THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, THE MICITIGfX1DAILY STINDA V., Storm Past Wolverines, 75-68 Record Crowd of 9,775 Sees Ohio State Pull into Tie with Illinois for Big Ten Lead By LLOYD GRAFF A sudden flurry of eight points by Ohio State shortly after Michi- gan center Bill Buntin's fourth foul of the game proved decisive in yesterday's 75-68 loss to the Buckeyes. Played before a record crowd of 9,775 at Y t Field House, the game lowered Michigan's Big Tn record to 4-4 and dropped the Wolverines into the middle of the pack. Ohio State moved into a tie for first place with Illinois, both at 6-2. Bra dds Breaks Tie Brawny Bill fouled his adversary in the pivot, Gary Bradds, with 7:08 remaining in the contest with the score tied, 58-58. Bradds looking somewhat like a bald eagle with an enormous wing span, sunk his charity toss for one of the 34 points he amassed in the game. Larry Tregoning scored 14 sec- onds later on a jumper from the corner, putting Michigan in the lead, 60-59. Then the Buckeyes abruptly seized the initiative and cashed in four consecutive Michi- gan miscues to open up an in- surmountable margin, 67-60. Four Quick Ones Dick Ricketts, Doug McDonald and Jim Doughty clicked on jump shots, and then Dick Reasbeck pilfered a pass by Bob Cantrell, and drove for a lay-up to account for the eight markers. The game, billed as a rematch I between Buntin and Bradds, was dominated by the Buckeye junior just as their first meeting was. This time Bradds commanded a 34-21 scoring advantage and a 14- 10 rebounding edge. Tom Cole, with 16 points, was the only Wolverine besides Buntin in double figures, while Bradds got support from Reasbeck (16) and McDonald (10). Gasoline, Not Water Following the game, Michigan coach Dave Strack commented that the Buckeyes had the mo- mentum, "but we added the fuel to their fire at the critical time with our mistakes." After pulling into the lead, Ohio State mentor Fred Taylor in- structed his charges to "put the game in the icebox," which they did. The Wolverine cages were the epitome of frustration as they dashed across the court hoping for a steal or an Ohio violation. Neither came. The last resort was to foul again, but the desperation tactics were of no avail as Michi- gan could pull no closer than six points.; Take Halftime Lead The first half of the "spurty game" as Strack described it, found the Wolverines leading, 39- 31, after twenty minutes. Brilliant foul' shooting, 13 out of 15, pro- vided most of the margin. Buntin scored 15 of his 21 points in that half, coming on a variety of hooks, jumpers, and lay-ups. The Bradds versus Buntin duel was extremely close in this half as the Ohio center notched 16 points. Michigan was down, 26-18, with six minutes left in the half. Sud- denly Michigan exploded, in much the same way as the Buckeyes did in the second half. John Har- ris snatched a rebound, one of 15 he got to lead both teams, and then popped in a lay-up. 'M' Jumps Ahead From this point until the buzzer the Wolverines picked up 21 points while limiting Ohio State to a meager 5. Taylor remarked afterwards that Harris 'certainly didn't play like he had a bad ankle." Michigan employed a 1-3-1 of- fense much of the time, keeping Tom Cole in the center spot while Buntin played on the baseline. Ohio State combated it with a sagging man-to-man defense. Ohio gambled on Michigan's outside shooting, which has been notably weak in recent games in an attempt to smother Buntin in the middle. The calculated risk payed off as Doug Herner and Bob Cantrell could manage just 13 points between them. Improve Rebounding The Buckeyes also got the bonus of added rebounding position by using the sagging defense. Ranked ninth in conference rebounding, they gained a 44-40 advantage on Michigan, which is number one in this department. Taylor said it was the Bucks' "finest rebounding game of the year." Ohio State shot at a 44.8' per cent clip to Michigan's 36.9. In other contests the Wolverines have often been able to compensate Bradds Nails Cagers for a low shooting percentage but not yesterday as they could mus- ter only 65 shots to their oppon- ents' 67. Bradds, the Ohio State meal ticket for this season led the way by hitting 14 of 24 from the field, largely on turn-around jump shots from 10 to 15 feet out. Reasbeck, his gunnery mate, notched 6 of 14 from the outside to hinder Michigan's attempt to crowd Bradds underneath the boards. OSU Big Attraction The massive crowd was the largest in the history of Yost Field House, breaking the old mark set at last year's OSU game, and found people sitting just about everywhere but the mid- court line. Reserve seats were sold out by Thursday and general admission tickets were gone an hour before gametime. The venerable struc- ture was half-filled by 11:15 with eager students who were deter- mined to get a good vantage point. Roly-poly Jim Enright, dean of Big Ten referees, added his bit of color to the basketball spec- tacular as he officiated with his usual flair. Strangely enough, the rotund referee has officiated three of Michigan's four conference losses, which certainly could not put him in the Santa Claus cate- gory for Strack and his team. Cole Harris Buntin Cantrell Herner Tregoning Pomey Ludwig Totals McDonald Doughty Bradds Ricketts Reasbeck DeVoe F latt Bowman Totals MICHIGAN G F R P T 5-11 6-7 5 4 16 3-13 3-4 15 2 9 8-17 5-6 10 4 21 3-11 2-2 0 1 8 2-9 1-2 2 0 5 3-4 3-3 3 4 9 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 24-65 20-24 40 16 68 OHIO STATE G F R 4-10 2-2 7 3-9 1-3 6 14-24 6-9 14 3-6 2-2 4 6-14 4-4 5 0-2 0-0 2 0-1 0-0 1 0-1 0-0 0 P T 5 10 1 7 2 34 2 8 3 16 3 0 1 0 0 0 30-67 15-20 44 17 75 MICHIGAN 39 29-68 OHIO STATE 31 44--75 -Daily-Bruce Taylor BRADDS SCORES AGAIN-Ohio State center Gary Bradds shows the hustle that enabled him to score 34 points and grab 14 re- bounds against Michigan yesterday. Here he is making a layup early in the game. Also shown are Tom Cole (31) and Bill Bun- tin (22). FIDWELL STARS FOR GRADS: Frosh Cagers' Balance mer Michigan greats John Tidwell and M. C. Burton, who scored 21 and 14 points, respectively. Both Tidwell and Burton missed part of the first half. Merle Shanks, for- mer Oberlin star, added 16 for the losers. The game was enlivened consid- erably by the passing of Russell, who surprised both his opponents and teammates with his accurate, seemingly blind throws. With less than two minutes left and the score 82-77, the Law Club was pressing the freshmen. But Bill Yearby blocked a layup at- tempt and then Darden made a clutch drive shot to put the game I out of reach. Shanks hit for two free throws and Burton sank a -jump shot to close out the scoring. This is considered to be the best freshman team in Michigan history. The five starters are all high school all-staters, and fresh- man coach Tom Jorgensen still has enough on the bench to work in another five regularly into the games. I1 -Dauiy-Bruce Taylor JUMPING JOHN-Wolverine forward John Harris, rebounding here, had no trouble yesterday with the ankle he sprained a week ago. Harris, a senior, jumped well enough to lead both teams with 15 rebounds in the team's second loss of the season to Ohio State. F 'U 40% OFF LIST PRICE ON EVERY RECORD IN STORE THROUGH FEBRUARY with student I.D. WELCOME to the COPPER KETTLE CAFETERIA - State and Liberty - SUNDAY . . 4:00 P.M., Wednesday, February 20... Hill Auditorium LOX & BAGELS I