| game wasn't that the Cyclones 1 Iowa State Collapses After Early Lead— K-STATE SMASHES CYCLONES, 98- 11 By Staff Writer. KANSAS CITY, MO.—There was a “cyclone” loose in Muni- cipal Auditorium here Wednes- day afternoon but it wasn’t the Iowa State basketball team which bears that nickname. Kansas State, going into the | second quarter trailing by three, rushed home 30 points in 10 minutes to build a solid base for an eventual 98-77 victory. Iowa State, owner of a sur- prise 25-22 lead at the end of the first quarter, suddenly became very impotent at scoring, making one field goal in an eight-point second pe- riod. The Wildcats, bys virtue of the victory in the losers’ bracket in the annual Big Seven tourna- ment, finished ‘fifth. Iowa State wound up sixth. The surprise in Iowa State’s | lost by 21 points but that they & lost by only 21 points. after be- ing haunted by such a horrible eight minutes, _ It was 52-33 at intermis- sion, but Coach Chick Suth- erland’s team scrapped back to cut the lead to 70-58 and they might have better if center Ch can and, later, Don D hadn’t fouled out. Duncan is the Cyclones’ big-’ gest at 6 feet 5 inches. And he was also their best with 21 points and. 12 rebounds. It was also Chuck’s absence in the sec- |. ond quarter—he was taken out with three fouls—that opened the gates, 14 Straight Points. It was a 32-30 game, favor of K-State, when Duncan went out. Starting at 38-32, the Wildcats ripped off 14 straight points to run up their halftime lead. By the time the Cyclones got in scoring stride again, they trailed by 24 points at 59-35. A problem that will be- come familiar during the yay. In the first half: largely. 6-11 Jerry g, who bagged 14 points. Jung, who can out-rebound most of the Cyclones standing flatfooted (and generally does), was removed early in the sec- ond half. The report is that he had a dent in his brow which needed X-ray. Balanced scoring—tnere were five Wildcats who tallied 11 or more—was a big aid to the Kansas State, which shot 47 per cent. Jesse Prisock was high with 16.’ Starts 2 Newcomers. Sutherland started a pair of newcomers, guard Tom LeBuhn and forward Howard Johnson, and both played well, Johnson, a good shot, tallied 13 points, six less than the ever-valuable Dutch Van Cleave. Kansas State’s 98 points was the highest ever scored inar egulation game in this tournament. That 103-102 victory by Stanford over ' Iowa State was under experi- mental rules. The Wildcats barely sie, hitting 100. Reserve guard Bob | Smith missed two free throws after the game had ended. Kansas Ree lowa State—77. Prisocs,f a % Davis,f ; 3 Nims, f 3 Wetter,f ny” Nn 2 8] WOPRKOHUONHE A. V'nCleave. g Frahn,g Johnson, ¢ Totals Stauffer, g Poore,g Bullock,g Totals 38 22 28 Score by quarters: Kansas State ..22 30 20 26—98 | Iéwa State ....25 8 25 19—T77 Free throws missed—Kansas State: | Prisock, Wilson 3, B. Smith 2. J. | Smith, “Jun x Frary, Snyder 3; Iowa State: Dav LeBuhn, DeKoster, Dun- j can 5, Dale “2 Van Cleave 6, OROWENNARHUNSCWAA eee tw Bibs ce no | ; | HOAs yOaNNNEgT ROME eH Ho: