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Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2011 with funding from
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http://www.archive.org/details/universityof19631964unse
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
ACC Standings, 1954-63 37-40
All-Americas of Maryland 31
All-Conference, All-Tournament Teams 40-43
Athletic Council of Maryland 4
Coach Bud Millikan 5
Asst. Coach Frank Fellows, jr 6
Coaches' Records Through the Years 32
Facts About Maryland, Outlook for 1963-64 14
Frosh Squad Picture 30
Frosh Squad Roster 13
Frosh Squad Statistics (Last Year's) 45
Highest Rankings of Maryland Teams 31
Indoor Track 46
Memo to Press 2
Opponents of 1963-64 Season:
Arizona 15
Clemson 16
Columbia 17
Duke - 18
Evansville 19
George Washington 20
Georgetown 21
Navy 22
North Carolina 23
N.C. State 24
Penn State 25
South Carolina 26
Virginia 27
Wake Forest 28
West Virginia 29
Records (Team, Individual, Game, Season) 34-36
Schedule, Frosh 44
Schedule Varsity 3
Scores of Last Year's Games 32
Statistics of Last Year 31-32
Terp Tips (Thumbnails of Players) 7-11
Swimming 47
Tournament Records of Maryland Teams 33-34
Varsity Squad Roster 12
Wrestling 48
MEMO TO THE PRESS, RADIO-TV:
A few changes will be noted in the 1963-64
Maryland basketball guide which have been
made with the thought of enabling you to
more quickly spot salient information, espe-
cially regarding back games with old rivals.
We have, for instance, eliminated the game-by
game scores throughout the years; we have,
however, selected the significant items from
each series such as series standings, largest
margins of victory and largest point totals.
And where either team has won a consider-
able number of games in succession, that fact
has been noted. If the rivals have split their
games for a number of years, attention is
called to that.
A run-down on each of Maryland's opponents, as supplied by their
sports information directors, is given on separate pages. They appear in
alphabetical order.
Maryland's All-America players and all-time records will be found in
the usual space, as will all-Atlantic Coast Conference teams since the
ACC was formed in 1954.
Capsule comments of Maryland's Winter sports — swimming, track and
wrestling — will be found at the end of this brochure.
We extend to each of you a warm welcome to one of the Nation's
largest and most beautiful field houses at any time and look forward
to seeing you at one of our many sports events during the Winter.
The undersigned stands ready to aid you at any hour of the day or
night at the numbers listed below.
Telephones: Day— UNion 4-4076
Night— WOodley 6-6244
—BILL DISMER
Sports Information Director
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
1963-64 Varsity Basketball Schedule
DATE
OPPONENT
LOCATION
Dec.
2
-VIRGINIA
Home
Dec.
4
Georgetown
Away
Dec.
7
Penn State
Away
Dec.
10
*N.C. STATE
Away
Dec.
14
WEST VIRGINIA
Home
Dec.
16
CLEMSON
Home
Dec.
20-2 1
V.P.I. Invitational Tournament Away
Dec.
27-28
Evansville (Ind.)
Holiday Tournament
Away
Jan.
6
-SOUTH CAROLINA
Home
Jan.
II
Navy
Away
Jan.
13
-North Carolina
Away
Jan.
18
N.C. State
Away
Jan.
20
*Wake Forest
Away
Feb.
I
George Washington
Away
Feb.
5
West Virginia
Away
Feb.
8
-DUKE
Home
Feb.
14
-WAKE FOREST
Home
Feb.
18
-NORTH CAROLINA
Home
Feb.
20
-Virginia
Away
Feb.
22
-Duke
Away
Feb.
25
GEORGETOWN
Home
Feb.
28
-Clemson
Away
Feb.
29
-South Carolina
Away
Mar.
5-6-7
A.C.C. Tournament
Raleigh, N.C.
Atlantic Coast Conference Game
Varsity Home Games Start at 8:15
Freshmen Preliminaries at 6:15
THE
ATHLETIC COUNCIL
Dr. John E. Faber
Chairman
Mr. William W. Cobey
Director of Athletics
Dr. Faber
Mr. James Beatty President, Student Government Association
Dr. Allan J. Fisher College of Business and Public Administration
Dr. Francis C. Stark Professor in Horticulture
Dr. Edward Stone President, Alumni Association
Dr. Fletcher P. Vietch Professor in Chemistry
Dr. Walter B. Waetjen College of Education
Dr. William A. Wockenfuss .... Associate Prof, in Mechanical Engineering
Department of Intercollegiate Athletics
Sports Information Director Bill Dismer
Ticket Manager Eddie Bean
Secretary to Mr. Cobey Mrs. Dorothy Hunt
Secretary to Mr. Nugent Mrs. Frances Henry
Secretary to Mr. Millikan Mrs. Theresa Ryan
Secretary to Mr. Dismer Mrs. Betty Francis
Secretary to Mr. Bean Mrs. Helen Ball
Baseball Coach Elton S. "Jack" Jackson
Basketball Coach H. A. "Bud" Millikan
Assistant Basketball Coach Frank Fellows
Golf Coach Frank Cronin
Lacrosse Coach Al Heagy
Assistant Lacrosse Coach John D. Howard
Rifle Coach Arthur Cook
Soccer, Tennis Coach Doyle Royal
Swimming Coach Bill Campbell
Track, Cross-Country Coach Jim Kehoe
Wrestling Coach William E. "Sully" Krouse
Head Trainer Alfred "Duke" Wyre
Assistant Trainer Dick Mann
Equipment Manager Kermit "Chief" Cissell
Assistant Equipment Manager Don Hutchison
Head of Facilities Charles "Lindy" Kehoe
The Football Coaches
Head Football Coach Tom Nugent
Assistant Football Coach Roland Arrigoni
Assistant Football Coach Lee Corso
Assistant Football Coach Bill "Whitey" Dovell
Assistant Football Coach Bernie Reid
Assistant Football Coach Alf Satterfield
Assistant Football Coach Frank Toomey
Assistant Football Coach and
Freshman Football Coach Carroll Huntress
4
H. A. "Bud" MILLIKAN — Head Coach
Bud Millikan, one of the nation's top
basketball coaches, this season begins
his fourteenth season with the University
of Maryland.
The popular Terrapin coach has had
great success in his thirteen years of
previous college coaching. There have
been only two losing seasons since he
came. '-Hfj^
The Terps generated the most excite-
ment across the nation with the 1957-
58 team. They won the Atlantic Coast
Conference championship and went on
to the NCAA playoffs, winning over
Boston College in Madison Square Gar-
den in the opening round. They lost by
four points to top ranked Temple in
the NCAA Eastern Regional Tourney at Charlotte. They finished the
season as the nation's sixth ranked team. The ACC title was the first
league title won by a Maryland team since they won the old Southern
Conference crown from Kentucky in 1931. For his outstanding efforts
and success, he was recognized by the Baltimore Sports' Reporters As-
sociation as the top man in the State of Maryland for bringing more
recognition and publicity to the State than any other figure.
Millikan is one of the hardest working coaches in the game and is
considered as having one of the finest basketball minds by his fellow
coaches.
His thirteen year record is 189 wins and 129 losses.
In the ten years in existence of the ACC, Millikan's teams in reg-
ular season play have finished second, twice; third, twice; fourth, twice;
and fifth, twice and seventh once.
Recommended by his college coach, the famous Hank Iba, Millikan
came to Maryland from the small high school gymnasium of Newton
High School in Iowa. His accomplishments have so paid off that bas-
ketball interest at the University and throughout the District of Colum-
bia and the State has skyrocketed. From the little gym at Newton
High and his first "home court" of Ritchie Coliseum, Millikan sends
his team before the excited fans in one of the nation's most beautiful
and spacious gymnasiums, the fabulous 12,500 capacity William P. Cole,
Jr., Student Activities Building. (Indicative of the job he has done and
the interest he has created is the fact that the Terps have played to
turn-away crowds of over 15,000 people.
The popular 43-year old is a native of Maryville, Mo., and finished
his high school studies there before going to college. He was a four-
year letterman in football, basketball, track and tennis in high school.
Following high school, he enrolled at Oklahoma A&M and was a
star guard of the varsity for three years. He was named to the all-
America team for his outstanding performances of the 1941-42 season.
He stayed on at A&M for one year as freshman coach before entering
the service. The great all-America Bob Kurland was one of his players
that year.
While a student at A&M, Millikan won honors in the classroom
also. He was listed on the Dean's list all four years as an honor student.
After two years in the United States Navy, he went back to A&M
to assist Iba during the 1944-45 campaign, a team that won the Na-
tional Championship that year.
He then went back to Maryville High School where he coached for
two years and then moved to Newton, Iowa, High School where his
teams won their conference titles both years.
Then the College Park assignment was accepted. With the develop-
ment of top college fives in his brief tenure at Maryland and prospects
for another winning ledger this year, the Millikanmen can point with
pride to their young hard-working coach.
"Bud" as he is known to all, married the former Maxine Louthan,
native of Maryville. They have a son, Marshall, age 17 and a daughter,
Maria Rea, age 12.
FRANK FELLOWS — Assistant Coach
Frank Fellows, a member of Millikan's
first team at Maryland, returned to the
University in 1961 as Assistant Basket-
ball Coach. He handles scouting oppon-
ents for Millikan and the varsity, scouts
high school prospects and coaches the
Freshman team.
He received his Bachelor of Science
degree in Physical Education in 1953
and his Masters degree in 1957. In addi-
tion to his basketball duties he is a
member of the staff of the College of
Physical Education, Recreation and
^^A M Health.
Fellows coached the Maryland fresh-
HP Jj^^ Mm men during the 1953-54 season while
working on his master's degree. He en-
tered the Air Force in 1954 and was a member of the Far East Air
Force Championship squad.
He returned to College Park in 1955 and completed his studies for
his Masters degree while teaching at Montgomery Hills Junior High,
Silver Spring, Md.
Fellows started his basketball career in Goodman, Wisconsin, where
he attended Madison Central High in Madison and starred in Football
and Basketball. He returned to Wisconsin in 1957 and coached Basket-
ball, Football and Baseball at Markesan High, Markesan, Wisconsin,
from 1957 to 1960. While at Markesan his teams won Football and Base-
ball Championships. His basketball teams led their conference in defense
two years and was runner-up his third year.
He coached the basketball team at Springbrook High, Silver Spring,
Maryland, in 1960, the first year the Springbrook school was open, and
accepted the assistant coaching position at Maryland last season.
Fellows married the former Beth Mouser of Louisiana, also a
Maryland graduate and a Terrapin Cheerleader during Frank's varsity
career. They have two boys: Cary 7, and Andy 4.
TIP-OFF ON THE TERPS
JOE BARTON — No. 5
JOE BARTON, 6-7, 215, 22, Senior
from Beaverdale, Pa. - - two-letterman
who will provide insurance at center
. . . oldest player on squad ... an arts
and sciences student with a major in
psychology.
NEIL BRAYTON — No. 33
NEIL BRAYTON, 6-4, 176, 19, Soph,
from Youngstown, Ohio — led frosh in
scoring last year with 20.6 average . . .
strong contender for a starting post . . .
can play either forward or guard . . .
with his speed, agility and ambition has
great possibilities . . . could develop into
one of Maryland's best guards. An out-
standing pre-dental student.
PHIL CARLSON — No. 45
PHIL CARLSON, 6-4, 163, 20, Junior
from Takoma, Washington — lettered
as a sophomore after making the start-
ing five through conscientious effort and
determination . . . has tremendous de-
sire . . . aggressive, fine rebounder and
driver . . . the finest student on the
squad who has made the dean's list
every semester with a 3.46 ... an arts
and sciences student.
