PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1966 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6,1966 J Cagers By HOWARD KOHN Hustle Houston, 86-75 A. A ringing, 20-foot "stuff" splat- tered through again and again. Dennis S t e w a rt could have bounced the ball in off his shoe- laces. A whipping, back-handed, shot- gun pass hit the Michigan man under the basket and in went a soft-shoe lay-up. Ken Maxey could have passed Medicare with Barry Goldwater as God. Stewart hitting from the out- side corner . . . Maxey running past, through, over and into every- one in sight .., an expanding zone defense .. . the new look of the Michigan Wolverines. Only Yost Fieldhouse was the same. "We've got a spunky club," (Dennis Bankey played. despite a case of the flu) praised Dave Strack, head coach of the last night's upstart winiers. "And any- time you mention spunk or speed, you have to mention Maxey." As a second-string sophomore guard, Maxey attracted super-loud applause from Cazzie-less Yost fans even as he crouched behind the scorer's table. Maxey went to the same high school as Cazzie, and he has the same dramatic flair. He isn't a Cazzie, of course. He never will be. He's eight inches smaller and a hell of a lot faster. He runs, runs, runs . . covering up his mistakes-which are there-' with a gutsy stamina. "I'd have to say he's real quick," said Houston coach Guy Lewis. On a one-on-one breakaway with All-American Elvin Hayes steamrolling in for the lay-up, Maxey calmly flashed into position in front of Hayes and the split- faced grinner charged right into a f oul. Even without Maxey, Hayes had his problems. The six goal-tending calls on him ranked him as one of Michigan's leading scorers. Lewis took only a little time out to quibble with the officials' opin- * * * Ill'n' Ni 'Cat 7111 'iats By The Associated Press LEXINGTON - Ron Dunlap dropped in a couple of free throws with 2:15 to go in overtime last night and lifted Illinois to a 98-97 upset of Kentucky, the na- tion's third-ranked college basket- ball team. Illinois never trailed, as Ken- tucky had to come from behind on two free throws by Thad Jar- acz to tie it at 85-85 with 35 sec- onds to go in regulation time and force an overtime. , The Illini, who used their big ment to their best advantage throughout, quickly took the lead again in overtime on a tipin by Rich Jones., Kentucky was led by Dampier's 40 points. Jones led the Illinois scoring Stewart f Sullivan f Dill c Pitts g Bankey g Maxey g Adams f McClellan f Totals Bell f Hayes I Kruse c Grider g Chaney g Lentz f Spain f Starks g Lewis g Leg I Benson I Totals MICHIGAN HOUSTON MICHIGAN G F R 11120 1-2 11 7-14 2-3 12 7-18 1-1 7 6-15 4-5 7 1-3 1-1 5 6-10 0-1 2 0-2 1-1 1 0-0 0-0 0 38-82 10-14 491 HOUSTON G F R 5-20 1-2 17 10-25 5-9 17 3-9 0-1 4 4-10 1-1 10 4-20 0-1 11 5-11 0-1 11 1-1 0-0 1 0-0 2-2 1 0-2 2-2 1 0-2 0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 P T 5 23 4 16 2 1S 1 16 0 3 3 12 2 1 0 0 17 86 P T 1 11 2 25 1 6 2 9 5 8 1 10 0 2 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 13 75 6-86 37-75 By DAN OKRENT Elvin Hayes - Houston's All- ing again after being tied, 48-48. 20 as he couldn't take advantage An innovatory zone defense and America forward scored 12 points Stewart's unerring jumpers from of his height when forced outside a startling rebuttal of so-called for Michigan, being called for the right side of the basket led by the adept Wolverines. "statistical truth" enabled Dave goaltending six times, three in the drive that enabled Michigan Teamwork Strack's underdog Wolverines to each half. to remain at least five points up It was truly a team effort for h a n d Houston's sixth - ranked It was that kind of night. for the entire last ten minutes Michigan. Center Craig Dill, look- Cougars a stunning 86-75 upset in of the game. ing more at home up front than Gone Gone Gone. - nsi nyuu ~cieun Yost Field House last night. Emerging 'from the depths of two earlier defeats meted out by Tennessee and Duke, the green Michigan quintet settled down af-, ter a somewhat erratic first half1 vva , V a , V . . . Things couldn't have been better as the Michigan five made their return to Yost in what might, un- derstatedly, be called one of the? most apprehensively - looked - at 32-100 11-19 80: 40 41 38 3' ion after the game, "I disagree! with them, but there's no useI bitching about the officiating1 now." Lewis, in fact, was more con- cerned about the shoddy perform- ance of his nationally-ranked team. "I wasn't satisfied with a thing they did tonight," he ground out through tightened lips. "There's no denying that Mich- igan has a good team after what I saw, but I was extremely dis- appointed with our shooting, he added. Although -Lewis could not re- member Stewart's name, he did remember his number ani his classic shot. "That number 40, he was all right out, there in