THE MICHIGAN DAILY rt _ i Paoge Se, I Cagers top Iowa in last seconds 86-85 By ROBIN WRIGHT Special to the Daily IOWA CITY - The postman knocked once again for Iowa last night as Michigan delivered a ones point loss to the Hawkeyes on their home court for the second consecutive year, The Wolverines dropped Iowa NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOTT BERRY out of the conference race with the 86-85 victory and took sole possession of third place them- selves. Elated Assistant Coach Fred Snowden said after the game, SPORTS SECTION: pages 6-7 "We knocked them completely out of the race. ' The win was reminiscent of last year's 71-70 triumph that took the twice built up substantial leads. janovich and Iowa's McGilmar championship away from the In the first half Michigan. worked and John Johnson as the two Hawks, but this time around it up a good 10 point average on the teams kept pace with each other.; was Michigan that had to make a Hawkeyes in the opening nine Johnson ended up being t h e big eomeback. minutes to lead 22-12. leading scorer with 27 points, 10 The Wolverines had gone up by But the Hawks made a swift coming on goaltending calls on nine points at 84-75 on steals by comeback, scaring the Michigan Tomjanovich, while McGilmer Ken Maxey and clutch buckets by cagers in the last five pninutes by popped in 23. Tomjanovich led Bob Sullivan. But in the .next taking a one point lead three the Michigan scoring by hitting three minutes Michigan fouled times. Two final Rudy Tomiano- for 26, including an above aver- four times to help start an Iowa vich field goals eventually left the age performance of six for seven rally that gave the Hawkeyes a Wolverines with a one plo i n t from the foul line. one point lead with only 34 sec- halftime lead at 38-37. Tomjanovich got much more onds left in the contest. After the intermission the cag- help from his teammates than his With the Hawkeyes ahead 85-84 ers returned for a tense second Hawkeye adversaries did, though, things looked t fatal for the Wol- half in which the score was tied and therein lies the story of the verines when a foul was called on 13 times. A tremendous shooting game. All five Michigan starters Maxey. But Iowa guard Chad duel' developed between Tom- hit for double figures with Sul- Cn1A b i. mci dtha firf t hn of- ivan closely following Tomjano-E vich with 21, 14 of them in the second half. In addition. Dennis Stewart had 14. Maxey 12 and Dan Fife 13. The Wolverines, who seem to have regained their early sea- son touch. shot particularly well :rom the field. They hit 50.7 per; cent from the floor and brought back memories of the time when they were number two in the country in field goal percentage. Michigan also improved its per- formance in the crucial area ofj free throw shooting, hitting 16 of 24. The Wolverines had to shoot3 well as Iowa kept pace by hitting 47 per cent from the floor and 76.7 from the line. The shooting percentages showed the tightness1 of the game as did the rebound- ing totals of 51 for Michigan and 50 for Iowa. There was some disagreement tbout the officiating, as the Hawkeye fans were hungry for a victory after the Michigan upset last year. Feelings were running j high to the point that one irate fan threw a raw egg as an object- ion to the officials' calls. But no amount of protest couldl alter the fact that Michigan w( and that Iowa was once again also-ran. After the game it w the Wolverines who were feeli high. Orr said. "We still have chance to win the Big Ten tit We're not out until we lose ft Our schedule isn't very prom ing but we have proved we c perform well away from h o n which will be important in the i maining games." Vidnovic Johnson Jensen Calabria Phillips McGilmier Miller Hatzley TOTA.LS FG Pet. 44,0 Turnovers 17 1015 A FG FT R PF 6-14 4-4 9 4 11-18 5-8 16 2 2-5 2-? 