JACKIE CLARK — No. 44
JACKIE CLARK, 6-4, 165, 19, Sopho-
more from Beverly, Ohio — a real
jumping-jack . . . had phenomenal 91.1
average from the foul-line as a freshman
and a 16.6 scoring average . . . once he
gains confidence, could be tough (might
even change nickname from Jackie to
Jack!) . . . will play both guard and
forward . . . another who made the
dean's list in the arts and sciences.
MIKE DeCOSMO — No. 12
MIKE "Waxie" DeCOSMO, 5-10, 165,
19, Sophomore from Camden, N.J. — ■
steady outside shooter and a heady little
guard . . . fine middle-man on the fast-
break . . . will give other guard candi-
dates a run for the first team . . . an-
other pre-dental student.
SCOTT FERGUSON — No. 54
SCOTT FERGUSON, 6-8, 225, 22, Sen-
ior from Piqua, Ohio — gained great
deal of experience last year and wound
up as the team's second highest scorer
(9.0 average) and rebounder . . . broke
into starting lineup midway the season
and stayed there . . .big and strong and
has good hook-shot ... a physical edu-
cation major.
BILL FRANKLIN — No. 10
BILL FRANKLIN, 5-10, 160, 19, Sopho-
more from Mt. Airy, Md. — the smallest
player on the squad but a scrappy, quick
little guard ... no one will out-hustle
him . . . also a shortstop on the baseball
team . . . majors in physical education.
BOB LEWIS — No. 42
BOB LEWIS, 6-4, 202, 21, Junior from
Silver Spring, Md. — product of nearby
Northwood High who never played high
school basketball but is determined to
make a basketball player of himself . . .
saw limited action last year but with
experience could see some action as a
forward or center ... an English major
in arts and sciences.
SAM McWILLIAMS — No. 40
SAM McWILLIAMS, 6-1, 185, 21, Jun-
ior from Washington, D.C. — letterman
guard from the local area . . . played
a lot as a soph, and did a good job, com-
ing off the bench and adding a much-
needed scoring punch ... a fine outside
shot . . . entered our basketball picture
with no help but had become a grant-
in-aid case midway his freshman year
... an engineering student.
DICK MUELLER — No. 20
DICK MUELLER, 6-2, 183, 19, Sopho-
more fi'om Independence, Mo. — one of
the hardest workers on the squad . . .
good speed and jumping ability . . . gets
down the floor fast to cover . . . was
playing as sixth man at the close of his
freshman year and should definitely see
much service as a guard or forward . . .
a business administration major.
GEORGE SUDER — No. 30
GEORGE SUDER, 6-2, 192, 20, Sopho-
more from Aliquippa, Pa. — after a
year out to adjust academic difficulties,
appears ready for varsity ... a guard
prospect with big, strong hands . . . with
continued effort could be a contender for
starting berth . . . led the 1961-62 frosh
in scoring . . . son of Pete Suder of the
old Philadelphia As.
TERRY TRUAX — No. 25
TERRY TRUAX, 6-3, 190, 19, Sopho-
more from Hancock, Md. — came out
on a try-out basis as a freshman and
stuck with the squad ... a likeable red-
head who is learning to play outside
after being an inside man during high
school career . . . also plays baseball
... a physical education major.
10
GARY WARD — No. 22
GARY "Spider" WARD, 6-5, 175, 19,
Sophomore from Washington, D.C. — a
product of DeMatha High in nearby
Hyattsville who was second leading
scorer (20.1 avg.) and next-to-top re-
bounder with frosh last year ... an
outside shooter who has a tremendous
touch around the basket . . . dedicated
to the game and definitely has chance
to become a starter . . . possesses finest
pair of hands on the squad ... a busi-
ness administration major.
RICK WISE — No. 55
RICK WISE, 6-8, 190, 19, Sophomore
from Wilmington, Del. — has outstand-
ing agility for a big man . . . handles
ball like a small one . . . has shown
tremendous improvement in a short time
... a business administration major.
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FACTS ABOUT MARYLAND
NAME University of Maryland
LOCATION College Park, Md.
FOUNDED 1807
ENROLLMENT 19,000
PRESIDENT Dr. Wilson H. Elkins
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR William W. Cobey
SID Bill Dismer
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
NICKNAME Terrapins
COLORS Red and White, Black and Gold
MASCOT Terrapin
HOME COURT Cole Field House (12,500)
HEAD BASKETBALL COACH H. A. "Bud" Millikan
TRAINER Alfred J. "Duke" Wyre
LETTERMEN LOST FROM 1962-63 SQUAD: (four)
Jerry Greenspan, 6-6 Forward; Bob Eicher, 6-2 Guard; Connie Car-
penter, 6-4 Forward; Bill Stasiulatis, 6-3 Forward.
LETTERMEN RETURNING: (four)
Joe Barton, 6-7 Center; Phil Carlson, 6-4 Forward; Scott Ferguson,
6-8 Center; Sam McWilliams, 6-1 Guard.
PROMISING SOPHOMORES: (six)
Neil Brayton, 6-4 Guard; Gary Ward, 6-5 Forward; Jackie Clark,
6-4 Forward; Rick Wise, 6-8 Center; Mike DeCosmo, 5-10 Guard;
Dick Mueller, 6-2 Guard.
CAPSULE OUTLOOK
Overall: Much improved, but tougher schedule. Sixteen of 25 games
scheduled on the road.
Shooting: Good outside shots.
Height: Adequate.
Depth: Improved . . . good bench.
Weakness: Inexperience . . . two-thirds of squad are sophomores.
14
TERP OPPONENTS
University of Arizona
At Evansville, Ind., Dec. 27-28
(Evansville Holiday Tournament)
FACTS ABOUT THE WILDCATS
CONFERENCE Western
LOCATION Tucson, Arizona
ENROLLMENT 16,500
COLORS Navy Blue and Cardinal Red
HOME COURT Bear Down Gym (3,600)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR M. R. (Dick) Clausen
BASKETBALL COACH Bruce Larson
HIS RECORD Won 25, Lost 27 (3 years)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Frank W. Soltys
1962-63 RECORD Won 13, Lost 13
1962-63 WAC RECORD Won 3, Lost 7
WILDCATS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
First meeting
WILDCAT NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (3): Wes Flynn, Monte Clausen, Regis Dauk.
LETTERMEN RETURNING (7): Albert Johnson, Warren Rustand,
Larry Harris, Dan Breck, Tom LaVoy, Buddy Doolen,
Dennis Albright.
REPLACEMENTS: Harvey Fox (6-4), Bob Spahn (6-1), Ted Pickett
(6-5), Bob Hansen (6-6), Tom Sutton (6-7).
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Bruce Larson's third year as Arizona basketball
coach looks like a good bet to produce the school's first
winning cage team in nine seasons. According to the young
coach, the 1963-64 team should be much stronger than
last year's squad (13-13) which posted the first non-losing
record since 1956-57 and managed to knock off two top-
ten teams, Wisconsin and Colorado. Seven lettermen will
return including four of the top five scorers. This could
give the Wildcats an all-veteran starting lineup although
several talented sophomores from one of the best frosh
teams ever will be strong candidates for starting berths.
Leading the returnees are two second team all-WAC
choices, Albert Johnson (6-5) and Warren Rustand (6-1).
Johnson led the team in scoring (12.9 average) and re-
bounding (9.7). Rustand was the top shooter in both field
goals (45.2%) and free throws (78.8%) and was second
in scoring. Arizona again will stress defense. The Wildcats
were ranked 22nd in the nation last season, holding their
opponents to a 61.9 average per game.
15
Clemson College
At Maryland, December 16
At Clemson, February 28
FACTS ABOUT THE TIGERS
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Clemson, South Carolina
ENROLLMENT 4,300
COLORS Purple and Orange
HOME COURT Clemson Field House (5,000)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Frank Howard
BASKETBALL COACH Bobby Roberts
HIS RECORD Won 12, Lost 13 (First Season)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Bob Bradley
1962-63 RECORD Won 12, Lost 13
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 5, Lost 9
TIGERS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
(Series started 1939)
Maryland leads, 23-13
1962-63 RESULTS
Clemson, 62; Maryland, 60 (at Clemson)
Maryland, 69; Clemson, 67 (at Maryland)
SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
Highest scoring game (166 points) — 91-75, Maryland ('61 ACC Tourney).
Greatest margin of victory: For Maryland, 40 (1954) 81-41; for Clemson,
19 (1948) 68-49.
TIGER NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (3): Chuck Narvin, Choppy Patterson, Larry Seitz.
LETTERMEN RETURNING (8): Jim Brennan, Donnie Mahaffey, Gary
Burnisky, Nick Milsanovich, Mike Bohonak, Woody Mor-
gan, Manning Privette, Richard Hall.
REPLACEMENTS: Garry Helms (6-4), Tom Corcoran (6-5), Ken Gard-
ner (6-5), Buddy Benedict (5-7).
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Coach Bobby Roberts, in his first year as head
coach, guided Clemson to a 12-12 regular season mark,
but the Tigers faced N. C. State in the first round of the
ACC tourney to miss the .500 mark by one game. Return-
ing this year are four seniors: Jim Brennan, Donnie Ma-
haffey, Gary Burnisky and Woody Morgan. Brennan has
led the Tigers in scoring the past two years averaging
16.6 for 52 games. Mahaffey also averaged in double
figures last year although his main asset is rebounding.
Burnsky, Nick Milsanovich and Mike Bohonak all sank
better than 40 percent of their shots as juniors, while
Morgan is valuable under the boards. Four good prospects
advance from the freshman team: Garry Helms, Tom
Corcoran, Ken Gardner and Buddy Benedict. With the
seasoned lettermen and some reserve power, the Tigers
could again finish in the first division this year.
16
Columbia
At Evansville, Ind., Dec. 27-28
(Evansville Holiday Tournament)
FACTS ABOUT THE LIONS
CONFERENCE Ivy League
LOCATION New York City
ENROLLMENT 3,000
COLORS Light Blue and White
HOME COURT University Gymnasium (2,000)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Ralph J. Furey
BASKETBALL COACH John P. (Jack) Rohan
HIS RECORD Won 13, Lost 33 (all at Columbia)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Philip J. Burke
1962-63 RECORD Won 10, Lost 12
1962-63 IVY RECORD Won 4, Lost 9
LIONS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
Columbia, 32; Maryland, 20 (1911)
Maryland, 24; Columbia, 23 (1924)
LION NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (6): Jim Brogan, Jim Cleven, Jim Glynn, Steve
Hartman, Paul Murphy, Larry Wein.
LETTERMEN RETURNING (7): Roy Bohaboy, Neil Farber, Mike Grif-
fin, Art Klink, Les Lockspeiser, Ken McCulloch, Garland
Wood.
REPLACEMENTS: Stan Felsinger (6-1), Ken Benoit (5-9), Phil Gold-
stein (6-5), John Burrows (6-5).
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: (According to Coach Rohan) I feel that the team
eventually will be stronger, but we must fill the play-
maker spot and the spot of the second "big man". Juniors
like Neil Farber, Klink, McCulloch, Garland Wood, Lock-
speiser and Griffin are going to be key men in the early
going. No one, however, had a job clinched as the season
started. Most of the boys who are experienced are also
backcourt men. Our ultimate success will depend primari-
ly on developing a good strong rebounder. It is difficult
to evaluate our prospects in terms of wins and losses, but
I expect that the overall tone of our opposition will be
"improved". How successful we are depends on whether
we improve more than the schedule. Farber scored on
.493 percent of his floor shots last year — the highest
figure in Columbia history. His 32 points against Brown
were high for the year and he led the Lions in eight de-
partments, dominating the offensive picture in his first
varsity season. He was the first or second high man in all
but one game and eight times went over the 20-point
mark.
