Sunday, March 1, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, March 1, 1970 THE MICHiGAN DAiLY Page Seven Iowa n'ps Purdue to nab Big Ten title RUDY GUNS IN 35 By The Associated Press Badgers bounce blue -Daily-Thomas R. Copi Tomjanovich drives the lane By ERIC SIEGEL Sports Editor, The appearance of head foot- ball coach Bo Schembechler at yesterday afternoon's basketball game at Crisler Arena warmed the spirits of 7963 Michigan partisans, and the whistles of the men in the striped shirts often. inflamed, the passions of the Wolverine fans. Nothing, however, could warm. up the shooting of the Wolverine cagers, who connected on only 36 of 92 field goal attempts for a dismal 39 per cent and dropped a Big Ten basketball game to the Wisconsin Badgers, 90-86. The loss scuttled the Wolverines' chances for a break-even season this year, leaving them with a record 9-13 with only two games left to play. "We shot poorly," commented Michigan Coach Johnny Orr. "We took 92 shots, which must be some kind of record for us, but we just couldn't put the ball in the basket." THE WOLVERINES' failure to connect from the floor was es- pecially disappointing, as the Maize and Blue took 33 more shots than the Badgers but hit only three more field goals. The Bad- gers, on the other hand, were red hot, sinking just under 56 per- cent of their field goal attempts and hitting on 24 of 29 from the free throw line. Wisconsin's hot-hand, coupled with a 50-42 advantage on the boards, enabled the Badgers to overcome a tendency to give the ball away to the Wolverines. The Badgers were charged with 21 turnovers, 11 in the first half, compared to; eight for the Wol- verines. The Wolverines hawking full- court press didn't help them much when it came to totaling up the score, though, as they repeated- ly failed to turn Wisconsin turn- overs overs into Michigan points. "We'd go out there and steal the ball and then we'd miss the easy DENVER - The Michigan hockey team defeated Denver University last night by the score of 4-2. The Wolverines scored one goal in bothythe first and second periods and added two more in the third to wrap up the win. The scores were by Gagnon in the first period, Slack in the second period and Shaw and Falk in the third. shot under the basket," Orr com- plained afterwards. Missed shots, under the basket and otherwise, were especially costly to the Wolverines in t h e first half, as the Badgers took a 54-43 lead into the lockerrodm at the end of the half. Michigan took 12 more shots from the field than Wisconsin in that half, but man- aged to put the ball in the. bas- ket only 17 times, twice less than the Badgers. The Wolverines showed some im- provement in their shooting in the second half, hitting on 19 of 42 from the floor, but they could only narrow the Badgers margin by four points. THE MAIN REASON the Bad- gers were able to keep the Wolves off their back was a 6-1, 160 pound guard named Clarence Sherrod. Sherrod was the Bad- ger's leading scorer with 28 points, 15 of them coming in the first half. More important than his scor- ing, however, was Sherrod's ball handling. Sherrod repeatedly broke the Wolverines' press, and allowed Wisconsin to play slow down ball for much of the second half. "Sherrod was terrific," Orr said. "He's a great ball-handler. I'd go into a slowdown too if I had Sherrod." Wisconsin Coach John Powles also noted the value of Sherrod's LAFAYETTE - Iowa won the Big Ten basketball title yester- day by coning from behind in the final minutes to defeat Purdue 108-107 despite a record 61 points by the Boilermakers' Rick Mount. The ninth-ranked Hawkeyes went ahead to stay on John Johnson's jump shot from the right corner with 27 seconds to play. That made it 106-105, and Glenn Vidnovic added two free throws with 10 seconds left. Iowa then let Mount drive down the middle for a layup just before the buzzer. The Purdue All-Amer- ican had already broken the Big * * *S COLUMBUS - A nine-foot re- bound shot by Bob Gale with two seconds to play gave Michigan State an 82-80 upset victory over Ohio State in Big Ten basketball here yesterday. The seventh place Spartans, beaten 89-66 by the Buckeyes in their last encounter at East Lan- sing, put together a steady team performance headed by sopho- more Ralph Simpson's 29 points, and were never out of contention. They led throughout the first half except for a brief one-point deficit and enjoyed a 39-30 edge at one time. After a 46-40 half- time deficit Ohio State rallied and went ahead 61-59 on a three point play by Jody Finney who