The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 January 1967 — Page 6
The Daily Banitar, Graaneastla, Indiana
Monday, January 9, 1967
Tiger Cubs Turn Back Red Devils in Big 3rd Quarter
The old saying “lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place’’ was proven false Saturday night as the Greencastle Tiger Cubs bombed the Brazil Red Devils with a big 27 point third quarter and an 86-73 win. The night before with Cascade, the Tiger Cubs were engaged in an even deadlock the first half, but blew the game wide open the third quarter with a 38 point burst. Mike Troyer was the man of the hour, as he tallied 15 of the 27 markers, eight straight at the end of the quarter to give the Cubs an eight point advantage, 63-55. For the night, Troyer finished with 37. Both teams came to play in the WIC tilt. Even while warming up, one could notice the tension building, and when the opening tip was tossed, each team was “boiling over.’*
And boil they did. The first quarter was a run and shoot quarter. Brazil knew they would face a full court press, so they retaliated with one of their own. This bothered the Cubs, so both teams moved the ball into offensive court as rapidly as they could. In the loose, ragged, but exciting first quarter, the Cubs made five field goals in 13 attempts, but Brazil only managed 5 in 19 tries. Both teams, in their aniexty, forgot all patterns in the run and shoot 8 minutes. Greencastle made eight free tosses to the Red Devils’ four for an 18 to 14 lead. But the Red Devils came roaring back. Two baskets by Tom Butwin, and one each by Tim Sanders and Bill Rumbley knotted the game at 24 all. From the six minute mark until the half the contest was
Greencastle’s Pete Norris (13) attempts a field goal In Saturday’s game with Brazil at the Uptown Gym. Norris chipped in with 15 points, but his largest contribution was in the rebounding department where he picked off 30. Defending Norris’ shot is Brazil’s Louis Barham (53) and Larry Fagg (35). Watching is Cub Terry Ross (55). Banner Photo—Don Whitehead
Fillmore Loses to Linden
The Fillmore Cardinals suffered their second three point loss in as many nights as Guinn of Linden made four free throws in the last minute of action to give Linden a 59-56 victory. Trailing for three quarters, the Cardinals caught the visitors midway in the final quarter and took a 54-53 edge. But a basket by Linden and the four foul shots was enough to secure the win. In the loose and ragged game hampered by 49 fouls, the Cardinals lost three players and Linden two. Fillmore won the battle of the boards, 43-28, and had a 36 to 34 shooting percentage, but Linden had the most shots, 58 to 53, and made 20 to 19 field goals. Ronnie Cash led the Cardinals attack with 12 points followed closely by sophomore Dan Clark with 10. Linden’s G. Denhart had the
Cloverdale to Meet Eminence Tomorrow Night Cloverdale opens the county cage action this week with a tilt tomorrow night. The rest of the teams wait until Friday for play, and the Reelsville Indians come right back Saturday with a clash against Montezuma. The Clovers, dropped from the AP Top Ten for the first time this season, will be seeking their 11th win of the campaign and 33 straight scheduled games. Sparked by the 23.9 per game average of Rick Ford, the tall and talented defensive-minded Clovers will be favored to make it two straight over the Eminence Eels. The first game of the season for both clubs, Clovferdale dropped the Eels, 10377. The Eels are paced by Senior Mike Buis, who in the first Cloverdale encounter, tallied 31 points. Several times this year, Buis has been over the 30 mark.,
wraps tucked on him by the Cardinal’s full court press, but teammate Warren picked up the slack with 26 points. Fillmore will attempt to improve their 2-9 record January 13 when they, entertain the Eminence Eels. (Continued on Page 8) STATE FAIRGROUNDS • INDIAWAPOHS COLISEUM
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tied seven times, and the half ended 36 all. The Tiger Cubs were outscored from the field 10 to three, but capitalized on 12 free throws, eight by Mike Troyer, for the tie. Then in the third quaiter, the Cubs took an early three point edge on a basket by Troyer and. a free throw by Harmless. But Brazil came right back with baskets by Sanders and Hank West for a one point lead. After the score was tied again at 40 ail, Brazil forged into a 46-52 advantage at the 5:20 mark. At this point the Cubs started rolling. The Cubs' defense started to jell and Pete Norris, Terry Ross, Harmless, and John New swept the boards on missed shots. During this span the Cubs tallied 17 points, rallying from a four point deficit to an eleven point spread. John New started the action with a basket, and Mike Troyer finished it with a pair of free tosses at the 1:31 mark. The Red Devils started a mild rally at the end of the quarter to narrow tijp Cubs’ lead to 8. During the fourth quarter the Red Devils ran out of gas and missed the services of their center, Louis Barham, who fouled out at the end of the third quarter. At 4:37 in the final stanza, the Cubs ran up a 20 point advantage at 81-61. The Cubs were outscored from the field 27-25, but converted 36 of 42 free throws for the difference in the game. Rebounding, the Cubs had a large margin, pulling down 71 to Brazil’s 43. Pete Norris led the Cubs with 30, followed by Terry Ross with 15. The Brazil press forced the Cubs into 15 errors.
