SUNDAY, APRIL 4, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY r A SEVEN StiNDAY, APRIL 4, 1937 PAC~E SEVEN Guldahl Breaks Par At Augusta To Take Lead' St. Louis Pro Has 68 AsI Nelson Cracks; Kocsis Is Second Low Amateur AUGUSTA, Ga., April 3.-(/P)-Ap- proaching and putting with a magic touch, Ralph Guldahl, tall, round- shouldered St. Louis professional, swept out in front of the field in the Augusta National Golf Tourna- ment with a total of 209 after 54 holes in the battle for first-place money of $1,500 today. The 25-year-old Missourian was seven strokes under regulation fig- ures for the distance. He picked up four of them with birdies on the last six- holes of his third round 66, to overhaul Byron Nelson of Reading, Pa., the leader for two days. While Nelson cracked under the par-shattering pace to take a 75 and drop into a tie for third place at 213, Bobby Jones, playing here for the fourth time since he abdicated his golfing throne in 1930, remained far down the list despite a nicely-played 73, his best score in the annual tussle with the professionals. Shooting a 71, one under regula- tion figures, Big Ed Dudley of Phil- adelphia, the home course profes- sional, also pulled ahead of Nelson to advance to second place with a total of 212. Nelson drcpped back into a deadlock with Lighthorse Harry Cooper of Chicago at 213. It was Guldahl, who had but one three-putt green today, who missed a four-footer on the last hole that would have given him a tie with Johnny Goodman of Omaha, Neb,, for the National Open crown at Chi- cago in 1933. Chuck Kocsis, former Michigan star, and leading amateur in last ,year's National Open, was two strokes behind Charley Yates of Atlanta, who led the six amateurs with a total of 223. Stars In Field Events Trainers Declare Tape Is Essential To Winning Teams By ROY HEATH 'What is the most important thing tow anathletic team? Experts, real and alleged, never tire of airing pro- found theories on the question, few ever hit on the right answer. 5ce say material, others hold out for coaches, a minority will tell you equipment is the answer while a necessary few just listen. There is one element however that they all cverlook in their enthusiasm-Tape. We say after careful investigation and observation that humble adhe- sive is the most essential thing to an athletic unit and we'll stick to it. Use Plenty Of It Acccrding to Ray Roberts. head- man of the Wolverine training room, Michigan athletes annually wrap 106,000 feet-1 inch wide- of the sticky panacea around their various limbs. Athletes will use tape for anything that ails them and some things that don't. When a few feet I of tape won't put a man back in com- petition it is a safe bet that he is in a bad way. Roberts and his assistant, Steve Bronson, use tape for sprains, bruises, tears both in muscles and pants, and headaches. Tape is also used to some extent to hang calendars and the like in the training room. Gridders Lead, Football players lead in the amount cf tape consumed. One breakable in- dividual a few years ago was the bane of existence to Roberts and Bronson. It took them two hours, working in shifts, to prepare the fragile one for a game and when they were done he must have made a mummy look like an acrobat. Both of his shoulders, ankles, knees and feet plus a brace of ribs were neatly encased in a mir- acle of tape work. He was good too. Track men run the footballers a close second. They use tape for weak ankles, to keep their shoes on, for shaky arches and shin-splints. Just what shin-splints are, nobody seems to know. Williams, Watson To Headline Track Meet With Golden Bears When the track teams of Michigan? good for at least third with a leap! and California clash April 17 two| of six feet two inches for the Bears Negroes, Archie Williams of the Bears have only two men doing this well. and Bill Watson of the Wolverines, California has already competedI will probably steal the show. in two meets this spring, losing to Williams, victor in the 400-meter the powerful Olympic Club and thenj race at the 193,6 Olympics, while ex- swamping the University of Wash-i pected to win the quarter-mile in ington. The Wolverines, undefeated easy fashion, may find himself forced through a five meet indoor season, to the limit by Stan Birleson and will leave Friday afternoon for the Steve Mason who finished one-two in Pacific Coast and their first outdoor the recent Conference 440. competition of the year. After vaca- Track fans like nothing better than tion Michigan will face Ohio State1 record breaking performances and it and Indiana at home and Illinois there in dual meets and will also be breakers to draw them through the host to the rest of the Big Ten May! turnstiles. Williams had a :46.5 22 and 23 in the Conference meet. quarter to his credit and the prospect of Birleson's pushing the Californian ITS UP TO WEATHER to at least equal this mark should in NEW ORLEANS, April 3.-()-If itself be enough to pack the Berke- the weather-man and rival managers ley stands for the Wolverine meet.:give the "okay," Carl Hubbell will Watson comes into the spotlight throw his left-handed pitching mas- with Coach Chuck Hoyt's announce- tery against Bob Feller's burning ment that the big sophomore from, speed tomorrow in the Grapefruit Saginaw will be entered in four League exhibition between the New events, the shot put, discus, broad York Giants and Cleveland Indians. jump and high jump. It is also ----- - --- - expected that he will not only be g content with placing in all four but ! *WJumr".0 '.Cruises will probably win two of them. ENGLAND, FRANCE, GERMANY, Etc In the shot he should be a sure Ake Tour and Steam Re a on NOW Pone 6412 thing with his teammate Johnny Steamer 7 Townsend battling for second. These Specr. same two will be after the first two Since 1917 places in the discus while Watson, s _. Sam Stoller and Alan Smith will be c. r ni-.