.SUNDAY, MARCH 26, 1967 THE MICUTE A TJIAIT V KAMMAN WINS TITLE: PAGE SEVEN MSU By RUSS RAJOKOVICK Special To The Daily KENT, Ohio-For the first time since the NCAA wrestling cham- pionships were established 38 years ago, a Big Ten team has won. However, Michigan State, led by individual championship win- ners Dale Anderson and George Radman, won the tournament in yesterday's finals, edging ahead of Michigan 74-63. Michigan, which along with MSU captured every Big Ten title, was headed, by Jim Kam- man's championship in the 152- pound class. The second-place finish was largely the result of a brilliant final day for Michigan wrestlers -Kamman in particular. Cliffhanger His 6-5 victory over Wayne Wells of Oklahoma came on take- down with less than half a minute left in the match. "It was a typical Kamman vic- tory," said assistant coach sick Bay. "The outcome was never se- cure until the last second." With 30 seconds to go, it looked like a sure victory for Kamman as he took down Wells. Then with 10 seconds left, Wells nearly re- versed Kamman.. But the Mich- igan man managed to sustain his hold for the victory. Wrestlers Top cM in NCAA's JIM KAMMAN Continuing his evaluation of Kamman, Bay commented, "There may be wrestlers with more nat- ural ability than Jim but none have more determination. He's the best." Bob Fehrs, Michigan's other finalist, finished second in the 125-pound division - a position most wrestlers would envy. But Fehrs is getting a little tired of it. I I NBA PLAYOFFS: 76ers Crown Royal though. He fought a simply tre- mendous match against a great opponent.' praised head coach Cliff Keen. In consolation matches for Michigan last night, Pete Cornell and Dave Porter fought to third places and Fred Stehman took a . fourth. Cornell decisioned Jeff Smith of Oregon State, 9-1, in the 167- pound class: while Porter, defend- ing heavyweight champion, gain- ed a measure of revenge for his upset loss Friday night, by smash- ing Jeff Richardson of Michigan State, 4-1. Stehman lost to Lee Ehrer of UCLA, 7-5 in the 160-pound range. Michigan State's two champion- ships came in the 137-pound and 167-pound classes. Anderson defeated Masary Ya- tabe of Portland State in the BOB FEHRS former in overtime. Yatabe strug- gled to a 6-6 tie in regulation time, For the third straight year, he btAdro de y32i h lostin he inas t rial ikebut Anderson edged by 3-2 in the lost in the finals to rival Mike extra round. Caruso of Lehigh.exrr n Ts Last night's defeat was espe- Seen taedoenf cially hard to accept. Down 4-0 Radman topped Mike Gallego ofr after the first round, Fehrs came Fresno State, 17-9. in the latter back to lead Caruso 6-5. But the class, maneuvering Gallego into final score ended in a 6-6 tie, seven takedowns. and Caruso was awarded one point In other highlights, Curly Culp for riding time and gained the of Arizona State assumed Porter's victory.. "Bobby shouldn't f e e 1 bad, FINALS HEAVYWEIGHT - Curly Culp (Arizona State) pinned Dominick Carollo (Adams State). Time-0:51 (first round). 191-LB.-Tom Schlendorf (Syra- -use) dec. Don Buzzard (Iowa St.), 5 j 1'77/N LB.-Fred Fozzard (Oklahoma s112-94 = =0. S ~est.) dec. Mike Bradley (Michigan St.), 10-3. 167-LB.--George Radman (Mich- K. C. Jones, whose first basket igan St.) dec. Mike Gallego (Fresno St.), 17-8. of the game lifted the Celtics 160-LB.-Vic Marcucci (Iowa St.) within two points, 53-51, in the dec. Cleo McGlory (Oklahoma), 2-1. final seconds of the first half, 152-LB.-JimK amman (Michigan) triggered a 10-2 burst early in d4c-. -- Okhoar 145-LB. - Don Henderson (Air the third quarter that sent the Force) dec, Mike Gluck (Wisconsin), visitors ahead 63-61. 8-1" After the Knicks closed to 73-72 137-LB.-Dale Anderson (Michi- gan St.) dec. Masaru Yatabe (Port- with four minutes to play in the land St.), 3-2 (overtime). period, another K. C. Jones basket 130-LB.-Harold McGuire (Oklar between two jump shots by Don homa) dec. Don Behm (Michigan St.), 9-6. Nelson, gave Boston a 79-72 bulge 123-LB.-Mike Caruso (Lehigh) and the Celts stayed in front the dec. Bob Fehrs (Michigan), 7-6. rest of the way. 115-LB.-Rick Fanders (Portland * * St.) dec. Jim Anderson (Minnesota), 19-2. Hawks Sweep Bulls CONSOLATIONS ST. LOUIS - A battling Bill HEAVYWEIGHT - Dave Porter Bridges paced a second-half St. (Michigan) dec. Jeff Richardson Louis scoring spurt as the Hawks (Michigan State), 4-1. 191-LB.-Jack Zindal (Michigan made a clean sweep of their three- St.) dec. Terry Crenshaw (Stan- game NBA semifinal playooff ser- ford), 10-1. es with the Chicago Bulls by 177-LB.-Gary Cook (S. Strouds- berg) dec. Jin Harder (Army), 6-2. taking a 119-106 decision last 167-LB.-Pete Cornell (Michigan) night. dec. John Smith (Lock Haven), 10-4. The Hawks thus move into a 160-LB.