( yo ‘iil acs / " re TF waa hes = hos oe Cu ‘het 182 2 _ ! eit: dl nail : vi, 1a ote BH 1 TY cl 0 ete at ll ee ND wW-35 71 Th vi, TL Med | & 1v =) Oe oe CF ey (tet Ie IS us (He) wae ss | ¥ oh My Ide th te $A VR on a) ‘ef #7 yy owiede 16 oA ae (geet 7°? Ft Me lean ie eet a i een Cee oe es h-39 ae Bee: ag ae at 67 ay te eT naw eh Uk ia 47 ip ee ass & FS et Yh OF i ee Pe ve bu tee Ot OAD ws see as 0 1h he Oe 29-0 of? 47 BS 24-39 1p or VE. OV 54-94 %! 7b AV a4 we Mls. SS 29-39 14 67 OG ee 599~ 36/03 33 -Gay “oF y nba LONG DISTANCE RUNNING By the late E, C. "Billy" Hayes, former. cbach,of Indiana University — : Reprinted from the National Collegiate , Track Coacheg*Association Notes 6f Jung, 22, °2:3, 1939.™ Av whe 17 oF VSS 30-0 23 62 At Fe-s1 eM Re MV L897 33 44 Cu 22-34 18 -70 ray Abetege. TG. &% Heath. ead. Hie ct ia TS ried) wm fl nv ev-3d HY ¥0 VS) MU be SF 22 7 Gy viet! +7. £0 Vs. MU ede 2G 44 LY On? 1464. Wh My wte27 20 Ls WU :%Ord4 24 74 MS eS wedge oe yu 1-37 Mek oe Up pe aoe bh es 1% oy: 2 lls bP ge vey OV coat 6 th nv g-37 ’ u ) D 4 ee | : , es 19-3 ” ov. uae “/ OF BA D wy Me MY 33-48 *F = lied 3-37 wy b> - ah ak wet vay VS, | aegf 25-40 ,f Tt V3 Ov tin} 4 aot e4 | appa FT apy TH Oe vi. St mr ¥l peewee sae dat >. fete MK 6V ath Is GS a ae yt Ret | 2h a 750-6 60-3 § 6-3 n¢ 293- Bes yes e CT ee =n Soe. ‘ ba) ae >) Ce eee eae PA ee 3 a tte mR Cn Ree bi Tes Bie a eal ale bs ed aa gates 4 Bs i i 1c it a eee Se PEAY jet In 53 OU *: 32 oe 3 by the ov. ai faery | 6! OMS i ode Piidtelcceo: Whtand ode as CU B3eS2 Sa 62 Bide WRG MR vaadi koe yrinncs hess boKiaht ok Aaydtbssdiseg Gf MU eI wy) 14. WS ey rYR FD 24. 22. ye RT Ra cdl Bhs chien OS = VS. out. tin eR in pe a ee my 22550 * — 2 ‘ 2 Boys hye Bh ORR V8 ee 5b NU d2- FS 24 xO st sf i. 25 32 SK 32 9y vs te Ee he aes sok in ee ee ee 5 Go-43 tS 4D F ay-w 31 1% gies vont ao SS biome ae rt as ap | a7 leahio Soe A 32 4] eee ee Aton 3g sapien toe Ge os? yigese: cay ep tigen A: OM agg o's = an ane dagees appabeaggtieccd he TE MY e4~F3 + Gr Ls 47 eu 3K 2 Se ay “ie yr- 4b 30 &b ~ vag to ar 2 le eo Ina Cy 30-39 17 Te se ies" P-H au = av! fig, ast" aay 59-6 we ee KDrev ov" as eee Meet 1393 "aot Pees. er lb 41 he can talk to himself a Little bit when his legs or arms or whatever it is are beginning to give ‘him trouble, he will be able to overcome that and go along and hold pace, If he follows pace, then his competitor is doing the job for him, If he is to depend entirely on his competitor he can go along more fully relaxed Physically and mentally, But the boy who can take responsibility and make pace on the watch with an alert mind, is the boy ‘who is really going to make records. When these boys have finished cross-country and later go into the more inten- sive work for track events, you all work at the same basis, using over-distance, at distance and under distance, You work over distance at a much slower pace, You work them at their distnnce & little on slower pace, and you work them under distance and at a faster pace. Of course, your distances are divided up. You give them pace as you think they need it, If they are two-milers and work on