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February 13, 1962 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-02-13

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

NIPS MSU'S JOHNSON:
McRae Evens Score in Highs

Fast Finish Helps Buck

By GEORGE WANSTALL
With only eight days' of prac-
tice and two meets, Bennie McRae
appears ready for anything, or
anybody, who steps forward to op-
pose him as the Big Ten hurdles
champion.
McRae's loss to Michigan State's
Herman Johnson in the 65-yd.
high hurdles in the Michigan Re-
lays on February 3 came as a
shock to nearly every Wolverine
fan, and undoubtedly even to some
that knew only that the speedy
Newport News senior was accus-
tomed to winning.
The Michigan sports world could
once again breathe a sigh of re-
lief last weekend, however, as
Bennie accomplished three impor-
tant things in his split second
victory over Johnson in the MSU
Relays. o
It was one thing to come back
the next week after losing to the
MSU speedster. It was another to
have accomplished the feat despite
the fact that his right shoe was
split so badly that he nearly lost
it.
McRae Ties Record
Bennie gained his revenge, but
more important, McRae with so
few practice sessions on the track
tied Glenn Davis's meet and Jeni-
son Field House record of :08.9.
His reply to a question regarding
the feat-"I was a lucky man."
One might say that now that
McRae has proven that he can
beat Johnson, he is all set to re-
tain his dual Big Ten Champion-

ships in the two hurdle events. At
least Herman Johnson's, suprema-
cy on the Big Ten cinders is more
of a question mark than it was
a week ago.
Wolvrines Fineshed Second
With the solution of one big
question in the MSU Relays an-
other arose, perhaps of more con-
sequence-The Wolverines finish-
ed in second place with 48 points,
seven points less than the victor-
ious Broncos of Western Michi-
gan, and only one-half point bet-
ter than the third place Spartans,
not considered a perennial cinder
power despite the addition of
Johnson and sprinter Sherman
Lewis. With this performance, is
the Michigan track team going to
be able to retain their Big Ten
Title at the conference meet in
East Lansing on March 3?
Western had a full team in uni-
form for the meet. They went out
to win 'the Relay title and did.
Wolverine Coach Don Canham
started north on Saturday morn-
ing with one idea in mind - to
come home with the two mile and
the distance relay honors, which
he did. These events were what
the mentor wished to emphasize,
but in addition there are Ergas
Leps and McRae, a certain one-
two first place scoring punch.
Five Win Vault
Rod Denhart, Steve Overton and
George Wade were among a field
of five which claimed the pole
vault honors. Carter Reese brought
home a fourth in the 300-yd. run;

Al Ammerman tied for fourth in
the high jump; while Wolverine
shot putter Roger Schmidt just
missed a place with a nice toss
of over 50 feet.
In the -Big Ten meet, Canham
will train and work the squad for
these events. Sure, it's going to be
rough sledding, but the first place
values of Leps and McRae in ad-
dition to the other individual per-
formances of the squad in the
MSU Relays indicate that the
team cannot be counted out.

(Continued from Page 1)
the boards and induced them in-
to many errors, the superior,
shooting power of the Bucks even-
tually spelled the difference. Ohio
State shot 48.3 per cent from the
floor, a little below its usual 50
per cent average, compared to the
Wolverines' 36.5.
The game started out as if the
Buckeyes would blast Michigan'
right off the court. With Nowell
popping them in from the outside
and Michigan picking up three
personal fouls, Ohio State moved

out to a quick 9-2 lead. It was
quite a change from the Columbus
encounter where Michigan had
taken a 12-7 lead.
Michigan battled back to within
one point, 13-12, but Ohio State
slowly edged away and held a 41-
30 halftime lead.
After McDonald scored to open
the second half, Cole hit twice
and Cantrell and John Harris
once each to lower the margin to
43-38 with two minutes gone.
Ohio State pulled back into a
ten point lead, 51-41, on a lay-up

by Lucas, with 13:57 left. J
Hall and John Oosterbaan whil
ed it back to six points to g
Michigan its best chance w
12:03 left.
Can't Hit
For the next four minutes, hc
ever, the Wolverines managed o
two free throws while Ohio St
was hitting only one basket a
the opportunity was wasted. O
State then pulled away to
final margin as both coac:
cleared their benches with m
than a minute left.

