PAGE SIX TIKE MICHIGAN DAILY ?TTF.71~AVY n7f3 &TTAVP ft -XULt'WAY, Z6 JAN VARY 19W 35 CFIVE VARSITY MARKS SET: agers Prepare for Clash with Spartans Records Fall in Tar ikers' Win By CARL ROBINSON With all five starters scoring in double figures, the Michigan cagers got revenge for last year's 81-79 loss to Purdue, 103-84. The Wolverines will face arch rival Michigan State at East Lans- g, 8 p.m. today. AP olS By The Associated Press Michigan retained its second place ranking in the AP Poll this week by defeating Purdue 103-84.. First place UCLA was idle all week due to examinations, but will return to action on Friday against the'surprising Iowa Hawk- eyes. , The unranked Hawkeyes, an unexpected second to the Wolver- ines in the Big Ten race, sur- prised the fifth-ranked Indiana Hoosiers 74-68 last Monday and might upset the defending na- tional champions in the feature of Gophers Top Purdue F ive LAFAYETTE (AP) - Minnesota came from behind with some hot shooting in the second half and beat Purdue 85-81 in a vital Big Ten basketball game last night. The Gophers trailed Purdue 37- 34 at halftime but took the lead at 50-49 with 13:20 to play and built their advantage to 83-67 with 1:36 left. Purdue scored 14 points in the last 96 seconds, Dave Schellhase getting eight of them. Schellhase finished with 32 points, hitting 11 of 22 shots from the field and 10 of 15 free throws, and Bob Purkhiser added 21 for Purdue on 10 of 26 and one of, two. Minnesota outscored the Boiler- makers on balance. Don Yates was high for the Gophers with 19 points on 7 of 11 and 5 of 6, but all their starters scored 13 points or more. Minnesota's man - to - man de-. fense kept Purdue's shooters off balance, and the Boilermakers sank only 33 of 74 shots. The Gophers had better marksman- ship against Purdue's various zone defense, hitting 33 of 63. The+ victory kept Minnesota alive in the Big Ten race at 3-1 and moved the Gophers into a1 third-place tie with Illinois. Pur- due, which went into the game with an 11-game home winning streak, dropped into a tie for seventh place in the Big Ten at 1-3. Last year, the Boilermakers came to town on the last day of the Big Ten season and knocked Michigan into a tie with Ohio1 State for the conference cham- pionship. Purdue, fielding a team which included such "Spoilermakers" as ' Second a doubleheader at Chicago Sta- dium Friday night. The game marks a return toI the Midwest for UCLA where the Bruins; unbeaten last season, had their 30-game winning streak broken by Illinois early in De- cember before starting their cur- rent streak. Third-place. St. Joseph's ran its mark to 15-1 by thumping Penn- Sylvania 88-72, while Providence made Seton Hall its 12th straight victim, 88-81, moving up two, places to No. 4 in the rankings. Idle Wichita dropped a peg to fifth at 12-2 with Loyola of Chi- cago and Louisville in their im- mediate future. Davidson, also idle, moved up one rung to sixth. St. John's of New York beat St. Francis, 75-61, for a 12-2 record. San Francisco was idle and re- mained in eighth place. Indiana fell from fifth to ninth after itsI loss to Iowa. Duke, 10-2, was also idle this week and remained 10th. The Top Ten, with irst place votes in parentheses, won-lost records through games of Saturday, Jan. 23: 1. UCLA (29) 14-1 347 2. MICHIGAN (2) 11-2 302 3. St. Joseph's, Pa. (1) 15-1 240 4. Providence (4) 12-0 209 5. Wichita 12-2 194 6. Davidson 14-1 140 7. St. John's, N.Y. 12-2 123 8.San Fancisco 12-1 114 9.Indiana 12-2 80 10. Duke 10-2 79 Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Brigham Young, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Miami of Ohio, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Caro- lina, North Carolina State, Oklahoma State, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Villa- nova. Bob Purkhiser, who scored the the team. 