TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ex- Wolverine Hoopsters To Play Exhibition Game Suprunowicz, Skala, Putich, Gutowski Go AgainstMichigan Normal-LIT Aggregation ICE SCRAPINGS: Name Matehefts Hockey Captain By DICK LEWIS The 1951-52 basketball season copies to the end of its local trail Sunday afternoon when a group of ex-Michigan cagers faces a squad of Michigan Normal and Lawrence Tech stars at Ypsilanti. Probably the biggest array of hoop talent in this area will ap- pear on the Ypsilanti High School Entry deadline for the I-M badminton doubles toruney has been extended to Thursday, March 20.. -Bob Berman court as the Trojan Laundry five of the Ann Arbor City League meets the Alani Chapel club from Ypsi. Game time is 3 p. m. * * * HEADING A combination of four former Wolverine standouts and four more ex-college perform- ers that compete in Trojan colors is Mack Suprunowicz, Maize and Blue captain in 1950. Suprunowicz is a 6-foot for- ward from Schenectary, New York, who ranks as the highest scorer in Michigan hoop his- A hL tory. He holds the Wolverine individual game scoring mark with a 28-point harvest against Purdue in 1949. This season's captain, Jim Skala of Chicago, holds down the other Trojan forward post. Skala top- ped the 1952 Wolverines with 258 markers, and closed out his three-. year varsity career with a 508- point total. * * * OTHER MAIZE and Blue stan- dard bearers of the past who com- pete for the Trojans are Bill Pu- tich, guard on the 1950-51 five and three-year halfback on the football team, and Frank Gutow- ski, reserve Michigan guard for three campaigns. The Trojan combination is rounded out with Jim Gault of Yale, Chuck Hoffer of Williams, Bill Ely of West Virginia and Wally Riley of Chicago Univer- sity. Alan Chapel will come into the contest with two of the top col- legiate players in the state, Web- ster Kirksey of Michigan Normal and Blaine Denning of Lawrence Tech. * * * KIRKSEY was named all-state forward two years in a row at Saginaw High School, and in his first year at play at Normal es- tablished a school scoring stan- dard by meshing 325 scores. He was picked as the outstanding player- who played against Wayne University's Tartars this season. Denning is the top point-get- ter for a Lawrence Tech squad that just returned from the NAIB tournament in Kansas City. Also shooting for the Chapel entry is the Michigan Normal quartet of Bob Sims, Sherm Col- lins, Chuck Paige and Jim Miller. Collins captained the 1951-52 edi- tion of the Huron hoopsters, while Paige was the team's high scorer last year. Proceeds of the struggle will be used to send the participants to invitational tournaments at Ad- rian and Flint. Squads from the University of Detroit and Wayne also have been invited to these tourneys. EXHIBITION BASEBALL St. Louis (A) 8, Cleveland 7 Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia (A) 5 Boston (N) 2, Boston (A) 1 New York (A) 8, Washington 5 St. Louis (N) 6, Philadelphia (N) 5 Brooklyn 13, Philadelphia "B" (A) 5 New York (N) 10, Chicago (N) 0 Seattle (PCL) 6, Chicago (A) 3 Chicago "B" (A) 11, Los Angeles (PCL) 6 By ED WHIPPLE Ice scrapings in the wake of Michigan's epoch making second straight NCAA hockey champion- ship: THE LITTLE MAN who wasn't there has been elected captain of next year's puck squad. Flying home from the Colorado Springs tourney the Wolverines Sunday named diminuitive Johnny Mat- chefts of Eveleth, Minnesota, to lead the 1952-53 sextet. Scholastic ineligibility kept the junior center out of the playoffs and the final eight contests on the regular schedule. Matchefts was leading the team in scoring when the axe fell. * * * THE TEAM also picked as its most valuable player another little man who was very much in evi- dence at Colorado Springs. He is K* * aIh #4/ #wi// hockey, it's no secet there was little love lost between Coloradans and the Wolverines. u One radioman made repeated reference to the "Michigan woodchoppers," a term the Wol- verines had in sharp focus as they pasted CC, 4-1, to take the championship. A newspaper report described George Chin as being "as wide as he is high." The phrase had more application to the championship trophy than to Chin, who led all playoff scorers with two goals and two assists. STILL ANOTHER account be- littled Michigan's 9-3 semi-final victory over inept St. Lawrence. "Four of Michigan's five first per- iod goals were undeserved," it said. When Chin outskated a Larrie de- fenseman for Michigan's second tally, it was unfair, the newspaper claimed, because the Larries were tired and the Wolverines were fresh from changing lines fre- quently. Finally, the accepted excuse aound the Broadmoor Ice Pal- ace was, "It would have been different with Hartwell, Erasca, and Brandt in the Colorado line- up." (Injuries and ineligibility benched the high scoring trio.) Perhaps, but the Wolverines were content to leave that much consolation so long as the first place trophy returned to Ann Ar- bor. * * r* TO GRAHAM CRAGG, senior Michigan defenseman, went the distinction of scoring the first and last goals of the tourney, and they were twice as many as he scored all season long. Graham's scoring splurge might be attributed to the presence of his father, who flew from Edmonton, Alberta to see his son's last game in the Maize and Blue. Battling Joe Marmo, wing on last year's championship team, journeyed from Loveland, Colo. to witness the big final contest. * * * NO SERIOUS rhubarbs develop- ed with the three officials, Hank Frantzen, Minneapolis, Jack Mc- Kee, Winnipeg, and Herb Gallagh- er, Northeastern University. Coaches voted befoe each gamet to decide which two would work the con*est, and the odd man served as penalty time keeper. Pat Cooney of Michigan argued a holding penalty too long with Gallagher, and got the full treat- ment, a 10 minute misconduct ban- ishment. f JOHN MATCHEFTS ... chief skate A.J.ULAn ,L & .LJ . .. champs like Ike * * * Willard Ikola, sophomore custod- ian of the Wolverine cords, also from Eveleth. During 24 regular contests he allowed an average of 2.75 goals per game, and in two playoffs, his total four goals against was low for all goalers. Despite this, not enough of the press, pfficials, and coaches liked Ike to place him on either the first or second all-tournament team. Ahead of Ikola were rated Colorado's Ken Kinsley and Paul Cruikshank, of Yale. Replacing capable Chuck Hy- man as senior manager is Pete Pickus, a junior from Sioux City, Iowa. * * * GENERALLY speaking, the three visiting tournament teams were royally received and treated by the Colorado officials, reporters, and fans, but when it came to 'M' Shooters Top Indiana Win Invitational Test By One-Point Margin Michigan's rifle team scored a one-point decision over Indiana to capture the Illinois Invitational Rifle Match at Champaign Satur- day. The victory over a 3-team field gave the Wolverines a year's po- session of the Sara O'Hara Tro- phy, permanent possession of the winner's plaque and six gold med- als. RALPH BIRD, a freshman from Dearborn, fired 284 in the ten- shot prone, ten shot kneeling and ten shot standing course to pace the winners' score of 1380 out of a possible 1500. Kalamazoo sophomore Gene Woodruff followed Bird with a 278 score, one better than a 277 fired by ,Jim Ryan, a Kenmore, New York sophomore. Junior Bill Zayanchkowski from Detroit came next with a 276 tally and St. Clair Shores freshman John McClay trailed with a 265 total. 11 L. 1 t 4 I I I f A 115 W. Liberty St. Royal Dealers Since 1926 F, 21 ) 21 -t '- U U U I