TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1962 'TU. M YRUZi.Efi1T ItXE. TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1962 t3 U TAX nEiKUTaA 'iTE"ALLYX Ui PAGE NO OLYMPICS: McRae Picks Gridiron Career Five-Team Battle Shapes Up for Golf Title T By DAVE GOOD Two summers from now in Tok- yo, hurdlers representing every part of the world will set them- selves in their starting blocks, anticipating the gunshot that wil signal the start of the 110-meter high hurdle finals of the 1964 Olympic Games. But the best hurdler in the world in 1964 will not win that race. He won't even be in it. At best, he will be watching from the stands, a professional for a Na- tional Football League team in the United States. * *-* Bennie McRae is a wiry, 6', 175- lb senior from Newport News, Va., who made his last appearance as a Michigan football halfback last November when he separated a shoulder and had to leave the Iowa game. Yet McRae, small even as col- lege gridders go, has decided to accept a bid from the Chicago Bears of the NFL to play pro ball next year. It was a decision which McRae made after much soul- searching, for McRae is not the best football players in the world. But those who should know in- sist that he is potentially the best hurdler in the world. Right now, however, McRae still Fht Sailing Club, Fight Way' g a To Nationals (Continued frorm Page 1) A total of nine schools partici- pated. They were Wayne State University, Wisconsin, Marquette, Wooster and Ohio Wesleyan. Michigan qualified for the Mid- west Championship several weeks ago in area competition by defeat- ing State and Wayne. The regatta was hosted by Ohio State University at Leatherlips Yacht Club.. Newport Harbor The nationals will be held at Newport Harbor, near Los An- geles, June 18-22. Sailing the Leh- man Dinghies and Lido 14's for Michigan will be Miss Schneider, Goldsmith, Rabe, White, Lee Jef- feries, Mike Carr and Travis Ran- dolph. Eight schools annually compete for the national honors-two from the west, midwest, New England and middle Atlantic. Last year Michigan placed fourth.. The Michigan Sailing Club sails out at Baseline Lake where the club owns nine Jet 14's and one Tech Dinghy. has to prove he is the best in the Big Ten when he meets Wiscon- sin's Larry Howard this Saturday in the. conference outdoor meet. Howard, McRae remembers only too well, is the one who divested him of his two indoor hurdle titles last March. Makes Impression And this is a curious business-- this having to prove himself-be- cause whenever McRae runs, he never fails to impress. those who see him. Not the least of these is Hayes Jones, the Olympic bronze medal- ist and American indoor record- holder from Pontiac and Eastern Michigan, whom McRae has never defeated in some half-dozen meet- ings around the country., "Bennie's got the speed and the strength to be the best hurdler in the world." Jones marveled at- ter watching McRae top Olympic runner-up Willie May in a tri- angular meet in Ann Arbor two weeks ago. "Why, he's stronger than I am, although I don't think he's as fast. I believe he could run a :13.2, any- way (tieing the world record), and he could certainly make the Olym- pic team in two years," Jones added. Work Together This is no small praise coming from a man who is now superior to McRae and in fact thinks of him as his protege when they work out together in the summer. But there are others who are even more enthusiastic. Don Can- ham, McRae's coach at Michigan, has been calling him the second- best hurdler (to Jones) in the country for the last two years. Just last fall, after Canham had seen his star finish fourth in both the NCAA and AAU meet hurdles (after being able to work out for only two days before the NCAA and not at all before the AAU), Canham exclaimed, "I think he can break the world record right now and be the best in the U. S. for the next ten years. "Guys like Harrison Dillard, Hayes Jones and Bennie come along very seldom." Friends in N.C. But that's not the half of it. There are, at Winston-Salem Teachers College in N. C., one track coach named Ross and one pupil of his named Elias Gilbert, himself a world record-breaker in the low hurdles. "They told me that if I really1 work hard and get in shape- something I haven't been able to1 do in college yet- I can run a :12.8 in the highs," McRae ex- plained. A :12.8 is a mark which is really beyond comprehension, at this time. Lee Calhoun and Germany's Martin Lauer have