e 5, 963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 5, 1983 THE MiCH. ii itAN tDILY J adgers Overtake Michigan ['Loses at Foul Line; intin Hits Stride Again LAST SECOND SHOT: 3M' Five Edges MSU, 72-71 By MIKE. BLOCK Wisconsin came from behind in the last minute of play last night to defeat Michigan's basketball team in a thriller, 81'-78.. It was the fifth such cliffhanger for the Wolverines in Big Ten play, and evened their conference - record at 3-3, while raising the Badgers to a 2-3 mark. Wisconsin's and Michigan's season records are now 9-7 and 11-5, respectively. Yost Field House's largest and noisiest crowd of the season, 9,100 strong, greeted the Wolverines, but couldn't quite urge them on to victory. Although they held a 76-70 advantage with but 4:45 to, play, Wisconsin capitalized on their mistakes to go ahead 79-78 with 47 seconds remaining. Unfrozen With three minutes left, the visitors had narrowed the gap to 78-77, when Michigan went into a freeze. It didn't work, though, as the Badgers stole the ball and went into a stall of their own, waiting for the last shot. They went ahead to stay on a layup by forward Tom Gwyn after -missing on a shot from the out- side. The Wolverines then took the ball down the court in an attempt to regain the lead, but failed as Tom Cole missed on a jump shot. Once again, the Badgers con- trolled the boards, and went up by two as Dave Grams sank a foul shot after being fouled by Bob Cantrell. With only 13 seconds to go, Michigan managed to get the ball downcourt with John Harris at- tempting a shot from the foul line. It fell short, and in the en- suing battle for the tipin, Gwyn fouled Cole; giving the latter but one free throw, which was missed. In the ensuing struggle for the rebound, both Harris and Bill Buntin had their hands on the ball, but Harris fell to the floor and was called for traveling. Helpless This gave Wisconsin control with Just three seconds left, and Michigan could do nothing to pre- vent its fate. Cantrell fouled Ken Siebel as the buzzer sounded, and the- latter converted to produce the final tally. Although Wisconsin led 45-41 at h alftime, Michigan stormed back to lead 56-55 with 13:27 left. They' maintained the advantage until Gwyn's basket in the waning moments. The Wolverines enjoyed their biggest lead, 16-9 with Just five minutes gone, while the Badgers had a six-point margin several times, the last of which was 49-43, just at the beginning of the second frame. The game featured phenomenal outside shooting by both teams, break by Wisconsin. The adgers hit on 51.4 per cent of their shots plus proficient use of the fast from the floor, while Michigan's 39.4 per cent was held down due to its repeated inability to capital- ize on tipins, the third straight game in which this has shown up. Lose Rebounds The Wolverines' downfall was also partially due to being out- ;.'rebounded for tho first time since the Ball State game, 55-46. How- ever, many of the rebounds they lost came after several tries at tipping the ball in. Their 4-for-13 mark at the free- throw line also hurt the Wolver- ines considerably, as any normal percentage on penalty tosses would have erased the margin of defeat. Despite his recent knee injury, Buntin played a fine game, and led the Wolverines in scoring and rebounding, with 20 and 19, re- spectively. But his performance was matched by Wisconsin's Jack Brens, who tallied 22 and equalled Buntin's rebound total. Brens played the last eight minutes with four personals, but still played full strength the rest of the way. Both teams had all five start- ers in double figures. Doug Her- Big Ten Standings W L Pct, Illinois 5 0 1.000 Minnesota 4 2 .667 Ohio State 4 2 .667 Indiana 3 2 .600 MICHIGAN 3 3 .500 Iowa 3 3 .500 MSU 3 4 .429 Wisconsin 2 3 .400 Northwestern 2 4 .333 Purdue 1 7 .125 ISCOlES BIG TEN Wisconsin 81, Michigan 78 Illinois 104, Indiana 101 Prudue 103, Michigan State 81 OTHER SCORES Georgia Tech 50, William & Mary 49 Kansas State 90, Missouri 55 Iowa State 83, Nebraska 69 Mississippi 60, Louisiana State 48 Oklahoma State 52, Colorado 49 Vanderbilt 74, Alabama 73 (ovt) Mississippi State 91, Tulane 73 Cincinnati 71, Drake 60 ner was second high for the Wol- verines with 18, with Cole and Cantrell at 13 apiece, and Harris with 10. Grams had 19 for the Badgers, with Gwyn and Mike O'Melia at 12 apiece, and 10 for Siebel. It was only Grams' third start of the season, but he bore out Coach John Erickson's faith in him by hitting 9-for-14 from the floor. Freeze Thawed Cole, f Harris, f Buntin, c Cantrell, g Herner, g Oosterbaan,: Tregoning, g Pomey, g Totals V Grams, f Siebel, f Brens, c O'Melia, g Gwyn, g Johnson, f Bohen, g Totals MICHIGAN WISCONSIN MICHIGAN G 6-151 5-171 9-27F 6-15] 9-13t f 0-1 2-5t 0-1 37-94 4 WISCONSIN G 9-14] 3-10 10-232 5-8 6-11t 3-4t 0-0 t 36-70 9 F R 1-4 5 0-0 ii 2-4 19 1-2 5 0-2 0 0-0 0 0-0 1 0-0 1 4-12 46 PT 3 13 4 10 2 20 3 13 0 18 0 0 0 4 0 0 12 78 F R P T 1-1 4 2-19 4-5 11 0 10 2-5 14 4 22 2-3 3 3 12 0-0 19 1 12 0-1 2 1 6 0-0 0 0 0 9-1555 11 81 41 37-78, 45 36-81 -Daily-Bruce Taylor BACK IN STRIDE-Michigan center Bill Buntin appears to re- gain his former stride last night when he scored 20 and took down 19 rebounds in Michigan's 81-78 loss to Wisconsin. Here he is re- bounding aganst Badger center, Jack Brens, while Michigan for- ward Tom Cole is looking on. MICHIGAN RELAYS: T rackmen Display Potential By CHARLIE TOWLE The bright promise of things to come dawned for Michigan varsity trackmen last Saturday at the Michigan Relays. Two-miler Chris Murray was, perhaps, the brightest spot of the evening. Murray had a disappoint- ing season last year with his best time, 9:23, coming early in the season. Both Murray and track Coach Don Canham feel his poor showing was due to over training. This year, however, he has cut down on the amount of running he does early in the season in the hope that he would be sharp when the big meets come around. Saturday Murray reaped the first fruits of his un-labor as he logged a 9:21.8 timing. The pace of the event kept the times up. The mile run seems to be as strong as ever after Saturday's showings. Des Ryan turned in a smoothly run 4:22.8 and showed promise of better times to come in winning the event. The best Michigan time for the mile, how- ever, came in the distance medley relay. Dave Hayes, running anchor in that event, clocked a 4:15. Looking at the 60-yd. dash re- sults for Michigan sprinters is a little bit deceiving. In the prelim- Grapplers,'Crumtble' Two Big Ten Teams special To The Daily inary runnings Ken Burnley won both of his heats handily, one of them in :06.2 which ties the Mich- igan varsity record. Although the often game Burnley was sound, Canham thought it better not- to give the injury bug a chance and withdrew him from the final. The two-mile relay hid another cheering personal effort, this one by half-miler Ted Kelly. Kelly running in the second slot turned the notoriously slow Yost Field House track in 1:54.5. Show Promise OPEN DIVISION ONLY MILE RUN: 1. Ryan, M; 2. Grebe, Central Michigan; 3. Bowen, MSU. Time--4:22.8. BROAD JUMP: 1. Garrett, MSU; 2. Moore, Purdue; 3. Densham, M. Distance-23'101/41. SHOT PUT: 1. Puce, M; 2. Soudek, M; 3. Smith, Purdue. Distance - 53'4". 600-YD. RUN: 1. Bernard, M; 2. Jarema, unattached; 3. Romain, M. Time-1:13. 60-YD. DASH: 1. Moreland, MSU; 2. Adams, Purdue; 3. Orr, Ohio U. Time-:06:3. TWO-MILE RELAY: 1. Michigan (Casto, Kelly, Hughes, Aquino); 2. MSU 3. Ohio U. Thne-7:47.3. HIGH JUMP: 1. Vest, Miami of Ohio; 2. McKoy, MSU; 3. Williams, Ann Arbor T. C. Height-6'61/". DISTANCE MEDLEY RELAY: 1. Michigan (Kelly, Malone, Aquino, Hayes; 2. Miami of Ohio (freshmen); 3. Western Michigan. Time-10:12.7. 1,000-YD. RUN: 1. Bork, Miami of Ohio; 2. Mitchell, Ohio U.; 3. Heller, Ohio U. Time-2:14.8. 200-YD. SHUTTLE HURDLE RE- LAY: 1. Michigan (Mason, Kohn, Thelwell, Nuttall); 2. MSU. Time- :25.2. 