led the Buckeyes with 28 points. * e * * Btg Red sea pled Ten single-game scoring mark of 57 points set by Dave Schellhase of Purdue against Michigan in 1966. The Hawkeyes pushed their con- ference record to 12-0 as they snapped Purdue's 30-game home- court winning streak. The second place Boilermakers are 9-3 in the Big Ten with two games remain- ing for both teams. Four Hawkeye starters, led by Johnson with 26 points, had 20 or more points. Chad Calabria had 25, Fred Brown 23 and Vidnovic 20. IFROCM:THE DRIVER'S SEAT EVANSTON-Northwestern got a three-point play from seldom used sophomore Paul Douglas with 4:33 left to play last night to go ahead to stay and score a 75-66 victory over Indiana in a Big Ten basketball game. Indiana rushed to an early 9-4 lead but Northwestern rallied to take a 28-26 halftime lead. The scored was tied 10 times in the second half before Douglas put Northwestern ahead to stay. Don Adams paced Northwestern with 22 points and Dale Kelley added 14. Kelly now has 515 points for the season to set a Northwest- ern record, erasing the previous mark of 505 set by Joe Ruklick in 1959: By Phil Hertz The deadly troia . .. strikes again SEVERAL WEEKS ago a story ran in The Daily attributing the following quote to "Big Al" Kaufman: "The only thing worse than two Big Ten referees are three Big Ten referees." Big Al did not observe yesterday's 90-86 Michigan loss to Wisconsin, but if he had, he undoubtedly would have spent yes- terday afternoon and last night reiterating his quote. To say the least, the refereeing/ during yesterday's contest left something to be desired. Whether the decisions affected .the final outcome is only conjecture, but nearly everyone in attend- % ance at Crisler arena was singularly unsatisfied with the work of the trio of Tom Ballaban, Pat Sheedy and Orlando Palesse. Among the most dissatisfied observers of yesterday's game was Michigan cage coach Johnny Orr. You could just see the Wolverine mentor suffering on the bench, at least when he was not galloping down the sidelines to protest a call. Orr was par- ticularly upset at the treatment given super-star Rudy Tom- janovich whenever he got near the basket, and he seemed to get more fed up with the reffing as the game reached the con- clusion. SHORTLY BEFORE the end of the contest, the Michigan press led by little Dave Hart, seemed to confine Wisconsin's superb guard Clarence Sherrod in the backcourt for an in or- dinate amount of time, but the referee refused to call a ten- second violation despite Orr's exhortations, whereupon the Michigan coach pulled off his sport jacket and stomped back to the Michigan bench, where he joined enraged Wolverine assis- tant Freddie Snowden and suffered through the concluding min- ute-and-a-half of the defeat. As the game ended, Orr walked slowly off to the runway leading to the lockerrooms. There he waited until IPe three ' referees arrived in the area. Then Orr reportedly pointed his finger at one of the referees and said, "That was the goddamn worse officiating I've ever seen." Orr was considerably more re- strained when he met the press a short time later. In fact, he refused to directly attack the trio of referees. He did, however, leave little doubt that he disagreed with some of the group's decisions. The Michigan mentor, who was considerably more subdued after this defeat than after past Wolverine failures this season, commented, "It doesn't do any good to complain about the officiating after the game. It might happen again Tuesday at Minnesota-heaven forbid that, but it might happen." LATER THE WOLVERINE coach praised the efforts of Sherrod, who he termed a terrific ballplayer, but at times Orr indicated he thought the Milwaukee junior was walking or palming the ball. Orr also indicated that Al Henry, the 6-9 Wisconsin pivotman, did an excellent job, but once again he had a jibe for the officials. This time Orr said, "Henry did a great job, especially on offense. He sure blocked a lot of shots, but I thought a lot of those blocks were goaltending violations." Orr still seemed to be harping on the subject a little later in his press confeence when a Wisconsin writer asked him why Tomjanovich spent so much of the afternoon working on the outside. Orr's response was, "Rudy went outside because he was getting beat up inside." Complaining about the referees is old hat for losing coach- es, but there certainly was no paucity of poor calls during yesterday's game. Al Henry's blocks were at times blatant pins of layups, but it seemed none of the refs had enough