ALL-BIG TEN NIT FINAL ASSURED: Carroll explode = NEW YORK (AP)-Purdue strong- State meeting late last night at Madison 22 more af 'man Joe Barry Carroll poured in 42 Square Garden. ting down i points, leading the 15th-ranked Boiler- The smaller Alabama team was Purdue mol makers to a runaway 87-68 basketball never able to handle Carroll, a 7-foot-1, 21 points ne victory over Alabama last night in the 240-pounder who was able to score vir- The Boil semifinals of the 42nd National In- tually at will inside. vitation Tournament. CARROLL COLLECTED 20 points in - The Boilermakers advanced to the first half, along with 14 by Jerry tomorrow night's championship game Sichting, to power the Big Ten team in- against the winner of the Indiana-Ohio to a 43-32 lead at the half. Carroll scored The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 20, 1979-Page 11 s as Purdue romps ter intermission before sit- in the final few minutes as )unted its lead to as many as ar the end. ermakers broke open the A NEFF Is ENOUGH game with a 12-point run late in the second half with Carroll contributing a field goal in the game-breaking burst. The score was 61-54 with 9:43 left in favor of the Boilermakers before they went on their scoring tear. ,_When it was over, Purdue had a 73-54 lead with 5:24 remaining. SICHTING ADDED 20 points for the Boilermakers, 27-7. Reggie King and Robert Scott each scored 21 points for Alabama, 22-11. The Crimson Tide was inhibited by foul trouble throughout the game. Two players, Eddie Phillips and Phillip Lockett, both fouled out trying to guard the irrepressible Carroll, who hit 13 of his 16 field goal attempts. Phillips was held to four points, 11 below his average, before he fouled out. "CARROLL PLAYED a great game," said Purdue coach Lee Rose af- ter watching his star center score a career-high point total. The highest previous game for Carroll had been 36 points against Iowa earlier this season. "Believe it or not," said Rose, "I think he needs to be more physical. But I'm sure he will be. "No doubt he will make a great pro." Pointing to his team's 61 per cent shooting, Rose noted, "That certainly didn't hurt us." Alabama shot a mere 39 per cent for the game. "EVERYONE KNOWS their role on this team," said Sichting, who added seve assists and teamed with Brian Waltker to give the Boilermakers sparkling backcourt play. Walker han- ded out nine assists, many of them to Carroll. By Billy Neff BULLETIN Indiana University defeated Ohio State last night, +64-55, .nto set up an all-Indiana cham- pionship game in the National Invitational Basketball Tour- nament. Indiana, 21-12, will meet Pur- due, 27-7, Wednesday evening at nine for the NIT crown. Ohio State and Alabama will play the consolation game at 7 pm. Both games will be played in Madison Square Garden. Provo's the place..,. ..Meyer's the man A S THE FINAL SECONDS ticked off the clock in Provo, Utah, Saturday, a dream was fulfilled and I, for one, was exhilarated. Ray Meyer, who should be collecting social security checks within the year, is off to Salt Lake City to coach his DePaul five to a possible national championship. Although Meyer is the winninigest active coach in college basketball, he has never made the national semifinals (the Final Four). His dream was to accomplish this feat and he finally did-his speedy inner city contingent vanquished powerful UCLA, 95-91 in the Western Regional cham- pionship. Maybe my roommate said it best about Meyer: "It was a real big exhilaration for me,. I was so happy for the guy (Meyer) that it brought tears to my eyes to see him finally make it (to the Final Four)." I could not agree more! Throughout the second half, though, it seemed like Meyer's dream would not come to pass. His DePaul Blue Demons had led by a 51-34 count at halftime. They had literally run the vaunted Bruins off the hardwood in Provo. The second half, however, was to be an entirely different story. UCLA kept chipping away and the excitement continued to mount. As the lead dwindled, the TV cameras kept panning over to Meyer to see his expression. His expression never changed. It mirrored the confidence he had in his players. He somehow knew this was to be his year. But was it? Al McGuire, NBC's colorful commentator, was noticeably rooting for the ageless Meyer. "Only four more minutes until Salt Lake City," said the former Marquette mentor. America pulled for Meyer Everyone, McGuire included, vanted to see Meyer fulfill his dream. As UCLA crept within two points, McGuire wailed, "only 90 seconds until Salt Lake City for Ray Meyer!" Finally, all doubt was quashed when freshman sensation Mark Aguirre slammed the ball through the DePaul