THE MICHIGAN DAILY ® THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wolverines gun down Wildcats, 95-84 Against4 Of ublicity.. .. .and Dale Kelley By PHIL HERTZ 0NE OF THE problems with playing for a loser is that no matter how good you play you tend to be ignored. Over the past three seasons Michigan has become accustomed to seeing their all-American Rudy Tomjanovich slighted. Yesterday ano- ther prime example of the overlooked player wandered into the Events Building in a Northwestern uniform. The player was little Dale Kelley, the 5-11 Wildcat guard, Kelley went into yesterday's game with a 23.7 scoring mark, fifth best in the Big Ten, and despite his size was second to backcourt partner Don Adams in rebounding for Northwestern. The little guard also is quite a whiz with a basketball in his hand. He drives incomparably, and often seems to float through the air 'as he moves toward the basket. In addition, he seems to have a knack of finding an open teammate for a # lay-up. A notable example of the latter occurred in the waning se- conds; of yesterday's contest. With the contest out of reach, most players with an oven shot would take, it without a second thought, but Kelley disdained an open 25 foot jumper to hit a teammate for a lay-up. The player, however, botched the pass and his playmaking went for naught. This too is an indication of why Kelley has had trouble getting noticed. Kelley may be too good for his team. The players, at times, seem themselves to be surprised at some of the Galesburg, Illinois senior's moves and passes. Among his teammates only Adams is averaging in double figures, and the team has won only six of its 18 contests this season. THE WORKINQ PRESS has never been known for its ' ability to find the good player on the poor team as Rudy Tom- janovich and Johnny Orr will attest to.. Orr insists that Tom- janovich is the Big Ten's number one player - better than Purdue's Rick Mount, but Mount plays for a winner. The pub- licity has been coming to Rudy only in the last few months when people have begun to put together his cumulative records. Rudy, however, has been aided by his size and rebounding abil- * ity. As a guard, Kelley could supply only points to impress the image makers. Yesterday Kelley showed 6704 fans at the Events Building, many of whom had probably never heard of him before, how to play basketball. The Wildcat star hit on 12 of his 17 field goal attempts and wound up with 34 points. He also led the Wildcats in rebounding with 14 - an unfathomable num- ber for a sub-six-footer. His efforts kept Northwestern even with Michigan for a half, but a 20 point second half performance was negated when his teammates were able to make practically no contribution. Both Michigan Coach Johnny Orr and his Northwestern counterpart Brad Snyder were free with their praise of Kelley. Orr said, "He killed us in Evanston and he did it again today. He's really great." Snyder chimed in with "He played a great game. Ke, kept us in there." The Northwestern coach also prais- ed Kelley's rebounding efforts, noting "He went to the boards real well." TWO OF KELLEY'S opponents also spoke highly of him. Dan Fife said, "He just ate me up. He's better than Dean Mem- inger (one of the .nation's better publicized guards, who plays for a winner at Marquette) because he's quicker." Tomjanovich added, "I couldn't understand how you could foul him when he was dribbling until I had to pick him up on a switch. Now I know- * * * COMMENTARY ON ; yesterday's Michigan - Northwestern game would not be complete without an examination of the p first Michigan basketball crowd since the Daily's Cusumano b asted the fans, the cheerleaders and the band. To no one's surprise, there was little change. The cheerleaders seemed to be trying harder. They were out on the court during the introduction of the players attempt- ing to exhort the fans to new heights without success. The band seemed particularly uncooperative and the cheerleaders com- plained after the game that they could not even secure 'the aid of the drummer in developing