The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January i11, 1979-Page 9 BENNETT WINS LAST MATCH FOR VICTOR Y: Grapplers pin 4th-ranked Lehigh By PETE LEININGER Despite dropping the first four matches, and falling behind 15-0, the Michigan wrestlers came back to win a thrilling 22-18 decision against fourth- ranked Lehigh last night in Crisler Arena. Going into the final match, Michigan was down by the score of 18-16 and needed a win from their heavyweight Steve Bennett in order to win the meet. Bennett responded by pinning Jim Karapelou of Lehigh at the 1:04 mark of the first period. "Steve wrestles real smart and has good mat sense. He wrestles real well against light heavyweights (which Karapelou was)," stated Michigan coach Dale Bahr. "THE MEET was a joy to coach. It was my first win (while at Michigan) against a major school," added Bahr. "I was most impressed with the hustle of the kids. Even the kids that lost didn't quit." Lehigh was without the services of their 177-pound national champ Mark Liberman, who stayed home with a sore Engineer upset 118--Steve Basstianelli (Lehigh) de- cisioned Jim Mathias (Michigan), 6-2. 126-Pete Schuyler (L) dec. Mark Pearson (M), 7-4. 134-Daryl Burley (L) pinned Dave Framm (M), 7:04. 142-Dennis Reed (L) dec. John Beljan (M), 10-8. 150-Lou Joseph (M) dec. Greg Cunningham (L), 5-1. 158-Nemir Nadhir (M) dec. Bill Schneck (L), 11-8. 167-Mark Churella (M) pinned Tom Hensler (L), 1:59. 177-Bill Petoskey (M) dec. Jeff Tur- ner (L), 12-4. 190-Mik Brown (L) dec. Steve Fraser (M), 8-4. HWT-Steve Bennett (M) pinned Jim Karapelou (L), 1:04. throat. "Our 167 and 177 pounders weren't ready to wrestle.. . but you got to go with the best you got," said Lehigh coach Thad Turner. "We figured we had to win five of the first six matches. We knew they (Michigan) would be tough in the heavier weights." Although winning the first four mat- ches, Lehigh was unable to capture five of the first six, losing the fifth and sixth matches of the night. IN THE FIFTH match, Michigan's Lou Joseph scored a 5-1 decision again- st Lehigh's Greg Cunningham to cut Lehigh's team lead to 15-3. The match was closer than the score indicated. In the first period, Joseph scored a takedown to go ahead 2-0. Both wrestlers scored escapes making the score 3-1 in the third period. With seven seconds remaining, and both wrestlers standing, Cunningham shot in for a takedown but Joseph countered and both wrestlers went out of bounds. Had Cunningham got the takedown, he would had won the match 4-3 (as a result of riding time), and given Lehigh an 18-0 lead. A wrestler is awarded one point for riding time if the time that he has controlled his opponent is a minute or more than the time his opponent has controlled him. ACCORDING TO BAHR, "The 150 and 158 pound weight classes were probably the turning point of the meet." SCORES NBA Los Angeles 99, Boston 89 Chicago 120, New Jersey 116 NHL Pittsburgh 3. Montreal 2 Detroit 5, NY Islanders 5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Duke 73, Clemson 54 Syracuse 85, Penn St.70 Georgetown, DC 107, N. Carolina Central 72 Maryland 82, N. Carolina State 81 Alabama 90, LSU 76 Arkansas 79, Rice 66 In the 158 pound class, Michigan's Nemir Nadhir scored an exciting 11-8 decision over Bill Schneck. In that match, Nadhir was behind 3-0 but took Schneck down on his back with a smooth fireman's carry, scoring five points on the move. Nadhir scored six more points in the third period, with twotakedowns and two escapes, to en- sure the victory. Really the only question in the 167 pound match was whether Michigan's two-time NCAA champ Mark Churella would pin Engineer Tom Hensler. Churella did score a pin, with only one second left in the period, to make the team score 15-12 in favor of Lehigh. AT 177, WOLVERINE Bill Petoskey scored a 12-4 superior decision over Jeff Turner, earning four points for Michigan, and giving Michigan the lead Howqlngleag Women's, Men, SIGN UF UNION Open 10 a.m. 1 p.m. Sc PINBALL at Union 35 mac for the first time 16-15. Michigan's Steve Fraser, fifth in the NCAA's last year, met Mike Brown (presently ranked number one in the country) in the 190 pound match. Fraser wrestled tough through the match but dropped a 8-4 decision to Brown, making the score 18-16 in favor of Lehigh. That set the stage for Bennett's heroics. Bennett's pin sent a good num- ber of Lehigh fans home unhappy and set the Michigan wrestlers literally' jumping for joy. The win raises the Wolverines' overall record to 5-1, and lowered Lehigh's (who lost to Wisconsin two. days earlier) record to 6-3. Michigan. battles Northwestern this Friday at. 5:30, followed by Iowa State Saturday at 3:30 at Crisler Arena. ves Formfinge -. s, and Mixed P NOW LANES . Mon.