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THE MICHIG~AN fHAIL.
SUNDTTAY. flWPW'1WRR48. 109
Cagers Beat Evansville; Icers Defeated in 0v
irtime
W
Wolverines Triumph 71-64;
Harris Sparks'M' with 20
Denver Earns Series Split with 3-2 Win;
McGonigal, Morrison Score for Michigan
Bv S!TAN KTTUKTA
By TOM ROWLAND
Special To The Daily
EVANSVILLE, Ind. -Michigan
broke into a quick lead here last
night and held on to take the
71-64 measure of a ragged Evans-
ville five in a wide open game.
It was the first away game for
the Wolverines and the first ever
against Evansville.
The victory was Michigan's
fourth in five games. Evansville
is now 2-3. The Wolverines return
to the home court Wednesday
night to face the Spartans of San
Jose State College before the
Christmas holidays.
Basketball Nutty
Evansville is a quote "basket-
ball crazy town." Motel marquees
spelled out the coming game, and
newspapers have been writing on
the Michigan basketball team all
week; Evansville people spoke the
name Bill Buntin (who is "lead-
ing the Wolverines out of the
basketball woods" according to one
newspaper) as if it was a house-
hold word.
About 8,450 spectators jammed
Roberts Municipal Stadium last
night and many more watched via
television to see the touted Buntin
and company face the Purple Aces.
And the Wolverines didn't dis-
appoint the home crowd.
The Blue were never behind.
John Harris started the Wolverines
off with six points in the first
two and one half minutes to set
Michigan into a 13-6 lead. The
Blue led by as much as 12 in the
first half. Evansville forward
Jerry Sloan hit for eight straight
points on some deadeye outcourt
shooting to bring the Aces to with-
in five points at halftime, 36-31.
Evansville kept the pressure on
Cinch Title
NEW YORK-The Houston Oil-
ers routed the New York Titans
44-10 yesterdayto clinch their
third straight Eastern Division ti-
tle in the American Football
League.
in the second stanza, quickly
closing the gap to a basket. Lead-
ing 45-43, Michigan called time-
out, reshuffled the lineup, and re-
took the floor with George iomey
and Larry Tregoning at the
guards. Pomey set up the Wolver-
ines with two quick pass inter-
ceptions and Buntin swished two
consecutive baskets and a pair of
free throws to push Michigan back
into an eight point lead. Evans-
ville never seriously threatened
again.
Michigan center Bill Buntin had
a rough night under the boards
but still collected 12 rebounds
while netting 17 points. Buntin
got stabbed in the eye by a loose
Evansville finger early in the game
and ended up on the wrong end
of a scramble for the ball in the
second half. Harris paced Michi-
gan both in rebounding and in
points, grabbing 21 rebounds and
hitting for 20 points. Guard Bob
Cantrell 'popped for 16 points.
Sloan High Man
Sloan ,led the Evansville quin-
tet with 23. The Ace soph grabbed
17 rebounds.
Again Michigan controlled the
boards, nabbing a total of 49.
Evansville couldn't match the Blue
front line and picked off 39.
The big difference, though, was
in the shooting department as
Michigan hit at a 47 per cent clip
compared to the Purple Aces' 35
per cent.
For hockey purists, the close
Emory Sampson's wrist shot checking, the outstanding goal
from 30 feet gave Denver a 3-2 work, the pin-point passing and
overtime victory over Michigan in the execution of the plays were a
the Wolverines final game of 1962 thing of beauty.
in the Western Collegiate Hockey Proved Disasterous
Association. *Galipeau's penalty proved dis-
The Wolverines now take a asterous in the third period. There
break for Christmas before they were 57 seconds left in his pen-
play their next game, Jan. 4 at antl and Denver mounted a pow-
Minnesota. That game will be the er play to take advantage of the
opening of a long road trip which shortage. Their work paid off and
will see the Wolverines play at with only 35 seconds gone, John-
Michigan Tech, Denver, and Colo- ston scored. He broke, with the
rado College, besides the Minne- puck at center ice, skated through
sota games, the defensemen stationed at the
'Best Game' blue line, deked Gray out with
In what Michigan Coach Al a head fake and drove it home.
