A7 t~[?' , I'I3: 7, l43 THlE M~ICHI1GAN fDAILY VAGS TUBES Michigan Trackmen Rout Championship Ohio State Squad Wolverine Cagers Face Maroon Squad Tonight Quintet Favored To Drub Hapless Chicago; Wiese Out of Lineup with Sprained Ankle _.. By DON SWANINGER A Chicago team that can't sink any lower and a Michigan squad that doesn't want to will square off this evening in a contest that will see the Wolverines in the strange role of favorites. No one in the league can touch the Maroons in the matter of losing basketball games, and no one wants to, so that anything else but a vic- tory for the Wolverines and a defeat for the Chicagoans, who have already lost 37 censecutive Conference games, would be out of place. Iowa, who pre- viously had but one Big Ten win this season, last week set the Maroons on their ears 63-34. Wiese Is Out Oosterbaan's line-up will be with- out the services of sophomore for- ward Bob Wiese who has a sprained ankle and possibly Mel Comm whose injured heel has been slow in re- sponding to treatment. Their starting line-up will thus probably be com- posed of Gerry Mullaney and Ralph Gibert as forwards, Captain Jim Air Corps Calls Hayes, Star Breaststroker Ohio State Loses Counsilman; Offsets Michigan's Loss By JOE McHALE The Army Air Force dished out a blow to Michigan hopes for a Big Ten swimming championship when it called up Patrick Hayes, the bar- rel-chested Irishman who was count- ed on for a third place in the meet next week-end behind Buckeye Jim Counsilman and Wolverine Jim Skin- ner. Believing in equality, however, the Arniy also struck in Columbus, for it is reported that Counsilman has also left for active duty. This is perhaps even rougher on the Bucks than on the Maize and Blue, but Patrick will be sorely missed by Coach Matt Mann's team. "Irish,".gs Matt loved to call him, was a great believer in hard work in the swimming pool. A freshman, on being asked by Matt why he wasn't working, said that he was just try- ing to find out what made Hayes go so fast. "Well, do you know now?" asked the Wolkerine mentor. The immediate reply was, "The answer is a four-letter word- W-O-R-K." This work paid dividends in meets and would have paid more of them if sophomore Pat had had more time in which to get over his tendency to tighten up" in competitiond Mayes was the type of swimmer who relied a lot on brute power for his speed, smoothness being an attribute ac- quired since coming to Michigan. So, Patrick was used in the medley relay to get full use out of that power, since it was hard for him to maintain full speed for 200 yards. Hayes swam his fastest competi- tive 100 yards to greatly help the medley relay trio of Harry Holiday, Hayes and Johnny Patten to a new world record in the Michigan State dual contest. He finished third for the longer distance in the first Mich- igan-Ohio battle and tied for third with Ohioan Emil Mamaliga in last week's thrilling meet. Teammates claimed that he could have taken an undisputed third ifhe had seen how close the Buckeye was; Mamaliga was riding low in the water on the opposite edge of the pool. His best performance for 200 yards came at Iowa City, where he butter- flied his way to an excellent clocking of 2:24.3, given the advantage of a twenty-yard pool. Matt was counting on him to hit his peak next week in Evanston, as- suring Michigan of an easy first in the medley relay and an important third in the 200. This latter has lost some of its significance with the de- parture of the Ohio All-American, but Patrick's loss will be felt. Now the burden of the number two breaststroke spot falls on Irvie Ein- binder, a fast-improving sophomore who won the 200 against the Spar- tans and, swimming with Patrick at Iowa, took a second. The recent loss to Uncle Sam of Dave Levy, Matt's other varsity breaststroker, leaves the issue solely 'in the hands of Irvie and Jim Skinner. State Grapplers Win T.A'n A'N7Vn rrTnTT T-ArI 'Piah ') _(I1fY i Mandler at the center post, and Dave Strack and Leo Doyle at the guard positions. It was way back in 1940 that the Maroons managed to bunch together enough points to turn back Minne-' sota, but since then all has been mis- ery for