PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN n A l l.V PAG SI TUF l1 ll11 1hiLl TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1961 Wolverine Nine Picked forNCAA District P1 Layoffs Freehan, Joyce Named District All-Stars; Wolverines Travel To Western Michigan ANOTHER TENNIS TITLE: Depth Key Factor in cM' Win By PETE DiLORENZI Local fans will be treated to an exhibition of the finest collegiate baseball in this section of the country next Monday when the NCAA District Four playoffs begin right here at Ferry Field. It should be a great three days of baseball. Four teams will compete in the three-day double elimination tour- ney for the right to go to Omaha, Neb. and the College World Series. Big Ten Champion Michigan, Mis- souri Valley Conference Champion Cincinnati, Mid-American Confer- ence Champion Western Michigan, and Wolverine nemesis Detroit will battle it out for the District Four crown. Two Monday Games The tourney will consist of two Monday games, with the first pit- ting Detroit against Western Mich- igan, while host Michigan and Cincinnati fight it out in the sec- ond. On Tuesday, the winners and losers will face each other. Wednesday's games will be deter- mined by the results of the other two days. Cincinnati, the Wolverines' first foe, has compiled an 18-2-2 record throughout the season, compared to Michigan's 20-7., Detroit and Western Michigan posted season records of 15-1=1 and "14-6, respectively. The playoff series was originally intended to have been played at Tiger Stadium, but, in an fortu- nate switch for local fans, it was transferred to Ferry Field. Freehan, Joyce All-Stars The District Four committee also announced the District All-Star team yesterday, with Wolverines Bill Freehan and Mike Joyce being named to the ten-man squad. The selections came as no sur- prise to anyone, most of all to those who have followed the Wol- verines closely. Both Freehan and Joyce have shown by their season- long performance that they were of all-star caliber. The team consisted of the fol- lowing players: First base-Wayne Knapp, Min- nesota (.355); second base - Ed LaDuke, Indiana (.361); shortstop -Frank Quilici, Western Michigan (.359); third base-Frank Corej, Detroit (.367); outfielders - Joe Nossek, Ohio University (.413) , Tom Riley, Michigan State (.358), and Bill Hess, Ohio State (.354); catcher - Freehan, Michigan (.439); pitchers-Joyce, Michigan (8-1), and Bill Ortleib, Western Michigan (8-0). At Western Michigan Today the Wolverines travel to Kalamazoo to face Western Mich- igan in a tuneup and possible pre- view of next week's playoff series. Coach Don Lund has named junior righthander Franz Neubrecht to start against the Broncos, who were ahead of the Wolverines 4-1 in a May 13 game which was called in the fourth inningbecause of rain. In that game, the Broncos threw Bill Ortlieb at the Wolver- ines. Ortlieb is the other pitcher on the All-Star team along with Joyce. Today, however, Western Mich- igan will start righthander Ray. Larned against the Big Ten champs. The game will be the Wolverines' last regular season contest before the playoff series. Save Top Pitchers By pitching Neubrecht today, Lund will save his three top start- ers for the playoffs .Joyce, Bob Marcereau, and Fritz Fisher, whose brilliant Satur day's one - hitter clinched Michigan's playoff berth, will all be available for action against the Titans, Broncos, and Bearcats next week. Along with these pitcher the Wolverines will also hope to have power-hitting first baseman Barry Marshall back in the lineup. Mar- shall has been out since the North- western game with a leg injury. By FRED STEINHARDT Michigan had the depth when it counted this past weekend as it won its sixth Big Ten tennis title, in the last seven years at East Lansing. Bill Vogt, Wayne Peacock, and Scott Maentz all came through with individual titles to back up first singles champ sophomore Ray; Senkowski. In addition, Vogt and Bruce MacDonald won the number three doubles titles and Senkowski and Peacock brought home the first doubles crown. Losers Performed Well Michigan's other two singles players also played very well. Jim1 Tenney lost to the eventual