Lucas Disappoints Record YFI Crowd;
Taylor Displeased, with Team's Showing

- a
TRIUMPH OVER TRADITION
OPEN MONDAY 'TIL 8:30
1209 South University

U di

By JERRY KALISH
It was never a question of Who,
but By How Many last night when
Michigan hosted undefeated Ohio
State.
Displaying an unusual defense
the Wolverines noticeably upset
the Bucks, but were outshot.
Explaining his defense, Coach
Dave Strack said, "We used a zone
after we scored, 'but dropped back
to a man-to-man when we missed
our shot to guard against the fast
break. I thought we did a good job
on it."
Strack also praised the Buckeye
defense when he commented,
"They don't give you anything.'
Slowed to Walk
An obviously, displeased Fred
Taylor, Ohio State coach, also had
his opinions on the Michigan de-
fense and the relatively poor show-
ing of his team. He candidly re-
marked, "We weren't moving very
much in our patterns. It looked
like we were walking our girl
friends out there."
The people who came out to see
Jerry Lucas were disappointed.
Taylor pulled him out with the
Buckeyes leading only by eight
points, the first time he has done
this with the score so close. Lucas
had his poorest shooting night of
the season, hitting on only 3 of 7
from the floor, far below his 72
per cent average. He wound up
with 13 points.
Ohio State, as a team, was also
below its usual high level of per-

formance in the various statistical
departments. Besides being out-
rebounded 43-42, an unheard of
feat, Fred Taylor's boys hit only
16 of 25 from the foul line. Taylor
said, "We only got away 58 shots
from the floor, considerably below
our average.''
We Got Hustled
But despite his ire, Taylor found
time to praise Michigan when he
remarked, "They were more ag-
gressive tonight than they were
the first time in Columbus. Michi-
gan did a good job of hustling."
It appears certain that Ohio
State will repeat as Big Ten champ
for the third consecutive year and
will be a major contender for the
coveted NCAA crown. But Taylor

felt a conference title was the
more difficult to achieve. He noted,
"With the long schedule and play-
ing the same team twice, it's hard
to get the boys up for every game
unless you've had a close call the
first time."
Most of the record crowd arrived
at the game in time to see a pre-
liminary game between the fresh-
man team and a group of former
college stars. Joining forces to roll
past the frosh 71-51 were Michi-
gan's former Big Ten scoring
champion M. C. Burton; Joe Billy
McDade, who played on Bradley's
NIT title team a few years ago;
and Notre Dame's John Tully and
Emmett McCarthy, former cap-
tain.

Full
MICHIGAN
Brown, I
Cole, f
Harris, c
.Hall, g
Cantrell, g
Oosterbaan, f
Herner, g
Higgs, I
Jackson, g
Andrews, I
Schoenherr
Totals
OHIO STATE
McDonald, f
Havlicek, f
Lucas, g
Nowell, g
Reasbeck, g,
Doughty, f
Flatt, g
Taylor, g
Bradds, g
Lane, ,f
Frazier, g
Knight, f
Totals
MICHIGAN
OHIO STATE

College Cage
BIG TEN
Purdue 82, Iowa 75
Wisconsin 105, Indiana 94
Illinois 88, Northwestern 70

House
FG FT R PF PA
2-4 0-1 11 4 4
6-11 5-6 9 3 17
3-10 1-1 10 3 7
2-5 5-9 2 3 9
6-19 0-0 5 4 12
3-10 0-0 6 3 6
0-3 0-1 0 1 0
0-0 0-0 0 1 0
0-0 0-0 0 0 0
0-0 0-0 0 0 0
1-1 0-0' 0 0 0
23-63 11-17 43 22 57
FG FT R PF PA
4-7 1-1 1 1 9
6-12 3-7 8 2 15
3-7 7-9 18 0 13
6-9 1-1 4 4 13
1-3 2-3 0 4 4
3-10 2-3 5 1 *8
1-3 0-1 2 1 2
2-3 0-0 1 2 4
0-1 0-1 0 1 0
0-1 0-0 0 0 0
1-1 0-0' 2 0 2
1-1 '0-0 0 0 2
28-58 16-25 42 16 72
30 27--57
41 31-72

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CORRIERE, BARDEN, CURTIS WIN:
Iowa Raps Grap pers, 15-13

By TOM ROWLAND
A crew of scrappy Iowa: wres-
tlers took full advantage of light-
weight brawn Saturday afternoons
to pin Michigan with its first
wrestling loss of the winter.
ThedHawkeyes struck early and
then doggedly hung on through
a reshuffled Michigan upper-
weight lineup to dump the Wol-

e.