both done :13.2 for the world record, Richard At- tlesey and Jerry Tarr (who is still running for Oregon) have both done :13.5 for the NCAA record, and McRae has done a wind-aided :13.7 for his best mark. Why, then, hasn't McRae shown world class already, except in brief flashes? Football Is Villain "Football is Bennie's downfall,' Jones pointed out. "You simply cannot play that game and still be a top-notch hurdler. I think if I were offered a pro football contract I would turn it down. Bennie's not a dedicated tracK- man like me. He likes football too much. There is one simple reason, how- ever, why McRae is choosing pro football rather than keeping on" running track after he graduates: "My family comes first," put in McRae, now a father. "I'd love to run track and make the Olym- pics," he said, but Boo, Boo, AAU The present situation for ost- graduate trackmen in this coun- try is not a happy one, according to Jones and the amateurs he knows. "You have to take a pay dock every time you take off to go to a meet." explained Jones, a physi- cal education teacher in Detroit. "I think I've lost 500 dollars that way in two years." A man endowed with the talent McRae has will turn naturally to the sport which offers him the most, and he feels that he just cannot afford to pass up the op- portunity to play pro football. McRae, an all-conference left halfback last season, is aiming for a spot at flanker back with the pros, so that he will be able to put his speed to use as a pass- catcher. Not on Trees About his main problem, his size, he seems to feel the same way as Michigan backfield coach Hank Fonde does. "I think any time you've got enough speed, you've got enough weight," Fonde commented after the football season ended. "After all, you don't find players with that much speed and quickness every day (every- body says McRae would be a :09.5 man in the 100-yd. dash) ." And McRae thinks he can get up' to 187 lbs. with weight-lifting to move into the same range as Baltimore's 190-lb. flanker, Lennie Moore. So for Bennie McRae, who has been a football player built like a trackman ever since ie came to Michigan four years ago as the leading high school ground-gainer in Virginia, there are still some goals he would like to reach before he becomes a football player built like a football player: 1) Beat Howard this Saturday in defense of his Big Ten high hurdle championship; 2) Beat Tarr next month to come up with his first NCAA title; 3) Maybe even beat Jones, Tarr and everybody else who has ever whipped him when he was sub- par physically to win his first AAU championship next month. And, oh yes, he would like to get at least a share of that col- legiate record in the process. (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of two stories deal- ing with Michigan's chances in the forthcoming Big Ten golf meet. This article deals with the other nine teams in the conference.) By JIM BERGER Five closely-matched teams and a new rule will highlight the 1962 version of the Western Confer- ence golf meet this weekend at Champaign. Minnesota, Purdue, Indiana, Michigan State and Wisconsin all will bring teams into the meet that might walk away with the crown. However, a new rule ini- tiated this year could make this conference meet anybody's. In Single Round The new rule will have each team count the five low men in each single round. The old rule had it that a team would take the five low men for the entire 72 holes. Michigan golf Coach Bert Kat- zenmeyer explains the significance of this new rule. "In previous years under the old rule, a player on one team who shot his first two rounds on the opening day in the 80's would usually be worth noth- ing for the team," said Katzen- meyer, "he would just go through the motions on that last day, Palmer "Takes Open Tourney FORT WORTH (P) - Pressure- proof Arnold Palmer unleashed another dazzling windup yester- day to trip Johnny -Pott by four strokes in an 18-hole playoff for the $40,000 Colonial National In- vitation Golf Championship. Palmer, leading by one stroke after nine holes, trimmed three shots from par on the back nine of the sprawling par 70 course to capture his first title here and pick up a fat $7,000 paycheck. He had a 37 going out and, in typical Palmer fashion, a red hot 32 coming in for a one-under-par 69. Pott, who never led the power- ful Latrobe, Pa.,belter, tacked to- gether a 38-35-73 for second- place money of $3,500. The victory was the third straight for