IV Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 28, 1971 Sunday, March 28, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY F- 1970-71: Congratulations On a Fine Sasn Ball Office Supply, Inc. "Your Friendly Stationers Store" 116 S. Main Street ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN --- Cagers search for era of greatness By BETSY MAHON came up against Bob Cousy andj Legend has it that after t h e his Holy Cross teammates who Michigan Wolverines had dropped handed them a 63-45 defeat. a decision to Kentucky -in the Cowles accepted a more lucra- 1966 NCAA Regionals, then head tive position at Minnesota the fol- coach Dave Strack leaned against lowing year and basketball again a locker in the diessing room and hit the skids. In the 12 years prior asked the members of the press: to the hiring of Dave Strack in "Gentlemen, where am I going to fnd snnt a hao s V1C~n1 "1 to find anothier cazzie Russen? Strack's query was natural: Russell was, without a doubt, thej greatest Wolverine ever. He broke almost every existing record and made basketball respectable. The Age of Cazzie appears even greater when it is compared to the decades that preceded it. Before that time success- seem- ed to occur at ten year intervals. Michigan had had only two All- Americans - Bennie Oostenbaan in 1928 and John Townsend in 1938. The Wolverines went to a post season tournament once, the3 NCAA's in 1948. Basketball became an intercol- legiate sport at the University in 1909 when the Wolverines played a five game schedule, in which they dropped four of the contests. The team subsequently withdrew from the conference in a dispute over a rule which barred varsity foot- ball players from participating in basketball. The sport reappeared at an in- tercollegiate level in 1917 and by the time that Oosterbaan graduat- ed in 1929, the Wolverines had won or shared four titles. Despite his heroics, basketball was still con- sidered a minor sport, on almost the same level as tennis. Because basketball was con- sidered a minor sport it had no full time coaches. The majority of the mentors were football men who coached basketball as a side- light. In 1948 Ozzie Cowles be- came the University's first full- time basketball coach and his un- divided attention produced in- stant results. Led by Pete Elliott and Bob Harrison and employing the zone press for the first time in collegiate history, the Wolverines won fifteen games and dropped only five and were invited to their first post season tourney. Unfor- tunately, in their first match, they 't i ij 1960 the Wolverines finished in the second division nine times. A- resurgence in the sport occur- ed in 1960 when it was given great- er emphasis. The most notable manifestation of this new interest was the hiring of not one, but three full-time coaches. The coaching, changes did not produce immediate results as it was not until the 1962-63 season that the Wolverines were able to pull out of the second division. By that time Strack had enlisted the services of former All-Staters George Pomey and Larry Tregon- ing. The previous summer one. of the coaches had happened upon Bill Buntin playing basketball at the Brewster Center in Detroit. Buntin had missed playing in his senior year at Northern High be- cause of a broken leg and had been subsequently ignored by col- lege scouts. During the 1963-64 season, Mich- igan fielded a quintet with Bob Cantrell and Russell at the guards, Buntin at center and Tregoning and Oliver Darden at the forward positions. That year they won the Big Ten crown with an 11-3 re- cord and sported a 23-5 won-lost record overall. They defeated both Loyola and Ohio University in the NCAA regionals before losing to Duke 91-80 in the finals. Russell scored 670 points that year while Bunton talleyed 627. Both were All-Americans. For the next season, George Pomey replaced Cantrell at guard whil! the other four starters re- mained the same. This was un- questionably the best Wolverine team ever. They lost only one Big Ten tilt, by two points to Pur- due in the final game of the sea- son, and went 24-4 for all games played. They outscored their op- ponents by almost 400 points. They won the NCAA Regionals by handily defeating both Dayton and Vanderbilt. They beat Princeton in the first match of