Brazil (73) Rumbley West Barham Fagg Butwin Sanders Miller G. Bowman Hickey Totals Tiger Cubs (86) Norris Harmless Ross Troyer Churchill Craig Dunn Fyre J. New Totals Brazil Tiger Cubs Reserve game: 68, Brazil 40.
FG FT PF .3 2 3
... 6 ... 2 ... 2 ... 6 .. 6 1 ... 0 ... 1 ... 27
6 0 2 7 2 0 0 0 19
4 5 4 4 2 0 2 3 27
FG FT PF
... 4 ... 3 _ 3 ...10 ._ 1 .. 1
0
... 0 .... 3 ...25
7 2 2
17
4 0 3 1 0
36
.14 46 55 73 .19 36 63 86 Greencastle
Mike Mitchell and Phil Myers of Waveland met the Simpson twins of Roachdale Saturda}’, and the Waveland duo won the battle of the scoring but the Roachdale Hawks won the game 92-87. Mitchell and Myers scored 83 of the 87 Waveland total; Mitchell had 51 and Myers 32. Whereas, the Simpson twins tallied 68 of the 92 Hawk points. Ron with 26 and Don poured in
42.
Roachdale threw a full court press at the Hornets in the first quarter and it proved effective as the Hawks roared into a 33-13 edge. Then the Hawks had to battle for their lives ro combat the Waveland crew as they solved the press, and the combination of the M boys, Mitchell and Myers almost pulled the contest out of the fire. For the game, Roachdale shot at a 41 per cent, 36 field goals in 86 attempts. Waveland could only drop in 25 goals in 68 tries for 36 per cent. At the foul line, Waveland made 37 to the Hawks’ 20. Roachdale Coach Carl Treece said “rebounding was what saved the game for us.” Roachdale 6-5 and 4-1 in the Big Four Conference was scheduled to play North Salem January 13, but Coach Treece said the game has been re-scheduled for January 28. A Wabash Valley game is scheduled for North Salem that night—that is the reason for the change. Waveland (87) FG FT PF M. Mitchell 17 17 2 Watson 10 2 Cosby 0 0 1 Miller 0 2 4 Wheeler 0 0 3 Myers 7 18 5 Gilliland 0 0 4 Totals 25 37 21 Roachdale (92) FG FTt PF R. Simpson 11 4 4 Doreff ... 10 5 Snodgrass 0 0 1 D. Simpson 18 6 4 Smith 0 0 3 S. Collings 3 6 5 Blaydes 3 15 Bail 0 O' 1 Totals 36 20 31
Tigers Edge Ball State In Hardwood Thriller, 92-91
“10-20-30-40-50 or more . . . iThe Cards and the Tigers how they jacked up that score . . . There was lingering doubt what the outcome would be . . . This bloody, crucial battle of the ICC.” Shades of Snoopy and the Red Baron, DePauw had to call in five double figure gunners to bring down favored Ball State, 92-91, Saturday and cancel out the tremendous performance of Ball’s Baron of the Board, Terry von Stillabower. The Ball State forward cracked in 31 points and sparked a late Cardinal blitz that nearly caught the surprising and surprised Tigers with their stripes down. DePauw appeared to have the war won, 92-87, with 46 seconds to play. No one sensed it, but there were still fireworks to come. Pesky Mike Shumaker seven seconds later drove the lane on Mike O’Connell and drew the 1-1. Since State already had hit 15 of 18, Shumaker saw no point in deviant behavior and hit both. That narrowed the margin to 92-89. The Tigers’ 13th error of the game six seconds later gave the ball to Stillabower near the Card basket. DePauw’s Denny Barrett, who drew the critical task of cooling off Stillabower’s gun, plowed into the marksman who hit two more for a unepoint deficit with 33 seconds
left.
