'1q PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1969 Thompsons Play ital Roles in V! Sorts Picture John Fills Gaps for Strack As Starter, Sub, Playmaker By RICK STERN What Michigan basketball play- er was All-State in Illinois two years in a row, once scored 44 points in a high school game, was the best free throw shooter in his district four years running and was scouted .by 25 universities and five Big Ten schools? You're wrong because he's the player that fits the description least. You've heard of him though - John Thompson, the short scrawny guy who runs between the giants' legs when Michigan plays basketball. Yea, the one who's averaging about five points a game. But there's a case for Thomp- son, too. First witness for the de- fense is Dave Strack. "John's only 6' but he's 175 pounds and he doesn't give away too much in size or anything else. He's played a major role for us two years in a row and he's a very important part of our team." Nonetheless John has put in his share of bench riding at Michigan, perhaps surprising when his illus- trious high school is considered. But he is philosophical about this. "I've had a chance to view basket- ball from all standpoints. In high school I was the big star so I know how Cazzie feels. Knows How Bench Feels "As a sophomore here I sat on the bench1 and played in the last minutes of one sided games so I know how Mark Delzer and Marty Slebodnick feel. Last year I was sixth man so I know what it feels like - to be in the twilight zone of notknowing whether you're going to play or not, like Craig Dill and bmanBrown., "And I know what it's like to be just an average starter 'cause that's what I am now." If Thompson's scoring average is lower than it usually is, it's mainly because a December ankle sprain has kept him out of the line-up until just this last week. He's still not at full strength but played most of the Wisconsin game. Before the Injury, Thompson had averaged 9.8 points a game, starting the Wolverines first 10 contests. Since then he's scored 31 points in parts of six games. 23 Average At Pontiac Township High School John averaged 23 points a game over a two season span and still, holds every school scoring record. But Thompson regards his play at Michigan as anything but a "comedown." "I'm a playmaker and I regard that, rather than scoring, as my primary function. I play along side of Cazzie and part of my job is to set him up. I shoot a 20-footer once in a while to keep the opponents honest, but that's about it. Caz is a great of- fensive player." Strack echoes Thompson's sent- iments. "Not only is John a very fine playmaker, but he's a sound defensive man. Invariably he picks up the opposition's top backd'ourt man on defense." Playing With Best But Thompson is playing with some of. the biggest and best in the country in Russell and Oliver Darden, not to mention the calibre of Big Ten opposition. It seems that if he'd gone to a smaller, less prominent school, he could have been a genuine star with a 20 point per game average. So why didn't he? "I didn't want that run and shoot ball that they have at most small schools. Sure, from a scor- ing stand-point it would have been great for me, because in that type of ball, size isn't a big factor. "But one of the great things about playing ball here is winning. I could have gone to Northern Illinois or something and done great, but if I don't Win I'm frus- trated and . wouldn't enjoy the game as much. Even at a Big Ten school like Wisconsin it just wouldn't be as much fun 'cause you're losing. I don't mind being a set-up man and my own per- sonal scoring success just isn't that important." Good Competitor Strack sums it up even better. "John is just too good of a com- petitor. He wants the big time and nothing less." Added the veteran coach pragmatically "if he'd gone anywhere else, he wouldn't have played in the NCAA's, he wouldn't have won a Big Ten championship and he Mark Displays Ruggedness, Spirit Both On and Off Iee By HOWARD KOHN "Of course, it is hard to stay 'fired up' for every game, but we On Friday and Saturday nights just didn't realize we could play Mark Thompson (no relation to that badly. Then in the Minnesota John) plays the rugged role of a games, the breaks seemed to go hockey defenseman-backpedaling against us and we couldnt get the down