TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2352 TWO SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1952 I I -THE EAST - National Cage Preview -THE SOUTH- Little LaSalle College of Phila- delphia, an all-male school with 1300 enrollment, appears to be the class of the basketball world in 1952-53. Coach Ken Loeffler has four starters returning from the squad that captured the National Invi- tation Tournament at Madison Square Garden last winter and wound up with a 24-5 slate. * * * WITH TOM GOLA, Fred Iehle, Norm Grekin, and Jack Moore spearheading the attack, the Ex- plorers have already chalked up impressive victories over three Eastern powers. Gola, a 6-6 sophomore, paced. underdog LaSalle to the NIT final round win over highly- touted Dayton last season, and wound up his freshman year with a 17.4 average. Coach Honey Russell's veteran Seton Hall five is regarded the best bet to give LaSalle a fight for top Eastern honors. THE PIRATES compiled 25 tri- umphs in 28 outings during the 1951-52 campaignand advanced to the NIT in New York, bowing to the eventual champions. Two starters have departed from that unit, but the South Orange, New Jersey combine still retains pivot miracle-man fThe Tvop 20 Walter Dukes and backcourt standout Richie Regan. Dukes, towering at 6-11, aver-. aged 20.2 counters last year and thus far this season is on a 27- point per game rampage, collect- ing 20, 34 and 27 markers in Se- ton Hall's opening three successes. Regan is playmaker in the fast- breaking Pirate offense and cur- rently boasts an 18-point scoring average. * * * OTHER TOP Eastern indepen- dents are paced by a couple of Massachusetts entries, Holy Cross and Boston College. '-First-semester ineligibility of 6-8 center Jim Tucker has put a crimp in the Duquesne hoop outlook. But Dick Ricketts, a 6-6 sophomore who teamed with Tucker to give the Dukes 18 wins in a row in '51-52 remains to bear the brunt of the scoring for cinderella poach Dudey Moore. Penn State, Navy, Iona and Vil- lanova, in that order, are also well-thought of independent teams. IN THE New York City cage hotbed,St. John's and Fordham are rated top contenders for thel Metropolitan League crown. I St. John's gained the final round of the NCAA tournament in Seattle before falling to pow- erful Kansas, 80-63. The Red- men, however, have graduated three starters from the quintet that stopped Kentucky to reach the semi-finals, and also have a new coach. The Eastern Intercollegiate or Ivy League will see the dethroning of the current champion if pre- season indications run to form. * * * -, PRINCETON took last year's laurels with crucial beatings of Penn and Cornell, but the high- scoring Quakers figure to hold up the favorite's position over the next few months. Main reason for the Pennsyl- vania optimism is a seasoned unit sparked by talented Ernie Beck, two-year all-Eastern selection. Beck has led the Ivy League point-getters for two campaigns, setting five records and tying a sixth. * * -THE MIDWEST -- Midwest cage seige guns are State, Nortwestern and Purdue out to lower the boom on Coach should finish in that order in the Harry Combes and his "murderer's league called by many the nation's row" of basketball talent down at most unpredictable. Illinois. Winners of the Big Ten title in Outside the Big Ten, the usual three of the past four years, the wealth of top-notch independent Fighting Illini once again are court squads prevails. With mighty Kentucky looking on from the sidelines, the South- eastern Conference race is a wide- open affair for the first time in ten years. I Louisiana State, Vanderbilt and Alabama deadlocked for second place last season, and among those three the Bayou boys currently look the strongest. * * * ALL LSU Coach Harry Raben- horst has to do is point to 6-9 center Bob Pettit and he has the biggest reason for potential Tiger court supremacy. Pettit finished behind only Clyde Lovellette and Dick Groat in the national scoring race in 1951-52, averaging 25.5 tallies per game while collecting 612 markers. His high-water mark was 50 against Georgia. Florida won its first 12 engage- ments last winter and is given a chance. of being up among this year's SEC leaders. Revitalized Auburn could make it a five-way dogfight for the vacated top po- sition. was on the long end of only seven of 16 Southern Conference deci- sions last season, but off an early- season upset of Duke and an even greater upset of nationally-prom- inent North Carolina State, the Deacons are the team to beat be- low the Mason-Dixon Line. That's quite an order for an erstwhile tenth-place finisher, but Coach MurrayG 'reason's charges have to be given a prominent billing after their stunning initial successes. Dick Hemric, third conference scorer last year with with a 22.6 average, sparked Wake Forest to its 51-50 conquest of NC State, the defending champions. The Staters finished last season with an unimpressive 24-10 slate, but scored 12 of the triumphs in 14 loop games. I TALL TIMBER-Center Walter Dukes (left) of Seton Hall and John (Red) .Kerr of Illinois rate as top prospects for the All- American pivot spot. Dukes stands 6-11, while Kerr is a mere 6-9. RECORD HAPPY FIVE: High Scorers Feature HardwoodA -- merca top-heavy favorites to romp over league opposition in convincing style. REASONS FOR the widespread faith in Illinois cage stock lie in a bevvy of returning luminaries from last season's five that cap- tured third place in the NCAA tournament. Such standout hardwood fig- ures as 6-9 center John Kerr, 6-8 Bob Peterson, Irv Bemoras, Jim Bredar and Clive Follmer are all seasoned veterans that have experienced the toughest in hoop competition. Minnesota, with pivotman Ed Kalafat and freshman sensation Chuck Mencel heading a group of returning lettermen, is generally regarded as the team that will make a contest of it with the Il- lini for the Western Conference top spot. - * .. . INDIANA, OHIO