Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1942 — Page 15
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THURSDAY, FEB. 12, 1042
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HE INDIANAPOLIS TIME!
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PAGE 15
U. P. Picks 4 State Finalists Washington From The South
Kautsky’s Whip ‘Rens,’ 36 to 31 Before 5500
The 3500 fans at the Field House
Bulldogs Change Style for Marquette
last night were somewhat amazed | -
at the New York passing game, but when it came | to scoring field goals the local | Kautsky's held an edge and won| w 36 to 31. Kautsky's professionals played the entire game with five players while the Gotham Negro team combined the play of eight players ohnny Townsend, former Michi- | gan Tniversity All-American, led the! winners with 14 points. Elwood Nor- | ris, a rookie pro from Butler. fol- | lowed with a hard-earned 10 points. | Boswell of the Renaissance was high | with 10. i Townsend's offensive work-in the! pivot circle kept the locals in the! lead the first half while Norris con- | trolled “Ren” rebounds in the second half to keep the New Yorkers’ scoring minimum. The two clubs were tied at nineell at the end of the first quarter. {autsky's took an early sscond Quarter lead they never relinquished, leading 18 to 12 at the half. Both teams fouled freely in the early play. The outlook began to look dangerous so the personal foul| rule was waived. Officials Walter Floyd and George Chestnut called
Renairsance’s |
+ 0 a
Bob Pierce, 6 feet one inch Marquette forward, has his heart on the wrong side. But he'll play anyway against Butler Saturday here. Above (left to right) are Eddie Rozmarynoski, Marquette trainer, 2nd Coach
Bill Chandler.
37 fouls. Allison U. Stewart-Warner Shippers, 42 to 41, end the Allison Patrol Service defeated Pure Oil, 35 to 23, in the preliminary games. Summary: KAUTSKY'S (36). RENAISSANCE (:
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Pee-Wee Agrees
NEW YORK-—Infielder Harold H. (Pee-Wee) Reese has agreed to terms for the 1942 season, the Brooklyn Dodgers announced today. Pitchers Tom Drake and Lester Webber and Infielder Lewis Riggs returned eotheir contracts last night, and make 17 who have signed for this season.
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were 10 points difference in the two How much has Butler improved
“Naturally, our shooting forwards, we trans-| ferred the emphasis to the guards. { “In coaching, you must fit your | plan to your material. You e {to juggle around, try some new | (things, go back and try again a | slightly different way.” But the emphasis—and this {comes straight from Hinkle—won't be on the guards Saturday night | when the Bulldogs meet Marquette | {at the Field House. It'll be on the! | forwards.
a | 1891 | Between the halves at the | | Butler-Marquette game Saturday night, two teams from the Central Y. M. C. A. will play a basketball game as it was first played when invented by Dr. James Naismith 50 years ago. The feature tilt is a Golden Game, and part of the proceeds will go to the fund for the Basketball Memorial at Springfield, Mass.
And it’s likely to be on one for{ward in particular—Paul Weaver. | “Marquette has a system of de|fense that will take our guards out lof the play,” said Coach Hinkle. | | “Therefore were shifting our em- | phasis back to the forwards. They'll Ibe the shooters. “We'll try tc get Weaver out from
‘under the basket and free to get a
I understand he’s a deadeye with ‘that shot. but he's been under the! ‘bucket so much, he hasn't been able! (to use it.” 7 in 2a Row
(We wandered out to the basket- | ball floor after talking to Hinkle | and saw Weaver sink seven suc- | 'Bessive underhand shots from be-| yond the free throw circle) | Hinkle won't say whether or not. {the Bulldogs will win Saturday, but | shay have been a fighting bunch of |sparkplugs since that last game’ [with the Hilltoppers, winning six! and losing one. That one was to Michigan State! ‘whom they beat last Saturday in a’ {return tilt. | The last three victories were {played without the co- -captains. | | Norris, of course, is out permanently | {because of grades, and Schumach‘er's shoulder is still bad. He won't see action Saturday, Hinkle said.
Fletcher, Maybe?
Against Chanute Field, doped to! whip the Bulldogs, Hinkle pulled {his much-talked-of bit of trickery, ‘playing two separate teams in al- | ternate quarters. | “It's beh done plenty of times i before,” he said. “We made it work pretty well. When it worked, it {gave the boys confidence. “Then, if you'll notice, each night | we play, one or the other of the lads {gets hot. One night it'll be Jimmie Deputy, another Fred Hunckler. {Jim Baumgartner made three buckets in one game and he hadn’t made nine all year.
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Forwards, Instead of Guards,
Will Do Shooting, Says Hinkle
By HARRY MORRISON The last time Butler met Marquette it was at Milwaukee and there
teams—to Butler's disadvantage. since then—if at all, and what did
Tony Hinkle do to keep Butler winning after the loss of his two ace forwards, Co-Captains Wib Schumacher and Woody Norris? we had to change our attack,” said Tony.
