WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 196: THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1067 THE MICHIGAN DAILY " nv+: .mot, r c:r M Runs 'Afoul' at Wisconsin, By CLARK NORTON Special To The Daily MADISON - Nobody has ever accused Joe Franklin of being Superman. Not even Captain Nice. But after leading the Wisconsin Badgers past Michigan last night, 98-90, the 6'4", 165-pound forward may have skipped the locker room and changed clothes in a tele- 4 phone booth. While popping in 27 points, high' for both teams. Franklin proved to everyone that he could leap tall buildings in a single bound. But he preferred to pull down 15 re- bounds and the Wolverines' chances of a repeat title. Franklin's greatest contribution, however, may have been his own gluttonal tendencies for punish- ment. Constantly driving in for the basket, "Spider" managed to draw enough hacks from the op- osition to help four Michigan cagers foul out. From Charity Stripe Franklin was allowed 19 free chances and connected on 13. Jim Pitts, Dave McClellan, Den- nis Bankey and Bob Sullivan all were casualties of the referee's whistle-the first time all season the 'Wolverines have been in trouble. Yet the foul situation was prob- ably more indicative of a hard- fought battle than a hit-and-run attack. Even before the game be- gan, the Wolverines spotted the Badgers one man when starting forward Dennis Stewart was de- clared temporarily ineligible. However, Michigan coach Dave Strack was confident that Michi- gan's leading scorer would be available soon. McClellan In "But Stewart's absence wasn't necessarily the major factor in our defeat," Strack grimaced. "McClellan subbed for Stewart and played an excellent game .. . and we probably showed our best team effort all season.'' From the opening tip, the teams see-sawed back and forth. Sulli- van grabbed the ball from Dill and the Wisconsin native gave thee Wolverines a 2-0 lead with a 20-foot jumper with only seven seconds gone. Both teams appeared tense, however, and were cold during the first five minutes of play. After missing three straight free throws at the beginning of the game, Franklin finally notched one to break the ice for the Badgers. Badgers Break Tie Wisconsin broke a 23-23 tie with eight minutes to go in the half and, when Franklin tipped in a rebound moments later, it gained the five-point edge it controlled until intermission. The half ended, 49-44, with Franklin canning 21 points on a variety of tip-ins and soft turn-around jump shots. Bankey, taking long shots that he seldom attempts and driving effectively past slow Badger guard Jim McCallum, led the Wolverines at halftime with 11 points. Pitts, although he gained his fourth foul with five minutes to go in the half, and was replaced by Willie Edwards, still led the Wolverines with six rebounds. Michigan switched to a zone de- fense at the beginning of the sec- and half after using the man-to- man in the first 20 minutes. "We thought that the zone would help gain momentum and help protect Pitts from picking up a fifth foul," explained Strack. Led by Pitts' aggressive of- fensive display under the basket and Dill's outside shooting, Mich- igan finally moved ahead of Wis- c6nsin, 55-54, with 13 minutes left on a Pitts' jumper. But the junior guard was cred- idet with his fifth foul only two minutes later after cramming in 18 points and grabbing eight re- bounds, trying for the team high in backboard snatches with Dill, McClellan and Sullivan. Sullivan Drives In The teams traded baskets for several minutes as Sullivan time after time drove in from the top of the key to convert his spectacular lay-ups. However, Franklin and teammates Chuck Nagle and Mc- Callum offset Sullivan's two-? pointers and Dill's steady free- throw shooting. McCallum picked up 17 points in the second half but arroused Wisconsin coach Johnny Erick- son's ire by "jumping higher on offense than on defense." Streak- ing Ken Maxey and Bankey made McCallum appear cemented to the floor. The Wolverines never had bet- ter than a two-point edge and led for the last time with 3:30 left on the scoreboard, 87-86, when Sullivan dropped in one out of two at the charity stripe. Franklin Again The margin was short-lived, however, as Franklin went one better by sinking two free throws eight seconds later. In the process, McClellan became the second Wolverine to foul out. A minute later, Sullivan gained his fourth and fifth fouls and Bankey followed suit seconds later. Michigan's bench was nearly emptied as Strack had to go with four substitutes. Wisconsin, employing an effect- ive stal in the last minute of play, increased the final margin to eight points by getting Franklin open under the basket twice. Erickson concurred with Strack that both teams exhibited their best performance to date. "I no- ticed that Michigan played much better than in Los