them. Tonight their starting five will be Forwards Edgar Nelson and Dave Zimmerman, Center Bob Oakley, and Guards George Krakow- ka and Harold Ellman. Anticipate Big Night All season Wolverine fans have been begging for a big night of scor- ing, and it ,a like tonight might be it. The Maroons' opponents have scored upon them without mercy at an average of 58 points per game. Thus it is rather appropriate that before the Maize and Blue start pouring baskets into the hoop to- night a scoring record of the team be posted: Uf er Breaks Old Record in Quarter Mile Large Crowd Watches Easy Win, 75%/2-28%/2; Conference Meet Next (Continued from Page 1) The bespectacled Wolverine sprin- ter who holds the national indoor quarter-mile record at :48.1, took the lead on the back stretch and was never in danger, although the smooth-running Owen pulled up a few feet in Ithe last stretch. Jim Sears of Michigan was third. It was the first of two records established. Michigan prepared the fans for what was to come in the opening event when Johnny Ingersoll and the Hume twins, Bob and Ross, snapped the tape holding hands. It was a three-way tie and gave the Varsity a nine-point lead. The time of 4:25.6 was slow. Alkon Pulls Upset The first upset of the meet was the triumph of burly Lennie Alkon in the 60-yard dash in :06.4. Alkon, in fourth place at 20 yards, bulleted across the finish line three feet in front of Ohio's Dave Trepanier with Wolverine Chuck Pinney a close third. When big Elmer Swanson and Bud Byerly both beat State's George Hoeflinger in the 65-yard high hur- dles the meet victory was assured. Swanson won in :08.4 with Byerly right on his heels. Bill Dale gave the surprising Wol- verines another unexpected tie for Breaks Another Record By WALT KLEE After taking the 6-0 drubbing ad- ministered by an alert Illinois hockey team on Thursday night, the Wolver- ine sextet has turned its attention to the second contest with the Illini to- night at Champaign. Thursday night the Michigan of- fense never got moving and with the exception of lone forays down the ice by Bill Dance, Roy Bradley, Johnny Athens or Bob Derleth, the Wolverines played the whole evening in their own territory with their backs to the wall. Loud is Brilliant The first period saw some of the most sensational goal tending ever witnessed in the Big Ten as Hank Loud turned back shot after shot. Loud spent one of the busiest eve- nings of his career, and was one of the most active players on the ice. He turned back 48 attempts of the ever onrushing Illinois forward line. Henry Coupe, brilliant sophomore center for Vic Heyliger's six, scored three goals and two assists to be the Player Mandler Doyle ..... Strack .. Mullaney Wiese .. Gibert .. Comin.. Lund .... Pregulman A Runner and Sportsman Hockey Team To Battle Illini in Return Contest FG 31 30 31 19 14 12 4 1 0 FT 11 10 6 8 3 5 10 1 2 TP 73 70 68 46 31 29 18 3 2 142 56 340 After tonight's encounter with the hapless Maroons, the Varsity will re- turn to the Field House Monday to conclude the season against a pow- erful Northwestern quintet that has been picking up speed as the season has progressed and is now entrenched in third place in the Conference with six victories and three losses. The Wildcats, who tonight will be trying to end the domination of Illinois in the Big Ten race, will come to Ann Arbor with Otto Graham of football fame and an all-star basketball cast. Matmen Seek Redemption in Big Ten Meet Occupying the "roost" of the Yost Field House, the wrestling squad is not a very pretentious group, but anyone who bets their bottom dollar that the grapplers aren't working hard preparing for the Conference next week in Chicago are, in the jar- gon of the mat men, flip-dippy. The team, right down to the last man, is doing its utmost to be in top form for the Big Ten championships which start Friday morning. They're out to win the title for several rea- sons. First of all they deserve it, be- cause, despite the fact they lost sev- eral key men to the armed services, the squad hasn't conceded a thing to anyone. Secondly, Coach Ray Courtright's charges are out to avenge the 25-3 defeat they absorbed at the