-Fri. it. -Sun. Lanes and Station r hines k of your spare time.w pasma ave a life! 4 a twice-a-week regular. tion, plus bonuses. -th $5extra one for appointment. . VIA CORPORA TION a - 7744 e d, Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG LEHIGH'S 150 POUND Greg Cunningham attempts to turn Michigan's Lou Joseph with an arm lock in last night's wrestling action at Crisler Arena. Joseph eventually won the match 5-1 and Michigan went on to upset the fourth-ranked Engineers 22-18. Tumblers ready to roll By ALAN FANGER By this Sunday - more than 800 miles and two meets later - Coach Scott Ponto and his Michigan women gymnasts should know where they stand in relation to the national tumbling powers. After a five-week layoff during which Ponto revamped and revised most of the tumblers' routines, the youthful squad takes to the road this weekend for a triangular meet with Louisiana State and Chicago Circle in the Windy City tomorrow night, and a quadrangular event with Wisconsin, Wisconsin- Oshkosh, and the same Chicago Circle team Saturday in Madison. The Wolverines will have more to contend with than just the interstate highways. LSU has used its outstanding depth to compensate for the pre- season loss of ace performer Jean Beadle, one of the nation's top twenty all- around gymnasts. In spite of the feverish schedule and a minor outbreak of bumps and bruises among the eight-member squad, Ponto sees the meets as an opportunity to showtase Michigan's improvement and eliminate some glaring errors left over from the December contests. "We were a bit unprepared for the meets last month, especially the Penn State Invitational," remarked Ponto. "We should have finished second' instead of fourth (of six teams). Sure, we'll still make some of the same mistakes, but we're much better prepared this time." The tumblers should have greater room for error at Madison, where slow-starting Wisconsin and Wisconsin-Oshkosh along with Chicago Circle provide the opposition. "We should beat the two Wisconsin teams," said Ponto. "They haven't scored as well as us so far("' The Wolverines can gauge their improvement against Chicago Circle, which was earlier ranked 19th in the country. "They scored about as well as us in their first meet," said Ponto, "so I think we'll be evenly matched." The first-year mentor isn't setting his sights on second place, however. "We have a chance to win the meet. We should beat Wisconsin and Oshkosh, too. But if we beat LSU, we could conceivably be in the top twenty." The gymnasts have only to go to Crisler Arena for meets next week. They make their home debut against Central and Western Michigan next Thursday night and hook up with 11th-ranked Michigan State a week from Sunday at Crisler. Buckeye Bruce? Iowa State University Cocah Earle Bruce appears to be the man Ohio State has settled on to replace Woody Hayes, the Buckeyes' fired football coach. "He's got the inside track right now," Iowa State Athletic Director Lou McCullough said of Bruce. "I'm afraid I've lost him." - After a session with Hugh Hindman, the Buckeyes' athletic director in San Francisco, Bruce would only say, "I guess I'll hear from them when they get through with interviews one way or another." Hindman insists that no choice will be made until Ohio State's delegation returns to Columbus early Thursday from the National Collegiate Athletic Association convention in San Francisco. -AP More plaudits for Baker Defensive end Al Baker of the Detroit Lions, a second-round draft choice who blossomed instantly into an All-Pro choice, was named Defensive Rookie of the Year by The Associated Press Wednesday. Baker was a landslide choice in balloting by a nationwide panel of football writers and broadcasters, receiving 61 of 84 votes cast. Ross Browner of the Cincinnati Bengals had 16. The Lions drafted Baker out of Colorado State and installed him at right end in the first preseason game. Ile was a permanent fixture all season long and led the NFL with 23 quarterback sacks. "He is the best rookie pass rusher I have ever seen come into this league," said Floyd Peters, the Lions' defensive line coach. 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