The Michigan Daily-Thursday, Nover Page 12-Thursday, November 29, 1979-The Michigan Daily HOOp it up: Midwest teams gain national stronghold RUGGED NONCONFERENCE SCHEDULE Early games to test Blue ca By BILLY NEFF In sports circles, legend has it that on the coasts and in the cities, basket- ball is played to perfection. In the hear- tlands of the midwest, the dominant sport is football. Legends, however, often become myths and this situation has occurred in college basketball. The midwest has begun to dominate the hoop scene. It used to be the two coasts which dominated. But now, the UCLAs have been replaced by such teams as last year's finalists, Michigan State and cinderella quintet Indiana State. THIS YEAR, the cream of the crop, no pun intended, is again in the midwest with the Indiana Hoosiers. Their raging mentor Bobby Knight has all five star- ters returning from an NIT champion- ship team. Add the expertise of Knight and an enormous additional of sen- sational prep star Isiah Thomas and you have a championship quintet. Joining Thomas, a Pan American player for Knight, will be scoring star Mike Woodson: Woodson was also the leading scorer on that Pan American team which included another Indiana starting forward, Ray Tolbert. Pivot- man Landon Turner should blossom this year and Knight will reap the headlines again. If the Hoosiers sputter, just a few hours up north, there is another school ready to wrest honors from them, Notre Dame. The only thing working against the Fighting Irish is their seeming inability to win important games under the tutelage of Digger Phelps. Although a master recruiter, Phelps has been outcoached more than his share of times, like last year against MSU when he could not solve the Spartans' zone. BEING THE MASTER recruiter that he is, Phelps has the deepest team in the nation. Two fine guards, Rich Branning and Bill Hanzlik, lead the way and are backed up by a host of others. Phelps will also call on a stalwart front line with starters Kelly Tripucka and Orlando Woolridge, and freshmen Bill Varner and Tim Andree (from Birmingham Brother Rice). Just a ways down the interstate, there is another school with a fine spor- ts tradition, great recruiting and little coaching-Kentucky. But then again, the Wildcats probably will not need much coaching as head man Joe Hall tabbed the finest recruits in the nation to go along with four returning starters. IN FACT, THE talent is running so ' ~! i: ' ' i l Nrasier's ub SINGLES NIGHT GIN, VODKA & WHISKEY COCKTAILS HALF PRICE EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT thick that starting center Chuck Alexinas and reserve forward Clarence Tillman, both high school All Americans, left school over their lack of playing time. To replace Alexinas, Hall signed on prep sensation Sam Bowie, a seven footer who prefers playing forward. ,Running with Bowie will be outstanding guards Kyle Macy, a first-round draft pick of the Phoenix Suns, and the incredible Dwight Ander- son. For Southern supremacy, Kentucky will be challenged by the Duke Blue Devils. Duke, boasting perhaps the best front line in the nation, has also been known to succumb in high pressure games. MIKE GMINSKI, the 6-11 tower of strength who left the Pan American team, will have something to say about that 'choke' image. Joining Gminski on the front line will be Gene Banks, the most highly sought after player in the nation three years ago, and Kenny Dennard. Duke lost captain Jim Spanarkel to the Philadelphia 76ers but the Devils have starter Bob Bender and sixth man Vince Taylor back, along with some top recruits. Rounding out the preseason top five will be the other delegation from the Big Ten, Ohio State. Although probably a year away from melding into a bonafide national contender, the Buckeyes have the material to make a run now. Returning are All-Big Ten perfor- mers Herb Williams and Kelvin Ran- sey, who combined for more than 20 points a game. Starters Jim Smith and Carter Scott also return. But there is a missing ingredient-the spice. This is where Clark Kellogg, who has been mentioned in the same breath as Ear- vin Johnson, comes in. Buckeye fans expect their native son, Kellogg, to lead them to the national title. BIT THINGS are also expected from perennial challenger North Carolina and their all Atlantic Coast Conference forwards Mike O'Koren and Al Wood. Center Rich Yonakor, known for his length-of-the-court dashes, returns along with starting guard Dave Colescott. But somehow, coach Dean Smith has to find a way to replace sparkplug Dudley Bradley, now an In- diana Pacer. Strong frontlines seem to -be the strength in the South and Texas A&M is no exception. In College Station, Texas, people boast of Rudy Woods and Vernon Smith. Woods bulldozed his way through European teams this summer as a member of the U.S. team in the In- ternational Cup Games. The Aggies also hve a sensational freshman for- ward Claude Riley in tow. The South has another imposing front. line in Bayou country-L.S.U. A team plagued with internal dissension, the Tigers welcome back All-American