DAY, DECEMBER 11, 1957 THE MICMGAN DAUM )ADE3MBR11 95 ~i% 11IC1iIC1AN IA1JEW PAGE £piv't4 Cntneftt BY JIM BAAD - - I Another Rumor R UMORS are flying again. The latest is the speculation on a pos- sible move of Michigan Athletic Director H. O. "Fritz" Crisler to the Pacific Coast Conference as its new head. Nothing definite yet, but its still top news. Crisler hasn't really said "No." Instead he has been cleverly parrying the press with state- ments to the effect that yes, he'd listen to a new job offer just as he'd listen to any favorable proposal, but he is happy at( Michigan. The Coast has been just as evasive. A spokesman relates that he doesn't know whether Crisler is being considered and that a decision probably wouldn't be made until next monith anyway. Related to this rumor is the $60,000 offer from Texas A&M to Michigan State Coach Duffy Daugherty. This is actually out of the rumor stage, however, as Daugherty is seriously considering it. On the otf r hand, Crisler's. move hasn't much more founda- ti6n than the prophesy of a few weeks ago that Bennie Oosterbaan was going to resign his position as head coach and move into the As- sistant Athletic Director's job. .Oosterbaan is still head coach. And yet one can't completely discredt a sports rumor because of denials or evasive, answers to prying questions. Coaches have been known to quit, players. have been withheld from or started in ball- games, and trades have been made all at the end of heated denials or reverse information. But, all in all, a rumor is a rumor until something definite has been decided- The Oosterbaan incident hung on for two weeks until disproved. The Crisler story is in its second day and picking up momentum. Right now Crisler is in Chicago and couldn't be reached for commeit last night. He must be hounded, however, until he makes a decision or someone makes it for him one way or the other. That's the nature of a rumor. The press can't quit once its started for fear of being second with the story. The public just has to wait and do its own speculating on the truth of the matter based on the bits of information which continually lend new angles to the story. But in the end, all must wait for something to happen. The spec- ulation r~ally doesn't add much. Cagers HopeI Against Souti Bill Wright is the new "quarter- back" of Michigan's basketball team. This was coach Bill Perigo's way of praising his little guard, who to date has been the team's big gun. Wright will be out to further prove Perigo's claim when Michi- gan hosts South Dakota State to- night at 8 p.m. in Yost Fieldhouse. Before the season started, many sportswriters designated Jack Lew- is as the Wolverines' quarterback (playmaker), but as the records of the Pittsburgh and Nebraska game show, it was Wright rather than Lewis who led the team. In the Pittsburgh game, Wright was high scorer for the Wolverines with 17 points, and against Ne- braska he scored 12 points in the first half on outside set shots. This was the main reason for the break- ing of the Cornhuskers' zone de- fense. Wright also excelled for Michi- gan on defense. He was the man mainly responsible for Nebraska coach Jerry Bush lamenting "we couldn't get started against that shifting man to man defense." Wright Continues Good Play iDakota State Here Tonight Michigan basketball fans and far have posted a poor 0-5 record. Perigo are probably wondering if The Jackrabbits' record, however, Wright will suffer from incon- should not be taken as an indica- sistency as he has in the past. tion that Michigan has a breather. In his sophomore year he was The Jackrabbits have yet to play one of the team's top players until a game in the friendly confines of the fifth game of the Big Ten their homecourt. race, but then he started losing his As to the fact that they may be touch both on offense and defense, tired out, assistant coach Matt and Perigo had to retire him to the Patanelli said flatly, "Playing bench, games are no rhore tiring than -y h m a practicing." cast uyear the nemesIthe aga If State follows form, they will season games he was hot but by probably use a 2-3 zone defense the time the conference race roll- shifting to a tight man-to-man if ed around he was again on the Michigan's outside shooting breaks bench the zone. bencSh. Dkt tt}Mci Michigan's main worries will be In South Dakota State, Michi- the Jackrabbits' two centers, Kent gan is meeting,a team who thus Hyde (their top scorer) and Wayne Gaughran, both 6'7". NBA SCORES These two men will start and Syracuse 114, Minneapolis 104 interchange between the pivot and St. Louis 102, Cincinnati 90 forward slot. Philadelphia 100, Detroit 97 Perigo probably will go with the same lineup as in the Nebraska game. However, he will experiment COLLEGE SCORES with lineups up to the Conference Clemson 63, N. Carolina St. 59 race. He indicated he might switch No. Carolina 86, G. Washington 59 Lewis to forward, a spot he played Penn State 47, Carnegie Tech 35 in high school, and put George Loyola (Chi.) 84, S- Dakota St. 58 Lee back at guard. f N Till Christmas . OPEN SUNDAYS, 2 P.eM. till 10 P.M. plus our usual Monday thru Saturday hours-9 A.M. to 10 P.M. BILLY WRIGHT . ..sparks cagers j Basilio Named Boxer of Year NEW YORK (M)-Middleweight Champion Carmen Basilio yester- day became the first two-time winner of the Edward J. Niel Me- morial Plaque as "fighter of the year." The thumping body puncher from Chittenango, N.Y., who moved from welter to middle crown on a split decision over Sugar Ray Robinson, Sept. 23, earned the unanimous vote of the Boxing Writers Assn. n BOB MARSHALL'S BOOK SHOP 211 South State, across from Lane Hall LOTS OF ROOM TO BROWSE I MICHIGAN IMPRESSIVE: Swim Squad Opens Year at 'Gala' By CARL RISEMAN 1 9 1 Few teams have made as sensa- tional a debut as the Michigan swimming squad; did Saturday night at the 23rd Michigan 'Gala.' While the 'Gala' did not go by team scoring, it was apparent to the nearly 1,000 interested specta- tors at the Varsity Exhibition Pool that the 1557-58 edition of the Wolverine swim squad had gotten off to a very, fast start. "The Gala was a very fine mkeet loaded with' top competition and entertainment," commented swim coach Gus Stager. "But one of the main purposes of the Gala was to evaluate our team." Under the pressure of swimmers like ex-M star Bumpy Jones, and former MSU stars John Dudeck and. Paul Reinke, both freshmen and varsity men gave commend- able showings. Michigan Swimmers Win In every single event, despite the fact that there was open com- petition, a Michigan swimmer won the race. Tony Tashnick, a Sophomore from Detroit MacKenzie, swam the fastest 200-yd. butterfly in his career, and set a new Michigan and pool record in the process. But in the same race freshmen Dave Gillanders came within one and one tenth second of Tashnfck's time with a 2:11.9. "The fastest time Gillanders swam in high school was around 2:20," Stager said. "In Saturday's time trials he did a 2:17 and then clipped more time off in the finals." Stars Perform Well Dick Hlanley and Cy Hopkins performed very well for an early season showing. Coach Stager be- lieved that Hopkins was coming along fine in the breaststroke which, under new ruling, requires a swimmer to keep his head above the surface instead of submerged. 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