I PAGE rUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 19" 0 ^I HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE BOUT: Johansson TKO's Patterson in Third Netter Mulloy Defeats Young American Star 41> (Continued from Page 1) outs, took charge in the first' round withhis left jab. It was{ just like the training camp at Grossinger, N. Y. all over again. All left, no right. Suddenly late in the first he flashed one right that landed on top of the champ's head. This was the type of punch that claimed highly rated Eddie Machen as a first round knockout victim last September and won Ingemar the title shot. In the second ,round, Patter- son was beginning to come on, slamming to the body but with- -out too much effectiveness. Inge- mar's stinging jab still was keep- ing him off but the Swede's right still was missing fire. Johansson Lands Patterson came out for the third, sticking with 'his left and looking over the top of the left as though sighting a gun. Boom came the "thunder and lightning" right that the Swedes have been talking about and down went Pat- Sterson on his back. Then Patterson took his eerie walk into never-never land with his hands dangling at his side. Johanson, sensing the big chance his fists already had given him, came dashing to the attack with another right. After each of the first two knockdowns it looked as though the champ was not going to get up. But he kept on coming back gamely, only to run into more of this right, hand punch that no longer is a mystery. A hard left and right sent the champ groveling into the resin dust until Goldstein counted six. Another right sent him down on his back near the ropes. He pulled himself up to one knee, pawing weakly at the ropes to help him- self get up at six. Blood was streaming from Pat- terson's mouth and nose as he went sprawling from another right. This time it took seven seconds before he pulled himself together. A left-right combination made even the thickest skinned fans wonder how much longer they could let it go. Patterson took nine this time and got up once more. The right hand did it once more. Goldstein declared the armistice. Johansson Jubilant The end of the bout touched off an explosive scene in- the ring. Ingemar's trainers, American and Swedish, grabbed him in waltz step. Edwin Ahlquist, the Swedish promoter who is Ingemar's "ad- viser," joined in the celebration along with Dr. Gosta Karlsson, his personal physician from Swe- den, and all the Swedes who could break through the heavy cordon of police. For several frantic minutes, hundreds teetered on the edge of the ring apron, rebuffed by police, in a scene that recalled the tur- moil in Philadelphia when Brock- ton, Mass. fans burst into the ring to cheer Rocky Marciano's knock- out of Jersey Joe Walcott. Johansson, who trained "fam- ily style" with his mother, father, sister, two brothers, and fiancee in attendance, was the fifth man born outside America to win the heavy crown. The others were Bob Fitzsimmons, Tommy Burns, Max Schmeling and Primo Carnera. Only three other men ever won the big prize of boxing without ever losing a fight. They were John L. Sullivan, Jim Jeffries and Rocky Marciano. Jeffries, how- ever, had been held to two draws. Johansson, a strapping 196- pounder, towered over the 182- pound Patterson. It looked like a man against a boy although the difference was only 14 pounds. At least, the difference was only 14 pounds Wednesday when they weighed in before the postpone- ment because of threatening weather. Rain fell for two and one-halfj hours last night, delaying the start of the program for an hour, and almost forcing promoter Bill Rosensohn to postpone the show until tonight or Monday. Surprised Floyd Got Up, Johansson Tells Writers NEW YORK (P) - "I was sur- prised when he got up - usually when I hit a man like that he stays down." Ingemar Johansson of Sweden, the new Heavyweight Champion of the World, brandished his ex- plosive right fist proudly in the swelter and confusion of the Yan- kee Stadium's catacombs and told how he beat champion Floyd Pat- terson into submission in 2:03 of the third round last night. "It was a straight right - and flush on the chin," the dimpled, smiling Viking added. "It was my best shot, and I thought the fight was over there. But I had to hit him again and again." Johansson threw his vaunted fist high in the air in a gesture of victory and then planted a wet kiss on the gnarled fingers. "You see I fool you," he told gathreed newsmen in his dressing room. "You thought my right hand was just a fantasy. I show you - and I also show Patterson." Rocky Marciano, former king of the heavyweights now plump and jowly from too much rich Italian cooking, was one of the first to reach Johansson's- side and shake his hands. "It was fantastic," said the re- tired undefeated heavyweight champion.,"I never saw anything like it - never in my life. It was so quick and so deadly." Outside in the dank corridor, clustered close around the police- protected door, were members of Johansson's family. Papa, Jens Johansson, a Gote- borg stonecutter was pale and shaking but showing complete de- light. Sister Eva was crying her eyes out. Mama Ebba Johansson was un- emotional. She chewed gum gin- gerly and stared oddly at the closed door behind which her son was being examined by doctors and interviewed. Floyd Patterson leaned sadly a g a i n s t the wall of Mickey Mantle's dressing room and said. "I couldn't see the punch com- ing. "The first one hit flush on the forehead. "When I got up the first time I didn't know where I was. "I didn't feel the second punch but after that I think I started to come out of it. "But I couldn't criticize the ref- eree for stopping the fight." Patterson whispered all this to his manager, Cus D'Amato, who in turn shouted it to the perspir- ing, milling