Renfrew termed as "their best A pall hung over the crowd until
game they've played," the Wolver- 16:31, when Ross Morrison scored
ines dropped a heart-breaker when on a shot from the point in what
Sampson's shot bounced off goal- was certainly the weirdest play of
ie Bob Gray's right shoulder and the game.
popped into the net. The goal- Try for Tip In
judge was reluctant to turn on the McGonigal passed the puck to
light and 2,500 fans and two hock- Babcock and skated in to position
ey teams held their breaths until himself in front of the net to try
referee Bob Gilray signalled that for a tip-in. Meanwhile, Babcock
it was a goal. Then pandemonium passed back to Morrison. Just as
broke out. Morrison was ready to shoot, Mc-
Grant Warwick, who was de- Gonigal was checked into the net.
clared scholastically ineligible There was some discussion con-
Friday morning and was watching
the game from the stands, leapt to
the iceand grabbed Sampson. /
Held Lead
cerning the fact that McGonigal
had beaten the puck into the net,
but Gilray allowed the goal, setting
the stage for the overtime goal by
Sampson.
Split Series
MICHIGAN
Gray
Rodgers
Kartusch
Wilkie
Butler
Coristine
G
D
D
C
W
DENVER
Unis
Lnidsay
Kenning
Kelough
Dowhan
Johnston
First Period Scoring: M-McGoni-
gal (Babcock, Rodgers) 17:12; D--
Kellough (Johnston, Dowhan) 18:03.
Penalties: M-Morrison (tripping)
8:41.
Second Period Scoring: None. Pen-
alties: M-Galipeau (holding) 10:01;
M--Gaipeau (charging) 18:57.
Third Period Scoring: D-Johnston
(Kenning) 0:35; M-Morrison (Babe
cock, McGonigal) 16:31. Penalties:
D-Kenning (holding) 2:48; M -
Morrison (high sticking) 10:04; D-
Naslund (high sticking) 10:04; D-
Kenning (hooking) 11:43; M-Morri-
son (high sticking) 12:27; D-Lind-
say (high sticking) 12:27.
Overtime Scoring: D-Sampson
(Wilson) 1:24. Penalties: None.
MICHIGAN 1 0 1 0-2
DENVER 1 0 1 1-3
Saves:
Gray (M) 9 8 8 0-25
Unis (D) 8 11 11 1-31
-Daily-Bruce Taylor
BIG BAD JOHN-Michigan forward John Harris stole the show
for the Wolverines in last night's 71-64 win over Evansville. The
6'5" senior scored 20 points and took down 20 rebounds. Here he
is shown against Texas Christian.
SEASON OPENER:
Penn State Defeats.
~M'Grap piers',141
}
t
t
i
TOM PENDLEBURY
..against the boards
Second Straight
MICHIGAN G F
Cole 0 0
Harris 9 2
Buntin 6 5
Herner ,0 1
Cantrel 7 2
Oosterbaan 2 0
Tregoning 4 1
Pomey 4 1
Totals 30 11
T
0
20
17
1
16
4
9
9
71
T
23
13
5
7
2
3
11
64
EVANSVILLE
Sloan
Briley
Zausch-
Pruett
Mautz
Bullard
Smith
Totals
G
8
6
2
3
1
1
5
26
F
7
1
1
1
0
1
1
2
Halftime: Michigan 36-31.
(GE/TTNG RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!) as
Special To The Daily.
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -
Penn State's superiority in the
lower weights gave the Nittany
Lions a 14-11 win over Michigan
yesterday in the Wolverine's sea-
son's debut.
Michigan lost the first four
matches and managed three wins
and a tie in heavier weights.
Heavyweight Jack Barden was
the most impressive of the Wol-
SPORT SHORTS:
Birds, Giants,
Make Trade'
By The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO -- The San
Francisco Giants and Baltimore
Orioles made a wholesale exchange
of 1962 pitching disappointiments
yesterday and threw two young
catchers into a six-man deal an-
nounced only a few hours before
the inter-league trading deadline.
The National League champions
sent Stu Miller, Mike McCormick
and catcher John Orsino to the
Orioles for Jack Fisher, Billy Hoeft
and catcher Jim Coker.
