WAGE sr% THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. JANU, THE MICHIGAN DAILY TTJV~DAV.. JANTI yvair Ax. iklp V[ r\\lAJ Minnesota Squeaks By Michigan, 66-63' Bearcats Still No. 1 In Basketball Poll By The Associated Press By DAVE ANDREWS Associate Sports Editor Minnesota sprung a stinger in the person of sophomore guard Terry Kunze on Michigan here last nigght, but it was senior forward Eric Magdanz who scored the big bucket as Minnesota handed Mich- igan its second straight Big Ten, loss, 66-63. Some 6,600 fans saw Kunze put on a fantastic shooting exhibi- tion from the floor .and Magdanz come up with the key buckets.' Big at 6'3" for a guard, Kunze showed it was no handicap. His 14 field goals in 15 tries tied the Big Ten record for single game percentage by Ohio State's great Jerry Lucas last year. Big Play Magdanz came up with a three- point play with 31 seconds left in the game to break a 59-59 tie and put the game out of reach. Between the two of them, they pumped in 48 of Minnesota's 66 points, Kunze leading the way with 28. For the Wolverines, who got no closer than a tie at any point after tie halftime buzzer, sopho- more Bill Buntin led the scorers with 21 points. The big center, however, was cold from the floor, clicking on only seven of 22 at- tempts and in general kept pretty well in check by Minnesota's brawny forward wall. In fact, the whole Michigan NCA4 Alters Substitution Rule By The Associated Press College football coaches praised the newly adopted almost free substitution rule as "good for the game" today and indicated they now have enough room to mani- pulate their forces despite a couple of annoying strings. "Very wise-very sound," said Bump Elliott, of the University of Michigan, commenting on the change made by the rules com- mittee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Saturday night at Coronado, Calif. Completely Completely free substitution will be permitted by either team any time the clock stops and on all plays in a series except the fourth down and when the ball changes hands.' In each of the restrictive cases, a coach may send in two men. Substitution has not been that free since unlimited substitution went out 10 years ago. "We feel this liberal change will speed up the game,' said Ivan Williamson, Wisconsin Athletic director and head of the commit- tee. "The provision will eliminate the messenger system, do away with the recording of substitutes and permit the use of specialists." Reliefs Pitt's John Michelesen said, "It will alleviate the problem of al- Scores South Carolina 80, Furman 77 Illinois 78, Northwestern 76 No. Mich. 79, Minnesota:Duluth 78 Western Michigan 110, Detroit 67 Notre Dame 80, Butler 54 Missouri 62, Kansas 56 Iowa 65, Wisconsin 56 Wake Forest 82, Virginia 62 ways trying to keep track of the subs on the sidelines. Now the coach has more time to concen- trate on the game." John Griffith, of Georgia, com- mented, "I'm for free substitution and I think this is about as close as we can get." That's not the way it looked to Ara Parseghian, of Northwestern. Disappointed "I'm' greatly disappointed," he said. "As I interpret the rules, you can't platoon on first or fourth down. Who wants to platoon on second and third down? Why don't they go all out and give us un- limited substitution?" Duke's Bill Murray, member of the rules committee, explained, "There are basic philosophies of football. A majority of the coaches favored a return to unlimited sub- stitution, but there were some who favored the idea that the boys should learn both offense and de- fense. "The rules committee is obli- gated to reflect these philisophies. So the change is a compromise. Unlimited substitution will occur, but coaches still have to train players for both offense and de- fense." Big Break Kansas' Jack Mitchell called the rule "a great break for the boys with somewhat limited abilities, allowing them to play more; it's not so good for the outstanding boys-they won't have a chance to use all of their abilities because it's