Page '-Saturday, February 3, 1979-The Michigan Daily HOLCOMB HEALTHY FOR 'MUST-WIN' GAME: Blue cagers face improved Illini Soluk optimistic for cager rebound By BRIAN MARTIN The second half of the Big Ten season officially begins today, and the con- ference picture is anything but clear. About the only thing in focus is a playoff picture without a supporting cast of Wolverines. After Thursday's loss to Indiana, Michigan dropped to 4-5 in the conference, four games out of fir- st place with only nine games yet to be played. Since only two teams from a con- tied for fourth place but only two games behind second place Iowa. Second place will certainly be an at-large bid to the tourney. Illinois definitely needs a win today to stay in contention'for the playoffs. The Illini rebounded from a three-game losing streak Thursday night with a convincing win over Minnesota. A big part of the resurgence of the 14th-ranked Illini has been two-fold: the recovery of 6-11 center Derek Holcomb and the improved play of former reser- ve forward Levi Cobb. HOLCOMB CAME DOWN with a foot infection the night of Illinois' win over Michigan State. He sat out two games and saw only limited action against the Wolverines last Saturday (18 minutes of play), which Michigan won 56-54 on Marty Bodnar's last second layup. During those Three games Illinois' record was 0-3. But Holcomb returned against the Badgers and helped record another notch in the win column. "Holcomb is a lot better than the last three weeks," Illini coach Lou Henson said yesterday. "He hadn't worked out. at all prior to the Michigan game (last week) and is much stronger now." THE OTHER REASON for the Illini's return to winning ways has been the play of Cobb. His 19 point performance against Minnesota moved him into the starting lineup in place of Eddie John- son. Johnson is the man who hit the winning bucket against MSU a few weeks back. "Levi has played excellent ball for us," said Henson, who racked up his 300th career win Thursday. With the exception of Holcomb, who is known as "The Incredible Hole" around Champaign, there are no established stars on the squad. Rather, the Illini have flourished on team play this season. Defense is the biggest attribute for Illinois, who lead the Big Ten in holding opponents to the lowest field goal per- centage (.421). Michigan is fifth in this rebound average in the league. In a strange twist of the norm, Illinois may have an advantage today with the game being played at Crisler. The Illini have been phenomenally successful on the road this year, having lost only one THE LINEUPS By ELISA FRYE Gloria Soluk is a coach who looks to the future. She doesn't need a horoscope or a palm reader, she has confidence in her basketball team. Her optimism keeps her from dwelling on such events as the loss against Central that the women's team suffered Wednesday night, and instead has her looking forward to the game with Calvin College this afternoon in Grand Rapids. of the year for me," Soluk added. So Soluk has been busily preparing the cagers for this afternoon's contest. "We're working on rebounding and blocking out," she said. "We're working on the things that we do well. As for Calvin's abilities, Soluk said, "Every team we play is good com- petition now." Soluk will not decide on the starters until just before the game. In an ipjury update, she reported that sophomore guard Deb Allor, who separated her shoulder in a game against Adrian, has had her cast removed. But her status as a player this year remains ulcertain. 6-7 6-5 6-6 6-0 6-3 MICHIGAN Phil Hubbard Mike McGee Alan Hardy Keith Smith Tom Staton ..... C .....Derek Holcomb ..... F ..... Levi Cobb ..... F .....Neil Bresnahan ..... G ..... Mark Smith ..... G ..... Rob Judson 6-11 "We're going to win the Big Ten tour- 6-6 -nament and the state championship," she said. "One loss to Central is not 6-6 going to stop that. It was the worst loss ILLINOIS 6-7 6-2 full court 1.js i- t Lai category at .461. Illinois' exact field goal percentage for the season. The Wolverines are hitting at a .456 clip. ONCE AGAIN Michigan will be out- sized on the frontline. Illinois' starting lineup has a 12-inch advantage over Michigan's starters, who rank eighth in road game. The problem has been win- ning at home, where they have dropped three of five. "We usually play pretty well on the road," Henson said. "It will be another top game, as games with Michigan are always tough." Big Ten mid-terms. ... Grades are in Levi Cobb I ference are permitted to participate in the NCAA's, and since Michigan is tied with Indiana for fifth place, hopes for. the runnerup spot look anemic. THE FIGHTING ILLINI come to Crisler Arena this aftern-oon .