t THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1956 p A GYM EmUIPMEN 4 4 GR UM STS {{*r BRUNSHOES--sox .BLS HANDBALL GL OYES fSQUASH RACKETS MICHIGAN "T"SHIRTS GOLF CLU BS BRUNSWICK BOWLING BALLS -- BAGS-- SHOES Wolverine Thinclads Retain T Both Indoor, Outdoor Titles -li By JOHN HILLYER It was another banner year for Michigan track. Under the able guidance of their successful young coach, Don Can- ham, the Wolverines again brought both the indoor and outdoor Con- ference titles back to Ann Arbor, making it four straight crowns, in- cluding both indoor and outdoor meets. The indoor season was high- lighted by several excellent per- formances in both invitational and team competition. Set Record at MSV At East Lansing and the Michi- gan State Relays, a sprint medley relay team composed of Grant Scruggs, Dick Flodin, Bob Rude- sill and Captain Ron Wallingford set a new world's indoor record for the event, and excellent clock- ing of 3:26.5. This broke the old mark, set at the same meet in 1954 by a Kansas foursome anchored by Wes San- tee. A new Jenison Fieldhouse standard of 3:17.4 was established by the mile relay team of Rude- sill, Robin Varian, Flodin and Scruggs, to add to the evening's success. Next important victory of the season was a thrilling 58-56 con- quest of mighty Kansas on the Jayhawk's home track as Law- rence. This was a victory which came as a surprise to many, and provided an ominous forecast for Big Ten teams to heed. O'Reilly Stuns The follgwing weekend found the lanky resident of Dublin, Ire- land-Brendan O'Reilly-execut- ing a stunning high jump of 6'14", to highlight an easy victory over Ohio State, Marquette and Wes- tern Michigan at Yost Field House. This eclipsed the Varsity record set in 1940 by Coach Canham him- self, and won an automatic berth on the Irish Olympic team for the surprised O'Reilly, who will be only a junior this year. Then came the Big One ... the Conference indoor at.East Lansing. And the powerful Wolverines were ready for it. Circulating among the track luminaries on hand was the ques- tion, "Who's going to stop Michi- gan?" No One Stops Michigan Michigan had the answer all prepared in advance-"No one." Four previous Big Ten indoor champs from Ann Arbor held on to their superiority-Pete Gray in the 1000-yd. run, Wallingford in the two mile, Dave Owen in the shot put and Mark Booth, who tied Iowa's Les Stevens in the high jump. One new monarch from Michi- gan was crowned-pole-vaulter Eeles Landstrom-who cracked the fieldhouse mark of 14'1%/8", set by Illinois' Dale Foster in 1955, with a 14'2" effort. The incomparable Wolverines scored in every event except the high hurdles, in which they had no entry, whipping their nearest com- petitor, Iowa, by better than 10 points. BREAKING THE TAPE-Ron Wallingford, last year's track, captain, was often the winner in the distance races in which he specialized, Club (triangular) and Indiana, both of which proved easy wins. Showdown Meet But th Big Ten showddwn at Minneapolis on May 25-26, as usual, made all of the other meets seem almost insignificant. And this, the 1956 outdoor champion- ship, provided enough thrills to last at least a year. Injuries convinced Coach Can- ham that it was Iowa's show all the way. And for a while, it looked' as though he would prove correct. But true champions never quit- they don't know how-andMicahi- gan proved to be a champion, and a great one at that. Bob Rudesill, who had become quite proficient at the low hurdles, was counted upon for a spot in the top three in thatPevent, which was the next-to-last of the afternoon. Trips Over Hurdle And it looked very much as though he would make it, until he had the misfortune of tripping over the final barrier, stumbling to a fifth. Iows, meanwhile, had garnered a second in the event, which meant that if the Hawkeyes finished ahead of the Maize and Blue in the last event, the mile relay, they would take team honors by half of a point voer Michigan. In the indoor finals, Iowa had sprinted to an easy second in this event, well ahead of the Wol- verines, and must have been favor- ed to do so again, since Michigan's relay men were either worn out from recent races or the .heat, suffering from lack of condition- ing due to recent leg injuries or both. Canham's choices were Don Matheson, whohadn't evencom- peted for several weeks because of a muscle injury; Varian, who had just run the half-mile; and Laird Sloan and Flodin, both of whom had run races that day and were in poor shape in addition. Run Best Quarter-Miles What happened was that each of'these men dashed off the fastest quarter-mile of his life, Flodin anchoring in :46.9, as the quartet ran the third quickest mile relay in Michigan history-.13.7. It was good for a close second- leaving Iowa a tearful distant third-and the outdoor champion- ship was Michigan's. So much for last year. It was a great one, but several outstanding athletes will be missing this sea- son, among them dash man Bb Brown, versatile Tom Hendricks, Wallingford, Gray, Booth and Landstrom, who will be back next year after a hitch in the Finnish army. Yet performers like Varian, Sloan, Jim Pace, O'Reilly, Ron Kramer, Flodin, Rudesill and Geert (Keilstrup, to name a few, will still be around, and a budding crop of sophomores will comple- ment this solid nucleus. Thus things look at least prom- ising enough to lead one to take a cue f r o m past performances, counting Michigan's track team right in the thick of things until proven otherwise. i I DAVE OWEN .. shot put champion returns A couple of standout perfor- mances featured the remainder of the season. At the Knights of Columbus Meet in Cleveland, Landstorm scored 14'8", the best he's done in the U.S., to tie the great Bob Richards, among others. A sensational race then ended the indoor circuit at the Chicago Relays the following Saturday. Wallingford ran the year's best two mile of any collegian in the BRENDAN O'REILLY ... also back in high jump country-9:05.1-only to lose the event by two-tenths of a second to Deacon Jones, Iowa's ineligible distance star, who was running unattached. Turning to the outdoor season, the Blue vas kept busy with Drake and Penn Relays, which saw some fine performances by all but over- shadowed by the tough competi- tion; and ,,by home meets with Marquette and the Chicago Track .. , - 4- - - '' - - HOCKEY SKATES FIGURE SKATES I ' V t.i, 4' 9,.. l b'p th e tIthlete" Michigan's NCAA Entry Finishes in Eighth Place 71T it., Phsorn NO 8-6915 ' iR OLD& TRICK 902 South Five members of, Michigan's track squad finished in the scor-. ing in the National Collegiate. Track and Field Championships at Berkeley, Calif. With a team point total of 19 7-10, the Wolverines placed eighth in the meet won by UCLA with 55 7-10 points. Dave Owen was outstanding for. the Wolverines, bettering his Con- ference title-winning shot put by almost four feet as he finished third at Berkeley with a heave of Captain Ron Wallingford, in his last= race for Michigan, ran fifth in the 5,000 meter event in 14:53.7. Geert Keilstrup also added points for theWolverines by placing third in the 3,000 meter steeplechase in 9:34.3. Michigan's other points were gathered by Eeles Landstromr and Mark Booth in the pole vault and high : jump, respectively. Land- strom tied for third in his spec- ialty with a leap of 14'4", while Booth repeated " his 1955 tie for State, Phone NO 8-7296 {, t 1 I 57' 3/8". fourth place by jumping 6'4". U ........ ,... I and EVERYONE IN ANN ARBOR iAT .7 i SHOP! .4. /,iQ: 1 xU A; - - - U