STX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDA'Y', FEBRUARY 25, 1 TH ICIANDILUEDYFBRAY_5 Wolverines Smash Badger Defense STILL LEAD WCHA: IM' Icers Cinch Big Ten Title By TOM WEINBERG Wisconsin coach Johnny Erick-j son had an interesting plan to stop the Michigan basketball team just in case Saturday's game were close. Unfortunately for him, there never was much of a chance to test the strategy, as the Wolver- ines walked all over the Badgers at Madison, 103-59, to tie the all- time record of 18 wins in one sea- son by a Michigan team. The distraught coach explained after the game that his defensive effort was centered around stop- ping Captain Bob Cantrell. "That Cantrell is the key to their of- fense," he said. "Whenever they need a bucket, he's there. I was Cagers Get Third Spot By The Associated Press After its loss to Minnesota a week ago, Michigan dropped from second to third place in the latest Associated Press basketball rat- ings. The Wolverines lost ground to Kentucky, a team that won twice this past weekend to take over second place in the standings, but the Wildcats were beaten by Ala- bama last night, 65-59. UCLA's all-conquering Bruins, rolling unchecked toward the first undefeated season among major college basketball powers in seven years, remained the No. 1 team in the nation. UCLA brought its record to 22-0 last week by beating Stanford 100-88, and moved still another step closer toward becoming the first team since North Carolina in 1956-57 to go through anentirs season undefeated. The Bruins have only four games remaining, against teams they already have beaten-Washington, Washingt, State, California and Southern California. While UCLA dominated the bal- loting at the top of list, there was considerable elbowing from the second to ninth spots, and a re- turnee took over as the No.. team. Loyola of Chicago rejoined the elite after impressive 92-83 and 99-81 victories over Bowlir Green and Marquette, respectively. glad that he only made one bas- ket." 'Can't Stop Them' When asked about the potency of Michigan's great scoring punch of Cazzie Russell and Bill Buntin, Erickson sung a familiar tune. "Those guys are going to get their points, no matter what we do. We just don't have the manpower to stop either one, and I doubt if anybody in the country can stop Cazzie." The Badgers' coach pointed out that the percentages told the tale in the game. Wisconsin sank a dismal .209 in the first half com- pared to .500 for the Wolverines. "The thing that makes this so discouraging," Erickson said, "is that we only turned the ball over twice in the entire first half. As soon as we started missing, well, school was out." Erickson was quick to praise the Michigan squad, calling it "a won- derful team. They're big, strong, quick and handle themselves well. They look like real champs." Michigan coach Dave Strack was in understandably good spirits after the win which kept his team on top of the Big Ten and tied the all-time Michigan record for wins in one season at 18. "You know, in the first half I would have been happy with a five point lead. They gave us plenty of trouble off the boards. But when the lead gets to 20, you want to make :t 30, and it just keeps going like that." Strack was quite happy with the performance of forward Larry Tregoning who popped in six-for- six from the floor before missing his last shot. Tregoning snapped back from a below-par 4-13 out- put at Minnesota last week. Extend Deadline The Judo Club has extended. its deadline for persons wish- ing to sign up for an all- campus championship tourna- ment to February 28. Anyone interested should call the main office of the intramural depart- ment. The big worry of the game was at the end of the rst half when Wisconsin's little Mike O'Melia shoved Caitrell, who then fell into Russell. The 6'5%" sophomore fell on Cantrell and twisted his ankle. Russell sat out for two minutes while Doug Herner and Cantrell played together for the first time all year. Perfectly OK Russell came back in less than two minutes, without any trace of an injury, and went on to score 26 points, two shy of Buntin's game- high output. Strack and the Wolverines are working this week with Illinois in mind. The Illini invade soon-to- be-replaced Yost Field House Sat- urday in an effort to pull the Wol- verines off the top rung in the Conference and spoil the NCAA bid for Strack and the team. v- 1ZD y " TLii Jli'T11211*Li By JIM TENDBALL "We 'played as well against Min- nesota as we have against anyone this season, especially Saturday night," said hockey Coach Al Ren- frew yesterday, looking back on last weekend's action. Thanks to the sweep from Min- nesota, 6-3 and 8-2, Michigan mathematically cinched the little- publicized Big Ten Championship, thereby being the first squad to bring home this honor in a full year. The Wolverines lengthened their win streak to 12 in a row, while raising their season mark to 18-2. Michigan now has a Big Ten rec- ord of 6-1, while Minnesota stands ' Big Ten Standings l MICHIGAN Ohio State