BLUE SQUEAKS BY HOOSIERS, 60-59: The MichiganDaily-Sunday, February 11, 1979-Page 9 Bodnar's bomb nips Indiana at buzzer y3' "A VE KEN BARGER Johnny Orr knew it was in all along. Alan Hardy knew it when the ball began its long descent toward the basket. But, for Marty Bodnar, seeing is believing. Bodnar was the guy who ended up with the ball in his hands with Michigan trailing Indiana by one point and one 'second left in the game, so he put up a made-to-order, 25-foot set shot. And, when the ball swished cleanly through the hoop, it did a lot more than confirm Orr's and Hardy's suspicions. Itlifted the Wolverines to a dramatic 60-5 tr'iumph over the Hoosers, squaring the season series between the two rivals. It also ignited a jubilant celebration of Wolverine players and supporters who hoisted Bodnar over their shoulders and carried him off the court. And finally, it made the sweet- shooting soph from Barberton, O. an eleventh-hour hero for the second time in two weeks. "YOU JUST can't go out there and worry, 'If you get a last-second shot, what are you gonna do,' " said Bodnar, Michigan's third guard despite his team-leading field goal percentage. "You've just gotta go out there and react and hope it falls." And fall it did, just like his last second layup fell two weeks back at Illinois. The Wolverine victory avenged last week's 68-62 loss at Indiana, and left them at 6-6 in the Big Ten, tied for fifth place with these same Hoosiers. The stage was set for Bodnar 58 seconds earlier, when Indiana's Butch Carter knocked in a similar outside shot to give the Hoosiers a tenuous 59-58 lead in the see-saw game. In the final minute the Wolverines, missing both Phil Hubbard and Mike McGee on fouls, held onto the ball, looking for only an unmissable shot. Orr called two time outs in the interim, the second with 11 ticks left on the clock. In the huddle Orr outlined a play designed to get the ball to forward Har- dy on the low post, hoping to get a high percentage shot or a foul. BODNAR THEN inbounded the ball to Keith Smith, Michigan's best ballhandler. Smith then dritbled around the perimeter near the right corner, looking for Hardy. Indiana's defense was there, however, and Smith rever- sed his dribble and ran into heavy pressure from the Hoosiers. Bodnar managed to wriggle free from the man-to-man defense, and Smith got the ball to him just to the right of the key. From there, Bodnar wasted no time and made no mistakes. The buzzer sounded just as the shot dropped through. "I saw the whole bucket," said Bod- nar of the play. "The defensive man was around on Keith and he came around and got me. Right when I got it I just shot it and put a lot of arch on it. I knew it was in when it went-when it fell through." Hardy saw the shot differently. "You never know -for sure until the ball reaches a certain peak," he said. "From where I was standing, I got a good view of it. I saw it coming down and I said, 'We got it.' APPARENTLY, THE view from the bench was even better. "I knew it was in. Man, that was dead center," said an i elated Orr. "That kid's a great shooter." Nobody would have guessed that the game was to be decided by -a buzzer AFTER GOING nearly three minutes without scoring, Hubbard took things into his own hands, notching 12 of Michigan's next 16 points on a variety of inside and outside maneuvers. Hubbard's final bucket for the after- noon was a driving layup with 9:23 left, and it gave Michigan a 50-49 lead. The Wolverines then blew three golden op- portunities to extend the margin to three on two missed layups and a travelling violation. And when Hubbard fouled out of the game with 3:55 left and Indiana's Mike Woodson popped in his twelfth and final basket 30 seconds later to give Indiana a 57-54 edge, Michigan looked like it was cooked. But Bodnar responded by coaxing in a shot from the corner, and the defense held, allowing Tommy Staton to weave his way through heavy Hoosier traffic and hit a go-ahead layup at 2:32. McGEE, WHOSE quickness allowed him to pick up four big steals, fouled out at 1:49, and Carter's clutch basket put Indiana back in control until Bod- nar's bucket insured the Hoosiers' a long flight home. "We just hung in there and battled." said assistant coach Bill Frieder."They went one ahead and we came back and went one ahead, and that's what you've gotta do." As a team, Michigan shot 60 percent from the field-by far its best mark of the season; and the first time since the Big Ten opener that the Wolverines have made more shots than they've missed. A wide assortment of travels, double dribbles and butterfingers ad- ded up to 20 turnovers, partially nullifying the shooting marksmanship. Hubbard led the team with 18 points, while McGee added 14 and Bodnar 10. Woodson topped everyone with 29. Marty Bodnar shot as halftime approached. The Hoosiers used their formidable height advantage to collect one easy basket af- ter another from the lane, enroute to a 28-16 lead with 6:54 left in the half. But the Wolverines combined a stingy, opportunistic defense with their reviving fast break offense to reduce Indiana's lead to 37-34 at the inter- mission. Mike