PACE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1967 PAGE ~1X THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. MARCH 11, 1967 Cagers End Disappointing Season Against Iowa Ken Maxey: 'The Hustler' ithout Cue By HOWARD KOHN He wasn't going to let it be that easy, he decided. It never is, of course, even on the basketball court. Things are always getting in the way. And so he got in the way, zip- ping in front of the charging Butch Joyner with only 11 sec- onds left in the game. Joyner, In- diana's leading scorer, didn't see him flash into position. He crashed into him and Ken Maxey crumpled before the tackle. The official whistled and Michi- gan had the ball. The Wolverines kept 4t, however, no longer than six' seconds and Indiana escaped with a meager two-point win. It was Monday night, two weeks back. Maxey walked carefully back to the locker room. Easy? Hell! But . "It's my job. I'm supposed to be fired up out there. I get to watch enough when I'm on the bench. When I get to play, I'm going to make sure the other team knows it." Court Charge Maxey is a ,5'9" dynamo ex- ploding with spontaneous basket- ball know-how, stabbing into the path of everyone with the ball, stealing, passing, driving, shooting. It's what he wants.. It's what he does instead of hunting pythons in the jungle or wheeling for kicks on asphalt. It's his answer to Wil- liam Bolitho's query: "How can they be compatible, the advent- urer within us and the social man we are obliged to be?" It's not that basketball is a world unto itself. It just adds a fourth dimension. "Ever since grade school, it's been part of my life . . winter and summer," Maxey admits. The streets of Chicago, where Bankey, Delzer: A Captain, A Sub, and the Last Game -Daily-Thomas R. Copi KEN MAXEY, the little guy in the double fours, shows his hustle. as he bustles around MSU's Vernon Johnson. By JOEL RUBENSTEIN "The obvious pitfall of our basketball team is that they are a bunch of girl-chasers. But not Delzer and Bankey," laughed Michigan cager Mike Maun- drell. "No, Sir! Marc Delzer devot- edly watches game films every Friday night before our games. I would bring my mother up to his room on Friday nights for her to see a truly dedicated play- er. And there would be Delzer watching the films. "And Bankey would be right next to him threading the pro- jector." Dennis Bankey and Marc Delzer are twofofmthe three graduating, seniors from the group of athletes that look like a living advertise- ment Fruit-of-the-Loom for; that is, the basketball team. Both are guards slightly over six feet, of quiet personality, and havedbeen teammates, and close friends for four years. Contrast But the similarity does not ex- tend into their playing careers. Bankey, a co-captain and start- er, stands in sharp contrast to Delzer, who has yet to start a game, and has sat out mostcon- tests during his three varsity years. "Sometimes when I'm sitting on the super-charged sparkplug got his first chance, abounded in roughneck kids with energy to ex- ploit in gutsy games. Hoops Over Gridiron "In many communities, there isn't that much interest in recrea- tion for kids. But I was lucky. The Park District organized basketball and baseball leagues for grade schools all year round and for the high school during the summer," he explains. Football was so de-emphasized that it was eliminated from the high school sports curriculum. But basketball and Chicago Carver hit it off together like marble and Michelangelo. Carver's state championship in Maxey's junior year was just an encore for those in Cazzie Rus- sell's preceding years. "I have to give a lot of credit to my coaches in both high school and at Park District." Larry Hawkins, Carver's bril- liant coach, made it a point to mold men as well as champion- ships out of his players. Maxey was active in extra-cur- icular activities and graduated near the top of his class. "Coach Hawkins wanted us all to work at everything we did. He made us," recalls Maxey. The highlight of his prep career was a trip to the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo as a youth ambassador. Six students from the Chicago area were invited, on the basis of academic and extra-curriculair records. After earning his degree at Michigan, he plans to continue with graduate school. And after that?. A coaching career? "It's a de- finite possibility." The pros? "Sure, I think about them but I'm not kidding myself." During the past three summers, Maxey has worked for Chicago Housing Authority in conjunction with the Park District. "It's great helping these kids find something to do. I've seriously considered making a career in the CHA." Even when takes times out to joke with his roommates, his un- derlying demeanor is serious. But if his personality is sublimated off the court, it is extroverted on the basketball floor. "A small player has to always hustle, always try to outthink the other guy. And I fire up." His trademark is the crowd- pleasing move, the fake, the steal, the fastbreak, the lay-up ... the spectacle extraordinaire . . . Caz- zie minus the dunk. Possession of the ball is nine- tenths of his strategy. "Sure, I draw a lot of fouls. But when you start wdrrying about it, it slows up your game." And Ken Maxey would just as soon play through.