Minnesota Northwestern Michigan State Purdue Illinois Indiana Iowa Wisconsin W 9 9 7 6' 6 5 4 4 2 2 L 2 z 4 5 6 5 7; 8' 9 Pet. .818 .818 .635 .545 .500 .500 .400 .364 .200 .182 W 18 14 14 9 12 9 12 8 7 8 L 3 7 7 9 10 11 9 13 12 13 STILL UNDEFEATED: Keen's Matmen Humble. State at 5-3. Far behind are Michigan State, 1-6, and Ohio State, 0-2. Coach Renfrew, who has been praising this year's team as one of the finest in Michigan history, proudly said, "This is one of the things that we were shooting for this season, and I was happy to win it." As for the WCHA, Coach Ren- frew stated, "It is really going to be tough going from here on in. We have two rough series these next two weeks--one with Tech there, and a home-away series with State." First Spot "We are in first place now, and we can lose one more game and stay on top; however, we intend to win them all!" The Maize and Blue stand just ahead of Denver in conference play. Denver maintained its posi- tion by taking two games from Colorado, 3-0 and 6-3. Both Michigan and Denver have a pair of games left with tough Michigan Tech. The Wolverines journey to Houghton this weekend for two games with the Huskies. This series will determine the WCHA championship, for Tech plays Denver twice the following weekend. They're Set Commenting on the team's fu- ture, Coach Renfrew said, "The team is ready, and we know what we have to do." With the excep- tion of the State series, we have improved ,pretty steadily since our trip to Ohio. The team is healthy, and looking forward to this series with Tech." Coach Renfrew singled out All- America candidate Bob Gray and Captain Gordie Wilkie as the out- standing players of the series. "They are both real fine hockey players that give a 100 per cent effort." Wilkie garnered two goals in the series as well as playing a strong game all ovrr the ice. Goalie Gray only allowed five goals in the two games, for a season's per game av- erage of 2.22. Michigan divided the scoring among six players against Minne- sota, while three additional icers picked up points on assists. Mich- igan's amazing offense is now av- eraging 8.5 goals per game for the season, and is thereby one of the highest scoring major collegiate hockey teams in the nation. I WCHA Standings YESTERDAY'S REHULTS Purdue 85, Illinois 74 Indiana 108, Wisconsin 82 Northwetern 98, Iowa 76 NM' Gymnasts on the Mend; Wind Up Conference Slate ae By LLOYD GRAFF What a difference a day makes. That was the tune gymnastics Coach Newt Loken was whistling after Arno Lascari, the team cap- tain overcame his elbow injury and gave a splendid performance on the parallel bars, and still rings in a 56-56 tie against Michigan State Saturday. This was a day after Loken had said cautiously of Lascari, "He'll try to work himself into some semblance of shape for the Big Ten Meet." For someone whose practicing has been curtailed by tendonitis in the elbow and who has competed very sparingly all season, Lascari's performance was truly remarkable. He won the par- allel bars and finished third in the rings. 'Feeling Fine' Lascari went through a workout yesterday and said his elbow was feeling fine which bodes well for the conference championship to be held in a couple of weeks in Madison. Lascari was not the only sur- prise of Saturday's meet. Michigan had to sweep the first three places in the last event of the evening, tumbling to get a tie. Mike Hen- derson and Phil Bolton figured to take first and second spots, but the Wolverines had to get the top three spots. But Loken had an ace up his sleeve, John Hamilton who had not tumbled competitively this season because of an injured knee. Hamilton got his knee se- curely taped and then made his run. He scored spectacularly to take second place in the event and insure a tie for the Maize and Blue. As if these heroics were not enough, Fred Saunders, another injured gymnast got himself taped together enough to take a third place. Sanders, defending Big Ten champion in the trampoline, was not expected to compete in his specialty because of a couple of pulled tendons in his leg. Winning Season The gym team has now finished its dual meet season in the Big Ten with a 3-2 and one tie record. Efforts will now be directed to- ward the Big Ten meet and the NCAA championships. Michigan does have one more dual meet left, however, a battle between the Freshmen and the varsity Friday night at 7:30 at the Sports Building. By BOB CARNEY "I just wonder what they had to say at their banquet." Wrestling coach Cliff Keen re- called yesterday that Saturday's meet at Michigan State was the Spartan's Homecoming and that their annual banquet was to be held that night. He surmised that a 20-5 loss takes the starch out of any after dinner speaking. But most of Keen's thoughts were with his own team, which is sitting on top of the Big Ten with only one league meet remaining. Better Meet "We wrestled a better meet against State than we did against Iowa," he said. "We were sharper and more determined." Keen was referring to last week's rather tight win over