“When we los! lost
Butler Relays In Good Start
The 10th annual Butler Relays
{ got off to its official start last night
{at a sportswriters’ dinner as Coach Ray Sears announced that already more than 20 colleges and universities had registered. The Relays will be held Saturday afternoon and evening, March 14. Last year there were 28 entries and despite the “times,” more entries are expected this year. Sears said five Big 10 schools, Indiana, Purdue, Michigan, Ohio State and Illinois, were certain to contpete, “And the word going around,” said Sears, “is to ‘watch Ohio State.’ Their sophomores are good enough to give Michigan (defending champions) a run for their money.”
Completion for Butler Other certain entrants are Notre Dame (very good), Pittsburgh, Drake and Michigan State in the university division. Chief competition for Butler in the college divi-
{sion will come from Western Michi-
gan, Ohio University, Miami, Michigan Normal and Loyola of Chicago. Archie Harris, former Negro star footballer ard high jumper from Indiana, will bring his own team from North Carolina College for egroes. Hermon Phillips, now track coach at Purdue and former Butler coach who founded the relays, will be honored along with Billy Hayes of I. U, whose team won the first relays. They will be named honorary | referees.
Rhodius, Lauter
‘Meet in Finals
Rhodius P. A. L. Club and the Lauter Boys’ Club will meet tomorrow night in the championship {game of the City Recreation De- | partment’s junior basketball tourinament at Brookside Park Community Center, Lauter won from the Pennsy (P. A. L. Club, 67 to 15, in its semi- | final battle while Rhodius defeated South Side Community Center, 39 to 32. Both games were played at Rhodius.
———
Anderson and 2 From North Also Selected
By ROBERT L. MEYER United Press Staff Correspondent When State Tournament day rolls around and three strenuous weeks of elimination rounds have pruned 700-odd teams from the chase, the “Big Four” fighting it out for the State crown will be Anderson, Horace Mann, Ft. Wayne Central and the Washington Hatchets. That, obviously, is a prediction. It is made with knowledge that: (1) Those four probably will not even be in the running, (2) that some little gang of wild-eyed gangly kids from Birdseye or Rolling Prairie will go hog-wild and dump a leader or two, and (3) nobody can dope Hoosier high school basketball. But these four represent, if not the best teams in the State, the best from their own locales. All victims of a system, they break down so that many of the better teams in the State will be knocked out in early rounds. { Other teams, perhaps greatly in- | ferior, may move to late rounds because of the varying standard of competition in different parts of the State. By the same token, the following 16 teams will emerge from the regional tournaments:
Bedford, Logansport, Ft. Wayne Central, Marion, Evansville Central, Bloomington, Crawfordsville, Richmond, Horace Mann, Connersville, Huntington, Columbus, Anderson, South Bend Central, Lafayette and Washington.
Following the “Big Four” through: Anderson should win its own sectional with comparative ease, if its late form is any indication. Principal opposition probably will come from Elwood, Lapel or Alexandria.
cennes semi-final, they'll meet their former nemisis, Evansville Central, plus Bedford and Bloomington. The 64 teams to win sections, with ample allowance for the persistent upset bug which strikes hardest in the sectional tourney, should be: Anderson, Attica, Auburn, Batesville, Bloomington, Bluffton, Boonville, Brazil, Clinton, Connersville,
Crawfordsville, Decatur, Delphi, Hammond Tech, Elkhart, Evansville Central, Ft. Wayne Central, Frankfort, Franklin, Horace Mann, Greencastle, Greenfield, Greensburg, Hartford City, Huntington, Decatur Central, Jasper, New Albany, Kendallville, Kokomo, Lafayette, Aurora, Lebanon, Linton, Logansport, Madison and Marion. Michigan City, Bedford, Monti-
cello, Rensselaer, Muncie Burris, New Castle, Fowler, Paoli, Peru, Pittsboro, Culver, Ft. Branch, Richmond, Rushville, Seymour, Columbus, Tipton, South Bend Central, Sullivan, Tell City, Terre Haute Wiley, Vincennes, Wabash, Warsaw, Washington, Rochester and Winchester; (Exit across the border until this thing blows over.)
The Indians get a break in the regional at Indianapolis, where they meet the poor competition that will | come from the Indianapolis, Plain- | field and Greenfield sectionals. Back on its home floor for the semi-final, Anderson again gets a comparatively light card. Connersville is doped to be there from a weak Rushville regional. Columbus should show from the Shelbyville stack and Crawfordsville from Greencastle’s tourney. The Indians should take it. Horace Mann gets the break in the sectionals. Gary teams will have been moved to the Gary tourney against weak Porter County outfits. Mann already has beaten everything in Gary. In the Hammond regional, Mann probably will meet Hammond Tech, also a former victim. South Side Competition As for Ft. Wayne Central, its chief sectional competition will come from the other Ft. Wayne teams—mainly South Side, In the! regional, Kendallville and Auburn| should be easy, with the Warsaw Bengals looming toughest here. Then at Muncie’s semi-final, Central must face Richmond, Marion and Huntington. Marion is secondchoice here. And the Washington Hatchets? —well, they'll breeze through a sectional of eight Daviess and three Martin County teams; host Sullivan, Jasper and Vincennes in the regional with no worries, except possibly Jasper; and in the Vin-
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