4 PAGE SIX THE M1ICHJIG~ANT 11411 Q7'TMAV OA YAVTTTA nVT 1nnr a. is . aii .i aitl hl\ Ll ai l hU.JNDAYX, 24 JAINUARY 1965bZ wVy V Cagers Trounce Purdue; Tankers Overpower MSU Wolverine Depth Stuns Spartans, 6312-4112 'M' Tops Boilermakers, 103-84; Dardin Leads Assault with 27 By GIL SAMBERG Oh O! Oliver Darden put all of his 230 pounds into it yesterday afternoon and emerged from Michigan's 103-84 victory over Purdue as the game's high scorer (27) and re- bounder (18), in a battle which threatened to become the first college basketball rain-out of the year. It was a game for which one of the referees did not show until ten minutes before starting time, and where there were enough leaks in good old Yost Field House's' roof to turn the duel on the court below into a small water circus. Famous Last Words "We thought we'd give them the outside shots. and concentrate on Russell and Buntin under the boards," said Boilermaker coach Ray Eddy after the game in a great display of famous-last- wordmanship. But the combined sets and jumpers of Darden, George Pomey, and Larry Tregoning neatly tuck- ed that theory into the circular file. By halftime the score was 51-38, and while Darden and Pomey had 17 and 12 points respectively, Cazzie Russell had only eight. Russell did not pick up his first points until the 9:47 mark, and hit on only four of 18 field goal attempts for the half. His 18 points for the night marked the first time that he has picked up less than 20 since the Missouri game of Dec. 7. Season's Second Century After Jim Meyers had brought the Wolverines' total to 99 with 1:12 to go in the game, it took the Blue just 29 seconds to shat- ter the 100 mark, as John Thomp- son took the ball out, dribbled up court, and hit on a jumper from the top of the circle. It was Thompson again who tossed in Michigan's final basket 19 seconds later. Eddy attributed the loss in part to his team's non-aggressive de- fense. "We had to use a zone." he explained. "Let's face it, we couldn't have played them man- to-man. And the zone was too slow. Michigan's outshooting was terrific." From the very outset it seemed that way. Darden opened up Mich- igan's scoring with a jumper, fol- lowed soon after by Pomey's 30- foot set shot. Darden came back with another jumper, a free throw, and a tip-in after three missed attempts by his teammates. 'O' Again A minute later, in quick suc- cession, Darden hit on another jump from the corner, Buntin tip- ped one in, and then swished on his roundhouse hook. It was then that Tregoning col- lected three personal fouls within 43 seconds, the last one while coming down with a rebound and three Boilermakers. A short time later one of the referees directed the scorers to wipe the foul off the books. Tregoning was charged with another infraction before the, half was over, and picked up what would have been his fifth with only 1:09 gone in the second half. Flying Dunk Towards the middle of the first stanza Russell took a jumper from! the corner and, as it popped off the rim, Darden came flying out' of nowhere to smash the ball down through the hoop, bringing the crowd of 5700 to its feet. Buntin put on a similar display at the 15 minute mark of thej second half, as he stole a Purdue. pass and tore the cords with a "Wolverine Special." Michigan used a combination of defenses yesterday, switching from a 3-2 zone press to a standard zone to man-to-man during the battle. Darden and Buntin dom- inated the boards, picking up 35 rebounds between them. Board Control As a team, the Blue picked offE 69 rebounds, 40 in the second half, as compared to Purdue's 49, 24 in the final period. The Boilermakers' top scorer, Dave Schellhase, contributed only 15 points for the game, falling victim' to Buntin's presence. Michigan's big center stuffedl three of Schellhase's shots during the contest. "After awhile, every- time Dave heard the patter of Buntin's feet behind him, he be- gan to think twice about shoot- ing," said Eddy. Darden came through also, by stuffing one of 6'9" Tom Nei- meier's ;jumpers. Yanks Big Three Michigan Coach Dave Strack