8 2 1-6 3-5 1 4 3-12 2-2 1 2 10-18 3-4 5 3 0-2 0-0 '2 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 33-75 19-25 46 iS FT Pct. 76.7 Team Rebounds 4 .,. :: 1 , ' 1 ' ..r ,;, { ti .. .: 1 :";:: , '::' l , u. ~ \ MICHIGAN Stewart 6-19 2-5 7 4 Sullivan 8-10 5-7 8 4 Tomaanovich 10-2 6-7 14 4 Maxey 5-8 2-3 3 2 Fife 6-9 1-1 5 4 Edwards 0-0 0-0 0 0 Carter ' -1 0-1 0 0 TOTALS 35-69 16-24 44 20 FG Pet. 50.7 FT Pct. 66.7 Turnovers 22 Team Rebounds 7 Half 38-37 Mich. A 13,700 -A DENNIS STEWART ELBOWS around Iowa's, Ben McGilmer during the first half of 86-85 Michigan victory. The win marked the second time in two years that the Haw have not lost to any other team at home in those two seasons, have had their Big Ten severely hurt by Iowa City losses to the Wolverines. GAIN SPLIT: . t.;aiaur a misseiOn e' Irsu s otof o sociated Press a one and one foul and Sullivan last night's snapped in the crucial rebound wkeyes, who with just 30 seconds left. title hopes The last half minute proved to be even more hectic than expected as the ball changed hands four, times beginning with a double 1 dribble charge on Sullivan. Maxey, however, then made the key play of the game when he stole the ball from Ben McGilmer. He quickly passed off to Sullivan who made{ a layup for the final points of the game. Sp dins shock fateig1lln EAST LANSING - MichiganjBuckeyes win State overcame a six point de- ficit early in the game and went COLUMBUS, Ohio - O h i o State shook off Minnesota's slow- on to defeat Illinois 75-70 yester- d tatcs wit two sond downs tactics with two second day in a Big Ten Basketball game half scoring spurts and went on at East Lansing. to whip the Gophers 58-41 in a ,rAnTBig Ten basketball game here last lers come winon Go to ie 2I rher rink Special to The Daily MINNEAPOLIS-Two third per- lod goals by sophomore forward' Brian Slack enabled the Michigan icers to squeak out a 4-2 victory! over Minnesota at Minneapolis last night and earn a split in their weekend series. The Wolverines came from a 2-0 deficit and poured in three goals Stars trounce Red Wmgs 6-2 ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (M- 4Aroused.- Minnesota exploded for three first-period goals and flat- tened the startled Detroit R e d Wings 6-2 lastnight in the Na- tional Hockey League. Detroit goalie Roy Edwards was, the victini of the first five Min- nesota goals as the North Stars, q made it 5-0 before Gordie Howe tallied for the Red Wings with 20 seconds to play in the second period. Goalie Roger Crozier fin- ished up in the third period for Detroit. Claude Larose and Walt Mc- Kechnie led the Minnesota assault, * each getting two goals. McKech- nie also picked up two assists and Larose also collected one to run his point total to 46 this season., Larose scored the first 'North \Star marker at 2:40 of the first period to set the tempo for the runaway. t in the;final period. to pull them! back into a fourth place tie withj Minnesota in the WCHA race, each sporting an 8-8 conference record. .' The win also kept the arch- rivals deadlocked behind Wiscon- sin in the somewhat less than complete four-school Big Ten race. Slack's first goal which came in the early moments of the third period evened the contest at 2- all afterf defenseman Phil Gros' tally late in the second period put Michigan on the scoreboard for the first time.. Minutes later, Slack broke in all alone onMinnesota goalie Ron Docken and flipped the puck over the out-sprawled goaltender's ex- tended glovehand. Always alert winger Don Deeks iced the game for the Wolverines with his long shot into the empty Gopher net at the 19:35 mark. The Gophers got the only goal of the opening period as once I again the line of Pete Fichuck; Rich Yurich, and Bill Klatt com- bined to . beat Wolverine goalie Jim Keough, this time with Fi- chuck doing the honors. In ' the second period, Mike Kurtz, who was espeically effective against Michigan in the Gophers' .victory last month, increased Min- nesota's lead to 2-0. Gros then scored to set the stage for Slack's third-period heroics. The Wolverines victimized Min- nesota's second-string netminder . Docken firing 28'"shots at the re-' latively green goalie.. Keough, meanwhile, was kept busy fti the Wolverine net as he turned aside 34 Gopher lrives, many of which were from ex- tremely close in. The Wolverines accomplished their, victory without the services of center Paul Gamsby, as the, speedy sophomore was ejected for the series Friday night following some prolonged fisticuffs vth Gopher Scott Buchen. Lee