SWEAT

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If your field Is
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ENGINEERING,
MATHEMATICS

SALE,
A SELECTED GROUP OF SHIRTS
WERE $3.00 and $3.50
NOW $200
Also
One group of MICHIGAN JACKETS
Originally $15.95 . . . NOW $10.00
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Sour experienced chef prepares delicious
Tender young SPARERIBS and CHICKENS
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Choice SIRLOIN OF BEEF with all
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BAKED SUGAR-CURED HAMS
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* When you're in a hurry try our Buffet Service for Pastries
and a hot cup of freshly-brewed Coffee.

verine grapplers, 15-13, before
some 750 fans in Yost' Fieldhouse.
The defeat leaves Michigan with a
4-1 conference mark.
Iowa captain Francis McCann
and Carl Rhodes dualed to a 3-3
deadlock in the 123-lb. bracket,
and the Hawks began their light-
weight sweep with Norman Park-
er's 16-8 victory over Wolverine
Ralph Bahna at 130 pounds.
Iowa's Tom Huff followed with
a little bit of last year revisited;
Buff outgrappled Michigan 137-
lb. champ Fritz Kellermann for a
9-3 decision and the first Keller-
mann loss of the winter. The
Michigan star dropped his only
dual-meet match last season to
Huff.
Kellermann picked an unfortu-,
nate time for the defeat; his high
school coach, Iggy Konrad, was on
hand to watch his former Lansing
Sexton star in action-from an
ideal seat: he refereed the meet.
Following Jimmy Kenn's 4-4
draw with Iowa's Herman Hem-
inga, the Hawkeyes shot infront
to a 15-4 lead with Steve Combs
nailing Wayne Miller for a pin in
8:07 of their 157-lb. match. It was
a return to mat service for Miller,
who had been out of the lineup
since before the Purdue meet with
an injured shoulder.
Michigan rallied its forces in
the heavyweight brackets, but it
was too little too late, and. the
Wolverine effort just fell short of
breaking the gap.
Captain Dan Corriere scored a
13-1 decision over Vernon Kohl at
167-lbs., and Jack Barden, drop-
ping down from his heavyweight
division to wrestle in the 177-lb.
class, took a 5-1 measure of Jay
Roberts.
Guy Curtis brought Michigan

within two points of the tenaciou
Hawks with a 5-1 decision ove:
Ken Johnson in the heavyweigh
match.
"Our lightweights were wha
made the difference," said Iowa
Coach Dave McCuskey after the
meet, "and I was especially pleas
ed with Norman Parker's showing
at 130 lbs."
Commenting on the Michigan
team McCuskey said, "That Cor
riere is terrific. And Kellermann
and Barden are two great wres
tIers. I was certainly happy to win
one from them."
The Iowa strength came as no
surprise to Michigan Coach Clif
Keen. "We knew they were going
to be tough. We'll fight them an
other day."
Michigan State looms next be
fore the Wolverine miatmen, and
according to Coach Keen "the
team will be ready. The lone ex
ception is Mike Vuocolo, who wil
be out with a bad ankle."
Keen takes note that there i
not a single conference team tha
can be counted out as a title con
tender this winter. "Any team can
,take any other team-any one of
the Big Ten could win the cham-
pionship."
Matmen Pinned
123-Rhodes (M) and McCann,
drew, 3-3.
130-Parker (I) decisioned Bahna,
16-8.
137-Huff (I) decisioned Keller-
mann, 9-3.
147-Keen (M )and Reininga,
drew, 4-4.
157 - Combs (I) pinned Miller,
8:07.
167-Corriere (M) decisioned Kohl,
13-1.
177--Barden (M) decisioned Rob-
erts, 5-1.
Hwt.-Curtis (M) decisioned John-
son, 5-1.

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