could afford to yank his Big Three -Russell, Buntin and Darden- with 2:47 to go in the game. As for the Big Ten race in gen- eral, "Michigan has it sewed up," said Eddy flatly. "Any team that can play like that has to win it." Michigan continues in its sole possession of first place with its unblemished 3-0 record. Next Week "We look forward to seeing Michigan next week," concluded the Purdue coach with the trace of a smile on his face. But before the Blue have to take on Purdue again next Satur- day, -this time at Lafayette, they will take up their traditional rivalry with Michigan State's Spartans at East Lansing on Tuesday night. By JIM LaSOVAGE Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's tankers traveled to the home of the Michigan State Spartans yes- terday to face the challenge of one of the Big Ten's strongest outfits, and met the challenge with a sound 631/2-411/2 victory. In disposing of the threat, the Wolverines collected seven firsts and eight seconds, limiting State to just four firsts and three sec- ond places. During the course of the afternoon, pool records were set in all but two events-the 200-yard butterfly and the 200- yard individual medley-in MSU's Men's Intramural Pool. Also, every swimming event saw a new Mich- igan-MSU dual meet record es- tablished. Takes Two Carl Robie was Michigan's only double winner in individual races, finishing first in the 200-yard in- dividual medley and the 200-yard butterfly. John Vry finished be- hind him in the IM, with State's 'captain, Dick Gretzinger, finish- ing third. However, in the butter- fly, Terry Hagan and Gretzinger took the second and third place points for the Spartans. Robie's effort in the IM race was a new varsity record. Michigan also placed one-two in the 200-yard breaststroke, with Paul Scheerer winning in a time of 2:13.7. Again it was Vry pick- ing up three points for a second. Scheerer also participated on the 400-yard medley relay team with Ed Bartsch, Tom O'Malley and Howie Brundage, which fin- ished ahead of the Spartans in a 3:39.9 clocking. A real race developed in the 50-1 yard freestyle sprint which saw Michigan's Bill Groft emerge as winner in a varsity record time of :21.3. State's Gary Dilley and Darryle Kifer finished second and third, and Bob Hoag took the fourth for the Maize and Blue- only :00.7 seconds behind Groft. Wolverine varsity record. Groft Hill's 2:05.4 timing was :00.1 and MSU's Jim MacMillan were faster than Kingery's. both timed at :48.1, but the sec- The team now will begin prac- ond was awarded by the judge to tice for a home meet with Minne- Michigan. Again, the fourth place sota a week from next Saturday finisher was extremely close, as and the big meet with Indiana a i Hoag fared better in yard variation, finishing a :47.8 clocking which the 100- first with ties the IKifer was clocked at :48.3. Boothman Back Coach Dick Kimball's diving' entries, Ed Boothman and Bruce Brown, captured another one-two for Michigan. Boothman, who has only been practicing for two weeks now, finished first with a total of 305.3 points in his first meet this season. Michigan State's best perform- ance of the day was turned in by sophomore Ken Walsh, who nailed firsts in the 200- and 500-yard freestyle events, while Michigan's Bill Farley swam second in both. MacMillan finished third in the 200-yarder and Dennis Hill was third in the 500. Still Looking Walsh, along with Kifer, Mac- Millan and Dilley, was also on the first place 400-yard freestyle re- lay team. Wolverine coach Gus Stager is still looking for the right combination in this event, and swam Rees Orland, Lanny Rep- pert, Tom Schwarten and Rich Walls, who were timed four sec- onds behind State. Olympian Dilley took MSU's other first in the 200-yard back- stroke, finishing ahead of Bartsch by :01.6 seconds. Russ Kingery split the third place point with State's Hill, as the judges ruled a tie in their finish, even though, week later. MSU Dunked 400-YARD MEDLEY RELAY-1. Michigan (Bartsch, Scheerer, O'Mal- ley, Brundage); 2. MSU. Time-.- 3:39.9 (pool, meet record). 