the cheers. The fans were as quiet as usual. During the first half they were in such a deep slumber that not even the old reliable Michigan fight song, "The Victors," could rouse them. AFTER VICTORY seemed assured in the second half, the fans, as is usual, came on, and treated the song as more than a prime opportunity to stretch their legs. The crowd reacted like a good basketball crowd for only one sustained period yesterday, and that oddly enough was during halftime when fthe athletic department provided the fans with a midget basketball game between two teams in the Ann Arbor Pioneer High School league. The fans were suddenly fans. They got on the refs, pulled' for their individual young favorites and generally had a good time while the Bombers crushed the Knicks, 13-8. As one wit in the press box commented, "There's the answer to Michigan's crowd problems, hire midgets." By ERIC SIEGEL For the first 18 and a half minutes of yesterday after- noon's game against North- western at the Events Build- ing', Michigan's Rudy Tom- janovich had scored a total of only six points. "I just couldn't get my shots in at the beginning of the game," Tomjanovich said afterwards. "I strained my arch against Purdue last week, and I only got to prac- tice once all week. I guess it hurt my timing a little at first." There was nothing wrong with Tomianovich's timing during the rest of the game, though. Tomjan- ovich scored seven points in the last minute and a half of the first half, and then added 19 in the second stanza to lead the Wol- verines to a 95-84 victory over Northwestern's Wildcats, Tomjanovich also collected 19 rebounds against the Wildcats, with 12 of those coming in the second half as the Wolverines turned a close game into a run- Special To The Daily DULUTH - The University of Minnesota at Duluth com- pleted a sweep of a weekend series by defeating the Michi- gan icers 5-2 last night. away by outscoring the Wildcats 49-38 after going into the half with the score tied, 46 all. DESPITE RUDY'S fine per- formance, however, the senior for- ward does not deserve all t h e credit for t h e Wolverines' win. Michigan was aided by a balanced scoring effort that saw three of its starters besides Tomjanovich finish the game with double fig- ures. "We always get a good game f r o m Tomjanovich," Michigan Coach Johnny Orr said after the game. "When we win, it's when we get some scoring from the other guys out on the floor." In the first half, t h e "other guys" on the floor were Bird Car- ter, Dan Fife and Mark Henry. Fife, who finished the game with 15 points, scored eight of those in the first half, while Henry tallied1 all of his eight points on lay-ups : ,, . . [ and short jumpers in the first 10 minutes of the game. But it was Carter who really kept the Wolverines in the game during Tomjanovich's dry spell. The 6-1 forward, who had a great day with seven of 11 field goal attempts and six of seven free throws, scored 11 of his points in the first half. Carter made all his free throws in the half. M o r e importantly, however, were the Bird's f o u r jumpers from along the baseline. Carter's shooting helped neutral- ize the effectiveness of the Wild- cats' zone defense. As Northwest- ern Coach Brad Snyder said, "We didn't think Carter could shoot that well." Carter's hot-shooting m i g h t have come as a surprise to Snyder, but Northwestern's zone was no surprise to Orr. "We thought they'd play a zone," Orr s a i d. "They had used it before." THE WOLVERINES played like' they expected the zone, too, as' they waited until they had a good shot or worked the ball to a free man underneath t h e basket to build up a seven point lead, 26- 19, with 10:17 left in the first half. In fact, Michigan bombed the Northwestern net the entire half, hitting on 20-of 40 field goal at- tempts and adding six of eight from the free throw line. BUT DESPITE their hot-shoot- ing and their mastery of the Wildcats' 2-3 zone, the Wolverines could not maintain their early lead. Led by 5-11 Dale Kelley, who finished the game as high scorer with 34 points and added 