the ice, bodychecking a for- puck into the net." ward, banging up against the Four Straight boards. Michigan has lost four games in He shares the rough tumbles inaoici s upstvioresom front of the net, where the script a row since its upset victories over frotof theametwhrethesrin pMichigan Tech. "We have no ali- of the game is acted out in un- bis." says Thompson. "I'm confi- ruly, action-packed scenes. dent we can snap out of it against On Sunday mornings Mark Minnesota-Duluth this weekend if Thompson talks understandingly the team plays as well as it is to a group of ninth and tenth capable of playing." graders in a Bible discussion class. Tse And on Wednesday evenings he Thompson's function in seeking presides as "unofficial honorary a pair of wins over Duluth will be president" at the meetings of the purely a defensive one. Hank Fellowship of Christian Athletes.Brand and he make up one of the pairs designed to alleviate pres- What influences a man to un- sure on goalie Harold Herman. dertake such wide-ranging duties, "The one thing that has always governed by almost opposite rules? been impressed on me as a de- What kind of hockey player teach- fgnseman is that he should never es Sunday School? !be caught across the blue line Thompson performs both as nat- when the other team gets the urally as a pygmy shrinks heads puck. Maybe I'm too conservative or an Eskimo rubs noses. The at times in moving up on the goal, blond junior from St. Paul, Minn., but I don't want to be responsible has been skating since he was for a two-on-one or three-on-one four and has been attending break. church even longer. Penalty-Killing Easier? Born into Hockey "It's easier to play defense when He was born into a hockey- you're killing a penalty because '9 * * -Daily-Kamalakar Rao MICHIGAN'S JOHN THOMPSON (25) DRIVES in for a layup against Bowling Green in an early season game. Forced to the 1....1 k:--.. ... 1..fr.wn. -6 U -l A l ArnsG. -h-I bench by an injury, the former h at the starting guard post as a p Cazzie Russell. wouldn't have toured Europe. These are great things to re- member." Is Thompson perhaps a little bitter about taking a back seat to nearly all the other starters? Hardly.. "Coming here when I did was one of the luckiest occurences of my life. It was just at the time when Michigan was starting to excel in basketball. Like I said, winning is primary when you're out on the court." What about playing along side Russell, the finest guard in the nation? "In high school it was ,actually just the opposite. The guy was playing along side me and setting me up because I was the star. But Caz is so good he's got to have the ball. In a one on one situation, nobody can stop him. I, mean usually I'm pretty blase, but he makes some plays that are out of it. "As far as publicity goes, that doesn't bother me too much either. Sure, Cazzie gets a large propor- tion of the newsprint, but eight out of ten times he deserves it. If anybody gets shunted it's Ollie. You do get a distorted view from reading the paper, but the paper, doesn't mean much to me." Plays for Fun So what does mean something to John Thompson? What does he get out of the game besides a free college education? "Fun- I play because I like basketball. It makes a difference not playing with a pro contract in mind. To some guys it's going to be a busi- ness and a good one at that. For me it's just forhenjoyment. If there's a day when I feel like sleeping or reading, then I just don't go to practice. "I won't miss playing next year because I can go down to the playground and have just as much fun playing in a . pick-up game. It's just the game - basketball- that's all." After sitting on the bench most of his sophomore year, Thompson started the first 11 games last season. But just as he was finally inching his way out of anonymity, he found himself back on the bench. "Darden had gotten into a slump and George Pomey took over for him and started playing great. I could see it coming be- cause Oliver wasn't gonna stay on the bench and somebody had to get axed. I don't regret it because Strack made the right choice." But Thompson saw considerable action as sixth man and Pomey's replacement. Against Indiana he came in with less than five min- high school All-American is back laymaker and backcourt mate to utes showing on the