THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 - - ~vlYv tu -- a - i:- SIJNUAY ', MARCH 3, 1963 3 Wolverine Cagers] 3untin-CoieHarris Trio Notch 70 Points; eared Twin Post Offense Flunks Test Popple Sixth-Ranked Illini, 84-81 I I f BIG TEN RUNNER-UP: M' Trackmen Place Second By LLOYD GRAFF Tom Cole-and John Harris sup- plied the crucial difference in Michigan's thrilling upset of sixth- ranked Illinois yesterday before an ecstatic throng of 9,400 at Yost Field House, 84-81. Harris and Cole, playing their last Big Ten game before a home crowd, scored 21 and 22 points and -collected 15 and 16 rebounds respectively. But while the two forwards played inspired ball the entire game, the game winning thrust came from Bill Buntin. Scoring Rampage The acclaimed sophomore went on a rampage in the second half scoring 14 consecutive points for Michigan. The splurge brought the Wolverines from a 53-52 deficit to a 66-58 lead. Buntin finished with 27 points, high for the team. Michigan doggedly maintained the lead despite the determined re- sistance of Illinois and Dave Downey. The Fighting Illini were able to cut the lead to one point with nine seconds remaining but a last second lay-up by Larry Tregoning clinched the final out- come. The moment of truth for the Blue came when Buntin fouled out with 3:10 left, with the score standing 76-70. Michigan went in- to a semi-stall looking only for a cripple or a foul. They were oblig- ed with both. Coach Dave Strack remarked after the game that the "big dif- ference was the play of Harris. This was his best game since Houston. He came through with the critical baskets." Strack also praised Cole's aggressive play against his old high school op- ponent Dave Downey, though the Illinois shotmaker did notch 29 points, tops an the game. The contest started with a fast scoring spree and then slackened off for the rest of the first half. Bill Burwell successfully checked Buntin's outside shot holding him to just seven points in the stanza, 'but Harris and Cole made up for it, meshing 15 and 11 points out of Michigan's total of 39. Illinois resorted to the twin totem offense after ten minutes had elapsed, as Skip Thoren en- tered the game. The Wolverines immediately went into a zone de- fense for the first time this sea- son. It was probably the last. The Illini picked up two ridiculously easy baskets as the Michigan zone neglected to cover one side of the court. Strack hastily called time out and abandoned the unsuccessful zone putting Harris on Thoren man to man. He commented after- wards in a jubilant locker room that "we tried to slip into a zone but we just didn't handle it right. I guess we just aren't a zoning team." Cantrell Guards Bob Cantrell was Small's con- tinual companion throughout the game, holding the Illinois guard to a bare seven points, 13 shy of his average. Michigan as a team played dilligent defense and held the . Illini's vaunted race horse offense well in barness. Illinois scored just two buckets on fast breaks one of which was neutral- ized by a charging foul. In the running department Michigan ac- tually faired better than the run- and-shoot Illini, scoring on eight fast breaks. The Wolverines maintained their conference lead in rebounding, garnering 55 to 49 for Illinois. Michigan scored numerous times by scavenging the garbage com- ing off the rim and stuffing it back in. Illinois dropped out of a first place tie with Ohio State due to its loss and State's 95-75 victory over Purdue. Michigan moved into a fourth place tie with Indiana, Monday night's opponent. Last Home Game -Daily-Bruce Taylor BIG BILL BUNTIN-Michigan's strong ceniter, Bill Buntin, shows his power by driving through the Illinois defense to put in an easy lay-up. Illini players are Bill Small (53), Dave Downey (44), and Bill Burwell (25), and Bob Starnes (44). Michigan's Tom Cole (31) and Jorn Harris (behind Cole) stand by. Sparkling Defense Marks 'Greatest Game of Year' (Continued from Page 1) Iowa's Hollingsworth. The Ameri- can indoor 440 record is 47.2. Earlier in the meet, Michigan was involved in another Big Ten record and this one turned oat to be more pleasant for the Wolver- ines. The record was set by Cap- tain Charlie Aquino who toured 1000 yards in 2:09.9. Aquino was the defending champion in this event. After playing around with the field for the first 600 yards, he stretched out a 15 lard