Operating now against a full court press, Hogan and Barrett worked the ball into the Tiger end and played andy-over. It was a fun game until the ball went andy-under Tom McCormick’s legs. Shumaker grabbed it with six seconds left, miscued on his getaway and found himself trying to dribble with his head and Jim Jackson’s between his legs. It didn’t work, but it took five seconds to convince him.
Waveland Roachdale
.13 37 55 87 33 48 69 92
Reserve game: Roachdale 47, Waveland 32.
COUNTY CAGE SCHEDULE January 10 Eminence at Cloverdale January 13 Russellville at Reelsville Rosedale at Cloverdale Terre Haute Schulte at Greencastle Eminence at Fillmore Montezuma at Bainbridge January 14 Montezuma at Reelsville
NOT JUST FOR KICKS—Placekicker Charlie Gogolak of the Washington Redskins has taken a bride, the former Harriet (Kandi) Van Kennen of Winnetka, HI. The two met while Charlie was attending Princeton university.
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In the scramble that ran the clock down to a single tick, Ball State coach Jim Hinga left his command p.>si and entered the war zone at mid court. That made five peopie in the center circle since the officials were there too trying to get 5-8 Shumaker and 6-3Jackson to jump. Hinga claimed one ot his players called a time out at the :06 stop, but both officials disagreed. Jackson easily rapped the hall into DePauw’s court, but before anyone could control it, it went out of bounds under the basket State’s John Haney flung it into Shumaker, standing 15-feet shy of State territory. His shot, fired as the horn went off, fell harmlessly and short Beyond those last hectic 46 seconds, this ICC tilt was as well played as Joe Fan could have asked. Both teams shot so well at the start (22 of 33) there was some talk of giving them points for missing instead. Because the Cards hit a phenomenal 13 of their first 17, they rolled out to a 31-22 gap at the 11:32 stop. That was their biggest lead of the game, but it wasn’t to stand up. While State was commiting three errors and going scoreless for the next 4:04, DePauw hit everything it shot at. Jackson finally hit an 18-footer from the left side for a 32-31 DePauw lead. Jack Rogan upped it to 34-31 with a 17-footer from the same side with 7:52 left in the half. DePauw, which finished the half with .500 shooting (21-42), rolled to a 53-45 half lead. Tom McCormick’s bucket as the last half began produced DePauw’s biggest edge, 55-45. But it stung the Cards. Stillabower, getting able help, hit six buckets alone in the next seven minutes and helped drive State back out front, 6362, with 14:14 to go. Barrett’s mid-court theft and layup and Charles Mundy’s intentional foul on the shot finally put DePauw back on top 74-73 with 9:52 to play. The lead changed hands seven more times until Hogan
lifted the Tigers ahead for good, 88-87, with a 20-footer from the top of the key at the 2:16 point. State missed its next shot and Jackson grabbed his 18th rebound. He flipped out to Barrett who was fouled by Stillabower with 1:11 to go. Barrett hit two for a 90-87 bulge. Stillabower. who finished with 13 of 25 from the field, misfired next time down and Jackson rebounded this one to Barrett again. He alertly fired it over State’s desperate press to O’Connell who had relieved Tom McGurk who drew his fifth foul with 5:18 remaining. O’Connell raced it in for a layup and the 92-87 gap that created those last hectic seconds. Now 2-1 and second in the ICC, DePauw outrebounded State, 48-47. The winner? had four less baskets, but converted 28 of 37 free throws. The Cards, 1-2 in the league with a win over Evansville and a 95-93 loss at Butler, made 19 of 22 free throws. DePauw shot 451 (3271) and State hit .450 on 36-80. McGurk and Barrett led DePauw with 20 points apiece. McCormick and Jackson added 17 each and Hogan got 15. O’Connell, Coach Elmer McCall’s only sub, scored three points. Behind Stillabower came Shumaker with 24 for State, Haney with 19, and Mack Sawyer with 13. DePauw goes into hibernation for finals until Jan. 21 when it goes to Valparaiso, 102-’M winner over Butler Saturday night. The third ICC upset of the evening was St. Joe’s 84-73 stunner at Evansville.