(at 3:30, not 4:05 to accommodate the NBC camera televising the contest as the Big Ten Game of the Week) still in the race, MAKES NBA EAST TEAM By DAVE RENBARGER Lanier 's a 'Star' Entertainment omes.. to the Stage Door! Magic Right before your very eyes, ilusionistj Lee Dorrow performs every Sunday from C 5 p.m. until closing ... possibly right at your very toblel Bring the entire familyl a4 Children's menu featured until 8 p.m. No cover charge. Drinks at regular prices. & Starting Sunday, Feb. 4, 1979. 300 S. Thayer Acro s from Hill Auditorium iNIS ADl DINNER More than fifty percent of the world is starving. Another twenty percent, just plain hungry. And yet, in the face of starvation, they have hope. Hope that the rains will return to the African Plain. Hope that the Asian rice crop will be bigger this year. Hope that someone, anyone, with anything to offer will come to help them fight the battle for life. Someone in the Peace Corps. They'd like to stand up for themselves, these prisoners of fate, but they're just too weak to stand up. But with the Peace Corps a flame begins to flicker. They've seen other like you before. Seen the changes you can bring. Two thousand wells on the parched earth of Sahel. Seen how their knowledge helped reduce the grain losses. Who are they? They're people pretty much like you. People with commitment and skills who've assessed their lives and decided there must be more than just having a job. They looked into themselves and knew it was time for the talk to end and the work to begin. They're very specia1 people, these people. Totally prepared to give everything they've got. And getting back even more than they give. That's the beauty of the Peace Corps. The work is hard and the pay is lousy, and the progress comes a drop at a time. But the rewards are infinite. Join the Peace Corps and then take a good long look in the mirror. .h.You'll never look the same to yourself again. rv The Peace Corps is alive and well. Call toll free: 800-424-8580. Or write: The Peace Corps, Box A, Washington, D.C. 20525 DETROIT (AP) - A record crowd of 30,000 is expected to assemble under the Pontiac Silverdome for the National Basketball Association's 29th annual All-Star Game Sunday, and they'll have a hometown hero after all, thanks to league Commissioner Larry O'Brien. With Philadelphia guard Doug Collins sidelined by a foot injury, O'Brien named Detroit center Bob Lanier to the East squad yesterday LANIER'S APPEARANCE should help Houston's Moses Malone, who before Friday was the East's only cen- ter against Kareem Abdul-Jabbar of Los Angeles and Chicago's Artis Gilmore for the West. Lanier won't be the only local hero. Pontiac's own Campy Russell of the University of Michigan and the Cleveland Cavaliers is a reserve for the East team of Washington Coach Dick Motta. Also on the East team are starters Rudy Tomjanovich of Houston and George Gervin of San Antonio. Tom- janovich was a star at Hamtramck High School and the University of' Michigan, while Gervin was a prep star at Detroit King and college standout at Eastern Michigan. "IT'S THE showcase of the stars," Gervin said. "Anybody can ignite it. I'm not coming in to steal the show. I'm just coming to be one of the stars." Tomjanovich said he's had better seasons and wasn't chosen. "This year I thought I had no chan- ce," he said.d Russell said: "It probably won't hit me until the day of the game as to what it all means." The crowd will be some 12,000 more than the previous high for an NBA All- Star Game, a turnout of 18,422 which watched the 1968 game in New York's Madison Square Garden. A DETROIT brewery bought a block of 4,000 tickets Wednesday, making the game a virtual sellout and prompting the local TV blackout to be lifted. Other East starters are Julius "Dr. J" Erving of Philadelphia and Pete Maravich of New Orleans. The West team, coached by Seattle's Lenny Wilkens, will counter with Ab- dul-Jabbar, -David Thompson and George McGinnis of Denver, Marques Johnson of Milwaukee and Paul West- phal of Phoenix. IT WILL BE the seventh All-Star ap- pearance for Lanier, who was the most valuable player of the 1974 game, scoring 24 points. He remembers that game vividly, and not just because he was MVP. "What makes that game stand out was playing the high and low post together with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar," Lanier recalled. "Larry Costello, coach of the West team, had us on the floor at the same time and that was something. It was a strange experience to have somebody on my team taller than I am. T had to look up to Kareem who is 7-2. The way we were flipping the ball around, it was awesome." IT'S MIDTERM TIME. But don't panic. This midterm evaluation only concerns the Wolverine basketball players, whose Big Ten