Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 25, 1969 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 25, 1969 REED COLLECTS 26 IKnick By PHIL HERTZ Special To The Iauly DETROIT-First the Jets. Then the Mets. Now the Knicks-it appears to be New York's year in sports. Last night the Knicks demon- strated the facts of New York power to several thousand more of the uninitiated when they cap- tured their sixth decision in seven starts, all but blowing the Detroit Pistons off the Cobo Hall hard- court, 116-92. The Knicks disdained the sur- prise of the Jets and the miracles of the Mets and simply played' the game of basketball the way it should be played. The Knicks ex-I hibited enormous depth, great balance, shot as well as they needed to, and played a tenacious defense, which forced the Detroit- ers into committing a plethora of turnovers, keeping them from ever seriously challenging ther Knicks. All evening the New Yorkers literally took the ball out of the Pistons' hands, setting the pattern NCA's Jerry Lucas traded to Warriors CINCINNATI (A')-Veteran Cin-' Warriors in 1967 after playing at batter istons, 116-92 in the first period when Detroit was forced into at least ten errors while the only Knick turnover came when Bill Bradley slipped as he began to drive. Walt Frazier was the chief Knick culprit, but was ably aided in the ball stealing derby by just about every Knick who saw action. Frazier tallied 24 points, second high in the contest to the Knicks' Willis Reed, who had 26. plus seven assists, boosting his career assist total to 1,006. The Pistons took an early 2-0 lead on a lay-up by Terry Disch- inger; however, Reed quickly tied the game up. Jimmy Walker, who led the Pistons with 21 points and nas the only bright spot in the eve- ning, gave the lead back to De- troit, 4-2. But that was the last time all night the Pistons found themselves on top. The Knicks began the urocess of putting the game under wraps after former Knick Walt Bellamy tied the game at eight apiece with 8:58 remaining in the opening period. At that point New York reeled off six straight points, and they were off and running. They finished the period by outscoring the Pistons, 9-2, to take a 32-18 lead. The Pistons continued to sink as the second period progressed, falling behind 49-33 with 5:14 left in the half. Detroit then appeared to right itself and gEt back in the contest when it outscored the Knicks 16-2 over a three minute period, to close the gap to 51-46. The Knicks, however, quickly shook off the slump and were able to go into the dressing room at! halftime with a 59-50 advantage A 16-4 spurt at the opening of theE second half took the last vestiges of doubt out of the game and the Knicks were able to coast home. ", EAe Jevi/ *i*cip& Bill Cusumano rm steps out of the subway Super Tec ....,.t ............................. . Professional Standings Eastern Division N B A W 1, 'r P ,F - -Associated Press ATLANTA'S JLlMMY DAVIS out-rebounds Boston's John Havicek in the Hawks' 122-110 victory over the winless Celtics last night at Boston Garden. Havlicek was later ejected from the game for receiving two technical fouls in the space of eight seconds at the Celtics lost their fourth game in a row. -SUNDAY- AUTHENTIC JAZZ CONCERItT Featuring: Ragtime Charlie and Sister Kate's Riverboat Ramblers (7-piece band) --"The band that plays it like it was" 6-9 P.M. JERRY'S 11980 McGregor Road- PORTAGE LAKE, MICH. 426-8183 (take W. Huron Rd. to Dexter, Dexter-Pincknev Rd. from Dexter to McGregor Rd.) Join The Daily Today! W I, T 2 F cinnati forward Jerry Lucas, who! has been named to the National Basketball Association all-star squad each year in his career, wast traded to San Francisco yesterday7 for forward Bill Turner and guard1 Jimmy King. In six seasons with the Royals, Lucas averaged 19.9 points a game and 19.2 rebounds after grad-I uating from Ohio State where he starred. In four games with Cin- cinnati this year, Lucas averaged 10.3 points a game and 10.5 re- bounds. Lucas, 6-feet-8. was named the most valuable player of the all- star game one year. For a big man, he is one of the league's better outside shooters. But he has been troubled by weak knees during much of his career.; King, a standout at the Uni- versity of Tulsa, has a six-season; scoring average of 8.6 points a game. King 6-feet-2, has alsol played for Los Angeles and Chi-I cago. Turner, a fine outside shot andI good rebounder, registered a 7.81 "oint per game last year withc 380 rebounds. The 6-feet-7 for- ward was drafted second by thet the University of Akron. Cincinnati General Manager Joe Axelson said that "We're trading to build a full squad of 12 NBA players. We feel we gave up one good one and got two good ones." "Luke agreed to go," Axelson, continued. "I don't know if he would have reported to any club, but he liked the sound of San Francisco." Boston 4 0 1 Detroit 3 1 1 Montreal 2 0 3 New York 2 2 1 Toronto 1 3 1 Chicago 0 5 1 Western Division Oakland 3 2 1 St. Louis 3 1 1 Minnesota 3 3 0 Philadelphia 1 1 3 Los Angeles 2 3 0 Pittsburgh 0 3 3 Yesterday's Game Boston at Oakland, inc. Today's Games Chicago at Montreal St. Louis at Toronto New York at Detroit Boston at Los Angeles Pittsburgh at Minnesota Sunday's Games Montreal at New York St. Louis at Philadelphia rt. GF 9 18 7 15 7 18 5 10 3 11 1 7 7 13 7 20 6 18 5 10 4 10 3 11 GA 6 10 10 13! 