seldom they will play both ways.", VMI's John McKenna had this reason for favoring free substitu- tiond: "The old rule was supposed to equalize the have and have-nots, and at first we liked it because we were short-handed. But eacn year they liberalized the rules a bit and pretty soon we ended up playing our two platoons against everybody's three." And Virginia Coach Bill Elias said, "It may be good for football, but it won't make much difference in the long run. The strong will stay strong, the weak will stay weak." In other rules changes adopted, the number of timeouts was reduc- ed from five to four in a half and the T-formation quarterback was made an eligible pass receiver. WCH.A team was held pretty much in check. The Wolverines wound up with 26 of 64 from the field for a shooting percentage of 40 6. Minnesota shot 50 per cent ori 27 of 54. Michigan gained a 39-37 edge in rebounds with Buntin leading both sides with 12. The Gophers, whose Big Ten record now stands at 2-1 and are one game below .500 at 6-7 over- all, fielded a front line of 6'8" Me! Northway, 6'7" Tom McGrann and the 6'6" Magdanz, however, and pretty well dominated their de- fensive boards in what Minnesota Coach John Kundla called "our best defensive game." Rare Only on rare occasions were the Wolverines able to get more than one shot and most of these were from "outside" as the Go- phers collapsed around Buntin and the basket. Nevertheless, the game was close all the way with the lead chang- ing hands several times early n the first half. Three straight buckets by Kunze in the final minute and a half of the first half gave Minnesota a slim 31-29 intermission advantage. Big Two Largely on the five for five per- formance of Kunze and Magdanz s consistent scoring, the Gophers maintained their lead throughout most of the second half until baskets by junior Doug Herner and senior- John Oosterbaan knotted the score at 57 with 3:04 left in the game. McGrann put Minnesota in front again 59-57, but again Ooster- baan tied the score with a long pumper, before Magdanze put the game on ice. Michigan's Ccach Dave Strack, naturally disappointed with the loss, had nothing but praise for the Minnesota team. "We knew they had a good ball club, but N e didn't look for them to be so quick. "Our kids tried hard out there, but we just couldn't put together a combination that would click." Michigan's next action comes January 30 at Detroit. The next Big Ten game is at Michigan State, February 3. Again For the seventh straight week, ever since the season's start, Cin- cinnati's basketball team finished on top in The Associated Press poll Monday. And for the third straight week, the steam-rolling Bearcats swept the boards, gath- ering up all 45 first place votes for a perfect 450 points. If it weren't for the unbeaten Bearcats, who now have won 31 straight, 13 this season, No. 1 team honors undoubtedly would have gone to Loyola of Chicago which owns an unblemished rec- ord through 15 games this season.' As it was, the high-scoring Ramblers had to be content with second place on 383 points. One of Loyola's two victories last week was a 107-69 triumph over West- ern Michigan, marking the eighth time the Ramblers had gone over the 100 mark. The top ten, based on total points alloting 10 for a first place team, nine for second, eight for third and down to one for tenth place vote with first place votes in parentheses: Cole Harris Buntin Cantrell Herner Pomey Oosterbaan Tregoning Totals MICHIGAN G F 2-8 0-0 2-4 0-0 7-22 7-10 3-7 1-1 5-9 1-2 3-6 1-1 4-611-1 0-2 0-0 26-65 11-151 T Reb. 4 5 4 1 21 12 7 1 11 1 7 4 97 0 3 63 35 T Reb. 20 7 5 10 2 6 9 4 28 3 2 2 00 66 32 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Cincinnati (45) Chicago Loyola Illinois Arizona State Doke Ohio State Georgia Tech Wichita West Virginia Stanford W L Pts. 13 0 450 15 0 383 1111 325 14 1 311 12 2 154 10 2 144 11 1 141 11 3 107 10 3 78 10 3 56 Magdanz McGrann Northway Bateman Kunze Jensen Linehan Totals MINNESOTA G F 6-11 8-8 2-9 1-3 1-7 0-0 3-10 3-4 14-15 0-0 1-1 0-2 0-1 0-0 27-54 12-171 MICHIGAN MINNESOTA 29 34-63 31 35-66 Big Ten Standings Denver North. Dakota Tech Colorado Minnesota MSU Michigan WL 6 2 4 1 4 3 2 2 2 3 3 5 1 6 T 0 1 1 0 1 0 I Pet. .750 .750 .563 .500, .417 .375 .188 Illinois Indiana Ohio State Minnesota Michigan St. Michigan Wisconsin Iowa Northwestern Purdue w 4 2 2 2 1 2 1 1 0 0 L 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 3 2 3 Pct. 