McGee triggered the 16-7 outburst, hitting four driving layups and adding two free throws. full court VPRESS Bodnar a winner... .. . he also talks By GARY KICINSKI, B OBBY KNIGHT wasn't talking, per usual. Phil Hubbard once again raised his Cone of Silence. Marty Bodnar, thank God, was talking, but I couldn't hear a word he was saying. A throng of reporters hovered over the Crisler security guards near the entrance to the Michigan locker room, struggling to dam up their impatien- ce. Finally, Johnny Orr appeared in the tunnel and nodded to the guards, who had to do some alert maneuvering to avoid the onrushing ink-stained wretches. By the time I made my way to Bodnar's locker, the reporters were three deep in a semi-circle around the last-second hero, who by this time was already telling his story. Music from John Garris' tape deck seemed to be reaching previously unattained decibels, and try as I might, I couldn't make heads or tails out of what "Bods" was saying. Abandoning my attempts at lip-reading, I finally squeezed a microphone over one shoulder and between another armpit, pointing it in Bodnar's general direction, and hoped for the best. Thank you, Panasonic. "I had to get it off quick 'cuz I knew there wasn't much time left," Bodnar said, exuding quiet composure. "I just got it and went through my natural motion and-put a lot of arch on it and was just lucky it went in. "You can't go out there and worry. If you get a last-second shot, what on earth are you gonna do?" he continued"You just gotta go out there and react and just hope it falls." It was the fourth Big Ten victory at the buzzer for the Cardiac Kids, and it was Bodnar's second personal triumph. Two weeks ago the 6-3 sophomore picked up Tom Staton's steal and outraced the horn on a layup to beat Illinois, 56-54. "This one was different because the one at Illinois, with ten seconds to go, we had no idea we were gonna pull it out. The one at Illinois was just like a complete surprise. This one, we called time out and we all knew we had a chance to win. Hubbard silence "The one at Illinois was a layup, and you're expected to make a layup - whereas this one was a 25-footer, and you're not always expected to make those. I'm just very happy and very fortunate." After milking Bodnar for all he was worth, the masses began breaking up to various portions of the locker room. Speaking to us today, Phil? Response: A quick shake of the head. Didn't need the Panasonic for that. Ph il, you see, has been doing Helen Keller imitations ever since (repor- tedly) he read something in a Michigan student newspaper (t'he Daily, I presume) that he didn't like. This bit of news didn't come directly from Hub- bard - rather, it was extracted from a Free Press article which ran last Saturday. The story indicated that Hubbard intended to refuse all interviews for the duration of the season. No luck with Knight Too bad, too. Hubbard has displayed game-to-game improvement, beginning with the Spartan contest. Yesterday he performed admirably, tallying 18 points on a 9 for 13 performance. The pun-makers would say he's letting hi playing do his talking. Meanwhile, Bobby Knight wasn't even letting his typewriter do his talking. Knight refuses to be interviewed by anyone other than Indiana Spor- ts information people, who then type up the quotes and distribute them to the sardonic scribes. But yesterday. the Hoosiers exited Crisler Arena so fast you'd have thought somebody hadshouted "Fire!" I happened to be on hand Friday afternoon when Bobby Knight marched his Hoosiers into Crisler Arena for a quick practice. While Knight was renewing acquaintances in the Michigan coaches' room, his team was out warming up on the floor. My partner in crime, Dave Renbarger, sauntered up to guard Randy Wittman and posed the question, "Just what makes a guy want to play for Bobby Knight anyway?" Wittman managed a quick response before an assistant coach corralled him; explaining that all interviews must be OK'ed by General Knight. When Knight emerged moments later, looking more like a deer hunter in his red Buzzermania INDIANA Min. FG/AFT/A R Woodson....... 40 12/19 5/5 10 Tolbert........40 5/10 2/6 6 Turner ........ 27 3/5 0/0 1 Wittman....... 40 2/5 0/0 1 Carter.........38 4/11 0/0 1 Eells.......... 15 0/0 0/0 4 Team Rebounds 3 Totals........... 26/50 7/11 27 Fouled Out-Hubbard, McGee Halftime-Indiana 37, MICHIGAN 34 Att.-13,609 A 0 0 0 3 0 i PF 1 2 3 1 1 1 Pts. 29 McGee....... 12 Hardy........ 6 Hubbard ...... 4 Staton....... 8 Smith ........ 0 Bodnar, Marty Heuerman..... 59 Lozier....... Johnson....b. Team Rebounds Totals ....... MICHIGAN Min. FG/AFT/A R A PF Pts. 34 33 32 37 16 26 15 3 4 6/12 2/2 4 2 5 2/6 9/13 4/6 2/2 5/7 1/2 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/0 4 4 2 0 2 1 0 0 2 3 1 0 4 0 0 0 1 s 0 0 0 2 0 14 4 18 8 4 10 2 0 0 Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON MICHIGAN CENTER Phil Hubbard tries to wrest the ball away from Indiana pivotman Ray Tolbert, while the Hoosiers' Landon Turner (32) looks on. Hubbard scored a team-high 18 points and ripped off four rebounds before fouling out late in the game. The Wolverines evened their season record at 6-6 by nipping Indiana at the buzzer, 60-59. 