Page 12-Friday, February 23, 1979-The Michigan Daily Graduate Students/ Singles One Shabbat Informal Discussion on ~eigSInglean1d Jewish" When: FRI., FEB. 23-Time: 9 pm Where: HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill St. refreshments provided for information please calli663-3336 WISCONSIN WINS, 66-65 Badgers embarrass Blue By GARY KICINSKI This time, the glass slipper didn't fit. The scene was set at Crisler Arena last night for Michigan's fifth fairy-tale finish, but this time a last-second shot refused to drop, and the Michigan Wolverines succumbed to the Wiscon- sin Badgers, 66-65. THE WOLVERINES, already proud possessors of four Big Ten victories at the buzzer, saw their dreams of a fifth miracle vanish into thin air as Tom Staton's desperation shot with two seconds left bounced off the rim, and Alan Hardy's ensuing attempt at a tip- in wouldn't fall, either. The loss dropped the Wolverines to 7- 8 in the Big Ten and into a sixth-place tie with Illinois. For Wisconsin, the vic- tory was its first in eleven games, as the Badgers hadn't won a game since they downed the Wolverines 77-66 in Madison on January 13th. Wisconsin is now 3-12 on the year, having picked up just one victory over Northwestern in addition to the Michigan victories. Sophomore guard Wesley Matthews paced the Badgers with a career high 31 points. IT HAD LOOKED to be a carbon copy of Michigan's earlier contest with In- diana, when the Wolverines ran the clock down to adozen seconds and then called time to set up the final play. But this time the strategy failed. Coach Johnny Orr set up a "third option play," where the two guards cut through the middle in an attempt to get open, and if that fails the ball goes in to Phil Hubbard, who takes it in himself. "We wanted to let Hub take it in on (Larry) Petty to the basket," Orr som- berly explained afterward. "But one of our players forgot ... so we had to do what we had to do. He didn't make the cut ... it was just one of those things." ORR DIDN'T single out the player at fault, but guard Marty Bodnar, who led Michigan with 19 points, said later that he was the one who messed up the assignment. "My role at that time was to in-bound the ball and then cut through the mid- dle," Bodnar said. "But I didn't; I went to the corner instead." The play developed with junior Mark Lozier handling the ball, who then dumped it off to Alan Hardy on the wing. Hardy fired the ball across court to Staton, who was forced to put up a shot with the clock winding down. The shot bounced off both the rim and the glass, and Hardy took one shot at a tap- in but failed. "IT WAS A busted play," Staton ad- mitted. "The ball reversed to my side, and I had to put the ball up with the seconds ticking off.", . "I calculated the tip," reflected Har- dy, "and I went up for the first rebound, and it just didn't go in. The frantic finish capped off what looked to an impressive and victorious comeback after an atrocious first half, as the Wolverines twice trailed by as much as 12 points. Michigan committed 12 first-half tur- novers and was out-boarded 29-16 by the Badgers, who added a comical 16 tur- novers of their own in the sloppy first period. Hubbard was held scoreless and Michigan connected on 38 per cent of its floor shots and a paltry 45 per cent of its free throws and trailed, 37-29, at the in termission. BUT BODNAR came out smoking in the second half, and combined with, Hubbard to slowly pull the Wolverines. within range. Hubbard's ten-foot jum- per knotted the game at 51 all with 8:10 to go, and from then on the game* swayed back-and-forth. Orr was understandably distressed with his squad's play, and felt that part of the flatness resulted from the MSU loss. "It doesn't bother me, losing. Lack of effort bothers me," Orr said sullenly. "I can't understand why young men ... you play 27 games and it would seem to me you'd want to break your back on every play. That's disap- pointing." Badger-ed again WISCONSIN FG1 Gregory ....... 3 Chrnelich ..... 4 Petty ..........2 Hastings .......3 Matthews .....14 Gaines ........ 