14 re- bounds, and 6-6 Don Adams, who had a dozen points in the first half, the Wildcats came clawing back to knot the score at 33 all with 5:31 left in the half. It wasn't until more than ten minutes later, with 14:07 left in r the game, that the Wolverines were able to shake loose from the Wildcats, A couple of minutes earlier, Snyder had pulled Adams from the game when his taritng forward drew his fourth foul. The effects of his loss weren't immediately apparent, however, as Kelley took up the slack for his teammate, scoring eight points in the first half dozen minutes of the second half. But Adams' loss took its toll a litte later, as the Wildcats aban- doned their 2-3 zone and came out in a man-to-man defense. TOMJANOVICH then started going to the basket more, collect- ing rebounds and finding the range from tne outside. Tomjano- vich repeatedly cleared the boards and hit on two long jumpers in a row as the Wolverines blitzed the Wildcats for 13 points in a row to take a 70-58 lead with 11:31 left in the game. Rodney Ford, who collected 12 of his 16 points in the second half. helped out during that spurt by' scoring on taps and a lay-up. After the Wolverines' 11 point spurt, the Wildcats were through. They never got within nine points of Michigan, as Tomjanovich, Carter, Ford and Fife k ept hit- ting from the floor and foul line. In all, the Wolverines hit just half of their field goal shots and over 70 per cent of their free throws. MICHIGAN ALSO neutralized Northwestern's r e b o u n d i:n gl strength in the second half. The Wildcats out-boarded the Maize and Blue 29-20 in the first half, but the Wolverines, matched them in the rebounding department in, the second half, with both teamsj collecting 23. In fact, in the second half, the Wildcats' only bright spot was Kelley. "He's great, he just tore me up out there," said Fife, who was called upon to guard the 5-11G senior. Kelley, who hit on 12 of 17 shots from the floor and grabbed off 14 rebounds, even impressed Tom- janovich. "He was great," saidl Tomjanovich, the only man on thet floor who had a better day than the Wildcat senior.r SUNDAY SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: ERIC SIEGEL AND PAT ATKINS -Daily-Randy Edmonds Tom janovich grabs the ball STARS COME LATE Frosh whip Tartan babies Right on Rudy Tomjanovi Carter Ford Fife Henry Hayward Bloodworth Fraumann Grabijec MICHIGAN fg ch 31-15 11-7 13-7 11-4 6-4 1-0 5-2 1-0 0-0 Total 79-39 Turnovers-S ft 5-2 7-6 2-2 9-7 I-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 24-I7 r 19 5 5 3 2 1 1 3 0 43 t 32 20 16 15 8 0 4 01 95# Moran Crandall Rentz Adams Kelley Sarno Douglass Berg Preston NORTHWESTERN 16-3 1-1 8-5 0-0 3-0 0-0 11-4 9-6 17-12 16-10 15-8 1-0- 2-0 0-0 1-1 2-1 3-0 0-0 Totals 71-33 29-18 Turnovers-17 7 3 2 14 11 1 2 52 7 10 0 14 34 16 0 3 84 By MORT NOVECK Playing most of the game with- Dut three of their five regular starters, the Michigan freshman basketball team defeated the frosh from Wayne State 101-84 in their prelude to the varsity contest yes- terday. Missing from the court when the game began were John Lockard, Ernie Johnson and the squad's leading scorer, Henry Wilmore. Ac- cording to freshman coach George Pomey the trio was benched for' arriving late to the game. "It's a purely disciplinary thing," he stated. Although the five that did start for the Wolverines played well, something was definitely missing as the frosh were unable to fol- low their usual pattern and break: the game open immediately. The contest started slowly for Michigan as Wayne took a 7-2 lead after two minutes and, held it until the game was 490 seconds >ld when the Wolverines took the lead for the first time, 24-23. The Michigan comeback was led by reserves Dave Sukup and John Roszypal who came off the bench to get things going.I Wayne stayed with the frosh, however, and although the baby blue pulled out to a seven point lead, 30-23, the period ended in a 43-43 deadlock. Michigan took the lead as the second half started but was un- able to move out to any sort of definite advantage. About five