ambition to blow the whistle. It is perhaps important to note that the decisions were far from being a one-way street. The Wolverines were called for only two more fouls than the Badgers, and John Powless, the Wisconsin coach spent a good part of the afternoon off his team's bench yelling at the officials. Powless' only comment after the game was "In a coaches' position, you can't say much. THE FINAL SCORE might have changed only a little yes- terday with different refereeing - certainly the Wolverines have played better this season, and teams seldom win contests in which they shoot 39 per cent-but I'm getting tired of watch- ing blatant violations and blatant fouls going unnoticed by not one, not two, but three referees. Orr said after the contest, that "I'm against this three ref- eree system. It adds little effectiveness to the game. I'm voting against it when we're polled after the season." The three referee system is being used experimentally in the Big Ten for the sec- ond year, and must be approved again after the season before it can be used next season., -Daily-Dave Beall Al Henry (54) hooks for two Illini victorious ball-handling skills. "Our game is control and we were fortunate that we tok an early lead and were able to play our game. When a team's down, it's fighting the clock, too, and our game is to go out there and take part of the clock off." SHERROD'S PLAY was partic- ularly frustrating to the Wolver- ines in the last seven minutes of the game. Wisconsin, led by Sher- rod and big Al Henry, who scored 25 points and pulled down a team- high of 13 rebounds, padded their half-time margin to 75-60 with 7:43 left to play. But then Michigan's Rudy Tom- janovich, who scored 35 points to move past Bill Buntin into second place on the all-time Wolverine scoring list, hit on five long jump shots in a span of a little over three minutes to help the Maize and Blue pull within six points, 80-74. SUNDAY SPORTS Night Editor: ELLIOT LEGOW During that span, Orr replaced Dan Fife with spunky 5-8 Dave Hart, and gave the sophomore guard the responsibility for guard- ing Sherrod. Hart, however, couldn't stop Sherrod, as the Bad- ger junior scored five points in five minutes on three of three foul shots and a driving lay-up, and also spearheaded the Badgers' slowdown with his dribbling and passing. "Sherrod was playing with a bad foot," Powless said. "He was a doubtful starter until eight min- utes before the game, but he was still great. If he doesn't make the All-Big Ten team, it'll be a crime." Powless also praised Tomjano- vich, "He's not only an All-Big Ten player, he's 'a real All-American," Powless said. In addition to his 35 points, Rudy collected 19 rebounds, and needs only 28 more to surpass the career record of 1037 held by Bill Buntin. Curses, foiled again WISCONSIN CHAMPAIGN-Rick Howat's 15- foot jump shot in the final sec- onds lifted Ilinois to a 75-73 Big Ten basketball victory over Min- nesota yesterday afternoon. The decision hiked the Illini to a 7-5 conference mark and into sole possession of fourth place. Minnesota dropped from a share of that spot with 6-6. The game was tied seven times before Greg Jackson hit five points to put Illinois on top 39-35 at halftime. Illinois led by as many as eight. points in the second half until the Gophers tied it 73-73 in the final 39 seconds on Eric Hill's free throw stemming from a technical called against Illinois' Mike Price. Price exchanged some words with an official. After Hill's charity, the Illini spent 36 seconds setting up a play which paid off on Howat's shot from the side of the key with three seconds remaining. Fred Miller, collecting four fouls in the first half, scored 11 points in each half. Howat totaled 19. Jackson hit 14 before fouling out at 7:44 of the finale. Larry Mikan and Eric Hill each bagged 19 points for theGophers. Big Ten r Standings Iowa 12 0 1.000 Purdue 9 3 .750 Illinois 7 5 .583 Ohio State 7 5 .583 Minnesota 6 6 .500 Wisconsin 5 7 .417 MICHIGAN 4 8 .333 Michigan St. 4 8 .333 Northwestern 3 9 .250 Indiana 3 9 .250 Yesterday's Results Wisconsin 90, MICHIGAN 86 Michigan St. 82, Ohio St. 80 Iowa 108, Purdue 107 Illinois 75, Minnesota 73 Northwestern 75, Indiana 66 PRO SPORTS: Red Wings rally to tie Rangers U I By The Associated Press DETROIT -- Bruce MacGregor tipped in Wayne Connelly's slap shot with 24 seconds to play and the Detroit net empty for a six- man attack to give the Red Wings a 3-3 tie with the New York Rangers. The Red Wings took the lead first on Nick Libbett's short- handed goal at 10:09 of the first period, and then on Gary Berg- man's power-play goal at 18:30, 15 seconds after Ratelle's 25th of the season, a turn-in of Rod Seil- ing's centering pass. But Detroit couldn't hang on and the injury-riddled Rangers went ahead on Nevin's 14th goal of the season. It was set up by Larry Brown, one of the replace- ment defensemen. *.