running 68, 69, 70,.72 quarters for the first mile, they will need considerable work on that pace. They are al- '. ways trying to develop faster pace on sustained effort, You never get away from that, That is the reason you give them under distance work in the form of quarters, two-twenties, six-sixties and half miles as the situation demands and as the individual demands, and I would not urge ony of you to follow any program that I would ever set up for any single man, You can think of it in terms of your men, but if you start to give one man another man's program of work you are likely to have trouble on your hands. Everything depends on that individual. No two men whom I have had have been able to take exactly the same schedule of work, You all know that I am a firm believer in over-distances for it gives them the preliminary background from the standpoint of health. It enables them to go through competition and to recuperate. They are not just athletes and nothing else, you want them to be feeling good and mentally alert on their academic work, and consequently you have to keep that in view when you make your assignment, Boys cannot be tired from one day to another, They must recuperate, That is why I give them over-distance work as a background, then when the boy is sup- posed to run himself out in competition I find that he can recuperate with safety. It is an impossibility for him to exhaust himself if he has what I call the right kind of background. Of course, full recuperation for further competition is another matter, That requires some thirty minutes or an hour, but I do think it is very important to remember that background governs the ability to recuperate from day to day. When I switch these distances and have intermediate grounds, I have two-milers running with milers andI have milers running with half- milers, and then I can throw them all together to make the program of work interesting. When you divide up the men into relay groups and try to break the monotony | of the grind of the so-called distance events I find that these fellows thrive on it. They are all interested in team work, Thatis, men often do better in relays than at any other type. Ofttimes you can place unexperienced men in relays with good men and the first thing you know they will surprise you and do better than they have ever done before. That is one method we use in stimulating boys who otherwise would be nothing but followers. It is a great thing to have a good boy who can be a good leader; and if you have two or three it is still better. So if you are able to change the leadership-- I give one boy the responsibility one day and then give another boy the responsi-‘ bility another day on the assignment, of making pace, I keep switching those ae Basketball, March 2, 1955, at Norman, Oklahoma OKLAHOMA A&M (38), OKLAHOMA (3k) Fe FleA PF TP Reb FO-A Fl=A PF Carter, £ le? N68 2 15 WW Harti ef 6 3 (Of Maloney, f 6—2, OB 3 12 TL Abbey, f a 385 5 Shafer, c 16 Ol /< . 