-Lee Ehrler (UCLA) dec. Fred Stehman (Michigan), 8-6. best-of-7 series for the Western 152-LB.-Charles Seal (Portland Division playoff championship St.) dec. Len Borcher (Stanford), against the winner of the pres- 3- .- a. ent an raniscoLosAngles 145-LB.-D~ale Bahr (Iowa St.) nt San Francisco-Los Angeles dec. Jim Rogers (Oklahoma St.), semifinal series, in which the z-1. Warriors hold a 2-0 lead with the 137-LB.-Gene Davis (Oklahoma third game scheduled for today. St.) dec. Russ McAdams (Brigham Young), 9-1. Len Wilkins topped the Hawks 130-LB.-Joe Peritore (Lehigh) with 27 points, but it was Bridges dec. John Hansen (Iowa State), vho got St. Louis rolling by tal- 11-5. ying 13 points in the second half GryLawlnan ( urger (Nav) dec. Ls the Hawks grabbed a com- 115-LB.-Roy McMinn (Arizona nanding 108-93 lead early in the St.) dec. Ray Sanchez (Wyoming), ourth period. POUND ARIZONA, 7-1: Diarnondmen Break Jinx vacated heavyweight title with a pin in 51 seconds over Dominick Carrollo of Adams State. Culp's pin was the only one in the finals and gave him three for the tour- ney-tops. Culp, incidentally, is an honors student and an All-America foot- ball player. "I came here to beat Porter and I'm disappointed that I didn't meet him because I would have beaten him ... that's for certain," boasted Culp after his match. Culp and Porter are both jun- iors and could yet meet in a showdown. UCLA Climaxes Perfeet Season LOUISVILLE, Ky. R) - Giant Lew Alcindor and tiny Mike War- ren blended their diverse talents and led unbeaten UCLA to the NCAA national collegiate basket- ball championship last night with a 79-64 victory over hopeful but hapless Dayton.' Houston, led by All-America Elvin Hayes, blistered North Caro- lina with'a first half rampage to capture third place with a 84-62 victory over the disorganized Tar Heels. A loudly pro-Dayton crowd of 18,892 and a national television audience watched the top-ranked Bruins score their 30th victory of the season-and perhaps viewed the start of a dynasty. Of UCLA's starting five, Warren is a junior and the rest are sopho- mores. Alcindor, 7'1%" sophomore All- America and Player of the Year, and the 5'10" Warren were, in reality, the long and the short of it. Intimidating Tower Alcindor tossed in 20 points before leaving the game with 5:17 remaining, dominated both boards and, by his mere towering pres- ence, intimidated the Dayton attack. !Warren finished with 17 points and served as floor general in UCLAs devastating fast break and chief worry-wart in their demoral- izing full-court press defense. It was simply no contest., Dayton, unranked and riding a string of upsets, missed its first seven shots and Alcindor blocked another' one. Moments later, the swift Bruins ran off 12 straight points and the Flyers found themselves in a 20-4 hole from which they never re- covered. Architect and Design Warren was the chief architect in the burst, pulling down three rebounds, tipping in one shot and driving for another three-point play. With 9:37 remaining in the half, it was all over. The outman- ned Flyers were terribly, terribly tight and obviously nervous in the early going, and hit only nine of 38 first-half' field goal attempts. The young Bruins did not play their best game either, making many, many mistakes, but it was simply too much UCLA. By winning UCLA: " Became only the fourth ma- jor-college team in NCAA history to complete an undefeated season. The others were UCLA in 1964, FINAL TEAM SCORES Michigan State 74 MICHIGAN 63 Iowa State 51 Oklahoma 48 Portland State 41 Oklahoma State 40 Lehigh 36 Arizona State 27 Navy 20 Air Force 18 This is the third time the Wol- verines have finished second in the NCAA, but Coach Keen is as proud and happy as if this was a first. North Carolina in 1967 and San Francisco in 1956. " Became only the second team to win three national champion- ships in four years. Kentucky turnned the trick in 1948-49-51. *Tied an NCAA tournament record of 12 straight victories set by the Kentucky teams in 1948- 49-51-52. Reserve Time The Bruins, who held an 18- point lead, 38-20,_ at halftime, en- joyed a margin af about 20 points most the last half before both coaches-John Wooden of UCLA and Don Donoher of Dayton- cleared theoir benches in the late, going. "I'm extremely proud of this team," said UCLA Coach John Wooden, who won his third na- tional title. "They stood up under tremendous pressure that started before we played our first game." In the consolation game, Hous- ton took command and charged out to a 42-23 halftime margin. North Carolina, which could do nothing right in the first half, ral- lied for 11 straight points shortly after intermission, but the Coug- ars blunted that threat and coast- ed in. The key