THE MICHIGAN ,DAILY PAGE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Cindermen Illinois Captures Fourth Straight Track Crown second In Big Te , _ NEW AT1LETIC PLANT-This diagram points out the location of the new athletic administration building and varsity pool which are under construction on Ferry Field. Included in the map are the proposed positions of the new fieldhouse and the Ferry Field track. anp By KEN COPP Captained by weightman Fritz Nilsson, the Michigan track squad finished the 1954 outdoor season by placing second behind Leo John- son's Illinois powerhouse. For the last four years now the only thing standing between the Wolverines and Big Ten title has been the Fighting Illini of Cham- paign. Even though Michigan possesses some of the greatest track talent in the nation and is rated as one of the top three collegiate teams. Don Canham's thinclads have been unable to wrestle the coveted crown from the Illini. During the last year Michigan possesed one of the best track squads in the history of the school. The " Wolverine tracksters under the able, coaching of ex-Michigan star Canham went on to set rec- ords in both their dual meets and numerous invitationals.t In the first meets of the 1954 indoor season the Wolverines gave some of the nation's top cinder stars a run for their money in a pair of invitational meets at Bos- ton and Washington, completely outclassed Western Michigan and Michigan State Normal in a tri- angular meet, and dominated the1 Michgian AAU relays held at Yost Field House. In the Knights of Columbus meet at the Boston Gardens a two-mile relay team made up of Roy, Chris- tiansen, Al Lubina, John Moule and John Ross finished a close sec- ond to the quartet from Fordham. Then in the Washington Evening Star Games this same team placed third behind Fordham and George- town. Five Meet Records Then in the triangular meet the Wolverine thinclads set five meet records as they won ten of the twelve events and shared in one other. Grant Scruggs recorded the third best time in Yost Field House history as he took the 440 from teammate and Big Ten titlist Jack Carroll in 49:3. In other events sophomores pac- ed the way as Tom Hendricks leap- ed 22'6" to crack the recrod set in 1952 and Ron Wallingford sent teammate and Big Ten champ George Lynch down to defeat in the two mile by running 9:37.2. The AAU meet saw two other sophomores come to the fore as Pete Gray won the 1000-yard run, a new event, with a record 2:14.5 and fellow Canadian Pete Sutton took the 440 in :51.3. With such individual stars as Wes Santee of Kansas, John Ben- nett of Marquette and Ralph Fes- senden competing, the Michigan tracksters could only garner two first places in the Michigan State Relays held two weeks later. These victories came in the one mile re- lay with Sutton, Carroll, Scruggs and Bob Brown running and the two mile relay composed of Lynch, Christiansen, Moule and Gray. Illini-Michigan Meet Then the big meet of the year followed a week later when the Maize and Blue of Michigan came face to face with the Orange and Blue of Illinois in a dual mee.t The Wolverines gave their all and could never lose a closer one to Illinois than this with the final score read- ing 581/2-551. The victor was decided in the final mile relay event when Illi- nois anchorman Fessenden lunged across the tape a half step ahead of Wolverine Scruggs. The time of 3:17.7 set a new record but that event had to take a back seat to the performance of Gray and Illi- nois conference titlist Gene May- nard in the 880 when the two sprawled across the finish line in a dead heat to break nearly every record in the book. Their time of 1:52.4 broke the Illinois armory and dual meet rec- ords and was three-tenths of a second faster than the Big Ten mark set the year previous by Dli- nois' Stacey Siders. In the rest of the events things went pretty much as expected with the two teams splitting the field events; Junior Stielstra winning the broad jump for the Wolverines (Continued from Page 5Y matches Nalan turned in the amazing feat of pinning all three of his opponents. Then for the third time this season he faced State's Sinandinos in the semi- final match and beat him by a very decisive 7-3 score. Nalan Defends Crown In the finals Nalan successfully defended his 130-pound title by defeating Ithaca College's Jim Howard, 7-2, as the Wolverines tied for seventh place with the host team, Oklahoma, in the team standings with 10 points. Kail was also entered in this match and he defeated Bill Turner of Illinois, 9-1, in his preliminary match and then Pitt's George Mat- thews, 6-3. However in his semi- final match Kaul was decisioned by Fd Eichelberger of Lehigh, 6-2, and therefore finished in fourth place in the 137-pound division of the NCAA. Of the two other men entered McMahon was defeated in the pre- liminaries and Haney was not able It in to make the trip due to a slight neck injury which he suffered in the Big Ten meet. Also at this tournament, Coach Keen received a high honor when he was elected President of the National Coaches Association. The genial coach, who has directed his teams to five Big Ten Champion- ships since coming to Michigan in 1925, also served as manager of the 1948 United States Olym- pic wrestling squad and has been active in affairs of the National Association since its inception in 1927. Keen's able assistant is former Wolverine mat star Bob Betzig, who captained the wrestling team during both his junior and senior