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January 07, 1962 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-01-07

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

fit AV

.. Ea M ir. a hiA1r AT+'. y a. TNf I

U1\Lti dHPi UHxLY

Volverine leers Rebound, 4-2

WIN IN FINAL EVENT:
Illinois Gymnasts Down
Michigan in Opener, 60-52

(Continued from Page 1)

Much to the surprise of the
dusky fans, the Wolverines took
he play awayfrom the locals right
rom the start, and finally opened
he scoring at 13:10 of the first
eriod.
With Tech captain Jerry Sulli-
'an sitting out a crosschecking
enalty, Larry Babcock beat Hus-
y goalie Gary Bauman with a 15-
t. angle drive in the near corner.
Berenson Scores
Exactly two minutes later,
Michigan's captain Red Berenson,
:illing a Wolverine penalty, stole
Tech pass deep in Husky terri-
ory and matched Babcock's shot
,o make it 2-0.
Sullivan, however, made it 2-1
t 6:17 of the second period with
MICHIGAN TECH
Gray -0 GBauman
Rogers D Seger
Morrison D Palante
Wilkie C Casey
Berenson W Johnson
Coristine W Angotti
First Period Scoring-M-Babcock
(Berenson, Pendlebury) 13:10; M -
Berenson (unassisted) 15:10. Penal-
ties-M-Berenson (illegal check)
0:20; M-Kartusch (tripping) 5:17;
T-Sullivan (cross checking) 12:14;
M-Kartusch (tripping) 14:40; T-
Draper (slashing) 15:46; M-Kolb
(holding) 16:08.
Second Period Scoring-T-Sulli-
van (Seger) 6:17; TL-Reballato
(IvanitzSullivan) 9:38; M-Hinne-
gan (Morrison, Kartusch) 11:51. Pen.
alties: T-Merlo (holding) 7:11; M
-Morrison (highsticking) 19:43 T
-Begg (highsticking) 19:43.
Third Period Scoring-M-Pendie-
bury (Babcock,, Kartusch) 18:46.
Penalties: M-Wilkie (tripping) 1:01;
T-Bauman (tripping served by Re-.
bellato) 2:45.
MICHIGAN 2 1 1-4
TECH 0 2 0-2
saves:
Gray (M) 9 6 5-20
Bauman (T) 11 8 18-37

a deflection. of Al Merlo's blue-
line bullet, and then at 9:38 of
the same period, Gene Rebellato
tied it up.
Then with the Husky fans
chanting "Go, go, go," Al Hinne-
gan quickly quieted the stadium
with what turned out to be the
Michigan winner. Defensemari
Wayne Kartusch started the play

by passing to cohort Ross Morri-
son, who carried into the corner
and shot. All Hinnegan had to do
was turn the wayside drive past
Bauman, who didn't have a
chance.
Michigan Coach Al Renfrew'
called the victory "a great one to
have" while in the other dressing
room, Husky mentor John Mac-

Innes took the blame for the loss.
"Our kids were tired," he said. "It
was our sixth game in nine days,
and all against good competition.
You just can't schedule games that
way and hope to win them all.
In the same breath, however, he
complimented the Wolverines for
taking the play away from his boys
in the third period.

By TOM WEBBER
Special To The Daily

ILLINOIS TRIUMPHS, 91-71:
Second Half Slows Cagers

By TOM WEBBER'
Special To The Daily
CHAMPAIGN - The Michigan
basketball team, behind by only
3 points at the half, suffered a
disastrous second half and lost a
very loosely played Big Ten basket-
ball opener to Illinois, 91-71.
The Wolverines went 6:23 into
the second half before scoring
their first basket and made fre-
quent errors in dropping their
sixth straight game. Michigan shot
a very cold 33.8 per cent for the
game, compared to Illinois' 41.8
'M' Cold Spell
While Michigan was only man-
aging two free throws in those
six minutes, Illinois scored 12, in-
cluding three easy layups, to go
ahead 54-39. At one time Illinois
led by 27 points.
Michigan made a good game of
it in the first half, battling from
ten points behind to close the;
margin to 40-37 at the buzzer.
The Wolverines actually had a
three point lead in the first period.