that corner." Strack praised Michigan' s team effort and the effectuality of a' strong zone defense. "We kept con- trol of the ball on offense. Once we got the ball, we didn't go for the break right away. We gct someone under the basket and3 worked the ball into him. "We played smarter ball. Itt helped. of course, that we didn't fall behind as in our first two games where we were playing des- perate catch-up ball. Strack called three timeouts in the last ten minutes of the game to help break up any concerted Houston rally and help his players keep their cool. The zone defense, though, was a veritable stroke .of genius. Hous- ton stumbled into the arm-wav- ing Wolverines, played monkey-in- the-middle and then ended up try- ing 30-foot panic shots. "It really worked well," empha- sized Strack. "In the first half we played it a little too wide, but we tightened up in the second half and really held them down." Pleased, relieved, excited and titillated by the first victory of the season, Strack .joked easily in the locker room. "Well, we're not really gunning to keep our place in the rankings, but ... "I have no complaints. It's fun to really win one. In his enthusiasm, Strack re- minded the gathering crowd of sportswriters that 'Michigan is go- ing to be a threat in the Big Ten. "I think we've shown that we can hurt a team." Lewis gave a sullen, matter-of- fact explanation in terms of miss- ed baskets and sloppy play. But, then in almost an adamant co,- fession, he added: "I'll tell you how it was. Michigan came out to win . .. and they did. They want- ed the game." and played with the aplomb and events in recent Michigan athletic the class of seasoned veterans, history. Cazzie Russell was gone, It was wonderful. Oliver Darden was gone, all the Kenny Maxey-he came out on rest that had made up the starting the court i the second half for fives for three consecutive Big keeps and flashed around his 160 Ten championships had passed pounds like a whirling dervish, onto fields of post-graduation, and passing to the right, dribbling to one of the only non-sellouts in re- the left, shooting the rubber cent years was attended more by sphere straight up and in. the skeptic than by the believer. That Kid But as an ingeniously-constructed Dennis Stewart-the 6'6"' whiz three-two shifting zone marked from Steelton, Pa., got into foul telling blows to the formidable trouble early in the game, then Houston five, the skepticism pass- keyed his play to the outside, con- ed into enthusiasm. necting for 19 points in the sec- The game started on an uneasy ond half. Houston Coach Guy note, as Houston took but ten sec- Lewis remarked that he didn't onds to sink their first two-point- know "that that kid had such an er. But Michigan quickly retali- outside shot." Strack commented ated, and in between first-home- that "maybe he (Stewart) is game jitters that spelled eight first learning something." half turnovers, the Houston ad- Jim Pitts-the 6'3" sparkplug vantage was turned into a Mich- who is listed as a guard but who igan lead, as sophomore forward played forward like ,a star next to Bob Sullivan sparked an attack men five inches and 40 pounds his that resulted in a 24-13 tally with superior: all over the court, the first period half gone. After "Jumping Jim" shut down the big staving off numerous Houston Houston guns like a man twice his challenges, Michigan was on top size." at the half by a precarious two- point margin, 40-38. e u~.e Then, the second half. As Maxey Ir s joined the starting five (minus co-captain Dennis Bankey, who was benched after playing' the IT , 0 first few minutes of the half un- der the aura of a minor case of influenza), Michigan started roll- While Houston took to the court behind Hayes at the start of theI game, the spectator was rare who did not notice the obvious size differential - the type of thing that has always contributed to Michigan victory in the past. But! this time, Strack's boys were ob- viously on the other side of the fence. Houston outweighed Mich- igan by 20 pounds per man (their front three averages over 230 pounds at each position), and had inches of height over Michigan's starting alignment. All this, not! to mention All-America Hayes and sophomore Melvin Bell, who averaged over 24 points in Hous- ton's two previous victories. he has in anybody's recollection, managed to swing enough of his 215 pounds to facilitate the smaller men's scrambling in and around the key, and served as an. admirable bulwark in the shifting defense. Houston Coach Lewis said it well when asked if anything happened that he didn't expect. Coolly and somewhat reflectively, the man who had all the reason in Dr. John Naismith's world to look for- ward to what might have been an unbeaten season, replied: "Yes. We were beaten." SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN SUTKUS Fillet-o-Fish . . . . . 