STATE, Wis- consin, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan Notre Dame has emerged as a definite threat for top national honors following a mediocre 16-10 record last season. A liberal blend- ing of youth and holdover ma- terial worked to good advantage as the Fighting Irish knocked off Indiana, 71-70, a few nights ago. RAY MEYER'S DePaul five was one of the four teams that was able to overcome Illinois last year and the Blue Demons seem a virtual cinch to become one of the area's winningest combines this season. The Big Seven Crown is a toss- up among a number of power- laden outfits. With the absence of Clyde Lov- elette and three other members of its starting unit, Kansas will have to take a back seat to the new power in this part of the country- Kansas State. Over in the Missouri Valley Con- ference, St. Louis and Oklahoma A & M are expected to put on their annual dogfight for the number one position. 1 r 1 .I LOWLY-RATED Wake Forest I 1. 2.1 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.: 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. LaSalle Illinois Seton Hall Kansas State Notre Dame Louisiana State Brigham Young Minnesota UCLA Oklahoma A & M Wake Forest Holy Cross North Carolina State Pennsylvania Indiana St. John's Washington Navy Ohio State Seattle By DICK LEWIS The biggest one towers at 6-11 and the smallest stands a stumpy 5-9, but big or small everyone of them is a potential basketball All- American. Little Johnny O'Brien, the na- tion's most prolific point-getter even though he stands three inches under six feet, cavorts in the pivot position for Seattle University. BUT AMONG pre-season polls O'Brien gains the nod at one of the backcourt posts. Little won- der when you look at the record O'Brien piled up with the Chief- tains in 1951-52. As a junior, the South Amboy, New Jersey dribbler scored 1051 points in 37 games to chalk up a new single season individual scoring record. He's just 206 counters short of the all-time four-year mark of 2593 markers set by Nate Delong of River Falls (Wisc.) State Teachers College. Another New Jerseyite, gigantic (6-11) Walter Dukes, seems a cinch to annex the All-American center position if his play over the past two seasons and the first four games of the current campaign is any indication. DUKES HAS collected 1,035 points in his Seton Hall varsity career, 524 of them coming last year for a 20.3 average. Duke's of- fensive prowess, which included the snatching of 513 rebounds (second best in the country), led the Pirates to a 25-3 slate. Seton Hall has triumphed in its first four encounters of the current season with the mam- moth Dukes registering 107 tall- ies (including 34 against St. Francis of Brooklyn) for an av- erage of 26.7 per game. Probable All-Americans in the front court are LSU's Bob Pettit and Pennsylvania's Ernie Beck, two more record-breakers. PETTIT IS A 6-9. 210-pound junior who averaged 25.3 scores per game last winter to rank third na- tionally. He holds five Southeast- ern Conference scoring standards and is the fifth player to register 50 points or better in a major col- lege clash. Beck, a shorty at 6-4, led Ivy League point-makers and re- bounders for the second succes- sive year in '51-52, garnering 284 markers and 222 rebounds for a 23.7 average. His high- water mark was 45 points against Harvard. Penn State's Jesse Arnelle sides with diminutive O'Brien at one of the guard spots to round out the potential top five players in the nation. Arnelle established a Nittany Li- on record last year when he can- ned 184 field goals and 124 free throws for a 492 point total. He's only a sophomore and measures in at 6-5. I I Nil More IPopuiar than the RNED HAND TURNED P { s FINE AUSTRALIAN IMPORTED WOOL SWEATERS in grey, maize, and navy 7.95 V-neck slipover, long sleeves. HOSIERY by Jerks and Coopers in cottons, rayons, nylons, dynels, dacrons, or wools . . . 65c - 3.95 SLIPPERS by Coopers ... for your loafing pleasure . . Sierra-Moderne soft, comfortable . . . 3.75 BY COOPERS-Gaucho jersey knit sport shirts in spice, grey, tan, and navy blue -- long sleeves . .. 3.95. WALK A FEW STEPS AND SAVE DOLLARS 217 East Liberty Phone 8020 S SE E SAM FIRST i .C': g __ -. - " - SICK of waiting in line and wasting time? - then buy at the f I We have ICE CUBES - THE WEST -- I'I I I 21 111 The University of Washington! in the North and UCLA in the South battled it out for the Pa- cific Coast Conference flag last season and figure to do the same again this year. UCLA sprung a 60-50 upset of Washington following two succes- sive losses to the Cougars to sew! up the PCC title. Only two regu- lars have graduatedfrom that aggregate, and on that basis the UCLAns are favorites to repeat over Coach Tippy Dye's five. WEST COAST fans remember, however, that the Huskies were top-heavy favorites last season, only to fall by the wayside. Toss- ing out the favorite's role, Dye this year can call on four first- stringers, including hookshot ar- tist Bob Houbregs, potential All- American. California's Golden Bears rank as the top choice after UCLAI for the southern division laurels, while Idaho tops Washington's challengers in the North. Also on the Coast, tiny indepen- dent Santa Clara went all the wayj to the semi-finals of the NCAA tourney last year at Seattle before being eliminated. The Broncos gained fourth place in that com- petition and currently top the non-affiliated far west schools. * * * SKYLINE EIGHT champion Wyoming, winner of 28 and loser of seven in 1951-52, loses Moe Radovich and Dick Haag, both unanimous all-conference choices, and three other dependable per- formers. Therefore Coach Stan Watts' Brigham Young five has a good chance to go all the way in the Rocky Mountains. Improving Utah could easily upend either of the top two. Down in the South-West, the usual first-place scramble is ex- pected among any any one of a number of teams. 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