200-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Walsh (MSU); 2. Farley (M); 3. MacMil- lan (MSU). Time-1:45.5 (pool, dual meet record). 50-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Groft (M); 2. Dilley (MSU); 3. Kifer (MSU). Time - :21.3 (pool, dual meet,.varsity record). 200-YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY -1. Robie (M); 2. Vry (M); 3. Gret- zinger (MSU), Time-2:00.6 (dual meet, varsity record). DIVING-1. Boothman (M); 2. Brown (M); 3. Genova (MSU). Paints-305.3. 200-YARD BUTTERFLY-1. Roble (M); 2. Hagan (MSU); 3. Gretzinger (MSU). Time-1:58.8 (dual meet rec- ord). 100-YARD FREESTYLE-1. Hoag (M); 2. Groft (M); 3. MacMillan (MSU). Time-:47.8 (pool, dual meet varsity record). 200-YARD BACKSTROKE-1. Dli- ley (MSU); 2. Bartsch (M); 3. Wolf (MSU), Kingery (M) (tie). Time- 1:57.6 (pool, dual meet record). 500-YARD FREESTYLE-i. Walsh (MSU); 2. Farley (M); 3. Hill (MSU). Time-4:51.2 (pool. dual meet rec- ord). 200-YARD BREASTSTROKE - 1. Scheerer (M); 2. Vry (M); 3. Glick (MSU). Time-2:13.7 (pool, dual meet record). 400-YARD FREESTLYE RELAY-1. MSU (Kifer, Dilley, Walsh, MacMil- lan); 2. Michigan. Time -- 3:14.1 (pool, dual meet record). OLLIE DARDEN 'O'-verwhelmed -1 Big Ten Standings I MICHIGAN G F R P T Tregoning f 4-12 2-3 8 4 10 Darden f 12-25 3-4 18 3 27 Buntin c 8-15 4-5 17 3 20 Russell g 8-29 2-2 7 1 18 Pomey g 7-13 2-2 2 2 16 Myers 3-10 0-0 7 2 6 Thompson 2-2 0-0 0 0 4 Dill 0-1 0-0 5 3 0 Clawson i-1 0-0 0 0 2 Bankey 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 45-109 13-16 69 18 103 PURDUE G F R P T Schellhase f 4-14 7-9 5 1 15 Niemeier f 4-10 3-4 9 2 11 Jones c 10-19 3-4 15 3 i3 Purkhiser g 9-16 1-2 4 0 19 Griese g 0-6 0-0 4 2 0 Brown 1-4 0-0 2 1 2 Johnson 2-5 0-0 3 2 4 HICKs 2-3 1-1 0 0 5 Trudeau 0-1 1-2 0 0 1 Harber 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 Cunningham 0-0 2-2 0 0 2 Hughes 1-1 0-0 0 0 2 Totals 33-78 18-24 49 11 84 MICHIGAN 51 52-103 PURDUE 38 46- 84 MICHIGAN Iowa Illinois Minnesota Indiana Purdue Northwestern Wisconsin Michigan State Ohio State W 3 4 3 2 3 1 1 1 0 0 L Pct 0 1.000 1 .800 1 .750 1 .667 2 .600 2 .333 2 .333 3 .250 3 .000 3 .000 BOB HOAG HURDLES HURT, 67-64: Chicago Cindermen Sneak by Michigan Accountants, Chemists, ME's, ChE's 75, 4.1: le S lersS weep Weekend Series , I i E I Special To The Daily Michigan's defending N C A A champion hockey team added a 4-1 victory over Colorado College last night to its 7-5 victory over CC Friday night to sweep the Western series. It was the Wolverines' second straight series sweep in WCHA play, and moved them into a fourth place tie with Minnesota in the WCHA standings. Michigan is now 4-4 in league play, while CC, with a 1-5 record, remains in last place. In Friday .night's action, the Wolverines won their third con- secutive comeback victory, 7-5, thanks to a three-minute hat trick by Marty Read late in the third period. Michigan fell behind at 8:46 of the first stanza when Warren Fordyce scored his fifth goal of the season, but the Blue fought back on, a tally by center Mel Wakabayashi which came just WCHA STANDINGS more than a minute later, at 9:51.1 . It was a night for the centers, as captain and leading scorer Wilf Martin scored his 18th goal of the season. Pierre Dechaine, whom coach Al Renfrew had said he would use as the third line center, picked up the assists. Mar- tin's score came at 3:19 of the second period. Drought Ends Wakabayashi then scored after a 13 minute drought by both teams. The "Mighty Mite" scored on an assist from Read at 16:56. The Tigers, down by two goals, were not down yet, and they fought back with a score by Glen Blumer, his sixth of the season. Blumer ranks third among Colo- rado scorers. Colorado then fought back from a 4-2 deficit, scoring three times in a row. Dave Peterson and Jim Amidon scored with only nine seconds separating their tallies. Steve Ebert scored two arid one half minutes later, beating goalie Greg Page at 8:42 of the final period. Tied Up Seven minutes then passed without any sustained offensive threat by either team. At 15:27, wingman Marty Read beat Tiger I