Angeles. How- ever, with so many fouls called, neither team could really play their own game," explained Erick- son. "We couldn't run our defenses or work our plays." Michigan players were whistled down 29 times, while the Badgers were caught 23 times. Strack was dismayed at the loss I to "mix" with the Wolverines. of Pitts so early in the game but Eino and the other Badgers maintained that no one factor start final exams this Friday but could be singled out in the upset. "We didn't let the foul situation as far as Erickson concerned, effect us so mucn that it inter- they've already passed one of fered with our offensive strategy. ther toughest tests this term. Wis- Wisconsin was able to rebound consin is 2-1 in the Big Ten. with the Wolverines even though Defending champion Michigan Erickson kept 71" Eino Hendrick- is 0-2, however, and must still find son on the bench. Hendrickson a way to combat other self-styled prefers chemical engineering to Supermen if it expects to make basketball and was not trusted' to four in a row. Wolverines Creamed in Dairy State MICHIGAN WISCONSIN G F P TG F R P T G F 1 P T Nagle. f 7-21 8-11 10 3 22 Sullivan, f 6-12 8-9 8 5 20 Franklin, f 7-13 13-19 15 4 27 McClellan, f 5-9 1-1 8 5 11 J. Johnson, c 4-12 0-0 7 5 8 Dill, c 7-18 10-13 8 3 24 McCallum, g 12-23 2-3 6 2 26 BneMitchell, g 2-6 2-2 1 3 6 Bankey, g 4-10 4-7 3 5 12 Voigt. c 2-3 1-2 1 5 5 r Pitts, g 8-11 2-68 5 18 Carlin, g 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 Maxey, g 2-5 1-2 4 3 5 R. Johnson, f 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Edwards, c 0-2 0-0 2 2 0 Schell, 1f1-2 2-2 0 0 4 Maundrell, g 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 Sweeny, g 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Delzer, f 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 35-82 28-41 55 23 98 Montross, c 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 MICHIGAN 44 46--90 Totals 32-68 26-38 48 29 90 WISCONSIN 49 49-98 I'; i 11 -Daily-Thomas R. Copi MICHIGAN'S BOB SULLIVAN goes in for an easy lay-up against Northwestern in last Saturday's Big Ten opener in Yost Field- house as Wildcat Jim Cummins (32) and Ron Kozlicki (43) look on. Sullivan scored 20 points against Wisconsin in the Wolverines' 98-90 loss last night. I i Big Ten Standings Conference 1' IN BIG TEN PLAY: 'Cats whip Illini ,104-96 L Northwestern Iowa Michigan. State Ohio State Wisconsin Indiana Illinois Purdue Minnesota MICHIGAN W 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0o L 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 1 1 2 Pet. 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 .500 .333 .000 .000 .000 SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL LATE MONDAY NIGHT RESULTS, UCLA 83, Washington 68 Washington St. 76, So. California 74 LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS Cincinnati 62, Dayton 49 Duke 85, Clemson 61, Miami (Fla) 111, Oklahoma City 109 Texas 82, Southern Methodist 73 Kansas State 75, Missouri 65. Davidson 76, The Citadel 72 Furman 69, Georgia Tech 68 (ovt) St. Louis 84, Creighton 79 Boston College 54, Northeastern 47 Holy Cross 74, Rhode Island 66 Bowling Green 76, Kent State 68 LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS Wisconsin 98, MICHIGAN 90 Northwestern 104, Illinois 96 SATURDAY'S GAMES MICHIGAN at Illinois Indiana at Ohio State Iowa at Michigan State Purdue at Minnesota SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL LEVIS. By The Associated Press EVANSTON, Ill.-Northwestern vaulted into the Big Ten basket- ball lead with a 104-96 victory over a battling Illinois team last night. The Wildcats, streaking to a 49,42 halftime lead, saw their lead slip in the second, half when sharp-shooting guard Jim Dawson saught fire and poured through 13 of his game-leading 29 points in the last eight minutes. The Illini, suffering their sec- ond loss in three league outings, closed to within one point with a minute and a half left only to have a pair of free throws by Northwestern Walt Tiberi and baskets by Tiberi, Jim Cummins and Jim Burns put the game out of reach. The victory was the second in as many conference games for the Wildcats and boosted them into first place in Big Ten competion. Burns once again paced the North- western attack with 28 points while Mike Weaver tallied 15, Cummins 14 and Ron Kozlicki 13. AP Top Ten ENGINEERS AND METALLURGISTS: Write your first name here. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. UCLA 35 Louisville 1 New Mexico Houston North Carolina Texas Western Princeton Kansas Providence Florida 9-0 13-0 11-1 11-1 11-1 10-2 11-1 10-2 9-3 8-2 359 324 227 203 201 164 115 101 46 31 ... . I1 Wouldn't you prefer to, be known by this than by a number? discount records, inc. TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS 300 S. STATE 1235 S. 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