THE MICHICAN DAILY .PAGEr ine Hockey Team Falls Before Minnesota Power, 9- Michigan Swimmers Battle Eli In New Haven Tonigh IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG BACK IN 1930 Matt Mann took one of his most powerful swimming teams East to face Yale. By Matt's own admission, it was a team "that should have won easily. We should have gone into the last relay without any possibility of being overtaken.- But that night we came up to thei free-style relay needing to win it in order to tie in point score." (In thosel days a tie in point score would have been settled by whoever won thel free-style relay). The records say that Yale won the relay, the meet and the honors. For the next seven years, although it was3 Michigan who was copping the cham- pionship honors, it was Yale who was hailed as the nation's top swimming' team. But two years ago, Matt Mann took another great team to New Haven. Again, the Wolverines were figured to be a sure thing. And again the two teams came down to the last relay with the meet winner to be de- cided by the relay winner. Tom Haynie had to climb out of the water, after winning the 440 to swim anchor on the relay team. He just nosed out Johnny Macionis to give the Wolver- ines a 41-34 victory, their first in his- tory over Yale. (Histor'y in this case only extended over a three-meet period). Tonight, in Payne Whitney Gymnasium, the two teams tangle again. It's Michigan's National Collegiate champions plus this year. It's the strongest team in Wolverine history. But Yale also has what Coach Bob Kiphuth has called his strongest club. Michigan should win-but will it? Matt claims that "Yale swims bet- ter in New Haven than it knows how. Their swimmers aren't that good- but they do it. And somehow Michi- gan boys get the jitters there. They look around that beautiful pool and mutter to themselves, 'Gee, do those guys really swim in this palace.' That's why I'm taking them down a day early this year (the team ar- rived yesterday morning). Maybe they'll lose the effects of that long train ride and get used to that man- sion Yale calls a swimming pool." This swimming meet, however, will be decided by more than train rides and jitters. And it probably will be decided, not by the swimmers, but by the coaches themselves. It will be decided by whom they select to swim differ- ent races. And Kiphuth is plenty foxy. Two years ago, he had Macionis, a free styler, swimming breast stroke-and winning. It's tough to figure his moves out un- til it's too late. Michigan has more balance and more individual stars; Yale is led by a sensational sophomore - Howie Johnson. Johnson must swim three races-and all Matt has to figure out is what races these three will be. When he has figured that out all he has to do is decide where to swim Gus Sharemet, his own ace in the hole. Johnson can swim, and come mighty close to winning the 100 and the 220. He also might anchor the medley relay team and the free style relay. But these are the races that we're sure he'll swim-the 100 and the free style relay. But now Matt must figure out whether he'll swim the furlong or the medley relay. In the distance event he has swum 2:12.5. Jimmy Welsh, Michigan's star, has done 2:13.6 in competition this year and better in practice. Our guess, and we don't think that this will be Matt's, is that Johnson will forego the 220 in order to anchor the 'medley relay. He'll do this be- cause, inr the Eastern system of scor- ing, second place in the relay brings only a goose egg and consolation. The winner here gets five and in the free style relay, seven. But Matt, thinking that John- son might not swim the medley, will take Sharemet out, figuring that Bill Beebe and John Share- met, in the first two legs, can hand Tommy Williams a com- fortable lead and that he can coast home against anybody but Johnson. That puts Sharemet in the 100 and the last relay. And in both of them he must swim against Johnson. The two are about even and anything can de- velop. One thing which we will predict is that a new world's record will be set in the free style relay. Yale has done 3:31.6 (three-tenths of a second behind the mark) but this when all four men were fresh. Tonight they will all have worked plenty-and hard. Michigan's quartet of Charles Barker, Dobson Burton, Williams and Sharemet will be comparatively fresh and may (we said may) go under 3:30. One final word-if Michigan wins both relays (which would give them a 12-0 lead) then Michigan will win the meet. If it loses the medley, it'll be a dogfight to the final race-the free style relay. We like vanilla-and Michigan. Doherty Has Wealth Of Speedy Sprinters Ready For '40 Meets By HERM EPSTEINI "It looks as if the average ability of this year's group of sprinters is as great as that of any other group we've had since I've been here." This is nothing less than Ken Doherty's way of saying that the Wolverine sprint- ing fortunes are pretty good. Quality isn't the only characteris- tic of the group for there is ample quantity in the presence of Al Smith, Carl Culver, Al Thomas and Bud Piel, the first two seniors, the last two sophomores. Smith Leads Sprinters Smith, of course, rates the number one spot. His brilliant success dur- ing last year was topped by a second- place in the 60 yard dash at the In- door Conference Meet and second in the 220 and third in the 100 in the Outdoor Conference Meet. Though he specializes in the broad jump, Culver's sprinting ability brought him through to a fourth in the Big Tens here last May. With two fine sophomore prospects com- ing up, Culver may concentrate more on the jump to take up the slack left by the departure of Bill Watson. And now we come to the two boys Lawson Little First In West Coast Open, SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 18.-OP)- Turning in a par shattering 69 to add to his first round 70, Lawson Little captured medal honors today in the $5,000 Sap Francisco match play open golf championship with a 36-hole total of 139. The stocky Bretton Woods, N.H., professional, who twice won the Brit- ish and U.S. crowns as an amateur, set the pace for a field of more than whose presence would gladden any coach's heart-Thomas and Piel. Thomas has been coming .along ex- tremely well this year, and just be- fore Christmas vacation, he managed to break even in two races with Sam Stoller, '37, who was on the 1936 Olympic team. Last Saturday, Al fin- ished about a big-toe length behind Stoller and an equal amount ahead of Smith in 6.4. His development this year is partially the result of the dis- covery that he needs and thrives on a lot of work. Doherty has been driv- ing him hard, and the results have been highly promising. Piel Also Quarter Miler Up to last week, Piel's sprinting was forgotten while he devoted his atten- tion to the 440 in the campaign to find men to run on the mile relay team. His success at this distance kept him busy until this past week, but his performance Saturday, when he finished so close to Stoller, Thom- as and Smith that he was timed in 6.4 also, indicates that he may re- gain his status as the top-ranking sprinter coming up from last year's freshman team. With a four-star array like that, it will be a big surprise to no one if Michigan brings home plenty of points in the dashes during the com- ing track season. THE JOHN MARSHALL COURSES (40 weeksperyear) d OL Afternoon-334years SCH OOL Adt.rys...I30.6:30 FOUNDED 1899 Evening -- 4 years Mon., Wed., Fri., AN 6:30-9:20 ACCREDIT ED- Post-graduate rjf III