The game was very close until
Michigan's top scorer John Ooster-
baan, twisted his ankle and was
forced to leave the game for a
short time.
During his absence Illinois built
a one point margin into a ten
point30-20 lead. Oosterbaan then
returned to the floor, scored a
beautiful tip-in, and hit on 3 more
baskets to lead Michigan to its
lone comeback.
Anything gained -in the first
half, however, was quickly lost in
the bad second half. "Those first
ten minutes of the second half
were the worst we've played this
year," Coach Dave Strack said
after the game.
Illini Outrebounded
Michigan outrebounded Illinois
in the game, but as has often been
the case this season, lost the ball
too often without a shot. Illinois
shot at only a 35 per cent clip in
the first half, but hit a hot 21
for .43 in the decisive second half.
Best marksman for the Illini
was left hander Jerry Colangelo'
who connected on ten of 15 at-
temps to finish with 21 points. His'
partner in the back court, Bill
Small, topped him with 22 points
hitting 11 of 20. The other three
Number Six

starters also hit double figures
in a balanced scoring attack.
Center John Harris led Michi-
gan scoring with 18 points. Harris :"
held 6'8" Bill Burwell to nine re- r
bounds and was able to drive
around him for layups on occasion.
After Illinois zipped off to its
big margin in the second half,
play became very ragged with both . Daily-Bruce Taylor
teams losing the ball frequently IN FULL CONTROL-Michigan wrestling captain Don Corriere
and getting easy layups. is in full control of his opponent, Pitt's August Arrigone, in their
Next week the Wolverines will 167-lb. match yesterday at Yost Field House. Corriere crunched
be thrown to the Buckeyes at Arrigone, 12-4, but the Panthers and Wolverines fought to a 13-13
Columbus. standoff at the meet's end.
Wolverines, Panthers Tie, 13-13
h1,,

CHAMPAIGN-Tied 48-48 with
one event left, the Michigan gym-
nasts finally fell to Hal Holmes
and Illinois 60-52 in yesterday's
dual meet.
Holmes the Illini's great tumbler,
scored 98, 97, 97 and 100 as the
last performer of the day to pick
up six points and ice the meet'
for the Illini. Teammate Bob
Glomb finished second and Bill
Cason fourth to give Illinois twelve
points in the final event.
Bad Breaks Hurt
Michigan had a couple of bad
breaks along the way to make it
easier for Illinois. Michigan senior
Lew Fenner missed his dismount
after a good side horse routine and
had to settle for fourth. Lewis
Hymar had all sorts of trouble
and averaged only 27.5 points for
his efforts on the Trampoline.
Arno Lascari only averaged fifteen
on the horizontal bars in what
Coach Newt Loken termed a
"fluke."
Each team had its big events
in what was probably a preview
of the Big Ten meet. Illinois
pickedeup agmaximumof.13 points
on the side horse with a sweep
of the first three places and added
12 in tumbling in the final event.
Michigan's best was 12 points on
the parallel bars, but added 10
each on the horizontal bars and
the still rings.
It was those three events which
brought Michigan from a 32-16
deficit into the tie. Top Wolverine
performers were Gil LaRose who
scored 22 points, including two

firsts and two seconds. LaRose
won the horizontal bar and still
Holmes Stars
The outstanding performance,
however, was reserved for Holmes
in his great finish. His perfect
routine served as a terrific cli-
max for the meet. The routine was
a series of flips without once
touching his hands, a performance
which drew an ovation from the
crowd. After the meet, Loken said
that he still felt his team was
comparable to Illinois. "They (Il-
linois) gave a good team perform-
ance," he said.
"Handley performed very well in
spite of his injuries, - sustained
last summer. LaRose and (Tom)
Osterland performed well for us,'
he added. "Holmes was just great."
Holmes Too Much
FREE EXERCISE: 1. Hadley (I),
(I), 88Z. 4. Grace (I), 88.5 5. Buss
94.5. 2. La Rose (M), 89. 3. Aufrech
(M), 82. 6. Hynds (M), 81.5.
TRAMPOLINE: 1. Osterland (M),
94.5. 2. Golemb (1), 90. 3. Posey (1),
88. 4. La Rose (M), 83. 5. Flood (I),
41.5. 6. Hyman (M), 27.5.
SIDE HORSE: 1. Lawler (1), 95.
2. Hadley (I), 94. 3. Aufrecht (1),
92. 4. Fenner (M), 90.5. 5. Harris
(MW), 89, Levy (MW). 89 (tie).
HORIZONTAL BAR: 1. La Rose
(M, 92. 2. Hynds (M), 91.5. 3. Had-
ley (I), 89. 4. Schmeisang (I), 80.
5. Salter (1), 52. 6. Lascari (I), 15.
PARALLEL BARS: 1. Lascari (M),
96. 2. La Rose (M), 93.5; 3. Hadley
(1), 92. 4. Hynds (M), 85. 5. Salter
(I), 84.5. 5. Schmeisang (I), 81.
STILL RINGS: 1. La Rose (M),
92.5. 2. Hadley (1), 92. 3. L~ascari
(M), 85.5. 4. Schmeisang (I), 84.5.
5. Hynds (M), 83. 6. Salter (I), 77.5.
TUMBLING: 1. Holmes (I), 97.5.
2. Golumb (I), 91. 3. Osterland
(M), 89.5. 4. Casen (I), 87. 5. Hy-
man (M), 86. 6. Volk (I), 82.5.