hands of Illinois two weeks ago at Champaign. The match was a lot closer than the score indicated, and with eight other teams thrown in to grab some places, the Conference meet is going to be a wide open affair with Illinois and Michigan heading the parade. This is the first year that Coach Courtright has ever coached wrest- ling, and it would be a fitting climax if his proteges presented him with the crown. Few men, if any, have ever coached their teams to a champion- ship in their first season as mentor, and this is especially true in the Western Conference where experience of the coaching staff sometimes spells the difference between victory and defeat. Let's keep our fingers crossed. GLIMPSES OF THE GRAPPLERS: Tom Mueller pinned Stan Clamage yesterday afternoon and earned the right to meet sophomore Bob Allen to determine the Wolverine's entrant in the 165-pound division in the Big Ten meet ... Chip Warrick, who at the beginning of the season was a 155-pounder, has come down to 128 and has been looking extremely good the last few days. Manley Johnson is taking on every- one and anyone in order to be in tip- top shape for next week ... Johnny is defending titlist in the 145-pound class and unless the Army gets him first, he's a cinch to repeat ... little Dick Kopel is another one to watch if he doesn't win the 121- pound crown we'll give Manhattan back to the Indians. BOB UFER . . . whose 49.0 bettered Field House record for 440. "Hose Nose" gave a performance last night that previews a possible new record in the Conference meet next Satur- day. run when Captain Matthews, John Roxborough and sophomore Art Up- ton tied for first place in the slow time of :01.5. Matthews and Rox- borough had the race to themselves and deliberately slowed up at the home stretch to allow the sophomore to pull up. State's Johnny Jones was far back- Segula, Schmidt Tie Bob Segula cleared 13 feet and tied State's John Schmidt in the pole vault. Both men failed at 13 ft., 3 in. Michigan's Fiank Maclear and State's George Finnerty tied for third. The climaxing event, the mile re- lay, went to Michigan as expected. Alkon took a three-foot lead over Paul. Hatfield on the first lap, and Willie Glas made it 12 in his duel with Bruce Hullinger. The third lap between Sears and Jones saw the Wolverine stretch the lead to 25 feet, and then Ufer boosted the lead to 40 feet over the fast and game Owen. The time of 3:25 was slow. Michigan Now Favored The one-sided triumph of Coach Ken Doherty's Maize and Blue thin- clads sets up Michigan as a definite choice in the Conference indoor championships at Chicago next week-end. A recurrence of a muscle injury to his leg endangered the chances of State's Captain Leroy Collins in the Conference. Collins fell while run- ning the 65-yard high hurdles and had to drop out of the relay. State was also handicapped by the absence of its star performer, Dallas Dupre, who had been counted on for firsts in the running broad jump, low hurdles and 60-yard dash. TAKING IT EASY By ED ZALENSKI Daily Sports Editor , , , , DAVE MATTHEWS half-miler and captain of thinclads who finished in three way tie for first place in 880. offensive big gun for the victors. Capt. Amo Bessone played a bangup game both on defense and on the of- fense as he garnered two assists and slipped the puck past Loud for a goal. However the six goals scored are not a true indication of the defen- sive game played by defensemen Bob Stenberg and Bob Derleth who played brilliantly in front of Loud and the Michigan nets. Three of the Illinois tallies were scored in scrambles in front of the net, where Loud had no real chance of watching the puck afs it was shot toward him. Athens Looks Good Johnny Athens kept on playing the same fine hockey that his size and weight permit. Showing plenty of spirit he made many solo thrusts into the Illini's ice only to be Quickly bot- tled up before he could send the puck flying at goalie Tom Karakas. The Wolverines' only real scoring threat came in the second period as Bill Dance split the defense of Bes- sone and George Balestri to draw Karakas off balance and have his shot miss the cage by inches. Several other times