17
Duke University
At Home, February 8
At Durham, February 22
FACTS ABOUT THE BLUE DEVILS
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Durham, N.C.
ENROLLMENT 6,400
COLORS Royal Blue and White
HOME COURT Duke Indoor Stadium (9,000)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR E. M. (Eddie) Cameron
BASKETBALL COACH Vic Bubas
HIS RECORD Won 86, Lost 25 (4 years)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Glenn E. (Ted) Mann
1962-63 RECORD Won 27 Lost 3
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 14, Lost 0
BLUE DEVILS RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
Duke leads, 36-22
(Series began 1926)
Greatest margins of victory: For Duke, 36 (1962), 96-59
For Maryland, 33 (1959), 64-31
LAST YEAR'S RESULTS
At Durham: Duke 92; Maryland, 56
At College Park: Duke, 76; Maryland, 70
BLUE DEVIL NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (2): Art Heyman, Fred Schmidt
LETTERMEN RETURNING (12): Jeff Mullins, Scott Williamson, Jay
Buckley. Buzzy Harrison, Bill Urlich, Ray Cox, Ron Herb-
ster, Denny Ferguson, Ted Mann, jr., Brent Kitching,
Hack Tison, Bob Jamieson.
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Duke went all the way to the final four last
season and, despite the loss of two great players, will be
good again. Coach Bubas will put them to the acid test
early with the toughest December schedule in Duke his-
tory. It is obvious that the loss of collegiate basketball's
greatest player last season, Art Heyman, and guard Fred
Schmidt will hurt. Brilliant Jeff Mullins will return to
lead the way and along with starters Jay Buckley and
Buzzy Harrison and all of last year's reserves, Bubas
hopes to have a well-balanced scoring unit. He also has
some likely looking lads coming up from last year's frosh.
Last year's team which ended 27-3 broke most of Duke's
all-time records and it will be hard to equal, but Bubas is
a born optimist and thinks his Blue Devils will be able
to hold their own against any opponent.
18
Evansville College
At Evansville, Ind., December 27-28
(Evansville Holiday Tournament)
FACTS ABOUT THE PURPLE ACES
CONFERENCE Indiana Collegiate
LOCATION Evansville, Ind.
ENROLLMENT 1,800
COLORS Purple and White
HOME COURT Roberts Municipal Stadium (11,500)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Arad A. McCutchan
BASKETBALL COACH Arad A. McCutchan
HIS RECORD Overall' 259-170 (All at Evansville
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Bob Hudson
1962-63 RECORD Won 21, Lost 6
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 11, Lost 1
This is the first meeting between
Evansville and Maryland
ACES NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (5): Walter Henry, Lynn Mautz, Marvin Pruett,
Ed Rolen, Paul Utley
LETTERMEN RETURNING (9): Wayne, Boultinghouse, Briley, Bullard,
Cox, Green, Sloan, Smith, Zausch
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: With four of the starting five that compiled a
21-6 record last year, Coach Arad McCutchan is expecting
another successful campaign. However, December will be
a tough grind with San Francisco State, South Dakota
State and Purdue appearing on the home schedule before
the Aces play host for the Holiday Invitational Tourna-
ment December 27-28. Arizona, Columbia and Maryland
will be the outside teams for this competition. The five
seniors on whom McCutchan is depending are Ed Zausch
(6-9), Buster Briler (6-4), Jim Smith (6-3) — all starters
last year — and Wayne Boultinghouse (6-3) and Paul
Bullard (6-4. Jerry Sloan, winner of the Kiwanis Award
last year and the top rebounder, will return as a junior.
"We'll need every man we have to meet our schedule",
McCutchan declares, "and we haven't even mentioned
th gams with Notre Dame and arch-rival Kentucky Wes-
leyan".
19
George Washington
At Fort Myer, Va., February 1
FACTS ABOUT THE COLONIALS
CONFERENCE Southern
LOCATION ~ Washington, D.C
ENROLLMENT 10,000
COLORS Euff and Blue
HOME COURT Washington Arena (6,500) and Ft. Myer
(4,000)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Robert K. Faris
BASKETBALL COACH William J. Reinhart
HIS COACHING RECORD Overall: 656-423. At GW: 291-191
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Jack Zane
1962-63 RECORD Won 8, Lost 15
1962-63 SC RECORD Won 6, Lost 6
COLONIALS RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
(Series started 1924)
G.W. Leads, 20-17
(Maryland has won last 4 games)
1962-63 RESULTS
Maryland, 74; GW, 71 (at Maryland)
Maryland, 68; GW, 67 (at Ft. Myer)
SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
Highest scoring game (170 points) 86-84 Maryland (Overtime) 1960
Greatest margins of victory: For GW, 33 (1941), 61-28
For Maryland, 21 (1956), 67-46
Longest winning streak: GW won 9 straight (1947-53)
COLONIAL NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (2): Don Ardell, Mike Checkan
LETTERMEN RETURNING (8): Joe Adamitis, Gary Holloman, Kenny
Legins, Mark Clark, Phil Aruscavage, Ric Duques, Eddie
Far r ell, Joe Mullan
REPLACEMENTS: Harvey Mallis, Mark Welker
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: With a predominantly junior squad, featuring
eight lettermen, the Colonials are looking forward to
their first winning season in four years. Senior Joe
Adamitis, 10.7, and juniors Mark Clark, 13.6 and Kenny
Legins, 15.4, lead the returning scorers and will be counted
on for the bulk of the scoring this year. The final two
positions could go to Eddie Farrel, 5.1, or Phil Aruscavage,
3.0, both lettermen. However, Harvey Mallis, a 6-4 trans-
fer, or Mark Welker, 26.7 as a freshman last year, could
both wind up in the starting lineup. GW will be tested
early as the Colonials open with Cincinnati, then travel to
New York to meet St. John's and follow up with the Steel
Bowl tournament (Duquesne, Pitt and Westminster).
20
Georgetown University
At Georgetown, December 4
At Home, February 25
FACTS ABOUT THE HOYAS
CONFERENCE None
LOCATION Washington, D,C.
ENROLLMENT 6,791
COLORS Blue and Gray
HOME COURT McDonough Gym
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR John L. Hagerty
BASKETBALL COACH Tom O'Keefe
HIS RECORD Jim Fitzgerald
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Won 38, Lost 32 (3 years)
1962-63 RECORD Won 138 Lost 13
HOYAS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
Maryland leads, 21-15
Greatest margins of victory: Georgetown, 18 (1938), 57-39
Maryland, 13 (1957) 82-69
LAST YEAR'S RESULTS
At Georgetown: Georgetown, 79; Maryland 70
At Maryland: Maryland, 73; Georgetown, 72
HOYA NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (3): Pardee Abadie, Bill Fox, Ed Lopata
LETTERMEN RETURNING (1): Jim Barry, John Brogan, Jim Christy,
Tom Craddock, Charles Devlin, Joe Franz, Bill Hodgman,
Joe Mazelin, Jerry Moriarty, Charley O'Donnell, Jim Pen-
dergast
21
Navy
At Annapolis, January 11
FACTS ABOUT THE MIDDIES
CONFERENCE Eastern College
LOCATION Annapolis, Md.
ENROLLMENT 4,100
COLORS Navy Blue and Gold
HOME COURT Navy Field House (4,533)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Captain William S. Busik, U.S.N.
BASKETBALL COACH Ben Carnevale
HIS COACHING RECORD Overall: 281-135. At Navy: 230-124 (17
seasons)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR L. Budd Thalman
1962-63 RECORD Won 9, Lost 9
MIDDIES RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
(Series started 1925)
Navy leads 23-16
1962 RESULTS
Maryland, 67; Navy, 61 (at Maryland)
SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
Highest scoring game (146 points) — 88-58, Maryland (1958)
Greatest margin of victory: For Navy, 38 (1933) 59-21
For Maryland, 30 (1958) 88-58
The rivals have alternated in winning their last three games.
Longest winning streak: Navy won 8 straight, 1944-1951
MIDDIES NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (3): Ron Terwilliger, Dave Konold, Ben Ross
LETTERMEN RETURNING (7): Capt. Woody Vaughan, Bob Daven-
port,, Hank Kettelhodt, John Krechting, Larry Mack, John
Mahoney, Roger Staubach
REPLACEMENTS: (From Reserves and JVS): John Common, John
Geraghty, Dave Kanning, Regis Matzie, Mark Rein, Bruce
Terwilliger
(From 1962-63 Plebes): Bob Bandy, Roy Bell, Doug Law,
SteveMiller, Ralph Mitchell, Gene Parchinski, Bill Rad-
cliffe, Chris Reddington, Frank Smith
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: (Coach Ben Carnevale) "We face some unique
challenges this season. Graduation took only three letter-
men but they were our top scorer, No. 1 rebounder and
the 'quarterback' of our backcourt. They will indeed be
missed. Seven lettermen return but none of them were
fulltime first-stringers last season. Woody Vaughan, our
captain, was on the junior varsity until mid-season and
Roger Staubach, another monogram winner, played only
26 minutes in our final five games. To tie it down to one
wcrd, we have to rebuild. The big question is whether
to rebuild around lettermen or concentrate on the quick
development of the many fine prospects from the 1962-63
plebe team, one of the best from an overall talent stand-
point ever assembled here."
22
University of North Carolina
At Chapel Hill, January 13
At Home, February 18
FACTS ABOUT THE TAR HEELS
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Chapel Hill, N.C.
ENROLLMENT 10,500
COLORS Blue and White
HOME COURT Woollen Gymnasium
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR C. P. (Chuck) Erickson
BASKETBALL COACH Dean Smith
HIS RECORD 23-15 (2 years)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Bob Quincy
1962-63 RECORD Won 15, Lost 6
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 10, Lost 5
TAR HEELS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
North Carolina leads, 40-23
(Series began in 1924)
Greatest margins of victory: North Carolina, 36 (1936), 64-28
Maryland, 25 (1939), 66-41
LAST YEAR'S RESULTS
At College Park: North Carolina, 78: Maryland, 56
At Chapel Hill: North Carolina, 82; Maryland, 68
TAR HEEL NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (6) : Larry Brown, Yogi Poteet, Charlie Burns, Pepp
Callahan, Dieter Krause, Richard Vinroot
LETTERMEN RETURNING (8): Billy Cunningham, Billy Galantai,
Charlie Shaffer, Ray Respess, Bryan McSweeney, Art
Katz, Bill Brown, Mike Cooke
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Billy Cunningham, a unanimous all-Atlantic Coast
Conference choice as a sophomore, will pace what should
be a good Carolina basketball team. The depth of the Tar
Heels is more favorable than in recent years. Rebounding
should be improved. On the negative side is a need for
slick backccurt operatives, since starters Larry Brown
and Yogi Poteet graduated. Cunningham averaged 22.7
points per game and 16 rebounds last season. He is bigger
(S-d1!2, 210) and has added polish. Coming up from the
frosh to aid him on the boards is 6-8% Bob Bennett.
Charlie Shaffer and Mike Cooke, who play both guard and
forward, appear to be the likely backcourt combination.