lead which he held all the way. Themother records broken in the meet came' in the high jump and the 880-yd. run. Bill Holden of Wisconsin cleared the hign jump bar at 6'10" to break the oi mark of 6'8%/$". Bill Frazier of Iowa showed the 880 field how it is done as he ran a 1:51.8 half-mile to break the old mark of 1:52.6. The record was previously held by Michigan's 1962 Captain Ergas Leps. Ted Kelly, running in the 880 for Michigan, clocked a 1:53.1. This is usually good enough to win but this time was only good enough for a third place. Other records which were tied came in the 70-yd. low hurdles and in the 60-yd. dash. Smith Wins Lows Running the lows for Wisconsin, which was missing last year's win- ner in this event Larry Howard because of a leg injury, was Bill Smith. Smith showed that he didn't have to take a back seat to anyone on the Wisconsin team by clocking a.:07.8 to tie the existing record. Bob Moreland of Michigan State earned himself the title of "Mr. Consistency" with his current rec- ord tying pattern. Running in the prelims, the semi-finals, and the finals of the 60-yd. dash, More- land was clocked each time in :06.1. This time ties the existing record first set in 1935 by Jesse Owens and equaled twice since. The meet, for the Michiganl track team and Coach Don Can- ham, needless to say was a dis- appointment. But this was one of those meets in which every man on the squad was giving every ounce of his energy all the time. Hawkeyes Win Championship 60 - YD. DASH - 1. Moreland (MSU); 2. Adams (Pur.); 3. Holland (Wis.); 4. Jackson (Ill.); 5. Lewis (MSU). Time-:06.1. Equals Big Ten record.) HIGH JUMP - 1. Holden (Wis.) 6'10"; 2. Miller (Ind.) 6-8; 3. Sideney (Iowa) 6-6; 4. Ammerman (M) 6-6; 5. Mohr (Wis.) 6-4. (Big Ten record.) 600-YD. RUN-1. Kerr (Iowa); 2. Bernard (M); 3. Montalbano (Wis.); 4. Horning (MSU); 5. Hughes (M). Time-i1:10.0. 300-YD. DASH - 1. Washington (Pur.); 2. Lewis (MSU); 3. Blanheim (I11.); 4. Hunter (M); 5. Reese (M). Time-: 30.9. 880-YD. RUN-1. Frazier (Iowa); 2. Miller (Minn.); 3. Kelley (M); 4. Gill (Wis.); 5. Huckaba (OSU). Time-1:51.8. (Big Ten record.) 70-YD. LOW HURDLES-1. Smith (Wis.); 2.: Gardner (Iowa); 3. Wil- liams (NU); 4. Anderson (Minn.); 5. Peckham (MSU). Time-:07.8. (Equals Big Ten record.) TWO-MILE RUN-i. Carius (Ill.); 2. Parks (OSU); 3. Murray (M); 4. Kramer (Iowa); 5. Trimbe (Iowa). Time-9:11.0. POLE VAULT-i1. Wolff (Ill.) 14'- 6"; 2. Morrow (Minn.) 14-6; 3. Mor- row (Minn.) 14-6; 4. Nelson (Wis.) 14-3; 5. Wade (M) 14-0. ONE-MILE RELAY -- 1. Iowa (Richards, Rocker, Hollingsworth, Kerr); 2. Michigan; 3. Michigan State; 4. Wisconsin; 5. Purdue. Time --3:14.7. (Big Ten record.) ONE MILE RUN--1. Fischer (Il.); 2. Lally (1Il.); 3. Loker (Wis.); 4. Hayes (M); 5. Castle (MSU). Time- 4:13.7. 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES-1. Lam- sky (Minn.); 2. Nuttall (M); 3. Peckham (MSU); 4. Muller (Wis.); 5. Gardner (Ill.). Time-:08.6. 1000-YD. RUN-1. Aquino (M); 2. Trimble (Iowa); 3. Creagan (Wis.); 4. Thronsen (Minn.); 5. Fulcher (MSU). Time - 2:09.9. (Big Ten record). SHOT PUT -- 1. Hendrickson (Wis.); 2. Ezerins (Wis.); 3. Schmitt (M); 4. Puce (M); 5. Soudek (M). Distance-55'7". TEAM SCORING: Iowa 43, Michigan 41, Wisconsin 40, Michigan State 30, Illinois and Minnesota each 22, Purdue 14, In- diana and Northwestern each 7 and Ohio State 5. Even in finishing second, the team had nothing to be ashamed about. Said Don Canham to the team after the meet, "We can just put this one behind and work on winning the Big Ten Champion- ship outdoors. LAST LOSS: North Dakota Wains 6-5; Gains First-Place Tie GRAND FORKS, N.D.--Despite Gary Butler's for point output last night North Dakota hockey squad posted a 6-5 decision over the Wolverines. The win put North Dakota into a first place tie with Denver in the WCHA standings. North Da- Wrestlers Win Michigan's wrestling team scored a decisive 17-12 victory over Iowa at Iowa City yester- day.I Carl Rohdes, Lee Dietrick and Chris Stowell socred the only Wolverine victories. Wayne Miller, Rick Bay and Jack Barden had matches that ended in draws. The Hawkeyes won only two matches. kota has an 11-5-2 record while Denver stands at 12-6-0. Butler notched two goals and a pair of assists to pace the squad. It may well give him the league scoring championship, depending on the outcomes of the incomplete games. The season record of 3-14-3 