in this period Dance and Bradley let shots fly at the Illinois nets, only to have the alert goalie stop the puck before it could hit its mark. Just because the Wolverines were trounced Thursday night, is no.rea- son to believe that the result of to- night's clash will be the same. Eddie Lowrey's charges have changed over- night in the past and may do so again. Offense Must Improve If the Maize and Blue is to over- come the jinx of no Conference vic- tories, they must organize their of- fense instead of relying on solo dashes down ice to dent the nets for a score. The two lines must operate together if they are to be effective. Loud, who finally has returned to the form that the fans expect of him, can be counted on for another fine performance in the nets. Stenberg and Derleth have become steady cap- able defensemen. Then it is up to the first line of Dance, and his two flankmen, Brad- ley and Anderson, to build up a score in favor of the Michigan team, if the Wolverines are to come off the ice victorious. The two hockey teams return to Ann Arbor on next Thursday and Saturday to finish the current sea- son. It's Still Basketball .. . The burning question of Michigan's apathetic showing this season on top of four almost equally poor com- paigns in the previous years of Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's five-year reign has aroused an interested student enough to blast back at this column. We are running his rather lengthy analysis en toto, because we believe the other side should have a chance to express itself. This does not necessarily mean that we agree with all or anything the writer says. Dear Boss: "To state it simply, I disagree with your last two columns regarding the Michigan basketball team. And I, too, have been disappointed at the Michi- gan basketball team for not only this year, but for several years back. "The fact that you chose the week before the Chicago game, in what will prove to be the most tin- portant game of this year, if we lose, is, I think, poor. Your column has put both the members of the team, and its coach, Bennie Ooster- baan, on the spot. And because of the column, the team might lose. "This past week you have implied that Michigan needs a new basketball coach. While I, and the great major- ity of the basketball fans on campus, will agree that Oosterbaan is not the best basketball coach in the Big-Ten, this is not the time to bring the sub- ject before the eyes of the public. In the first place, this is probably the last dying gasp of collegiate ath- letics for the duration. In the second place, there are no basketball coaches available. And lastly, nothing can be done about the matter until time re- turn to normal. You also imply that Michigan has the material for a champion- ship ball club. I have not been con- nected with basketball in any other way than as a fan; and as a fan I see no Andy Phillips, Johnny Kotz, Bill Hamilton, or any other star or even potential star on the Maize and Blue's ball club. "There are good men, several of them, on the cage squad. But they are not great. In my opinion, Ooster- baan has too many prospective cen- ters and not enough forwards and guards. Dave Strack is the only man playing the position that he is physic- ally built for. Jim Mandler, Bob Weise, Leo Doyle, Ralph Gilbert, Gerry Mullaney, Mel Comin and Har- old Anderson all have the physiques of centers and probably played that position in high school. "Now what is the reason for the apparent lack of stars on the Michigan five. The state of Michi- gan is a notoriously poor high school basketball state. Indiana and Illinois are superb basketball states. It is natural then for these high school players to go to their state universities and colleges where there are good teams. Most of our players come from Michi- gan. We get occasional athletes from out of state, but these men come here not to play basketball-- as they would if they went to school at home-but for education "Then there is the 'fast break'-a subject popular with campus strateg- ists for lo, these many years. Is it the solution to Michigan's basketbal problem? Better yet, is it even a prac- tical solution today? It