'winning points last year, and Bill Jones with 23 points and 15 Bob Griese, who was roundly rebounds was high in both depart- booed for his exploits on the foot- ments for Purdue. ball field, quickly found them- Scoring Leaders Fail selves outclassed by the Wolver- A scoring duel between Michi- ines. gan's Cazzie Russell and Purdue's Darden Scores Early Dave Schellhase, ranked one-two Oliver Darden opened the game in conference scoring, failed to de- with a jumper, and was followed velop. Both men were guarded soon after by a Pomey set shot. well, and finished the game scor- Darden returned with another long ing 18 and 15 points, respectively. one from the corner, a charity toss Schellhase had three of his at- and a tip in. Pomey and Darden tempts smacked right back at him combined for 29 points in the by Buntin at center. Boilermaker first half to give Michigan a 51- Coach Ray Eddy commented that 38 halftime lead. Buntin's presence made Schellhase It was Darden's best game in "think twice about shooting." his collegiate career. He had 27 The cagers hit the century mark points in the game-17 in the first for the second time this season half-to take high scoring honors on John Thompson's shot with 53 for the game. His 18 rebounds also seconds left in the game. Thomp- - - was the game high. Bill Buntin had 20 points and 17 rebounds for second honors on Big Ten Standings MICHIGAN Iowa Illinois Minnesota Indiana N'western Purdue Wisconsin Ohio St. Mich. St. Conference All Games W L Pet. W L Pct. 3 0 1.000 11 2 .846 4 1 .800 9 5 .643 3 1 .750 10 3 .769 3 1 .750 11 3 .786 3 2 .600 12 2 .857 1 2 .333 5 8 .385 1 3 .250 8 6 .571 1 3 .250 6 7 .462 0 3 .000 6 7 .462 0 3 .000 4 8 .333 son added Michigan's last bucket 19 seconds later. Tonight's opponent, Michigan State, has a 0-3 league record and a 4-8 overall record, after losing three of their starting five of last year to graduation. State Lacks Height State is a relatively short team (the tallest man on the team is 6-6, and he is not starting), is led by 6'3" junior Stan Washing- ton, and 6'4" junior Bill Curtis. Even though four starters aver- age in double figures, the Spartans are ranked only fifth in Big Ten scoring. They are eighth in re- By BOB McFARLAND bounding. Although they have not beaten A host of records fell under the anyone of national prominence, assault of the Wolverine tankers they have beaten both in-state in their 631/-411/2 victory over the teams they have played, and would Michigan State; Spartans in a dual like to maintain that streak. meet Saturday. Last Saturday, the Spartans lost The swimmers snapped five var- to Northwestern by one point, 76- sity records in the contest, whicht 75, in the last six seconds. also saw pool records set in every1 The Wolverines won both of last event but two, at the Spartans' year's contests, 91-77 and 95-79. Men's Intramural Pool. New Mich- igan-Michigan State dual meet marks were established in all 12t events.1 Adding to the significance of the meet times was the fact thatS the performances in four events-i the 200-yard backstroke, the 200-a yard breaststroke, and the 100- and 200-yard freestyle-bettered the first-place times of the Big Ten Meet last year. Coach Gus Stager pointed out that in many instances the fourth-place time on Saturday was lower than the sixth-place time from the 1964 Western Conference meet. Hoag Impressived h "I was most impressed with the performance of Bob Hoag," Stager stated yesterday. Despite a recent illness, Hoag won the 100- yard freestyle tying a varsity rec- ord with a time of :47.8. Hoag GEORGE POMEY added a fourth-place finish for the Wolverines in the 500-yard; freestyle. t Stager was also pleased with the S S tra ig h t efforts of Carl Robie and Paul Scheerer who both "had good times, but swam surprisingly esy"Robie, the only double win- infected finger, but was back onethe ayo e ler- full-time duty this past weekend. ines noced almost fie seonds Wakabayashi had left the ice ininskocealstfvscnd the Saturday game with Duluth off the varsity record in the 200- after hitting his shoulder but yard inidividual medley. The soph- showedhno iffecsshepickedomore Olympian'sot er first came owed no ias p In the 200-yard butterfly. up three goals and three assists Finishing first in the 200-yard in Colorado Springs. breaststroke, Scheerer