minutes into the period, though, the break came when Pomey sent Wilmore into the battle. Wilmore proceeded to score 14 paints in 11 minutes and assisted by the rebounding of Lockard and Johnson, took the team from a two to a 20 point lead, 73-53. Wil- more dazzled the crowd with his ability as he hit on 5-7 from the floor and 4-4 at the line. , The streak finished off the Tar- tans and although they continued to scrap they were never able to. close the gap to less than 13. Once Wilmore was removed the game descended back to its previous level with neither team really able to dominate the other. Both teams had balanced scor- ing attacks, as only one member of each squad failed to score. Bob Solomon was high for Wayne with 27 followed by John Boger with 12 and Vic "Cool Cat" Moses with 10. Bob Rhodin was high f o r Michigan with 19. Trailing h i m were Greg Buss with 17, Steve Bazelon with 16, Wilmore with 14 and Leon Roberts with 10. The totals for Rhodin, Buss and Baze- lon were their season highs. Pomey commented after t h e game on their performances, say- ing that he was pleased with the job that Buss did and that he was progressing well. Although he felt that Bazelon played fairly well and did a good job ion the boards, he still made too many mistakes. Pomey was also pleased with the way the team ran the fast break, stating that "this got us several easy baskets." With the win yesterday the frosh's record is now 6-2. Only three games remain on their sched- ule, two of them against commun- ity college teams. Their season fin- ale, against Henry Ford Com- munity College, originally sched- uled to preceed the Wisconsin game on Feb. 28, has been chang- ed to follow it. Scores Ohio U. 107, Western Mich. 68 North Carolina State 71, Virginia 66 Davidson 73, Virginia Tech 66, o.t. Villanova 92, St. Joseph's 65 Maryland 81, Georgetown 71 Wash, St. 89, So. Calif. 72 Duke 82, West Virginia 70 Georgia 94, Vanderbilt 90 Louisville 71, N. Texas St. 60 St. John's, N.Y. 54, Army 44 Penn 96, Dartmouth 68 Cincinnati 77, Memphis State 63 Duquesne 70, Providence 66 Oklahoma 62, Oklahoma State 57 New Mexico 64, Air Force 61 Florida 70, Auburn 68 Tulsa 70, Bradley 61 Nebraska 84, Kansas 73 Iowa State 89, Missouri 78 Westminster, Pa. 95, Slippery Rock 64 Calvin 71, Kalamazoo 65 Colby 84, Norwich 67 Goshen 83, Huntington 58 Hampden-Sydney 69, W. Maryland 65, o.t. f Ralph, off,' MSU loses By The Associated Press MADISON - Hot-handed Clar- ence Sherrod tallied 30 points as the surging Wisconsin Badgers toppled Michigan State 89-79 in a Big Ten basketball game yester- day. The Badgers held high-scoring Ralph Simpson to 15 points, and were never headed after the first few minutes as they racked up a third straight victory. They are now 3-3 in the Big Ten and 8-8 over-all. Simpson, who entered the game with a 31-point average, couldn't seem to get untracked, and the Spartans trailed 48-35 at the half. Teammate R u d y Benjamin sparked a Spartan rally in the second half and helped pull the visitors to within three points be- fore Sherrod and Lloyd Adams took charge. Adams wound up with 21 points. The defeated dropped Michigan State to a 2-5 Big Ten mark and to 6-11 for the campaign. Wisconsin coach John Powless went all the way with his five starters, except for the final min- ute; when Adams fouled out and way in the half on consecutive was replaced by senior Dave Zink. baskets by Glenn Vidnovic, Dick * * * Jensen and Johnson. * * * l i t k f t . 