Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 December 1941 — Page 7

Early Games Prove 1

aps Come Home—and Win; Was It Tuer Or That Big Crowd Crying for Victory?

* "Now that Turner's back with that new system and nonchalance, you can expect the Caps to keep winning.”

Bulldogs Don't

Tougher Than Northwestern

Butler University has four more Big Ten foes to worry over this geason, but they don't expect any of them to be any bigger or tougher than the Wildcats of Northwestern. The bruised and battéred Bulldogs have Illinois and Iowa on hand this week. So there is little time in which to recover. You have to possess the ball to score, and when Otto Graham and the rangy hands of Northwestern,

have the same idea, it is rather difficult. Unable to get the ball off] either backboard consistently, ue | Bulldogs dropped their Big opener, 46 to 40, to the Wildeats, It was the second straight vietory for Coach Art (Dutch) Lonberg’s boys.

Graham Is Grand Graham,

peatedly from the pivot for oints. Two teammates from the|

Tootball field, the giant Don Claw-| son and tall Bud Hasse prevented (Of a powerful Manchester team to-

the sophomore sensa-| tion of the gridiron, exploded re- [ence teams play 22 games this week, 16/13 of them with out-of-state teams.

Want. Them

16 Conference

Teams Play

By UNITED PRESS

Sixteen Indiana college oconfer-

Valparaiso will invade the court

| real threat of the frame came early

There are two explanations about the Caps losing on the road and coming home to win like champions—like they did last night, 2 fo 1 in the final minutes against

Pi js Sentimental and one is

sensible. Sentimentally, it's the crowd, the

Sensibly, it was probably the fact that Joe Turnef wasn't in the goalies position during this last, bad week when the Caps lost five t games to eastern foes. th Turner out, the offense has had a tendency to lag back on defense, observers said, afraid to take a chance of leaving home territory open to opponents wings. Last night No! No! was at his best. After a shaky first period, the boys in blue went down surely, skated faster and brilliantly, took a few chances and wound up in a tie for first place with Cleveland.

Caps Sloppy

The first period was scoreless with the Caps taking a sloppy play to Teno most of the time. The only

when Jud McAtee, controlling the puck on and off his feet, steered to the corner. Jerry Brown took a short pass and fired it straight in front to Rookie Roy Sawyer. Roy was in too big a hurry. The ominous warning the Hornets have been telegraphing up from the cellar became reality in the second period as Pittsburgh scored. Squee Allen, Normie Mann and Johnny Sherf gained a break on the all-offense tactics of the Caps. The three wings hit the blue line together and Hec gambled on taking the puck from Mann. He lost. The three continued unchecked. A deflected puck, tapped by Allen, rocketed between “No, No" Joe's legs.

Carveth Scores

The third period gave the Caps a tie as Joe Carveth slid one home. It was a battle of goalies with both Teno and Turner working like they had four arms. Time and again Joe methodically mouthed his gum and speared everything that came his way. Teno was up and down like a Jack in the Box.

The goal came at 6:12. The Cap

wings hit Teno four times with both

{barrels firing. He staved them off.|

Only 3 Teams In Conference Lose Contests

By BOB FLEETWOOD basketball even more than in football, the Big Ten is a mighty tough circuit. The three years of the National

be- | Collegiate Tournament have found

a Western Conference team in the finals: Two, Indiana and Wisconsin, were winners while Ohio State was the runner-up. This season's early contests prove again the league's potency. In 20 battles to date only four have gone the wrong way for Conference fives. The Maroon has dropped two of these. Seven of the teams are still unbeaten, Purdue, Minnesota, WisconIowa, Michigan, Northwestern Ohio State. This week the squads continue their brawling but effective basketball. Indiant’s once beaten Hoosiers tackle Nebraska tonight at Bloomington, and U. C. L. A. Thursday night. Purdue takes on U. C. L. A. on Wednesday and the giants of Great Lakes on Friday. Notre Dame has powerful Michigan to contend with, while Butler tests Illinois and Iowa for Conference ability. In Saturday night's games, only two Big Ten teams tasted defeat, Chicago and Illinois. Champions, and apparently as strong as ever, the boys of Bud Foster at Wisconsin made it 18 straight victories in a row as they crumbled Notre Dame, 43 to 35. Johnny Kotz, voted the outstanding player in the 1941 national collegiate finals, was a desperate problem to the Irish. He snared 20 points, 10 on foul shots, as the Badger defense completely bottled up the Irish short game.