Letterman Ray Respess will struggle with vet Bryan Mc-
Sweeney for the other forward spot. The Tar Heels were
15-6 last season and Coach Dean Smith expects the com-
ing edition to be just as strong, providing Brown's play-
making isn't missed too much.
23
North Carolina State College
At Maryland, December 10
At N.C. State, January 18
FACTS ABOUT THE WOLFPACK
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Raleigh, North Carolina
ENROLLMENT 7,300 men; 200 women
COLORS Red and White
HOME COURT William Neal Reynolds Coliseum (12,400)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Roy B. Clogston
BASKETBALL COACH Everett N. Case
HIS COACHING RECORD Won 370. Lost 122 (17 seasons)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Frank Weedon
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 10. Lost 11
1962-63 RECORD Won 5, Lost 9
WOLFPACKS RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
(Series started 1923-24)
N.C. State leads, 21-15
1962-63 RESULTS
N.C. State, 76; Maryland, 74 (Overtime) at College Park, Md.
N.C. State, 79; Maryland, 59 at Raleigh, N.C.
SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
Highest scoring game (150 points) 76-74, N.C. State, 1962
Greatest margin of victory: For N.C State, 20 (1955) 78-58
For Maryland, 24, (1930) 53-29
N.C. State has won the last 3 games
WOLFPACK NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (7): Jon Speaks. Ken Rohloff, John Key, Jim
Whitfield, Pom Sinnock, Ron Gossell, Don Greiner
LETTERMEN RETURNING (2): Pete Auksel, Larry Lakins
REPLACEMENTS: Ray Hodgdon, 6-4; Hal Blondeau (6-4), John Argan-
bright (6-3), Larry Worsley (6-5)
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: The Wolf pack returns the most inexperienced
squad Coach Everett Case has had in his previous 17 sea-
sons at N.C. State. Not only are forwards Auksel and
Lakins the only lettermen returning from a team which
won only 10 of 21 games but they are the only men to
have played as much as 20 minutes last season. Senior-
to-be center Ron Gossell was severely injured in the auto-
mobile accident which took the life of Speaks and his
status for the coming season is uncertain. The Wolf pack
will neither be tall ncr graced with speed, elements indi-
cating that a revised style of play from past State teams
is in the offing. "There will be some trying times, but I
feel we can offset some of our shortcomings with added
determination, spirit and hustle", says the veteran Case.
24
Penn State
At University Park, Pa., December 7
FACTS ABOUT THE NITTANY LIONS
CONFERENCE None
LOCATION University Park, Pa.
ENROLLMENT 17,000
COLORS Blue and White
HOME COURT Recreation Building
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Ernest B. McCoy
BASKETBALL COACH John S. Egli
HIS RECORD Won 113, Lost 98
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Jim Tarman
1962-63 RECORD Wen 15, Lost 5
LIONS RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
Penn State leads, 2-1
LAST YEAR'S RESULTS
At College Park: Penn State, 62; Maryland, 61
Greatest margin of victory: Penn State, 6 (1962), 71-65
Maryland, 17 (1961), 64-47
NITTANY LION NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (2): Earl Hoffman, John Mitchell
LETTERMEN RETURNING (6): Capt. Bob Donato, Ron Avillion, Terry
Hoover, John Ludwig, Tom Malinchak, Bob Weiss
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Six returning lettermen, including four starters,
a promising crop of newcomers from the best freshman
squad in many years; a better bench, good speed, good
defense, good shooting, and adequate size would make it
appear that the Nittany Lions might equal their 15-5
record of last year (the school's best in a decade). But
the schedule is the toughest ever. In short, the team could
be better but the record not as good. Lions open at Duke
and North Carolina State which is a tip-off onthe sched-
ule. They will play at home only eight times in the 22-
game schedule.
25
South Carolina
At Maryland, January 6
At South Carolina, February 29
FACTS ABOUT THE GAMECOCKS
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Columbia, S.C.
ENROLLMENT 7,782
COLORS Garnet and Black
HOME COURT Carolina Field House (4,100)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Marvin Bass
BASKETBALL COACH Chuck Noe
HIS COACHING RECORD Overall: 142-112. At S.C: 9-15 (1 year)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Tom Price
1962-63 RECORD Won 9, Lost 15
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 4, Lost 10
GAMECOCKS RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
(Series started 1925)
Maryland leads, 23-9
1962-63 RESULTS
Maryland, 6S; S.C, 63 (At Maryland)
Maryland, 51; S.C, 44 (At S.C.)
SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
Highest scoring game (158 points), 99-59, Maryland (1958)
Greatest margins of victory: For South Carolina, 15 (1950), 59-44
Greatest margins of victory: For Maryland, 40 (1958), 99-59
Longest winning streaks: Maryland has two 7-game streaks (Maryland
has won the last 2 games)
GAMECOCK NOTES
LETTBRMEN LOST (3): Scotti Ward, Bob Haney, Dave Prevoznik
LETTERMEN RETURNING (6): Ronnie Collins, Jimmy Collins, Bill
Yarbrough, Terry Lucansky, John Corsage, Rick Grich
REPLACEMENTS: Jim Fox, 6-8, 225; John Schroeder, 6-6, 205; Billy
Woofter, 6-7, 215 (probably after February 1)
CAPSULE OUTLOOK. This year's South Carolina basketball team will
have somewhat more height and heft than the short and
skinny squad of last year, but otherwise will face many
of the same problems that confronted Coach Chuck Noe
a year ago. Noe, who had a highly successful seven-year
tenure at Virginia Tech, posted a 9-15 record his first year
with the Gamecocks but was in all but two games until
the closing minutes. It was generally conceded he did an
excellent job with his nine-man squad whose biggest
starter was 6-4, 187. The returnees have the advantage of
a full season of the Noe system of multiple offenses and
defenses and the freshmen got a thorough indoctrination
of the system. However, they will have to give 100 per-
cent-plus to finish above the .500 mark in the tough ACC.
26
University of Virginia
At Home, December 2
At Charlottesville, February 20
FACTS ABOUT THE CAVALIERS
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Charlottesville, Va.
ENROLLMENT 5,500
COLORS Orange and Blue
HOME COURT Memorial Gym (3,000)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Steve Sebo
BASKETBALL COACH Bill Gibson (First year at Virginia)
HIS RECORD Won 102, Lost 37 — at Mansfield State
College
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Dick Turner
1962-63 RECORD Won5, Lost 20
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 3, Lost 11
CAVALIERS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
Maryland leads, 52-23
(Series began in 1924)
Greatest margins of victory: Virginia, 36 (1948), 79-43
Maryland, 34 (1930), 54-20
LAST YEAR'S RESULTS
At Charlottesville: Maryland, 67; Virginia, 61
At College Park: Virginia, 71; Maryland, 69
CAVALIER NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (4): Gene Engel, Mike Greenberg, Steve Jarvis,
Gene Flamm
LETTERMEN RETURNING (8) Chip Conner, Mac Caldwell, Fletcher
Arritt, Kenneth Goble, Dick Katstra, Bernie Meyer, Gary
Spohn, Jay Lambiotte
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Eight lettermen return and a better record is
indicated. The two big words in Virginia basketball this
season are expected to be Chip Conner. Conner, who is
the team captain, is one of the finest players ever to per-
form for the Cavaliers at forward. He will be supported
by 6-6 junior Mac Caldwell, who led in rebounding last
year while averaging 13 points a game. The greatest
need is for some scoring from the guard positions and a
big man to help Conner and Caldwell with the rebounding.
27
Wake Forest
At Winston-Salem, January 20
At College Park, February 14
FACTS ABOUT THE DEACONS
CONFERENCE Atlantic Coast
LOCATION Winston-Salem, N.C.
ENROLLMENT 2,915
COLORS Old Gold and Black
HOME COURT Memorial Coliseum (8,200)
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR W. H. Gibson
BASKETBALL COACH Horace (Bones) McKinney
HIS RECORD Won 94, Lost 58 (six years)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Marvin (Skeeter Francis
1962-63 RECORD ..._ Won 16, Lest 10
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 11, Lost 3
DEACONS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
Wake Forest leads, 17-7
(Series began in 1952)
Greatest margins of victory: Wake Forest, 39 (ACC Tournament 1963),
80-41
Maryland, 21 (1954), 74-53
LAST YEAR'S RESULTS
At College Park: Wake Forest, 85; Maryland, 74
At Winston-Salem: Wake Forest, 75; Maryland, 54
At Raleigh (ACC Tournament) : Wake Forest, 80; Maryland, 41
DEACON NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (4); Dave Wiedeman, Bob Wollard, Al Koehler,
Ted Zawacki
LETTERMEN RETURNING (6): Frank Christie, Dick Carmichael,
Butch Hassell, Ronny Watts, Brad Brooks, Dick Herring
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: Three regulars from last year's ACC runners-up
along with center Ronny Watts who saw action in all 26
games, give Coach Bones McKinney a sound nucleus
around which to build his 1963-64 club. The regulars are
forwards Christie and Carmichael and guard Hassell.
Herring is another letterman who will baetle for a start-
ing job. Bob Leonard, top scorer fo rthe frosh with a 19.9
average last winter, could be in the starting five. Watts,
an excellent jumper, will be the big man in the lineupat
6-6. McKinney feels the team could be as strong as last
season.
28
West Virginia University
At Home, December 14
At Morgantown, February 5
FACTS ABOUT THE MOUNTAINEERS
CONFERENCE Southern
LOCATION Morgantown, W. Va.
ENROLLMENT 9,000
COLORS Old Gold and Blue
HOME COURT Mountaineer Field House
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR Robert N. (Red) Brown
BASKETBALL COACH Gecrge King
HIS RECORD Won 70, Lost 18 (3 years)
PUBLICITY DIRECTOR Edgar Barrett
1962-63 RECORD Won 23, Lost 8
1962-63 ACC RECORD Won 15, Lost 1
MOUNTAINEERS' RECORD AGAINST THE TERPS
West Virginia leads, 10-2
(Last game 1954-55 Season)
Greatest Margins of victory: West Virginia, 40 (1947), 81-41
Maryland, 10 (1926), 25-15
MOUNTAINEER NOTES
LETTERMEN LOST (4) : Rod Thorn, Jim MeCormick, Dave Shuck, Gale
Catlett
LETTERMEN RETURNING (5): Marty Lentz, Tom Lowry, BUI Maphis,
Don Weir, Mike Wolfe
CAPSULE OUTLOOK: West Virginia's long string of basketball all-
Americas comes to an end, but the Mountaineers still will
be shooting for their ninth consecutive season of 20 or
more victories in the coming campaign. Without Rod
Thorn, who followed Jerry West and Hot Rod Hundley
in a line of some of the nation's brightest college stars,
West Virginia will be hard pressed to keep up the 20-game
tradition — a mark surpassed only by Kentrcky with 14
straight 20-win seasons ending in 1959. Besides Thorn, the
Mountaineers also lost Jim MeCormick, two of the top
seven scorers in the school's history. Coach King, whose
.795 winning percentage for three years equals the six-
year record of his predecessor Fred Schaus, will call for
more team balance and scoring punch up front to com-
pensate for losing an outstanding back line. The return-
ing front line of tall Tom Lowry, Mike Wolfe ad Bill
Eaphis contributed only one-third of the team's points
last season.
29
Terps' Highest National Rankings
In School's History — 1957-58
International
Associated Press
News Service
United Press
1.
West Virginia
1.
West Virginia
1.
West Virginia
2.
Cincinnati
2.
Cincinnati
2.
Cincinnati
3.
Kansas State
3.
San Francisco
3.
San Francisco
4.
San Francisco
4.