* Bruins blitz Hawks BOSTON - The Boston Bruins got rolling on Phil Esposito's early goal and wore down the Chicago Black Hawks for a 3-0 National Hockey League victory last night. as goalie Gerry Cheevers fash- ioned his fourth shutout.. The Bruins, whose only two loss- es in their last 16 games were to Chicago, nailed down the decis- ion on third period goals by Gar- net Bailey and Johnny Buyck. Cheevers turned in a tremen- dous performance for two periods, and then had an easy time in the final 20 minutes. He finished with 28 saves. The victory moved the Bruins to within one point of first place New Scores Georgetown 73, Penn State 66 St. Peter's, N.J. 137, Manhatten 112 Kent State 92, Northern Illinois 85 Missouri 84, Nebraska 63 Virginia Tech 80, West Virginia Bradley 82, St. Louis 74 St. John's, N.Y. 64, NYU 53 Pittsburgh 76, Carnegie-Mellon 55 Ohio U 78, Bowling Green 76 Duke 91, North Carolina 83 Boston College 86, Holy Cross 73 Grinneli 64, Ripon 56 DeCremen Oler A. Henry Sherrod Fraser Zink' Barao Cenlon Mayberry York, which tied Detroit 3-3, in the NHL's East Division. The less snapped Chicago's four game win- ning streak. It was only the se- cond defeat for the surging Hawks in their last nine games. * * * Knicks roll on NEW YORK - The New York Knicks staged a second-half breakaway to beat the injury-rid- dled Baltimore Bullets 115-101 last night and cut their magic number to seven to clinch first place in the Eastern Division of the National Basketball Association. , Dave DeBusschere was the Knick leader, scoring 23 points on 10-18 from the field. He scored eight in the third session as the Knicks, tied at 68-68 after Baltimore put on an 11-0 burst, went to a 91-77 lead. g 3 5 11 9 3 2 0 0 0 33 2-2 1-1 3-4 14-11 2-2 1-3 0-0 5-6 0-0 24-29 t 5 11 25 28 8 5 0 5 0 90 0 4!57 ki &'ertnt Totals MICHIGAN Tomjanovich Carter Ford Fife M. Henry Bloodworth Fraumann Hayward Grabiec Hart Wisconsin Michigan Fouled out:1 15 5-5 35 9 0-0 18 2 2-4. 6 4 4-5 12 4 1-2 9 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0-1 0 2 0-0 4 0 2-2 2 Totals 36 14-19 86 51,39-90 43 43-86 Wisconsin, Fraser; Mich- U of M SKI CLUB trip to Pico Peak Killington Okemo Round Top Sign up Mon., March 2, Union, 7:30 $68 for transportation and room and board due at meeting 'M 14is - i. t v~ 'l it6ti Professional Standings .r~. NRL Eastern Divisii W L on T Pt. GF New York 34 13 13 81 21 Boston 33 13 14 80 221 Montreal 31 16 13 75 19 Chicago 32 20 7 71 19 Detroit 30 18 11 71 18 Toronto 24 24 11 59 18 Western Division St. Louis 29 22 8 66 17 Pittsburgh 23 29 8 52 14 Philadelphia 15 25 20 50 16 Oakland 17 31 9 43 13: Minnesota 10 30 18 38 15 Los Angeles 9 42 8 26 12 Yesterday's Results St. Louis 3, Montreal 2 Los Angeles 3, Toronto 3, tie New York 3, Detroit 3, tie Boston 3, Chicago 0 Philadelphia 6, Minnesota 2 Pittsburgh 3, Oakland 2 Today's Games Toronto at Minnesota, afternoon Chicago at New York, afternoon St. Louis at Boston Los Angeles at Philadelphia F GA 0 141 28 177 96 1541 0 139 3 155 4 183 5 143 6 188 5 182 2 198 8 202 5 231 NBA Eastern Division W L1 New York 54 15 Milwaukee 49 22 Baltimore 43 28 Cincinnati 31 39 Boston 30 39 Detroit 28 45 Western Division Atlanta 40 32 Los Angeles 38 33 Phoenix 33 40 Chicago 32 39 Seattle 30 41 San Francisco 27 43 San Diego 23 44 Yesterday's Results New York 115, Baltimore 101 Chicago at Seattle (inc.) Today's Games Los Angeles at Boston San Francisco at Detroit Baltimore at Philadelphia Phoenix at Atlanta Cincinnati at Milwaukee Chicago at San Diego Pct. .783 GB igan, None. Total fouls: Wisconsin 19, Michigan .690 6 . .606 12 .443 231/ .435 24 .384 28 .556 - .535 1% .452 7 Y .451 7 Y .423 9% .386 12 .343 14% - 4. ~r 11"P lUll m c o "No ilrni 9. L In L I , (I. -T T I [" Filing for OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION -764-0558 COMPLAINTS --9 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. SUBSCRIPTIONS - 1 p.m. - 3 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS -764-0557 10a.m. -3p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY - 12:30 p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY --9 a.m. - 4 p.m. TUESDAY thru FRIDAY -1 o.m. - 4 p.m. STUDENT GOVERNMENT Spring Elections I I I I I1 i II 11 m1