to the Cougar victory was a 19-4 scoring burst early in the first half that gave them a 23-12 edge. Hayes and Ken Spain each had eight points in the deci- sive flurry. North Carolina hit only 10 of 43 first half shots as the Tar Heels fell hopelessly behind. By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - Wilt Chamber- lain sank the first two field goals of the game and the Philadelphia 76ers never trailed as they clinch- ed their National Basketball As- sociation Eastern Division semi- final series with a 112-94 victory over the Cincinnati Royals last night. The 76ers lost the first game of the best-of-five series and then took three in a row. The Royals seemed lackadais- ical throughout the game except for Happy Hairston on the offense and Jerry Lucas, who pulled down 25 rebounds. Meanwhile, the 76ers kept meth- odically plugging away. They led 31-29 after the first quarter, 65-56 at halftime, and the closest Cincinnati came after that was five points. Celts Clip Knicks NEW YORK-K. C. Jones scored 12 of his 14 points in the decisive third-period rally and Sam Jones hit for eight points in the closing minutes as the Boston Celtics trimmed the New York Knicker- NBA PLAYOFFS Eastern Division Semifinals Boston 115, New York 108 (Boston leads best-of-5 series, 2-0) Philadelphia 112, Cincinnati 94 Philadelphia wins best-of-5 series( 3-1) Western Division Semifinals t St. Louis 119, Chicago 106 (St. Louis wins best-of-5 series, 3-0) NHL Montreal 4, Detroit 1 Toronto 4, Boston 3 NCAA FINALS Championship UCLA 79, Dayton 64 Consolation Houston 84, North Carolina 62 EXHIBITION BASEBALL Minnesota 8, Boston 3 Chicago (A) 4, St. Louis 3 San Francisco 4, California 3 Detroit 7, New York (A) 3 New York (N) 8, Kansas City 1 Cleveland 8, Chicago (N) 7 (10 inn) Houston 6, Washington 5 Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 4 Philadelphia 7, Los Angeles 1 Baltimore 5, Pittsburgh 3 bockers 115-108 last night for a 2-0 lead in their NBA playoff series. ,The Celtics, who have beaten New York 21 straight times over the past two years, can wrap up the best-of-five Eastern Division semifinal set with a victory in Boston today. Golfers Claim 7th in Tourney Special To The Daily MIAMI-Michigan's golfers re- tained seventh place in the Miami Invitational Tournament despite John Schroeder's floundering in the final day of play yesterday. Settled in seventh from the opening day of the tourney, the Wolverines finished with a total team score of 1296, three strokes behind sixth-place Rollins and 58 strokes behind first-place Florida. Schroeder, however, after lead- ing Thursday and holding second Friday in individual standings, dropped to eighth with a disap- pointing 78 for a final 291. Bob Melnyk of Florida won with a 281. Frank Groves' 73 led Michigan in yesterday's round-up. Individual Wolverine totals, fol- lowing Schroeder's, were: Groves, 299; John Richart, 305; Rod Sumpter, 311; Bob Barclay, 322; Harr Engelhart, 324; and Dave Graff, 324. j c f t 1 X k l Special To The Dailyj TUCSON - Right hander Bill Zepp pitched a three hitter and Glenn Redmon chipped in four singles as Michigan's baseball team ended Arizona's four game jinx and stopped the Wildcats 7-1 in the first game of a day-night doubleheader yesterday. All three of the hits off Zepp were picked up by Arizona cleanup hitter Dave Hunt and the only run off him was unearned as the result of his own error. For Zepp it was the second win of the Ari- zona trip. Hitting When It Counts Redmon's hits figured in each of Michigan's three scoring bursts. In the third inning, Zepp and Redmon put back to back singles together, Les Tanona walked and Keith Spicer drove a single to left field to score two. Doug Nelson knocked Tanona. across for the 3-0 margin. In the fourth, Bud Forsythe, Redmon, Tanona, and Nelson sandwiched singles around a Rick Sygar double to account for the scoring. MICHIGAN 003 300 010--7 13 4 ARIZONA 000 010 000-1 3 0 Zepp and Nelson; Barber, Brash- ers (3) and Miern (4) and Gershon, McMackin (5). WP-Zepp. LP - Barber. PAUL CAMELET tailor 1103 S. University above drug store' 663-4381 Rednion scored again in the eighth, singling to left and circling the bases on a sacrifice and two wild pitches. - Free to Michigan Students 25 to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda- tion, tells which career field lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses-which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year-which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other-what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This'24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor- tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. 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