win- ner, Dick Hall of MSU in a spine tingling semifinal match at num- ber two. MacDonald advanced all the way to the finals before bowing to the Spartan's Jack Damson. Senkowski was easily the out- standing performer of the tourna- ment. His final singles match against Don Thorne of Indiana took only 35 minutes as he admin- istered a quick and painful tennis lesson to Thorne. Three out of six regulars from this championship team depart- Vogt, MacDonald, and Peacock. COLLEGE MEN. EARN $2000 THIS SUMMER! Largest company of its kind has several interesting job opportuni- ties for personable college men in following areas: V( - * FSenkowski, Maentz, and Tenney will all be back next year along with Tom Beach who played much of the year as sixth man. Help Coming Coach Bill Murphy should also get help next year from veteran Gerry Duble and freshman Henry Fauquier. Dubie, who was ineligi- ble this year, won the number two singles title in 1959, the year the Wolverines won every possible match in the conference tourna- ment. Last year he played first singles and lost to the champions, Denny Konocki of Northwestern. Dubie teamed with Senkowski to win the National Scholastic dou- bles title when both were students at Hamtramck (Mich) High School. Fauquier is a Canadian whiz who has pleased Murphy in freshman drills this spring. Murphy rates him as roughly equivalent to Dubie. Thus coach Murphy will be pointing toward a fourth con- secutive Big Ten title and seventh in eight years a year from now. With a remarkable 124-21 dual meet record since 1948 behind him and a flock of talent on hand the Wolverines hope to repeat as champs in 1962. Once again, Northwestern and cross-state rival Michigan State should provide the toughest competition for Michigan. ALL-STARS--Wolverines Freehan and Mike Joyce were named to the District Four NCAA All-Star team. Joyce ended the season with an 8-1 season record, and Freehan batted .439. In Big Ten action, Freehan batted .585, and Joyce pitched his way to a 5-1 season record. The Wolverines' sophomore batterymates were named to the team along with eight other District players. STADIUM Automatic CAR WASH 142 E. Hoover (1 block east of 1000 S. Main) COMPLETE CAR WASH ...$1.50 MAY SPECIAL: Simonize ... $9.99 Special gasoline price to car wash customers! 27.9c and additional 2c discount on fill-ups 4 i I STILL WIN OUTDOOR TITLE: Thinclads Compile ',Only' 55 1/5 Points By DAVE GOOD M' Go lfers Fail Wh By JIM BERGER What happened to the Michi- gan Golf team at Bloomington? What was the reason why a team which had won all its dual meets, and had averaged 76.4, would completely collapse and average (for six men) 78.9? Why did Captain Joe Brisson, fifth in the conference last year, play such consistently poor golf (80-80-79-78)? Why couldn't Tom Ahern play Indiana's tight back nine? Why did Mike Goode, who never shot over 79 all year long, shoot an 81 on Friday and an 80 on Saturday? Golf Coach Bert Katzenmleyer has some of the answers, but by no means all of them. "First of all," said the Michigan mentor, "three of the players were introduced to something that they had never seen before. "The Big Ten Meet is the most gruelling of any tournament in this country and you can talk to the boys 'till your blue in the face, and they will never understand until they see it themselves. "Another reason is they tried too hard. In golf, it seems the harder you try, the worse things get, and that's what happened at Bloomington. "Another reason is that some of the boys just got so disgusted with themselves and said the hell with it all, and with that kind of at- titude you can't possibly play good golf." The enigma will probably never be completely solved, but Katzen- meyer's subtly answers. all the questions. About the only thing missing from Michigan's romp to its first Big Ten outdoor track title since 1956 last weekend was a real shot at Illinois 1924 record of 74 points. The Wolverines' total of 55 1/5 points was a big drop from their winning indoor total of 69, but Coach Don Canham got an even bigger kick out of last weekend's meet than the indoor one., "I guess you could say that," agreed Canham, "because we had won