Iowa, 15-9, in which the Wolverine vic- tory wasn't assured until the last match was over. It was a different story Satur- day, with Michigan posting wins in the first six matches, but -at several points during the meet the same close competition was evi- dent. Cal Jenkins' 137-pound duel for example, was anything but one-sided. Jenkins won it, 4-2, but not before opponent Dick Cook had given him a good scare. Referring to this match and a couple of others that were nearly as close, Keen noted a little Michi- gan State strategy. "They moved a couple of their lighter wrestlers down a weight class to see if they could knock us off that way," he said, "but that didn't bother our boys." Ironically, Michigan State's only win came in one of the heavy weight classes, 177, when Spartan captain i Emerson Boles whipped Chris Stowell. In that one, Stowell was five points down before the match was a minute old. Keen didn't seem too concerned about the loss, which was Stow- ell's third straight. "It was just one of those things," he said, "He was caught off guard. After that shaky start he fought a good match." Defensive Moves Michigan State's only other points came when heavyweight Home McLure was able to tie Michigan's Bob Spaly. Short and stocky, McLure is basically a de- fensive wrestler, and against Spaly this strategy proved effective. After forcing the Michigan wrestler to make the first move, McLure was able to catch him off balance and score an early take- down. It took a very sharp move by Spaly late in the meet to sal- vage a tie. Obviously, neither the loss nor the tie disturbed Keen very much. Why should it? His wrestlers are r the only undefeated squad in the Big Ten. "These boys come as close to hitting one hundred per cent of their potential as any team I've coached," he said. "Despite the fact that they haven't lost a col- lege meet, they don't think of themselves as stars. They work at it." MICHIGAN Denver Minnesota Michigan Tech North Dakota Colorado Michigan State W 9 6 7 5 4 3 1 L' 1 5 5 5 9 Last Weekend's Scores Friday Michigan Tech 7, Michigan State 3 Michigan 6, Minnesota 3 Denver 3, Colorado 0 Saturday Michigan Tech 11, Michigan State 1 Michigan 8, Minnesota 2 Denver 6, Colorado 3 This Weekend's Games Michigan at Michigan Tech Minnesota at North Dakota Colorado at Michigan State Warroad Lakers at Denver (non- conference) T 0 1 0 0 0 0 Pet. .900 .813 .583 .500 .450 .250 .100 This Week in Sports THURSDAY SWIMMING-Indiana at Matt Mann Pool, 4:00 p.m. FRIDAY HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan Tech GYMNASTICS-Frosh-Varsity Meet at Sports Bldg., 7:30 p.m. TRACK-Track and Field Federation at Yost Field House, 1:00 and 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL-Michigan at Illinois HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan Tech WRESTLING-Minnesota at Yost Field House, 7:30 p.m. SWIMMING-Iowa State at Matt Mann Pool, 3:00 p.m. CLIFF KEEN .. . veteran mentor I 1. UCLA (38) 2. Kentucky (2) 3. Michigan (1) 4. Duke 5. Wichita 6. Oregon State (1) 7. Davidson &. Viianova 9. DePaul 10. Chicago Loyola w 22 20 18 18 19 23 21 19 18 17 L 0 2 3 4 5 3 3 3 2 5 Pts. 416 356 332 258 225 195 136 124 95 40 Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL Alabama 65, Kentucky 59 Georgia 81, Vanderbilt 69 Bowling Green 106, Marshall 87 Virginia 79, North Carolina 64 NBA Detroit 115, Boston 113 1 11 For.. I I, Ii Liston Gets 7 to 1 Odds MIAMI BEACH, Fla. UP)- Heavyweight champion Sonny Liston, an ominous 7-1 favorite, is expected to button the lip of Cassius Clay tonight at Conven- tion Hall in a heavyweight title fight that could be a shocking $5 million mismatch. Is Clay a hoax? Or a new gold- en boy? The true story of this 22- year-old former Olympic cham- pion will be told when he has to put up or shut up against the man he calls "that big ugly bear." The gabby poet from Louisville, unbeaten in 19 pro fights, has been popping off so long that his spiel sounds like a recorded message from an answering service. "I'm the king. I'm the king. I'm the greatest. Ain't I beautiful? I'm too pretty to be a fighter. I'm go- ing to whup that ugly bear. If he whups me I'll crawl across the ring and kiss his feet. I'm predicting eight to prove I'm great." That is the Clay party line, de- livered with the glibness of a car- nival pitchman while he stares out into space. There is no free home tele- vision, of course. There will be a radio broadcast by the American Broadcasting Co. The 15-round match is sched- uled to start at 10 p.m., EST. RIGHT NOW IS THE TIME . 0. 40 r ,0 *tst .- l J 0 to acquaint yourself with the many services offered by Ann Arbor Bank. Speciaicheck accounts, money orders, savings accounts and travelers checks are just a few of the services you'll enjoy when you deal with Ann Arbor Bank, Ann Arbor's traditional student-faculty banking headquarters. ANN ARBOR BANK AB I SEVEN FULL SERVICE OFFICES: Main at Huron f E. Liberty near Maynard / Packard at Brockman S. University at E. 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