65-YD. HIGH HURDLES: 1. Mc- Koy, MSU; 2. Jones, Wayne State; 3. Nuttall, M. Time-:08.2. By TOM ROWLAND Special To The Daily EAST LANSING -Diminutive Doug Herner's 15-foot jumper with nine seconds showing on the Jenison Fieldhouse clock squeezed Michigan back onto the Big Ten victory trail here Saturday after- noon-much to the lament of a fieldhouse-full of once-happy, BULLETIN Hockey Colorado Coll. 8, Michigan 5 howling Michigan State fans who thought they had the game all wrapped up. A pair of free throws by for- ward John Harris and Herner's quick two-pointer spurted the Wolverines past State, 72-71, with 10,577 and a Big Ten television audience looking on. Stepped to Line With Michigan trailing 71-68 and 16 seconds to play, Michigan State's Fred Thomann clipped, Harris under the boards, and the Wolverine forward calmly stepped to the foul line and swished two. The Spartans had just 16 seconds to keep possession of the ball to snatch a one-point victory, but guard Tom Douglas' pass inbounds went awry and Michigan captain Tom Cole grabbed up the loose ball. Cole whipped it to Herner, and the little guard moved to the left of the free throw line and pumped in the winning two points. State called time out and tried a last-ditch shot, but Bill Schwarz's desperation heave was off the mark. Home-Town Boy ... It was a grand homecoming for Herner, who graduated from Lan- sing Sexton high school, and that winning bucket was only his sec- ond of the afternoon. It climaxed a slam-bang game that saw the stars of both teams hobbling around on crippled knees, an over- wrought spectator try to get into a skirmish between players on the floor, and-yep-Michigan hit 27 per cent of its shots from the floor. The whole game was even-up right down the line. State led by as much as five in the first half, but the Wolverines came back to pop into a 29-87 lead on a 30-footer by guard Bob Cantrell just before the half. The Spartans were ahead at the intermission 33-31. Michigan was leading 68-67 go- ing into the final two minutes when it all began. Following a Nicklaus Wins, Golf 'Playoff PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (MP) - Nation Open champion Jack Nicklaus, turning the match into a rout when Gary Player blew himself to a triple bogey 7 on the 12th hole, won the Palm Springs Golf Classic yesterday in an 18- hole playoff with the South Afri- can star. LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Michigan won its third straight Big Ten wrestling dual meet yesterday with a smashing, 26-6 win over Purdue. Saturday the Wolverines trounc- ed highly rated Minnesota, 17-8. Michigan now has a 3-2 'season's record. Ine both meets Michigan showed balance winning equally well in both the lighter and heavier weights. No Michigan wrestler lost twice and in several weights won twice and in several weights Mich- igan won on both occasions. Carl Rhodes at 123-lbs. won against Purdue and tied against Minnesota. Nick Armelagos show- ed the form of two years ago winning twice at 130-lbs. At 137- lbs. Dave Dozeman lost against the Gophers but cane back to score a fall against the Boiler- makers. Lee Dietrick at 147-lbs. split, winning against Minnesota and losing against Purdue. Wrestlers Romp AT MINNESOTA 123-lbs.-Rhodes (M) tied Henry (Minn.) 5-5. 130-lbs.-Armelagos (M) d. Wit- tenberger (Minn.) 7-1. 137-lbs.- Kennedy (Minn.) d., Dozeman (M) 3-0. 147-lbs.-Dietrick (M) d. Quazay (Minn.) 4-1. 157 -lbs.-Rubis (Minn.) d. Miller (M) 3-2. 167-lbs.-Bay (M) d. Millingeon (Minn.) 11-3. 177-lbs. - Stowell (M) d. Maur (Minn.) 7-1. Hwt. - Spaley (M) d. Smith (Minn.) 4-0. AT PURDUE 123-lbs.-Rhodes (M) d. Shrag (P) 3-2. 130-lbs.-Armelagos (M) d. Elker (P) 6-2. 137-lbs.-Dozeman (M) pinned Montgomery (P) 5:15. 147-lbs.-Gibson (P) d. Dietrick (M) 4-1. 157-lbs.-Keen (M) d. Loeper (P) 4-0. 167-lbs.-Bay (M) d. Kinney (P) 6-2. 177-lbs.-Nonkon (P) d. Stowell (M) 2-1. Hwt.-Barden (M) pinned Turnack (P) 2:58. " 1 - --^.. i Wayne Miller at 157-lbs lost to Minnesota, but Jim Keen who wrestled in his first meet of the season, won against Purdue. Rick Bay at 167, won two impressive victories while Chris Stowell at 177-lbs. defeated his Gopher op- ponent, but lost to Purdue. At heavyweight, Bob Spaley a sophomore defeated his Minne- sota opponent and Jack Barden pinned his Purdue opponent for a clean sweep. Michigan's other Big Ten win was against Northwestern. The Wolverines lost two earlier meets to Penn State and Pittsburgh. III