the indoor title twice before but missed it outdoors. "The boys, who have done so much for us the last couple of years came through in real good shape. Everybody was just as sharp as could be. It was real satisfying." Canham doesn't care much about record point totals, anyway. If he had used Dick Cephas and Tom Robinson, who both wanted to run on the mile relay, Michigan could probably have improved on its fifth place finish in that event. Canham knew the Wolverines wouldn't have a good chance at the record right from the start, because Les Bird was having re- curring leg trouble to keep him from placing in the broad jump, Bennie McRae hasn't run the 220- yd. low hurdles around the turn since he hurt his back in last year's conference preliminaries and Michigan hasn't got any top- caliber discus throwers. Workmanlike Job But Michigan's big guns all did a workmanlike job. Robinson, who said Friday he thought the Iowa track was fast enough for record times, woh the 100 in :09.5 and the 220 around a turn in :21.2, both just one-tenth off Jesse Owens' Big Ten records. Ergas Leps was healthy again after recovering from a cold which kept him from working out last week preliminary to the Western Michigan dual meet, where he managed only a second and fourth. Leps wasn't extended in winning HuberWins In I-M5-3 Huber gained the 'A' residence hall softball finals yesterday by edging high-powered Gomberg, 5-3. Down 2-1 going into the bot- tom of the third inning, Huber took advantage of a leaky Gom- berg defense to tally four times and jump ahead, 5-2. Pitcher Tom DeWard helped his own cause by knocking in a run and scoring one himself during the uprising. Gomberg scored its third run in a short-lived fourth inning rally. Both DeWard and Gomberg twirler Danny Alix showed good control and allowed few hits. In the only other I-M games scheduled yesterday, Taylor 'B' erupted for a 19-run third inning to swamp Allen-Rumsey 'B,' 28- 5, while Chicago 'B' forfeited to Michigan 'B.' 1 ----- 1 II |1 Major League Standings l the 880 in 1:54.7 and the mile in 4:11.1, which are not great times for an outstanding middle-distance man. "He can't run his own race be- cause he's always got to come back and run the half mile," pointed out Canham. "He'll run faster times for us in the national championships coming up (June 16-17) ." Among Nation's Best Bennie McRae and Cephas both proved they belong among the best collegiate hurdlers in the country, as McRae won the 120-yd. highs in a wind-aided :13.7 and Cephas the 220-yd. lows in the Big Ten record time of :23.4 around a turn. Dave Martin had tough luck in the 880 and mile, finishing third in both races despite a finishing kick which rivaled Leps'. Because of all these standout performances, Canham will still go along with the label he pinned on the team after the indoor meet, as "the best the conference ever had, as far as point or outstand- ing athletes go." COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING To Please You ! ! * Outstanding Personnel 0 10 Barbers " Good Service THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. DETROIT GRAND RAPIDS SAGI NAW Michigan resort areas Several summer European assignments - 0 " " MEET YOU IN ALL THE BEST . PLACES? " 4 " NATIONAL San Francisco Los Angeles Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia o0 WHY' " " OI A LWAYS 10 LEAGUE W L Pct. GB 21 12 .636 - 23 14 .622 - 19 12. .613 1 19 15 .559 2'j 15 16 .484 5 13 18 .419' 7 12 21 .364 9 9 23 .281 11Y YESTERDAY'S RESULTS' San Francisco 3, St. Louis 1 Los Angeles 2, Cincinnati 1 (10 inn.) Pittsburgh 2, Milwaukee 1 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAME San Francisco at St. Louis (N) Philadelphia at Chicago Los Angeles at Cincinnati (N) Pittsburgh at Milwaukee AMERICAN LEAGUE WV L Pct. GB Detroit 25 11 .694 - Cleveland 21 14 .600 31/ New York 18 15 .545 52 Minnesota 18 17 .514 6/ Baltimore 18 18 .500 7 Washington 17 20 .459 8%y Boston 15 18 .455 8yz Kansas City 13 17 .433 9 Chicago 14 20 .412 10 Los Angeles 12 21 .364 112 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 4, Chicago 1 Cleveland 7, Minnesota 5 (15 inn.) 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