Kansas State
4.
Kansas State
5.
Temple
5.
Temple
5.
Temple
6.
MARYLAND
6.
Dayton
6.
MARYLAND
7.
Kansas
7.
N,otre Dame
7.
Notre Dame
8.
Notre Dame
8.
Bradley
8.
Kansas
9.
Kentucky
9.
MARYLAND
9.
Dayton
in.
Duke
10.
Kansas
10.
Indiana
ALL-AMERICAS AT MARYLAND
Selected by New York Sports Writer's
Selected by New York Sports Writer's
1931 — Louis "Bozey" Berger
Assn.
1932 — Louis "Bozey" Berger
Assn.
1953 — Eugene Shue — Second team Helm's Foundation.
1954 — Eugene Shue — Second team Helm's Foundation — 16th man on
Associated Press Poll.
1960 — Al Bunge — Honorable Mention Associated Press.
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
1962-63 Final Basketball Statistics
(21 GAMES)
P G FGA FG PCT. FTA FT PCT. SM REB. PF TP AVG.
Jerrv Greenspan F 21 312 111 35.6 191 143 74.9 249 184 75 365 17.4
Scott Ferguson C 21 177 77 43.5 58 36 62.1 122 150 47 190 9.0
Bob Eicher G 19 172 64 37.2 63 43 68.3 128 57 39 171 9.0
Sam McWilliams G 21 159 70 44.0 36 22 61.1 103 81 46 162 7.7
Connie Carpenter G 21 159 71 44.7 21 16 76.2 93 50 16 158 7.5
Phil Carlson F 21 147 60 40.8 54 31 57.4 110 127 44 151 7.2
Bill Stasiulatis G 10 103 32 31.1 55 39 70.9 87 46 30 103 10.3
Rudy Shively F 11 23 13 56.5 8 3 37.5 15 16 6 29 2.6
Joe Barton C 11 19 7 36.8 7 3 42.9 16 14 16 17 1.5
Bob Lewis F 6 1 1 100.0 3 1 33.3 2 3 3 3 0.5
TEAM 160
MD. TOTALS 21 1272 506 39.8 496 337 67.9 925 888 322 1349 64.2
OPP. TOTALS 21 1336 614 46.0 396 276 69.7 843 *879 366 1504 71.6
* — Includes 164 team rebounds
INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS
TP Scored
Greenspan
N.C. State
Dec.
11
30
(FG 13, FT 4)
FG Scored
Greenspan
N.C. State
Dec.
11
13
(FGA 23)
FT Scored
Greenspan
Geo. Wash.
Feb.
1
11
(FTA 13)
Georgetown
Feb.
4
11
(FTA 12)
FT Attempted
Greenspan
Duke
Dec.
8
16
(Made 10)
Rebounds
Ferguson
S. Carolina
Jan.
5
17
(Team 55)
31
OWN TEAM HIGH MARKS
FG Scored vs
FT Attempted
FT Scored
PF Committed
North Carolina State 30
Wake Forest
vs. George Washington 36
vs. George Washington 26
vs. George Washington 20
LOW MARKS BY OPPONENT
South Carolina 20
Virginia
South Carolina
North Carolina
12
4
10
1962-63
RECORD (8-13)
Penn State
(H) 61-62
N.C. State
(A) 59-79
Georgetown
(A) 70-79
Geo. Washington
(A) 68-67
Duke
(A) 56-92
Georgetown
(H) 73-72
N.C. State
(H) 74-76
(OT)
North Carolina
(A) 68-82
Virginia
(A) 67-61
Clemson
(A) 60-62
Wake Forest
(H) 74-85
South Carolina
(A) 51-44
South Carolina
(H) 68-63
Wake Forest
(A) 54-75
Geo. Washington
(H) 74-72
Virginia
(H) 69-71
Navy
(H) 67-61
Duke
(H) 70-76
North Carolina
(H) 56-78
Clemson
(H) 69-67
ACC TOURNAMENT, Raleigh, N.C, Wake Forest, 41-80
ALL-TIME COACHES' RECORDS
TEAMS COACHED BY H. BURTON SHIPLEY:
ALL
Won
1923-24 4
1924-25 11
1925-26 14
1926-27 10
1927-28 14
1928-29 7
1929-30 16
1930-31 14
1931-32 16
1932-33 11
1933-34 11
1934-35 8
1935-36 13
1936-37 9
1937-38 14
1938-39 13
1939-40 13
1940-41 1
1941-42 7
1942-43 8
1943-44 4
1944-45 2
1945-46 9
1946-47 14
243
REG.
SEASON
AMES
CONF
. GAMES
Lost
Won
Lost
6
1
2
4
3
1
2
7
1
9
6
4
4
8
1
8
2
5
5
9
5
4
8
1
3
8
2
8
7
3
7
6
1
10
4
3
5
4
3
10
4
8
8
6
4
8
8
3
8
7
4
21
0
13
15
3
8
8
5
5
13
2
1
13
2
5
11
5
4
9
9
4
199
124
91
32
TEAMS COACHED BY
1947-48 11
1948-49 9
1949-50 7
FLUCIE"
STEWART:
13
9 7
17
8 7
18
5 13
27 48 22
TEAMS COACHED BY BUD MILLIKAN
1950-51 15 10 11
1951-52 13 8 9
1952-53 15 8 12
1953-54 23 7 7
1954-55 17 7 10
1955-56 14 10 7
1956-57 15 9 9
L957-58 22 7 9
1958-59 10 13 7
1959-60 15 8 9
1960-61 14 12 6
1961-62 8 17 3
1962-63 8 13 4
27
8
5
3
2
4
7
5
5
7
5
8
11
10
189
129
103
80
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND TOURNAMENT
RECORDS
Conference Tournaments
MARYLAND OPPONENT
MARYLAND OPPONENT
1924—34
V.M.I.— 19
1945—49
Duke— 76
25
Georgia — 29
1946—27
North Carolina — 54
1925—27
Alabama — 21
1947—43
N. C. State— 55
18
N. C. State— 30
1948—51
Davidson — 58
1926—19
Miss. A.&M.— 22
1949—61
North Carolina — 79
1927—22
Georgia — 27
1951—50
Clemson — 48
1929—35
Mississippi — 37
45
N. C. State— 54
1930—21
Kentucky — 26
1952—48
Duke— 51
1931—37
Vanderbilt— 21
1953—74
Duke— 65
19
North Carolina — 17
59
Wake Forest — 61
26
Georgia — 25
1954—75
Clemson — 59
29 x
Kentucky— 27
56 *
Wake Forest— 64
1932—24
Florida— 39
1955—67 *
Virginia — 68
1933—28
South Carolina — 65
1956--69
Duke— 94
1934—37
Wash. & Lee — 45
1957—71
Virginia — 68
1936—47
Duke— 35
64
South Carolina — 74
32
Wash. & Lee— 38
1958—70
Virginia — 66
1937—35
N.C. State-42
71 *
Duke— 65
1938—45
Citadel— 43
86 x
North Carolina — 74
32
Duke -35
1959—65
Virginia — 66
1939—47
Richmond — 32
1960—58
N. C. State— 74
52
N.C. State —29
1961—91
Clemson — 75
27
x Clemson — 39
1961—76
Wake Forest— 98
1910-^3
Wash . & Lee— 30
1962—58
Duke— 71
32
Duke— 44
1963—41
Wake Forest— 80
Invitational Tournament Records
1954 — Ail-American City Tournament (Owensboro, Ky.)
Maryland— 65 Arizona State— 50
33
Maryland — 66 Evansville (Ind.)— 58
Maryland — 54 Kentucky Wesleyan — 37 x
1955 — All-American City Tournament (Owensboro, Ky.)
Maryland— 58 Texas Tech— 54
Maryland— 83 Rhode Island St.— 66
Maryland — 78 Cincinnati — 61 x
1955-56 Mid-Winter Festival (College Park, Md.)
Maryland — 75 Michigan State — 95
Maryland— 75 St. Francis, Pa.— 66
1956-57 — All-American City Tournament (Owensboro, Ky.)
Maryland— 89 Montana State — 72
Maryland — 43 New Mexico A&M — 45
Maryland— 43 Virginia — 39
1957-58 — Sugar Bowl Tournament (New Orleans, La.)
Maryland — 71 Vanderbilt — 56
Maryland — 46 *** Memphis State — 47
1957-58 — NCAA Tournament (First Round)
Maryland — 86 Boston College — 63
1957-58 — NCAA Eastern Regional Tournament
Maryland— 67 Temple— 71
Maryland — 59 ** Manhattan — 55
** — Consolation Game — Third Place
1958-59 — Sugar Bowl Tournament (New Orleans, La.)
Maryland— -45 Mississippi State — 56
Maryland — 54 Loyola — 50
1959-60 — Blue Grass Tournament (Louisville, Ky.)
Maryland— 63 Indiana— 72
Maryland — 76 Fordham — 54
1960-61 — Dixie Classic (Raleigh, N.C.)
Maryland— 57 North Carolina — 81
Maryland— €7 N. C. State— 75
Maryland — 84 Wyoming — 77
1961-62 — Sugar Bowl (New Orleans, La.)
Maryland — 62 Mississippi State — 64
Maryland — 64 Louisville — 83
k- Championship Games *— Overtime Games *** — Triple Overtime
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND BASKETBALL
RECORDS
SINGLE GAME— TEAM
MOST POINTS: 103 against Yale, Jan. 1960 at College Park.
FEWEST POINTS: 15 against Seton Hall, Dec. 1941 (15-59).
MOST POINTS BY OPPONENT: 98 by Wake Forest in ACC tourna-
ment, 1961.
FEWEST POINTS BY OPPONENT: 12 by Navy, 1926 (12-21).
MOST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 183 by Maryland & Yale, Jan. 1960
(Md. 103 - Yale 80).
FEWEST POINTS BY BOTH TEAMS: 33 by Maryland & Navy, 1926
(Md. 21 - Navy 12).
MOST FIELD GOALS: 38 against South Carolina, March 1958 at Col-
lege Park.
FEWEST FIELD GOALS: 6 against Seton Hall, Dec. 1941.
FEWEST FIELD GOALS BY OPPONENT: 6 by Navy, 1926.
MOST FT: 40 against North Carolina, ACC tournament final 1958 (52
atempts) .
FEWEST FT: 2 against Virginia, Jan. 1944 (7 attempts).
34
MOST FT BY OPPONENT: 36 by Wake Forest, Feb. 1959 (49 attempts).
MOST FT ATTEMPTS: 57 against North Carolina, Jan. 1953 (made 36).
FEWEST FT ATTEMPTS: 7 against Virginia, Jan. 1944 (made 2).
MOST FT ATTEMPTS BY OPPONENT: 49 by VPI, Feb. 1953 — 49 by
Duke, S.C. Tournament 1953 — 49 by Wake Forest, Feb. 1959.
MOST FG ATTEMPTS: 88 against Washington & Lee, Feb. 1953
(made 30).
FEWEST FG ATTEMPTS: 29 against Virginia, Feb. 1960 (made 18).
MOST REBOUNDS: 65 against Virginia, Feb. 1961.
MOST FOULS: 44 against William & Mary, Feb. 1952.
MOST FOULS BY OPPONENT: 37 by North Carolina, Jan. 1953.
FEWEST FOULS: 8 against Clemson, Feb. 1960. 8 against George Wash-
ington, Jan. 1962.
BEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: .926 against Clemson, Feb. 10,
1962 (25-27).
BEST FG PERCENTAGE: .621 against Virginia Feb. 1960 (18-29).