Lafayette ied the Spartans Iowa made one last gasp but attack with 23 points including did not come up with the clutch play. First Glenn Vidnovic missed seven field goals. High scorer for a jumper from the corner and- Illinois was Greg Jackson, with 20. then a desperation shot was off Spurred on by cheers of 7.020j target as the buzzer sounded. Coach Johnny Orr praised his spectators, MSU tied the Illini at team for the victory. "The back- 13-all after trailing 10-4. By half- court steals by Maxey and (Dan) time, the Spartans were ahead Fife were the key plays of the 3925 game. We played zone most of the139-25. game although it was a switch to Illinois -,scored, eight straight man to man that put us into the, points as the second half opened, lead in the last six minutes. But narrowing the gap to 39-33. But we changed again to the zone in MSU 'stayed ahead the remainder the last 30 seconds and Maxey of tlie game. was then able to steal the ball The outcome left-the two teams and give Sully that final winning with identical 4-4 records in Big shot." Ten play. Illinois is 14-4 overall The pattern of the two halves for the season, while MSU has was similar as the Wolverines a 9-8 record. i Indiana drowns swimmers 73-50; Wolverines take only 4 firsts, 0' night. The Buckeyes stayed only one game back of first-place Purdue with a 6-2 league record but for a while it looked like Minnesota would pull a big upset. The visitors, going with a ball control game, did not score their first basket until 41/2 minutes of the first half. Minnesota led 13- 12 midway through the first half as the Buckeyes went without a basket or nearly 61/2 minutes. Minnesota led at halftime 21- 16 as the Bucks shot only 28 per cent but it was all Ohio in the second half. With less than five minutes gone, Ohio pulled even at 28-28. Larry Mikan's free throw gave Minne- sota its last lead but the Bucks went on a 10 point scoring spree to open up a 38-29 margin. Purdue swamps LAFAYETTE - Purdue breezed by Wisconsin 87-69 yesterday to maintain its Big Ten basketball lead as Rick Mount pumped in 35 points. The Boilermakers led all the way, overcoming a late Wisconsin rally when the Badgers muffed five straight shots after cutting the margin to 72-63 with 4:22 re- maining. Mount, the conference's lead- ing scorer, went into the game with a 33.2 average. Herm Gilliam and George Faerber had 13 each for the Boilermakers., Chuck Nagle led Wisconsin with 12 points as Keith Burington and Al Henry followed with 11 each. Purdue is now 7-1 in Big Ten play and Wisconsin stands 3-6.' second basket of the sedond half with 9:47 remaining, Ohio ran off nine straight points for a 47-31 advantage. -Associated Press OHIO STATE'S Denny Meadors attempts a shot as Minnesota's Erie hill defends. OSU went on to win the game 59-41 last night in Columbus, Tra cmen overcome India na threat 75=74 By KEITH WOOD Lorenzo Montgomery turned in Michigan overcame a strong In- fine performances for Michigan diana 'threat '.yesterday to claim in thequre-i.Fag wo a narrow 75-74 victory over t h e the race in :50.5, and Montgom- Hoosiers in a dual track meet ery finished third. that saw a total of seven records Michigan's most disappoint- set. ing race was probably the 1000- The Wolverines held a slim yard run. Despite finishing se- The-olrinesdnhed a- slmcond and third Wolverine h e a d three-point advantage, 55-52, coach Dave Martin commented, with only four events to go after "The 1000 i where we're going Indiana's speedy sophomores Mike to have to show some improve- Goodrich and Larry Highbaugh ment." The times in the 1000 were finishedt first and second in the probably the slowest when com- 300-yard dash. Goodrich set a new pared to the times in the other meet and Yost Field House re- I events, on the new rubberized as- 11ord with a time of :30.7. phalt track. Goodrich and Highbaugh turn- In the field events, Michigan ed in a similar performance ear- senior Bob Wedge turned in the er in the 60-yard dash w 1 t h day's best performances by fin- Goodrich winning in 1:0,2 a n d ishing second to teammate Ira Highbaugh finishing second in Russell in the long jump a n d :06.3. gaining first place honors in the) Then the Wolverines showed triple jump with a leap of 47'.