4 9 29/48 ,2/4 22 11 14 60 BIG TEN ROUNDUP MSU rolls over Bucks, By The Associated Press COLUMBUS - Earvin "Magic" Johnson's 26 spoints and deft passing triggered 10th-ranked Michigan State to a 73-55 victory over No. 13 Ohio State last night and dropped the Buckeyes in- to a three-way tie for the Big Ten Con- ference basketball lead. The Spartans, the defending league champions, moved to within one game of leading Ohio State, Purdue and Iowa with their fifth straight triumph. The Spartans are 8-4 and 16-5 overall. Michigan State blew into a 25-8 lead in the first 111 minutes, and Ohio State never threatened thereafter, falling to 9-3 in the Big Ten and 14-7 overall. Johnson sank 12 of 15 free throws, most of them down the stretch, to keep Ohio State at a safe distance. Jay Vin- cent added 22 while Greg Kelser had 11 for the Spartans. Michigan State's smooth 1-3-1 zone defense held Herb Williams, the .1 Buckeyes' outstanding 6-foot-10 center, scoreless in the first half. Williams wound up with 10 points, and teammate Kelvin Ransey 13. Carter Scott had 15 for Ohio State. The Buckeyes, losing their third game in their last four Big Ten starts, shot a frigid 25 per cent in falling behind 40-23 by halftime. The Spartans, whipping the Buckeyes for the 13th straight time, never permit- ted Ohio State to move closer than 13 points in the second half. When the Buckeyes closed to within 55-40 with more than 11 minutes left, Michigan State Coach Jud Heathcote ordered the Spartans into a ball-control offense. Iowa 79, Wisconsin 65 IOWA CITY - Freshman forward Kevin Boyle and junior guard Ronnie Lester led a second-half flurry to break open a tight game as 15th-ranked Iowa rolled to a 79-65 victory over Wisconsin in a regionally televised Big Ten con- test yesterday. Boyle scored 12 of his team-high 19 points in the final 20 minutes as Iowa, 16-5, remained in the thick of the Big Ten race by raising its conference record to 9-3. Wisconsin dropped its eighth straight game in falling to 2-10 in the conference and 8-13 overall. The Badgers' Wesley Matthews topped all scorers with 24 points. * * * Purdue 76, N'western 64 WEST LAFAYETTE - Joe Barry 73-55_ Carroll scored 27 points yesterday as Purdue held off a strong rally to beat Northwestern 76-64 in Big Ten college,;; basketball action. The Boilermakers, in a tight race with Ohio State and Iowa for the con- ference championship, led by 14 points early in the game before the last-place Wildcats closed the gap to two points;on the long-range shooting of Jerry Marifke and Mike Campbell late in the second half. Guard Jerry Sichting was the only other Purdue player in double figures, hitting 19 points. Marifke topped Nor- thwestern with 16,Gibson added 14 and Campbell chipped in 12. Michigan relay 'team, breaks world record By STAN BRADBURY Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan tracksters Ken Gardner, Charles Crouther, Andrew Bruce, and Tim Thomas linked up last night in East Lansing to set a new world record in the sprint medley relay. The time of 3:22.0 run during the 56th annual Spartan Relays smashed the old record of 3:23.6 set by Jeff McLoed, Jim Grace, Doug Hennigar, and Andy Johnson of the Wolverines three years ago in the same meet. TrackCoach Jack Harvey said of the world record, "We were shooting for it. I didn't know how good we could do but we were going to try and see." A STRONG final half-mile leg by Thomas pulled the Wolverines from 15 feet behind to a 1.6 second victory over Michigan State. "Tim's been running so well," said Harvey. "We didn't plan on being behind, but maybe that helped us." Though the sprint medley relay is not an NCAA championship event, Michigan did qualify in one more event. Greg Thomas, Ted Dobson, Mark Toelman, and Bill Weidenbach sur- passed the qualifying time in the distance medley relay while finishing third behind Tennessee and Bowling Green. "I was really happy with our distance medley and two mile relay team, especially with the good performances HARVEY ADDED that he was ex- tremely pleased with the improvement shown by the team, and especially that of football tailback and 300-meter man ButcheWoolfolk.Improving rapidly sin ce the season's beginning, Woolfolk finished a close third in the 300 behind MSU's Ricky Flower and Tennessee's Anthony Blair. "The improvement shown pleases me the most," said Harvey. "The overall development of the team is coming really well. We have three weeks until the big meet (the Big Ten and NCAA's . If we're not set by then, we'll be in trouble." Other Michigan performers who slid well at the meet were miler Steve Elliott, 60-yard lash man Ron Steele, high hurdlers Don Wheeler, .Gary Hicks, Arnette Chisholm, and Shelby Johnson, who captured first in the shut- tle hurdle relay. SCORES Big Ten Basketball MICHIGAN 60, Indiana59 Iowa 79, Wisconsin 65 Purdue 76, Northwestern 64 Michigan State 73, Ohio State 55 Illinois 59, Minnesota 57 Scores Wake Forest 60, N. Carolina St. 56 Cincinnati 87, Memphis St. 79 Syracuse 74; St. Bonaventure 69 Detroit 135. CCNY 77 , 5y ,. . NORM