clock, and the Wolverines down by six and proceeded to hit two clutch 25 footers to send the game into overtime. Michigan eventually won. Bankey Back to Bench This season j u n i o r Dennis Bankey held the spot after Thompson's injury, but has been relegated to the bench. Says Strack, "They're both fine players, but John's a senior and has the edge in experience." Thompson elaborated from his own point of view. "In the Big Ten a guy grows up. Experience has to be a factor because, in the clutch this league is fantastically tough. Just one bad play can lose a game. Strack plays seniors and that's one of the reasons I'm starting." Thompson has gained a deserved reputation as an outstanding clutch player, last year's St. John's game as well as Indiana standing as notable examples of his ability to perform under pres- sure.. "The pressure doesn't really bother me. It never has. There'll be times when you succeed in a clutch situation and times when you fail. It's as simple as that. I find that I concentrate better in the last two or three minutes of a game. There's no room for a mental lapse." Academically John finds him- self a business major and he will go to business graduate school next fall, preferably in Ann Arbor. Salutatorian in his high school class, John considers academics as the major reason he picked Michigan over other schools with a similar athletic structure. "In the Missouri Valley confer- ence the academic standards are much lower-they can't even count down there. And every Big Ten school I went to said 'Michigan's the best, but we're second!" John Thompson took the best. When you ask him about his goals for the remainder of the season, his voice lowers but he still talks about the best. "I want to start, and I want to win the Big Ten championship. I wish we could have beaten Illinois, since we'd beaten them the previous four times and this was the last game. But if we win the championship we'll have the last laugh." Winning the Big Ten champion- ship will lead to the NCAA tour- nament. That's the best of all, but nobody talks about it much. Says Thompson "you're gonna go. You gotta go. It's just there." enthusiastic neighborhood where he learned the fundamentals oft the sport and into the home of a3 minister, his father, where he re- ceived his religious background. His brother, who had been a bas-1 ketball player in high school, en- couraged him to enter organized athletics, and, since Mark's high1 school stressed hockey, he becamec an icer. In 1963 Thompson came to Michigan, crossing state lines be- cause "I wanted to be on my own, plus Michigan offered a bet- ter scholarship than Minnesota." "When he first started practice here, Mark wasn't a very strong skater. But he has worked hard, has improved and is now a good all-around player," explains Wol- verine hockey Coach Al Renfrew. Hustler Teammate Ron Ullyot concurs, "Mark's a real hustler . . . al- ways spirited, and he tries to en- courage the team. As a defense- man he is never afraid to get in front of a puck or a charging op- ponent." Thompson admittedly believes that "spirit and hustling are the key to a winning team. The play- ers have to try, to give it all they have, and they have to want to, win," he comments. "We were fired up for the Tech series (which Michigan swept) and it certainly helped. Against Mich- igan State, however, we were rush- ed (by transportation circum- stances) in the first game . . . and before we knew it, they had five quick goals," states Thompson. *. . ..***-~* . ~ Billboard The Michigan LaCrosse Club will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in; Room 146 Bus. Ad. Bldg. Tickets for this Saturday's3 Michigan - Purdue basketball game at Yost Field House go on sale starting today, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Ticket Office, State and Hoover. --Daily-Andy Sacks MARK THOMPSON (18) MOVES IN TO protect goalie Harold Herman in the recent Wolverine sweep over Michigan Tech. Thompson felt that the Tech series was the best played by Michigan, demonstrating the ability of the team. Assistant Captain Thompson feels the Wolverines can bounce back from a four game losing streak this weekend in Minnesota-Duluth. your main concern is just to clear the puck," Mark adds. Scoring records reflect Thompson's non- offensive strategy, indicating only a