- their strength in the middle dis- 11%". tances 'by sweeping the 880-yard Warren Bechard, who has been run. Paul Armstrong won the race the Wolverines' best in the event for the Michigan thinclads in a,, thus far this season, did n o t time of 1:56.5. Rick Stor ey, who compete because of a bruised heel also won the mile for Michigan, suffered last week in the Michigan finished second, and John Thorn- State Relays. Atocarn in third. Gary Knickerbocker finished Senior Larry Midlam followed second to the Hoosiers' Gary Hau- with his second record-breaking pert in the high jump by virtue performance of the day in the 70- of a jump-off. Both men had yard low hurdles to put the meet cleared 6-8. on ice for the Wolverines. Midlam Wolverine pole-vaulter Ron; ran the lows in :07.8 to set a new Shortt set a personal high by By ROD ROBERT Tom Mertz. Mertz' 55.1 split was qualifying in that event for ,the Special to the Daily still his best of the season by about NCAA's. BLOOMINGTON-Indiana's top- two seconds. Wolverine butterfliers Tom Aru- ranked swim team swamped Mich- In the 200 yard freestyle, In- soo and Lee Bisbee swept their igan 73-50 yesterday afternoon, diana got not only a first but also 200 yard -event. Arusoo took first as Wolverine Coach Gus Stager's a crucial second place. with a 1:55.2, with Bisbee in at rating of the Hoosier home pool Sophomore -Bob Zann was far second with a 1:56.1, both times advantage was perfect. out in front for the first 150 ards being their best of the year. Earlineronhisowthekfrst er0hadd', Soph Greg Zann became a dou- Earlier this week, Stager had but faded as Hoosiers Ron Jacks bewne o ihga sh said, "The fact that the meet is bu ae sH ir o ak ble winner for Michlg~an as he Ssaid, "h f atthe and Lee Bezold came on to take took the 100 yard freestyle in 47.7. down in Bloomington should give first and second respectively But Bryan Bateman touched out Indiana an additional ten point Michigan's Mike O'Connor also Bob Zann for a crucial second advantage." Last month in Ann tried a late charge, but finished; Arbor, Indiana squeaked by the behind Zann. place, Still, Indiana was now lead- Wolverines, 63-60.u eg Zann ing by only 46-38. In both meets, Stager said that Greg Zann broke Indiana's Charlid' Hickcox .,touched out the fbo th measad hdant string of victories as he outsprint- Gary { Kinkead in the 200 yard pnth fia ocor a s eperant ed Indiana's Bryan Bateman in backstroke. Hickcox' winning time upon the performances of his free-the 50 yard freestyle. His winning of 1:58.9 was still slower than stylers. "We lost the last time be- time, of 21.7 qualified him for the Kinkead's best of the year, and cause our sprinters didn't come NCAA's. Juan Bello followed suit the Hoosier seemed thankful for through. But we lost this time be- for aiother Michigin win in the his victory. After the meet he ad- cause our distance freestylers 400 yard individual medley, also mitted, "Gary should have won." didn't swim well. But the Michigan tankers still didn't give Indiana as much trou- ble as they had hoped to. Quite, a few Wolverines had shaved down, to help improve their times. But only with Greg Zann and Ma s t, Tom Mertz was there a substantial improvement. Indiana wasted no time in tak- ing command, winning the first four events on the card. Although bothered by tendonitis earlier this season, Fred South- ward easily won the 10004 yard freestyle. His time of 10:04.8 was nine seconds faster than Michign runner-up Gary Kinkead. Ulf Gustavsen took third for Indiana,X far ahead of Wolverine Mike Ai- . Wildcats top) EVANSTON, Ill.-Northwesternt all but blew a 22-point lead and scrambled to a 91-88 victory over Indiana last night in a Big Ten basketball thriller.3 The Wildcats held a 53-29 half- time advantage and then moved, ah ad 66-44 early in -the second half before Indiana battled back. The Hoosiers came on so strong that they cut Northwestern's edge to one point at 79-78 iwhen Joe Cooke hit one of his numerous baskets. But' Northwestern battled back, in the closing minutes to score its third conference triumph, in nine games. SCORES NHL Chicago 3, Philadelphia 0 Oakland 4, Pithsburgh 4, tie Toronto 6, Newyork'2 St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 1 Minnesota 6, Detroit 2 NBA Cincinnati 111, Chicago 101 New York 98, San Francisco 92 College Basketball Missouri 56, Kansas 55 : Michigan State 75, Illinois 710 Davidson 103, Furman 67 Florida 82, Kentucky 81 Purdue 87, Wisconsin 69 Ohio State 5, Minnesota 41 LaSalle 84, St. Joseph's 67 Northwestern 91, Indiana 88 TOPS IN NATION )O in smashing Spartans len. Indiana's medley relay team raced to the fastest time in the nation this season with a 3:33.8., Their margin of victory came from the initial backstroke leg where Olympic gold medalist Charlie Hickcox took a bodylength lead on 1000 YARD FREESTYLE - . South- ward (I), 10:04.8; 2. Kinkead (M); 3. Gustavsen (I). 1 METER DIVING - 1. Henry (I), 320.5; 2. McManaman (M); 3. Carmine 400 MEDLEY RELAY - 1. Indiana, 3:33.4; 2. Michigan (Mertz, Mahoney, Bisbee, Kircher). 200 YARD FREESTYLE - 1. Jacks; (I), 1:46.2. 2. Bezold (I); 3. B. Zann (M)- 50 YARD FREESTYLE - 1. G. Zann (M), 21.7; 2. Bateman (I); 3. Anderson MI. 400 YARD INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY -- 1. Bello (M), 4:20.1; 2. 'Ware (I); 3. Gilmore (,; By DAVE BEEMON Michigan's gymnasts could have made the Ed Sullivan Show with the performance they put on yes- terday at the Events Building. They not only clobbered Michi- gan State and Indiana, but posted a 190.825 team total in doing so. This score was the best in the na- tion this year, and set a Michigan home record. State and Indiana lagged behind with total's of 184.875 and 167.00 respectively. Coach Newt Loken, exuberant over the showing, exclaimed, "We're hitting a terrific momen- tum towards the Iowa and Big Ten meets. I'm extremely happy about the total scores in the six Olympic events." Michigan's 163.- .025 (without the trampoline) was also tops in the nation., The Wolverines' performance completely overshadowed a good Spartan effort and a negligible Hoosier output. Although both teams had their sparse moments of glory, practically every Michi- gan event was successful in draw- ing ooh's and ahh's from the fans. The Wolverines team was pheno- menal, hauling in 28.0 points.! Charley Froeming pulled off a red 'viously delighted. Mike Sasich 'turned out a show on the high- 'bar, complete with a double fly- 'afiay at the end. It was good for -a 9.3, his biggest haul of the year. - The Wolverines posted 27 plus iscores in the trampoline, parallel 'bars, and high bar. The competition between Mich- igan and Michigan State was close, up to the trampoline event. State trailed by only .05 points at this spot. The Wolverines got off to a bad start, faltering in the floor ex- ercises and side horse, with totals of 26.85 and 26.30 respectively. Dave Jacobs was under his best form in the floor exercise and received an 8.85 decision from the judges. Only Mike Gluck's 9.15 saved STATISTICS FLOOR EXERCISE - 1. Towson (MSU), 9:45; 2. Huntzicker (M), 9.1; 3. Urarn (MSU), 9.0; 4. Haynie (MSU) 8.95; 5. Jenson (M), 8.9. SIDE HORSE - 1. Kinsey (MSU), 9.25; 2. Smith (MSU), 9.2; 3. Gluck (M), 9.15; 4. Uram (MSU), 8.85; 5. De- Boo (M), 8.6. RNS- 1.:Frnoeyminx M.g9.5:q2.11 Michigan from disaster in t h e f side horse, as the event was pla- gued with mishaps. From this point on, however, the 'show was all Michigan's. Indiana was never in the run- ning, and at times it even was embarrassing. The Hoosiers man- aged to fall off the high bar twice, and faltered in several events. Their best event was the rings, in which they scored a 26.45. Michigan State had its own share of near disasters, as Spar- tans hit the mats on several occa- sions. Norm Jolin practically som- mersaulted off the trampoline. Rich Murahata hit the floor, on his side, as he dismounted from the high bar. Two other Spartans were nearly wiped out, as they made dis- mounts off the rings. State had several outstanding performances, however, with Toby Towson's floor exercise being the most notable. Coach Loken praised the out- puts of both Sid Jensen and Rick McCurdy in the all-around. Both men scored in excess of nine points three times. Jensen just missed a 9.0 average by a fraction, t,;, n ::>