goalie Bill Howard for the tying goal and the first of his hat trick. It was Read who tallied again at 15:44. And as Colorado coach Johnson pulled his goalie in a desperate attempt to tie up the game, Read blasted the puck into an empty cage. Michigan w il1l continue its WCHA and Big Ten season when the Wolverines journey to East Lansing on Saturday night, Jan. 27, and then take on Michigan Tech in Houghton on Jan. 29, and 30. SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL St. John's 75, St. Francis 61 Northwestern 76, Michigan State 75 Drake 89; Cincinnati 80 Morehead (Minn) 85, Mich. Tech 50 Notre Dame 113, Toledo 65 Navy 75, Manhattan 70 Villanova 72, Detroit 70 Providence 88, Seton Hal 81 Xavier (Ohio) 96, Duquesne 90 Minnesota 97, Ohio State 77 Dayton 83, Louisville 78 St. Joseph's 88, Penn 72 Oklahoma St. 55, Nebraska 53 Northern Michigan 75, Oklahoma 74 GYMNASTICS Michigan State 75, Minnesota 45 Iowa State 74y>, Michigan State 421,a HOCKEY Denver 3, Michigan Tech 3 (tie, ovt) Minnesota 6; Michigan State 5 BOWLING Michigan State 2733, Michigan 2690 , I i E I t i I Special To The Daily A sweep of the first three positions in the 70-yard low hur- dles by the Chicago Track Club with only one event remaining led to a 67-64 Chicago victory over the Wolverine thinclads last night. Michigan held a 59-58 lead with only the low hurdles and mile re- lay left to be run, but the Track Club strength in the hurdle events, evidenced earlier by an identical Chicago sweep in the 70-yard high hurdles, was too much for Wolverines. The thinclads from the Windy City gained all nine points in the 70-yard low hurdles, more than enough to insure a Track Club victory in the meet. Wolverine Olympian Kent Ber- nard scored a triumph in the 600- yard run in the time of 1:12.2 in addition to anchoring the mile re- lay team, composed of Willie Brown, Dan Hughes, Bob Gero- metta and Bernard, in its win. Heaving the shot put 52'7", Gordon Harvey, a Michigan soph- omore, finished first ahead of two other Wolverines, Leuchtman and Fred Lambert, who placed second and third, respectively. Al Carius of the Chicago team was a double victor, winning the mile run in 4:1,5.5 and sharing a victory with teammate Steve Szabo in the two mile run. Jim Mercer of Michigan turned in a good performance finishing second behind Carius in the mile. Hurdled 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES - 1. Streeter (CTC), 2. Loomos (CTC), 3. May (CTC). Time-:09.0. 600-YD. RUN-1. Bernard (M), 2. Kenton (CTC), 3. Steel (CTC). Time-1:12.2. 300-YD. DASH-1. Lampkin (CTC), 2. Jarema (M); 3. Cooper (M). Time- :32.0. 880-YD. RUN-1. Norde (M), 2. Hughes (M), 3. Harvey (CTC). Time -1:55.7. HIGH JUMP-1. Densham (M), 2. Ashman (CTC), 3. Glombecki (CTC). and Conrad (CTC), tie. Height - 6'3". BROAD JUMP - 1.' Eckerman (CTC), 2. Sweeney (M), 3. Glom- becki (CTC). MILE RUN-1. Carius (CTC), 2. Mercer (M), 3. Kelly (M). Tim-- 4:14.5. 440-YD. DASH - 1. Larmpkin (CTC), 2. Weiss (M), 3, Geromnetta (M). Time-:50.1. 60-YD. DASH-1. Reid (M), 2. Cooper (M), Weibe (CTC). Time-- :06.3. 1000-YD. RUN-1. Falk (CTC), 2. Legacki (M), Lewitz (M). Time- 2:17.3. SHOT PUT - 1. Harvey (M), 2. Leuchtman (M), 3. Lambert (M). Distance-52'7". POLE VAULT-1. Canamon (M), 2. Weirs (MI), 3. Cornelius (CTC). Height-13'0". TWO-MILE RUN-1. Szabo (CTC), and Carius (CTC), tie. 3. Hig- don (CTC). Time-9:27.9. 70-Yi. LOW HURDLES - 1. Loomos (CTC), 2. Streeter (CTC), 3. May (CTC). Time-:08.0. MILE RELAY - 1. MICHIGAN (Brown, Hughes, Gerometta, and Bernard), 2. Chicago Track Club. Time-3 :21.0. North Dakota Michigan State Michigan Tech Minnesota MICHIGAN Denver Colorado College W L 6 2 4 2 4 3 T 0 0 1 0 0 x 0 Pet. .750 .667 .571 .500 .500 .200 .167 5 4 1 1 5 4 4 5 Michigan Rink Skating Card Here's this week's public skat- ing schedule at the Michigan Ice Rink: Sunday, Jan. 24-3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 26-10 a.m. to 12 noon. Wednesday, Jan. 27-8 a.m. to 10 a.m.; 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. (adults only). 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