LARGEST VICTORY MARGIN: 40 points against Clemson, Dec. 1953
(81-41) — 40 points against South Carolina, March 1958 (99-59).
LARGEST DEFEAT MARGIN: 63 points by Army, 1944 (85-22).
MOST POINTS IN ONE HALF: 63 in second half against Yale, Jan.
1960.
SINGLE GAME— INDIVIDUAL
MOST POINTS: 43 by Al Bunge against Yale, Jan. 1960 (14 FG 15 FT).
NOTE: also a Cole Field House record.
MOST FG: 16 by Gene Shue against Washington & Lee, Feb. 1953.
MOST FT: 16 by Tom Young against Wake Forest, Dec. 1957 (18 at-
tempts) .
MOST REBOUNDS: 22 by Bob Kessler against Georgetown, 1956 — 22
by Al Bunge against Georgetown, Feb. 1958.
MOST FT ATTEMPTS: 19 by Bob Kessler against Michigan State, Dec.
1955 (made 11) — 19 by Gene Shue against Duke, Feb. 1954 (made
13).
MOST FG ATTEMPTS: 34 by Gene Shue against Washington & Lee,
Feb. 1953 (made 16).
MOST CONSECUTIVE FT: 14 by Jerry Greenspan against Minnesota
Dec. 15, 1961.
MOST CONSECUTIVE FG ONE GAME: 9 by Nick Davis against South
Carolina, March 1958.
BEST FG PERCENTAGE: .818 by Nick Davis against Navy, Feb. 1958
(9-11).
BEST FT PERCENTAGE: 1000 by Lee Brawley against North Carolina,
1951 (13-13) — 1000 by Bill Stasiulatis against Wake Forest in ACC
Tournament, 1961 (12-12) — 1000 by Lee Brawley against North
Carolina, 1951 (12-12) — 1000 by Bob Kessler against George Wash-
ington, Jan. 1956 (12-12) — 1000 by Jerry Bechtle against North
Carolina, 1960 (10-10) — 1000 by Jerry Greenspan against Minnesota,
1961 (14-14).
MOST FT ATTEMPTS BY OPPONENT: 21 by Bernie Janiciki, Wake
Forest, S.C. Tournament 1953 (made 15) — 21 by Pete Brennan,
North Carolina, Feb. 1958 (made 15).
MOST POINTS SCORED AWAY FROM HOME: 40 by Gene Shue
against Wake Forest, S.C. Tournament 1953.
SEASON RECORDS— INDIVIDUAL
MOST POINTS: 654 by Gene Shue, 1953-54 (30 games).
MOST 1FIELD GOALS: 237 by Gene Shue, 1953-54 (30 games).
35
MOST FREE THROWS: 180 by Gene Shue, 1953-54 (30 games).
MOST REBOUNDS: 336 by Bob Kessler, 1956-57 (24 games).
BEST MELD GOAL AVERAGE: .506 by Gene Shue, 1953-54 (30 games,
att. 469, made 237).
BEST FREE THROW AVERAGE: .873 by Bob McDonald, 1960-61 (26
games, att. 79 made 69).
BEST SCORING AVERAGE: 22.1 by Gene Shue, 1952-53 (23 games,
508 points).
BEST REBOUNDING AVERAGE: 14.0 by Bob Kessler, 1955-56 (24
games).
MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE: 27 by Bob O'Brien,
1956-57.
MOST CONSECUTIVE FIELD GOALS MADE: 9 by Nick Davis, 1957-58.
SEASON RECORDS, TEAM
MOST POINTS: 2004, 1957-58 (29 games).
HIGHEST SCORING AVERAGE: 69.9, 1961-62 (1748 pts. in 25 games).
HIGHEST OPPONENT SCORING AVERAGE: 73.4, 1940-41 (1615 pts.
in 22 games).
MOST OPPONENTS POINTS: 1805, 1961-62 (25 games).
MOST FIELD GOALS: 712, 1953-54 (30 games)
MOST FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS: 1698, 1957-58 (29 games)
MOST FREE THROWS MADE: 590, 1957-58 (29 games)
MOST FREE THROWS ATTEMPTED; 858, 1957-58 (29 games)
BEST FIELD GOAL AVERAGE: .432, 1961-62 (25 games, att. 1476,
made 637).
LOWEST FIELD GOAL AVERAGE: .346, 1951-52
BEST FREE THROW AVERAGE: .747, 1959-60 (23 games, att. 534
made 399)
LOWEST FREE THROW AVERAGE: .617, 1952-53
HIGHEST AVERAGE MARGIN OVER OPPONENTS: 11.5 1957-58
(29 games 69.1-57.6)
BEST REBOUND PERCENTAGE: .585, 1954-55
BEST REBOUND AVERAGE: 49.1, 1954-55
MOST REBOUNDS: 1178, 1954-55
MOST PERSONAL FOULS: 579, 1951-52
FEWEST PERSONAL FOULS: 385, 1954-55
CAREER RECORDS
MOST POINTS SCORED: 1397 by Gene Shue, 1951-54 (75 games)
BEST SCORING AVERAGE: 18.6 by Gene Shue, 1951-54 (75 games,
1397 points)
MOST FIELD GOALS: 504 by Shue, 1951-54 (75 games)
MOST FREE THROWS: 389 by Gene Shue, 1951-54 (75 games, 526
attempts).
BEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE: .469 by Gene Shue, 1951-54 (504
field goals, 1074 attempts).
BEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE: .773 by Bruce Kelleher, 1959-62
(68 games, 198 made, 256 attempts).
MOST REBOUNDS: 849 by Bob Kessler, 1953-56 (78 games)
MOST CONSECUTIVE FREE THROWS MADE: 32 by Bob O'Brien
1955-56 (last 5 in opening game of 1956 season)
36
ACC Basketball Standings
1954
Conference G
ames
All
Games
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
Duke
9
1
818
710
21
6
2,250
1,816
MARYLAND
7
2
621
504
23
7
1,953
1,673
Wake Forest
8
4
978
853
17
12
2,210
2,028
*N. C. State
5
3
656
580
26
7
2,687
2,258
North Carolina
5
6
749
721
11
10
1,439
1,335
South Carolina
2
8
600
758
11
16
1,693
1,816
Virginia
1
4
333
373
16
11
2,149
2,013
Clemson
0
9
502
758
5
18
1,433
1,802
(*won conference
championship in
tournament, 82-80 over
Wake
Forest overtime)
1955
Conference G
ames
All
Games
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
*N. C. State
12
2
1,283
1,086
28
4
2,839
2,449
Duke
11
3
1,212
990
20
8
2,386
2,037
MARYLAND
10
4
923
881
17
7
1,573
1,485
Wake Forest
8
6
1,176
1,121
17
10
2,315
2,139
North Carolina
8
6
1,124
1,107
10
11
1,592
1,599
Virginia
5
9
1,255
1,255
14
15
2,605
2,449
South Carolina
2
12
970
1,168
10
16
2,043
2,158
Clemson 0 14 1,020 1,355 2 21 1,694 2,147
(*won conference championship in tournament, 87-77 over Duke)
1956
Conference Games
All
Games
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
*N. C. State
11
3
1,167
1,024
24
4
2,319
1,974
North Carolina
11
3
1,017
923
18
5
1,839
1,633
Wake Forest
10
4
1,162
1,065
19
9
2,259
2,105
Duke
10
4
1,101
955
19
7
2,095
1,815
MARYLAND
7
7
932
909
14
10
1,600
1,555
Virginia
3
11
957
1,135
10
17
1,992
2,130
South Carolina
3
11
999
1,132
9
14
1,798
1,823
Clemson
1
13
1,115
1,303
9
17
2,236
2,360
(*won conference
i championship in tournament, 76-64 over
Wake
Forest)
W57
Conference Games
All Games
Won
Lost
Pts.
Oph.
Won
Lost
Pts.
Opp.
North Carolina
14
0
1,121
940
32
0
2,537
2,098
MARYLAND
9
5
.907
859
16
10
1,680
1.590
Duke
8
6
1,090
1,049
13
11
1,881
1,848
Wcke Forest
7
7
954
921
19
9
1,916
1,754
N. C. State
7
7
1,036
1,052
15
11
1,970
1,933
South Carolina
5
9
1,072
1,091
17
12
2,385
2,272
Clemson
3
11
1,022
1,170
7
17
1,739
1,977
Virginia
3
11
989
1,109
6
19
1,715
1,859
37
Championship Tournament
(Played at Reynolds Coliseum, Raleigh, N.C., March 7-8-9, 1957)
First round — South Carolina over Duke 84-81; Maryland over Virginia
71-68; North Caro'ina over C'.em-on 81-G1; Wake Forest over N.C.
State 66-56.
Se nifm'ils — 'outh Carolina over Maryland 74-64; North Carolina over
Wake Forest 61-59.
Fh'als — North Carolina over South Carolina 96-75.
1958
Conference Games
All Games
Won
Lost
Pet. Pts. Opp.
Won
Lost
Pet.
Pts.
Opp.
Duke
11
3
.786 969 867
18
7
.720
1729
1601
North Carolina
10
4
.714 1026 926
19
7
.731
1867
1688
N. C. State
10
4
.714 960 895
18
6
.750
1607
1477
MARYLAND
9
5
.643 989 862
22
7
.759
2004
1671
Virginia
6
8
.429 974 1036
10
13
.435
1621
1660
Clemson
4
10
.286 941 1019
8
16
.333
1650
1723
South Carolina
3
11
.214 898 1077
5
19
.208
1590
1868
Wake Forest
3
11
.214 912 998
6
17
.261
1452
1558
1958 Championship Tournament
First round — North Carolina 62, Clemson 51; N. C. State 66, South
Carolina 61; Duke 51, Wake Forest 44; Maryland 70, Virginia 66.
Semifinals — Maryland 71, Duke 65; North Carolina 64, N. C
State 58.
Finals — Maryland 86, North Carolina 74.
1959
Conference
Games
All Games
Won Lost
Pet.
Pts.
Opp.
Won
Lost
Pet.
Pts.
Opp.
N. C. State
12 2
.857
930
843
22
4
.846
1777
1595
North Carolina
12 2
.857
967
853
20
5
.800
1797
1629
Duke
7 7
.500
914
955
13
12
.520
1632
1728
MARYLAND
7 7
.500
840
772
10
13
.435
1365
1296
Virginia
6 8
.429
969
993
11
14
.440
1764
1783
Wake Forest
5 9
.357
884
876
10
14
.417
1569
1589
Clemson
5 9
.357
794
870
8
16
.333
1365
1540
South Carolina
2 12
.143
833
969
4
20
.167
1477
1670
Championship Tournament
First round — Duke 78, Wake Forest 71; North Carolina 93, Clemson
69; N. C. State 75, South Carolina 72 (overtime); Virginia 66, Mary-
land 65.
Semifinals — N. C. State 66, Virginia 63; North Carolina 74, Duke 71.
Finals— N. C. State 80, North Carolina 56.
N.C. A. A. Tournament
First round— Navy 76, North Carolina 63.
38
1960
Conference Games
All Games
Won
Lost
Pet. Pts. Opp.
Won
Lost
Pet.
Pts.
Opp.