GOTHAM BOWL
NEW YORK-Willie Ross ran
92 yards with a kickoff return
and scored a second touchdown
in the final period yesterday as
Nebraska edged Miami 36-34 in
a spectacular Gotham Bowl foot-
ball game despite a dazzling pass-
ing show by George Mira, Miami's
All-America quarterback.
* * *
LIBERTY BOWL
PHILADELPHIA-Terry Bakers
Oregon State's All-America run-
ning and passing threat, reeled
off 99-yards on a beautiful roll-
out run in the first quarter yes-
terday to give the Beavers a 6-0
victory over Villanova in the
fourth annual Liberty Bowl.
verine grapplers with an 8-0 win
over the Lions' Dick Moen. Wayne
Miller of Michigan defeated
Charles Beatty, 2-1 at 157-lbs, and
sophomore Chris Stowell defeated
Penn State's Mike Gill, 7-5 at
177-lbs.
Rich Bay, Michigan's 167-lb.
wrestler tied Penn State's Marty
Strayer, 4-4.
Michigan's losers were Ralph
Bahna at 123-lbs; Captain Nick
Armelagos at 130-lbs; Dave Doze-
man at 137-lbs. and Lee Detrick
at 147-lbs.
Bahna was beaten by Penn
State's Dennis Slattery, 3-1; Ar-
melagos was taken by Bob Haney,
4-1; Dozeman lost to Dave Thiel,
5-4 on riding time, and George
Edwards of Penn State edged Det-
rick, 2-1.
SCORES
COLLEGE
Purdue 93, Butler 78
Wisconsin 84, Miami (Ohio) 58
DePaul 76, Minnesota 74
Ohio 62, Iowa 54
Duke 76, Louisville 75
Illinois 76, Iowa State 74 (ovt)
Kentucky 71, Northwestern 60
Ohio State 74, TCU 62
St. John's (NY) 54, St. Louis 48
Loyola (Chicago) 105, South Dakota 58
N.C. State 87, Geo. Washington 48
Maryland 67, Virginia 61
Columbia 54, Lafayette 48
Florida 73, Wake Forest 67
Arizona State 77, Kansas State 72
Tennessee 65, Sewanee 45j
Mississippi St. 77, Memphis St. 66
Detroit 98, Hillsdale 76
Bowling Green 83, Western Ky. 58
Fordham 75, Connecticut 66
Brandeis, 76, Harvard 56
Loyola (New Orleans) 77, No. Texas
St. 66 (ovt)
Princeton 65, Navy 54
Westminster 66, Malone 49
virginia Military 88, Furman 68
San Francisco St. 74, W. Mich. 66
Toledo 70, Northern Illinois 48
NBA
Cincinnati 124, Boston 120
St. Louis 112, Detroit 94
NHL
Detroit 3, Chicago 1
New York 4, Montreal 2
NFL
Cleveland 13, San Francisco 10
Michigan held a 5-1 second per-
iod lead. Captain Larry Babcock,
playing his first game of the Den-
ver series-he was ineligible to
play in Friday night's game be-
cause Uf a fighting penalty and
subsequent game suspension he re-
ceived two weeks before in the
Michigan State series, passed ou.
from behird the Denver goal.
A Denver defensive lapse left
John M,-Gonigal in the open. He
gave a head fake and then flicked
the puck into the lower left cor-
ner for Michigan's first goal.
Michigan almost didn't have
that lead, however. Denver ap-
peared to score a goal with about
30 seconds gone in the first per-
iod. The goal light didn't go on.
however, and Gray was laying on
the puck.
Three on Two
Denver didn't take long in scor-
ing the equalizer. The Pioneers had
a three-on-two break. Denver
captain Marshall Johnston shot
and Gray made the save, sprawled
on the ice. Then Howie Kellough
batted at the rebound. Gray mir-
aculously stopped it with his stick
as a Michigan defenseman fell on
top of him. He tried to gather the
puck in, but the rubber eluded
him. Kellough made no mistake
this time as he lifted the puck
over the outstretched Michigan
defenders and into the goal.
The second period was, perhaps,:
the best of the game. Neither
team scored and only two penal-
ties were handed out. Roger Gali-
peau received both of them-one
at 10:01 and the other at 18:57.
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