leaves the icers well down in the league basement. NoDaks Whin, 6-5 MICHIGAN NORTH DAKOTA Gray G Lech Pendlebury D Goodacre Rodgers D Roberts Wilkie C Gurba Butler W Merrifield Butts W Chigol FIRST PERIOD SCORING: M- Cole Coristone, Kartusch) 2:08; ND -Dyda (Matheson, Stornsteen) 4:- 17; ND-Merrifield (Ross) 6:14; M- Butler (Rodgers) 9:51. Penalties: M -Kartusch (roughing) 10:11; ND- Chigol (roughing) 10:11; M-Pendle- bury (holding) 14:04. SECOND PERIOD SCORING: ND -Stokaluk (McLean, Sutherland) 9:44; M-Wilkie (Rodgers, Butler) 10:50; ND-Matheson (Stornsteen, Dyda) 14:01; ND-Stokaluk (Dyda, Sutherland) 18:32. Penalties: M- Kartusch (holding) 6:25; ND-Ro- berge (interference) 17:03; ND-- Dyda (tripping) 19:18. THIRD PERIOD SCORING: ND- Chigol (Merriwel, Roberge) 4:25; M-Butts (Butler, Wilkie) 4:44; M- Butler (Babcock, Wilkie) 9:25. Cole f Harris f Buntin c Cantrell g Herner g Tregoning TOTALS Starnes f Downey f Burwell c Small g Brody g Thoren f Edwards f TOTALS MICHIGAN G F 8-19 6-9 8-20 5-9 12-29 3-3 2-10 2-2 1-4 0-0 f 3-4 0-0 34-86 16-23 ILLINOIS G F 2-8 4-5 12-27 5-7 9-16 3-3 3-12 1-1 6-11 0-1 1-4 0-0 1-1 0-0 34-79 13-17 R 16 15 12 2 5 2 55 R 8 12 1 6 7 1 49 P 3 3 5 2 1 0 14 P 4 4 1 1 2 5 17 T 22 21 27 6 2 6 84 T S 29 21 7 12 2 2 81 By MIKE BLOCK "It was our best game of the year." Dave Strack said it on his 40th birthday, and while such a state- ment may not come as shocking to someone who saw Michigan defeat sixth-ranked Illinois, 84-81, it sums up the situation perfectly. The Wolverines. didn't exactly annihilate the. Illini, but they left no doubt as to who was the best team on the floor yesterday. Al- though thei' dshootingpercentage, both in field goals and in free throws, wasn't spectacular, they outplayed Illinois in virtually every other department - includ- ing, apparently, desire. Illini Toughest For it was Michigan, and not the men from the Land of Lincoln, who looked like the team fighting for the Big Ten basketball cham- pionship. Nevertheless, it was the consensus among Wolverine play- ers and coaches that Illinois was the best aggregation they've run into this year, including Ohio State. All of which goes to show that the Wolverines were a vastly superior team to the one which dropped two games to the Buck- eyes earlier this year. Even though the Wolverines showed plenty of offensive spark, especially via the layup, it was their defensive prowess which kept them above water. Illinois' 81 points was nine below its Big Ten average of 90, and the difference was mainly due to Bob Cantrell's superb coverage of . Illini guard Bill Small. Clings Like Cloth Small had been averaging al- most 18 points per game, but that didn't. seem to concern Cantrell, who clung to him all afternoon like a Siamese twin, and limited him to a paltry seven. It wasn't that Small was missing his shots- but that Cantrell was harassing him to the extent that the senior hot shot simply couldn't get clear to take a pass. Then there was the case of the abortive t w i n totem offense. Assistant coach Jim Skala put it aptly after the game when he commented, "Illinois depends on the two center offense when their regular one doesn't work. But when that gets fouled up, they're stuck, and have to go back to the original one, which they abandon- ed in the first place." Towers Topple Thus, when Skip Thoren enter- ed the stage to pair up with fel- low skyscraper Bill Burwell mid- way through the first half, Mich- igan responded by jumping out to a six-point lead. Despite their height disadvantage, the members of the Wolverine front line, Bill Buntin, Tom Cole and John Har- ris, were able to bottle up Thoren completely, while Burwell was re- legated to shooting jumpers over their heads rather than layups. Burwell still played a respect-. able game (Strack remarked that he was "surprisingly good offens- ively"), but Thoren had a meager two points and fouled out ignom- iniously with 7:22 to go in the game. Furthermore, the Illini of- fense degenerated after a while into one of deliberate free -lanc- ing, with little in the way of pass- and-cut patterns Michigan used so effectively. Leading the charge for Illinois was one Dave Downey, who dis- played a remarkable assortment of moves designed to get him into the proper position to use his soft touch. While Cole didn't exactly contain his old high school rival, he played almost on a par with him, scoring just seven fewer points, and outrebounding him 16-12. "He'll make a good pro guard someday," said Cole of Downey. But Cole and Harris, responding to the huge crowd's support of a senior in his last home game with probably the best game either has played, were the pros yesterday afternoon. 