*1 f The Michigan Daily-Sunday, February 4, 1979Page 9 Micigan comes aliive to betIlni7_5; - full court .- P PRE- Fast break slows... ... shooters on the bench By BRIAN MARTIN Lou Henson was still shaking his head fifteen minutes after the game had ended. "It's one of the saddest days, not because we lost, but because, when you work hard to teach people to play the game of basketball and then every time somebody moves they reach out and grab." Illinois' propensity to reach and grab was the only reason that Michigan won the game yesterday. Henson's squad committed an astounding 31 fouls, with all but seven of them coming in the second half. The Wolverines went into the bonus at the 13:12 mark of the second half, and received 15 opportunities to shoot one-and-one. Of these, Michigan missed the front end of the bonus four times and a total of nine charity tosses off the bonus. There was no reason for the Illini to be in the game as long as they were. With all the opportunities the Wolverines received, the men in the orange should have been worrying about how their hair looked on television rather than trying to pull the game out, despite their haphazard play. "Our free throw shooting was lousy," understated Johnny Orr. "It's a mental thing for us now." Lacking offense Mentality aside, Michigan shot an unimpressive .667 (26-39) from the foul line, which provided the winning margin. However, the most glaring weakness of the team continues to be its inability to put the ball through from the field. The Wolverines.shot a dismal .390 from the floor, led by Mike McGee's 10-for-27 performance. This is nothing new. Thursday night in Bloomington the Wolverines hit only 24 of 61 attempts. That works out to .393. Not too im- pressive for a team that was promoted as a run-and-gun, fastbreaking, sharpshooting squad. What has happened to that pre-season team? Before the Windsor holocaust way back in November (Michigan won 122-77), Michigan held an intrasquad scrimmage, complete with officials and a 15 minute clock. Orr set his teams with the starters against the reserves as he only had ten healthy bodies available when Paul Heuerman had his hand in a cast and Mark Bodnar limped around in a foot cast. The teams were explosive. In the first period, the starters Phil Hubbard, McGee, Thad Garner, Tom Staton, Johnny Johnson) beat the reserves (Alan Hardy, John Garris, Marty Bodnar, Keith Smith, Mark Lozier) 66-64 with both teams pressing all over and fastbreaking at every and any oppor- tunity. They played another fifteen minutes with the starters winning 54- 52-they must have been tired. I am reminiscing to that period of time to show that the Wolverines had no trouble at all stinging the twines in Crisler Arena. And they certainly didn't display any knack for the art of defense by both teams allowing a total of 236 points in thirty minutes. .The current Blue contingent demonstrates a total turnaround in team concept. The pre-season notion stood at the best defense would be a potent of- fense, which the Wolverines had. Now, it's the defense that has enabled them to struggle to their current 5-5 mark in the Big Ten. With all the trouble Michigan is having to score from the field, it seems ironic that Orr continues to keep his more accurate shooters on the bench. Marty Bodnar, prior to yesterday's contest, led the Big Ten in field goal per- centage by hitting at a .603 clip, the only conference player to hit over 60 per- cent of his shots. Alan Hardy is third in the conference at .586. Yesterday Bodnar played only 12 minutes and took one shot (he missed it). Hardy recorded 22 minutes on the court, which is misleading since Orr wanted to replace him with four important minutes left but had to rescind when Hubbard fouled out. Problems for McGee Conspicuously missing from the top shooters is McGee, whose flat jum- pers haven't had nearly the success they had last year in his freshman cam- paign. "McGee still isn't shooting well," Orr had to say again yesterday. Yet the sophomore from Omaha still logged 37 minutes on the court, despite his poor shooting and questionable shot selections at times. Hardy took a bad shot in the second half and Heuerman was at the scorer's table in a flash. "I don't know why I didn't play much in the second half. If you knew that and I knew that we'd both be into a lot of money," Hardy said after the game yesterday. If there weren't a question to answer, maybe the Wolverines would be into the playoff picture. Aid what tage, free t 74-65 foul-f Th( appa at ha been Wolv right ficial TH descr ting a then conta In picke a diff as th sonaL And shooti lately attem score( seal