cracked a Renfrew Pleased pool mark with a time of 2:13.7. Renfrew was pleased with the Scheerer also participated on two esandsummedupthe Michigan's 400-yard medleydrelay series by saying, "We played real squad, which bested MSU with a hard. The games could have gone time of 3:39.9. Other members of either way, and both were. fine the Wolverine medley relay ta eiter ayandbot wee. inewere Ed Bartsch, Tom O'Malley hockey games. The difference forwand arsr Tmdagey us was the ability to come back, and Howard Brundage. even after they scored three in a Need Sprinters row on Friday." "We need to find two more Schwarten, Brundage, Bob Tan-I which he also held, by :04.73. 1 ner and Lanny Reppert as con- Michigan State sophomore Ken tenders for the job. Walsh finished ahead of Farley Groft smashed a Michigan var- in both events. sity record with a time of :21.3 Ed Boothmnan, participating in in the 50-yard freestyle, :00.1 fast- his first meet of the season for er than the old mark. Sophomore the Wolverines, finished first in Groft edged out Gary Dilley and diving with a score of 305.3 Darryle Kifer, both of MSU, in a points. close contest. Minnesota Next Farley Sets Marks The Wolverine tankers are Although failing to earn bet- now practicing twice a day in ter than a second-place finish, preparation for the home meet Bill Farley broke two Wolverine with Minnesota on February 6 and varsity marks. Swimming the 200- the clash with defending Big Ten yard freestyle in the time of 1:46.0, champion Indiana a week later. Farley bested the old record by Stager plans to add a couple of a half second. His other record night workouts later on "to clear came in the 500-yard freestyle up the butterfly and sprint prob- :lipping the previous record, lems." This Week in Sports TUESDAY BASKETBALL-Michigan at Michigan State, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan State, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY HOCKEY--Michigan at Michigan Tech WRESTLING-Wisconsin at Yost Fieldhouse, 3 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL--Michigan at Purdue HOCKEY-Michigan at Michigan Tech WRESTLING-Ohio State at Yost Field House, 3 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Michigan at Illinois TRACK-U.S. Federation Open at Kalamazoo Pucksters Wmin Fourt M i I i I By DALE SIELAFF At the expense of the Colorado vollege Tigers, the Wolverine hockey team ran its winning streak to four games last week- end with a sweep of the two-game series in Colorado Springs. Marty Read was the Michigan star in Friday night's come-from. behind 7-5 victory. Read pulled the Wolverines even with the Ti- gers with less than five minutes to go in the game on an unassist- ed goal. The junior wing iced the win with two more goals with- in three minutes for Michigan's first hat trick of the season. On Saturday the Colorado squad jumped off to an early lead on Warren Fordyce's goal at 15:25 of the opening period. Michigan bounced back in the second to tie SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Minnesota 85, Purdue 81 Detroit 108, Xavier (Ohio) 92 Kentucky 102, Georgia 82 N.C. State 79, Centenary Col. 64 Dayton 89, Loyola (Calif) 71 Florida 67, Alabama 55 Florida State 58, Auburn 55 Iowa State 87, Oklahoma Si Vanderbilt 84, Mississippi 70 NBA Boston 142, Baltimore 104 the score on Dean Lucier's tally with Pierre Dechaine picking up the assist. Wolverine goalie Greg Page turned aside 14 shots in the final period as he held Colorado score- less over the last 44 minutes, en- abling his teammates to pull away with three goals in the third per- iod for the 4-1 win. Barry MacDonald, who had been used sparingly on Friday and in the previous home series against Duluth due to a knee injury, scor- ed what proved to be the win- ning point at 4:26 of the third period. Mel Wakabayashi added an insurance goal less than a minute later with Tom Polonic assisting. Captain Wilfred Mar- tin, leading Wolverine goal scorers by a wide margin, picked up his 19th goal of the season with 17 seconds left in the game. Page Cited Coach Al Renfrew cited Page