season is exactly halfway down the drain. The grades are in. Tommy Staton-A-minus-Tommy gets straight A's in categories like defense, enthusiasm, leadership and quotable quotes. But his questionable offensive skills coupled with his extended absences cost him a half a grade. Still, Staton's value to the team is difficult to understate. With him going at full tilt all year long, Michigan could very well be 6-3 instead of 4-5 right now. Phil Hubbard-B-That's fair enough, I suppose. You just can't be too harsh on a guy who has had to endure as much as Hubbard has for the last couple seasons. Never much of an extrovert, Hub is so sick pf everybody wanting to know how his knee is feeling that he has withdrawn deeper into his shell of silence. The real extent of the frustration he must feel is thus left to the imagination. Alan Hardy-B-plus-After three and a half years, "City Al" is finally becoming a consistent player from game to game. His shots have been going in a lot more often lately, but it seems like the better he shoots, the more he sits on the bench. I never knew making baskets was so exhausting. Smith needs some polish Keith Smith-B-I was tempted to give the little guy an A-plus on the sole basis of one shot he sank 'against MSU, but one shot does not make a season. Give him another year or so of polish, and Keith is a good bet to make the grade. This seasoi, however, his frequent mistakes and poor out- side shooting counteract his often brilliant play. And, no, I won't consider changing the grade, no matter how many late papers he turns in. Mike McGee-C-So how is it possible that the team's top point producer gets stuck with the lowest grade? Simple. The problem is, that Mike's many mistakes on the court often more than make up for his bushels of baskets. All too often, the trigger-happy "Geeter".confuses Michigan basketball with I.M. basketball, unloading those patented 22-footers. As a result, he has missed more shots than anybody in the Big Ten, and owns the worst shooting percentage (.405) of all the conference scoring leaders. Marty Bodnar-A-minus-He's the most pleasant surprise on the team, the steadiest and most consistent performer over the entire year. Marty commits few errors on the court and makes a lot more shots than he misses. Thad Garner-B-minus-He's a hard worker, he's enthusiastic, and he does many things well. But he is also very prone to make rally-killing mistakes at the worst possible times. Still, it's tough to get down on a guy who probably writes home at least three times a week. Paul Heuerman-B-plus-"Drink" has been doing everything you would expect from a decent back-up center. He can't dominate a game like a star- ting center, but then again he does a lot more than just take up space like a Tom Bergen. JJ needs another chance Johnny Johnson-B-An untimely injury stalled a JJ's emergence as a bona fide Big Ten player a few weeks back. Now Johnny finds himself at the crossroads. If he gets another opportunity pretty soon and produces, he could be just what Michigan needs. If he blows the chance, or, worse yet, doesn't get one, he just might end up elsewhere. Mark Lozier-C-plus-I'll admit it. That's just a guess. It's not based on anything Mark's done this year, because he really hasn't done much of anything. As fifth guard, the only junior on the team has developed into Michigan's forgotten man. Mark Bodnar and John Garris-I (as in a incomplete)-This pair simply hasn't done enough to pass any sort of judgment on. They do both show up for practice every day, but, at the games, they might just as well be sitting in the stands. Johnny Orr-??-C'mon now. The guy's like a professor with tenure. I can't touch him. I suppose you're wondering about the team GPA. It figures out to be just about a 3.0. I suppose the median for a tough conference like the Big Ten would be a shade over a 3.0. All of this, I suppose, serves to explain Michigan's current sixth-place standing, just a shade under the median. See how easy it is? 4 f f a 7 days to MICHIGRAS '79 Sat., Feb. 10-8 pm THE MICHIGAN UNION-$1 It's Gonna Be A "SUPER PARTY" Carnival Games o Movies Live Bands * Casino " Prizes Free Bowling & Billiards " Food Drink " 21 Club " Great Acts Sponsored by Union Programming/UAC 763-1107 - i PD Where can you get a six pack that costs as little as8C a day, and will last a whole week? ju ----a / . 11 BILLBOARD The Department of Recreational Sports announces that the filing deadline for paddleball teams in the Residence Hall, Fraternity, Graduate, and Independent divisions is Monday, February 5. All entries can be turned in at the old IM Building on Hoover St. between 8:30 and 4:30 on Monday. Hoop fans who didn't read the story above carefully enough should be war- '4