& o -_ in the broad jump. In his fourth event, the high jump, he should be 601 L HURON STA ANN AURI Texas Relay Meet Sees Marks Fall" AUSTIN, Tex., April 3.-(IP)-Led by Olympian Sam Francis, Nebras- ka's great ace, and Al Tolmich, sprint star from Wayne University of De- troit, track and field athletes cracked six meet records and tied two others at the Texas Relays here today. Francis and Tolmich each won two first places in the nation's first ma- jor outdoor meet of the year. The Nebraskan-Olympic weight man and All-America footballer- contributed a record-blasting shot- put of 51 feet, 113/4 inches, boosting the mark he set here last year by two and three-eighths inches. His left arm then won the discus with 146 feet, 101/4 inches. Union's Table Tennis Tourney Starts Play The Union table tennis tourna- ment, which was slated to get under way last week has as yet barely passed the beginning stages. The tourney, which is being held in con- junction with College Humor mag- azine, is to decide a national cham- pion. Out of the five seeded players par- ticipating in the meet only one has played his match and was beaten, C. Leveet losing to M. Fineberg. TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPHING Promptly and neatly done by expert- enced operators at moderate prices. 0. D. MORRI LL 314 South State Street 1 v mmmmmml MMWA Tennis Racket Restringing Let us do it while you're on your vacation- ; " #me ' .'.._.. vv" a... rw vaa +,{tnt a .. it b7 KR73VR. IYil4t1. I Bill Watson, phenomenal soph- emore star, has already given Michigan a conference record this year by putting the shot 50 feet 41 inches, set a new mark in the Butler Relays, and copped first place in the shot-put in every meet. lie will be entered in the shot- put, broad and high-jump, and dis- cus events in the California meet. SUDDEN " SERVICE !! '"' EXPERT WORK - FINEST STRING $2 to $8 ARMOUR - VICTOR - JUNEMAN GIEO. J. MOE SPORT SHOPS 7.11 North University 902 South State' Wrestlers Change Style For Nationals ._. ., t L _ ^0 J piE *'i v 1 ot Uiesty92Sut tt By BUD BENJAMIN a wrestler who simply goes behindi Veteran and rookie usually imply and hangs on is doing. himself no, the two opposite poles of experience good. Most important of all, pinning in the athletic world, and to be a vet- a man requires that his two should- eran and yet a rookie in the same ers touch the mat only for an in-I1 sport is 4 pgienomenal feat in itself. stant-the required two seconds in Nevertheless that's the very pe- collegiate wrestling is done away1 culiar predicament that Wally Heav-. with. enrich and Johnny Speicher find Thus if a man should roll over, or7 themselves in today, in switching allow his shoulders to Besides being seasoned grapplers touch the mat, he is pinned despitet with experience galore, the two bear the fact that his opponent may have the unique honor of both being cap- had little to do with the whole pro-t tains of Michigan mat aggregations. cedure. Wally led the matmen in 1935-36 Is Much Faster while Johnny is- the newly elected- Matches are scored by falls and, co-captain, along with Earl Thomas, near falls with the three judges (noti for the coming season. the referee) rendering the decision 1 Feel Like Freshmen at the end. In the tournament a loss t This in itself should stand as evi- does not put a man out of the run- dence that the duo know the mat ning but gives him three blackmarks. game from the switch and ride to the A winner must pin his man or he is Australian keylock with a reverse half penalized one blackmark. A split de- nelson. And yet, after working out cision by the judges gives the win- yesterday in the Field House, the two ner one blackmark, the loser two. If confessed that they felt like the a man pins his opponent he is not proverbial Freshman finishing his penalized. first session of mat mixing. Thus it is possible for a contes- The boys haven't forgotten what tant to wrestle seven or eight times they learned while traveling over the during the tournament, until he tough road of experience. They either wins or is put out by five black- simply are engaging in a new type marks. of wrestling which requires them This style of wrestling has been in learning the game from the ground force in all Olympic games, and up. American wrestlers, used to work- Olympic Rules Hold Sway - --nn__ The u o-se of this d di__ ing under collegiate rules, have been at a serious disadvantage in past Olympic matches due to this fact. There is little "bulling" or going behind, the contestants tend to be very cautious, and most of them find the leg tackle the most effective way of ending their matches in a hurry. Most matches, although scheduled for 15 minutes, do end fast due to the fact that should a man relax for a minute and allow his shoulders to touch the mat, he is gone. That's why Wally and Johnny are shaking their heads today. "It's wrestling all 'right," they say, "but it might just as well be called ping- pong-that's how it compares with the kind of wrestling we know." 1I:.; 11 IM A HOLE IN ONE AND YOU'RE ONE U on the GREENE Mrs. Hampton's Famous SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN Served Every Sunday from 12:30 - 2:30 Homecooked food for family gatherings daily. MVIRS. HAMPTON'S TEA ROOM I 605 Forest Phone 2-3836 I 0 - plt p.ulEtb nl!116ew Uaal ferent type of physical exertion is in preparation for the National A.A.U. wrestling tournament, to be held in Baltimore, Md., April 9 and 10; bothi men are entries. While that in itself sounds like a pretty formidable gathering one no doubt wonders why wrestling here might differ from anywhere else. The whole secret is in the type 8f wrest- ling holding sway at the Baltimore get-together. Here the Olympic rules, rather than the collegiate, will hold force, In brief here's what the new form of wrestling involves. 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