29c Triple Thick Shakes . 25c Delicious Hamburgers ]5c 2000W. STADIUM BLVD. Daily Classifieds Get Results 4 A The Vise-Press But Strack's strategy paid off. Houston was continually pressed into bad shots by the vise-like zone, and they notched an unbe- lievably poor 32 per cent from the floor, as opposed to Michigan's 47 per cent. Perhaps the most re- markable statistic, however, was Houston'sbackboard dominance, as they snared 80 rebounds to! Michigan's 49. But rebounds aren't points, particularly when men like big gun Hayes look like fish out of water when forced- as he was-to go outside the foul lane to get their points. And even Hayes was not much above the Cougar norm, account- ing for only 40 per cent accuracy in his 25 efforts. Don Chaney, a 6'5" guard who was neatly han- dled by an alternation of Pitts and Sullivan. collected a dismal 4 for drecords, NEW on ATLANTIC records JAZZ: By The Associated Press Notre Dame is the national college football champion for the first time since 1949. The Irish handily defeated Michigan State in the Associated Press' final poll of the 1966 season while Alabama, the defending titleholder, placed third. The crimson Tide's 3-1 victory over Auburn last Saturday, their 10th in an unbeaten-untied string, made no distinguishable impres- sion on the AP's national panel of sports writers and broadcasters. Alabama won the 1965 national title when it beat Nebraska in the Orange Bowl and Michigan State lost to UCLA in the Rose Bowl. Alabama faces Nebraska in the Cotton Bowl next month. Notre Dame and Michigan State will not play postseason games. The Top Ten, with first place votes in parentheses, season records and total points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1.Notre Dame (41) 9-0-1 506 .2. Michigan State (8) 9-0-1 471 3.Alabama (7) 10-0-0 428 4. Georgia 9-1-0 332 5. UCLA 9-1-0 291 6. Nebraska 9-1-0 224 7. Purdue 8-2-0 193 8. Georiga Tech 9-1-0 165 9. Miami, Fla. 7-2-1 76 10. Southern Methodist 8-2-0 62 Others receiving votes, listed alphabetically: Arkansas, Army, Florida, Houston, Mississippi, Oregon State, Southern Califor- nia, Syracuse, Tennessee, Vir- ginia Tech, Wyoming. lP+ Ur.. i r c0 '1 cI"Il" r'rotessioiicti o t iiliiii ;n NFL Eastern Conference AFL Eastern Division w and POETRY: Dallas St. Louis Cleveland Philadelphia Washington Pittsburgh Atlanta New York W L 9 2 8 3 84 7 5 6 6 3 8 r 10 1 10 T 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Pet. .818 .727 .667 .583 .500 .273 .167 .091 .811 .667 .615 .500 .400 .333 .273 L Western Conference 'T Green Bay Baltimore Los Angeles San Francisco Chicago Detroit Minnesota 10 2 8 4 8 5 46 4 8 3 8 Boston 32 Buffalo 8 41 New York 5 5 Houston 3 9 Miami 2 101 Western Division xKansas City 9 21 Oakland 7 5 ISan Diego u 51 Denver4 4 8 x-Clinched division title. SATURDAY'S RESULT Oakland 28, New York 28 (tie) SUNDAY'S RESULTS D~enver 17. Miami 7 San Diego 28, Houston 22 Boston 14, Buffalo 3 SUNDAY'S GAMES New York at San Diego Denver at Oakland Boston at Houston Kansas City at Miami 'T 2 1 0 0 I 1 i p Pet. .700 .667 .500 .250 .167 .818 .583 .545 .333 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Dallas :31, St. Louir l7 Green Bay 20, San Francisco 7 Cleveland 49, New York 40 Baltimore 21, Chicago 16 Atlanta 20, Minnesota 13 Philade"phia 27, Pittsiirgh 23 Los Angeles 23, Detroit 3 SATUR DAY'S GAME Green Bay at Baltimore SUNDAY'S GAMES 'Minnesota at Detroit Chicago at San Francisco Clevelanid at Philadelphia Pittsburgh at New York St. Louis at Atlanta Washington at Dallas ALL ATLANTIC RECORDS ON SALE THIS WEEK ONLY- 3.79 list 4.79 list2 5.79 list359 WELCOME STUDENTS! " DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men & Women " 7 Hairstylists The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre with 32 points, while Deon ner added 23.. Fless-I Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL Purdue 74, Ohio U, 71 Indiana 77, Missouri 65 Iowa State 87, Minnesota 69 Michigan State 81, South Dakota 54 Northwestern 120, Bali State 83 Kansas 94, Ohio State 70 Creighton 69, Iowa 68 j U I RfIN WEAR, including these great artists: Mabel Mercer, Tristano, Charles Mingus, Ray Charles, Ornette Coleman, Coltrane, Milt Jackson, John Lewis, Herbie Mann, Modern Jazz Quartet, Mose Alli- son, Wilson Pickett, Hank Crawford-and many, many more. Ig dt recori 300 S. STATE-665-3679 HOURS:-MON.-FRI. 9:30-9 1235 S. UNIVERSITY-668-9866 , SAT. 9:30-6 His choice for Christmas: the impeccably tailored shirt of English VIYELLA REG'E - . SPORT SHIRT EXTRAORDINAIRE! That's a Manhattan* shirt of }glish Yiyella. 55% pedigreed lamb's wool and 45% combed cotton. Un- believable soft. Full of true color bea'uty. And warm without being bulky. The Manhattan Shirt Company's skillful tailoring endows it with extraordi- nary fir, too. Washing after washing. 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