Page Four---Wolverine Sports THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 2,. T970 Page Four-Wolverine Sports THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 2, 1970 The athletic dollar bind; can Michigan overcome it? Gymnasts take NCAA titie (Continued from Page 1) was $179,744 compared to op- erating expenses of around $2.5 ~million. But it is the former reason - rising costs - that is most im- portant in explaining the crisis in athletic financing. Inflation, is hitting intercollegiate ath- letics hardy and threatening to knock some sports clear out of bounds. In addition, the rising costs of tuition and living expenses for students at universities a r e bloating athletic department budgets, too. Even though the number of athletic tenders are staying the same, the cost of feeding, housing and educating the athletes on tenders is ris- ing. "We (athletic departments) a r e in a doubly tough situa- tion," Canham says. "This is one of the few businesses where you can't increase your revenue by raising the cost of the pro- duct. How much more money are people going to be willing to spend for football tickets?" Despite the outside factor of inflation, Canham believes that at least part of the problem of athletic financing is due to poor administrative planning a n d management. "We're stupid - our own NCAA program hurts us,',' he says. "For example. he continues, "they put Michigan State and Notre Dame on TV from South Bend when there was a home game here. I bet that cost us 20,000 in non-student attend- ance. Things like that go on all the time, all over the country." Canham is understandably upset by such examples of mis- management. For despite an average home football attend- ance of 71,000, the attraction of an All - American basketball player, modern Crisler Arena and $200,000 in student fees to help pay off the bond on tlhat building, M i c h i g a n athletics barely finished in the black last year. Still, althqugh he iay be wor- ried, Canham is not dismayed. "Sure, it's a problem," he says. "But it's not as bad as some places. Ohio State is filling their seats for basketball and foot- ball, and they're still in debt. They have nowhere to go. "I look out there and I still see empty seats at Michigan Stadium and Crisler Arena. It's my job to see that they're filled. The burden's on me." Meanwhile, purists are calling for an end to "collegiate profes- sionalism" and a de-emphasis of at least some sports. And hard-nosed realists are saying if college sports are ,going to -in- sist on being Big-Time, t h e y should be Big-Time all the way. and to' hell with maintaining this facade of amateurism. So far, most athletic administra- tors have rejected both these views. But they a r e- going to have to go in one direction or another if the crisis in athletic financing continues. Daily--Richard Lee Losing Sid Jensen hurts ROAD TO PASADENA Gridders reign as co-champs By JERRY CLARKE Show business performers dislike following extremely good acts be- cause it makes them look bad. This year's gymnastics team will have much the same problem as they follow in the footsteps of the team that capped a perfect dual meet record with a dramatic tri- umph at the national champion- ships in Philadelphia. The championship was not de- cided until the last routine of the last event of the competition. Iowa State had taken an early lead on a phenomenal performance in the vaulting, but the Wolverines peck- ed away at the Cyclone margin,. and when the Wolverines' turn came in the high bar, they needed a 27.85 to get at least a tie. Ted Marti led off with a 9.3, and after Sid Jensen got only a 8.9, Rick McCurdy came back with a 9.25. This left it all up to Ed Howard. Howard, competing undeif fan- tastically intense pressure, scored a 9.4 and the Wolverines walked off with the title by, the mere margin of one-tenth of a point. The thrill-packed triumph end- ed many'years of waiting for the Wolvtrines. Michigan undoubtedly had the best team in the nation in 1968, but an off day in the Big Ten meet cost the squad a chance to go to Seattle to compete in the nationals and thus only individual Michigan competitors could parti- cipate. Iowa, runner-up to the Wolverines in the Big Ten, took the title. This year's team will be missing four performers who keyed much of last year's success. Last year's captain, Ron Rapper, who was a two-time NCAA champion on the parallel bars, will be almost im- possible to replace. George Hunt- zicker will be sorely missed not only in the floor exercise but also in vaulting, where he got con- sistently high scores. Bill Mackie will be another loss for the floor exercise, an event where he improved greatly as the season wore on. And, most im- portantly, the Wolverines will lose all-arounder Sid Jensen, who was perhaps the single most valuable member of the team.r THIS YEAR, Coach Newt Loken will rely heavily on his returning competitors in his quest to defend the championship. Most impor- tant will be McCurdy, two-time Big Ten all-around titlist, who will be the team's captain. Mc- Curdy will be under even more pressure than in the past, as he will have to take the slack left by the departure of Jensen. Gura performed last season on the side horse and long horse, and did well in both at the national meet. Marti came into his own on the high bar, where he consistently scored in the nine's, and should give Gura a fight for the vacant berth. The Wolverines graduation loss- es will be most painful in the floor exercise, where only Ward Black returns. Black showed much pom- ise as a freshman, and he and McCurdy will have to perform superbly to cushion the team against the loss of Huntzicker and Mackie. The most improved event will be the side horse, long the weak spot of the Michigan team. Dick Kaziny was a standout as a fresh- man, and if Gura holds down one of the all-around positions, Mike Gluck will get a shot in the side