MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1949 THE MICHIGA-N DAILY I PAGE TFMHEII age Season a Success Even hough Squa d Third Natators Sink to Th Lowest Finish for Mermen Since ird in Conference '25mv HEAVEN TOO? Facilities for t I 3 . t 35 Sports By DALE DANENBERG Swimming coach Matt Mann experienced his worst season in twenty-four years as a Michigan coach last spring when his charges slipped to third in both the Big Ten and NCAA swimming meets. There probably isn't another coach in the country who wouldn't settle for a comparable record every year, but Mann has long been in a class by himself as a swimming tutor. SINCE COMING to Michigan in 1925 his teams have won 16 Western Conference champion- ships and 13 national titles. Only twice had a Mann-coached team dropped below second in either meet until last season when Ohio State's divers and Iowa's well- balanced team combined to give them their pair of thirds. Despitetheir relatively poor showing the Wolverines chalk- ed up six dual meet wins, in- cluding a thrilling 45-39 tri- umph over Ohio State's nation- al champions-to-be, before Iowa halted them 46-34 in the final dual meet of the season aided by the disqualification of Michi- gan's winning 400-yd. free style relay team for jumping the gun. The Wolverine's six and one record gave them an, overall re- cord of 176 wins, 20 losses and three ties since Mann has been at the helm. THE VETERAN swimming men- tor, who has developed more Olympic swimmers than any other coach, had another one on last year's squad in the person of co- captain Bob Sohl, a third place finisher in the Olympic breast stroke. Sohl who holds the var- sity record in the 200-yd. breast stroke and for a short time was the world record holder in the 100-yd. event went into an inex- plicable slump last season but was still able to take a third in the Big Ten meet and a sixth in the NCAA's. Real standout of last year's squad was Dick Weinberg, na- tional and Western Conference champion in the 50-yd. free style and runner up in the 100-yd. sprint. Weinberg, who in 1947 won national championships in both the 50 and 100-yd. free ener are expected to add strength to those events. moreI 'BigOne' By PRES HOLMES Sports Co-Editor Michigan's 1948-49 basketball season was a rousing success, but don't look in the record books for proof. The Wolverines placed third in the Conference last year, which is Snothing to complain about afterI two decades of finishing in the second division but it still was a letdown after having finished first the season before. * * * THE OVERALL record of 15 wins and six losses was almost asI good as the first place Maize and Blue team had piled up-exhibit- ing just one less win. Won for McCoy Available i I-M Program DICK WEINBERG . . . national champ style dashes was in the best shape of his career as he raced to new Michigan records in his two pet events and then posted the third best time ever re- corded in the NCAA 100-yd. qualifiers. He was defeated only once in dual meet competition (on a dis- puted decision) and his victories included an upset win over his old nemesis, Wally Ris, Iowa's Olympic champion. * * * WEINERG and Sohl, will be gone from next year's squad along with diver Ralph Trimborn, dash star Bill Kogen and distance man Johnny McCarthy but the Wol- verines' chances of regaining their Big Ten and national crowns from Ohio State are extremely bright. Captain Matt Mann III who is likely to blossom forth as the outstanding distance swimmer in the country now that Bill Smith has finally said his good- byes at Ohio State and Bill Heusner has done likewise at Northwestern, heads a powerful aggregation of returning letter- men and promising freshmen. Gus Stager, another outstanding distance man, will team' up with Mann to give the Wolverines what could be the most potent one-two punch in college competition and juniors Bob Byberg and Bob Weg- VERSATILE Charlie Moss who starred in both the free style dash- es and the breast stroke is ex- pected to confine his talents to the dashes and the individual medley events which will be a part of all dual meets this winter. Moss will be aided by veter- ans Dave Tittle and Tom Coates in the dashes while Byberg and Bill Upthegrove will probably share starting duties in the med- ley. In an effort to lessen the weight of the two diving events in de- ciding Conference and national meets, two new races, the 100-yd. breast stroke and back stroke, have been added to next season's cham- pionship meetS, and herein lies Michigan's hopes for added cham- pionship honors. THE WOLVERINES are loaded for bear in the breast stroke des- pite the loss of Sohl. Bill Upthe- grove, who has displayed a ten- dency to weaken in the late stages of the 200-yd. event can match strokes with the best of them at the shorter distance, and Bill Aus- tin is about in Upthegrove's class. Two sterling sophomores are expected to carry the Wolverine colors in the 200-yd. race, and both of them have already equalled Sohl's best times as a freshman. They are John Dav- ies, a big Australian who finish- ed fourth in the 1948 Olympic Games and who has display- ed marked improvement under Mann's tutelage and Stew El- liott, who answers to the name of Big Stoop. These two men were easily the most impressive members of the 1948-49 fresh- man squad. Bernie Kahn who was improv- ing rapidly at the close of the last season is expected to once again be the number one backstroker but he will have some tough com- petition from Dick Howell another promising member of last season's freshman squad. * * * GEORGE EYSTER will inherit the No. 1 diving post from the graduated Ralph Trimborn and Mann is looking forward to great (Continued on Page 8) By JOE EPSTEIN Michigan's extensive intramural program, which includes team and individual competition in thirty- five different sports, plays a large role in the life of the average male student. Under the direction of a well- trained staff, this intramural pro- gram is as varied as that at any other school in the country. ACTIVITIES on the program include