11 22 18 12 14 13 14 18 Eas Philadelphia Milwaukee New York Baltimore Detroit Cincinnati Boston We Atlanta San Francisco Los Angeles San Diego Chicago Phoenix Seattle stern Div stern Division 3 1 2 1 22 1 2 1 2 1 3 0 4 .750 .667 .500 .333 .333 .250 .000 vsion W L Pet. 3 0 1.000 3 0 1.000 6 1 .857 3 1 .750 1 2 .333 1 4 .200 0 4 .000 GB 1 114 21z 4 x, 1 1 13 Yesterday's Results Baltimore 131, Cincinnati 126 Atlanta 122, Boston 110 New York 116, Detroit 92 Milwaukee at Los Angeles, inc. Chicago at Phoenix, inc. TOLEDO NEXT VICTIM? Soccermen face easy road By NORM SCHERR From a view midway in the sea- son, it appears that Michigan soc- cermen, while not approaching a' success rate that brought them a 7-1 record last year, are still heading for a rvla'ively good mark this year. Losing the season opener to Northern Illinois 5-1, the team re- bounded to beat Oakland 6-3, A clash of individual national styles and a lack of agnressiveness on the part of the forwards t h a tI marked the first game w e r e in part overcome by the second match. An early test of tne team's new- ly found coopeiative spirit was a 0-0 tie with thy University of Wa- terloo, one of t h e better soccer teams of the conference. Michigan1 and Waterloo fought a tough de- fensive game In which both goal-' ies were superb. While not a clear- cut victory, the Michigan soccer- men regarded it as such, since they had been rated the underdog. As a prelude to the season hight point with Cleveland State, the3 Michigan footmen darcated t n e University of Kentucky, 2-1. Once1 again the defense provided a toughr shield, but the offense displayed a conservative style of play, Michigan then faced its mostr formidable opponent with a 2-1-1r record, and a team which was be- ginning to ieturn to the previous year's form. Practices precedingt the Cleveland State match stress- ed a unified offense, and b o t ht units were ready to take on the . eighth ranked C.S.U. Cleveland State featured two oft the top scorers in Ohio, along with a well balanced offense-defenser squad. When the two teams fi- nally met, the better unit of each cancelled out the other, resultingr in a 2-2 tie at the end of regular play. Michigan's tight defenseg held the usually thot shootingE C.S.U. offense in check, resultingI in double overtime. But a disput-( ed goal at the end of the first ov-t ertime, followed by a second ing the last put Cleveland on top. r Despite the loss, the Michigan> soccermen had gelled into an ef- fective, coordinated unit. having integrated the nationalistic play-a ing traits of its multi-nationalt team. Tired, but not defeated in spirit by the loss the day before, the Michigan footmen took on Notre Dame last Sunday and trounced them 7-1. The men from South Bend had come in the dismal driz- zle with a fighting spirit that is particularly theirs, but neither enthusiasm nor the luck of the Irish could stop the inspired play of the Michigan offense and de.. fense. Michigan forward Mike Sasich had two goals, and Daniel Boyle,. Carlos Flores and Co-captain LesI Feldman each contributed o n e.- But the real star was Miguel Tau- be, who booted in two goals and assisted on two more. Only a lone goal by NotIre! Dame's Dan Brook spoiled fresh- man goalie Rick Moore's excellent net tending. Michigan soccermen venture in- to Ohio territory again today to cross legs with the footmen from the University of Toledo. The Michigan team should find the, going easy since Toledo bowed to! the Irish 2-1. But Toledo seniors Dave Liver- more and John Worcester mightl make the day a little less enjoy- able for Michigan. Both have been named to the All-Ohio All-Star Squad d u e to their consistently good offensive performances. Liv- ermore is a center forward while Worcester plays on inside right. Coupled with Captain Lazlo Kol- tay, they have managed a fairly' good showing at home. On the road the Toledo footmen have not performed quite as well, as evi- denced by their 3-6 record over- all. Their biggest drubbing was at the hands and feet of Michigan State, ranked first in the country. The Boston Celtics haven't died; they just moved to New York city. The Knicks brought their traveling road show to Detroit