Palmer, his sixth cur- rent triumph and his 32nd major championship. It boosted his 1962, earnings to a fantastic total of $59,308. Pott's dismal finish was no doubt particularly disappointing after coming from seven shots behind Saturday to tie Palmer with 72- hole totals of 281, one over par. knowing that his score wouldn't be counted. "Under the new rule, that same player will be able to help his team," he continued, "and even the poorest golfer will have at least one good round in four." In last year's meet at Bloom- ington, Ohio State took the crown. Sparked by their number-one and number-two men, Jack Nicklaus and Mike Podolski, respectively, the Buckeyes swept to victory. Nicklaus, now a very successful touring professional, took the in- dividual medal with a one under par 283 while Podolski notched a 299 for third place in the individ- ual total. Not This Year This season there will be no one dominating player such as Nicklaus, and no team with the one-two punch that the Buckeyes had last season. Taylor Cops Golf Title Bruce Taylor fired a blistering tJniversity course record of a 10- under par 62 to capture the First Annual Michigan Daily Sports Staff Golf Tournament Sunday. A pay check for $3,500 was awarded to the winner. Taylor virtually ran away from the field with a whopping eight- stroke lead. Runner-up Dave Good posted a two-under 70 to collect second-place money of .$2,000 Dave (The Escanaba Flash) An- drews and Gary (Player) Winer dueled to a third place tie with 72's. They each picked up a check for $1,200. The tournament was sponsored by The Michigan Daily sports staff and the total purse was $16,000 (play money). Taylor and Good played in the1 last threesome of the day and there was some doubt as to who had won the tournament. (All scores were calculated according to the Calloway system, which subtracts poor holes from the gross score.) For Men and Women- IT'S "CONTINENTAL" HAIRSTYLES GALORE!! "Tonsorial Querie invited" -Completely air conditioned- THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theater Katzenmeyer rates Minnesota as the prime contender with Pur- due close behind. "I thought Min- nesota had one of the best chances to take it last year, and just about everyone returns again this year," said Katzenmeyer. The Gophers will be relying on Rolf Demming, a senior this sea- son who took second in the indi- vidual crown last year with a 297. Other top players for Minnesota are junior Harry Newby and sen- ior Jim Pfleider. Well Balanced Team Purdue, also a young team, will be relying . on a well balanced team. Junior Steve Wilkinson and seniors Mark barnell and Jerry Jackson are three big men for the Boilermakers. MichiganState with number- one man Buddy Badger along with seniors Gary Barrett and Gene Hunt will also be right there in the running. Indiana, also with another well-balanced team, has an equally good chance. Wisconsin, which finished ninth last year, has only one "claim to fame" this season. They defeated Minnesota, 36-0, in a triangular meet. Same Position Of the other teams in the con- ference, Iowa, Northwestern and Michigan will be in about the same position, all battling for a spot in the first position. Ohio State and Illinois appear to have real troubles, and have little chance in the upcoming meet. The new rule will be significant and with five teams battling for the crown it will probably be as Katzenmeyer predicts "anbody's meet." j Ii, Thesauri Veteris FELIX A. PAPPALARDI, JR., Conductor SUNDAY, MAY 2Q 8:30 P.m. HILL AUDITORIUM Admission Free PROGRAM .. Gabrieli Telemann Purcell Pachelbel Dencke Mozart SOLOISTS.3. . Louis Stout Willis Patterson Gary Glaze Walker Wyatt Lavetta Loyd Noel Papsdorf Full Chamber Orchestra, Chorus Brass Ensemble BEN McRAE ... defends title "Bennie might come around every day and work for two hours. When I work I might get out only once a week, but it's a hard work- out and I know exactly what part of my form I'm working on. "And there's another thing, too. He has a tendency in the big races to run the man and not the hurdles, and you've got to run the hurdles. I've noticed he shortens up on his stride when he looks at his man, and then he hits a flur- dle," Junes commented. DISCOUNT RECORDS' SALE THIS WEEK ANGEL. RCA VICTOR COLUMBIA LONDON Pops, Classics, Jazz, Bd'wy Shows, etc. 40%,QOFF lively BoLh HofsLaeLLr, Ohio $Lao 64 1' I i 5.98 Cat. Price 3 59 4.98 3.98.i Cat. Price Cat. 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