'M' Takes Fourth The Public is Invited (This advertisement paid for by the University Press Club of Michigan) 1 UNIVERSITY LECTURES IN JOURNALISM Correspondent for The Baltimore Afro-American will speak on: "E NEWS WE DO NOT GET" Wednesday, March 6 at 3 p.m. RACKHAM AMPH ITH EATRE I I Tankers Down MSU, 55-50 Ohio State Illinois Minnesota MICHIGAN Indiana Wisconsin Northwestern Iowa Michigan State Purdue w 10 9 L 2 3 8 5 7 5 7 5 6 6 5 7 5 7 3 9 1 12 Results Pct. .833 .750 .615 .583 .583 .500 .417 .417 .250 .077 REFERENCE All Subjects Thousands at 19C and up ULRICH'S BOOKSTORE A By BOB ZWINCK Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan State rooters must be content with Mike Wood's record - shattering performance in the 200-yd. free- style as better balance earned the Wolverine tankers a 55-50 victory. Wood closed out his home career in spectacular fashion, a 1:46.4 time, and broke five of his own records and pending records by over two seconds. The Michigan State pool, varsity, and dual meet standards fell, as did the pending Big Ten and NCAA marks. Misses Record Although the time was also un- der the listed American record, it cannot be considered because a hand touch at each turn is re- quired. Under a new NCAA rule this year, a hand touch is un- necessary in collegiate meets. Wood's splits were 23.1 'nd 49.1 at 50 and 100-yds., giving him a phenominal start toward his rec- ord. He also took the 100-yd. free- style wth a 48.4 mark and an- chored the victorious freestyle relay team. As expected, the Spartans dom- inated all the sprints, but the only other event they could take was the individual medley. Second for Riutta Wolverines Jim Riutta and Tom Burns swam very strong races in the 50 but had to settle for second and third at 22.5 and 22.8 as MSU's Jeff Mattson picked up a couple of feet on the turn to whiz home in 22.1. Mattson pushed Ed Bartsch to his second consecutive sub-two minute time in the backstroke in a real cliff-hanger. Bartsch trail- ed through the first half of the race before rallying to go ahead after 150 yards. He finished in 1:59.9 and handed Mattson only his second loss of the year despite setting a State varsity record of 2:01.8. In the 500-yd. freestyle Roy Burry withstood a late rush by Dick Gretzinger for the narrowest of victories, 5:11.0 to 5:11.1. Tom Dudley, who finished third, took an early lead and held it till late in the race. Burry crept by him, as did Gretzinger, with about 100 yards to go. Gretzinger pulled even in the last two laps and bettered his own previous best by over four seconds but was still out-touched by Burry. Yesterday's The Wolverines s w e p t events, the butterfly and breaststroke. 'M' Sweep In the 'fly Jeff Moore and two the Jeff Ohio State 95, Purdue 75 Michigan 84, Illinois 81 Minnesota 105, Indiana 73 Wisconsin 92, MSU 89 (ovt.) Northwestern 76, Iowa 66 Georgia 79, Florida 77 Rice 83, Texas Christian 76 Baylor 73, Southern Methodist 72 Vanderbilt 75, Georgia Tech 74 Louisville 73, Ohio U. 49 Mississippi State 75, Mississippi 72 Tulsa 86, North Texas 71 Duke 68, Wake Forest 57 Bucknell 95, Colgate 84 Wichita 73, Chicago Loyola 72 PRO SCORES NBA Boston 122, New York 117 Syracuse 152, Detroitk128 NHL Toronto 4, New York 3 Detroit 7, Montreal 1 I Opposite Engineering Arch Longstreth turned in 2:02.6 and 2:03.6 performances to finish well ahead of Spartan Chuck Strong. In the breaststroke, MSU's Bill Driver, who at this point in the meet had to finish first for a team triumph, started out quite fast and held the lead until the last 50 yards, but Geza Bodolay and Dick Nelson both passed him by for a narrow victory. ..: is.,.... . ... :" A{'" .+::i J :!"'" .r...1.r. .".J "Y" . . .. . . .i{i:?;"11......"'" :" i:.. .nJ." v"l'.. . .: . v."v . ." + .."." -.,x". f .r. v .. ./ IFC ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Wednesday 4:15 'I Y I March 6 Union, 3rd Floor Conference Room ...; r :;ir, vl br ::.. r : Y f } 3 ' :%} 'r'"";k :: f J J M.r': '" }J ~ {Q : : '.r :<;; r; REFRESHMENTS Senior Officers and Committee Chai rmen will be introduced. CDC A VED. If LILI EI W1 kA'aD I I