a gone t TON impor 67-65. and a Foul shots in waning moments p By DAVE RENBARGER good measure. Staton played a terrific The Wolverines mane ded for much of the second half by game overall, scoring ten points and baskets in the second ha seemed like a three-man advan- adding eight rebounds and six assists 17 by the Illini. But a 22 Michigan managed to sink enough Mike McGee's 25 points led five vantage from the line n hrows down the stretch to record a Wolverines in double figures, but his up the difference. Big Ten triumph yesterday over season-long shooting slump continued. ILLINOIS COACH L prone Illinois at Crisler Arena. McGee was but 10 of 27, and had seven more perturbed at his e three guys in the striped shirts of his shots blocked by the taller Illini. the officials. rently befriended the Wolverines Coach Johnny Orr was animated in "Even if I thought th lftime, and while it might not have the post-game press conference, ob- poor job, I wouldn't say an eight-on-five ballgame, the viously pleased that his team bounced the way we played," sai erines certainly came out on the back so well after playing poorly at In- defense was just reac end in the tug-of-war over the of- diana last Thursday. "None of 'em made too many foolish f s' whistle. come easy for us anymore," he said. "You don't have to N E REFS could generously be "We've got a little more fire even figure out how to win," ibed as inconsistent, at first let- though we've lost a few games. We're son. "If they're shootir ill sorts of things go unnoticed, and not giving Up.,, the second half, what's whistling down even the slightest AN UNCHARACTERISTIC move by Let them keep shooting. ANUCAtCEITC.oeb on the line." ict' Orr in the first half may have influen- BUT THE Illini follow he first half, for instance, Illinois ced the officials' view on the game. The tactics. As a result, d up only seven team fouls. It was Michigan coach joined the crowd in fouled out, including erIllni wr e asleford s4apzr, berating one official for failing to call e Illini were called for 24 per- Illini guard Rob Judson for elbowing Foul pi s. defender Keith Smith.Fo t'p i the Wolverines, whose free throw efThen, after play had stopped, Orr ap- ng has been anything but reliable proacheae official and elbowed him MICHIGAN converted on five of their last six prsached the nelbowed hm Mim FG/A just below the neck, risking the McGee ............37 10/27 pts in the last 37 seconds and automatic technical foul that usually Hardy...........22 4/8 d the game's final seven points to accompanies such action. The ref didn't Hubbard...........35 4/9 victory that could very well have call the technical, but sure called the Staton............37 2/6 he other way.-game closer after that. smith.............. 35 4/9 VIMY STATON sank the two most Michigan (now 5-5 in the Big Ten) Heuer........1720/t tant freebies, with Michigan up established a 34-29 halftime edge, but Garner.............5 0/0 Alan Hardy hit the other three, the Illini managed to stay within Team Rebounds ... dded a bucket at the buzzer for striking distance despite their fouls. Deadball Reb'ds... -J ropel aged only nine alf, compared to -2 Wolverine ad- more than made ou Henson was players than at e officials did a y anything after' id Henson. "Our h and grab. We ouls. e very smart to continued Hen- ng 36 percent in the objective? Don't put them wed the opposite three starters top point man ay Wolverines Mark Smith, and leading rebounder Neil Bresnahan. Instead of capitalizing on their many opportunities at the line, however, the Wolverines decided to make things more interesting, missing four times on the front ends of one-and-one chances. ,"We just can't get away from anybody," said Orr. "If we'd make those free throws, we'd have a little cushion." NO SUCH cushion was to develop, however, and Michigan's situation wasn't improved when center Phil Hubbard picked up his fifth foul with 3:32 left: Hubbard hit a driving layup to give the Wolverines a 63-59 lead, but was called for a charging foul on the play. And when freshman James Griffin connected on a layup with 59 seconds left to pull the Illini within two, 67-65, it was time for Michigan to stall. Twenty seconds elapsed before Staton's cluth free throws closed the door on the Illini for the final time. Griffin led Illinois with 16 points, while Bresnahan single-handedly dominated the glass, grabbing 18 rebounds. 30 Per Copy at the PAPER CHASE Michigan Union next to U-Cellar 665-8065 Tal . 200 Fouled out: Hubbard: ILL Min Bresnahan........ 30 Cobb.............29 Holcomb ..........20 Smith............ 19 Judson ...........33 Johnson ........... 