hurSd'oy, September 5, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five hursaySepembr 5,197 TH MI~iGA DALY ageFiv Gymnastics: A long tradition of winning AFTER OFF YEAR Tankers: Hope to surface By LEBA HERTZ To many students, the Michigan gymnastics am's greatest feat last year was changing the me of an evening meet to the afternoon so that ob Dylan could appear at Crisler Arena. But enthusiasts of Coach Newt Loken's gymnasts, ieir greatest achievement was qualifying for e NCAA's at Penn State. There were many highlights of the season for e Wolverine tumblers. The men were unde- ated in all dual meets which included victories er Big Ten Champion Iowa and nationally nked Penn State. BUT compared to other Loken-coached Michi- n teams, 1973-74 was an off year. In 27 years, ken has a record of 194 wins and 34 losses so e 200 victory mark is well within reach. Michi- n has won 11 of the last 13 Big Ten titles and o NCAA crowns. The past season seemed to end in Iowa City en the Wolverines failed to retain the Big n championship they had earned the year be-, re. Despite injuries which plagued the gymnasts ward the end of the season, Michigan finished cond by scoring a normally winning score of 1.4. However, Iowa the host of the Big Ten eet was simply exceptional- in scoring a 326. According to NCAA rules, the champion of ch conference must score at least 300 in order qualify for the Nationals. If a team does not eet this standard, the highest scoring second ace school goes. Michigan aited in anticipa- n for many weeks. Finally the Western Athi- tic Conference results came in. The chain- on Air Force did not score the required 300 d Michigan became the eighth team at the CAA's. HOWEVER, the injuries finally caught up ith Michigan at Penn State. The major loss as Captain Monty Falb, ring specialist, who ad an operation and was unable to participate. fichigan finished eighth in the Nationals with st year's wi-ner Iowa State repeating its first lace performance. Next year's squad seems strong as the only raduating members were Falb and floor ex- rcise and vaulting specialist J. P. Bouchard. Although Falb and Bouchard are irreplaceable, the Wolverines have so much depth that they should remain a powerhouse. RETURNING lettermen include Jean Gag- non, Pierre LeClerc, Bruce Medd, and Bruce Keeshin in the all-around. Gagnon won many individual titles in the all-around last year and proved his consistency. The loss of Falb in the ring exercise will undoubtedly hurt Michigan; but versatile Joe Neuenswander should aid the Wolverines in this event. The floor exercise event has two dependable specialists returning in Randy Sakamoto and Chuck Stillerman. Carey Culbertson and Bob Darden are outstanding specialists on the high bar; Jerry Poynton and Rupert Hansen are standouts on the pommel horse; Rich Bigras and all-arounder Gagnon are experts on the parallel bars; and LeClerc and Gagnon are the one-two punch in vaulting. To replace Falb and Bouchard, Loken recruit- ed some fine gymnasts such as Harley Danner, Michigan State High School champion in the All-Around competition from Ann Arbor's Huron High School. Bob Creek of Evanston, Illinois is considered a fine prospect by Loken, especially in the High Bar. Creek was an Illinois State Champion. Another freshman prospect is Dave Keeshin; high school teammate of Creek at Evanston and brother of Michigan captain Bruce Keeshin. Dave's specialty is the pommel horse. KURT Golder comes to Michigan as a trans- fer from Alpena Junior College and Loken rates hinm an excellent prospect in the rings. Hopefully, these young gymnasts and the ex- perienced veterans will be able to avoid injury and repeat or surpass last year's performance. Michigan will host the Big Ten Championships in late March and host defending champion Iowa in a dual meet. A tenative match is also scheduled with Louisiana State at Baton Rouge. In the Big Ten, Michigan will face strong opposition from Illinois, which lost just one performer, Iowa, and perennially strong Min- nesota. One thing is certain. This season will again be exciting and the Wolverines will be one of the favorites for the Big Ten title again. By CHUCK BLOOM' Q: What does the Big Ten swimming scene look like for the upcoming year? A: Well, there's always Indiana. Q: And? A: And what? And what? That question and dialogue has been sticking in the side of Coach Gus Stager for the past 14 years. During that time, the conference's pools have been dominated by "Doc" Counsilmen's Hur-~ ryin' Hoosiers and for 13 of those years, Stag- er's Wolverines have always acted as brides- Imaids. But 1973-74 was not a good year for Michi- gan swimming. It started in early September when the team's top swimmer Tom Szuba, while on an AAU tour, was trapped in Santiago, Chile during the Allende overthrow. This, plus a sub-par summer of training helped to dampen Szuba's performance last season. THEN came an early season dual meet loss to Wisconsin 70-53 up in Madison. It was the first non-Indiana conference loss since 1968. The Badgers came back to haunt Michigan at the Big 10 Championships as Wisconsin's over- all depth proved to be too much and they re- placed the Wolverines as Indiana's runner-up. The season ended with a 15th place finish at the NCAAs, the first time the Wolverines had finished out of the top ten in many years. Alas, what of the future. Stager must re-build the tankers from the bottom-up due to gradu- ation. The Gerald Ford ceremonies in May wiped out 3 4 of the medley relay, the foundation of any team, and the pipe-smoking, wise Stager is searching for proper replacements. The key to the squad is Dearborn's Szuba, who must rebound to his freshman formwhen he was Big 10 and AAU 400-IM champion. This season, Szuba will be out to prove that he is one of the country's finest mermen. OTHER stalwarts of the swim team are senior breaststroker Pat Bauer, from Ann Arbor, who must fill the trunks of the graduated Stu Isaac, and sophomore freestyler Gordon Downie, from Williamston, N.Y. Bauer captured a pair of thirds in the confer- ence meet posting personal bests in both the 100 and 200. Downie, who swam for Scotland in, the British Commonwealth Games, set varsity records in the 500, 1000, and 1650 while finishing second in the 500 at the Big 10s. Other point-getters for the Wolverines are New Jersey sophs Fred Yawger (butterfly) and Rob Helt (backstroke). The upcoming freshman crop is expected to - fill the voids and add needed depth but the brightest newcomer is flyer Andy Lehner, re- fugee from Southern Cal. As a schoolboy, Leh- ner was one of the top flyers in the country but found California distasteful and sat out all of last season. His presence will help take some of the burden off of Szuba. Other hopefuls include Wit Davis, nian-bteaststroker, and John Daly, from Puerto Rico. a Califor- an IMer The Daily Photo by STEVE RUTTAN .JERRY POYNTON, one of Newt Loken's star gymnasts, shows his stuff on the pommel horse. The tumblers placed eighth In the NCAA tournament last year. --- - LORD FOX -Ann Arbor's Finest Dining- Invites you to visit our half-century old restaurant set in a relaxed and spacious country environment We are open seven days a week: MONDAY-SATURDAY 4:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. ALL SPORT inc. 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