1

'4

.,

I

ILLINOIS
Love
Downey
Burwell
Small
Colangelo
Starnes
Lovelace
Curless
Mills
Leeper
Edwards
Ferguson
Renner
Totals
MICHIGAN
Cole
Oosterbaan
Harris
Cantrell
Hall
Higgs
Herner
Brown
Schoenherr
Baldwin
Eveland t
Greenwald
Andrews
Totals

FG FT PF TP Reb.
3-7 5-7 3 11 12
5-18 2-3 5 12 15
6-19 4-6 3 16 9
11-20 0-0 1 22 2
10-15 1-1 4 21 4
1-5 0-0 1 2 3
0-0 0-0 1 0 0
0-0 0-0 0 0 3
1-3 0-0 0 2 1
0-0 2-2 1 2 0
0-1 0-0 0 0 0
0-1 0-0 0 0 0
1,2 1-2 0 3 2
38-91 15-21 19 91 51

-Daily-James Kesen
LOST CAUSE-Michigan swimming captain Bill Darnton comes
in anchoring the 1600-yd. freestyle relay to a second-place finish
behind Indiana, but he was too late to help more here or in
the 400-yd. relay. Darnton also gave the Wolverines a temporary
lead in the 500-yd. relay.

FG
4-14
7-15
7-14
3-10
3-16
1-2
1-3
0-0
1-3
0-0
0-0
0-1
0-2

FT PF'
7-7 3
0-1 2
4-4 3
0-0 1
5-9 1
1-1 2
0-0 0
0-1 3
0-0 0
0-0 0
0-0 0
0-0 0
0-0 1

TP Reb.
15 12
14 13
18, 12
6 5
11 6
3 1
2 1
0 2
2 0
0 0
0 0
0 1
0 3
71 56

By PETE DiLORENZI
Michigan's Jack Barden and
Pittsburgh's Tom Jeffries battled
to a 2-2 draw in their heavyweight
match and left a previous 11-11
tie score still tied at the meet's
end, 13-13, before some 450 fans
at Yost Field House yesterday af-
ternoon.
Barden jumped out to a 1-0 lead
at the outset of the second period
with a quick escape. Jeffries came
right back in the early moments
lead with two points on a reversal,
of the third period to take the
but Barden countered almost im-
mediately with an escape to knot
the score at 2-2.
Neither man had sufficient
riding tine to break the tie.
Pitt Pulls Away
The Panthers pulled out to. an
early 3-0 lead when Richard Mar-
tin, Eastern Collegiate Wrestling
Association 123-1b. champion, and
third place winner in the NCAA
toufnament last year, edged by
the Wolverines' Nick Armelagos,
3-2,.on riding time.
The Wolverines tied the score.
at 3-3 in the 130-lb. match as
Gary Wilcox romped over the
Panthers' Sherman Moyer, 7-2.
Fritz Kellerman put the Wolver-
ines in the lead by a 6-3 score
with another 7-2 rout--this time
over Pitt's David Osmun in the
137-lb. event.
Pitt made it 6-6 by virtue of
John Zollikoff's 6-0 win over the
Blue's Jim Keen at 147.
Tide Turns
In the 157-lb. match, Pitt's
Daryl Kelvington, leading the Wol-
verines' Wayne Miller, 4-1, at the
beginning of the third period,
found himself suddenly behind by
a 5-4 score in the closing seconds
of the match. He managed to
salvage a 5-5 draw, however, and
the score remained tied at 8-8.
Captain Don Corriere completely
overpowered Pitt's August Arri-
gone in the' 167-lb. match, winning
by a lopsided 12-4 score.
Grapplers Tie
123-Martin (P) decisioned Armel-
agos, 3-2.
130-Wilcox (M) decisioned Moyer,
7-2.
137-Kellerman (M) decisioned
Osmum, 7-2.
147-Zollikoff (P) decisioned Keen,
6-0.
157-Miller (M) and Kelvington,
drew, 5-5.
167-Corriere (M) decisioned Ar-
rigone, 12-4.
177 - Harrison (P) decisioned
Florence, 3-1.
H'wt.-Barden (M) and Jeffries,
drew, 2-2