- the bench, I think about possibly having gone to a smaller school, and playing," Delzer pondered. "But in the long run, it's not that important . . . I guess." Delzer, who had contemplated attending Wisconsin, Marquette, or Valparaiso after high school, added that "I have no regrets. "However, maybe Bankey and I came here at an inopportune time." The chief creator of the "inop- portune time" was Cazzie Russell, the player who not only made All-America, but who also made many hopefuls remain on the bench. Defend "When I was a freshman," Bankey reflected, "Coach Jorgen- sen told me I must concentrate on defense if I wanted to play. I think that concentration might have hurt my shooting." The scoring prowess that has suffered in his college career had earned Bankey a 29-point average in high school in Detroit. "People tell me that I don't shoot enough. I think I should take a few more outside shots, but that's something that's got to be inside of you. Recently, though, I've gained a lot more confidence. I guess that's what it amounts to." People may accuse Bankey of shooting fright, but they can't be- little his hustle and enthusiasm, and above all, his superb defensive play. "Guards should be strong on de- fense," emphasizes Coach Dave Strack, "and Bankey is our best defensively." Defense Hurts Teammate Delzer adds, "Bankey was at a handicap at, the begin- ning of this year. He was just out there last year to play defense (when Cazzie did the shooting). "Now he's out there to play both. But perpetual hustling on defense hurts your offensive game. It tires you out. "You see a lot of real high-scor- ing stars on the courts who can't play defense well at all." Marc Delzer, on the other hand, is primarily an offensive player, and consistently one of the high- est scorers in intrasquad scrim- mages. Bankey expressed a captain's outlook on his squad. "The team has come around as the teamwork has improved near the end of the season. We're now taking the good shots and making the better passes. "A lot of our troubles had to do with inexperience. With eight sophomores; there was little unity left from previous years." Disunity is a stronger deterrent BillboardA rar The faculty - student athletic series in a variety of sports commences for another year on Monday night with basketball games at 5:15 and 6:00 in the IM building. Michigan: Frustration, And a Chance for Glory Michigan, already destined to last place in the Big Ten, closes out its 1966-67 basketball season today against Iowa at 1:30 p.m. in Yost Field House. "Although it's been a disappointing season according to the won-lost record, the team has played hard. There have been. weak spots, of course, but they've done some things well," says head coach Dave Strack judiciously. "Last year when the team g." in trouble, Cazzie was there to throw in a basket. But this year there's no one to throw one in the last minute, no one to take charge. And a leader is a must for a winning team because the rest of the players can 'be re- laxed," says former head coach Bill Perigo objectively. "It's been a year of trial and error, a year of trying to find out who could play. We'll still be trying hard to win today for the University of Michigan, but there's really not that much incentive "Is it not strange that desire should so many years outlive performance." -William Shakespeare left for the team," says sophomore guard Ken Maxey belatedly. It's been a year where a lot of wrongs never quite added up to a right. A year of Michigan as the "born loser." A year when Dave Strack would have won a season pass to Yost Field House in a Win-a-Trip- to-Bermuda contest. But even today, in a game as anti-climactic as the electoral college, the Wolverines harbor hopes of a last-game upset. "Why not?" asks Strack. "In the last three years when we've been first we've lost the last game of the season. Maybe this year the whole pattern will be changed." Iowa is a notorious away-from-home1loser but Hawkeyes still envision a last-minute Big Ten title share. "It's probably pretty foolish. But there's always a chance In- diana and Purdue will lose, so we're very much concerned with beat- ing Michigan," explains Iowa coach Ralph Miller. Iowa drubbed Michigan 91-81 at Iowa City earlier this year. Miller's forte is a pressing defense based on the old psych principle that idleness is the opponent's workshop. "We keep'em busy," he admits. Sam Williams, the junior transfer hotshot for the Hawks, is the third leading scorer in the Big Ten. An