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .500 .500 .333 .250 .000 .000 AGAINST OHIO STATE: Lack of Rebounding Hurts 'M' i F~TheIi Op[1UO3® U - JT w in the Mt. Royal Hotel 8841 Woodward TR 58775 9 PM-4 AM Fri. & Sat. FREE PARKING I I BONNIE DOBSON "a fresh and striking entry in the folk singing field" VARIETY "ingratiating honesty and warmth" N.Y. TIMES 1 U U By BILL BULLARD With Bill Buntin on the bench for nine of the 20 minutes of the second half in last Saturday's 68-66 loss to Ohio State, Michi-' gan's rebounding was weakened enough to be a major factor in the defeat. The Wolverines picked off 32 rebounds as against 21 for the Buckeyes in the first half. But with Buntin out for much of the second half Michigan was out- rebounded 24-15 in that period. Not only did the Wolverines have to play without their No. 1 rebounder but the second leading rebounder, John Harris, only played a couple of minutes, being hampered by a leg injury. Coach Dave Strack agreed after the game that a healthy Harris would have made a difference in the rebound- ing department. "Harris is a great' ball player," he said. "Anytime he's not in the game it hurts us." Strike One Strack first took Buntin out of the game at 10:37 of the second half after Bill had incurred his third foul. John Harris took over at center despite his leg injury and had a turn at battling Gary Bradds under the boards. At this time Michigan had a 52-48 lead. Buntin came bac.r into the game about two minutes later. But at 7:24 he fouled Brads in a scramble for a rebound. This was his fourth foul and Tom Cole came off the bench after a brief rest to become the Wolverine center. Bradds sunk his free throw to cut Michi- gan's lead to 54-53. Tom Bowman put OSU in front to stay with a lay-up shortly after. Try Again At 6:09 with the Buckeyes lead- ing 56-54, Buntin was substituted back into the game. He fouled out of the game for the firs~t time this season at 5:56 trying to stop Bradds from scoring. The 6'8" Buckeye center's backet was good and he was awarded a free throw on Buntin's foul, which he missed. Ohio State led at this point 58-54. Michigan never gave up and almost pulled the Victory out sev- eral times. But lack of a big man to fight Bradds for rebounds once Buntin was out of the game proved too much of a handicap for the Wolverines. Close Buntin ended up with 13 re- bounds to 15 for Bradds. Both Michigan and Ohio State had sophomore forwards picking off the second highest number of re- bounds for their team. Larry Tre- gonning played most of the game for the Wolverines after starting for Harris and pulled down 12 re- bounds. Tom Bowman came off the bench for the Buckeyes to end up with 10 rebounds, all but one of them gathered in during the second half. Bradds had a clear edge over Buntin in scoring, 33-15, but only took down two more rebounds de- spite playing the whole game com- pared with about 75 per cent of the game for Buntin. After the game, Buntin commented on the rebounding battle between him- self and Bradds. "I didn't find him difficult," said Buntin. "He just Pooped ... but must carry on' Snap right back and keep going'Take Verve continuous action alertness capsules. Effective, safe, not habit-forming. had one of his good nights in scor- ing while I had a bad one." Expressing the common feeling of the Michigan team that the Wolverines can beat the Buck- eyes in their February 16 encoun- ter at Yost Field House, Buntin said, "I'm looking forward to it and I know they're not." Added John Harris, "We'll kill 'em next time." 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