunk in the lay-up.' "It was awful," he moaned. "With those mistakes added to Michigan's board control, we not, only couldn't dictate the pace ... we couldn't even keep up with it." In the second half, Michigan outrebounded Purdue, 35-19. tired in the first half, we'd be dead in the second," laughed Strack. "But we started picking the balls right out of the air." Stewart and Dill were nigh for the Blue with 12 each, followed by McClellan and Maxey with 10. During both the vaudeville acts of the first half and the acrobatics of the second, however, Bankey was the master juggler. "He han- dled the ball very well. He's usual- ly one of our best outside shots, but today he was driving the base- line and putting in the inside shots," praised Strack. Bankery ripped through seven out of 11 attempts from the floor I for an eye-catching 63.6 per cent, compared to Michigan's lukewarm percentage of 42.0 The Wolverines, after hitting a freezing 32.8 before halftime, turned on for a cool 50.0 after. Downhill Purdue dipped from 45.8 to 35.1 in the second. Strack indicated that Pitts, Sul- livcan and substitute Scott Mont- ross will probably be reinstated this week. "I expect them to get back into the good graces of their teammates," he said. "However, if they had played today, Willy would never have gotten his chance . . . I keep com- ing back to Willy, and the guys will probably kid the hell out of him, but he was good out there," he smiled. "For us to stay even with a club "They figured that if we were Cazzie Would Be Proud Stewart McClellan Dill Bankey Maxey Maundrell Edwards Deaser Totals MICHIGAN G F R 9-20 3-6 12 4-9 4-4 10 10-23 4-5 12 7-11 1-10 0-3 3-5 0-0 1-2 4-5 0-0 0-0 2-2 4 10 0 0 P T 3 21 3 12 1 24 3 15 5 6 0 0 0 6 0 2 15 86 PURDUE G F R P'T Blalock 3-15 1-3 6 3 7 Gilliam 8-16 4-5 14 4 20 Suerth 0-3 0-0 1 1 0 Ebershoff 3-11 4-5 2 3 10 Keller 5-13 1-1 6 0 11 Reasoner 5-6 1-2 4 2 11 Brady 5-8 0-0 2 1 10 Reynolds 2-4 1-1 3 3 5 Totals 36-71 12-17 51 17 74 MICHIGAN 30 56-86 PURDUE 37 37-74 OVOLi[3WA139 M OuR CA IMOA . Pick up either Volkswagen in Europe. 34-81 18-24 611 it __ _ -- I -Daily-Thomas R. Copi MICHIGAN SOPHOMORE DAVE McCLELLAN pulls down a rebound In yesterday's 86-74 victory over Purdue. McClellan, starting his second game this year, ended up with 12 points and! 10 rebounds. Purdue's Herman Gilliam (30) looks on. ffi If you have a driving ambition to see Europe,the cheapest way to do the driving is in your own VW. And picking it up in Europe is the cheapest way to buy one. You can get a genuine beetle in more than fifty cities in twelve countries. And, i. you want a VW with a little more room and a little more power, spend a little more money and get our Squareback Sedan. (it's just as genuine,, but not so beetle-ish.) We'll attend to the details of purchase, delivery, insurance and licensing. And if the car needs servicing after you ship it home, we'll attend to that, too. If you think that's a tot to ask of a total stranger, come in and get to know us. BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Illini Snap Cats' Win Streak By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Northwest- ern's perfect Big Ten basketball record was snapped at four straight by scrappy Illinois, 93-83, despite serious injury to Illini vet- eran Dean Flessner yesterday af- temnoon. Northwestern, falling well be- hind its 96.4-point average, led only oxrze in the entire game, at 30-29 and lagged by as many as 11 points in the second half al- though the Wildcats spurted to trail only 81-79 with 3:10 left. It was the third Big Ten win against two setbacks for Illinois which avenged a 104-96 loss at Northwestern on Jan. '10. Sophomore Dave Scholtz, who did not commit a foul in the rough game, and Captain Jim Dawson paced the Illini with 26 points each. Jim Burns was the game's top scorer with 29. MADISON, Wis.-Ron Sepic re- covered from a dazing head injury to lead Ohio State to a 90-84 Big Ten basketball victory over Wis- consin in overtime yesterday after the Buckeyes had wasted a 17- point lead. Sepic cracked a 78-78 tie with two long jump shots early in the extra session, triggering a decisive seven-point spurt. He finished with 26 points, sinking 12 of 16 shots from the floor. * * * MINNEAPOLIS - Indiana weathered a 35-point outburst by Minnesota's Tom Kondla and a furious Gopher rally in the clos- ing minutes to 'claim an 82-81 Big Ten basketball victory last night. Kondla fouled out with a little over three minutes to play and Indiana leading 76-71. Bill DeHeer had 17 points while Butch Joyner, Jack Johnson and Erv Inninger each added 16 in In- diana's balanced attack. Behind Kondla, whose 19 points sparked Minnesota to a 42-38 halftime lead, Paul Presthus got 12 and Ray Stephens 11. HOWARD COOPER VOLKSWAGEN 2575 S. 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