SI Vault
 
BASKETBALL'S WEEK
Mervin Hyman
January 26, 1959
THE SOUTH
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
January 26, 1959

Basketball's Week

View CoverRead All Articles View This Issue

PREVIEW: TV GAME OF THE WEEK

Saturday, January 24, NBC-TV, 3 p.m. (E.S.T.)

CINCINNATI

VS.

XAVIER

SCOUTING REPORT: Cincinnati loves to fast-break, but the Bearcats often are forced into playing other team's slowdown game. Either way, Robertson (.see page 18) is key man on attack. He gets help from Davis, a fine outside shooter, and Mendenhall, a quick-breaking driver. Weakness is lack of mobility of big men, Wiesenhahn and Tenwick. Team uses switching man-to-man defense, but if occasion calls for full-court press Davis and Mendenhall move up front with Robertson, and Bouldin and Whitaker replace big men.

SCOUTING REPORT: Xavier operates from double post with two players flanking pivotmen and lonesome guard (Stein) bringing ball upcourt. But Muskies, despite lack of good team speed, will run if they get the chance. Stein is fast, good outside shot, and together with Viviano, a top rebounder, provides one-two scoring punch. Alternating big men, Piontek, Nicolai and Phillips, control the boards but do little scoring. Xavier relies on zone defense but may take cue from recent Cincinnati rivals and assign one man to play the elusive Robertson.

11

John Bryant

F

6-3

21

Rick Jannott

G

6-0

12

Oscar Robertson

F

6-5

22

Bill Middendorf

F

6-4

14

Ron Dykes

F

6-4

23

Charlie Phillips

F

6-9

15

Dave Tenwick

F-C

6-6

31

Ducky Castelle

G

5-11

21

Bob Wiesenhahn

F

6-4

32

Al Gundrum

G

5-9

22

Ron Nall

F

6-4

33

Jim Dentlinger

G

6-3

23

Larry Willey

C

6-6

34

Hank Stein

G

6-2

24

Mel Landfried

C

6-7

41

Joe Viviano

F

6-5

25

Ralph Davis

G

6-4

42

Ed Tepe

F

6-4

31

Mike Mendenhall

G

6-4

43

Rich Piontek

F-C

6-8

34

Carl Bouldin

G

6-1

44

Ron Nicolai

C

6-8

35

Bill Whitaker

G

6-1

53

Jim Puthoff

F

6-3

THE SOUTH

North Carolina and North Carolina State jostled the lead back and forth like a hot potato but in the end it was the Tar Heels who held on longest to win 72-68 in overtime for first place in the ACC. With Governor Luther Hodges and 13,049 other excited fans whooping it up, a driving layup by big Lee Shaffer gave North Carolina the winning basket, and Harvey Salz added two foul shots in the very last second.

In the SEC, unbeaten Auburn had some bad moments before three clutch pop shots by Jimmy Lee sneaked the Tigers past Alabama 57-55 for their 22nd straight, while Mississippi State trounced Vanderbilt 83-65 and Mississippi 87-58. Kentucky , working easily against zone defenses, beat Tulane 85-68 and Tennessee 79-58. Observed Coach Adolph Rupp: "Any team that plays the zone against us may think they have murder in mind, but actually it's suicide."

THE SOUTHWEST
In Texas , where men are supposed to be men and coaches are almost always glad of it, some men seemed to be acting like boys as they hanged Texas' Marshall Hughes and Rice's Don Suman in effigy. But more important SWC news was made by Baylor and Texas Tech . Baylor's Bob Turner shot SMU out of a zone defense with his 27 points to help beat the Mustangs 70-53 and then the Bears used a zone of their own to upset Rice 46-45. Texas Tech defeated Texas 64-47 and took the first fall out of TCU 61-57. TCU was still on top but the race tightened up after Texas A&M squeezed by Arkansas 63-62 and clobbered Texas 73-29.

THE MIDWEST

The Big Ten deck underwent its weekly shuffling, and this time Michigan and Illinois wound up on top. Michigan beat down Wisconsin 84-74 and the Illini out-shot Iowa 103-97, but both needed a helping hand and got it from Iowa and Ohio State . The Hawkeyes caught Indiana by surprise and bumped the Hoosiers 88-78; State upset Northwestern 88-77.

Kansas State breezed past Oklahoma 90-45 and Missouri 75-60 to hold firm in the Big Eight; Missouri Valley leader Cincinnati was given a scare by stalling North Texas State but pulled ahead in overtime to win 64-56 and then drubbed Drake 97-60 as Oscar Robertson scored 40 points; Miami of Ohio caused some rumbling in the Mid-American Conference, edging Ohio U. 56-54 and Bowling Green 70-68 to breathe heavily down the neck of Kent State; Marquette outraced Valparaiso 96-74 for its 11th straight.

THE EAST

Princeton , laying it on poor Columbia 75-66 and Cornell 66-52, moved to the top of the Ivy League but was only a bare half-game ahead of Dartmouth's defending champions. Coach Doggie Julian's Indians whomped Harvard 74-56 in their only Ivy test, then found themselves hard-pressed to beat Manhattan 63-61 in double overtime at Hanover.

Philadelphians, who wondered how St. John's could have beaten St. Joseph's in New York's Holiday Festival, got a chance to see for themselves and were convinced after Alan Seiden and Tony Jackson led the Redmen to an easy 97-72 victory. Unbeaten St. Bonaventure made Canisius its ninth straight victim 86-79 but Holy Cross found Syracuse too hot to handle and lost 85-73.

Continue Story
1 2 3