archery, badminton, base- ball, basketball, bowling, boxing, codeball, cross country, fencing, football, golf, gymnastics, hand- ball, horseshoes, ice hockey, la- crosse, paddleball, rifle shooting, soccer, softball, squash, swimming, tennis, track, volleyball, water polo, weight lifting, and wrestling. Undergraduate competition takes place within six main di- visions - all - campus, residence hall, professional fraternity, fra- ternity, independent, and inter- national. There is also a faculty division. Headquarters of all Michigan in- tramural activity is the well-equip- ped Intramural Sports Building. Modern in all of its details, the building is located a short dis- tance from the center of the cam- pus. .5 ) * THIS BUILDING is ordinarily open for activities from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily; however, during the late fall and early winter, it stays open for use until 10 p.m. Here may be found a beautifultiled swimming pool, four regulation - size basketball courts, as well as a host of other fine athletic facili- ties. One of the highlights of the I-M year is the annual I-M Open I l House. Since its modest begin- ning in 1928, it has grown and grown in popularity. Now, al- most 5000 students and towns- people attend every year, and watch 500 athletes engage in a variety of 22 sports. It is on this night that most of the spring all-campus championship events are held. Although a paid staff keeps the I-M program functioning, students bear a large part of the responsi- bility for it. Student referees and umpires officiate at all intramural contests, and a staff of volunteer student managers handles many of the administrative details. PARTICIPATION POINTS are awarded to all who take part in I-M athletics. By earning a suf- ficient number of points, a stu- dent becomes eligible to receive an intramural monogram. These monograms are awarded each year to the two hundred highest rank- ing all-year point winners on cam- pus. The Michigan Daily annually awards a trophy to the individ- ual picked as the All Around I-M Athlete of the year. His name and home town are painted on a plaque which hangs in the lobbyj of the Sports Building. A past winner of this coveted honor was grid star Tommy Harmon. Yes, Michigan not only produces the best varsity athletes in the United States; it also tries to pro- duce intramural athletes of the same tip-top caliber. I This could be sufficient reason for calling the season satisfac- tory, but isn't any indication of great success. The success story lies in the last win, the fifteenth one, the one that turned the season from a dis- appointing debut for head coach Ernie McCoy to one of jubilation and a feeling that a job had been well done. THE GAME was played against Illinois in Yost Field House and was the last of the Conference season. There were no titles or championships at stake. They had been decided the Saturday before when contending Minnesota had lost to Wisconsin making Illinois the undisputed champion. So when Michigan took the floor against the Illini early last March it seemed to be simply another contest. The Gold and. Blue had won ten and lost only once in the Big Nine season and were odds-on favorites to make their record read 11-1, especially since the Wolverines had drop- ped their last two starts. But at the end of 40 minutes of red hot basketball Michigan had given Illinois its worst defeat of the season, a 70-53 pasting. * * * THE WINNERS' locker room or less of a utility man on the team but a very handy man to have around, rounds out the list of returning lettermen who saw much action fast season. * * * BILL DOYLE, Chuck Murray, Bob Olson. Les Popp, and Irv Wis- niewski will be back from last year's squad and will provide coach McCoy with a good nucleus to build this 'year's team around. Whether or not they can ex- hibit the same spirit and deter- mination as this year's crew will only be told as the season pro- gresses. Michigan basketball fans could be in store for a type of play quite foreign to Maize and Blue teams of the past two or three years. AT THE BEGINNING of last season Coach McCoy stuck to the conservative. possession type of ball his predecessor had won the title with a year before. When t'ie chances of recapturing the crown had faded however, he began to experiment with the fast-break and race-horse style of play. In the second Purdue game and also against Illinois, this different type of play won for Michigan. Mack Suprunowicz looked particularly good playing the faster game and if the other material fits this pattern the Wolverines are very likely to switch to that brand of ball completely. Whatever system Michigan does use this season, if the 1949-50 squad plays for McCoy the way last year's did -with heart, and drive, and a will to do the best possible-the season will be an- other rousing success. DO YOU KNOW ... that the individual record for the great- est number of points scored in one basketball game for Michi- gan is held by Mack Supruno- wicz. He netted 28 against Pur- due last February. MACK SUPRUNOWICZ . . . cage captain . ..the "old man" was a bedlam. The back slapping was ferocious, the shower room resounded with whoops of victory; the boys had won the "big one" for Ernie. For five members of this squad, four of them starters, it was their last game. Mack Su- prunowicz, who will be playing his fourth year of basketball for Michigan and captaining the squad, is one of the holdovers and will be one of the key men in Ernie McCoy's second season as coach of the Wolverine cag- ers. Leo VanderKuy, who as a soph- omore stepped into the shoes of the injured Bill Roberts, will be back to hold down the cenir spot again. Hal "Lefty" Morrill, more - -- I1 Exclusive showings of all "ESQUIRE" feature promotions 1000 HEADS WANTED!! Whether they are f lat, round or square for a Collegiate hair style at THE DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State X, Q . tti3 a" a Another Van Boven First "The Wilton" Here is a suit that has been styled and made by your requests. 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