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PUBLIC AUCTION As w» or# changing our farming oparation wa will sail aur camplat* hard of Haraford cattle and equipment at oar farm located 1 mile^porth of Mooresville and miles west of SR 267 on the south side of Morgan-Hendricks County Line Road Monday, Jan. 16,1967 at 11 A.M. Oliver 66 tractor with live hydraulic system Oliver mower 7 ft. Oliver 2-row cultivator John Deere A bond crank tractor, runs good, used as tandem behind J.D. 60. All tandem equipment included. Will pull 5-16 plow John Deere 60 with Chor Lynn power steering and power block Freeman manure loader for J. D. 60 John Deere Model 5 mower John Deere 8' fertilizer spreader Model LF New Idea 6A 2-row pull type corn picker 2 8-ft. rotary hoes Cultipacker and cultipacker mulcher J. D. Model KBA 9 ft. wheel type disk J. D. disk tiller Case offset disk J. D. subsoiler pull type good as new 3-16 IntT. plow hydraulic lift J. D. 14T baler with automatic bole ejector 2 hay beds with racks to receive bales from bole ejector 6" 46-ft. auger used 2 years, excellent condition M. M. manure spreader, needs repair New Idea manure spreader—good Wagon gear Vz bag concrete mixer Lennox 300 bu. recirculating batch drier Pipe tools, wrenches, lawn mowers and ether items too numerous to mention TRUCKS 2-ten Dodge 1948, good rubber, hydraulic dump and 14 ft. grain bed 2-ten Chevrolet 1954 dump truck with 1961 engine and good rubber and bed 1-ton Chevrolet 1956 cab and chassis, completely rebuilt 1960 GM engine A excellent rubber HOG EQUIPMENT 5 Heller Alter hog fountains, electric heat 4 60-bu. hog feeders, cast iron bottoms 1 25-bu. hag feeder 1 4-hole hog feeder 1 2-hole mineral feeder 1 6-ft. stock tank with 1 drinker 1 6-ft. stock tank 2 8x16 Napoleon portable hog houses 1 8x16 Napoleon portable hog house with fleer 1 portable farrowing house 8 Napoleon hay bunkers V type 1 400-bu. corn crib on skids Miscellaneous cattle and hog equipment 30 tons, more or less, alfalfa brome and orchard grass hay 10 tons, more or less, barley straw CATTLE 1 Registered polled Hereford herd sire GHF Pioneer Prince, 6 years old, fine animal, sure deherner 4 Registered polled Hereford heifers open 16 to 20 months eld 18 Registered polled, 1 Registered horned Hereford cows, pasture bred to start calving Mar. 1 24 grade cows, all polled or dehorned, 2Vi te 9 years old 17 Hereford heifer calves, seme eligible for registration at buyer's expense, calfheed vac. 15 Hereford steer calves, seme will weigh 650 lbs. Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Lusty, Owners
Jim Vaughn, Auctioneer Leonard Holbrook, Recording Clerk LUNCH SERVED
Ray Ulroy, Cashier Not responsible for accidents.
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