North Carolina
12
2
.857 1079 879
18
6
.750
1754
1494
Wake Forest
12
2
.857 1050 882
21
7
.750
2035
1767
MARYLAND
9
5
.643 884 822
15
8
.652
1495
1407
Duke
7
7
.500 869 910
17
11
.607
1801
1769
South Carolina
6
8
.429 967 1082
10
16
.385
1914
2066
N. C State
5
9
.357 844 834
11
15
.423
1570
1565
Clemson
4
10
.286 880 973
10
16
.385
1668
1838
Virginia
1
13
.071 846 1037
6
18
.250
1614
1815
Championship Tournament
First round— N. C. State 74, Maryland 58; Wake Forest 74, Clem-
son 59; North Carolina 84, Virginia 63; Duke 82, South Carolina 69.
Semifinals — Duke 71, North Carolina 69; Wake Forest 71, N. C.
State 66.
Finals— Duke 63, Wake Forest 59.
N.C.A.A. Tournament
First round — Duke 84, Princeton 60.
Eastern Regional — Duke 58, St. Joseph's (Pa.) 56; New York Univ.
74, Duke 59.
1961
Conference Games All Games
Won Lost Pet. Pts. Opp. Won Lost Pet. Pts. Opp.
North Carolina
12
2
,857 1087 904
19
4
.826
1765
1512
Wake Forest
11
3
.786 1184 1050
19
11
.633
2488
2294
Duke
10
4
.714 1154 1051
22
6
.786
2283
1994
N. C. State
8
6
.571 1044 995
16
9
.640
1932
1808
MARYLAND
6
8
.429 924 944
14
12
.538
1747
1757
Clemson
5
9
.357 955 1012
10
16
.385
1742
1834
South Carolina
2
12
.143 1079 1274
9
17
.346
2014
2256
Virginia
2
12
.143 987 1184
3
23
.115
1825
2224
Championship Tournament
First round — Wake Forest bye; Maryland 91, Clemson 75; South
Carolina 80, N.C. State 78; Duke 89, Virginia 54.
Semifinals— Wake Forest 98, Maryland 76; Duke 92, South Carolina
75.
Finals — Wake Forest 96, Duke 81.
N.C.A.A. Tournament
First round — Wake Forest 97, St. John's 74.
Eastern Regional — Wake Forest 78, St. Bonaventure 73; St. Joseph's
(Pa.) 96, Wake Forest 86.
1962
Conference Games All Games
Won Lost Pet. Pts. Opp. Won Lost Pet. Pts. Opp.
Wake Forest 12 2 .857 1171 1024 22 9 .710 2523 2304
Duke 11 3 .786 1156 999 20 5 .800 2051 1698
N.C. State 10 4 .714 1013 925 11 6 .647 1211 1138
North Carolina 7 7 .500 1006 1022 8 9 .471 1230 1235
South Carolina 7 7 .500 1116 1098 15 12 .556 2117 2080
Clemson 4 10 .286 989 1074 12 15 .444 1947 2011
Maryland 3 11 .214 986 1040 8 17 .320 1748 1805
Virginia 2 12 .143 977 1232 5 18 .217 1614 1911
39
Championship Tournament
First Round — Wake Forest 81, Virginia 58; South Carolina 57,
North Carolina 55; Clemson 67, North Carolina State 46; Duke 71, Mary-
land 58.
Semifinals — Wake Forest 88, South Carolina 75; Clemson 77, Duke
72.
Finals — Wake Forest 77, Clemson 66.
N.C.A.A. Tournament
First Round — Wake Forest, 92, Yale 82 (overtime).
Eastern Regional - Wake Forest 96, St. Joseph's (Pa.) 85 (over-
time); Wake Forest 79, Villanova 69.
Nationals — Semifinal — Ohio State 84, Wake Forest 68. Consola-
tion Final — Wake Forest 82, UCLA 80.
Conference I
Sames
Won
Lost Pet.
Pts.
Opp.
Duke
14
0
1.000
1169
927
Wake Forest
11
3
.786
1026
944
N. Carolina
10
4
.714
1065
989
Clemson
5
9
.357
875
940
N.C. State
5
9
.357
923
947
Maryland
4
10
.286
895
1011
S. Carolina
4
10
.286
867
977
Virginia
3
11
.214
959
1044
1963
All Games
Won Lost Pet. Pts. Opp.
27 3 .900 2496 2069
16 10 .615 1854 1788
15 6 .714 1608 1487
12 13 .480 1685 1673
10 11 .476 1464 1439
8 13 .381 1349 1504
9 15 .375 1571 1701
5 20 .200 1589 1862
Championship Tournament
First Round — Wake Forest, 80; Maryland, 41; North Carolina, 93;
South Carolina, 76; Duke, 89; Virginia, 70; N.C. State, 79; Clemson, 78.
Semifinals— Duke, 82; N.C. State, 65; Wake Forest, 56; North Caro-
lina, 55.
Finals— Duke, 68; Wake Forest, 57.
N.C.A.A. Tournament
Eastern Regional— Duke, 81, N.Y.U., 76; Duke, 73; St. Joseph's, 59.
Nationals— Loyola (111.), 94; Duke, 85; Oregon State, 63 (for third
place).
All -Conference Teams
(As selected by Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Association)
1954
FIRST TEAM
Dickie Hemiric, Wake Forest
GENE SHUE, MARYLAND
Mel Thompson, N. C. State
Rudy D'Emilio, Duke
Buzz Wilkinson, Virginia
Player of Year — Hemric
SECOND TEAM
Vic Molodet, N. C. State
Lowell Davis, Wake Forest
Joe Belmont, Duke
Jerry Vayda, North Carolina
Ronnie Mayer, Duke
Coach of Year— Everett Case, N. C. State
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM
Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest
GENE SHUE, MARYLAND
Mel Thompson, N. C. State
Ronnie Shavlik, N. C. State
Skippy Winstead, North Carolina
SECOND TEAM
Buzz Wilkinson, Virginia
Bernie Janicki, Duke
Rudy D'Emilio, Duke
Herb Applebaum, N. C. State
Lowell Davis, Wake Forest
40
1955
FIRST TEAM
Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest
Ronnie Shavlik, N.C. State
Buzz Wilkinson, Virginia
Lennie Rosenbluth, North Carolina
Ronnie Mayer, Duke
SECOND TEAM
BOB KESSLER, MARYLAND
Bill Yarborough, Clemson
Joe Belmont, Duke
Vic Molodet, N. C. State
Lowell Davis, Wake Forest
Player of Year — Hemric Coach of Year— Everett Case, N. C. State
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM
Buzz Wilkinson, Virginia
Ronnie Shavlik, N. C. State
Ronnie Mayer, Duke
Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest
Lowell Davis, Wake Forest
SECOND TEAM
Bill Miller, Virginia
Bill Yarborough, Clemson
Vic Molodet, N. C. State
Joe Belmont, Duke
Phil DiNardo, N. C. State
1956
FIRST TEAM
Ronnie Shavlik, N. C. State
Lennie Rosenbluth, N. Carolina
Vic Molodet, N. C. State
Lowell Davis, Wake Forest
Joe Belmont, Duke
Player of Year-^Shavlik
SECOND TEAM
Ronnie Mayer, Duke
BOB KESSLER, MARYLAND
Bill Yarborough, Clemson
Grady Wallace, South Carolina
Jack Murdock, Wake Forest
Coach of Year — Murray Greason, W. Forest
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM
Vic Molodet, N. C. State
Lennie Rosenbluth, N. Carolina
Jack Murdock, Wake Forest
Jack Williams, Wake Forest
John Maglio, N. C. State
SECOND TEAM
Ronnie Shavlik, N. C. State
Ronnie Mayer, Duke
BOB KESSLER, MARYLAND
Bill Miller, Virginia
Bob McCarty, Virginia
1957
FIRST TEAM
Lennie Rosenbluth, North Carolina
Grady Wallace, South Carolina
Jack Murdock, Wake Forest
Tommy Kearns, North Carolina
Jack Williams, Wake Forest
SECOND TEAM
HOB O'BRIEN, MARYLAND
Pete Brennan, North Carolina
Jim Newcome, Duke
John Richter, N. C. State
Ernie Wiggins, Wake Forest
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM
Lennie Rosenbluth, North Carolina
Grady Wallace, South Carolina
Jack Williams, Wake Forest
Pete Brennan, North Carolina
Jack Murdock, Wake Forest
SECOND TEAM
Tommy Kearns, North Carolina
JOHN NACINCIK, MARYLAND
Ray Pericola, South Carolina
Joe Quigg, North Carolina
Bob Cunningham, North Carolina
1958
FIRST TEAM
Pete Brennan, North Carolina*
Lou Pucillo, N. C. State
Tommy Kearns, North Carolina
Jim Newcome, Duke
Herb Busch, Virginia
:::Unanimous selection
SECOND TEAM
David Budd, Wake Forest
John Richter, N. C. State
Paul Schmidt, Duke
JOHN NACINCIK, MARYLAND
NICK DAVIS, MARYLAND, TIED
Bucky Allen, Duke, tied
41
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM
Pete Brennan, North Carolina*
NICK DAVIS, MARYLAND
Lou Pucillo, N. C. State
CHARLES McNEIL, MARYLAND
Tommy Kearns, North Carolina
* Unanimous selection
SECOND TEAM
Bucky Allen, Duke
Bob Vernon, Duke
Ray Stanley, North Carolina
AL BUNGE, MARYLAND
Bobby Joe Harris, Duke
1959
FIRST TEAM
Lou Pucillo, N. C. State
York Larese, North Carolina
John Richter, N. C. State
Doug Moe, North Carolina
Carroll Youngkin, Duke
SECOND TEAM
Lee Shaffer, North Carolina
George Stepanovich, N. C. State
Howard Hurt, Duke
Paul Adkins, Virginia
CHARLES McNEIL, MARYLAND
AWARDS
Player of Year— Lou Pucillo of N. C. State
Coach of Year — Harold Bradley of Duke
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM
Lou Pucillo, N. C. State
John Richter, N. C. State
Lee Shaffer, North Carolina
Paul Adkins, Virginia
George Stepanovich, N. C. State
FIRST TEAM
Len Chappell, Wake Forest
Lee Shaffer, North Carolina
AL BUNGE, MARYLAND
York Larese, North Carolina
Choppy Patterson, Clemson
SECOND TEAM
Bob McGillivray, N. C. State
Doug Moe, North Carolina
York Larese, North Carolina
Howard Hurt, Duke
Carroll Youngkin, Duke
1960
SECOND TEAM
Art Whisnant, South Carolina
Dave Budd, Wake Forest
Paul Adkins, Virginia
Billy Packer, Wake Forest
Bob DiStefano, N. C. State (tied)
Howard Hurt, Duke (tied)
AWARDS
Player of Year — Lee Shaffer of North Carolina
Coach of Year — Bones McKinney af Wake Forest
ALL-TOURNAMEN'l
FIRST TEAM
Len Chappell, Wake Forest
Doug Kistler, Duke
Howard Hurt, Duke
Lee Shaffer, North Carolina
York Larese, North Carolina
FIRST TEAM
Len Chappell, Wake Forest
Art Heyman, Duke
York Larese, North Carolina
Doug Moe, North Carolina
Billy Packer, Wake Forest
SECOND TEAM
Carroll Youngkin, Duke
Dave Budd, Wake Forest
John Frye, Duke
Bob DiStefano, N. C. State
Paul Adkins, Virginia
1961
SECOND TEAM
Art Whisnant, South Carolina
Tony Laquintano, Virginia
Ken Rohloff, N. C. State
Choppy Patterson, Clemson
Howard Hurt, Duke (tied)
bob Mcdonald, md. (tied)
42
AWARDS
Player of Year — Len Chappell of Wake Forest
Coach of Year — Bones MeKinney of Wake Forest
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM
Len Chappell, Wake Forest BILL STASIULATIS, MARYLAND
Art Heyman, Duke Scotti Ward, South Carolina
Billy Packer, Wake Forest Dave Wiedeman, Wake Forest
John Frye, Duke Carroll Youngkin, Duke
Art Whisnant, South Carolina Choppy Patterson, Clemson
1962
ALL-CONFERENCE
PTRST TEAM SECOND TEAM
Len Chappell, Wake Forest Larry Brown, North Carolina
Art Heyman, Duke Dave Weideman, Wake Forest
Jeff Mullins, Duke John Punger, N.C. State
Art Whisnant, South Carolina Tony Laquintano, Virginia
Jon Speaks, North Carolina State Jim Hudock, North Carolina
AWARDS
Player of Year — Len Chappell, Wake Forest
Coach of Year — Bob Stevens, South Carolina
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM
Len Chappell, Wake Forest Dave Weideman, Wake Forest
Jim Brennan, Clemson JERRY GREENSPAN, MARYLAND
Art Heyman, Duke Bob Robinson, South Carolina
Jeff Mullins, Duke Ronnie Collins, South Carolina
Billy Packer, Wake Forest Art Whisnant, South Carolina
1963
ALL-CONFERENCE
FIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM
Art Heyman, Duke Jay Buckley, Duke
Billy Cunningham, North Carolina Larry Brown, North Carolina
Jeff Mullins, Duke Bob Woollard, Wake Forest
Dave Wiedeman, Wake Forest Frank Christie, Wake Forest
Larry Brown, North Carolina Buzzy Harrison, Duke
AWARDS
Player of Year — Art Heyman, Duke
Coach of Year — Vic Bubas, Duke
ALL-TOURNAMENT
FIRST TEAM SECOND TEAM
Art Heyman, Duke Jay Buckley, Duke
Jeff Mullins, Duke Larry Brown, North Carolina
Dave Wiedeman, Wake Forest Bob Woollard, Wake Forest
Billy Cunningham, North Carolina Frank Christie, Wake Forest
Ken Rohloff, N.C. State Buzzy Harrison, Duke
43
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
1963-64 Freshman Basketball Schedule
DATE
OPPONENT
Dec.