crowd of newspaper- men that had been kept out of the dressing room for a full 40 minutes after the end of the fight. CHAMPION AND FORMER CHAMPION-This was the scene at the weigh-in for the Patterson-Johansson fight which was fought last night. Johansson's third round TKO was a surprise to the oddsmakers who had picked Patterson 5-1. BATTLE IT OUT: Crawford, Lucetti Lead In NCAA Golf Finals WIMBLEDON, England () - Perpetually youthful Gardnar Mulloy yesterday defeated Earl (Butch) Buchholz, a powerful teenager young enough to be his son, in the third round of the Wimbledon Tennis Champion-' ships. The 45-year-old Mulloy took this center court struggle in straight sets 6-4, 7-5, 6-4, by Ban Koreans, Russians Say MOSCOW -) - K. Andrianov, president of the Russian Olympic Committee, declared today that South Koreans must be banned from the 1960 Rome Olympics if they refuse to compete in a uni- fled Korean team. South Korea competed at the Melbourne Games as a separate team and is going ahead with plans for the Rome Olympics. Andrianov, writing in the News- paper of Soviet Sports, also urged that "international sports associ- ations purge the Chaing Kai- Shekists from their ranks." This was in reference to the recent action of the International Olym- pic Committee in 'withdrawing recognition of Nationalist China because it claimed jurisdiction over the Chinese Mainland. As matters now stand, both Nationalist China and the Red Chinese are outside the Olympic movement, the Communists be- cause their claim to jurisdiction over sports on Formosa was re- jected. In the first installment of a plc Problems," Andianov said "it series of articles entitled "Olym- is obvious that if South Korean sportsmen oppose an agreement on the creation of a unified Olym- pic team (for all Korea), the International Olympic Committee at its next session in February of 1960 must take a decision to ban South Korea sportsmen from the Rope Olympics." working the corners and the side- lines and chopping soft shots that hardly bounced at all. The victory sent Mulloy into the round of 16 in men's singles--a bracket attained by seeded players Alex Olmedo, Neale Fraser, Barry MacKay and Roy Emerson and by fourth-seeded Bobby Wilson and seventh-seeded Luis Ayala yester- day. Never Found Balance Buchholz, an 18-year-old high school boy from St. Louis and one of America's brightest tennis prospects, never found his bal- ance. In every set the pattern was the same. It was set by the crafty Miami veteran who first hit the U.S. ranking list in 1939-the year before Buchholz was born. First Mulloy worked for an early serv- ice break. Then the trim grey haired man clug to his advantage like ivy on a wall. "I deliberately soft-balled the kid," Mulloy said afterward. "I wanted to dra whim up to the net and force him into errors. Toward the end I was getting tired and so was the kid. He was making me run too much with his shots from the baseline. "When you have been around as, long as I have, you are glad to win one like this." Frost Beaten One American besides Buch- holz was eliminated from the men's singles yesterday. Jack Frost of Monterey, Calif., dropped a straight-set decision to 22- year-old Joergen Ulrich of Den- mark 9-7, 7-5, 6-1. In Women's singles the United States has four survivors among the last 16. Two Americans won yesterday, two lost and one had to default. The winners were third-seeded Mrs. Beverly Baker Fleitz of Long Beach, Calif., and Janet Hopps of Seattle. Darlene Hard of Montebello, Calif., seeded fourth, and Sally Moore of Ba- kersfield, Calif., last years Wim-- bledon Junior Champion, ad- vanced yesterday. 5 a' EUGENE, Ore. ()-- Houston's Dick Crawford and San Jose State's Jack Luceti moved into today's NCAA golf finals with semi-final victories today. Crawford, No. 4 man on four- time-team-champion Houston University, whipped Yale's Ted Weiss 8 and 7. Luceti edged Georgia's Bob Moser 2 and 1. Crawford, a sophomore, meets Luceti in the 36-hole finals of this 62nd annual tournament at the Eugene Country Club. Luceti overcame a two-hole deficit to win on the 17th hole.! Moser went 2 up on the 23rd and 24th holes but Luceti won the 25th when his iron shot dropped 18 inches from the cup, and he went even on the 27th when Moser missed a 4-footer. Luceti went 1 up on the 29th with a birdie, and he won the match on the 35th when he put- ted within five feet of the pin' on a 50-footer, and then dropped the winning putt. Crawford held a 3 up edge after the first 18 holes, and closed out the match on the 29th hole when Weiss struck a tree and had to settle for a bogey. Crawford went 4 up on the 19th, when Weiss missed a 10-footer, and 5 up with a 2-footer on the 20th hole. Weiss trimmed the lead to four, holes on the 21st, when Crawford missed a 5-footer, but the Hous- ton sophomore won the 23rd. Crawford extended his lead to six strokes on the 27th when Weiss double-bogeyed a par 5. hole, and he won the 28th when Weiss hit his chip shot 15 yards beyond the pin. Moser never led in the morning round, but Luceti was unable to take more than a 1 up lead and he frequently lost that. Crawford won the first two holes against Weiss, the first when Weiss hit into a sand trap and the second when Weiss' tee shot went into the trees. Weiss pulled even on the 6th and went one down again when he chipped 20 feet past the pin on the 7th hole and was 2 down on missing a 6-foot putt on the 9th. A s. 11 U AE7To CrilURCi- ON _rlES~t r 'I. NELLIE DOESN'T MAKE IT-Chicago White Sox second baseman Nellie Fox is out at the plate as Wz ington Senators catcher Clint Courtney puts the ball on him in the fourth inning Thursday at Comiskey Park in Chicago., Play started when Harry Simpson grounded to second baseman Ken Aspromonte who threw to the plate. Orioles Batter Detroit, 12-7 In First of UDbleeaer r