net. Meyer's introspective face lit up; he was beaming. He had finally accomplished his goal! As the buzzer sounded, the players came over and hugged their leader. They loved this man; it was written all over their faces. But who wouldn't? He had coached basketball at DePaul for 37 years, worked with two-handed set shots and two-handed dunks. He had labored for 37 years-coaching the world's most famous bespectacled basketball player, George Mikan, and three of his own sons. He had faced much adversity, but through it all, he had never lost any enthusiasm for his sport. What many people don't realize is that it is extremely difficult to recruit for a school like DePaul. This small Catholic university is stuck in the nor- thern part of Chicago-not exactly the high rent district! How can it possibly compete with the Notre Dames, the Kentuckys and the Michigans when it comes to recruiting? Answer: it cannot and oftentimes, Meyer has had to work with second-rate players. Last year, many thought, was his best team ever and virtually final chance to reach the Final Four. Prior to the regional championship against Notre Dame a season ago, his star center and leading scorer, Dave Corzine, had broken his hand. Corzine was virtually useless to the Blue Demons and Notre Dame crushed them with a strong second half, 84-64. No one expected anything from Meyer this season as he lost four of his first six players, including Corzine. But Meyer coaxed them back to the national spotlight again by adding a real blue chipper in Aguirre, a transfer student (Jim Mitchem) and the third guard from last year, Clyde Bradshaw. They did not have a bona fide center so he used an offense without a cen- ter. And his bench strength was virtually nonexistent so he played his five starters the whole way, except for a substitute for the injured Curtis Watkins. These strategies had worked and when the buzzer sounded and he was embracing his players, I welled up also. Everything this man had worked for through all his years had been worth it. Whether it had taken 37 years or just one year like his opponent in the next game (Indiana State's Bill Hodges), his dream had been realized. There was no denying him now. His trip to Salt Lake City would be so sweet! NBC recognized this beautiful spectacle also, by awarding a scholarship to DePaul in Meyer's name as the game's most valuable player. Meyer symbolized to many the puritan ethic and no one wants to stand in the way of a dream, especially an American dream. And we all know how America loves an underdog-therefore, the victory was just as sweet for the American public as it was for Ray Meyer. Joe Barry Carroll B ruin Fans are calm despite recent slide' LOVE RELATIONS"IPS -Do You Know What You Want? -Do You Get What You Need? -Are You Satisfied? Peer Counselors of Counseling Services are Offering a FREE WORKSHOP for Under- graduates on Understanding Your Current or Past Relationships. Saturday, March 24, *10 a.m.-3 p.m. To Register or for More In formation Call 76-GUIDE or Come to the 76-GUIDE Desk, 1st Floor Michigan Union * Lunches not included BOARD FOR STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ELECTIONS (Held with MSA Elections) TWO STUDENT MEMBERSHIPS OPEN " ONE MUST BE ENROLLED UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT " ONE MUST BE ENROLLED GRADUATE STUDENT " TERM TWO YEARS PETITIONS AT MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY OFFICE 3RD FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION DEADLINE TO FILE MARCH 22, 1979 LOS ANGELES (AP)-The last four -not the Final Four-concern UCLA basketball fans after four seasons of falling short of their accustomed national title. UCLA teams of John Wooden won 10 National Collegiate Athletic Association championships, eight in succession before Wooden retired on top in1975. Since then, the best showing came under Wooden's immediate successor as coach, Gene Bartow. He got the Bruins to the Final Four in the NCAA tournament in 1976, losing to eventual champion Indiana in the semifinals. Former Wooden assistant Gary Cun- ningham took over two years ago when Bartow had enough of Wooden's shadow. Now at Alabama- Birmingham, Bartow literally was driven out of town for his teams' sins-third in the diation and tied for fif- th in the nation in his years at UCLA. Alumni. discontent seems to have cooled during the 50-8 won-lost record and two more tie-for-fifth NCAA finishes under Cunningham, who was UCLA alumni director just before becoming coach. "Everywhere I go, they've thanked me for a great season. I've never seen any hostile experience toward me or the team." 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