horse. So, for the first time in years. the team should get up into the 27 range on the side horse. JENSEN WAS the team's best ring performer, so scores could suffer there. Skip Frowick was a standout as a freshman, and Mike Sale did well until sidelined by an injury. If Sale is healthy and Frowick continues to improve, the ring team could well stay solid. The long horse, or vaulting, should again be excellent. Despite the absence of Jensen and Hunt- zicker, there are many other' vaulters present to keep the scores high. Gura, McCurdy and sopho- more Terry Boys all performed well last season, and the long horse should again be one of Mich- igan's strongest events. Murray Plotkin and McCurdy will have a tall order on the parallel bars, for Rapper and Jen- sen formed a superb one-two punch. The scores on this event cannot help but suffer, even though Plotkin was a strong per- former last season. The high bar will probably be the Wolverines strongest event, as they will field one of the strong- est contingents in the nation." NCAA hero Howard will be back, and he and Marti should van- guard consistently high Wolverine1 scores in this event. Jim Scully will give Michigan added depth, and McCurdy counts the high bar as his favorite and best event. With these four com- peting in the final event of every meet, the Wolverines are assured of consistently strong finishes. Coach Loken co u l d be fairly certain last season that his team would make it out of the Big Ten meet and into the national cham- pionships, but this year, he can- not be so sure. An improving Illinois team will join traditional power Iowa to give the Wolverines a stiff challenge. A LOSS IN the Big Ten's would eliminate the Wolverine team from the national team title race, a pill that would be doubly hard to swallow as the meet this year will be ,held in Crisler Arena here in Ann Arbor. If indeed the gymnastics team can match their exploits of last year, and do it in front of their home crowd, no one would com- plain. Except maybe Iowa State. 4 * (Continued from Page 1) side of the road, the Wolverines were now the top contender for the Rose Bowl bid. And they knew it. Two games' remained, before the long awaited meeting with Ohio State, but the Wol- verines were not to be caught looking ahead. They travelled to Illinois and nearly tore down the stadium in a 57-0 slaughter. And what was supposed the big showdown against Iowa's errat- ic Hawkeyes turned out to be another laugher, as the Wolver- ines broke all kinds of confer- ence offense records in a 51-6 rout. The team crescendoed might- ily for their climactic meeting with the Buckeyes, and no team in collegiate history had ever taken the gridiron a n y more prepared than did the Wolver- ines on that memorable Novem- ber afternoon. The sky-high Wolverines were quickly brought down to earth as Buckeye quarterback Rex Kern scrambled for 25 yards on the very first play from scrim- mage. This w a s exactly what Schembechler didn't want; his strategy was to contain Kern. The Wolverines stopped the imi- tial OSU thrust with a valiant stand on a fourth and one at the ten, but the Buckeyes drove it over the next time they had the Pall for a 6-0 lead. T h e Ohio State score seemed to throw added fuel on Michigan's fires, and Moorhead generalled a beautiful drive, Garvie Craw capping it by dragging two Bucks into the endzone for the Wolverines' first score. Ohio State got right back on the boards, as Kern passed his team down the field for another score and a 12-7 Buckeye lead. The conversion was good, but Michigan was called for being offside and greedy Woody de- cided to go for two. Kern tried to roll to his left, but he was inundated by five blue shirts. and Ohio State thereupon lost their momentum f o r good. Moorhead began mixing passes to Billy Harris a n d Mandich with runs by Taylor. From the Ohio State 33, Taylor cracked over left tackle and broke for the sidelines before being down- ed at the three. Garvie Craw needed just two cracks at the Buck middle to give Michigan the lead for good. Cornerback Barry Pierson then began his one-man assault on the Woody Hayes' legions, zig- zagging a punt back 67 yards to set up the third Wolverine TD. Tim Killian added a short field goal and it was 24-12 at the half. The first half glory belonged, to the offense, but the second half was all defense. OSU be- gan to pass, but the balls kept ending up in Wolverine hands. Pierson got three thefts, A 11- American Tom Curtis got two to break the all-time NCAA re- cord for interception r e t u r n yardage, and wolf man Tom Darden added another. Almost the entire second half was play- ed in Buckeye territory, and al- though the Wolverines knocked on the door time and t i m e again, they could not manage another score. But when all was said ond done, this really didn't matter. The Wolverines had trounced their foe at their own g a m e with a complete effort. It was the greatest win any Michigan team has ever had, a win achieved by a team that knew they could do it. 01 Opposite McCurdy at all-around position will sophomore Ray Gurac the other be eitlher or Marti. -Daily-Richard Lee All-around titlist Rick McCurdy swings out _..._ .. _ _ _. h._________________ ________ _________ ______ __________ _______ _________ ___________ _.__ . On the Michigan campus since 1932 THEFORESTER Headquarters for the HIGHEST QUALITY SHOES Featuring for MEN Johnston and Murphy French-Shriners and Bass Outdoor Footwear f __ r . tw .._ . ." ,; _ ,., : ;:_ ~ Clothes of iI Al 41 Recognuizable w 'ellence For the GIRLS British Brevitts Sandier Pumps and Flats Bass Wee uns and Tacks (The largest and most comprehensive stock of Bass shoes in the midwest) Clothes tailored for Van Boven are noted' for the superlative fit and balance of their light unpadded construction. They are made of choice British and domestic ima- terials. 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