rack To Coach By DAVE ANDREWS owing the most disastrous t in history, Michigan's bas- 1 team will return to the for the 1960-61 season with look and renewed hopes un- he youthful leadership of Strack. ack, who was an assistant his predecessor, Bill Perigo, two years ago, returns to gan after a year as head at the University of Idaho. eam he inherits won but four games overall and only one Big Ten, but all is not lost. greeting him this fall will e largest group of lettermen :ent school history, including gan's latest bonafide candi- for All - American honors, captain John Tidwell, and est group of sophomore pros- pects since the days of M. C. Bur- ton and George Lee. Eyes Gleam Strack's eyes gleamed when Tid- well's name came up last spring. "John is one of the finest basket- ball players in the country," he commented, and Tidwell's feats with a basketball back up the new coach's comment. Last year as a junior, playing at either guard or forward, Tidwell ,broke Burton's single season scor- ing record by flipping in 526 points for a 21.6 average. This came in the face of hurried and difficult shots forced by the constant double teaming of the opposition. His big night gave the Wolver- ines their only Conference win of the year. Using his unorthodox one-handed jump shot and his cat like drives to full advantage, Tidwell netted 41 points to snap the Yost Field House and the1 Michigan scoring records for one game as the Wolverines upset Michigan State 72-65.{ Rebuilding Job However in a Conference fea- turing high caliber basketball, one# man teams don't win many games.! And while Strack has centered his plans around the Herrin, Ill. sen- ior, he is faced with a rebuilding job of monstrous proportions. The biggest current problems will be with size, or rather the lack of it, and with inexperience. The team loses only two members, through graduation, Captain Terry Miller and rugged center Lovell; Farris, but the remaining group has had little playing time. The' exceptions being Bob Brown and Jon Hall. Both played the better part of the Conference schedule. "Our success will probably de- pend on how quickly the sopho- mores can develop into respectable Big Ten ball players," Strack ob- served last spring. Could Win Michigan's prospects for a win- ning season could skyrocket if either Tom Cole, 6'71%", from Springfield, Ill., Don Petroff, 6'4", from East Detroit, or Jim Ludwig, 6'5", from Ste Sault Marie rounds into i respectable 'pivotman or forward. With Brown, a burly 6'3", and the return of Scotty Maentz, 6'3", and Dick Weyer, 6'6", the Wol- verines could present a front line with rebounding possibilities of Big Ten potential. Brown, one he found his "bas- ketball legs" following the football season, was a tower of strength under the boards late in the year. Maentz and Meyer showed up well early last year, but both were lost for the major part of the Big Ten schedule; Maentz academically in- eligible and Meyer with illness. If the big men from the sopho- more group come through, the back court will probably be han- dled by a trio of returning letter- men (Tidwell, Jon Hall and Dick Clark) with a couple of promising sophs pushing for an opportunity. Clark played the first half of the season but he too was lost for the second half of the season with illness and Hall took over. illness and Hall took over. Little Tom Eveland, son of former Mich- igan basketball captain DeForest Eveland, and Rod Linder, a trans- fer from Clemson, both have fine outside shots and could possibly crack the starting five. Lettermen Dick Donley, Chuck Higgs, Steve Schoenherr and re- serve Paul Sangster will also be available, but here again they will be hampered by lack of experi- ence. L' SQUEEZE-Michigan's Captain and leading scorer John 1 dribbles around a defender. The Herrin, Ill., senior was ie bright spot last winter as Michigan stumbled through the basketball season in its history. ANN ARBOR f . BARACUTA RAINWEAR . MERIT SUITS & SPORT COATS . CHESTER LAURIE SUITS COMPLETE FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE'll