the finals only to lose the crown to UCLA by a score of 91-80, That year Russell scored.694 points and Buntin 564; again both were honored as All- Americans.. In the 1965-66 season a some- what rejuvenated team came back for another try at the NCAA title. John Thompson joined Russell in the backcourt while John Clawson and Jim-Myers teamed with Dar- den up front. They won the Big Ten Championship for the third straight year while their overall record "slipped" to 18-8. They. edged Western Kentucky 80-79 in the first game of the Regionals only to lose the second match to Kentucky 84-77. This was Russell's last game in the maize and blue uniform and caused Strack to ask about Russell's successor. Indeed, Russell rewrote t h e Michigan record book. He holds the record for most points in one game, 48; most points for a sea- son, 800, most field goals for a season, 308 and most career points, 2,164. He was a three-time All- American. Yet, the man who guided them through these years feels that the outstanding feature of t h o s e championship teams was "their ability to get along with each other. Our success was a balanced operation; all great teams n e e d great reserves. They had intangi- ble qualities such as leadership and the ability to play and get along together., Oliver Darden who played with Russell for three years and cap- tained the 1965-66 squad concurred, "Cassie was a great ball player who always seemed to come up with the winning basket. Yet, we weren't selfish. All individual ef- forts were secondary to the ulti- mate purpose of winning." The Age of Cassie quickly died as the season following his gradu- ation the team fell to last place. It was only during the past sea-son that they ,were contenders again. Strack, who has since acquired the position of Associate Athletic Di- rector, may very well have the answer to his question in the per- son of Henry Wilmore, who tallied 618 points as a sophomore. -He and names he overshadows such as Grabiec, Johnson and Brady will have another opportun- ity to try to bring Michigan its first national title. Perhaps another Era of Greatness is dawning. That (Continued from Page 5) the season to spell Brady who was having difficulty adjusting to Big Ten ball. Picked to finish in the se- cond division by most of the pre- season pollsters, the Wolverines surprised no one when t h e y dropped their first three games. Of course, they faced some pret- ty notable opponents. The opener was a home tilt with the Fighting Irish of Aus- tin Carr ... er, Notre Dame. A capacity crowd showed up at Crisler to see Michigan fight a tough first half, but get blown away in the second and lose 94- 81. Next in line were Kentucky vacation, Michigan flew to sun- ny Hawaii -for the Rainbow Classic. They were stopped, however, by Hawaii's Rainbows, 83-76 in the semi-finals. Shaken from the defeat, the Wolverines got it together a n d swarmed all over nationally ranked Villanova, 103-87, for third place in the tourney, as Wilmore exploded for 31 points and 19 rebounds. "It was after that Villanova game that I was convinced we had a great team here," said Rodney Ford at sea- son's-end. When January 9 rolled around, all the previous games meant nothing. That was the day the Big Ten season began, and as t~he "After .the Villanova game, I knew we had a great team here."-Rodney Ford year thai and Duke and Michigan lost to both, 104-93 and 95-74 respec- tively. But it was the Kentucky game that gave Michigan fans what they had been waiting for: the real Henry Wilmore. He made life a bit more difficult for the Wildcats by pouring in 40 points, and prompted Kentuc- ky's seasoned coach Adolph Rupp to say, "We couldn't stop him and nobody else will either." Rupp was right, and Wilmore went on to lead the Wolverines to victory in 15 of their next 16 games. After winning the first annual Michigan Invitational Tournament during Christmas 4Time to move?' UNIVERSITY TO WERS is now renting for summer and fall University Towers 536 South Forest Ave. 761-2680 M'I Read and Use Daily Classifieds In the tIng 0f a ntuns to love . The gift of - ewelry is one small way of i> expressing this love.