The Maroons, who finished last

in 1940, are quite likely to repeat.|

A fast-breaking Marquette team, made up of five starting sophomores, romped over Chicago, 49 to 24. It was the first victory for the Hilltoppers, and big Jack Dentinger lead the attack with 11 points. Illinois found the former college stars of Chanute Field a little too tough as Bob Menke of Indiana looped home 15 points to spark a 40 to 38 victory for the college alumni. Ohio State, the only team able

the Bulldogs from follow-ins and night that knocked off Franklin Then Carveth picked up a rebound,|to squelch the Great Lakes team, {last week-end. DePauw, on a road [med it up carefully, and drove for| continued its unbeaten pace with a|

rebounds. Coach Paul D. Hinkle fought the! Wildcat - size with his two-team system, hoping to run them into the floor. But the gridiron buddies

ran right with them all night. Bob Jake and Russ

of the Northwestern fast Hu

which rivaled Butlers for s IS

ften the Bulldogs had to or to get out of the way as Clawson or

Hasse boned their way toward the Wednesday and hosting to Towa

hoop. That cost them the gall] game, for the Cats connected on| 18 foul line tosses while Butler was hitting eight. Firing from the field was about even. Hinkle's men let go 61 times and struck home 16, while Northwestern banged away 62 times for 13 hits. All One-Handers

The entire Cat squad seemed unaware of the fact that they had left hands. Graham, especially, pumped the one-handers from every place but the timers bench. Otto hit six out of 22 shots. The gqalfback started the eveing's ewtertainment with an ominous one-hander from the pivot line which told of things to come.

| trip {tinues to make its |ot ball predominate. seem to like the fast pace and they|cagers have downed Susquehanna, |8iVe the Caps a victory.

Wentland, | racing along side Otto, took gare

{Hanover at Earlham, Anderson at Central Normal at] Ser

through Pennsylvania, con-|% Hoosier brand The DePauw |

Pa, and Gettysburg, Pa, and to-| night engage Swarthmore on the Pennsylvania hardwood. Coach Tony Hinkle's tiny Butler squad will continue its early season schedule of gruelling tilts with Big| Ten teams by going to Illinois

| Friday. Butler was defeated by Northwestern and its sophomore fcomet, Otto Graham, Saturday night, 46-40. The remaining schedule: Tuesday—Wabash at Franklin, Huntington at Central Normal, St. Norbert at St. Joseph's, Indiana State at Eastern Illinois.

Delta State at Evansville, Thursday—Louisville at DePauw,

Rose Poly, Valparaiso, Manchester at Huntington, Ohio Wesleyan at Ball State, Great Lakes vs. St. Joseph's at Hammond. Friday-Ohio Wesleyan at Wabash, Central Michigan at In-

Glenn Miller swung Butler back in|

ine with a pivot of his own.

A foul exchange and Bob Fletcher | racing under the Bulldog hoop, put| Butler ahead momentarily. Then] Graham & Co. started to run and]

throw just like the Bulldogs. Co-|

captain Wilbur Schumacher, with three bali-in-the-hoop plays, kept the Bulldogs close at the half, 27 to 25. Ernest Tidrow did a splendid job of guarding Graham in the second half, hurrying his pivot loopers, but the other Wildcats profited, as all eyes turned toward Otto.

shots. Baskets by Clawson, Wentland and Kruger speeding down on fast breaks and connections on nine of 10 foul shots kept the Cats ahead. Tidrow hit two longs, tricked his way under for two, and Glenn Miller batted in one for Butler in the second stanza, but only five foul chances out of seven hurt them. For a moment early in the seecond half i appeared the Butler speed might be telling on the Cats as Clawson, Graham and Hasse] Jerrored repeatedly. BUTLER (19) NORTHWESTERN

, mw i vo. | sgovemumomus rar] G@Gmts 100 BW intr ol msicoon Je P| owe

“wl Puto Pr oT TISO yw son sm

Totals . 16 Score at Half: Sa nwestarn, 23: Butier,

Officials: Glenn Adams and Dale Robinson,

usual offering. Modern s

new low price.

Graham | could snare only two out of 13]

diana State. Saturday—JIowa at Butler, Kansas

Wednesday—Hanover at Miami, Hers

{ State at Indiana State, Ohio Wes{leyan at Evansville, Earlham at St. [vosepbs.

pipe. The iron rail relayed the rubber home. The now famous last-minute play lof the Caps materialized again to

Carveth, the man Detroit had better never see, brought the puck] jdown and fired straight into Teno. | Harvey shuffled it off and Douglas smacked a rebound at Hime. | Again Teno said “No.” But Jack Keating the floater ex-|

up and into the net. (B.