is too late in the season to change systems of of. fense. But with the personnal of the 1943 basketball team, a 'fast break would be next to impossible. Look at the men who make up the team. With the exception of Strack and Doyle and possibly Gibert, there are not men who have the speed to fit intc this type of offense. And I think that even these men are not fleet enough Mandler, Mullaney, Weise, Anderson Comin; not one of these men could work the 'fast break' with any degree of success. "I certainly think that Michigan's team should have a better record than it does. Mandler, our star center, has never hit the form that he seems to have. Strack has found the basket in but one or two games. Weise has but'one shot, that be- longing to a center, and that shot has not been "on" since the first two games of the season. Doyle and Gibert are sporadic scorers. In other words the team never got to- gether enough to function as a good club should function. Nor did it ever get the confidence that a team should have. -Walt Klee We're Surprised Too GEORGE OSTROOT . .. amazed everyone by taking top honors in the shot put with a toss of 44 ft. 8% in, Nice going, George. first in the high jump when he cleared 6 feet. Hoeflinger and John Clark of Ohio State also cleared that height. Ostroot Surprises Showing the best form of the in- door season, George Ostroot, Wol- verine shot putter, tossed the 16- pound iron ball 44 ft., 8 3/4 in. to take an unexpected first. State's Bill Willis had to be content with second on his toss of 44 ft., 3/4 in. Merv Pregulman, Michigan football and basketball star, took third with a heave of 41 ft., 2 in. Pinney, blonde timber topper from Detroit, came within one-tenth of a second of tying the meet mark in the 65-yard low hurdles when he breezed home in :07.5, followed by teammates Jack Martin and Swanson. Ohio's Chet Thomas broke the meet record in the running broad jump with a leap of 22 ft., 21/2 in. The old record of 22 ft., 2/g in. was set by Michigan's Frank McCarthy in 1941. Leonardi Wins Two-Mile Ernie Leonardi led two mates home in the two-mile run in 9:53.4. The fans' interest was centered on the battle for second and third between Bob Hume and Lew Germanson. Hume trailed by 50 yards until the last two laps when he started to close in, and then legged by Germanson in the home stretch to win going away. Another slam came in the 880-yard Mile Run-Three-way tie for first between John Ingersoll, Bob and Ross Hume (M). Time: 4:25.6. 60-Yard Dash-Alkon (M), Trep- anier (OSU), Pinney (M). Time: 06.4. 440-Yard Dash-Ufer (M), Owen (OSU), Sears (M). Time: :49. New meet record. Old record was :49.7 made by Ufer in 1941. Also breaks Field House record of :49.1 held jointly by Ufer (1942) and Johnny Woodruff of Pittsburgh (1937). 65-Yard High Hurdles-Swanson (M), Byerly (M), Hoeflinger (OSU). Time: :08.4. Two-Mile Run-Leonardi (M), Bob Hume (M), Germanson (M). Time: 9:53.4. Shot Put - Ostroot (M), Willis (OSU), Pregulman (M). Distance: 44 ft. 8% in. High Jump-Three-way tie for first between Hoeflinger and Clark (OSU), and Dale (M). Height: 6 ft. 880-Yard Run-Three-way tie for first between Captain Matthews, Rox- borough and Upton (M). Time: 2:01.5. 65-Yard Low Hurdles-Pinney (M), Martin (M), Swanson (M). Time: :07.5. Broad Jump - Thomas (OSU), Clark (OSU), Pinney (M). Distance: 22 ft. 21,4 in. 22 ft. 2z in. New record breaks old mark of 22 ft. 214 in. set by McCar- thy (M) in 1941. Pole Vault - Segula (M) and Schmidt (OSU) tied for first place, Maclear (M) and Finnerty (OSU) tied for third place. Height: 13 ft. Mile Relay-Michigan (Alkon, Glas, Sears, Ufer), and Ohio State (Hat- field, Hullinger, Jones, Owen). Time:, 3:25. t 1 1 . t 1 k., t 1. 1, ' i I I "INdt OUT" , .4AMY 1 , ,... BOTH J, 8*4w r YOUR FIGHT is on the HOME FRONT Back the boys in the service by your con- tinual purchase of war bonds and stamps, and be assured of their safety by keeping them in the safety-deposit boxes of the Ann Arbor Bank. Correct colors for all Branches of the U. So Service ... and for, Civilian Wear. Xutrr c~at e. TM 7W COW@W me avw 50c 65c 75c $1.00 TO OUR CUSTOMERS I All '..oal.me . rvma*lntro clknallil. . II E s