THE MICHIGAN DAILY dwell Sets Hoop Scoring Marks MANY IF'S TO THINK ABOUT: Grapplers Lost Meet,_But It Was Close By TOM WEBBER It's often easy for a Monday morning quarterback to sit back and look at a meet and find places where a loss could have been turned into a victory. The recent Big Ten wrestling meet is an example of this. Michi- gan lost the meet to Michigan State by the narrow margin, of four points and many are the places where these points could have been made up. If Nick Armelagos could have held on for 15 seconds more for a decision over the Spartans' George Hobbs. Or if a referee's decision had gone against Michigan State's John McCray, and even he was shocked when it didn't, he would not have reached the finals. Or if there would have been ten more seconds in Spartan Mike Senzig's match (he was flat on his back at the buzzer). Or maybe if Michigan's Corriere hadn't lost his quarterfinal match. Or possibly if Michigan State's Olka Johnson, Norm Young and Merle Prebel hadn't managed to eke out their wins (all of them by one point). JOHN TIDWELL ... adds to mark time we expected too much of John, but when the other players started to take up some of the slack, John did better, too."MN i Praises Everybody Strack had special praise for by MIKE GILMAN each member of the tem. "(Jon) Hall and (Charlie) Higgs did fine defensive jobs against Illinois, and (Scott) Maentz, (Bob) Brown, and Tale of a Benchwarmer (Tom) Cole did tremendous jobs on the boards, with Maentz and 'OLUMNS LIKE THIS are usually about the stars-the touchdown Cole scoring well too. This brought the happy coach kings, the home-run hitter, the big goal-getter, or the guy who back to Tidwell. "I sure hate to hits 20 points a game with his long jump shot. see John finish his career. I was Newspaper writers can easily fall into the trap of thinking that extremely lucky to have him here these are the only people on the sports scene. in my first year and. when he leaves, Michigan will have lost a Today, let's talk about the sub. You know, one of those guys that great ball player as well as a fine doesn't even start most game, the kind that has to fight like heck to person, even make the squad, a squad made up of a lot like him. Try Tom Wilson. Heard of him? If you're a died-in-the-wool hockey fan you might have seen him in action-occasionally-in the ia vZe past three years. He seldom makes the paper. You can usually find his name in the fine print of statistics-if you look hard. We even ran ACA a picture of him earlier this season. It was after an away game and l lee we didn't had many unused pictures in our files, so we used Tom. His distinction that night? He picked up the most penalties. Tom isn't exactly the smoothest player on the ice. Sometimes even the advantage of diving on a fa- the Michigan fans start riding him when he draws an apparently miliar board and in familiar sur- unnecessary penalty. But they all have to admit he's aggressive and rounding, "won." Webster was one of the hardest-hitting defensemen in the league. Little Louie An- certainly on a par with his per- gotti the hot-headed Michigan Tech forward, is probably still wearing formances throughout the year. bruises from a check Wilson threw on him here in Ann Arbor in early As further proof of Vitucci's bril- January. lance, Tom Gompf, who was sup-, posed to have given Webster his This was Wilson's last season of play for the Wolverines. He biggest competition, finished third wanted very badly to make theteam. As a sophomore he had lettered and fourth. on an injury-decimated team that skated much of the year with two Legacki'Loses, But lines and three defensemen. Last year, as a junior, he just went along Frank Legacki lost his 50 and for the ride. His only claim to fame was in being able to consume 100-yd. freestyle titles to fabulous larger meals than anyone on the team-and top them off with two Steve Jackman of Minnesota but malteds.j the Michigan captain almost sin- glehandedly won the 400-yd. free- THIS YEAR he was a senior. Reports strted filtering out of the style relay over favored Michigan practice, sessions: "Wilson is a tiger this year." "Wilson is hitting State. harder than anyone in praptice." "Wilson lost some weight." Legacki picked up ten feet On Lost some weight is right. The easy-going Wilson rapidly shed! Wood as he was timed in :47.6 20-plus excess pounds, going from 220 down to the sub-200 range- for the final 100-yds. Adding the still leaving him one of the biggest men in the league. customary half second for the roll- The first big stretch of competition this season came during the1 ing start to individual times in a Christmas road trip to the West. Opening in North Dakota with a relay, Legacki swam a :48.1 which win and a tie, and moving quickly to Colorado College for a win and beats Jeff Farrell's American rec- a loss, the Wolverines were a tired bunch of hockey players and ord of :48.2. Wood swam a :49.0, mighty Denver loomed ahead. but looked like he was standing still alongside the churning Le- Wilson hadn't seen a lot of action. Coach Al Renfrew still wasnt gacki. sure of the Ontario senior. But the other three defensemen were just However, in what have been the plain tired. single maneuver that finished off So Renfrew called a meeting. Wilson and roommate Pat Cushing Michigan, Indiana entered Mike left training table early and the rest of the squad quickly huddled._ Troy and Pete Sintz. The two