year and. competed from 1946 to 1949. Wrestling in the 157-pound class Betzig holds the enviable record of 21 victories against three losses in three years of varsity competition. PETE GRAY .. . sets record in 1000-yd. run with a jump of 23' 4%1" and Nilsson taking the shot put. A week later the Michigan track- men participated in a meet with Ohio State and Michigan Normal and this turned out to be merely a warm-up for the conference meet which was to come the next week. The Wolverines won this triangu- lar affair easily as they scored 1031/ points to Normal's second- place effort of 30/2 and Ohio State's 25. In this meet John Vallortigara, wearing the Maize and Blue of Mi- chigan, set a new record in the ini- tial running of the 300 yard dash as he stepped it in :31.6. Conference Meet Then in the big conference meet at Champaign on March 5 and 6 the Wolverines finished behind the strong Illini, which was expected, and behind the Hoosiers of Indi- ana, which wasn't expected. Michi- gan finished with a.point total of 42%, which was one-fourth of a point behind Indiana, and Illinois won handily from both teams with 55 points. Only two Michigan thinclads managed to cop first places as Ross defeated Indiana's Lowell Zellers in the one-mile run with a time of 4:11.2 and Captain Nilsson won the shot put with a heave of 52' 7"% . Each man captured his third straight title with Ross running the indoor mile the second fastest of his life. The Wolverines made their pre- sence known two weeks later when the two-mile relay team composed of Christiansen, Moule, Ross, and Gray ran the university relay in the fastest time of the indoor sea- son, 7:39.3, to defeat national champion Fordham in the 14th an- nual Knights of Columbus meet at Cleveland. What made thel time, which was a new meet and Big Ten record, even more unusual was because it was run on a very small track- one that has 12 laps to the mile. Also all of the teams entered, Michigan State, Fordham, and Pitt had' defeated the Michigan quartet earlier in the season. It became apparent that this quartet was out to break records when the following week they won the Chicago Daily News Relays event in the -record time of 7:35. This time set a new Varsity record and clipped 4.2 seconds off the old Relays mark. West Coast Triumph Then in one of the most impres- sive performances of all season Canham's thinclads journeyed to the West coast during the spring recess to face Stanford, UCLA and Edwards Air Force Base in- dual meets. None of the meets proved to be much of a contest for the Wolverines, even though this was their first outdoor competition of 1945, as they trampled the Stan- ford Indians, 86-35, and the Uclans, 96-36. The Michigan aggregation won all but three events from the In- dians and completely out-classed the squad from UCLA. The most encouraging performance was that of Vallortigara, who was out all last season with an injury, as he swept to double victories in the 100 and 220-yard dashes. Sophomores Wallingford and Gray continued on their winning ways as they scorea wins in the two mile and 880-yard runs res- pectively. Other Maize and Blue entrants who took their respective events were Ross in the mile and hurdler Jim Love who marked up a double victory in the 120-yard highs and the 220-yard lows against UCLA. Immediately after returning from the West the Michigan squad be- gan to condition themselves for the coming Ohio Relays at Columbus. In this meet Captain Nilsson scor- ed a double victory in his special- ties, the discus and shot put, and the distance and two-mile relay teams took firsts in their events. Nilsson Scores Sweep A week later at the biggest track event of the year, the Penn Relays, Nilsson again swept his events to become the first athlete to ever win both weight events for three straight years. The other Michigan crown went to the sprint medley team of Scruggs, Brown, Carroll and Gray. On the first day of May the Mar- quette and Western Michigan squads proved no match for the Ann Arbor squad as it took 10 first places out of a possible fourteen. This meet merely served as a warm-up for the first annual Big Ten Relays whicl4 were to follow a week later. In this meet seven Illi- nois Memorial Stadium records fell as Michigan dominated the field. This time the Maize and Blue out- shone the host, Illinois, as the Wol- verines grabbed five titles to the Illini's three. The 1954 outdoor season was capped by the Big Ten meet held at Purdueand the NCAA meet held two weeks later at Ann Arbor onh Michigan's, Ferry Field. In the Big Ten meet Michigan assumed its usual second place role as Illinois won their fourth straight meet with 57 points to Michigan's second place effort of 40 1/7 points. Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES I Gym Squad Finishes Third (Continued from Page 4) 1 Johnson, who aggravated his in- jury in the preliminaries, was un- able to put in more than a token appearance in the finals. He in- sisted on performing however, and was able to garner two points de- spite his injured wrist, enabling the Wolverines to edge MSC for third place. Several bright spots did show up for the Wolverines in the title meet at Columbus, Ohio, however. Three Maize-and-Blue trampoline men, all returning this season, reached the finals. San Antonio, participat- ing in his first semester of Big Ten competition, finished sixth in the side horse and eighth in the parallel bars. 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