lone goal in the Colorado series to his credit this season. Off the ice, however, Thomp- son's attitude takes a much more positive outlook. He becomes a doer. Last year, he, along with Parkhill have all been drafted in- to assisting Thompson teach his Sunday morning class at Zion Lutheran Church. The Wolverine icer plans to take one of his pupils along with him when he speaks at an upcoming "father-son" banquet in Bay City. Thompson also is going to repre- sent the Michigan Fellowship of Christian Athletes as a speaker in Milwaukee in the near future. In the more distant future, he SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL Rutgers 69, Navy 65 Detroit 93, Western Ontario 49 Iowa 96, Minnesota 87 No. Carolina St. 87, No. Carolina 77 St. Joseph's 83, Davidson 79 St. John's 77, Notre Dame 59 Kansas 98, Missouri 54 Texas Tech 98, Texas A & M 85 Oklahoma 69, New Orleans Loyola 44 Geo. Washington 86, East Carolina 80 NBA Cincinnati 136, Boston 123 Baltimore 114, Detroit 105 Philadelphia 121, St. Louis 109 SOCIAL FRATERNITY 'A' BASKETBALL 1st Place Playoffs Sigma Alpha Mu 36, Sigma Chi 16 Alpha Phi Alpha 49, Delta Upsilon 31 2nd Place Playoffs Lambda Chi Alpha 80, Alpha Delta Phi 31 Beta Theta Pi 45, Alpha Tau Omega 41 3rd Place Playoffs Phi Epsilon Pi 35, Phi Kappa Psi 28 Phi Gamma Delta 53, Tau Delta Phi 31 4th Place Playoffs Phi Kappa Tau 45, Pi Lambda Phi 19 Sigma Nu 26, Phi Sigma Kappa 21 has hopes of representing the United States on the hockey team in the 1958 Olympics. "It would be a great privilege for me to play in the Olympics," says Thompson. He has been preparing for a shot at the team by competing in a summer hockey league of Olym- pian prospects in his hometown, where he also has the opportunity to play against many of his old high school rivals who are now members of other college puck squads. t Concerning his other plans for the future, two conflicting inter- ests leave him still undecided. "I would like to either become a minister or a teacher-coach," re- lates Thompson, who is now a his- tory major in the School of Edu- cation. Of course, there's always a chance he could be both. 4 4 i MW MARK THOMPSON JOHN THOMPSON Bob Timberlake, helped organize the Michigan Christian athletes into the.FCA. This year, although he hasn't been elected to the presidency by an official electoral procedure, Thompson has been directing the meetings and has been handling many of the speaking engage- ments. Assistant football coach Tony Mason, grid player Tom Parkhill, basketball players John Clawson and Van Tillotson are among the many active members of the FCA. "I think it's important for an athlete to have something to build him up spiritually, as well as phys- ically and mentally. There are' many nationally prominent ath- letes who are not Christians, of course, but there are just as many who are," emphasizes Thompson. Recently, Clawson, Tillotson and BIG TEN: Iowa Drops Minnesota; Gophers Fall o Third HAIRSTYLING TO PLEASE -CONTINENTALS -COLLEGIATE -RAZOR CUTS TRY! U of M Barbers N. University-Near Kresge's IOWA CITY ()')-Iowa came on strong in the second half and dimmed Minnesota's Big Ten title hopes with a 96-87 victory in a foul-riddled basketball game last night. Behind 10-4 after a five-minute scoring drought early in the game, Iowa surged back to tie it 22-22 on a tip in by big George Peeples. The two teams traded baskets be- fore another Peeples' bucket gave the Hawkeyes a 30-28 lead with 8:34 left in the first half. No Place Like It Iowa, which hasn't lost at home, never trailed after that. The Hawks led 47-44 at intermission, and slowly increased the margin to as much as 13 points at times in the second half. Minnesota cut the deficit to 87- 81 on a pair of free throws and a basket by Lou Hudson, but that was as close as the Gophers could get. Fair Weather Team Minnesota, infoul trouble most of the way, was forced to play cautious basketball in losing its third league game in eight starts. Iowa is 4-4 in Big Ten play. Chris Pervall led Iowa's balanced scoring with 28 points, Peeples had 25, and sophomore Ben Mc- Gilmer contributed 22. Hudson was high for Minnesota with 26, followed by Archie Clark, who fouled out late ,in the game, with 23. They were the only two in double figures for the Gophers. 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