for his netminding in the Colo- rado series, saying, "Page made all the big saves. It was anybody's game, and Page played real well." Renfrew also commented that the high altitude in Colorado made various line changes necessary so that some of the players could rest due to the lower oxygen level. Physically, Michigan is back in top shape. Polonic sat out one game here against Duluth with an SHEET MUSIC SALE 20%--70 % off WE'RE MOVING--WATCH FOR OUR NEW LOCATION UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE 340 Maynard NO 2-5579 A smW-n & +l r" 1 I i 4 I IV W II : Iua . sprinters to obtain good balance," The Wolverines put their win- Stager added. Michigan lost by ning streak and 4-4 WCHA record four seconds to MSU in the 400- on the line this Wednesday in yard freestyle relay. Hoag and Bill East Lansing, as they meet Michi- Groft have turned in consistent gan State in a single game. This fast times for Michigan, and the coming weekend Michigan is still two have nailed down positions on the road, with a two game se- on the 400-yard freestyle relay vies against WCHA rival Michigan team. Rich Walls is a good pros- Tech at Houghton. pect for the third spot, but the t fourth position is still open. Sta- You can do y WCHA Standin DON YATES North Dakota Minnesota Michigan Tech MICHIGAN Michigan State Denver Colorado W 6 6 4 4 3 I 1 L z 4 3 4 3 4 5 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 rrs [ I Pct. .600 .571 .500 ..500 L .200 1 .167 CITES SOPHOMORES: Canham Pleased Despite Loss -finest quality Pants Skirts (plain) Sweaters (plain) ger named Rees Orland, Tom By HOWARD BOIGON Despite Saturday's 67-64 loss to the Chicago Track Club, coach Don' Canham is satisfied with the progress of the team thus far, and is especially pleased by the fine showing of some talented sophp- mores. "The team is still concentrat- ing on getting in shape," Can- ham said yesterday. Canham con- sidered Saturday's meet a good test because of the collection of "very fine performers" faced by the team in Chicago. Al-though hampered by injuries to some key men, the Wolverines performed very well, showing a good balance between upcoming sophomores and reliable veterans. Cooper Places Twice Among the top newcomers is Dave Cooper who took second in the 60-yard dash and third in the 300, turning in time's of :6.4 and :32.8,respectively. James Mercer ran a good 4:16.2 to place second in the mile, and Gordon Harvey paced a sweep of the shot put with a toss of 52'7/2." Canham was particularly pleased by the show- ings of these men who have now proven that they can perform well in varsity competition. Coupled . with these perform- ances were the fine efforts of many returning veterans, upon whom the bulk of the Wolverines' title chances depend. Dorie Reid, a junior from Ferndale, won the 60-yard dash with a time of :6.3, finishing ahead of Cooper. Cecil Norde won the 880-yard run with a time of 1:55.7, as Dan Hughes finished close behind him in 1:55.9. Bernard Wins Captain Kent Bernard won the 600 "running easily," according to Canham, who stated that the for- mer Olympian is "in excellent shape." Bernard also ran the an- chor leg on the winning mile relay team. Senior Tom Sweeney who was fifth in last year's Big Ten Indoor Championships placedsecond in the broad Jump. The sweep of the shotput was accomplished by Steve Leuchtman and Fred Lam- bert, finishing behind Harvey. Injuries played an important part in limiting Michigan's effec- tiveness. Top miler Des Ryan could not compete because of an injured Achilles tendon, while hurdler Roy Woodton was slowed in the 70-yard, high hurdles and scratched from the 70-yard lows- because of a bad leg. The injury to Woodton led to a Chicago sweep in both of these events. The tracksters travel to Kala- mazoo this Saturday for the U.S. Federation Open. Ryan is expect- ed to run, but Woodton probably will not. The remainder of the team is in good shape for theI meet. d b b raf aerme OttIeS I Suits laundry- 55 $140 -.. 'our banking by mal imnight time s any time. 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