Renfrew left the decision up to the team. picked up third and fifth respec- Wilson played a regular shift that night. tively and ten points. On the bus trip to that game, while the rest of the team talked "We thought that Slntz would half-heartedly about beating the Pioneers, Tom was the only one probably swim the .100, 220, and who sounded like he meant it. an anchor leg on one of the re- lays," commented Stager. "But he He played that way, too. can also go longer distances such Sure, he made mistakes. Some of them cost goals. too. But he as 440-yds. and 1,500 meters. didn't quit hitting, and that would have been easy to do when Denver (In 1960 the versatile Sintz fin- was playing its best period of hockey this season, getting six goals in ished second in the Big Ten 1,500 seven minutes of the first period. meters and won the 440. Troy, more renowned' as the world's N FACT, he'll probably never forget that Denver series. A substitute premier $ butterflyer, made the defenseman doesn't often get more than a casual glance from a Olmpic freestyle relay team last hockey crowd. But by the midpoint of the game, he'd bumped home- summer, town heroes Jerry Walker, Bill Masterson and Co. often enough and Dave Gillanders swam his two hard enough to have the fans in an uproar. best butterfly races ever as he almost beat Troy in the 200 and It may never happen again, but for the rest of the series, every won the 100. time Wilson took the ice, 500 rabid partisans rose to their feet with Stager now turns his attention a chorus of boos. to the NCAA meet, March 23-5 at He's played out his career at home and has never scored a goal Seattle. Defending champion in a Michigan uniform. When kiddingly told that a column might Southern California will be fav- get written about him if he ever scored, the reply was: "Forget the ored to retain its crown. The Wo- column, I'll just dive into the net and get the puck!" verines will not have to contend The playoffs are ahead, but Ann Arbor fans have seen him for with Indiana who is not permitted the last time. to enter NCAA, championship tels ie events as punishment for football Here's a tip of the hat to Tom and the dozens like him on every recruiting violations, team. They outnumber the headline-getters by quite a margin. If one or more of those ifs had happened, the conference crown might have stayed in Ann Arbor. "It sure was disappointing," mused Michigan Coach Cliff Keen on the Monday after. "But I'm very proud of the way my boys looked," he quickly added. This last statement seemed to hold a little water, because "his boys" had come home with three first places, two seconds, a third and a fourth. The three cham- pions - Fritz Kellerman; Jim Blaker, and Dennis Fitzgerald .-- were repeats from last year. And naturally Keen was eager to reflect on some of the key points of the meet. In some places he disagreed somewhat with the discretion of the referees, but made it a point to say that these were not excuses. "Nick (Armelagos) would have won his match if he had been given the three points for a near fall," he commented. This would seem to be in agreement with some of the fans who groaned when Armelagos was given one point when he almost pinned Hobbs. What about Corriere? "I think Don was subconsciously looking toward a match with Bob Mar- shall (167-lb. champ from Purdue) and got a little careless," Keen said. Joe Mullins of Iowa defeated Corriere on a take down he got in the first period. "After Mullins got ahead on that take down, he laid back and Don Corriere wasn't able to get close to him," he added. And then there was McCray. "All the good moves that were made, were made by the Illinois boy (McCray's opponent)," Keen countered. But then its always easy to win the meet on Monday. And then again the crying towel bit doesn't seem to fit Keen. For, as he watched some of "his boys" skirmishing on the mat, his talk turned to the future and the NCAA meet. Wings, Clinch P'lay'off Berth DETROIT (A) -- Gordie Howe, the Detroit Red Wings' super star, holds another record today and the Wings have virtually clinched a national hockey league playoff berth. Howe set up two goals last night to tie the Wings' record for con- secutive game scoring. Detroit beat the Boston Bruins 3-1 and moved 10 points ahead of fifth- place New York in the NHL race. It was the only game last night. Howe, already 12 times the highest point-scorer in the NFL, scored two assists and extended his streak of at least one point a game to 14 straight. He tied the record set earlier this season by team- mate Norm Ullman. NHL Standings W L T Pts. Toronto 37 18 10 84 Montreal 36 18 i0 82 Chicago 27 22 15 69 Detroit 23 27 15 61 New York 21 34 9 51 Boston 13 18 13 39 A SOPH IN FINALS--Sophomore Jack Barden was one who coach Cliff Keen was proud of in the Big Ten Championships. His loss in the finals to Northwestern's Al Jaklich was only the second loss Barden suffered all year. The other was also to Jaklich, pictured above. Ii. YOUNG REPUBLICAN CLUB presents JAMES C. ZEDER Candidate for U. of M. Board of Regents TON IGHT Union Room 3R-S 7:30 P.M. for EASTER or anytime. New Spring Sport Coats Popular checks and plaids, all meticulously tailored in lightweight fabrics, and most mod- estly priced! $3500 607 East Liberty Next to Michigan Theatre i i We Offer to YOU . . . a RAI NCOAT- TOPCOAT, Cornbinaction I We Will fnten ek' On... 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