Hockey Standings

AMERICAN LEAGUE Western Division

{kota State. | MacMillan of the Gophers warned

pert, lifted one of his loopers high| 13 points.

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WEDNESDAY Hershey at

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Mat Card Filled For Armory Show

Opening action on the wrestling card tomorrow night at the Armory will send Joe Millich, Detroit against Nick Elich, Cleveland, the

two heavies starting the program at 8:30 o'clock.

times .and has captured each engagement. He faces a major test in meeting the rugged Mephisto. Sandor Szabo, heavyweight champ out of Los Angeles, risks his title belt in the main event against Ray

«) |score of leading heavies, including 18 recent upset against Jim McMil- |; 8|

rimless glasses, corhiplete with “Gold-Filled” finish mounting and TORIC lenses for FAR OR NEAR VISION, at our

Villmer, a top notcher from St. Louis. Ray has overpowered a

len. He also holds a 90-minute draw with Jim Londos, former champ.

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43 to 41 victory over Kentucky. Minnesota marked up its third | straight, 41 to 32, over North DaLast year Coach Dave {the press to watch Minnesota in 2. Jowa opened its season with a victory over Washington of St Louis, 52 to 31, and Tom Chapman

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Four veterans are back at Hawkeye posts. Michigan finished seventh last season, but several veterans returned and the boys are lankier. Jim Mandler, veteran center, lopped in 15 points as they defeated Michigan State, 37 to 20.

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Kautsky's Beat

The Indianapolis Kautsky's National League pro basketball team was over the 500 mark today after a 35-t0-28 win yesterday over the , 0., Goodyears. The Kautsky's took a period to get warmed up and hn swarmed over their league rivals at the Cathedral High School gym for their third win, compared to two defeats in the loop. The win avenged a 36-to-31 defeat last week at Akron. It was the Goodyears’' height that made the Kautsky's back water for a period. Floyd Ebaugh, §-foot 7inch center, and George Glamack,

ball off both backboards and the | Kautsky's wound up on the short end of a 14-to-8 score. the second period opened,

Week's Games

This week's Big Ten games: : TONIGHT Nebraska at Indiana. WEDNESDAY Butler at Illinois. U. C. L. A. at Purdue. THURSDAY DePaul at Chicago. U. C. L. A: at Indiana. FRIDAY Notre Dame at Michigan. Great Lakes at Purdue. SATURDAY Towa at Butler. Creighton at Minnesota. Pittsburgh at Northwestern. Wisconsin at Marquette.

6-foot S-inch forward, controlled the | the

‘ ery 1pts $ WASHINGTON, Dec. 15. —Sammy NEW YORK, Dec. 15.—Fordham’s Baugh of Weaningisn Redskins is|first football practice in preparafamed for his passing but he led|tion for Missouri in the New Or1941 professional kickers with aver-|leans Sugar Bowl, Jan. 1, was inage of 48.7 yards in 30 punts. terrupted by an air raid alarm.

Goodyears;

Go Over .500 Mark in Loop

three free throws by Johnny Townsend, one by Johnny Sines and a fleld goal by Diets brought the score to 16 to 14. Diets then intercepted a toss and scored from underneath the basket. With about two minutes to play in the first half, Sadowski tallied after some fancy passing snd the Kautsky's went in front, 18 to 16. The local team was never headed He that. ‘ They went far in front, 23 to 18, on a basket and a free throw by Diets and a one Ter by Sines. Long shots by Vocke and Hull punctuated a desperate ry to put back the. ball

game, but with | ne minutes to play, ‘the Raufsky's went on the des ensive..

taking the ball out of bounds to keep control. The summary: Kautskys (35) Goodyears (28) FG FT PR

| i 1

. 2 i], ©... Anderson, g Totals..13 § 17 ‘Totals...10 8 18 Score at Half—Kautskys, 18: Goodyears, Referee—George Bender (Indianapolis).

Operate on Frisch

PITTSBURGH, Dec. 15 (U. P.) — Pittsburgh Pirates’ Manager Frankie Frisch was scheduled to undergo his second operation in two months today-—this time for removal of a bone growth resulting from an old injury to his left foot. Shortly after the close of the National League season, Frisch had his tonsils removed.

3 2 1 0

They refused three free throws, | |

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