2
Virginia
Dec.
4
Georgetown
Dec.
9
Catholic University
Dec.
10
Loyola (Frosh)
Dec.
14
West Virginia
Dec.
16
Ft. Belvoir
Jan.
6
American University
Jan.
21
St. Johns
Feb.
1
George Washington
Feb.
5
West Virginia
Feb.
8
DeMatha
Feb.
14
American University
Feb.
15
Navy Plebes
Feb.
18
Catholic University
Feb.
20
Virginia
Feb.
25
Georgetown
LOCATION
Home
Away
Away
Home
Home
Home
Home
Away
Away
Away
Home
Home
Away
Home
Away
Home
(6:15)
(3:45)
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL COACH: Frank Fellows
44
UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
Final 1962-63 Freshman Basketball Statistics
Neil Brayton G 16 135 77 60 .779 52 330 20.6
Gary Ward F 16 132 80 58 .725 40 322 20.1
Jack Clark F 16 97 79 72 .911 35 266 16.6
Rick Wise - C 16 S3 65 48 .736 60 214 13.4
Mike DeCosmo G 16 79 46 36 .783 47 194 12.1
Dick Mueller G 16 33 30 16 .533 49 82 5.1
Bill Franklin G 15 22 19 13 .684 14 57 3.8
Terry Truax F 16 14 7 2 .286 27 28 1.8
Bill Siedling G 9 0 2 0 .000 2 0 0.0
Maryland Totals 16 591 405 305 .753 321 1494 93.4
Opponent Totals 16 403 447 288 .644 286 1094 68.4
INDIVIDUAL SINGLE-GAME HIGHS
TP Scored Brayton
FG Scored Brayton
FT Scored Clark
FT Attempted Clark
Georgetown Frosh
Georgetown Frosh
Loyola Frosh
Loyola Frosh
Feb. 4 37(15fg,7ft)
Feb. 4 15
Feb. 19 11(13 fta)
Feb. 19 13(made 11)
SEASON RECORD (14-2)
Towson Catholic H.S.
(H)
91-36
Mackin H.S.
(H)
96-56
Georgetown Frosh
(A)
72-88
George Wash. Frosh
(A)
98-69
St. Johns H.S.
(A)
77-64
Georgetown Frosh
(H)
105-74
Virginia Frosh
(A)
101-73
Catholic U. JV
(A)
91-71
DeMatha H.S.
(H)
67-51
Navy Plebes
(A)
83-89
American U. Frosh
(H)
107-67
Virginia Frosh
(H)
96-66
George Wash. Frosh
(H)
121-71
Loyola Frosh
(H)
95-72
Fort Belvoir
(H)
90-64
Catholic U. JV
(H)
104-74
45
INDOOR TRACK
HEAD COACH:
James Kehoe
season.
1962-63 Dual
Lost 0.
(Maryland '40) 17th
meet record; Won 1,
LETTERMEN RETURNING:
Ed Bennett, Don Boyer, Ed Bury, Dick
Calgaro, Mike Cole, Bob Collura, Paul
Davis, Olaf Drozdov, Mike George,
Tom Krueger, Steve Lamb, Rodney
Lambert, George Leonard, Stu Mark-
ley, John Prettyman, Walt Samora,
Dick Sheer, Ramsay Thomas, Oliver
Thompson, Tony Torrice, Bob Vermil-
lion, Don Wann.
1962-63 CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS:
Mike Cole Broad Jump (22-8J/4)
*John Prettyman 600 yard run (1:12.5)
Bob Vermillion 700 yard high hurdles (8.8)
*John Belitza Pole Vault (15-1%)
Dick Smith 880 yard run (1:52.8)
Chris Stauffer 700 yard low hurdles (7.6)
*Bill Grey, Chris Stauffer,
John Prettyman, Dick Smith Mile Relay (3:20.2)
^CONFERENCE MEET RECORDS
NOTES:
Maryland has won eight ACC championships in a row and nine of the
ten held.
John Belitza became the first collegian to break the 16 foot mark in
the pole vault at Boston last January.
Dick Smith's time of 2:09.3 in the 1000 yards last Winter was the
fastest run by an American citizen last season indoors.
With 22 lettermen back, the picture is fairly bright, but the most
encouraging signs are to be found on coach Kehoe's frosh squad
which appears loaded.
Jan.
11
Jan.
11
Jan.
30
Feb.
1
Feb.
7
Feb.
13
Feb.
15
Feb.
22
Feb.
29
Mar.
7
1964 SCHEDULE
Massachusetts Knights of Columbus Boston, Mass.
Richmond Invitational Richmond, Va.
Millrose Games New York, N.Y.
Boston A. A Boston, Mass.
Inquirer Games Philadelphia, Pa.
New York Athletic Club New York, N.Y.
Navy Annapolis, Md.
National A.A.U New York, N.Y.
All-Eastern Games Baltimore, Md.
Atlantic Coast Conference Meet Chapel Hill, N.C.
46
SWIMMING
HEAD COACH:
Bill Campbell (Springfield '53) 8th
season as coach. Seven year record:
Won 62, Lost 22.
1962-63 RECORD:
Won 10, Lost 2.
ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE
RECORD:
Won 5, Lost 2.
Tri-champions of the Atlantic Coast
Conference.
CO-CAPTAINS:
Ron Squiers and Doc Dunphy.
LETTERMEN RETURNING:
Mike Bershak, Dick Dahl, Doc Dunphy, Hoe Beng Fong, Jim Geary,
Kevin Gilson, Tom Manfredi, Mike McMahon, Raoul Rebillard, Ron
Squiers, Kenny Wall, Bob Windrow.
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS IN 1963:
Maryland won the conference meet at Raleigh and finished third
behind North Carolina and North Carolina State to tie with the
Wolfpack and the Tarheels for the crown. The same trio shared the
title in 1961 with Maryland winning outright in 1960 and 1962.
NOTES:
Graduation hit the Terps hard, and unless the sophs come through,
coach Bill Campbell feels that the team will be hard pressed to equal
last year's 10-2 overall mark, the ACC crown, and the Eastern Inter-
collegiate Relay Carnival title.
Co-captain and all-American Ron Squiers handles the diving very
well, and there are good prospects in the butterfly, freestyle and
sprint events.
Here again a good frosh team appears to be a very encouraging sign,
with Baltimore's Phil Denkevitz, and two other high school ail-
Americans, Joe Brey and Mac Pardew, ready to go.
1963-64 SCHEDULE
Dec. 7 Eastern Collegiates New Brunswick, N.J.
Dec. 14 North Carolina State College Park
Dec. 18 American University College Park
Jan. 10 Virginia College Park
Jan. 11 V.M.I _ College Park
Jan. 18 Navy Annapolis
Feb. 1 Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pa.
Feb. 7 South Carolina Columbia, S.C.
Feb. 8 Clemson Clemson, S.C.
Feb. 10 Wake Forest _ Winston-Salem, N.C.
Feb. 11 Duke Durham, N.C.
Feb. 15 Washington and Lee College Park
Feb. 21 North Carolina College Park
Feb. 27-28-29 A.C.C Chapel Hill, N.C.
47
WRESTLING
HEAD COACH: ■■■
William "Sully" Krouse (Maryland gj
'41) 17th season. f
16 YEAR RECORD:
Won 92, Lost 42, Tied 3. gfi
1962-63 RECORD:
Won 6, Lost 2, Tied 0.
1962-63 ACC RECORD:
Won 4, Lost 0.
Champions of the Atlantic Coast Con-
ference, winning conference tourna-
ment with 103 points.
CO-CAPTAINS:
Marshal Dauberman and Fred Sentner.
\V
LETTERMEN RETURNING:
Nelson Aurand, Marshall Dauberman, Tim Geiger, Bob Kopnisky, Dave
Ott, Fred Sentner, Amando Soto, Gary Wikander.
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS:
115 lbs. — Roger Neutze 157 lbs. — Bob Kopnisky
130 lbs.— Ron Maunder 167 lbs.— Amando Soto
137 lbs. — Dave Ott 177 lbs. — Marshall Dauberman
147 lbs.— Sam Bossert 191 lbs.— Tim Geiger
Heavyweight — Gary Wikander
OUTSTANDING WRESTLER OF ACC TOURNAMENT:
Bob Kopnisky, 157 pound class.
NOTES:
Maryland has won ten consecutive conference titles, 1954-63. The Terps
have won 70 of the possible 88 individual titles.
The Terp matmen have won 55 straight conference matches including
the last nine in the old Southern Conference. Maryland has never
had a losing season with a 5-5 mark in 1948, the first season that
wrestling was a major varsity sport in College Park being the closest.
Maunder and Bossert were ACC champs all three varsity years. Dauber-
man has won two straight championships in his two years of competi-
tion so far.
Terps have had 137 and 147 pound champs all ten years.
Maryland's conference record since the ACC was formed: 46-0-0.
1963-64 SCHEDULE
Dec. 6-7 Coast Guard Tourney New London, Conn.
Dec. 13 North Carolina State College Park
Dec. 19 Virginia Charlottesville. Va.
Dec. 27-28 Wilkes Tournament Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Jan. 11 Penn State College Park
Jan. 21 Pittsburgh College Park
Feb. 15 Navy Annapolis
Feb. 22 North Carolina College Park
Feb. 29 Duke College Park
Mar. 6-7 A.C.C. Tournament College Park
Mar. 26-27-28 N.C.A.A. Tournament Ithaca, N.Y.
48