2 Smith ......... 0 Mitchell ....... 2 Totals ......... 30 FGA 7 13 7 4 21 6 1 3 62 FT 0 0 3 0 3 0 0 0 6 FTA 0 0 4 0 5 0 0 0 9 R 8 10 8 1 2 1 4 45 A PF 1 4 0 4 1 3 3 2 1 2 1 2 0 2 8 20 TP 6 8 7 6 31 4 0 4 66 MICHIGAN FG FGA FT FTA McGee ........ 5 9 0 1 Hardy.........4 10 0 0 Hubbard....... 5 9 2 3, Staten ......... 4 8 0 0 Smith ......... 0 2 0 0 Bodnar, Marty 8 10 3 4 Johnson ....... 0 2 0 0 Heuerman... 2 5 2 4 Garner ........ 0 1 0 2 Lozier ......... 1 2 0 0 Totals.........29 58 7 14 R 3 4 4 3 0 2 0 3 1 1 26 A PF 1 3 1 2 14 4 0 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 1 13 16 TP 10 12 8 0 19 6 0 2 65 Halftime: Wisconsin 37;Michigan 29 Attendance: 13,009 Michigan's Marty Bodnar (24) tries to shoot through Wisconsin's freshman center Keith Mitchell (41) while Wolverine Paul Heuerman (15) looks on in action from last night's game. Despite Bodnar's career high 19 points the Blue cagers succumbed to the Badgers. It was Wisconsin's first win in the conference since it beat Michigan at Madison five weeks ago. Big 10 Standings Conference MJJa r uEIv c /I everyday X599 albums $ow prce $ 6g tapes S8.98 LIS T 69"""""e Team OSU ............. MSU ............ Iowa ............ Purdue .......... Indiana ....... MICHIGAN. Illinois........ Minnesota..... Wisconsin ..... Northwestern ... names 12-3 11-4 11-4 10-5 8-7 7-8 7-8 4-10 3-12 1-13 Overall 17-7 19-5 18-6 20-7 16-11 13-10 19-8 9-14 9-15 5-18 GILLESPIE -"BASIE BROWN -ROKE R PABLO RECORDS HOURS: MON.-SAT;10-6 SUN-12-8 r A N N A R B O R I Minnesota at Northwestern, night .~ , ....Daily Photo b CYRENA CHANG ...:... ::..........: :. :: ::. ..... . ..... .. ..:v::.w n.... .....".. ....::: "::::r.:::: v.*.. .*:..*.:... :..f . :.* \. ..{ .. . .'d :y :'.\*.*{v::" BIG TEN ROUNDUP Bucks scalp Illini, 73-55 an4 Tyes6 523 E. Liberty 994-8031 5141/2 E. William (upstairs) 668-1776 By the Associated Press COLUMBUS - Herb Williams matched his career high with 34 points last night, lifting 14th-ranked Ohio State to a 73-55 victory over Illinois and the undisputed Big Ten basketball lead. Ohio State now is 12-3 in the conferen- ce and two over the sole lead after previous co-leader Iowa lost to Indiana 64-62 last night. Kelvin Ransey added 16 points as the Buckeyes turned the game into a rout in ) the closing minutes, outscoring the Illini 14-2 in one five-minute stretch. * * * ' Indiana 64, Iowa 62 BLOOMINGTON-Junior Mike' Woodson scored 31 points last night as Indiana upset 12th-ranked Iowa 64-62 in Big Ten college basketball. The Hoosiers hit 7-of-12 free throws in the game's final seven minutes to hold off the Hawkeyes. The Hawkeyes, who started the game sharing the conference lead with Ohio State, suffered their fourth conference loss in 15 games when Kevin Boyle missed a 20-foot shot with two seconds to play. * * * MSU 73, Purdue 67 EAST LANSING-Michigan State's swift, leaping Spartans held Purdue's 7- foot-1 Joe Barry Carroll to just two rebounds and four points in the first half, but had to fight off the Boiler- makers' outside shooting in the late stages of the game for a crucial 73-67 Big Ten basketball victory last night. Gregory Kelser, MSU's all-time leading scorer, was tops in the game with 29 points, while Carroll was held to 10 for the night. . The loss dropped Purdue out of a tie, for second place in the conference with. the Spartans. * * * Bradley 76, Wichita St. 74 PEORIA, I11.-Two clutch free throws by Ken Garrett gave Bradley the two points they needed in the final minutes to stave off a wild Wichita State charge and preserve a 76-74 Bradley victory in Missouri Valley Con- ference action last night. UlNUO Print or Type legibly in dii ut ublet the space provided, 4 upplement the copy as you would like it to appear.2Be (ACTUAL SIZE OF AD).AIR NAMEIT 'm4 ND SM'Q /7 ADDRESS________________ P et- Ort4 PHONE fr o d e '0Y0/S Mail or Bring in Person with payment to: 'd c s - 420 MAYNARD STREET withrQ/IrecU MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 WS/tO SYr:2r I ONLY $8 before 5:00 p.m. March 2. 1979 L-O4)' R~ 'Of/