2 kh Bacher, c dnl0 3h 2 Barnhouse, g 2210 Onl |} NL 6 Lane, g O-10 2, 2 Wright, g¢ Oell O=1 2 1 hk Babb, g OO @h 2 ) Thoms 4 pe Totals cacos 15-6], 8x19 16 38 : 4h a Field goal percentage: 21.6% _ Field goal percentage: 20.0% ay Free throw percentages 12.1% 3 Free throw percentages =e - SCORE BY HALVES: Oklahoma A&M 21 17 == 38 Oklahoma 20 ly — 3h OFFICIALS: Joe Conway and Cliff Ogden. eo Sumaytery 7 1 ine wens FT ET, PF TP EXFIR PE... Rs CU Se Me 34 _ eh vis rs. pike tae 0 76 vue eS | pu Mu PEST 1a “¥Ee vEm v bee 3 u Gg CU -- WY Ls - $3 is va yg, MU L3- " (4. x4 Ft eu eth te UR “i ee a a ms OMr OR RIM: Ref no: FI. MEU 20°39 14 Lg — Ve eT ws Ao AWM Jats cr oor DUI SN A Lowe WO ameggs age aE mMurNY Ube 3m UP We ow wu aae 3g 40. 13 KU-OU IT-76G 0 4 47 VS OU ja-ed Is Ts | efecy WB-ee 14a Re we AM 174. fe 6 tt-myv 13-3 ah ide Ws MU TR de ee Le NUR RAR AEE Ye ob VS MUNFORD AS KT vu-oV PP WE theo The Mba Of, 3b: MI yoda re CU yee one bow hs Court bate gr dh es FB musovnss- $2 14 a wh OUD 6190 OTE CCK WHI pe bP lh» a wee ie ese GO age fhe a ge pen oe ee ee CUCM BE PT he. atk oe Tbe tones eh 7 med or aa At Ty Be Sn As tae Age 4 I-31 ee Cee oP bl . Fiboyp. Je vs, Gi 24-40 bores: 77 FY ony Le 34 per ien pole nee OU YT-3L ae” Bey 7 a oT Paps 5 ae paea vetldes Job cmebaqps cee Bap yoke ts p§q. by ache wr. PY Ty I 341554 Ae - LONG DISTANCE RUNNING Nick and Tom and { are fergunaje enough to have had some good boys. The reason we have bad goed boys is net because they receive good goaching, but because we have boys who want to run. Thet ts the firet requisite. You have get to find boys who really want to run, aad like and love te run, When these beys are little fellows, ofttimes they get a foundetion that should be credited to the parents and environmest end will make some coach famous, Boys who get eut and run, and run in their playing, until they are tired and then rest awhile, and _ then rum and rest and run egain arc building an excellent background for running im high school and collegs, And we have the little boy who refuses te be licked, except temporarily. That competitive spirit continues ag he grows older aad reaches the high school and college age. In my werk with boys, the most tater- esting @hing te me has been the devclopment of them. I -ffnd_real satisfaction in guiding a boy who has an ambition to de something and really enjoys it. There is no satisfaction in coaching boys who want te compete when they are not ready for competition. , I like to think of the development of these boys on a sound basis se that + the boy is acquiring a foundation of health, which involves strength, vitality and endurance, and which wiil enable him te go through competition en hig natural vitality and have the power te recuperate quickly from his effort. Well prepared contestants often feel better in the second racc than they do in the firet, and after they have run two races they are not worn out. The results of my experience con- vince me that it is an entirely individual problem. I try to learn as much ag I can about the boy, his background and home life aad opportunity for play. It helps to learn what his hobbies are and why he came te college. We must safely guide him. Work should be given in casy stages. Alternate running and walking