° Ii THE v f BANGLE U mYh o ECKLAC'E \I is available in various styles, with r o u n d or heart-shaped tags.v No charge for engraving . - - ---- ------ ----. from eight dollars. arcade jewelry shop 16 NICKELS ARCADE FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS OPEN DAILY MONDAY-FRIDAY 9-5, SATURDAY 9-4 1909 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1951. 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 History Won Lost 1 4 6 12 18 6 10 13 16 4 15 4 11 4 10 7 8 6 12 5 14 3 10 7 14 2 95 13 4 11 6 10 8 6 14 8 12 15 5 16 4 13 7 11 9 13 7 9 10 6 14 10 8 8 10 12 7 12 7 12 8 155 15 6 11 11 7 15 6 16 6 16 9 13 11 11 9 13 13 9 11 11 15 7 4 20 6 18 7 17 16 8 23 5 24 4 18 8 8 16 11 13 14 10 18 6 r it has been said, "It's a whole new ball game.,, The game was against Wis- consin at Madison, and the Wol- verines had to resort to the re- feree's whistle to. win it, 90-89. Trailing by one point, 89-88, Grabiec tossed up a feeble-look- ing jumper with two seconds left. It never would have reach- ed the basket anyway, but the Badgers' Glen Richgels anxious- ly batted it away and was called for goaltending. Result: Michi- gan was in first place in the Big Ten with a 1-0 record. Almost as an extra added attraction, Wilmore tossed in 44 points, the most ever for a sophomore in his first Big Ten game, The talk all that week around the conference and even Ann Arbor was that Michigan was lucky and would never beat highly touted Indiana, featuring another super-soph, George Mc- Ginnis. But sure enough, Michigan, in possibly its finest game of the season, wallopped the Hoosiers before a full house at home, 92- 81. Wilmore continued his tear, scoring 35 points, while B r a d y ripped 20 rebounds from under the noses of McGinnis and big Joby Wright. A 97-87 win at Northwestern followed by a 97-79 romp 'at Minnesota, began to attract a good many believers that Mich- igan basketball had awakened from the dead. A severe test for the Wolver- ines would be their contest with Purdue, also in the thick of the pennant race. With all five starters hitting double figures, Michiganhliterally blasted t h e Boilermakers, 85-69, leaving the Wolverines as the only unde- feated Big Ten team. The following Saturday, Mich- igan was scared by unyielding Northwestern, but hung on for an 82-81 win as Ford and Wil- more collected 22 points apiece. Standing 6-0, the Wolverines faced a trip to West Lafayette and a return match with Pur- due. Playing most of the game with Wilmore in foul trouble and on the bench, Michigan got 19 pionts each from Brady, Fife and Grabiec, and devastated the Boilermakers 81-74, before the most hostile crowd they faced all season. After another shellacking of Minnesota, 108-90, the Wolver- ines had to look ahead. to the grit of the season. Michigan was on the top of the heap, boasting an 8-0 record, while Ohio State was breathing down its neck at 8-1 and Indiana was 7-2. The Wolverines made the trip to Bloomington, and 1o and be- hold, their bubble was burst, as the Hoosiers got their revenge and humbled Michigan, 88-79. McGinnis erupted for 33 points and Steve Downing added 28, while the two combined for 35 rebounds. But the Wolverines still had a shot at the Big Ten crown. All they had to do was knock off Ohio State in the showdown of the 8-1 teams. Sophomore Alan Hornyak scored 17 points in the f i r s t eight minutes and got the Bucks off to a lead it would never re- linquish. Michigan managed to tie the score with six minutes left in the game, but they could not contend with the smooth moving Bucks, and OSU coasted to a 9-85 victory. Hornyak net- ted 36 points, but he was best- ed by Wilmore who broke the 40-point barrier for the third time, with 42. The Wolverines followed with a one-point, 75-74 victory over Illinois. Trailing 74-73, Fife threw in a scrambling layup to put Michigan ahead. But Ford saved the game when he blocked a Nick Weatherspoon shot with three seconds left. An 88-63 humbling of Michi- gan State and an 86-82 win over Iowa clinched second place for the Wolverines and won them the NIT berth, while Wilmore added 63 more points in the two games. In the final game with Wiscon- sin, Michigan fini'shed -the sea- son in style, blasting the Badgers 93-73. Ford hit for 30 points, his career high, while Fife came in with 19. Wilmore, who "let the seniors have their day," re- laxed and settled with seven. 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