Durand Macklin, gone all last season with an injury, and DeWayne Scales. The guard position will be coach Dale Brown's problem, although Jordy Hult- berg returns. Hultberg is the guard who "shot the lights out" against MSU last year. SYRACUSE AND DePaul, two teams who were right in the thick of things last year, round out the top ten. Syracuse possesses the 'Luois and Bouie' show with dominating 6-11 center Roosevelt Bouie and defensive star Louis Orr at forward. DePaul has its two bears, Teddy Cummings and Teddy Grubbs to add to their grizzly, Mark Aguirre, star freshman of last year. All in all, it should be an interesting season that promises to have many surprises, which may include the resurgence of UCLA and St. John's, two oldtime powers. Legends, legends. Recruits - how good? (Continued from Page 11) I thought, and he's picking up the plays very well," said Orr. Despite his shooting success so far, Person knows his real forte. "I'm not what you would call a quick forward," he said. "On the other hand, though, I'll take the 20-footer if it's open. I don't think he (Orr) would mind." THE LAST OF Michigan's freshman, forward Leo Brownis not expected to see much action. The 6-8, 205-pounder from Mansfield St. Peter High shot 66 per cent from the field and 78 per cent from the foul line, impressive statistics for a player his size. However, a series of foot injuries have hindered Brown's development in practice, and only now is he rounding into top form. So there you have it - the 1979-80 Wolverine freshman class. A good group, no doubt. Perhaps, eventually, an outstanding one. James, in par- ticular, shows tremendous promise and may provide much of the offensive spark this season. But Orr's search for the "big man in the middle" - a role Hubbard would have filled and Kellogg could have filled - will continue this winter. By MARK MIHANOVIC With ticket sales slumping, the press criticizing, and thousands of fans brooding, there's only one way the Michigan basketball team can combat the pre-season pessimism surrounding its 1979-80 cage fortunes. That's by knocking off some tough opponents on their non-conference schedule. The Wolverines will be severely tested by an early-season slate which features NCAA tournament qualifiers Toledo, Marquette, and Detroit. To make the task more difficult, Michigan must battle all three of those teams on the road. 1979-80 Schedule Dec.1 MASSACHUSETTS, 2:05 p.m. Dec. 3 CENTRAL MICHIGAN, 8:05 p.m. Dec. 5 at Toledo Dec. 8 at Marquette Dec. 12 at Detroit# #Joe Louis Arena. Detroit Dec. 15 DAYTON, 2:05 p.m. Dec. 22 WESTERN MICHIGAN, 2:05 p.m. Dec. at Sugar Bowl Tournament 28-29 (Michigan, Mississippi, Virginia Tech, Tulane) Jan. 3 MINNESOTA, 8:05 p.m. Jan.5 IOWA, 2:05 p.m. Jan. 10 at Indiana Jan. 12 at Purdue Jan. 17 at Illinois Jan. 19 OHIO STATE, 2:05 p.m. Jan. 24 MICHIGAN STATE, 8:05 p.m. Jan.26 at Northwestern Jan. 31 at Wisconsin Feb. 2 NORTHWESTERN, 2:05 p.m. Feb. 7 at Ohio State Feb.9 WISCONSIN, 2:05p.m. Feb. 14 ILLINOIS, 8:05 p.m. Feb. 16 at Michigan State Feb. 21 PURDUE, 8:05 p.m. Feb. 23 INDIANA, 2:05 p.m. Feb. 28 at Iowa Mar. 1 at Minnesota THE BLUE cagers open their season at home this Saturday against Massachusetts, perhaps their weakest opponent. Michigan Coach Johnny Orr, a former head coach at the eastern school, originally scheduled the game with Jack Leamon, a former assistant to Orr and head coach of the Minutemen last season. But Leamon stepped down after a 5-22 campaign, leaving successor Ray Wilson with a team which had lost its top four scorers to graduation. The following Monday, Central Michigan comes to Crisler Arena. Last year the Chippewas sported a 19-9 record (including an 87-78 loss to Michigan), but graduation has deeply cut into their talent, as well. "There's no doubt we've suffered the most losses of anyone in the league (Mid-American Conference)," Coach Dick Parfitt said. "We lost four star- ters, all of whom played regularly on three straight title-contending teams." MIKE ROBINSON, a 6-9 transfer from Michigan, is expected to move in at center for Central. He'll join the lone returning starter, Leon Guydon, on the front line. Michigan's first road game takes place December 5 at the home of the defending MAC champions, Toledo (22- 8 last year). The Rockets surprised everyone but themselves in the 1979 NCAA tournament, as they knocked off Big Ten tri-champ Iowa in the first round and narrowly lost to Notre Dame a week later. Returning forwards Dick Miller (11.6 ppg, 8.1 rebounds) and Jim Swaney (15.9 ppg, eight rebounds), personify the aggressiveness which marked Toledo last year. An excellent recruiting year makes the Rockets a_- prohibitive favorite to repeat as MAC champs. The Blue cagers- next travel to Milwaukee three days later to play always-tough Marquette (22-7). Coach Hank Raymonds had a lean recruiting year, but nonetheless has enough veterans to make the Warriors a very difficult team for Michigan to defeat. The loss of Bernard Toone should be compensated for by 6-6 Oliver. 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