is a - sound bapis te build up crese-county running. It invelves every kind of form used in runming and I have found it more succesef(ul in developing strength, vitality and endurance than to just keep pouring the work to the boy on the track. He has more interest in his werk, Up and down hill werk is very important as a background for @istanee running, You cannot everiesk this monotony that comes from eue- tained effert, If you have @ scenic cougse, that breaks the monetony, it will en- courage greater effert, Fer instance, Tom Jones has a very fine cross-county course sround the shores of 2 lake. 18 is not monotonous. Niek's course i¢ not so good in that respect as Tom's course, Our course is up and down hill, We change courses. We have three or four that we run go that I do not ict a boy feel thet there is the grind of that same old course day after day and I find that he has more inter- est in hig work, This preliminary work of building up by means of cress-ceunty gces through the walking and running stages, and you reduce the walking and in- crease the reaning. You have your upgrade work which of cpurse ie slow but the principle ! vse an wphill werk is making the © oy realize that a hill er an upgrede ia a chal) Longe to him. Whea he comes te an upgrade, instead of beginning to give up on it and slowing down, we have the boy accept the hill as a challenge, just like the hill were another impertent competitor, and a serious one, He must pay attention to his foym in ruaning uphill ead when he reaches the top of the bill or the grade or whatever it happens te be im degree he dees not slow up. He comes to the level and his form changes, then be trices te go out and run a gesd pace. Eventually he will ole a} a “Pt, “eonard Wood ( 78) Atha FT-FTA PF TP 425 16 8-10, 16 O40 Buk Q-0 0-0 5-6 3=5 405 Le 1-2 - Burne tt Davies | Lumpe: a Mills- - Poll ock ‘Rothbert oo ona 8 a 13 14 ~~» oo ew NM OO OolUlUtKMthlUmlUlehUrlCUf su =) n oc ew “a « ae 25 28-36 16 78 Kdnsas 3 (65) | FO FT-FTA. PF TP Cox eo (oe. Divich — 4 5-9 Green 23 B44 Hurst eo ee Jets 1 O-O L-2 79 Qa2 o-0 L-3 0-0 , | - eS oOo Johnston Toft ‘Werr en _ Wenger Wolfe Albert s re a ey OD & - ay © @ @ © 8 #* ® O ~s = + a uw 6.4 we Oe 8 ‘tialftime score - Fte “eonard Wood 413 KU 35 Officiials: Hike liuyphree and Russ Sehon | » - D - FINAL STATISTICS Kansas vs Iowa State - oC Lawrence, Kansas, February 8, 1955 oe | OFT’ DEF TOTAL KANSAS ($ REBNDS Brainard, .f 2 aX o Davenport, f 2 — en, > : >» &. % 6 Pa Jonns Toft, cs. Alberts, ¢ Anderson : ker, £ Dobbs He itholt, . Hol. J c ton fe Half Time Score: “xu Ge Is 30. Officials: Ronnie Gibbs and John Lloyd — ‘ ee ee FIRST HALF STATISTICS . oe : Kansas vs Iowa State _ — Lawrence , as, February 8, 1955 oe | OFF REBNDS DEF TOTAL - : | Hollinger, ¢ Hamas TOTALS Li@| 24 | Hoja % S if ' TEAM REBOUNDS ; istare toms | yal o9[snel ¢ Half Time Score: 7 | *, Officials; Ronnie Gibbs and John Lloyd ? | PINAL STATISTICS a : i Kansas vs Iowa State : Lawrence, Kansas, February 8, 1955 , Te Orr DEF TOTAL Er REBNDS _ REBNDS - POT NTS Por PTA FGA KANSAS (. Brainard, f Daver - ¥v SUM, - Green, | q PG co 8% the, ‘ 9 &. Padgett, ad Johnson; @= "fa Toft« 606i <4 Alberts, G50: “ Anderson : Parker, @ Pee Dobbs, 8. oe Hoitholt,. Oita Hollinger, 4 Johnston, 2 Wolfe, 7 t KANSAS TOTALS. tay oo a . P . - a ? oh be Pee ae ’ oat Ahan Pe! iia cael I OCA 8 Ct W A ih t.