explosive performance today could give him an outside chance at the title. On a day for outside chances. DENNIS BANKEY from winning than is excessive girl-chasing. The Tough Oiies Michigan now stands, or lies, at the bottom of the Big Ten with two conference wins and 11 losses. In the last four games which the Wolverines have dropped, there was a total margin of 12 points. "When you lose by a 20- or 30- point spread," laments Bankey, ''you tell yourself that you really deserved it. "But, boy, those last few!" he groaned, with visions of. the drop- ped pass or the last-second oppos- ing basket obviously dancing in his head. Bankey then summed it up: "A basketball team, more than a football or baseball squad, has got to get close. That takes time. "You've got to learn how each of the others lives and how he thinks. In basketball, you must be friends with all of them." But for Michigan, the '67 sea- son is almost gone. For Michigan, the seniors, Del- zer, Dill, and Bankey, are almost gone. For Michigan, everything is al- most gone. Everything but the future. z .4 0' I 7i 7 --HJK The Lineups A representative from the Jervis B. Webb Company will be on your campus March 13, 1967 GRADUATING ENGINEERS; the opportunities are excellent for those who desire a career in the Material Handling Industry, and are inter- ested in diversification of training in all product areas from designing to wherever your abilities carry you kn. this exciting industry. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER -, , IOWA MICHIGAN (10) Dick Agnew (6'-5/") F (20) Bob Sullivan (6'-6") (11) Ron Norman (6'-3") F (42) Dave McClellan (6'-4") (15) Huston Breedlove (6'-51") C ( 4) Craig Dill (6'-10"' (23) Gerry Jones (6'-4") G (24) Jim Pitts (6'-3") (24) Chris Philips (6-3") G (3) Dennis Bankey (6'-1") STRUGGLE TO THE END: Indiana, MSU Face Fight MARC DELZER k.4 19-YEAR-OLD STU DENTS use FCONO-CAR for Transportation Specials Phi Epsilon Pi ALL-CAMPUS OPEN HOUSE Indiana and Michigan State are favored to win today, but not by all that much'. The two teams, tied at 9-4 on top of the league, take comfort in their home-court advantage be- cause that is about the only secur- ity they will have when the; Hoos- iers take on Purdue and North- western invades East Lansing (on channel 4 at 4 p.m.). And waiting in the wings is Iowa which will travel to Yost Field House with the knowledge that if they beat Michigan while Indiana and MSU falter, the conference will have a three-way tie, and they will get the NCAA bid. This is because they last went to the tournament in 1956, while Indiana' went last in 1958, and State in 1959. Like Black and White In their attempt to play the spoiler's role, the Boilermakers and Wildcats, despite identical 7-6 records, are a study in contrasts. Purdue tended to alternate wins with losses all season, until they turned on in their last several games. Meanwhile, Northwestern has almost fallen apart, losing five of their last seven, although they were at one time favored to win the league championship. Both teams should be tough for the defenses of the league leaders; Purdue tops the conference in field goal percentage with a .465, while Northwestern leads team scoring with 90.2 points per game. Scrooge Moo-U Meanwhile, Michigan State is best defensively in the conference with a 71.5 point-per-game allow- ed average. And. their offensive average has at last sneaked by the defensive average, and is now at 71.9. The reason these two aver- ages are still so close can be traced back directly to the 81-59 pound- in handed the Spartans by Mich- igan in January. That game was far and away the largest point differential of the year between State and its opponents. The only other game today will be Illinois at Wisconsin. Minnesota and Ohio.State have already fin- ished their schedules. 4+ SATURDAY, MARCH 1 1 1803 Washtenaw 438 W. Huron 663-2033 2-5 P.M. -Iooooo~o~eooooloo~ooooofloOOOOOOOCO p I A CI--- - -- F-444 44444Q4 4444 4 CI - - - - - - - - - - -l TODAY SATURDAY, MARCH 11 ALL LOVIN' SPOONFUL ALBUMS DAYDREAM DO YOU BELIEVE IN MAGIC? WHAT'S UP TIGER LILY? HUMS and BEST OF THE SPOONFUL! TOMORROW SUNDAY, MARCH 12 ANOTHER GREAT MYSTERY SALE AT THE "SOUTH U" STORE FANTASTIC BARGAINS ONE AFTERNOON ONLY NOON TO SIX P.M. STOP IN AND S A VE_____________________________ a a a a a a a a a a a C a C C a C a a C a a a a C a a a a a CA-45 maylt Lul~l. a OJJ-LkO vOAJ A ,* 44 , ~ c ,A 1-...P C04-T 45-6HALF LIQ UC f30Xt 1 100 BA Lf-O, HP2(20\3 ofP~r~vvU7 )VHEREPRV};1 TtW SY LAIN I Big Ten Standings I Indiana Michigan State Iowa Purdue Wisconsin Northwestern Illinois Ohio State Minnesota MICHIGAN 9 9 8 7 '7 6 6 5 2 L 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 9 11 Pet. .692 .692 .615 .538 .538 .538 .462 .429 '357 .154 TODAY'S GAMES Iowa at MICHIGAN Northwestern at Michigan State Purdue at Indiana Illinois at Wisconsin 4 A When You Must Keep Alert 1 1 I