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February 19, 1963 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-02-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY,FEBRU

NU Defeats 'M' Cag ers, 62-61

FUTURE BRIGHTENS:
Thinclads Mak Turn-Around

Guard Marty Riessen was foul-
ed and missed his first shot on a
one-and-one foul situation.
Michigan took the ball down-
court and John Harris put a jump-
er through the hoop to make the
score, 63-62. There were nine sec-
onds left and the Wolverines foul-
ed Riessen again. This time he had
two shots and missed them both.
The ball was passed down the
court to Cole who drove down
the baseline in a smart maneuver.
It appeared that Cole would eith-
er make the lay-up or draw a
foul. But as he went up to make
the shot, he was hindered enough
by several Northwestern players
that he missed tle shot. The re-
bound was handled momentarily
by Buntin and finally reached
George Pomey.
Buzzer Sounded
At this point the buzzer sound-
ed, ending the game. No foul was
called against Northwestern on
Cole's drive despite protests to the
referee by the Wolverine players.
Michigan had fallen behind at
halftime 33-25 and' after several
minutes of the second half was
down 39-27. But the Wolverines
battled to within five points when
Coach Dave Strack took all his
starters out of the game except
Buntin at 12:30. He substituted
Tom Ludwig, John Oosterbaan,
Larry Tregoning, and George Pom-
ey for his regulars. With Ooster-
baan scoring six points on jump
shots the Wolverines tied the score
at 50-50 at 8:27.
Stole Ball
Ludwig made the 'score 50-48
when he stole the ball from Falk
and raced the length of the court
to make the lay-up.
In the first half, neither team
could build up more than a three-
'point margin until Northwestern
broke away from Michigan in the
last four minutes to take a 33-25
halftime lead.
Strack called a time out at 6:55
with the Wolverines leading 22-
21. But after play resumed Michi-

gan still was frustrated in its ef-
forts to pull decisively ahead.
Coach Bill Rohr had substitut-
ed three fresh players into the
lineup during the time-out and one
of them-sophomore Don Jackson
-proved to be too much to handle.
Three Baskets
Jackson scored three baskets on
jump shots and tipped another in
to pace his team's scoring splurge.
Another late starter, Captain
Bill Gibbs, pumped in the other
two NU baskets in this period.
Michigan's last basket of the
half came at 3:35 when Larry Tre-
goning completed a high, arching
pass to Buntin under the boards.
Buntin made the lay-up but from
then on the Wolverines were held
scoreless.
Greater Accuracy
Northwestern had greater ac-
curacy from the floor in the first
half. NU shot 38 per cent to Mich-
igan's 30 per cent. In addition,
the Wildcats outrebounded the
Wolverines 28-26. Buntin led the
rebounders and scorers for both
teams in the first half. He had
nine grabs off the boards and 11
points. Cantrell had nine points to
take second place scoring honors.
Another Squeaker
MICHIGAN

By CHARLIE TOWLE
"Will the real Michigan track
team please stand up," is a re-
quest local track fans might be
making after the performance of
the Wolverine cindermen in the
past two weeks.
NCAA, NIT
Make Bids
NEW YORK ( ) - Loyola of
Chicago, second-ranked team in
the nation with a 21-1 record,
headed a list of eight teams chos-
en at large yesterday to compete
in the silver anniversary National
Collegiate Athletic Association
basketball championship.
Loyola was chosen to open first
round competition in the Mid-East
section.
Others picked by sections in-
cluded:
EAST - New York University
13-2.
MIDWEST - Colorado State
University 16-4, Texas Western
15-5 and Oklahoma City 15-7.
FAR WEST - Seattle 17-4, Ore-
gon State 14-6 and Utah 'State
19-5.
The selections left only three at-
large spots to be filled in the tour-
nament bracket, which will in-
clude conference champions who
are automatically qualified.
These teams' will compete in
first round eliminations beginning
at various sites March 9 and March
11.
Meanwhile, the National Invita-
tion Tournament announced two
teams - Miami of Florida and
Providence - had accepted bids
for the rival event March 14-23
at Madison Square Garden. Miami
has a 19-4_record

Cole
Harris
Buntin
Cantrell
Herner
Tregonin
Pomey
Ludwig
Oostreba
Totals
Lopossa
Keeley
Woislaw
Falk
Riessen
Miller
Gibbs
Jackson
Totals
MICHIGE
NORTHM

G F T
6 1-3 13
1 2-2 4
8 5-8 21
5 2-3 12
I 0-0 2
1 0-1 2
0 0-0 0
1 0-0 2
an 3 0-0 6
26 10-17 62
NORTH WESTERN
G F T
3 3-4 9
1 0-2 2
1 1-1 3
8 7-8 23
4 4-7 12
0 0-0 0
2 0-0 4
5 0-2 10
24 15-24 63
AN 25 37-62
WESTERN 33 30--63

A

1

I

This Week in Sports
FRIDAY
HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan State
GYMNASTICS-Minnesota at Sports Building, 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
BASKETBALL-Michigan at Purdue
HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan State
TRACK-Michigan Indoor Federation Championships at Yost
Field House, 1 p.m. 'and 7:30 p.m.
SWIMMING-Ohio State at Matt Mann Pool, 3 p.m.
WRESTLING-Michigan State at Yost Field House, 4 p.m.
An Exclusive
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Special STUDENT SHIP departing June 29, 1963
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daily, Sightseeing, Tour escort, Tips, Taxes, transportation
within Europe.
Reservations are limited and all deposits are due by February 8.
Detailed itinerary available upon request from the College Desk of .. .
HILAND TOURS, INC.
4862 Woodward Avenue-Detroit 1, Michigan phone: 832-1300

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