Corriere's win put Michigan out
in front, 11-8.
Pitt came back to tie the score
at 11-11 in the 177-lb., contest as
James Harrison topped Bill Flor-
ence, 3-1, to set the stage for
Barden and Jeffries.

"Jeffries exposed himself to
some dangerous situations by
leaning in so hard on his man
(Barden), but he managed to stay
out of trouble."
Michigan's next dual meet .is
with Purdue here, on the 13th.

27-80 17-23 16

Indiana Wins in Big Ten Relays;
Michigan Places Third Behind MSU

By DAVE GOOb

i

Indiana's swimmers were every
bit as strong as their press ad-
vances promised they would be in
the Big Ten Invitational Relays
here yesterday, but Michigan was
shut out in the pool and could win
only the diving relay with Pete
Cox and Ron Jaco.
The Hoosiers were in such a big
hurry that the only two close races
all day were the two they lost,
both sprints, to Michigan State,
which got yeoman performances
from Mike Wood, Bill Wood and
Jeff Matson.
The Wolverines, defending
NCAA champions, beat the Spar-
tans in six of. ten races, but
couldn't match their sprinting
power. Michigan State wins in the
400and 200-yard freestyle relays
plus clutch seconds in the last
two events, the 500-yard freestyle
and 400-yardhmedley relays, were
enough to ease the Spartans past
Michigan for second place in the
meet.
Sleight-of-Hand?
Indiana won with an almost
unbelievable 103 points (out of a
possible 114), Michigan State
totaled 74, Michigan 70, Kenyon
27 and Wayne State 12%.
Coach Gus Stager didn't make
much use of his four graduating
swimmers. Backstroker. Alex Gaxi-
ola and butterflyer Dave Gilland-
ers swam their specialties once, but
freestyler John Urbanscok didn't
swim at all and breaststroker Ron
Clark's only appearance was as a
freestyle sprinter along with Gil-
landers.
Michigan fielded good three-
man teams in placing second in
the 300-yd. backstroke, butterfly,
breaststroke and individual medley
relays, and stayed fairly close to
Indiana in the first two.
ATTENTION
NOW OPEN

Paxiola put the Wolverines
ahead by a half-yard on the first
backstroke leg against the Hoos-
iers' Cary Tremewan, normally a
backstroker. Then Ted Stickles,
Indiana's world record-holder in
the individual medley, pulled past
Mike Reissing and gave a three-
yard lead to Mike Stock, world rec-
ord holder at 200 meters. It, was
like money in the bank, because
the fast-stroking Stock finished
with a five-yard lead over Fred
Wolf, who in turn came in some!
15 yards ahead of the Michigan
State trio.
In the butterfly Indiana's Olym-
pic gold medalist, Mike Troy, came
thrashing in with a three-yard;
lead over Jeff Moore. Jeff Long-
streth held even with the Hoosiers'
Frank Brunell, but even Gillanders
couldn't match the anchor leg of
Lary Schulhof.
IF

Indiana's Chet Jastremski (who
really is jet-propelled, no kidding),
Ken Nakasone and Cary Treme-
wan led in the breaststroke from
the start and came in nearly seven
seconds ahead of Jon Baker, Geza
Bodolay and Dick Nelson.
Three More Seconds
Michigan was hard-pressed by
Michigan State for second in the
individual medley relay, but Wolf's
strong anchor leg saved the two-
inch lead he got from Moore and
Longstreth:
Michigan's other two seconds
came in the 1600-yard freestyle,
in which Win Pendleton, Roy Bur-
ry, John Dumont and captain Bill
Darnton finished one-and-a-half
pool lengths behind Indiana and
the same distance ahead of Mich-
igan State; and the 200-yard med-
ley relay, in which Reissing, Nel-
son, Bob Schaefer and Dennis Flo-
den just touched out the Spartans.

I.

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