A rise in spectator interest and the fall of some favorites in holiday tournaments marked the final week of shakedowns before the start of college conference races. The list of unbeaten major schools was down to four—Ohio State, Villanova
, Mississippi State
and Seton Hall—with the Buckeyes
and once-beaten Cincinnati
moving away from the field as the class teams of the year.
THE EAST
Cincinnati's Bearcats
mopped up New York
's Holiday Festival with preliminary wins over St. John's and LaSalle and then beat an undermanned but spirited Wisconsin
team 101-71 in the finals. NIT champion Providence
lost games and prestige in the tournament when the Friars
' two post men, Jim Hadnot and John Thompson
, got their combined 164 inches of muscle tangled under the boards and slowed the team's attack. St. Bonaventure moved up by knocking De Paul from the unbeatens 70-60, with talented sophomore Miles Aiken on the bench. Aiken was grounded by Bonnie Coach Larry Weise for reporting late after the Christmas break. Villanova
advanced to a 10-0 mark with a convincing victory over nationally third-ranked Duquesne
as senior Hubie White and sophomore George Leftwich combined for 43 points. Temple
's fiery Bruce Drysdale collected 28 points and a most-valuable-player award in leading the Owls
to an 85—67 victory over Miami
of Florida
and the championship of the Hurricane Classic.
THE SOUTH
Before a packed house in Atlanta
, Charlie Lee of Rhode Island
made history. The Negro Ram star competed in the first non-segregated collegiate athletic contest in Georgia
, possibly opening the way for the acceptance of Negro players on southern teams. Oglethorpe, the host team, beat the Yankee Conference
champions 64-47. Kentucky
breezed past Yale
79-58 and began to look like another Adolph Rupp
powerhouse. W. D. Stroud's jump shot, with three seconds to go, saved SEC titlist Mississippi State
in the Sugar Bowl
as the Bulldogs
edged Maryland
64-62. Sophomore whiz Bucky Keller scored 30 points to lead VPI to a 78-69 win over Florida
for the Gator Bowl
crown. Using as many as four sophomores as starters, Duke
passed Wake Forest
as ACC
leader Art Heyman
shuttled between front court and backcourt, combined with newcomer Jeff Mullins
to give the Blue Devils
two potent (average: 46.9) weapons.
THE MIDWEST
Big Ten
teams, emulating their football brethren, collected laurels all over the country. Wisconsin's Badgers
, led by the whirling figure of Ron Jackson, beat Dayton
's pro-sized Flyers
105-93 in New York
. Ohio State
in general, and Jerry Lucas
in particular, captured the Los Angeles
Classic. Illinois
beat Manhattan
61-56 behind Center Bill Burwell's clutch baskets in Chicago
, and Iowa
whipped Ivy contender Perm 72-64 in Philadelphia
. Northwestern stayed at home, was pushed to an overtime by Princeton
, but won on Ralph Wells's goal in the last five seconds. The Big Eight did not do so well. Kansas State
looked shaky in the KC competition before beating inept Missouri
62-57. The Tigers
tamed Hank Iba
's Oklahoma State
team 60-44 before bowing to K-State. In the oddball game of the week, St. Louis
broke a four-game losing streak with a 60-foul triumph over Notre Dame
, 81-72. John Benington
's Billikens
used a full-court press because, Benington
said, "The kids don't have time to think and tighten up when they press." The refs hit Benington
with a technical foul for calling one of their decisions "chintzy," and Center Garry Garrison with another "for stepping on an Irish player." Said losing ND Coach Johnny Jordan: "The game set basketball back 50 years."
THE SOUTHWEST
In the oldest of the holiday scrambles, Bowling Green
played Jack the Giant Killer with an upset of fifth-ranked Wichita
at the 26th annual All-College Tournament at Oklahoma City
. The Falcons then played an ultra-conservative game in the finals, came back from a seven-point deficit at the half and beat Houston
47-45. Texas Western coasted to the Sun Carnival title at El Paso
with an easy defensive win, 73-55, over New Mexico
. At Lubbock
, Texas
, in a preview of the Cotton Bowl
football match-up, Texas
beat Mississippi
87-71, then overwhelmed William and Mary
84-71. Making it an SWC sweep, Texas Tech
beat W&M 91-70 and Ole Miss
93-70, with 6-foot-10 Harold Hudgens getting 28 points and 20 rebounds in 26 minutes of action. Arkansas
beat Clemson for its seventh straight, and SMU took St. Louis
63-53. Said Mustang Coach Doc Hayes of the now-popular pressing defenses: "You've got to have plenty of speed for that sort of thing. I'm wondering who vaccinated those teams with that needle."
THE WEST
With an improved Billy McGill
shooting at a 38-point clip and the four other players serving as ammunition carriers, Utah
may be the best in the Rockies. The Redskins took third place in the Los Angeles
Classic by beating UCLA
88-79. Utah State
gets its chance Saturday in a family feud with Utah
as the Skyline race opens for both teams. In one of their four meetings Montana Stopped Montana State College 69-61, with pint-sized Guard Ray Lucien scoring 18 for the Grizzlies. Traveling California
teams had a terrible Christmas season, a road record of three wins and 23 defeats and endless complaints about "hometown referees." Said John Arndt, Loyola athletic director: "I guess the way to beat the officials on the road is to take a hometown hero with you. We had Ed Bento [from Honolulu
] with us when we went to Hawaii
, and the referees were asking him if the officiating suited him." Loyola beat the University of Hawaii
three times.