§ SDgpine * ‘a = 2 > ~~ retain pone ad | — = sani meee , . a ‘ ° aur ob ; Ri myaery et He APE we cer omen” Pie 9 ess a | cra Fe ph at Fr é : we 7 sa l é * — WS Me ee | % se gona 8 at; BiSets ee: ete & ‘i er er Liss e 2035 wary At< 3 ; ¥ e+ “ toon tes he ty ; le, > ee Fidei + *. pate = i= 7 ~ s as ; % ao a Se : ‘i 5 itt ean gh ie Re ~~ <<“, * $ < wor, * 7 =" = \t 7g o 3 tue: + a” = i . a yew \ lee a a a se 3 @« * as * . ‘ rs : 7 5-Ates . , “i { 75 . *s ow 7 , i 5 ii %/ oe tt f percents oe Rp Mt as ares f r ‘ - AS teary s e ~ ~ woe a * : s 2 * ca + + s . + 7 a * . t pein. eee a MG shaw a * : * Pac a Gem re ee - | $ # ae PRE ee | r San 6a . , are apie ’ tis * tu ry £44 : 43 bh QP ee § 3 ‘ . SB BRS Bot ay ~ & “ “a & 4 on * 2 7 ®. , . hens t paves _ wins cm. - * 2 - wee — <. € % > = ; moe? at ui > + . at 4a” apo 7 my eta +3 - as o ™ ~ - re ?. very - one ~ ‘ a ? ‘ ; 5 ~ ait FES t ‘ * ; . 4 “ = we =. ; ei i reas & a & - ‘ 2 = a “ ae : tO at ht we sh Sys ‘ oe ; * “6 “ z 4 ; ges oe * . or * by * 7 i é rit’ ¢ t 4 e &? Se eb Sek NO Pgs 2 * eae . J , « . i . ‘ % 2 fe ete Elstun, f ‘King, f Be ei Team ‘Rebounds : FINAL STATISTICS oh Kansas vs Oklahoma: Lawrence, Kansas March 8, 1955 FGA _ — DEF TOTAL Bra , Davenport Di - ” Jett, f tt foft, ¢ Alb Dobbs Heithoit Parker Wolfe Johnston, g team Rebounds KANSAS TOTALS 28 38° Peck, § Be eS i ce $ ORLACMA ToRALS | » Le or ela [1% [Rp le Helf Time Soore: KU 3b ou 32 3 cnrte fals: Mike Oberheiman end oLirr 8 ogden 7 FINAL STATISTICS : Kansas vs Kansas State Lawrence, Kansas, March 1, 1955 ‘ | : , OFF Derk: TOTAL PCT R S __REBND — POINTS £ oO Davenport, f : t z Jett, f Kin - Padgett, f ohnson, ¢ 7016, ¢ S rs b : Heitholt - Hollinger Johnston ar olfe : TEAM REBOUNDS a 7 ee oe KANSAS TOTALS | 2b es i Ls ub | *oi 3... | 9. | 2 Adams, f Schneider, fe tone, c ung, ¢c ynn, Poore er, & Pb we. TEAM REBOUNDS oe K-STATE "TOTALS 2 : lb Stele | 19 | Half Time Score: KU | Uy i. t eS te eS Officials: George and Lloyd — , , - 4 FIRST HALF STATISTICS 9 Kansas vs Kansas State | : '.Lawrence, Kansas, March 1, 1955 . OFF DEF — TOTAL dett.. f Johnson 37 ¢c Albe And b a. Heitholt Hollinger Parker am Rebounds KANSAS TOTALS !5 1371 vo.¢ 1) . -— . aS Team Rebounds K-State T bt Hale #haie score: KO. UY SF a Officials: George and Lloyd 4 : \ smieeemeeiantateiieiaiaihi imate —. NPRASKA, 13, UNE: eR v OF ZaNSAS is? Aso aR E Toners Tat eS = ‘Zoek a co . Fea | Levey Davenport, ¢ | 30 {Bill Brainard, £ | DAP ‘| Maurice King, f _ {7 _Jobn Andergon, PW a Gone Biota, £. iL aA ao oe oO és PTA oe ee ee eee | ot sled x ola : . sy " Jobs Parker, g Sea. Se eS ee Jim Toft, c . {pee ae 4 ee Tt ah j Blaine Hollinger, ¢ | DWP Sb ee Pa | Lewis Johngon, ¢ 16 oS eet Lee Green, f DHE | : / - ee Meet? ld) UT | Sa 4 tS. ys See CU 8s SL ee ee Halftime Score: Kamas 9 /_ we 2S a Ba Ker att eas Kaysas Srare; . Officiaiss ShosGnas Bere Bee Ken Pryor. Oklakows, Oy ‘ Gy 8 welt lesions eo TTT NG aa tt a iat Oa Se niet a ak on Sal Ne Nl a i ee Sports Information Office Kansas State College ) Paul DeWeese, Director KANSAS wae saga STATS | K-State Sb) 2,70 | meny aay V0 Iowa State (67) 34. 