I TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE PAGE THREE 71' Cagers Dump Iowa To Sna p Losing treak Groffsky Sinks 19 Points To Pace Hoopsters in Win Substitution WEEKEND OF OPPOSITES: (Continued from Page 1) con Davis failed, and that was the last chance the visitors had at the hoop. A free throw by sparkplug guard Ray Pavichevich and another tip- in by Allen put the frosting on Michigan's fourth triumph in 11 outings. It also paid back the Hawks for an 85-77 loss suffered at Iowa City. THE HARD-FOUGHT Wolver- ine victory, first in the last five games, seemed far off following a miserable display of shooting in the third period. Only an equally poor demonstration by the visitors, who outscored Michigan, 13-7, kept the winners within shooting range. During the third session Maize and Blue shooters con- verted only two of 23 shots. They blew a 38-37 halftime advantage while watching the corn-staters assume a 50-45 margin after three quarters. Forward Milt Mead accounted for the lone home team field goal in the first nine minutes of the second half as he meshed a two- pointer with six minutes gone. Mead fouled out two minutes later with his squad trailing, 43-40. *, * * WITH THE 6-7 Mead on the bench, Iowa rolled up a 50-43 lead that was shaved to five points just before the buzzer when Pay- ichevich went all the way on a fast break. Hawkeye guard Chuck Jar- nagin, who poured through 15 points to tie for scoring honors for the visitors, popped in a set- shot as the final ten minutes be- gan to re-establish Iowa's seven- point bulge. But the hustling locals steadily! shaved down the Hawk margin and won going away. THE OPENING 20 minutes of action were almost as thrill-packed as the final 20. Sensational play by Maize and Blue pivot operator Groffsky was the main factor in Michigan's slim, one-point lead at the midway intermission. Groffsky, the 6-4 center from Maplewood., New Jersey, fun- neled in 18 counters in the first half, tallying seven in the first ten minutes and eleven more in the next ten. He added a free throw in the second half to an- nex scoring honors for Perigo's five with a 19-point harvest. Michigan was on the wrong end of a 10-8 tally midway through the opening chukker when Groffsky went on the first of his point-get- ting panics. TWO JUMP shots and a free throw by the sure-shooting soph- omore combined with an Eaddy set shot gave Wolverines a 15-10 headway which wasn't relinquished until early in the third quarter. Coach Perigo's unpredictable combine maintained a 17-14 margin at the quarter, but with guard Ken Buckles and forward Deacon Davis beginning to hit, Iowa deadlocked the count at 30-all with little more than half the period gone by. Then Big Grof rolled into action once again, collecting seven suc- cessive markers and boosting the Wolverine lead to 37-31. STATISTICS Rule Object Of Meeting ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.-(AP)- The football rules committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association met yesterday and plunged immediately into a vig- orous discussion of the two pla- toon system. Committee chairman Fritz Cris- ler, Michigan athletic director, called the present free substitu- tion "our first and most important order of business" and said the matter would be thrashed out be- fore anything else is done. * * * WORKING behind closed doors, the 10-man group devoted the first of its three days of conferences to deliberating whether the two platoon system should be restrict- ed or left alone. No final action, if any is tak- en, is expected to be announced before tomorrow. Columbia's Lou Little, chairman of a coaches' committee.attending the meetings in an advisory ca- pacity, reported that the country's college coaches 'voted overwhelm- ingly in a poll in favor of free sub- stitutions. IL was a weekend of opposites for the Michiganhockey team. One game was won from the Montreal Carabins in a breeze, 13-2, and another was lost to the same Flying Frechmen in a thriller the next night, 2-1. * * ONE PLAYER returned to the ice for the first time this season while another was lost for the season via the suspension route. The Wolverine sextet took ad- vantage of a chance to raise its point totals Friday night as Montreal was never able to get started. Pat Cooney netted two goals and four assists for six points while George Chin and Doug Mullen each pulled the hat trick against a listless Carabin squad. The absence of scrappy Johnny McKennell, suspended for the sea- son after an altercation with a referee in Denver, was felt the next night, however, "as the vis- itors turned the tables on the MIDWEST COLLEGIATE HOCKEY STANDINGS W L Pts. North Dakota .....6 0 10 MICHIGAN .......4 1 7 Denver ............4 4 7 Colorado College ...3 3 6 Michigan Tech ... .0 2 0 Michigan State ....0 9 03 Wolverines in a complete reversal of form. FROM THE opening faceoff of the non-league game it was ob- vious )'that the Montrealers re- fused to be toyed with. They fought tenaciously for possession of the puck and their accurate short pass offense coupled with a There will be a meeting of the M Club tonight at 7:30 in the M Room at the Yost Field- * house. -Laurie LeClaire I stubborn defense was too much for the confident Maize and Blue. The single encouraging de- velopment was Ron Martinson's return to the ice after nursing a broken leg for six weeks. Mart- inson saw a few minutes of ac- tion this weekend and should be ready for full time duty against Michigan State tomorrow night. The Wolverines will be looking to regain lost ground in the Mid- west Hockey League against the Spartans. During the weekend's action, North Dakota defeated Denver twice to climb into first place, three points ahead of their victim, Michigan. IN THE ONLY other league games Minnesota whipped Michi- gan State twime, 3-1 and 5-4. The Pucksters Lose Ground in Standings Golden Gophers boasted the three highest scorers in the league in the persons of John Mayasich (34), Dick Dougherty (28) and Gene Campbell (23), as of Jan. 3. In the Michigan scoring parade, Captain John Matchefts, who picked up one goal and three as- sists over the, weekend, leads his mates with 20 points. Doug Mul- len has 14 markers to his credit while Jim Haas, Earl Keyes and George Chin each follow the lead- ers with 13 points apiece. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS G A John Matchefts 5 15 Doug Mullen 7 7 Jim Haas 3 10 George Chin 8 5 Earl Keyes 9 4 John McKennell 7 5 Doug Philpott 4 6 Pat Cooney 4 5 Reg Shave 3 3 Alex McClellan , 0 6 Bert Dunn 1 4 Telly Mascarin 2 1 Lou Paolatto 1 1 54 72 Pts. 24 14 13 13 13 12 10 9 6 s 3 2 54 72 136 -Daily-Don Campbell RAY PAVICHEVICH-of the Wolverines leaps high to sink a bucket as Iowa's Bob Miller (20) makes a futile effort to stop him. BUILDER OF CHAMPIONS: Matt Mann Begins 28th Year as Swim Mentor IOWA Thompson I Davis f Miller c Hettrick c Jarnagin g Buckles g Totals MICHIGAN Mead f Codwell f Kauffman f Allen f Groff sky c Eaddy g Pavichevich g Totals Iowa MICHIGAN G F P T 3 4 5 0 ]9 19 4 4 1 4 3 26 2 7 4 0 5 5 23 F 0 2 2 0 3 4 3 14 9 3 4 1 3 4 17 P 5 4 5 2 3 3 2 24 8 15 14 0 15 9 61 T 8 10 4 4 19 12 9 66 JANUARY 2-31 gan State twime, 3-1 and 5-0. The JANUARY 2-31 By GORDON MARS Starting his twenty-eighth sea- son as coach of the Michigan swim- ming team is Matt Mann, who has justly won the title, "The Builder of Champions." Mann-coached teams have won the Western Conference cham- pionship 16 times, and in addition have taken the N.C.A.A. title 13 times. Add nine second place fin- ishes to the national crowns and you see that Mann's title is well deserved. IN DUAL MEET competitions, Mann's natators have amassed a record of 200 victories against only 25 defeats. Mann was born in Yorkshire, England where he began his swimming carreer at 11. The British Empire free style crown came into his possession at 16. Coming to the United States in 1904, he won the national YM- CA 100 and 200 yard free style crowns. His coaching actually began in 1909 at the Buffalo Athletic Club. He then took a job at the first municipal pool in Brookline, Mass., where he coached for five years. At the same time he was coaching Harvard and Navy to undefeated seasons. * * * JOINING THE New York Ath- letic Club as head coach in 1916, Mann again took on a side coach- ing job-this time at Yale, where his swimmers were undefeated once again. From here he went to the Du- luth, Minn. Boat Club, and in 1919 Mann joined the Detroit Athletic Club. World champion Ted Cann won the 220-yard free style title for the DAC while under Mann's direction. Coach Mann finally came to Michigan in 1925, and instilled the will to win in his teams. 14 23 13 11-61 17 21 7 21-66 LATE BASKETBALL SCORES Illinois 83, Northwestern 58 Indiana 88, Ohio State 68 Wisconsin 76, Minnesota 74 Oklahoma A & M 57, U. of Detroit 50 Kansas 65, Nebraska 59 SERVICE with a SMILE Collegiate Styles To Please You 8 1aircutters-No Waiting The Dascota Barbers Near Michigan Theater INTRAMURAL HOCKEY SCORES Chi Psi 3, Kappa Sigma 0 Phi Gamma Delta. 10, Flyers 3 Hinsdale 6, Newman Club 3 Sigma Chi 4, Sigma Phi Epsilon 3 1 1 _ _ _ ___ ' ' 7 iscouatsa e -4 (U4-rd &q it TAILORED TO MEASURE EVERYTHING REDUCED 11 "A secure future, exceptional opportunities for advancement, and a high starting salary await you at FAIRCHILD, if you are one of the men we are looking for. 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