TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE EVEN TUESDAY, AUGUST ~5, 1964 TIlE M1CIHGAN DAiLY a Ll Vl I Aa T lIL\ t Michigan Finishes Second to Wisconsin in Big Ten Tra tck Meet By MICHAEL RUTKOWSKI Michigan's showings this year in the Big Ten Indoor and Out- door Track and Field Champion- ships were similar to the show- ings they made last year-only better. At the indoor conference meet at Columbus in March the Wol- verines put on a spectacular show as they defeated the strong Wisconsin team which had been favored. Michigan brought home five in- dividual champions as they over- powered the second place Badgers, 67-48. The individual winners for the Wolverines were: captain Roger Schmitt in the shot put with a heave of 55'91/2"; Des Ryan in the one mile run with a time of 4:14.4; Kent Bernard in the star- studded 660-yard run with a clocking of 1:10.4; Ted Kelly in the half mile with a time of 1:53.5, and Al Ammerman with a surprise win in the high jump with a leap of 6'6". Besides these firsts Michigan also got four seconds, four thirds, three fourths, and one fifth. Seconds Defending high hurdles cham- pion Cliff Nuttall came in second as he lost his crown to Tom Dak- in of Wisconsin. Sophomore Bob Densham - made it one-two for Michigan in the high jump as he placed right behind teammate Ammerman. In the 300-yard dash Mac Hunter finished second to Mel Blanheim of Illinois. The mile relay team also came through with a second place as Purdue running in a different heat had a time which was faster by .1 second. Sophomore John Rowser came through with a spectacular leap of 23'11" in the broad jump for a valuable second place. This leap by Rowser was the best of his career. Third places were earned by Dave Hayes in the mile, Ken Burn- ley in the 60-yard dash, Cecil Norde in the half mile, and Chris Murray in the two mile. Ernie Soudek in the shot, Dorr Casto in the 1000-yard run, and Roy Woodton in the high hurdles all finished in fourth place in their respective events, while Dorie Reid was fifth in the 60- yard dash. Better Than '63 This fine showing was an im- provement over last year when the Wolverines tied for first with Iowa with 43 points while Wis- consin was close behind with 40 points. In May at Evanston Michigan was unable to capture the match- ing outdoor title in spite of some brilliant individual performances as they were plagued with injuries and bad luck. A bleeding ulcer took defending high hurdle champion Nuttall out of the finals and the wind bother- ed left-handed discus thrower Soudek as Wisconsin achieved some measure of revenge for their loss indoors with a stunning 64-52 victory- The injury to Nuttall paved the way for a Badger slam in the hurdles and gave them an easy 12 points to Michigan's none. This in the opinion of many observers was the difference in the meet as the Wisconsin final margin was an identical 12 points. Soudek finished second to right- handed Don Henderson of Wis- consin as the best heave he could get into the wind was 164'4/2". This was almost a foot less than the winning toss of 165'3%" by Henderson. Five Firsts Although the Wolverines were beaten for the conference crown, they managed to win four indi- vidual firsts plus the mile relay. Leading the way for Michigan were Bernard with a remarkable :46.1 in the 440-yard dash, Sch- mitt with a repeat win in the shot and a put of 53'1134", Kelly with a 1:51.3 in the half mile, and Chris Murray with a 9:15.9 in the grueling two mile run. The victorious mile relay team composed of Dave Romain, Dan Hughes, George Wade, and Ber- nard broke the Big Ten record of 3:11.2 set by Iowa in 1963. The Michigan quartet turned in a 3:10.2 as Bernard ran a tremend- ous :45.6 anchor leg. Bernard also ran a :46.0 in qualifying for the finals. This time was the fatest time in the world for the year. Murray First Murray's showing in the two mile was one of the standout per- formances of the meet. Although given little chance of winning, he led most of the way and stove off challenges by two other runners over the final his victory. 150 yards to gain In the high jump Michigan failed to win even though no one jumped higher than either Den- sham and Ammerman. They were awarded second and third respec- tively though because of greater misses than Cornelius Miller of Indiana. They all jumped 6'7". The Wolverines got four other thirds as Fred Lambert in the dis- cus, Ryan in the mile, Casto in the half mile, and Bill Yearby in the shot all made creditable showings in their respective events. The only other place winner for Mich- igan was Rowser in the broad jump. In the opening home indoor meet, the Michigan Relays, the Wolverines walked away with seven firsts including two Yost Field House records, two meet rec- ords, and a tie of another meet record. High Jump Record Densham tied with former West- ern Michigan star Jim Oliphant at 6'101/$" in the high jump. This mark was a new world's indoor record on a dirt track. The mile relay team of Romain, Bob Jare- ma, Hunter and Bernard broke the other field house record with a 3:18.5 clocking. The meet record which was tied was in the distance medley relay. Other firsts were won by Nut- tall in' the 65-yard highs, Ted Benedict in the two mile, Schmitt in the shot, and by the shuttle hurdle relay team. At the Michigan State Relays l the Wolverines came back with three firsts. Nuttall was first in the 70-yard highs, Schmitt was first in the shot, and the mile relay team was first, In two other home meets Mich- igan captured 11 firsts in 15 events in each of the contests to pace them to lopsided wins. They scored 98 points compared to 36 for Indiana and 35 for Notre Dame in a triangular meet and the next week scored 104 points to second place Ohio University's 26. Bernard Breaks Record In the former meet Bernard tied the Yost Field House record in the 600 with a 1:11.2. In the latter meet he broke the field house record for the 440 with a 48.6 clocking. (Continued on Page 9) 1 -Daily-Dave Good HALF-MILERS TED KELLY and Dorr Casto finished one-three in the Big Ten Outdoor Track and Field Championships as they helped the Wolverines to a second place finish behind Wisconsin. Kelly ran a 1:51.3 as he picked up the outdoor crown to match the one he won indoors in March at Columbus. !, U I "Welcome to YiS FIFTH AVENUE" /l :I *.f s' / p C / .,'n > . x'x + yTi' C . ~ s i. s. ,;.s+ N N his greeting, accompanied bya warm handshake, is whatwe extend every year to thousands of University of Michigan nen. 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