13 Lanter ............ 16 Griffin............ 20 Range ............ 17 Lubin............2 Leonard......... 1 Team Rebounds ... DeadballRebe s.... Totals .............200 Fouled Out: Bresnahan, 24 /61 INOIS nFG/A 3/10 2/8 1/3 4/7 4/7 4/8 1/1 8/16 2/2 0/0 0/0 29/62 FT/A 5/10 3/4 6/10 6/6 3/5 0/0 3/4 0/0 3 26/39 FT/A 1/3 0/ii 0/0 0/0 2/2 2/2 0/0 0/0 2/2 0/0, 0/0 7/9 R 5 .5 4 8 3 2 6 0 3 39 10 17 74 A 0 2 0 6 0 0 PF Pts. 2 25 3 11 5 14 1 10 1 11 10 3 3 10a R 18 2 4 6 1 3 0 4 2 0 0 1 5 46 PF 5 3 5 5 2 1 4 3 2 0 Pts. 7 4 2 8 10 10 2 16 6 0 0 8 31 65 Holcomb, Smith Halftime: Michigan 34, Illinois 29 Attendance 13,609 Hatikah Campaign UJA) upped its 1979 pledge UP TOURSI Return your pledge card today F I Ann Arbor's Second Chance welcomes ROY AYERS Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG MICHIGAN'S Keith Smith (25) seems to be giving up in exasperation as his shot is, blocked by Illinois' James Griffin in Michigan's foul-filled 74-65 victory over the Fighting Illini yesterday. SPARTANS GAIN REVENGE Tuesday, February 13 Shows at 8 & 10:30 Tickets $ 6.50 advance Tickets at: Discount Records U-M Ticket Office The Second Chance Wherehouse Records- Ypsi Bucks lose to Hoosiers, By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON - Mike Woodson made four free throws and Scott Eells three in the final two minutes as In- diana held off seventh-ranked Ohio State 70-62 in Big Ten college basketball yesterday. The Hoosiers, 5-5 in the league, upset the conference leaders without making a field goal in the final seven minutes. Butch Carter's jump shot with 7:96 to play, giving Indiana its biggest lead of the second half at 57-48 was the Hoosiers' final field goal of the game. _ Ohio State, 8-2 in the league after its second loss in three days, rallied to a 61- 60 deficit on a Kelvin Ramsey field goal. Ramsey, who had 20 points and Herb Wi!iiams, who scored 26, sparked the comeback. All five .Indiana starters finished in double figures. Woodson led the balan- ced scoring with 16, Ray Tolbert had 15 and Landon Turner contributed 14. I SCORES Other College Detroit 91, Georgetown 71 Clemson 74, S. Carolina 64 Du~ke 87, Maryland 78 MSU 61, N'Western 50 EAST LANSING - Senior Gregory Kelser scored 18 points as Michigan State blew open a close game in the Big Ten Standings Conference Ohio State Iowa Purdue Michigan State MICHIGAN Illinois Indiana Minnesota Wisconsin Northwestern. W 8 8 7 6 5 5 5 3 2 1 L 2 2 3 4 5 5 5 7 8 9, All Games W L 13 6 15 4 17 5 13 5 11 1 17 5 13 9 8 8 11 5 14 of the game, favoring the leg slightly and scoring just four free throws. The Spartans lead was 21-19 at half- time after they missed numerous chan- ces from in close during the first 20 minutes of play. * * * Purdue 54, Wisconsin 48 MADISON - Purdue's onrushing Boilermakers, sparked by Joe Barry Carroll's 20 points, outlasted Wisconsin 54-48 yesterday for their fifth con- secutive Big Ten basketball victory. Wisconsin, 2-8 in the conference, trailed by three 32-29 at the half and then tied the score at 42-all on a Claude Groory basket with 4:49 to play. But Gregory, a 6-foot-8 sophomore forward who led the Badgers with 14 points, fouled out moments later. Joe Chrnelich followed him to the bench with 4:20 left, on a foul that enabled Purdue's Arnette Hallman to sink a pair of free throws that put the Boilermakers back in front to stay. * * * 70-62 Iowa 97, Minnesota 71 MINNEAPOLIS - Ronnie Lester scored 17 points and dished out six assists last night as Iowa clobbered Minnesota 97-71 and moved into a tie for first place in the Big Ten basketball race. The Hawkeyes scored 11 straight points midway through the first half and then scored 17 of the last 21 to assume a 45-25 bulge at halftime. Iowa's 8-2 record tied the Hawkeyes with Ohio State, which dropped a 70-62 decision at Indiana yesterday after- noon. Lester, Iowa's speedy guard from Chicago, scored two quick baskets early in the second half as the Hawkeyes ran up a 54-27 lead. Kevin Boyle added 15 points for Iowa, which raised its overall record to 15-4. Steve Krafcisin had 14, Dick Peth 12 and William Mayfield 11 as seven players reached double figures for the Hawkeyes. I -: ...._ thie CbS BELL'S PIZZA AFICIONADO$ll S. STATE AND PACKARD 995-0232 FREE DELIVERY DAILY after 4:30 Sun-Wed open til 1 am Thursday til 2 Fri-Sat ti) 3 am ': ' V . i a 4 b*, . '% t 4 r, .4 .4 M _ ..._.. vu w Thursday's Games Illinois at Purdue Indiana at Northwestern MICHIGAN at Ohio State Michigan State at Iowa, Minnesota at Wisconsin second half and rolled to a 61-50 victory over Northwestern in Big Ten basket- x COUNTRY SKI RENTAILS LESSONS AiND SKIINGi * FRESHMEN!