1 S P'urdue squeaks COLUMBUS - All-American Rick Mount scored 32 points and hit two free throws with five sec- onds left to lead Purdue to an 88- 85 Big Ten basketball victory over Ohio State last night. Mount drilled 18 of his 32 points in the second half helping the Boilermakers to a 5-2 league rec- ord and 12-5 for all games. Jim Cleamons scored 24 of his 28 points to power a second half Buckeye rally. Ohio State drop- ped to 4-3 in the Big Ten and 13- 4 over all. Purdue shot 53 per cent from the loor to Ohio State's 52.6 and held a 43-29 bulge in rebounding. Purdue's front line of George Faerber, Tyrone Bedford and Bob Ford combined for 28 rebounds. Dave Sorenson contributed 24 points to the Ohio State attack, 16 in the first half. Larry Weath- erford added 20 points for Purdue. P u r d u e commanded 13-point leads several times in the first half and led 43-3 2 at halftime be- fore an Ohio State rally sent the Buckeyes to a 75-72 lead with five minutes left. Cleamons' steal and lay up cut the Boilermarker margin to 86-85 with nine seconds to go. Jody Finney fouled Mount and the six- foot-four Boilermaker star con- verted a one and one free thr'ow situation. * * * Hawkeyes fly BLOOMINGTON - John John- son led a second-half runaway Saturday that gave Iowa a 104-89 Big Ten basketball victory over Indiana and kept the Hawkeyes in front in the conference race. Johnson, a 6-foot-7 senior, and Brown, a 6-3 junior, had 33 and 23 points respectively, scoring from all over the court. Irish eke SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Notre Dame, led by Austin Carr's 38 points, captured a 96-95 double; overtime basketball victory over Marquette yesterday. Ninth-ranked Marquette led 81- 79 with five seconds left in the first overtime period when Notre Dame's Tom Sinnott deflected an inbound pass to Carr. Carr scored a layup as the buzzer sounded. Notre Dame scored first in the second overtime and never trailed. Carr's 38 points gave him 675 for the season, a Notre Dame rec- ord. The old mark of 654 was held by Tom Hawkins. Dean Meminger, with 27 points, was high scorer for Marquette, 14- 3 for the season. Notre Dame is 14-5. !1aravich nipped ITUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- A rough, wide open basketball game ended in a brawl between players and fans and a 106-104 Alabama vic- tory over Louisiana State yester- day despite a Southeastern Con- ference record 69 points by LSU's Pete Maravich. Maravich, who played the en- tire game on sore legs, poured in 47 points in the second half to raise his record college basketball career scoring total to 3,157. The 69 points broke a conference game mark of 59 set by Maravich two years ago against Alabama. The loss gave LSU a 6-3 SEC mark and a 12-6 overall record. Alabama is 3-7 in the league and 6-12 for the season. I I Pistons squelch SuperSonics By The Associated Press DETROIT - Dave Bing scored 32 points and Otto Moore added a career high of 27 as the Detroit %%V+A'Jlb Y Wlf . . . ..4~t .V~ t :1A.W..M. Professional Standings L5i Pistons squandered a 20 point lead and then rallied in the final two minutes to beat the Seattle Super- Sonics, 113-109, last night in a National Basketball Association game. The Pistons, playing without coach Bill Van Breda Kolff, who was ejected by referee Bob Rakel In the, second period, stormed ahead 76-56 in the third period. But Seattle bounced back, and with Barry Clemens and Tom Meschery pacing the drive, the SuperSonics caught the Pistons and went ahead twice, the second time at 106-104 with 2:46 left in the game. i New York Montreal Boston Detroit Chicago Toronto St. Louis Philadelphia Pittsburgh Minnesota Oakland Los Angeles NHL East Division 29 10 10 27 12 11 27 12 12 26 15 8 25 17 6 21 21 8 West Division 24 18 7 12 21 17 16 25 8 10 24 14 14 30 8 9 35 5 Pt. GF GA 68 174 112 65 174 126 65 192 195 60 147 128 56 147 108 50 150 149 55 41 40 34 36 23 Yesterday's Results Montreal at Minnesota, Inc. Oakland 1, Toronto 5 Detroit 2, Boston 2 Philadelphia at Chicago, inc. Los Angeles 1, Pittsburgh 3 149 115 127 150 116 159 138 168 112 172 106 189 Los Angeles 31 26 .544 1% ! Phoenix 27 33 .450 7 San Francisco 25 33 .431 8 Chicago 26 35 .426 8Y2 Seattle .23 37 .383 11 San Diego 19 36 .345 12i Yesterday's Results Detroit 113, Seattle 109 New York 121, Cincinnati 114 Los Angeles at Phoenix inc. Philadelphia vs. San Francisco at Oakland Today's Games Milwaukee at Baltimore, afternoon Cincinnati at Boston, afternoon Atlanta at Chicago, afternoon, also will finish 124-124 tie of Nov. 6 San Diego at Los Angeles Philadelphia at Seattle ABA Eastern Division SW LPc t.G Big Ten Standings t W L Pet. Iowa 6 0 1.000 Illinos 5 2, 714 r I be] 0