7 Yo FG | FGA} FT RBS — FG | FGA] FT } FTA] RBS} PF eg a Adams, f 5 | 3 q Alleman, f OiwtOlortili o- . Hull, £ DeKoster, £ LAS POLO 1S Lt te Kiddoo, f Frahm, f£ ZIP [eT 4eiotl 7 : Powell, f LeBubn, f DNP : Smith, Muehlenthaler, f DNP oe - 4 Stone, f Peterson, f l 4 aed 0. Ae 2 ae — Vogt, £ Slo ott iGis) -G |S a c = © [2 ie 21.2... O : = os Stotler, ¢ Duncan, ¢ 4 tet St ve Ls-15 1/7 3 | Bullock, g oes * lpr a ei eiol so | Poore, g DeRuyter, ¢ DNP __ ae Schneider, g Gaarde, g t O10. . : “de Snyder, g Sandbulte, ¢ / tet Of 0. Vicens, g Thompson, g pao Coen Wallace ee Ly Wetter, g am 10 , Flynn, g | Ok d,| tole Team | Team de TOTALS | 3016841 wD | leet TOTALS Ltd \Jeu a SCORE BY HALVES: Kansas State 38- 4) OFFICIALS: Cliff Ogden (Kansas City, Ks.) ATTENDANCES Ken Pryor (Bartlesville, Okla.) %,000 | _towa state 4x- 45 Basketball, February 16, 1955, at Norman, Okla. KANSAS (87) OKLAHOMA (75) Fe-A FieA PF ‘TP Reb FGA Flos Hart, f bBo Thompson, £ O-L = 00 Bacher, c 8-17 nD i, c¢ ts a O=3 Bak On Brainard, f 7-13 hed Elstum, f 11-23 12 Sohieon 9c 2=9 23 Dobbs, g Ll-2); 306 Anderson, ¢ 2, ed King, £ la2 35 Abbey, f 25 Me fb Hamilton, g 0-2 Totals coo 35-76 17-26 UW, 87 3h Blus, g O-l _O Field Goal Percentage: 6.1%. | Totals ooo 26-69 19=27 15 75 Free Throw Percentage: 650b:%. Fisld Goal Percentage: 0.6%. Free Throw Percentage: 70ch%. co nm OY ND OF UY URN ip wn co A ao 6 ee ee ee Parker, g Pere w 8 o + g YM oF Ff wWHOoRNnp & ww nj Seore by Halves: Kansas . = 7? hO <= 87 Oklahom = 16 29 == 75 OFFICIALS: Cliff Ogden and Vic Glennon. : FINAL BOX SCORE : | | Cetarcade ve. Lowa = | a damned, 1989. Towa State (“7/) - @ © MM RF Oe. © eM oe, Eee eee Totels | 66123 1 4S] 32] 26 “Mel?tdme Scores Cyrog4Po 4O, lows, State 2 | Officials: John Fraser awd Vie Glennon. Atteniences SOSO oe a ‘ Colorado VS~ Kanges at Boulder, Feb.22,1955 Official Box Score weeted) FOA FG FTA Fr PP (‘P Beb 68 (23 |26143|/ [69 | zs | oS 67 \3; | 2s| 77 \7F - 47 Halftime scores 12+ , Contin Zo. , “Offietals: CHET Ogden (Wichita) and Ron Gibbs (St. Thones). Le | FINAL STATISTICS © Se ee Kansas vs foiorade Lawrence, Kansas, January 10,1955 pcT FT $#FTA REBNDS DEF REBNDS FGA FG venvort, stun 0 G - Jett, f Kin Pa ett TEAM REBOUNDS KANSAS TOTALS (69 Jeangera Los ter Ley orgon, Cc arro $s E e » Moc Morrison, . ra - TEAM REBOUNDS COLORADO TOT | Half Time Score: _ 33.3 ay Officials: eens —e and Ron Gibbs 4 ‘a dl ay 3 clu’ FINAL STATISTICS oe Se Kansas vs . wes : : ve v Lawrence, Kansas, January oe wat V0 WGA . PCT FT FTA REBNDS REBNDS PF — POINTS & Davenvort, f oO ‘ic un en Jett, f Kin Padgett, Johnson C: f Cc erson, g 9 9 3 ston, g e ec, & TEAM REBOUNDS | Zz | KANSAS biog Gy [213 \ul 24 9] 23 3] su of a eangera Ranglos, er ardle orson, c rroid, £ nsfiel oc Morrison, g ay, & TEAM REBOUNDS y COLORADO TOTALS| 23} 14 133.3 iq 13 I can oT | : Half Time Score: _ KU TY | a “CU y a o | Officials: Cliff Ogden and Ron Gibbs