last night and showed the Piston fans why they are supposed to be the next super team in the NBA. Just as the Celtics used to destroy opponents suddenly and merciless, so do the Knicks. And they do it Celtic style too, by using tough defense, deadly shooting and constantly hitting the open man. The tenacious New York defenders force errors and continually cash in the opportunities to build up insur- mountable leads, as the Pistons found out. Detroit managed to turn the ball over to the Knicks over 30 times as the New Yorkers laughed their way to another win, making the Pistons look worse than they are in the process. The Knicks have held teams under 100 points in four starts already, including last night, and have made most people forget the demise of the Celts. The reasons for the New York dominance in defending, shooting and passng are pretty obvious; they have the best five starters in the league and the best bench. No one can really fight a team with that kind of equipment and to date no one has. The power of the Knick squad could not have been demon- strated more than it was against the Pistons. Despite having only an average shooting night, they decimated the Detroit club by 24 points. The New Yorkers opened up a 13 point edge at the end of the first quarter, had it cut to nine at the half while reserves were in and then exploded to a 21 point margin in the third quarter and were never headed. Throughout, the Knicks kept pressure on the Pistons and held all of the guns in check. The defense that the men from Manhattan displayed was almost unbelievable. Bill Bradley took Eddie Miles, "The' Man with the Golden Arm," and held him to a measly field goal for three periods. At the opposite side, forward Dave DeBusschere was doing the same kind of a job on Terry Dischinger. But the truly astounding performance came from Walt Frazier, who stole, passed and shot the Pistons blind. While pilin; up 24 points of his own he also passed off to Willis Reed for 26 more. Frazier at one point caught Dave Bing from behind, stole the ball, moved up court beating two nien with between the legs and behind the back dribbles and finally passed off to Reed for an easy shot. However, Reed blew the cripple. Who came along to hit the rebound? Who else, but Frazier. The way Frazier moves is typical of the Knicks. They constantly help out on defense, are after every loose ball and seem to always see the open man on offense. Very few times will there be an open shot for opponents while on the other hand the Knicks always seem to get them. The Knicks are, more than anything else, a real TEAM, and that is a tribute that goes mostly to one man-Coach Red Holzman. Holzman took over the Knicks two years ago when they were floundering and began to mold them. He took ad- vantage of the excessive manpower that the Knicks possessed and started to play pressure defense while platooning. He also moved Bill Bradley back to his original position of forward where he was more comfortable. However, two ingredients were still missing, a leader on the floor and another strong forward. Holzman found the leader when he decided to go with Frazier full time in the back court and relegate Howie Komives to a bench seat. The forward was a more difficult problem and proved to cause the greatest obstacle in the planned Knick rise. Pla-ying Walt Bellamy and Reed on the front line just made the Knicks too slow and cost them games. After a 6-13 start last year Holz- man had his fill and sent New York owner Ned Irish after a top front court man. Irish went to Detroit and came away with DeBusschere in the deal that is known around New York as THE TRADE. What they really mean is the steal, but that is only whispered around the big town. Holzman somehow managed to palm off Komives, who wasn't playing, and Bellamy, who was a disappointment, on the Pistons. DeBusschere arrived and the Knicks haven't lost too much since then. The odds are that they won't lose too much in the future, either. They are young (Dick Barnett is the only man over 30) and after one season together play as an incomparable unit, They have the talent to toy with opponents and can pace them- selves to play in quick bursts that destroy weaker clubs. There really is no apparent weakness, except that someone has to be cut when Phil Jackson gets off the injured list. That may be the only way to break up the Knicks a little bit at this point. Music with. Muscle from Memphis: ', r 4r . t - I ItH I the BOOKER T.&THE M.G.'s FUNKTION a 4 DON'T MISS the NOW MOVEMENT in SOUND when HOMECOMING '69 Laura Nyro BLOOD, SWEAT Richie Havens AND TEARS Sweetwater THURSDAY, OCT. 30, 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY, NOV.1, 8:30 P.M. I ALL EVENTS BUILDING INDIVIDUAL SALES FOR SATURDAY CONCERT BEGIN ii i ,